HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-11-23 - Orange Coast Pilotp ••••••
ORANGE COAST YOUR HOMITDWN DlllY PIPIR
M O NDAY. NOVEMBER 23. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY. C ALI FOR NIA i '> CENTS
Lindbergh kidnap files open to public
EWING TOWNS Hl P , NJ
<AP1 -State police fil es on the
f amo u s Lind berg h baby
kidnapping case were opened lo
the publi c tod ay . but th e
attorney who s ought t h e
disclosure says new v1c~ing
regulations are unfair
M ajor John M cGa nn
announced tod:.1} that ··only one
researcher from any interested
group" could view the mounds
o f papHwork <.1 nd evide nce
s torl·d here.
"Thi.' gu1dt'l1ncs arc
arbitrarily re s tri<'l1vc and
unfaa:-. said Robt.•rt Br} an of
San Francisco. attorney for
Anna llauptmann
The 8.1-ycar old Y1·adun, Pa .
wom an is. tht• widow of the man
exet:uled for killing the son of
famed aviator ('harle-.
Lindtwr~h
l:iryan, who also charged thal
thl' guadelim.'s wl're illegal. said
he had planned to have four
r c s t' a r t' h l' r s g o u v e r t h e
material lie said McGann
issued tht.• gu1dehnes "so at may
take us years to go through the
flies "
The attorney said an associate
would ask U S District Judge
F rederick B Lacey an Newark
to 1'isuc an order relaxing the
restrictions
Bryan repres e nts Mrs
Hauptmann an a $100 million
lawsuit against New Jersey that
cl aims her hus band, Bruno
H1 t hard Hauptm a nn , was
wrongly executed in 1936 on
c harges s t emming from the
kidnapping-murder .
·w e h av e a case o n
Hauptmann's innocence" even
without the files. Bryan said
But the attorney declined to say
what materials he is interested
in viewing.
Bryan also r e presents
Ke nneth Kerwin of Biddeford,
Maine, who is one of two men
who claim to be the missing
Lindbergh son.
McGann gave no reason for
the n e wl y announced
restr ictions othe r than lo say
Stale Police S uperintendent
Clinton Pagano ·•said so."
The 49-year-old files have been
se aled s in ce the infant
dis appeared from the family's
Hopewell mansion in 1932.
Pagano said Friday the flies
would be available to a limited
number of researchers "while
en suring there is no risk of
damage or mutilation" to the
fragile records .
Reagan 'suspends' government
•
Delly PIMC PM• •Y O.ry Alftllr ...
Sign at Saddleback Col7eye remmds motonsts to tum out their
lights after dnvmg to work m toda1{.' heat'l.I /oq
Fog shrouds coast;
Rain may foil ow
Weathe r forecast ers said
today rain could follow on the
heels of the fog that hugged the
Orange Coast this morning
A U.S. Wea th er Service
s pok es m a n s aid c lo ud y
conditions will continue through
Tuesday and that the chance of
rain will reach 30 percent by
Tuesday afternoon.
The misty conditions along the
coas t ear ly t oday cau sed
motorists to continue driving
with headlights on.
At Orange County Airport,
J>ilots we re required to fly on
instrume nts, but the fog caused
n o pro bl e m s with ai rport
operation, a spokeswoman satd
The Orange County Sheriff's
Harbor Patrol reported one-mile
v1s 1h1hly in t he ocean this
morning, thoug h few vessels
were a llemptin1oe to tra ve l
through the fog.
The formal forescasl for
Orange Coast c1t1es ~alls for
continuing cloudy conditions and
dense fog near the coast, with
the m e rcury peaking in the
m id-60s and dipping into the low
50s overnight.
Brinl\,'s
suspect
arrested
SAN fltANCISCO (AP> An
anlmal-lovina ex·Brio.ll'a au.Md c harged with takln1 11.85
million from his own armored
van faced arraignment today
after his arrest by FBI agents
near a busy supermarket
George Manuel Bosque, 26, the
object o f an 1nte n s 1v e,
nationwide manhunt , was
unarmed and offered n o
resistance Sunday evening as he
was arrested in the parking lot
of o ne of t he city's busiest
markets, crowded with people
doi n g thei r Thanksg1v1ng
s hopping, the FBI said
No further details of the arrest
were given
Bosque. on the run since Aug
15. 1980. when he and t he m oney
disappeared. 1s charged in a
fede ral g rand jury indictment
with larceny of bank funds and
theft from interstate s hipment.
Al the lime of h is indictment,
bail was set at S3 million
It wa s t h e nation 's
second-largest theft, exceeding
the $1 22 millio n 1950 Brink
robbery m Boston.
Bosque had been employed by
Brink's 21:r years at the lame of
lhe theft. which occurred al San
Francisco Inte rna tional Airport.
The money had a rrived from
llonolulu, properly or that city's
F1 r s l Ha waiian a nd Central
P acifi c banks, and was headed
for the Federal Reser ve Bank.
Brink's s aid they covered the
loss.
The FBI as known to have
recovered only $30,000 of the
loot, which was m ailed to two
pa rtics within a rew days after
the theft The firs t package, with
$20,000. went t o a bus iness
associate of Bos que's as
payment of a de bt. authorities
reportt..'<l.
Anothe r $10,000 w a s sent
t h rough the mail a couple of
d ays later as a donation to the
San Francisco Society for the
Pr evention of C ru e lty to
Animals fro m which Bosque
was fired in 1977.
··Please u se this humble
amount to benefit our animals,"
<See BRINK'S, Page A2>
Stolen plane crashes; two die
Craft.averts sleeping Marines at Camp Pendleton
A stolen twin-engine plane
grazed several tents filled with
sleeping Mari n es at Camp
Pendleton before it crashed,
killing the pilot and passenger,
but the 230 Marines on the
around were uninjure d , a
military official said.
"It's a miracle, really," Lt.
Col. Gale Stlenon said Sunday.
"When you look at the scene,
when you look at the night path,
when you look at the way the
tetJt• are I id out, It'• just
amazing that no Marin es were
hurt."
Long Beach Po llce Lt. Dan
Shea said the plane h ad been
stolen earlier from the Piper Air
Cente r in Long Beach
The two-seat Piper Seneca
crashed into the Marine bivouac
area at 1:50 a .m . Sunday in the
R ed Beach urea near Interstate
5 in the huge Camp Pendletion
complex.
The craft struck several tents
before s mashing into a bulldozer
parked in froFt or a tent where
•
seven Marines .were sleeping.
A 11 the other tents the plane
grazed were occupied, said Ms.
Stie non.
M edlcal corpsmen with the
Marines, who were on a four-day
training mission, rushed to the
crash site, bu\ the victims were
dead from the impact, said Ms.
Stlenon.
The dead were identified u
the pilot , Bernard David
Kaminsky, 46, of El Toro, and
Margaret Florence Bishop, 42,
(See PLANE, )ace Al)
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These are the /irst arid last pages of P resident Reagan s message
ro the House. erplammg his veto of the fiscal year appropnati.ons
resolutwn
Midwest snow turns
roads treacherous
By The Associated Press
S now and freezing rain fell
over the Dakotas, Minnesota
and Io wa t o da y, snarling
m o rning rush-hour traffic in
M anneapolis-St. Paul as s leet
turned roadways to treacherous
glare ice.
Driving co nditions in
Minnesota's Twin Cities were
the worst in 20 years. law
e nforcem e nt officials said.
Semi-trailer truc ks Jackknifed,
at least one rolled over and even
a fe w s anding trucks were
unable to traverse the hazardous
s treets.
The Metropolitan Transit
Commission. which operates
buses in the Twin Cities and
s uburbs, sent all its buses back
into the garage. Many schools
c losed and some taxicab
companies al so suspended
operations temporarily.
Meanwhile, 5,000 homes and
bu11inesses In Mi c higan
remained without electric power
today. Consumers Power Co.
continued e!Corta lo restore the
'Service knocked out to 92,000
customers by storms that
dumped 14 inches of snow on
parts of the state Thursday and
Friday.
Record cold temperatu~ also
refrigerated some secUo• of
Florida on Sunday as storms
dumped up to a fool of snow on
parts of New York and Ohio. At
SF gays topic
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Priests, nuns and lay people
discussed atraJned relations
bet ween ihe San Francisco
Archdiocese and homosexuals
over the *t!4!kend .
least one death was blamed on
the latest snowfall.
In the "snowbelt" area south
of Buffalo, N.Y., r esidents woke
up Sunday to a blanket of snow
four to 12 inche s deep .
Chautauqua County was hardest
hit, with 12 inches reported In
Sinclairville.
One traffic death in New York
was blamed on the s torm .
Authorities said Jane Laney, 52,
of the Buffalo suburb of Grand
Island, died Saturday when her
car skidded on a snow-covered
road and struck a wall and a
building.
One to six inches of snow fell
in northeast Ohio. No major
problems were reported, said
Dennis Dixon of the National
Weather Service, adding the
weather was "not unusual" in
the area at this time of year.
(See SNOW, Page AZ)
There goes
neighborhood
GOLDSBORO, N.C. <AP) -
About 18 homeless swine have
been hammina it up in a
nel1hborhood here for about a
week, but some of the human
resident.a don't flnd their antics
funny. 1n fact, the humans are
thinldng ol gettlna fed up.
SO far, no one bu been able to
determine who owna the Pie•
and where they came from. But'
the porken are obvloualy bavtna
• lood time with freedom.
Pat Howell said the littlest
pl11 have made a play1round ol
her cover9d 1wimmtn1 pool.
Vetoes
spending
measure
WASHINGTON <AP> -
President Reagan vetoed an
emeraency spendine resolution
to restore fund• to federal
a1encies today and told bla
Cabinet to "cut down, s hut down
and eliminate all unnecessary
government services."
It was his first veto in 10
m o nths of office . House
Democ rats conceded they
lacked the votes to override the
veto and made no attempt to try.
Instead, they began meetinp on
a new, stripped-down measure
to get the money flowing a1ain.
Reagan told reporters minutes
after signing the veto that the
bill posed "a difficult choice"
for him. The rejection sends the
measure back to Congress .
The president went from hiJ
session with reporters to an
emergency meeting with his
Cabinet, where he declared.
·'The bulk of the government
should shut down immediately,"
presidential spokesman Larry
Speakes said later.
··As quic kly as possible,
people s hould be sent home. This
is not bus iness as uaual,"
Speakes quoted the president as
saying.
The spokesman s aid that by
noon, 60 percent of the White
House's 351 employees would be
furloughed without pay. By the
e nd of Tuesday, he added,
400,000 of the government's 2.9
million workers would be off the
JOb.
Emerging from the one·bour
Cabinet session, Transportation
Secretary Drew Lewis said,
··Essentially, the president told
u s we're going to s hut the
government down, and we're
going to go back to o ur
d e partments a nd start the
shutdown right now .... we're
going to close our files, tum out
<See VETO, Page A.2)
D~Al-1 CUil 1111111
Mostly cloudy tonight
and Tuesday with a
chance of rain increasinc
to 30 percent by Tuesday
afternooo. Highs 62 to 67
Tuesday. Lows toniebt 52
to 58.
llSIDI TDUY
PoliHcol 1otirit1 Art
Bucht.OOld hot o /ulbag tltcd
M '• "in bl.&lfneu" for IOrM
time. Stt Page A7.
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Orange Coast OAILV PILOT/Monday, November 23, 1981
inai patrol Supported
our Eur~an nations. agree 1o participate in peace force
rARIS (AP> -France,
rlta n, the Netherland11 and
aly hav,, ••rff<l to p rt1clpate
n • m ult l·l'l a lt o n al
ace·keeplna force to pa trol the
lnoi after Israel returns the
r ea to Egyp t. th e fou r
vernment"4 announced today.
In making the announcement,
h e t o u r govern m e n t s
amrmed their support or the
·called "European initiative''
r a Mideast peace that calls
r t he Pales tine Liberation
rganization to be brought into
e Camp David process.
French fore ign m1n1 s try
fficials said at a briefing that
he United States, Egypt and
' head with 1t Sunday.
£iYf>l us ·•a nrst step" toward a
lostang Mlddle East Peace, and
emphaslied that their support or
t he treat y was "co m pletely
distinct and independent or the
r est of t h e Camp David
process." ,
l t described the peace·keeplng
unll as .. a symbol o f t he
d e termination of t he four
governments to reach u global
peace through negotiations
between the parties ...
The joint declaration said lhe
decision to join the force
stemmed from .. the policies
defined in the European
Economic Comm un ity
declaratio~ in Venice m 1980"
which called for · •guarantees for
the security for the state of
Israel and justice for the
Pa lestinian people and its right
to self-determination.··
patU<'lpaUon In the torce dld not
com m>t or prevent the rour
nations from particlpatlna ln
other lntematlonal accords.
ll suld the four governments
would be willing to play the
same role lf and when Israe l
withdraws from "other captured
territor ies," presuma bly the
West Bank of the Jorda n Rivec.
Israel and Egypt are negotiating
fo"r a form of self.rule for the 1.3
million Palestinians on the West
Sank and Gaza Strip.
A Saudi Arabian "blueprint"
for Mideast peace proposes a
Palestinian stale be established
on t he West Bank with East
Jerusalem as its capital. Israel,
which claims alJ of J erusalem
as its "eternal caeital," rejects
the Saudi plan. f
lsreal , w h ich asked that
uropeans. join the force, were
i formed or the decision lo go
The Arab League has warned
~at participation 1n the
eace keeping force could
opardize European tie~ with
\he Arab world
The jomt declaration s aid the
four countries we lcomed the
peace treaty between Israel and
The Venice declaration is the
b a~is for the "European
lnit1at1ve" in the Middle East
and calls for the PLO to be '
.. associated" with the peace
process
I sraeli Prime Mi n ister
Menachem Begin has said he
would veto participation or any
co untr y that ties its
contributions to the Sinai force
to purs uit of peace proposals
different from the Camp David
accords. The JOint declaration said
Killings described
by Bonin/s lover
r:.\ (,'( MW ANH.ES'/ r:n
< ;e11ry1· ·~1anu.-l H11sq11e
From Page A1
BRINK'S • • •
said a note that was ~1gned · Mr
Anonvmous ··
Sar1 Mateo County sheriffs
depul) Jeff Bovd said the theft
was pulled off· at about 7 a m .
arter Bosque waited until hJs
partner lert the van , theh took
off with 1t The vehicle was
found abandoflcd later al the
nearby Airport Thlton Hotel
Boyd s a id an armed man
acco'\h.>d hotel maid Pusha Lal
in her car. commandeered 1l.
5-tuffed m two big pouches with
the loot. and sped away She
man a~cd to escape before the
thief drove off The· car was
later located al a "5hopp1ng
center five mile-. north of the
airport
Bosque. known to s uffer from
ep1 lepsy. was reported by his
Daly C1tv neighbor to be under
stress because he feared he
would be fired 1f his employers
learned of his ail m ent
Four years prior to the theft,
Bosque had been arrested in
Washin~ton, D.C , on a larceny
charge I le was not conv1ctt'<i
• Edward S. Lenehan. Bnnk·s
vice president or securtl\.. told
reporters at the time of the 198iJ
theft he had not known of thf'
earlier arrest.
·'He was a we ll g roomed.
depPndable and we thought
trustworthy employee.·· s aid
Lene han
The nallon·s biggest robbery
wa~ in New York in 1978 when
five masked men bound and
manac led 10 e mployees and
made off with SS million in cash
and some $800.000 in jewels from
the Lufthansa cargo area al
Ke nnedy International Airport
Blas t rips market
OAKLAND <AP > A gas leak
is suspected in an explosion that
broke windows and knocked out
walls over an entire block of
East Oakland. destroying a fish
m arket and damaging a church
Police said the explosion ripped
through Taylor's Fish House at
the 6007 E . 14th St Sunday,
damaging the adjacent c hurch
and nearby buildings.
LOS ANGELES <APJ
freeway Kille r defendant
W1lltam Bonm decided to kill
) oung men he had homosexual
:-elations w1th so they could not
1dent1fy him. a youth who
admitted part1c1pat1ng tn two
gruesome torture murders told a
Superior Court. Jury
Gregory Miley, 20. graphically
de~cribed the strangulations of
l\\O victims m testimony that
began Friday and was expected
to continue today In the midst
nf his account. one mother of
another Freeway Killer v1ct1m
ru~hed from the courtroom 1n
tears. others sat with their arms
around each other:
The mothers o f the two
victims whose murders were
descr1lx-d were not m court
s 'onin. a 34-year old truck
dri\•er from Downey, 1s charged
with 12 murders of young men
and boys whose bodies were
found dumped near Southern
HB youth,
13, wounded
i\ 13·year ·old Huntington
Beach vout h r e mained in
critical condition at Fountain
Va I ley Commu nity Hospital
today after he a pparently shot
h;m s elf 1n the h ead while
pla;, 1ng Russian roul~lte with a
loaded revolver
II untmgton Beath poltce said Thoma~ Richard VanMeter of
20892 Crest view St "'as inJured
at about 12 35 pm Saturday m
an upstairs bedroom of his
home
/\ 13-vear-old friend of the
vout h. · wbose name police ~dused to release. witnessed the
s hooung, according to Lt
George Renek •
Rcnck sa id the VanMeter boy
was playing Wllh a short-barrel
3R caliber revolver that had
three live rounds in 1t when the
an 1dent occurred
DRA \>rtSG T/IE L/,'Vf;
Heagan after veto
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat c1 .. 11t1ect ectvert111ng 714"42~M11
All other department. 842-4321
Thomas P. Haley . ~ .... o.. l[._,.,,.Oflllior
Aobef't N. Weed'' ,........,
Thomas A. Murphlne .. ...,
Michael P. Harvey
-....~
L. Kay Schultz ~-~ Kennett! N. Goddard Jr. ~°"""' Bernard Schutmen ~
Charlet H Looe .............
~:-..Moore
MAIN OFFICE
.. WHt ky M., C•i. Mue, CA.
M4111-: lh• IMO, C:•i. MeM, CA .....
co.,.,r1911t 11111 OrMtt c.e .. ~· ....... ~.
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Califomia freeways. leading to
the case·s Freeway Killer tag.
M 1 ley. whose IQ has been
estimated at 56. described onJy
the two v1cl1ms slam Feb. 3, 1980
Charles Miranda . 15, and
Jlmes McCabe. 12.
M 1ley has pleaded guilty in
young M1randa"s murder in Los
Angeles County and to the
McCabe boy"s murder in Orange
County He has described
himself as Bonin"s homosexual
lover
The slender youth. who had
agreed to testify against Bonin
1n exchange for escaping the
death penalty. said the older
man stalked his victims along
the streets of Los Angeles and
Oran~e County .
Thieves loot
three homes
in Newport
Burglars br oke into three
Newport Beach homes and
made off with more than S62.000
worth or belongings in separate
episodes over the weekend.
Police said burglars broke into
Lhe Corona del Mar home of
Phyllis l. Seals and took $40,000
worth of jewelry. Officers said
the house was entered through
an unlocked garage.
In Cameo Shores, police said
burglars broke into the home of
Robert Koop and got $8,275
worth of goods Koop told police
his house was ransacked.
Newport Heights resident
Ne1atolla lghanian told police
burRlars smashed out a window
to enter his house and look
Sl4,000 worth of oriental silk and
wool rugs
P o li ce sa id there 1s no
evide nce the burglaries were
comm1lled by the same person.
From Page A1
VETO. • • • the lights and go home."
On Cap ital H i ll , House
Speaker Thomas P. O"Neill J r ..
in a sharply worded attack on
R eag an , sai d , "He "s
unbelievable.··
"He's only out t here for the
t h eatrics. believe me." the
speaker said.
8ut S peake s s a i d t h e
pres ident. at h is Cabine t
meeting, rejected t hat charge.
The spokesman said Reagan
told the session : ·'T his is not
theatrics. This is for real. ..
Reagan told reporters that the
c hoice he faced was. "either lo
sig n a budge t ·busti n g
appropriations bill that would
finance the enti.-e government at
level s wel l a b ove m y
r ecommendations, and thus set
back our efforts to ha lt the
excessive government spending
t hat has fueled lnOa tion and
h i g h in terest r at es a nd
destroyed investments for new
jobs ; or to hold t he nne on
s pendlng with a veto, but risk
lnt ~rruptlon or gove rnment
activities and services."
4 die in crash
ESCONDIDO (AP> -Three
men and • woman are dead and
four people hospilalized after a
headon colllslon on a curvlq
m o untain r oa d east of
Escondido. Authorities sald a car
driven by AJ\arbol Torres, 38,
coUlded with a pickup t.ruck and
campe r dri ven by Heclor
Cutro, 43 , killlni both
E scondido me n alt>na wlth 1
Torres' wlfe Etlella and an,
This is all that remains o/ a stolen tunn-engine plane. wrapped around a Marine Corps bulldozer, after it
crashed al Camp Pendleton ktlling both aboard
From Page A 1
PLANE • • •
of Anaheim. said David Lodge, a
deputy Sa n Ot ego County
coroner
A spokesman for the Federal
Aviation Adm1nistrat1on. which
was conducting an investigation
of the 1nc1dent. said air space
ove r Ca mp Pendleton 1s
restricted, with fltghts banned
below 2,000 feet fie said 1t was
not known wh) the plane wa~ m
the camp area
Woman kidnapped,
raped by two men
Fly spraying cut
LOS GATOS I API Medlly
Project officials say they plan lo
cut aerial applications or the
pest1c1de malathion despite the
discovery o f another
Mediterranean fruit fly
From Page Al
A 22-year-old Laguna Niguel
woman, reportedly pushed into a
car by two men in front of a
Corona del Mar restaurant, was
driven to a m otel where the
as~a1lants forced her into a
room and raped he r several
t 1mes. police reported today
The woman told Newport
Be a ch officers that s he was
leaving the Quiet Woman, 3224
E Coast Hi gh wa y, early
Saturday when the m e n
approached her and forced her
into their car.
SNOW SPREADS • • •
Skies were c lear over the
Southeast on Sunday as the
mercury dipped into the teen~ m
Tennessee and into the 20s as far
south as Florida
Record cold temperatures
were reported in the Florida
cities of Orlando, Pensacola and
Daytona Beach. '
The low or 33 In Daytona
Beac h tied a record set m 1937.
while Orlando reported 35. rour
degrees below the record set m
1952. It was 29 m Pensacola. a
reading that tied a 1952 mark.
Citrus growers in the Orlando
area welcomed the cold. saying
1t would trigger juice growth in
their crops. Temperatures were
expected to be slightly warmer
Sunday night and to return to
normal within a few days
Jn Georeia. only St. Slmons Isla nd reported a tem perature
above freezing early S unday,
Clayton. in the north Georg1a
mountains, reported the state
low of 20
A doggone shame
M esan protests canine litter
Costa Mesa resident Andrew
Whitney wants to make it
against the law for dogs to go to
the bathroom tn city streets and
gutters
Whitn ey w a n ts a law
forbidding the ··outrage " He
says he"s tired of c lean in~ up the
mess.
He told City Council members,
.. This is my third appeal within
a year. and I hope the last. to
change the law a llowing owners
of the pets to leave a mess m the
gutter section of city str eets ··
He charged that he made a
similar appearance before the
council last September and was
promised someone would study
the possibility for an ordinance
amendment re garding the
oroblem
But. he contended. nobody has
done anything.
(.;1ty law prohibits an owner
from allowing dogs to make
messes on public side walks. m
public parks or on other public
property or improved private
property
Spec1f1cally exempted are
s treet gutters
.. You have to change that
ordinance:· said Whitney, 'Tm
protesting because I can't stand II ..
Coun cil m a n Donn Hall
su~gested that Ci t y Manager
Fred Sorsabal r esearch the
potential for cove ring the
gutters with the ordinance
She told police the men. one
described as being 25 and the
second about 40. drove toward
llunt1nglon Beach, s topping
briefl y at a liquor store where
she freed herself and asked a
store clerk for help
Pohce said the m en dragged
the woman back to their car and
drove to a nearby motel . which
the woman said was either m
West Newport or Huntington
Reach
Al the motel. the woman
reported. the men got a room.
dra.l{ized her inside. threw her on a bed and raped her.
Police said the assilants later
drove their victim back to the
Quiet Woman and dropped her
off
Plaza area
master plan
on agenda
Costa Mesa's Plann i n g
Comm1ss1on 1s expected Lo take
action tonight leading to
eventual approval or two major
proJects, the $.59 mill.ion Orange
County Music Center and 148
residential units at Fair view
State Hospital
Sought in conjuocllon with
music center construction is
approval of a South Coast Plaza
area master plan amendment lo
add the theater complex and a
final development plan for the
theater and a 16 ·story offi ce
building.
In the other development, the
state seeks a conditional use
permit to allow construction of
residences on hospital property
to hou se patient s and
employees
The 3,000-seat theater and a
separate l ,OOO·seat theater at the
Segerstrom Town Center
com pl ex are expected to be in
operation 1n 1985 to offer
symphony, ballet. theater and
opera performances.
Th e Fairview Hospital
apartment project 1s the result
of special state Assembly action
to construct affordable housing
for e mpl oyees and some
patients.
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Reagan gets graded
I. Conservative group chides administration
I
WASHINGTON <AP) -A
conaervatlve thlnk tank has
delivered a report card on
Prealdent Reagan's first 10
months in office, givina bad
marks to hia personnel practices
and to the Defense and Energy
departments.
·'The Reagan administration,
AllhO\llh headed In the proper
direction, should and could have
accomplis hed more s ince the
election In November 1980. ·• the
• Her1ta.~e Foundation said in
a dra!l report.
The main reason the new
Republican administration has
not accomplished more. the
report s aid, is its personnel
practices. Poor staff work, it
added, had forced Reagan to
~ "use his remarkable powers of
pers uasion." .
The personnel problems were
caused "in almost every case by
d e l aying app o intm e nts,
unqualified or m isqualified
appointm ents or t h e
appointment of individuals whQ
a r e not comm itte d to the
president's goals and policies,"
the foundation said.
President ReaJZan himself got
h ig h marks fr o m th e
conservative o rganisatlon,
which aaid he "has exercised
personal leaders h ip ve ry
effectively."
"To date, <Reagan) has not
been t es \e d with major
decisions. but only to carry out
pr omise• made durlnt the
campaien.'' It said.
The administration's actions
were sized up against the more
than 2,000 recommendations the
He ritage Foundation made a
yea r ago to make th e
government more conservative.
T h e a dmi nis tration has
started or implemented about 60
percent of the 1,270 suggestions
that could be made in a short
time, foundation vice president
Ri c hard N. H olwill told
reporters.
The highest marks were given
t o Budget Director David
Stockman's office. which was
praised for revising President
Carter's 1981 and 1982 budgets
a nd getting the c hanges to
Congress within a month after
Reagan took office.
Cabinet officials singled out
for praise were Commerce
Secretar y Ma lcolm Baldrige,
No black pilgrim
at holiday feast
PLYMOUTH. Mass . (API -A
black man may have been at the
harvest table at Thanksgiving
celebration 350 years ago, but
he 's no longer represented at
historic P limoth Plantation
because of a dispute over tlis
existence.
"I would think the plantation
would have benefited from
something like this, especially
around Thanksgiving . but I
guess it's better to be safe," said
Marjorie Anderson, director of
a n other Plymouth museum,
Parting Ways Mu seum of
Afri ca n -American
Ethno-tlistory.
··Now it's guess who's not
coming lo dinner.·· s he said
P ltmoth Plantation . designed
to show life as it existed in the
New World, last summer tlired a
bl•clr m•n to personify Abr•h•m Pe•r•e. one or the
colony's early inhabitants who
was believed to have been black.
During the museum's 1981
Thanksgiving celebration
held an October because it 's
actually a festival to m ark the
gathering or the harvest -
Pearse was not represented.
Ms Anderson said white
descendants of Abraham Pearse
put pressu re on museum
officials to cancel the Pearse
portrayal.
Plantation director David
Case de nied t hat, saying
officials at Plimoth Plantation
got so many complaints from
historians and genealogists
attacking the assumption that
Pearse was black that they
decided not to r eplace the
employee after he left an
September.
.. Most hi storians by and large
feel there is a very. very strong
c hance there wouJd have been • black presence. Our problem la
exactly who were they." s aid
Case
Health and Human
Secretary Richard
and Interior Secret
Wall. /
The Tnanspo
Department wu prai
handling or the a [
-controllers· atrike, e
safe t y and pollutio
standards and writing ew rules
for a ccommodati g the
handicapped on mass tra sit.
While the State Depa ment
was praised for s howi "a
notable improvement over the
incoherence which marked the
Carter administration," the
report said the personality and
ins titutional d iffic ulties of
Reagan's foreign policy team
h ave been a "nagging
em barraasmenl. · ·
This could be resolved . the
foundation said, by giving a
"clear and meaningful role'' to
national security ad v iser
Richard Allen.
lt comp lained that the
Pentagon has not come close to
car r yi n g out th e
recom m endati o ns of the
foundation.
··Despite the president's
pledge to 'close the window or
s trategic vulner ability ,· the
actions or (the Pentagon I will
extend the period of America's
s tra tegic vulnerability," the
report said. "The administration
has not attempted to address
these strategic deficiencies in a
tamely or coherent fashion.
The conser vative group said it
a lso was t ro ubled that the
Energy Department still exists.
The department's s taff has
shown resistance to some of the
president's policies a nd the
administration has been too slow
an deregulatin g nat ural gas
prices. the report said .
Marine death
probe ended ·
SAN DIEGO I AP> -Weeping
and at times bristling under
que s tioning , a M a r i n e
swimming instr uctor said he
thought a recruit who drowned
1n August was bobbing in the
water to conserve his strength.
Testifying Thursday before a
three-man investigative panel .
Staff Sgt. Rudy Rodriguez of San
Antonio , Texaa, said the pracUce of bobbins ls common
among recruits trying to rest or
re~ain their strength.
Chance of slwwers
Coa&tal
Smog report
Tne Air Ou•lity M•n•9•m•n l
01\lrlct pr..:11<~ (IOOO •Ir C1<Ulity tor everyOM In IN 5outll Coot air ei.lifl
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COftUPllon 10 ~ Hk olal Ill-\/ a I I e Y • 9 J IO r I II t 5 a n
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Extended '
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Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 23. 1981 8
FOSSIL SEARCH -Children went looking for
evidence of ancient life Saturday in the ditch
separating two sides of Newport Boulevard.
near Santa Isabel. Taking part were Ton
Haidinger. 10, in foreground. Costa Mesa
o.tty ~ ~ .. l.M ~ ....
paleontologist Mark Roede r , and Judy
Haidinger. pres ident of Orange County
Natural History Foundation. which sponsored
Lhtt search.
Watt OKs drill freeze
No oil searches until summer on wilderness
WA S HI NGTON <AP I -
Interior Secretary J a mes G.
Watt is going alon g with a
congressional request that he
not approve until next summer
any oil drilling leases for 80
million acr es o r fe derally
protected wilderness areas.
Bowing to a non -binding
request by the House Interior
Committee. Watt tentatively
a gre e d to a s i x -m o n t h
m o r a t orium on wilderness
mineral leases to give Congress
time to study whether it should
change wilde rness protection
laws because of his policies.
Rep. Morris Uda ll , D-Ariz.,
chairman of the House Interior
Co mmittee , s aid the
moratorium would "kind of hold
t h e s t a t us quo" without
in vo ki n~ the more drastic
power held by th~ committee to
forbid oil drilling permanently
and immediately. Tbe committee earlier thla week had been polsed to uae th.al
authority to permanently bar
Watt from a pproving any
mineral leases in wilderness
areas.
Walt averted that vote when
h e agreed lo co ndu c t
environmental reviews, hold
public hearings and p"rovide
advance notice t o Congress
be fore approving wilderness
leases.
The committee's non-binding
r equest came in a resolution
a pproved 41-1 tl\at said Congress
needs time ·'to evaluate and
r es pond to the c hanges in
federal policy whjch may result
in the issuance of numerous oil
and gas leases."
Delaying new leases will allow
Congress "lo study and evaluate
the full implication of the recent
ch anges in poli cy a(fect ing
mineral leasing in wilderness
a r eas and to consider any
legislation which ma y be
a ppropriate". the resolution
said.
Rep. Dick Cheney, R-Wyo, \
sa id he ha d discussed the
request with Watt. and Watt had
agreed . Interior Department
spokesman Harmon Kallman
said later tht Watt 's final
approval was awaiting a reading
of the exact wording of the
resolution, but "a s it was
described to ham, it's OK. He
has no problem with 1t"
The resolution would affect
23.4 million acres of wilderness
in the lower 48 states and 56.4
million acres an Alaska.
While the resolution 1s not
binding on the administration.
the committee came within one
vote of adopting a rider that
w o uld hav e dec l ared an
emergency o n Cal ifor ni a
wilderness areas and put them
permanently off limits to 011
drilling.
That attempt by Rep Phillip
Burton. D·Cahf . was defeated
20-19. but o nly after Rep
Do u glas Bereuter, R-Neb ..
sw\tched his vote from '"aye" to
"no" wh en at a p peared the
amendment would be approved.
Burton t hen became the only
co mmittee m e mber to vote
against the.overall resolullon.
One factor be hind Watt's
agree m e nt is the unusual
autho ri ty the Interior
Committee h as to block the
s ecretar y 's st a t e d plans to
in<;rease development of federal
lands .
The power rests in an obscure
sect ion o f f e deral land
m anagement la w that allows the
Interior Committff, by it.sell, to
withdraw any federal land from
mineral leasing if an emergency
exists.
Used only one time beloere
this vear -to protec t a
municipal water supply from a
proposed uranium mine -the
committee invoked the section
in June to protect a Montana
wilde rness area from oil
drilling.
The committee's action is
unde r challenge in U.S. District
Court in Billings , Mont.
Reagan gloomy
on state aid cuts
WA S HINGTON (AP >
President Reagan says he
cannot promise there wUI be no
more cuts in federal aid to the
states. according to an account
of a n intervie w with hi m
published in The Washington
Post.
He also said he could see little
li kelihood soon of turning over
revenue sources to the states.
som ething he said during the
campaign that he wanted to do,
b ec ause o f the f e deral
government's own financial
problems.
· · 1 just think our e me rgency as
so great, I don't know how we
could hold back and wait for all
or this ... the president was
reported as telling fi ve reporters
wh o i nte r view e d him Dn
Thursday.
The interview. published
Sunda y. was limited to the
subject of federalism.
The account or the Interview
appeared as the Republican
Governors Association began its
convention an New Orleans. The
chairman of the association.
Gov. Richard Snelling of
Vermont. earlier had appealed
to the president to hold aid to the
states to at least $46 billion for
the 1983 and 1984 fiscal years so
they could draw up budgets with
more confidence.
The president said he had
little sympathy for a reshulfilng
of program financing with the
states -for example. taking all
w e lfar e financing into tbe
federal government and tumine
over all education financing to
the states.
He also said he did not believe
it was the responsibility or the
fede ral government to
r edis tribute resources from
r elatively well-off slates to
relatively poor ones.
Where services are lackine.
taxes high and government
inefficient, Americans "either
will use their power at the polls
lo redress that, or they'll 10
someplace else." he said .
our do e.vq,ryth1 n~ jackcz,t,
survivalon ...
1•
th<i fincz.st cotton poplin
you1l l rt;V<Lr cz.xpcz.rirmce..
d(lV(Z,1op~ by~ nJjal
airfbrCe. duri!YJwwil,
this uniqu<Z. fabric is
wakr ana wind re~Yz::nt;
pz.rhai:e t:m. fln1Z.et cloth
fbr proi:.<z,ction against
thcz. e.l<l.m<ints known
to man .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Novemb
Reagan 'wiO not'
turn other cheek
UNITED NATIONS <APl -
The United States h_.s "laid
down a marker" to warn the
Third World it no longer is going
to shrug off hars h criticism, its
chief delegate to the United
Nations says.
Ambas sador Jeane J
Kirkpatrick , who s ays s he
advocates "a certain level of
candor" in diplomacy. fired off
a s harp note to more than 40
countries that s upported an
anti-American communique
issued by the 93-n a tion
non-aligned group.
Other U.S. diplomats at the
United Nations also are
returning hostile verbal fire with
greater intensity.
Meanwhile, the U.S. veto is
blocking the election of the
non-aligned candidate for U.N.
secretary-general, F oreign
Minister Salim Ahmed Salim of
Tanzania. But Mrs Kirkpatrick
denies that this is a result of
h ostile stands taken by his
supporters.
"There has developed a kind
of pattern of discounting even
hars hly critical comments about
the U.S . if they're made by
relatively smaller or 1,ss
powerful or less developed
nations, as though they didn't
matter." Mrs Kirkpatrick said
in an interview with a small
g roup of reporters at her offi ce
"We're s upposed to sort of
bear this with dignity as one of
the prices of power an the world
"There may have been a lime
when Americans were ready to
shrug off even harsh , even
unbalanced cnt1c1sm But that
time as past "
After the U N delegates of the
non-aligned countries adopted a
21 -page communique without a
vote on Sept 28 , Mrs
Kirkpatrick wrote some 40 of
them whose governments are
considered generally friendly to
the United States
She told them s he wa s
"s tartled that you or your
government would or could
associate yourselves with a
document composed of such
base lies and malicious attacks
upon the good name or the
United States."
She also faulted the
Cuban-engineered communique
for picturing the United States
as a major threat to world peace
while making no mention of the
Soviet Union.
··We were laying down a
marker, in a sense: that we
noticed and cared," Mrs.
Kirkpatrick told reporters.
C uban diplomats c laimed
those who received the letter
were outraged. They compared
it to the confrontational style of
Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan
when he was the c hief U.S.
delegate.
However, Mrs . Kirkpatrick
said some of the non-aligned
delegates "fe lt bad about the
communique anyway . They
knew as well as we did it was
unbalanced and unfair. And a
few h ad already entered
reservations."
One Third World diplomat, she
said, "told me at was the first
lime ever that the United States
had taken note of a non-aligned
communique a nd it never
occurred to him that we either
noticed or cared what the
non aligned did. And he thought
m fact it was useful lo know
we cared "
Her deput y. Ambass ador
Kenneth Adelman, sa id a
dt'veloping country that as
hos tile to the United States
s hould not expect American aid
"There's enough poverty and
suffering. unfortunately. 1n
those countries that generally
s hare our approach to the world
to really soak up . . all the
resources we have an this area,"
he told The Associated Press
"If a country wants to be
hostile toward the United States
that as a country's right to
do so. But we're not going
to pay for their hos tility "
Nuclear. balance
versiom di ff er
LONDON IAP1 The
Soviet-led Warsaw Pact has a
distinct nuclear advantage an
Europe over NATO. but the edge
is not "on the order of 6 l " as
President Reagan says,
according to the International
Institute for Strategic Studies
By its way of counting nuclear
arms. the advantage 1s closer lo
a maximum of 3 1, says the
I lSS. a London-based mdepcn
<lent research orszanization
The Soviet Union , in yet a
third version. s aid after
Reagan's speech Wednesday
that there as approximate parity
in nuclear weaponry an Europe
No one as necessarily com -
pletely wrong The argument is
over how lo assess the arsenals
The llSS think tank. which
deals with 1ntemat1onal secunt}
a nd arms control an the (lUclear
age. approaches its assessment
from a different angle than
Reagan or the Soviets
On bare figures. the institute
includes Bntash and French
nuclear weapons. in addition to
L' S weapons an Europe Reagan
clad not include British and
French weapons. The Soviets
clad
The anstatute, which as not
s upported by any government
and 1s financed largely by
prl\ ate founda t ions, ~oes
beyond a sa mple count of
nuclear systems and warheads.
and attempts to show what
warheads would actually
·arrive" on targets an the event
of all-out \\ar
The anstatute uses a formula
that takes mlo account known
\\a rhead inventories and apphei.
fal'lors ancludmg the actual
avaalab1hty of warheads for
deployment
FWT YOUR EYES
OI OUR FLOWERY
Dress your Thanksgiving table
with a lurkey too pretty to eat. But hurry.
before they all get gobbled up
•
.,..,,,.......
CLASSIC GOES COUNTRY -Country music enlertamer f'1vc -mcmber band had Lhl' erowd standing, ::.lompang and
Charlie Daniels, nght, directs and plays with his band as clapping wildly when his 60 minutes of down home music
Bergen While, left rear. director of the li5 pit•tc Nashville was over. The unusual pa1nng atlrattcd some :J,800 patrons.
Symphony Orthcs lra. condutls along with Daniels, al the raising an estimated sso .ooo tor thL· tananc1all~·-strapped
Grand Ole Upry House in Nashvdlt'. Daniels and his sy mphon~. __ __, _ _,_ _ _,_ _____ _
Break-even budget hopes fade
Deficits could soar to record level of $80 billion or more next year
WASlllNGTON 1AP1 It
ui.ed lo ... ound lakt> a del~rgent
commerual Ral<Jn ce the
ft•der:il budgt'l and whis k
tnflutaon awa) But thl· proi..pt•t·t
of a break even budget )ear has
faded now and so have
Pn•sadent Re<1gan s ... uggestions
that def1C'1ts an• the reason ror
lht• fll>lll~ eost of la\ ang
· Wl• know now that inflation
results from all that deficit
spending," lht' president said
last wanter 1n has firi.t economa('
address from the Whale House
Thal as no longer a lhemt'.
bcn1us<.' therl' as gomg lo be
more der1c1l spending during th<'
Reagan admanastrataon
Even with Reagan's budget
cuts. the com b1nat1on of
recession. high interest rates
and big tax reductions 1s going
lo produce a deficit that could soar to record levels or $80
billion or more next year
Reagan already has backed
away from the promise of a
balanced budget by 1984. saying
that 1s unhkel} now, although
balance remains the eventual
goal
"I don't think that Ju~.
balancing or a budget could
JUStafy any means to attain it, ..
Reagan has said "You could
always balance a budget 1f you
put at all on the backs or the
people with tax increases
·'The rcduC"taon of govt'rnnwnl
spending ill the answer and the
thin~ that wt• arl' going lo
altl•mpt." he i.a1d
Economists al the Treasur)
Department and the Coun<·ll of
E conomal' A<lv1st•ri. argue that
lh(' need tu ... 11mulat(.• economic
~ r o "' t h \\ 1 l h t a x l' u t s f a r
out\\t'ighs tht· bend1ls to be
dera\Cd from l<ix mcrl'aSes thal
\\Ould curb th1..· dcf1c1b
Their argument as that tax
reduct10ns will produce enough
new savings to provide -;ources
.,
NIWS ANAlYSIS
for t·ont1nul•d government
borro"'1 n g and wall J(•ad
ullamatl'I> lo an N·onomat• boom
that \\all bring an more
government rl'venues evt•n at
IO\\.Cr tux rat<>s
'Should om• tx· worral.'d about
lhe dt•f1c1t " Ves , · · said an
adm1n1strat1on ofracaal who
a s kt'd nut lo be 1dt'nl1f1cd
Should 1t ht•t·omt· a fixation''
No ·
F:conomai.l llcrbert Stem. a
part-tame .idvas N to Reagan.
says the impact of defacati. hai.
been exaggerated ·Budget
defacats make the control of
1nflat1on more daffacult than at
wou Id be \\1th a balanced
budget, but probably not greatly
more dlfficuJt and certainly not
1mposs1ble. ·Stem said
In an appraisal published b)'
t h e A m e r 1 t' a n E n l e r p r 1 i. e
Ins titute. Stein said defacat
s pending ma) be the onl> way to
do what people want the
government doing
"The fact that the> budget wai.
balanced only on<·t.• an the past 20
)Cars ha::. t~comt• regarded as
the leading symbo l of o ur
economic s an , and achieving
b<ilanct' now or a determination
to a<'h1cvc 1t soon has become
rej!ardcd us the ess<'ntaal sagn or
t•c·onom1c ret•latude." he s aid
That was Hcagan s message
during the pres1dent1al
<·.trnpa1gn and lhl' early phases
or the admanastrallon. before ll
l>1·t amt• ('\ldent that he \\asn't
goa ng lo l>t: able to produce a
halanced budget w1th1n one
Whitt• House term
Stein '>uggei.ls that the• long
era of dl'fa c at ... ral'>C'> the
hkel1h11od that the red ank was a
reai.onable rc:.ponse to real
cond1t1ons an the country To
balance those past budgeti.
\\UUld have required higher
taxes. le:.s i.pcndang on defense
or s harp cu t s 1n othPr
>-:11\ ernmenl programs
·Man) people "'ould b<:
prepared to s ay one or thest•
Lhang .... but re\\ would bt•
1>reparcd to say them all. ·Stem
wrote .. Running deficits ma~
have bl:'en the bes t . or only,
111>..,s• bll• \\a)' or compromising
ltll' daffrrt-nt Sl'ales Of prtoritaes
s lrungl~ rt·prei.cnled an the
<·ounlr~ and an the government
Then• ma~ have been no way
of hal:mcmg the budget that a
suffa('H:nt majority would have
n·garded a:. preferable to
running u dc·f1c1t," he saad.
Thl'r(' ma\ not he a way now,
t'll ht·•
Errors in grants
cost $300 million
WASH IN GTON 1 AP 1
Nearly half of the 2.7 m1l11on
college students who received
federal grants in 1980 81 were
paad the wrong amount. and tht•
errors cost taxpayeri. more than
SJOO mallaon . Education
SeC'retan TH Bell sa\'l>
Bell s "estimate ur Lhl' losi.es
was based on a s tud\ of
mai.takes in awards to 4 000
students He promised 'l'hursda)
l o s top a ccepting on faith
students' claims about famah•
income and other data. ·
Bell saad that starling 1n
J anuary he wall s tep up
Vl'rafication efforts and may
require students to provide their
families' federal income tax
returns when they apply for a
Pel I Grant Awards of S2 4
hallion were made last year to
2 7 million students under thr
program, former!) called Hasac
Educational Opportun1l)
Grants.
rlell said the stud) pn>Jt'Clet.I
that students were overpaid $3411
mall1on and underpai d $51
mallaon due to anac c uralt•
information they supplied
Tht• ... luth also l'Sl1mated that coll~ge f1nanc1al aad officers
made numerous mistakes
cos ting $112 million i n
O\ l'rpu) mt•nls and $97 malhon an
undc•rµa) ml'nls for a net error
of 15 malhon
Skel' Smith, an Education
Depurtment s pokeswoman. said
1h1• ... 1ud\ found that 44 ~rcent
of all tht• students got awards
that ~<·rl' off h\ at leas t S2.
II 1:-. c1l.iv1;1U.., that radical
l'l1angt•s an.· C'alled for af we are
lo n •<lun• pa) ment errors
subi.tantaall). · Bell said in a
slatc•mc•nt
"Thl• root of lhc problem 1s
that unlike most o ther
nt·l'd hast•cl federal progr ams.
\\ t· gc•nerall) <tCC'ept on faith the
1nformat1on provided by
s tucll•nh and parents on student
.ml apµl1<·ataons. he ad ded.
Bell ..,aad he• also as planning to
us k Congrc•ss for unspecified
ll'lo?l"lallvc changes to lighten up
the program b)' 1983-84 He said
lht• .IJ>J>hcat ion form will be
gr t•atl) -..ampla flcd to reduce the
t hane·<' of c•rrors
Honl10fl "'-"'• to lurbank Number one to Phoenix, and getting better every day. Now
you can fly us to Phoenix for as low as S36, one way There's no
lower fare in the air And nobody gets you there as often or
l• 1 40 1 m Arr 9 40 1 m l• 1 00 • m
11 '°•m
SSS pm
_, ) ... ""
11 ~·."' 6 06pm as fast
More nonstops than anyone. Fly Republic to Phoenix
from 3 Los Angeles area airports. Choose from 3 nonstops
out of Burbank, 2 nonstops out of Ontario (with a third
nonstop starting November 19, 1981), or 4 nonstops out of·
Orange County.
Get down to business with our exclusive Business
Coach.'" Try out our executive comfort at far less than first class
fares Complimentary cocktails, extra elbow room, loads of leg
room and wide two-two seating besides All this for iust S80
Frequent Flyers•• fly free. Ask about our super Frequent
Flyer program for bonus free flights
to anywhere m our domestic route _.,.-~.
system It's simple, it's on-going and ~ ~
it's all for you
UIS pm 117pm
6 npm • Jlpm
l• 7 00 1 m Ar I S9 un
I 40pm l 40pm
(eff II 19'11 I
SlSpm 7l7pin
Nonltop °'!ftl! COU!!!J to P'lloenl•
l• 7 201m •• t ll•m I 001 m 9 S9 Im
(tlf 12'<111811
II •lS1m
(•ff 1119'111
1 Ollm
S 20pm 1 OOpm
I lOPIT' 10 t6p.m
Nomtoe "-nix to Ont.oroo
lv 7 lOom
1 tSom
(•If 11 19'11)
J40pm ,12pm
Honnop "-"••to O.!ng! CO..n!X
i· .~ g~:~ ,., .~ :~:~
(•ff II 19'111
11 SS~m
S IS pm
9 JO pm
9 JS pm
l•H 11119811
1l OJ Pm
~1tpm
9 )8 p m
9 40p m
Schedu~ and fares subject to chan9e W'thoul notice
Call yt,iut tr1vl'l agant end wy you want to fly Republic
Or ull us anytime 11 81.Hban~ (113) 14 7 8lH, 011tart0(714) 988 858$, or Oranoe County (714') 540 2060
l,~~--------'SH<1n9 1s limited, so plHw pi.n ahffd
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 23. 1981 s
TOOLS OF TRADE -Jim Ross lies on rubber
boats used by Grecnpea<:<.• ('fews aboard Sea
Shepherd II. which has put into Los Angeles
B oy to • receive
...............
llarbor to raise lunds to save dolphins b(•1ng
killed by Japanese f1shermL'r1
$17 million
Brain damage payments could last until 2051
SAN DI EGO <AP > A
Revoke
vote
delayed
SACRAMENTO <API
A private
committee's crucia l
decision on whether to
withdraw ·it s
accreditation of the
troubled University of
Ca lifornia Medical
Center has been delayed
unlit next month. the
hospital said
H the Joint Committee
on Accreditation or
Hospitals follow.s the
recommendation of its
inspectors and issues a
revocation, the hospital
stands to lose all its
Medi Cal and Medicare
payments $60 million
out of an $86.7 million
budget.
Hospital spokesman
Ed Goldman said the
Chicago-based JCAH
not1f1ed the hospital that
1t was deferring the
dee is ion until Dec. 18 to
co n s id er new
mformal1on provided by
the hospital 1n defense
of its accred1lat1on.
If the committee, a
self-policing agency of
the hospital industry
\Oles for a revocation.
the hospital will <1ppeal
and would keep its
accreditation during tht•
appeal, Goldman said
"We have no 1ntcnt10n
of closing our doors.·· hf'
s<1 id
ANNIVERSARY FUR SAL E
20o/o to 50o/o off original pric es
Our largest sale of the yt:ar, in South Coast Plaza four d ays onl·1 111 .. sdJ'{ ti q ,, 111
Friday, November 24 through 27 Ancl you may l'rll'•V our ,JV•t•q~ nc,,· "
arrangements may be mac1r to let us bill you m F ehru 1 y 1 'H~<' t , u
Fur Salon Fur products labeled to show C•H•ntr:; ot 1.1 qu
1. m a g n I n
South Coast Plaza Costa Mesa 95 7 1511
4-year old boy whose brain was
permanently damaged when a
h ospital respirator
malfun('t1oned will receive
payments lotalhng S17 34 million
b y the year 2051 under a
settlement with Children !>
Hospital and llealth Center.
attorneys said
ca re for the retarded boy . who
must~ red through a tube in his
stomach
d1scla1med hab1hty, 1t agreed to
th(• out-of court settlement of $1
million !Jlus an annuity
gua rantcc1ng the Unpingcos
benefits paid b) the insurance
('Ompany lo ··avoid the
uncl'rtaint\ of a trial and to
bcncr1t a'1i parl1es, · hospital
attorney Wilham G Bailey said
The 407-bcd hospital, --
a teaching facility for
The child's parents. Jesus and
Felisa Unpingco of Long Beach,
received the first $4,000 payment
reoenlly . s~ 1d their attorney.
Joan E Louw The monthly
payments will increase each
year of Eugene S N Unpingl'o·s
life.
Eugene stnppl'd brt'athing on
Ch ristmas Day, 1977 lie was
rus hl'd to onl' hos pital, then
transrerred to thl' San Diego
fac11it y. where he was diagnosed
with pneumonia (.Ind placed on a
respiraton mon1tor1ng
machine. act·ording to the
malpractic(• suit filed in 1978
·tr we had gone to trial, they
could have asked a Jury for as
much as $.5 rnilllon, .. Bailey said
Thursdav ·
the UC Davis med1cJl
S('hool. w as s haken
earlier this year b~
rl•port s of
above·a\crage d eath
and comphcat1on rnles
in the kidney trj:lnsplanl
and ('ard1ac suq:t-ry
units Both serv1ct"·•
have been suspended
1ndefm1tely
Eugene's life expectancy 1s 73
years, Ms . Louw saad . His
parents have decided on home
~\fler three days observation.
he suffered a cardiac arrest and
s topped breathing again. but the
re s pirator 's alarm
ma I funct toned and w asn 'l
noticed for four or rive minutes.
the suit said . Eugene lapsed into
a coma for tbree weeks,
The parenL• .. 1mm1grants from
Guam. will rec·e1ve $125,000 for
emotwnal d1 stn•ss and the l'ost
of Eugenl'·s t·are. plus 10 years
of monthly payments 1f he dies
Eugene 1s also guaranteed a
$200,000 lump payment on tus
20tb birthday.
A J CAH 1n s pcl't1un
team v1s1tcd the hosµ1tal
for three days in June.
and recommended 1n
September that
accred1tal1o n be withdrawn. A I though the hoaplta}
Biglwrns
released High technology future eyed
•
PALM DESERT <AP 1 Panel created to boost state's electronics industries
Two young bighorn
rams raised in capt1v1ty
have been released into
the wild as part of an
effort to find out whv the
wild sheep are dyin.g off
1n the Santa Rosa
Mountains
The pair. 18 months
and 30 months old. have
been inoculated with two
vaccines developed to
protect them from two
viruses found in the herd
last spring '
They were also fitted
with bright collars. one
con ta1n1n g a
transmitter. to aid in
t.rack1ng lhc•m .
researchers said
Pipe pulled
SAN FRANCISCO
I AP l City water
orfit•1als have started an
"intensive program · to
remove the last or the
old lead p1J><'S carrying
drinking water in San
Francisco
SACRAMENTO 1AP1 Gov
Edmund Brown Jr. is calling for
· a new partnership of business.
labor. the un1vers1ty and
governm ent · to boost
Cal1forn1a s growing ,
h1gh-technolo1n industries
Brown signed an executi ve
order last week establishing the
\al1forn1a Co mm1:.s1on on
Industrial Innovation. which 1s
lo draw .. a strategic blueprint
for California's high technology
future "
One major problem. ht.• -;aid.
1s providing enough sk illed
workers.
Brown cited a study by the
American Electronics
, Allsoc1at10n which, h e s aid.
found .. an alarming shortage of
engineers ...
lie said the study abo found
"a rapidly growing demand for
other technical workers 1n
California s high technology
industries.
·The c hall enge of
government, business, labor and
education 1s lo insure that
industrial growth is not stymied
CONSTRUCTION
MONEY
AVAILABLE AT
HERITAGE BANK.
• Residential
• Commercial Buildinp: Takeout
Commitment required along with leata.
• Land Loans up to one year 50% appnWaL
CONTACT:
• Jeff Johnson
Soulh Orange County/ Irvine
714/851-4050
e Tom Wilcher
North Oraniic County I Rivenide County
7141851-4126
• John 1-XnhfeJd
San Diqp County
7141299-9330
Aa:oun lNured co $100,000
because we lack these trained
workers.··
Other priorities for the
commission are making more
capital available, encouraging
mor e re sea rch and
developm ent, and giving
workers a greater stake in
innovation. Brown s aid
As for capital Rrown said
11arl of the challenge ··is to
promote the significant capital
invcslml•nt required 1n the new
growth technologt'fS a nd to
t.•n courage greater
compan) lc\.el and individual
crrorts by management and
t.•mpl oyecs to promote
productivity · ·
li e s aid the comm1ss1on's
rccommendal1ons .. will provide
the starting poml for a new
partnership or business. labor,
the university and government,
to meet California s need for
">u sta1nable tec hnological
1nnovauon "
Therefore state 1>ollc1es on
taxes. investments, education,
labor and business ·must be
"o\·en together to produce a
strategic blueprint. .. He said 1f
business, labor, education and
governmen t fall to respond
together. we race 1nev1table
decline as a society " or the com m1 ss1on 's 18
members, all representatives of
business. labor . the university
and ~overnment, Brown named
13. including Hewlett-Packard
Chairman David Packard and
B<tnk of America Chairman
Leland Prussia The rest were
named by the pres ident pro
tempore of the Senate and the
speaker of the Assembly.
The governor said he will
p e r s o n a I I y c h a i r l h t·
com mission. whose executi ve
c11rector 1s E Allison Thomas
Farm to pay
SACRAMENTO <AP > -A
Kern County plum farm owned
by Superior Oil Co. must pay
back wages to 25 rar m workers
who left work during the 1979
harvest, the state Agricultu,aJl
Labor Relations Board ruled
OCTDwill
plan your bus
triJ!for
0 ~00° it-.--~
No matter where you w1µ1t to go
in Orange Cpunty, we'll make it easy for you to
get there on an OCTD bus. Just call us at
636-RIDE. We'll tell you the exact routes
and times. And if you need schedules and
Ride Guides, we'll send them free.
So give us a call. You'll find t he bus is
your easy-to-use ticket to work, school,
......-::~~::::;;c~ shopping and entertainment in
Orange County.
tia6-lllDE-~
()ur ".1>o.!6" vested ~uit
in a comfortable tropical \\'eight
The hu">tnl·">-.m .~n l1111ktn\! 1111 .1 pr.11.. l l l .il
-.ult \,\ti! a rpr l'Ll.Cltl' the: I0-11111n1h \H 'ill 1hdtt\
or grc' (jJ1.·1Hir q uh.111 pl.11d ( 11a1. 't.'"' .111,!
lrou">t'r-.. 5280
UTAIWSHEO iate
-103l RV1
STEREO SOUNDS OF ,THE HAIBOR
: l __ \
"' Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/November 23, 1981
,,...----------------------------~------------------------------------------------------------------------------~~
THE
fJ\~llL\'
CIRCl'8
by Bil Keane
"Why do they coll mil< 'milk'?"
"Because it's white."
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
"I hate Mondays."
by Brad Anderso n DE:\:\IS THE MEN ACE
"Get your foot off the gas! We're going
too fast atreadyr"
\\HE N 5tw AN('I
-._ LINt'A MA' ('(IN T 6f T (lLIT OF HIE
ACROSS 51 ShOwToom
ca.r
1 Cl1Mtered 52 Stadia
acc1s S• Remove
• Turk1Sh VIP 58 Greek letter
9 PhilOsopllerS 60 Chemleal 1• Cove sullix
I '"I FWIP ,~,
f
VERY (iOOD, l<AYo
FOR 1H,AT, HERE'S
A WHOL~ DoLL,AI< !
t5 RuSSi&n 61 TV assembly lilliill~~-~~~~
co·oP 62 Russia's -
16 Fr111t Republie
17 T -bone 64 E• penmen tel
19 Oevelo(> 66 Ouar1z
20 Mamtay 87 Prt119nl
21 FDA s baby 88 liySOfl
22 Decade 89 Bundles
23 Suiters 70 Fund
2• lal>ofs 1 ' Expiry
21 Cult DOWN
29 M•ey COin 1 Pl.ll
3' &enumb 2 Mountain 42 Sii~ • '
!( ;J~ ~ . ~551
11M~ WIL~ ~T Ul<E OORMUSIC ,SJ WE P.E JUST
GONNA PIVCTICE WHll.£ HE'S TAKIN' A NAP.'
by Harold Le Ooux
'r(lll CAN ALWAY& DEPEND
ON H~ TASTE A5 6EIN6 IMPECC AN f ' __ ,_.....,..;
by Jim Davis
l'M 8£GINNING 10
DREAO MONC'AV5
32 Poi toUrce rtdgt denc. ....... ..._..._.,__
33 ~ 3 food ""' 2 WOfdt
3t lnMIC1 4 h<*ld 25 f:ttloeil( 41 MOI( •¥tit•
3f v..., $ Mr lwctlwald gro-tllt on 41 Tum
3t Cllllle'. f Ntrrow: Prtl "°"" 13 8'ow' Mui
2WOfdil 7.......... 27Went~ 16Jowlfor•
•I ~ 9 e.tterY l"9 lllUdl M L~y
43..... • ~ 21 AallnCI """'°" "=-:tO=.,. == ::=... ........ ttLaD--. M~ 11,.... ................... ,,.HS8 m•,,_
PMNtTS
TMIS AAS 6EEN A 6000 ()\V ... I AAVEN'T
DOHE A SIH6LE ~IN6
m\T WAS STUPID. ..
Tl' M BL£• ££08
Sl\IAKEH:Ye eSCAPE.t'
ACROSS 1l-f e RIV~A'.
SHOE
HEY, THAT'S NOT
THE WAY iO
BLAZE A
TRAIL
AAVE VOU DONE
ANVTMIN6 TMAl
WAS SMART?
by Charles M Schul z
by Tom K Ryan
WAA'f IF MY HORSIE
1'RIPPl:l7 OVISR A FISH?
by Jeff MacNelly
by Ernie Bushm1 ller
IN CASE THIS SPRAY PAINT
IT'S DARK GLOWS IN THE DARK
WHEN W E
COME
BACK---
by Tom Bat1uk tT:\K l "l:\Kt;RBEA !\
(AX)UlD ~ LIKE 10 BW A
BAND Tl.JRK£Y AND HE.LP iHE.
BAND EARN tn'.)N8) FOR ~
Ut-Jlr-ORN\o <;
I'D LOVE ro. BUI f(V..(
HU5BAND 15 kAtD OFF AND
I DON'T fHINK WE. CAN
Wf LL , IT J!hl 50 HAPPEJ'.l5
1AAf W€ HAV£ A ~1LJ.l ·
AND-DE~i SPECIAlON tJ:li'f.
TuRKt<iS "TJiA'f WANDE.RED
OOT ONTO lfiE FRE.£.JJJI¥..> !
DR A BB LE
' atC°1' M.L1l'Jt, ~ ro..o
11' I~ 0\)1'-SI~, MA~E.[
AFrO~D ONE .'
l
i
1'M ll>fAfl1tij, A ~oil *>lMA~\~'fot.llt ~IN&
COll'f AKO 1\UlE.E ~rt~~! s~ ~~s 1! ~'f '40U r-----, ____ _.., ,..... __ RUltU t(oW (,(A()
HE! ONL.Y
weARS HIS
C>OC:1"0R SU Ii"
~o PE:OPL.e
WIL.L. 1"HINK
HES'S 60fN' ON A "HOUSIS CAL.L-..•
,.,.,~?--·
by Kevin Fagan
1'11£.'{ OION"f V5€0 'fo 8t
~fl'f ~ I ft-U. ~ ~0
'f"f.~ ~f.!
'•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. November 23, 1981
Soviet
sub fleet
'biggest'
Capital 'confusion' supplies Buchwald
LONDON <AP> -The Soviet
Union has built the world's
biggest submarine fleet while
beerlng up its entire navy, the
editor of the authoritative
"Jane's Fighting Ships" said an
a book.
Retired Royal Navy Capt.
John Moore wrote 10 the forward
to "Warships of the Soviet
Navy," published by Jane's, the
military reference book
specialists, that the Soviets have
"the largest submarine fleet and
the largest m 1nelaying
capability in the world."
Moore, f9rmer deputy director
of British naval intelhgen~.
s aid the Soviets began 10 1956 to
build an all-purpose navy,
rather than one designed only to
protect its coasts.
The Sov iets have 266
submarines in operation, 11
under construction and 100 in
reserve, while the United Stales
has 119 subs. plus 32 being buall
and s ax an reserve. according to
Moore's figures.
He wrote that the latest Sovael
submllranes "can outrun and
outdave any We~Lern torpedoes
currently in production.··
Oil thefts fought
WASHINGTON CAP> The
Interior Department 1s creating
an inspection program an efforts
to stop as much as SI balhon an
oil thefts from fedenl and
Indian lands. the department
announced
NEW YORK <API -If there's
one thing political satirist Art
Buchwald doesn't need to worry ·
about, it's material The way
things are going an Washincton.
he says, there's an endless
supply.
"I have a feeling that because
of this Stockman thing, I'm in
business for some time now,"
says Buchwald, toying endlessly
with un unlit cigar
His reference. of course, was
to the big story of the day: a
published report quoting David
Stockman, the president's
budget director. as suggesting
the Reagan economic plan was
not working, and may never
work.
For Buchwald, 1t could mean
plenty of fodder for his
thrice-weekly column, although
he's not quite sure how to handle
1t.
"Do I just repeat what he
<Stockman) said? How do you
improve on the man who's in
charge of the whole 'Rea-
gano m1cs"1"
But then. that's a typical
dilemma for Buchwald, whose
column has reached a growing
readership since 1962.
· 1 really don't know what the
rule of the sat.mst is any more,"
he s ays. "The satire is being
done by the people who are
suppo:>ed to be playing it
straight."
On the road promoting his
la test book . "Laid Back in
Was hing ton With Art Buch·
wald, .. the bespectacled col-
u mn 1!.l notes that the best
climate for hi s work as "utter
confusion " And that. he says,
has been the case "for some
lime now" m the nation's
capital.
Buchwald, of course, does not
limit his work to politics. The
American lifestyle as his beat. as
he perceives it from the dozen or
so newspapers and m agazines
he reads each day the Boston
Globe has replaced the defunct
Washington Star on his reading
list, he says and from
extensive travel.
Ultimately. though, it's the
government and its function-
''T hey
'You can
say ,
make
fun of ~; here's
your license .' ''
aries who provide most of the
grist for Buchwald's mill
Asked to identify hi s chief
source of material over the
years, he re plies without
hesitation.
"Nixon. Nixon was the best."
Why?
"Because of Watergate
just a beautiful story "
Buchwald. whose syndicated
column appears in S50
newspapers, spends much of his
time on the road, on a lecture
circuit that reportedly earns
him more than $500,000 a year
But despite his travel and wide
readership, people still confuse
him with other satirists like
llerblock Herbert Block. the
cartoonist.
"They tell me how much they
enJOY my cartoons." Buchwald
says. Which Is not so
fur-fetched , suggests Buchwald,
considering h.ls method of work.
"I'm like a poli tical
cartoonis t." he says . "l stay in
my ivory tower and just sketch
an artist with a typewriter
instead or a pen ...
Whal puts Art Buchwald in
Lhas enviable position among
those who cast about,
precariously. in the sea of
political satire?
"l think I get away with it,"
he says, "because I've been
doing it for a long time and I'm
accepted like Johnny Carson.
l could say the most outrageous
things <although black humor is
a Buchwald taboo) and
everybody says, 'Well , he's a
good guy '"
Then Buchwald recalls what
former Sen Paul Douglas once
told him.
• "He said. 'You know.
America gives out about two or
three licenses every generation.
They say, "You can make fun of
us . here's your license." You 're
ver) fortunate because you have
one of those licen!.cs."
Thal seems to satisfy
Buchwald:
'Tm not questioning 1t
that then' aren't too many
licenses around. I 'II take mine
and keep it
"Maybe I'll sell 1l when I get
•Ider "
Man dies on rig
COALINGA (AP 1 J onathan
l>avad Birt. 19, an oil n g worker
from Bakersfi eld . was crushed
tu death between a pulley and its
drum northwest of C~hnga
AP•I .........
Government and its junctwnanes pro1'1dc u1111>t 11/ 1111.> gn1>t fur Art
Buchwald's mtll
642-4321
Direct or collect .
to subscnbe to your
hl•melown paper. the Daily Pilot
,--------------------~
Chevy to market
cheaper ininicar
01:.!ROJT <AP I Chevrolet plan~ to
introduce a lower priced version of its subcompact
Cavalier with less standard equipment. the Detroit
Free Press said
Production 1s scheduled to began next month
on one or two or the four Cavalier versions and
prices could drop as much as $700 from the S7 .187
fo ur.door sedan and $7,404 station wagon models.
industry sources told the newspaper
The new versions are expected in showrooms
a,!ter Jan. 1, the newspape,.....r _sai_._d_. --------1
Device may
find tombs
in Egypt
SACRAMENTO <AP1
An ··c>leC't rontc
imager" invented by a
professor might be used
to determine 1f there ar<.'
unfound tomb!. under
the E gyptian pyramids
Al Cal State Sacra
mento, Professor Rob
ert Cribbs. who also
run s a n e l ec tro n ic
research firm an nearb)
F o l s om . s ays ha s
microwave machine as
like refined radar : fl
c an dete ct s ton e
s tructu res and even
bone structures beneath
hot, Clry sand
Cribbs sayl> he has
won 1nillal permission from Egyptian authori
ties to u se th e
in s trument on the
"st e ppe d" pyr a mid .
Egypt's most ancient.
Also. beneath the
middle pyram1d at Giza.
Cribbs says he hopes to
check preli minary indi·
cations found by a Stan
ford Hesearch Institute
team that there 1s an
additional tomb beneath
the known tombs, deep
in the bedrock. Their
instruments too are
electronic.
The Egyptians de ·
clined to allow the SRI
tea m lo d r ill a hole
and lower a miniature
television camera.
Cribbs hopes to start
his explorations in early
1983.
mn•m "Our 24th year" ' . I
Where can you tin<1 a
compact contemparary
paperback? A delulle
leather edition? Or a
Spanish German o r
Greek translation?
A• lhe Chr1st1an Science
Read1nq Room near you
You II find the King James
Version in many
handsome bindings
the colorful paperback
hardcovers in several
sizes and colors new
bonded lr•ather dnd
natural IPather Other
English translallons~and
25 othPr languaqPs-arP
also available
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
READING ROOM
FIRST CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
3315 VIA LIDO,
NEWPORT BEACH,
CALIFORNIA 92663
Starting December I, LQSJ
JOO fly_ for lesson theFriendsbJP-~si!
Uniteds Friendship Express
is off and rolling. And
wherever it stops, you'll
find great low fares.
We're slashing the fare
to Seattle to as low as $99
one way on selected flights.
$119 on all others. And United offers
terrific savings to San Francisco, 15 times
a day; Portland, 4 times a day; Reno and
Phoenix, 3 times a day.
There are no advance-purchase or length-
of-stay restrictions of any kind. But best of
all, when you fly the Friendship Express,
you're not just flying for less-you're flying
United for less.
For reservations, call
your Travel Agent.
Or call United
at 973-2121.
Partners in
Travel with
Westin
Hotels.
'.\on'h'P fn St•;Htk
I
Leave Arrl\oe
8·00a.m 10 28a.m
10 45 a.m I 13 p m
155 pm 4 2npm
5 OOpm. 7 2.5 p m
7 30pm 955pm
9 OO o.m II 22 om
• ·Not av•1l1blt' Sundays
"No1 available S•lurd•ys
Fue
599•
99
99
119
99
99••
F..rn and M.hrdulr• ~Htttlw I)!>,· I II)!! I
Fly .the friendly skies of Unitttd.
. Call Uriited or }'OmTravd Agent.
.'.
I '
s Orange Coast DALLY PILOT/November 23. 1981
'
•
United Way is more than just a fund drive. It's people giving. working. h elping
. . . and that fe els good!
... doing things for others all year long
Whethe r it's a reassuring voice o n a cn s1s h o tline, research to fight catastrophic disease, or day care for wQrking
mothers - - -we all need a hand sooner o r l~ter. It's nice to know som eone is there whe n you need them.
Adopdo•
Children's Home ~:>OCWl\I of Cahfom1a
Holy Family SeM<:es
Ako~oll•• ••cl Ont Ab-•
Alpha Center Inc
Center !Of Creabve AltPmanves
Communi1y Counseling
542 1147
8..15 55'll
99] 4400
b42 0177
C«.nter .. . . .. . . . 831 -06 l 6 493. 7333
Condllo of Orange County
First Step House of Orange Counl\I
Family SeMCe Assoc1abon
Gary Center
Nab<>rlal Council on Alcnhohsm
The Salvaoon Armv ·
Straight Talk Clinic
547 07~
t>JI 9802
SJAT\17
~70 1>7'•'•
X35 18..1'
778 540(1
828 2000
The Villa
YWCA Cen11al Orange Count\/
558 q8()7 542 2732
633 49'.>ll
CtiUd ••d Spo••• Ab•••
Alpha Center Inc
Child Guidance Cente1 Inc
Children's Home ~1ery of Cahfom1a
Chlldren5 HospHal of Los Angeles
Children~ Hospual of Otange
qq3 4400
871 92fl4
542 1147
21 I b69 2UJK
County . •JQ7 iOOU Ext 241
Family ~rvice Assoc1anon
Garv C.t>nter
Girts Club of North Orange (ounn.
Holy r am1ly S\IMCes
8:3~ 7J77
R71l h7'1'l
'>22 ii 'd
HJ'l 5'l'll
L,,guna Beach r ree Chmc 4Q4 076 I 546 171 'i
The People s Chmc
Pride Development Council Inc
YMCA Orange Coast
YWCA Cen11al Orange Counf\I
Ctilld C.re
• Amencan Cancer ~1ety
!For cancer V1Cllms and fam1he~l
Children s Home Soc1ery of Cahlom1a
Cooc1ho of Orllnge County
El Modena Commumty Cent1>1
FISH Harbor Area
Cood Neighbor Child Care
542 !9HI
s~n 2c,2x
b42 C)<l'IO o.n 4qc;o
7'}l MOil
542 I 147
547 072Q
')J2 145l
"'42 f)(lnO
Center 8.16 7066 8.10 b5.l I
Pnde Development Council Inc 543 252~
The Salvaaon Army 77R 5460
SeMC~ for the Bhnd lnC' 541 .3.154
YMCA Anaheim Family 635 9622
YMCA of Otange County 542 3511
YMCA North Oran!}" County R79 %22
YMCA Orange . 033 %22
YMCA Orallgl! Coast . . . .. b42.9<1Xl
YWCA Cen11al Orange County 6J~j 4950
YWCA Nonh Ol-ange County . . R7 I ~
YWCA South Orange County , .......... 542 3577
Co•--11•1 for l•dlvfd••l•. Fa•lll ... ••d
Gro•p•
Alpha Center Inc . . . .. .. • .. •.. * American Cancer Society
•American Heart A$soc1aDOn
*American Lung Assoc1aooo of Orange
CO\Jnty . * Amencan Red Cron . . . .
Assessment and Treatment Service
993-4400
752~>
S47 3001
835-5804
835-5381
Center ... .. 549 1814
Boy's Club of Buena Park 522 7259
Boy's Club of the Harbor Area 642 8372
Boy's and Girl's Clubs of La Habra .•. 213 694-1805
Boy's Club of Tustin . . 838 5223 838-3054
*Catholic Community Agencies . . . . . . . . . 542 6 778
Cenwr IOf Creative Altemallves . .. ... 642-0377
Child Guldancce Center of Orange
County ......... . .................. 646 7733
Children's Home Society of Calllomla ... 542-1147
Cltnlca De Salud Mental . .. . . .. . . . . . . . . .. 75 I I 060
Community Counseling
Center ................................. 831-0616 493. 7333
El Modena Community Center ............... 532 3452
Family Service A$sociatlon ....................... 838. 7377
Frea Cllnlc of Orange County . . . • . .. .. .. 956-1900
Fnendly Center. Inc ........................ :. . 77 t .5300
Gary Center ...................................... 870-6755
Jewish Femlly 54!Mc:e ........................... 537-4980
Laguna Beach Free Chnlc ......... 494-076l 546-3715
Natlonal Council on Alcoholtsm ................ 835-3830
' .
Otange County Assocu1non for Retarded
C1tuens
The People ~ ( hnic
• Rehab1htall0n lnslltule ol Orange ( uuntv
Th .. ':>alvab<>n Armv
Tho> ~lvanon Arm\, '>eMC'l' [ •tension
'>.!IV!{ es for the Bhnd Inc
!:>ptech and ul'lgU<!lge Uevelop!l1'1nt
Center .. . ........ •• . • ..
S1raJgh1 Talk Clinic
H81972
'>42 IQH I
t>:IJ 7400
778 546()
H98 qn2
541 1354
Tr1111elel\ AKl ',noel\: 21 l
821 3620
828-2000
432 34xr,
0..13 %22
b42~1
>'.,I 44XX
YMCA 0rdnge
YMCA 0rdnge Cw\t
YWCA "lrmh ()Tanqe (' oun11.;
E•ert••qr Food ••d Lodti•1
Alpha CPnter Inc 9Ql 4400
1:135 °>381
'>42 o77R
* Amencan Red Cross * CatholK Community Agencies
Community Counwhng Center
El Modena C.ommun1rv Ci>nter
Fl'>H Ha1hor Arli!ll
8:ll llt>lo 4'H HB
532 3452 "b42 6060 r nendly lenler 771 s:mo
Lutheran '>oc1al 'wMces IChn~nan T emporal",I
Hou~1ng r ac1htvl 'd4 b4'.tl
Th11 ~lvllOon A1mv 77'(<. "'4h0
Tiw ':>dlvatlon Armv ~:>l'l'V!Ce lxtenslOn 898 9'B2
'>outhwe5l M1non1V ~.cnn<>mK I >evelopmenl
AsSOC"ranon 547 4073
bj() 41 71
542 .~511
Trawler~ Aid '><X1l'1V
YMCA of Orange <.ounn.
E•plov•-• hmc••
• Ami'ncan Cancer !:>oc1etv
lonc1h<> of Orange County
(I Modena Community Centl'r
• GQOd1.1111l Industries of Oran~ Countv
Oiange Counrv AS5oc1anon
for RetllrdeJ C1nz1>ns
'>dddl.>hacl. Cmnmurnl\I (nterpnw~
!:>ou1hwes1 Manoni\! f cooom1c
Developnwnt A$S<>C1a1>on
YWCA Cen11al Orange County
YWCA North Or"nge County
YWCA "nu1h Orange County
Youth lmployment 5e1V1Ce
He•dlcepped Semc•• * Amt>ncan Canc4.'r !:>octel\I
• Am1>ncan Lung Assoc1ancm
of Orange Counl\I
Boy s Club of Buena Park
Goodwill l!'ldustnes of Orange County
Pndl' Development Council. Inc ..
Providence Sp.'ech and Heanng
7C,l 80410
'>47 11U11
C,32 J452
547 t>101
73k 1q72
"!17 72&>
547 407.4
0.13 4QC,C1
R71 44AA
54:.! 3577
b42 0474
752 &,()() •
835 58o4
... 522 7259
547-0301
5432528
Center .. b39A990 543 4822 * Rehabihtahon Institute of Orange CO\Jnty &33 7400
• Saddlebdck Community Enterpnses .. 837 728()
SeMCes for the Bhnd Inc . 54 I .3354
Speech and Language Development
Center * Umted Cerebral Palsy AsSOClation
of Orange County. Inc
YMCA of Orange County .
YMCA North Orange County
Heelt~ Ed•cado•
821-3620
540 5760
542 3511
879·%22
• American Cancer Society * American Heart AssoctatlOn
.............. 752 8600
......... ... . 547-3001
Thanks to you
• AmenCAn Lung A\wc1.inon
ol ()Tanq.• <.ounl\I
• Amencan Kerl (. Ill\'>
Amencttn '>oc1al t l .. 111111
A~'1<1C111non
B<J\/ ., ( luh , .t P1.ir l'nhn
8c1l,I \ Club ol I U\hn
Cemer l<>r Lll.'dnv .. Ah .. maDv•''
Chtldurn• ~tal ol
Orange County ,. • ••
f ,,.., Ch me of Orang.· Counn,
<~Ill'\. C.ent .. r
( 11rt ' Club nl ':>4111,, An11
Ldgund B.>a• h I 11 " ( hnK
Nttnon.il ( ourK1I or1 Ak ,,n,,1,.,rn
Otangt• < <>unrv A''"C111t1<1•1
f<JJ Mental I !t•al!h
.tx ~14o
>< l"> '>22;1 ><I!\ $0'>4
•>4~ 111/"i'
9'J7 :JO(l<I £Kl 24 I
f 1h tfJc
"(;, ,,; ,
'1-l'• ~II'> I
1'11 ll7r I '>41• Cl',
._!, l'HI
~peect· 11nd l ttnQUd'J'' I > .. ~eloprn .. nt
Center
lJn11ed '>tllll'\ l 1le'>dVlh<I
A~!.OCldhOn ,
YMCA ol 01angt• l •>ulll
YMCA Ncmh 01,mqi• l .. uni\
YMCA Or.ir'9"
YMCA < lr.irnJt· < ,, "1
YW(A ( t'nll<1I C Jr.111•w ( "U'll\
YW<.A Nc111h Or1111q1• l •11m1\
YWCA '>uuth c 1 ... nq•· l .. un11,
Ho•• Heelth Cere
V1sibnq Nurw A'>"'lt 1dn• ,,,
of Orange Counfl,
H-ptteJe ••d Heelt~ Cllnlca
• Amencan Rvd CU~\
Bo.,. s Club of Bul'M I' u~
Chlldrens H ospital
of Los Angeles
Children\ Ho<optldl 111
Orange Counl\
Conc1ho of Oran'!• l ounf\
El Modena ( ommunll\ C•·nh•r
Frei' Chrnc of 01.inqt.' ( oun11.
Garv (entl'r
L..guna &>ach 1....., C 11111<
OrthopaedK Hosf)1tt11
PrOVldenc.., '>Po!;>e h .i nd
Hl'anng C.. ""'"'
.111,hl\I
1·1' l', 11
i-71• 4'1l:,!
"H CJti'l'/.
•·12 r1•11 1
I ii •l11,(i
><71 'l4KK
"" !'.'77
~l, 1 IXI
•.!.! 72'Jq
I. I I 1>1111 l lllX
>1~ !IHI hi ~ll
r,4~ Iii' L''
-. I.'. 14<,.._'.
, • .,,, )'HJ(I
"(;"I t1/'J'
1'1 l 1171> I '•4h 171 ,
l I I ~ i.' I lt"I
l••ltyafto• ••d Refu9ec Service•
Bov s Club of P111cl'nt1.i '1...'.1'\ Kl411
'>42 h77'/'i
c,1p 1172'-J * Catholic Commun11v fl9••n11•''
l.o<K1ho of Orange C<Ju11111
Gary Center
Jewish Family ~eMce
S••lor Cldae•• Service•
Abrazar . I
* Amencan Cancer Soc1erv
*American Red Cross
Boy ' Club of P11mm11a
Center for Creahve Altem.rnves
Concilio of Orange C.ounrv
El Modena Communiry Cente1
Family Service A"4X1anon
FISH Harbor Arell
Fnendly Center Inc
Jewish Family Servlcl'
K70 67'>'•
''d7 '11)811
891 J'>kl
752 Kb<Xl
~.IC, C, IHI
528 Rl40
b42 0177
547 072<}
532 14'l2
!HH 7177
Ml oOoO
771 SJOU
.., 17 498(1
• L,,guna Beach Free Chnic ...... 494 0761 'l41l 171'>
ft works ••• '
RllAU.·llUS United way
of Orange County NS
•,
Th" People ' Clinic
Pnde Dewlopnwnt Council Int
• Rt>hab1ht11non ln\ntute ul
Oran~ Counn,.
l he ..,alvdnon Armv
Th.-..,,,lvdll<m Army 'wrvK .. r Xh?nSl<,n
'><luth1A>l'5t Mmonf\I [cnn<1mK
f>.·'"' >IUTll'<ll A\Y.Clllhl•fl
Volun1e.-r Bureau of Nonh
Orange Counrv
\ M\A An.,1 "'"' Fam1h.
'i ~(A r-;.,n1 ( >r•l'IY, ( f•Unl\
'i MC ,\ < h mq•
\ WCA I 1·nt"' c ""'"IV Cnunl\
\IA'< A Nv11h < >i.s"9" ( ou1111.
'r'WI A "'•Ult ( >r \I •.i--l '>Ufll\:
Scrvtcee for Nlllte ry PeHonac.I end
Depead-h
• Amencan Red l IO\\
An11he1m ':>l'Mcem,•n ' (.,•nit•r
ln1erta11t. 'wl'VICl'me11 s (. en1e1
l ln1ted '>¥M• " Organ1Z<1t111n\
lnr IU'-111
Service• for Trenelenl•
542 'i981
54'1 2528
6117400
77R 5460
898 q312
'>47 407 l
526 3301
6.15 9622
R74 %22
h.~ i 'H.>22
nH 49'llt
~71 44AA
~2 lS77
>U'1 S ~I
b l'i ()')40
44l 1814
( 1>0\lllUllll\i ( llUll'>''llllq
( 1•n1 .. r
11..,H H.irh11r A1w1
I n .. rlfll\ I •'""'' Inc
XII 061 h 4'1 I 7 111
o42 60(>(1
771 '>ll)(I
I .,.;1un11 B1•ac f, I re11 ( hm,
Thi 1..,.,1v.incm Armv
411l ll7fl I 54t> 171 '>
Tl ... '><ii\ .innn Armv "''fVI<" [ "''"n'>1on
l ht' ..,nlv.inon flrrn\
"'•uthw<'•t M111on11. ~ cnr111m11 I l,•v1.•lopm1>n1
/\\ ...... c11 Ofl
1111\l'lo'r~ Aul "'l('wf\:
YMCA ol C )r11nq.• l ountv
Voulh Develop•••• and Recreation
778 ')4(1(1
54f> 7AAl
X'l>l 4JJ2
'>47 4071
l>lb417~
'>4ll511
• Amencdr R1•d lrn'' IH'> ~I
~ Bo1, ...,. • Uf' "' Am.,nca '>46 4990
B<>\. ' < uh of Bu1•n,\ "·"" ">l2 725CJ
IY•v ' Cluh of ( Vflh'" c,27 2697
Bo\. s( luh ol ~ ull.,rton '>2'l 8241
Hoo,. '<.luh ol tlw Harbor Ar1.'d b42 !H72
S. >\ ' l luh of 1 d'}}Jna IW<'I< h 4q4 2535
B·'I.'' .tn.J {11rl ~ Cluh~ of ( ,1 Hah1i\ . 211 llq4 1805
13< ·~ ' ( luh nl P111llmht1 52R 8 I 40
S. •\' ' l luh nf O.:,anta Ana '>43 7212 s....,' and uirl' Club of tlw ~OUlh lo;m 492 0376
ll<>V' Club of ..,111nton 892 IOQ7
B<1v s Uub of Tustin . H VI 522J 8 IA 1054
( amp r lrl' Oranqe Counrv ( ounc1I Inc 8J8 9991
C<'nll'1 for «rPallve Ahl?rnanw~ 642-0377
[I Mod1ma Commun1ry C l'nter 'l3:.! -3452
rn.,ndly Cente1 Inc , 771 5300 * Girl Scout Council of Or11nye County 979 7900
C.irl ~out Cou11cll !)pam~h Trail\ 632 2518
(11rl 'Club of 1ht> I larl>or Arl'a b42 7181
Girls Club ol uguna 494 7630
Girls Club of Nor1h Orange Counl\I 522 3153
Girls Club of !:>anta Ana 549 2051
Los Alllmltos Youth Center Inc 827-9010
Orange County AssoctallOn for Retarded
·cuuens
The Salvation Army
The Salval!On Army
The SalvaDon Army Sel'VICe E"<tenslOn .
SeMCes for the Bhnd Inc . .
Southwdl M1nonty Economic Development
Association
738·3972
7785460
540 7880
898-9332
541-3354
547 4073
Stanton Athlellc Club .................... 543.9793
YMCA Anaheim F•mily . .•. ... • . . 635·9622
YMCA of Or•nge County . . ....... 542 351 l
YMCA N011h Orange County . . . . . .. . . . 879·9622
YMCA Orange . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . .. . . • . 633 9622
YMCA Orange Coest . .. . . •. . . ........ .. 642·9990
YWCA Central Orange County .. .. • . .. . . . .. 633.4950
YWCA North Orange County ................ 871-4488
YWCA South Orange County ................ 542·3577
Youth Employment ~rvlce ................... 642-0474
Vol•••••••..,•
Voluntary Action Center . . . . . 953 5757 855 6772
VoluntHT Burnu of Nonh
Orange County ........................ , •.• 526-3301
-.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOf/Monday. Novembor 23. 1981
Lulu comes back to America w ith a mile and a h it
8)' VARO£NA ABAR
A.-.<lt• l'r«tt WrltH 1.os ANGEL~S At the hel1ht of the
SwtnjtlnJi '60s. a pellte Scottish redhead named
Lulu knocked Amerlcans out with a one·two
punch. 8t4fring ln the tllm "'ro Sir. Wit.h Love"
11nd s inging the hit 8ona of the some name .
But until recently . there w1111 never much In
the way ot tollowup at least ·nol In thls country.
Aftor a handful of generally forgettable songs,
Lulu vu1ually di1rnppeared here during the '70s.
At home, however . Lulu who was only 16
when she appeared in the 1967 rum as one or a
bunch of scruffy s lum kids lamed by schoolmaster
Sidney Poitier was very busy indeed .
She put out hit records including one with, or
all people. David Bowie, and for a dozen years was
on British televis ion in an assortment of variety
series . In one, she was co-hos t with Dudley Moore.
She played Peter Pan on the London stage.
She married Bee Gee Maurice Gibb, was divorced,
and married hatrdrec;ser John Frieda, father or
her 41'l·year·old son. Jordan
Now, 14 years after "To Sir, With Love" spent
Cive weeks as this country's No l song stall a
r ecord ror a female singer Lulu is back in the
United States with an al bum, "Lulu," and a hil
s ong. "I Could Never Miss You."
No m ore lhe pudgy teen ager of "To Sir, With
Love" or the crazily coiffed, mimskirted figure
Music's future • ID a
TROY.NY. IAP1 The musical rutureofthe
world may be shaping up 1n a little black box that
responds with sweet melody to a breath or air, the
pressure of a finger or a flack of a s witch
The future or t•lt•ctronic music is being formed
today al Rensselaer Polytc<:hmc Institute under
the guidance of Ur Niel Holn1 ck. an IBM 3033
computer, and a host or students
Rotruck hopes that the 20th century will do for
the digital synlhes1ter what the 19th dad for the
grand pia no
He e nvisions a wor ld where li ving room s will
proudly d1spla> S} nlhl's11.t:r;.. much as they now
show ofr piano~ or organs
"Before lhl' 21st l'entur} gets here. there will
be a n electronic in~trum ent as rcspons1\e and
emotional and flexible as the piano or the violin I
don 't thank ther e., a n } poss1 b1ltty 1t wo n 't
happen, .. s <.1ys the 34 year old composer
As Rolnick discove red when he c ame to RPI 1n
January to head the school'~ new electronic music
program. most µeople be lieve synthetic music as
an impersona l hiss and whirl or hars h noise s
produced by computers for use by rock bands
Rolnick !-lays cnrollml·nt in hts 1ntroductorv
course dropped sharply after students dis covered
that electronic mus"· 1s act epti:d and widely used
in contemporary or · serwus · mus1t·
.,..,..
Loee
772-6466
NOW PLAYING
llllf*SlM IUQ llStlM NII NMC£ Edwards Cinema M1ss1011 V1eio Mall Stadium Drive· In
8•8 0388 495 6ZZO 639 8770
UU IRYIN£ HANCE
Orange Mall
637 0340
mm Brea Plaza Woodbrulgt
529 5339 551 0655 UA C ty Cinema
634 391 1
COSTA MESA ldwards Cinema Center 979 4141
"Masterful"
-l A Times Shella Benson
"Wonderful"
Newsweelt Magazine Jack Kroll
• L AOO c!OMPAHY •ND WARHE:R ~S "'U A!ol _...., __ 0.-.--. ~·~ ~
edwards NEWPORT
~E.,UCO,t.ST HWY.&MACARTHUR
Jn:WPOH 0 Cl:WTl:JI 644-07 60
of ht>r Mod London <htys i1he looked posuave ly
alamorous. even In casual sl11cks und 'iwealt-r,
durlna 11 recent interview at lh1• West Hollywood
pied·a ·terre ot her longtime marulger. Marion
London. The carroty hu1r ha11 mellowed rnto u soft m unc or pule ora11.:l' 11nd blond that sets 011
peachcs·and·cr e am skin a nd grt>cn t•yt·i;
But a very youthful e nthus iasm J>NlSists wht•n
s he discusses the joyis of her Ameri('an t•omeback
"I'm thrilled lhal people remember me, .. sht.'
says. "The first l1mt I came here. about two
months ago, I went through customs and gave
them my pal>Sporl. They're us ually very dour and
serious. but I came through, tht.• agent looked <11
my passport." she illus tr ales with a double takf•
"and she s miled and s aid, 'Ar(' you TllE Lulu'''
And l s aid, · Yesssss '' I was .... u ptf'as1·d with
myself "
Why the long abs l'rH:e from /\mcn ca'' 'l'hc11·
were opportun1t1es Lulu s ays s he turned down j
Broadway s how and a TV <tl'rlt's Hui , mainly on
the ad Vll't' or Mrs London. who d l.,t'O\'t'red Lu I u
s inging an a s mall club and itll but adopted ht'r
unlit her ftrst marriage, sht• t•ho~e instead tu
concentrate on alte ring her image b:u·k home
"I started out as a tattle ro('k n · rolle r who
s ang ·Sho ut' and sc reamed and wor e m od
hairstyles and mod dolhe!>, and rather than JUSL
be. thought of as a ltttlt• beller a nd a l1tllc !>huuter
little black box
The next myth the assistant prufrssw tar klNI
1s that ele<"lrtc g:.adgC'lry produces lh(• <;ounds .
.. A synthesizer 1s JUsl anolhl·r 1n-;trument. It
can't work alont• al nel•d., th<• magw nf people to
make 1Ls muSJl',' he s ays.
One of the major proJCl'ls A.oln1ck 1-.. des1gn1ng
an an effort lo m<ikc HPI ·a world das!> elt•ctron1<
mus ic center · 1s e xpe nmt•nta11on in the input of
mus ic lie calls his C'Oll<'l'Pl 'body mterial·es
Rolnack C'xpl<.1ms that tod :n s "}nth("SIZl·r s
gen erall) are d e"1l!n l•d lo b · •llJl'rall•d by a
ke> board Thts has bl•t•n <111111" hl· "ah l11
accommod:.tle the skllb of till' p1an1!>I ·or tht·
o rganist and .,o lht· l'ompam l'.lll turn a prnf11 111
its first year ·
But Holna l'k finds thl' 1dt•a of ..i kt•\ board
li miting Ten fin1H•r s hl' ., .. , s. l annul prod.Ul'e all
the nuantcs 1n tnne, frcqucno 1nh'nsll} rlurat 1on
\'1brato. timbre. rhy thm i:lrtd ar r;ingt·ment that an•
within a synthes1.w r s l'j1Jab11tt11•s
A ke~ l><rnrd With a lot or ~lops 1·a11 make d lot
of dafferl'nl :,uunds But 1f ~ou rnulcl ..iho push.
blo\\. s4111•1•t t'. fl1 l'k ""' 1tt•ht:s JllCI use wind
p ressurv. )OU d han• l h<.tt many mor1· ~11uncl~ ... hl'
S<J)'S
'Thtnk of It ltkl· i.1 1wrcuss 1on "t.!lU p With all lhl•
diffe rent sounds you c an prudun · frcim d1ffen •nt
drums, from bells. from C'ymt,:.ils . ht• sa~s
THE PORT THEATRE
673·6260
MON N 11 c ALL !::>l:.A l ~ >L 00
Two Frenc h Mys te rie s
"DEAR INSPECTOR ''
JlAPirff\S
TNlfft RATED PG
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
® H()Qf<f u>;DfR t• ADM lf1'0 , ...... ,,,,., .. "'
n cett1" _..,_,,
~l, ~ ra ""'0 (!jj '°'""'~ Rf Cl •Vl
rM[ 5EAI. ()J rH( .. O TION Pl(. TURf
CODC or Sf lf AfC.U«ll!Ot<
Sean Connery John Cle~-• TIME BANOI~ (PG I
SHOWS AT '1 00 9 20
I A n Amertcan 01Tl l n 70~m Z ~tT !RI 1 ~o9.f'or
r======> I C•nd1ce Ber .. n 'RK!:fa~~11 RI 11'"SHOWS AT 1 15 9 JO
O"v• 11u Open 6: 30 NI GHTLY
Under 12FREEUnltnNoted
Lulu
•BARGAIN MATINEES •
Monday thru Saturday
All Performances before 5 00 PM
(hcepl Special Engagements and Holidays)
LA MIRADA MAU
LA MIRADA WALK·IN
o M11000 01 l>o1ec•or"
994·2400
•Im. DAWta •..O CNlflOU a4t(fllil
lH£ WATCHER
IN THE wooos· !N I
I If I M t,M..1 41l 1a•
,,_, llAJOtlt ......... MfTOtUtl
"AOENCY" 1111
U M. I ti, f H, • • e -_ 1f ..
PAT£1'Rttv· •Ni w.-.111-00110 ·1W1t.11.....,.,.
'"' a.t• 1• • .. '' Jll RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARI(" ...,....,,.. t II 4 M e M ,._. ~f ITPaO
CARBON COPY tN J 11•.u1 1• , .. 1111 ,,. •• ., t ,, ••••
--"" , If ...... " -.... HALLOWEEN 11' 1•1 • t • '"" ----
1 M 1 ti • ti ... NI U 4ll 4 Jiii I• ntlY CMOtli t llMI ... nGllY ,....,. t"TQU iTI
McVICAR 11•1 , t w ,_ ~,1::~ !A,N~T.: ,~:"
Ji01 ,.,_. 00\.8• l'lJlfO
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OHL Y WHEN I LAUGH 1111
t IO • M ti ti
SEEMS llKE OLD TIMES t"lJ ......
LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAUMN
rocu11y Al Dt!t Ame.
213/634·9281
Mtl'f UACtJt ttlf
RAOGEOY MAN 1001 ,,.,,..,. ........ ..
LAGUNA
faculty 0 1 Cono•••OOO
213/531·9580
"" ...... SOUTHERN COMFORT 1111 '"' ... , ...
WtlU \ 1'111Cl"P .ut0 AJlllwi 9'QN_t _
THE FRENCH LIEUTENANTS
WOMAN !111 I
n • 1H IM 111 ttn
MCVICAR 1111 11•.•• ••
OUAOROPHENIA '"' > •.• ,.,,....,.
O"UCOA J.ACI( ... A.I
STEVIE ,_,.,
1 ta I M t II I U 11 M
--.... Souln Cootl M1woy
so. COAST WALK·IN DJ l •ooowoy
494-1514
,,... _... .... _,.......""" ........ m I "TIML a ANOITS' -................ .. , ...,.. J" ... , " ...
,P JO 71S
IMPORTANT NOTICl' CHllOREN UNOlR 12 FREE•
•"• "'•"·•~ .. I'll '"-'• .,., • JO. '•' s-." " .. ', oo , • ... ... \QvlritO.' It • ..,, All! ""°" I~ t! • SlllAl'f~
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1'-"" U! l'OAfAI l •All r ~t fl OfWI OHS 1311 000 AM MOO
ANAHEIM
ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN
''•••ov 01 ot temo~ St
879·9850
Lii •.a.IOlllit • M)ll«tlll •Tt. .. t.Hf
AOEHCY" 1111 ••llt
SCANNERS 1•1
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SATURDAY THE 14TH" tOOI ... .,.
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OR FU MANCHU . ,_
c•TMUCN ru....-1111 •..o WK.UAM""""' eoov HEAT" 1•1 ... .,.
PATERNITY lf'Clt
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l•l'\C.O•n ,..,. we1t o• lt'liOU
821·4070
I UlNA PARK
LINCOLN DRIVl·IN
821·4070
..... 4.LICt 1M ttOMOI~ (Ill)
,,., OION t llA•I .. ,l'Ollt, ""'' arou 1n
TIME BANDITS"' '"I "'-... THE FRISCO K10·· tHt
•1•11.1•11•:~!1~~t:J~g~1:J?i11•1•1• ";~~:::;~;::=
lo" 0 •go frwy ot l1oo•"u•1• i\o I OR FU MANCHU 1 .. 1 96 2·24 81 c •1 1 ~ou•o
WI SI MINS IHI
HI-WAY 39 DRIVE·IH
Beac~ B •• &o OI
t'.°.\J10.n G•<r-t ''ttwo•
891·3693
THf -T "'".., ... CAM llU•
ARTHUR ll'OJ
f'\.U9
PATERNITY IPOJ
c 1•1 ">;()\JHO
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UI HAlllA
lA HABRA DRIVE·IN
,.,.,_,<IJI ..... fl ~1111 1'•13 "~D,._ I ,a
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HM!ltll()tl ro-o • ..,.. .. •UIN IN
I ' RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARI('
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l "RAISE THE TITANIC" fN I
.IH! It 50Ulo0 -----'Ml MtOHTllMI II# f OYIA1
'HALLOWEEN II' IAI
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DEAD & BURIED" 1111
Clll( It SOl/110
NAlltlltt90flf '°9t0 • IUMlil A.U.1M ..
"RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARI("
'"'
ORANG(
ORANGE DRIVl·IH
'TMI ~,.,., °' ,.,,:*"-IN\
-nc1110nc.-•tU11nor--1•
.wee .. ,,:--: ..... 1111 I
\A~ JllA~ { API', JllA1JrCf1
MISSION ORIVf·IN
UONl1N1.f.tNRla.1 H
WARNER DRIVI' ·~
""omet A•• Wt1I Of .. OC" tl•O
147·Htl
--·c:-•lllC:9---fltJ -~•COi •_ .. ....,ml ..... --COi ·-·~ .. -
·---. LOI A,.llTOGATOI -n MOUllTftO O•
4.08 CllN MIL&.ONH
f'-00 HI CillOAO
Local. count y . state. national and international
~vents c~1ne t~ your doo.rstep Dll.IJ Pl.Ill n1 the brzght. l1ghl and l1 vely .
.•nil .1 lllllc rol·kN Jllfl JU'>t being ucccpl ·d by
lh1· k11I" Mar ron ""w thut I could 1><>i.1Sibly appe1.t
111 ,1 ~11h•r 11ud1enl'l', .ind I wantt.•1.1 to
~1 v.lt1•11 w1· w1•n• urf..r.-d thing~ lake the
1·qu1\.uli•nt 11f \our /\rid) Wilham~ show:.. to be a
l(lH·.,t . I would drciu. up in a nice drcs . miakl' my
h .111 p11·-.1•nt <1bk i•nll 1·011f111tn In fact," sht! adds
"1 \ 1-.. I think l't•tt.• T own1>end I ul Tht• Who I was
;11 c tt~f'd 11( t1111l, <·11nforn11ng "
S1111wurw who obv111usly slat•ki. lo old fru:nd!I .
Lulu n •c·orcl1'<l hc·r lJ S C'omeback LP which
"'1 I t'\t'll out 111 E11"h1nd 11ntlc•r th1· <.11•g1:, of
111 .. t1 11c·1·1 "¥1 ~1 1k London. M ~1111111's hu:ibund und the
\\11lt•1 11f 'l 11S11 , With l.ovt• ·
1'111 .1 11111~ t1rnt• .. lll('f' lht• nowlt.• lt1111.: 1n '74,
I r1·.1l h v..1 .... 11 1 1"<t'1lt'll 111 t.'nthu-.1J.,t1t· :.thout
11·c o r<lllH! .ind I 'ti n1•glt•cl<.·d 1l terr ibly Th£'r1·
"·'"" 1 .111\ l111n1ot that turm·ll me 1111 1111111 MJrk
f<111r11l 1111•. \1111 11~ ~II) ~1·1 1 llarrlMIO v.ho write., ... .,,~,
I oruli111 p1•r .. uadcd ht•r to du wh.it w1.•r1·
111 11-:111;111\ lllll·mh·d to lw clt•11111.., fu1 M·ll1111( the
'''"~'tu .1111•llt1·r s m.:t·r ·;111cl as !>tl'lll ,J., v.1· dul lht•
rl1•11\ll., 11 ",,, '1•1, oh\""" that the't wcren t going
''' 111' rlt•11111 I ht•\ w 1•11• ohvwu.,h i.:oin~ tr1 be for .....
.,
' "'· Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 23, 1981
College growth limit
forces course cuts
A growth ltmat imposed by
new st ate law has put local
community colleges in a double
band , forcing pl tms to cut back
s prang class offerings an order to
curtail enrollml'nt but without
j eopardizing existing s tate
funding by too sharp a drop.
There will be 200 fe wer
classes each at Orange Coast and
Golden West colleges and a
spring reduction of about 300
classes each at Coastline and
Saddleback colleges.
A measure passed by the
s tate Legislature grants com-
munity colleges additional 1982
state funding to cover only 21 2
percent annual growth over this
year's enrollment. That simply
means that if the colleges exceed
the growth limit. they will have
to find other means to pay for the
education of t he extra students.
But state law prohibits
ch arging for classes. except for
supplies, and reserves are nearly
exhausted.
Since the Coast Community
College District. for example.
experienced an 8 percent growth
in attendance this fall , the spring
cutback must be made to meet
the 2 1 2 perce nt annual growth
limit.
But if the proposed class cuts
cause too much of a drop in
enrollment. the schools will lose
some of their present state
funding, which is based on
average daily attendance of
full-time students .
Specific course cutbacks now
are being planned, and others
may be made o n the basis of
January registration, with strict
adherence to minimum class
enrollment and cancellation of
classes lhat do not attract
sufficient students.
An additional cha nge in the
state law could help the
financially trouble d community
colleges. That would be removal
of the ban on charging, beyond
the cost of s upplies. even for
so-called hobby or personal
enrichment classes. Man y ol
those who enjoy these classes
probably would be willing to pay
a modest class fee if needed to
de fray the cost of instruction.
Mineral 'cartel' seen
Orange County business
leader J Robert F luor ran up a
new red flag for the United States
last week when he warned of the
po:,s1b1llty of a n OPEC-style
minerals cartel to manipulate the
pri ce and supp ly o f v ita l
minerals
T he nat10ns of southern
Af n ca control 95 percent of the
world's s uppl) of chrome. 86
percent of platinum. 64 percent of
vanadium, 53 pe rcent of
manganese and 52 percent of
cobalt.
Al most al I the world reserves
o f chrome. essentia l for the
manufacture of stainless steel. ts
\n the Union of South Africa
and Zimbabwe. · forme rly
Rhodesaa.
Cobalt 1s rquared for jet
aircraft engines and guided
mbsile contr ob. The United
St ates im ports 98 percent of its
!\Upply
Without these met als and
minerals the defense industry
would be an disarray.
Fluor·s concern as that U.S.
chplomacy. or lack of it. art the
Third World. could encou rage the
n<1t1uns of southe rn Africa to
follow the OPEC example and
band together to impede our
supplies and fatten their
pocketbooks.
He also noted. with some
alarm, that as long ago as 1973
Leonid Brezhnev said flatly that
the Soviet aim is to .. gain control
of the two treasure houses on
which the West de pends ; the
energy treas ure house of the
Persian Gulf and the mineral
treasure house of central and
southern Africa:·
Fluor urged the U .S.
government to take a leadership
role in warding off this
eventuality by restoring a
balance between tbe requlre-
menta of U.S. national security
and the advancement of social
Jus tice overseas. by designing
and implementing a consistent
minerals policy, and by building
up the U.S. s upply of critical
materials.
His words are worth heeding.
The Fluor Corp. has its own
interest in the mine rals issue.
but t.rus is no self-serving
warning. If the prediction should
come true. OPEC-instigated fuel
crises could pa le in comparison
A bette r police service
Thf' Irvine Po lice Depart-
m e nt n ow ha s fol l owed
departments in Orange. San
Cle mente and Anaheim in joining
a program that could help solve
o n e of t h e knotti e r
police-community problems.
:-.Jext month. Irvine pohce
will began referrals to the Dispute
Hcsolution Center of Orange
County. an agency that resolves
legal disputes out of court.
ln the past. and still in most
areas. police have taken a
strictly hands -off approach with
regard t o neighborhood , do-
mestic, consumer-m e rcha nt and
landlocd-tenant disputes.
Unless v1olat1on ol a crimina l
law or a public disturbance is
involved. the police have every
rig ht to term the dispute a
matter of civil law a nd to advise
the combatants to settle their
differences m court. But with
civil court calenda rs always
overcrowded. t his advice isn't
very helpful.
The Dis pute Resolution
Center. to which Irvine police
•
now will refer those involved in
civil disputes, 1s a service of the
Central Orange County YWCA.
Its 21 volunteer m ediators. each
trained in a 50-hour course.
attempt to bring the parties
together to arrive at a n
out-of-court solution. Persons
us ing the service are asked for a
SlO donation substantially
cheaper than t h e lega l fees
rn volved in purs uing a court
case.
If the m ediation is s uc-
ce ssful, both parties sign a
legally binding agreement and
cente r officials say there is a 95
pe rcent cha nce that both sides
will live up to the agreeme nt.
Since police so often are
called into domestic and neigh-
borhood disputes, and legally
can 't do much to solve them. the
referral idea makes a great deal
of sense. Certainly it is much
more helpful than the practice of
backing away from anything
that doesn't qualify as a direct
law violation.
Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Oailv Pilot. Otner views e~pressed on tnis page are those of their authors and art ists. Reader comment Is lnv1t·
ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone 1714)
642-4321.
L.M. Boyd/Heads winning
If you ask men what phy1ical
c haracteristics make a woman
beautiful, the majority wlll put "Iona
hair" on their lists. Studies at the
Unl venJity of Southern Callforni•
Indicate that. ff you ask women the
same question, according to tbe11~
studies, most say sometlling about
"blond hair."
It was lhe common belief for many
centurle11 that bears were born
without form and had to be licked
Into shape by thelr mothers .
·, ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Tho,na1 P. Haley
Pubrtsher
~·-_,. .. l .. ""' ,.., .. "' -...
'
M ,C..u ~~••<tr~le ... IMO, C:MUI /IN16 CA "•1'
Thoma A. Murplllne
Editor
Barbara KAlbich
Edltort•• Page Editor
Confidentially, I think these shuttles have lost so me of their mystique ...
Demos off er nothing better
W ASHlNGTON -When he was a
student, even younger than he is now.
David Stoc kman saw h i m setr as
something of a left-w ing radical
destined to become a he ro of American
liberals.
Destiny fulfilled. On his 35th birthday,
Stockman became the hero of liberal
Democrats everywhere. Which tells you
what kind or shape the Democratic
Party and liberalism in general are in
these days They have neither heroes
nor ideas.
There Is something embarrassing
about watching Hous e Speake r Tip
O 'Neill and Sen. Don Riegle o r
Michigan and the r es t o r the
De moc ratic leadership proclaiming the
end of the Reagan administration. They
think they can see the evidence all
around them : Stockman has admitted
that, yes, it's really "trickle-down"
economics; National Security Adviser
Richard Allen can't seem to explain
why he took that Sl.000 from a Japanese
magazine ; S ecr et ar y of State
Alexander Haig insists on sounding hke
• nut; • rormer Nixon assistant named Douglass Hallett writes a piece In the
Wall Street Journal pointing out that
President Reagan and his men don 't
seem to know what they're doing in any
area.
THE HONEYMOON is over; it was
just a bit longer than usual Reagan and
his boys may be in terminal disarray -
I suspect they are -but that does no
credit to the Democrats. It's pathetic
for their leaders not to realize that, no
matter what misfortunes befall Reagan.
the American people may have noticed
that Democrats, in general, haven't had
a useful thing to say in the past year
There 1s som eth ing dreary and
revealing about the politics of "l Told
You So "
Perh a p s it 1s enough fo r the
Democrats in opposition to glory in the
current Republican e mbarrassment.
Rut 1ud1ietng by his thoughts as recorded
RICHARD RHVIS
m the famous Atlantic article. young
David Stockman has been trying to
think about and do something about the
country's economic malaise. Whal have
the Democrats been doing? Speaker
O'Neill and the others mock Stockman
for conceding that he was movinf too
quickly to really understand al the
bud1et lieurea be was tbrow1D1 around. But D emocraUc footwork ha.a ~a even
faster the Democrats have been
dancing to whatever tunes and numbers
t he White House has played. The
reason, unfortunately , is s imple: The
De mocrats have no numbers and, as far
as I can tell. no ideas
P UNISHED by the voters a year ago
for not dealing with economic problems ,
the party has made no real attempt lo
learn a nything since then. O'Neill, who
s hould be replaced if Democrats in the
House expect to be taken seriously, has
simply reacted to the ideas, not very
good ones. generated by Stockman and
the rest . The Democrats, so gleeful for
the moment, have served the nation by
lying low and hoping that Reagan would
fail. The Republicans probably will fail ;
their ideas have never made sense to
me. But they tried!
I cton 't think Ronald Reagan will be re-el~cted 1f he decides to run three
years from now. (My guess is that he
won't r un once his s imple little
program is tried. there really won 'l be
any rea son for him not to go back tn lhe
ranch.) But if there were an election
this month, Reagan would probably win
bigger than he did last year . And
Stockman might do better than that.
There would. after all, be no positive
r easo n to vote Democ ratic. The
Democrats' leaders hip seems perfectly
content with that, calculating that the
Republicans will screw things up. Then
Robert Byrd, the deposed Senate
majority leader. and all the rest will get
their bjg offices and their v1ewa back.
WHATEVER H APPENS to
Stockman. the new hero of the left, he
deserves credit for showmg clumsily,
som etim es c rue lly. that there are
federal programs that can be cut. that
there are federal agencies that can be
eliminated He's done more than his
critics in both parties.
But then they 're a dismal lot: The
Republican s upply -sider s have the
wrong answer and the Democrats have
none .
Why not subsidize anti-smoking ads?
One or the things that strikes an
American traveling 1n a foreign country
is how much better the advertisin~ 1s
back home. The pictures and the copy
in our news paper and magazine ads
are, for the most part, wonderfully
altr active, creative and convincing
They can talk us into anything.
The trouble comes, of course. with
what they talk us into. I have an idea in
this regard. The wa y cigarette
advertising is now. it t ries to talk us
into smoking or into changing brands if
we 're already hooked on tobacco. Now.
we'r e all agreed that s m oking
cigarettes is bad for us and even people
who s moke wish I.bey didn't. If we could
turn all that great adverlisinl! around
and use it as effectively to ducourage
smoking as it is used now to 1encourage
it, I 'II bet we could all but eliminate
cigarette smoking in five years.
THE BIG TOBACCO companies have
alread y h e dged thei r bets b y
diversifying They aren't going to go out
of business If ever yone stops smoking.
The giants like Philip Morris don't
even take most or their income from
their c igarette business a ny more .
Somehow, though, we have to protect
thl' advt•rt1s1n~ agencies who do s uch a
good job and take in so much money.
from th<'1r cigarette clients I have an
1dt-a
R ecently. Cong ress passed t he
tobacco support bill agam This gives
ta~ mone~ to to bacco farm ers In
,~~'
-AND-Y-RD-ONl-Y -~
Cong ress, :..,1 representatives voted in
favor or the tobacco price support bi II
1ust as 1f they thought lung cancer was
good for us It will cost taxpayers about
563 million thls year. I propose that
Congress pass a bill providing for a
matc hin g grant to be given to
a d vertisi ng agencies lo mount
campaigns lo discourage cigarette
smoking
With t he advertising genius we
ha ve in America . they could make
ci~arelle smoking seem like a really
repulsive thing to do. I'm in complete
sympathy with smokers. I don't happen
to s moke cigarettes myself but it's
Reagan Cong r ess rally cools
There is a growing number of
Congress-people who are getting as
nervous over Ronald Reagan as a lon~·talled cat in a room full of rocking chairs.
T hese are many of his fellow
Republican politicians and some
GllRCI MAIR
Democrats who jumped ship to support
the Reagan budget cuts.
Tbh nervousness ls evldented by a
tlurry of atrategy meetinas and a
,,eneral coolln& down of the
· 'rally·around-t he·President-no-matter·
what" entbualaam or several months
ago.
T he reaton for all this creeping
dluftectlon is the ll'OWlnl su1pfclon
that, despite all the public relaUon.s hype, the hapn domeaUc plan ltn't
workln•· RepreaentaUves -all of whom are up for re .. leetton next year
-and SenMon -a third of wbom are
up for re-election next year -are
hearing things they don't like from back
home.
lnflllion is up and rising. The latest
government figures set the annual rate
at almost 13 percent. Unemplovment is rising and now near 8 percent. And,
worse. of all the stratospheric interest
rates are killing business left af)d right
with housing and cars being the most
severely hit so rar, but others in bad
shape and getting ~orse.
BE;VOND T HAT, the impact of the
s hnrp budget cuts is beginning to be
felt and many people are alarmed
because they thought it meant slashln1
bureaucratic waste, not closin1 tbe
clinic in their town.
Add to all U\ls the fact that th°"
Democrat.a who deserted their party to
vote for the Rea1an bud1et juat fOund
out Mr. Rea1an couldn't deliver oe b1a
promises to belp them with importaDt
subatdles.
There's nolbln1 too compllulecl
about whal'I bappenin1. lt'1 'allW
, pol1Uc1 and that'• the na~ of U. lllM
' ln W1sblnstoo. It'• • 1••• tbe Wb1te
House hasn't quite mu&end Jet. ·
more luck than strength or character.
M v vice is not tobacco but ace cream
I m probably 20 pounds overweight and
1l will contribute to m y ultimate
de mise. but I can't stop eating ice
cream any more than the smoker can
kick tobacco. So. don't think I can't
uncferstand the smoker's inability to
quit All I want to do as he lp
In the 50 years since men and women
have been smoking so much, the death
rate from lung cancer has multiplied by
12. In 1930, there were about four lung
rancer deaths Ul 100,000. This year,
about 45 people out or 100.000 are dying
of lung cancer
1 'd love to see our advertising
industry get a big rederal government
subsidy to discourage s moking. Instead
of a handsome. macho cowboy sitting
on a hand-tooled saddle on a fine horse.
with a cigarette in his mouth. the
s moker would be pi ctured as something
quite different.
THE AD READER would be asked to
associate smoking, and himself as a
potential smoker of a particular brand,
with a dirty, drunken derelict lying In a
urine-stained doorway with a bull
c lutc h ed be twee n his thumb and
forefinge r so he could suck on it to the
very end.
Cigarette advertising relies heavily
on association. The women in the
a nti-s moking ads would not be
fresh-faced, hea lthy and attractive
young college girls frolicklng in the
leaves on a beautiful autumn day. The
women in the no·smoking ads might be
pictured, Instead. as unattractive old
women without enough breath lef\ to
blow out the candles on her 35tb
birthday party cake.
I 'm sur e our great advertising
Industry could save a lot of lungs with a
match.ing grant or $63 million.
Too bed more people wlllo llft a IM
beuh don'l fffd U.e Hal'f1 CUI
tnatead of feedlnl llli!Ur 1ar •I•
di&popla.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. November 23. 1981 ~·· ,~~\
~,,~ . ~ Wood cutting tips offered
Airlines kvy penalty
for unused discounts
LOS ANGELES (AP> A num~r
of major airlines li<tY they havl'
begun charging penally fees of uK
much as $20 per r ound·tnp ticket
when refunding money for unulied
1\ 11 linl'., ~pokesmen aald th·
IJt'Oaltw' will not Ix! upphed to mo5t
t'a.,t•., in whH·h tic'kt:ts i1re exchan~ed
for t1ckNs 1m other flights . DEAR PAT DUNN: I bave a chance to
cut down 10me trees at a frtend'a properly
and choo Ute wood la&o 1011 for my fireplace.
What IQnd of u •bould I UM, and are tbere
aay other tools I should take along? · L.W., "C:osta 1'1esa
The Hand Tools Institute advises wearing
safely goggles a nd proper clothing to protect
against flying chips, as well as making
certain the work area provides plenty of
swinging room. free of bystanders . A double
blt ax is usually used to fell, trim or prune
trees and to split or cul wood. A single bit a x.
which is used for the same purpose, a lso can
be used to drive wood stakes with the striking
race located opposite the cutting edge. Never
use any ax to strike a steel wood splitting
wedge or other m etal objects.
Steel wedges are used to s plit large
diameter precut workable sections or wood
into smalle r sections. ty pically used on small
precut sections or large dfameter tree trunks
Begin by making a starting slit with the
cutting edge of the woodchopper's maul, then
place the wedge in the starting s lit and strike
the wedge with the striking face or the maul,
located opposite the culling edge . Never
st r ike the steel wedge with the culling edge
or the maul.
Lodging guide avai/,able
DEAR PAT DUNN: Can you tell me If
anyone publishes a directory of people in
private homes who provide overnight lodging
and breakfast the way thet do in Europe?
I've beard this is being done, but I don't
know bow to check into it. I'm particularly
interested in accommodations in <.:alUorn1a.
S.T., Huntington Beach
You'll probably want lo order a new
guide called ··Bed & Breakfast Homes
Directory for Northern Canfornia, 1981·82. ·
It lists host families who open their homes lo
visitors and as updated midway through the
HUNTINGTON
BEACH
FLOWER MARKET
17955 Beach Blvd.
Huotlng1Gn Beach 847-9614
NEWPORT
FLORIST
2727 Newport
Blvd.
Fountain Ct Valley
DAVE'S
FLOWERS
of
Fountain Valley
18078 Harbor Blvd.
Fountain Valley
839-1010
year; the supplt•mcnt ii> mcludNJ In lhc
purchase pricl• or u 9~ plus lllll tend ii.
automatacaJly sen t to all subscriber<> l':uch
geographic div1s1on of the guide precedes the
listings wltb highlights of the un•u 'i; must
interesting features . Ea~·h ltstang dcsl'rtbes
the B&B hom e and key<'odes dcluals of guest
units, bed&.. bath!>, entranl•es. floor ll•vt!ls uncl
daily rates.
There·s information on how to bo<1k your
room . how to benl•fil rrom thi'> ho'>ptlahty
network ' · a n d how to o l> la 1 n m 11 rt•
informalton about a !>Pl'l·tf1c a1 t•a. f'uture
editions wlll inc lude all uf Cal1fo1111a The
directory can be ordt•rt•cl h~ mail uni.> from
Knightllme Pubhcal11111 !> l' O Bo>. ~!J I I..
Cupertino, Calaf 95014
I RA account aduice
DEAR PAT DUNN: I am Mvercd b) a
pension plan through m y employ.-r but I
understand that I can now 01>en an lltA
account and deduct the t·ontribullon '> on my
income tax return al lht-t>nd of lht' year . Ii.
this true? J .t:.. ('osta Mesa
The answer 111 no for 1981 lax rr-turns
according to the Internal Hc\·cnu1· Sci" 1Cl'
However. st arting Jan I 1982 ""u ma) m.lkc
contrabut1on~ to a regular IRA .w1·01ml •·Vl'n
though you ure {'fl\ l'l l'd h\ a quallfit•cl
retirement or ~overnnH'nl pl ;111
( 1111 11 prt1f1lf m I lu-11 11 Tll• /u /'tJI
/IU/111 /'111 U 11/ 1'111 r1'1J IUJll' 1/1'lllnl/
011' 11n\11 t" 11n1I II! 111111 111111 rw1•d /r1
~uh t' 1111·11u1lu ' m 1/•11 1 rr1m• nl r1nrl
hu\1111 " \11111 ,,,,.,, qun/11>11' '" /'ul
/)111111 Al \ HIH ~.·n 11 • 1111111111· ("1111\(
0 ()01/y />11111 I'() llu.r /.~Ii/I ,.,,,, .. \ft'\I/ I ·\ '1/1,/li !h
rnan11 ll'ltf'n Cl\"""''''•' 111// /11 1111s11 ,.,,11 '•ul 1•l111r.l'I/
mqu1ne~ or /t'tlt" 11111 111 l•1tl1•111 llw rnJtl1•r ~ 1tll/
namt' cuWres.~ 11nd ''"~""'\\ l11111r 11l111ru 111011'11 t
cannot be considered Thi' t·11lu111•1 up1J4!C1rx .\tunda11.
Wednesda11 und f'ndu11
WESTMINSTER
FLORIST
What a be•utttul
Idea ... Flowers
893-4519
8081 E. Westmlnater
Weatmlnster, Ca.
IRVINE · ........
FLORIST
2211 Martin
Irvine
752-1780
CAUGHT -Robe rt
Hedford gave a New
York tra ffic cop his
uutograph, som ewhat
rt.'1 uct¥.nllY. after thEf
actor 1.vas ticketed for
cir 1vm~ 73 mph on a
\\ cstchester County
highway
discount.fare tickets J
The penalties. sparked by an
increase In no-shows durmg the early
weeks of the air truffle controllers
strike, have been Imposed by United,
Am e r ican . TWA. Western and
Braniff airlines, according to a spot
survey conducted by the Los Angeles
Times.
The survey s howed that Northwe ... t
and Republic a1rhnes also have filed
for Civil Aeronautics Board approval
of the fees.
The fees for those who Cati to ~how
up or who cancel tickets apply on
"super saver" or other types of
bargain fares. As m a ny as 75 percent
of air passengers use the discount
rates, which generally require that
tickets be purchased a week or two an
advance.
tht•'t' apply to ru11 fare tickets. 1io .... 1·ver, thr~·e airlines sa1d they
pl.in to 1mpoi.e tougher penalties l\1r
Plorula and USl\lr suid tickets for
MHlll' discount flig hts to f''loridu wall
Ul' non refundable, whale New York
i\1r 'iJIU that Wt or Dec 1 ll Wiii begin
1mpu:,111g a S20 service charge on
c·u11<.'l'lh1t1ons of c·onfirmed re~crva
t111n' on at s Boston -HJlta
mon· 01 la11do rout e. even 1r the
t 1dwt has not been paid for
( 'onllnentul Airlines begun <.·harg
ing 1:1 fee for refunds on tickets
111111 ~ht after Oct 17. and Frontier
\arltncs has had !>uch a fee for some
I 1rkt.'ls sanct' 1!179, but most carriers
..,;mJ lhl'y fc1:1red thcv would lo.;,.
pa!>'il•ngt•rs. Tht.'y said the penaltu~s
\lit.'rt: finally imposed al> a result of
<lt.•d1010~ n.•vt•nues ancJ an increase
1n no .,hows
p;;;;;HU;;;;N;;;;Tl;;;;NGT;;;;;;;;;;;O;;;;;;N;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;~.~!!!!'1--' c-,-a,-k-Ken_ned_y-..r;;~==A;;;....;;Ll;;;;;;C;;;;;IA~'S===-i M-0 -0RE
HARBOR Flortat W FlOWHS I GIFTS
1701 Coriatlll• w., FLOWERS FLORIST 291 5 Red Hill Ave . 1_h,_o4oc
LEE'S
FLOWERS
1\1 5791 Weetminater Ave.
Wfftmlnater
891-2589 .. COLLINS
FLOWERS
2184 South Harbor Blvd.
Anaheim, CA
750-0451
UNIVERSITY
FLORIST
of Irvine
14ns Jeffrey, Suite lfB
l;
552-0283
Phone Order~
Welcome THANKSGIVING
DAY
SPECIALS
(Slonemill Bus Park\ • ...._. ... __._
Costa Mesa Hew,-i leed1 1215 A . Baker
Costa Mesa 1-0810 133-1883
•
TheFlOWER
GARDEH
160l2.._. •• d.
Hmt .....
842-5000
FlFfH
AVENUE
FLORIST
Westminster Cf
DAVE'S
FLOWERS
of
Westminster
1332 We.tmlnater Ave.
Wfftmlnater
894-5504
•
M ILE SQUARE
FLORIST
16519 Brookhurst St.
Fount•ln Valley
839-5200
556-7870
Open
Th•n1l991Vlng Day
Eves until
7:30 P.M.
-~ I l I\ • COSTA MESA • IRVINE
NEWPORT BEACH
CORONA DEL MAR
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
HUUts}itts Ci1
Nursery ·Florist · •
tJUl-tff1
2640 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa
Bror11/1w) Flouer Shop
)Ill) HAllllOR lllvO ol •DAMl
tin Co•'"' CAnten
Cl)~TA MEV,. CAlll'ORN IA m1'
All Occot1on1
Gr"" Plonu
Opon Sunday• and Haltday•
Share your warmest thoughts of Thanksgiving. Order the FTD •
HERITAGE
FLORIST
14474 Culver Dr.
Ste D.
lrvlne 857-1111
JERI'S
FLORISTS
CALL
962-9990
11512 Beach Blvd.
Hu~onBeach
Credit Cards Accepted
By Phone
Huntington
Beach -DAVE'S
FLOWERS
of
Huntington Beach
8861 Adams
Huntington Beach
964-3718
PAULS FLOWHS
644-1990 ..........
14111 .... IW.'
W1 I ' llF
193-4112
'Thanksgiver· llouquet
Specially designed to capture
all the colors of autumn. With bright daisies. Brilliant mums.
Even a decorative pumpkin.
All in an exclusive
rTD Woven Fern Bosket. Or send
a fall classic. Bli!1.~~
The rTD Mum Plant.
helping you stiy it right.
The FTO Thonksglv•r Oovqver Is generollY ovolloble for leu rhon i17 ~O. Prices for rhe FTO Mum Plont vary according to slz..
As on lndep•nd•nt bvslneumon, eoch FTD Florist sers his own prices. Service charges ond dellvery moy be oddlrlonol.
' 1981 FlorlslS' Tronsworld Delivery.
Most FTD Florists accept American Express and other major credit cords .
We send flowers worldwide.
Ordw early
Avoid OtaeppolntrMnt
1830 ltn Mlgu•I Drive, Htrbof View Center • OU-4000
•• bit 11th ltttet. Co1ta MeH • 1M&.e111•
' MOORE
FLOWERS
2115 Harbor llvd.
Coat. Mesa
845-5585
• Spe~lal prices on Spec lal ••II
arrangements. Happy Thanksgiving
from MOORE FLOWE RS.
Cav~s.
"Always tht Seasons Fints('
FLOWERS ._.PLANTS ~A.CCESSORIES
2913 HAHO • tOUlfVAIO 2l7$ N(W,OU l lVO
COSTA MESA CA 92626 COSTA MfSA, CA 92627
714 .j.Q.J I J$
R
EMINDER
(714) 7 51-4705
Jfl41 BIRCH STREE
NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92660
IN LAGUNA HILLS
~'Windmill :Jfo,~t
For That Little
Something Extra
We welcome
orders by phone
770-0455
Order Car~,AW!d i>lsapix>111tment"
DeMURL
FLORIST
Come ••• u• at our new locauon et:
2175 Irvine Ave., Ste 1-83
Coatall-
c1rv1ne ~h~-~11111Cllfi\lt•
.... ,,,._ . .,...-
~·2
-MMNG--•:001• ~ CHARLIE'S ANGELS
Th41 Angels ano ' -.111 eel
1-1 lhlflt go to the Carib
IMl•n to 1t•al e mvltl·mll
lion OOllar diamond ••'II
rttutn II 10 •II •!0'111ul
-
Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT/Monday. November 23, 1981
G THI CMOO KIO
A l°"Ylll•old'a CCMlra
~ 11"'9Qll """' • akin cllM4l• t1u11 11.. Crlpplld
him from 1><1111 11 aocw-
menllld. <fl INTVl'TAIHMUfT
TOHIQHT
On IOc.tllon In T e.sM wftl't
()Om 0.LUIM alld ''fha
8"1 llllle WhC)f~N In
le•U '' (Ql MOYtl
• 1 f1111 01 '""'' I 1t73)
8'~ LM , Maile YI A
Mat'tlal arts ·~l*'f llndl
UMMPIGltd datlg« when
he QOM 10 work In e BBllO·
tcoi. ic. lllCtory 'R'
Cl lWHAT'I UP AMI.NOA
fNIUflld Af'll4JfiCe'e only
matadOf; • oroue> 01 I ·
molllh·Old ewlmme11.
hOmemllOe alt"•h and 1"9
<1tt11no young man wllo ny
lherTI
t :4& ( Z) MOVIE
'® NFL FOOTBALL Mlnnosoto Vl~•nQ> at
Atlanta Faicons,) 0 TREASURE HUNT m THE MUPPETS
Gu•ll Oel>Or•h Harrv
(I) HAWAII AVE-0
"Most llkel'I To Murdo• fD BUSINESSREPORT
'1!} DICK CAVETT
SURVIVAL A s mall band of California
t•ondoN'; sends one of its mem bers lo find
a l'duge which t•ould l>Olve their s urvival
probkm in "No Man's Land," an
an1mC1ted s µcciHI al 8::JO tonight on
t\.NXT t21
• • • "Ntghl MOVH "
( 1916) Gene Haclim•n.
Jennifer Warren A pr1v11e
eye hi<td to loetl• the
daughter of a fonner mov-
ie acireu bacOtl'l8I entan-
gled In • web ol lnlrlgva
with a Meyan &mUQOll"O 11no
10:00 f) Cl) LOU GAANT
Lou oo.. btck 10 his
hometown and runs Into
en UMllpecle<l and trou-
bling news story
UOCI> MEWS Guest Sir Fr~efltk ANh
ion
CBS NEWS
NBC NEWS C MOVIE "'* • Advance To 1 he
Rear ( 1964) Glenn Fo•d
Stella S1•11ens When 11
company ol Union soldiers
11 oa1a11ed 10 guard a gotd
1h1pmen1 Iha captain lalls
for a female Contedotr.i11
spy
@MOVIE * • * Tile WOfld s Gre~t
est Altlll!lf' ( t973J John
Amo5 Jan M1~hael Vin
cer'I A coach who 15 hllV
•no o run ot Dad t~k
rftturn.s to h19 toots m Afu
ca ano discover• a super
a1nte1e G
l MOVIE
tt * * 'L&5 Girli I 19S7)
GeflfJ Kelly M1111 Gayot>r
An Ame11can mus.cal snow
n11s the European circuit
when compltcallons art•" e·ao 0 BULLSEYE m WEL.COME BAO<.
KOTTER
fD KCET NEWSBEA T
'1i) BUSINESS REPORT
• A) ll9J NEWS
H WILD BABIES
Tn1s docvm4lfltary C<lllChes
many "'1ld animals ,;s tht.l'
grow up and 1e11rn to 'Ur
vive 1n lheu naluraf hatu
"" S MOVIE
• • Oeadman ~ F1oa1 A
surte1 ano his '""nds try tu
capture a dru9 runner ''"''
S5 m1lhon wortr> ot neroon
PG
7-00 0 C8S NEWS 0 NBCNEWS 0 HAPPY DA VS AGAIN
0 YOU ASKED FOR l'T
rttaturtod Chop,t1r~
WP<tpons and E"91os11
Ptgeons That Save l ovttl '8 M•A•&•H
Hawt<_.... ef\d lreo~ "811> °"" sotd•~r to 101n '"" pr90nan1 ,..,,,. and try to
slop a"olher trom ma"v•
1ng o bus1no5s II"' a> JOKER'SWILO
ED OVEREASV
Gufl'Sts 11111 st J.-an~Ptertt•
Aampal my11101og"t
Joseph Campt>ell J m MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
I TIC TAC DOUGH
J9J THE MUPPETS
Gue1t Lesley Arm Warr""
0 MOVIE • * , Stitt l1ek ~ r11•
Motion Portutl' I l'l791
w1111;im St. iwe• Le '""rl
N1moy fh~ formm (um·
manoer 01 th<> u S S
Entetpnse re .. "s~mblM h•s
otd crP\411 and wt!!. oft on ,,
m1ss1on to hnO tne my~ter1
ou• •M~~• responsible !or
CHANNEL LISTINGS
0 KNXT ICBSI
fl) KNBC CNBC>
0 l<TLA I Ind 1
6) t<ABC IABCI
Q KFMB (CASI
f) t<HJ TV llno I
a1) KCST IABCI
6) KTTV tlnd I
II) KCOP TV (Ind I
m KCET IPBSI
m KOCE IPBSI
11>11 dastruchon ot nvmer
ous Federation starah1p1
'G'
7.30 0 2 ON THE TOWN
featured a IOOk al thot
tacts and myth1 surround
mg mastectomies syndi-
c .it e d colvmnist Jack
AnO.-rson talk' about hlS
Ille and what has kept him
Q0.119._illl these yt1ars 0 I)! FAMILY FEUD 0 LAVERNE & SHIRLEY
& COMPANY
When Sh1rl4!)1 f1nOI OUI that
C•irmone 1s naung otl1er
gorli.. $he decides lo play
tht1 field her sell
0 MATCH GAME m M•A•s•H
A young surgeon trom
r ok vo brinos home to 111&
~u19eons of the 4077th
""'' !hey are out ot touch
'"th nl'W mt'd1c11t praGllC
es ID TICTACOOUOH fD MACNEIL / LEHRER
RE POAT
'1i) GREAT
PERFORMANCES
'>•m~un And Oehlah
Pl 1c100 Oom•noo and Shir
111y Veuett arn teotured +n
(.,1m1ll& Sa•nt Saens s
"'"'' ~ct ope.a taped our "'II ,, p<>rloananc<> ol thf'
Sor• Francisco Ope••
Company last season.
Jul•us Rud•t conducll
8 P M MAGAZINE
1nta1v1ew$ with Aobell
waqner llnd ho~ w1I• Natal
•e Wood . .i collage lootball
leam ,..,,n the worst win
1ec:orCI 10 h1sto<y
H MOVIE
• • Hel1d1n For Broao
wJy ( t9801 Re• Sm1lh
Vt••un Reed Four young
tal~"'"° and scared per
torme,. go to N...., Yori.
Coty trying to mek" 11 0o9 '"
~how buSlness PG
8:00 8 Cl) A CHANA
9N>WMTHAHIC8GMHO
Antmated Cl1artla 8'owr>
ur>d his pals oet logelhet
arovnd a p•no pong taDle
tor " nov<>I T hank501111no
tea!l (Al 0 ~ UTTU HOUSE Of!
THE PRAIRIE
Charle~ trav<>ls 10 Ch>CagO
10 console his Old fnend
l\a•8h Edward1 when th&
man , you"9 M>n •s killed
n an accident
0 MOVIE * * A T OOGh 01 C•ass
119731 Glf'ndA Jackson
G~rqe Seoo1
0 MOVIE
• • Tt>e l1beta1oon Of
l B Jones (1970) lee J
Conb AnlhOny z...,be m P M. MAGAZINE
Interviews .. 1th Rdbert
waqner and h•l wife N.a1a1
+fl Wood a tool< •t the 11111
0 On TV
l 2 TV
" HBO
e l(11wm.u 1
t tWORl NV .NV
11 CWT8S1
E tESPN1
s
0
0
IShowltm<'I
SPOtltQht
CC;ibll' New• NPlw<>rk)
ot • male strlppet. Lmda
Harri• vl1111s Beroelono,
Chef Tell on how to tell
wtlan Ille tvrkey IS done
(I) MOVIE • * 'Valtowllone Kelty·
( 19S9) CHnt WelkM, Edd
Byrne5
&;) OREAT
PE.RFOAMAHC£S
Samaon And OelUah'
Placido Oom1noo and Shir·
ley V11<ratt are fealured 1n
Camille Sa1n1-Saans s
three-act oPer• IBPCld dur·
1ng a performllf\C4l ot the
San Franc11co Opara
Company last season,
Jullu• Rudel COndUCll
C MOVIE • * • Foaas ( 19801
Jodie Fo11e<, Sally Ket .. •·
man The v1cttm1 of brOk•n
homM and uncarong par-
ents fovr •een·eoa glt1s try
to IOOthe thew amottonal
wound• lhrOUQh drugs and
set• 'A'
$ J SAN FRANCISCO BIO
l.AFFOf'F
Fred Willard nosts this
numorou1 ntghl ot enter·
1a1nmen1 as un~nown
comedl8ns are 1udge<1 tor
their c:omic talents
@MOVIE * • • Chapter Two
( 19791 JamM Caan, Mar-
shB Moson Soon eltef""hls
wile s daalh • wroter hnds
\ hlmMtf raluelantty talllng
-:> 1n love again PG
l TliEFUGmvE
'Fear In TM Desert City"
1•30 0 (I) NO MAH'S
VALLEY
An1matl!<I A smaH Dand ot
C1J1forn11 con<IOfl whose
home ts 1>e1no threat90ed
Dy con1truct1on Hnd •
scout In SflafCh Of A MAQI·
cal legendary raf..ga m ALL IN THE l"AMIL V
• Mika and G1ot1A hava •
_..., •9"'"'9"1 -1.IMI
led -1 Otof18'8 tlOW INI
aogr .. IO< In t~ ma<l1al
relatlonsNp
1:60 l Z) THE FUOmvt
·•11141 Judgment' (Part 2) e:ooe Cil u·A·s ·H
Ma1t call bring. a dll1Vfl>-
1ng leuer !or B J from his
w1(• and • delinquent
spee01no ticket tor COi
Potter 0 MOVIE
Fir• On The Mountain
(Premlflt•I Aon Howard.
Buddy Ebsen An aging
r ancrier struooles to keep
hlS land Oesc><te an army
request end cour1 Ofde<s
to vacalo 11 to make way
tor a missile Slta
Q THArS INCREDIBLE
f'Hturea a stunt mans
laM from 16 atOflfJS up •
pig r<t<:1ng !rack two t t-
year Of<! aer1a11111 attempt
to perform a tt1pla 1<1me•·
saull m MERV GRIFFIN
@) OOH CORYELL
H 'MOVIE
• • "Baby B1ue MM•ne
( 1976) Jan·Michael Vin-
cent Gtynn•s 0 Connor A
young man d1shonora1>1y
d1scherr;ia<1 lrom the
MR11ne Corps, assumes
the Identity, tt>a role and
un1to<m of• war hero 'PG
9:30 tJ HOUSE CAU.S
Chartey break• • state
child abuse law rlll>ar than
reveal the name ol one ot
hts patients a pregnant
teen·_,
0 MOVIE
• • • ''\ "Oell11eranc•'
( t972) Burt Reynolda, Jon
VOIQhl
fJl) BEGINNINO AOAIM
Three 1N1dowara of differ·
1ng ages d1scuu hQw thelr
lives -• attec1ed by tile
daeths OI !half WIVH
'1i) NO PlACE LIKE
HOME
Holl Helen Hayes e•pfores
soma vt•bta alternetlvas 10
nutsing nomes on a docu-
mentary loolt at IOno-term
care tor the elderly (Al
OJ) THE ROCKFORD
Al.ES
Rocklo<d linds o weelthy
bu11n1uman's m1111ng
g1rllt1end and Is than
ass19ned to keep R close
walch on he< C MOVIE "'* •'• The Bad And The
Beauhlul ( 19S2) Kirk
Douglas Lana Tvmer A
cold-hearltd Hollywood
producer affects the hvas
or sever•• peopi. Put w•no
stardom
10:30m NEWS ID INDEPENDENT
NETWORK NEWS fD AURAL AMERICA·
THE COMINO OF AOE
Lorna Green looks at the
proolem• laced by the
1ura1 elderly and a•plores
some 1nnovallva aoiuhona
H HEP8URM ANO
TRACY
A po1gnant look II laken al
one ot HOiiywood a most
popular and en0vr1no cou-
ples • Spenc;er Tracy ano
Ketharine Hepburn
$)MOVIE
• "'·~ The 1mmor1a1
BacNIOr ( 19791 Mon.a
V1t11 G1ancarto Giann1n1
On lt1af fo< murderlno her
husband. • .,.._.,lffut wlO· aw .,,,.,..... the IUtY wttn ,_ ,.,,,....btencaa of ,_
~ate ~tie hie
'PO
0MOVIE * "''• 'CaboBlanco
( 198 t) Charies Bronson.
Juan RoDards An aWlleCI
Nazi who h" t>oognt off
the to<:at police dominates
a small Pe<uv1an C011118l
town dunng 11'41 t9•0. R
I 1:00 f) 0 @) Q) NEWS
0 SATURDAY NIOHT
Host Che11Y Chase Guest
B<fly Joel 0 PAUL HOO.AH m THE JEFFER80HS
LIOnet h8' 10 l•t..e a he
detecto< test on the first
dllv ot h" n-1n1'
(I) BENNY HILL
Benny do.5 8 ComedlC
lake.off on "Bonrna and
Clyde
fJi) DICK CAVETT
Gue$! Sir F re<ler IClo. A Sh·
ton
'1i) RUAAl. AMERICA·
THE COMINO OF AOE
Loma Green look1 111 the
problem& taced bV tn.
rural eldefly and eapjorllS
soma 1nnovatrve SOiutions
11: 16 '0, MOVIE
• • ·~ "SmOkey And The
Bandit fl ' ( 1980) Burt Aty·
notds. Jacloe Gleason
Sheutt Buford T Jutttce
calls 1n his two tewman
brothers to stop • retired
bootlegger, th• Bendit,
from lrt1napott1119 • baby
elephant PG
'Fire' not hot movie
Story. about embattled rancher a dreary, long-winded tale
By FRED ROTllENRERG
AP lelevi.1 .. Wfltef
NEW YORK Stones aboul old timers
rebelling a~a1nsl modern c:1v11i zation by
refusing to sdl out lo progres~ and high-rise
apartments are in vogue no\\ Newsrasters
occasionally wrap up their broadcasts with
pieces on these pioneers µrotectin~ their
homesteads
The story as told an a minute or two. and the
viewer srrules about the J:ood old days and
heads out to the local shopping center.
Tonight's NBC movie I KNBC. Channel 4 et
9 p.m .). "Fare on lhe Mount.Un," starring fton
Howard and Buddy Ebsen, 1s such a story. Only
it's so dreary and long·winded that It's
impossible to hold mu('h compassion for Don
Quixote.
The windmill battler 1s John Vogelin ,
played by Ebsen. who was able to !!lip into Jed
Clampell's wardrobe and twang for the role.
Vogelln. proudly stubborn. refuses government
requests -and court orders that he vncate
his New Mexico ranch to make way for a
missile base.
The coonict is simple to Vogeltn "My
earth, soil, sweat und bo~e." vs "the
government's papers nnd luws.
Vogelin like!! to rock on his porch and watch
the 11un set, and he boasta that he'11 n man of few
words His culol{y Alter shooUn~ ttls arand·
11on1'1 larnfl hor11P was typic~I. "l ain't much
with words He was a good horse
Goodbye old horse.··
The story is equally sparse and fails lo build
any dramatic tension. The subject -a man
protecting his home agrunst government
intrusion -just isn't done in a compelling way.
The villain starts out being the government
in the person of Col. Oesalius, played with
smothering politeness by Michael Conrad. the
Emmy Award winner from "Hill Street Blues.''
But, oddJy enough, Vogelln's obstinance in the
race of government concessions and the fact
that the government actually owns the land,
causes sympathies to move toward Big Brother.
Howard is not believable as Lee Mackie. the
land speculator trying to milk the government
for his land. Although Howard's mercenary
bent mellows under the stoic inrtuence of
Vogelin. this really iim't a rilUng role for the
boyishly lnnocent actor who is best known as
Opie on the "Andy Griffith Show" and Richie
Cunningham on ··Happy Days.''
In one bizarre scene, Mackie offers to heJp
Vogetin chop a huge tree and takes off his shirt
If this ta suppo,11ed to be beefcake, It's sliced
pretty lean. Who are they t.rying lO kid? And lt'•
comical when Mackie attempts an awkward
em brae with hl1 love Interest on the sbow. You
can't help wondering when the Fona wUJ barge
in and show t\lm how to do It right.
There are two other cbar1cter1 who are
supposed to add warmth, but lbis two-hour
movie doesn't work on any level. No
heart.atrln~J aro ever pulled,
,__.
TUBE TOPPERS
KOCE G9 7:30 and KCET Qt 8:00
"Samson and Delilah." Opera taped last
season during a pedormance of the Sun
Francisco Opera Compony.
K.NXT 9 8 :00 "A Charlie Brown
Thanksgivi.n8." The little round-headed
kid 1ets together with hl$ friends for a
novel feast around a Ping-Pon& table.
KTLAe 8:00 -''A Touch of Class."
Glenda Jackson in her Academy
Award-winning role as the mi.stress of a
married man.
KABC fl 10:00 -"Deliverance."
Four Atlanta businessmen get more
than they bargained for on a weekend
canoe trip. Stars Burt Reynolds and Jon
Voight.
11:26 ( Zl MOVIE
• * * "The Lonoa•t Yard"
( 1111•) Burt Aevno1da,
Eddie Albert A former pro
qvarterbac:k doing ttme 1n
a Soulhe<n prison 11 given
tile job coaching a grovp
ot convict• !Of a no.nolda-
berr ad foolbalt game
~111n11 Ille gvards
11:306 QUINCY
A gunlhOI VIC11m <!195 from
• aeeond wouno apparent·
ty ovarlook8<1 by Iha Y°""O
doctor wtio trealtd him et
an emergency chn.c 0 O'f THE BEST OF
CARSON
Gues11 CIOf1s L•achman
Robby BeMon Svdney
Go1C11mrlh CAI
U NEWS
Q 8E8T OF OAOUCHO m THE 000 COUPLE
a> SANFORD ANO SO..
fD KCET NEWSBEAT
'1i) CAPTIONED A8C
NEWS
I!§) ABC NEWS
NIOHruNE
14 8TAHDIHO ROOM
ONLY
"Sherlock Holme1 • The
Stranoe Cue 01 AflCa
Faulkner· The muter
delacllve searches tor
SIOlen love fetlera 1n this
stage pr()(luctton, taped at
lhe Wllttamstown Theatre
Festtval In MasaachuMllta
statt1no Frenk Langella as
Sherlocl< HOimes and Ste
ntien Colilns
-Ml>NIGHT-
12:00 0 MOVIE * * T wtttghl On The Rio
Grande" ( 19•71 Gene
Autry Autry run1 1n10 a
female knlht·thrower and
soma ,...., smugglers
0 ABCMEWS
NIOH'Tl.JHE 0 MOVIE •"' * ·~ Father Goose
( 196SI Cary Grant LHhe
C11on A WOfld War II
dttlter is an1gned to Mii up
a W81Ch Slatton ltl the
South Seas where he •S
tnvadael bV • perky Francll
SCN>o(tNCher and her MIV·
en llvely young ternale stv-
denls
• ~OOUGl.M
Cof>oet "-'>at• Scouo
Guesll Doug l<erShaw
Robert Lansing Fr•nk
00fshltl
ID AO<>t<IES
Chris and Terry nalHt lhelf
car SIOlen Whllt! ltlv .. ttg81·
~ a m•tO< roboery W INTAOOUCTION TO
PHILOSOPHY
@J THE ROCKFORD
ALES
C'MOVI£ * • * An Enemy Ot The
People ( 197 7) Steve
Mc~ Charles Durn-
ing Based on Ibsen s ptey
Tt>a c1uzens ol a small
town lirSI applaud then
perMCut11 a loc81 physic1on
tor decl1111ng the local ho!
spt•ngs unsafe di>!' to POI·
11111on G
f2:16($) MOVIE "' * "' * "Ordinary Peo-
ple' ( 1980) Mery T )'fer
Moore. Donald Sutnerland
A ou•tt·rldden teen-ager
1ry1no to put h11 •••• back
1ogether altar h111>rolher'1
de•lh and h+s own ev1C1de
attempt raaGhes oul 10 his
complacent lather and his
cold, re59rva<1 molher R
12:30 0 Qt TOMORROW
Gue.ls Tony Randall chef
Jacques Papin Kris Ktts
tolt111snn
Q MOVIE "'* '> The Pow11r ( t'Jb8)
George Hamilton Surnnne
Ptesnatte A my!llll 1ous
power attempts 10 control
the minds ot the SC•f!n1•st~
1n a space faDoratory
fJi) IT'S E\IERVBOOY'S
BUSINESS
Labor Its H"'°'Y
@ MOVIE * • •., · LHtfe Miss Markor
( 1980) Welter Mallhov
lvtoe Andrews Base<! on
the D.imon Runyon story
A. grull ,i1noy 1930s Dook
10 s Illa 15 turned around
when 11.i accepts a b V""'
old moppet as a mert«•r
tor a rec1no !Mii PG
INO f) 'I HARRY 0
A blind my~lety <tulhor
wnott bOnk' have tor11t Old
actual mvr<!ers tell~ Hrtrry
lhat Shi! .. 111 ~ the nf'•I
onti to llHf IRJ
1-00 0 MOVIE
• • "Mountain f1hylnflt
t t939) Gene Autry Juri"
Stor•y m SPEAKOUT ID INDEPENDENT
NETWORK NEWS ®J NEWS
t·30 a> MOVIE
• • , l he Cononnneo
01 Allon& t •9631 Soor.1a
Loren Mu1mohan 'iChf!ll
A oymg bvsinassman tries
to pass 1111 busin"s~ Qn 1r; ,,,, younoe• son whe11 his
p1ychot1c older boy
b<lcomes a recluse
Z MOVIE • * * * Ordinary P('O
pie ( t9801 Marv Tyie•
Moore Donald Suth4!1tand
A gu111 t1dden teen·AQt>t
trying IO put his hit> bJcl.
tOQalher alter his brothe< 4 deeth end hie own ..,_
ett-1 raac"89 8vt 10 his
compta<;ent tather .ino hit
cold rese1ved mother R
1:500 MEWS
2'00 0 ENTERTAINMENT
TOHIOHT
On locatoon 1n Te•as "'''h
Dom Oelu1&e end The
Best l•ttfe Wh...,,ehou~e In
Tuas
~NEWS C MOVIE
• • MlltflOr ( 1979) s .. an
Connery Natallu Wooo
American Qnd Russian sci
~e ecpens tOtn forces 1n
an attempl to ward ott a
01anl melf'Ot from outer
space, which 1s on a duoct
cOllls•on courw wlln farlh
Dolor" mass d•S•~tf'r
SltlkPS PG
JOHN DARLING
IHI MfNUNf AMO
T"'-CV
A polOnant fO(lll If !alien al
one ol HOiiywood • n.oat
P<>OUl•1 4lnd 90durlng COV·
rll<I• Spencer Tr a<y •nd
l<tllha1111e H8Q«>urn
ntf) MOVll * • , llQW Br Tll41 TAii
t 10011) Ch flat Opher
0•0109, Offtl J1go9' A
Vletnem •el•r•n 11
accuMO 01 Ill• blotf\4H •
mut1ler eltar rllur rung
humthew1A1
2:10 Cl D MEWS
&IWHAT'IUPAMINCA
reaturaa A,,,.,IC•'• only
mataOOf. • group of 6-
month old 1w1mm•r1,
llom@Mldl 1111roralt 1n<1 I~
daring young man wno 11y
th~
OMOVIE
• • •, r alat From Tt>a
Crypl II' ( 19731 Curt Jvr
QMnt, Talfy·Thom11
Sealed 1n " UllW"'4!111 11111
meo ret••• 10 one another
the hOttOt &IOflh lhlt
1.ompr1te their moll
ctrallded niglltmarea 'A
3 30 $ JAMBOREE IN THE
HILL.8
Sup;ir Bowl 01 Country
Music T h11 un1qve coun
tty mu11r les1tv11I from
West V1rg1n111 features two
Clays ot poc~•n s1ng1n ond
hdotm 1ind 1nctude1 lluCh
Sldrs a1 Emmytou Harn•,
Conway fwllly T G Shap·
ard Al8b8trlll .,,d many
more
335 l MOVIE
• • • les G11!s 119571
Gene Kelly, M1tz1 Gijy1101
An Amet1can musical show
h1I~ tri.t European c11cv11
Wltff\eu t.omphcattons At1~
•OO C MOVIE
• •" Fo•es· 11980)
.JOd1e Foslar Sally Kellttr
man T"f' ••Cloms ot l>tOkttn
hOmt!S uno unc:at1no par
ants tour loon-age girl~ try
10 soolhe the+r emottOH411
wounds '"'OVOh drug~ dnd
sex A
@ COMMUNITY
PROGRAMMING
'1'1w11day'11
Day• Int.-'tlot•I.-•
-MORNING-
7·45 C • • ', How To Beet
r ne H111h L.ost Ot tiv•ng
( t9791 Sunn Saint James
JPS$1Ca Lange No longer
able to ~eep up with 1nllR·
flon three Oregon
hOU..,...1•eS turn to larGtlny
to balance thetr oodgef$
PG e 00 S * *', Ja1lhousa
AOC!< ( t9S7) Elvis Precley
Judy Tyler A young pr1S·
Otl6f teatn1 to play IM gu1
tar and al!Of his retaase.
climbs to atardom 0 ••"The Amazing
Adventures Of Joe 90·
Puppets A magocat 1nven-
t•on f'tlabtes a 9-y11ar -old
fitly to l>t'Come a special
.19ent tor the World tntell•·
Ne<work ·o ~o&>:'\t."ln TheMOner"
f 19Slll 8a-y 90yS Pa111
r.roi Oonsnue
C ***'• T1rne A11er
t 1me ( 1979) Malcolm
MtDowell David War.-
ti G Wells ch4MS ""'
intamo.Js Jack the Ripper
trnm V•ctorum London to
m()(lern day San F 1 anc1sco
lhlOUQh th«' use ot .i time
machine PG
O • • * Chapter rwo
J t•H9l James Caan Mar
~ha Mason Soon alter h1s
wile s death a writer ""°'
h1msell reluctantly falling
'" to•e again P"
10-00 S • • , Aoubn Cul
1 tcl801 Burt Reynold• lfls
1ev Anne Down, A Brit11h
wc1ahle lures '" 1nt•rna-
honat 19wt"l th•ef out of
rC'ttr•mont to help her ttaal
'30,000 000 in dlalnonde
PO'
to'IO. • '-' TlwM t ... aa
81Hr• I 1nt) John
Wayne, CarOlll l.andl• 11-ooa • • .., file lv•ter
!{ .. ton lioty" I 19671 Ooft..
aid 0 Conn()(, Rtlollde
"•m111g
11;IO(C) •"' *'-' "Wlaa Btooo"
(tflO) Blad OolHll Arny
Wrlgl\t All eMOtlOnalfy
dalllciltd Pt•achat c;on-
tandt With a handlul of
~. HCl'I of wllOm
'"'""'' to e11pto1t rwm IM • d1ttarent rM1on 'PO'
11:00. • • • "BIMry' ( 1974)
William HOiden, Kay I.Aini
Cl) • •"' "Ww Hun1"
(IOI~) JOhn Sexon. RoWt
Rldl0t<1
0 •*'I\ Lltlla M ISS
Marker" (1910) Walter
Metthau. Jull• Andr-•
BaMd on th• Demon
RunyOO llOfY A grull attn-
gy 19301 boolo• a kle •I
turned ••<>und when h4t
ac;capll • 6-~••-0ld mop
pat u e marker '°' • tac·
tng bet PG' z • * * • 0.dlllaty
People' I 19801 Mery Tyta<
Moore. Donald Sutt>artand
A g;.illt•rldden tean·•oer
1rylt1Q to put hi• Me back
together alter h11 brOI,,., I
d•ath and hll own •ulCide
allompt ••11Ches out to hit
complacent f•thlr and hll
cold. resar~ed motller 'R
1 00 $ • • ''> Ja1lhOUM1
Rock t t9S71 Elvis Presley
Judy r yte• A you no ~t•·
oner 111111n1 to plav lhe gui-
tar and afler hit release
ct1mbs 10 slardom
1.30 C "' •' • Ja11nousa Rock" ( 19S7) ElvtS Presley
Judy Tyl111 A yDvog p11t-
oner lorns 10 play the gv1·
tar and after his release.
ct1mDs to s111oom
2.-00 O :.,,. "' * ·ou11aw Blues
( 1977) Peter Fonoa. Suun
Seint James When o
country-waatern 11nger
a1aal• h1• song an ea-con
1fo8S dllsparst•ly 10
re111eve his recording
11ghts whole batthno the
police PG
21>& Z • • '• The Great
McGon•gall Spike Mtlk·
gan Pater Sellers William
McGonagoll 11 the world's
worst poet vet t.e -·
to find lodda• tor "'' pen
e"e<ywnere
3:30 0 * • Ct1ato s Lene
( 1972) Charles Bronaon,
Jee~ Pelanca
C • • • Tom Sawyer
I t973J Jonnny Whitaker
Celesle Holm Base<! on
Mark Twa1n·s novel A LQy
who h11ff near the M1ws-
>S1pp1 River ltnds 1t •mPOs"
bte to stay out ot trouble
especially wt>"" hf' •ao•
along with his bvddy Huct
Fonn G s * • ' • Hot Lead And
Cold Feet I 19781 Jim
Dale Don l<notts In The
Old West twin Drothers •
one •ough n tOUQh tna
Othttr 8 C•IY·bnlO tn4tque·
toast compete 1n JI
grueling contest to AM
who will 1nhen• 1heH
tathltf a fortune G
a:4a ..%; * * ' 01 .... He< The Moon' 1111101 Manh•
l<ellef Bf'ft Convy A rich
Am•rtcan 1noustr1at1s1
veca11on1ng '" Europl,
compi.cates everyone a Ille
when ht-dee10es to marry
• Mnnet ot • v1ttaoe beauty
pageant G 14011
•:OO 0 • • • The ldOlmak·
er" (19801 Ray Sharkey
l ovah Feldlhuh A man•
Putative manager v-var·
IOVS ploys 10 catapult '""°
1"'8n·aoe<"• into pop ••no·
1119 stardom PG'
6:20 Z * • •., Smo«ay And
The Band11 II (19801 Bun
Raynolds. Jllcic,. Gtauon
She<tll Buford T Jutl1C41
calls 1n h+I two lawman
brothers to "°" a ••tired
l><>Otlt'gge. the Bandit
from transpo<llng a baby
elephan1 PG
by Armstrong & Batiuk
CHEF M>C A.RONI 15 WITH
US TOOJltl.Y TO GIVE US
SOME HEL.PFUL HINTS ON P'REP~ING "THAI
THANKS61VING MEAL!
CHEF, WHA.'T A.60UT S0NE
01= 'THE P'ROC.ES.SEC? WELL, JOHN,"Tt1EY DO / HAVE. '"1"HEIR AOVANTA61:S.
IURKE.YS ON 'THE MARJc:ET
THESE' c;:r..vsr ARE 'THEY
WORTHWHILE?
.:;7~~. :l\.· '. ~~·"·-
SOnto's tte·r~
and Morel
.Your advertising dollars will
go miles with the
r1 Daily Pilot ~ift Train 1
1~ appeanng :
December 2, 9, 16 & 19
Your ad will reach
over 86,000 adult readers
Call 642·56 78
Ask for your
Christmas Ad-Visor
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 Mesa, CA 92627
Approved for Medicare
1
Daily Pilat
MONDAY, NOV. 23, 1981
CA VALCADE
SPORTS
82-3
84
I•
Rams have the life
kicked out of them by San
·Francisco. See B4 .
Members of the Raiders and Lightning Bolts square off during an exhausting rush upfield toward the goal posts and a hard-won scor e. There will be plenty of brutses
and sore muscles later.
F1recrcu:ker Karen Peterson. 9 remopes her
ea rrmg before going 1111<> C1ctw11
ti...
Sugar 'n' spice
'n' vicious
corner kicks ·
Youlh soccer mvolves at least 10 percent of
Newport Beach'• total populaUoo ln one way or
anoth<.•r
At least that's what J ohn Stewart says He's
the t·omm1ss1oner to the East Newport Beach
teams In all. Stt.'wart said more than 2,000 boys
and girls lrom ages 5 lo 14 take part 1n the
rough and tu mhlt• sport in the cit~
Stt>wart said when cheering parenLc;, aunts.
uncl<•s , t·oach(•s and fans are added to the
numhe1 of children belonging to Amencsfl
Youth Soccer Organization-sponsored teams m
~e"' 1><>rt. about to percent of tht.' city is into
socct•r
St>ason pla~ runs from September to June.
concurrent with the school year Jn the s pring
A YSO has a sotcer ca mp for players who show
exceptional promise in the sport
Te<ims ;ire d1v1ded b' age group, with 5 and
6 ·)t'al olds pla)ing on a coed team called
pee\.\t'l~ Girls and boys older than 6 a re
d1v1<kd into separate teams
Stt'\.\art said the guiding principal behind
the soccer program 1s that every youngs ter
part1c1patmg gets to play. "This 1s really a
tremendoul> program." he said, "and all the
kids have a g0<xl time But not as much fun as
the adults ··
Daily Pilot Photos by Lee P ayne
Cheering on teammates are Susie Sangster, 10, f leftJ. and Suzanne Ken~la,
10. Defending the goal is Karen Peterson, 9, and Katnna Carter, 10, against
Suzanne Madigan, also 10.
Ashletgh Aragona, 9, grimaces while making a throw-m for the 1"1rec rackers.
Orange Co11t DAILY PtlOT/Monday, November 23, 1981
.· ··•ANN LANDER~
~HUGH MULLIGAN
. •ERMA· BOMBECK . ·. . .
. ~untin.g ··.ground .goµe:
JUST THE ACCESSORY? The 'last of three
Ferraris stoJen rro m a Scottsdale. Ariz. car
dealer was found last week. with its stereo
missing and its · battery discormccted. And
there was a note reading ... J j ust wanted the
Arw ........
ster eos, the cars just ~appened to be
attached... Keys we re in the ignition. The
cars. each valued at $50,000, were stolen Aug.
24.
ore cluck
tor yo~r buck. --.--·-·----------• • ••
D·EAR ,\NN LAN1>Ea·s ·: 1 was
mtrigued by aH those 'women who wanted
to Up off their single-and-lootcing sisters·as
to where t.he men are. . " .
The lady from l,1\ah who wrote Is living
in the past, my dear. There used to be 11
tnen for every woman in this state. but
thanks to the blabbing ol. thousands· of
females who c:ouldn't keep a good thing to
themselves, . Utah now has ·17 women for
every man. .
I am 30. years of age and have been
combing Salt Lake City and surrounding
territory for Mr. WonderfuJ. Even the top
men in the church say l would make an
ideal wife. I I'm attracUv~. too.> So far,
nothing in sight. But I'm not giving up ..
Please tell the hopefuls that the pickin 's
are mighty lean in "the Decency Capital ot
the World" and if they come here they will
be .sadly dis appointed. -NOTHING
COOKJNG IN UTAH
DEAR COOK : Maybe you should
disregard Horace Greeley's advice and go
East. Read on.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 take
exception to the maligning of Lawrence.
Kan., a s man-hunting territory. The
woman who wrote is misinformed.
I mel my dream man while attending
Kans as U. in Lawrence. Three of my
sisters also married men they met in
Lawrence.
Recently two friends of mine fell in
love in Lawrence, and it looks as if they
are altar-bound. Next week I am returning
to L~wrence to attend t~e wedding of my
cousrn who met her fianc~ there, Maybe
at,'s the water. 1 LOVE LAWRENCE
. DEAR LOVE: If you· can prove il,
someone could· make a fortune by bottling
the stuff and sellU:ig it alt. over the world.
Thanks for the bulletin.
'1 $1UOUT99 .111.99=· . 11?'A9mr'1 hus~~:dR a~~N~ !:~tw:~~ ~~oc o~~ GRUT · · honeym'oon on the occas ion of our
0
o.z • Dllln I · ~ I .cg anniversary. We were gone just over the
Good tort11reepitcnorf'llCY galdtn1>1own ·Good roitW11 P11CtS of ~go1c1e1111iown A.._lllilc:eupGfltoii~hc*k1141M weekend and left our 11-year·old daughter. 8~ KentuckyflJldChlcUn p1u11.11Ql1'stfVll\ls I Kt11111ckyFr11dCllickln.withl1111110H1.1 ·1 witlllltttt11piecnofjuicy.911dtft""1! ~z Lisa , in my sister's care. Sue is divorced
of tol1 slew 11111h1d po1110.-i 1nd 111ny 11191 cot1sl1w.1le191111111\ed pot11otl · Keniiicty Flied Olictlll ll4HI IWO olftn and has a 7 -year-Oki son.
1no1ro11 L111111rweorr111p1rpu1chlu 1 1M 1mtdnime•m ll1111t twoolf111 pt1 1 Pfl"1fclln•CM11011eoodMlyft1,..._ Sue and Lis a were looking through Covpon good 1nly lo1 comt11nr1ron white/ purr.llne Coupon good onlJIOI ~ Mtlon wllltellllft °'*'' Cum-PIJS I
01rt o1d11scu11o""'Pl'"'''PP1tt1111e w111111dlltorot11cu11-111p a111,,e1· t111Hflc*ent111q • some albums when they came across
u lutea I ullleultslll I Olle.tlj)llH 0Kfflll)ef61981 I pictures of little Jody without his clothes.
OlfeieaJ>l!tSOectrnDerb 11At OlftreapnesOeceml!eiB 1981 • Ptie1111111•1r11tPfltlciJttinelocltk>111 My sister seemed surprised' that this was
Prn:tim1y¥•l'f•lp1r11c.-111ne 1 P11,111111y vary11 p111ic1patlft9 loutt0111 1 ·eovP.nvoodonlylnS1111themC1mom1t I the first time Lisa had seen a naked boy.
1mt1ona Coupon gooo only Coupon good 011ly ill Sou111tr11 Cflifomil That night, When Sue was getting Jody
'" Sou1h11n C11rtorm1 • ready for bed. she called Lisa Into his room
---1 --COUPON -1 _____ _. whereshehadhim stretchedoutonthebed
. got mto his paJamas. Even though Lisa • • . .
said she'd ra~her not, my ~Lster insisted
that Usa'examine her son and touch him.
Lisa w;ls-embarrassed to·tears. Jn fact ,
she cried when she told me about . the ·
incident. ·
.l phoned my sister and gave her the
devil. She had the nerve to say I have some
ridiculous hangups when it comes to s ex. I
slarrimed the receiver down and nave
refused to talk to her since. I think.SHE is
the one who 'is hung up. Please express
your opinion and settle this disagreement.
MAD.JN CHARLOTTESVILLE
DEAR CHARLOTTE: \'ou14 sister
s hould not have taken it upon herself to
enroll your chiJd in a sex-education course.
Very young children should. be
introduced to the anatomJcal differences
between boys and girls lo a casual, relaxed
manner. Although your sister meant well,
s he made too big a deal out of tile
"difference" and you were right to give
her the devU.
.. SeIJJO.l f reedom .. presents a d1jf 1cu1t
decz~icn for teen-agers and their parents. Ann
Landers oj/ers down-to-earth advice m her new
booklet.· .. High School Sex and HotO to Deal
With It -A Guide /or Teens and Their
Parents ... For each booklet. ~ent! 5() cents plus a
Long, stamped. self-addressed envelope to Ann
Landers. P.O. Box 11995. Chicqgo. Ill. 6061 J
Punch
''I eee Eamon deckted to «*I off hie hunger ...... ·nm· c· ky Fried Chicken . :i~h;~u~~~~!.~~·l;:ke !~t3~:at>!ro~ew~:
. · . : Crime clo~k reversing
The Alliance to Save Energy' ha5 prepare<i.a
Qrochure that contains 1 2 simple 1nexpenS1ve
measures to take which can cut down yoU(
home energy use by 25C!oa T!]pt 1n t4Jrn .
can cut down the amount of money you pay
for home energy (F.or example Did you lcnow
that eleetncal outlets · 7eal-. heat? The.br<;>t;hure .
will tell you how to prevent 1t and·save)
The brochure will also tf!ll you about easy ·
things to do to chimneys an<:J flues to pipes
.and ducts. to shower heads to etectncal out·
lets. to washing machines to doors and wm·
dows. to .water heaters Do them alt and cut
your Pnergy use by 25% The brOchure ·
ccmta;ns ·a~urate d1agra/ns anti easy to
fOl/Ow direcr!Ol'l6 · . · . .
Take our advice Send ~or our free brochure.
Ttie 25% SolutlOfl 'ft can save you plenty
ofmoney · . • . . . .
--~--~------~------Th9 i4111anc. lo Saw. E'*rw ·
Box 57200. Wnhlnglon, D.C. 20011 ~'sessndmeYocJrMergy·savrng money·Sa~ngOrocfl&X~
NAM£
crry ~TATE
ATHE ALLiANCE TO.SAVE EN,;,,G~
·.
. .
RIDGEFIELD. ·c onn. IAP I A friend
of ·ours . who lives in a brownstone in
Brooklyn was awakened the other morning
just after dawn by the joltin~ thump of
sledgehammers.
She thought it was a bat early for the
rare pothole repair crews to be about their
rounds. afld she was right. Burglars.
·unable to find a handy basement wi~dow.
were brashJy beating their way through
the walls.
Police in a neighboring Connecticut
town ap'pre hendeq a leehnologically
sophisticated· team <,>f house breakers who
melted dowri stolen silver in a cauldron on
the back of their van, an idea they picked
up from watching a TV documentary about
· a Soviet whaling ship. .
An article in the New York Times real
.estate section a few ~eks·back-stated that
among customers for million dollar co-op
apartments and condominiums in New
York and Miami, security. not a view of
the bay, was.the prime consider~llon . ·
LOCKSMITHS IN TIUS rapacious era
of what the editorial writers call .. a crime
explosion" are more in demand than
plumbers and value their services almost
as highly. The front door of your average
'Manhattan apartment looks like the main
vault at Fort Knox, but fear of maraudePS
is no longer a fact of life only in the effete
East. .
In. small town. front porch America.
the once carefree heartland of the country
where people never locked their doors.
Uiey are now chaining do~ their rocking
chairs and buying up burglar alarms
faster than smoke detect.ors. · .
. Civilized soeiety, which unfortunately
is not a redundancy, ~& undergone an
interesting regression sociologicaHy and
archit~turally. We are now in the process
of reconstituting the old medieval walled
· tmvns. Right ~w throughout New England
there are any number of secluded housing
developments and ~o ndomin \um
~omple~es where the .visitor passes
through a guard gate an4 a secu'rlty check
and the occupants trave a password, as
well as· an ,e·lectronic pass key to
manipulate th.e· latch gate and· the
communal ;arage doot.
There is no night warden with .a
HUGH MULLIGAN
MULLIGAN STEW
pike staff to send up the comforting cry.
"10 o'clock and all's well," but many
neighborhoods now have their own
vokmteer security patrols which prowl the
darkened stre e t s in two -wa y
radio-equipped squad cars.
VISITING A JOURNALISTIC cohort
recently in -well. let us call the place
Peaceable Corners so as not to blow its
security cover we were both reminded
by the elaborate burglary protection
arrangements or gates and guard towers or
our last visit to Muscat in Oman. when the
old s ultan was in power . The gates of the
city were closed fast at s undown. after
which no one was permitted to pass in or
out. Armed guards roamed the streets on
the lookout ror desert cutthroats and
brigands.
Modern New England, we concluded.
is not so different from Nairobi in the days
of tbe Mau Mau uprisings or Tehran during
the first grumblings. of unrest against the
shah. Or Shanghai on the eve of the Boxer
l\ebellion. The foreign community lived
behind the walls of compounds, and the
·mor.e nervous neighbors supplenl'ented
these security· arrangements by hiring
their own house guards.
TODAY IN MALI and Upper Volta. the
Tuareg tribesmen ·who mainly serve as
wagon masters and out-riders on the -salt
caravans from Lake C had across the
Satrara hire out in the off-season to stand
guard outsid·e private residenc'es with their
e v e r . re ad y , h a n d be a t e n s i.I v e r·
broadswords. ·
As we. regress. steadily toward the
Middle Ages, we already ~m to be well
into the' 18th. century. In. noisily and boldly
poking apertu11ts iA the premises .t<,> aet the
· goodies, Manhattan's rpodern inaletactors ..
have brazenly tul'l)ed back the crime clock
two cenlO!ies under ~he noses or the
sle.eping cnme wardens.
...
1111111
By PHIL INTERLANOI of Laguna.Seach
II~
flMA IOMlfCI
AT W IT'S END
The price
not right
A manufacturer of food!> came oul v. llh
a full page ad last \\eek bannl'rt.•d. Let's
get cooking again. r\rnenca. ·
It was a p1 tth to start \\'omen cooking
al home The gist of the ad v.as 1f you sent
in labels from all the produNs hsll'd. they
would send vou SS in cash.
You don't s uppose ~ou could makl' it
$ W . could you.,
Llkl.· four Olli or tin· famllll'S in
Amerita. I too have suc:c:umbl•d to the roar
of the t nm-<b and the smell ol lhl' grease.
IN FA(T, TH E LAST time till' hght on
m~ s tove \His on was when I inJdvertentl~
set a bucket of thicken on 1t I don ·l knm\
hov. to gc.\l I am1hcs back mto lhl· k1tc:hcn
again. but I do know what k1llt•d thl· fam1I~
meal.
Apulhy \'ou ean l1•ad a kid to
<.1 s paragus . but you ean·t mukl· him
swallow 1t I sen ed mon.' meals to u
squatting O\ :.1t10n than I t:are lo n•mt>mber
One v.ouldn'l cat onion:-.. one gut n<1uscous
al lhl' s1ghl Of \\hill' saUt'l'. Onl' had a
oats up def1c1cnt:~·. and the other h,·ed b.'
bread a tom• I The l-had-1t-for-lunch chant sent home
q-Ooks running out of the kitchen in packs.
You could sern• Chicken Necks \Velltngton
-.ncl you could count on hall ol the family
having it for lunch that da} and thl· other
half still s1t·k from ha\'lng 1l ~·t·sk rdu~
GEITING T llE FAMI L\' togt•ther tor
a meal beC'ame as 1mposs1ble u:-. l'\'l'f'~one
com mg down with measles on th<' same
da~ Beside:-.. the I am1ly that all' together
began lo hall' together. Lile al lht• dinner
table wasn 't the \\arm. sha red feas t
ever~·onl' thou~ht it would bc Past sins
wc rc man:heu out. pu111shml•nts assigned.
and in gc.•ncral food W<JS thrown nol
t•aten.
When cC'onom1cs lorccd <i lot of women
into tht• l<ibor market. the~ s<rn their
chunce for csC'ape C:tnd took 1l And left m
the wake a re shelves ot stuplcs that no
longer have mean!)'lg l'akl' baking soda
No one uses 1t for Waking. anymore the~
bathe m 1t
At some lime. women will return Lo the
home. but w(»ve learned a lesson lrom all
this If you don 't put 1l in a bag with a
pickk and a n<.tpkin. 1t dnl'sn t st<i nd a
C'hancc.
· As for the S.5 bonus for c.·ookmg <ii home
I have my pnce
And lh<il isn 't 1l
PllSOllAllTJ Q.&A.
BY MARILYN ANO HY GARONER
'82 f oreCl\St
flattering
While wailing oul' turn to push our cart
through a local s upermarket aisle and pay
the ransom to the cashiers. we were
s tartled to s py a big bold, black headline
in the popular tabloid. the Globe, s houting:
"P r e d iclions ror 1982." Even more
earthshaking was the name of an old frie nd
of ours and millions or other movie rans.
Cary Grant. And beneath his name flashed
the phrase: "A Da d at 78!"
Now we were aware that Cary took
unto himse lf a beautiful Britis h doll nam ed
Barbara Harris e nough months ago to hit
the jackpot withou~ r aising eyebrows.
W"at made us uneasy is how a baby
brother or s iste r would make teen-age
daughter Jennifer feel. For we'll a lways
reme mber dadd y talking about the time he
and she ran into Debor a h Kerr and. when
s he saw the t wo old friends kiss hello, got
so s hook up she ·warned the famous
actress ··You keep away from my
daddy~ ..
Not that the prediction 1s not flattering
to any ma rrwd man at the age of 78. If
true. it could make the super s t a r 's
so lid-white h a ir turn blac k aga in.
t Incidenta lly. when J ennifer was born to
Mr . Grant ·s previous wife. Dyan Cannon.·
he was hailed for being a f1rs t-t1me father
at age 62 which these days isn't exact!)
newi:. 1
'.\Jt>xt to team manager Tom Lasorda.
Cary was the happiest Oodgcr rooter
around when his boys got oft the canvas
grass <incl lx'came world champions. T he
onl~· lime he was made that hapµy m hi s
baseball hobby was when the l~gcnd ar)
John McGraw of the N. \'. Gtants gave him
a gold season pass in the ·20s.
Of morl' recent vintage. one of Gran t s
b1ggl·st chsappoinlments was having to
miss tht> 1005 World Series because he WU!'>
making a mo\1t' an Tokyo Thcrl' I \\a!'>.
he luml'ntl·d to n :porte r s ... running
thrnugh I hl• :-.t n:cts 1n my underwear for
thl· film. with four Scnes tickets waiting
for mt· batk home ' · ·
OTllE K CELEBRATED folk s the
Globe made predittwns about somt>
awesome. some worrisome included
J acl~ n Smith c about a baby 1. J al'k1e 0
'who'll m<Jrr) mlo royalty 1. Burt Reynold:-.
and Omah Shore 1 thev'll fmalh wed 1. that
there II lw <.i s eco.nd woman on the
Supre ml' Court 1 a black 1. and tha t Robert
Redford will enter polit1cs m Utah t and win I .
P E RSONAL TO Mr. and Mrs C<i r v
Grant and President and Mrs. Ro na lcl
Reagan:
Wh1ll' c1rdmg the Globe we sighted
anothe r prtid1tt1on · "The Reagans become
grandpare nts." At Ronnie's age that not
uni~ 1s poss1blt• 1t 1s probable'
Se11.cl yuur questwns to lly Gardner ·Glad
Yuu A~ked That .' m c:are of the Daily !'riot
P () Heu 19620 . I rvme Calif 92714 ,\.1anlyn and
Jly Gardner will answer as many quest1uris as
they can 111 their culurm1. but the L•ulume of mail
makes pnsoool repl1e.\ 1mposs1ble
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
l KNOW ti.. h
W HAT'S 2'EAUTIFUL ~l
WHEN l S E E \T -H
• AND
SO O~TEN
I SEE IT
IN YOU.
Aries: Delay decision
T uesday, Nov. 24
ARI ES !Ma r c h 21 Apri l 19 >. By
r e f u s in g to a c c-e p t f i rs t o ff e r . ~· o u
stren gthen position. Foe-us continues on
investments.
T AUR U <April 20-May 20 > Focus on
cooperative efforts. abili ty to share
knowledge with one who does have your
best inlerests al heart
GEMIN I I May 21-June 20>. Many
explanations received will lack substance.
Be aware enoug h to have alternatives at
hand. Keep options ope n .
CANCER <June 21-July 22 > Wh at
m1t1ally appears to be an upheaval is
Ac lually a mere change of mind or pohcy.
You'll be engaged in rebuilding process.
LEO 1 Jul~ 23-Aug. 221 · Dig beneath
s urf ace indications for complete stor y .
Member of opposite sex has information
re lating to home, basic security.
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Accent on
family, home. s pecial purchases and a gift
which arrives through mail or delivery
service. Short journey coµld be on agenda.
Taurus. Libra. Scorpio persons figure
rominently. ·
LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22>: Terms are
efined In con nection wit h payments.
olleclions. investmen ts. Avoid temptat ion
o see places. people through haze of
lshful thinking . . --
• HOIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
SCORPIO 10cL 23-Nov. 211 : You've
asked for direct action and now you get it.
Lunar cycle hig h timing, judgment will
be accurate. You have ability, will get
backing from a uthorities. you'll emerge
victorious .
AG ITTARI US I Nov. 22-Dec. 21>:
Sense of drama is he ighte ne d : you'll
illustrate meanings, attract allies and gain
recognition from important people. Aries.
Leo. Libra natives play significctnt roles.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19 >: Aura
of lethargy is removed; you' II make new
star t. gain added independence .and get to
heart of matters. Focus aJso on fulfillment
of desires.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-F e b . 18):
Spotlight on reputation. honor, prestige
and promotion. Intuitive intellect Is honed
to razor sharpness. You'll know what to do,
·when to do It .
PISCES <Feb. 19·March 20>: E mphasis
o n communication, long-range projects,
travel arrangements. Flurry or excite ment
coincides with increased popular ity .
Orange Coeet DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 23, 1981
JORDAN GREETED '.'Jational t.;rban League
President Vernon J ordan 1left 1 t·xtcnds hand
lo wcll -w1shcr al New York Hilton flotel
during the 25th annual Equal Opportunity
Oay dinner. With him are M. Carl llolman
• 19 5 cu fl no ftoll relttger••o• • 6 68 cu It
lrettt• o Srortt up to 8 lbs ice. about 210 cubt\
• 4 1d1uuablt glass \h1lvt!' • Au1om1t1c ehtrgv
1ne1 W•tem help\ cul operet•n<J co" • Mor\t 'N
Frtth 'Hied h19h hum1d11v
pin • Mot keepet with
otd1ustable temperature Regularly
control Sele Price
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4944u 1 27 Years Expenence
.,
I 114 Orenge Coast DAILY PILOT/November 23, 1981 -
bt
9'I
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.~[pffiffiTI~
Rams have
life kicked
out of
By JOHN SEV ANO
OI .... o.llJ I'll«, .. "
'em
During the c~lebralion in the San Francisco
49ers' locker room Sunday, the players suddenly
broke into a chorus of "Happy Birthday."
No. the team wasn't singing about tts virtue or
fortunes after beating the Rams. 33-31, on a
last-second field goal by Ray Wersching.
Instead, the players were saluting their leader
linebacker Jack Reynolds -whose 34lh
birthday just happened to coincide with the 49ers'
elimination or the Rams from the NFC Western
Division chase.
WERSCIUNG'S FIELD GOAL of 37 yards with
twCJ ticks remaining on the clock not only took
what life was left in the Rams it kicked the
heart out or them. too And now, at ~-7 ana w1tn only tour games to
9ft play. the Rams would virtually have to win them
be all to have any chance of staying in the hunt for an
NFC playoff berth. That prospect would seem lo
be unrealistic. however, especially following
Sunrlay's turn of events
The game was more than JUSt another loss to
the Rams, at literally, for what it's worth, knocked
the wind from their sails and the horns off their
helmets.
ln what !>C'cmed like a final gasp to find their
abilities of old, the Rams did s how enough
character to bounce back from three different
deficits :J.u. 27-17 and 30·24 .
And, even when all seemed lost on a Ronnie.
~ Lott interception of a Dan Pastoriru pass that gave
01 lhe 49ers a th1rd·quartcr 27·17 advantage, the
a.ii Rams to their credit didn't gtve up then,
• 11 either.
Instead, ~howin~ more emotion than they had
.,,, in their prev1ou'> 11 games combined, Coach Ray
q&l Malavas1's team behind Pat Haden -came
back
HAOt:N, SCORNE D throughout most of the
•. , year, dire<·ted two touchdown drives during the
11 final 20 minutes And. when Wendell Tyler plunged
llL over from the one with I SJ left to play, the
~ excit~ment was so high on lhe Rams bench you
would· have thought they had just won the Super
& Bowl, not a simple football game.
, .t But. ala:., as has the season gone for the Rams
1 u this year . so did the game
21 The 49er'>. 9·3. dramatically put an end to the
oJ Rams' JUbllat1on by driving 61 yards on 13 plays ,
climaxed bv Wt•rsching'<> boot which s plit the
uprights
iO It was the kind or knockout blow that left
ti'" defensive end Jack Youngblood motionless at the
.:111 23 yard line All the veteran could do was sit on an the ground tn the middle or the field and bow his
Jn bl .,,.
head between has leg!..
KIS DEJECTION graphically exemplified the
team !s frustration. although the 49ers were not
about to kick anv more dirt 10 the Rams' faces
·'There s rcdlly nothtng s pecial about this," 90 insisted Reynolds, who returned to Anaheim
ls· Stadium for the first time since being exiled by the
!t'I Rams last summer. "Th'is was just another game.
10
9fi
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,1'
w•
'(.
v.d ,n
•• • • • • • • • ...
ti ...
"' .. • • • • it • .. • .. ... • • • • • • .. • • • .• • • J • • • • • t • • • • • ..
ll 's no different than the one we played last
week "
Who knO'-"S. maybe to the 49ers 1t was another
(See REYNOLDS, Page 861
0.11, ........ -. ., GM'y ..........
Pat Haden fades back to pass but later, after finding no one open, tucks it under his arm and runs for a first doum .
Somehow, Rams find a way to lose
Players have trouble accepting the bitter, last-second def eat to San Francisco
By EDZINTEL
Ol U. D.ity ...... Slaff
It must tell you somethtng about Pat Haden's
sense of direction because from the moment he
turned to his left to head toward the Rams
dressing room at the end of the game Sunday
afternoon, to the time he varushed into the closed
quarters of the Rams hideout, he kept his head
down. •
Not even the pleas for attention from anxious
youngster'$ hanging over the guarded rail could
seduce Haden.
It was, most assuredly, one of Haden's most
grave and frustrating moments in a six·year
career that has been marked by the very same,
particularly of late.
Of course Haden wasn't the only Rams player
biting down hard on his tongue. groping for
explanations Cor the loss wtuch appeared to be a
win just 1:51 before the final cun. .
As a representation or the kind or season
Haden and the rest of the Rams have had in 1981,
somehow, they lost. despite a rare performance of
heroics by Haden himself to put the team ahead
with an eight-minute, 90-yard drive late in the
game.
Offensive guard Denni~ Harrah said that in
looking in the eyes of his teammates immediately
following the game. there was a general sense or
··spaciness.·'
Haden, the last interviewee during the Rams'
make-shift r endition of "Meet the Press."
wondered out loud on the Rams' chances of an
NFC Wlld card playoff berth. When informed that
Sunday's NFL scores
49ers 33. Rams 31
Cincmnati 38. Den\'er 21
Detroit 23, Chicago 7
Tampa Bay 37. Green Ba) 3
Buffalo 20. New England 17
New Orleans 27 , Houston 24
NY Giants 20. Philadelphia w
Pittsburgh 32. Cleveland 10
Kansas City 40. Seattle 13
St. Louts 35. Baltimore 24
NY Jets 16, Miami 15
San Diego 55, Oakland 21
Dallas 24, Was hington 10
Tonight's Game
Minnesota at Atlanta c Channel 7 at
c NFL roundup, Page 8 7 I
<N FL summaries, Page BSJ
the Rams still had a slim mathematical shot at
wanning that berth, Haden drew a contemptuous
sigh of relier and announced. "Well. since we still
have a mathematical chance, that makes me feel
better.··
The hurt was evident among tbe Rams, but not
the capitulation to the rest of the season.
"The season's not over," said Coach Ray
Malavasi. "We s till have a shot at it and we're not
going to say the season s over until the last game
is completed."
Yet with a record of 5·7 lthe worst Rams
record after 12 games since the 4·10 team of 19651,
there just may not be enough poor season-ending
records in the NFC to get the Rams into the
playoffs. .
.. As far as getting tn, at doesn't look good,"
said Harrah "( don't know what to say. It's
nothing but work fro m now on It's very
disheartening but what can you do? There's no
more fun now "
Harrah, as 1s his custom as one of the team's
true s piritual motivators, said that the team was
"fired up all day." especially after Wendell Tyler
bolted over from one-yard out for the go-ahead
touchdown "I had chills running down my back at
the time," recalled Harrah, "I couldn't have been
r.iore-excited than had 14-e JUSt won the Super Bowl."
The Super Bowl must be the furthest thing
from Malavas1's mind today as he recollects the
events which transpired on a mild, hazy day in
Anaheim. Ins tead. Malavas1's prominent food for
thought may be JOb security
Asked about his job being 10 danger, Malavas1
answered with an abrupt "no " Asked 1f there had
been any d1scuss1on or at dunng the week between
ham and management, Malavasi responded with
another abrupt "no."
In Malavasi's case, there's only so much self
defending you can do when things aren't going the
way they used to when the Rams were wrapping
<See RAMS, Page 86> {_
The writing's on t he wall
It's in men 's room as woman reporter cries foul
By EDZINTEL
OI die o.ll'f ..iMC SWft
lt seemed like a tasteful gesture on the part of
the Los Angeles Rams . The table setting was
neatly arranged with bottles or hard liquor in the
middle, flanked by buckets of imported beer and
jugs ot white wine. Standing behind the display
was a young woman, forever smiling, ready to
serve at the first command. But for the party
guests. it wasn't enough. No, acluaJly. it wa~ way
too much.
AS REPORTERS AND CAMERA crews filed
into the room, each one did an impersonation or a
young teen-ager after being planted with his first
kiss from bis first dale. Disbelief replaced the
usual nonchalant look of reporters immediately
following an NFL game .
Perhaps overwhelmed by it all, the media
members took it all in s tride. Only a handful took
advantage of the Rams' good will and as the last of
the guests left the party, one turned to another and
said: "This is the first time in history the press
hasn't monopolized on a freebie."
A lilUe background is in order before this
story goes on:
A lawsuit by the Los Angeles Herald
Examiner to get a woman sports columnist into
the Rams' locker room led to orders Crom a judge
over the weekend, barrine all reporters (men and
women) from the team's dressing room.
Under orders from U.S. District Judge Robert
M. Takasugi, men and women reporters were to
have equal access to the team for interviews after
Sunday's game between the Rams and San
Francisco 49ers at Anaheim Stadium -but in an
interview room separate from the locker room.
T HE TEMPORARY ORDE R was a response
filed by the newspaper Friday Lo an at.tempt to get
columrililt Diane K. Shah into the locker room for
post-game quotes.
To add to the controversy, Shah already had
the right to get Into the locker room of the 49ers
because a San Francisco federal judge on Nov. 12
ordered to give equal access to all reporters. That
decision came ln response to a similar situation
revolving around a woman sports reporter for a
San Francisco-based paper .
Just before Judee TakQuai's order Saturday,
Rama attorney Terry Christensen announced ln
court that t.he team had just lnat.ttuted a "change
in policy" barring all reporters from the locker
room .
"We got what we wanted,·· said Herald
Examiner Publisher Francis L Dale. "Diane Shah
will not be discriminated against anymore The
rest 1s between the court and the Rams ...
He said he was pleased with the "essence" or
the court order .
RAMS SPOKESMAN JERRY Wilcox said the
interview room idea was discussed by team
management last week .
"It'll give everyone equal access. That's what
the court wants, 1sn 't it'.'" he asked .
The newspaper's sPorts editor, Alan Malamud,
took the opposite view.
"They were discriminattnji( against women .
I don 't want to make a cause
out of this. J'rn not looking for
publicity. All I want is success.
-Olene K. Sh•h
Now they're discriminating against men and
women . They 're very equal in their
discrimination," Malamud said.
Shah, who was at the game Sunday, and
among those astonished by the Rams' attempt to
provide tile press with the finest accomodations as
they talked to players in the "interview room."
told or the incidents leading up to the lawsuit and
why she, like Malamud. was offended by the
aslion taken .
Shah, a former writer for Newsweek and the
National Observer, came to the Herald Examiner
last June to become one of four regular sports
columnists for the newspaper .
She bad done extensive sports coverage prior
to coming to the Examiner, having written on
major league baseball for some 10 years .
Shah said that during her career. she had
experienced problems in gaining access to certain
press box facilities, but that was in years past,
when wom~n r eporters were barred from all
major league sports dressing rooms .
AT ONE TIME, none of the 96 existinK
professional franchises allowed women reporters
Into team dressing rooms. However, In the last
three or four years. the number of restricting
clubs has dwindled to about 10, according to Shah.
Seated at a press room dining table durtna
halfttme of Sunday's game, Shah spoke of her
lnltlal dealinl(s with Rams mana1ement in regard to female reporters.
''When l covered my flrat same, I usumed
that the Rama allowed females lnto lbe dreulna
room,'' she aald. "When J went dowa att.r t.M • • ~
ft Rams' Nolan Cromwell picks off a pan In third quarter adfon Sunday at Anahdm Stadtum.
Cbrlatenaen advised Herald Examiner
attorney1 and Takuu1l UM Rama would set up an
lnte"iew room and brtn1 players lo at the
report.era' requeet Sunday. (See MEN'S aoo•. Pa .. Bl)
1J
I
I
1
J
~
Neta blown out In third quarter · . ..
UHOD•hlth ~ polnt.1, lnclud 1\1 10 lD
LODllt latllOD ICOrtd a m
the declalve third quarter. u lhe
Se.c.tle SuperSonlca pulled away -
from the New Jeraey Ntta ln the aecond half on
the way to a 109-92 triumph Su.ndty nlcht ln the
only NBA came aeheduled. Seatt.lt ••aard Gu
Wlllla•• blabll1hted a 17"'4 burst th1~·1avt the
Sonlc1 a 70-~ lead halfway throu1h the third
Parker would like
to leave Pittsburgh
From AP dlapa&ehea
PHOENIX -Pittsburgh • Pirates oulllelder Dave Parker says
he hopes to be traded to another
National League team durina the
offaeasoo so he "can 10 back to Pittaburgh next rear and sbow the fans and the front office tbat
'm sUU the best player in baseball."
Parker, here this weekend for a charity golf
tournament for Houston pitcher James Rodney
• Richard, said he is fed up
with tbe way he is being
treated by Pirate spectators
and "would welcome a
change" of scenery.
period. WUlianu, who
collected 10 a11lst.1 and seven
steals in the same, had three
assists and two steals during
that 7~·mlnute upristn1
Guard Odt 81rdl091 paced
the Nets with 16
points ... The Detroit
Pistons traded forward Ores
Keiser to Seattle in exchange
for guard Vinnie JohHOD.
SheUon Keiser wu traded to Seattle
last season, but the deal was nixed after the
fotmer Michigan State star failed a physical.
Keiser teamed with "Maaic" .lohaso9 to carry
Michigan State to the NCAA title ln 1979. The
Pistons also said they would place reserve
guard Glenn Ha1aa on waivers and replace him
with former Mlchig11n forward Alan Hardy.
"I'll play anywhere but
I'm thinking along tbe lines
of probably Houston or
Atlanta," Parker said. "'I'd
like to go back and inflict the
same kind of agony the fans
Rookie has a game-winning debut
Rookie Cbr1a Valentlae, playin1 (ii
in his first National Hockey League · ,
game, scored the winning goal
Parker caused me in Pittsburgh.
Quote of the day .
"Tex ! Winter, the Long Beach State
basketball coach) says I have more
friends In Long Beach than he does, but he
doesn't add t1tat 1 probably also have more
enemies there, too.·· -UCI basketball
coach Bill Mulligan.
Kansas in bowl: Seurer sidelined
BIRMINGHAM. Ala. -The University of
Kansas football team has accepted an invitation
to play Mississippi State in the Hall of Fame
Bowl here Dec. 31. officials announced Sunday.
Jayhawk quarterback Frank Seurer, who
prepped at Edison High, suffered a dislocated
right elbow when he took a late hit following a
pass during first quarter action against
Missouri Saturday. He had his arm placed in a
cast today.
Seurer, a sophomore, is still hopeful of
being able to play against Mississippi State.
midway through the final period Sunday night
to give th;, Washington Capitals a 3·2 victory
over PhilaCJelphia. their second win in as many·
nights over the Flyers. The Caps, who won
Saturday's game 10·4, grabbed a 2·0 lead in the
first period, but Philadelphia got a goal from
Ron Flockhart in the second period and winger
Bill Barber tied the game at 3: 59 of the fi nal
stanza ... A pair of third-period goals by
Duane Sutter blunted a New York Rangers
comeback and boosted the New York Islanders
lo a 7·2 victory . . . Mlroslav Fryc:er scored
three goals and Ala Cote added two more as
Quebec trounced Boston 6-1 and extended its
unbeaten streak to five games . . . Tim
Higgins' power-play goal with less than five
mtnules remaining he lped Chicago salvage a 1· l
deadlock with Minnesota The lie extended the
Black Hawks unbeaten streak at home to 11
games . . Center Dale Hawerc:buck and left
winger Doug Smail both fired in a pair of goals
t o lead W1nn1p eg past St L ouis.
5·4 Defenseman Rob Romage scored his
second goal of the game with less than three
minutes len to give Colorado a 5·5 tie with
Vancouver The Rockies remain winless in their
las t s ix games.
W altrip's sixth
good enough • IS
He wins Cup; Allison wins race
RIVERSIDE <A P ) -Like a
teen-ager out for a Sunday drive
with his dad, Darrell Waltrip kept
revving up the car and "un.ior
Johnson kept telling him to take it
easy.
"l felt like I could have won."
Waltrip said, "but every lime I
started to running pretty good,
Junior would say, 'Hey, you take
careofthatcar. boy.· "
The strat egy didn 't win
Sunday's Westem500 for Waltrip
and the Johnson Team Buick, but
it did give Waltrip a bigger priie
-t he 1981 Winston Cup points
championship.
Bobby Allison won the stock car
·FV, St. Paul
play at OCC
Fountai n Valley High 's
Barons will meet St. Paul
Friday night at Orange Coast
College an the second round of
the Big Five Conferen ce
playoffs.
Marina Hi gh·s Vikings .
mean while, w111 entertain
Bishop Amat at Westminster
High, also Friday night.
Both schools sought OCC. but
Fountain Valley was given the
nod by the Huntmgton Beach
School District because the
Barons were on ,the road in the
first round.
Sou th Coas t L eag u e
co-champions Mission Viejo and
Capistrano Valley both face road tests this week in the
Central Conference. Mission
Viejo will duel Rancho Alamitos
al Bolsa Grande High, while
Ca pistrano Val l ey meets
Anaheim at La Palma Park.
Sea View League champion El
Toro faces Century League
kingpin Foothill at Tustin High.
All games have 7 :30 starts.
~~
... race Sunday at Riverside
International Raceway, edging
Joe Ruttman by a mere .24 ol a
second. But Waltrip, who finished
sixth, did what he had to do to beat
Allison forthe points title.
With an 83-point lead over
Allison going into the event,
Waltrip only had to finish 20th or
better to lock up the title.
"We were on the defensive,"
said Waltrip, whoqualifiedforthe
pole position but drove a very
conservative race. "The way we
ran was a smart way to do it and
I'm gladwedid.
"I would like to have tried to
win and a couple or times I
thought about it, bulit just wasn't
in the cards.''
The points championship was
the first for Waltrip, 34 , who
finished the 31-race series with
4,880 points to Allison 's4,827 .
Wal trip had entered the final
event of 1979 with a two-point lead
on Richard Petty. only lo lose
when Petty finished the race
ahead of him.
"I had flashbacks of that," s&d
Waltrip, who added that he was
very relieved when Sunday's race
was over .
'·Every lap that went by. I knew
I was one lap closer to the
championship," he said. "When I
crossed the finish line. I had a
very calming feeling . The
butterflies I'd bad for the past two
months finally settled down."
Allison averaged 95.288 mph for
119 laps over the 2.62-mile
Riverside road course. The time
for the 500-kilometer, 311.98-mile
race was 3 hours, 27 minutes, 19.44
seconds, as seven caution nags
slowed it up.
Terry Labonte finished third,
Dale Earnhardt was fourth, and
Joe Millikan was fifth. Richard
Petty finished seventh behind
Waltrip.
'Zi1181tt
()~insurance agents ~ and brokers
Wright
t lnaurance <Mis rising? ~
contact ua ror competitive quotes I
on f>roperty, Llablllty, Dlrrlcult -
Product& Uabllity. Commercial
Auto, Oroup Ufe and Medical 11 well 111
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3931 M.cArthUr1 Newport a.tcf\, (714) 7SMISS
Darrell Waltnp
Kilijaro in
winning form
INGLEWOOD <AP > -
Kilijaro finished fourth in the
Yellow Ribbon Invitational at
Santa Anita three weeks ago,
but that didn't stop the crowd of
28,481 al Hollywood Park from
making her the favorite in the
first running of the Matriarch
Stakes. As it turned out, the
bettors knew what they were
doing.
That's because the S-year-old
Irish-bred daughter of African
Sky recorded a n impressive
2'h-length victory over Glorious
Song in the $221,600 event for
fillies and mares on Sunday.
Kilijaro, ridden by Laffil
Pin cay. was fifth most of the
way in the 1 'h·mile race on
Hollywood Park's turf course,
but she started her winning
move at the top of the far tum
and won J(oinll away.
The winning lime was 1:47,
one second off the course record
of l :46 set by Johnny's Ima1e
two years ago. Kilijaro paid
$5.80, $3.60 and $3.40.
Maua1e
Alip Bath
Shiatsu
Press~e POlnt
HydrOna= . , ..
Come la
Toda1!
Orange Cou1 DA'LV PILOT/Monday, November 23, 1981 ...
Dryer fltea suit ~Inst Rams
~ attorney ror former LOI •
Aa1u• Rama defensive end Fred • •
Dryer aald Sunday nJ1bt that hit client
wUl Ille a complalnt a•aln1t UM National Football
Leacue club today.
John Thomaa, Dryer'• attorney, said
f ollowin1 the fillnl Dryer wtll hold a news
confer:ence at the Loa Aaieles County Courthoule.
Dryer played more than 13 MUOdl ln the
ttf'L, the lut 10 wltb the Rama, before belnt
releaHdtbllputSepttmber.
The 35-year-old defensive end had a no-cut
no-trade contract but was cut anyway by tbe
Rams, who prior ta the re1ular 1euon had
informed blm that they were come to give
somebodyelaehisapotonthe ,5-manroeter.
But because of the no-cut no.trade contract ,
the Rama kept Dryer until after their third
re1utar-1eaeon 1ame when they releued hlm.
Rogers captures Australia Open
Texan 8Ul Ro1eta blrd!ed the •
final hole and won the Australian
Open in Melbourne Sunday by one
stroke over defending champion Gre~ Nor•aa
of Australia. Rogers. the British Open
champion, finlshed with a one-over-par 73 for a
72 -hole total of 282 in eamlng the S27 ,000 top
prize .... The Kansas City Royals scored five
runs in the elghth inning, Including a two-run
homer by Joba Wathan, and rallied for a 7·S
victory over the Yomiurt Giants Sunday in
Kokura, Japan. The triumph boosted the
American League baseball team's record to
8·7·1 on its 17-game exhibition tour or
Japan . . . Host Honduras held Mexico to a
scoreless tie Sunday, knocking Mexico out of the
World Cup soccer tournament.
Television, radio
Followino are the top sparts events on TV tOday. Ratings are; • • • ~ excellent; ••• worth watching; ' , fair; • toroet 1t. e 8 p.m., Channel 7 { { { {
NFL FOOTBALL: Minnesota at Atlanta. Announcers: I-rank G1fforo, Howard Cosell and f-ran Tarkenton.
The Vikings are two games 1n tront of three
teams in the National c.onterence C.entral 0 1v1s1on
while Atlanta is struggllng with the kams tor
second in the Western 01v1s1on The V1k1ngs
aeteateo New Orleans last week with lommy
Kramer passing tor 287 yards. At the sarne time,
the f-alcons were 1os1ng to t->tttsourgh where 1 erry
Bradshaw pteked the Atlanta oetense to pieces
with five l O aerials Atlanta is ravoreo by tour points at hOme
RADIO
f-ootball Minnesota at Atlanta, o p.m .. 1<.NX
(1070)
New coach has
plans for Purdue
LAFAYETTE, Ind. !AP> -Improving the
defensive secondary is an immediate goal of Leon
Burtnett. who was named Purdue University's 30th
football coach at a Sunday news conference.
"The problem is we do not have enough
returnina depth in the secondary even with our
freabmen... 1atd Burtnett. tbe BolleTmakers' defensive coordinator for the past five seuons.
Noting that the Boilermakers open the 1982
season against Stanford and quarterback John
Elway. Burtnell sa1d the position was one he might
look to juruor college prospects for help.
.. Every program I've ever been associated
with has been a high school oriented program, ..
said Burnett, who replaced Jim Young. "This ~ill
continue. AU great programs are based on high
school athletes. It 1s our desire to get the finest
athletes from the state of Indiana, the finest
athletes from across the United States. We will
only bring in junior college players to fill in an
immediate void."
Burtnett said he anticipated bringing in no
more than three junior college tran5fers for 1982.
adding that he was looking for_ help in the
defensive backfield and a receiver with speed.
Burtnett's appointment was announc~ o~ly
four days aJter Young announced tus res1gnat1on
to become a full-time associate athletic director
for the Boilermakers.
"The decision by Coach Young was as much a
shock to me as it was to everyone else," said
Burtnett, who added that he was asked to replace
Young on Saturday.
NFL standings
From PaQe 84
MEN'S ROOM • • •
aame, I was told that I couldn't 10 In.
"Soon after that (and after Shah wrote of her
experience In a column) I spoke with (.leneral
m1na1er> Don Kloalerman and Wilcox <s>ublit
relations dlre('tor>. They 11surtd me that \be)
were hopetul u chan1e wouJd be made In tile
policy."
Shah said s he let the matter ride 1Dd
copcentr11ted on coverina baseball's major lea.cue
playoffs and World Serles throu(lh October.
TWO WEEKS AGO, Shah called the Rams to
seu whut progress had be4'n made. She uld she
was told by Klosterman that U}e situation was stiU
being worked on.
Then , last Friday alt4'rnoon, Shah was
Informed that s he could not enter the Ram
dressing room the following Sunday.
Shah got on the phone to the Examiner and
d iscussed with her editor what she had been told.
About thirty minutes later, said Shah, s he fot
a call from the pape r . telling her that the
publisher, Dale, had decided to file a lawsuJl
against the Rams.
Thus, the court order for the ant~rview room
Takasugi also o rde red a hearing on tbe
newspaper 's motion be set for 10 days after
Saturday's act1on
SHAH WAS BEING filmed continually by
camera crews while at work during Sunday's
game and was interviewed by at least three
television reporters She said that was not what
she wanted.
"I don't want to make a cause out or this,"
Shah said. "I'm not looking for publicity, all I
want is access.
"Actually, I 'm a bit surprised at all the
attention I'm getting. But most people I've talked
to have felt that I'm right."
Shah denied s he was asking for an Immediate
solution to the problem from the Rams. Ironically,
she pondered the poss ibility or the ensuing party
atmosphere during the game.
"I'm not sorry for what took place, I'm sorry
the situation had to arise in the first place," slle
said . "If some of the reporters are outraged by this.
I don't blame them They should be "
THERE WERE THOSE who did take sides
with Shah
"The bottom line, .. said Los Angeles Times
Sports Editor Bill Dw1re, "1s that women ought to
have equal access There are solutions to lhl~
problem . rather than the knee-jerk .
close·the-locker one "
"It's an easy accommodation to be made," said
Sha h "All they <athletes1 have lo do is slip
something on "
But some male reporters at Sunday's game
look another view
"I agree wllh the principle behind Shah's
argument," said one reporter "But it makes it
awfully difficult on the rest of us. I wanted to talk
to !a key Rams playen about the game but be
was n't there c in the interview room 1."
Saad another· "It's unpractical. It makes a
poor s ituation all the worse. The (Rams>
management mus t have no perception or what our
JOb 1s . They have a negative kind of respect for us.
After taking away our rights. they try to cater to
us. It's bull "
JOHN GARR ETT. CHAIRMAN of the Los
Angeles region of the Associated Press Sports
Edilora, tell that lbe new setup caused con.fwJioa.
He issued a letter of complaint to Wilcox, urginc
him lo reeons1der the plan
Rams coach Ray Malavas1 said management
had no choice · The court took care of it." he said.
'I respect the privacy of our players and the
requests of their wives ."
Shah agreed that the mterv1ew room was not a
practical idea. "It's discnmtnatory to everyone
now," she voiced · Fqr players who need medical
attention right away and can't because they have
lo come into another room. it's also poor."
Shah said s he felt the policy would be changed
in her favor soon.
"No newspaper in the country will stand for
something like this, .. she said. "It's up to the
Examiner what action they want to take, tsut I
think all the press is united. The thing is, there
wouldn't have been one ounce of animosity now if
thjs hadn't taken place But I'm not the villain, the
Rams are."
ASKED WHAT HIS feeling was on the matter,
and how he looked upon the idea of an interview
room . on e Ram s player said : "They
(manage ment! make the rules and I have to go by
them. as you know. What can l say? This is fun,
real sweet. if you like crowds.··
~~~~~~~~~~
************ft'
! JOHNSON & SON ! •
NATIONAL CONFERENCE AME.RICAN CONFERENCE : Presents~ • • • • • • • • • ..
Weit.era Divlaion
W L T PF PA Pel.
Sao Francisco 9 3 0 270 214 .750
Atlanta s 6 0 297 223 . 455
Rams 5 7 0 268 271 .417
New Orleans 4 8 0 166 261 .333
Eastern Division
Dallas 9 3 0 289 232 .750
Philadelphia 9 3 0 297 172 .750
NY Giants 6 6 0 242 213 .500
St. Louis s 7 0 248 327 .417
Was hington 5 7 0 250 294 .417
Central Division
Minnesota 7 4 0 250 238 .636
Detroit 6 6 0 291 254 .500
Tampa Bay 6 6 0 217 190 .500
Green Bay 5 7 0 220 286 _,17
Chicago 3 9 0 176 275 .250
West.em Division
W L T PF PA Pct.
Denver 8 4 0 241 194 667
Kansas City 8 4 0 303 224 .667
San Diego 7 s 0 370 312 583
Oakland s 7 0 195 239 .417
Seattle 4 8 0 209 289 333
Eastern Division
Miami 7 4 1 275 238 . 625
NY Jets 7 4 l 265 244 . 625
Buffalo 7 5 0 237 209 . 583
New England 2 10 0 257 277 . 167
Baltimore l 11 0 209 412 . 083
Central Divis ion
Cincinnati 9 3 0 330 224 . 750
Pittsburgh 7 5 0 275 229 . 583
Cleveland s 7 0 208 261 . 417
Houston 5 7 0 210 263 .417
• • • • • • • • • « • .. • • • .. • • • • • • • « • • '• • • ,.
'• •• )I
NFL11
Plcuof
TlwWNll
MONDAY ....... .., ...
MIMetote
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
ti * ** ........... * ••.•••••••••••.••••••••••• * • • • • • • • ..
p· •.. ~ . at ·····'"'· . ~ ·14% LUXURY . LEASE
·PLAM
IXTEMDED .THROUQ.H N~VIWlll • • :
MIW._,Ulli •
PAITS DEPAITIOO 1111 : I°"" l:OO ...... 1:01 ~Jiit. IATUUAYS . :. ***********'************•·······~·· . . .
. --.. ----,.. -.
• .. Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT /November 23, 1981
From Page 94
RAMS LOSE • • •
up their divisional title at about this time oC year
lnstead Milluvui placed the blame on
Sunda)"s loss on others. like ofCicials. saylnll that
as o whole, the otnclatln" wu "lerrtblti ''
IT WAS MALAVASl'S decision, however. to
brina In Hu den with s: 26 remaining In the third
c1uarter, in place of Dan Pastonni, who up until
that point had struggled. Pas torini. making has
third straight start since getting the
encouragement or the Rams' coaching starr 1n
recent weeks, had completed 8-0f·l8 passes for 79
yards His final puss attempt of the day Sunday
was intercepted by San Francisco's Ronny Lott
1tnd returned 25 yards for a t-0uchdown to give the
49ers a 27 17 lead.
"l won 't discuss why we c hanged
quarterbacks," said Malavas1 afterward ··1 felt
Haden could throw the ball in the system we were
using "
As for next Sunday . Malavas 1 s aid a dec1s1on
would he made on Wednesday as to whether
I laden or Pastorini would s tart in Pittsburgh
· We cun only kee p hoping." said wide
receiver Preston De nnard. who continued to
demonstrate his value with five receptions.
including a magnificent finger-tip catch for a
touchdown of a seven-yard halfback option pa::.s
from Mike Guman
··Hay 's doing what he'd done all along as a
coach. and you can't pinpoint who's at fault l
don ·1 know 1f we m e t our match today but fate
wusn 't good to us."
FREE SAFETY Nolan Crumwell aunbutcd
the luss in a like m anner .. Ray has done a good
JOb, he said ··1t·.., JUSt the way the ball's been
bouncmg. Maybe the league's J!Ctltng better But
we've had a lot of injuru.•s and we have madc
mental mistakes
Rut now, all we hav(• 1s pride to gel up for
l'VC•ry gam e We have a helter team than our
n-cord shows The sad p art ts that we haven't been
hlown out in man:. of the games
11
O•DtMAliCll NO.ti U AN O•OINAWC9 Of'TMI CITY COUNCIL Of' THI CITYOfl cotTAMllA llOA•OllllO CONIOl.IOATIC* Of' THI .. NllAL MUNICIPAL ILICTION WITHTMl ITATIWIOI NOVIMlll
OINl•AL ILICTION1fH IVIN.teUMllllO YIAU THt. ClfY COUNCIL OP THI! CIT\' Of' COSTA MISA OOH Mll'llY OltDAIN AS f'OLLOW$ HCTIC»f •• Tri• Clly eo..ncn .. Ille City .. Coll• llMH llt•tl>y """' •nd
Cit< ltrt• •• follow•· l•I T ... $la .. Latltlltli .. _.,, -.itlCI t llW II\~ llOW ............ ltl l•W Clllli \0 C,.._lltlt tlW ll•le Of tr.Ir '""11dNI ti.<llOl\l oo llllt IN t lt<tlen• Uln O<Cur 11 l ... Ml'nl 11-Ii Certeln ileltwlcte 1lecll0ni 1111 II •Olild lie In 1111 _, lnt1r .. 11 ol 1111• clly to tau •llv•llC•IJI of 1111• •uthorlly '°••to ln<•HM vot1r fNlfll<lfNlllon 11 rnvnl<llMll 111cllon• ""d to r• dliCl IN COih tor (0f\lhl<ll"Oel4ic11or1' ACCOAOINGL Y, t ... City C-ll Df llW Clfyol C.ilt Mli• ller1wltll 0<d1t11•
"~~· I HCTIOH t: f•I Th• 91n1r•I munlCllMll -II-tor Ille City Of C.\l• Met• •11•11 be lllld on the ...... dtf ti IN ilat4'WIOt 91Mrel 1leC1lon\ CUt19nlly lllld In NO .. mber In •vtn·numllerlCI Y•••• 11>1 Thlt'Ordlnance 11 enac:tlO pur-1 to Celllornl• Go .. rnmenl c.ooe Sec
lion a.SOJ S •nd doe\ not 119<.0mt elffcll.,. ulllll Ir. e11ct1on d•r <,,.nlJI It •P
ptOVHf by t11e Oren9e Colintr Bolrd of SUj)lrvhor• CCI If 1 ... loerd of Superv1~· •PP"OV•I I• 04...., prior lo tlla CllY't <ell ol IN April"'' 9(1Mr•I muntclpel •1e<1ion, tr.n lllel 1l1ttion wlll i. poilponed e11d tonllOlldelld wltll U. No....,.., 1"1-••1 ••<lion 11 ,,. epp•ov•• come1 •ll1r tN call, tr.n Ille 1lt<11on clay ,,,.,,.,. wilt i. 1llecl.I•• lor lllt 911n1r•l munlclpel •••<lion In 1.-. SaC1'tON J: Tiii\ ordlNnca -· lelle ~le<l .ond 111 In f\jfl force llllrtr UOI
cleYi from end •fler Iii pa6WolJll. -prior lo llW t"91••11on ot lllt"n I UI .,.,, lrom ,,,. .,.,.,.911 llWrlOf, JMll Ill Plibll"*I one. In 111e Orer191 C.oHl O.Uv Piiot, • MW\PIPI' Of o-ntr•I Clrcutatlon, ptlnled and publlllled In"" Cllf 01 Colla Mell, or, In 1111 •ll••rWll.,., t.111 Oty Clark mo teUM to i. pullllihlO • 1<1Mm•ry ol 11111 Ordln•nc• etld • or1111.o COCIY ol tr. teal ot tllh Ordln•nc• INll lie POiied In ltw o11fuo Of Ille Otv Cieri< llw ISi 0.1$ 111lor to Ille d•l• 01 edOpllon ol llllt O•dln•nc• -wltllln lilt .. n CUI oa~ •lier aOOO!lon 1111 Cll y Clerk •11111 <•uM lo be publillWd, 1111 ••oremenllonad •Ymmery and sh•ll 0011 In 1111 office ot tlll Clly Cllfk • cerlltltld <OP'I ol tl\11 OrOlnW1<1 lOIJlllN r wllll Ille ,,.,.,., of IM members ol I"" Clh C.o...w:ll YOlll'IG '°' •nd aQeln\l lllt ""'" PA.SSE DANO AOOPTEOlll" 1611\0.yot NO ... mbet , .. , ...... SCl\•1•• M•ror of 1111 Cltr of Coll• MIH ATTEST Ell .. n P Pl\1nney Cllr Cilfk 01111• City ol Coll• MIH STATE OF CALIFO RN IA I COUNTY OF ORANGE I u CITY OF COST A, MESA I '·EIL EEN p PHINNEY, Oly Gl6'fk and ea-olllclo Clltk 01 .... City Council or 111t Cllr ot Cott• MIH, twr•blt certllv tMl ,,. •bOw end toro901ng Ordinance No 11·12 w1• lncroclu<H -con110ertd .. ctlOn by Mellon at • re !!Iii•• meet1n9 of ••Id City Council IWld on llw 2nd d•r ol Now miler. '"' and Ille•••''-' P11'"4 eno adoPled •• • ""'°"' •' • re911I•• mu11n9 ot u 10 C11v Council field on 1111 1•111 day ot N<w1mber l'lt1. by Ill« tollow1ng roll call vole AYES Council Memi.f\ S<.,,.ter, H•ll, Jollnson NOES Council Membert Mcl'arl•ncl ASSENT Councll Memllt" Her110Q IN WITNESS WHEREOF I ...... lwreunlo .. 1 mr n•nd and •ll•••CI '"" !.e•I ol Ill« City ol Coil• Mau lllll 11th Gav ot Nowmbtt 1911 EllMn P Pll1nno. City Clerk •nd o-otllc10 Cler• ol tM City Counc:ll of Ille City ol Coll• Nll!Y Publl-d O••n!Je CoHl 0.1lf PllOC, NOv lJ 1'11 )Ill II
rtllUC MOT1CC rtllUC llO~E
NOTICE INVITING BIOS NOTICI TO CONTltACTOltS
Sa11 1''ram11.1" p/111.1 /;11 /;1·r 1<1111 \\ t'f\1 /111111/11/I,,1111111111<1 h-1c/\ 11.' "1rl. ('111/m,,
A,P Wlropllo•
I:!. il'11fi' 111 1111 1u w. It was brought to the atte ntion or Haden that at
least onc or the 49ers' players had reportedly felt
that the wrong Rams quarterback '>larted the
gam~
, NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN Owl CALLING FOi 110$
Ule Bo••d of Ttut.1•• ol ,,. c.o... SCHOOL OtSTIUCT C.Oall com Communllr C.01119'! OlstrlC1 ol Or-e munlty Col~ Ohlflct
From Page 84
·No one has played a s wdl as they would ha\c I REYNOLDS CELEBRATES ...
game To the Ranh lhuuf.!h 11 was a s<'ason l'onftdence 1n ea<.'h other ... Rc}nolds explJtned
liked. · said lladen in response Evt·rvone s vt•n
d1saµ1>qmtcd ·
And so what·s wrong with the Hams·'
You <·a n 't S a) there~ mU<'h right whl·n
\11u rl' 5·7," Haden said
Co<inlY. C.lllotnl•, wlll rec.etw .... ..., 810 DEADLINE 10 00 0 CIOO. m OICI• UD lo It 00 • m To;e•O•y ot the tlh d•Y .. O.temller 1'itl O.cemb9r I, 1991 •I IM Puttllell"IJ PU.CE OF 810 AECE,IPT Ottlo 0.p•rlment 01 Hid colt-ll'•trlct of Ille Purcllttln9 •~nt Ml ~""" toul!td at IJ70 Ada"" ,.,..,..,. Coit• Purln, CoHI Community C.ot~ Dot
Mew C.lllornl• •• #111<1\ ,,,.,. Mid trlc t, IJ70 Adam• AV1nue. Cot!• Mew, ll<Cll wlll De publlcly opened •"" •HO C:.lltornl• ,,.,. llU I j~SISO tor PROJECT IDE NTIF ICATION STATIONERY SUPPLIES NAME Co11ttlne Community Collf9P All Didi a11 to bf •n 1ccorCM1nC• wllll Cenler -810 10.1 ltw Bid F0<m ln•lrUCllOnt Ind '°""'· PU.CE PLANS ARE ON FILE T"' lion• end Spoi<fllcellOM #flo<:l1 •rt row Btu.rock P•rtner\lllp, UOO N ... _.,
on 111• •nd m•v De H<u red In ll'tr ofllu eo.it .. •rd, N .. •port e.ec11. C:.llforr,.. ot ll'W Pur<nHlng AIJlnl ot W•d co11-oio n~ 11u 1 tll 0300 lfobtrt ..,.""" . "f thou~hl Llw HJms were f1ght1ng for lhe1r Snmt'how, we know we're going to ~l·t the Job
hves today. adill•tl Rl'ynulds. who look ;.i t;.ix1 done ll's just the way we feel " If f knew why. I'd be the head man around
hen" '>:ltd dl'fen!>1ve end Jack Youngblood /\II I
know 1s that hulzards kt•ep fh 1ng a round my
houst.•
dlllr l<I AIA
from his hotel to the -.ti.1d1um d ressed 1n his Quarterback JO<' Montana agreed Eecll OukHr mus1 lUD'"l ""'" "" NOTICE IS HEREllV GIVEN 111111 ll<d • c11111er'• <IWO, certH•e<I <IWO. 1111 •t>ove·namt<I Sc11001 Oittrlct ot or bldder't bond m""" oaYiOble to tl'tr Or•noe County. C:.llforril•. •<111'1Q .,., oro.r ot IM CoHl Commumlr Coll-•nd tllrougll 111 C.Ov.rn1119 Soard uniform We kne w that all we needed was u held
"Hemt·mbe1 I µla\ cd with them before l!oal." s ;.i1d the Notre Dame grad, who wa::. 6 of to
k11ow when t llcv rt• f1ght1ng for 5•1 ~ ards on the 4~rs final march Ol1trlct Bo•rO of TruStM\ •" •n "•'•'"•ft•r r eft rrtd to .,
I roni(·alh lht• HJ ms lost a lot of their fight Coac h < B1ll 1 Wabh said tht•rc wJs no rca:>on AS POST-GAMI-: d1 ::.{·uss1ons began to break
off. a reporter unconsciously a!>ked Haden how he
felt bemg the 'short reliever ··
•movnl not len 1111n II•• .,.r~l IS > DISTRICT . ""' r1<t1ve up 10. Dul ot Ille him Old •• • 9v•ranttoo lhal tnr "°' l•ter tll•n the abO•t·tl•'*I lime 11<001r will enter Into '"" P"~ W'•l<td l>KI• tor ,,... d••ro 01 • con'
Contr•c1 '' Ille .. ,.,. " •-rOtCI IO l••<I tor IM •bOw pro)ICI or seem ed to an) wa~ when Hcynolds. among to ru:>h the lwll down the field. We had a lot or time
others. wa-. n•movf·rl from !ht' team Sunday. all and \\oe nt.~ded a field goal. not J touchdown him In Ille event ol f111ur11o ..,.., 1n &Id• $1\ell be 1tcilve<I In "" PlacA'
the B1rthda} Ho\ did w.as h.iunt his former That reall) o;howed a lot of c ha rat ll·r.
teammate., b~ rl'<·urding 8 ~olo tackles to go along ora1i>ed Re\nolds of the drive "ll s howed a lot or• · Is that a pun'>" Haden s aid bal'k w1lh a
s mile
to """ contracl Ille oroc-d '"' IO.ntlfleo •llo•• ""° '""" be _.:i c,...o wlll be torf11t1d. Of in llW <•w -publicly ,.;.d eloud at ttw abOw
of • bond, Ille hm lum lllereot ••Ill be llallCI lime and ot•«
with 8 assists Hoth f1 g un.'" far t•xceeded any other guts and a fot or Poise. This team wasn 't able to do Then Haden was asked how he fe lt about the
wa rm rece ption he received from the home crowd
as he e ntered the game for the first tame
forl•ll•d to ••Id coll~ d"lri<1 1 ,..,. w111 oe a Ot\40 11uno•eo ""° No lll<JCH r m;iy w1tnoraw r·o c.o for no 100 "°"•" is100 001 .,.~1 ••· • 1>1rlod Of torty five !.SI CS.Vt •lier Quited IO< HCll WI ol bid ltoc-ll to
1111 CUllo .. 1 for Ille -nlnQ tlWf'ltol _,.,.,,. ll'lt return 1n oooa condWon num?ers tomp11l'd cm .l•1tht'r ~1d1.· of the field that o;ort of thing two years ago
fl set>ms like 1t s lwcn onl' m1i,t•ue here or ·of t·uurse. 1f som eone had told m e Wl' werf' Tiii BOaro of Tru•l•ll r.,...,.., llW wllllln 10 0.Yl •fter IM bid openinQ DtlvlleQ9 Of ••le<tl"IJ any •"II all Diel\ CS.lo Only !WO 121 wu of <Ot'6lrucllon
"' to wal ww •nv 1rreQt11anttft or tn-oocvmenh wlll Dr IH\Hd lO Ul""'llr•I forma11t"'• in eny bid or on llW ll>CIOll'IG conlreci b!Odefl
one m1 sC'ue tht•n· for them '>:.11d Re' n<>lds ·Am I going to beat the Rams twice this year I would
surprisecJ .it "n.1t lht•\ H' dont'" Ye::.. I 'm havetold the mthey we recran 'The sports fan 1s so fickle.' he said I think
they would have c heered 1f Billy Bar1 } had j(t>m·
In ..
:-urpri~ed. lmt I 11·;111\ t·ouldn t ll•ll \OU how the\ •
got when· lhl'\ :.11 l' • TllE RAMS PROBABLY wo uld have said the
NORMAN E WATSON E•<ll blCI mull conform ano be Se<ttl•ry, ••-•Ive to 111• contract OOcumrnh
REYNOLllS C'Ol'LU TELL } ou plen ty about
the 49ers. though In fact . if Atlanta should lose
tonight againc;t Minnesota San Francisco would
(.'hnrh IL°' f11..,t di\ 1-..11nal l1lle 'llH'I' 1972
We h:t\<' d Int of lo(u"' hl·rt• who have a lot of
Marti1za wins;
Jaeger fumes
From AP dispatches
Ma rtin.i 'i:H r ,1t11<n a nL·,·er lhnu~ht her victory
would be so C<•'>Y and Andrea Jaeger nevt"r
thought tht• pres., would be so mean
Navr alilo\..; thl· defend1n~ c hampion.
outstroked <'hn E\'crt Lln)d 6 3. 6 2 Sunday to
win the Lum l.ad11·., Club tenni" tournent m Tokyo.
Meanwhile, Jaegt-r 16. allnbutcd her 6 I. 7-6
loss to P am Shrivt•r Sunday to being labeled a
"s\Jperbrat" hy the pres.., covenng the National
women's te nnis l'la.,.,1c in Perth Wes tern
Australia
IN OTllER ~11\TCHl'.:S 5unday. Sandy Mayer
defeated Roman1Jn Hlt•ran I he Nastase 7 5. 6·3
and won $15,000 in the Volvo Indoor te nnis
tournamen t in Bologna. ltJI)
Bill Scanlon. seedt•d fourth. won the Bangkok
Tennis Classic and $15.000 with a 6 2. 6·3 victory
over unseeded SweaJl' Mah \\'tlande r In the
doubles final. John 1\u ... tin and Mike Cahill beat
Lloyd Bourne and Van Win1t::.ky tl-3. 7 6.
Czechoslovak 1 a ·.., r \'an Lend I won the
Argentina Open, defeating Guillermo Vilas of
Argentma 6· 1, ti 2 Lendl now has 175 points and
continues l o lead lntcrnat1onal Grand Prix
standings.
Using powcrtul st-rves. Navratilova Jumped to
a quick 3-0 lead in the fir<>t set. breaking Lloyd in
the second gaml'
IN THE SEC'OND .,et. Navratilova took a 5-l
lead a fter breaking Lh>)d in the first and fifth
games Lloyd kept her seventh game serve and
Navratilova clinche& the match by keeping her
last serve
"I never thou~ht I'd win so easily My serves
were very good today.' s aid Navratilova, who won
$100.000
1981 ELDO ADO BIARIUTZ
Equipped with all Cadillac power aaaiat
optioM, AM-FM steteo with caaaett.e, Vogue
tires & Cadi llac wi r e wheel covers.
(1BHE018). S}6 995
. ' ~1Uac f ofue !""OltctfOn Stroic. Agrtmwnt ~~ ....
Al c.t ......... T•-~ 41,.,._,..,. JV6 U.-
DIJ nlAT •DA\ •M nkl.Dlo·
WITll CIDIVUfl •M Nftl.
::.ame thing. but then they dtdn'l figure to be two
games under 500 al this point either. JUSl ltkl:! the
49ers didn't expect lO be six games over.
Of course, Reynold1, Fred Dean. Loll, Walsh.
and Montana have had a lot to do with that.
"l don't think any one pen.on should be given
a lot of credit for what's happened." :,aid
Re) nolds. who was a rec luse with the Ram'> b ut
found himself surrounded b} the press S unda)
"There are a bunch of other guys out there. too
· lt takes an entire team. not JUSl a defen-.e or
an o.>ffense "
And. 1t takes a few leadl•r!>, too. hh Heyn<>ld!>
and Dean
fl s unus ual becau~t' I m not u-.1:11 to 1t ::.aid
Revnolds of the Jtlent1on It's a whul1: new
t'X pt'nence for m e Let s JUSl ~a) 11 ... lJeen vt•n
pleasant and very gratifying
rm really in s hock about what we'vt· bec•n
doin~ I '\till don't think we're for real I think
"l' rt· luck) ·
THE RAMS NEED mort-than a little lul'k t11
help them no" They need a tran.,plant
ph \ s1cally e motwnally and ml'nlall)
Unfortunatl'ly. donors are tough to come.• by a l
the ta1lend of a season The be:>I the Hams t an do
now 1s just try to survive and regroup unless the
damage or 1981 has a lread y gone beyond that
point. too
Haden was asked if that was a pun
Yes." he answered with a s mile
Apparently. even losing has its lighter side
UCI poloists selected
Board ot Trull M\ Each ll<d lf•ell bf acc.,.__ by ~~~~'°;.';.',~~;ty Ille wcurlly reterreo to •n tnr <Olll•act
PYblillleO 0t•"9" C.o••I 0.llY P1to1 ==;.:~,:~:by Illa llt( of proix-<J
Nov. U . JO, 1Ml Jii7.-i Tiii OISTltlCT re .. .-..\ -rlflH IO
.1 rw.-CI ... , .,. all .. ..,. ., II-"· ...., flUluC MOTt£ 1rr1ov1•rlll11 or lntormalll~ 1n ...., D<d• « In Ille blddono SVMMAllY OF Tlla OISTRIC.T Ml ot>ot•lned ,,,,..., ADOPT iD OllOl"AHCi Ille Olrttlll' ol llW 0.Plrt.,_ OI In. OROI NAN(.E ll·lt ,, K"""'*' to duttrlal Ael•llo'll Ille oeneral ~• .. I be in lull •lfect JO d•y• '""" NOv 'l'IG tilt o1 ,.., dl•m wl9ft 1n 1114' ember 16 '"' 1..o wH a<IOl>led by t!W IOUll1y In wlllCll 11111 work '' 10 ti. UC Irvine has been :-t.•lected Jnd .,t•cdC'cl fifth touow1n9 roll ull vote eo...cu Mom. oertormeo tor tech <••"or t'fil9 of oett AY ES scnal•r H•ll M>r1'tn•nnt>1ded!lleucut•tr.con f 0 r t h Is " el' k l' n d . ., N c A /\ w a t e r p () I u M<Ferl•nO Jolln\On NOES N-lre<I Tnue ... ~are on '"" •• ,,,.
c hamp1onsh1ps al Belmont Plaza in Long Beach •&SENT ..,.,,,09 01sT 1t1cT omce •oc••eo et Ptly .. u o
1'he Antc•ater.~. lh1rcl·placu f1n1 s·hc·r•. in the Ordln•nu1116,c11an11uu.1•1tn9C1·l~•••l•t••" 1'1.nn1ng. L<>e•t t.°"1mun11v " '-" 1y cod• sec lion• ••l•ling lo College Ohlrlc t, Tr•llet Comotu
rect•ntly completed P C/\.A lourne_, .• will fo('t' P•wnbro~~,, lo bring ttwm•n<on· JOIW\ Poll., OlrtC10f, 1310 .., ..... totm.tnc._~ ••It· ,........ \t•t• n •tut•• re-.,,,.,..,,,. (~l• Mil'w. t •1t•o,.rw• v1•~• fourth seed l:C SJnta Barbara in lhe11 first lt•'>I at ;u1.11119 s.cono11enc1 o.1ien n.. Collies m., i.. obt••ne<t on roqunt •
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Stanford from tht• Pac 10 Lon~ Beach State. a .1ue11ng t11o .. pr1vooully P«''""eo ft TRACTOR 10 w11om 111e <"""«" 11
run111•1 up tc> Sant B· b· ra 1n the PCA • l • pawntlr'oUr'. w111 oe ,._,.,.., 101••erOld, and upon •ny """.,'''"''°' • J a r a '' OU rne} • Obtain a .... Condllend Cll•l•r llCtnM undlr lllm, 10 PIY no l•U 11\An fl\f .. ICI
was ... i·cdell "Cli?-<lnrl behind Stanford. with UCLA. w11111n JO d•y• of 111e -t-Ol tllu •Pe<lll•d ,., .. to a11 workm•n
l'('SH lt\lnt'. l'ahforn1a fur r or('c.• and Rrown Onllnanc• APC>llUllon tor llW licenw •ml)40yttl by lt'Wm In , ... ·-"'-"' ,.,.Y be obtained from Ille Oty Dir«· IM Cotllte<I rounrltn~ mt\ lhti' hneup I« o1 F•n111u TM 11c1n..., "'"'"' ,~ No DI-• may wtthdr•w Nl""' for If the Anteaters beat Santa Barbara. thl'.'"11 wadby111e c111e101Po11ce1or1,..c11y•oertoc1ofMven1y.11 ... 11St dll\I•""' -' •fl••• b•<k9rovnd <IWO on apcitl'"nt Ule dale wt tor Ill« opoinlng of bkll µla) the winner of the St11nford Hrow n contest at 7 11 .. been oDl•tned 1rom 1tw S1••• • pay,.,.nt bond •ncl • Pef"formence
Saturda' • los w Id h th m t th O.p•rt,.,.n1 ol Juillc• n. llu<>w bond •Ill Ill r..wlre<I pr-to eucu • ~ " S OU S OVC (.' In 0 e mull be rene,..d yurly and 1, -lt<I lion ot Ille conlr•ct Trw peyJTWnt bond
t«m-.olatwn hrackct and a 4 o'clock dale w1lh the 10 r••oc•t•on by,,.. cn1e1 of l'Otlce '°' st1111 be In ,,,. form '"' forth In 11w loser or UCLA·Cahfornia • 1•11ur• 10 OOWrv• Ille r_.irement• conlract do<umenh --------------1 ol 1tat• l•w re9ut•1ln9 tl'W .. ,., -C.0Wm41'1Q 8D•ro lr•ntl•1 ot HCondh•nd ~ -11'tr 8• NOflTWln E Ml..., OP"' •l•On 04 lhe OU\1n(M. .. Of M'-OflO S.<r•t•,.Y Boe rd of TrUllf!itS h•no dUhrlQ Plill<I-.! 0••11911 Co••• Delly PtlOC.
College football OUTSTANDING
VALUES!
Tl'lt lull tut or Illa iwooowd ,,, No• lJ, 1<ie1 st,.-41
dln•nct m•y be r11d 1n '"' Coty a .... , Office •• 11 Fiii Orlw C.o.t• PUBLIC MOTiC
MIH EILEEN P PHINNEY
(.1ty (. .. ,~. •.fjl61
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JIM MARINO
: VOLKSWAGEN-ISUZU
'1 • 18711 BEACH BLVD. I
~~---J HllNTINGTON BEACH CALL 842-2000
IRAMD MEW
1981 vw
DIESB. RAlllT
FACTORY STICKER . . $7670
DISCOUNT
$675
SALE PRICE
56995
(2983) (1 77663)
IRAMD MEW
1911 ISUZU
4X4 PICKUP
SALE PRICE
'7395 (1272) (02088}
C a~d tranam1ss1on
AM·FM stereo
& a sunroof
( 1•92tl5)
SALE PRICE
OMLY
'7995
Nov 1J, lttl )IJIHll
rtllUC MOTtC
SUMMAltY 0, ADOPTED OltOINANCIE ORDINANCE 11-1' ,, sci-.led to
Ill In lull elfl<I JO ll•n Ir-om Nov·
.....,., 16, 1 .. 1. •nd .... ecloOt.0 by ttw totlowlng roll call vo11 Co<inclf Mom. C11t1 · AYES S<h•ler. H•ll . McFarl•nd. JoMson NOES HOM AllSENT HortlOQ OrOlnanu II· 1', r.Oucu the fllJn'ltler
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Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 23, 1981
Ke~ey-~~c! C~efs move into a tie .with DenV-er
'Former San Cleme1.1te High.and Saddleb(Jck star'fir~s two touchdown passes in. KC's 40-13 rout of Seattle . . . . . . . . . r.:O~ ~P •paac\i.ea ~ · · · · • · ' · The acore wu lied 10-10 wttb 12:55 rernalnlnl seconds left in the first hall on Todd Bell'• 92·Y•rd · . KANSAS .CJT'Y, Mo'..-Blll Kel).aey pus~d for wh'o Ea&les punter Mu Runacer klcke4 one oft return after lnter ceptlna • HJpple P•••·
two tpuchdo~ 6und~y. vautUna. the Kana.as City the elde of hll foot that traveled only 9 yarda to the
Chief• to a: .0-13 victory over tb4' Seattle ,Seabawka PbUadelphla 32 Rob Carpenter then carried five
IQd Into a fitst-place tie with .>enver In the AFC conaecutlve times for a total of 19 yarclJ to the
West. · · Eagles· 13.
Steelers 32. Browns 10
The former 'San Cleme nte High. an~ Quarterback Scott Brunner deliberately threw
Saddlebacl( Coll~ge product drllle'd a 14-yard bne out of the end iooe, and Danelo put the Giants
CLEVELAND Donnie Shell and, Anlh9ny
W aahmgton combined for five interceptions of I'
Cleveland passes ud five Pittabur1h players
scored short-yardage toucbdowo1 •• the Steelers scorlnj' strike .to J .T. Smith late in the second ahead wh.b hiJ 30;yard lie ld goal. q\ulrter, and.in \he·rourth period roU.nd rookie Ulh\ . rolled past the bumbUng Browns 32·10. · ~hd WU~ Scott from 2 yal"ds out. • . . .
!l'.he Cbiefs hiked their: record to 8·4, matchlna
Denver, which lost to Cincinnati. ·
Seattle's Efrerr Herrera and· Kansas City'~
Nick Lower:y swapped field goals through most of·
the first bJlf, with Herrera hilling from 26 And 80
yards and ·~wery connecting from 37 and 24.
But the Chiefs scored two to4chdowns Just 36
seconds apart in t he final moments of the second ,
quarter to·take a ~·6 lead. · · K --' '
Kenney. with l : 07 left. capped a 73-yard, en Anaerson
e!ght·play scoring drive on the 14-yard pass to
Smith. Then rookie -safety Lloyd Burruss picked
off a Jim Zorn. pass on the sideline and sped
untouched 46 yards to score.
Seattle, which had \\'.On three of its previous
four games. including a 44·23 upset of San Diego
last Monday night, fell to 4:s.
Bengals 38. Broncos 21
CINCINNATI ~ Quarterback Ken Anderson
passed for three touchdowns and ran for one TD.
leading Cilicinnati to a 38·21 rout over Denver. .
Anderson. an 11-year NFL veteran enJoyang
one of his finest seasons. completed 25 bf 37 tosses
for 396 yards the second 9est tota~ ~r his career
-against the top-ranked pass defense m the NFL.
CinciMati's fourth straight victory gave the
Bengals a 9-3 record. the best in the American
Football Conference. It also assured the Bengals.
leadins the AFC Central Division. of their first
winning season in four years.
Anderson tossed TD passes of 2 yards to
f~llba ck Pete J ohnson and 7 yards lo Cris
C'ollinsworth in the first half, then hooked up on a
65-yard touchdown pass pl~y wjth runniJlg back
Charles Alexander in the fourth quarter as
Cin cinnati scored the most points this season
~gainst the Denver defense.
Jets 16. Dolphins 1.5
NEW YORK -Richard Todd's 11-yard
touchdown pass to J ereme Barkum with 16
seconds to play and the extra pOint by Pat Luhy.
who had kicked three field goals, gave the New
York Jets a 16·l5 \lictor y over Miami and
propelled .them into a share of first place with the
Dolphins in the American Conference East.
Todd, playihg despite a fractured r:ib, drove
the Jets 77 yards in 10 plays .for the winning
touchdown after Uwe von Schamann had giverc
Miami a 15·9 lead with a 23·yard field goal with
3: 10 to play.
TOdd, who completed 21 or 39· passes for 203
yards, threw the ball nine times in that lO·plfJY
drive that en abled the Jets to stretch their
unbeaten streak against the Dolphins to eight
jtames. It was the J!'!ts' fourth stra1i;?hl victory.
Chargers 55. Raiders 21
OAKLAND Dao Fouts threw a club-record
six . touchdown passes and fight end Kellen
Winslow tied an NFL record with five TD catches
in an offensive explos ion that gave San Diego a
55-21 victory over o·akland. ·
The Chargers, 7·5. ended a two-game losing
s treak wi th the second-highest. scoring
performance in the ir hi~tory. They left the
Raiders, defending Super Bowl champions. S-7 and
virlu~lly dead in the race to the NFL playoffs.
Winslow's first four touchdowns were on
passes from Fouts. The fifth was on an optior\ pass
from Chuck Muncie late in the game and tied the
NFL record of fi ve TD receptions set by Bob Shaw
of the Chicago Cardinals against Baltimore on Oct.
2, 1950.
San Diego scored on six consecutive
possessions. The second touchdown paas to
Winslow. on a 29-yard play, sent the Chargers
ahead to stay, 28·21 , in the final minute of the first
half.
Bills 20. Patriots 17
ORCHARD PARK. N.Y. -Joe Ferguson's
36-yard touchdown pass to Roland Hooks with only
five seconds left gave Buffalo a 20-17 victOl"y over
New England.
The Bills had gained possession on their own
28 with no timeouts remaining and only 35 seconds
left in tbe game. Ferguson connected with a diving
Hooks for a 37-yard pass to the New England 36.
Two plays later, Ferguson lobbed the ball into the
end zone, and the ball was tipped by Buffalo's
Frank Lewis into Hooks ' hands for the score.
New England had gone al\ead 17-13 with less
than two minutes left in the game when Matt
Cavanaugh tossed a 5-yard scoring pass to Don
Hassel beck.
·The play was set up when Cavanaugh
connected on a 65-yard pass play to Stanley
Morgan to Buffalo's 5 afte r Bills cornerback Mario
Clark fell on the play.
Cowboys.24, Redskins 10
IRVING. Texas -DaUas quarterback Danny
While pierced the Washington secondary with two
touchdown passes and the Cowboys ·charged into a
first-place· tie with Philadelphia in the NFC East
with a 34-10 victory over the Redskins.
White broke a 10-10 tie with a 10-yard scoring
pass to tight end Doug Cosbie late in the third
quarter. He a lso had a first period 28-yard
touchdown strike to wide receiver Butch Jotmsoo.
Trailing 10-7 at halftime, Mike Nelms returned
l .. e second hall kickoff Sl yards to set up Mark
Mosele)('s 26-yard field goal.
Drew Pearson caught a 34-yard pass from
White on third and 18 lo give DaUas life at the
Washington 30. The touchdown pus to Cosbie
came five plays later.
· The Redskins were handicapped by the loss of
halfback J(>e WublqtoG, wbo rushed 12 um .. for 84 ylU"dl aad cau111t three .,..._ for 47 yanbl ln
the first halt. He sufrered a torn rib cartilage near
the end of the second period and never returned.
Gian.ts 20. Eagles 10
PHILADELPHIA -Joe Danelo kicked a
30-yard field goal set up by a shanked punt and
cornerbarj( Terry Jackson returned an intercepted
pass 32 yardS for a touchdown In the final period
as the New York Giants upset Philadelphia, 20·10.
The Giants had lost 12 straight games lo the
Eagles since they last beat Pttiladelphia in the
opening game of the 1975 NationaJ Football League
season. ·
Falcons: A win is vital
ATLANTA {AP> -The year that was supposed.
to have produced a strong run at the Super Bowl has
turned lnt.oone of frustration for the Atlanta Falcons.
·leaving oilly rading hopes of sque~zing into .lhe
National Football League playoffs as the fmaJ
wild-card team. .
Atlanta. which has lost six of its last eight
outing$ in plunging to a S-6 record, tangles with tl1e
NFC Central Division-leading Minnesota Vikings
tonight in the NFL's weekly prime time nation~lly
televised contest.
Quarterback Steve Bartkowski probably feels
the frustration more than any other Atlanta player.
He is having one of his best seasons statistically, but
haa. seen late game come ·back attempts foiled by
crucial mistakes with regularitv in recent weeks -
som e of his own and others by teammates .
"We're a better team than our re-cord
indicates," Bartkows ki says. "There's "still a lot of
football left to be played, and ir we put together a
winning streak we can be there at the end.'·
With only five games remaining, Atlanta was
one of seven NFL clubs with a S-6 mark in the chase
for a wild card spot going into 12th weekend of the
season.
And despite the Falcons' play of recent weeks,
Atlanta is a four-paint favorite to down the Vikings,
who own a 7-4 record in their quest for a 12th
division1ll title in 14 years. The Vikings enjoy a
l '~-game lead and Atlanta trails NFC West leader
San Francisco by 3'>'.i games.
· · 1 know you guys get tired of hearing the same
thing, but I'm not trying to convince anyone of
anything," said Bartkows ki. "I 'm not running for
office.! believe it."
He said that despite the frustration this year,
there is not Uie despair there used to be.
. "My first three y~ars here I would look around
the league and see where we had nowhere the talent
as other teams," Bartkows ki said. "Now, we've got
the talent,aod there isn't the despair there used to be.
There's a light atthe end of the tunnel now."
Bartlu:>wski has ~assed for 2,726 yards and 24
touchdowns this season. His Minnesota counterpart
has similar statistics, having thrown for 2,598 yards
apd 18 scores. A ttigh-scoring passing battle is
expected in the 6 p. m. clash.
··Atlanta is a tough team to begin with, but
the)C 're going to be even tougher al home on a
Monday night, especially since they're bound to be
steamed up ~ft.er losing thelr last two games," said
Coach Bud Grant of the Vikings.
I OID us. · ·
' 50f: f A' SHlLH R
PAT MO IMCOMI
TAX .01 1911 MID
•IT llPUMDS · Ol
M.L T Ai · PAID Joa
• , ••• '"· 71.
eilllllml . ....... , .
C,a 11 &45 ·1154
We've p the ~ to do the ~you need to
00 ... ar¥i an the thiliS you ve been dreaniug about.:
Every ~·Canolefcial .Credit~ people with
· ard tDneowner ~ ... smal a;nd larJte. They've ~<nutting 0n us fer tl)Ore 1tl3n 6.5 years. ¥ru can. too .••
We1 fmd a Wcr/ to help. ean us today. .
.f:j ~ CO~E~IAL cRf_orr c~R.ATioN ~·
\=a r:il a Control Data Cpmpany · · · • · .
· •. ·r-uta.OOOlllllOW:,,•~.flr•o••'I t of_._.,.....,~, ·
.,· .... .
COSTA MF.sA • 370 E. 17\h st1cct • 64S-8100 •
HUNTJNCTON BEACH·• 16075 Col-Wt1t St."• 8'7-77n
MISSION VIEJO·• 2439S Al.JcJa Parkway, Suite 2£ • 170..2661
. · . . . Attcia Towfl PW..• ·
SANTA ANA • 1224 ~ J7th Street• 547-$871 ·
~" ui. '--'•nU..~ .. ~........,;. .. '-' •-. .
•• t '. • • • : i • ~ • ' • • • • • •••• • 11 I .' • • •• • , • ..
Cardlnals 35, Colts 24
8ALrIMORE -Ottis Anderson of St. Louis
broke the 1,000 -yard rushlng mark for the third
strai1hl year .or his career and scored two
touchdowns as the Cardinals handed the Baltimore
Coils their 11th consecutive defeat. 35·24 .
The up-and-down Cardinals, 5·7, broke their
five-game string or road losses ln an error-filled
game be fore a meager crowd of 24 ,784 at
Memorial Stadium.
Anderson, who rus hed for 130 yards in 29
carries, scored on a 4·yard run in the first period
and added a second touchdown on an ll·yard run
with 48 seconds left in the game.
He has compiled 1,049 yards on the ground this
season.
The Colts. 1·11 , tied the score following
Anderson's first touchdown on Curtis Dickey's
36·yard TD run.
But six minutes later, the Cardinals took the
lead for good when Dave Ahrens intercepted a
pass by Bert Jones and ran 14 yards for a
touchdown.
Lions 23, Bears 7
CHI CAGO Eric Hipple set up his 5·yard
touchdown run with a 46-yard pass to Fred Scott
and Ed Murray kicked three fi eld goals. leading
Detroit to a 23-7 victory over Chicago.
The veteran Shell intercepted three Brian Sipe
passes and Washlnetoo grabbed two, damaaing
the Browns· chance of repeating as champions of
the American Football Confe rence Central
Division.
Ron Johnson picked off a sixth Sipe pass with
seconds remaining in the game.
Pittsburgh quarterback Terry Brads haw
passed 1 yard to Ray Pinney, usually an offensive
tackle, for a Steelers' score early in the fou rth
quarter, then tossed a 5-yard scoring pass lo Hick
Moser with 1: S4 left in the game.
Saints 27 . Oilers 24
HOUSTON -Houston rans gave New Orleans
Coach Bum Phillips a warm welcome home and
two touchdown runs by Jack Holmes and 142 yards
rushing by rooki e George Rogers gave him and the
Saints a 27·24 victory over the Oilers
The Saints, who hired Phillips last January
after he was fired by the Oilers. capitalized on
three crucial pass interference calls against the
Oilers to score the winning touchdown
After the Oilers had fought back to a 10·10 tie
in the third quarter. the Saints marched 74 yards
m six plays. The drive included 57 yards on two
pass interference penalties to set up Hol mes·
2·yard touchdown run.
Bucs 37, Packers 3
The Lions' defense Li mited the Bears to a total
of 24 net yards for the game. the lowest in Chicago
history. The previous low was 66 yards against
Denver in 19'.71.
Hippie's touchdown run around right end came
with 3:29 left in the third quarter and gave the
Lions a 16-7 lead. Murray booted field goals of 24 .
23 a nd 49 yards in t he first half. The LiOl\S clinched
the victory on a 2-yard touchdown run by Ri ck
Kane with 1 :45 left in the gam e.
TAMPA. Fla. Tampa Bay safety Cedric
Brown ignited a 24 -point second quarter by
returning an interception 81 yards for a touchdown 11 and former O ly mpic hurdler James ·owens
sprinted JS yards for another score to pace the -
Buccaneers to a 37-3 victory over Green Bay.
Owens. a wide receiver·turned running back.
rus hed for 112 yards on 16 carries and caught four
passes for 44 yards as Tampa Bay improved its
record to 6·6
· The Bears. bottled up by the Lions· defense.
which had seven sacks for 61 vards. scored with 16
Green Bay, which· played most of the game
with rookie Rich Campbell at quarte rback after
David Whitehurst was injured. dropped to 5·7
Touchdown Crosswordl" I Ros.tie r s
ACROSS An1wer To Latt WMk'a Puu1e b egin
1 ,& Shown, Felcona' backup OB
10 Ha.II of Famef
"BrvlMf" -12 Jeta' OT Abdul -
13 T Matteon'a
alg!'Klll
14 Sudden deeth 11tuatlon
1& Chalo-It 1• Matt RoO!Mon'• ....
11 "--Yenl!M
Doodle Dendy"
19 St. loolt tMm, IC><
•tlort
21 -·Ametican
24 StMlera' CB Blount
25 Vttdnga• Hollowey
and Mullaney, e.g.
2& Bengala' WR Don
30 That la (tb.)
31 OE Braaae'a lnalgne
32 Beat Bryant'a
achool
34 Alan Pao• or Allan
EUia 37 N.C.-H..-
38 -and older
41 Ollera• RB Celpenter
43 Mel Of Ed of
buaball
defense
NO RW ALK -Golden
West ColJegc begins its
bad for another s tate
co mmunity co ll ege
water p olo
championship Tuesday
when the Rustlers face
Cypress in the opening •"• round or the Southern ' •
C alif o rni a
c h a m pio n s hip s a t
Cerritos College. 48 L .. Roy to Dewey 54 Vtktnga' CB Bot>by -With a 23-0 rerord .
22 TW91ve rMn on tM 44 Dolph I~ Selmon (ab.) 56 OB Norman -Coach Tom Hermstad's
llelO <le LB Rich Wingo'• 49
achool (ab.) & 1
Attention 57 Ball when not In s quad is the top-seeded
23 C1ger1 · 0<g.
DOWN
t BuccanMra' TE Gli.a
2 Negative prefix
3 Oolphlna' WR
Moore
4 Carda' LB Wlllltmt 5 Ron .. _ .. Jaw~kl
8 -Ml"
7 Our continent (ab.)
8 Biii Bergey, John
Bunting, et et.
9 Oolphln1' CB
Garald -10 B..,.. WR-KR
HalnH
47 Prlnler'a rMUure 52 OE Ric•'• lnltl•I• play team in the tourname nt
Redatllna'TEOon ------..-...,P-.. T he Rustlers took care
--IP'""ll"'"9'1'!"-. or t he Southern Cal
lll!Plll!~~-+--+-+---t Conferenre title again this year something.
~-+---t they've done every year
since 1969 ewe ·!) ope n ing
contest in the SoCal
--+--+--t tourney 1s set for I 30
p m . against the --+---. ... eighth-seeded Chargers.
Other games find No. 2
seed Long Beach CC
meeting No 7 seed and
host Cerntos at 9 a m ..
No 3 seed Saddleback
~4--flll-. facing No. 6 seed Santa
11 Chargera' OE Fred-
12 Fen drink Ana at 10:30. and No 4
~-+--+--t seed Fullerton squaring 18 -Arbor. Mich. 20 Batra' Wther Payton, e.g.
21 Tlmat of dey
2e TU. t -vi.w
21 Rad Of Deed
28 Radakln1' C Kuztel
29 Woodaon or Glbron
32 LB Rlctlatd "-"
Wood 33 Htll of Ftmar Aoonay
36 C:O.Ch Peraeghlan
38 Batra' RB Hati* 37 StMle,..' LB
Loren -
o rr with No. 5 seed
-....-+---t Ventura at noon
A first-round victory
~-+---t would send the Rustlers
against the winner or the .. -.lw-t--t--t-t--" Fullerton-Ventura affair
at 1·30 p.m. Tuesday.
also at Cerritos The
38 Crazy '*90" •2 Hall of Fam« Stan <le Bikini upper c ha mp1onship game 1s
39 FalcOflt' Jenlllnt 44 Rama' OE 50 Whlak~ or breed set for Wednesday at orRlchardaon -Dryer 53 Oefanavepot. 1:30 p.m .
~ Coach Ewt>ank 45 Gridiron unit · &S Antlalrcrtlt (ab.) The top two finishers ::_.==:..:.....:..:..------------------in the SoCal tournament
will advance to the state
-----------------------championships.
SM next wMlt't lu ue for IOlutlon I
I
ll
i
..
--
Orange Co11t OAJLY PILOT/Novem.,_r 23, 1981
NFL
49ers 33, R•m• 31
Sc .... l>y0-1'1.tl'
!Mon Fr•ncls<o l 1 11 ._JJ
Loi A~ln 0 II I 1-.11
SF FG Wffs<ll109 •1
LA FGCMral M
LA Tyl« U PAU lrom P•t1ortn1 CC.orral
11101
SF Dav"' I n•n CWttr1otnl1>9 11.>ckl
LA O•nn•td 1 P•'' from G\lm en
u:o,,•1 kl<kl S F Llwren<e •J 11.lt &ott return
IWttu n1t19kKkl
SF FG We<W:N"9 )"
S F Lott H tnlerupllon r eturn
IWtru ntng kt< kl
LA Arnoto 2 pau lrom H-n 1corral
kt<l<I
Sf
I.A
SF
A
FG WerS<h1n<;1 ll
hie< I'"" !Corr•• ktO I
FG werw:nlnv Jl
6J.•S.
Tum51abtlkt
SF
F 1rs I down\ "
Au.,,_•,.,.,. 1•11
Pa u11>9 ylltCIS 1S• Return ,...,. >I
PUW> l .. »t
s.ciu Dy 1.0
P"nts 1 44
f umDlfi to" I I
Pen•Hofi.yarc» ~St
T 1mt ol P°'wwon H 00
llMll•-1 st.ollttkt
ui. 11
4M0l
10I s
••J:2·1
).14
~ ...
111
»OO
RUSHING s.n Fr•nclsco. D•••• •n. Pillon 1·10. Hofer S 1•. Lewrenu 1·9,
CooCM r • •. MontaM 1.m1nut 1 L.os A1199,.s,
T yltr 1J 97, Guman 11 .-. Oennaro H •.
P .. 1orin1 1·1l H.a.n 1·¥. Bryant 1·4, J
lnomut·1
PASSING S•n Fr•n<•t co. Mont•N
" JO I 11J. LAI\ Angelff, P•tlOflnt • t• I-It, H•oen 9-IJ41l2 G .. man I 1.0 1
RECEIVING 5.illl Fr•n<IS<O, S.0-
S U•. ~r ~U. Cl.,k • St, Hofer 1-10,
Youn9 1 ti , Sl\um•nn I 1 L°' An991H,
Oonn•ro S·S•. l ylttr • >•. Gum•n l ·11,
ArnolO 112. 0 Hill I 4J W-y I I. llryMI •
I 1. J ll'IOml1i IS
Cowboys 24, Redskins 1 O
Sure l>y °""9"°"
Wuh1nQ1on O 1 J O 10
D.>11•• 1 > 1 1 24
D•I Jonn\on 71 0•11 from wrute
IS.pllen k1<k t
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w o n G-u1n10 I i>aH lrom Thel\mar>n
IMo~le~ II.IO I w .. h FG-•y1'
D•I c-10 ~•from WnH• CS.Pllen
Sc>r•"V' I,.., IS.pCiff\ kKk)
54.113
•-•-I Slalbtk\
AU!>HING w .. l\1n9ton. WHlllnQ-
11 I• G1•Qu1n10 1 11, A•oo•n• ' 11,
Tneum•nn 111 Dall ... Oo<wll 2:1-IU,
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PASSING Wuhlnolon, lhel\manfl
ta J4 l·ISI. D•llllt. Wl'ute 1).1/4222.
REC.Ell/ING w .. n11>9ton. T!lom..--
• S&, w .. h1n9lon J ·41, Gl•qu1nto J.n .
M@IC•ll 2 II, NIOM I ll, W•lll.er l·S 0.11 .. ,
P••,.on 6·111 . Holl J •t. Joh,,.on I 11.
!>prinos 1·22 CoollM! MO S.ld1 I·>
Of I rot I
Cn•c•90
Lions 23, Bears 7
SCor9l>yQ\Wl'Wn
l
0
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D•l FG ,,,,,.,,., ll
D•t F G Mvrr•y ••
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A !0.081
l .... •-ISUU•lk t
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• 1
1-'ASSING 0.lroll, Hopple 11>-1' 1·45.
1.h•<•QO. E•&M •l'l-l 71 Aw111n1 l-10.1·20
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!>un4'y J 10. P•Ylon 1 1
Chargers SS, Raiders 21
kwel>yQool ......
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O•kl•no 1 14 0 0-21
Oo R_,,..,.,. pau lrom "'''""' tB..,r 111c11.1 so Muncie I r .. n l!Mf>lrKnU klek)
0 •11 J..,_, 1 run I B..,r lllCll.I
50 Brooo 11 P•U lrom F ouu
I 8 tntr1iehkt klCkl
0 •11 Wll'IOI\ 11run1 ll•hr k1tllJ
SO Wlntlow tS pus l rom Foutt
c 8f n1rsc:hU kKkt
SO w1ns1ow n pus l rom Foun I Benirw:hM 11.K't
SD Wtns.low 4 O•'s trom F-ouU
t 8•ntrs<.~ kKk>
SO ""'"'''°"' s ""'' 1rom F°"'IJ lkl<k 1a 1i.01
SO Joiner • o•'' from fowt' 1 er nir><hkt k•Ck I
S O Won\low J PU\ lrom Muncie
I Btnirw:~ .. K .. I
A SO.I ..
lndi•-1Slalhtk1
RUSHING s... Dieuc, Brooh, 11·'1,
Muncie 11-41, C•-llem ... Oall.l•no, King
a.11, Jrnsen ~tt. WllllOf> 1 "· H•wllln\ l·S.
Wh1tun91on 1 m•nu• 2
PASSING -S... 0._, fo..IJ ~l·N,
Luther 1·1.0-U. Mun<le l ·l.0-3. Wlntlow
0-1.0.0 Oall.••no. Wthon 11·14,2·10J, Pl..,llett
•"·I IJ6
REC.Ell/ING San Ole(lo. Wlnllo•
IJ 144, Br-s ~. Chandler 4-U, Joiner
>-ll, S.utH 2·lt, "Wncle 2-4, ~llettl MS.
O••tana , A•mtey • 111. Jensen •·14,
Ctwnoler J.56, BrWK.h J.ll, Hew"'" ~. Kino 1· u . Chr•slensen l·lO, Cl\Hl•r t-4.
/
Bue• 31, P•ckera 3 k-.., Qoil9"9n
GrHn Bay
hmlMI &ay
TB-FGc..-e 41
0 0
I 1•
0 )->
0 lo--31
TB -Brown II lnlercepllon retwrf'I
cc.apace 1t101
18-Clw9n•»run IC-• kt<ll.J
TB -T Bolt 1 P•U l•om Wlltl•m~
IC.ai;i.'e 11.ICkl
TB -FGC-•U
TB -FGC-eSI
GB FG Slenen.cl U
TB GllH J Mtt lrom Fu>ina CC-~
kKkl
A -~.2SI
IMl•IWa1$latl•lk•
RUSHING GtH n B•Y. Eltlt 11·»1 HvckleDy •·U, Jen .. n J-4 hMIWI B•YI
o.ent ••11J, R e.11 t·11, w lloer •n,
Ech•-•U . WllH•m• l-U, Fu.ina 1-1,
0 .. 1. 1-l, -1-1 PASSING Green Bo , W1tlle1tursl
...+H, <:Aml*ell l~·I.. hmPA B•Vr
Wllll•m• 12.2:1-1-1..a. F...in• H-4-J
AECfHVINCi -G'"" lay, Elli• IHI,
Lofton •IOJ, Coll,._ 1·», .HllerlOfl 1·1\1.
T•mlMI e..v. GllH 4-)3, <>wan• ..... w1•
,.,,,Hou .. l·IJ, R Bell 1·11. T Ball,.,
S•lnte 27, Ollere 24
k .... ..,o.en.n
Ne .. Ori.-O 10 14 l-11
Hovtlon O > 1 14 J4
HO -HOI,,_' "'"I Rk .,00 II.kid
HOV -FG FrltKl\4'
NO -FG A1<eroo ..
Ho.. -CAmpliell I fl•n IFrotuh kl<kl
NO -_,,_ 2 ""' 111.C•roo 11.ICll.I
NO Wll'°" 12 OH> from M•nn1~
IRKa rOO kKkl
Hou -Hol>ton so P•U from S1a1>1er
I FrtlJcn 11.l<kl
NO -FG Aturoo •2
k°"' -CM'nDOell I run lfrtlf(n kk'i
A -49,Sll
............. $\atltlk•
RUSHING N-Orie-. R-tt 3-143,
Holmu •u. h ••r ~u. WllSOfl >-s. E rolel>efl
l·mtnu• " Houllon. C•mPD•ll H ·•1t.
Coltm•n 1-l
PASSING New Orle•n\, M•nnl"O
10-l•.0-141 Hou1iton. St•CMer IS-2).1 ltO.
REC.Ell/ING Ne• OrlHl\l, HOI,.,.
5-49, H.,01' 2·20 WllW>n 1·21, ,,..,...,, l·li.
Groth 1·11 Houllon, Hol\IOft ...... C->-1S. C~ll l-10. 8urrD"911 2-41 Cof.,._
1-2S Arm•lrCln9 1-4
81111 20, Patriot• 17 k-"'~" N•• Env.-1 0 l 1-11
Bufl•lo l 10 o 1 20 Bui -FC. Mo...,1;1a.,., 11
NE -Mor99n S. p .. , lrom John-.
tSmlll\11.klil
Bui -FG Mlk•fWWv•• ll
Bui Hoou 11 o•u lrom Fer9usG1
1 M•••·fWWver llkll
NE -FGSnwlJIQ
NE -H-11111<11. S pass from c.a • ..,...g,.
1Sm1t11 kteal
Bui -Hook> l6 P•U 1rom Fervu-... 1M11le.fWW-II.IO I
A 11~
1..i...-.is~uu
RUSHING -New Envt-. Ft r(lu-
14·H , Cunnln9h •m ll·SI, Colllnl' •·t,
C.•11..,•UQI> 1-4, T•I._ l·minus 1, J-..ln
1 .... 1 .... s 4 ....... IO,~,._.,, -~1
Crl-i-. --..... PA$SING -,.._ ._,.._, C..•
•· 12·0· IU, Jollnton t l·O·S•. 8ulla t , Fer(lu..,,.1~34-1·2.ll.
RECEllllNG -N-E119l•nd. -!!: l·141, H .. wlbe<k )-41, C..,nintMm I .
Bufl•lo, -•111, LHll• ~. B~ter). , Brammer 1-19, L.aaks l·S
Benvel• 31, Bronco• 21 tc.w...,._....,.
°"""' 0 1 0 1.....,1 Cu><lnNtl "'4 o..-C.1n -.-Jtrun 18 rw<"kk kl
Ctn --2 !MIU Iron\ Anoer' .... (BrMU\11.k llJ
Oen -Lytle s '"" 1s •1n1or1 ak kl Ctn -A,...._,2 run I Breie<" 11.kkl
Cln -Coll..,._,n 1 MU lrom AnGerlPft
I Bre.<I\ kklll
Ctn -FG B.....:h »
Otn -WatW>n 14 IMIH trom Dt Berv
1s1e1nlOl"l k1Ckl Cln -.,._, U pass from ,.,_...,,,
( Breun kkkl
Oen -Lytle 14 put lrom OeBero
t$t•1nlOl"l II.Kii.I
A Sl,207
···-• luthU<• Ru SHI NG Denver. D•l•ro •·JO,
Prttton ~t7, A"'° ~II. P•rros 2·S, L'(1i. l·S.
C1ncinn•U. -I._"· H.,9ro•• ~ KrelO.r 1·21, Ander'°" ).II,,.,.,._, ._IO,
A Griffin 1-1
PASSING Oemrtf, Oe&.ro 21-1 .. 2·305.
C1nc 1nnatl, Ander-. 21-ll•n.. Kr••-.
0-1-
RECEIVING Oeftver, Wal..,,. ~102.
PrUIOfl ~. ParrCK S.50, R-... ,., L'(11e
2·11 C1nc1nneh. Rou '·IU, Jot.MOn -· M Harris 4-S7, A,.,.,,..., Ml, IC.rtlcle• >...:i,
Cofllnsworth H S
Steeler1 32, Browns 10 Sc-tty~ • P1l~burgn
Clevttend
Cle -FG S...r JJ
I] 0 .. la-32
l I O ~tO
Pol -H_,_ne 1 run Cklck 1•11.0I
Pol T!mrnlon) "'" lklO l•oledl
Cle Lo0M U PAM from Sipe 18.lftr
kKkl
Pit -Herrls 1 n•n lkk k lallttal
Pot -Pinney I pau lrom Br.Otll•w !Trout 11.k lll
Pit -MoMr S -•Ir-Br.OSh•w I Trout lll<kl
A -17,'111
1 ............. , .. thllct
RUSHING -Pllttt>uron, Hurl• 2G-H,
TllotntOft IS.S2, HawtllorM N , Br-..
2·•. Matan. l·S, 0.Vl\ I.() c. .. v•l•nd, M.
Pruitt , ..... G. Prvlll 1-17, Sipe HI, Wnlte
1 ...
PASSING -Pltllbur9h, Brao11'••
11·l2·1·22l. Ctewl...O, Sipe 1...,.....227
RECEIVING -Plm11Ur9'1, Tllornton ~I.
Smith l-12, "•rrl• >-~. Sl•ll-rtll 1~.
Sw..in 1-lt, H-.. •·!2. Gr-l·I,
Moser M , P.,...y M Cle.,.lancl. N-
Ht, Feec:"9r .. ,,, M. Pn.111 WI, G. Prvitt
).It, Rue-Ml,~ l·tl, Ooff\ 1-6.
SCOREBOARD
Jet• 11, Dolphin• 15 lit-..., °""9"9n
Ml•m l
NY J e b
0 IJ
J > 0 )-U
0 '~" NY J l'G lAally 2'
NY J FG lAall'"
Mia -Nau.an 4 r.., IYOn ~ham""" kkkl
Ml• s.Mty, Toad tec:kled In eno tone
Ml• FG YOft ScMmeM 46
NY J -FG lAally 45
Ml• -FG """S<Mmenn u
NY J -&Milum II"'"' from T-IL• ....
11.kkl
A St,•2 1119iYIWal 5talbtkt
RUSHING Ml•mt, Nelh•n IS·h .
Fr•nll.lln 1-4.S, WpoOltJ 4-41, Hiii S-•. -
Yorll, Mc-• ,.,7', OHtr•ono 1·16 ... ._
J.12, l OOd MO. N-'Dn 4-1
PASSING Mi<oml, W-l•J 11>-11·2'63
New York, T-11·>1+10J
RECEIVING Ml•ml, Nalh•n l-1•,
Harrol l ·lll, U. 24'\lnuS >, Hiii 1-4, Cttl•to
l·l , HerOy I J New York, B•rkum ~ •
Harper ._,.,, J Jonet )·JI. Walur J.J6,
M<Nell ).JO, O .. rklno J.11, B. J-\ 1·11,
Newlon 1·1
C•rdln•I• 35, Colts 24
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SIL Ahren' 14 lnt.rcepUon re1urn
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Morrot 12_.., Lom•• •·24, Mltchall J.1J
B•IClmore. D••on 12·U , Qlcll.ey l ·•I •
McMlll•n f.19, J-1 M2, ~Caul•y 1 S,
Fr•nll.lln 2-4, G•rreil I >.
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RECEIVING SI l.OYI>, Ill .. , :t-ISI, R
Green 2·••. i...F1 ... , 1·21, A,_rson 1·21.
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C D•neto klClll
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Plltl.Oelplll•, Monloorntt•Y 1S.102. Ollw r
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1-1.
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K•nw • City, H-.01 10-10., )Kii.Win 1110.
Ottleney 11..S. Blect-• It. tC..,,,.y 1-•
PASSING Seattle, Zorn 19-l0-1·1M
K•r>WlClty, lt..,,,.y 11 U -0-111
A EC.Ell/ING S.•n1e. L•rgenl •-43. T
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GREY CUP
Edmonton 28, Ott•w• 23
ker• ~ ... °""9"-n
EomonCOft
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Ott -FG Of'(loln J1
011 RelO I run I Or9o1n • Kii. i
011 -Pl•tt 14 run 10r(loln llkkl
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Edm --I run IC~i.r """'' Ott• FG Or(loll'l ll
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Moon 12·23, Lum-1-J. Ottawa, Pl.ti
12-41, Wa~S-2', Reid 1-1.
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10 Artt-$1•1• " HI! DUI C.olor.OO !>t•I• H ·l
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5UNOAY'S llESULU ( ....... u ...... _....,. ..... _11.,.1
F1115T llACE. I 11'• mllM
FIHI Auler 10.1-u\WYtll JJ 40 11.20 140
M19hh Fell• IOll11•rn1 21 20 11 40
Oon•la tS10.11e1 • 40
Al\O r«..O l10thJ~ LAI M Rcwr. 8 r •i-.O
Kn•"• 1 ruc.o. "°"''•'" HO ~.nt, h 1no. K '
VtnGK•lor
t 1m e 1 4ot • )
SECONOIACE 11 .. miles
Noo" OyN>ly cc; ... ,,., .. IO U .00 I• 00
El G•IO Or-tMcH•r9.,.. 1110 I 40
Su.i N Fl ... IOl1•••H l I 60
Aho r•cHS Maori'n St •r , M•,ler
Ben1•mtn, L•u<1n1no Rover. !>ir Spr .. u ,
1(1\•Qhl of GOia, Pi••ll< f.llr\IUlic, Back
B•lley, Clamor, TOA•I th• lloCtl)t
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0 OAIL Y OOU8LE 11 111 P<ha '617 IO '"'•o ••ca. One m11e Dom•-IV•1..,, ... 1a1 '40 •.60 J 40
Bono Rullah(CM~) •00 •GO
OelenM c-11Plnc.••I J 40
AtW> re<.ect P1•r<1 ' Ore•m . O••l•ftO
Eltu•ry, TreDllan $11.y 'I'.,_
Time I It •rS
U UlACTA IM I PAIO 'IU 00
flOU•TH ••ca .... lutlonQs
Mauer ~ CMcCMron1 • 60 4 . .0 > 40
Alrroll1>9 I Piere.el • IO 4 lO
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flll'T" ltACE. I ltl•mll .. on turf .
Parlovl I T-1 • IO l .0 2 .0
Gttmmete 1"-'~•I l 60 1 40
Son of• OoOo CGalllt.flOI 1.to
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John. Ind-Chant P11n1n
Time I , .. ,)
SEVENTH •ACE. I luttono•
lmporC•nt -mo 1 W1ntano1 u 60 1 JO s 40
Ktnneoy A10Q!t t ll•lttn1utl•1 11 00 1 oo
Ou••v Hui• 1S11>111e1 • 60
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con•ol•lton ""'° l l 11 60 *"" »• w1nn1no t•<"•'' Uh,.. hOf'W'\ °""' u r•tcft)
EIG"TH •ACE t•~ m11es Oft lutl
Klll1•ro IP•nt•YI S 20 l 60 ) .0
Gtoo'lou t Sent IMctMronl S 60 • .0
Bttr,lo C&aul 11 60
Aho rac,.o <Neff\ 10 ConQwr. S.jam•.
Ack s s.<ret, Ju>I • C.•m• II, Berry Bu>ll.
A.••nDow Connectton
Tlmt I '1
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Port lfelllle C Pterc11 S• 00 11.00 • 4G
f'irtl 8 1-\Pir•Uyl • 60 S.OCl
Alsnurouk CH•w,.vl 1.c
Al>o r•cttO """''"'" Covrt, Bolo Ack. P l r•u Be o n l lmt , Hasty E•v••.
Eml>erm•IK, Fo•v Oulllo
Time I 4)
U EllAC'TA 14 SI P<tlCI l~ 00
Alie-. 7' ... I
Deep •• flahlnq _
NIW'°4tT INt'I ~I -2' eneten:
1n m~. JI baa, 31 roo coa, • -.1111.
10. .. .,.. "--> -1" ....-.. : m rack
(OCI, ao. "*"41nf. llS boftilo, S MM MM, I
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210mKll ..... ,2c-Qlll, I llftVCDd.
DANA WMA .. I' -100 ..... n : U Nu, 11
-.110, I .... ,-. )ff retll COCI, -mac-.i,
111ntC4111.
Camel.Where a man belongs •
.
1 Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. 8 mg. "ta('. 0.8 mg. nicotine w.
per cigll'1ne by FTC method.
NBA
WISTIRN C:ONl'E•ENCE
fl9'1fk Ol•ltl111
W L P<t. I l ,,,
QI
Portl•no
LAil en
Golcltn s i. ..
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IC.•nW• Clly 173
0.11 .. 11 Oil
E.UTERN CONFERENCE
AtlMlk 01•l•i ..
Phll•oelpnll 11
Bo.ion 10
New Yotk w .. l\lnQton N•• Jerwy
OttlrOtl
All•nl•
Ceftlr•I Dl•l•I•
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lndl•n•
cruc•QO
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Cle•elano at All•nl•
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N«¥f J.,yy •t Hou\tOf\
Cl11t •llO al San 0 -
I
7
1 • 10
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<:AMP8ELLCONFE-£NCE
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flalrlu. OIYI.._
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NY ltlMdtr\1,NY R-rt7
W1nni1199 S SI LOUtl 4
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dttl Mike B•-J H B-·. ~I. I ......
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1•18-Alretl
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Indoor tournament
1•111otavn• 11.1,1 s..,. ... Fonal
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tM•v•r Win\ \U,000 N., •• ,., Wtf\I" )0(;1
Ladles Cup tournament
lllt l••yol
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l"1rllPli1U l r•<Y AU\t1n Otl .,..,,. Manol19low• I •,
I • I At.1\.Un win) U0.000 M•ndlfko¥• ••n\
P O 0001
Women's tournament
l•I Pe'111, Aw .. Ult•l
S1nt1esF1""I
J<t.,m Snn~r dirf Anote• JM'tJllf • I 1 •
~"'""' b•rt>•r• PoUf'r 5in.ron 'W•l\I\ CH't l.•AOY
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l•I ...... si .. )
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)00 G r•na N•hon•t \lOC.lll <•r r«• w1tl't tvs-
ot t•r~ l~<ornpf•ttd •no w•nner '•ver~
•OHO In mc>n
I B_., AllltO•'. Bu•< ... , ,, •s 1M "'""
1 Joe A~lmar>, Bu10 . t 19
l l err-y LttOOn•• bu1ck, ll'i
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S Joe Mtlltlllln, PonlliK. 11'
• O•rr•U ¥¥•ftt1P. BY+(k, 119
1 R1ctwrd Pen~. Bui<~. 119
I HaHy C.MI, Pontiac, 118
• Jooy AIClttty, f'oro. 111
10 Ron -1\aro. B .. 10 , 111
II Jo -Ou•h•. Pontiac t ll
11 Gary l<tr""''"· B"Kk, 111
I) MotOMSl\eoaro. BuKll, Ill
14 Biii !.<1Vn1l1, BIMll.. 11•
I~ 00ft WllH"-. BuKll.. II•
I• Lake 5-0. Bui<• 11~
11 J•,,_ HyllOft, BuK• llS
II 80C BonourMI, POfthac, 114
19 C.ar y IUIOuQn. Buo<•, 111
10 l 1m RKtvnoncl 8u•cll • 1) 2 • OOft ._,,..., 1c1t, Olat 111
21 C.-T-. BuKll 110
U 1111-$-,F-.109
1• 8..ooy Arrll\Olon, ~. 10.
1S D•v• Marc•s. Ponllac, tOJ
2• Tommy C.a le, F0to. ts
21 Be""' l'•r-.•. ~Oto. 9<I
21 Ch<lck P1ll•19r Elu1ck. &O
29 Scon Miiier. Ponhac. ••
lO Roy Smit~. 8uoe: •. SI -
ll ltrrr ~rman Buick }S
31 Jim R_n_,, Olc»moDI .... )J
JJ N••• e.:..-11. Fora •9
l' P•t Mint•• C.rwwrot~t 40
JS Don Wh1n1nvion. 010•...-••• JI
lfo Jim 8owfl BuKll, l4
J1 Kyle P,,tty, 8UICk. 11
)I H~r;IWI McC.r1H 8uK.. 11
)t R•cl'\ara en.lath• Buo<ll.,)
•O A~<•r R.-CheWtolet 1
Weekend tr•ns•ctlon1
SASEIALL ",,..." ... Ltt-1( "N SA!> C ITY ROYALS N•m eo
lomm~ Jont\ • lr•••h nQ mi.tructot •no
minor 1•6QU& ,,,.twgpr •• BvUt, Mof't'
8ASKETIALL
NH--utCNll AH•Kllll-
OE T ROI l PISTONS Tr.a.a C.r._y
K1:lwr forward, to •~ ~•ltl• ~oer!aon•<.•
lor V1nn1f JOhns.on, 9udrd.
HOCKEY
Hal,...I H9Ckey L• .. ue
Sl LOUIS Recalleo N .. I L ........
ott•nS.•mM'I trom Salt U k• t •tv or '"'
Ct nlr•t Hooey u -
COLLEQE
PURDUE N•..._ L"°" Burtn•tt l•UO
IOOID•llCO«h
,
..
Daily Pilat ,
MON DAY, NOV. 23, 1981
S LIM GOURMET CJ
SW EET P OTATOES CS
E ASY R ECIPE I DE AS C6
Turkey and stuffing can be sparked with the flavors of I ndia (top ) or Mexico.
T raditional turkey with a
sli m taste ... C4
mh1 :. holiday :.eu:.on add a n
1nternullonal nuvor lo lhe family
fl'ast Choo1>e thl' seasoning:. of a
favorite foreign l'u1sine to transform
the trud1twnal turkey
At top, a turkey that borrows some of the
fl avors of India There's a stuffing with curry
powder, r1C'e and raisins
Whole berry cranberry sauce adds a strictly
Amen can note and keeps the stuffing moist.
Two typical Indian spices, curry powder and
ta rdamom, are added to cranberry Juice
cocktail for a glaze that 1s rich and flavorful.
The second turkey goes south of the border
with a cranberry juice glaze that has a generous
helping of spicy chili powder.
Colorful peppers stuffed with corn, bacon,
tostados, Monterey Jack cheese and chilies add
familiar Mexican touches.
For a different kind of large party, you
might want to consider serving both turkeys.
Two turkeys, side by side, cook in less time than
one large turkey and give you extra drumsticks,
wings and breast meat.
Two 15-pound turkeys cook in three and a
half to four hours while a 30 pound turkey takes
seven lO ei1tht hours
INDIAN TURKEY
1 turkey. about 15 pounds, thawed if
frozen
Salt, pepper
STUFFING
1'2 cup butler or marganne
1 onion, chopped
1 cup minC'ed celery
5 cups cooked white or brown n ee
1 cup" hole berry cranberry sauce
1 cup raisins
I teaspoon curry powder
GLAZE
I can 16 ounces I frozen concentrated
cranberry JUl<'e cocktail, thawed and undiluted
'·2 teaspoon each curry powder and
ground cardamon
1 ~cup melted butter or margarine
GARNISH
Whole peeled navel oranges, whole pitted
dates, cashews, piles of pomegranate seeds or
pomegranate halves.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Sprinkle
turkey 1ns1de and out with salt and pepper. In a
skillet heat butter and saute onion and celery
for 5 minutes. Sttr in rice, cranberry sauce,
rais ms ·and curry powder. Season lO taste with
salt. Use mixture to stuff turkey. Sew or skewer
openlnp. Roast ln a roH·Uned rout.lna pan ror
3h to 4 hours or until leg can be moved up and
down easily In a bowl, mix glaze ingredients.
During the last hour of roastmg, baste turkey
with glaze every 10 minutes If any glaze is left,
heat it until bubbly and serve it as a sauce.
Place turkey on serving platter and surround
with ganushes and 1r desired, fresh coriander or
Italian parsley leaves Serves eight to 10
generousl}
MEXICAN TURKEY
1 turkey, about 15 pounds, thawed, if
frozen
SaJt, pepper
STUFFING
1 pound ltahan sweet or hot sausage
1 oruon, chopped
l' ~ cups minced celery
3 cups drained cooked kidney beans
9 cups plain croutons
I teaspoon poultry seasoning
l tablespoon chth powder
I cup cranberry JUice cocktail
GLAZI.!:
1rJ cup butter or margarine
2 tablespoons chili powder
2 cloves garlic, mashed
•1~ cup mashed jellied cranberry sauce
GA RNISH
Kernel corn mixed with bits of crisp
bacon stuffed into red and green pepper halves
alternated with tostados glazed with Monterey
Jack cheese, whole sweet green chilies
Sprinkle turkey inside and out with salt and
pepper In a sk1llet, fry sausage slowly for
about 15 to 20 minutes or until cooked. Remove
sausage, cool a nd cut into chunks. Add to
sausage drippings and stir in remaining stuffing
1ngred1ents Season to taste with s alt, if
necessary use mixture to stuff turkey Sew or
skewer openings Roast in a foil.lined roasting
pan 1n a preheated moderate oven (350 degrees I
for 31 ~ to 4 hours or until leg can be moved up
und down easily M 1x glaze 1ngred1ents in a
bo" I During the last hour of roasting, baste
turkc) "1th glaze every 10 minutes If any glaze
1s left. heal 1l until bubbly and serve as a sauce.
Place turkey on :.erv1ng platter and surround
with garnish A 15 pound turkey serves 8 10
genl'rously and allows some leftovers
t-or a large group roast two turkeys side by
side These will cook in less time than a vety
large turkey saving energy, and providing
plenty of drumsticks, wings and breast meat.
Two 15 pound turkeys cook in 3'77 lo 4 hours
while a 30 pound turkey takes 7·8 hours.
Plan on 11 i to 2 pounds per person if the
turkey 1s pre stuffed Using this guide, there
will be plenty for gracious carving at the table
no s<'raping the bones to serve everyone
The best way lo thaw a turkey 1s in the
rcfr1gt>rator. according to home economists
Hefr1gerator thawing 1s recommended for
food safct\ rea:.ons blncc the s urface of the bird
remains "cold during thawing and does not
permit the rapid growth of bactena.
Plan on two lo three days for thawing a 12·
to 16-pound frozen turkey in the refrigerator
If you must tha" the bird more quickly. put
1l 1n a deep pan or in the sink. cover 1t with cool
water and change the water frequently to keep
the ">UrfaCl' tool "'hill• the turke} thaws
Hoom temperature thawing 1s not
recommended IJec·ausc• the turkev surface can
betom<· "'arm. allowing harmful bacteria to
grow
Provide a perfect ending with pie for dessert
mhanksg1ving 1s a time
for all the warm and
wonderful traditions
. famil y and
rr1 e nd s and plump
1oasled turkey ,
cranberry sauce and pie.
T h is year, s t a rt a n ew
tradition with your fatnily ...
Praline Pumpkin Mousse Pie. So
easy . So de l i cio u s. So
memorable.
PRALINE PUMPKIN MOUSSE
PIE
1 !}.inch baked pie shell
1 envelope unf la vor e d
gelatin
'h cup praline liqueur
1 can ( 16 oun ces> pumpkin
4 egg yolks, slightly beaten
lf.i cup packed brown sugar
lf.i cup sugar
1/4 cup butter or m argaMne,
melted
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
lf.i teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
4 egg whites
'1ti teaspoon cream of tartar
Pinch of salt
~ cup whipping cream,
whipped
Pecan Nut Topping (below)'
Soften gelatin in praline
lique ur; s et asid e . He a t
pumpkin , egg yolks , brown
sugar, sugar, butter , cinnamon,,
salt and cloves in saucepan over
me d i um h eat , sti rr i ng
constantly, until slightly boillng
a nd thickened. Re move from
beat. Beat ln gelatin mixture
until gelatin is dissolved, about 1
minute. Cool.
Beal egg whites, cream of
tartar and salt until stiff peaks
form. Fold beaten en whites
a nd whi ppe d cre am into
pumpkin mixture. Pour Into pie
sh e ll, mounding slightly In
center. Cblll 6 hours. Garniab
with addiUooal whipped cream
and cruabed Pecan Nut Topptnc.
PECAN N1JT TOPPING
~ cupaqar
2 \ablelpoona water
PiDdl ot cream of tartar
, ~ cup pecana, coaraely
chopped Butter baldn1 abeet. Heat
·l u1ar, water and cream of
• •
tartar in skillet over medium
heat, stirring constantly, until
color becomes light car amel.
Stir in nuts. Spread quickly oo
baking sheet. Cool and chop into
small pieces.
Here's a new recipe that's
bound lo be a classic, Caramel
Almond Apple Pie, inspired by
a nother American favorite,
caramel apples. Almonds,
blended with brown sugar and
layered over the bottom crust,
add a delig h tf u l
crunchy-caramel texture and
out-of-the-ordinary taste to the
tradit ional a pple pie filling.
Additional almonds, sprinkled
over the top crust, add extra
crunch and appetite appeal.
CARAMEL ALMOND APPLE
PIE
Pastry for 2-crust 9-inch pie
114 cup melted butter or
margarine
1 cup packed brown sugar
l cup choppe d na tura l
a lmonds, toasted
2 pounds tart green apples,
peeled and thinly sliced <about 2
quarts)
1/4 cup bourbon or apple
juice v. cup nour
1 teaspoon each cinnamon
and nutmeg
1 egg, beaten
Line !}.inch pie plate with ball
of the pastry. crimping edges.
Pour melted butter over pastry,
then sprinkle with lf.i cup of the
brown s ugar and ~ cup of the
almonds. Set aside. In large
bowl combine apples and
bourbon. Combine fl our, the
remaining \.'!! cup sugar and the
spices; add to apples , tosalng to
coat. Arrange over almond layer
ln pie plate. Roll out remaining
pastry; cut into strips and
arrange over filling to form a
lattice crust. Brush with beaten
e ag. Finely c hop or Crlnd
r emainina \4 cup almonds;
sprinkle over crust. Bake ln
425·dearee oven 10 mlnutea.
Reduce beat to 350 detreee and
c ontinue baki n1 about 50
mlnut.es, unW apples are tender
and filling is bubbly. Cool
sll1bUy before cuWnt.
Mak• I servin.s. t
T O TOAST ALMONDS :
Spread almonds in an ungreased
baking pan or skillet. Place in a
350-degree oven o r over
medium-low heat on the stove
top f or 5 t o 10 minutes
(de pending on the form of
almonds that you are using) or
until almonds are a light golden
brown. Stir once or twice to
assure even browning. Note that
almonds will continue to brown
slightly after being removed
from the heat.
Another variation on the
traditional fall favorite 1s Apple
Pecan Crumb·Top Pie A crumb
topping made with brown sugar
and pecans make:. a delicious
s ubstitute for a top crust
AP PLE PF:C'AN CRt:MB·TOP
P IE
'•cup chopped pecans
l unbaked 9·1n<'h pie shell
I cup sugar
2 teaspoons flour
'• teaspoon nutmeg
12 teaspoon cinnamon
6 cups thrnly sl1('ed tart
apples
2 tablespoons buller or
margarme
Crumb Topping I See below>
CRUMB TOPPING
12 cup firmly packed brown
... ugar
1 , cup butter or margarine
I <'up rtour
'• teaspoon cinnamon
14 cup chopped pecans
Hl end first 4 ingredients with
fork until butler IS Size O( peas
Stir 111 pe<'ans
Sprinkle pecans on bottom of
pit> shell Mi x sugar, rtour and
s pi ces . mix thro u gh apple
:.hces lleap apples m pie shell.
dol w1lh butter or margarine
and cover with Crumb Topping
Hake al 125 degrees for 40 to 45
minutes or until apples are
tender
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT Mo11d.1y , Novomber 23, 1981
The ordinary potato forms ha i
elegant, tasty new getable disl
The reul of today has
come a long way from
the past. Such ordinary
table items aa Individual
spoons, knives and
plates were considered a
curiosity until the 17th
century, before which
guests s upped from a
common dish or cup.
Mo s t Euro pean
royally, preferring to
eat with their fingers,
s hunn e d the
"irreUgious" fork until
the mid-17th century.
upper-claas, the Frenc h
ac tually viewed it as
harmful -the potato
only became basic to
Western cuisine In the
early 1800s .
Right In time for the
country's most beloved
hol i d ay , freshly
harvested potatoes are
arriving In markets all
over the country.
Two d ishes that
celebrate the wonders of
this New World tuber
are Potato Puff Rmg
and Mixed Vegetable
Puree .
Throughout the ages
v arious foods have
s hifted in fastuonability,
as well. POTATO
0 u r mod e rn ·da y PUFF RING
Thanksgiving feast is , 5 large potatoes
indeed a tribute to the v .. cup butter o r
b o uni i r u 1 pro du ce • margarine, melted
harves t of Americ a v .. c up c ho pped
because it was at the pimiento
time of the Pilgrim 's 3 eggs, beaten
first celebration in 1621 2 l a b I es p o o n s
that vegetables were no chopped parlsey
longe r r egarded with 1 t e as poon onion
s uspicion. powder
T o day, on e of the J teaspoon sail
reasons to be grateful at 1'1< teaspoon pepper
Thanks giving is the P ac ka ged . dr y
h i gh I y nutritio u s , bread crumbs
delicious potato. P are potatoes, cut in
F I u c t u at i n g i n halves crosswise. Place
popularity from country p o l aloes 1 n I a r g e
to country -the EngHs h s auc epan with l ·inc h
thought it was poor boihng water Cover .
m a n · s f ood . t h e Reduce heat, simmer 25
Mexicans considered it minutes. unt1l potatoes
Turkey prices
below 18st year
By CATHER I NE
WILSON
AtM<latW ~ftS Wr!W
Groce ry s ho ppe r s
huntin g f o r
Thanksgiving turkeys
could encounter "the
g r eates t ;>arg ain in
hist ory ," an industry
spokesman says.
But what's good for
con s umers a ppea r s
rurnous for g r o we rs .
Several fa c t or s are
working in favor o f
s hoppers and a gains t
fa rmers. Henry Turner
o f th e s t ate Turkey
Indus try Bo ard an
Modes to s aid i n a
telephone interview.
P roducers facing the
larg e s t c r op in the
n ation's history have
more turkeys in s torage
than ever before this
l at e 10 th e ye ar
Wholesale prices are
down considerably from
the 198> holiday season.
And cons umption 1s
down slightly.
Indus try le ade r s
be l ieve the s ituatio n
may induce a repeat of
the turkey price war
w a ged by Southe rn
California store chains
last year.
''It ma y b e an
opportunity that won't
come along for a while
ag ain," s aid G e n e
Simpson, president of
Valchris Inc. of Turlock.
·'Turkeys are going lo
be a real bargain for the
cons umer. What's bad
news for us is good news
for them," Turner said.
"I hope people will take
advantage of it because
we need help
"We have to eat our
way out of this."
Turner is preda clang
.. a real disaste r . the
worst year in history as
far as losses a r e
concerned.''
California g r owe r s.
who produce almost one
seventh of the nation's
170 million turkeys, will
lose about $1.95 on the I
average 15·p<>und bird,
he estimated.
G r o w e r s are
con cent r a t e d tn San
B e rna rdino County ,
Lancaster, Sonoma and
the central San J oaquan
Valley
"All o f the m are
l os ing m on ey ," h e
added. The price of frozen
young tom t urkeys an
the 18 lo 20·pound rangl'
deliver ed to a m aJor
chain or distnbutor was
56 cents per poun d
com pared to 77 cents at
the same time last year ,
a ccording to recen t
nal1onal figures
The same price for
youn g he ns r a n ging
from 10..12 pounds was
5 7 ce nt s a po und
compared to 71 cents an
1980.
Pri ces for f r es h
turkeys are s lig h tly
higher . but t he same
p ri ce dif f e r e n ce
rem ains.
The buyer's market
for whole turkeys is a
product of the recession,
Turner said.
"The main thing is the
economy. It's true of all
meats . The consumption
of meat is down," he
said. "With competing
meat prices down and
m o r e m eal o n t h e
m a rket than people are
willin g t o bu y.
ever yUung suffers ··
Cranberries end
meal uith taste
The pilgrims might
have bad cranberries
and corn meal for their
Thanksgiving feas t
but never in s u c h
s plendid combination as
in this Cranberry Pecan
Pie. Se rved with ice cream
or whlJ>ped cream, it is
a beautiful end to the
meal where yo u
c el e brat e your
American heritage.
CRANBERRY PECAN
PIE
Com Meal Crust:
1 cup all-purpose
flour
cranberries
are lcncll'r llr.110 Pl.Jn•
half Uw pot 11111 ~ 1n u
food prot't'!l!ltll r1ttc•cl
w I l h u k n ir 1· Ii I a tll
P roress unt 1 l s 1111mth
Removt• to .1 I. 1 ~·· t.<1'4 I
Repeat "'1th 11•1.1.11n1111
potatoes. Stir 1n h11tt1·1.
pimiento, t·10·~. 1Mr:.l1·~
on\On L>Ol.\1kr, ... ill &nd
p e p p e 1 II 11 t t •· r a
J •" q u 11 rt rt 11 ~· mo I rl .
dust h~htl) "'11h hrP.1cl
c ru mbs "'1111011 1101.ilo
m1xlu1 I' 1111.u n 111cl f\.1kt
m a 350 rlegr1·1· 11\ •·11 ·m
to 40 m111utt·~ until 111111•.
set and v.ol1k11 H~·1110\ •·
from ov1·11 Allul.\ lo
s la n ii I 0 m I II" l t• s
Unmolll unto "''1 v 111r
platt' Fill 11•11h'1 \\ 11 h
cookt•t..I h111<'• 1111
Ilru!-tst·ls ~pru11\.; •1r
carroL'>
Yield Ii ~··n 1111-:~
Fresh Western Oyst~rs
Pork SdU5dY~
Shrimp Mea•
N 0 T E : Jo' ll I
t·o nvenltonal methoti
mas h po t a t o wit h
t>lectn c mixer or pot11to
mash~r until s mooth
/\dd butler , eggs. on11111
powder , s ail and pep1wr
Beat until lig ht anlt
(luffy. Stir in p1m1ent11
;ind panley,
MIXED VEGETABU .
PUREE
4 c ups po l alt>t
part'd, cut in chunks
2 c ups t u r n ip ,
pared, cut In chunks
2 cups carrots, 1 111
an I anch pieces 14 cup butter 111
margarine
l egg, beaten
5 t a bl espoon
<"hopped chives, d1v1d1•1I
1 teaspoon sail
1 , teaspoon peppt'f
1 cup sour cream
.. ,99'
s49a
Skinless Fr 1n~ c;
Chunk Bo
Gallo Sal ·
'~
\~
I :
'* Butte; 6usteih--
'~T urkeys
Mo"o' Mo"••
H..nt o Jo"''
G•ode A
''01•'1
Fresh Yo ung
Turkeys
A
Mono, Hout•
Hen• o• orr• c; od• 4
Wnh Pop Up 1 m••
Mn1
Mid t
c-~·
Mono• H ••
lu•r.a• &ct•t
f.•t•n Cua J•
~ 0111 011r Large Variety of Hr
.. ,, •MT H1 • 'Ith,,,, l 1 ... ,,
•I" •w f•tin tit
row n 'N Serve
Rolls
Go ld Medal
/\
I •flJ
.ii I
I 11 I
"{11
v. cup enriched com
roe al
For Corn Meal Crust
H e at o v e n l o 4 25
d egr ees. In m e dium
bowl, combine (lour,
corn meal and salt. Cut
in s hortenin g until
mixture resembles
coa r se c rumbs . Add
water, 1 tabl~poon at a
ti me, stirring lightly
until mixture forms a
baU . Wrap dough
securely; chill about 30
minutes. Roll dough on
lightly floured s urface to
form 13-inch circle. Fil
loosely int<> 9-incb pie
plate; trim. Tum edges
under; flute. Bake for 7
minutes; cool. .J or 'lllsltvry ~Morton Pi -~ teupoon salt ~ cup vegetable
s hortening
~ cup cold water
Cranberry Pecan
Filling:
4 eggs
Yl cup firmly
packed brown sugar
~ cup light corn
syrup
\4 cup maple
flavored t•ble syrup
~ cup butter or
mar1arine, melted
l teaspoon vanllla
1 cup c hopped
pecan• ~ cu~ c hopped
For Cranberry Pecan
Filling: Reduce oven
le m perature l<> 325
degr ees. In medium
bowl, beat together eggs
and brown sugar; slowly
add syrups, butter and
vanilla, mixing well.
Stir ln pecans and
cranberries. Pour into
partially bitked pie
crust. Continue baking
for 40 to 45 mlnulea or
unt.ll ~al. Coo l
thoroughly. SeTVe wilb
whipped cream Ol' lee
cream, U desired .
Makes one 9-inch pie (6
to 8 servings> .
......
I ~l 'URl'1Hl L..:..-1111 .. °"~
~ .... ,~77c 5.:. .,.... ....................... ,
. DAIRY
~ EggNog
~Whip Cream
\ t 000 leyMde Dr~ ,..•wpori •eoch •
~M1xedV•g
::1 Ripe Oltv~ --.... Marsh1 .ill
• H6 I S.. ....... s-te A1te r
·~··••-••• •••••••·aa··a·a·neconoe··e•oe tr • n= ft
~.1u 1·11 1 n
.1 11 uud
• I 1nrli l111tl111.i.
111111utt•i.
11\tr and
t 11.n~cr
tl11t .. ii rt•
•" II I. u I (• ('
I Ii I I I ( ,, t) 11
I' I' I Ir j I'
1 1111111 f' h u
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p110 11 '
J.H 1>111' I
:0.. I• I t' il d
I I qo,trt
.d.11 > d1-.h
I··~ r • • 11ve11
I '>II all
\ ,,,~., /111111111 l'u/I Umg makes an elegant side d1sl1 jur Thanksgwmg
2
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69'
MOST
SAFEWAY
STORES
AAE OPEi
THAIKSGIVllC
U.SNe.l-...250 _.,.... -...
. lb.
-QUALITY FRESH PRODUCE
Z Red Grapes -::··
::::: .,11ellr.d Walnuts
==:. G1 111efru1t Juice
FROZEN
:;::: Birds Eye Peas
Z Carn11ed Sweet Potatoesl
:;:::: Snow Crop
69'
'179
'199
.. ; 69'
., 89' ..
99'
0 LIQUOR & WINE
::;:eGaJlo Wines ·::·.,..., l '399 , ...
=:Kamchatka Vodka· ·='?4'
::S-: Champagne • 3 .:.;.'500
• :.::•10111
~ Russet Potatoes :•
~Yellow Onions :.: .
Z Fresh Mushrooms
®margarine
.____Imperial
Margarine
.. 35'
35'
h s1s9
:::49c
1-lb.
Carton
Birds Eye
f.-~ol Whip -:::51 Co11en
.,_~, -o.....-,, .. ,
BAKERY
:;:e Crushed Wheat "..¥? ·:. 59c
~Pina Colada ·• N.,., •a s11e
~Pita Bread 2 ..... s100
Oil
of Olay
leeutyletlH
~.·299
lellle
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Or,rnqt• Coast DAii Y I'll 01 Monday, November 23, 1981 ca
Turkey with tequila would shock Puritans
8 y BAltBAKAGIBBONS
Would the PHgrima
Mnd Puritans be
shocked. Turkey with
tequila!
Who ever heard or
such a thing? But then,
who ever h ea r d o r
turkey s t eaks a nd
cuUets. turkey hot dogs
and hamburgers, even
tu r key h ams a n d
sausage Wllil recently.
Today there's no need
to wait until
Thanksgivmg to explore
winning ways to use this
lean and luscious bird;
turkey parts and
products are available
year-round.
However November 1s
the month turkey gets
s pecial attentio n in
supe rmarkets. often at
better-than-ever bargain
pnces.
So this month our Slim
Gourmet Reader Recipe
Contest prize goes to
Car ey J . Huc kaba of
Tillamook. Ore .. who
combines turkey breast
cutlets with tequila to
c reate an e legant,
co m pa n y pleasing
extravaganza.
You could substitute
brandy for the fl ammg
liquor. ir you wish.
TURKEY MARGARITA
M a rgarila sauce:
2 c lov es gar li c .
minced
3 green onions,
chopped
l tablespoon oil
:1, cup chicken
broth, fat s kimmed
divided
2 tablespoons hme
JUICC
l t e a s p o o n
Dijon-style mustard
I tablespoon mmced
parsley
1 4 teas poon dried
basal
1 4 teaspoon dried
oregano
I tablespoon flour
Saule garlic and
onions in oil until
golden. Add one-half cup
chi c ken broth , lime
juice, mustard, parsle),
basil and oregano: heat
to s 1 mmerang Blend
Hour into rema1n1ng
broth until smooth. stir
into simmering broth
mixture until thickened
and smooth. Remove
Crom heat and set aside
Plan for
extra at
dinner
Man y ~1se food
shoppers. when buym~
t h at hohday turkey ,
make at a point to select
a laq~er turkey than will
serve their family or ,
gues ts on lhat s pecial
day
In the meantime. they
plan ahead just what
delicious dishes they can
make with lertover
turkey. so that lertover
turkey really becomes
planned over turkey
In planning the
holiday dinner. allo" :1.~
to 1 pound ready to cook
turkey weight for each
servi ng \\-h at 's
rema1n1ng afte r the
holiday then becomes
the basis for any of
many delicious meals.
S LICE OF TURKEY
CASSEROLE
I package (two · 6
ounce bags) seasoned
dressing or rnrn bread
stuffing
l pack age < 10
ounces) frozen mixed
vegetables
l l arge onion.
chopped and sauteed m
2 tablespoons butle r
t cup melted butler
or marganne
11,. cups condensed
chicken broth (one 101-.
ounce can)
8 thick shces turkey
•,. cup butter o r
marganne
"•cup flour
2 cups milk
2 cups grated sharp
cheddar cheese
Salt and pepper
M ix dressing ,
vegetables . onio n s.
butter and broth. Spoon
mixture into a greased 2
qua rt s hallow bakin g
pan. Top with turkey
shces. Melt butter and
stir in Oour. Gradually
stir in milk. Cook while
stirring until sauce
bubbles a nd thickens .
Stir in 1 ~ cups of the
cheese until it melts and
sauce Is smoolh. Season
to taste with salt and
pepper and spoon over
turkey. Spr inkle with
remaining cheese. Bake
in a preheated moderate
oven (350 degrees F) ror
one hour or until brown
and bubbly. Makes 8
· servtnp \
Turk~y bttast:
2 tablespoons flour
1,M teaspoon papr1ku
Salt, pepper, to tal'ite
Optional: 4 slu~e!.
fresh ginger root <or •.,
teaspoon ground .:in~t·r >
l tablespoon 011
I .,.l pounds turkey
breast slices
•1.. c u p t c q u 1 I a .
80-proor
Combine the rlour.
paprika, sail, pepper
a nd ground ginger, 1f
using Pound into turkey
s l ices until meal 1s
flattcnt'd to '• 1ndl
t h H' k 0 t' !i S ( I( U 8 10 g
1:1nrer root, brown In
oil . then remove and
d1s<·ard ainucr l Heat 011
111 a !urge nonst1tk
8klllt't Quirkly s aute
turke y sl1cc!I until
brov. ned on both sides, 3
to 5 minult.•s Sprinkle
v.1lh lt.'Quila (and fl ame,
If d(.'s 1rcdJ , coo k 2
m 1 n ut(.'S more. Add
saUl'l'. heat through.
Makes :sax servmgs, 210
1·aloraes each.
OVEN ROASTED ·
Rruwn a whole lurkt>y
h11·a~t portwn :n the
SllM GOURMET
oven at medium high
heat. Dram and discard
any melted fat. Sprinkle
with seasonings ; omit
flour. Continue roasting
at 350 degrees until done.
P r epare sa u ce a s
directed. doubling
recipe ii more is needed.
Add tequila to sauce;
cook and stir 3 minutes.
Se rve turkey, s li ced,
with sauce poured over
llcn"s anotht•r r1·1·11·•·
t·un1bining t urkey v.1lh
tequila. this 111H' dew~
have Mex1 ran fla .. 01.
comb1rung <·um1n '>l•ed:.,
oregano anti or .in J! 1·
j u 1 c e 1 n t o t h ,.
tequila based baslt' It '>
from my low calur11·
"Year·Rountl Tur kt•\
Cookbook "
TEQl11l.A Tl RK•.\
I )O un ).! t111k1\
hrt'.ISI pcut11111 i ithOUI J
111111111b1
~ I .11 i.. 1· 111·1· I l' d ,
l'>ltt•t•cl 41111111\'
1 1 I II }I' II r ii ll I: l'
Jllll ,.
1 1·u1, lt'iJUlla
I l' I 11 ~ t• A 11 r I 1 l' •
111 lll('l'fl j or fllrl!'h or
mi.I ant g.irhC' 1
2 lt•u-.potlll'> tlrit>ll
11rni.1nu
~ lt•UlllHlfln' 1·um1n
'>l'l'll' ( 01' I (\'d'>ltll()fl
)'llllllltl t'llllllll I
'iall ,11111 t'OiJI '>t'I)
•:• 11111111 1x·p111·r to t.1~t1· s " r .• ) a 111111 !>I I I k
roa:o.l111g pJn with
rooking spray Put
turkt-y brcu:.t 1r1 114tn,
'kin s ide up ,
unseasoned Place pan
in prehc<ited 425·degree
oven for 20 to 30
minutes, until skin is
crt:.p Dram and dist'ard
any melted fat.
Put omon sltceb under
turkt•y Comb in e
rema1n1ng 1ngredients
and pour over turkey
I. o ~ l' r h t• a I t o 3 5 0
flt'gn·es Cover pan and
twkt' I hour or more,
unttl turkc> 1:0. tender
Uncover a nd bake
until skm 1s crisp and
llquu.I lb reduced to a
l h 1 c· k g I a ze B a s t e
frequently with pan
l1 qu1d (A d d a
lublespoon or water If
the liquid evaporates too
much). M a k es 10
servings, about 235
calories each .
I Re aders can get a
c opy o f m y
·Year Round T ur key
Cook book" by sending
S6 95 to: Slim Gourmet
Turkey Book, P.O. Box
624. Sparta, N J:.._0782!2._
VONS LOW PRICES FOR
A HAPPY THANKSGIVING
I
Stuffed Turkeys
.79 .....
Wilson Boneless Hams Self Basting Turke~
ENTER VONS HOLIDAY
SWEEPSTAKES
25,000
WINNERS
GUARANTEED
" I 'I 11• .... ~ ..... , , f "'-"ttf
ENTRY BLAl'Ul8 MD DETAILS AVAILABLE
AT A.LL VONS lllARJ(£T9
r -. ' ''°"'"~ , ~' Im 11'" ''°',. I~
1820 l6!:> .\\< ... 1 .1 II
IV.NCH. LANCAS Tl:R OR I 1'."llL ~ I wlOl LIM I • ~·I I<' I '°"'\l I~~ limit~ P"'• fll lt>I t.10,111 t:u TO STOCK ON HA!\0
-I • } 69 >l'~•~la BoneJe.ss Turi<ey Roasts '" Young Dudding•
c _
SAVE _..3,
, , .24 '::::;.
... ' " -)"':~·' f ~1~--
IMPERIAL
MARGARINE ~57 FARMER JOHN
SLICED BACON .99
,,
~i·!l.G(!!
.. ·""' '' .25 ' ' . ·~· ... Crisp Celery ....
Emperor Grapes .69
. '": .. 99
.33 I 41 I ' Fresh Yams
R~~·h~ & G~n Onionll • 19
.29 ' Avocados
Whole Shelled Almond~ }98
FLOWERS . .
Poinsettia Plants
• Table Mums
4 29
169
DELICATESSEN
~rt/ Ohl 1'l ~th \111d"' 'J'"'"' Crescent Rolls
(\('ft !'4(r ( ~W1f 1"'W ••tiU .._ ~
Knudsen Sour Cream
¥i~1'sou': er~~ ·01ps
~•1CHll"4" lfll A f'¥r'JO °"'!
Vons Cheddar Cheese
,.. ~I •"I\' f'tl'll'i -\1)f PHI.\
Kraft Cream Cheese
1/011" r MU '«~ '1M>Vl .. ,lf't
Cheue Bell with Pe.cans
.75
.95
.65
}15
, .. .,2 69
.79
2 99
I • ! ••n I f\.\,1 ,\ IP'urc"NH ~'f't l#T!~~f'q pt.._f' 1 l4t
""II •JR <,00., CiNCUI "1.E re-...-11."' r ~ , '"·•·haw t"1¥H htr\ltt"Q pnr-,. 4Q1
¥t•••t"•' Beer Rib Roast
Beef Chuck Roasts
'") 88
'" } 49
'''~11n11.-..•1vt ~ )98
Boneles'I Rump Roast '"
"' 248 I'• Ii ,f ai Beel Cube Steaks
'' "°'"f'I 1fM .,., ...... q219 London Broll Steaks 1"
• "' t ,. t' r l can Ground Beef ''., .
Boncl~" Stewing Beef
)58
~ )99
,,..11 .. "'' •pr rlf>l'w' }39 Fresh Por1< Loin Chops A
'HOT' BAKERY
,, " ..... •t\. t , .. .,. ~' ,, .... ..... ,.,.
,, .. , .\ ·~ , ~ .... .All'l \f 10Wt "''-
..., ....... , .. I'\ • .. ~ "' n """ .,, """ r,c r .
Fancy Fruit Cakes
.~ .. ' ........
Apple Pies
........ ,........ .."If , (~I/I "'I
Butter Cookies
349
299
.99
VONS BAKERY
~"'' .,.,...., M(~1r'IC'I Pumpkin Pies
,., ... """ King Hawaiian Bread
,,.1'l(" ,...,,.,'M,,-, .,. .. ttf-Af
Brown & Serve Rolls
219
}39
.79
.69
I Vons Cut Yams
Libby's Pumpkin .. ,...
Mini Marshmallow'i
Grern Giant Cut Bran'i ...
Green Giant Corn
~ \ii ~ ' • Jello Gelatin
.. .... ..
Dole Pineapple Juice
UbbY1s T'omato Juke
,. ......... , , ... t .. ' t
San Femando Olives
• 11,...,., ( " ..
Vons Mixed Nuts
1A lftij°'tf. I .-.-,
Swanson Chicken Broth
.69
.69
.65
.45
.47
.62
.63
.89
.69
J09
.89
21 9
.35
lift•1A;\#~li•I•l•~'I
,,.,h 'l(JNU So\( i Vons Pet te Peas
11>AO l'(l RITt
Deep Dish Pie Shell.s
'Jt.,. (1"1 A.\,11\fhf"l~ .. ,,..., ..
Old Fashion Ice Crtam
.99
.83
]99
l#.)01 "4{,_ ttnco•u••111 .... ' 1 ""-.'89 Vons Vegetables
v,,,, . t •Ult r11r kt.111
~1 .. ·nr<' Stuffrd Olives
Jcr"c\11M1•1 t gq Nog
Crnwn Prinn.• o~.,tcr<;
tc>'il Point Shrimp
Von., Suqar
Vof'l<i Cho..olalc Chips
Betty Crocker Pie Crust
}89
12s
.79
.50
.89
J 09
] 73
.49
)49
.69
v'f 1io •• •""kt• Bac.irdl Rum . ... .. ~ .
J11rque Bonet Champagne
Iii II.. •I ·~ 4t"t( .... •f Almaden Mt. Wines
I 1.to ,.~ ~J flj N
Gallo Chablis Blanc
' ' Maicus Rose Wine
' ,. ' •.. , ' -' .. " Robert Monda'tlf Table Wines
Harvey Bristol Cream
Gallo Ch~nln Blanc
~ I
Christian Brothers Brandy
flV
Wente Bros. Grey Riesling
.._ "'" I If N \. 'I t • Kahlua Uqueur
4 99
}89
399
269
2 79
3 99
7 99
249
549
3 59
899
ALL VONS MARKETS CLOSED ntANIUJGJVl.ftQ DAY!
PftK'ES f.fftCTM/llOM ll1RUWfl> .. ~. 2.l TO l'IOV. 25 , Itel. CALI. 12JI) 579-1400 FOfl l.OCA~ ()( ntr ''ITOAI MCAA!.ST \'OtJ NOl All IT'EJl\S IVC> l'ftlCESIN TlilS AD CfY"ECTM Af YO/'IS,
))).<I w. 8TH Sl .. 1500 w PICO llLVO. 6571 w llOTH ST .• LOS Nl(ja£S, SAl'f ~00 ~o lA3 VEO...S '>Alll> II'! RCl"-11 CllJ"-NTITifS Ol'll' l'IO"ll noRr~ OPf'n 6 NII TO ~IOH'f 7 OAYSA W£!K.
Huntington Beac:n
5t22 Edin er l Sprlngd1le
Coat• Meu
115 E Htn Street l(Jd Oran1>9 Ava
~
Hun1ln91on BHCh
21012 8HCll 81\ld
Huntington leacll
tH1 At11nt1
San Juan Cap11tr1no
32051 Camlno1'1pl1lfano a OetOblapo
Ir vine
030 81rtlf"C:I Rd .
lnnne
UOO lrvlf\9 Blvd
,ount•ln Velley
111201 Hlfbof & Edlf'lger
C1pi1tr•no Beach
3•081 Ooneny Park ot 6 v1c:1orl1
Fountain Velley
17950 Magnoll1 f. Talber1
lagun1 Hiila
2"'41 Allele Parln•uw & Hon
----·----~~···~~~ ·····--
. .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 23, 1981
Stuff turkey with
low calorie count
ROAST TURKEY
1 turkey, about 12
pounds . (use rreah or
frozen turkey , n ot
pre·ba.sted type.)
1 tablesp oo n
all-purpos, flour
o/.i c up ow.fut milk
White pepper to
taste
Cook unpeeled , whole
1 teaspoon salt onions in wate r with
l teaspoon pepper c Io ves until tender.
, about 25 minutes. Drain, 2 packets dry butler discarding cloves . Tnm
substilute ' root ends and remove
1 cup hot tap water s k in . In s e Pa r al e
or dry wtule wme s a u c e p a n c o m b 1 n e
StufCmg (see below)
remaining 1ng red1 enls
and mix until smooth
Remove giblets Crom -------
lurke~ and wipe inside
and out w1lh paper
towe ls. Rub mside and
out with salt and pepper.
Di sso l ve butter
substitute in water or
wine. Sprinkle turkey
cavity with about 3
tablespoons or mixture
Fill caVlty with stuffing.
Skewer or sew opening
shut, and truss turkey.
Insert thermometer in
thickest part of thigh
without touching bone
Pla ce on rack 1.n
roasting pan and brush
with more butter
s ubsti tute m i xtu re .
Roa st at 325 d egr ees
a bout 4 ho urs or 20
minutes per p ound ,
bast ing occ asionally
with pan drippmgs and
remaining butter
substitute. Bird is done
when, thermometer
r egister s 180-185 de·
grees. Remove from
oven, cover loosely with
Coil tent and allow to
stand about 20 minutes
before car ving. Makes
12 servings
P er serving (5 '•"2
ounces)
Calories <without
skin : 240)
Protein· 45 gms
Carbohydrate: 1 gm
Fat. 4 gms
SodJum 470 mgs
LOW CAWRIE
VEG E TABLE
STUFFING
1 p o und rre s h
mushrooms. sliced
3 cups < 8 or 9 s talks 1
sli ced celery
2 c u p s ( 3
m edium-s ize> peel ed ,
cored, and c ho ppe d
apples
'l'l pound fine I y
shredded cabbage
1 cup (1 large)
chopped onion
\i cup fresh bread
crumbs
2 packets dry butler
substitute
1 teaspoon s age
Fres hly g round
pepper to taste
2 egg whites, beaten
Heat , s tirring
co n is lantly, until
thickened Add onions to
s au ce and heal
th o roug hly a bout S
minute s Makes 4
St'rv1ngs
P e r se rving · (4 S
onions>
Calorics 90
gms
Protein 4 gms
Carboh y d ~te : 15
Fat l l(m
Sodium 260 mgs
ln lar ge bowl ,
combine mus hroom s,
celery. apples, cabbage
and onion. In separate
bowl, combine bre ad
c r u m b 's , b u t t e r
substitute, s age and
pepper: toss to mix well
Stir into vegetables
Fold sn b eaten egg
whites. Li ghtly s t uff
neck and body cavities
o f turkey . Do not
overpack as stuffing will
s ~1L Bake extra
s tuffing 1n s mall
c ass erole about 30
minutes, along with
turkey. Makes about 10
servings.
f"LADY LEE 39 ~~~~AR 1601 so(•
Per Serving : ( 3>.1 cup>
Calones 60
gm
Protein 3 gm
Carbohydrate 12
Fat. Trace
Sodium: 255 mg
Y U M -YUM ORANGE
VAMS
3~ pounds yams or
sweet potatoes, peeled
and cooked
2 cups orange 1u1ce
1 packet dry butler
substitute
0¥k Brown°' l 19nt Brown
CUDAHY
BAR-SHAMS
C~nnl!d 5 LD Un
879
CRANBERR Y
SAUCE
ocean Spray Je111«1
Of wnoie 16 oz can
.38 "~"
2 tablespoons firmly
packed l ight brown
s ugar
1/4 c up (about I
medium-sized orange>
grated orange peel
!"WHIPPI NG 99 i £~~AM 16 oz crn •
!" PARKERHOUSE 79 i ~,2~vl S a oz cane
~ teaspoon sail
Dash pepper I AOlJA·FRESH 133 TOOT HPASTE
81 Oz Tulle ! ;~~ROI """ an 999
Sliver Of Am«>er
!12PACK 299 COCA COLA
12 oz cans
.....
/J1t'1t'rs will tha,1k the
lwstt'11s who prepares a
d11wt•r with low
1 Jwlt'.\lerul
BUTTERBALL
TURK EYS
Sw•ft G<-ll eaueo 1~ n ltx Froz~n
LAD Y LEE
TURKEYS
G<ild<e A voung ~teo 1c n U» Frozen
FRE SH ZACKY 79 ~~~~!~ Lo a
10 n Los Av<lilal>le ~hur~av HOOn
GRADE A
DUCKS
Tyson F<Olert l' ,.S lOS ... 89
;~~;~e~lM .. 1 ss
l'UllV (()Ol(l'O ~ 1 lOS ~If .. am lO 1 691
LARGE END
RIB ROAST
&onoeo ettt
BONELESS
TURKEYS
.Vmou< Goloen St.Jr
~fOlP<l
.. 11s
f"M JB
J>Sr~FEE "o'''" 598
GAME
HENS
Tyson Grildf A F<Oltn
1001
1'4 LADYLEE 69 J> ~MS 790z C•n•
~~~~ PORTI0~11 a
RED
YAMS
US NO 1
... 29
•Butt POrtl()n lO 1 J81
JUM BO
WALNUTS
FRESH
CE LERY
en~ ano cruncnv
.~.29
FRESH
PINEAPPLES
sweet' JUICY
... 25
CRISP
CUCUMBERS
·~·19
Preheat oven to 350
degrees. Cut potatoes
into 2-inch slices and
arrange in baking dish.
In se p a r ate bowl ,
combine r emainin g
ingredients, and spoon
over yams . Bake ,
uncovered, about 20·30
minutes, basting once or
twice with liquid. Makes
8 servings.
"""~" l'Ot "'f«t ff Wt \.>!'t'tl ~I ______________________________ .... -""''""'*'ooc°"""" OUt ,.....,...,U<flO"_y _____ toM-_., _131""'-· -~ · ..
Per serving: (o/4 cup)
Calories: 220
Protein: 4 gms
Carbohydr ate: 50
gms
Fat: Trace
Sodium: 330 mgs
C&EAM STYLE
ONIONS
l pound <•P ·
proximately 20-25 small
white ooiooa
3 whole loves
l packet dry butter
substitute~
Gift Certific:ates
THE PERFECT CIFT
Olft Ctrtlfleates trom luov ¥t the pel'fect way to
u~s l'IOllOay gre.tlngs to rf!JtlllfS •no lltlgnoon
Ind I hnt way tO SllOW VoUr apprectttlOn to people
wtio'Yt llflpeo vau ~t me vu~ It'\ 1 nte~
way to say "NPPV l'I04lda~1· ASll VOUI l.U(ley stOft
ma~ for oetat~
Pick Up Your f'ree Booklet
from Lucky
Tii' Weelc be SW't to pl(lr up '(WT frM cop~ Of OUf
booldet "Traclltlonll T'N'*sghl1ng ~lpes lt'i ftlteO
with iiill>fUI tlPS on l'tOW to ~Pitt your l!Ollday t\M11ty ano Clellclous recipes to orac• 'IO\K d!nn« tablt
KqJB"IJ5
mean edla MvlnlJ'.
Key Buys a~ itcmJ pnc:cd below th<1r everyday
discount price• u a rtsult of manufacturers·
temporary promotional allowanttt or ucepuonal
purchaSet. Youit find hundmh of Key Ruy
hems every time you 1hop.
All stores wm be closed
Thanksgiving oayr
\
•
• ,,. , ''' .. • _...,.._.,,. "'\, • ,. "' ""r ... _.. • • -• • •• -'-"' • -#'>-• • .._.., _.. • - -..,.. _. -• ..... a. I"-'• .. -....,,::...'----~ f_t~~.,'; .... ~Ao.::;,..;;,;,.;i'..,;•::..;:z.z.;;,z:.:;:~=~~=-_..-.;A. __ __. • +., .....
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 23, 1981 cs
Sweet potatoes ~hange flavor
of Thanksgiving cheesecake
Everyone lov es
cheea~ake, and recipes
abound. Most cooks
hav e their own
ravorites, and there are
entire cookbooks specializing in
cheesecake.
Many restaurants
serve their own special
versions. Guaranteed to
become a new favorite,
S w eet Potato
Cheesecake is not as
rich as many, but bas a
delicious, unique navor.
Flavored with spices
and fresh sweet
potatoes, it's baked in a
graham cracker crust
seasoned with cinnamon
and nutmeg.
This cheesecake is a
good dessert for a
di11ner party , or a
family treat. It should
be made ahead of time
and is best prepared the
day before, as overnight
chilling allows the
flavors to blend
thoroughly.
Sweet P o tato
Cheesecake illustrates
the versatility of fresh
sweet potatoes.
Not just for s ide
dishes, they can be used
in appetizers, salads,
main dlshes, breads and
desserts.
They add color. flavor
and nutrients to all.
One 3'-"J-ounce sweet
potato provides more
than 100 percent or the
r ec omme nd ed d ail )'
a llowance <RDA > of
Vitamin A, 36 percent of
the RDA of Vitamin C
and 5 per cent of the
RDA of iron.
Usuall y three
varieties of s weet
potatoes are found in the
produce section. This
cheesecake uses the tan
or c oppe r s kinned
Jewel.
Generally called a
"yam," it has a bright
orange, moist flesh.
The Garnet, with its
deep red or purple skin,
and deep orange flesh is
also sold as a "yam."
but, like the Jewel, is
really a sweet potato.
Marketed as a "sweet
potato," the Jersey has
a creamy colored skin
enclos ing a yellow.
somewhat dry, meaty flesh.
Take advantage or
Cres h s weet potatoes
while the supply lasts by
making luscious Sweet
Potato Cheesecake soon.
S WEET POTATO
CHEESECAKE
Graham Cracker
Crust <recipe follows)
1 pa c kage (8
ounces) cream cheese,
softened
~ cup packed light
brown sugar
3 eggs
2 tablespoons flour
1 tablespoon freshly
grated orange peel
1 t e a s poon
cinnamon
i,.i teaspoon nutmeg
1/4 teaspoon each
ginger and cloves
1 v.i cups mashed
c ooked fresh orange
sweet potatoes, cooled
Vi teaspoon vanilla
extract
Peanut
snack
Like peanuts for a
s nack ? Then you 're
certain to like a dip
made with them and
cheeses. Beat 2 cups (8
ounces) shre~ed Swiss
c h e e s e I\ room
temperatur e with 3
ounces cream cheese
and Yl cup dairy sour
cream , until well
blende d . Stir i n 2
tablespoons chutney and
Yl cup chopped Spanish
peanuts. That will give
you 2 cups of dip. Or
chill the mixture, shape
into a ball and roll in
peanuts, if desired. • • • Apple, cabbage or
pineapple in your salad
plans? Each or these
-<:an b&-mo~ subst~iaJ
i f yo u add some
s hredded or cubed
cheese to it. • • • II you enjoy onions,
here's one sandwich
you'll really go for :
Saute 2 thinly sliced
on ions in 14 cup ( Yl
stick) of butter. Season
with ~ teaspoon salt.
Spread 1 tablespoon
chill sauce on each of 6
slices buttered tout set
on broUer pan. Divide
oniona equally on slices ot toast. Top each with a
thick slice of Cheddar
cheese. Broll until
cheeae melts. Meatless,
tool
Prepare &raham
Cracker crust; chill. In
lar&e mixer bowl, beat
cream cheese until
smooth. Gradually beat
ln brown sugar. Beat in
eegs one at a time.
Com blne tlour, orange
peel, ciMamon, nutmeg,
ginger and cloves ; beat
Into cream cheese
mixture. Gradually
blend ln mashed sweet
potatoes and vanilla
extract . Pour into
prepared crust. Bake al or margarine, melted
350 degrees F. about ~ v. cup packed Ught
minutes, or untU knire brown suaar
inserted halfway to 1 t e a s p o on
center comes out clean. cinnamon
Cool lhoroughJy on wire ~ leupoon nutmeg
rack away Crom drart. Mix graham cracker
Refuge rate several. crumbs, butter, brown
hours. Makes 10 to 12 sugar, cinnamon and servings. nutmes thoroughly .
GRAHAM CRACKER Press lnto bottom and
CRVST l y, inches up the sides or
l~J cups graham a 9·1nch sprlnetorm pan.
cracker crumbs Chill while preparing
5 tablespoons butter filling.
JANET LEE FRESH U.S.D.A. GRADE A
YOUNG
TOM TURKEYS
WHOLl OR HALf
•
JANET LEE
BONELESS
WHOLE HAMS
FLOUR
· r ~--~.GOLD MEDAL
l'
'-~~·
BlEF CHUCK ROLLlO SHOULDER
MRI. CUBBllON'I POULTRY
.---ALL·PU'!.._l"Oll ORCORNBRIAO Miii
~~STUFFING ~·j
CAL". ClLLARI CHABLIS, BURQUNO'I', RHINl, OR ROH
TAYLOR WINES
Sµ1ce~ 111ul /H'.'ill su.cet
p11l11l1W\ 11111/..1• II ~/Wt'IOI
/111/ulm1 dw1•.~1·n1l.1·
MOST STORES
OPEN
THANKSGIVING
CHECK s'!o~E~EAREST lj
YOU FOR HOURS I
ASSORTED POPULAR GRINDS
MARGARINE
IMPERIAL
•
YU BAN
COFFEE
•
FRESH
JUMBO RED
IELVET YAMS
LB. •
CITRUS PUNCH \-~UNNY DEL~.GHT
-~-
.......... ·-,,,,,,,
.. ::::~'i~oz. •
~--·~_MOUNTAIN DEW, REGULAR OR DIET
~ r pE~~SI COLA
ll
12
CT .• FOR
MEAT-DELI LIQUOR & WINES FRESH PRODUCE
BROCCOLI '"llH, Tl"OIR .................. LI .49
EMPEROR GRAPES ................ L ••• 69
CREAM CHEESE ~.~~~~:~ .............. a-oz .• 59
MOZZARELLA 0"'"1CIOUI •1 15
-.. ~~~~'.~.~.~.~ .... I-OZ. •
JIM BEAM ~~~~:'.~~~.~~~~~~~.~ ..... 790-ML. $4.99
12 COORS LIGHT BHR .. 11·:~~~NI •3.68
BISCUITS .!~~:;~~0
............. 7 ... 0Z. 5 ,OR•1 CHAMPAGNE .Jg~~~~~11o.•~ ~R 4.99 HEAL TH & BEAUTY
SAUSAGE ~~~~~~~~~~~ ..................... 1-L •. •1 ·.09 ALMADEN WINES~~.!:~:~::o .. s3 48
I U .. OUNDY f 11-l Tll •
lllOIT ITOllll G~OCERIES DEVl.U CAPRI
SEVEN Up 111011u11 o•o•n •1 19 $10N£WARE
• ~:.~~.~ .................... 1-Lll'IR • ,,.iftltl WltK'I ,.ATUAll lllACll /' NABISCO CRACKERS ~~~r.99 / NER PLATE
NESTLE'S M°"!~i'r:1.89 . it
OPEN7 AM
'TIL MIDNIGHT
101111 ITOllH 0 .. 1114 M0\1111
Q ea-.kt ACU_.f VID& ,. ... tt~•P ~~.::::" ... e:t:::.~~-·-•\I
~-c~~=· ..,~·;~ =:::.•• .,.:2., ... .=i ........... .
~~ ,., "9Cal ...... CT1VI
llllOMD~'!,~!· a Tt4RU ~AY,
MOY ... "81 IXCOT ocu.Mlll)e
AVAILABtUn ·
l• " • '"'"' •. , .... ".r\•• '111"'1\ \tttt ffQI ~·fd 't
'"' .l~fl-IQI '""' ., G bf' tll I~• •1 .. '"' ua :r • " ,. ·~,.. '\-.i ft' • ,.., .. ,,.,"IO ..... fl<
PUMPKIN PIE ............................ r 1.39 , ..-
-·~ .. VEGETABLES IAIMT \II PllOllll CUT 79
0-.... •1 ...... "'""'It." 11~.mt.~.,.MM,.t ... a.oz. • WI IYl"Y II ""'OMAR
.__.ttTW,,..,.,_ UINCMECtc
Albertsons·
-----~ ·~--··-·-·-······---n a ·····---
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 23 , 1981
Novice cooks given tips ·
•for holiday feast planning
Per hap a not h In 1 to packaae dlrccUona,
• e e m a q u 1 t e a 1 addlna chopped 1tbleta.
Ir i I ht en in I t o t be Rlnae turkey; pat dry.
be1lnning cook aa the Rub salt and pepper into
thought of preparin1 the neck and body caviUea.
Thanksgivina feut. But Lightly spoon stufflng
here's some good news into neek cavity; cloee
! there's nothing to be with skewer. Fill body
• frightened of. c a v i t y . S e c u r e
T H A N .,. S G 1 V 1 N G drumsticks lightly with .. a s trins . Roast
DINNEll FOR I uncovered on roasting
• SHOPPING LIST rack in 325-degrce oven
' Mea\ 2 l 0 14 . P 0 u n d 20 to 22 minutes pe r
pound or lo Internal
temperature ot 180 lo 1~
dc1reee. Any remalnin1
1tuff&n1 may be baked,
ln a covered casserole,
alon1 with the turkey
durinl the last hour of
r o a a tlna . U n c ove r
stutllna durlna final 10
mlnutH o f cooklna.
Re m o ve tur k e y t o
phalter and let stand al
least 3> mlnutea before
carvln .
M eanwhlle, nuke
1ravy by pourin1 orr au
but 6 tableapoona
drlppin11 from routing
pan. Over low heat, alir
an flour undl lbickened.
Let flour cook about 30
seconds, or untu bubbly.
Measure reterved tiblet
cookln1 llquld ; add
water to make 2~ cups.
Add to roaatloa pan ,
stirring until 1mooth.
J.:a.vy tu ju tdew for
l>t.'gmnmg cooks makt
hululay fea&tmg ea1y
. ~fK:-l canwhlp~ LOWER PRICES OVERALL
3 packages, 10 ounces
t :·:~=~~~~coU p -oR T ' HOLIDAY! 4 sweet potatoes,
about 1 pound each
1 bunch celery
2 medium onions
Grotertes
1 l a rg e pa c ka g e
warm -and-serve rolls
1 bo x pre p a r e d
stuffing mjx
2 cans c r a nb e rry
relish
Have oo Hand
l egg
1 s t ick bu tte r or
margarine
1 c hicken b ou1 lion
cube
Salt s tablespoons nour
Co ff e e , t ea or
preferred beverage
· ROAST TURKEY WITH
GIBLET STUFFING
AND GRAVY
12 to 14 po und
turkey
1 onion, quartered
2 s t a lks cele r y ,
• chopped
Water
Packaged seasoned
stuffing mix (enough for
12 to 14-pound turkey 1
Salt
Pepper
5 tablespoons flour
Remove giblets from
t urk ey . Pla ce in
medium saucepan with
onion and celery. Add
water to cover. Bnng lo
a boil; reduce h eat ,
cover and s immer 45
minutes lo 1 hour or
until giblets are done.
Cool enough to handle;
r e move giblet s and chop, reserving cooking
hqu1d for gravy.
Prepare seasone d
stuffi ng mix according
Cooking
~with class ,.
Sherman Libr ary and
Gardens in Corona del
Mar will offer a class
taught by Madeleine De
Groote from 11 a.m. to
1:30 p .m . Tuesday .
Recipes will include
artichoke salad, brandy
chi c ke n liv er pate ,
chicken in ternne en
• croute with vegetables
, a nd a lemon dessert.
•Fee is $20 , and
preregis tration is
required. Call 673·2261.
FREE HOLIDAY
baking classes will be
'o ff e r e d Monda y
mo rnings or evenings
begi nning Nov . 30
through the Capistrano
Adul t School. Call
493·0658 for information.
SHERMAN LIBRARY
·a nd Gardens in Corona
' d e l Ma r will o ffer
classes in holiday buffet
' ideas from 11 a.m. to
• 1:30 p.m. Dec. 1 and 8.
• Fee is $20 per class. Call
673·2261 for information.
F ASSERO'S in Corona
de l Ma r will offer a
class in hors d'oeuvres
• and fi rst course dishes
at 11 a.m. Dec. 1. For
more information and
r es erv ations, c all
673-2343.
HUNTINGTON
Beach Library and the
• Allied Arts Board will
• s ponsor a holiday
.: cooking workshop from
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Dec. 5 at
Huntington Beach High'
School. French chef
• P e rrette Dillon will
,. instruct in a complete
•' meal from appethera to
, dessert. Fee is $30, and
more information is
available at 8-42-4481 ,
ext. 33.
SEBASTIAN'S WEST
Dinner Playhouse in San
Clemente will offer
·'T h e Daze B~fore
Christmas" begin.nin1 at
11 a .m . Dec. 7. Chef
Bruce Goldbe r1 of
Beverly Hill a will
present ideu lor holiday
entertain inc. Call
4t2 ·tt50 for
• reterntlons.
PACK
I2A>Z.
CANS
Beef R ib ~
FROZEN
16·24 LB AYG
LB.
Gold Medal
Flour S·LB. aAo
La!Je Meaty End rn-S 4S 78 Rib Roast La. £
llully lleo ~Seedless Grapes
ft-f•H h ~Broccoli
Cosr tulle• ~Evaporated Milk
CH I Cutr.i
ffiAlum in um Foil
10
13 0/
un
7S 10
f1 ,Oil
.46
.49
il! Princella Yams 79·01 .79 Qft .................. , .... ,,. ......... H! Pineapple 10-•• .65 U n
... , 1.09 u •
M11-tt luktt h l11
Large Ripe Ol ives
~tyll\Ul Heavy Duly m Aluminum Foil J9"ll2-1411 0 3 II IOll •
K11tt !H Mayonnaise 37-0I
"' 1.35
Nestle
Semi-Sweet
Morsels
All RIGHTS llESEllVEO NO SAl£ TO OEAlEllS 011 FOii COMMEllCIAL USE
" .......... h•• -' .• IJll) ·~ ., 8HI Rio l ••qt 11i1u 1y fno ffi Canada Dry Mixes 10::· . 69 'l~ Rib Steak •• 1. 88
c..... ..... ..,.....,, ...... Ht Paul Masson Wine
...... ,._. 0 -rU ............ ffl Champagne
Jt1HylllltG !H Butter
J11nyma1d Atroul ffi Dessert Topping
1
1
1
6 3.59 ... , l ...
~Porterhouse Steak
,J 2. 29 ~"'" 8 ., Po<1 .... ,)., Smoked Ham
8 QI
P~Q
1 I 1 •I
ti•
.99 f•u• Wnte•• 'J+ Oysters
.69 ~~ P~~kch~p~'·
Fresh Hot Golden
Fried
Chicken
GOOOONlY Al srlms WllH H01 ow
lb 2. 38
10 1. 38
e-01 1 39 ,., .
10 1. 49
) I
·' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 23, 1981
Ranch
Farmers a1·ket
produce
iceherg littuce 35~. ,,,,, "'"' hi•••.
fa• h1111lln n~ juice oranges , •.
"'"' fr•h 4/$100 cucumhers
fre1h elf 11nwort• 3ti hroccoli
Olllftlprlf 79,t. cranherries
39t.
hr111 fre1h 19!,.h • green onions
f1r111 fruh 19~ ... h radishes
• • v1lam1ns
0
nature• life
spirulina $795 500 111Hll9r11111 100 ta• -
111111 en!k • . 7.2 oz. 1111 *SOO elastin lotion ,.,. •a.4t
for your winter 0111119
111lfl ert1k
dark tanning lotion *250
while 1upply lam a oz.
grocery
lftlnt raneh hr1111n 1111rket lar91 SA+
grade aa eggs ~ •.
er1111 & &l1elcwell
mince meat 21 oz .
with ,, .. & ., .....
11111• & •11eMll ol• 1119lllh
plum pudding 15 •.
$f19
$249
oro111 & •laokwtll M 29 hrandied hard sauce · 1
s~ oz.
11llle1 $229 cranherry chutney 10 oz.
ya ol•• 11 ...
fruitcake
meal
7 hone roast
heef hrisket
shoulder clod-raaJt-
meaty short rlhs
lean 9ro11nd1 heef
side of heel
frt1 lrwl• naeh far•n_ lllrbf 1hrllt••
•0111 In ha111 with ••'f 1141 1r41rt4
hi~dquarter
· •s.oo tff •If so 1•. freezer pak
•to.oo tff • ., too •· frtuer ~·• I •lff1nlt fttu1r pab fl , .... In•
e1r4lil I flMti $145 salad dressing t1.s 11.
hnlfll nlllf
amaranth cereal t2 1z. $149
·""""'••• h1l1'1
pudding & pie mixes 4St
S A1•on
lrwl• n111h ftr•n •rbt
peanut hriffle 1• u. $165
bakery
fish
calamari $2'8 ahltM ltyl1 1•.
hallhut steaks $39f
mahl mahi $229 , •.
• -,,. ••••• 111. 179 red snapper , •.
fillet of sole . $498 , •.
l•p•rtt• ftt11h Jn• tf an $449 60~ hrie , •.
rlehla ..... $249 turkey ham , •.
91110 ltllla • $3f f dry salami •.•... , ....... $139 salad dreising , •.
waldorl salad .... ,,... .. .., $149 , •.
...
bulk only
........
seecllea raisins
M•• •••• ,,... ,. .... ,... ,,1 9 sunworld dates
cheese coffee cake .. !.. w. •· •••
.. .. ~··· ,,... ,. •• ••rbt 100~ natural strouted ~29
1
shelled pecans
wheat hread · 24 11. "'' ,
,Limit 10 lbs. per customer per purchase. Anything over 10
lbs. will be sold at the regular price of $S.59 lb.
'limit rights reserved/no sale to dealers
.· .. .... .... .... .. 6IM404 . . ... .... , •• s.it••·•···
1.SLT.
y
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 23. 1981
TAYLOR
"CALIFORNIA"
CELLARS"
•Chablis
• Burpndy
•Yin Role
• RhlH
•:J•Q:t·t•
GALLO
PREMIUM TABLE
WINES
• ChabH1 Blanc
• HHrty ltlrpnd1
•Yin Rose . '"""
...
Bertoni
umbrusco
RED ·
WINE
•Jtjji•r••
Robert
Monda vi
VINTAGE
WINES
•RED
'
AD PRICES PREVAIL:
MONDAY, NOV. 23rd THRU WEDNESDAY, NOV. 25th
BLUE NUN
LIEBFRAUMILCH
WINE
750 ML
2.99
LANCERS
"VIN ROSE"
WINE
750 ...
2.99
MILLER =~i~ LIFE
12 OL MCMt£lUIN aonw
12 PAK
Farley's HARD c1DER
1.SLT. 2.49
TORRE DEi CONTI
AstiSpumanteA ng
750 ML 't.;J
Drunks
focus
of walk
••
LOS ANGELES <APJ A
candlelight "Walk for Life" is
planned here Dec. 1 in an effort
to focus public allenlion on what
actor James Stacy says are the
26,000 drunk dr1 ver-ca used
deaths in the United States this
year.
Stacy, who In 1973 lost his left
arm and leg in a traffic accident
in Benedict Canyon, ts national
chairman of the walk, which will
take place at Los Angeles City
Hall, as well as In San Diego,
Santa Barbara and In Orange
\County.
''We 're l aking t h is walk
honoring the 26,000 Americans
who have been killed this year
by drWlk drivers, .. said Stacy,
who 1s fi l ming "Something
Wicked This Way Comj!s" for
D isney with act or Jason
Robards
The march 1s to raise public
awareness of drunk driving and
to encourage bartenders to a:.k
JH.•oplc "either lo take a cab or
have a friend drive them home"
'Baby line'
cribs part
recalled
WAS HINGT ON t AP 1
Plastic brackets used to suspend
the s prings on about 98 ,000
.. Baby Line" cribs have been
recall ed by the manufacturer
because they m ay break or
be nd, the Cons umer Product
Safety Commission says
The agency s a id that the
rec a II by Questor J uvenile
Furniture Co of Los Angeles
was prompted by r e ports of
minor iruuries to three infants.
The recall covers brackets
used on 29 Baby Line models
w1lh date codes from June 1977
through September 1978 About
34,000 of the 98.000 cribs are
s ubject t o a previo us ly
announced reC'all for th e
problem.
The cribs affected have these
date codes on the ms1de bottom of the headboard : 677, 777, 877,
977, tern. 1111. 1211. 118. 218. 378.
478, 678, 778, 878 and 978.
·~-, ...... l:Jomb-d1.$pOSO/ yume whteh has drown protest.<; Ill (;real /Jntam
gets the allefllwn of un umde1111/1ed buy
'Bad taste' game
pulled from shelf
LON D ON <AP >
Manufacturers of .. Bombshell"
a chtldren's game in which a
bomb·disposal squad 1s blown up
-have taken the toy off the
market Friday after a wave of
protests including one from
Pr i n ce C h arle s. wh ose
gr eat·uncle , Earl Mountbatten
was killed by an IRA bomb.
The heir to the B'r1tish throne
s aid th e game wa s in
"dreadfully bad taste."
The protest began with the
family of an explosives expert
killed by an IRA bomb a nd
reached Parliament on Friday.
The m a n ufac tur er .
Waddingtons !louse of Games
Ltd or Leeds, first announced 1t
had no plans to withdraw the
game but then reversed 1tsdf
as the protest gre w and ma1or
department s tores began pulltng
it from the shelves
.. Bombs hell" went o n the
ma rket s ix months ago backed
by a tele vision advertising
campaign, sellmg for up to $13
and billed as "explosively funny
ror those aged 6 and upwards ..
No figures were available
from the company on how well it
sold, but one department store,
Selfridges. said the slore bought
six as a trial and sold all of
them The st ore was among
thos e that decided to stop selling.
the game before Waddingtons
stopped production.
Players are instructed to help
·four b r ave but bung ling
soldiers" Maj Disaster. Sgt.
Jimmy Jitters. Private Tommy
Twitters and Pipe r Will y
Fumble defuse an unexploded
bomb.
A long the way. the soldiers get
stick-On bandages from head to
foot Four injuries a nd the
player 1i. out The winner is the
one with the s urviving soldier
In Northern Ireland, where 17
born b d isposal experts have
been kill e d s ince 1971 , a
s pokes man for Austi ns, a
Londonderry department s tore,
said "Thankfully, we have never
heard of it. We have enough
trouble with real bombs " . -~~--~
OPEN
THANKSGIVING
DAY
200 llaaalne Ave. 878-0880
CANADIAN
CLUB
750ml
SAVE $3.00
56.39
J&B
SCOTCH .
750ml
SAVE $3.40
58.39
Effective November 18·26 . 1981
BLUE
NUN
750ml
SAVE $2.00
sa.29
Jacques Bonet
HAMPAGNE
750ml
SAVE $1.00
51.99
--~~~~~~~~~ ......
KAMCHATKA
VODKA
1.75 LT
SAVE $3.51
S6.99
MOET
CHAN DON
White Star
750ml
SAVE $8.00
1so ML I · s599 Wente LeBlanc de Blanc ... S299 ALMADEN BRANDY .• J ••
SAVI $1.00 LTR. SAVI SI.II
,... ...
CRANBERRIES
12 ....... ,.
...... 69¢
1-vOcAoos ...... :.39¢ ~
ZACKY FARMS
FRESH TURK_EYS
TOMS .......... s 1 o~
11·24 ••.
.......... s, 1 0!
mall lake
' ·now big one
' , DELCAMBRE. La. CAP> -A tall man could
,wade acroaa Laku Plegneur before the bottom fell
out; now the water Is 1,300 feet deep. Once. the
.area produced l.S million tOIUI or silt a year: now it
&'felds 60,000 tons.
· The courts are considering who's to blame,
\vho should pay. But for most folks hereabouts, the
•eography changed Nov. 20, 1980, but not much
else.
. On that day, l ~·square-mile Lake Peigneur
Jirained away in a powerful whirlpool. It was like
pulling the plug In a bathtub, except that this drain
rapidly enlarged. £i The bottom fell out when an S>·foot·high shaft
t' or the Diamond Crystal Salt Company mtne
beneath it collapsed. A Texaco oil dr;illing rig was
'Everybody i n town
wanted to move aUXly .'
In the lake, and either drilled into the ~haft 1,300
feet below the surface or drilled near it and the
shaft fell in.
Astonishingly, there were no deaths. Crewmen
left the rigs when it became clear something
serious had happened below. And 60 miners rode
s low elevators to safety from the 1,200-foot level.
Sea water rushed in along the Delcambre
Canal from the Gulf of Mexico, refilling the lake.
The adjacent fresh water marsh got saltier, a nd
folks worried Jeffer son Island -a mountain of
salt in the marsh honeycombed by salt mine shafts
-would fall in. It didn't .
There were s ome casualties: A nearby
botanical garden closed because 70 acres or it was
under water: two oil rigs and some barges were
lost: Diamond Crystal can't get as much salt from
the ground.
Two-hundred or so former sail miners are still
out or wo.i:k . and lawver Ted Haik says many of them are likely to remain so
Chester Archangel is one He says be's lucky
to be alive, and accepts that he's retired, ready or
not, because he's 63. ··Hardly a day passes that I
don't think about the accident, because I think
about how easily we could have been drowned," he
said. "W~ust dropped everything. We had a long
way to go to get out."
Pete Juneau of the stale Department of
Wildlife and Fisheries says people over-reacted to
the collapse. ·'It locally and temporarily affected
the area. The only difference now is that you have
a big hole in the lake. In less than a month those
fish that were sucked into the hole ' were
replenished by other Jish in the marsh."
He says the added salt from seawater may
cause proble ms in the fresh-water marsh. But he
says salt levels are up all along the coast because
of Jack of rain.
Live Oak Gardens, the botanical attraction. is
suing Diamond Crystal and Texaco, and now re-
quires any visitors to release it from responsibility
for injuries.
Delcambre residents vividly remember the
day the bottom fell in ··oh man, it was
someUUng," said resident PrisceJla Migue~.
"Everybody in town wanted to move away. They
thought the hole was going to come thJs way."
Texaco and Diamond Crystal, meanwhile are
locked in a legal fight over their losses. 0The
multimillion-dollar damage s uits are expected to
teach the courtroom in late 1982
~Women urge boycott
• • : QUEBEC <AP> Feminis t organizations,
angry over ads inviting women to join visiting
' French sailors al a dance, have urged local
women to boycott French sailors visiting this
• French -speaking provincial capital.
·'The women of Quebec are profoundly
' msulted" by the ad, said a statement signed by
several women's organizations.
• The advertisement a ppeared in Quebec's two
: daily newspapers. About 100 women responded lo
; the ad, military authorities said. The dance was
•h eld at a naval base for sailors from three visiting
' French wars hips
• • I
f lndiam seeking park
! PIERRE. S.D IAP> -The 11 Sioux Indian
tribes of South Dakota, Nebraska and North
r Dakota plan to ask the federal government to
:establish a new national park in the Black Hills, a•
•Sioux official says. ·
; The proposed park. which would be managed
: jointly by the Sioux and the National Park Service,
!would also be open to non·lndians, United Sioux
:Tribes Executive Director Clarence Skye said.
• The Sioux consider the land sacred .
,AClftC VlfW
MIMOllAL 'Allll
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1 l1c View 011ve
Newoorl Beach
~-2700
McCottMfa MOITUAl llS
Lacuna Beach
494·9415
Laquna Hills
768·0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
SUMMARY 0 ' A DO .. Tl!D ORDINANCa
OAOINANCI! IMO. Is K-..ed to
• In full elfKI JO days from Nov·
·-H, Utl, a!WI was adOClled by Oii followlnv roll call vota: Councll N9m. bert: AYl!S: Schafer, Hell,
Mcf'arlenel, JoN\i.on. NOES: -· A8HHT. HerU09.
Of'Cllnanc• 11·20, wlll P9f'mll •lee· Ironic oame maclllna1 In all com-
,..rc.lel Md lnclu&lrlal ZOft"'9 cl1lrl<U. CMIClltloftet VM Permlb wllt • ,.
cwtred f« any bullna» wllk ll pr~
1101ft 10 locete or maintain four or
INft machines In • tl,,... tocattan. hlttlflt blillnet.Ns wllll four or more
macft4IWt mini <-'Y with IN ,...
_._within -year of IN_..
t!Gn of IN Of'Cllnanca. Tiie 11111 tUI of IN pr°"°'9d or· Cll111nce mey be read In tlle Clly Oe<'tl'I Offka el n Fair Drlw. C0.1
Me .. EILEEN P. PHINNEY
City Clef It City of C.o1la Mesa "*'INCi Or•• Coal! O.lly PllOt,
Nov U. 1'11 SI,..,
MAalo. L.AWK-Mf . OU YI -----------MorluMY •Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave ,
Costa Mesa
540·5554
rtlACI laOTHIU llLL •OADWAY
MOITUAIY
110 Broadway
Cotta Mesa
&42·9150
IAl.l'l .. 6110 ..
SM'TM & TUTHtU Wlflf t"f,~"/.HL
Cotta M•N
~371
NS.ISIM
• NOTICE OF DEATH OF
BETTY JO FAANKOL aka
BETTY JO TILL ANu OF
PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE
NO. A-111034. .
To all heirs ,
beneflclar1,s, c reditors
and contingent creditors of
Betty Jo Franko, aka
Betty Jo Tiii and persons
w ho may be otherwise
Interested In the wlll
and/or estate:
A petition has been filed
by Euoene E. Franko In
the Superior Court of
Orange Coonty requesting
that Euoene E . Franko be
appofnted as personal
representative to
adm lnlster the estate of
Betty Jo Franko, aka
Betty Jo Tiii, Costa Mesa,
California (under the
I n d e p e n d e n t
Administration of Estates
Act>. The petition is set for
hearing In Dept. No. 3 at
700 Civic Center Drive
West , Santa Ana .
Callfornla 92701 on
December 9, 1981 at 9:3C'
a.m.
IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of ·the petition, vou should either appear
at the hearing and state
your objections or file
written objections with the
court before the hearing.
Your appearance may be
In person o r by you r
attorney.
IF YOU ARE A
CREDITOR or a
contingent creditor of the
deceased, you must file
vour claim with the court
or present it to thf'
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
code of California. The
time for filing c laims wlll
not expire prior to four
months from the date of
the hearing noticed above.
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the file kept by the court.
If vou are interested in the
estate, vou may file a
request with the court to
receive special notice of
the inventory of estate and
of the petitions, accounts
and rer>orts described in
Section 1200.5 of the
California Probate COde.
ELMER 0 . MONT ANO
169S>Crescent Ave. #621
Anaheim, C~. 92801
(714) 776-1550
Published Orange Coast
Dally Pilot, Nov. 16, 17"23,
1981 49f6·8t
'90TICll t•VITI .. I UL•D ~ltOPOSAU
CllDSI •OR TMlf CC*IT R UCTIOtl CW
Dr111 ...... ~ .. IMM Raecll Weter Dlt tflct llectel-
W"'-l•~·--OC'tlee MM ... ........... '"JI<' ....... •O•TMa ••v••• u•Ot WAT•• DrST•ICT NOTICE IS H£1UIY GIVEN \Ml IN eoant of Director• of tald Dlltnct
lnvnu a nd wlll real.,. _..., -
oosalt (lllcll l 11P to ... how of 2 p.m
Oft IM ftlt Clay of DK..,..,. "'1, '°' .,,. "'"'1"'tnv to Nld Dlwlcl of a11 1r_.ntton. labor. materlall, IOOls,
eQll!pmen\, MrvlcH , permltl, .-mttes.
anct other ltam1 MCeuary IO COnJlrll<t
said won. Al said time, said~' wlll be PVl>llcly -neel...., t'Md aloud
al h office of Ille Ol1trlC1,
4201 ClmPllS Orlw
Towncenler 811lklnv
lrvlna. CA '21U
8ld1 shall conform to and be
l"ft4M>ntlw lo the contract dDcllf'IWnlS
for tlle -rk. Coples of tr. contrect
doc11men11 are on Ille encl mev • u · emlned In Ille otllc.• of Ille District ano 111 Ille office of Boyle Enef,..rlno Corporation,
1501 Quall StrMt
Hlwoort. 11.;e_•<I), c~ mt!.
Cople1 may• otttalllad at IN ofltc.
of Boyle Enelneertno eo,_atlon for
llS per Mt nonref11..0.l>la. Pl-and
-•11c1t1ort1 w111 • maltM. -,...
-'· IO IWOttie<11w bl-n lor .. -dlllonal ts.00 Cnonref11..0.blel IO ,_,.
IN COit of posfa9e ano llandll~
Eacll bid tllatl • 111llmltteo on • lonn turnl.,,.d •• par1 Of IN ~act
documents -mu&I be ace~ by • Galftler'1 ,,.ck. • c.ertlfled er.ck, or a 111-r·s bond In an aMOUl!t noc
l9U Ulan 10 percent of IN -of \fie llld, m-paya~ to tte order of or lor I.lie benefit Of Ille 01Mfic1 &ell
llld 111a1111e Mated enct !Mllwred lo tte
011trkt et IN tocallo~ ~-In
tlll1 notice for the -ntnv of_,..,
at or •for• Ille time In tlllt noclca pr~
vlded. TM check or bonel shell • 9lwn H 911erantM tllal the bldOtr •411
em.,. Into • conlrecl wllll Ille District
Md hwnlstl Ille requ4red P9Yl'\"9nl -pertorme11ce tio!Wls and certtncates Of Insurance enel endorsemenll If
awerded Ill• work, end wtll bie
de<lareel forfeited If Ille bl.tlldar re•
f-lo 11,..ly enter Info .. Id uintract or l11rnltll Ill• required bondl or
c:ertlfl<elH of lnsurMce ancl .-.... ... nts If 1111 bid 11 accepted.
Ttw lloaro of Olracton Ills *-IMd from Iha Director of Ille Qllllornl•
Otpartment Of lnclustrlal RelMloM • determination of Ille ,.,,...., prevall
Int refa of -dt.m Weeff Md IN eitNr•I prevelltnv reto for 199e1 hol~
day •IWI owrthna work In tlle tocallh
In wtllcll said -rlt II IO bl ~ for Mell cran. clenlll<etlOft, ., type
or _II.,. nMded. Not leu INn Oii •
termlllad r atu 1llall be palCI to ell
worlter1 employed In I IW perfonnente
of tlle cont..ct. 5-Kll r.tH al .... ,
.,.. .. IN flle wllll tlle °"-'"*"of lndllltrlet llletatloft1 encl 111 IN ofttce
Of tM District aM ere a..ilallle ID MY lntefeslecl party"'*' ,....._l TN lloan:I of 011"9<1wt of IN DI,. Incl ,._,,.., IN rleflt ID l9leC1 ...
ICNcl'llle .,,,., wlllell tlle tlldl .. IO
• compared and COftlrect _,.,,..., '° reJ«t any ..,Cl ell bids, 4lflCI to •lw IHI)' MO all lr,...,1erlly In.,,, llld.
IY THE 01110611 0,. THE ~1110
OF Olllll!CTORS Of' THE lllVINI!
llANCH WAT£11 DISTRICT.
Pu11111111ec1 o.-• .,.. e.o •• , 1»11I ..... HOY. 21, 1"1 MMt.
.I
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 23, 1981
The marketplace 1
on the Orange Coast .. 64 2-5678
CLASSIFIED
INDEX of n~wport
REALTORS
675-~~H
f1 "-' hlr Ad, C1tl
642·5678
HOUSES fOI SALE .......... ,
h.U•w l•t•ftlf
.... it. .. .-.-·--···· f .... "t•llill• Mr•·~ ..... ,. .. ,".' ....... "~ h ... .,,.,., .,,..,_
t•IMM• 19 \•IM;~ Ufifllit"'~.,.. ..... , ..
lh• ..... ~."' .. " ... ,,,..11 .. ..
1...-i.A.\ .... ,
'11, ... .,. \"""' ~:r:::-,:.~~
~#llJ.,,.ftf •)ol•1f•..., ""'• '-'• "·J"' .-toi ......... "I •IV!• v.." .... '"'4 ... °41.1r jl.; .... '911 am mm '·'"'·'· ,,,, '•'• '~·"""'"' tflf ~j .. ~·•"i'r•..,.fh )t"''""""''t1...,..tll I f""'h" t .. h I fl~ .. : ::."!t.~:~~~·~,:·\
l~Vi•\•· I 11•1' '•I~ '""''""''""'"""'_..., lftil•tmt-l·'r1+-1n
l•lihntf••' h1,~ll1 1,."''" ,.1,
\11•\• II,, .. ''" ,.,., ''"'"'"" .......... ,, " ........ , •N•l'ltl .. I •I l1ftlj
t)v4 1'''""'*'I''"'' ty, . .._. ... ti ....
k.~~· ··'"' •. , fll kt.It '>l•lt t \I"•"'' ~ ...... ,., ............ ,
IENTALS
"'~'·'·"'"'"""'° ........ , '"'"''llM•"ri l~ ...... h.,fturl"'t '•"•dii .. u• ... M1o t-.ita ll~UIUWtn•l"'
f Mi,,w"'-tWtfl
r-.Nw ... ~·' "' ,~, ........ ,. ,.....,.,,. ... .., '"'" .. ... '"' ',.,..,,~ \611• t"'"'" I.,, ........
fw-:.·v.~;:•
''""''''""""' ""~ ...... , ..... . ,., ........... ,.
k..-1. "•"""'". ........... , .... ,.
uu .. ,. """"'•'
""""'""'" "' "4•1 ,~..-, .. , ... ._., ... ..,, .... Mfl'M•I" ~.,..,...
....... lierti114•1•
8USl1t(SS. INVEST
MOH, FINANCE k.,,.-..,c.,pnn•
~'""'"" ~ •Mrd '"''U'''"""'" ·~·...,, . ,,.,,,,""""" ",,,_.,.,,
\hif'lf\tolN•fl
\IQM\'4•M*"4• y,,.,, ...... "' \
ANltOUNCOIEltfS.
rmOMALS '
LOST I FOUND
>\N't"'tlJ •frW"4\ .. , .. ,..,.
"1fl ,II ... ,. .. ,..., ' .. ....
f'fH•Jf\4Jll• ...,,,.,,,,~.
I Tt••H•
SCIYICES .....,._.,,,.frtt ... \
oiri.onmn &
PllPW TIO. "' ........ ,.,,_ """' ....... . ..................
lt(ltltAMllSf .... _
~·· ..... _ ... ....
...... W .. Ht-.1• ,..,.,~··.-....... ....
0.. ,... .... , ..
t"\trillllw•
t.MU.t'°* -................... Jo...;n 1;,....,.. .. ..-, ... ..-
M.w..-.......aiw" ••"'""' lllvvt•t lwrwl'WfM" OfftirP ,.,. ....... , , ...
:::~::=.. 'lta1•t11 (,ood\ <fCllf"f llnt'1Vf'f l'll tl<tf
"f:~~ll1t1"'1 ... ..,.
BOATS & MAllNE
E0•1J1lUNT C-tl ... h.W ........... Ut'f' Brit..l•'tlan•••• ., .. , ,.._,, ...... ,.,,..,flt.rtrr ........ , .. ,
~ • ..-.,,..u.... ... ..._ .. .,....., .... ...,...,.., .•.
TIAllSPOITATION
4af"fr•ft '·""""'~terlllf fleof1rw t. •" -C)'< ....... .
Mel:tltta.~ .. ....
fra""' fr~H1
Tu.tfn\ttlith ...,..wuoP1'1•
AWTOMOllLE
\rt'Wf•t ~ltf .. ltt
._,h.Clliolfl \flt_ ... , ..... '¥'"' ••~• M•lif· I WWM•I \Hn•t h -.U , ....
~WhtL.. .. IA(
.\"'-WaMM autos. IMPOITCD
.. ..... .i
Alh."4MYW'• ,..,, '-'"' .... ,.,
*'"' l •pt> f:r.-
O•b• t •H•ft .,., ..
U;."'111.;
'"'"·' J-
fl.•fll'Mft•Wflll• ~ ..... .... ,.,. ... ... ...,1 ...... , ..... ,
~ ..
ll"M . ....
l'•M"'" .,~,"~ ~~:.~
WleM0•1t 9'•u• .... -...... ,.
fvttill• lrw•,-'"''••••f'• '"'"'
AUTIS.M
1••v .. ..
"" ''"" ~ -.,., ,..,.,. .... •·•Iii 1 IM -..... .... . ..... ,.., ..
I ... .... .... , ....
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
P••"-.,'• Moffet: All real estate ad
\ert1sed 1n th is
nu spa per IS subject to
the Federal Fair Hous me Act of 1968 which makes 1t illegal to ad
Hrttse "'any preference.
l1m1ta11on . o r dis
rr1m101111on ba~ed on
race, color . religion
so. or n.iuonal origin.
or an intention to make
an} surh preferenre., l1m1tat1on. or dis cnm1nauon ·
• ~ I ~' -
STEPS TO OCEAN: Supt r dupltx l ·
bt dr.oom 2 both, flnploct cmd beom ctll-
in9. Jw.t lftps to oct• cmd only I 2 ytors
old~ Grtot lftvtshntftt pohtltlol If SllflltMr
rttthd. Owner wil cony SOtM fifumcitt9.
S299.000,
COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS
251 5 E. Co a1t Hwy .. CorOAO .. Mor
675-55 11
Thu; newspaper IA 111 not I
know1n,ly ar<'ept any I ~!""'~~!!!!!!!~'!!~!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~ advertising ror real
eslate which 1s 10 viola $98,950 13%
tionottheJ.!_w. COSTA MESA 517,000 OWN! ---------1 Owner w\11 ('arry fm anl" Befie"e it ' A fan111st1l'
::::: ERRORS: AdvtrflMn
mg with small down' :i home with large ltvmg
Bdrm Well mamtaim•d and family area~ Bril'k
Great barg.11n. ut•t nolA ' r 1 re P I a,. e. su n n ~
646 7171 k1trhen. 3 huge bdrm~ .~:: "'4Mlld chtdl tlttW och doity Cllld NpOfi .,. ""'I ron IM1Mchhty. The :-!~ DAILY rlLOT es....s
~ l obtlty for .... fint
..... ~ i11c orr•ct lutrtlo..
THE REAL
ESTATERS
::z o.ty. I ZONED DUPLEX
212 baths Great rmanr
1ng. S17.<XX> down 13',
101eres1 Call ror morf"
details. 646-7171
THE REAL
'ESTATERS ~:I SI 17,500! • .,. HoetHt for Saa. 3 IJdr uld~r homt' on de 0 ~ i ••••••••••••••••••••••• ep R 2 lol t:\t"l'll rt•nt.il I 123/.4 Vo :~: GttMrof I 002 or build out J du11ll'\' OCEAN VU Paril
L.... •••••••••••••••• ••••••• Nam£" ~our lt'rm)' l.olA A fanlll)lll" 4 Rdrm 2
::.: dn P.I) mL'lll Cl". r .. 11 Is I 0 r\ h 0 m I' ... t I h I :~~ VACATION ra~t Roh liurl11t'k Jl?t ma1?ntf1r1•n1 t" ''"I SEMINAi 7S!lt221 I~!? f.im1I~ dfl"J !:,, Condo time share 'a<'a I ~ 11 r 1.dai·t' ;·nunln I "'' lions for up 10 4 peopi. 1 k1ll"hrn. man) t•\tra~
I Luxurious 600 )\I n $93.500 0 ~(', flnan1'.1n11 di
bearhfrpnl rondos w1lh I I 3 6 01 1 2 • • Pr 11 l' ti "t I • ro $149 !1110 BJrt(alO 1·all ;;;.: 180 deg tX·ean \ll'W. in I Terms' Noqu11hf~mt(' ti • $46·2313 · ~" Puer~o Valterta. Mex I f.inlJSlll' Jffordabh• now. ~~ 1co. For a total 1·ost of home IA 1lh 11m·ar) Cov :;~ S35 00 a d<1y. tnot l'at•h I ered entr>. formal ll\lnl? THE REAL
ESTATERS person) Semmar. Tues
1
room . added f11m1i) , day. No' 24 at Lusk r 0 0 m IA 11 h b r tt• k
I Realty tn Corona dt•I rirl'plat"l' 3 hu)le bdrm~.
Mar Call for n:st•n'J 2 bath. V<'r)' pm·a1t• rt'ur
""'lions 6753411 l.e.irn )ard l'rl l't' onl\ ~~~ how to buy 2 wttks Sl26.SOO l"all 546 2313 4Jjr~
llCi CANYON HOADMOOl
MOVE IN FOil CHllSTMAS
NP\\ tixc-lusl\'l'~ Hard to find Plan I ~
onl~ orw 011 market Lo\'ely 5 bdrmSJ
fa m rm , form.ti dining rm. 3 balh--:uw~
Stu<·c·o ,\ ~lum ilSton~ t!Xlerwr ~ hig
\\ 111do\\ :-. Bn~hl l'\ sunn~ mlt•rior Ai r
l"Ond J r.1 r gar Call to see S850.000
1D<"luc1tng thl' 1Jnc1 , j
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO .. RlALTOllS I
211 I SOit JooquM Hiik lood t·
NEW PORT CEMl'tR. N.I. 6 44-491
LINDA ISLE HOMES
Pn•slt ~l' pool family home Maia
rha n n(•I \'ll'W f rom beautiful:
traditwnal. I h1frrn. 5 hath home . SH
•r 2 lar).(e ho<.1ls. $1.4!15.000.
\\'1dl· la )!•1011 'll'" I l'om -.pt>C liJ<:ular
;,in·h1ll'l'lural dl·s1gn fi burm. 5 balh,t
pl:iHoom . et a rk nxim & den Slip for~'
largl' ho;1t:-S 1,3511.00ll
LIDO ISLE HOMES
l·\·atur l'll 1111 llome~ Tours llll!> lovel
1rad1t1on .tl :-.1>al·1011:-. l"Uslom 3 hdrm.
h.1t h hunlt' llt'\\ I\ n'<ll'n1nited Priced
lo ~l·ll quid..!~ ,1t $.li5.llOO :\lust s<.•e
~P\\ I\ 1 rn1111ll'lt•d :J bclr m 2 b<Jlh plus
lg\' 11•1·11•.1t11H1 room & :! p<tltv~ Beam
1 l·1l111g-.. <; t l'tlt 1111" l.1m11\ II\ 1ng
E\t l'lll·nt '.1h1t• al Stlll.000
PENINSULA POINT IEACHfRONT
P a11ora rn H" ha~ & 11n•;,i n \'ICW at
\\11llJ.!''· I rom pnnw largl' lot. I bdrm.
:1 lwth n1 ~tom hom1.•. 3700 sq ft
ll•atunng mar11w room $1.385,UOO
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Boy\1dt> 011Yl' N 8 675 6161
... .. -.....
THE REAL
ES TATERS •. t:l i' . DUPLEX! ~f~~'1!
DECOIATOI · .-~ ... ;1 I ... $94,900
MULTIPU CHOIC
Low Do-P11Y1 ... 9'PI.
MoDowaP CONDO -$15,000 I VA .. ,.~umabll' loan or ·-67~J41 I f'ormtr mlMkl rondo 10 US.200. 9 S' • tnl\!te~1
""' m1Dl t'Ondl\lon llo•b SSS6 tolal P .. ~menl~
OrY•T U.! I N l:W PORT BE •
sh.irv 2 'to11 tOY>nhoo
3 bdrm 2 '. b.it
f1r.•11ldl I' p.it111 plw.
llllA 1' SI.I I" St:LL
. ... I 3 IDR MEWPOIT \ 1ewi. or j?rt"t'nbt•lb Jntl S,YGlASS I Both UOl1' 2 '1rm I ~ 2 ty $119 OOOI s,.1mminl( poo1 o~n··r OPENDAILY9-5PM I b.ith J. l?rt'JI hJrl!J1t1 -•S • • wtll l·arr} f10am·10,e IAllh 11 Monlt•1·1t11 l.<tl ,l(rnn l"Jll S<-16 2313 _, I Lo~esl pnC'fd 3 Br 2'~ low do1An Call n.11A \"1t1A . f1nJn~111,.:' l°Jl.l I , .. ~ ...... =·~••_ .. =•~•.•~11119•
_ Two sty spill lt\tl. end PROPERTIES -•\f . : =: Ba rondo 111 romplrx Cl) SEA COVE Nataht Jl!I ti1!'>6WI _______ L _
:! 11arage. rul dt' SJ<', pool I llaH• ,um.-thm)! 111 M'll '
Yi 11 I. 1.IST Y.N '
"-~.ooo·
lolboa lay Prop., ........
•675-7 060•
-O tennis Low down 71,-63 f ·6990 Cla,.,1ftl•tf.ut,1lu ti 'At'll t • .a..-jf yow OWWI f tt'MS -wner to ralT)' b;il:rnt•e ' ~ • : I Jog to bearh' Mot1\ 111~ ••11!11 ,.-D1•r1•r pJr1 ur munthl\
-sir takt advant.ii:t·' l".ill I .ssft & ffN11 SOUTH 'AWS 11.1) 1111•111 on lhll> 1 hJrn1 1----111111!!!!11!!111~!!!'11 ~ Bob 8urd11·k . .il(t mi: ll.tllH•.tll>IJnllh11nw I LEASEOPTI
:,: 7S9-122l 1 C L R E R T R T y E G B R E S A B N L 1111 H~sty, Rltr $5,000 DWN '
:\ S P E EM 0 A E 0 HT UR E BAB I W 675-28,6 ,1nd S9Sll pn
:; H I A 0 P R H N X U Y R I C H E H L B Su llrt•)!on H1q•r lol 1111 llt'101w N£"1Ap"rt c:
A N C U N P J A Q H E V 0 X G H A P E 'l"l'llH" Ho)!Ul" lll\t't lln l(ardl•n hom1• Ownl' _.., ...... ..... ..... .... -
.-;. -..... ----# ... . ...
.... .... ••• •llO .. ... .,,. ••• .....
-
Jacketdressing !
SIZES 10Y1.20Y,
A h'"'. J n11 IH• of H111rnt• mnl1\',1l1-d' ~·orn1al R A E l A I I L x A L y E 0 D R T II I\ 1·r & I ml So (;I .tr\( • Ill)! r1 rrpta.·e plu"
R Iii 0 0 R" RR Z 0 ERR L H V k HT l'a~i-Trt•to:-& .:Ii ,k11111: IJur Sparkhn!?pool.
Y U U S 0 C C 0 [ P S A R A E I R C Y i!tMI rt frontai.:••. llMI fl Onh Sl36.!lll0' llur
S R T A l C 0 C 0 H L E L I M W I E G dt•pl from HiH't lo lllA~ t·Jll.ti73 8.\50
T T H 8 B « I R A 0 T R A N 5 C S I R $-t!J,tMIO 675 IT~
R T T f' R A I( O R A 0 O L A • U.S.VETBl.ANS
U., ... Y_T._.l ........ Y EC 0 v GT VCR l C N RB Fll ~.ELl~'TllFllllMES '::!:!!~!:&i~il World H ~: ~ 11;; .ii £ R U 0 R I R A Y L A N I A T E P A l
" R H S H D R 0 G I( V R E N J " A H E
A A E N A l U I L 6 N E L Y C L U C A
M H K I M J X R A M 0 P R A H I I( I M
HQollln
llebtAu~
ICifn "" Ger1'd Fon!
"'1y G"'*
Mllldy A.OOMtl
Ro Hlrriloft
AOlllW s.ta
Hlrry S. T 111111111
L-wDaVinci
T OlllOllOW. Ytatan Pwli,.,11
H ,_ 0..lr ""~•r c..do M
V Auorfl•"t fo t'1i• Sten Y
ro d••tlt"p Mf\\09• for TwsdO\,
•ood """m "'"nponc1"'910 IV!lbt" of~ Zod10< blrlh\lgn ,,,.... ... 1•• , .. , ..... •C..-'°""' .......
'"'!)•""'' .... '" ..... •G ,,,. .. _
,,.....,
t)'t .... """"' ''°*~.......... , ., ..... ··-. ... ,.. .... 1==-==111-,, ,....,, n_..,
IJ ... , . ._ ... ""-P.::=~-1 :=.
Jiit
U WI)••
"°' i.~~-· )lflU"tt ,._
J, ... ,,.
ltOI JIOo '°' .. .. ,~
UC..
Uf ... .. ,,.,... ., .... ....... .. _ .... ....... ~o. •• .---. ,, .....
"1"-UIM<• "~ 141• .........
""'-.......
., .. "'9 t.l ••-!Y ., .... ~ .... 11,,.1. ., .... ,
...~ .. ,,,...,. ..,." .. ·~·...-. osve-.i.,-•., ...
,,..,~ ., .. ..
, ....... f"'lllll ,, .. ... .... .. .... ,,,.,....r, • .... ..... .,~
f 1Gfit • w ....
&H.• ..... ' ··-ac:-... .. ....
ADORAILE
APPEALING IRYINE TERRACE
Htat and op~n floor plCllt °" CORNER
with btoutiful pool, patio & spa. W»mft •iW•
low cash & owntr wiH carry or acctpl
10°0 down. 5295,000. Call 631-1400.
BALBOA ISLAND COTTAGE
Lowut prictd lslcmd homt wiffl ittw
carptt & adorablt bricli patio; 2 ~d.
ntor shop1. $323,000 & au umolllt.
loons. 673·6900.
WATERFRONT HOME
Ar At r 1 A Tf , ..... ,., -· "" 1fT-...i-rff e...~ .... .°"' It-..... ..... .... ·~· •<>-.. ... I ., I \1
''4\ .,...
.... I~ WOt
\. ...... .. .. '.,....,.. ,,,; ,......... ...
'"i\•h·t ~
lolfttt l.lt.r.
''"'"*'""4j .... , ... ull1 4'41 ''*"'•' Ytll IJ.•h.. n.u t'-"•I llf.llo!
1m.,.,11•I ~
........ 't.H.i
'tl•trH1' ......
..... , ... ,, ")If
\1'6~1...... <IA!
'"'"',... ... ,.. •t... 111tt4+1 ... . ''''""""f\ ... ... ,~......... ....
t~i..1•-i•I ,.,,,. \I .,i 'tfil .,., , ... ""'
A clmic t11dtt111 PfO'lldt's lht
oeifect IDPP'"I for 1 pr1ncm
1lim ~ usufl You uq ao
¥OuRd lht woild 1n 111 oulf~ liM
1n11 Simple 10 sew•
Ponied P1ttein 9'11 ~II
St1n 1011 12'1 1•'1. 16'1
18'-i 20'-i S11t 1' l1 (buit ln
dttU l•Wi JI, J¥0S ~5 ·~
s..4 $1.• "' •• .... ~soe i.m,.et1t11tei
,. .... 1114 ~ •. S.4 Ir.
llMIAll llMTlll
P•tt•m 09pl. 442
0•1'1 Pltoc
.g)~J, .. ,, .. .,.
(;1'n ml
'=~~1':t' S<C:\\~~-a£~s· _..,QA, .. ~-----
··--"""-• ol"" ,_ 1tl0'""1od -· 1>9-
low to '°''" 1-"""'" _ ...
I BOSREM I , r 1 1 1 1
., ... \' ( ·"' 11. ,,.~lll'" Kt."'.
Ul·1400
BEST PRODUCT IN TOWN!
Wt'•• got 8 left to Hft!
m West 1ai. St. 11 .. '"" "' -------110011. '""' llAI(, al($.$,
~....,..M _U _P_L_f__.,
1
,, . I' I t I .
13Y2 % 30 YEAR
FIXED INTEREST
We'll deal!! 1 m. sill .-snu 1111111et
Wotk1ne "om4"' loo~ \11\itl bt I· 111411 dim IOI lt>s ltYI • •MO
•Jllf ••I~ 0.1 lllW IAU Wl!VllR
l•AJllRll CAIAlOC C.Po"' 111
1,er Sl ~""" 1n)l(lt '°"'
• ~•1 )tl(f SI !IO AU Wrl IOOIS. UAO ut~
IJS.HDlllM4C... ·=::-..... , .. ~··si # .... , ....... ~ . ..........
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 23, 1981
COLDWC!U. HANl(eRC
TERMS.TEIMS !?}l~vel condo nr So
Coast Plaza Super 1 Br
wlftl seller fmant 1ni: OQlY S\12.900 Hurr~
RCTaylorCo
64Q.C)90()
~ .. -Ott..~
REH TORS
• A Y •ry Sptclol
lluffs End Unit
.,.1th 83ck Ba~ '"'"' T~lefully rem01M1·d
cfltom patio '4 1th
J3'1_UZZI used hnrl.
frehch doors and lot'
l l'lM)fe Fantasllt· "'
s l(m a b I e r 1 n :i n n n i:
MQ0,000
D.M. Marshall Rttr
760-0835
C::::. SELECT
..,.., PROPERTIES
•U.S.YnetAMS Free lJ3tofHome\
World RE~ 77i7
COLDWC!U. BANl(eRC
Climb
Aboard
our
Gift Train
and sell your
Handmade items.
It's so easy
Just call 642-5678 and
ask for your
Daily Pilot Christmas Ad-Visor
CE
IBDBll ILllRS ca.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
EMERAlD IA Y MODllM
:-One Of The Most Jx•h${hlful lloust•s
"'We've If ad Oppo11unity To Offer. If
fo<lern Stylinl! ls Your Taslt'. You
fost lnspc•ct This Altr~klive Home
Its Spcl Allrtbulcs H1 Beam
ealin~s. lntriralc Cusl Lighting.
harp. Clean Feutures Lov<?ly
EAN VIEW.Sun Deck. $695,000
LOY ELY NORTHWOOD PATIO
HOME Bright & airy w/an
outdoor view from nearly every
room. 3 BR each w/mirrored
wardrobes 2 BA., eating area in
kitchen ovcrlookmg lovely patio
w!lush plantings. Very private
location $169,900 Marion Hanson
5.51·8700 (K5J >
AESIOENTIAl RE Al ESTATE SERVICES
LIMDA ISL~ USTIMG
A lovely bayfront with room for 3
large boats Large deck , plus a
European style private .Patio. 3
fireplaces, large master su1te plus 3
additionpl bedrooms, library and
family · room . 4 full baths all this
plus the best price on. the island
with good owner nnancmg. S990,000
L.H.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
LIASIOPTIOH
Near ly 2000 sq ft or
cuatomhed reatures.
Two separate master
suites and huge patio all in the gated community
of VILLA BALBOA
Lease option avaHable ror 1 year 1249.500. Call Wm. Cote for further in
formation.
'*
-· , Coie Realty
, & Investment
• . 640-5777
IMVISTIM
IMCOMI PIOP.
Our offkm h111 ocean·
. front duplexes that can
I brin1 you a yearly In· 1 come, Owners motivat-
ed lo work with you.
Some with ocean • harbor views.
Rt 'l !! 11 :J ~;,P !\r ',lit\'
1 1 ' l ii I
71<1 6'11 0763
2925 Colll'~e A \Of'
l'o:.la Mesa, \A
IYOMB
4-Plex. 121.200 Income.
9~ ~ loan on contnct
812 Calle Camp111a. San Clemente. 4200 sq. ft.
9 n4 S807.
ArNY.a.uY
Near new 4·plu 2
BURR WHITE
REAUOR . IMC.
67S-4630
TH IUJffS
Spi11 llJU,. l11h'" J h..ith
tarn t1011w N1·w p11 in1 &
C'IHl•t•I Muv1· tn rt·o11h
Sn'.o .PH month A.:1
r140 !.~.t.O
LIDO ISLE
I JI t I 1111 212 \'I
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flt/II J'1U lll 11111
l m•I\ I •Ill• '!Hr .'i•,1
~I011,, rrl
I •lilt l!r 11.1 $1.W•
\ I 'l fl r I It
\ I I '
Waterfront HOf!W~
Rim lftC 631·1400
I fi"
3400 ·········•···••·•••····
342 •••••4•••············· IE OWE OF
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HOME
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LIDO ISLE
IAYFROMT
associated ·
lltOKUS-•EAL TOO
202S W lolltH 671-l60
Balboa hi.cl 170 .........•..••••...••..
l'olboo Pn-wla 3707
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DO IT NOW! ... ,..5-h
y OW' Daily Pilot
Ser vice Directory
Rt pl"eMllbtl ve
642·1671. tat 32J
A.fie lw•h Uiiifln.. h Uafw1i.. ~ IMfw"a. A#elwww.+su.tw.. 1••www.+su.tw1L Rootm 4000 ..... to 9-9 4300 to 9-9 4300 4300 • ...... 4400 w;.:~;· .... ;;u;i·o· c;;h•M:. ....... lti4 ;::·;;;.;. .... • .. •;~·;; ;;;;.:; ............ ;~·~; ;;;:;;;;W ... li•'9 •9;;.;~:·i~•:u;;;•;u:~ u;~~··oo.·~·~ft•u Res mk F to hr
3
F, 2S or over to share 2 ~·~ .. ;; .. ~:;;·~;;;
•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••!••••••••••••••••••••••• weekly Klubennette, CONTACT l.aT&est Gay p. nons fi s bd. duplex. near OC area
2 br .. 2 ba .. l bl. to beach, STUNNING large I & 2 2 Br. 2 Ba. Pool. Jacuu1 Condo 1 BR ~/mo 2 ocean front ~40 Male/Female Sttv1ce in ~a~b.BDU,!~ ~+ b~ a•1'f1>C!~ WSl7~~~~ Last ~123
2 car garaee Br. 2 Ba. Garden Apt. S59S/mo. stry comer mdl Lake A.DULT UYIMG Rm in lge house nr OCC So C a I G R C ..w.. 9157~. 646-M53; P us nu · ,__.., ,,.._. Mlt ldt Loe. 6'7~12 ool now_ .St 631~ Pines Rec factl 2 bdrm. 2 bath, no peU for resp. female, empl 213 30t0. wkdys (213 )189-3279 Lee N.B. dplx to abr, hoo f ff
Beac h House. W/D, THE VICTORIAN 2 Br l Br l Ba. refrige. 639-0279 __ SHO mo Isl. last n~osmoker Nice Share 4 Br home btwn Leab .s~ptlobeacb,$225/mo ~:~~<>:_-p1rut\g0io'.~:
ratio,. 2Br lba. yrly, pref w /gar newly decor dshwshr. ~cluld~n. no a..g.. ..... 3141 +sef~\\i!:!umr ~u·~~~r= S200 tncl Bay & Ocean.' N B R B. house to share ~15 673-5191, 642.al Newport Beach location
am1ly, 675·8793 artj adulls New c rpls , pets Avail. Dec lsl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• N Be h Avail. 1mmed. 6'15-2637. + 1o; uUI refer reqwred Dana Pt. 2BR. 2BA. Rel Cc,mueeitnow' 10.m. drapes, bit ins, patio /mo. 7141857-1200 Ocean View Deluxe l &i 2 ewport ac Male Of female to share 4 Call afl6. 847 .• 781 . . Wbt M. \'I Ulils $250 1st M.wport Arcltltn/
View Duplex Yearly , up. I Cal!.bt~n 1·!>636-4120 2 bdrm, 2 ba . larg~ Br. Ap~. New.ly decorat ~':::~ ~. c~~2Jie:~2 M/F to ahr 2 br Balboa M 25-35 toshr3br2ba Bal. •dut-: '93-Tolilli ... ~
per 2 Br .. lrg L.R frplc. 6'i'1 G V1ctona 70 ground floor. Enghsh ed. refnge, dishwuher, ooJ 6.0-6435 art 10 PM apt, $250 /mo Resp, Is. home, rent ~ utll. Beaut. town.home 11, ml Call: 64.2-4Mt fouppt. gar. Adults S800 Newer2BR2BA,S450 Tudor Bldg. Washer· d1spoul. heated pool, OCEANFRONT Wkyd 6'1l·Ot63 fl S honest party. No cigs. [1J.905leve from bch , pvt balh. f 2 ffi (l2 14• 6'13-4374. 760-1418or548·8675 dryer, gar. OPEN SAT· elevator, aubter. prltng Lrg 2 Br 2 Ba. w frplc, n s 1 er 675-3&2 -'325+ v. utiJ Dano Pt 308 sq t. , o ices ~
Kingslze 3 Br. w/frplc. veaorw ends SUN '515. 34001 Amber $8S()&up.Call4.94-8083. aundeck. freshly paint· PM Roommate to shr 3Br 830-9il0/8Sl·Sosl Nancy & 10114 )Ii reception
New deocr deror 513 W EASTSIDE fresh. 2 Br . Lantern llA Luxury lBR Ocean v.iew ed, upper 9925. 2 Br I Com pl. furn H.B. rm, S:~lok!o~~ic~*t!.'1 'i,f[~ hie, S200 mo. Close to So. A ' area. furnished, storage
Bay, Yrly S82S. 536-1441. gar. patio. adults, no DUPLEX lg 2 br. 2 ba, Lr& kltch. Bl.Ii lo lkh Ba lower 1825. Yrly. color lv, towels. etc. wk· music loakina foe musl· Cst Plaza. Rod641-1414 ~f.8Fe avallable. 833-3361
640-5719. .R!!!J:US. 548-0165 S525 mo. Close lo beach. $550 mo. Also lBR for AC e o t 67 5 ·9432 or Ix wub. 536-11$44 ciaos to ab are with Female to share 3 bdrm
Corou dll Mm' 3122 ownhouse 2 ~~ 1.,., Ba. Martha 493-6019. mo. 714,.751.4293 :i'~::!' Mk for Nancy Near OCC. Pool. Noo· Kwit have studio apace: home witb pool in Irvine. T... "t:. 4350 BA YfROHT
....................... patio. garage. Adults 35 1420-2 BR. nr Dana I .... ...... Smoker Male Sl70. Can pay $200. Coata Ne&otiable. 559-8231 ....................... Prime otnce. 79).9440.
COZYIBrOuplex,frplr. yrs or over. no pets Yacht Harbor-0·25081 75.499-S7Uevwknd MIW-11.ACOHIAY ~2SIOafterSPM. Mesa area only, pre-Prof ftosb.r3BR.2BA, X20at5QW19thSt
pool One emplyd SSOO/Mo S48-~9 ~...!'£.~ .. esta Ownr a-......__. 3112 Just completed in tbe For woman newly de· ferably by Dec lat. bu in CdM. Non·smkr. c flC Storaee only Have somet.h.lng lo ~II' female, nos'™*er, ,._ts ~-_,.....,..,.... pn·va•· bayf-t AAm rorated private room & Weocb.llJ1·2t'13 1375 + util 6"-4.3Slevn I 100 mo.Jack ttn Claul/1edadsdo1t well ..-LITE & llm ••••••••••••••••••••••• "" '.... ~v . frpk ds -· ---LfasefSl0.640-4999 Like new I Br Apt.s OCIA..MYIEW Coodo 2bd . 2ba .. ~/ munity ol Beaton Bay, ~~~· east!:!: ~c~. • ••••••••••••••••••• 9 •••••• SPECrACULAROCEAN w/1ar or carport. From Dana~~ mo. CaU 497.zsog or buuWullOOOaq.fl.\!r. •• .••
Is CITY UGtrJ'S VIEW. Upatalra w/balrooiea. sceok bl1df, like new ., -.1-. Z. •I view. Zbcl •• 2 " • •
From everyroom. lar•e rn1. spa. bbq. laundrv. Be the tint.~· 28r 28a eondo l t ........ ~db·-nor ...... room In Ill)' a.ome 8 DAY WEEK SPECIAL • 1 Br. $635 /mo Call 70 •. u~ M atu'rJ• Only 4 units. 2 Br. •~°'mo.--" e tt . raa,e. ""·oven. tor rent, neat. qWet DOCI • . Mearlene642-S757days • .. f...J ._ 2 Br , .. _ _.., .,..., washer/dryer, car w/ smltr, $200/mo Avail • • -Adults NO ETS Mesa w/ '.,.c. • w '"""0 • U'l·ZSOI lOIM t t Walk to beach Avail Pines 26SO Harla Hurryfort.bebestview• ..____..._. lHt ~::herctoJn:!t~J>voo Der I Call Oya • 8Day1 • 3Llnes • 80ollart Ott. s. l Br. new decor 549 244; · $625 to $675. Adults, no -,...... • · S ..,.... •1 540·6730, eat 7411 .1 •
$500. Adults. no pets --·-pets Days 643-0212. •••••••••••••••••••••••1 pets. l•vv/mo yr Y · evea/wk.nds· 5.lS-7411 • 119 ~'J He 11 0 tr 0 p e . 1 Br E side. small but Wknds 661~ PAK Mr'llPPOIT 1 Wkdy1. sz.ms eves. ~ c d M p v t e n It s easy to place your 8-0ay Week Ctass1f 1ed by mall and 1t e
97H406. cozy w/lots or neal lal wkeodl.en..3U6 trnce/garden pal•o e costs 1ust S8 -t hat s only a dollar a day• To Quahfy for this e
wood. 13'5 Adults only llwliw91•1Md1 314 COUMllYCLUI Sea Wind townhse 2br nr Pum Beamed ~11.in1 e special offer. you must be a non-commercial u s er offering LLlediA.pt S51·1660. •••••••••••••••••••••• UYM Hoa H~p. W/D pool, Lg Very nice •
Avail Isl, clOH lo THE W .. FRITI& Bachelort, 16:2 bedroom • a 548-7008 Microwave Uttl IDC • merc handise for sale up to $800 per ad and the price must
beach &r sbopping.kitch. 9fe81i8.AU LuxuryAdultun1t.sataf· apt.s &townhouaes Upper 2 br., ~an rront Must be quiet. resp . be in your ad The cost stays the same whether your a d • much storage. Uul pd ... , ... -..~s fordable bving t.2 a, J Yr m 1000 6'4-900 I .... L ts•/I t /d • $3 25 mo. 645 3779, "' "'"'"""""'' Br. Well decorated vu, ex I nns.,nu c,....... DOD·Smar • as ep. needs eight days selling tune or 1ust one • 646-9714 aft l20QOl'I. Beautiful landscaped h Wtsklff pref mdl age cpl. '300./St pkg 1325./gar • -garden apt.s. Patios or Olympic siz.e pool, Ilg t-Large 2 Br. Patio Pool ,m1yrly 642-~12 pkg. 759.1~-•
._vall Dec 15· So or PCH decks. Pool &r Spa, cov ed tenlli! court. Jacuui. B h 1 e Use .one word 1n each box About 4 words make one clun2bdrm,beamceil eredpark111g Heatpaid park like landscaping. Newly decorated. ac e o r apt o n E 'S'd C M V •
lng, fpc. S700. Adults. no pets. Most beautiful bldg. in Adults. 64.5-8 · -Peninsu~i~mo spa:io:s! Very. priv~~e~ e c lassified line o f type Minimum ad 1s 3 lines Please print 67~2424 BACH $385 HB Generous rent al· Duplex, upstairs, 2 Br, 1 Own entrance Homey plainly . • 3 bdrm, 2 ba. beam cell· 1 BR $43().$440 lowanre. Ba. frplc. Jarage. Near 2 bdrm apts yearly. w/frpk Gal pref $300 • •
lng,Ute&alf')',S'/50mo. 28RlV•BA S505·S51S 846-06l9 Lidoshoppmgarea.'600 wmter.Oceanview.$500 1st /last req. 646·3375 • r-----------------------------, No ts.A 67J..~. 22SOVangua.td S4G-9626 bedy-Mon"'! year l~a~. hAdulu. t' J!IO~up 6'15-l&42. wknds!evs. •
Costti Mfta 3124 Adult over-40 commu11i pets. us ave "' 5 S. C....... 317' U-.t.-t.. ~ -4100 • I I
OC R"",.,.,..ALS 1 uJ l 2 bd Avail now' Dnve by ••••••••••••••••••••••• .._.......... M-.u I • ••••••••••••••••••••••• .c.i.. ty mmac a e . rm. 614'i1 Clubhouse Ave • D I Unit 2 B 2 B ••••••••••••••••••••••• • I • HEWLYDICOI. l·SBr'sS200toS2000 l &• ba . Huntington 494.ml up ex r 1 · Lave on Newport Beach I 7~3314 r~c Landmark Co ndo . --frpk. walk to beach SIOO wk Pine Knot • I 1 Br. gas pd, encl gllr Washer &r Dryer, 2 NO FEE! Apt. & Condo 1500/Mo .. 330.7145 or Motel 6302 w PCH. NB 11-------+-----+-----+-------i~------~ I • d/washer, pool Adults USTSIDl patios. weibar. bit in R & rentals Villa ~ntals _2131277-8081. &45-0440 • •
642·5073. 2 Br I Ba Poolside Apt O. 2 car gar $57S per _m.-4912 Broker Old Spanish large 1 BR. 2 ---I I 1.00
l.rT.ria•t Laundry room l child I ··IA .. ..,,.... 0 f tr w· le B .. d'. f I 3 Yearlyontbebeachfum • I t------t------t------+------..------. ,._ OK. no peu Call for mo st .. """ + ~sec cean ron or m r ,.., mm& rm, rp c, rooms. Kitch. & Ba S290 10 *" • Newly decor gas pd . appt berore its gone d e p o s i t C a I I Rentals. Furnished It blu to beach $460. &r up per mo. + S290 stt • I .vv •
encl 1ar .• pool, dswhr TSLM nl. 64.2·l603 1714)759·4381. Ask for unfurn Brolter.675-4912 496-7151 dep. 2306 w Oceanfront I t------t------t------+------..------1
AduJt.s.642-5073. Mr Bingham.Call8-5. 2 BR 2 Ba coodo, newlr. Old Spanish large studio, NB • 13.20 •
2 Ir. I le.._. WESnA.KEYIUA.GE DEUWA..IE,,MES painted. rpt.a. fpk, poo . pano. ocean view. 3 blks 673-4l54 • \ •
Newly deror. C:as pd IAmdmltedo loyrcnuopmapnlce~ adlt.sonl . .645-1528 tobeacb .496-71.Sl S., ........ .,~ • I 15.80
encl gar .. pool, dshwr u n ~ " SPACIOUS I BR EAST BLUFF lbr • pool. __...._ 31t0 SA--,_,'-. I • Pool, spa, laundry room. 1 1 k I d It ,..._ Wkly rentals now avail Adult.s.642-5073. pat1oa orde<'ks.Nopet.s Firep ace, wa 10 quietarea.slllgea u · ••••••••••••••••••••••• $112 & up Color TV e I Add$2.60fore1ch1ddltlon1lllnetor8 tlmt1 Spacious2Br, l Ba $395 Garagesavail. c losets. dishwasher. no ts mo.644-476'1 Cozy newrondo Adults. I Phones In room 2274 •
JBr,l'i'I Ba.$425 Laun Bach.$360 ~arage. pool Ii laundry OCIAMFIOHT Br+ den. frplc. Rec . Newport Blvd CM • I
dry far., pool. 548-9556 I Br. $415-$425 acilities. Avail Ott. lst Spacious !:.,r . .>!gles •495 i mo 646-7445 • I • Pets considered, adults ,,_ !!:!'!:'! p Mo. 2 Br. l Ba. Apt 2 Br $485-S49S only. S440per mo. 4 Br. 2 Ba. Upper, frplc. -Yocatlolt ..... 425 Pu blish my ad for 8 days s t arting •
Garage, washer/dryer. TSL M ml. 00·1603 19221 Oeleware St. washer/dryer, garage. A.pMtw• r.altlNd ...................... • •
all built·lns. Small child 1 Br carport. uttls paid. iSo. olGarfieldJ Submit on children &i or U•fwlhk4 3900 OCEANFRONT 2 , 4 Br. Classi fi cation
OK. no pets. Onl,y I year $370 Quiet adults. no 842.8807 pets. $1500 /Mo. TSL ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avail. Winter. Weekly/ • ---------------------•
old.CalJ forappt. pets. 383 W Bay,** Lux. lBRPierpoint. Proeertles642·1603 SE AW IND Moatbl .673-7873. • Name
TSL MGMT 64.2-1603 S48-&Sl6. frplc, gar, pool. spa. l br apt w/stove. refrlgi VILLAGE Lrg Mt. home, Bi& Bear, ---------------------•
Eastslde 11 2BR. natural $460 640.°'37 prke. On Peninsula. Cal nr ski area. holidays & • Address
IF YOU w 0 0 d c e i 1 In gs & l.: k. ok 675·0812 an. m New 1&:2 !>dnn luxury wkends. 714 8662. • ----------------------•
cabinet• utilities pd. rl br, ids . nopetA, ow. I Br. Condo, SS50 Mo. adult apts m 14 plans. 1 ff •WAJI" --C1'ty Z1'p Phon e • have aserv1ce to offer or 95 Ssl 1660 Slater & Gothard, clean. Ve r 1 a I I I e 1 c a 11 Bdrm rrom $490. 2 bdrm " · · • eoods to Hll. place an ad mo. · · 15/mo. 640-1<178 2 1 3 1823 .78·5 4 0 r from 1570. Townhouse 2BR. 2BA. Oceanfront •
in t~~ Daily Pilot 2PBI r. 1 Ba. 5!>~.oc,oast 2 br, JV, ba. crpts, drps. 213/830·2323Rirhatd. fro, m S640rf+atf:.°ls.ndsten,· apotno1'utlu.t~ IPletikt~'nn. • Check or M.O. enclosed 0 I Class1f1ed Section au area . ..,., mo. blt·1·ns, W/Dhkup, pat1'0, ate s .(j He uuu VV"' • Pb 646 4667 631-4516 UDO VIEW Ele1ant & n 1• w . • · (213) &l807 • I one642-S678. -• or . 1ar.l690.S3S-C»2I lr12 Br. 2 Ba. 2 patios Gas for cooking beat· . -·--Charge my ad to: •
E'aide 1 BR. 1275/mo. No r 1 Ad 1 11200· Ing paid from San Mammoth 3 br condo, • I
our unused
items could
bP, someone's
Christmas
Sell them
·with an ad
under the
Dai~ Pilot
Gift Gui*
Cal 6'2·5171 ........
Cllr..._. ........
'
pets. R & H Investment r p c. u ts. · Die 0 Frwy drive North sips 10 wltdys SBS. O ~ #
152·2197 &75-63.W on Cacb to McFadden wknds $110 per olte • --------------Exp. I • r l At 2 Br upstairs, stove. New. ocean vin 2 BR 2t,oJ then West on McFadden Reser vat Ion on I Y • II •
adult•. ref's. couples BA, gar. 1750/mo. Days to Seawind VIiiage. 499.5304 •a:sn O •
rer. mo.&4f.rm. • i &?BAP1tt0Aocs &4f.S800.EveSS7..e&89 (714)113·5198. l ...... toS.... 4300 • # Exp. I e
Laree 2 Br. lt,IJ ba. Patio • D1shwut1t1s & 880s Versailles Com er Pen· ..... 4000 •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• •
It pool. Adults. '475, , Poo1&Ret Room ~e-~br'7;~ AvalJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rmmt.e wanted lo abr 3 • L ------------------------------1 979·~or646-6789 • G~10tnldndsm1119 DOW · Laauna ~ad! Motor Inn. Br La1una !kb home. • , •••••••••• WE 'LL PAY THE POSTAGE •••••••••••••• • 1w~t~~-:.i~~~ ~m~~ : ~:~1:t:~ Snops
1t~·1f°::~u~~. ~:~~: :!y~0ia~~~!kB~~~~ !:,~i/1ro Call eves • : ---._ r NO POST AGE : •
142$. No Pets645-7636 sauna, Jacuul, cym, no Dally, Weekly, Kitchm Fem only. 18 6 over. • : 11111 NECESSARY 1 • fireplace, pool. pvt pets $SSO. 7si.2313 days available. Low winter ocean a Ide Cd M I I
patio. dishwasher, on 540.757eevet. rates. 4M-s.2N ~/mo. gar sp. Quiet • : If MAILED : •
El•lde all in X·lrg 2 Br. WESTCLIFF. 2 bdrm, 2 La bdr to l"ftlt pvt ba area 613#17 11· IN TH[ 0 •
1arden' apq. From $560. l Br 4 bib from beKlachh. bal fireplace, pool, adltl Ii d . ·k it . 0p riv .·: NB prof 1m.i. will aha,. • ~ I UNITED STATES =-~7-2841. $350/mo utll pd. tc on Y Avail 12/15. l&OO S200/mo.CM.M2-1478Ull beaut. home w/ fem. • .z · ,, •
2 Br . 1911 Maple Ave. appUances\nc:f.91§:49$4 63l·SSN 7pm over30 . 780-0802 ~ BUSINESS AEPL Y LABEL: °'
Adulu . upatal"· nopel.3. Laree. clean 2 br, 11-\ ba lbr condo. vu fountain. e w ~-• S»5. Sierra Mamt. co. twnhae. 2 levell, \.'t ml. Million Dollar Clubhu. • g F111sr CLASS PEllM1T HO u cosTAMU A CALtFOllHt• ; •
Ml· 4. beach. adulta, no pets. Sauna. pool, apa, 1Ym. Need more cash
WESTSIDE Spark line J!75. M0-2382 blllierets. He. 1r d. • !! POSTAGE Will 8E PA() 8Y AOOACS..C\£( 8 •
clean' Sptcloua. Jbr .. 1 ltwl"91• MOO/mo lf'J.5114 Tom for Christmas buyitf? ~ Ortnge Co11t Dally Pilot e
ba .. frnbly painted. ...,.,., J14J Newport Beach Coodo to • .. I •1 p•1at carpet•. drapes. di•· ....................... ttnt or le .. 1Br.1 Ba. Sell your unneeded • 11 J I •
hwathtr,rqe6mrta. C ... tw.M-'1• OCHA YJew.IUW. items with I low O~ ~eta. U U /mo. 3 bdrm, 2 ba.. l story, Y~ llr, 111,.1ulurn, cost ad under the e • •
_4orWf723 auard. pool, Jae. dble . pd, caJllCllt, mpe to 011111 Piiot Gift Gulde • a 1011580 • ••••mt• car. S715mo.PP btb. Mlf!D0.'7HA'l J I
2 Br. 2 a.. T...,.., UU>l!NMHkll Le• a br, 2 ba, deck, bk· e t' 330 W. lay St e
tt1llsltt. plllio. rant. au 9"M 1144 ~ 1ar. 1 blk to oceaa. Cal 142-5171 COltl MtH, CA 12121 e
Mllt·lu . latmd6" rm ............. -..... ,,. fll--171 _.. .. .., 1 •
Miii Jtt.a,. u t . • 1 ~ _.,. delDau 1,w, 1 ba...1 1171~/ao, ffl1 Ctll1 ... , ... ,,. ....._ • I , •
o. I coe-... •· '11 HH. \;a , o,.. _.,_. .............. . DLMOlfT. tHll. · T )uw,(111 ••••••••••••• • r ~
• -
Cll Orange Coast OAJL.Y PILOT/Mond y, November 23, 1981
......... 44" w~ .. ..... UOO~WlllM nooMttpW... 7100HetpWllll!h4 7100 w..w 71oo~w~ ..... ~!~~ .~~ ..... ?!.~-------...~ ................................................... , ................•.....•..•.••.... ···········••·········· •...•...............•..... ,.................. ... ..... . .. .
ltlf Wettdft N a Winl OAllACi ~to r.11t r o u 11 d A 111lr•I111 n EXECUTIVE H1lr1tyU1t MAINTIHAMCI ~I LUt '7000. f Nnr/h\ Me11 Vtrdt tor Sht11htrd, M Uy ht n BANKING CL91CAL Bf your owo Bola Sub r•SOM Pita Wet*
"' UM I moe Mt M1lt Ronlfr ~olht ml)., TELL' ER RuLutaU iyndlution L ... DY 11-UTl"I ltatt spice In NB Aak Southland Corp hu In Nttld ptOplt with '1c1rlptd E"•-trl colort'Cf Math I 1 .. 1 NB A '""' ' tor QhucL87~204$ · stye or per1on1 H M~ N rt 1\4• •h A i 1 proctta n& c ~r .. or upcnln11 tor 11 Jlt'l'IOO lo h1ndwrltln11 for pltce
....... , .... , .. \!Wpo Ill n 1n11 111vut hrm rrocttHI ( ... •-11 " r Pot•otllll HAIDWMt ptrform bult m111n work II hom'" Send PIMMSULA Al-.ce "hrlttr 1144 :r.stl tttw tnvut 1nvolvln1 "'1 .. "•0 "' Retail ulu, L•auoa ltDIMf' dultu tn tht' um pit to 1889 w Com
=lou tat<"utin ot ............ •••••••••••• ~·ound. m11 Catm h'r C.-..n Y•C• b1nk depo11ta & delalltd l.udi na 011 11 Gu Betrh. Full Ume, 1>art Sorn Eleven Stores monwulth Suite u
H ll tit"* from City ._. ricr mix. It 11pricot CM C..tO.! follow up Dtl>C'J1d1billty ·conaulUn& Firm nruk • time caahlt<t cout Theauctet~ful app1Jc1rn1 l"ulltrton CA 92llW 111• ... ,! \ i!!.r:v!~ nalla 0 eaar'='• 5005• area $34 ~1 ... 1191 31111 CR.,. "T WE". TERN 4c accuracy rtq Com Ing lht' Mall' t'b1uvmtsq lbrdwar•4'7~ w a 11 h 8 v e a ba" <' dudt rtturn addreu
u .. .I.. oPtwl . ,,,,m us ,,o..--vy t'uund hunnl( • d "' r.n ., PUlt'I up hflptu1 C1ll 8 I l\.uw, knowledat or 110 220 h bt Ml n -.p at l'Hton1ble ••••••••••••••••,••••••• r11" i1 20 "'nrdha~n Ur SA VINCS ha~ ian im 114 l40 01.23 artlt!r vl'J'V~WlllY to HAIDWAll SALIS vull circuitry. dry wall 11nd .P ont num r
rentala. No luse re LOSINC LEAS1',. quit IM.'l Prtntl'lon l f.iu' ml'd11tt< optnlll& for 1111 1 ~l'~oie r C ~f~eer1 f"ull time Apply In & framlnic et.wlt'tit>~. 4c Plaallc1 Ult!d. Hll ft~I002 tlor butlnm, selhn« out ~H4lO .. nthusiastlc and outgo COL• ~TAllS ro eu ona ll\ l QI t• p e r 1 o o . <: r u w n their own truck or v•n SfT UP PBS°"
UICUTIVI ALL auppltt-1\ and fix 1 n II T t: LL f. R on 11 -'-""' r1tm, Cruwt.h lnd1.111lr)'. Hardwar~. IO'l4 lrvtnc. Entry ltvel aulury with 2 Wt arr loOktn~ ror 1n ex turHinrluduil( i''uund II 211lil Whl Malt• PART TIMJ.' bas11o an P lime, uper pre work 01 with M1Jot 011 1 f" B revlrws durina li1t pc'nfncl'd M 1-·rorlnJer SUITIS Oiapla)' l'lllt6. w11111n« Husk) t'11rHt<w' Rnll.ff our (.'OST.\ MF.SA fl'rred. but will train Com11101"' U you ml'el HOSTISS/HOST 9/mo of cmploymen! j llon moldtn& production.
IN room chain. Buuty ~9 ~l&o llr .rnch l'all rora~t~ 839 7260 our strict quat1r1t11Utms. Xlnl ro benefilll l'ltasr t'o paid twialth vaca
HlllTA51 Salon h11irdryt>ri. und Found luiie Hr11nll't I Companion, rtm for 71 you will receive l.'X f'1rt timr, luxu7 hotf'I •PPIY in ~n.on mo W lion & holiday~ ~shift Pf.AD hydraulic chairs, mtr \\'('jL~•de C'M 11v.ntr 11111 1 l'n••1ous fuunw1l 111 yr old l1dy on w11lkt'r 1e11.1lvt' tr.101na at our ~tall~rl~I /" •1&~na L 8 yt1 a 111 o r o1 nge opening only. 4 30 12 30
rors, shelves and ploAnb. & identif ~ l60ll bltlullun npcrtfDl'l' ut Mw.t h11vr own r1tr Sun rxptnn while um1n11 Hr • PP Y to an 978 0137 I\ 1 ut Newluluryolrlcesface Also makeup 8hampoo > ruh h1111dl11111 r~ nalr t,hru ~'rl nttr Coll more ll}Oney th11n re 4~·4477ExtA4lS.F.OE r PPY
In 1 r v lne 'a bus est and h111r produ~ts r.o .. t ,11 20· oran11t', T:ihhy µt•rarncl.' " 11t't'l':li.11ry 833 0379 · quired (0 comfort11bl y HOUSECARt: Ludy to A firmf;~'>~ Artiou ORANGE COAST
eenttr! Euy F~y II<' Call63197!>4 or ~•Ill n l:le~md lonwnu Prior puhl11· ,·untull I drivt 1 Ml'rctdts 450 carr for cldrrl)'. non I PLASTICS
caa. Avail. now Call arter&898680!1 SChool(\1MStG&tl ba1·k2round hrlpful COUHTSlHl:l.P SU: Mu&lbe Bnahl At bednddenWornitn l,o\ MEDICA.LSICT'Y I w 8lhSt C'M
ror detilll • f'ou nd Ci rr> l't>r\t D n Knowll'dllt' of Ill kt•v 111111 Ill PM to 6 AM Mon thru tracttvf', Well Omo,,'., rd, ely Costa M'1la home Exprr1enel'd Cull front &ti ~ ~' lll·IUI 6 4230 Spoghettl.....,. Type• Gur.:t'llll.' M.ile \ lt11htl)ll111t;iHt'1JU1tt!d ~·r1dny ALSO Sat and I St·lf Motivated, Monty Own room & bath non oft1t·t. H B 11rra Wttll' , • . • •DILUll~lS• Investors wanted, nev. l".1l <;n'l•n ryt~ \111• 1 Sun W 1n r hr11 .s Orl~ntrd. Stron11 Uls •moktr tvea & ~kl'nch, na11s1f1edAd JIJ86 1Ju1h t .. ~ ~-~ ( II 0 ~I. 1.2 Ii 3 ~ location Ask tor Joy rt l'omunJ & IHth l .1 II \ uu II !1mt our ,,1hmt\ Ooughnul How.e 2!53 I'. df hntd t'thlral & •bc1vf' t21~ 682 !12113 Pilot. P O Box I :x;n, I+. A<. II t. n ")(Pr r d · qujt'ed~ Ae~~:r Hoskinson 64~0651 ur1 l\flt!r~r~ li312.l.Sll I l'UmlH'lllt\\',llO'nehlHx t7th St Costa Meul 111 Arttcuh&tt l>e11n.'l' lloult'clrllntnll 1 wtll CobtJ Mesa l'A ~vrr 1,H mwa ~ella ~I. W.3223. ~~. ~ OS3G PtNOftofs 53501 l'elll'nt. ancl work 10.: an,tlhl\t! b1;111t°fl('111I. but not rt• lt111n you 14 001hr plu~ ~26 OS60 I ll' 1142 1313, 536·
••••••••tt•••••••••••••I cund111on~ t•urr1fo1taltlr Counter hdp ~1T II 3 qutrc.>d ldt<11 I H11,.k btrnonthl)' riaL~~ to IS MedirillSecrl'htr) l'~l' ~l.'huol Dtret·tor, man 17THSTIHT ICECllAMSTOllE EXECUTIVE l'l"<l~l' JJ1pl) 111 Jl4'r .. on Mon fr1 G"ry • Ut'h, 11round wnold 111du 4 11 hrs d1tl)' 96497G6 Ex prrtPnrcJ Medic.ii f. t: t. + 3 units ad
COSTAMISA LIQUIDATION tu Cousl Hw y Cd M d.~ ln1uran1·1· rlt·al r 11 11 brl 4 Hpm Sec·n'tiiry Front Offt1a·I mm1l>trat1vr19493.SJ
2otlroom olficesu1ltS 6 rrt!l'/l'f~ r1'fr1g . •SUITt•.. GREAT 16752193 fo,Nllllt'.Sllh·~.Aclv(•r\I~ wrc·kday11 Weekt'nd~ Manager for Smull 11'rmllnj(
A/C,plentyofprkg Ulll ~toraKt' rark~. nrnf. !4lwuit • ..,\OHl'S WESTERN <.:RTtelt>phune"cretary lni:i.. M11rkd ll~·1w11rrh, 11nyll01e1 Orthopedll Surgt<n l l'latrroomhelpt'rMon 3
Incl.Aull now Call rquip & ~upphl'\ Heas •95~-t.122 MC/VISA -15 11.pm l'\'Q, 1mmrd1atl' HI.': lotu.rnn•: ~.mµl•t> llOllSt:n.t.ANt.llS Pra..tHl' l'M to Jpprnx 8 PM.
Relonomlcs 675-6700 67S26J~, ufh ~~1!119~2 '.IFOS\\ould '·"'' 111 SAVINGS nvrnrn11 for gr11Yry1111t ~11111·111 (ont.ul Mr l fll'x hu.f'Tt•r 11v.11 7~1(11!1!4 TuesJJ<IPMtuappro1
Share 2 ore SUllt in pre e\ es. I .Ht) .. uh ~1111 ( .111 s11.. 3200 rarti ,1i1rt M Jlure & pll'll!IUlll 11 NII • • • lrt1111> t:11y al !-'ll (~7 MODELS~SCORTS H PM no PW ne<· App-
atialous 1irpon area. 375 "' llt•hh1r .1111111111• Clftffr Dr. lk'r,011 loC'n\l'Cl rn Co«lo 61~ 023! I) l'Pnn) sa\ er 1660
sq. ft. For details call lnnshntftt •1 r11;,.1 Cotto Mtto \1t''11 nil 1 b3 l 11 HU r < Al'< OllN1 AN'I HOUSHHPER Attn f'ema t.,. unh l'larenllJ A\'e, C M
ALL JOBS FREE
TELLIR
Haµ1dly 11row1n.i S ~ J.
wek11 fr1t'r1dly Tt>ller
II.Ith bank Ctr s {I,. I.
bJc kgr o und f or
~auurul nev. branrh
Grtal Jdvanrtmenl
potential & t•xrt>llrnt,,.
1~11d1l~
Coll: Corry
972.9955
HOTE HUD
Beautiful be11ch lorwlt'd
bunk seek5 experrenred
1nd1viduJI lo Join 1l\
i:ro1<1ng ~ta ff Ex
relll'nl bt>nef1 ts end
'tart mg :.allir)' to s1200
Coll: Corry
972-9955
HJ.122f. ---Qpporiumy 50151 1-:01'.. llOOKKlo:•:f't;H Mtr11•t~r & w1fr nt·l'd 95.l 1m1
DAN A p 0 INT 2 ~ 0 •••••••• •• ••••••••••••• A Touch \" t:of: '1 F M u11t ht• Nfltf 11111t1v1111•1I IHJUM·kl'N>l'r I l'hllrt Nur\l'r)' !lard workm)( 'l>Ull" 1na11 DILIY~Y & I 1v• n ., ' ·-t· .. · $175/mo. 500' $350/mo ' "' OfClo ICft t:~1wrtt'11n• w111rrwr11l t • '1 "' • ,,,. •1 '""'11 Hl..,.Guard 34210 Violet Lantern seeks ~lll'nt partrlt'r Ill ;i F"·ort' \11~~·h111 . stOCI( PERSO~ ltlll(t'r I rr.il hal.111n• NII ,. r ~' 111 ( J 11 L d q( l'..,..~ h 11 l t•' d It'
Pro~r/ TELLERS Typesetter
'1 1120 NBprupt>rl) G46!11ii" I 11\\1\l:l<lo i'ullltmt' Tue•' Sal 1 111,h fluw an.ii~''' 71'1 f!Oir~t l1hur•'h1 nur,l'ry \\"\'k1n11
Tax ShthPr'l> ~ht I nti?h1 iC~l !w~ ~;;11~·.~.1 :• Jo 11 J~pm i''rini.:i· fort,·u1tl11111 . t111tfl(••t & Hr-HJ !Wi tl3'll re~poos1ble 111111\ 1duJI tu HWn EX~ STE oH 1n Ill He1.o,~r la't'' • b1•11rf1l\ Set; lliirold. 1:1s 0 .,H.ilronal µJ.inninl( lfuu~rk1•1·1!4"·r Sun & Mo11 :..~'ume ~111110 3, •r
• Lwturlous suites avail pd 111 '78, '79. 'KO f\an' \\ \1 ~·1 >;k\ ''I .Ill 111 * J£ll£R• I-. 17th St ,l \1 "ork l'lllrtitll c l'A&.1, uni~ lt11u•l'tt"lt•.in111.i & rtll.Jtor guard \i•t"qwr ~b-r' omce avail for 85164:!5 l'r•rm.1111•nl 1•talll11\llllJ DELIVERY \l\l 1oqHt1,1h• '"''"'"'"' I hll1I IJrl' I .... Hl'h rl'q d 30 hr' Pl'I l'k !xcl~:r:eln o'frrc~r ~:~ M~y to locsl 5025 11 "~1 ·~r ~ 1~" 1i'i',', 11"'' \ " 11111 "1111· .11ut ""'' . tH. Goud C'alrf 111 'rnJll r.,,t i.:111w111M I ~ ~.·~·~ , 1·~1"~~11~~tn\;~ j t'onl•1t•t J,.ll, 1111 J plexea Ai rt close ••••••••••••••••••••••• t \!1~11' lo.If! h.1' .!II 1111rm-.!1.1l•·1 •lrt\!•r s hcenst• & "vfVTt r I r m w I I h II <I t ' ' S5!14Z21
Includes· rpo VtnhattCapltal .. 1111111i.. ,., 11., h."1u11ru1 c \I lllui·pnnt ~H5S7t 1111111,t1Jt1\1· 1tut"'' 411 ~JKJ 'lju,...mi:
• R . · 1, h 1 · Loan \, "'''"" 11 .... Ir """' '\on 'nwkm.: l'lt••t>Jnl llou\1•kt·•·vu1i.: ,,.n 11 1 LVH Uill~cep p o ne •1 uiine;ss ' 1 SEXYESCORTS r .. r.1 lo In h1>n11•n11• DEUVERY un•.m \ll off11<' tn ~111 nrc>tlt'd full .in1I 11:111 j 1~ ~ts •c Jarutonal • y1:nt9rt lapr~I rt''·11 1·630.0426 I'' prl'l,.rrt'\l lur th1' full Ut'h\'t'f\ dnver ncedt'l1 I t'lr ~.~p 111 rt•JI l'~tuh· 111rnt' ht'lp S.1511 to start 3 11 JO ('nrl\ llu~JJ 11.H A r~e opie:_mo: :r du~i:;es~ • 3
1 up 1111n• p11,111n11 hut v.1•l 1mm1•l lor plJnn1n1: pJ1tnt'r,h1P'&w11~tru1 '6314118bet!l5 ::-;:1e,Po~ee~~;:ud~·1,~ m P e Par .' n g so o W-tn<,.., oan' "'ill ,,,,1111, -.111u·1111t· 111111 m o C Reh;1btt' &. tiun il + ~or 1mm1.01.11l' ,_ ________ ~
'llt•ctkd p1:1rt umt Late St>\l'ral Tellt>r po~111oru;
aftt'rnoun e\enrngs 3 t.hroughou t Or<1 ngc.>
n1gh1i. p\'r Wt'ek plus (ounl) for expern•n('t.'Ci
SalurdJ> Excetlenl1 •nd111dual' lookm1: for
'!Jt'lhn1-Jnd grJmmar 1 Jrt'...r poten11al
skill~ nuessary, plus1 Coll: Corry
ob1hty to work fa5t un I 972-9955 rtn d~adhnt.' pressurt'
1<1·pl~ to per..onnel
Or~Coost Doi PUot LOAH OFFICERS
J:IO" a)'Slrt'l'l llaH two pol>rllon:. fur
t'U!lla ~trsa •n~tallment or rum
K1lcben. ~I y sen I equ1~menl l1· 1•1n~· ra•tl 5450 "'•th I '''''Ill: I a~h .... 11 itrnomed r llml' l'OO\ldt•r.tlHlO 'l'Od ft' IHTEllOGATOR: bt>nt'fth r .. 11 6'\2110"4 avii1 Ca~5-~~nne 8559863 ,··.·•·••••••••••• .. ••••• 11111111111,.. •·11~.:rn111111 \Inn. \\~'\I&. 1-'n 1\rll 'umr &~.ilary hr~lonto HEEDED l'Our"nl!
Mort90Cjfl. Trust I 1111 '···~ ' r... I ,,, \\I •f!1•r hi! llll:!ll ll1•\l•rl) f'l>S. 2611 "frwport Ctr PA.RT TIME. MURSES AIDE
t.quJI Oppty Emplyr mt'rrtal Loan Ofhcel'. .----1111!!!1!!!11--~· \\Ith bank barkgrounrt
PT /TIME OFF4CE Coll: Corry Dud1 5035j '"111'1 11 k•1•1 "' ""111 •l11p~1l.11' 11• 'l \I ~ trm•· llr. "470 'IB. 92ti6Ct or • ~.X"l'I d Jll llhtfl~ Mon..nMit. •rip frur• 1 1hf11•111 i. r ' • • h u t ~ .. ,. Slllil v.eekend Jnd uµ " ••••• • • • •••••••• •• • •• •• •I '.1 • J ,,.., r •1•1•.1r"' 1 In huifontrt '""~l t'' Jl une ,..,4 1.,.. .• ormc1 . 11 . . t'nn\ llU!>p N"'Pl 81 h NewportBeach7~)(100 ..,,1111,•1'1•01\tl.ol 1 I• II Ca 5S.!,lt7J Arm~ B I & sq rt main floor Ideal Sattkr MhJ. Co. I • • 11ri 17:!<'.,. • ' II.•• 6'' " 1 :., , , l'l 1 1'1 t'f ti l'all 1144 t400 FULL CHARGE I Reserve Kl' all vou , an rtnit )OUT~ mr e JUllt
Marint .Ava1lablt>Jan1 Allt.'P"),nfrrulr,tall' ~1,llCH I\ l'I ip1•111" t. llF\r\I \SSIST\:\T IUSINESSMGR. bt-. :'!;r;e~,T~r,~~l'dtt!t;~
UOOWest CstHwy IO\'l'~ml'~~:: t949 fll II ;," ' I '1r '111'"1: .i~·~·.i.: ;:,1 r~1'.1'1 di.111,uh• t'"I J>O!>llllJO t 1'{'t'lll'lll oppt '~ ror ,__ .. !111111_.-i!!'I!!!!~-· 642111)14 ---..::.~=3683 pec1--..,m 111111 11 JI• t.uk..: rn m111ll'm f.i,t mc•\ln~ 1 .. r .. t>r m1nd!'1l ~., LADIES l>ISCOl"'IT
Cotti Mesa. 250 sq rt 2ndTDi ,,,, .l-\plll)Aonl) $7~1 l'C'\1(1\1• dedll'lllt•d Lu STORE Ol'('(IS m11n11gt'r l OCUM&IMLAMO
suite. Sl751mo. Utils m ' 642·2171 54~0611 l&nploym:: & f ID ELITY t11 tu 'tart 527 :!2.:>1 11peral1111( v.1th t'hn,11<111 & ~JI t', pn,on nt· I OPEIA TORS
cld. 779 W 19th St "iclt•v. h.t• 1111111.._ f , l'rtpar °" DEMT "l "SST prrnC"tµll'' \lu.\l he J1 Plt?aM• c·al \nnd lll'll :"ov. Ji ll1>tinl( .ipphl'.i
1151-8928 ••••••••""""0
•••••• FEDERAL "' "' 111111 & JX1Jpl .. ont•ntt•d ll3 74!14041 lion~ "ul'<'n, W.i\, JI.I\ -=.....-=·--l () $111.•0 up ' I School) & H111 II j! J ·'l ~'JI 1111•( L • . I I .. .... .,tWPOITHACH r 1t'1!11"h1·1k ""lr•11l1' 1nos \ "1'11 ~r '\111 I'' •'Jll'ntn11~ ~n iuMnt>l> Lo91o1tol.aeh Marina 100 Vu•·l'n ' " l',rll p 1•11 ,..,..1 '"'"' l11dnich011 l·ll i•,'t l 11p1•1at11111' \\ork 1l111•rl W;n Dr untl( !it-dC'h 6 orricts and rerepllon ,.3 'JI .......... ............ • h v.1th thrt•f l.,,.11111 ,t' Hardv.ar11 rl•tatl ~ah•, ,2ij1437 5611 overlooking golf rour.;l' 1 ti• ' 1 \,"' I DESk CU•K/ 11ff ll'r ol r ... 1 l!rn,.mi: full ltml.' Part 111111•
Avail Dec I ~ulldn l Mocktrt4Rat\MtCJ. 11.011 I' rirmtui.irpouti~iltn Ca,h1rr ('oa't OFFICE-PTmME Rulty~2960 _ I Sl'\1 • • \IU \c••'lil ''"• '' 1 • MIGHT AUDITOR m.ikt• hu•mf'~' 11 .. l·ra llardv.are 4974403 ~wpl lkh f1i1-J,,t11t I
'\v.pt 11th l'lraHnl 972-9955
I Jthnnl' pt'r.l(>nahty hght
t ypmg & f1l1ng. Apply I
llo' H3i, lrv111e 92716 _
Rec epfiollid
fvll time ()peninq
Until Jan f I 98f
l'lu~h 'ev.purt Center
offt• • n1•f-cb retepttnmsl
I' rlh front nffH'e ap
Jll' Jr ,1n1·1• lo illlli wer
phun,., Jnd du hi:hr l) p
ma: Sh Jlt•r hr !I tu 6 ~1on
thru ~ r1 CJll Sh1rle)
'I tic, 1144 l.<ffo
SECRET A.RY
tntl'rndltondl rorpora
tion ~eek) p01!>ed or
~o1n1ted penon for ,
1.irl'~r minded l''I
l'I Utl\ ,. 3 4 ) l'ltrl>
\l·t·relartJI t>Xp(•rat•nt'I.'
11k t'ompJn\ offt'r' ~~
, t>lle:nl benefits plu' a
v.t•t'kS paul 'a1.at11111 .11
<'hri~tmJ~
I '"" c I 1· I· 'I" t ••n•f ~tu,1 hJ\o' ,.. h I I h Deluxe Peninsula Off1re l'>l & .!111t I 1 u't !>n•il• , P ,. "' ·' 1 '~ 1 '1 • 111111.il & hudj!l'l plan' l al Sec' P one persona it) •i: 1 RECEmOHIST · I f "' • h-11 I' J td \ppl~ lll 1wr\lu\ I e~ l typrno &. fthn" \fi"I\ Approumatey94-0sq I On\Fll\lhll\\'\H< <'.ilr! .. irriJt.\tutl'I 1111 Sirutturl'c·;.ap1tJ1zo1l111n .. ,. " \o'"'l'r phont''.
Rita Johft50n
972.9955
Calhedral Ceilings v.1th thr 1 1111 Jotu Won+t-ct, 707S 1 "· t .. 1 \,", 1 ,1 llirl' &. drle)(Jll' 'mJll Nt-1' po l Lr Real :~talt' Box H37, Ir"\ 1111> 1127l6 min rm um l) pin.: and
Carpeting. Wood Par 7fill lil!27 1,11.1;1111 1\1•1-:·1 1, 111", 1l·•·r Droptry Wort&room ~1v~t bl' molt\'illl•d '"If wek' exper'd Lei<JI ~·• PART TIME KP;;I r \laleufr ('all Mr Et>ITRY LEVEL
Trussts. SkyhRhls, !'iel' l'rh ' l>ulll" fir ···r !....................... BEAUTY 'IJH or kt•\ pt'ri..onn•·t l.1l1galtun J,Jw Firm! lilt' hlckp)( Full time
quet, Air Cond1llomn.: , .,1111~ .... 1> .,1 t ... 11 ,. PRESTIGIOUS 11.rth "r1:n hllnll 'ltll'h 'tarter ~.xpt>nen11• v.1tb v.1th i:ood typin,g th~ c,c·nri<~· ;14 n.3 ltillll ur t It'd" rut and 1 ll'an
S 1 l 6 0 mo Le a "' IAnnotMctme'fl'h/ :,15 -111, Jfl ~·t ~Al OH "x 11• r for J ~ µir~on R t'd I 1:; ,1 Jl e I 1 rn llt!i.l laphont-dnd ~II \k1lb I EV[MllNGS \I J rtl) n ii 1 4!11 b.~11 tirt\lnl< rl'tord a mu1,t
Message. P.r·,onah/ Help w~ 7100 1 ... ~ Ii ... 'l·\t11"'"1 I ... otkrourn llourb litll:' pJrtner~h·P' & PrllJl'<'lS Salary Ojlen 640-6960 LAI I REamOHIST I \\ 111 tr.am In ;h1pptnj(
---'-•-•.:.;673-fi606"" _ •• Lost & found •••••••••• ............. ~t:tltll ·~·• t,t~11,1 " ~:i'u t full med1rat and den u + Satar) & rnm Lr:GALS~('RETi\RY WI.' ar<' pN'!>entl> Wt'k 1 ~v.llchhu:..rd & h"hl l>P clcparlml'nl of 1.1rKe
1t 17 .... 5~ •••••••••••••• .. •••••••! "" t It•• ·' 1"'· 1allwn1•r1t.s pcnsat1on open n1m Laguna tull'< rerent t J lflg adul~ with plea'-Jlll .. , 1 H h n....t .., ffi"' Tnr'ln th .t.----c--"" ~00 .\CCOUKTIMG "''"'111•rl t "lllH fir ~1366 mtnsurate v.1th I'~ Probate E~p ner Xlnt personahltl!'I v.ho v.ould •Ill( I-\Cl.'llenl bt'nt'ftl'> ""'P'>r eJl tom """UJle o ice space w1 """"-• ..... .....,..~ Cl.Yk , II & b 1 11 be k l all ~111 ~1 pm hr" pJn' Thl'rt' rs .i lot or 17th St frontage for •••••• • •••••••••••• ••• l>ra\ er ptntnl·r a I ti) A typing & S II Sk1lb rPt1 I rntere~lrd tn "'or In!! I ''Jll !13111"""' room for J1h ancement •
1 C · lit , ft !l.f'••de•I l1•r ' t1•1'1 1 1 "" SCHOOl IUS rephe~ ~t netl) l'onftdt'11 Call Mr' Wm~lo" r1ir 1n Sall'' &. l'romot11111 • .,.,, and comi>an} ha' t'\ t~se. 0.Ti':ob 1~1~~994 1n1t r~'t.1u1 "' t • n.tarr r~.111H1•cµn DllVBl trnl For 1mmed1Jlt' con appt 837 1060 v.1th t>c11l} Pllo1. Camtr REC EPT(TYPIST ctllt'nt !Jt'ntlfals pnces. c .., -l orpor:ih' 11fft11· 1>ut1t•\ p 11111" full ch:irge J , . s1deratton send brief re I to to l5 )'e.i r, ut•J I
8401q fl prof ofl1ce suite tndudc .'1unihl> B•nli.I d:tV\ per .,..t't'k Ciill l Class to tram 11chool bu• s umt> anrludinit l'll
1
LIVE IN Unltmtled tarning:. \ct1ve real estate offlre/ Rito J°"'91CN1
•/ocean view reception rMonr11i.1uoo. llrweeltly co r 1 n n.. wk d v ~ K 70r:~~J 5 1 f~:il'~~::d~ perientt. salary history MOTHBl'S a v a al ab I e to r1 I!h1 has openm~ for a well 972·9955 rm/2 largt offices Sl'P sale' poslln~·, & l're1l11 1\31 ~l • & requirement' lo pt>r~on Hr 5 :J(tPM to l(roomt1d p<'r..inabte in
equip and storage ~m 1.ard rti.'rl-'t'' arrah~.~ IC.ICaCa F/C apply llunhngt.on Beach Prore~<,1011al Dl'Hlop HR.PEI '8 JOP \1 , \londJ) lhru d1\1dual \tu.st be t'~per
Ntwport C4!nler DestRn f;llp prf'h·m.J &. ~di.tr 1001(1(u;;a-go,, Cit) Srbool Dist 7~ 14th menl Sentr..,,. Im 2fiCt FrtdJ~ Somt-Saturda\ v. q p1ni: !>okllb 45
Plaia New carpl't · ,omm1•n 1r~1r v.1tt1 l{t 11 ~ l,•h· r~pPrieno· St ... 11 B i167~19 ~ewport<.:t>ntrrUr Ste Ideal s1tual1on rn ;ava1t°db1hl) Fllr aµ j •~lwpm HPal l''tate l!'t
palnl. Sl.65 per sq fl .1h1l1t) t .ill Hu,lv 1>r•·l1·111•c1 H.111k rrcun ORIVF.RSWANTf:D HO.NrwportBelH'h.C\ Nt,>11.oport BeJl'h 3rta por ntmenl 1a ll I PH cthrrabll.' l'all
!7142 759·9044 l't'hl'Jll 714 .,.1!1 !13:.!.:.' r1lta11011 Yt•n•,. ii t .. di:rr t.arh momtnR home dt 92660 ii' a1lable for tndl\'ldU11l 642 4321 .. ~k for Hen 'iuian 631 <1213
C via-G f lrtu• h.il.1nc1 \t>edt-cl ll\·f'q I.A TIMES G"' .... El"' l'>LLJCE tultHl'tlh fam1b 1.·an W1lbams ~ .. .....,... 1v(> yourset a 1mrr.t'•I \>~ l<•r \fn , "" ...... vrr1 for infant. and as~umr •--111111111111!!!1!!----•1 Otrlce or retail shop Christmas bOn"S A.DMIHISTRATIVE 11,, '"0 9901 lntne & ~ewport arus r.t Tanw ,..
ail ed. l I " ,,., Sol 25 + mo Jess h u u s c h o I d •---------i spice av imm ta e >' -sell unneeded Sf'ECIAUST OYS I 0235 Mun thru Fri. 4 lo s hrs responsib1bllcs PIPilllf p •RT TIME 450 sq ft. S.75 mo ME:EDED BUS B ~ datl) Must l) pt> run 10 rail t2l3J 941 8781 A ~ items in th., PA.RT-TIME 11 , ) & nrrl 1 c:t>orgl· ' f "\GR \\ER to enRravP kl'). hi:ht bkkp)( Stl'\Pn I
1
\1a1hngopt·ra11on' RE IHVESTMEHT ---~~~ Oa1'ly Pi'lot 1 •nll'h•t ·~ t r .13:!.13 "'''rd' (( p1rturPs ""I ThomH An1111u .. , , == !lloexper reqd Mu$tbl'
1
. · · I
._._ __ 1 1.............,. $I r~· "'1'"kt·nil ''"'1 "" /,!la~~. ~1hrr & tirass 957 3989 I MARKETlllio...IG dependable and ava1la l::arn v.hile you learn
_. ......... 4450 G1'ft Gu'1de c .r1 i !'>'•2 .n 13 '' rn, IUSIOY ~1 u,1 hJ\l' at1rJc·t1ve I,. i ""' bl II "' t K h II t. H ' T ' G E ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rr>~f\ ,. f~ .111 \ HI I '" ~ ,, •• fll llC t'<I 1lrt>akla~l d • ·~ bl t "f'nera l' on (';J p ( I'\'~·~ r \I I"' T "'111
I t,. t.; ur,, • ·.h1f1 I •r lm•tr' hdn \\rtltng"' .,.. il r o llelp v.anted forrlrapen M'NIP[M[HT fa~h1t1n Island an'.1 ,.
•-a•n•All••sr-A•C•E-• Call 642-5678 f1,.,1.1or .111 l.d1.un • u'" 'Jndbla'llln~ ~n & rarpl't rlranm.i plant ft M I 7600501 .8·JIH2 JO I }~;~nh1 .~·~u ;,~;ti;:~e
1290 sq. ft. Harbor Bhd and ask for a I \ \t f\1111 H .,1 • 11 1•1 t., flt ·" h \Jtph t<• J .1 n gr d \tr ~ ~O hr So I '\u Upl•r ner Yh-"'111 TRAINEE ! && l'han~···' 1n\ e'lor de
.. :.e1.1%n•r•a~~m11e~i~•ll!lm6711°•s•6i~·1X"'>~l-c--h-~-~_v_s ._:_o_~_a_sJI ~~::::i~1t:'.1~;:11: ::·/;'-;_;'.': ;1
1
1
t '·~ ~ :~ ~·~~·~t m ~~a::~:~~ s:.~vm~. d;;:r:r1
:11
1:s ,eek mg $12 00 /MO I' 6-9pm 't~J!~ }ou1h ~~~:~.~~'..i~£i~~;~~~t
Storeor0ffice.1350sq ft 1 Jp1111.1·, tr __ , t nl /.. 1 ltmt· hrt1• \pf• c;uod l) pin!{ \kills. 11dd 11 ronal 1n1·uml' I • rounsehng r1rm ha' 1 an unu.~ual oppt} for
Me11VtrdeArea JCOLlll::'l,Yi.~~~:; .• ~l·llt~s'11"1:;1 \n'"''''"1 :-...r•h I' I \:,11,11•;1~;" •%1111,,.bor superior phon1•kmar"r 1714 )!14869!1!1 TO START Qpt>n1ngs for l-5 ~har11 lr:1?ahll1penlr..Ponr\1~~11nf1l~aenll MS-4123 ' '' c ,, " ne" abll' to v.or I' 1 General Labor outgotnR maturl' peoph• • "
--$1500 li·IOtillt)J "t1t1" 111~1u11 r• t••n CASHIER r.1enth underllmt• pre I Goll storaoe I' T 10 mollvate .amb1twu' \tn1.l'S465880
CmMfY v-. SCRW ·ETS I .~ '.: ri''"n 111~".!1
'1; ::·; ' ~·"It' Ill 1-1.11111 !dlltl I s~urt· Altral'tl\l' :,ala~) pri\'ale Cou,;'try Club I l""'"•d ...... pn>-1 10 13 yr olds Call 2·5pm
Ortlce or retail shop l'lm"L I w .. ,lrnm,lfr.iro•,i ~11 ~ """ i·.~pr pr.·( ~.1st & henehb (or rig ti Call 644 ~ moti0tt1 trc. wftltia, 642·4321.ext 343 Ask for
FORECLOSURE
OFFICEI
~lruni: ha< kg round m
d\'fJult hhngs through
fort'dOsUrl'' 2 nl.'rded
Start1n1: !>alar1 lo
Coll: Corry
972.9955
IHSURA.HCE CLERK
Bec1u11ru1 rompan) not
.. 11 for 11' Ion)( term
l•mplri\tP\ 11nd no
td\l•ffs 'l't'k' tndl\ 1dual
"''h hunw nv.ner' flrt'
and cawall> tn~uranre
bark11r1ound Sail's
hnn:.t' a plu' bul not
rl'flUlrl'<I
Coll: Carry
972-9955
apactavailimmediately ANSWERS ,1,t 11111 ,111tr•r 1111 rr.:ht Vt''"'" Pll'a'I' call · corr~"° exp • .\ndrea Rt'~tJurant
450 sqrt.S47Smo \1 ttn11·11l \l.in.tl(i r 1wr ,.1 ..,,,11,. "\•·~ or 'l'l!l ,'660 askforKath~ MC willtram. 9'11'1111111!•1!1111 .. 111111-Th~Goodhrth
673§.S22 Somhrr l.111111" "'11111 t 1oupli .... i.1111,, .. , 1.1t1H,n111 GENH.Al.OfflCE I j]14164Mi l 5 1Photograper5 nePded Resfalrant I TAX A.CCOUNTA.MT co-1tcld Crimp llt•tf..r tit .iuliftrll\ 11•·1 "~;11no1I .11111 •·41 ,o; I ~.Cl E EXPANDING I' T artemoons. I 6 l'M. Part time or full llmt' & IGktty It('(' en l R JI ht.' tors
....... 4475 l'l llttos~· 01
' uni i ''"P 1 .!\hr• r' , ,1111 "l'I' fnr ~ t-d '1 f' f~p'd 1n must be able to l\pe & PlrasecaU631 :!254 tlJ' po"ltons a\Jllable llc.>)!ret' 111 artount1nl(
••••••••••••••••••••••• She ' ,, ....... , Ill.PIH 11 \ 11111~ 't.> 1~' ~pl p, ,,.,,1111 .... ·.m111·1I dt ,~Jlt bu~1nt'll' pro spell 9791711 M~ Phuto Jab nt't'd' dnvpr for exper bne r1><>ki; and I n1•r .. ~sdr~. plui. 'ome
ltOOO Sqrt commenral there"•'rPJ ""'"'1 ft1t ~·11'·1 ~1t1 ,.~~111~~~. Iii• m11•k•' 1"''"111 ccdurt'' or 11 dcs1rr IO JI O MEMAKER S & Looks. persun:il•I). prl'fer l1ll' trurk n·stJuranl m3tn lJ\ t?xpern.•nt•r rum
business or warehouse mart~{' '~' :'"11t•I 1""' . l<1·111 l1t 111 11 .. 1 .. 11 \11111) 1,·arn on a p t hasr!i COLLEGE STUDENTS rharm Good pay. no l'x hatrhbark Cahf Drr\l'r I trnann• Rent'f1t~ in pJn\ '" tnlt'rnJl1Cin.il
soi sq ft. 2 car space on I l HI i.>S~. I '·· '1' m h lc• i ·. v. •· "' 111 •n , ... ,,M, Konu'e' & tr a\ l'I for eam S6 pt!r hr h\ekeep pr r n er S rh oo I 1 n I! L1r +ample m~urante duded Appl) in J>('rsoo Jrul en• .... th potrnt 1al as
have util ~7184 443 lost & FotMd S300 1 J IU ''' pb ' \ '1 Tht Good Earll\ ni:hl people ang m I nine. CdM Ap J\ J1l,1ble Also \ ar1ow. lab dullt' 21U :-..e" purt tenter Dr enurmou~ Posll ton 1s
H1mllton JO C.M ••••••••••••••••••••••• '1a• r.rPi:c•r.' "' ~t 1' 1 Rtttaur-orrt Call91>2 3'.l1.! I prox 12 hrs per "k Gari 847 7678 898 04~7 ~ev.porl Beach c-.:rrllcnl for someone
Industrial Bldg for lease I l'lo1rentt.i l •"t.1 ' 1 & , .... ~ Friday Home Sl•rvtt:rs v.1th lt!lhl background
f ffj 10 ()0(1 tlJh'~111 Pr m·i•lt"1 '''' '1 -559·5022 ,incl" raret'r mmded 3000 sq. t. O ire. · H 11111 url V.kd' JI••·• 210 N .. w....... ntr Dr
sq. rt. warehouse al 28' FOUND 'OS ~ h1Mll l'.<n.1 ,•, 11 11\1'0 Ht'w.!: Beach STOP!! H-~ Rita Johftson s q r t c 0 s I 3 " ...... • !Jkl lltn(• to rl•la~ Jnd v.r·-.ltl...-I 972 9955 Mesa/Newport area ARE FREE •,\• ·:n·.~ t.,.:1ll .11lt'r ·' It It Ill.I .., .111111111\ ' Hl'~t 'ho~> JI hnm<'. 1r~ s1m lfts~ _.,-•
Avail . 2-1·82 Call I \I .111.1"1111 """' t.tlun•' IPI'' for pit> "'1th Datl\ 1'11111 Possess good typtng ( (."'---~-----) )
714/MS-8706 Call: I BAIYSITTER i t11·f ~ f1 ii." pt n1t1' <'lil~"ru•d Ads i\nd if ab1llly. skills in basic . •
Store tor rent tn the heart llou, .. qtlo'r 'o11111.t1111111 ~\II ·I univ \1:111\ llt'I \'uu ha\" somethmi: lo math Orfice m attrac·
of Corona del Mar on 642•5678 fur t:I ·" • l•I r-•1 I I ., :I:; 1':\I \11111 ~11 nnl) :.ell. 1·ull a 1 r11•ndl> ~~~-~o~;ft~j1 s~:l~~~ I
P1cHic Coast Hw y '-'lt.">f p,., C.ill ;:.:.t• t. I.th "1 .ir lu~tm l'la~\tftt•ll \d Vt,or at Contart 'tts Irene Rutz.
S79S/mo.Hersel 968-0733 IR E w \ H l>. • I."< t I 111tr.~ 112'• '' s \ tJ.12 f!li7K 640~89U'I -lhmnlJ) ;10 f t .1' \ ac IJJ ' .~ 11; b 11 -~ ~-~l Store, chot<'e loca lnmt furtl••rotl-. c'.tll k • .t .... 1111 ... 1111 .... 1 t111t t'l1rnrl ~t.b~~Ti;~a~I 760 ~s<it:or :l5.'1 11.:1:• timi· \Ion Fn rr11 11111111· ns..41as,67J..l40I. I "~l c.r ... 11 ll.11w l .. 1h l'u 11 \h· .11 ll o11o1 RECEPTIOMIST /
-ml\ 11111 k \:11 ''' 1 h.ip It. h\ Ill• r 11tt•l•'<I ll•r 1 CLERK 2400 sq.ft.. 5 offlres &. man in <1r.1111i1 lltl ;;•·'!. , ,. ,1: ,, 1,1 1t .1,,1• It l • r work space W. Costa • Meu nr Placentia & Lost It lfi 11111• 1'1•cl lfrh;1hlo•. 11. ; .. ~
l9lb. 'Ample pkg, $1560 Burm<'" m.rlt·' ti \11· H.in~11 ~·
mo Ownr/bkr 67~3568 22nd &. lmn• kn~ ,,,1 TS.LY ' ---642 IJO.I
.... triel R...tal 4500 Lost 11 19 Iha nnu tlhr
••••••••••••••••• ••• • •• Sh1•p l' ~n1e1 111 l'llh t \1 2295 L11un.a Canyon Hd Rev.ml' &-12 17\tl
\ •It· I l lkr n••Nlc-11 :O.t;v.
fn1!1•Jll'n•lt·11l fl,1nk r111·d 1 cxp1 ru•nr •'fl "\iolt t .. Lt 1
f 111 v1111 'n11 •\ w11rkmi: I
~ •!h ''""Jlh• 111 pll'a,ant I urn undtnl'\ l'hf'n you
WANTED
C r---cc=::,,....:))--) >
CLERK
Re,pons1hle pos1l1on for
mature minded pervll'I
Need A1.·rounts P.na
hlf' Al'l'OUOlll Rt•t•et\'a
hit• and t•ompul<'r tial'k
)!round plu' a reJ'IOOil
hit> an ur.ite I\ PlllR
'Pl'l'd <:ood ernv.tf\
P•>lenl1al plu' j.!•11ld
bt>neCits
l ita JohftsOft
972-9955
SALES PERSOM lll·A. S3SO sq rt un B.ickl(rowul rn ( I\ "\.i
ltonal S\''""'' •h' 111•.I I
'ilnl h;•n1·f1t S.il.cr 1
11''"'1 '" "'I' ..... 11111 t • .-1111rr1 tc•v. tf 1 1 '>l't •I
111.i> tH' tht• 1•1lt' for u:.'
\\ r .1r,• .1 rnaJnr Sil\ tnl(s
&. 111,111 \l't'ktnj.' J H'l'efr
ltt1111'l frir ''"r l1111nl
Sl'r\ II t• 1fo•pt ;tr l rllt•fll tn divided area, except 2 f o u n d 11 r ,, u I 1 t 11 I
restrooms & office. 18' Parakt•1·t hoHr ~hor:;'
ceiUn&•, puking for 30 Call le• tclt•11t1t) i,1~ ~
tfn, additional 7500 ~q rot " 11 t .it Ill .1 It·
ft concrtle block bldg S1amr~r. II R .1rN
1dj1cent w/30 parking Plea~c 1dent1t,> 114& 4513 M
apa cu 18 ' overhud I •1 p•1 ..._ (';ill 1'f71i.'i11. I
Pl•h rson. Ofl('t11t1011'
.'it'" p11rt 11('.H'h l'an
1hrla1,., rn~ t hr .ibte to
11 I'• 111WP'\t .-ind po<;~e'~ 1
~11111! 1·11mmun1cat1on l 'kill~ (;enernl ofrire ex
1•• 111•ncr rr<1u1red We
ttttrooms 1v1il. soon doora . 2 office "' al y I DI ··
Ownr/Alt. WUI considf'r .
around T~ • aalt of :
tlle lmprovments for
yoor depreciation ad
vanl1ae. Only vatancy ~'.\Ill r n~"~~~l~~1j~i~~11~~~1~~t~·1•n11 111
·. prm ulf' l'XCf'lleot rom I
11.tn) paid benrftlttl
• I wh1rh 1n1 lude dent11t
Jllll upt11·.11 rh~:i'e call
l'rr onnl'I fl1S 4l311 fnr
nn llJl[ICllOlMt'OI -sr~Wims
NEEDED
Newspaper
Carriers tor routes
in Huntington Beach,
Fountain Valley & Newport Beach
Mus t ha\e pn•\'iuu' 1•x •
ptr1en('e tn dt•nlal flt'ki
dnd v.ork~d in " IJh ~· underste1 nd a ll!lys anti
non prec111us mdals -
1\jll!rtsi.1\ t' uul look
ntressary tn 11bta1n th•~
litable pos1ti•1n with
jlrow1njl l'om11any1 rompuny l'Ur. SI 1110
h11~c plu' l'nmm"'"'"
Jnd ttt:noltl'
In l5 yn tteasonablt
bue rent + ((111 of tiv Inc lndea. Additlonat ln '
form1Uon, Good Real
lltatc, UM E. Mi11lon.
rallltrook. -4-121
h11nrth· k I'\ ,f l'C'OUMl1 lttr 111.IOl!I' c 'r1.1•I
0.111\ l'tlll l '.ti.HI ("Ommt '"0 JI fl ('~I f'llt•nl ht•nC'f1I' (;1'11l'lh OJ>i•>t1Untt11·~
for 1•1'r'lon 111!h t•urttr amh1lt•tM ~rncl
rom11IC'11· rt,unw to \t,1r11 hnclt>I l'<l Bo~ I ~r.11 t nsl;.i \I t:'o1 < ,\ • r<'t.:.'11 No pt11111t
tall't Jdt'll"" i\n t;qu.it Upput
tun1ty r:m11ln~1·r
HOME FEDERAL
SAVING S &
LOAM
t-:qual Opponun.it)'
E'"1>loYtr
Earn $30-$60 per week.
Trips & Prizes. Ctl '*· a.e. at SJt..0601.
•
•
Good EamilKJS
Super Trips
• Grea P.rizes __
CALL
CIRCULATION
DEPARTMENT
Baily Pilat
642-4321 •
.... Jol.10. tn.ttss
t •
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Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 23, 1981 •• 12
~W.... JIM W.W JIHMtrc.._.. Dw I041 .. a1Me ltl0Mlae1l .. 1• IOIOMllkll l1•r• 9010 ,.-cwdft/ MfotW-'M •tst4 •• • •••••••••••••••••••• ••••ff••••••••••U• ;.-.r................... ....................... ....................... ..... •••• IOIJ ....................... k..t.r. '110 ..................... v •!ll••••llli••• .. l!ll!lll•lill•lllililillililil ••••••••••••••••••••••• D d I d Ott white velvet 1ofa LOSll'IC: Ll!:ASE. qllil· u•••••to•••••••••••••• u e urt bit ona ••••••••••••••••••••••• WI HllD YOUI ., Rellittflll AIM•u 1 1001 KEESHOND P\lpe AKC $100 2 nd lbla tr tlna business, tdllna out Very rere Marlin '• tloftJ Bo1t1, planes, car C REATCH GOOD USID CA•• IUSnPIUCAM HICIOIYWMS "••••••••• .. •••••••••• Champalrt. Mii" Pett tbl ·i100~ lampe.~n= ALL 1uppllet and Ox Oulter Mod 5Jlw/eut Pl 11 " 930;:9M2_ Grt1tCbl\ttmuBuy Anytb1.nerno.11drr,.d0
ll SO tif a I 11 St at Oppt1 Hll 1ciurmet Hard Rotk Maple Bed. • 1 h 0 w · pvt Pt Y re ram I c SI o ea .. ture1 mcludl.na: PU Gibson Arouttir Uted wlnd.turler, rustom '78 Suzlkl J70 Rid xlnt 1mthru 19t!O
'-"A1U11ar,lrv1M.Now food•. &lrt1 ror POller.OvtrlOOynold 2134t1tM5aM m redwoodplcntc tbl.$40. Display cues. waltln& nylon1ttan1*"° aller lltru. n so. Mark rood.oeverractd ~ I
• •r~ptlns appticatlona, holldaya Flu. hra. CallAlterf SHIH TZU PUPI. AKC. CallU3· _ room chalra, Beauty lpm or tittw. 6 6 642 1'00 day , Ha-3046 fv•nll'lt.7»5191 ~
allpoelllom. Fuhloo l1land f40.f030. ~ --S250andup Cubonly Bunk beds ' drener. Salon halrdryera and t V ' h'tt Y1m1h1Vlra1011 Llh , 1.. ..1
COOKS WntcUtrPlau&U_.,2 TJhf:.~~~~~.~.nll w_• Wood. l yr oM, lnclds bydraulk rhalrt, mlr· ~XR.~HASESHJITER 17 ' canoe, Nona newwithloweasymlle1, ft
KITCHEN HELP "·In MO-Dot...;....._, mattreHes Paid I.SOC>. ror1, 1belve11nd pl1nt1 100 dual controla. tlbualui, &ood rond R!uuxtru. ~
BARTENDERS .-. AKC ood •a •,.... Sell for Im Cbildl wht Alto, make-up, ahampoo Newly rebuilt. US. S300 Ken '79 HONDACv""" "K COCKTAJL IMSULATIOM lobe Weriiltke antq oak •I -m~nnent d and hair producu Barrus-Bffry Pre-amp · IW4N, • m1 • •I hi Or_,, c:.-y
WAITRESSES ! x Per lenced u If Salk, dp/tall. '700/0BO s beautirlll females. au' reaser w /hanaln& Ca11Ul•9754or ~. mi)]~l· ' 644-8494 M IOY extru' Day6 2925 Harbclr Bh'! 'f3J> ::~~~ motivated peopte earn :n:q ~•kcc!J~w~d1, red Fro~~ clos~~K A=E af r Vlollo and Viol• xlnt llMh.1_.M .... _,· to•o 159·6!MS Eves&7J.7ll07 <:OSTA MFSA
.21' per IQ rt. Oet pald ' · 0 a ·..., • · EnaUa.11, xlnt tond. Canadian Red Squirrel cond. '350 each or beat -.-.••-• 979·2500 SEAFOOD BAR within 5 workina d~a of 545·9226. . #1 Champ bred Gt, Dane ~ m .""B7 Fur Stole, Ukt new. $450. ~ .71119 •••••••••••··~··•••••••Motor H ...... ~/ HOST/HOSTESSES tumlnt In &llJ'ed LCF Grandmas German pups, AKC re& .• after 6 ~ ...... v, 2700,,.7 · 2 HP Evlnrude. lo lop •..t/S.... f 160
D DISHWASHERS tQntract.Worltanyirei Slar k Forest cuckoo ..£M._~OllQL ' WATERBED . "l · S .... WllY...... Shape!S17S.Al.110 Mou11l, ..................... ..
ay t nlCflhhlJta avall. Ca II . Steve < 714 ) clork. $400/bsl. Cash • Newfoundl and Pup Kina 1b:e, rompletewltb ~auti!ul N~ Wht ~· 4 yn old. Like neW"cond $20. 675·3563 wknd's & RENT. 22' dehu mtr hm.
ApflY in /:"on Mon· llM 5'8·S210 AKC. Shuts. wormed a II 1tceuorlea and ng vown. ever n be1u tone. $4,400 ru•. sips 6 self ront $295. wk
Fr " 9 AM. PM. SALES Early l900's Ir~ wood tool Champ llnea. $400 lo booluhelf headboard. wom. Slse~l~J100· ... lotlta, Po...-9040 ~!!< mJJ>1>. 640.8.'i8S
L.T. Industries is ex ch est w/or1& tools. -~·PymtaOK.1162·7335 ~ew condition. 1200. RCIF mib'T 1 Cl b Offlctf•L.ct& ....................... 25 motorhome,fullyself
RESTAURANT
YOUUtlYEI
IE Fii flOM
HM.
CARL'S JI.'-la.
•dlett, fULL or
PA•T TIMI , ................
clo .. Mwtt. ,-. ........ tor:
COUMTH
PERSOMHa
ASSIST AMT
MAtQGHI
pandln1 their industrial ~ash M8<S21Q_ Doble Pupe. AKC s wh. l 751 18 I Memb~b ~t>!t otr ·~··•••Ill IOI P.,.._.W91hdl r on ta l n e d S S~ o o
u lea force. We offer ..,,..llCtt IOI Tails cropp11d Line NEVER USED: Sofa bed Oya 54f 'tsol eve~ •••••••••••••••••••••• 2A tt ~ar1y SD Im· ~_._3077,s.5'7"'6.!9
1u1ranleed1alary+ex· •••••••••••••••••••••••'Bred . S200 uoo . ~llO.k Qn.:g0rm J $4tO, M9 • S:.V: l"'ss11ir«' copier m1culate. Loaded. S130TroHtn,T~tf 9170 ~tll. romm.wion, group HARBORAREA l·S2H~---· un 1 • . · a • . . I · . ... nr. mo lnduding NB slip+ •••••••••••••••••••••••
lllSurance, short boun APPLIANCESERVICE Irish Setler Puppies. trets/boupnngs · Twn G~~:5°~~.~ 112--egu1tydepo1itSS7·9.12'1 Hard top tent 1r111ler,
8AM·12PM, l2PM-6PM, We buy used appliances AKC re&. Show & Pet ~R~\1, ~~" Sl30. Sura Caroua~· slide Clottnl ollice, metal & • OWENS. Tri-cabin In sleeps 8, eood cond1t1on
room for 1dvancement. -Wesellrecond.,gu1r. Quallly Sl2S·S3SO .. proj $.SO Maple b\IM wood duh. r halrs, live.aboard slip. Npl 9978679 Call 1·2141 appliances. ~3077 581 8722 Fim~us Eames Le1ther bed frames $75. m -6120' pertJtlona, fUtw. IMkus. Karb0r642~ 12· tamper trailer w --Ch11rs, lie New. Must · • · . misc. 631-2570 ask for•-"'~"-=-~---= S../•4 11•111 llUY Af'ft.IAMCES 17 mo. 8m1wht mixed Sell 714-833-8280 ev_ Bob PW• IOATSUP stove. sank Sips" S7~
Nulr1tJon Co.kioltingfor Les 957·8133 Chahuahua31bs female w 1 D . 61 cement blocb. wood l2-R . -u d k t 19999 6.'JlOt 29 eves sucrus oriented in· --No small ChlJdrtn free 1 nut IJ\lll& room ttt, sbelvina. (ll)7'x l \I)' ereplloo Booths 7oxB4, n er mar e · · T lltn 1wa.. 9110 dividuils who desire an WHher SM. Clean works lo IO\'ln home 11~,_.168 6 1 phol chairs. S7SO. bo rds SlOO 11 642-S670 so II d u a k. cont em. Trlr, all xtras inti sh1p ro , ... _., bo · eood. gas dryer, clean ~-"--Sm1ll Credenza Stereo. 1 · -a --par1ry. rust om built. to shore Call Mack ••••••••••••••••••••••• a, ve average tnrome works goodS7S 5'8-Ml3, CUODLYCOC:KERS UOO 0 80 . 846-6437 Lazy.Boy cba1r, S80 xlntcond &l-664.S 962·1788. Xlnt cond S'X8' truck
or thetr efforts. C1ll for S48-448S Will hold for Christmas Wkd 493-1739 E Amish Rorke r SSS --bed lrlr Nt'w tires. S33S appt. No phone 111· KC · · ys. ves. · IBM Exer eler P e n n Y a n ~-B6l8
terviews Mr Davis 17141 Sears 18 ru ft ref rag . ~hn•~S ~~=de' LlY rm set. 2solas. tables !;:~~and & belt, typewriter, new platen Sport/1sherman -S •--P---L. 194-1'198 I rreezer. froHless. '--"LA~· -&cbook sbelvesS.'IOOCall ~. (roller) serviced $195 26'210HPDsl '81Demo A.to '"-· _...
lea lcemaker, brown, $350. 3Goldn Retpups AKC. Ans wer ad• 562 , Color TV. $200 645-4631, · ManyFartOpt +more &Acceuortff 9400
MAUCiHTY LADY 631·3098 champ Une Show dogs. 642·4300 z. hrs Typewriter. lW <elect) Slop driving thro.;gb traf 24' 270HP ·rze· Beam • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Ladies berome a Lady Kenmore washer& l?OC>eaS45-7264 Q~ Din rm set Dys, US·6S2L Eves, lit Send a romplele 1 2Stall44galfuel•--------1
Naughty Lady 51 les &as dryer, harvest gold, mt to Yo. I045 tarved · ta bl~ 44x82, 2 549-l68S page racsunlle in 4 min 23' 2SSHP '80 rutl eq't A TT9fTION
988·0178. M2·S670 Spranger Spaniel, M, 7 chairs. SSOO. Drexel ble SSOBest<>rfer Europe by Xerox. $800 21 FtStarftn 2TONNEAUCOVF.RS
rep! Ca ll Alison . perfect , S42S both .1 •··~··••••••••••n••••• Ives, 6 velvet uph Llkenew.PinaPongTa to LA , New York . 4Fsn 213-592·~~ MG'S
Relr1gera1-0r. frostfree. yr~ old , rriendly. good w Herltaee bookcase. $200. ___!18SS4 inti supplies Telecopier Loaded VHF-C.B .. TV, Fits MG 'b, '71 lhru '81
be ..... ..._..., .cl Salesperson, ladies high iremaker. Sl7S. Good • ch_!ldren_._pl.q7 RCA stereo, mahog. APARTMENTSALE J.portl_494·671!§ outriggers. live bait, Neveru.wd,S7Sea ...... won co.cl-f1Shion st.ore. Npl. Bch cond.644-4170 __ 2 Cute male kltlens, 31, cab,__JlQ9.494-230S _ Very nice redwd tbl/4 Surplus School doublt trim tabs Sl~s 3, trlr. Maria631·T197 lvemsg Mo.t. ,.._....,., i. area. Salary + good Fr idge . 14 c u rt . mos, housebroken Call Antique Walnut Din. tbl. chrs. Couch. earthtones, dralling desks w 1 RehltJSOOMC ~ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!l!!m-I
benefits Full & p/time. Frostfree, $200 F'reezer. 7S9·l643 &c 6 chairs A steal at kog sz comp waterbed drawers MUST SEU! 111111--------1
ptnOlt! C1l1 644·7l00. ---upright 16 cu rt. S200 Male Whippet-:1lmo ~ '6311716 C~mp1ng equ1,pment. 700.3217 559-8231_ ---
flll ________ M2·5790 _ ~3931 7' Couch, modern with m'!lc· Ca.II anytime but Pth 1017 28' Tro)an. immaculate, LITE IODY WOik
up to 50'1 otr your body
shop estimate' 536·9832 1...--Friday
2 • S'tMet:
CARL'S Jr.
I IOU C.tr Dr.
Int.
SALES Fridge.$125. 957-0636 woodonarms.olivecol· Fri /Satnighl.~Z326 ....................... w slip, Nwpt Bch , RECRUITERS RunsGood' Fwttl"'" or, xlnt rood SISO. call l98lSp1cetnvlldergame CITRONCOCKATOO $12 ,000 rirm PP.
Exerullve search firm * •751-8260• • ••••••••••••••••••~~.~~ ~1-3288 marhane. Colli operated Barella type, cage S62S ~-~~el F'or Sall' 280'.l boot. S3S s .... "s bn'n·'-t "o.-ress1va E r • p s I D~• Sell Cock11il table stylt' 6452963 M F' ...,, ""'" &>• ._.,.,. " nergy er lt'lent 17 CF Quun Arant' rurn . lg vt I e ncunng . SLSOO Oa 12131 642·1143 -loat1 RHlf/ A M rar :1lere<i .,.,, recrwters who can think Frosl Free Sears refr1g desk & chiur, l'Orree ta ing almost romplele ex l 2101 ev 1714 1 Blue Fronted Am non Ch~er 905 642 0787 aft 6 wkdy~
and grow rich Call 8moold$400 ble&lowboyS400 ea quality hst'hld 960-S028 · Parrotwcage.beaut & •••••••••••••••••••••••400 CllE\'Y IH.Orl\
' v -WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FOR USED CARS
AUHMAGMOH
POMTIAC/SUURU 2480 Harbor Jlhd
ro~'TA \1t.;..,A
549-4300 549-1 4$-7
PORSCHES
WA.MTED
Allow u~ Ull' owonnmtv
to 1·on\1de1 th•· pur1-h.nf'
or tradt' m of \11ur '11 .. •n
Porsche t 'ht'•~ 1111th I '
Toda}'
I iClll ll4tf· 'lli1IJ
>1•11f"" (tru .. t ·-•• »tl
WE BUY
CLEAHCARS
AMO TRUCKS
CC*MB.L
CHEVROLET
""' Harbor 81 vd ('(~ff A M t~'iA
54~1200
Equal ()ppty
EmployerMt P
~67!1!!311·2902•••••1!!!!!!• ----=s.&S-,,_,,,_1037 !162-3597 eves furnmshing.s tame Onl,Y J400 642·6512 ~GINE SIOO r --• •96J.5o226• • Gorgeous wht wedding p I b d *s11t•u~--s DHbt.O.t11StoYe Elegant ~·an rurree ta C b 1 .. --190 gown si lO SIOO Matrh r young ove ir 5 w I HOUDAYPAmES I 6468184 HIGHIUYER liA~•~ * I~ 848--0&48 blesetw wallumts.xlnl ~d · 1"e net veil sso Encycl S2S new blk wrought iron WHY NOT TAKE A 4 Ind} Mags v.1th n«"v. Top doll.in. for o;_po R r --r cond f7S0966S2to room set, piece.I M2809lJ.9PM <;.~e_,$95673l«IO BAY CRlilSE Call E60xt s Good~ear l can llul'' .... np• Bnd1I shop alterallons e ngerator. 14 ru t -.. · j l_l75 d rond 536-4114 -· ----Manx k1ttem. 3M . I f . I Yachting Consultants
1
Poly glass llres S300 for 911 s \udi ,
depl -<:ostaMesa ~~S:lnt cond Sl2S **I BUY** Bassett canopy c~ SEASONEOFlREWO?D beige, 3 gr}. S20 l'll 1714 16752960N B Set 6450'192.i645-0721 Ask for l t \It.I{
RETAIL 546-1821 __ 556-93331--· --Good used F'um1ture &c yellow g111gbam ranopy ~~~~livered Call 1!45 7_964 I Small blork Che\') carb & DRESS IM G Se1SonalHelp Rerngerator. rrost rree. Appliances -OR J w111 1 rover. sheets, dust rul-,---·-Pl &n.-. 10901oats,S...u 9060 intake from ·75 VJOIMLKMASWR!HG~ ...
ROOM '-IFT...,_"'_.,S \ ery clean SI SS 11 SELLr y ne comforter pads Pd New push button am 901 --~· -, • r 1 , .. ICl"'I
SECURITY Starling 11130 D1ys, __:-_ -MASTHSAUCTION ' S600.7se8 eoew 4r!..14~.,o4r uv Grand Piano 1911 u...L.t-16 set·uprorv.hole system ' Ill \T1";1·0\ llJ. \•I .. nlUU'"l"ll:lll 893 9060 se or or OU . II 0)0 'wk . d" f L trurk S2S , .............................................. Corvelle K&N air 1 l~r 111711 rlt'.nli Hl\d
evenings & weekends Stove. Garrers & Sattler, 64#>.HH lll-9625 5461 7 -1 -~-"'---~ ~ Read} 10 boll 011 S225 Personnel needed to Apply 10 person Crown works fine, good cond ~ , -New Hotpoant Electric Ten Cent Slot Machine II 552 52B7 I c1·rollror~~~~~17 .. 5023comp mr 951 8838 befon· IO JOam 842·2000
monitor dressine room Hardware. 1024 Irv me lSO. S48-Ml3 548·4485 CUSTOM DESIGNER Stove. drop in . selr loses Money!" Perfect __r-vv"" or after 9 ~m I WE HEE:O
du r l n g Christmas .... "'-='"-="""------1 Bltn dbl gas oven, looks Sola loveseat. or111 rleanmg oven, S2SO 3 pr . for game room enter y:":.~~~h1;:,lllh~~~:~d Used wmdsurfe;, rw.tom Munc £' 4 spd rl'bll sm YOUR EXOTIC
season.TemlJ:aryposl· c/Recept.AtrportLaw likenew Rotisseneanrl. ll400,sac@iSO!l66·:'>2IO sectional,$100 Chestof tammeot! SLSOO 080. xtras , $750 Murk T 1d tr.an~ l1nk.1.:e.I ~~0;!~~:?'~~ ease apply Firm Good skills. selr· 150. 673-3961 _ I IUY FUINITURE drawers. SlOO Tables. 640·6142 Alt6PM . sarririce 167554811242 642 HOO day, 966 3046 reblt, J200 673 3lf73
1
& IRITISH CARS
st.arter. Non .smoker licyct.s 1020! Les 957-8133 Cof,ret , end & oc WEDDIHGDRESS Mason Hamhn Ht eves
OSHMAH'S JoseMJ.11025 __ •••••••••••••••••••••••Smoked glass din sel, rMausc•oHnMa10. RSEI~, 71~ S1626
2S. Want lo look beautiful on •7s.757o Dufour sail board. line AMtos for Sak ~EWPOITT
.--------•MolobecaneGrandTour SlSOContempsorabed. - -'----·-your wedding day~ OldUpnghtPlano hohdaygtlt'l2'6"1ong,••••••••••••••••••••••• MPORTS S P 0 RT I HG •SfCUTAl.IES•
1
ing 12 speed. blk 1red. 1 l!fil1SedJ400. 966 S210 _ Din rm lble. 4 highbark Have rormal rh1rron ... ~.,, 68 sq rt of sail. Ney, IM PORT ANT I GOODS Type6S.lrainword yr old. S290 or B10 KING INNERSPRING wicker chairs, S17S An· wedding dress. pnnress ...,........., Weekdals58SI 6833eves NOTlet:TO 1 ,...
South Coast Plaza processor. Laguna 540·9128 --EXTRA FIRM mattress tique dresser w/m1rrur, rut, pearl inlaid bodice, Piano antiqll\' upright, weeken 644-~l!I ~~e~~~s~:~ 3100" « 'oa~• llY<•
3333 Bnst.ol Beath Fun l\rt1St1r Man's 10 spd Excellt'nl set, never used, worth SIOO Antique C.oal Bin, & lace sleeves. s1u 9 S2SO Circa 1800. xlnt cond 27' Catalina_ '76 Xlnt I !'-P~fllln 144·,11 I
People $14,400. ' cond. $75 SS30 , sarr S248 del c~s!.__l).SO~-!OSi& (veil included I Pleaff Mahoaany. 1von kt)l>. cond Loaded Pvt pl) The pm·e or •ll'nl~ ·1 t.4? '4•(• 7141Jo?5~f Mg~ M / F L11 Remders Agy, Inc I 675-6056 alters Never uSf'd queen sz, Comer Group-walnut tbl, call e~en~.§73 7683 comp I restored & rerrn • • 7~·1919.. advertised hy 1 t•hH·I~ N~s!~~~E~r~e ss~~;.~~--~~s s-r .. ~t'J~~ ~~~l~el~~u~~:htio°~~ !fil~!~Jlor:.~~~ Vall~~lc:~c:;~pool ;::~:9ocMilel 1°'2 ~r~11:r1}'M~l~~rh::k~ ~~f~~~:~dEJelr~·I~: ~at~~~.~.P.! Ir
IUSTY Pl:UCAH wheels $60. La Chick 754·7 ___ Rtthoer 1311 Roclun& chr Needs recovering D>O ••••••••••••••••••••••• orrer 631--4729_ I dude any applicable I V o I 1 0.;, < a I I 1' New~ Bud!, now hlr· ,_ ________ , new tires 6 cbain. llS$ IO tofu. New .•• Lov· US. Duk-inaple $7S. .._.114 R~moldi Over Locll 9l50Cl lcHlh, SI,./ taxes hcmse. tra0$fer TODA y ln~(es~ Bar, bussera SICllfMY Mt-73S1 eaeau '81. SIHpera, L!mpe1Uq.M$:1521 HOSP. Bl'd ell'c. whl Sanaer SU 2'2 t500 Juk.. Dodlt •0701 rees rmanc~ tharges ~OD·iF~~~ A~'to~:i Excellent opportunily New SR Bicycle. 21 ",WI$ 99 P'ACTORYIST·SfOI Ide • ~ Beige Obi rhalr, walker All ror ctralfl h~~edl~I $3~0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rtt!. 'ror .11riiollut1on <'On.
H ror high powered 10 uso. must sell. S22SSofa 6' Rust.. 8'!1g;f; BedGdCond.Sl25obo S600 otrer near nev. 0':i5'~33 ~J'sr~nt Wantrd Slip ror 34 troldl'\ll<'rert1rU'at1nn' TOl'OTAYOLVO
wy. d1v1dual With top typing OBO Top earner for 2 Gold Oes1p Good Cond • •61~~ • !·_5 _ ~·3590 con l troller Bnstol C.ond Pvt or dealer document Jr) 1, .. H.-1,.4 Sales & shorthand skills Must bikes . 67~5227__ Cash OnJ 760 387_1_ HorM. 1060 s H P Ro lo t 1 I I er SkJflHJ 109) Home Pref W1lhng to preparation chJrl:l'~ un c.,1 • .,..,.
I Professional Sales be aggressive. selr· 10 spd Sears best bike BEAUTIFUL Dnftwood w serv1re con1r11cl ••••••••••••••••••••••• pay Lop S for Prime lor les!. otherwu.l' '>Pt'tirlt'd ""'•o •lOJe• H o u u
Ground level oppty starter & able to a.ssume Nt'wly tuned Xlnl cond Corklail Table Free ••••••••••••••••••••••• poo. X~t cond 642 584!1 IKne!ssel Short M al(1r I Brian4..9§3-4287L 731 5231 b} the ad\ert1~rr ~~~cs:ies~~:: ~~ respons1b1l1ty f75obo.84&-7QM rorm approx 315· w1th j HO•SESfwUASI Carpet. 140 yd:i. Light !~~t~haGt'zt' b~~d~f4s. PnmeNewportSlip.SS'>. GeHral '510 Top Dollar
to $46Kift.oyouquallry Congenial Newp~rt Stbwino gnls cruiser, heavy glass contoured TwoReg Green Good Cond S2 IP' J:ICl 1 17 Pri\ale Party !••••••••••••••••••••••• Paid
Send Resume lo Mr Buch comm ercial S70 Xlntcond tall lop C~l new ~pprox Thoroughbr~ yd Ston, lfffwwt, ~ mo 67S_fJT7~ I FLHTMASTBS
French 43 Grant. Irvine brokerage om re ~· 7903, ask 'ror Bia kl' S47S. will ucnf1re for !168-8310/M2-0565 eves 543-41119 a. 1095 Side tie to 18' SlJS <.:ONSL'M EH f'or \ "ur < ,,r
Ca. 92714 Contart Peggy Boy's Triumph30" IG-spd for SJS01orr See to ap Elec hospital bed SIOO. •••••··~··•••••••••••••1 673-114hns. Ht \'INC & Lfo:ASI~<: JOHNSON & SOH
Sales 833-2900 $50. 20 .. folding bike· prec1ate Perr cond IH et.oldGoodsl06S whHI rha1r SlOO LOSING LEASE, quit --I SE'R\'ICF line~":]
uni.qua ma"-by Toyota J!!i0·1963 ~• Cabover camper $400 ling business. selhng out 35' Sip Hot Id •11 mak' , & • d"I ~·~~~cr:;~e~tl~;n~~~ 1'!!!1!!!1•••••11!!!!!!!!!!11 " uc Bdrm Set 1100 Twtn bed TA°PP~;t;;1~~:;;;;;~1jj 847-6177 eve Al.L supphe~ 11nd fix · $10Per11-ffe3·4007 I Lease an:5
1981 0~0 .J ~~I l'o,~:2~;~1:;oor H~O 5(.}!f
qu1lified Sales people SECRET AllES ~: ~-6~k ---peed bolt, 3 dr1twer w11ll unit. under wam1nty Xlnl Electnr car un lures mcludang . !loot• Spted &: ~ Apr Cr szoo dn IH'l~ I 0\1
Please Apply an person Work temporary )Obs xr s I~ se:i ~ s . boxsprmg, blk silver cond J2SO 847-4331 4 post Display rases. w111llng ' Slii' 901 mlo any make . l'remium ~lrlf't•• th close tohome otcon494-4.269 box OKH206444015 548-5744 room chairs. Beauty '•••••••••••••••••••••• CA LL !'IOW• 1 pJ1dfnr.1mu~ .. 11t11
1801, SouGJJ:"· In the VICKI HESTON .-: 2yr old Loveseal Makes Jewelry 1070 p I l bl 4 8 S3SO Salon hairdryers and Unique I man Hydro 675 9JSJNB 83S 6636S1\ 'fon•1;!n oril11n11·>-t11 t
540-0522 s.G-0400 Perfect cond Sacnr1rc, S48 0 48 0 v er 2 O O 11 at u r a I Seagull Ill hang glider rors. shelves and plants P ice 0 Surplu~ Jeep,, l .ir~ & Set> l ' Fir'« Antique · &c ASSOCIATES Ladles 24 10 speed mto Bed SISO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 00 a e. x · hydraulic chairs, m1r lane boat Pr d 1 I . 111 i:ood n"1tl1t1u11 •
Sales -hke new.._ (75, !16.1·9934 1 EM ERA LOS, wt'11(hmi: ~aut""-'400 6]3·3873 Also, make up. shampoo sell. must sell 833 9891. Trul•ks ,\\ail Man~ wll ~lll••••••11io.
Ollhidt Sdts SfCllTAIYll New-Schwinn 10-spdl Dlsplay Ca btnet total or 100 Cts AP· 2NaugloungeCha1rsSJS andha1rproducts 7S90810 under S 2~o Ca l l
Positiooopenffllingre-Secrelarial pos1t1on tn Varsity his & hers. Sl2S pra1sedatSl8.000 MUST & S70 Electr1t' V1bra Call6319754or loah,Storoge 90901 3127421143 f.xl47~for l~~ij(lljfr'jliifll
ader ad advertising to ac1t1ve Ne~ Center SlOO ea or best pp SS252B7 SELL Bes I orrcr' Bell ps 64().~ .rtuS.89116809 ••••••••••••••••••••••• , :nfonnhov.topurrhase I
localmerchantsanapro Realtor's rice Front 54S--9Z26 Art Deco 3Jr Bdrm 640-8688_ _ __ Girls sm rloth1nJ:, Restaurant table!> I Surplus Jt"rps rars &I
terted territory Ex :~~i' t~~':'ne~~:~ -MEN'StOSPD Purn _Match set Luv DIAMONDS arllf1e1al Xmas tree. ,j45ea. 646-1114 ORY STORAGE Trucks a1a1I ~1an> ~ell
cellent commission & l Y P • n g . S H & a P Roy re Uruon xlnt rond I ely orig cond Sl.2110 at 70'"f or appraisal chest or drawers. maR under S200 Call •312, I bonus programs, good tUI • 673.8890 6315794 Private art .7s16218 rark.B42-8MO TY,ledio, Monthly boat & RV 7421143ext 4726rorrnfo co. benefits Apply at pearanrl' Real l'Slate ..=-------,DmetteSet Wrought aron ------HIR,Shno IOf11 storage(Gf'lftys11e.241 onhowtopurrha1e
The Pennysa\'er, 1660 expenenre helprul but Bike Sale" From Sl2S to base extenslOl"I 4 rhrs Cllri1t.o1 Gffh & EST A TE SALE ••••••••••••••••••••••• hr s er u rt t y. r re t' • ...._ /
Placentia,C.M. not essential Prder S3SO CrulSl'rs, Classics. ~ ·5402921 Senlcet 1079 673-22& ATARI 800COMPUTER 1 1aunrb1ng & washing ' ..... !.~"~ ~~~~~~~---• local resident For 111-prts. frms. 10 spds 707 '-"'--' ••••••••••••••••••••••• . . . . 16K DISk drwe. rolor privileges Newport! Clou1cs 9520 Sain ronsuJtants needed lerview call Mrs Duhl St Jam es Rd NB Queen water bed for sale I 1 ton uhhly lraJler 4 xS mon1lor. aJI a<.'ress S800 Dunes 1131 Bark Ba\ •••••••••••••••••••••••
for health & nutr1hon WesJeyM.TwiorCo. 645~ _ _ ""12dra,.ers.bookcase l1~e new S2SO Eve 6'5·9324 Dr Newport Beach rlETTIEST
products. lull ' p /T __ R~altors~-4910 -lhikMHJ Materids 102 675 5640 $600 80 :-;, , I ~ 2530~an966-6.?37_ 8'!1ullrut 25· Zenith Cir 644-0SIO '57 T-llRO rc:il~oo"!e~a~e 1f:i~ SEC'Y{OFACEMGR. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Qrueen size box s~r1ng "'i'J GAenuh1ne Bru1llan TV. Sl48 2 yr wmly • IHTOWH!
G lJHE ... OW 36•/FT oam mattress •• ear f ' mel ysts over 1 tarai Free del TV John 's IESTOFElt• only.S4HJ61 SAi MA A " a, nev. llOO 6756056art5 ea Only r> per stone guaranteed color sets Tr•spotfafioll U •.
SALIS CLB.K-leta61 Top skills. organ.1ia Redwood 2x6 eck1ng. Corner br set antq wht 640-11688 rrom J.!.00 646-1786 •••••••••••••••••••••••: I~ KZI N St . h lional ability & sa1hnlo( 4-20' long! also redwood bk h ir d k d · --.... _.._..: __ .. •tL--~ ewport aUooers as knowledge a must rencing. Deck&rent111g ls et ·d es175. ,,.;1es3098ser. Mkcel••-Tosh1b1amHm stereo.3S -YVn-~ 914 a f /time Tuesday 645·7104. installation available ni es an"-"" 1011 wall/channel, and rass •••••••••••••••••••••••
THEODORE
ROBINS
WEIUY
l'SEU <'\I<.""' llH•t'li
t'O\U: I\ t11i
l \I.I r uR
FREE APnAISAl
rorn11t'r llt>l •1111
CHEYROC.ET
18211 Rt:,\t II Fil \fl
Ill 'llTl"\(;·10\ nnn·
847-6087 or
549-3331 through Saturday posi --Lowest pnce guar Jim Maple dbl bed. new boll W..ted 2 SRL lnruuty speakers '77 PUCH MOPED. low tiorl av1il. Will train. SEC 'Y 19U-El'f · t 1 d •••••••••••••••••••••• 548-4233 mileage xlnt rood S37S «79212 M E p l'h', ... fi _ I .ed orkenanytime,640-9885 mat, tr.ape reaser Wanted.1beLetter "A"'. ft6 '63s . TRAii~.· w ~111 ~)1 ..., . ' r_ mmons ub is ang inn ocat STEEL BLDG KJTS w matching drop lear For the Pepsi Cha llenge 7 aohd oak. c1b stereo a . m. Ll79 -Sedan !'I.'" ~II I llrl\'\
FORD
'2060 HARBOR lll VD,
COSTA MHA 642 ·0010 Sdts near J.W. Airport seeks You build. 20x40xg'H w . desk. $425 9 pr Pecan Game. <Under the Caps w/Sinyo Pioneer rec. & 11979 blue G1lane moped, 1 home· & ronr!o v.t1h Im.
De•Hzla•n ~:fo~~ ~~~v!~~=~Y ~~ 2 8x 10' doors. $3285. dinh rmh sf w/~ cffet b~ Of Soft Drinks) Will p1y la~, sac. WQ.~·8242 ex cell rood .. S200 Don ·30 Ford Cabriolet Looks _pay gd t>qull) &S9 100'
P /lime, 2 to 4 days. Car. olrire duties Thill can-Build in 3 wknds_ ct in~ ac f~set u ,e800 Your one stop shopping center $100 lo the person who Zenith 25" color t v. 675·51~--& Runs Reaut1rul Ntrc ' ·
oec.$4hr.213/877·113S& didate should have a A.B.C.$47·14~-Sacnrice!67~689& ·IO< gift items To place yoor Cindsone.497-5312 beaut. dlt w1lnut, xlnt 78 Puch Maped Newpon Drivablr Car S11,~oo A.tos ltnporltd
714/541-0718 pleasant phone vo•<'e, 8' Bathtub enclosure & 4 Pc Bdrm SetS7S Twin ad in this column call Buying World Wu 11 1 rood. aac. Sl95. 19" color ~2~3 Very good rond e75·317s ••••• : •••••••••••••••••
goodtyplngskills&wlll· frameS2S. Bdrm set' sas 3 6425678 and ask for the Souvenirs. Cuh p1id. rt lS0.966-8210 __ ------RecreatloMI Aatdl 9707
Sales ingness to l~am. Will -~tl!L aquariums & ac . (Especla.lly w1nt 19" Con~~le color 'fV '79 Motorbecane Moped Vet.lcln 95l01··••••••••••• ......... . F....n •Grollp consider trainee Mrs. Used Plywood. 40 pc's i!~ories,J:IC>.6.'ll ss18 Christmas Ad Visor Guman Relict)SSl-4464 $154. 12 Black/whale Xlnt cond. 250 mi. 90+ ....................... ! •73 Aid IOOlS
£v 9 5/l6lhs X4X8 S220Per Oak Frame Waterbed POOL TABLE <not SELL Idle Items with 1 Port.ac/dt!l00.842-4624 M~G .~.SSl·~ Dunee5~g.&Trlr t-;xlnt rnnd Auto, ttr
Call us 1bout the oul· SHIPPIMGCLfl.K Sheet ss7.3973 ____ w/11rPrame ~ Slate> GoodconditJon. Dilly Pilot Cl11sified Slereo·Motorolo Console. ·i!rle:tuC~ltJ.onMolx~~a ••496 t6U7arter6 30 .. Must&et-•2100
stand in f ~areer OP· For active sportswear ....._ IOlS 842·9381 ISO 540-9444 Aj:l. 111 wood cab. AM /FM. 840·2643«2131592 5o.S4 portun1t1es IS an mr r.Pulllime.646-6688 vn phono. 8tlt USO Color clun. Kept in slorage 4Wlt.etDrins 9550 lnsur1nre Agent. Tratn· ='-'----.-....-:.'-"=~=~~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• TV. RCA 21" Console r or 2 Ye a rs Low ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMW 9712 ing will not Interfere START HOW Persi1n Kittens. Reg l2S. $45-9223 Mllea e . 968-9024 Jeep. '76 CJ Renegade. ••••••••••••••••••••"•
with your present Loni Amw1y dis · Shots. S200 & Sl75 2 V8. xlras. spokes & OR.\HGECOU~
employment. tributor.ollerso~pt·yfor Adults Sea 546-9!165 ... IW.W 9150 wranglers S34SO OU>lST ,,...,
the houl'I We tr1in. For ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 HONDA 400F '68 BRONCO •• good earnings. ou pitlt DocJa 1040 .. ~.\.'!:!!!!........... ....................... 642·7316 e~ &
Sain help. f1bric store,
retai l uper. pre f.
Me-4040; T72=tfll.
Sain
Ptrt -time Sales. ex·
per'd . Motherhood
Maternity Boutique.
Fuhlon l1land, tlu .
hl'1. Eves/.itends. Call
Mimi: 7st-1.
Wes,.,_
Needed f« Full or P tr
temporary Pot itlons.
prt'ltntinl ntW producta
In local dept. atorea. PltoOe (213> .,., ... for
intervltw area
SALIS#~ n.. Loi ~ 'nsnet
ClrtulaUoe Dept. ti,.
rutty ht poaltlOfll ... u ........... .
t.,,.tNatalivt. YM'll ....... ....,·::· 'tit* remrbr . .., ..........
inter\'iew 673-Shih Tzu 3"1 mo, Fem. 13K, clean. $800/080 NEEDS WORK. SIOOO
WAITllSSIS lull pedigree. USO 631·7297/545-6258 556-4345
Ex per. l /r.rs. min. Needs non-working ;1 SUZ GS750 l2.000 mi . Tnteb 9560 Sales Sen1rt' IA'a~ln•
(/time aYli . Apply In motber.548-8Ull xlnt rood Xlras ••••••••••••••••••••••• fnCAR\/ER person, Jolly Roger, 400 UKC Amer Pit Bull pups. 979·3621, 54.5--0672 Joe 1958 Pord Pirk-up. run
So. Co11t Hwy, l,aguna 6wks. Quality pups rrom 750 Triumph Bonneville, n1ng bul needs work. ICXl.5 ~ 'F·Btvf\\'
Be1ch. $48.t~l t,t-"'\) cnr\s\f'l'\BS '78. Low mUe1ge, xlnt M1keofrer ~v&4H?13 ~~·::;•:-,,. ~ -
d vour . 9 in Skates . skis' . cond 1500.642-1603,_ i2Custom RanrheroToo
Don't need it? 1 .. 7:~
We'll bet Jt
.somebady daes!
Make beautiful .
lllJSiC by
~ting your
1J1W11ted musical
ftstr•I in
the Daly Pilot
CHt Gii*
d & 0 1 , runn\n many xtras to llst Good
Go anea n\\e your ~~ ,s M-lswER leds • snowmobile ~~9~ao~2300 6•2 S46o.
snopp\ng "'· t C\ass,t\eds· wno\e Sell. your used l¥fJ ·w p,\o \\~ tor a :1,-
tne oai · vour ca 642-5678 & items in our AO wi\\ ta\(e $5 00. ca\\
tor on\Y · Daily Pilot
wee"-< ad naw\ Gift Guide p\ace tna
Call 642-5671 .........
. Cllm'-'A•VIMr
ftne aomeuras 1ou ••lo .... , Cl•ifttd
.. doll !!1. MHt7!.
NEW
BUSINESSMEN
Contact th• DAIL y
PILOT tof lnf°""tllon ,...,ding the COUftty
r;qulr;menta for
ualng a Flctltloua
lualn ... Ntme •
IQ-4321 m .m
'76 Dodge ~~T P U
Absolultly immllr
UOOxl6 S lire.trims
trurk must be sun
ftlust aell.JSOOO .497 um
'64 Chev ~ T • sht bed
PU, 6 cyl, 3 spd. 80K ml
l 1SO.OBQ_84924
i7 Ford P.U ll'U(k. F15'i
tultom 6 ryl, auto,
ltaM, pb. pa. Id nin _mt. .., -
.,
Orange coa t DAILY PtLOT/Monday. November 23, 1981
•,Imported · Alltot, l .. art.d Aalto1, l••orttd Mtot, l•port.d ....._, l•p•rttd t A.tiltot, IMpOl'fwd .... :.':':~ .......••••• ~·.~~ ................. ·.~~••••••••••• .............................................................................................................................................................. ~~ ............. !?!.! ~~ ............ !?.~~ ~~~ ...... , .. !?~.~ = ............ !?.~! ~~~ .... !?!~ ~ ............. !?!~ ~!.~ ••••....•.. !?!.~ .~~~~ ...... !??.~ ~.~~ .......... !!.'.~ ~.~ ............ !!.~!
•Ml ,,..ter• lic .... COllCI .. ·110 Sport Coupe•• COMTIMPLATIMG 1·15 Dart Slit 311. VI, 3 l•UMODB.S
AHIVIM
MOW!'!
~ 111 ll11'11<'lll 1tr ~I· 111•
so 11 I r n1 L'11hl11rnl~
I ntl' t l' I idtn
&
SADDWACK
l.t.iW
;!11411 \\,11 1:\lt'llll' l'k")
M' 1111 ••J
\ I l'klH t All
Ul-2040 495-'4949
198' IMW
CLOSEOUT
SAVE!!
l'Cl I lM t II\ I
rrlltnt
•lt'pl
OUIAIM-YOUR
SA TISFACTIOM
Sa Ir~ Strvlee Lu~lnll • DATSUN
13731 Harbor Blvd
Gorden Grove
554-9000
sa.., llMd·~ • 1 owner Opel '76 2 dr Silver 14KMI PS.Sapd 1600 1lnale port VW CADfUAC? , ,pd, t1ood ~.bell of c ... tt. • ., ... -8rlthl8lu.!8'13sar7 Slt'reo Rally •I whl t'n1lne lon11 block only ' Wt' •Pl'<'llh7e In ltl!t!I ferovtrfl'llO Ml·~ BRAMD HEW '7) J_............, _.. $.Wl0080M757R9 Hun1 11ooct. wu l'X
OELOREAN
·~r •~llM? '74 0pttW19 -chiinimt for 8 dual port fur tht· bu11nu~ rx '72 Dod11e D»rl Xlnt
Must aell, ~l otreoovtr Com part JIOOle of lrn Grol mpa New tvrr VolatwOCJI" 9770 motor ht $1$0 takr " •·<'ullve & professional <'Ond RUN Great ~K ~~-f~~~~\:, wk':a. ports D1rrd leue and 80 yth1n1 All rr1•r1vh ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ht-fore 10 30am or .iftrr lat'C)t s.IKHOll or111 mt SlllOO Make Of
IMMEllATE m 4274__ _ mos atn~lble pymts. 1146 9557 VOLKSWAGEN !I :l()pm Of M.w 191 I ftr
0 1 11 I 2 I 3 u r f'OISCHI 1161 8{Lfl Ccdlocs • •615 4233• •
ERY SHARP 714/M ERCED~ Ill 213 Portche 9750 AUDI ·113 BUS xlnt runnin111 Mow 111 Stock! ford H40 OEUY C H ....... 714 637 2Xl3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '
CNI• -.w wop 0L --·so Pursche 1128 •·ully to1<l'lher wlder one roor eond. nh llrt'S, um Im 'N \B(~J~~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
H da '7J J ...... Httly loaded 8K mile&. lJltru for your comparison btereo SS&-8003 i ~ '71 f ord Sta Wagon
On MustSl•ll,beatorterover SELLINCYOURMB' Sound System 7S2M7l ~hopping C11ll us for '81 Rabbit Convtrtlblf', (' \()f( l \ • $8'1SGood runnin1 rond
$4500 Cbuc·k or Gary WEP.AY orllll·2684 t•om1>etat1\'eleastratts must sdl. 1hu~room ,, ' '' • 646-2528 Santa Ana ~Sk~~j:I da 751 4274 TOPDOUAIH 'T7Porsche9llS,tmmat' C1.:1f c-und1ttun.S8*•t,M66052 1 .'•\i'. .. l• U.colft H45
Call Jack Bacon cond. Met silver hntsh, lflLfmil ...................... . 54 n7430 "°""°"" GMa 97l4 JIM SUMONS snrf amtlm cass. a ,. . • ' '72 Karmann Ghtll frt•sh -. 711 M ll r k v. r u 11 y U-••••••••••••••••••••••• IMPOITS Must see SIS.950 Pl' V~/EO~ •:fi A~DI ~paint & tar~ xlnl 1•ond
1
711 ~1·\lll1· lmma• rdr l'qu1pped. moon roof.
301 w Warner A\'e '6S Karman Ghia Good l30l Qua.ti St SS9·8689 da 737 6St6 8 ~ Diwa~ '32SQ 54M :M.51 !l60 3963 full) i•t1p1tl all elel· Ser silver w red mt lo mt .
I blockwestol Matn «)nd Looks sharp, new NEWPORT BEACH 1·57 p--9ll2 Cpe No rust N Ill &)'Stde nve I 9772 to apprertult Sti200. Co i•ar . Sac' $7700 t t?(JYI 675 3925 • · eWJIOrt &ouch 673 11-JUO o •o • . 97!1 8600 or 340-9277 Rot . 9725 ~atn """""' 833-9300 Xlnt Cond Blue lllk, .. , 'W I f & h ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11!17 8423 -••o••••••••••••••••••• Maida 9731 I New trs. l"'hrome wi:iis :'oo~S ~3 IE'ri 1d00/1~ IJ 1 VOLVO DlAlfl fi4 C.ul St-flan d1· \'1 lle M..-cwy HSO
•74 Fiat 124 Sprt Cpe 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1970 Mer cedes 280SL 631 2321, 546 5142 , h W 1 hi IN ORANG!!: COUNTY, 7K 1100 m1 l.t>.1drd runs ••••••••••••••••••••••• lll""""""""~~M•I Good cund. Best orrer I Conv und ll ardtop '78 Turbo Turga. red,1 ~~~~ ro~s~:~~ty:e:ill' ' 1 gd ~I ~1113 '7t~~r1g Wgn.~~~rs·::~~ Ev~s call 646 tS28 &--.... ... , am fm radio. new tires nared whL't'ls, P 7\, on $20 ea 548.9744 SALES, setVICf 79 f ldo. blk "" rt>•I nr" f u P;; 6142 Aft &PM IJl.i.&.;i~~...,...,. .... ....,111 Hottda 9727• ,.,.._* · .:::':'• 'm A~k for Ltt 979-2067 ly 6 K mt, must see tu ap 62 \'W 8 "fr"" amt AMD lliSIMG tin·~ dll th< to)!> 311 uuu irrn ~L.;.;.;~....;,~-=-::1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE'VE . '80 JOO SD MBZ While pre c 1 a le. $35. uou reblt eng'.1t5CXJ mf 294:1: OVE RSF.AS1>EUVl:R'r
1
mt Sll .ouu nr t.1~r .. o\!•r Mu.t11t9 9952
VISIT YOUR Ext Tan Leather Int I 642 1603 673 3!1JO t:XPERTS 1,t' 5411 311.c,1 , !160 J9l;:J ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMOYEDll JOK ..,.. 000 979 8300 ' 97561 ' • · L·\ I I • '66 Mustang, auto. new IHODATSUM OR,..._.GECO,.ST '·~-·.. mt -=· .RoUsRoyu 1'79con\ rt'd ~ wh1letu11 I \11 Hl...,r. I · r . t ood nd $2600
KIMG CAI "'H"o .... oA"' Dan Only -••••••••••••••••••••••• Im mac' Lo~ ml $7.!1511 £AIU ll(f H" m11t ... hkt' Ill'~ pa~ bg tor'' 644-6965 <·••·1 ltd•~ ir 1'1 \ir r11h11 . ..:hrornebum· ""' S1WIY&YMM .. '68 230 All Ort!( New "l DrAL(RINU SA I -John 77~!171111 VOLVO 71 1'>\llti.tlt. ... res .rll d
''' '"'11'' II\\\\ ' I" 1 ~ t:xc El.L.ENT HE _.D~ _.RTERS ~CAITYI I Head $2400 L • • • • • 1966 llarborUh1t 7 K HI u ,. 1 d \ IJ t· a; Conv, exce ent con utlt11 II\<,, ,,, ,., l 1 ct"lllTION 1ec•71 "' "' su 642~646 !1780 I (OYCAR\/ER 7!1(on,· 5000MI L1k1 ''C)S'TA 'IL:.~.\ I ·' Pon)tntS.S.0008S5tlOO ' u• TO A~·····' u~ •-?\r~ $80011 Oa\'i ~ .... ~, l'l••ll(Jlll l l.t1Jllu' 5111~ l't It 1 omltl 1 llllS \\E~KSSPE:t'l.~I. l l f.OR ·11 M8,un1< owntr.mtnl Dr'\I I C ~ ~97139 bt.'t~bpm !>on. 646-9303540.9467 ~!ISO ll1•.;n IM57!>1
I o~S5995 UNIVERSITY voua cond S7 000 m1 S17 500 l'\\...Jl...LJ"l'\Vl\....L 9920 titl \1 u!>tan11. V8. auto. \\ ' "·' ' ' "i"· SALES&SERVI(.'~; MAlOA I 546·6232 ·7~·9175 . I ... -"' ....... •'•" ·72 till!; IU>lt Pedt•ll '74 145 Sta Waq Chnrole-t •Hr µs. restored. xlnl 111 111.i tr I It"''' SADDL ACKIMW I nllJ' ........ •r -. I ....... . ..... ..... paint & inlr H:.td tJb t ~p<l Xlnt ('llfld ~·I ••••••••••••••••••••••• lOlld $2950 IS.13 4242
utl••'• 11 .. i.1• ii oi•ll•' • 831-2040 495.4949 OLDSMOllLE _ • ,...!! __,.,, '79 300 SD Twt.G CIOSllHUNDAYS ~U r .. 11661 .flll2 646 7211 • Cht-Yrolet '80
trt· hr JI! IPIO Lv" ml I HOHDA ... a·~ Mint cond. sunroof + '711 lhbb1t 01-1 Slt'rt'il I 1!179 \ IJl\O . ..,.,,. llt•f1(111" MOtllG Sport Cou... Old•mobi~ 9955
'Ill n r 1 n I GMC TRUCKS ""600 r . ..1o. 9762 ~' " r· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 011 " ' u" n• r $2750 t'\t'~. 1111 au1J s1 us1u 1sno11l4 otherxtras .w, m1
1
-aru I Ca'~ Hrn Xlnl 1·11nd !>perial µ.u. nl Joh lil~•·k ~.•·•mc•mll';il 11 'I auto ,74 "·"""-1,.,,,,,, It 1;.1~ \Ill~ 28SO l1arbor Blvd 11934J74 •••••••••••••••••••••:•1 H K mt S4 lOO 01\11 & .:old MitJ: whl' 5 ,p<t 1r.111~ Jtr 1ond 1•11· ......->5
7 l l • l I •it.>I 'H 11 711 l>ahun ~10 2 Jr khaki COSTA MESA • MG 9742 Wed Fn 12 1 ~kn1b "' 494 t~I~ luadf'd $Iii 51Xt li7~ .1711'1 I\ Ul!:IUH "king SllOO 642 JOOS
I 1
The Mo't EJtd+tnq
PorlOf Yow
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1 111 .!\lit ~\ Sport A c. ~ork SIOOf1rm EXCLUSIVE ·711 Corolla ~H 5 lftbk IW6 9bQ.1 Ill\ 1111 ~rf!'tl $!17CKt ~h 1 t.:, 72 ~1Jhntum Pinto. hne
'l•·r .. u fui>I in)l·t 20K 646 8184 MA SERATI I MGI 9744 \ ('. A \I F!'tl , mO\ in~· '7ti \ \\ Ill's 1:1 trn n11 .:d I :124 !15t:I t'\ rue ~ I l·ond S9UO 645·5013,
ml Dl'JUI)' t'('l)OOm} !IQ A cro 4 r. DE .. LERSHIP ••••••••••••••••••••••• 536 8536 ~?~db'"·~· ll'ot ufr I a I ··,7 "Int "ond u •• t orrer I u & , llON D A rel d I must sell ~1.6.50 Ill' It c I I 1141; l!OSS
Sf. 995 0 8 o. IH5 H:.!6 5spd Be111e w1lh xtr•~. "' ·59 MGB GT. xlnt cond ...,., ,,.,., Alltos, Used ' " oc:1
orS-1" 2756 shdrn. 7525860 We 11 deliver .inywhere ~·ire wheels. AM •"M H Corona Rl:'llJhlr 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644 2t2 1 work llomE' z ~ 1i3 \ Y. Hui: un ' l 1 ~ llJ\\Un la.I,~ dr 1 J09"or 9730j intheworld' radio S2800 Ci.ti tr.inspo rldt1011 $1100 owner~. n l\ mi ~lnl luicll 99101 I' ~IHll!ISAllkforJeH
I -11•1 11.ori...:ar.rrts ·······················!BEACH IMPORTS ~59961lfters.11m ~d2114~~~~~ Ad •4s.t rund 12110> 0110 Jrt ,, •••••••••••••••••••••••• Ptymouth 9960 t>-'5-75711 ii I:.. l} pe \ 12 291\ mi 1148 DoveS.reet DAILY PILOT 646 7~ l!IJ Huu k l't'ntun I TO ~ ~' \I ,. ii u Spt c1w •••••••••••••••••••••••
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t paint ~Int mu\\ ~tll. i32 4201 day ... 1133 :?427 j 1969 llarbor Blwl CLASSIFIED ADS 1'.111) l'llut l'l<1"1llt•tl 1 lttt'" S5UO '1d~ lrtll«• mt 5&1'15 I \ r hlll\ \11 S1fi7'1 11110 !Ires. good body and $3.JU05~!13443 l!\l!nt!!.&.s &weekentb 631:_7170 642·5678 Ad "urk Call631 71!;1Jdl ti31triOll 4~•11ti!l21 11ng1ne99'711679
ATLAS CHRYSLER-'l YMOUTH
l '•Sta ~esa Te 5"6·1934 3 blocks
freenay 011 Hart>Qr Bl•O Comp ete
• >es 5Prv ce Paris Sel"i•CP Dept open
, '" "rw1a1 7 30 AM 10 5 30 PM and 8 AM 10
a'uraav
BUCH IMPORTS
" -··el'' "ll'wOort Beach Tel 752·0900 Call us
Pt.. 1 ''"A•• Romeo Pevqeo• Saal! &
T HEODOU ROllMS FORD
MATCH THE HUMBER S ON THE
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES
NEWPORT DATSUM
888 Dove Street NPwport Beach Tel 833-1300 Al the
lr1ang P of Jamboree MacArthur & Br ·~to beh•nO v cto• a S1a1 on Sates Seot•" Leas•nq & Part s F1eet
discounts to 1he public
0
MAIERS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel 5•0-9100 Orange
County s Largest Cao •tlac dealer Sa•es Service Leas·
•ng
G)
808 LOMGPRE PONTIAC
1.)600 Beach B·«l Westm.nster let 892·6651 Orange County 1aesl .ind arqe~· Pt.. . a~ 1l1>a,Pr~h1p Sa•e5
Ser,•ce Pa11s
COST A MESA DATSUM
UHIVHSITY HONDA SUMSET FORD. IMC.
2850 Harbor Bivo Costa ~~ Tet 540-96'0 t M le fHome t >'V e 1rp wna e !>44 ua•'1Pr G•o·t e ~!1
South 405 Freeway ::.a es st>r. ce par\5 & E'35"'" Westminster Tei 63'l·4011.
• • t "' .~"':I ,prv P parts body paint & lire depts
• t I~· •111 .. ~ r ease & da11y rentals 2060 Harbor
htwc L. ·a ·.~u .. b42-0010or 5A(>.821 I
DA YID J. PHILLIPS BUICK-PONTIAC-MAIDA
Sales • Service • Leasing
24888 Al1c•a Parkway
Laguna Hill!> 837-2400
SA MT A AMA DATSUN
2001 E 171n S11ee1 Santa Ma Tei 556·7811 Your
Ouginal Deo1ca1ed Datsun Dealer
fRAMIC PROTO LIMCOLM-MERCURY
Serv•ce and Paits o .. .,artno.-r•I d'WM' DP" • d~ys a
weei. 7 30 AM 10 b I{, p M 8'8·7i39
Q JOHMSOM & SOM LIMCOLM MERCURY
0
)sta Mesa Tel SA0-5630 57 Years
Orange County s oldest Lin·
SOUTtl COAST DODGE
B&! t•,1· ti • .:i Costa M~ Tel ~ RV service
PtK:• 11 a t..istom •an conven•ons
.
MEW,OIT IMPOITS
J100 W Cout Highway Newport 811ch •Tel.
6A2·9•05 540-1764 The ferr111 ~Ult.t9U-
f) TAIGET DA TSUM
"er-,t c-tr• ....... .,.... DMw"
13731 HarbOr Blvd Garden Grove Two blocks south ol
Garden Grove Freeway Sates SeMce Parts Our aim is complete customer sat1slactlOl'I Shop us and avoid
paying loo muellt Tel 55~-9000
• ALAM MAGMOM PONTIAC-SUIARU
2~ Harbor Btvd Costa Mesa Tel 549-'300 Sain .
Service Leasing Mr Goodwr~h
0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS
MIJCIOls.llMl . S••· S.-.lu•i.--. 6862 Manchester Blvd. Buena Park (on Santi Ana
Freeway1 Ta~t_Bt1ch B.tvd. •otframp -sharp right on
Minchesler
DIAL MER·CEDES (213or 714) 637·2333
.AHAHl!IM MAID.A
"a.tr o.c. ,_. °'*' •• "" """" L.-c.n· 801 S Mlhllm 81vd , Allftm 956-1820 Just north 01
llrttl AN Frwr. on Mltlelm Blvd Call UI firttl '1fl ARE HMO TO FIHO-IUT WORTH /Tl "
0 MIRACLE MAIDA
We ve moved1 Our new locat•on •s 1425 Baker Street
Costa Mesa Tel 545·33~ Stop by & v1s•I our brand new
showroom 1nd see why we re the 11 Mazda dea1e1 m
Southern Cahforn1a Sales Service Parts and Leasing
ALLfM·OLDSMOIU.E-CADILLAC
SUBARU-GMC TRUCKS
San Diego Fwy al Avery hit on Camino Capistrano 1n
Laguna Niguel Tel 831-0800r495-0800
A · SADDLHACK IMW W 28•02 Marguerite Pkwy Al/try Pkwy eK1t
We otter what no tease company or bank can
1 Ultra·modern service dept lor 1st class after sale
aervlc•. 2 Factory auth lacll1t1es & body shop. 3
Ehmlnatton ol the middleman -leasing dealer d1rec1
831·2().40 495.4949
·--------..
0 CONNELL CHfVROt.fT
2828 Harbo r Blvd Costa Mesi Over 20 years serving
Orange County• Sales leasm9 service Call 546·1200
special parts lane 546-9400. body shop hoe 754·0400
0
CHICK IYHSOH ,ORSCHE-AUDl·YW
4t5 E Coa<;l Hwy Ne .... port Beach 6730900 The only
deale1sh1p on Orange Coun ty with these three great
malles under Ol'IP roo11
ROY CARVEi ROUS ROYCMMW
1540 Jamboree Roe<!. Newport Beach 64().64•t Saltt,
Service Part' And 1.1111no
1
I
I
I
I • I
I
••••••
DUlll CUil YOUR HDMITDWN DAllY PAPER
MONDAY NOVE MBER 23. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
John Thompson. director of music. leads a hymn by smgmg a
lme which is refX!aled by choir and congregation . Otho Budd keeps an eye on the members of the church with l11s
··t1ckter·· m hand to wake up the sleepy
Worship 's a ticklish situation
.
Rituals of Pilgrims progress into 20th century at Laguna church
By SANDIE JOY
Of tlM o.lly Pli.t Staff
Sleeping during the sermon wasn't
easy Sunday at the Neighborhood
Congregational Church, Laguna Beach.
Not with eagle-eyed Otho Budd
patrolling the aisles.
When he caught a napper , Budd
would reach over with a long pole
tipped with a feather and tickle the
offender under the chin.
He startled a choir me mber that way
right in the middle of the sermon -in
plain view o f the r est of the
congregation.
The pastor, the Rev. John Reynolds,
was being watched closely, too.
As Reynolds took the pqlpit, one of
the parishioners P!aced an hourglass on
the stand to remind him not to get
long-winded.
No. This isn't some weird new form of
worship.
Despite the rippling giggles when the
tickler went into action and when the
pastor was timed, the entire service
was serious.
It was a taste of the past.
The congregation was participaUng in
the re-creation of an authentie 17th
century Pilgrim service.
The service began with a call to
wors hip by the drummer, Jonathan
Reynolds, son of the pastor and his
wife, the Rev. Margaret Reynolds.
Next came Budd as the town crier.
tolling his bell and crying, "Hear ye.
Hear ye."
This was followed by a reading of
President R o n ald R eagan 's
proclamation denoting Thursday as the
206th Thanksgiving Day and the choir
procession.
Most of the participants we re dressed
like Pilgrims for the occasion.
The pastor was res plendent in a black
velvet Pilgrim suit with a large shawl
collar, an authentic 17th century suit, he
said. Most of the choir wore Pilgrim
costumes although a few of the children
wore Indian outfits. a point church
moderator Dick Willson noted saying it
was nice the Indians could join the
Pilg rims in the m eeting house for
worship.
Even the congregation had a touch of
<See PILGRIMS, Page A.2)
Eugene Carey takes up collection from ma~ WJe of au~ whtle Dclna JoJ:!meaA<J'hera women's_'offering.
Reagan vetoes
emergency
spending hill
WASHINGTON <AP> -
President Reagan vetoed an
emergency s pending resolution
to restore funds to federal
agencies today and told his
Cabinet to "cut down, s hut down
and eliminate all unnecessary
government services."
It was his first veto in 10
m o nths of offi ce . House
D e moc r ats conced e d they
lacked the votes to override the
veto and made no attempt to try.
Instead, they began meetings on
a new, stripped-down measure
to get the money flowing again.
Reagan told reporters minutes
after signing the veto that the
bill posed .. a difficult choice"
for him. The rejection sends the
meas ure back to Congress
* * *
The president went from hd
session with reporters to an
eme rgency meeting with hia
Cabinet, where he declared,
·'The bulk of the government
should shut down immediately,"
presidential s pokesman Larry
Speakes said later.
··As qui ckly a s possible,
people should be sent home. This
is not business as usual,"
Speakes quoted the president as
saying.
The spokesman said that by
noon, 60 percent of the White
House's 351 employees would be
furloughed without pay. By the
end of Tuesday, he a dded,
400.000 of the government's 2.9
<See VETO, Page A.2)
* * *
Veto won't affect
local mail service
President Reagan's veto today
of an e me r gency s pend ing
resolution to fund federal
agen cies won 't h ave a n
immediate e ffect on loc al
governments and won't interfere
with mail deli very.
Municipal officials along the
Orange Coast say cities that
receive federal Housing a nd
Co mmunity Development
( HC D I money already have
received federal grants for the
1981-82 fiscal year .
Reagan's veto affects funding
t o ··non -essential·· fed eral
services. Local postal officials in
Huntington Beach say the mail
se.rvice ls viewed as essential
and won't be affected.
Local government orricials
say it's unclear if the veto would
cut off future HCD funds.
HCD grant funds are used lo
provide low income housing
opportunities, to redevelop
existin g city community
facilities, to upgrade streets and
drainage sys tems a nd to
eliminate slums, according to
Steve KohJer, HCD coordinator
for Huntington Beach.
Kohler s a ys Huntington
Beach has earm ar ked S2.5
million in HC D funds for
community improvements. He
says the city anticipates getting
a nother Sl.3 million in HCD
funds next year, if the program
still is in business.
Newport Beach doesn't accept
federal funds. But other cities on
the Orange Coast do.
Next fiscal year. beginning in
July. Costa Mesa expects an
HCD grant of about $800,000;
Irvine, SS00,000 and Fountain
Valley, $360,000.
Lindbergh kidnap
files open to public
EWING TOWNSHIP, N .J .
<AP > -State police files on the
f a mous Lindbe r g h baby
kidnapping case were opened to
th e public today, but th e
a .ttorney who so u g ht th e
disclosure says new viewing
regulations are unfair.
Major John M cGa nn
announced loday that "only one
researcher from any interested
g roup" could view the mounds
l)f paperwork and e vidence
stored here.
"The g u i d e l i nes are
arb itrarily restrictive and
unfair." said Robert Bryan of
San Francisco, attorney for
Anna Hauptmann.
The 83-year -old Yeadon, Pa ..
worn an is the widow of the man
executed for killing the son of
famed aviato r Charles
Lindbergh.
Bryan. who a lso charged that
the guidelines were illegal, said
he had planned to have four
researchers go ove r the
m a t erial. He s aid McGann
issued the guidelines "so it may
take us years to go through the
files " Midwest srww
turns roads
treacherous
The attorney said an associate
would ask U.S. District Judge
Frederick B. Lacey in Newark
,,. -J.JY)issue an order relaxing the
_./ r~trictions.
By The Associated Press
Snow and freezing rain fell
over the Dakotas. Minnesota
a nd Iowa today, snarling
morning rush-hour traffic in
Minneapolis-St. Paul as s leet
turned roadways to treacherous
glare ice.
Drivin g conditions in
Minnesota's Twin Cities were
the worst in 20 years, law
enforcement officials said.
Semi-trailer trucks jackknifed,
at least one rolled over and even
a few sanding trucks were
unable to traverse the hazardous
streets.
The Metropolitan Transit
Commission, which operates
buses in the Twin Cities and
suburbs, sent all its buses back
into the garage. Many schools
closed and some taxicab
companies also suspended
operations temporarily.
Meanwhile, 5,000 homes and
businesses in Mic higan
remained without electric power
today. Consumers Power Co.
continued efforts to restore the
service knocked out to 92,000
customers by storms that
dumped 14 inches of snow on
parts of the state Thursday and
Friday. ·
Record cold temperatures aJso
refrigerated some aectiona of
Florida on Sunday as storms
dumped up to a foot of snow on
parts of New York...and Ohio
Bry a n represents Mrs .
Ha uptmann in a $100 million
laws uit against New Jersey that
claims he r hus band, Bruno
R ic hard Hauptmann , was
w rongly executed in 1936 on
charges stemming from the
kidnapping-murder.
<See LINDBERGH, Page AZ>
DRANGf COAST WfATHfR
Mostly cloudy tonight
and Tuesday with a
chance of rain increasing
to 30 percent by Tuesday
afternoon. Highs 62 to 67
Tuesday. Lows tonight 52
to 58.
INSIDf TODAY
Political aaurist Art
Buchwald ha$ a feeling that
he's ''in buftne33" for aome
time. See Page A7.
INDfl
..
••••• Orange Coaat dally pilot/Monday. November 23, 1881
I 0
~ ............ WO.tyA-
S1gn at Saddleback College rerrunds motonsts to tum out Oum
lights after dmnng to work m today's heavy fog
~og shrouds coast;
"'ain may foil ow
ot..
1.,-.wealhe r for ecasters said
today rain couJd follow on the
~i~ls of the fog that hugged the
-6fange Coast this morning.
c U .$. Weather Service
o k es m a n sa id c l oudy
dilions will continue through
sday and that the chance or
n will reach 30 percent by
~11esday afternoon.
. The misty conditions along the ~a sl ear ly today caused
torists to continue driving
h headlights on.
~_].t Ora nge Count y Airport,
qnots were required to fly on
instrumeots. but the fog caused
no problems wi th airpor t
operation, a spokeswoman said.
The Orange County SherifC's
Harbor Patrol reported one-mile
visibility in t he ocean this
mor ni ng, though few vessels
we re attempting to travel
through the fog .
The formal forescast ror
Orange Coast cities calls for
conlinwng cloudy conditions and
dense fog near th e coast, with
the mercur y peaking in the
mid·60s and dipping into the low
50s overrught
Woman kidnapped,
raped by two men
A 22-year-old Laguna Niguel
woman, reportedly pushed into a
car by two men in front of a
Corona del Mar restaurant, was
clJ'j ven lo a motel where the
~1sailanls forced her into a
r:/1,pm and raped her several
'btt:es. police reported today. ~he woma n t old Newport
tf~ac h officers that she was 10
Ol!
f /om Page A1
fr ET0. • •
nUiltlion workers would be off the
j'11.
~Emerging from the one-hour
cnlbinel session, Transportation
Secretary Dr ew Lewis said.
''essentially. the president told
~ we 're goin g to sh ut the
~ernment down, and we're
lfOin g t o go back to o u r
~partmen ls a n d start the
shutdown right now. . we"re
841ing to close our files. turn out
tllJ lights and go home.·· ·
1~ n Ca p \ta I H i II , House ~aker Thomas P . O'NeilJ Jr ..
ll'th sharply worded attack on
R eagan, said, "H e 's
unbelievable ...
"He's only out there for the
theatrics, believe me ," the
speaker said
HB youth,
13, wounded
A 13-year -old Huntingt on
Beach youth r e m a ine d in
cr itical condition al FounlaJn
Valley Community Hospital
today aft.er be appare ntly shot
b i mseH in the head while
playing Russian roulette with a
loaded revolver.
Huntington Beach police saJd
Thomas Richard VanMeter of
20892 Cr~lview St. was injured
at about 12:35 p.m . Saturday In
an upstairs bedroom of his
home.
leaving the Quiet Woman. 3224
E . Coast Highway, ear ly
Sat u rday wh e n the m e n
approached her and forced her
into their car.
She told police the men, one
described as belng 25 and the
second about 40, d rove toward
Huntington Beach, stopping
brierty al a liquor store where
s he Creed herselr and asked a
store clerk for help
Police said the men dragged
the woman back to their car and
drove to a nearby motel, w)l1ch·
the woman said was either 11i
West Newport or Huntington
Beach.
At the mot el, th e wom an
reported, the men got a room.
dra~~ed her iosidl'". threw her on
a bed and raped her
Police said the assilants later
d rove their victim back to the
Quiet Woman and dropped her
off.
From Page A1
LINDBERGH
"We h ave a case o n
Hauplmann·s innocence"' even
without the files, Bryan said.
Rut the attorney declined lo say
what materials he 1s interested
in viewmg.
Bryan a l so rep r esent s
Kenneth Kerwin of Biddeford.
Maine, who is one of two men
who claim lo be the m issing
Lindbergh son.
McGann gave no reason ror
th e ne wl y an·nounced ·
restrictions other than lo say
Stale Police Superintendent
Clinton Pagano "said so."
The 49·year-old fil es have been
sea l e d sin ce the i nfa nt
disappeared from the family's
Hopewe ll m a n sion in 1932.
Pagano said Frid ay the fil es
would be available lo a limited
number or researchers "while
ens uring there is no risk of
damage or mutilation" to the
fragile records .
ORANGE COAST _11ily Pilat CIHelfl4td adveftlelng 7141142-Mfi
All other depertmenl9 142-4321
MAIN OfFtCE
• Wne e.y St., C..U .... CA. Mitll __ : ... IMl,C... ... ,CA.W»
CWY•llM "8t 0r.,.. c..t .......... ~ . ... _..._, ........... ....,.._..,., .. ,,.,,.__... --_,, .. ... =• ..... .......... 1.11; -'<.,....,.._.
Brink's
suspect
arrested
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -An
animal-loving ex-Brink's 1uard
c har1ed with taking $1.85
million from hia own armored
van faced arraie nmenl today
after bis ar rest by FBI aaenll
near a busy supermarket.
George Manuel Bosque, 216, the
object of an l ntenslve,
n a tlonwlde man hunt, was
uoa rmed and o ffered no
resistance Sunday evening u he
was arrested In the parklna lot
o r one of the city's busiest
m arkets, crowded with people
d oing their Tha nks giving
shopping, tbe FBI said.
No further details or the arrest
were eJven.
Bosque, on the run since Aug.
15, 1980, when be a nd the money
disappe ared, Is ch a rged in a
rederal grand jury indictment
with larceny of bank funds and
theft from interstate shipment.
At the time of his indictment,
ba il was set at $3 million.
It w as th e n a ti o n 's
second-largest theft, e xceeding
t he $1.22 million 1950 Brink
robbery in Boston.
Bosque had been employed by
Brink's 2'h years at the time of
the theft, which occurred at San
Francisco International Airport.
T he money h ad arrived from
Honolulu, property of that city's
F irs t Ha waiian and Central
Paciric banks, and was headed
for the Federal Reser ve Bank.
Brink's said they covered the
loss.
Four injured
in Mesa
auto crash
A broadside collision in Costa
Mesa Sunday night lell rour
people injured after the driver or
a pickup t ruck apparently lost
control of his vehicle.
Michael Steven Marushok, 19,
of 9322 South Sh or e Dri ve,
H untington Beach a nd his
passenger . Angela Clayton,
29672 Hilaria Circle, Huntington
Beach, were reported in fair
condition at Hoag Me morial
Hospital today following the 6:20
p. m crash in the 1100 block of
Viclona Street.
Jo Ann Zafty, 22, of 989
Victoria St., C.0.la Mesa, was in
good condition at UCI Medical
Cente r tod ay. Her hus band,
Moshe Zafly. 27, was treated
and released from Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital shortly after
the crash.
Police said the truck driven by
M arushok spun out and crossed
into the eastbound la n es,
collid ing with t h e Zafly
automobile.
Witnesses told police the truck
was traveling al excessive
s peeds when t he collisi on
occurr ed. Detecti ve Floyd
Waldron said officers were
m vest1gating the crash.
Plaza area
master plan
on agenda
Cost a Mesa 's Pl a nn i ng
Com mission is expected to take
acti on t onig ht leading t o
eventual approval of two major
projects, the $59 million Orange
County Music Center and 148
residential units al Fairview
State Hospital.
Sought in conj unction with
music cente r construction is
approval of a South Coast Plaza
area master plan amendment to
add the theater complex and a
final development plan for the
theater and a 16-story office
building.
In the other development, the
slate seeks a copdilional use
permit to allow construction or
residences on hospital property
t o h o u se pa t ient s and
employees.
Thieves loot
three homes ·
in Newport
Burglars broke into three
N ewport Beac h homes and
made orr with more than $62,000
worth of belooglngs in separate
episodes over i,:1e weekend.
Police saJd ourglan broke lnto
th e Corona del Mar home of
Phyllis I. Seals and took $40,000
worth or jewelry . Officers said
the house was entered through
an unlocked garaee .
From Page A1
PILGRI~ •.. •
Pila rim faahlon. F:ac~ pariah.loner, u
he arrived at church was 1lven a wttlle
paper Piltrhn collar t.o wear,
The ·aon11 all were 1un1 with the
llnln1 out procedure ln which lhe choir
director, Jobn Thompson , 1an1 a line to
be repeated by the consre1atlon. This
technique was used in the 17th century.
he explained, because there weren't
enough hymnals for e veryone.
Everything was s ung a cappella
because , ln the e arly days , there
w e reo 't any organ1 In Pilgrim
churches.
Only the sermon was modern.
Reynolds said he found· some 17th
century sermons but, II he delivered
the m , everyone would fall asleep
b ecause they wer en 't r elevant to
modem limes.
··A minister always preaches to the
times," be explained.
Other special touches for the Pilgrim
service , conducted S unday for the
seventh consecutive y ear. included
taking of the orfering with pouches on
long po les a nd an a f ter -worship
get-together for pumpkin pie atld coffee.
Dollly .......... .., Olertt• ....
Reynolds explained that the ser vice is
h e ld "lo recall o ur national a nd
r eli gious herit a ge with its vital
tradition."
Sermon by the Rev Jolin H.eyrtolds. m authentlC:, velvet
Pilgrim garb. rs limed by an JwurgLass on pulpit
Stolen plane crashes; two die
Craft. .averts sleeping Marine~ at Camp Pendleton
A stolen t win-engine plane
grazed several tents filled with
sleeping Ma r ines at Camp
P endleton before it cras hed,
killing the pilot and passenger,
but the 230 Ma rines on the
ground we r e un i n jur ed , a
military official said.
"It's a miracle, really," Lt.
Col Gale Stienon said Sunday.
"When you look at the scene.
when you look al the night path,
when you look al the way the
tents are laid out. it's jusf
amazing that· no Marines were
hurt."
Long Beach Police Lt. Dao
Shea said t he plane had been
stolen earlier from the P iper Air
Center in Long Beach.
The two-seat P iper Seneca
cras hed into the Marine bivouac
area at 1:50 a.m. Sunday in the
Red Beach area near lnterstate
5 in the huge Camp Pendleton
complex.
The craft struck several tents
before smashing into a bulldozer
par ked in front of a tent where
Irvine odor
non-toxic
A sickening odor that wafted
over north Irvine Sunday night
was caused by a non-toxic
chem ical fe rt ilizer. Or ange
Co unty F ire D e p a rtme nt
spokesman Chuck Murphy said
today.
He said the odor was caused
by Vapam fertilizer used on an
agricultural field near J effrey
Road and Irvine Boule vard
Foggy conditions appa r ently
intensified the fertilizer smell
and led some residents to call
the fire department, he said.
Murphy said nobody required
hospitalization.
seven Marines were sleeping
All the. other tents the pla ne
grazed were occupied . said Ms.
Stienon.
Medical corpsmen with the
Marines, who were on ct four-day
training mission, rushed to the
crash site, but the victims were
dead from the impact, said Ms .
Stienon.
The deltd were 1denllf1ed as
the pilot , Be r nard David
Kamins ky, 46, of El Toro, and
Mar garet Florence Bishop, 42,
of Anaheim. said David Lodge, a
dep uty San Diego County
coroner
A spokesman for the Federal
A via lion Ad ministration. wh1ch
was conducting an investigation
of the incident, said air space
over Camp Pen d l e t o n is
restricted, with nights banned
be low 2,000 feet. lie said It was
not known why the plane was in
the camp area.
o.11• "ll•t ....... ~ Rk !Y.-. ll-
A TIGHT SQUEEZE Newport Beach police
say this is the predicament driver Eri c
Nosier found himselr in Sunday noon on
Balboa I sland when he tried to squeeze his
M ust ang past a parked VW. He missed.
pOIU.'e report he pushed Peter Allison's bug
into a garage at 2101 :! Ma rine Ave. :-.Iobod~
was injured but 23·~ ear-old Nosier of ~an
CIL•menle. police said. wa::. arr est ed on
su:,p1cion or drunken driving
ATTENTION SKIERS:
GOOD NEWS!
Mammoth Snow Report
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in Fit From
•1hl1 Good Ski News presented by •••
AP11E spgRTS LTD , I
In Cameo Shores, police aald
burglars broke into the home of
Robert = a nd eot 18,275 • worth ol . Koop told police
JIJI I.Cont~.
Car111 .. M•.CA
. 17141675-9700
his house wu ransacked.
Newport Helthta realdent
Nelatolla t1hanian told police
burglars smaahed out a window
to enter hl1 houae and took
$14,000 "'1h o( oriental allk ancr
wool nap. (
I
~
..
British actor Oliver Reed. 43. puts on a comedy act /ow;;;;;
11-year-old g1rlfriend. Josephine Burges. at London's Heathrow
Airport on his arrival from Los Angeles. The smgle rose was his
gift for Josephine
Kuma Kime memorial replaced
A new bronze plaque
honoring Kuota Klote, a
slave character in the novel
.. Roots," was unveiled in
Annapolis, Md., replacing a
memorial stolen two days
af t e r it was laid in
September.
·'This ce r e mon y
underscores our desire to
fight bigotry, hatred and
racism," said Carl Snowden
of the county NAACP. which
released about $3,000 to pay
The salary of William
Walbridge, general manager
of the Sacramento Municipal
Utility District, will be raised
15 percent to $86,312 a year
next month , the firm
announced.
It will make him one of the
Regents of the University
of California announced that
the Quinn Martin Chair of
Drama has been established
in t h e name of the
award-winning television
producer.
The announceme.nt at UC
Sao Diego said Martin
donated $250,000 to the
for the plaque, set in the city
dock where slave ships once
berthed.
About 300 people came to
the doc k, described by
author Alex Haley in
"Roots" as the place where
his African ancestor first
stepped on American land
after leaving an English
slave shi p in 1967. Haley
helped dedicate the original
plaque. His brother, JuUus,
was preserit Sunday.
highest paid public officials
in California. David Saxon,
president of the University of
California, is paid $91 ,520.
Chief Justice Rose Bird is
paid $77,409 , and Gov .
Edmund Brown Jr. gets
$49,100.
campus to set up the chair.
The 59-year-old Martin has
produced approximately 20
movies for television and 16
network ser ies. including,
"The FBf," .. Barnaby
Jones" and the Emmy
award -winning ''The
Fugitive."
Former Ar.ientlne
newspaper publisher Jacobo
Tlmerman, 68, who wrote a
book about t orture and
detentloo without cbaraes in
Argentine prisons, and black
poet-playwright N&ouke
S.ban&e, 33, were among slx
authors t.o receive 1981 Los
Anaelea Times Book Prizes.
Timerman's "Prisoner
Without a Name, Cell
a Number" won in the
current interest category and
Ms . Shange 's "Three
Pieces" received the poetry
prize.
The Robert KJrscb Award
for Body of Work went to
novelist and critic Wrl&bl
Morrls, 71 , who has written
more than 20 books. D.M.
Thomas, 46, received the
fiction award ror his
bestseller, ·'The White
Hotel.''
A Florida woman and her
Maryland partner shot t.o the
lead in tense battling in San
Francisco in theftLlfe Master
Women's Nortn-American
pair championships or the
American Contract Bridge
League.
Edith Kemp of Miami
Beach and Nancy Gruver of
Ellicott City led into the
finals Sunday with 403 match
points to become the only
pair to score more than 200
matc h points in a single
session.
James Bellows, editor or
the Los Angeles Herald
Examiner, will turn over his
position to the paper's
managing editor, Mary Anne
Dolan, to become managing
editor of a television
program.
Be llows, 59. will join
Paramount Pictures in
developing TV news
programing and as
managing editor of
Par amount · s J
.. Entertainment Tonight"
show.
Jean Harris has become an
"inmates' champion" in the
prison where she is serving
time for the murder or
Sc arsdale D i et doctor
Herman Tamower, a fellow
inmate says.
Adela Holzer, a former
Broadway producer in prison
for investment fraud, told
New York magazine that
Mrs . Harris has been elected
to the inmates' gr ievance
committee at the Bedford
Hills CN. Y.) Correctional
Facility.
Chance of slwwers
1 ..........
Temperatures
Coastal Ml ..... ~
lncr•nlng 'loud• •onlghl ano :1~ny • l2
Tuuoay wHll a cllanu of rain ;11uq.,. .. 31
oev•toplng thl• •v•nlng •nO Amarillo IS 31
lntru•tng "' JO percent <~• of Alllevllle .. 21
rain by T-y alter,_,,, Hloll• Allan'-SS 1t
·-y u "' 10. TuetdeY In IOW lo Atlante Cly 42 ll
mld...OS. ~ klnlQl>t S2 lo SI. Ba1Um0tt 0 " EIM.,ller<t from Point C<ln<aptlon Blrmlngllm ff u
to tl\a MexlCM'I -r -out Ml Blwnarck ).I .. .13
mile•: Light varlabl• wino• :o1~ " 40 .2• ···" i.tomtng -to soutllwffl I lo u 0• on "' " ~ Celd
knot• '"" •-Ing. Nortllwesl sw~tll :~~~~!vll<r ... S2 -ll JO 1 to l Ifft IOCSAy. Nlijhl eRO m0<ntng Cl\Arlsln K
lo• ctovos but moslly •unnv 11111 Cllart•tn wv S4 ll o • ., • •. <······· " ,,
•ttern-. c11a, ...... S6 31
Cllk-u '' Piiand, Ma " JI Ukiah St
v.s. Clnclon<lll ll> 21 PllaR0,0.-e S5 41 .u Barstow IO " summary ClevetaRO -H .01 Reno "' '2 .20 8 l98ear •5 27
Cotumb\6 2t u Ri,llmond .. 2A 81""'9 Ml ,.
Snow encl fl'MLing rain felt owr the D•l·FI Wiii 69 J9 Salt Like ... 41 .01 Calall na 12 S4
Dakotas, Ml,,...t0t1 lllO •-• IOOay Denver ., :16 Se•nt• " 41 .l1 LOng 114•11 .. ...
and 1no., •l•o wu ••P•<••o 1~ Des MolnH "' 20 St Lout• ., ,, Monrovia 14 43
.-1hern C.llfonlla. M<lhern Neviela O.tro1t 32 ,, S• P-Temc>a ., " New por1 Bea<ll "' .. " and •he nortl>n"n R°'kles. Oululll Jl • SI Sit Marla 1' .. Ontario ,, 0
Rein •llowers or flurrlH ••r• Et PHO 1S JI Spokane .. " Pesa-11 " foreca11 tot northern N•• El!ill•nO H1rttord u 31 Tutu 11 ).I SM! 8arnan1lno 14 4S
• nd norlll•••I New y ork eno Helena ., :16 WHfllngln .. • Senta Ana 10 41 tllun<ler~ -· txpec;ga o .. r Honolulu 13 IS wlc1111a S9 31
•-•r tlevallons of IN Pacific c.ou• Houston IS S4 CAUl'ORNIA l'ANAMERICAN •RO ln•o tht •-third of Callfornla. lndnapll• JI 23 Bakertlltld 12 S3 Auoulc.o t2 Rein sllowatl were forKut 10, Jacllsnvllt 6S JO 11 .01
•outllust Iowa acrou norlll•HI Kant City S4 ,, BlyU.. 14 BarbadOs .. IS
Mluo.irl to _..,,. .. t Alabama •no I.•• V~ 65 41 Eureka 61 SJ .11 Bwmu<IA 11 .. . 50
ctnlr•I Soulh C•olina. LIUlt R0<.k 6S l7 Fruno ., " 8-'• ., .. . 04 L.anca1te. 72 .... Curacao Tamoera•uru from around '"" t..oulsvlll• 43 21 • 11 ·°' nation Nl'IY IOCMy ranged from 1J In ~mphls 60 ,, Los Angela n M Freeport ,. S4
Eau C.lalre. Wis. to 11 In Corpus Miami I) SI Marnvllla •> 57 G11ae1Atal•• ., ..
Chrlsll, Tu. Mllwa11k• .)4 19 1\1\0n•erey .. .01 Guadeloupe 90 7l N..OIH 1J He vane Mpl .. Sl.P 11 9 ., so
Nalllvltte " Oaltta!>d ., S4 Klllil••on t2 IS
<;alif ornia 11 Paso Robin " .... Moni.oo Bay Ne•Or-. .. .. IS :16 Red Bluff 60 SS .11 Marattan IS N•wY-41 31 ..
The NaUonal WUll\ar S.r vlce NorfOlk ... )1 Redw-Clly .. M .OJ ~rlela IS Sf S..:ram..,•o " ., Mulco Clty 13 43 fore,u• • chance ol rain ano °'<1• City .. l7 S.lin .. .. S4 .CM Mon•erro " " consloer-cloudtrwu Tuesday for Omal\A 4.3 21 S.n Diego " 59 Naswu II .. most of Southern C:.llfornle. Lout Orlando .. 15 San Franc:IKO .. ~Juan " ,,
ttron9 911'ty •Inds --••PK ttO In Phlladlllll• 43 l l S.n•• 841111er• .. so SI. Kitt• .. II tN northern mountain• -oeserts P'-nl• 76 so StocktDft .. T41911<lgal1» 11 ff Tutld•y. Plltlburgl\ it 21 .02 TMrmel II 0 Trlnloact u .02 A 30 perc.anl <llenca of rain wa1 Veracruz 19 6)
pradt<tltO tot L05 Anvales, o•htrwlse
•
•lie Skifl should .. mostly cioucty. 'ANA DA
The Cl'llln<es of r •In in lht 5anla Calgary " 11
Barbara -V.ntura county <0111tal SU Rf Rf PORT Edmonton " 2'
•r••• Tllftdey stood et Ml perunt. Mon•rut ,.. IO
A JO perunl <Nnu of rein WH Onawa JO 17
PAdk•act for Ille COllSlal aru1 from Ree Ina :w 21
Santa Monica lo Orange Covnty. .. Toronto n 21
Htells along,,,.~ should range ;;;; -Vancou .. r " " lrom62to61. Wlnn l!)9V :w 2.S
Lecatlelt T•r'• wa.. AYtr ... Extended ~
o~tlook.
u ti Awt/MaJI. ..... Tafllll. ~ .,un nt1Gll 81Uffa 2-4 felr 61 •de Hu11tl"91Dft p.... 2-4 fair 61 ft.n, m 0 Q n, tl 8 Sany AN Rlvor JoUy J fr11d .i
SOUTHERN CALIFOR NIA
COASTAL AHO MOUNTAIN AREAS
-Rain likely ~•Y· Clffrtne aftd wlndY -Milly In ,,_taint
Ttiur.oay -l'rlaey, HlgN In '°' coastel .,. .. and 42 •• 52 In
mountelna. L.ows Wtdnuday
nwmlnt 4S lo SS coe.llat •rNt -21
.. • In ~. Coo11119 S to I ...,.., I ..... In perloG.
. ,.., ........ ..., .............
40!11 St. Ne-1 2-l II-ti TODAY
ttncl S•. ~ 2 fair t t saconcs 111911 1: 4' p.m. •.2
Batboe Willdllt t..J fair " Rockplle, 1...19Wia 2-3 fr-9C1 ,, TUESDAY =!.:'O:: ~-: :•1CI ti First I-l :lh.m. u Sen CtonwM Plor ,:J •11d tl Flrtt 11191> 7:10e.m. U Tr•f•ltar 9004' *' S.COfld ,_ J: 17 p.m. o.o
JT·itr .. u s.s ,_ .., , s.c-111911 •=••·"'· 4.1 T-.-., t!OH: H1911: 1:>0 a.m.; .._, 2· 11 0 m . 5-11 dlrec•loft· Sun Mis laoey •t 4:4" p.m., rl ... S...U.-t · • " · T\lttdayeU:iu.m. ~-)'_9"f11k no A91nCI01: 8111 SYll1Mf'11, Ron Hai-. Bud .. , ... , S..w Moon llU Mday M J;2t p.m., rlMa ............ m k.iArryMoora T-•yet4t<lila.m •
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Orange Coast DAILY PfLOT/Monday, November 23. 1981 H /F
FOSSIL SEARCH -Children ·went looking for
e vidence of ancient life Saturday in the ditch
separating two sides of Newport Boulevard.
near Santa Isabel. Taking part were Tori
Haidinger, 10, in foreground, Cost a Mesa
pa leontologist Mark
Haidinge r . presid e nt of Orange Coun
Natural History Foundation. which sponsor
the sear ch. ,,.!;_
·.:~ *.
Watt OKs drill freeze
No oil searches until summer on wilderness
WASHINGTON <AP I
Interior Secretary James G .
Watt is going along with a
congressional request that he
not approve until next summer
any oil drilling leases for 80
million a cres of fe derally
protected wilderness areas.
Bowing to a non -binding
request by the House Interior
Committee, Watt tentatively
agreed to a s i x -month
moratorium on wilde rness
mineral leases to give Congress
time to study whether it should
change wilderness protection
laws because of his policies.
Rep. Morns Udall, D·Ariz ..
chairman of the House Interior
Committee, said th e
moratorium would "kind of hold
the s latu E quo " without
invokinJt t he more drastic
power held by the committee to
forbid oil drillirig permanently
and immediately.
The committee earlier this
week had been poised to use that authority to permanently bar Watt froai approving any
mineral leases in wilderness
areas.
Watt averted that vote when
he agreed to conduct
environmental reviews, hold
public hearings and provide
advance notice to Congress
before approving wilderness
leases.
The canmittee's non-binding
request came in a resolution
approved 41·1 that said Congress
needs time "to evaluate and
res pond to the changes in
federal policy which may result
in the issuance of numerous oil
and gas leases."
Delaying new leases will allow
Congress "to study and evaluate
the full implication of the recent
c h a nges in policy affecting
mineral leasing in wilderness
areas and lo consider any
legislation whic h may be
appropriate ", the resolution
s aid.
Rep. Dick Cheney. R· Wyo •
said he had discussed the
reque!t with Watt, and Watt had
agreed. Interior Departme nt
s pokt$man Harmon Kallman
said later tht Watt's final
approval was awaiting a reading
of the exact wording of the
resol ut ion, but .. a s it was
described to him. it's OK . He
has no problem with it."
The resolution would a ffect
23.4 million acres of wilderness
in the lower 48 st ates and 56.4
million acres in Alas ka.
While the resolution is not
binding on the administration,
the committee came within one
vote of adopting a rider that
would ha ve dec lar e d a n
emergency o n Ca l ifornia
wilde rness areas and put them
permanently off limits to oil
drilling.
That attempt by Rep. Phillip
Burton. D-Calif., was defeated
20 · 19, but only after Rep.
Douglas Be reuter , R-Neb.,
switched his vote from "aye" to
"no" when it a ppeared the
amendment would be approved
Burton then became the onJy
committee member to vote
against the overall resolution.
One factor behind Wat1' agreem e nt is the unusu
a uthority th e Interio
Committee has to block t e
secretary 's stated plans to
increase development of federal
lands. ·
The power rests in an obscui~
secti on of f e deral lan·a
management law that allows lfle
Interior Committee, by itself, Jo
withdraw any federal land from
mineral leasing if an emergeney
exists. '
Used only one time beroerJ
this year -to protect .a
municipal water supply from a
proposed uranium mine -ufe
committee invoked the section
in June to protect a Mon~a
wilderness area from on
drilling.
The committee's action _JS;=
under challenge in U.S. Dist~
Court in Billings, Mont. •
Reaga n g loomy
o n s t a t e a id c uts
WAS HINGTON I AP I
President Reagan says he
cannot promise there will be no
more cuts in federal aid to the
states, according to an account
of an interview with him
publis hed in The Washington
Post .
He also said he could see little
like lihood soon of turning over
revenue sources to the states,
something he said during the
campaign that he wanted to do,
because of th e federal
government's own financial
problems.
.. I just think our emergency is
so great, J don't know how we
could hold back and wait for all
of this." the president was
reported as telling five reporters
who inte rviewed h i m on
Thursday.
The inte rvie w. published
Sunday, was limited to the
s ubject or federalism.
The account of the interview
appeared as the Republican
Governors Association began its
convention in New Orleans. Th~
chairman of the associaMo~
Gov. R ichard Snelling <ff.
Vermont, earlier had appealed
to the president to hold aid to tti~
states to at least $46 billion for
the 1983 and 1984 fiscal years so
they could draw up budgets with
more confidence. ' ·•
The pres ident s aid he had
little sympathy for a reshufflinl
of program financing with t.ht
states -for example, taking ~n
we lfare fi nanci n g into tbe
federal government and turning
over all education financing to
the states.
He also said he did not belieVJ!
it was the responsibility of ~ r e d e r a I g o v e r n m e n t t.o
redistribute resources from
r e latively well-off st'ates to'
r elatively poor ones.
Where services are lackinc.
taxes high and governmen~
inefficient, Americans "either
will use their power at the poUf •
to redress that, or they'll g~
someplace else," he said .
'•'
our do e.'ftl..rything jackcz.t,
survivelon ...
i
1
t.hci fin<Z.st cotton poplin
you11l rz.v<Lr cz.:xpczri<inc~.
cWn,lopz.d by tm, rcyal
ai~~e.dW"1:nd .ww~
this un1q,ucz febr1c is
wata.r an3. wind T'¢~lrmt.;
pl-rha:i::e th<L fln~t cloth
fbr protR.ct1on against
thcz e.l<Z.m<ints known
to man .
' (
H•' ,•
H/F Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 23, 19811
rotestanls call
trike in Ireland
BELFAST, Northern Ireland
(AP > -Thousands of
Protestants walked off their jobs
today in support or the Rev. Ian
,Paialey's call for a 12·hour
eneral strike to pTotest British
llcy ln Northern Ireland.
Most of the 7,000 workers left
heir jobs at Harland and Wolff
hipyard in Protestant East
ellast, largest employer in the
ritlsh·ruled province. About
SO workers at the province's
a r gest power st ation also
truck.
M any schools and offi ces shut,
:.end towns in the Protestant
...Qeartland of the province were
..&hoked with car and tractor
--earavans as Northern Ireland's
,Protestant majority rallied to
(tiemand a British crackdown on
lhe mostly Roman Catholic Irish ~epubhcan Army guerrillas
'Mo urners visil
merrwrial of JFK
DALLAS <AP > A steady
stream of people v1s1led the
John F . Kennedy Memorial
Sunday on the 18th anni versary
of the president's assassination
Crowds were not large.
however. and no special events
were planned to commemorate
SUPPORTER A Spana~h
n g httsl holds i..I photo ul
Colonel l'eJel'O!:i. leudcr ol a
coup attempt an Spain .
during a rail~ an Madrnl
marking tht.' ;.anntn•rsa r~ ol
the death ol Gen Frant t!:il'O
Franco.
the shooting, which occurred a
block from the s ite of the
memorial.
Quake unf e/J
off Oregon ooaat
NORTH BEND, Ore. CAP> -
Oregonians apparently didn't
feel It, but scientists say a
mode rate earthquake rumbled
beneath the Pacific about 200
miles from here early Sunday
morning.
The epicenter of the quake
was 43.5 degrees north latitude
a n d 127 9 degrees w est
longitude. The quake measured
between 5.6 a nd 5. 7 on the
Richter Scale, the National
Earthquake Center in Boulder.
Colo .• reported
Warsaw police
disrupt meeting
WARSAW, Poland <AP>
Police broke up a meeting of
anti.government activists and
Solidarity union members
Sunday in the apartment of a
leading dissident, the state news
agency PAP said.
Solidarity and di ssident
sources said severa l dozen
people attended the meeting at
Jacek Kurom 's apartment.
including regional offi cials of
the independent union. Police
searched the three -room
apartment a n d iss u ed a
summons to Kuron, but made no
arrests.
Security tight
for J>OJ>'1'S visil
TOOi , It aly <A P > -
Anta·lerrorist poli ce fanned out
through throngs of pilgrims
Sunday i n It aly 's largest
security operation ever for a
papal visit as Pope John Paul 11
made his first pilgrimage since he was shot May 13.
Hundreds or paramilitary
officers were brought In from as
far away as Naples to protect
the 6l·year·old pontifC during a
visit to this ancient hilltop town
76 miles north of Rome. and a
nearby shrme
Hi nck ley facing
medical test.s
WASHINGTON <AP> John
W Hinckley Jr., accused or
trying to kill President Reagan,
was released from an Army
hospital Sunday and moved to a
cell near the one in which he
tried to hang himself a week
ago, the Justice Department
announced.
Department spokesman John
Russell said additional medical
tests are planned, apparently to
determine whether Hinckley
suffered any permanent brain
damaged in the suicide attempt.
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OI OUR FLOWERY
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Arab Leagrie inWls Sudan ouster
Libya and Syria blast nation's close ties with Egypt, expelled in 1978
FEZ. Morocco (AP) -Ubya
and Syria broadened their
attack on the Camp David peace
accord.a today, calllng tor the
ouster of Sudan frQm the Arab
League because of its close Ues
with Egypt, expelled In 1978
after It signed a peace treaty
with Israel.
Arab mplomalic sources said
no action was taken on the caJI,
which they said came in a closed
meeting of foreign ministers
from 20 Arab nations and the
Palestine Liberat io n
Organization here for
Wednesday 's Arab League
summit. Libya and Syria are
expected to renew the plea when
the summlt convenes.
Some moderate Arabs htve
proposed an approach to the new
Egyptian government o f
President Hos ni Mubarak ,
successor to the slain Anwar
Sad a t . to discuss Egyprs
possible return to the league.
L i byan Foreign Minister
Aabdelaati Obeidl and Syrian
Foreign Minis ter Abdelhalim
Khaddam told the meeting their
governments would never
accept Egypt'• return to the
Arab League unless the new
Egyptian eovernment revereea
the Camp David peace policy of
Sadat and "rejoins the common
s truggle" against Israel.
They a ccuse d Sudanese
President Gaafar Nimeiri of
tacitly approving the Camp
David agreements through close
relations with Egypt, and said
therefore Sudan s hould be
OMSted, according to the sources.
The Sudanese news agency in
Khartoum reported todav
FIRST SNOW Ski enthul>&asts enJOY the
season ·s first snowfall al Sugarloaf Mountain
tn Cassabas~ett. Main~. Sw1day. The stat~·l>
·~-...........
i.kt <.treas are hoping for a sno~) ''mte1 afll.'r
seeing their hills bare fur week:-. at a llml'
dunng the µast two s casoni.
W. Germans fear Soviet nukes
Brezhnev urged to negotiate missile ban with Reagan
BONN, West Germa ny <AP>
-Chancellor Helmut Schmidt
told Soviet President Leonid I.
Brezhnev todaJ that West
Germans fear Moeirow'a nuclear
rirepower and he urged the
Kre mlin chief to negotiate a
European missile ban with the
Reagan administration
Government spokesman Kurt
Bec k e r said Scbm idl told
Brezhnev he supports the "Zero
Option," President Reagan 's
proposal to cancel plans to
deploy U.S. Crwse and Pershing
2 missiles in Western Europe if
the Soviets dismantle their 5.5-20
m issiles that ra n g their
European border.
Schmjdt, who takeJ credit for
persuading Reagan to propose a
European missile ban, told the
Soviet leader Reagan wanted
peace and wou ld pursue
strategic arms control talks with
Moscow, Becker said after a
meeting that lasted more than
three hours.
The West German a(ld Soviet
d elegations sat down a t the
chancellor's offi ce beside the
Rhine River. Later today,
Sc hmid t a nd B rez hnev .
accompanied by trans lators.
will meet at Schloss Gymruch,
t h e ancient castle where
Brezhnev is staying 20 miles
northwest of the capital. Schmidt told Brezhnev that
West Germany feels threatened
by the Soviet missiles, and that
a negotiated arrangement of the
Zero Option wa s the only
guaranteed way U.S. missiles
wou Id not be deployed on
schedule starting in 1983. Becker
said.
Schmidt also told Brezhnev
West Germans beli eve the issue
of British and French nuclear
missiles could be discussed
during future East-West arms
talks. The Soviets have said
these weapons s ho uld be
included in a n y mutual
reduction since they. like the
U.S. missiles, could also hit the
Soviet U{'lion.
Becker said the two sides
discussed other issues including
the Middle East. Southeast Asia,
Southern Africa and Central
America. He gave no details.
Before today's talks, the
Soviet leader reviewed a West
German honor gua rd in a
nationally televised ceremony
welcoming him to Bonn for a
four -day visit. The weather was
mild and Brezhnev wore only a
s uit aa he walked slowly but
s teadily along t he r eviewing
lines between rows of troops
Brt!zhnev arrived at th e
Bonn Cologne airport Sunday
eveni n g and Schmidt
accompanied him to Schloss
Gymnich
Schmidt later told a West
German telev1s1on mterv1ewer
he had a 20-minute impromptu
talk with Brezhnev al Gymnich
that touched on "the central
themes" of the visit including
arms contro. He gave no other
details.
Tass, the off1c1al Soviet news
agency, said the two leaders had
a brief talk 1n a "friendly
atmosphere.··
Reagan's missile proposal,
which he made in a speech last
Wednesday, will be the opening
U .S . o ff er 1n the So ·
viet ·American arms reduction
talks beginning next Monday m
Geneva, Switzerland.
Number one to Phoenix, andgetting better every day. Now
you can fly us to Phoenix for as~ as S36, one-way. There's no lower fare 1r. the air And nobo g~ts you there as often or
lv · 7 40a.m. Arr 9 40e.m. l• 1001 m
11 401 m
SSS pm 12: 15 p.m 1'17 pm. •·JS pm I ltp.m
Nlmeiri would not attend tht
summit.
On Sunday, Arab League
Secretary·Oeneral Chedll Kllbl
urged the foreign ministers to
envisage such overtures tti
Egypt.
H e a lso told We ste rn
European nations they would
put economic, political and
cultural lies with the Arab world
at risk 1£ they participated In the
Sinai peacekeeping force.
Today .. Britain. Italy, France
and the Netherlands planned t.c
announce they will participate in
the U.S. ·led force. which is tc
replace withdrawing Israeli
troops in the Sinai Peninsula
under terms of the Camp David
accords.
·'IC th e countries o r the
European CommunJty want tc
contribute to the efforts for
l)eace in the Middle East, it i~
ne<·essar y for them not lo
participate in the mult1lateraJ
force lo be established in the
Sinai," Klib1 said 1n a s peedll
Sunday lo the Arab foreign•
ministers
lie said 1t wai. 'high time·
W est European nations
abandoned their "hesit ant
attitude" and gave full support
to the Palestinjan people'i. right
to self determinalton and Vasser
Arafat"s Pales tine Liberation
Organi zation
The 2.500-man peacekeeping
force 1s to patrol the eastern
S1na1 after t h e I s r aeli
withdrawal from Egyptian
territory• captured during the
1973 Mideast War 1i. completed
1n Apnl.
Four c harge d
in c lubbing
doe to d e ath
NORTll ATTLEBORO. Mass.
1A P 1 Four men have beeR
charged with clubbing a tame
doe lo dcttth and butchering Lhe
while tailed deer for a
pre Thanksg1v1ng meal."
police say
The death or the animal al
Memorial Park outraged the
commumty, authorities said
'I've been here 28 years and
we· ve had all kinds of stuff out
at the park rapes, c hild
molestation and attacks," said
police Chief John Coyle. ··eut
this has made the commuruty
very angry This is the fi rst time
I've se<>n a real expression of fear.·
Police arres ted four men
Wednesday on a tip after the
town seh:ctmen put up a S500
re ward
Charged with larceny over
$100, conspiracy to commit
larceny, cruelty to animals and
deslroymg a park animal were
Richard J Paul. 18, and Tracy
Penny . 18. both of North
Attleboro, William T Davis. 28,
of Hyannis. and Ralph f' Door.
22. of Provincetown
They were released on their
own recognizance
According to a statement from
one or the men. the four went to
the park at 4 a m Nov 11
because they were "hungry,''
police said
While two stood guard. two
others allegedly clubbed the doe
lo death, police said
At 7111m
II 511 m
6 06pm
More nonstops than any e. Fly Republic to Phoenix as fast · ~ -toe ,,_,,.. to OMMto
from 3 Los Angeles area air s. Choose from 3 nonstops
out of Burbank, 2 nonstops o t of Ontario (with a third
nonstop starting November 1 1981), or 4 nonstops out of
Orange County.
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·-----------......_~--Orange Co1-1t DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 23, 1981 --,41
. ~ ...........
HONORED Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthaf
I left 1. Nina Lagergren. s ister of Raoul
Wallenberg a nd actor John Voight share
handshake at ceremonies where Mrs
Lagergren recei,·ed the Simon Wiese nthal
liuma n1tarian Award on behalr ot her
brother. a Swedish diplomat held captive in
the Soviet L;n1on Voight will portra\
\\'a llcnbt·rg in a mO\' ll' ·
Critics rapped
in Corps death
SAN DIEGO <AP I -Marine Corps
Com mandanl Gen. Robert Barrow lashed out at
critics or the Marine investigation into the
drowning death of a Texas recruit, saying "the
Charge Of whitewashing IS the rinal effrontery ...
Barrow, who acted al the urging of
~ongr~ssmen t~ order a second Marine Corps
investigation into the death of Pvt. Randall
Christian, 18, of Dallas, spoke to 400 people lest
week al a luncheon of the Navy League, Chamber
of Commerce and Military Order of the World
Wars.
Barrow admitted that "once in a while we
have a problem, .. in an implied reference to the
Christian case and the court-martial of a dnll
instructor accused of ordering a recruit beaten
Gal due hi north?
Warning issued; 7-foot waves expected .
By Tbe Aaloelated Pre11
Gale warnln1• have been lasued ror
haaardoua sea conditloll'S 20 mllea
wut ol Point Arena and Point St.
George with waves reaching 7 feet
late today, the National Weather
Service reports.
Increasing cltudiness will occur
over San Franclaco. forecasters say,
with rain expected by late afternoon
and showers continuing on Tuesday.
Raln ls expect«! to spread across
Northern California by Tuesday.
Highs will be io the 601 with lows In
the SOs along the coaat. Small craft
advisories h ave been Issued for
increasing southerly winds In San
Francisco and San Pablo bays.
Killing revives
SF gays' anger
SAN FRANCISCO <API -The
killing of one man al'\,d stabbings of
two oth ers, allegedly by a
beer-swigging duo shouting anti-gay
co mm ents. bave revived
long-simmering feelings or anger in
San Francisco 's large gay
community.
On Sunday, several gay leaders
said the attacks may change the tone
of what had been planned as a
peaceful demonstration later this
week. The attacks took place
Saturday in the predominantly gay
Polk Street district where another
man was murdered In one of many
similar incidents earlier this year.
Richard Weston, 29, and Henry
Luna, 26, were arrested for
investigation of one count of murder
and two counts or attempted murder
in connection with Saturday 's
stabbings, police said
Navy halts search
for copter crew
SAN DIEGO <AP) -The Navy has
given up the search for four crew
members of a helicopter that crashed
off the coast. officials said
·'The search has been permanently
discontinued... Ken Mitchell, public
affairs officer. s aid Sunday. "It
would be improper lo speculate"
whether any of the crew survived.
"They are all listed as m issing. We'll
look into declaring them olflclally
dead tomorrow."
The craft took off at 6 p.m.
Saturday and the deck of the U~
W ichita with a squadr on or
helicopters "and was never heard
from again,'' he said.
Glen«Jale Federal,
Florida firm to merge
GLENDALE (AP) -Glendale
Federal Savings & Loan Association
a nnounced that it \will absorb an
,alling Florida thrift, First Federal
Savings and Loan Association or
Broward County, ln what wtll be the
largest combination of assets in
savings-and·loan history.
The merger will create a company
with about $7.9 billion In assets,
making Glendale Federal the
nation's fourth largest S&L. behind
Home, Great Western and American .
Glendale Federal has 115 branches in
California and First Federal has 35
branches in Florida.
First Federal. based in Fort
Lauderdale, is Florida's second
largest savings and loan. with assets
of $2.5 billion . The company
reportedly has been losing money
rapidly in recent months and the
Federal Savings & Loan Insurance
Corp, had solicited bids from other
thrifts in an effort to avoid an
insolvency.
Two probes pU8hed
in sailboat sinking
SAN -FRANCISCO <AP) -Twin
inquiries into the confusiOD-ridden
sinking of the sailboat Freedom II
continued over the weekend as a
Coast Guard investigator said he
could not believe the survivors· story
of being rammed by a stip before
two women died in a storm-tossed
s urf.
C oas t Guard Capt. James
M cCart.in, ch.ief investigator for the
Marine Safety Office, said at a news
conference he believed th&t a wreck
did occur the night of Nov. 12, and
that t wo women perished ia the chilly
Pacific south of Stinson Jeach. But
that was where his certainty in the
case ended.
Announcer von Zell mourned
His career reached height on Burns-Allen shows
SL'CCUMBS AT 75
Jlarry UOTI Zell
Study planned
FRESNO I APJ
Pacific Gas & Electnc
Co. has confirmed that it
pla n s l o fil e a
preliminary appijcation
to make a feasibility
s tudy of a proposed
hydroelectnc site on the
north fork of t he Kings
River.
~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -Harry voa ZeU, wbo9e
deep baritone voice made bJm one of tbe top
announcers of radio's golden era, has died or
cancer al age 75, his son Ken announced.
Von Zell, who wanted to be an actor but even
at the height of his c;areer in the 1950s on the Burns
and Allen radio and televisk>n shows was typecast
as an announcer, died Saturday al the Motion
Picture Country House and Hospital in Calabasas.
"Harry von Zell was a great announcer and!
also a fine actor ," said comedian George Burns,
von Zell's former boss and longtime friend . "He
was a delight to work with. always on time and
always knew his lines ...
Burns recalled that von Zell and Gracie Allen
were wonderful com ic complements on the
television show.
"ln lhe script, he and Gracie had a lot in
common He understood her, and she understood
him and nobody understood both of them,"
Burns said
At times during the 1920 and 1930s von Zell was
announcer on as many a s 20 shows a week. Among
them were the "Eddie Cantor," "Fred Allen" and
.. Phil Baker" shows, "Stoopnagle and Bud," "The
March of Time," the "Henry Aldrich Show," "The
Amazing Mr. Smith" and the "Ben Bernie Show."
Von Zell's voice was the standard announcer 's
baritone, but with a difference. His h ad a
humanity and humor lacking in some of his rivals
that was described as ''dignity with a giggle."
Once von Zell provoked a nationwide giggle
when he introduced the presiderit by saying:
.. Ladies and gentlemen, the president of t he
United States -Hoobert Heever."
"People are still asking me about that." von
Zell said in a 1974 inte rview, "tbouO it occurred
nearly a h alf-century 110. I didn't do l on p~rpose.
When I came to that line, my tongte lert me. I
thought it was the beginning of tht end of my
career."
Von Zell was born July 11, 1906, ia Indianapolis
as the son of a sports reporter for tht Indianapolis
Star. His family later moved to Siol.bc City, Iowa.
where he graduated from high schoo.
The family moved to Los Argeles and he
attended UCLA. He was a memberbf the musical
and dramatic clubs and played f<Otball until he
was sidelined by an injury.
He landed his first show busiless job in the
mid-19205 as a s inger-announcer on KMIC radio in
Inglewood, where CBS offi cials ~eard him and
hired hlm as a sports announcer. linger. producer
and writer for a local radio outlet.
His big break came in L929 tihen orchestra
leader Paul Whiteman chose him "om among 250
candidates as the announcer of his popular
musicaJ show. By the next year von Zell was a
staff announcer for the CBS netw•rk in New York
City .
Von Zell also began workint in movies. His
screen credits among some 3t films include
.. Strange Affairs of Uncle lrry," "Saxon
Charm," "Dear Wife," "Son of aleface," "Two
Flags West," "USS Teakettle" a "For Heaven's
Sake." '
Von Zell capped his Ion~ career on the
famiilar television ad for Home Savings & Loan
Association for nearly two decad .
He is s urvived by bis re of 56 years .
Minerva; two children, son Ke S2, and daughter
Linda Salamone, 35.
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~~------------------------.---
If Seagram. the world'• lar&est maker and teUer
of 1tcohollc beverages, bad announced at the start of
this year that 1l intended to •CQufre • major ata.ke In
the Du Pont company, you can fma1fne the
anauiishcd 11creams that would have come from
the Wllmlnglon, Oel.. home of Ou Pont -and from
other quarters aR well.
Du Pont is, a rter all, one of the world's premier
(•ompanJC~ ll':s the largest chcmicaJ producer in the
United States, and lt.s history goes back to 1801 wht:n
it began making gunpowder on Brandywine Cre~k in
Oelawurl' Seagram, on the oth.ir hand, 11 a
Canadian·based company whose history aoes back
only to the Prohibition period. Ou Pont was started
by a f''r{'nCh aristocrat. Eleulhere lrenee du Pont de
Nemours, who tied from lhe French Revolution.
Seagram was started hy Sa~ Bronfi:nan. a JewJs h
Immigrant whorled Crom Czansl Russia.
Ou Pont Is the ~
c o m p a n y t h a t l"
in ve nt ed nylon 'I' o
Seagrnm 1!. th e r~'
company that ..,.... showed you could do __ _.._..._ ____ _
well hy advertising a ll(Jll llllllRZ smooth , blended
whis ky, 7 Crown,
from coast lo coast These were. in other words, very
unlikely marrtage partne rs But this is a combination
that now seems possible. Seagram is emerging from
1981 with a 20 percent stake in Du Pont, making 1t the
largest shareholder, bigger even than the Ou Pont
family
If th<'re's a moral to Ut1s bizarre outcome, it's
this Never ask for anything you want directly, that
will only ra1:.e hackles l:>eut around the bush
lt "'as no secret early 1n 1981 Utat Seagram was
on' the prowl to buy a company. It had S3 billion
burnml( a hole m its pocket, thanks largely to the sale
of its T<'xus Pacific 011 properties So 1t made a bid
for a big mining company, St Joe Minerals and
was immediately turned down. John Duncan. St.
Joe's chairman. referred to Seagram's boss, Edgar
Bronfman, by saying, "I don't hold 1t against him
that h1:. father was a bootlegger "
Seagram then turned its attention to Conoco, the
natwn·~ ninth largest oil company, making what 1t
thou~hl was a respect able offer But Conoco wa~ JUSt
a:. qutc:k as St Joe to sµum the offer from a liquor
company In fa(·t, Seagram 's fltrtallons drove Conoco
into the arms of Du Pont
Seagram was µre pared to pay as much as Du
Pont fo1 ('onuro and indeed many Conoco
:-.haroholders did sell their stock to Seagram
lloWl'\'Cr. for Conoco managers. that wasn't Ule
powt They o;imply didn't relish the idea of selling out
lo a whisky d1 st11ler As for Du Pont well, that was
another story Classy. you know
So mighty Du Pont made the biggest acquisition
1n U S business history $7.5 billion A ~ by
<•cquinng Conoco. Du Pont leaped from 21st to 7th
place in U S business rankings
Rut Du Pont :s urprise picked up something
else with Conoco Seagram had managed lo
accumulate 18 m1lhon Conoco shares, and rather
than exchange them for dollars, which it doesn 't
need. Seagram swapped them for shares in Du Pont
ttcs ull. Seagram became what it could never have
become by going d1reclly for il -the largest
stockholder in blue·blooded Ou Pont.
Edgar Bronfman. his brother Charles, and
Seagrani's chief financial officer, Harold Fieldsleel.
~ 111 now sit on Du Pont'i. board of directors. That's a
direct reflection of Sea gram's power As Edgar
Rronfman told Fortune magazine, .. Having, I won't
say a dominant voice, but a very much listened to .
voice in the seventh largest company in America 1s
not u bud pos1t1on to be 10 · ·
Ou Ponts. move over for the Bronfmans
Gold metals quotations
Gold
By The A.~socialed Press
Selected world gold prices today
London: morning fixing $396.00, off SS.50.
London: afternoon fixing $396 75, orr $4 .75
Paris: $405.28, off $6.31.
Frankfurt: S397.99, off $5.00.
Zurich: Late fixing $393.00, bid, off S7.00, $396.00
asked.
Handy & Harman: only daily quote $396.75, oft S4 75.
Engelhard: only daily quote $.196.75, off $4.75.
Engelhard: only daily quote fabricated $416.59, orr $4.99
Gold coi11s
NEW YORK <AP> -Prices late Friday of gold coins,
compared with Thurs day's pnce
Krugerraod, 1 troy oz., $418 25, orr Sl.25.
Maple leaf, 1 troy oz .. $418.25, off Sl.25.
Mexican 50 peso. 1.2 troy oi , $505.50, off $1.50.
Austrian 100 crown, .9802 troy oz ., $398.50, off Sl.25.
Source· Deak-Perera
Metal.s
NEW YORK (l\P1 -Spot nonferrous metal prices
today:
Copper 79~·83 cents a pound. U.S. destinations.
Lead 32-34 cents a pound.
Zinc 46·49~ cents a pound, delivered.
Tin SS.2663 Metals Week composite lb.
AJumlnum 76-80 cents a pound, N Y
Mercury $424.00 per nask.
Platinum $381.00 troy oz., N. Y
Silver
Handy & Harman, $8.030 per troy ounce.
-----~-~~--~~------
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/November 23, 1981
NFL
49era 33, Rama 31
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S..n Fr•n<~ l I 11 .-)l
LotAngelH 0 11 1 I 31
SF FG WHKIWnQ.,
LA FG Corr•I ...
LA hie< n peu from Putorlnl tt.orr•I
kl<kl
SF Oe•ll 1 run tWtrKlllng klekl
LA Oenn•ro 1 P•l' from C"m•n
• tCorr•l l<k kl
SF Lntrenu U ••<koll reh1rn
twer«lllng kkkl
Sf FG Wt<KIWng )4
SF Loll H 1ntercept1on return
tWert.:lltng klckl
LA ArnolO 1 peu from H-n tCottet
kt<kl
SF FG WHKhong l2
LA Tyl« 1 run tC.orr•l klOJ
SF FG WerKlllnQ JI
A ~.~
Tumsi.U•tk1
SF
f lrll o-n• ,.
Ru~•·y.,ds 1t-11
Pen1ng ura• 2S9
Relurn Y••O• 37 P .. S.> 19-JO.I
~th by HI
Puni. 1 ...
Fumllln·IOSI l·I
Pen•ll••~Y.,01 l.-S1
T 1me 01 "°""....,.. lS 00
1""4•-1 SUIJSlk 1
LA
11 ., lOl
JOI
~ 1 .. ll·I
M4
4-4) ...
J.71
l) 00
RUSHING ~ Fren<tKO. Oe••• t-U,
P•tton 1·20, Holer S 16, Lewrtn<e 1 9,
C.oo~r ~. Monlene I mlnu• 1 Lo• Angele•.
Tylor U·'1. Gum•n 11·64, o.,-.nero 1·14.
Po1oron1 2 13, H..,.n 1 9, Brv•n• 2-4, J
Tnom .. 1-1
PASSING Sen fren<•HO, MonteN
1'·30-1 nl. I.OS AnVele>, P .. 1onn1 .. ,._, 19,
H•Gen 9-l:M>-122. GU<Nn 1 1~7
RECEIVING ~ fr•nc1sco, So-
S 114, C_,.r >S~. Cl•rk 4-St, t;oler 1·10.
YounQ 1·11, Shumenn I 1 LOS Angele\,
O•nnuo S·S•, Tyler 4·39, Guman l ·l•.
Arnolo 111, 0 Hill ' o . W.OOy .... BryMI •
17,J T hOmH1·~
Cowboys 24. Redskins 10
Sunby-r1an
wn111nQ1on o 1 l ~ 10
0~11.. 1 J , 1 14
Oel Jolln1on 11 pen from w1111e
t~pUen kl<l<J
B•I '-FG Sf!c>llH> lS
WHll GIAQutnlo 1 .,.. .. ''""' Thell""'""
IMoHIOll.tOI
WHll f(;Mosele•2•
Oe1 c...-10 peu from Whtie 1S."'I..,
Sc>r1119s I run ISep11en k lC kl
~.S&l
IMl•"'IUll Sl.tllltKt
RUSHING W••lllnglon, Was11lng10n
ll 84, Gt•Qu•nto 1 II, R1ggin1 • ii,
Thel\m•nn 2 11 Delle'-Oorwll ZJ·11S,
Spru•g• 11·.S, PHt'.IOn l·?S. Jone• 4-lt,
Wlltle2·14
PASSING w .. h1nglon, T11e11m•nn
14->4-l·U•. 0.11 ... While IJ.11+m RECEIVING Wethington, ,,,...,_
4·S•. WHllinglon J H , Gla Quinlo J.2•.
Mel<•ll l ·ll, -1-IJ, W•llr.er I·~ 0.llH,
Pe.,ton 4-111, Hill >·41, Jollnton l·H,
Spr1ngs 1·11. Cosol• I 20 ~eldl l·J.
Lions 23. Beers 7
Sceni.yO...,,.n
Oetrool
Cn1<•90
Oel FG Murr er 1•
0•1 fG Mufray 1l
Oel fG Murray 49
J
0
I U
O I
(hi e.11 ,, llllHC•Pllon ••lurn I Rovelo -•n1 Del
0•1
Hllll>l~S ,..,., lMucuy klC.11.J
IC-l run !Murrey klC.kl
A SO.OIJ
lnolv-1 SUilttk 1
RUSHING Detro<!, S1m111·111, H1PC11e
'1-ll, B1>t>ey 1 JI, IC•ne lrll, V T_.,,_
: :•·Scott 2-12 '"''eQO. Polon IJ 37, ~Y
PASSING Oe1ro11, H•POI• 10-2'-I""~
C.lllUgo, Evan• 4·1._l ll, Avellln• ).10-1 20
ParlOn\1).1~
RECEIVING Oe1ro11, Stoll J ...
N1cno1> 2 19 Norr1• 1·12, Kane 1 "· 1.
11\0mp\On l·I, IC.•"'I I.() (ht<-, Walls 2 2•,
Sulley l ·IO. Payton 2 1
Chargers 55, Raiders 21
kore lly 0..-.Wn
S•n 01~ 1 21 10 1 ))
Oeuane1 7 14 o o-21
00 R.., .. r Wt O<IH from WlllGn I Bellr
ko<kl
~o--••-4-. .. ~~ Deir. -Jt'nwn2runt8ehr kiclr.I
SO Brook> ll pen from foul•
IBenlrKhu klCkl
O•k Wtl'IOll 12 run 1 Bahr kl<kl
SD W1n1low IS O•'' from F-ouh
I lientrKhk• kt<k 1
SD W1n\IO• ,, 0•~1 from F ouu
I Banir S<J>M kt<k I
SO W•n\IOw • P•\\ from foul'
t 8enor.cM• klClr.I
SO W•"''-S peu tram Fou11 Ckl<I<
laoleOI
SO Joln•r & pau lrom fouu
tBenlr><hl<• 1<101
!>O Wontlow J PU• from Muncie
CBenlrsciw.e kklr.I A SO,.,,
lnCllv-1 Sl.ttlslk•
RUSHING ~ Oie90, Broollt, 1/.97,
Muncie 11-0. ~lletto .. Oakl...O, 1C1ng
.. 21, J•n""'" }-19, Wilton 2·1•. Hawlr.1111 l·S,
Wholln•Qlon 1-m•nu• 2 P ASSING S... 01990, Foul~, ........ ,...,
Lull\er 1·1+2S. Muncie 1·1..0-l, Wln1lo•
0.1..0.0. 0a1r.1ano, w111on 12·14,2·103, Pluni."'1
.. 1t-1-1:i.
RECEIVING Sen Diego, V.11\llOW
13-144, Br-• S.». OWnoler 4-31, Joiner
i.», Soies 2.JIJ, Munt le 2 ... <Aopel .. nt l·ll.
O•klend, R•mHy •·Ill, Je.,un 4·)4,
CIWlllOIH ).S., BrM><ll J.ll, Hawkin• >44,
KlnQ 2·14, crw1s1 ... ..,. •·». Clle•t•r 1 ..
Bue• 37, Packers 3
k-..., °"""'"' G<Hn Bey
Tempe Bey
TB FG'-<e.,
0 0
J 14
O >-I
0 1()...41
TB Brown II 1111erup11on retur"
IC.peu kl<lll
T8 -o-n,u,..,. t~e lr.10)
T8 T Bell 1 PUl from Wllll•m>
IC.apeu lr.k kl
18 -FG c;_.,)l
TB -FG C..-<• JI
c; e -FG si.neruo S3 • TB Gllfl 2 peu from Fuslna IC-•
kl<kl
A -U,lSI
···-· 51.atl..Xt RUSHING GrHn Bev. Elll• 12·U.
Huckl•llr •·ts, J•nMn 2~. l ..npe B•y,
O•ent 1•111. R. &ell 1·21, WllO•r .. u.
EckwOOd •n. Wiiiiam• ).U, Fu.in• 1-1.
O••h 1-3, Hou .. I I. PASSING Green Say, Whllellulll
M+U, CMnP»ll ts.JIM.I.._ hmpe Ber.
Wllllams 12·U.l 1 .. , F_,,• l·l~J
RECEIVING Green B•y, Elli• 11-7•.
Lofton • 1111, Coif"""' 2·JS, Jelferton 2· 10.
T•mpe Bey, Giie• •$3, Owe"' 4-44, WllO«
1·22. H-I 13, R. Bell HI, f &ell I 1
Saini• 27. Otters 24
k enlilTOMf'len
New Orie-O 10 14 l 27
Houston o J 1 14 2•
NO -Hol,,... 9 r...,, t RIC¥00 klCkl
Hou -l'G l'rtll<h 49
NO FG Rk.,oo ...
Hou -c.m-11 I run tfrltKll l<t<kl
NO HOI"""' 1 run tRl<•rOO lr.l"I
HQ -WlllM>ft 12 PH• from Mannino
I Roceroo kk kl
Hou Hohton SO P•-'' from St•bltr
lfrlll<h klCkl
NO f(; Rl<M'OO 42
HOU Cempeell I run lfrtlSth •IC"
A •9,Stl
llMll•-1 Sl.ttltlk1
RUSHING New Orleans, Aooen 1 .. 142,
Holmu t-2), I yler S·lS, WlllOll l·S, E r•l-n
I-minus •• Houllon, Campllefl 1S·9',
Coltm•n I>
PASSING New Orlun1. Manning
10-14-0-141 H°"llon, St.alllt< 1,,_2).1 ttO
RECEIVING New Orlean1. HOlmet
S-•~. Haroy 2 20. Wilson 1·22, 111\erk.,-., l·U,
Grotn 1.21 -Mon, HolslOft ........ c.-
) 2S, C•m-11 ) 10. Burrough 2-42. Colemen
2 1S, Arm>lrong l-4
Biiis 20, Patriots 17
kenbyQw.Wn
Ne• E"9~ 1 0 l 1 11
Bull•IO J 10 O 1-10
Bui FG M•k..,,,_,., 21
NE Moro•n Se PH• lrom JohnlOn
ISm1lllkk1<)
Bui -FG Ml•e-Meyer 2l
But -t1ootu • t P•H trom ~•rgu,an
IMIU ·Mever klCkl
NE FGSmlllle3
NE HMJalllKk S peu from C•ven..._,
CSmolh lr.IClr.I
B1>t Hooh ,. p .. , lrom FerQulon
IMtke·Meyer klC•I
A -11,ffi
l lWlv-1 St.IUllkt
RUSHING New E1>9l•nd. Ferguson
14-H , CunnlnQll•m ll·S1, Collln1 4·S,
C••an•U{ltl 1-0, hlupu l·mlnu> 1, Johnlon
l·mlnus 4. 8ulfel0, l.Hk• , .. .,. H-• 1>-u,
(rlCIOi I~. "9._ ,..,
PASSING -EllOYno. c. •• .,,..._,
•·12·0·1JJ, Jellnton l·l·O·S•. 8ulfale F•r11Uson I~ 1.m, '
REC.EIVlflfG --Enoloftll, -.... 3·141, H•u••~o >-41, c .... nl"tNm 1-1.
8utl•lo, -• .. Ill, L-1• ...... Buller J.Jt, Br•m""" Mt, L..U 1·5.
Bef\9•1• 31, Bronco• 21
korelilT~ Denver O 1 O l._11
(irlC 1nN1i 14 U 0 l~ll
C1n --J9run IB•ee<ll kklr.I
Cln -JOfln'°" J pan from Anderton
I Br•ecl\ •lcl<I
Oen -l.V11• S run tSteinforl ktckl
Cln -A,..,.non 2 run 18'-<h •tckl
(.In C.olllnlworfh 1 ~from A,..,.rton
I Br•ecll kkkl
Cin -FG Breo<h •
Oen -W•ltot1 14 pau from OeBero
1 s1~1ntor1 ll1Clr.I
Con Ale-• U _. trom Anoerton
I Breech Ir.kill
Oen Lyll• 14 pan from OeB•rg
tSle1nlort kkkl
4 Sl,JOI
IMl•WoMI StM11Uu
RUSHING -O•n•••. Oelerg •·>o,
Pretlon "'"· R-S-11, Pat<O\ 2 '· LV1i.1·S C•nclnneto, JOl\Mon ,,.,., Herg.rove ~.
KrelOllr Ml,__. ).11, A••·-· 4-10,
A G rotfln I 1
PASSING Denver, 0.S.rg 21·)4.2-l05.
ClnclnneU, Ande'11on l>ll~N. KrelCl<tf,
1).1~.
RECEIVING -0...ver, W•lton S-101,
Preston s..G, P••-s-so. R-... 1 •• 1.yll•
2·11 C•n<lr1nell, ROU 1·1D, JOI\"'°" .... M.
Harris •SI, Ale_, U2. K••-· l-4l. CVtll~713
Steeler• 32, Brown a 1 o
kenllyQwrl.an PillsllurQll
CWv~l•nd
(le -Fe; Bahr JJ
12 0 •
l 1 0
Prl H.wt_.ne I run tkl<" l•llecll
Pol -Tnornton l run tk•<• ta11eo1
I l2
I).. 10
Cle t..aven ll paw from Sipe (Behr
k1<kl
Pil H.,rls 2 run lkklr. lallecll
PH -Pinney I ~u lrom 8reOSh•w (Troul kl<kl
Pll Mo9ef S Pti• tr om Breo>fl•w IT rout l<l<lr.I
A -71,ttl
IMl.-at St.lll>U<t
RUSHING Plllsl>Urgh, H•rrl• 21>-7S,
T110rn1on 1~52. Hewt-4-), er-
2-4, M•IO<W l·S, Oa•ls 1-0. Cle .. l•n<I M.
Pruitt I._,., G. Pnilll 1-17 So-4.J/ ~llile .... ' -'
PA~SIHG PllUl>urgll, 8r•d1h••
11-n+m. c iew•-. Sipe 1~n1
RECEIVING -Pl~. Tnomlon ~1.
Smllll 3-11, H•trll :1-3', Sl.tll*Of11\ 2_.,
Swenn Mt, HO-r• 1-12, Gn>Hmatl lJ,
MoMr l·S, Plrw.y 1.1. Clewl-, He..-
S-61, Feocllef •19, M. Prvitt J..ll, o. Pn.111
:I-It, Ruell., \.II,.._ \.IJ, OOen 1 ...
I SCOREBOARD
Jeta 1 IS, Dolphin• 15
"-lly O...<Wn
FGLA.,.,y2t
FGL.Hlly ..
0 12
J J
Ml•ml
NY Jetl
HYJ
NYJ
Ml•
Ml•
Mle
NYJ
Ml•
HYJ
N•IMn 4 ""'Ivon S<Mmenn Ir.IOI
SelelT. T-lklo.le<I In •no -
FG """ Scrw""'nn ... FG Leahy tt l'G won Scrwmenn 23
B.,lo.um II peu from TOOO I Leahy
kl<kl
A St.~
tnolv-1 Sl.aU.lks
RUSHllo(; Ml•m•, Nathan IS·S•.
Frenlllln 1-4), -Jey ~I. Hiii M Ne•
York, McNeil 19-IS, Dierking 2-1', HetPH
). U , T odO I 10, New10n 4·1
PASSING Ml..nl, WooQJer 10.22·2~.
New York, TOOO 21·:...0-20>
RECEIVING -Miami, N•lllan l·l•,
H•rrl$ 1 30. lAo 2-tnlnul J, Hill l-4, C•lalO
1-l, Haror 1-l New Yoo. B•rkum .....i.
H•rpar 4 2', J Jone• J·ll. wa1ur J.lt,
~looll ).JO, OterkiftO 2 11 B Jonff Hl,
N•wton 1 2
Cardinals 35, Colts 24 Sun by 0...11•"
5.1 Loul• 14 I I I U
B•lllmore 10 o I 1-1•
SIL Anoer10n 4 run tO'OonoohW •><kl
B•I OICkey :i. run tWOOO kl<kl
Stl Anrens, 14 1nlet(1puon r•h"'"
10 Oonc>QhUe l<Kkl
Bel FG wooo eo
SIL Lomu 10 run 10 ~ uo1
Bal c;.,, S peu from Jontt cV.OOd kkkl
SIL Morrt• l •un IO'Oonoghua ki<llJ
Bel 81111er 8 pan from Jones tWooo
Ueki
5.IL
A
Anoerson II run 10 Oonogllw klCkl ,. ,..
l .... •-ISl.ttlttk1 RU~HING St lout>, Anoerson 29-IJO,
Morro\ 11 44, LDmu • lA, MtlLl>eJl .J..ll.
Baltomor•, O••on 12·••. Oto.ey 2·41,
McMlll•n 1 19. Jone> 1 11, MtC•ulo l·S.
Fr•n"ltn 2°"', G•rr•tt 1-l
PASSING SI LOUI>. Lomu 12 11.0-219
B•lllmore, J-.1).4S.2-230
RECEIVING SI Lou••. Tiiier S·I~, R
Green 2 19. U>Fle<ir I 21. Anoer\On 1-21,
MOrrt\ ' •• Gr•r , ... ~ HMr•U ''° 8•U•rnot•. Buller I 5', McMillan 4-S9 Carr 4 21, M<C.11
2·21, M<C...,1ey 2-lS. D11ton i 19. F renklon
2·1S
Giants 20. Eagles 10
k .... by Qvarfen
N.Y G1•nll
P1111.oe1pr.19
) 1 0 10-JO
1 J 0 0-10
HY(; re 0-IOJ'I
Phi Kr•f>tl• • o•'' from J••orO.t 11' ren•lln ~1tkl
NYG 8rj!llf\l I run 10. ... 10 klCU
P111 I'(; Frenklln JI
NYC. FG 0-10>0
NYG T. J ack""' 32 1ntorup11on reh.,n
tD•nelo kldd
A W.,1121
IMIV-1 Sl.ttllll<t
RUSHING New York c;.enl\, ,.,penler
24-111, f0f1e 1•, L Jaci.son 1 2, Brog/It 1-1
Pllll•O•ll>fl••. MOnlgomery H 102, 011 ...
~II, CMnpf,.IO 2·11. Je_,.-, 2•, Rus.Mtl
1·2.
PASSING N•w York Glanls, Brunner
10·21·1 111 Pllil•OtlPhi•, Jaw orOI
~s 1111
RECEIVING N-Ye><k G-11, Perkin•
4-41, Grer ).5', Shirk l·l9, Froeoe 1.-J
Phll.oelphia, tetnpllt'IO M!i Smllll J.», Henry ).lt, _,,,_.., W . Krepfle J. ,.,
CMmk-2·14, otlwr 1-4
Chief a 40, SHhawka 13 _...,o-nen
S.•111• l(entHClly JJ11>-U
3 11 I I).~
SH Fe; fMrret• :i.
KC l'G~y)/
KC FG'--tylA »• FG ...,,.,. JO
rt( Smllll 14 peu irom rte"""y 1 Low.,,
k•<kl
KC 8"'"''-' .. lnterceot1on return ,Low~rv 11,Jca t
KC. Jacuon I run IL-orv k•OI »• L•rOl"'t 30 Nii> from Zorn ~ Herrer• klO)
KC S<oo 2 pau from rt.,...., tk1t~
l••i.01
KC
A
Je<kson 2 run ILO-•¥ kl<kl ••.002
IMl.._I Sl.tUttk1
llUSHING S.allle, I Brown 1Ml.
Ooorntnk ) I), S. Smith 2 •. Hughe• 2·1
rtenw• Clry. H-.OI I~ 10.. Jacl<son 11-10
Oel•MY ll•S, Ble<Koe 4·19, Kerv.ey 1·9 '
PASSING Seel11e, lorn .. 30·1·1.st
K•nws Clly, KtflNy 11·21.0-111
RECEIVING -Se<ttllt, Leraent 4-63. T
Brown • •. s....,.r ).1', Ooornrnk J.l2, s
Smtoh J 0 , John> l·l4, M<Cullum 1·10
Kanw• (lly, J T Smtih 1 10, Marlhall 4 SI,
Delaney 3 JI, Haonol 7·21, Scoll 1·2
GREY CUP
Edmonton 26. Ottawa 23
Edmonton
0 11.tw•
011
011
011
011
Eom
Eom
Eom
Olla Eom
-·""-"-" 0
IJ
,. 11-:i.
0 J-1l
FG0rganl4
FG0r9An JI
RelO I run !Organ lr.Kkl
Plall 14 run tOrQ41n kl<lr.I
Slngl• Cutler 1•
Germeny 2 run !Culler kl<•I
Moon 1 run l(utler kl<kl
F G Of Qolfl la
Moon I run t(yncer pan tn>m
MOon)
Eom FG (IJ\le< 11
A SJ,301
Tum S .. llllkt
l.dm
First d°'"1'1S 21
Ru.,,.s-vera. 2 ... 1
P•U I ng .,.,°' 2 ..
Re111rn y•nK 11
P•UH 2J.•>
FumblH-IO\I 1·1
Pen•lllH-yM'CIS I S1
llMllV ..... I S1.tU1lk1
Ill .• ,,.,
1-1
.. $3
RUSHING E-lon, Germany 13-5',
Moon 12·23, LumS4en 1-a_ 011•"1'•· Pl•11
11 ..... W•tts S.29, Reid \.I
PASSING -Edmonton, -13-21.+lll,
Wlllo.ln.on 10· •>·O·I O 011•••. W•ll• ,.,..,. ..
RECEIVING -~ton. lwmtden .. 91,
C•n<•r 141, l(elly ..... ~OU ....... Ge,....,,.,
1·14, Smllll l·S Otl•"l'O, GMritl .. ,., Pl .. 1
•19, Kirk 2·>2, RelO 2·"· Stoqwo l·M. A....,.y
·~.
Collage
SATURDAY'S LAT• SCOlllU
P•<llk 23, H•w•U 11
CS NOf11ViOOe lO, C.I Poly·,LO 14
Or eke SJ, Net><e•ke-Om•IWI 0
Wm ~Mery U, AICl\monG 21
How top 20 tared
I 1'1IUburgt11 llMMlt Deel I •mple J>-0
J ti•,,_ I II~/ bUI !>011111 C.eroliM
>~ IJ
J u•Org1• 19-Hll 010 n<H Pl•y.
4 Al .... n .. t•l·llOIOllOIPl•y.
~ Nel>rMkAI 19-2.01 be•• Oklanome JI 14
• )oulhern MelhOOl\I i 10·1·01 0 .. 1
Arkenws l'l·ll.
I M 1<h1Qoln lt-J.41 lo\I 10 OlllO !>lete I ...
I h•a• tt-1 11 llHI tlaylOr :1 .. 11
v ~outhern Ml~""•PP• Cl·l·U IO" to
LO<ll\Voll• 1.1·10.
10 !>OVlhern t•I tY.2.cJJ DUI UC.LA 12·21.
11 Mo ...... ~I• l~·l-01 l:IUI hortn t.,ollM
)l•te 14 ...
11 North CM011ne 19-/-01 M•I uuu JI IU
ll ,......, !>!eta 1t-l-01 11*•1 Notr• O.rne
" 11 14 v.u111ngton !iol•I• 11 2 11 1011 to
W HIH119\on 2J.10
I) UC.LA 11·).1110\l IO ~INlrn l.91" JI
.. Ark•nn• ll·l 01 IOll lo :.0111,,.rn
-•l'IO<ltll l2·11.
II. W•>l>•nqlon ,._.,-01 ......... ,..nvton
!>t••• U.10
II SrlQIWm YOU"9 t 10 2·QI M•I vi.11
-.11
It. ·-· 1•).0111 ... 1 M1<ll1~ Stele ~I 10 Aruon. St•le ll·N>t M•I C.otor-
!>lel• SM.
· Hollywood Park
'UHOAY'S IHSULU
I lflll ot U..r ~-m .. 11,,.1 FlllST llACE. 11 1'm11 ..
~1 .. 1 Ruler IOel.,,.,u•w••I 2l .0 11 JO 140
M1g111v f~ll· tOhvereU ll 20 12 eo
Oonelo IS•l><llel 4 .0
AIM> rk.ed l1on11• Let M Ro.r 1 Bre.t..t.y
N..n•v•. ltuc,o, Houl•ku. No~'"'· ~•no. K.''
\11nol<•tor ltme I .,.,,.S
SECONO ltACI.. I I I• mole>
NOO<l 0¥NSIY tG .. rr•I 16 IO J~.00 i. 00
El C.•lo Gr-IM<Harg .. I 1110 1.40
~url N F leel IOl1v•re>1 I 1oO
Al'O r•t~d MOOttUt ~t•r. M •iler
btn1•m1n. L•Uillh•no Rtver. Sir Spruc.t.
o.n10M ol Gola. P•••llt F e111as11c Bao
Ilalio, Cle,,_, Toeu 1,,. ll1Ctor
Tlmt 1 '41/S
U DAILY DOUSLI. t1 Ill P•tOS417,IO
T"lllD llACI.. One mile
Oomln .. u lll .. «11uel•J
Bon<t Rulle•>IC.nlf-1
O.tenoe c-r CP•nt•vl
Abo r•ceG Pierce ' Or••m.
I: llU•1¥. Tra.,.1.tn, St.y v ••de•
Time I ,.4/~
U l.XACTA IHI !NICI •IU 00
l<OUllTH RACE.•~• 1ur1ongs
• '° ~ eo •00 400
l 40
O•l<l•no
MUltr J-IM<CarronJ • . .O 4.40 3 .0
Alrrohng I P .... <•I • IO 4 JO
N"t;t~I )00
.41 r"'"' lt~I 5fl0r1 • .-..-, ttonw ......... ,.~l)wk• l,llW. t.1. ti ·~T I 9<1M $In.to,
"~TM •Aee.111 .. mll .. onturf.
Parloul !Toro) •-IO J.40
C.emma1e IH•wleyl > loO
Son ot e 0-CGellll•f!OI
Al\o ••<e<I Se••"9. GHIWS,
L110
Tome I 42.
U EXACTA t:l-21 pe10 ~SO
SlllTHllACE.ll 1'm11 ..
Maggie. 6n1 tSllllll•I 14 .0
C.n••Q• e.1-n t l.1pl\<llml
8111t JH1er IH•wleyl
100 4 00
4 40 '00
J 00
AUG raced Botr•ll, ~1er1tn9 ~.,. Lfmo
JGNI Incl..., CNnl Phnln
l1mt 1 .,.. S
SI.VI.NT" ltACE. I IU<lono•
lmPO<lenl Memo I Wini-I I• .0 1 20 S 40
ICenMoy R009r CV••""rue••I 11 oo 1 oo
011>1y Hui• tS11Hllel • .o
Al\o r•..O N•t1ve f-t\her. Se• Awu~
Run. M•''" ~•rr1or. Ma•\ P1~ b•r•.
Oe1<.,o, Lo9er11v111m
'1mt 1 11 J s
U E llACTA lt-~I pe10 \S.. 00
U PICK SIX 111+/ J 1 .. 1 pelG $10,'lt 10
w 11n U w•Mtng t-c••h lhw f\Of'W'' 12 f.'t(IL
5'1• cont0&..CllO,, p.-fd \I 1• 00 """" u 1 w1tWH"9 ll<Uh (lour l>OtW>I \2 Pio !M• ><r•t<h
<on•olahon IMllO \111 loO '"'" JS9 wonning ti<~••' (I""" he*w,, one Kr•tthL
EIGHTH llACE. I' t m11non turf.
ic.1111••0 1 P•n<•vl ) 20 > • .o J eo
Gloroo11• Song tM<CMronl S . .O .._.a
8u>10 I B<ta) 12.loO Al\O , .. .., Queen to ,_.,.,_ S.IMna,
A'lr. ' S.C••I. Jl61 • G•m• 11 B•rrv Bvth,
M••nOOw Connec1oon
lime I 41
HlloTH RACE. 1 lfl•m1i.,
Poll V•l•le 'Pltrol S•.OO 21.00 • 4C ~lt11 Bl-1Plnteyl • .0 Hiii Al•llurou~ IH-leyl /,tlJ
AIM> r•ceo Mett\llC Court, Bolo A<lo..
P1ea•e Be on lime Ha•IY E•gle
l:mO.r..,_IK, Fo•YOl>•llO
Tim• I C3
U EXACTA 1 ... SI pe.o \9QS 00
An~no.,u· 71.411
Deep Ha fl1htnq N•W~T CMt11 ~I -29 anoien:
,., mKMref, SI Ilea. JI r.ui COd, • -··· IDa,,.,•a IMWI -tit ... ten: W r«k
,Od, Jo. mKll«e4, IU bonllo, S -Mu, I
,_ <Od. J cellco"""
HAL 81.ACH -S7 MIQten: 650 ,_. c-.
21om.ackwet,2~'0Cl. I ll119<0d.
DANA WHAR,. 100 •nvlen: •S ~"· 13
llonllo, t IWlllOut,,.., rcxk c.oQ, 300 ,.,,.11.,..1 111no coa. •
Camel.Where a man belongs.
•
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smokmg Is Dangerous to Your Health. 8 mg. ''tll'', 0.8 mg. nicotine BV.
per cig1r1n1 by FTC method.
NBA
WllTl!RH COH,IRl.NCE
,.«lfkDl•ltMll
Porll•n<I
uun
GolOenSi.i.
Phoeni•
S.elllt
W L l'<I.
• l /21 ' . .., I 4 ~ . ) ~)
~ ) soo
S4ln Oleoo 2 I 200
Mi.w .. 1 Ol¥111WI
5"" Antonio
Ulah
Of:nwer
HOUtlOn
K•nw• City
O•lles
9 ' s s
1 • II
llASTEllN CONl'EREHCE
AllMl\k Dlvlll ...
Phil-IP"I•
B~lon
II
10
I
1
I New York
We'111nQlori
NewJ•rwy • 2 10
Oelrool
All•nte
Mllweulr.te
1nolen•
(hlUQO
C••••••no
C...Val OIVltl ...
1 • I
s s
4
S\IMey'I S<o,.
Seat lie 109 N-Jeno 92
T-f'•O-
Lelr.an el 0.11••
N•w Yorkel lno1.,..
Golclen St.tit al WHhtngton
(lent-•I AllMI•
Oelroll •I Mllw.., ... H•• J<trwv el Houslon
Cnlcaoo e1 ~ OlaQO
NHL
. .,
Ill
lt4
111
1•1
CAMl'IEl.LCOHl'ERENCE Sm'(llWDlv,.i...
GI
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11f1
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J
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V•n<.ouver • 9 • to 11 1(1"91 9 12 0 •l 104
Coloredo J I) • Sl IOJ
HenllDMt-Mmniesot• II • u 5'
C111<900 ' s I IOI ..
WI Ml peg • ' J II .,
Oelroil I ~ s 12 ..
SI Louil 17 J I I .,
Toronlo 11 4 .. ~
WAU5 CON,EllEHCE
1'*1<110Msi9"
NY lslandlen 11 4 • ., /0
1'111\bvrll> t • 4 ,. .,
PllllllOel ..... lt • I n " NYA-1 • 11 ..,>. 10 • .,.,.~ ' h I ., 1' --o"'i.i ... Owtott 12 9 1 110 .. &0110n 12 s II ..
Monti• .. II l 101 .,
8uilelo 10 s ,. !>< He<1toro l 10 I ., IS
~-Y'•S<-
WHIHftillOfl), Phll-11>1\te 2
Quebe< •. Boston I
NY 1•1-.> /,NY R•nger1 7
Winni-~. SI Loull 4
Min~ I, (Ilk~ I
ColOr-s. Vencou .. , ~
TMl9M'•G-Oetrool al Eomonton
See Cliff Calcutt• tournament
l•IH-........ -~I M•-~ .. FIMCt
29 n ,.
10 ,,
n
21 ,.
II ..
,.
11
21
I}
11
21 ,. ,, ,.
IJ
O~n 11111111 Jell Bunero-~ue ~, .... n
oet. M•k• Bree-~ Wiiii\, •l. 3-•. • 1
flr•I lliglll Al Alhson·S.lly 0ec. .. 1ro
otl. Tom Fat•nol•·JUOy Oe1c>ers •• I, •-0
Su ono lllglll SI••• Ellioll ~•••••
Full•rton Oet Aot>f'rt Aob1nion Jutl•
Alhson, 1• ... 2
T noro 1119111 Jom Corcllt<O·AM Coltmen
Gel. Mike 8r-·JH Bonner, )·I I ••• 4
Fo11rlh flight Curt M1CU.1fl.J•n Oan1.W10
oet. Freel Hen Mev• Shlwota. •·4, 1 •
Fifth lllQlll Fran• Ponaer-1<.•tlly Bovgs
def Jorry Olten NICOie llourgel • '·•·I, .. I
Argentine Open
l•••-Arr .. J
SI ..... FIM I
l••n Lenci.I oot Guillermo Vol•• • ._, • >
I
C..0-FIMI
M•rtO\ Hotev•r JNO $c)4re' O.f J .. me
F1Uol Al-.41HO F-IUOI , ... •·I • •
Bangkok ClaHtc
(at .Ml ..... , Tl\ellaMI
Sl"lle• FIMI
Bill ScM1lon Get M•I• V.11.tl!Oer, .. , .... .,
t Sc 11n1on w1n\ \I ).000, W•l•noer vw1n5
Jl,SOOI
0...111" ftMI
John Au\tln M•ILf' C.•h•ll oet L-toya
8°"rnt Wln.h-.y • J. f •
Indoor tournament
te1 Bo1ogn41, 11.1, 1
Sl"lle• FIMI
Sanav Meywr <let 111e N••lew. 1 l ._,
C M•Y•r win'\ t S.000 N•\ta .. wtn\ '1 .SOO>
ledlas Cup tournament
lalTMye)
St,,.1• FtM I
M•rt•n• t't•vr•tllov• 0.1 c.n"' fv•rt
Lloyo, •l .• 2 I N••••lolO•• WIM \100,000,
LIO•O w•n> U0,0001
Tll1'11 Piece
1 r•<Y AU\lln Mf ......... M•nollkoiw•. , ...
,_. lAu~1n win' '30,000 M.,ml1k.ov• '*"'•
\20.0001
Women a tournament
lal Pe1111, A11.11r•lo•l
Sif1111"Fl""t
P•m ~"'•"'' oet Andrtt• JMQll'r, • 1, 7 •. oou111 .. F1,..1
bar II•• a f'Ollrr Sn.tr on Wallh ci.r C.•no•
Rono•O>-b•h• N•OOl>On ...... 2
We1tem 500
C•tltl.-1
Tiie r...,lll ol Su..-y·s l'ol•ntlOn WHlern soo G•eno N•11one1 •loo "" race wllh lype
Of C•t, l•f>' complttte<t ano W•nner '•ver.ge
•PHO In mph
1 BOOl>'t Allison, Bu1<1r., I It •s 2M ml>h.
1 JM R11nman. 8u1<k, 119
J T errv L•Donle, BU•O. I"
4 O•lt EernherOI Pon11ec 11•
s Joe Mllllk•n. Ponh«. I It
• D•rrtll Wellrtp, BUl(k, 11~
1. Rl<,,.rO Pettr. Buick II~ e H•rt• GMI, Ponll.t<., Ill
9 Joor Roalty, foro 118
10 Ron BouclWl•O 8ut<k 111
11 J 0 M<Oulll• Ponh.o< 118
12 <i•rv K•ri.tw.-,. 8u~r... 111
I) Mor-!iohe-0 b1>1Ck 11/
14 Bill St11mo11, Buick Ii.
1~ Oon W•1Htnefl. 8ut<k, ...
16 l.•H ~ 8u10, 1 IS
II J•-•Hyllon,BllKk. IU II Boll Bonour.,,1, l'onhec, 114
19 G••v tl•IOUll". Buick. 11J 10 llm RKllmonO, &ulo llJ
21 0on P.,i.loarl(ll,OIO>. 111
22. Gene'-· 8u1Ck, 110
ll M•'11 St.th! fe><O, 109
'4 e.-., Arrlnoton, OOOge 10. u . ., .... Mertlt, POfttlk, 10)
1'. fOMmy Gele, Foro, ts
11. Benny P•tWlllS. FMO, 90
21 Cnu<k Pllle"9f'r, Buick, 10
19 S<on Miiier, Ponll•<, ••
JO Roy Smtih Buot '· )I
JI hr,.,. H•rrn.\n. Su.ck H
31 Jim ~nson OIO•mc>O•I•. ~J
JJ Ne•I Sonntll. ford 49
l• P•• M1n1e, C.nevfolet. 40
lS Don Wht1tonQ1on. Ola•moo1••· ll
3' Jtm Bowl!. 8u10, :M
31 IC. yl• Pelly, 6u1<k, 21
31 ._..,"net M<C..r1tt, Buie~, ti
J9 A I( hil<O C.nt IOl'~S. 8v1,11, )
40 I< 1<ky A.-Clloro1e1 2
Weekend transactions
SASE BALL
A,.,....IC..,Le"fue
KANSAS CITY ROYALS Nem•O
Tommy Jorws a tr•velino ln\l;uctOt" .no
minor 1•-0~ tn.al\oiQft •t Bullt' Mont
SA5KETaALI.
HatlMal e.s.utNll A1-••ll-
OE l ROIT PISTONS lr-C.rooorv
KtlMr tOf'w•ro. to IM Se•ltle ~per5on•cl
tOf" Vinnie Jotim.on, 9u•rO
HOCKEY
Natlenel Hockey Lu9.,.
ST LOUIS R•<all..O Ntol LeWll• deoten~nt.n, •tom S.lt L.tk• (.1ty ot t~
Ctnlral HO<Uv Le.-
COU.~E
PullOUI: Narrwo L•on Burlnett iweo
loolbell co...:11
I l
r l
·l I I
J
...
·1
: !
"
'•' 1:
•1
.........
I NOTIC2 01' DEATH OF
caoeaY HO·IS$4 lumber Room &eTTY JO FRANKO aka
BERTHA M CROS&V vlttlt•tlon will tM h•ld on BPETTY JO TILL ANb OF
•1• H . a rutdant oi Tueaday. November 24. 1981 E T I T I 0 N T 0
Hunlln1ton Buch, Ca . from 1;30AM to 10.00AM . ~00MINISTER ESTATf;
Pa11ecl away on Sunday HOYT · A·t11~. • November U , tUl al WENDELL V. HOYT, T O • I I he I rs ,
H u n t t n' ton e • 1 ch pauod away on November beneflcl1rlt1, creditors
Convale1etnt tlo.pUal MIH 20, 1981 Born Aprll 22. 1903 •nd contlnQfl't c~ltors of
Crosby had bffn an active In fort Fairfield, Maino. Bttty Jo Franko, tkl
member of tht' Plrit Survived by hl1 wife Lola J . Betty Jo Tiii and per50ns Ch rt 1 ti an C hu rc h 0 r Hoyt of Tustin. c a .. 1on1 who may bt ot htrwlst
Huntlnaton Beach c a 11 Harlan W. lloyt of corona lnttrtsted In tht wlll
I on 1 a s h c r h 0 ,·,th del Illar, Ca., brothera Louis and/or estate:
permitted Beloved alster or Hoyt of Rlver1ide, Ca., and b A petition hlS been flltd
Sy Iv I a s . Let 1 0 n 0 f Lin wood Hoyt of Laauna Y Eugene E. Franko In
lluntln&ton Beac h c a Beach, Ca .. grandchildren the Sup erior Court of
J
Everete Croeby of Beil. ca:: Ctlcrl, Judith and Tom.ttoyt. ?;~nge County requesting
Roy Crosby or Canon City,· Memorial services will be I ~ugene E. Franko ,bt
Colorado and Emma o entt held on Tuesday, November appointed es person a l
or Sallna Kana111 and 24. 1981 at ll OO AM u repre se ntative to
aeveral nie~es and nephews. Pacific View Memorial Park •8dmlnlster the estate Of
Friends roay c all from Chapel. In li eu or flowers etty Jo Franko, aka
, 5 : 0 0 PM to 9 : oo p M 0 n memorial contributions mtty Betty Jo Tiii, Costa Mesa,
Monday, November 23, l98l bemadetotheCltyofHope. Callfornla (under t he
al Pierce Brothers Smiths' Pac iric View Mortuary Al dn 1d e P e n d e n t
Mortuuy where runeral directors. m nlstratlon of Estates
services wiU be conducted Act)· The petition is set for on Tuesday November 24 RENN hearing In Dept. No. 3 at
1981 at lO:OOAA1 with Rev: EDWARD B RENN JR. 700 Civic Center Drive
Or. Thomas w o•erton resident of Costa Mesa. Ca. West, Sant a An a ,
pastor of the First Chnslla~ since 1947. Passed away on Ca 11 for n I a 9 21O1 on
C hurch , o rt iciallng November21, l98l He was a December 9, 1981 at 9:3C'
Inter ment will be al m e mbe r of th e VFW a .m . Westmin ster Ce mete r y Huntington Beach Post IF YOU OBJECT to the
P ier ce Brothers Smiths' having been retired from the granting of ·the petition,
Mortuary directors 536 6S39 United States Marine Corps you should either appear CANN C W .0. He is survived by his at the hearing and state
·EARL w. CANN. resident wife Mergie, c hildren your obj,ctlons or file
or El Toro, ca. Passed away Edward 8 Renn Ill, Eva written objections with the
on November 11 . 198 l Lapham of San Clemente. court before the hearing.
Surv ived by h 1 s w 1 f e Cu and Jessica Landry or Your appearance may be Fr ~n ces, duughter und M1ss1on Viejo, Cu , James In person or by your
son -in-law Earl and and William Shuman , also attorney.
Mars hall St y II ot Costa survived by l grandchild I F Y 0 U A R E A
Mesa, Ca .. grandson John Aaron Graveside ser vices C R E D I T 0 R o r a
Styll of Laguna Hills c a 2 will be he ld on Tuesday contingent creditor of the
granddaughters Jam.ie .. ~d Novembe r 24, 1981 11 i deceased, you must flle
Susan Styli of Costa Mesa , l :OOPM. at Harbor Lawn your c;lalm with the court
Ca .. J great grandchildren, Memorial Pa~k . S~rvices or present It to tht>
Ju stin. Br and o n and und er a-he d1rect1on of pers~nal representative
Stephanie Styli of Laguna Harbor Lawn·Mount Olive a~po1nted by the court
Hills. Ca .. 1 brother Dale Mortuary or Costa Mesa within four months from
Cann of St George Utah 540·5~. the date of first Issuance
and numerous nieces and of letters as provided In
nephews. Mr Cann was a section 700 of the probate id t r 0 c code of Callfornla. The , res en ° range ounty DUIHI time for flllng claims wlll for 19 years He was past n t I I president of the Fores t o exp re pr or lo four
Garden So<;ial 1n El Toro. ILlllHIRI ~~n~:!ri~~ot~~~ ~~v:f Ca. Memonal serv1eei. will YOU MAY EXAMINE
be held on Wednesday , the file kept by the court ~ovem.ber 25. 198 1 at lfyouareinterestedinthe
3f.OOSPM m the Grace Chapel BAKERSFIELD 1AP1 estate, you may file a o t Andrews Presbyterian request with the court to Ch~rch .or Newport Beach A business and farming receive special notice of
Pr1vate.mterment at Pacific leader in Kern County. the inventory of estate and
Me morial Park. Newport \"letor Cem>, 59. died from of the petitions accounts
Beach. ln Lieu of flowers the an apparently seU·inflcted and reports deScrj bed In
family r.equesti. memonal gun:.hot wound . t he Sec t ion 1200.S of the conlnbull~s be mal;le to lhe coroner's office reported California Probate Code.
A m er i c a n H e~ r l ELMER 0 . MONTANO Assoc1at1or,i. Pac1f1c \ iew STOCKTON iAP1 The 1695 Crescent Avt . #621
Mortuary directors Rev Mer 11 n Jose Ph Auhelm,-ca. 92101 DeBELLE CulUoyle, 73 . a retired (7~•> 776•1550 1:-0UI S DeBELLE . b is hop or lhe Ro man PubllshedOrangeCoast
• res1denl of Laguna Beach. Ca l ho I 1 c d i o cc s e o I Dally Pilot, Nov. 16 17 23
Ca . Passed u w uy o n Stockton.d1edf'rulay. l981 ·~9~6.fi
November 21, 1981 in South '
Laguna. Ca lie was owner NEW YORK 1AP 1
or lhe D&D Bootery. La~una Frank Sheed, 84. a writer
Beach. Survived by his wire and lecturer on Romun
Neoma. 3 sons. Richard Catholicism and rounder of ~ De Belle of Fountain Valle}. l h c She e d & W a rd
NOTICI INVITING H ALIO l'llOf'OSAU ll lOf) !'Oil THI C·ONITllUCTIOM 0' Ca .. Lauren DeBelle of publis hing house. died
r.: Laguna Hiiis. Ca .. and f'rida) O.tm.t ... ('.M9tnteu.t .. ~ ll••Cll Water 011trlcl llacl•l-f
•-l•IK .... 1111ractlall Wlllll -............ W.11 l'ntact ........ "' Warren DeBelle of Boulder.
Colorado, I dauiihler Doris
Cramblit of Boulder.
Colorado. and 4 slstera.
M i ll icen t Wh1ttwell or
Arizona. Claudine
• Gra\•berger or Colorado.
~ Camella Kirk of Colorado
• and Donna Jones or ~Anaheim . Ca 7 , .. grandchildren Memorial f' services >A lli be held on
Tuesday, November 2"1. 1981
al 2 00 PM at th c Ra }
Family Chapel w1lh Rev
Thomas Warmer, pa:-tor ol
the United Methodist Church
o r L aguna B eac h .
officialmg. Pnvate burial
~ HEHN ,. GLENNA M H E HN . ~ resident or Costa Mesa. Ca
:; for SS years. Passed away on
I November 21. 1981 She is
s urvived by her children
Jim Hehn. Judy Shultz and
J erry ll e hn and 8 F grandchildren Gravei.1dc f! services will be held on
' Tuesday. November 24. 1981
)lo at 10 OOAM al Harbor Lawn
Memorial Park with Re\
Bruce Kurrie. pastor of the
Presbyteriitn Church of the I Co\•enant. off1c1al1n~
Services under the direction
of Harbor Lawn Mount Oh\'P
Mortuarv of Costa Mesa
~i.------
PACIHC YllW
MIMOl lAL PAlll
Cemelery Mortuary Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1f1c View Drive
Newp0rt Beach
644-2700
NEW ORLEANS 1AP1
Ausust Lanotx, 79. a former string bass player with the
Prei.er vation Hall Jazz
Band. died Tuesday
GOODING Idaho 1AP1
The president of Western
Brnitdcastrng Cotp his
rather ond the pilot of the
plane m \\h1ch the} were
rl~ Ing ~ere killed '"a plane
crash Sunda} rn s tormy
IH'alher. authont1es said
Dal ~ ~oor e, 53. or
M 1~soula. Mont . his Cather.
Grant Moore, 86. or Santa
Barbara. and the p ilot.
•:arl Lee of llailey. died.
CAIRO, Egypt u \P1
Fonner lrnRallon Minister
Abdel Azeem Abul·Ata, 56.
died Salurday m prison or II
chl'!lt ail m ent lie was
11mong 1.536 people ordered
urre5tcd b~· President
Anwar Sadat less than a
month before he was
a~i..i:.~mated
RIVERSIDE 1AP 1
Della Hanson, 84. who spent
~ear'l as ch1er governess
and housekeeper for former
Ethiopian Emperor Haile
Selassie. died
l'Oll TMI 1av1•• llANCM WATU .. T .. CT NOTlca IS HlllllY GIVEN tlwt .,. ......... Otf9<1trl qf Nici Olllr1<1 111\'ltu efld wlll "9C91 ... _..., pr• pou11 lblell) up to WW .._ of 1 It m.
°" ttw "" N\I of OK•-· litl, for ttw hKnltNnt lo uld Oltlrld of ell tr..,_,.llOll, lallor, ""'*lell. _. .. ~IMMft(. wrvlcff, -mlb, lllHhM. etld _, Items 1'9CHMry lo ~lrud
uld -k. Al Mid ti,,,., MIO~· wlll ... pulllle1J opened .nd ..... alovcl
•• the Oftlu ol the Olltfkt,
001 C."'9'1• 0r1 .. ToWft<llflt•r auu .. ,. I rvlM, CA '2715 l ld• •11•11 conform to and be •-•lw lo IN 'orolrKt ~-I'll• for U.. work. Coples of I.ht cer1tract dlKvments are oro Ille etWS m.1y bl u -•mlowd In Illa otflu of tN Olalrld -In IM afflu ol Boyle Englnearlfto c:.or-auoro. 1501 Ouall SlrHI Newport. ~ac~, i;~ ml.
Col>la• ""'' ... otltalned .... ofllc:e of aor1e En91,..,1,. eo._.uon '°'
$IS -Ml '*!rofvndellle. Pl-. 8"d 111KlllC•lloro1 wlll be m•llecl. -,. -'· to P<O-'I ... lllOde" for In ad-dllloft•I S.S.00 1-.reluftO•lllel to c-r ,._cost of llCK!eee and ~11,,., Each bid INll be w"'"tted Ol'I e twm l\lrnl.,,.. ff pert ol tM Cllll'ltr«t
dDc:vments .no MYll tie acc.........,
11oJ a Cetll .. r't Check,• urtllled <*II.. °' e lllclder't llOtld Ill an • ......,,. not less -10 ,.,,.,., .. tN .,.,..,.. of
IN llld, MMe peyallte lo lht -r of or lor IN beMflt ol Ille Olstrt<t. EKll
bid lfl•ll 119 Meled and dell-to ti. Dl11rkt al IM IOUllOn ..._..., In
U.11 notke lot IN openlnt ol ~· •I °' before t._ llme In 11111 natlc:e -vhled,, T"9 clleCll or llON .,_I tie 9'Wfl H 911ara11tee 11\•t tlle ~ 1111111 ...... Into • corotract wltll ti. DIWIC1 8"d lvrnllfl ttw racivlrecl ,...,.,..,,. enCI
P9"for Melle.a llolldl -, .... lll<AltH of ln111rance •nd endorse,.,,.nh II ew•rdecl lfl• work, encl wlll IMI
de<IWH fort.Ii.ct II I .. Wider re S U M M A It Y 0 f' A 0 0 I' T « O IUMS to Umely enter Into Mkl contrk'I OllOINANCll or lurnltll Ille requ ired llOlldl or O,_OINANCE 11·20, II IC~ to certlflcotas of Insurance •nd ~
be ltl 11111 ftfect JO dart lrom Nov-ments If 1111llld11 .ccejlted.
tft'lbW 16, 1tt1, •nd -· ~by IN The Board ol OlrKllKI 11H obY!necl loll0wlnt1 roll c.all vote: C.O...Cll Ml~ t'9M ~ OlrecttK ot the Cllllllrnl• tiers: AYES: Sc haler, Hell , Olt_...,me111 of lndllstrlal "91MIOM 1 M(f'arland, JOflnson. NOES: Nalle. dftenn!Mtlon of Illa ge,,.,81 prav .. I· AISENT: H.rt:l09. 11'11 ral• of -diem waoe1 -tlla Of'cllnenc• 11-20, wlll pernil elec· general 11"¥alllnt1 rate tor 1e991 11111~ 11'9nlc .. me rn.clllMI In ell com· clay end o ... rtlme -•It In 1111 loullty merclal Md lnd1Mtrlol "°"'"' cl•trl<U. In wtllcll Mid -r• I• to t. performed Cllftdlt-.1 Uu ...,mlts .in b9 ,.. fw H<tl craft, claulflc.Uon, °' trpa
QUINO for any llullnen ..,kh pr~ or_..,,_.,..,, Not len tNn lf'9 oe. ,.._ to lotet• or rnelni.ln lour or wrmllled retH shall tie pel4 to •II
more m.IClllMI In • ,1 .... locatton. .,,..,. •MPIOr.O In ttw ,-rtormance
k
' McCOtlMtal MOITUAlllS blltlnt 11utlne1 ... with lour or more of ttw contrect. Sv<ll retH of _.,., LaQuna Beach rN<lllnet mt.itt comply with trw new era°" ttw me wltfl .... Oltpart,,..,. of
i 494.9415 ordl-wltlllft -year of IN...,_ hw111trl•I "•lotlOnt encl In ww ofllo lien of, .. Of'Clllllln<e. Of tfta Oltlrlct and era e..i ...... LaQuna Hills TM lull ... , of ttw ,,...., or· .,..,1nt-lad-1YVC1C111,..._.. 768-0933 flnenca may M rH4 In ttw City Tiie 8oanl ol Olrect01"1 rtl trw Dlt-~ San Juan Capistrano a.r11·a Office et n f'alr Ori,., ~ trlct ,._ ... , ttw """ • lalact WW r MeM. lldlHule IMClar •llleii u. llldl -to
I
r. 49!>· 1776 EILEEN P. PHINNEY ... <-reel ..... camrKt _,.., .. City Cl«• ,.)eel any Md all lllde, .... to .i .. City Of 0HU Mela Olly .... Ill lr,...,larlly lft .,,.,., Ill&
"""""'" Or•nee Coast Dtlty Pl~. IY THI OftOlll M THI llOA"O HAllOtl , .. --... ""T. ""'I'll 1 .... No-v._u_._1•_1 ______ s_1,.._1 Of' OlllECTOIU o, THll lltVINE ..,.. ,...,,_,.. ..,., AANCH WATllll OIST"ICT'. Mof1~z,;.. ~:~ 1erv "° llTll .... ~~,°'ante °' ... o.1~1::..
! 1625 Gisler Ave llOTtca 0' I PIU -Cos1a Mesa l'\llLt~ M11A1t1Ne ••IK 540·555• NOTICE IS HEllEIY OIVEN t1W1 • ------------"*'k .... ,.,.. Wiii lie ... Id by IN Oly UIOM. MOTIC•
rtllCI HOTHIH ~ MOADWAT
MOaTUUT
I tO Broadw•v Costa M•H
&42·9150
IAlTZIB•MO ..
SMITH A nm4tU.
WISTCLMI CHAP'k
•27 E. 17th St
CostaMeH
846-9371
,_Cll90THIH
IMITMS' WOITUAAY
WMainSt
~ntinqton Beaoh
536-65311
OC-11 .. tlle City of Cotta MtM M NOTICI IS HlllEIY GIVIN !Mt O.cemMr 7, I"'· In IM Co....cll IM tel....,_ ltefM of fovN or,..,.. 0iem11e" .,. City Hall, n ,. .. , 0r1... ~ ,,_ 11aa1111ew 11y 111e ,....1ce
caw """'· ot •·• 11.m., ., • -OeHrt....,,. r11 t11e citv of c.i. -.. UltrHftar • pra<lke, on tN IOllOw• lore ,......,ln_Uf C•l Myl:
Int 11trn: Olrl'• 81111 Siert l'r" Spirit 10 Ol lflllAL .. LAN AMllNO.wlNT W l kJC ... 0!'11' Ya .... IW'll• ONl~O. CMC• Mete City ~II. fOt ...,.,., 1 -ltlnlrtr tlCyele, .. y'1 llMll to •INIMI Ille tlllct .. .. llff Scllwlnll 10 itlf, lkyele, .. ,.,
~ U• lllefNnt ..... CltyCll 0.. ••ac•IY•llow Hwffy MlltcrHI
MtM '=:' .::"..:.\'::::: 11cr,c1e, .. Y'• llac' Huffy .. WI
•111•11•111 to AMI NO CIOUNCIL (r\I -lkyclt, ..... Ten ~-Mart All I "'° i s,d. lkyda, 9or't 11119 llr .. It 90LUT OHS 7a-t ... 1$.M, Mii 7..... s,lrll ~ ,._,_ a1c-1e, .. y'a lllnt Oellar81 1'1811 A~ I '' r•ctft.irH enf r,.11clt1,· ..ill to Wll te I '"· --.1acrH1 llocia. .... o ..._,CU•, Wellft Mf ,,._,, ....... N TITLI Ill Oft .. C..• NO'l'ICI IS lfUlUHl lll OIVIN --... ltle! C.-te lftcwllll'* ...... • ,.01t.uc <l'f8MH O.nl•••• " "° -~ Mii iw-s 1111 .......... , -u..-c.Mlt) _.,,. ---· , .. .,_,,, Wltllln ~ rid. l 11wlrell-tol O.twml-171 ltOY't ,.,......,. tN ..... ICMNll Of
ltl\1 ="W. O.CleratNll. 19111 ~ .. lfll tltte ......... INll '°"t ~· .~' ,:~;!,".:':=:.:: ~.:-.. ":• ~ -:.=·:: .: _, ""9et _. .. t.N .., ~y IMll .. Miiiot IM*le-INll
CltYC:...Cli•tM .... -• ..... ete H_IM ... talle-M, ...,, o....-~"·"" lt,l .NSTH
CMlfef .... ~ ""lllltllef 0 ,.lltf COAIT =~y ............ n.,•• '
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 23, 1981
The marketplace
on the Orange Coast ... 642-5678
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
l• ... h.... 1.._..,,.,,. ......,,_w.
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. 1002 • ...,...
.......... w. .._....,.Wt
••.....•............... ······················~
I lltJ
hflllctYftrU.CaQ
642-5678
MOUSlS fOR SAl£ ''•""'-' PMh•Mhl•N k.lfi11w j;.,.,"\'6)•
f ·~"'" '"'' ,....., • •w•lft•Otl \l•r ....... " ..... ......... 1114 ttTw1o1 ·'~··--'•'""' lhffllit!W\.lffll tw ~" ,,, ...
:~::~t· , .. ..,.,,llliflt "" ...... , .. ,.. ~r~.:;• '-" ,.,.,.1 •\lf~r • .-.. '-"'• 'IN ............
~~.:T.:
'll•tit ltwn.'"' ..
llAl£STATl
#t•h•i:•W'\.lt<r
,....,, .... k-""" ......... ~f1\ »ww""'' P:Y..,.n,
l t•hhlM"I""" ~=.:.::1::~" ~'-" '•"'"'" lk.il~'-'"'"·J\r4 ,,, ............... ,h ,,..,._..,, ..... , •• ,h
1,1h"" '-W \l&AMNUfll~ tm•'tt.• \f . .,,.. ..... _,, ...... ...,
••• ,. .... " t"•t•
t..,tu ,...,,.., t'f•• '""'""""'"" .,,..,., ............. , ... ,,.h.,., k ..... ,,., •• ,, "•"-11.
Mol l•t.t., "•111441
1£NTAlS
llwv11o • vf~\lt'11 llW~' ~ .-f_,u,._,,. .. .,
'"-""'"t\,tA url l'f I VNiu•~Hnuun• • u,,. t~tfuwnh'"' Tv-.Mow'-•wtlll Tw.M-1111-''"' I~'•"~""" l>Mk\~l--• ..,,., ... ,.
~Iii'' l l(lilfA ,.,.,.lillll1fllfll ·-· 1ift1tllft1• .... .,,.
lbfh ""'•h ••W"I • ....,... .. '-llntnrrth•hh , .............. ,
IC"".t' '• '°"'l.,f• •. ., .. "'tut "'"" Ufhc• Mf'M•I ~ .............. , '""""'••I 1Crt11•i ._..~._,..
Mnt ........ .. ... ,"' ......... ..,
IUSlllESS, lllVEST
111£111, flHllCE
"-Yillin\ ,.,..,,.
~"~ ... ..,,. ....
:::::~~\ ~) ........ . " .. , ........ .
"°'1..U&n fH'
ANMOUllC£llOITS.
MetlAlS &
LOST & fOUllD
·~ ........ "' .. , ~· l"l•l '11UtO ...... ~,·.,..,...,., ...
...... ,t .. ~· ''·"' ...
£MrtOYMEIU &
NErAHTIOll ..,.....,,., ln~rwt~
,.,. ...... f'\ •• . ....., .... "' "'. MEICMAlfllSE
""'"""""' \,,..,,,'"" ......_
..,.""' ...._. th•f'n•J" fz"'·' ..... ,.... ._ ...... , .. """""'• G• .. ~ --i.-. H<arlf) LI,.....,, .. .,...,,., .. __
......................
"-t.lf..tlw,,..,•"' ~~ . ..,. .. _..,
=~~c ~ ... c.. ...,, . ._...,. ..... ,
t:r...._H1h,..,..,,.
IOATS & MAlllt(
CIUIPlllOIT
c.-.i lotiU Mt4M '«'tttn .... ,.,•n••.-11 ..........
.......... 1"-f\fl ...... ~.,
ao.t."'11"" tJv-l, ..tt ......... j .... ,~lit .. .
TIAllSPOITA TIDll
"'ttn.ft t ... ,...,.,_.. ....
o.t\ttr l •O ..... ert • .,....,,.
..... trMM•M~ kf'M rt .. ..,,... T11ut
l~~~~ .. i.,,,
Al!TOllOllLE
EQUAL HOUSING
:;:~ OPPORTUNIT Y
11.rt ~= I , ......... Metlct : i~ I ~ ~'r ff:~ ;s: ~tel:~~ ::: r~:1,1c:.11a .. ~a~~j~f~~o
:::. ing Act or 1968 which :~ makes 1l Illegal to 1d ~• v(rtise "any prererence. :=~ limitation. or du ,_ crlm1natlon based on
:.: race, color. rehg1on.
:,": sea. or national onem.
.... ....
1,l)o ....
'"" .....
or an inl~llon to make 1 any $Ucb prer~renre. I l1 m1t1t1on. or d1& rrlmlnallon "
I I ~' ·-
REALTORS
675-HJ J
STEflS TO OClAM: Suptr d11plta 3·
btdroom 2 b•"'· .....,aoct and bH m ctlJ. "-9-J111t 1ttp1 to ocecM Oltd o,.fy I 2 .ytort
old. GrH t in•tl..._. pottttffal If sWMMr
Nllhd. Owntr wtl cony '°"" f"901tC1ft9.
S29',000.
COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS
n 15 L Coo1t Hwy .• CCWOM dtl Mw
675-55 11
'"" ,_ , ....
This newspaper will ._ol,
know 1 n f I~ a crt pt any "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 1dvert11101 for rul =
estate which 15 tn v1ol11
lion or the la1t _
HIOIS: Acfftrffaen
thotlld ca..dl ....,. eds
deffy .... report ""
Ill.. "°" 1 ... c141hfy. n. :~: DAILY fllLOT .. ._..
!~ ••llty for .... first ~~~ h1correct huertlo.
j,~\ ......
--1· ~ .................... , ....
$91,950
COSTA MESA
Owner will carry finan<"
mg with small down ' 3
Bdrm Well m1untamed
Great bargain. acl now '
646·7171
ZONED DUPLEX
$147 500!
13%
ii 7,000 DWN!
BeT1evt II! A rantasll<.' home with large IJving
and family areas Bmli
firepla ce. sunn v
kitchen. 3 hugt bdrms.
211 baths. Great rmanc
in&. $17.000 down 13'. mlerest. Call for morl'
details, 646-7171
THE REAL
ESTATERS
:: Hoaet fot w.
·~~ ••···•·•·····•·•··•···•
3 Bdr older home on cJe
ep R 2 lot ~Xl'l'll rrnt"I I 2lf4°/o
or build out d duplex• OCEAN VU Park
Name your terms' Low A fantastic 4 Bdrm 2
dn payment 0 1\' Call ,s t ory homl' w1.1h I fast. Rob Rurd1l·k <11(t m a g n 1 r 1 l' en 1 11 \ 759 1221 I 1 n g r a m 1 I) " red
:~ .... ,... 1002
u~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• :~~ ~--------::: VACATION
~~ SEMINAi .. .. .... Condo tune shllrt v110
lions ror up lo 4 peopll'
Luxurious 600 i.q ft $93,500
~arhfront condos with 13.60/0 ':: I 80 deg ottan 11e14 • 1n 1 Terms' Noquahr)tnl(' A
•II Puerto Vall~rta. Mex rd nt;ut11' .iHordJble :=::; aro For ., t.olal rost or homr wath pra\at'} Co' = S3S OO a day. tnot e:.t<'h I tred entr) formdl '"int(
1 person> ~r Tues -'d .. day. Nov 24 11( Lusk room au eu fom1ly
I Rtalty in Coron.i del room 14 1th b r 1 1· k Mar Call for r~Sf'f\' (1repla re 3 hul(t' bdrmb
tioas 675 34ll 1 . 0 2 b11th. very pnv.ilr rrar
;:;: how'to buy 2 weeks .rarn Y ii rd P r1 l' l' on I~ ...., ' $126.~ Cllll 546 2313
~ u ..
"'" ""'
THE REAL
ESTAT&:RS
I t'1r~pl<1Cl' lOuntr}
k11chen. rrumy e\lr<£s
OWe f1nanc 1nl( at
12 '•'• P r11 l'd JI
$149.900 B.irl(.im 1.111
now. 546-2313
THE REAL
ESTAT&:RS
DECOIATOl
COHD0-$15,000
·'"' 6 7~34 I I I Former model l'Undo 111 :;~ !•-.. •• .. ••• mint rond1t1on llo~l~ 3 IDR NEWPORT \'1ewb or grrenbtllti. anrl SflYGUSS 2 tv $119 0001 ~w1mm1ntc pool <ll4nrr OflEMDA.ILY9-5PM ·I~., • · wi ll c01rry rin'lnt•m•• 11.ilh 11 Monlr1•1to l.itt·at111n I -.,., Lowest pnt'td J Br 2', .. ~ Ba condo m 1 , lowdown Cillll14J'A. V1el4 , f'1nanl'10I!' rail
_ Two-sty split lt:r.~:l~I @ SEA COVE N11t.1ht. att b7HOW : I eara1e. <'UJ-dt> ur. pool PIOPEITIES -6 lennts. Low down 7'4-6J1-69fO "!'''' lltlrmothu1~ Iv M-11• -Owner to carry bal11nrt , Clo1~:.1r1t-.I J<bl do It v.1•11
: I Jog lo beach' Mot1\.1ltd I •lllftl r/ : I sir take adv;intuj?t' l'Jll I ~ & IJN SOUTH PAWS ..r· B o b B u rd 1 c k .1 I( I r-~;;;..;;;...;;;...:.,:~:.::;----.:..:...:..:.._:..;.:.__ = 759-1221 C L R E R T 11 T Y E G B R E S A 8 N L
: SPEEMOAEDHTUREBABJW
::; H l A 0 P R N H X U Y R I C H E H L 8
:: A H C U N P J A Q H E V 0 X G H A P £
:: Jacketdress1'ng'. R. E l A l I l x A l y [ 0 D R A T ~ R " 0 0 II " R R Z D E R R l H V K H T
Y U U S D C C D £ P S A R A E I R C Y
S R T A I C 0 C 0 H L E L I M W l £ G
T T H B 8 k I R A D T R A N S C S I R
R II T T r R A K 0 R A 0 0 L A
U Y T I Y E C 0 v G T V C R l C H R 8
E R U D R I R A Y L A N I A T E P A l
" R N S H D R D G k Y R E N J M A H E
A A E N A L U I L 6 H E l Y C l U C A
M H K l H J X R A M 0 P R A H I K I M
.... ;__ -• becli· • ""· -Ot diafanelly. flftd Mdl Md boa it In. -
HlrJo llen lllMdv llia-OIWitl Cole ,.,._ ~
llG CANYON llOADMOOR
MOVI IN rolt CHRISTMAS
New exclusive! Hard to find Plan 1 ,~
onlr. one on market. Lovely 5 bdrms .
fam . rm .. formttl dining rm . 3 baths.
St_uN·o 1"-. slumpslonc exterior & high
windows Bright i\: sunn)' interior. Air
<'Ond 3·tar ga r. Cttll to see. S850.000
including the land
WESLEY H. TAn<>l CO., lt.ALTOU
211 I S•~Hi• ltood '
MEWflORT CEM'TH. H.J. 644-4910
LINDA ISU HOMES
Prestige po ol family home. Ma in
c·hann e l view fr om be autiful
trad1t1onal. 4 bdrm. 5 bath home Slip
1r 2 large boat:, $1.495.000
Wide lagoon 'tl'W from spe('ta('ular
art htteC'tu ral design 6 bdrm, 5 bath,
playroom . dark room & den. Slip for 2
largl' boals St.350.CX.l(l
LIDO ISLE HOMES
Ft>atured on Homes Tours this lovely
lrad1t1onal s pat·1ous. t ustom 3 bdrm . 3
bath homl'. nl•wly redet·oraled. Pri<'ed
tc> sell qut('kl~· at s.t75.CJOO. ~lust see.
Nl· .... 1~ n·mode il·d :i bdrm. 2 IYdth plus
lgt' n•<·n•at1on room & 2 patios. Beam
1·t•tl111 g~ l; 1 t<a l for fa mil\ h \'tng
fatt'llt.'nl vaha• al $420.000. ·
PENO-ISULA POIMT IEACHFROMT
P<inon.1mH· ba~ & Ott-an view at
\\l'dgt'. I f'llm 1>nml' larJ!t' lot. 4 bdrm.
3 bath 1•u:-.tom homt' 3700 sq fl
feat uring mannt• ruom. $1 ,385,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J41 Bo'(~•d•· Dr.-NB b75 61bl
DUPLEX!
$94,900
VA J ssumabll' lo:m ur
$55.200. 9 5'. 1nt1•ri•:ct
S556 total pw yml.'nl"
Both un11~ 2 lldrm I bath. ll l(reat baqeam.
t•all 546 23t3
THE REAL
ESTATERS
~t yowowti ht'wn.
MUL Tlfll.E CHOICE!
Low DoWll flay-'!
HoDoWllfl~!
Or Y011Td Us!
NEW PORT REACll
~h11rp 2 stor) Lownhouse 3 bdrm. 2•, b11lh .
hrrpla<'l'. patto plus zs·
BOAT SUP' SF.LLt:R
W I L L I. I S T t-: N ' ms.ooo• leltoe.., ,...,. .....
•675-7060• Defer p .. r1 or munthh
l'J) ment on th~ d\.1rm !•11111-ml!l!l!!!l!!!!!•l!!l-1nl( B.ilboa bland homo•
lil H~.lltr
67S.28'6
Sn Orr11on K1H•r lol on
St't'n1c Rol!Ut' K1wr On hw) 3 m1 no uf Ko.iut• Riv.er & 4 ml:io t;nrnt i.
Pass Trl't'I> & itd 'k 11n11
2011 It rronlill!I'. 11•1 rt
dtpl from K1H•t to lf14 y
$49,000 67~~
•U.S.VETEIAHS
Fl<Et: Ll~IOFllOMES
World R t: 5!i6 7777
ADOl.UU
lrAFFOIDAIU
A t.ii.tefully rt'tlemratt•d
3 Hdrm homr "'llh 11 I 'r old roof and R\' 'i.p11rt•
Srl!sr m<1)' a~i.1:.t 111
financ1nii All 1h1~ for
Sl26.000 Cdll 111111
979.SJ70
LEASEOPTIOM
$5,000DWN
.1nd S9SCI pn mu
L>rhu:e Nt.>14 port (;fen
~uden home lhon~r 1s mot1\ <1tt'd' Formal din
mg. Clrepta.ce. plu.s ~~l bJr Sparkhnj? pool. spa
Only $136.900' llurry.
<·a ll673-~
THE REAL
ESTATERS
Hottte & DmltK
3 Bdrm & l"'O ~ Bdrm
rentals Ex«llent l'ond1
t1on Only 10'. down owe Askinic $260,000
........ ~vr.\:lni1c. ... , ....... , ...... '" """h ..... " ..... l tll....,.11.k'n~ .. ,,..,.. ... .,_
A•vt..ru -c 1'W.W...W ..
AllTOS. IMPGITCI
lebe llvtll 1111 Herrilon Jltk The AW-4
1Ci111 Nin ll0111141 s.te Ps.11 Mcc.tMy ~
GtnM Ferd Herry S. TIW*I Wy G..-i
llCty 01111111 IMlwdo 01Vi11Ci Qin. ~ I ALLSTATE ,'-~·
REALTORS
~-::-::::=:;11"~~~~~~~_..:;:..1
T 011101row. Yia1111 PlnilSlll
~~·' \.I• ........ -"-..Hf'•"'• ... , ... ,
Oii.-...... u ..... .. ,,,., .... ........ ,,, ...
,~,. ....
~•fnMM"ftw ~ Vi., •• ~~"''°' ..... ,
~<.• ...... f'•llM•1.
.,.....,~,,
t'\iot•HM ~-"" """''"'")f-f' "'" .. ' t;','
:wl .. rv
rtttwh 111"'""--" \~h••11.1111\ '~"'
"'""'•'
,....,.., .. ,
\~\ ..... , .........
MITIJS, MEW
AUTBS, US£J
t ,,..., .. ,,...,. .... ,. ,., ... ·-· \""Mtft• ,,.-uu.
\W..1f! l~..t .. 4" ....... ,,._.,...,, .. , ......
"'hU•* .. ,,. .. , ........
···~ .... ,. ....... ··hm.••" ... .,. .•. ,...,.., .. , ..
'"' •f'ttf'tof""'
-..... .... ,. ...
wol ... -11.!1 fl/'; .. ,. -...
"ll --.... ..,.; -..
".I> -; ...... -<oJ:o ..,,
Far Ad Action
Call a
Daily Plet
I Al-VISOll ~ 542-5171
)
lJ. •-o..i, """'"' ~ M •u•'"·Af '• '"• S•oN V To dev••DP-"'"9< 101 Tu<>da• •ood ~ (00~•"9 IO ...........
pl """' l odooc bortt. >91
1 Ow• t
)•
)ti~I
•Ct .... t0. I
tVtu ,.j ... ~ .. ··-f M ... ,.
tfhi.• , ......
llE~!:!!.!!!I :~ ~~:4 uw . ,,0..Cfl'f~
'f Wllll
l"W 11 ...... ,
i.:;.:.:.;;::.;::i ::::141' , .. .,. ni~· ,, ... ... _
:2:· pc==.-1 110.00 ·-,._ . ....
•£i(;ocM
11 • u ..... UOI .---""''"""• ..... "If ''" ..... "°' """ ., ... •i•w d Ct11 O•h .. s,.,... .,,,... ...... n~.
-'t'lliil·l'I tfWftaJ too. ...... .. , ...
Uilllito--•
""'' ....
1110 ....... ,.. ""' .... lt ..... ··-to••
~AJ•ct"
··-....... °' .... '-~-dtti.. io.o01_ ..... ,....._ •
I BOSREM
I E I I I I
I MUPLY I I' I t I
I Ip RI ~ 1' Cr I j Slit'• • IHI m111yr II 11111•
'-· .....1.-L. . ...J..--l_L-J ; wtre I COlllHI lot mt 11y11,
,..--------lllt would Iott -on··-"· I RHEEf l I I I I t r • ~:::: :-~~::. ~ ,......_,_,...Nol .....
• rt•lll ru.....,.•10 lfllltS r r I r ·r Cl' i I /II Jolf\( '·!J4!0 _ _ _ -~. _ •
• tii':='. lUllU TO I I I I I I I l
SCIAM-Uft~llClill..._1111
APPEALING IRYINE TERRACE
Meot and Of>H floor ,a.. °" CORMElt wl"' INatdiful pool. paHo Ir spa. W.11tlt
low cash & owntr wtll cony or ocetpt
10°0 down. $295,000. Cal 63 1-1400.
BALBOA ISLAND COTTAGE
low.-t prictd lslcind holM wltfl ntw
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631·515
,
J ohn Thompson. director of mtlsic. leads a hymn by s1ngmg a
hne Winch is repeated by chmr and congregatwn Otho Budd keeps an eye on the members of the cf1urch unth his
··tickler .. m hand to wake up the sleepy.
Worship'~ a tickl~h situation
Rituals of Pilgrims progress into 20th century at Laguna church
By SANDIE JOY
Of ... o.lly ...... 5Wt
Sleeping during the sermon wasn't
e as y Sunday at the Neighborhood
Congregational Church, Laguna Beach.
Not with eagle-eyed Otho Budd
patrolling the aisles.
When he caught a napper, Budd
would rea ch ove r with a long pole
tipped with a fe ather and tickle the
offender under the chin.
He startled a choir member that way
right in the middle or the sermon -in
plain view of the rest of the
congregation.
The pastor, the Rev. John Reynolds,
was being watched closely, too.
As Reynolds took the pulpit, one or
the parishioners placed an hourglass on
the stand to remind him not to get
long-winded.
No. This isn't some weird new form or
wors hip.
Despite the rippling giggles when the
tickler went into action and when the
pastor was timed, the entire service
w as serious.
It was a taste of the past.
The congregation was participating in
the re-creation of an authentic 17th
century Pilgrim service.
The service began with a call to
worship by the drummer, Jonathan
Reynolds, son or the pastor and his
wife, the Rev. Margaret Reynolds.
Next came Budd as the town crier ,
tolling his bell and crying, "Hear ye.
Hear ye."
This was followed by a reading or
President R onald R ea n ·s
proclamation denoting Thdrsday a t
206th Thanksgiving Day and the c oir
procession.
Most of the participants were dressed
like Pilgrims for the occasion.
The pastor was resplendent in a black
velvet Pilgrim suit with a la rge shawl
collar, an authentic.1.7JlLcent.ury suit, he
said. Most or the choir wore Pilgrim
costumes although a few of the children
wore Indian outfits, a point church
moderator Dick Willson noted saying it
was nice the Indians could join the
Pilgrims in the meeting house for
worship.
Even the congregation had a touch or
<See PILGRIMS, Pate AZ>
•
• f
YIUI HlllTlll llllY PAPER
Reagan vetoes
emergency
spending hill
BULLETIN
WASHIN GTON <AP )
Congress appeared on the edge
or restoring the government to
normal operations today as the
House approved and sent to the
Senate a Republican proposal to
continue federal spending at the
old level until Dec. 15. President
Reagan indicated he would sign
s uch a measure.
WAS HIN GTON (AP l -
President Reagan vetoed an
emergency spending resolution
lo r estore funds to federal
agencies today a nd told his
Cabinet to "cul down, shut down
and eliminate all unnecessary
government services."
It was his first veto in 10
months of orr1ce . H o u s e
De mocrats c onceded t he y
lacked the votes to override the
veto and made no attempt to try.
Ins tead, they began meetings on
a new, stripped-down measure
* * *
to get the money flowing a1ain.
Reagan told reporters minutes
after signing the veto that the
bill posed "a difficuJt choice''.
for him. The rejection sends the
measure back to Congress.
The president went from his
ses sion with r eporters to an
emerge'1CY meeting with his
Cabinet, where he declared,
"The bulk or the government
should shut down immediately,"
presidential spokesman Larry
Speakes said later.
··As q ui ckly a s possible,
people should be sent home. This
1s not bus iness as us ual,"
Speakes quoted the president as
saying.
The spokes man said that by
noon, 60 percent of the White
House's 351 employees would be
furloughed without pay. By the
end of Tuesday. he 'a dded ,
400.000 or the government's 2.9
<See VETO, Page A2l
* * *
Federal building
ordered closed
The federal building in Santa
Ana was ordered closed at noon
today a lo n g with othe r s
throughout California because of
President Reagan's veto of an
emergency spending resolution.
T he action won't have an
immediate errect on local
government and won 't interfere
with mail delivery.
The Orange County office and
federal buildings in the rest of
the ·~ as well as Nevada.
Arizona a nd Hawaii will be
placed on a "weekend
schedule," with a skeleton staff.
a Genera l Se r vices
Administration spokesman said.
The Sant a Ana federal
building at 34 Civic Center Drive
includes the offi ces or Social
Security, Health and Human
Ser vices, Internal Revenue
Service, the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco and Firearms and the
FBI.
Laura Myers , of the public
affairs office for the Federal
Building in Los Angeles, says
there are 4,000 IRS employees in
22 locallons throughout Southern
California.
She s aid th e re wa s no
es timate of the number or
federal employees housed in the
nine·story federal building in
Santa Ana
T he s pokes ma n for the
Ge n eral Se rvi ces
Administration said today that
an estimated 95 percent of the
GSA 's 3.000 employees in the
four states and the Pacific
Territories will be furlou1hed
until further notice. He also said
he understood GSA buildinp in
other areas were being placed
on the s ame basis.
The federal passport office
also was closed and the federal
Information center said it would
close at noon.
Local c i ty ofr ici als say
Reagan's veto won't have an
immediate eff~ct on municipal
government or local mail
delivery.
Federal grants for Housing
and Community Development
< HCD1 projects have already
been approved through next
July. Postal delivery has been
identified as a n ·'essential
s ervice " of the federal
go v ernm en t a nd won 't be
affected by the veto, according
to local officials.
Lindbergh kidnap
files open to public
EWING TOWNSHJ P , N.J .
(AP > State poll ce files on the
f amous L indbergh baby
kidnapping case were opened to
the public today, but the
a tto rne y who so u g ht the
disclosure says new viewing
regulations are unfair.
M ajor John M cGa nn
announced today that ··only one
researcher from any interested
group" could view the mounds
or paperwork and evidence
stored here.
"The guidelines a r e
arbitrarily res trictive and
unfair," said Robert Bryan of
San Fran cisco, attorney for
Anna Hauptmann.
The 83.year-old Yeadon, Pa.,
woman is the widow or the man
executed for killing the son or
f amed aviator C harl es
Lindbergh.
Bryan, who also charged that
the guidelines were illegal, said
he had planned to have four
researc h·ers g o over the
mate r ial. He said McGann
issued the guidelines "so It may
Midwest srww
treacherous
B)' Tlte Aaaocla&ed Pren
Snow and freezlng rain reU
over the Dakotas, Minnesota
and Iowa today, snarllnt
mornln1 rush-hour traffic tn
Minneapolis-St. Paul as 1leet
turned roadways to treacherous
tlare lee.
Drivtn1 conditions ln
Mlnneeota'1 Twin CiUn nre
the worst in 20 yean, law
enforcement offlelala u•d.
take us years to go through the
files."
The attorney said an associate
would ask U.S. District Judge
Frederick B. Lacey in Newark
to issue an order relaxing the
restrictions
Bry a n rep r es e nts Mrs .
Hauptmann in a $100 million
lawsuit against New Jersey that
c l ai ms he r hus band, Bruno
R ic ha rd Hauptmann , was
wrongly executed in 1936 on
charges stemming from the
kidnapping.murder .
<See LINDBERGH, Page AZ>
DRAIGI CUST llATlll
Mostly cloudy tonight
and Tuesday with a
chance or rain increasing
to 30 percent by Tuesday
afternoon. Highs 62 to 67
Tuesday. Lows tonight 52
to 58. .
llSIDI TIDAY
PoUtical aotirilC Ari
Buchuiald hoa o feelbtg that
IN'• "tn buaiMu" for some
time. Sn~ A7.
llDll
j
'
~~~~~.-..~ .~~~~-_.. ... .,. ....... .-.i ................................... 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
,.
CLOSING 851 .71
If Seagram, the world'is largest m31'~r and seller or alcoholic ~verages . had announced al lhe start or
this year that al intended to acQuire a major stake in
lhe Ou Pont company, you can imagine the
unguished screams that would have come from
the Wilmington. Del .. home of Du Pont -and from
other quarters :ts well.
Ou Pont 1s. afte r all, one of the world's premier
companies. It's the largest chemical producer in Lhe
United States, and its history goes back to 1801 when
it bt'gan rnukmg gunpowder on Brandywine Creek 1n
Delaware. Seagram , 011 the other hand, is a
Canadian-based company whose history goes back
only to the Prohibalion period. Ou Pont was started
by a French aristocrat, Eleuthere lrenee du Pont de
Nemours. who rted from the French Revolution.
Seagrarn was started by Sam Bronfman. a Jewis h
immigrant who fled from Ctanst Russia.
Ou Pont as the 0
c o m p a n y t h a t \'·
1 n v c n t e d n y I o n ., r !:»
Seagram is the ,
company that ...A.""~·
s howed you could d~ •-•Gb~.-i-.-----
"ell by advertising a~ MllJll llS•-nz s mooth. blt!nded UW
wh1 !>k y, 1 Crown ,
from coast to coast These were. in other words, very
unlikely marriage partners But this is a combination
lhat now seems possible . Seagram 1s e merging from
1981 with a 20 percent stake in Du Pont. making it the
largest shan:hold<'r, h1gger even than the Ou Pont
family
If there's a moral to this bizarre outcome, it's
th is Never ask for anything you want directJy. that
will only ra•Sl' hackles beat around the bush
IL was no se cret early in 1981 thloll Seagram was
on the prowl to buy a company Ii had $3 bilhon
burntng u hole m its pocket. thanks largely to the saJe
of at~ Te>.as l'ac1f1c 011 properties So it made a bid
for a big mining company, St Joe Minerals -and
was 1mmed1ately turned down J ohn Duncan, St.
Joe s chairman. referred to Seagram's boss. Edgar
Bronfman. by saying, "I don't hold it against him
that his father was a bootlegger."
Seagram then turned its attention to Conoco, the
nation's ninth largest oil company, making what it
I huught was a respectable offer But Conoco was JUSt
as quick as St Joe to spurn the offer from a liquor
company In fact. Seagram 's flirtations drove Conoco
into the arms or Du Pont
Seagram was prepared to pay as much as Du
Pont for Conoco and indeed m any Conoco
s hareholders did sell their s tock to Seagram .
However for Conoco managers. that wasn't the
point . They simply didn't relish the idea of selling out
to a whisky distiller. As for Du Pont well. that was
another story. Classy, you know.
So mighty Du Pont made the biggest acquisllton
1n C S business ha story: $7 5 billion. And by
acquinng Conoco. Du Pont leaped from 21st to 7th
place tn U.S. business rankings
But Ou Pont surprise picked up somelhmg
else with Conoco Seagram had managed to
accumulate 18 million Conoco shares. and rather
than exchange them for dollars. which 1t doesn't
need, Seagram swapped them for s hares m Ou Pont
Result · Seagra"\. became what it could never have
become by goan'g directly for 1t the largest
stockholder in blue-blooded Ou Pont
UPS AND DOWNS
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•