HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-11-24 - Orange Coast PilotJ • --------------~
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ORANGI COAST YOUR HOMITOWN DAllY PAPfR
TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 24. 1981 ORANGECOUNTY CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Fiscal crunch m.ay force state tax hike
SACRAMENTO <AP l An
aide to Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
s ays the Brown administration
1s turning to a tax hike as the
only way out or the state's r1scal
c runch, the Sacrame nto Union
reported today
The news paper quoted Lu
Haas, Brown's s pokesman and
press aide, a s s a y ing that
··reve nue e nhancements " a
euphemism for tax increases -
we re likely to be needed lo
resolve lhe dilemma .
Stale Department of Finance
om c1als have projected a $747
million revenue shortfall for the
fi sc al y ear if econ o mi c
conditions don't improve
And the Comm1ss1on on State
Finance said that shorlfaJI may
swell to S3 billion during the
1982·83 fiscal year. s purred by a
stag nating economy and the
likely passage next year or two
tax-cutting 1ntt1at1 ves.
Ir approved by voters, the la x
initiatives wo uld fully index
stale income taxes l o account
for inflation and abolish the
stale inheritance tax
"We think you have to go for
revenue enha ncements," Haas
said.
li e addt>d that th e
adrhinistration 1s developtng a
list of potential ways to raise
revenues next year.
"There's no concept thllt ha:.
emer ged ," Haas said "We
really don·t have a feel for the
dimensions of the problem ··
The c urrent year's budget
totaled mot<' th.in S25.4 b1llton
T hl' stall' constitution prohibits
.. deficit
Brown has already called for a
5 pe rcent C'ut m the .. baseline"
budgeL-. of stale age ncies next
yt>.i r. a mo\ e that would save an
l''>l1 matcd S180 million The
gen crnor ha :. al so cal l~d a
m o r a to r iu m o n s t a t e
c·on:.trucl1on
H aas said the action was "not
e n o ugh ," adding that the
administration is considering
"no cost -of-li ving adjustments
for anyone_"
Those cost-of-ltving raises or
adjus tments , the s o -called
COLAs. comprise one of the
most expensive segments in the
s t a t e budget . with each
<See TAXES. Page AZ>
'Business1n_an bandit' robs pair
Dave Stockman
coast no show;
budget blnmed
Federal budget director Da\>id
A Stockman can..celed an
appearance today in Newport
Beach "tn ordtv to remain m
Washin gt o n D C to foc us
alle nlion on lhC' nation s latest
bud get problem~
.. And you c.in read tnto that
whate ver you want , .. s uggested
an aide from Newport Beach
Rep. Robert Badham's oHtce
Oday.
Badham had invited Stockman
Prime ra t e
at lowest
l evel in year
N EW Y O RK 1 AP 1
HP flect1ng othe r declining
interest rate~. several major
banks today lowered their pnme
lending rate to the lowest level
in a year
Cit i ba nk . ra nk e d
second larR est a m o ng U S.
commerC'ial banks, and First
N ati o n a l of C hi cago. the
ninth-largest. cut their prime
rate to 16 pe rcent from 16.5
pet cenl Chemical Bank. ranked
~1xth largest. followed suit
Chase Manhatta n Ba nk. No-3.
went further . dropping its pnme
fro m 16.5 percent t o 15.75
percent.
The lowest equivalent prime
rate was 1n mad-November 1980
when the prime varied from 15.5
percent to 16.25 pe rcent
Chase today said it lowered its
prime because interes t rates
have be en declining and loan
demand slackened.
As an illustration of how other
interest rates have fallen
recently. the Federa l Reserve
Board reported the federal funds
rate averaged 12.94 percent in
the week ended Nov. 11, down
from an average of nearly 14
perce nt in the previous week.
Today, that rate opened as low
as 12 percent
to •ppear at • noon f'uaCl-raJ.er today •t lhe Marriott Hotel.
The word from Badham's
office today was that Ken
Khach1gian. a former cons ultant
and speech writer ror President
Reagan. wou ld fill 1n for
Stockma n
Stockman, officials said. had
scheduled a speaking tour in
Califorrua weeks before he set
off a wave of controversy by
r a pping Preside nt Reagan's
economic progr a m during a
magazine interview
L a te las t week . a a des to
Badham saad they were told
Stockman would still show up
for his date a t the Marriott
8 } Mo nda y, th o ugh. a
lon g-distance guessing game
between Washington 0 C and
Orange County e rupted on
whether Stockman's tour was on
or off
.. lie finally c anceled Monday
at 4: 15 p. m. Eastern Standard
T i m e ," Badham 's o ffic e
reported.
In Washmgton. a spokesman
for Stockman said the rederal
b ud get directo r had been
working with the president on an
tntenm bill to keep the federal
government o pe rating.
The preside nt offere d the
22·day budget hill after vetoing a
budget bill passed by Congress.
Stockman also was to appear
at an Anaheim fund-raiser for
Re p Wil ham Oa nne meyer ,
R-Fullcrton
P air escap e j ail
P LEASANTON <AP> Two
prisone rs at the Santa Rita jail
crawled through the attic of
their barracks. stole a deputy's •
van and escaped, according to
guards Lt. T.P . Harris said
26-year-o l d Joseph Lloyd
Rom e ro o f Oakland and
21-year-old Lo uis Lee Rieger
escape d Monday night after
hot-wiring a sheriffs van
Miami crime feared
Burger King move would t ake 700 jobs
MIAMI 1 AP1 The Burger King Corp. has been based
here since it was founded in 1954. but company officials s ay
they may be moving the corporate head(luarters. in part
because of the area 's cnme rate.
··Burger King chairman Lou Neeb h~s been havmg
trouble attracting new executives from other parts of the
country. Al so. our execulives travel a lot. and they're
becoming afraid to leave thejr families behind in Miami. ..
co-founder James McLamore said.
McLamore said Dallas was a leading candidate as new
home of the cham. second only to McDonald's in number of
restaurants.
1f the company moves . 1t would take 700 Jobs with 11
••
T/11s J!Jl.) wumty hus parkt>d ~111dt' the latest nwdel. '·' the 11eu mu~c 111
I ra11s11 /)1.\I rtt 1 <Jnu.' dm t'll by (;ory Coopt>r II ~ J..11011..,·11 us U/d )'el/a
Oallrl"IMl5t.eltl"Mte
tor tl1t• ()range Cuu111 4
'Old Yeller ' OCTD 's mascot
1925 ha nd-crank tourin g bus br ings lore to distr ict
By GLENN SC01T
Of Ill• Dally l'llel St.elf
Just as the U.S. Forest Service has
Smokey the Bear. the Orange County Transit
District has its image -making mascot
for promotional use for rive years After
riding m it during two parades, Ralph Clark,
chairman of the district's Board of Directors.
s uggested buying it
Clark convinced other directors lbe bus
would be a needed promotional tool for the
district and that waiting fi ve years until
the contract expired would onl y tncrease the
cos t.
And guess what? It's a bus .
Not just a ny old bus. This one already
na m ed "Old Yeller " for its color <and
perhaps to add a little sentimentality>. is a
four-cylinder. 1925 hand-crank touring bus
or iginally used in Yellowstone National
P ark.
Adding to its lore, the bus was driven by
a young cowboy by the name of Gary Cooper,
who after living the life of a bus dnver
decided he'd rather be an actor.
The trans it district spends more than
$200,000 a year in advertising. F'unds for the
bus came from a separate djscretionary fond
controlled by Ge ne ral Manage r James
Reichert. who negotiate d the sale with
Farell.
Trans it district officials added their
latest a nd oldest bus to the ranks last week
a fter paying $39,750, including tax. to its
former owner, William Farell oC Huntington
II arbour.
Farell, retired general manager of the
Long Beach Transit Dis trict. said he had no
plans to sell the bus, which he said he's
driven in hundreds of parades. including
twice in the Tourna ment of Roses Parade.
"But if I was going lo sell it to anybody, I
preferred to sell it to OCTD," he said,
(See OLD, Page AZ>
Farell agreed in September to lease the
rare. 10-passenger bus lo the transit district
Government doors open again
Reagan approves stop-g ap spending measure
WASHINGTON (AP I -The
federaJ government js back in
business and President
Reagan's running budget battle
with Congress is on hold after
approva l of a revised
e mergency spending measure.
"Of course, we now must
come back and do the work all
over agajn In th\! Congress on a
bill that can be signed," Reagan
said Monday night after he
signed the stop.gap spending
bill, whic h expires Dec. 15.
Shortly aflerw8l'd, Reagan left
t h e Whit.e House for h is
Ca lif or nia ranch, a
Thanksgiving vacation that had
been delayed a day because of
the budget im passe.
In a telephone call from Air
Force One, Reagan told the
R e publican Governor s
Auoeiallon meeting ln New
(-,
1
Orleans that the battle with
Congress had been .. a game of
chicken, and someone just had
lo bring it to a halt."
Reagan's acceptance of the
measure ended a confrontation
with Congress that led to the
president's first veto and the
layoffs of hundreds of thousands
or federal employees.
The president's supporters in
Congress said the episode was
rresh evidence of Reagan's
resolve to slash f ederal
spencU.nt.
But rurlous De mocratic
leaders said the skirmishing
tb1t l e ft the government
tecb.nk11ly insolvent for nearly'
67 hours was only "a charade.''
Reagan believes "there is a lot
more work to be done," said
deputy White House pr ss
secretary LarrA S~akea. "lle'a
looking forward to working with
Congress when he returns."
On Monday. Reagan vetoed a
$428 billion emergency spending
bill, expiring July 15, that a
bitterly divided Congress sent
him Sunday night. The House
then voted 367-26 for a
Republican-drafted comprot'lise
that e xpir es Dec. 15 -as
Reagan requested.
The measure Reagan signed
simply extended the interim
spending legislation that expired
ot midnight Friday.
Democrats wanted to extend
Interim spending authority
through Feb . 3 , but the
Republican plan was substituted
on 11 vole of 221-176.
Then the m easure salted
thr oug h th e Re ·
publlcan·controlled Senate. 88-1.
$16,050 ·
taken
in Irvine
A well-dressed man somehow
s lipped through the Fluor
Corp 's e xtens ive security
system Wednesday and stole
$16,050 from two men who were
servicing an automated teller
machine at a s atellite
corporation otrice building in
l rvine at Main Street and
Jamboree Road, police said
today
The armed robbery. the first
ever at the huge engineering
corporation, occ urred at 3:30
p.m .
· Th e man dressed an a
two -piece business s uit and
carrying a black briefcase was
described as being in his late
20·s. 5-foot· 10 with brown curly
hair and a mustache
Th e two emJJl o yees of
California-Canadian Bank -
Frank Amexcua and Kari KuUer
were forced into a storeroom
bv the man who indicated he had
a· gun in his coat poc ket, police
s aid. He then forced the men to
open a safe.
Arter getting the money, he
tied up the men and fled. The
m e n were able to untie
themselves and call police.
The automated teller machine
1s jus t one of many such
machines at the Fluor Corp . a
Fluor spokesman said.
A spokesman for Fluor said
security officials were trying to
fi gure out how a person got into
a corporation buHding without
apparent authorization.
Policeman mum
LOS ANGELES <AP> -The
lawyer for Signal Hill policeman
J erry Lee Brown. who discussed
the death of college football star
Ron Settles in a published
inte rview, has refused to let
Brown talk to the district
attorney's office about the case.
r.iiiiiiiiiiiii--
ORAll;f COAST WIATlfl
M oslly cloudy tonight
with 30 percent chance ol
rain tonight. Variable
clouds with local gusty
winds Wednesday . Highs
60 to 66. Lows tonight 50 to
56.
INSIDI TODAY
A Tucaon new.,,aptr it
publiahing a daH11 ..,,.
intenlity indez. Sn Paoe AT.
INDfl
Al •••••• orange Co11t OAll Y PtLOT(TuHday. November 24, ise1
APWI...,....
freezing ram mt heuled .~1clewalb 0 11 tilt> .\ 1<.:111/t•I \loll 111
downtown ,\/11111eapu/1 ,, produced 1111~ toy ltke 1'll<'t I tor
~de$lr1011S
Snow, freezing rain
travel with death
• ~Y The Assoclat.ed Press ~· Rain and s now hit large
.;)Sections or the West. the central
'')\ p p a I a c h i a n s a n d t h e 11M 1ssissipp1 and Ohio river
'1valleys today as winter storms ~continued across the northern
'ltates.
' The latest storms have hit
tiardes t in Minnesota and
'Wi sconsin, and the National
,Weather Service said more snow ~1 nd freezing rain may be in the ~ Hing for those states late
onight or early Wednesday. and
'\he foul weather could spill into
"!southern Michigan.
Two deaths Monday 1n
''Wisconsin were attributed to
weather. Chicago & North
Western Railway conductor Lyle
Allen, 50, of Adams s li pped on 1 Ice and fell under a freight tratn.
·'La Crosse County authorities
1'said. Winnebago County officials
"said Lori Ann Hess. 16, of
'Hartford, died. apparently of
"exposure. on U S . 41 near
"Oshkosh.
An ice s torm Mo nday "para ly.~ed much of southeast
"Minnesota , 1nclud1ng 1'1Minneapolis and St Paul
Children ice s kated on the
sidewalks of the Twin Cities and
trafrtc was at a standstill as a
coating of ice seemed to cover
everything
Even mall delivery was called
off an the Twin Cities.
Police estimated that up to 600
vehicles were stuck on a stretch
of Interstate 94 south of Elk
Raver. Mtnn. between Rogers
and St. Michael Most drivers
had to wa1t about three hours
before the road was s anded and
they could get started again. In
Elk River itself. about 100
vehicles s tacked up at the
bottom of a h.ill before police
blocked off the highway .
Hospitals reported bumps,
bruises and fractures from
people falling on the ice. There
were scattered power outages as
well
In Arizona. meanwhile, an
air-pollution alert issued Fnday
remained in force for the
northeast and south-central
parts of the state for today
through Wednesday, when winds
rrom a Pacific storm are
expected to break up the
thermal inversion Phoentx has
been cloaked with high amounts
of carbon monoxide.
Cop's firing of gun
ruled accidental
~ A shooting 1n which a Laguna
Beach merchant narrowl y
1nl issed being struck by an
bfficer's bullet has been ruled
'accidental by a police review
board.
1 "After d1 scu ss1 ng and
'reviewing all the facts and all
'lhe attendant circumstances
~urrounding the incident it was ~\inanimously ruled an accidental
~isc harge,.. Lt Terry Temple
faid Monday.
•1 T he s 1 x · m e m be r po 11 c e
,Urearms discharge board of
feview m et las t week to
,petermine whether Officer Mark
1,V uille discharged his weapon
with justification Nov 15 inside
1;i Laguna Beach jewelry store.
The incident occurred inside
the House of Tai shop at 917
Glenneyre St. Officer Vuille was
responding to a silent alarm at
the address lhat had been set off
aragedoor
crushes tot
RANDOLPH, N.J . <AP> A
to ddler died after she was
pinned beneath an automatic
Qar age door while her 3-year-old
blkotber operated the controls.
police said.
Christine Frischmann, 1 'h,
died Monday on the operating
table in' Morristown Memorial
Hospital two hours a fter the
ace id e1'1 t at h er h-o me .
authorities said.
She suffered a crushed chest
and punctured heart, police
said.
madvertently by Fred Hershey.
part owner of the shop
As Offic~r Vu1lle entered the
bus iness through the front door
with his weapon in hand.
Hershey reportedly came into
the s ame room from the back,
The officer discharged hi s
re\'Ol\.er . sending a round
through a display case The
bullet ricocheted into a wall a
few inches from Hershey's head
Lt Temple said the incident
was unmlentional. adding there
would be no disciplinary action
taken against the officer
Big question
gets airing
STORM LAKE. Iowa tAP)
She heard 1t here first on the
radio
John Lawson, 24. said Laurie
Taefenthaler was sitting on his
lap when radio s tation KA YL
broadcast a 30 ·s eco nd
commercial he had bought it
included a happy birthday
m essage and a marriage
proposal
He said she turned to him and
said, "You know I wtll ! ..
They tentatively s et the
wedding for next Septemb<>r
4 rescued in fire
PASADENA l AP )
Ffreftgflters rescued a doctor
and three custodial workers who
were trapped by a fire that
s wept the Fair Oaks Medical
Building, a spokeswoman said.
OftANGe COAST Daily Pilat CIHllfted ~Mtt 71'~2-M7i
All other depemn.nta M2..tl21
MAIN~
..... ~ ... C.. ...... CA.
Mell...,_:._ IMl,C: .... MHa, C:A ...
a
Road funds fight stalls
Congressmen coaxed for Santa Ana Freeway money
The slruiflle to entice more
rundl' to improve Orange
County's trumport.ation 1y~tem
continued Monday as loc'I
leaderft coaxed congressmen for
funds to widen the Santa Ana
Freeway.
T h e occasion was a
congressional hearing at the
Santa Ana City Coun cil
Chambers in which Jerry
Patterson. D·Santa Ana, and
Glenn Anderson, D·Torrance,
received testimony rrom a
handful of the county's influence
leaders.
The two congressmen are
rnembers of the subcommittee
on surface transportation to the
House of Representatives ·
Pub l ic W orks and
Transportation Committee.
That committee 1s considering
legislation s imilar to a bill
already passed by the Senate
1:1 uthonzing interstate freew1:1y
widemng as part of a national
road maintenan ce and
reconstruction program
Local leaders left no doubt
that they bac k any federal
programs leading to the
expansion of lhe freeway trom
six to eight lanes with a new,
smooth surface
··Re cons truc tion of the
existing six lane facility alone
will simply serve to improve a
multi·millton parking lot."
observed Daniel Grisel, a Santa
Ana City Councilman and
member or the county's
Transportation Commission.
In less than four years, Gnset
said, planners think that the
s ix -lane freewa} will be so
clogged that rueful drivers will
b<' caught in .. stop-and-go"
conditions on the freeway 12
hours per day •
More than merely an
1nconvenienc·e. severe freeway
congestion also means a rough
time for the local economy,
s peakers s aid It means
products don 't get to the market
on time and worhrs don't get to
their jobs.
"We see the handwriting on
the wall." cautioned Malcolm
Ross. chairman of lhe Orange
County Chamber of Commerce's
Transportation Council.
While local officials are
hoping for federal money to help
widen the Santa Ana Freeway
the speakers said more taxes
eventually must come from
county residents af greater
improvements are to be made.
Irvine Company President
Peter Kremer and county
Supervisors Thomas Riley and
Ralph Clark all suggested that a
m aJortly of taxpayers will
From PageA1
TAXES • • •
percentage poanl 1n all the
COLAs costing the general fund
about S250 million
The COLAs include welfare
grant increases, stale pay raises
and more than a dozen other
items tied. by law. to inflation
Fiscal experts estimate that
an across-the-board freeze on
the COJ..As would save the state
about S2 b1lhon but spark a
political firestorm .
"i'll we know is we have to
provide a balanced budget, ..
Haas said. "It'll probably be a
com poncnt of things "
Haa s s aid Brown plans
m eetings with legis lative
leaders to attempt to achieve a
consensus balancmg the budget.
lie also said Brown will begin
meeting soon with his top fiscal
advisers to prepare his 1982-83
bud~et propos al. which is
scheduled to be released in
January
Diana short,
gets a hand
TETBURY, England IAP)
British tabloids s aid today that
Princess Diana didn't have
enough money to pay for candy
she bought at a local store so her
bodyguard made up the
difference.
The re was no immediate
comment from Buckingham
Palace.
The p~rs said the incident
occurred Monday at 8 store in
this Gloucestershire village,
where Diana and Prince Charles
have made their home.
The tabloids said she selected
chocolates. fudge and soft fruit
chewies costing $4.99, fumbled
in her purse but came up short
and her bodyguard detective
handed over some money to
make up the difference .
Mishap kill8 girl
HILMAR {AP> A 4-year-old
Hilmar girl was crushed to
death when she fell from a scoop·
bucket on t he front of her
father's tractor and was c rushed
under the rront wheels ,
a uthorlties reported Monday.
Julle Andt'ade was /ronounced
dead or ma live hea injuries at
Emanuel Hospital In Turlock
arttr the accidenlSaturday.
coi;i11lder ¥ local !'Mies or g11ol1ne
tax If they under11t1tnd the
mon"y will •o onl)' towud new
road construction.
"We cannot rely on federal
and state aid," said Kremer,
who culled the specia l
counlywide transportation tax a
"realistic part or the solution."
Clurk told the congressmen·
that th1: county 's plan lo
construct a mass transit hne to
link Anaheim with the John
From PageA1
Wayne Airport 11nd all the
major commercial and
industrial 1tops ln between
will help relieve traffic
congestion. The new design also
would lead to new higher-density
residential development in the
heart of the county where
middle-Income people can livE•
much closer to their jobs. ht·
said.
The mass lransii line and lht·
widened eight-lane freeway art·
OLD YELLER IN ACTION.
two key paru1 ot the coun~)
TransPortatloo Com.,,lsalon •
program lo relieve con•eslion
alona the so·cullc:d Santa An•
Freeway Transportation
Corridor.
The cost of the packa&e or
improvements is estimated at $2
billion, which works out lo about
$1,000 per each of the county's
two million residents.
-Ht/ 1;u;.\ \' .'il'U'/"/
• •
explaming lhat his vehicle will get proper
care and shelter.
Farell said he bought the bus in the
mid 1960s from a friend in Utah who had
purchased 1l from a rancher in Montana who
used 1l to transport his seven children to
school 15 miles away.
an investment as well as a promotional tool.
He said an appraiser valued it at $60,000
once several repairs are made.
The bus will be repb1red by district
mechanics early next year, he said
.. Alter they all fini shed school. they just
more or less parked 1t, · · Farell said.
After that, il will be entered m all of the
major parades in Orange County, from the
Garden Grove Strawberry Festival to the big
July Fourth parade in Huntington Beach.
This bus was one of the few models that
was not destroyed at the national park in a
garage fire m the 1930s, he added Farell said
1l always draws a response al parades and
will prove to be worth the expense
"It's one of the best marketing tools they
could buy," said Farell. "I know I'm very
promotion minded myself."
But first, it will once again grace
Colorado Boulevard m Pasadena on Jan. 1,
1982. Part of the sales agreement included a
stipulation that Farell gets lo use it for the
las t time to ferry the president of the
Tournament of Roses Association in the
prestigious event
Michael Barnes , the district's
commun1cat1ons director, said the bus will be
But never rear. says Farell The transit
district's new image will contmue to roll on
.. As long as they keep 1t up," he said.
"that bus W111 run forever ..
•
Oil world warned of shock
Current worldwide surplus called temporary
VIENNA I AP I The current
worldwide surplus of crude oil 1s
a temporary condition that could
end with a "Jarring s hock,"
Saudi Arabia's oil minister
Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yam ani said
today.
"The exastang oil s urplus 1h
the market doesn't meaf\ the end
or the energy P(Oblem." Yamani
said at a semin~r sponsored by
the Organization or Petroleum
Exporting Countries.
·'This 1s a transient phase
during which many may relax an
the sense of false security that at
gives," he said, "but at the end
of which may cause them a
jarring shock ...
Many energy analysts believe
the oversupply of oil on world
markets will end sometime next
year with a rebound in economic
activity and a continued
drawdown of oil stocks held by
the international oil companies
Yamani, whose country is the
largest source of imported oiJ
for the United States, warned
that oil-importing countries
might be poorly prepared for an
end to the 011 surplus, and "they
will once again look to OPEC Cor
comfort "
Separately. Jraqr 011 Minister
Abdul Karim charged that lhe
United States had led an effort
to mani~ula.te oil stocks and
bring prices down
Has remark implied that Saudi
Arab i a , which k e pt it s
production high despite protests
from other OPEC members,
played into the hands of
rndustrial oil consumers.
Ka rim said the surplus was a
threat to OPEC member
countries, and complained about
the organization's inability to
"produce 011 at the rate at which
1t wants."
Yamani, whose country 1s
known to oppose programmed
oil production within OPEC. said
later that Karim 's s peec h
··repres ented mostly I raq1
views."
Victhns' hairs match Bonin's?
Criminologist testifies in Freeway Killer trial
By J ACKJE HYMAN As.Mew• P,...• wrltff
LOS ANGELES An expert
criminologist testified that hairs
fou nd on three Freeway Killer
victims appeared lo match those
or defendant WilUam Bonin.
''I found the physical and
mic roscopie char acteristics to
be consistent with having come
from William Bonin." said Los
Angeles County Sheriff's
Crimmolog1st James G. Bailey.
who s aid he also compared the
hairs to those of more than half
a dozen other suspects and ruled
them out.
Bonin, a 34 -year -old truck
driver from Downey, is charged
with 12 murders or young men
a nd boys whose bodies were
found dumped near Southern
Califorrua freeways, leading to
the case's Freeway Killer tag.
Bailey said hairs found on lhe
bodies of James McCabe, 12. of
Garden Grove. Ronald Craig
Gatlin. 18, of Van Nuys, and
Marcus Grabs. 17, of Germany,
were "consistent" with Bonin's
hair
However . under
cross-examination, he said. "I
can never be absolutely certam
that a hair came from a
particular person."
Bailey said statistics weren't
ava ilable to indicate the
percentage of probability that a
hair actually belonged to a
person whose hair it seemed to
match.
•'It's true there are n o
percentages available," he said.
"However, experimenh1lly I've
eliminated something like 10 or
11 different people, so that
should give you some idea of
how strong the identification is."
Among those he ruled out, he
said, were Vernon Butts. J ames
Munro and Gregory Maley
Butts, who was cha rged m sax
of the Freeway Killer murders.
committed suicide an his Jail cell
on Jan. 11, the corol\er·s office
has s aid. Munro has pleaded
gui lt y lO one {'OUnt of
'.Ex.tend a
Compfime~ ...
·-
second-degree murder and
test1f1ed against Bonin
M tley. 20. who pleaded guilty
to two counts of first-degree
murder , co ncluded hi s
testimony against Bonm. during
which he described m gruesome
detail the torture-strangulation
murders of two youths
The witness. who has been
diagnosed as having an IQ of 56.
described the Feb. 3, 1980.
killings of Charles Miranda. 15.
and young McCabe
However. he admitted under
cross-examination that he could
not at first identify photographs
of the two youths
"Is 1t true that t he only reason
you can identify these two
pictures 1s because the police
told you who lhey were?" asked
d e fense attorney W11l1am
Charvet, who is representing
Bonin.
"Yeah." Miley rephed.
1S FASHION ISLAND
Nh'°"T lllACH .
en•> w.-w
•
I
AP W1tot!Mto>
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,/111111111y Sltl· ll'lll ,.,,,,, /11 ·'1 l'll Ill \/if ,,_ ' , ••. I •••••
µnil11h111u11 111 ('/11u1f.i" 111 1111 /!t.!• ,,
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1/1 //'/ \I .,JI/I/I l•lf//otl/ . .: ' 'I I .. , I
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\ ', ,. ·~,, ., •• 1/ •• '
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Mojave Indian
chief recalled
Fort Mojave Indiana voted
to r ecall Tribal Chairman
Llewellyn Barrackman and
his wife, Betty, by murglns
Of better Lhan 12 to 1, the
Bu reuu of lnd1un Affairs
said
The unofficial vote was
124 11 In favor of recalling
Barrackman and 124·10 in
favor of reca lling his wire
from her pos t on the tribal
council, according to Allen
Anspach of the BIA 's tribal
operations office in Phoenix
T he 757 m e m ber tribe ,
hcadc1uarle red in Needles.
owni:. a 41,884-ac re triangle of
land in Anzona . California
and Nevada
T he Nat1onu l Portra ll
Ga lll•ry in London says the
Princess or Wales' official
portr ull, s lashed la st August
1'y a prote~ter from Northern
Ireland. will return lo pubh<·
d1s pla~
T he• ofl1t·1al portrait of
Prtnl't'Sl:> Diana ha s been
lull) rt>slorcd and will go on
\'H'\\ th•~ wcl'k. the "lat1 on al
Porlratl Oallt>r~ announct'd
Th e p a1nt1n g. 1 n
\\Ul t•r ha ~t·d ac:rYlll·s on
t•anvas. portray'> tht' formt>r
Lad~. 1>1ana Spt·n t·c1
wcanng an info rmal pant::.
s uit. '>l'all'd ht> fore a d ra\\ 1ng
mom <.1001 1n Uuck1ngham
l'<t late
,\t'lor Ed Asner plays lhC'
roll· o f ne\\spapN editor on
tl'k\ 1:-.10n Jnd labor ll'.Hler 1n
rl'al life. I.Jut he had onl y
ha r -.h ""r <b to r both thi·
pn "'" and tht' lt>a<kr:-. of
.\mt•r u:a "'tug union..,
So ml'" he rl· a Ion ~ lhl'
l11w . I ft•ll out ol Iii\ l' "1th l hl·
prl''"· :-.a id ;\:-.1ll'r. "o tar ol
I ht• ('BS ll'il-\ l"oton ..,ho\\ Lo u
(;I o1 Ill. ,rl11111t ,1 da ti \
Ill'" -.papl'I'
Thl· tu1111ng point l·.i m e hl'
.., ,1 I d \\ I l h l h l'
non l'O\ l'ragt' of " -.tnkt·
II\ tht• Sn t-t>n \c t111.., (iurld
11.I \\ h I I' h h l' " I ht' n l' \\
111 t''> "tent
\,nl'I' ,, ... ._ 1n lk"> :\lmnl'., lo
'>pt•.1k al J tl'll•llr:Hton fo r th1•
\ m t' 11 l' a 11 f' l' d l' r at 1 o n of
l.Jh11 r ., IOOlh h11thda'
F o1 n11.·1 l S Heµ Robert
Bauman ol :\Ian land :-.a id
thal hl' ha' deah .. :un ·1·'>::.fulh
\\tt h ht' ..1 lc-o hol1'>m and
hom1l:-.l'Mialll~ .ind inll'nlb to
run ug ain for thc :.t-al h~ IO!>l
last yesr
Th l• 44 \ea r o ld
Rt·pubhc;m . who held the h t
Dt!>lrtct t'ongres~1onal !-l'Jl
tor c·1~ht year-.. !-.atd a t J
rH'"' l'Onft•renl'l'. I (·an lt•ll
'ou that lhl' probll'm'> a n·
m t'I .ind dune '' 1th
~\" 'f.\~ Outlook cooler Tuesday
Coastal
0< c •~•on•I •t9n1 'Atn ton•Qhl
P•rtl~ <touelv •na t~ V.f!<IM \O••
Wllh QUSIY Wlncl\
(O•,t•I .,, •• no IOYI\ 1n SO\ (.o~o•··
ml•no n1Qtl\ tn oCk V¥•trt at
E.l~e•htt'• l1Ql'\l ••r••O I., w1nO\
n•9nt •nd "'°'"'"Q noors bl'tomm9
we\t 10 \Outhwest 11 to 12 knot\ 1n
•tte rnoons two to l loot wt\.trr•~
i ••fl t•<f1>1 ~to 8 tret out•r ••ter\
S•n N 1to••s I Sl.tno northw•ro
C.touov
V.S. summary
f r~11nc;a ,.,n illnO 'leet l\ltt tall~
from no rt h'tlr t \ tern H I 1 no1 \ to
s.ou1h••~lern M1nNsoU1 •nd turned to
Extended
outlook
!>0U1 H f;l<N C.A LH Uk"'I A
OE!>l1<1 AR lA~ Mo\11• <•••
w1noyttnou104 Hut &Mrtly<-louch
dt hfTlt') "°''" oorhon\ H •on .. ·~ •o >) (Jw~n' "•11•v OUwu w1\I )1> lo f>)
uoorr CM\.*r I\ •no ft) to I) 10""•'
Ot-Wfh LOW\ 1) to)~ O•l t'I\ 'Y•llt.,
l \ to •) Yl>Of'f OiP\.f rt\ 4H\0 •O\
IOWff d t•\t'tb C.O A!>IAL A,.,0 MOUNlAIN
ARt:A!> ...... 11, tl~U U VPI $GnW
(!Ouch •I ltn•f'\ 1n tn~ nortJWrn
mounl•1n\ V.1ndi;i di t•mt\
M•1nly '" mount••n\ In <OO\l•I
., ... ,, HIQn' ., to n l OW\ tr\
tO°\ •n.d IOWff ~ Mounld1n "IQf\\ JI
10 H l~ 1n 201 •na low•t JOs
I " ' ~ ... -\h.-.• ,
tmIIrn
8an1morr ., 11 lt
&ollon .. ... 2J
Bull•IO
(h4rt\tnW'\; '"""'· with 10 rOMI\ •toe0•"9 wnw ------------JA
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14 RAPIO (1ly
l1 Rl<hmono
lO ~n OI~
1• ~n fr•n
JO SHtllt
.. SJ
•S SA -~ trom !Tlflr lob\ inG IOH lnQ
i.ome s<hOOI\ 10 < IOW
Th• sleet was nettv1e't Mono•t
•rouno M1nnt•PGh\ •f'Kl )I P•ul
whi<.h t\.o JUiC \IMt•G to ff'(Ov•r
f rom IA\.t •Mk \ 10 IMtl \rtO•t•tl
•n o m •nv 1cnool,, <OYrt\ •no
llbr•rlt \ w•rt < IOW'O ThOst ••wi.
St•te f'mploy-••\ who 9(1f to •Or"
wer• w nt norne
Mlnnupolt> St Paul 1n1u ,,.t1on.tl
Alrpotl ,.,.llfll lin<l•"!I• '"' •Doul • "•lf .. hour to •t i crtw' s•nO tht
rUft••ys
Th• St P.-ul F1rr Oepairlmtf'U \•10
Smog
EL MON Tl:c IAP 1 ,.-... "tr
CJu•ldY M•n•o•mrnt lJ•\tru t
or•ct1t1\ oooct ,., qua111, Al'\O ~
Po11ut1on ~tand4tcJ lndE'• r•ttn9 ot •J
IOt •H .,~.\ OI lnf "'CkJ\• 'Ge\I • .,
1M\1n
AQMO rat1n9\ ·"~ "' fflflOW\ 9000, 0 lOO, unhe•tt'1tul for wn\111\tp
OfOPlt 10f 200 unn•~ltntul to,
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lOI S00
c.n~uriM
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(01umbu'
Dfon•f r
~tro11
Outulh
Fairthtni.,
HPltnd
Honolulu
1non•Ql1.,
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La\ Vf"~'
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1] SI LOUIS
1A St !>t~ M••~
).t 1 u•'• 18 W•\h1n91n
~ CALIFO~NIA
:~ APPIO II •II••
13 &•~u >t1e10
31 &a•Uow
31 euumon1
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0 32
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18 OJ l.0\H\Vlllf •B
M1•n11 1& patam•ol<• •npono•o lo t S ------------
JS fltvlne
6iO l•'"""" .. SI
weett•r·rf't•tf'O t •lls 1n a •1 1·hour ptr•oo. mo~1 1nvolv1n9 tt•cturt's
tulf.,PO tn 1•11•
Snow ••WJ teH from SOOH'lw('\l•rn
Minnesota 10 t.,. ea"•rn O~llol•• ano
•c ross W•s<ons1n •nO north•rn
tlllnol\ llw So<tth O.tlkota H19nw•v
P•trol •d"''"' no trav•t tn uuee nort,,~•1••rn countte\
A•tn ,.,., trcwn toutrwrn Mt\SOMfl
Into iou1Mrn lnd••n.J •nd wtstu n
1>41r" of KMtuo v •no len11H\U
A•tn,hOwer\ w•rt K•lt•r•d over
the P•<•U< North•es,1 •nd lrom
northern C..lol0<n1• to northtrn Vl•ll
tct•ho •nd western Mont•na h•O
S"CIW.
CIOUOy Sllles ••1•.-0 throu9n tM Mf"'tl'tern •nd ce.nlr•\ RockteJ to trw
1tl91t Pl•tn1, •no ov•' the lower
Mllslu tppt lf•tlty a no •trou
PeM1ytvMt•• into New Jersey •nd
-•te1n ,...,. EnQl•na
Some •tol•1.0 tn0w toll HSI ot lht
tower Great L•ktt.
Temperatur•• arouna Ille rwtl•on •I
2pm EST1.,.011om•low o1na1
&rtOIOrG, P• • to " h•Qh ol ., ••
McAll•n. l ellas.
MOndey F roO•v II Y<X1 00 not -. "°"' -by !> :JO P m C~I C.IOte 1
p"' and your coov *'" oe o.t•-eo
a.tvt'Otty 1no Su'ICl•T,y" /o: 00 not .::,~:.. e:,:r "°"' CO:.,"' .... C: --"°
Mllwaukf'f' Jli
N•V~vlllP ~· N•w Ode•n, IQ Te mpe ratures U (ulver C..•h
31 r: ......
H frono
6' S1
16 )I
10 •1
Alb•ny
Ancnor-
Ashtvlll•
Allanl•
NATION
th I..•
l3 11
10 11
SI 1J
~9 lJ
N•w Yor9' .,
Ollie t.11' u
Oman• SI
Phoenl• 81
Plll\burQh 31
Pllano -••
16 L•n<•s••r ~ LOnQ llu cn
16 M•f'Y\Vlllf
•I Monrovt•
)I Monlebello
11 :~n:.'.~
Nt:.cih~s
~ewporl Bu en
0 .tkl•nd
71 ~ •• so
U SI
,. 4A 11 .,
l1 SJ
o• S1
II ...
6S S7
6' •S
Sun, moon, tidRs
TODAY
!>•cono h•Qh • 28 pm • t
Wl!ONESOAY
Ftr\t tow 1 1'•m 16
F lr\I hlQh I SS a .m S.• V•ll01o•pm 1000 S..rl S_.I l wefl Swell S11rt Sott1 !>et ono low 1 ., p.m -0.1
!>~ono 1t1911 • OA p m • O IH<ll A•• Mn Pr41 A ... Mu Dir
Zum• , l 11 1 l w
Sun ••ts 4 •• p m ,,,., ~n1a M0ntU , • 11 , ] w
12 2 J "" Newp0r1 ) • !>in 0 1•90 c-1· l )
Oullook lor W.OMwlay Liiii• ch•noe
IJ 2 l w w eone..uty • lS a m
M oon '"'' • 01 pm .• rl1•• Wecln•MMY S :» • m
·I
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Call the number below and your message will be recorded,
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Tell us what's on your 1t11nd.
642·6086
• .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTuHday, November 24. 1981 s
Transit
plan
backed
About 150 senio r c 1t1zens
cr owded into the meeting room
of th e O rang e C ou n t y
Transportation Co mmission
Monday to urge support of a
plan t o co n so l i date
tra nsportation ser vices tor the
co unt y 's soci al se r v i ces
ag encies.
If the s pectutors exp ected
confronta tion. however , they
didn't get it The commissioners
said they. too, hke the idea of
com b1ning the services .
According to a cons ultant's
repor t or d ere d by th e
com m1ss1on. 259 social services
agencies in the co unty provide
so me typ<o of transportation for
their ch enls Ninety·one or them
own theH' own vehicles
Most of those agenc1e!> do not
be long to a l'OOrdina ted network
aimt•d al increas ing e ffi ciency
a n d ket>p1ng cos ts down . thl.'
cons ultant concluded
Under the plan pro11osed by
OA VE Consulting Int·. all of the
agent 1es would bc united under
a n•nlralizl.'d agency the
Comm un1t :> U e \'elop m e nt
CounC'1l that would t·oordinale
d ri v er traini ng . 1n i:.urant·e .
equipment purcha!>ing . veh1 clt>
m a intenance. uccount 1ng a nd
referrals
The program 1s ex pectt'<l lu
la ke three years t o put into
effet·t
Moi.t of the senior s alter.d ing
the commission meeting al Lhe
l'OUnt y Hall of Ad min1strat1on rn
Santa Ana seemed lo beltt>ve
t hat the eentral t.ted s ervll'l'
would increase their ab1ht \ to
find rides lo hot lunch progrJms.
doc to r·S ' o ff ll' t• ~ a II d so ('I iJ I
i.ll'll \'lttes
One native sa id trans µorlalton
has 1'ecomc more dtfht·ult from
th<' t ime when ht· """ a child
and re!-ldt>n ts ha d thl'tr """
hors e:-. and bugg1e!-
Co m m1 ss1on m e mbt'rs are
..,t•hedull•d to lakt> actwn on the
retommendalt0n lo t ons oluJ:Jle
the '>Cl'\ ll'l' at their meeting m
two \\eek... Tht· t·o n ... ol1dat1on
stud v \\US mandakd ll\ the stak
lei!,; la lurl'
Judge nixes
telephone
solicitations
/\ Tus t in m an h a s b C'e n
ordert.'d b\ an Oran~e Count~
Supe rior Court Judge to ceas e a
tclt•µhnne :-.ollc1tat1on tampa1gn
1n "h1ch caller-. lat I to d1sd o::.e
that o n l ~ ha l l o r th e
t'ontribut1ons go to l'hanl ~
Wtl lt am Wilkins \\J~ issued
the• restraining order b) J udge
T h o m as Cros by T he• o rder
enjoins Wilkins from represent-
ing incorrectly that he is a
volunteer and a doctor seekin g
charita ble donations for the Ray
of Hope a ctivity center for me n-
tally retarde d people
W1lk1n'> \\li '> a l legl'd l)
solll'lllng th<' t•ontribulwns tnr a
c har ilabl <.• Christm a s pa rty .
actordinl! lo tht· IJ\\'>ll tt filed
la '>l \\l'Ck h\ Diane
Sta venha gl•n de pot) d istric t
attorney 10 Orange Count)
T 1t·kel!> to the e vent were '>old
for S5 each. hut Wilkin:-. did not
reveal to donors that ha ir the
mu n t'y wa !-. u s e d l o p ay
per!-onnel making the ca lls and
c o 11 1· e t 1 n g t ht' m on C' ) . M .,
Sta vt•nhagcn said
Offtl'1ab at thl· Ray of !lope
tcntn told investigators they
\\t•n.• una\\are of poss 1hlc illegal
act1v1t 1e:.. and "'ere h elpful
durin g a n u n d e r
With the approe<:h1ng holiday
season we would h11e to t1ke
1h11 opportunity to thenll our
friends #Id customers tor the
goodwtll and loyalty that hes
helped to build our bu11ne11
b1gaer end better every year
A,..,,.......
NEAT SLICE H.1111.tlJ\ H11hl.· .1 ntl·n1ht•1 111 !Ill· .\llll'l'H'.t ll
B 111111ll'r.111g l\·,1m ('!u -.·l. . ., h1 .... l '\ l'' Inn nh11t..tj.!l'' J .... 1111ll· ......
h 1· .. h11\\:-h11\\ 111 l"ll l .111 .ippll' 111 It.ill du1111g pr.HI ll'l' fur I h1 ·
\t1-.11.t1 1.1 \1111 •r11·;.1 Hoonll'1.1111..! l l''I 111 S \tlllt'' \11 .... 11 .1!1.i
MS patients told
new drug perilous
By JODI CADENHEAD
01 IM Oall, Pll<lt Staff
M ult1plt' sclerosis patients
s h oul d n t b e c·o m e t oo
o p t 1m1 s t1C· about p ubli s hed
r e µo r t s heral d i n g th e
controverstj.tl drug interferon as
a new e fft>ct1ve treatm en t. sa ys
Dr Stanle\ van den Noort, Dean
of t hl· UC in ine Medtt'al School
An article pubh:-.hed Frida) 111
Scie nce maga zine '>;J) s that
pat ients treated a l a Buffalo
hos pital wi th the <1 nt1 vi ral
l'he m1 ca l sho\\ed im prove ment
1n their d1:.ea,,t•, compared tu
another group given s tandard
treatment
Dr van den N0<1rt. who ser ve..,
a s chairman of the medical
ad\.tsory board or the Multtplc
SC'leros1s Society. s a id that
pubht·ation of the :-.Ludy donl' at
tht' Dent ~eurolog1c lnsl1lule at
Millard Fill more llos p1 tal 1n
B uffa lo on 12 human '>UbJecls
"as µrcm ature
I would cons ider that a pilot
~tud'. · he said I don l think I
wouid have published 1t because
the numbers are loo small."
T he hea d of the UC Irvine
me dical school s aid interferon 1s
too sc arce and expensive a drug
to b e offered as a hopt.>ful
"e apon a g<11n '>l t h~ s lowl)
progr ess1n• disease that a fft>c·ts
the brain and spinal cord
Toys sought
for Indians
ThC' As..,1-.tancl' Le ague of
La g una Bc·a c h 1::. 'eek 1n g
d onat io n .., of d olls ... 1urft•d
antm.il:-.. lo~-. and gamt'" 111 gl\c
to Indian c·h1ldren at ChrtstmJ::.
A:-.,1o;tan<'l' League voluntecr ...
l'mphJ"otl l' tht• doll'> C:tnd toy:-. do
not need to bt• ne \\ Thal s
becaus l' t he g r o up hol d ~
\\Or k..,hops each Frida) morning
heg 1nn1n g a t 10 lo r epai r
o ld toys at the chaµter housl' al
547 Cata lina St
If vou would like to donafe
g1ft'i.'<·as h for ga soline and food
or hel1> repair tO)'> t all 494·ti09i .
o r d ro µ hy lh l' Leag u l··:-.
rurnabout Thnrt Shop al 526
G ll'nneyre ~t
.. ~ .... L_., .... ,
··Even 1f we had inte rferon tu
the bucketful 11 proba bl y woufd
not be the answer to MS ... said
Dr van den Noori in a tele phone
1nte r v1e "' ·e a sed o n an
understanding or how tnterfer9n
works. the t hances 1t will makC'
t he pat ient wo rse a r e about
equal to the c hance::. 11 will m ak(•
them better ··
Interfe ron 1::. a rare and costh
drug thill has gained IJme Jn
cxpcnmentul cancer treatment
lltghlv punr1cd blood -.ampl~-.
taken from 12 donors \\Quid ~
nc e dl•tl t o r o n e dos e or
interferon said Dr va n d en
Noort
It t!-1 almost useless to d iscut-.,
the d rug until new te<"hn1qul''>
mC:t ke mass p roduction poss1bk .
hc added
For the las t ) ear the MS
Soc iet y has been conducting
l'lint cal studies of tis own 1n San
1>1e~o <1nd Sa n Fran cisco on
about 100 pa t ie nt s us ing
interferon Those tests will be
com p lcted in about six months
ac.cording to Dr van den Noor\.
Dr van den Noort s aid he
expec t e d thos e f 1nd1n g s
involving more patients would
be m o re co nclus ive than thl'
· '>tud~ donl' 1n Buffalo
Coast trash ~
pickup to he (
delayed 2 days
R u b b i s h p 1 c k t. p w ii l ~e
del a ) ed one d a ) beg 1 nnin~
T h u r ~ d a ~· b e c a u s e o f
Thanksg1\'1ng 1
R e s id e nts "hos e r e g ul a r
.,er v1ce day 1s Thursd ay w1p
h ave their tra sh pic k ed up
Frid ay, while Friday :.erv1ce
custome rs will have service Ofl
Saturday Regularly sc hcdulefj
ser vice will res ume Mo nday ,
Nov. 30
Commumt1es included 1n the
holiday s chedule are La guna
R e a c h . Huntington Be ac h .
Ne wport Beach. Irvine. Coslh
Mes<1 . Fountain Valley. Lagurt'a
Niguel a nd Dana Point "
City halls wi ll be c losed
Tbursday a nd Frida "
.
We Shell elwaya try to "*''
your confidence We ate
gtettfUI for your contnbutlOM
to OUf IUC~ Md with to
Hnd you enct ~ur f1tn•e,
9tMtlnga M INI .& IQll ..
1M1ot1 ••. from .. ..,. • Ch•rtee H 11rr Js 1t•1.
/
s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Tuesday. November 24 , 1981
[f]ffiU~rnrn
Oil firm seeking
-more Libyan crude
Bv the ~ssoclated Pre s
Marathon 0 11 Co. has said
it is negotiating with Libya to
increase purchases or crude oil
from that North Africa nation,
and a trade journal has reported
that llaly is considering raising
Its crude purchases from Libya
Maratho n 's dis c losure
Monday followed a report by
Conoco Inc . on Friday l hal
Libya had offered a reduction of
about Sl, to about S36 a barrel
·on an interim bas1i.." in the
price Conoco pays for the crude
it he lps produce for Libya.
ConO<'o called Libya's offer a
· significant move" bul added
lhal 1t was ··still not competitive
e nough in the current c rude 011
market ·· Conoco said tt had no
immediate plans to buy any
Li byan oil at the new price.
ll was reported m London on
S unday that Libya's official
news agency had quoted the
Libyan oil sec r etariat as
denying it had offered a pnce
!'eduction.
··These false reports are
designed to weaken lhc unlly of
OPEC," the news agency JANA
~aid. Under the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries·
ret·enl pricing agreement. Libya
"as allowed to charge up to S4 u
bar r e l above t h e cartel·s
henc hmark of S34. ll set its
official selling price at S37 50
Marathon. whi ch ts a member
of lhe Oasis 011 consortium that
includes Conoco and Amerada
lfess Corp , declined lo sa~
whethe r it had been offered am
price concession. The Oas1.s
group produt'es a large portion
of Libya's oil
Willia m Ryder. a spokesman
at Marathon's Findlay, Ohio.
headqu arters. said company
officials had been negotiating to
increase Marathon ·s shipments
from Libya. Those talks are now
an suspension, but Ryder said
Marathon believed il had ··the
basis for ongoing dist'ussions:·
He would not elaborate
Marath on had t aken an
average of 17.300 barrels or
crude a day from Libya during
lhe third quarter and an average
64 .300 daily an the fi rst nine
months of the year Ryder said
t he t'ompany took no oil 1n
October and only one shipment
so far this month lie det'lined to
disclose the ~•te of the latest
shipment
Meanwhile. a New York-based
trade journal reported that
ltaly·s state-ownt'd 011 l'Om pany
AG IP was consider in g
incr easing its crude import!>
from Libya in reaction to import
culback!> ren•ntly announced by
ltaha n private Oii companies.
Platt•s Oilgnim New~ quoted
.in unidentified ~ourl'e 1n Rome
as s aying Italian author1l1es are
c·ons1dcnng every IJO!>S1blt!
source of suppl y. including
L1by a · Ital~·!> privatt> -oil
l'Ompan1es had been taking an
a\ l·rage uf about 285.00U barreb
of 011 daily from Libya during
t hl• t1r~t nine months of thl· vear
but halted all pun·hases ·last
month. Platt s !>aid
Al'WI..._...
FREEZING FLOP l<.1\ \\1·11 ... 11; ul .\l1111tl·.q1111& ... ol1d11 1
ll,l\l' .I l°ll,llllT Ill\ Ill., h1t\1 1l-,1111'1 .I llt'l'/lll ;..'. 1.1111
1rn m11l11l11l·d 11111d1 111 tlw .in·.i .\l1111d.1' .\l.111' ... ,·1111111 ...
• !11 ... 1•d :-l.1!1• .111d lvd1•1 .II 1.•rnpl11\ l'l'' h.111 1 lt1• d.1, 1111 .111d
lllt'll 11pt1ltl.1tl 1111' 'l 'I \ llT \\,I, h.tlll'd tl111 :11 ;..:l.ll ll'I l1i..1·
1111d1111111'
s office
pro es Allen's
sale of firm
WAS HIN GTO <AP > -
National secur ty adviser
Ricbard V. Allen wrote in a
government financ I disclosure
state ment that e sold his
consulting firm in nuary 1978,
but now, accordin to a Wh ite
House lawyer, s ats the sale
actually took plac~ early this
year .
Ques tioned a bo~ the sale
date, White House c unset Fred
Fielding s aid Allen ent him a
memo last week statJng that he
had mistakenly put\ down the
1978 dale and had me.nt to write
J anuary 1981.
In the disclosure ftalement,
flied last Fe bruary, ~lien said
he no longer was prtsident of
Potomac International Cor p as
of January 1978, and added m
parentheses ··sold busil\eSs."'
But F'iclcling could n(j explain
why. ir the sale of J>otomac
International had occerred m
January 1981. there was no
mention of either t he sale or
Allen's recent ownership of the
(1rm under the IOCOrae and
asseti. section of the financial
questionnaire.
Bob Flynn. an official of the
Government Ethics Offict . s aid
Mo nday that if Allen had rude a
capital gain on the sale of the
fi rm, that amount should have
been listed under income
Flynn also said federal
regulations requ&rt! that
nominees list on their discla;ure
state m ents any interest in a
business held at the end Qf the
preceding calendar year
1dentif1ed, said Hannaford had
kept details or the purchase
··close lo his chest "
Hannaford is a former aide to
Reagan and a pas t business
partner of Mi chael Deaver . one
of Reagan·s top three White
Hous e aides.
On the While Hou15e disclosure
state me nt. Allen said that he
had received a S75,000 salary
from Potomac International in
1980 and had been president of
the consulting firm from August
1972 to January 1978.
But Potomac International 's
corporate reports on file with
the Distn ct of Columbia. listed
Allen as president of the firm
through its lates t annual report.
dated March 13. 1980.
Knowingly a n d willfully
slating false information on a
government financial disclos ure
s ta t e m e nt i s a f e l o n y
punishable under federal law
by a fin e up to Sl0,000 and up lo
five years m prison. al'cording
to the ethics offi ce
Allen could not be reached for
comme nt on hi s d1sclo!.ure
stateme nt. but Peter Dailey,
Allen·s s pokesm an , referred
calls lo Fielding, who besides
beang White House counsel had
represented Allen before the two
m e n enter e d the Re agan
administration
Task force upgraded to -major command
Peter Hannaford, owner of the
llannaford Corp., has said the
firm ac quired P oto ma c
lnternat1onal on Jan 18. 1981 ,
two days be fo r e President
Reagan·s inauguration and
three days before Allen received
$1.000 in cash from a Japanese
Journalist who had interviewed
first lady Na.ncy Reagan.
··He sent me a note last week
an d sa id h e had made a
mistake.·· Fielding told The
Associated Press Sunday night
1-·1eld ing noted that Allen also
made mistakes an his d isclosure
statement on the date of his
White House a ppointment and
the fil ing date. putting down
· 1980. for both when he had
m~ant 1981
Th e Justice Department 1s
cond ucting a prel1m111ary
in vest1gat1 on of A lien· s ren·1 pl
of the Sl.000 from a Japan<:!>e
JO urn a l 1s t to see If an
independent special pro!>ec·utor
.,hould be appointed.
W AS lllNGTON I AP 1 The
Pen t agon has upgraded a
small t ask force at Key West.
Fla . into a m ajor command of
L. S forces in the Caribbean
The new Caribbean command.
lot·aled at the southern tip of
Florida, will ha ve no for ces
assigned to 1t per m anently, but
will be able lo draw on US
'laq unit:. 1n the area plus
Army and Air 1-'orce elements 1r
required.
The Pentagon did nol direcUy
answer whelher this move is
related to possible lJ S military
options reported under study
ll o"e"e r . the Pentagon
acknowlt'dged Monday that thl'
m·taon reflect!> the continuing
l ' S 1ntert.•s t an t h l' vital
Caribbean an.•<.1
Tht· rommand amounb to an
expansion in the importance of a
Contangenc~ Task Force cr eated
b\ former President Carter
about two years ago, when the
l]nitl'd Stales was objecting lo
the presence or a Russian
brigade in Cuba
Scl·retarv of State Alexander
M ll a1g. and Pres idential
Counst•lor Edwin Meese Ill
1nd1catl'd that the United States
m ay be approa<·hing a dec1s100
point on ho" to deal with the
alleged military buildup an
leftist ruled !'11canigua
Admm1strataon officials have
accused the Cubans of funneling
arms 111to Nicaragua and have
c l ai m ed that s ub s tantial
am ounts of such arms have been transshipped to le ftist auen111as
in El Salvador
W ernht.·rger :..rnl Sund a) that
· there 1s t'onungenl'} planning
go1n~ on to look at what should
be done or wha t s hould be
recommended ·
In announcing the upgradang
of the l'ontingenc) Task Force
into a m ajor t•ommand, the
Pentagon :.aid its area of
respons 1bil1ty "Ill 1ndude
wa t ers and &!>la nds of the
Canbb<.:an Sea. Gulf of Mex1l'o.
and porl1ons of the Pacific
Ocean borderin" Central
America ..
However, when asked Sunday
mght from whom his com pany
had bought the consulting firm .
Ha nnaford s aid. ··no comment
.. You could ask me 25
questions. but all you're going lo
2el is no comment."' Other past
and current offi cials of the
Hannaford Corp a lso refused to
discuss who bad owned the firm
be fore Hannaford bouaht it.
O ne , ">who a s ked not t o be
A I len sa id he rece1 ved the
money on Jan 21 afte r helping
to arran ge the 1nterv1ew
between a J a panese women·.,
m agazinc and Mrs Reagan
t\ I len s a id the mone)' "as
intended as an honorar ium for
Mrs. Reagan , but that h e
intercepted the Sl,000 to avoid
embarrassing the first lad~
* &oing OUt el Business *
Ros si gnol, Nordica, Head ,
Ca ~·e r , Garmont, Hanson,
Saloman and more ...
e
BackpackirKJ Equipment
and ClothirKJ in3Days
Obermeyer, H.C.C., Roffe,
Kit t:·), Veleda, Gerry, Co lm er,
Demetre and more ...
• o •
Tennis Equipment
and Clo thing
Up To 80% and more
Starting Fri., "ov. 27, 10 am
Sat., Nov. 28, 10:00 am
Sun., Nov. 29, 12:00 pm
9:00 pm
6:00 pm
5:00 .pm
.
Sid Mart, 2700 w. &Coast Hwy., •• ...,... Beach
VISA and MASTER CHARGE ACCEmD 1
.
·-·
. •
\ Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, November 2•. 1981 s A&
~TI ill TI~
~emporary 'tangled speech eyed
Study indi cates women more likely to stutter j ust before menstruation
L OS ANGELES (API ..
Ever ybody stutters, although
most or us don't stumble to the
point of speech disorder. But a
ne w study indicat es norma l
wom en are mor~ likely to
develop minor speech problems
when their stress levels are
considered highest. just before
m enstruation.
T he report introduced over the
weekend at t h e a n nual
convention of t he American
Speech · Language -H e a ring
Association seems likely to
generate the same controversy
as its 1975 predecessor. which
angered women's rights groups
with ils focus on biologacally
induced behavior.
"The ERA folks JumpeQ all
over when the orieinal study
c a m e out ·why are you
picking on women'!' " said
Valerie Tallman. a gr aduate
student a t the University or
Southern Illinois, Carbondale,
who co-authored the latest study
with Dr. Gene Brutten.
·'It ·s true there are four males
ror every female stutterer." she
said in an interview fo'riday,
• ··but the profession has taken
the pos ition that negative
emotion is t.he basis or
s tuttering No one has
established a wide fluctuation in
emotions among men the way
anxiety levels in women have
been tied to menstruation."
A I t h o u g h o n e m i 11 i 011
Americans s uffer pathological
stuttering, Ms, Tallma n noted
that ··all people have some of its
components. our ·urns and ahsl'
our ·you knows' -what we ca I
interjections .
"We a ll repeat words and
phrases. revise our statements
or fail to complete sentences.
but those pr o blem s aren ·t
co m mon l y associat ed with
negative emotaons. as stuttenng
is."
In the initial study. two of
those stuttering components
interjections and revisions
Old Titan missile site sold
Surplus deale r tra des la nd, $15,000 for fac ility
CHICO tAP1 An obsolete
Titan intercontinental mis sile
site near here complete with
underground tunnels, rooms and
silos has been purchased by a
Man teca government surplus
dealer.
Robert Lague got the SI a cre
site on a rocky hall north of this
Sacramento Valley city for
SIS,000 plus 104 a cres of forest
land an Sierra County. the
Genera l Service s
Adminastrataon said
Lague couldn't be re ached
immediately, but his ware .
Margaret, said he had bought
the s alvage rights to th e
ins tallation for St 11.000 an 1971
She said he stopped ··tearing at
apart"' an 1973 and had been
negotiating ever s ince for the
property itself. She said they
.had ··Just been s1tl1ng on it,""
with a security guard protecting
t hings
When he bought the salvage
rights. only the missiles and the
elec tric generators had been
removed, Mn1 Lll"gue said
The government paid $30
malhon to mstall three missiles
with 10 megaton warheads and a
range or 6.300 males an 1962
They we re declared obl>olete
three vears later
A tre mendous explosion at the
Reagan to skip
Capitol gala
SACRAMENTO cAP1 President Reagan
won't attend rededication of the rebuilt Cahfornaa
l>tale Capitol because the project had s uch huge
cosl overruns. the Sacramento Union said
A story from the ncwspaper·s Washmgton
bureau quoted a former Cahfornaan now workmg
1n t h e Whi te Ho u se as s aying pol1t1cal
ra mifications rule out lhe president ·s attendan ce
at the Jen. 9 ceremony.
site in May, 1962 injured SO
people.
Mrs. Lague said the silos are
175 feet deep and ther e are
several cavernous underground
rooms with domed ceilings. One
or them ··is like a coliseum." she
said
She said she had no idea what
her husband plans to do wtth the
property He's gotten alLkJJlds.of
s uggest i ons for b u ilding
underground malls. gardenl>, or
using it for grain storage.
· lt"s on a rocky httle hill. It
won't grow anything And it"s
hot The last ume I was up there
at was 127 degrees.·· Mrs Lague
said
appear ed heighte ned a mong
pre -menstrual women compared
to t heir occur rence m idway
through the menstrual cycle,
when self-confidence supposedly
peaks wi t h t h e s u rge or
hormones.
But Ms. Tallman said the 1975
survey involved only 10 women
and didn't use a control group.
Her work provided that control
by match i ng 17 college-age
women who didn't use oral
contraceptives wit h 17 who did.
The rationale, she explained,
was that wom en taking the pill
don't experience the mid-cycle
hor mone boost accompanying
ovulation and t hus coul d
demonstrate whether ovulation
actually affects speech.
Eac h woman 's cas ua l
conversation was tape-recorded
twice, once midway through her
monthly cycle and again within
48 hours before menstruation
Overall, the women showed
the same pattern as in the
earlier test. And Ms. Tallman
noted that women who didn't
take the pill were even more
likely to hesitate. interrupt and
repeat themselves in high·stress
times than the earlier stud·
showed.
Conversely. women us ing the
pill showed few s1gn1f1canl
speech differences at opposite
tames of the month. ··What"l>
even more interesting,·· she
added. ·is that there was even
less ptlrase repetition by these
women JUSt before menstruation
than among the non ·pill
women
. ............
STRIPPED OF GR ANTS I 11 \I ._i 11 11 1 .J l 11111 "' 1 l I .. \ \\ ,, ,
,, , lllPl'd 111 l'l':O-l 'Jl'dl ~I .1111:-\\111 I" ,:_i~ll IHH I 11\ I II\• \,11 11111.11
111,'llllll· 11 l ll·.tllll lil0l.llhl 111 · \1111,11\·d ll'•l\•1 .11 1 dll'" \\Ito II
• I f I' l" I I •" 11h '11 I I 1 l' I I I 'I h "" \\ 11 ;..! I. 11 l' I I ' l . II -111 I '. I I t: -
• \jll 1 ll lh'lll' 1111 llll lll.111 ,,dq1 ·1 '' ·'' • •• •1111-•• Ill• I."'
,.,_, l -I 11 111·-
642-5678
Put a fe•t' u.mrds to work fnr you
111 l ht'
Lock in todays high rates.
Daily Pilot
There are many ways to earn high interest
for the future !
Money Market Certificates -Six
months of rate protection .
··Some or the pohtical ram1f1cat1ons we are
concerned with are the excessive cost overruns:·
the offtcaal said
··when you put the president up there you are
sort or putltng his approval on that. things lake
SI00.000 gold chandehers
The newspaper s aid people c lose to the
president also felt at would be a political manu~ to
share a platform walh Go\ Edmund Brown Jr
and the Legis lature·s Democratic leaders
CAUTION .
All Savers Certificates-A year
of tax free interest income.
30 Month Account -The
highest yield we offer for
any amount.
IRA/Keogh -High tax
deferred income available Democrat Brown. running for the U .S Senate
seat held by Republican S.I Hayakawa. ha s 1 campaigned agaanst Reagan and his policies.
Rebuilding the Capitol to make at earthquake
safe was planned when Reagan left the governor·s
oHtce an 1975 It was lo cost no more than S42
mllhon. but has ballooned to more than S68
million.
The ded1cat1on cere monies wall end a
weeklong privately financed celebration of the
reopening or the 107-year-old domed Capitol in
downtown Sacramento
Work began in March 1976. to restore the
building to its original elegance. plus a new
foundation and remforced frame to withstand
possible earthquakes.
"HOME OF 1liE ENTERTAINERS;'
,-----------------~ I KNOB RADIO P.O. BOX 3159, I I ANAHEIM, CA 92803 I I Please pnnt I
I NAME I
'1 I ADDRESS ___________ _
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PHONE(-)----
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INTEREST
RATES
to everyone starting
January 1, 1982.
C all or stop in today, and ask our
Savings Counselors to help you
determine which of our many
investment accounts will meet your
individual financial goals.
Tomorrow may be too late
for today's high rate!
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~· Or•nge Coaat DAILY PI LOT(Tu11d•y. November 24, 1981
County leaders eye
• mass transit tax vote
A btll pussed b~· the stale
Legis lature this yea1 authorize<!
an int•rease in the h1gh\\U~ tax
I 1·om sc,·en ('Cnts to 1unt1 <:ent!-> a
gullon of gasoline. l'llel'lt\'l' 11\
l 9 8 :i . I t a I !> o g a ,. l' I n l' a I
authoritu:s the l'ight lo Sl·ck an
ac.Jd1t1onal lax 11\t'rPa:-.e 11 lo<.«il
tl'an spor t at 1on problt·m s
wurrant
Oranj.,4:' Count~ leadt>rs.
'1t.•\v1ng with JU:o.l1l 1etl d1sma~
increasing lrec\\a~ tralltt• ,1am-.
as nt'\\ 1't•s1dcnts ('untin11t: tu pour
1n . arc chM·11s:-.1ng 1u:.t :-.lid\ ,1
s111l1t10n .
The goal \\11uld he t's
tahlt:,hment ol a m;.1s:. tr;.1ns1l
Jint·. t•1tht•1 light rail or ln1s\\ a~
r u n n 1 n g t h r o u g h t h l' m 11 -. t
populuu:-. an•Js ol lhl' t·ount~
Tht• t•ount~ alrcu<I~ h.i:, ::;till
m1ll10n set aside for mass transit
ll!'>t'. but lht• '>l'l'\'l('t' l'll \'ISIOlll'd IS
t•:.t tmaled to l'O:.t :-.omt• :):;011
mtll1on . That most L'l'l'la1nh
\\11uld H·qu1rt• Jn udd111un.il 1.1\
though :.omL' lu1Hh might lw
I ort ht·oming I r1>m -. I JI l' a 11d
ll'd eral !'>Ourtes
.\ J.)l'lnl'IJ)l.ti bal'kt•1 Of lhl•
m.1!>s transit pro,1et·l is Halph
l'l<.1rk. no\\ ('ha1rma n of both the
count~ Board ol Supern;ors and
thl' Ol'l.lnge C<Hln t~ Tn111!'>1t
Ot!>lrtcl's board of d1rec·tol'~
As now p roposed the hne
would hu,•e a muin spur linking
t·tmll'al Anahe im. D1snl'\'lund .
..\nuhe1m Stadium. do\\.ntown
Suntu Ana. South Coast Plaza
und J ohn Waynl' Ail'porl
A second s pur would nrn
l rom Santa Anu north to tht· Los
.\ngele!> County border. whl'l't' 1t
rnuld hook up wit h other planned
I I a l\Sll lrnl'"'
T h L' p I' o p o s a I .1 I :, o
I l' (' 0mml'11 cb. h I g h l' I d l' 111 s I ~
rt•stdt>nllal dl'\'elop ment along
lht· lran:,ll routL'b to permit
"ul'kL•rs l'a:,wr attess to tlw11·
tohs
lt rHl\\ sl'L'nl!> apparent that
thcl'l' \\Ill bl• little or no ful'tht·r
rlla,1or l recwa~ de\ t>loµmcnt in
Ur.ingl' Count~ \\hill' 1t µrubabl.'
\\ 11ttld Ix-L'XI rl•meh <11ll 1eull to
\\Ill a la\Orablt• \Ott.: on a mass
I ran ... 11 Pl'OJt•t•l .11 th1:-. llnll'. II
t·ould \q•JI hl' lh.11 l'lJlllll\
n·:. 1 <fl-n t ..., . w l' a r ~ o I 11 g h l 1 n ~
l>l.'l'!Jl'tuul trull1c· 1ums. \\ould lw
\\ 1ll1ng lo bu.' thl•tr "a~ out ot tltt•
11\l•..,.., ,1 l'Ouple 111 \'L'i..ll'S I rum llO\\
Thl· t·ount~ I!'> W(•ll mh 1:-.l•d to
kt tlw mass t1 a11:-.1t µlanrwr-.
I' I IH' t' l' cl \\ I l h t h l' I r I ,1 !> I-I n
a 11t1L·r pa t 1011111 that da.'
Nuclear safety crucial
The beleaguered l ' S nucll!,11
power mdustr~ !>Ul fcrcd anothl.'1
senou~ blo\\ last \\ t'l'k wht•n lh1..
~udear Rl'gulator~ l'omm1:-.s1on
su:,pended the test operatrn~
license ol tht> cmhattlt>d l>1Jhl11
Canyon nuclear µowcr µlant
I n ' 1 l' \\ o I l h l' ~ L' 1 1 u u ...
p I' o b I e m s t h J l h '' ' l' h c l' n
<11-.t m e rttd I l'('l'ntl\ ''1th lhl· Sl .$
hill1on plant -. l'urthquakl· ~alt.1t'
l'ngrneenng. lht> :--:He ... <H'lwn
"h1d1 also rt•qu1rc:-. \ l'l'll1t·at1011
ol :-.c1sm1c :-.afel~ equ1pnw111
\\ J:> a pruµcr t·ou1 '>t' ol <1<.·t111n
Th 1..· !'> 11 s IH' n s 1 o n 111 l h l'
lo'' ·PO\H'I operating lln•n:-.t•
gr antt!d onl~ t\.\u months ago
was the latest in a long lin1..• ol
:-.1..•t h;;tks ~it ll1 ahlo. 2011 mill'"
non h ol Lo!-! Angt'l<.·s
..\ I l t• I l h l' l' I\ d II I t h l'
SL·ptl'mber ·hlt>t•kude ::,tagl·d h.\
\ J I' I U ll -. J 11 \ I 11 ll l' l l' J I'
orgarnzat1on:.. 1t "a:. found that
the \\rung d1agn1m h.1d bL'l'll
tt sl•<.l to pm' 1dc tor se1 m1<· !-i,il<.'l'
at Ln1t l. ''h1l'h along with tl11·
!'>ttll unlm1s ht•d L n11 :! i.... onh :! :1
m1IL•s from an otl-.horL'
1:a rthquake I .lllll
( >thl'r Sl'ISmll' :O.itll'l \ 1 l'l.lll1d
1..·rrors "'"l'l'l' <11 -.c·o\1•1:<.·d -.0011
a I t l' I'\\ .i r d F o I I o '" n g ' H l .
Ill \'l'!-ol 1gat IOI\. I ht• 11 l'l'lhl' \\ ,l!-i
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ma1k-. on b oth tht' nuclear
indu~U'' a nd the go\ crnment ::.
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... 1.11ul,11 d ...,
Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex-
pressed on tn1s page are tnose ot their authors and art 1sts Reader comment is 1nv1t
ed Address The ~a11y Pilot, P 0 . Box 1560. Costa M esa, CA 92b'1b Phone (714)
641 4321
L.M. Boyd/Solar pioneer
Ninety·nine year s ago, a bright
fellow in Par is. France, focused the
sun 's rays through a parabolic
mirror ~o generate steam in a boiler
That he used to run a printing press.
lt put out his ne ws paper. Solar
energy goes way back
The same amount of DDT that will
kill mosquitoes in half an hour can
take a week to do in roaches.
Who comes to mind when you
mention the name "Renee"? The
name itself means reborn.
Henry Ford didn't bother to put a
reverse in his first car
Those who refuse to believe that
('rocodlles kill more people than any
other deadly beast insist cobras rate
No. 1 in the human fatality category.
Available statistics don't settle the
matter. not yet.
You've read that old item from our
Love and Wa r man's m e about the
wis tful divor cee who said to her
ex-husband, "Yes, we bad some
wonderful days together -one in
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
1959, another in 1964." F'rom the
same folder comes the observation or
the 72 -year·old husba nd who
announced on his Golden Wedding
anniversary, "We've had SO glorious
years together 49 for her and one
for me."
Q. How fast do geese fl y when 1n
V·formation?
A About SO mph
lf you are 28 years old, you wer e
born the same year as the world's
firs t transistor radio
Q. How long has it been since
Proctor & Gamble sold Its first bar of
Ivory soap'!
A. Exactly.102 years
Drillers bored 2,500,000 holes in the
unassembled parts of the Eiffel
. Towe r. When the workers got around
to piecing it together upright, all the
rivets fit all the holes perfectly. Some
erector se\. •
9
Was long the custom in Chile to
s h ave the h eads of convi c t e d
pickpockets so they'd be easier to
spot In crowds.
Thomas P. Haley
Publisher :rltOtftn A. Murp1ar.M
Ed tor '
Barbara Krelbich
Edltorl•I Page Editor
'Lost' benefit checks costly
WASHINGTON Everyone knows by
now lhat the Social Security trust fund
1s 1n big trouble mainly because
there •re too many people drawing
benefits and too few people making
payroll contributions.
But lhere's another problem. It's a
minor one, but it's indicative or Social
Security's status as a kid brother who
can be llicked around by the really big
spenders or the federal government
llere's what happens ·
Socia! Security gets the money from
payroll deductions and puts it into its
trust fund So far, so good But when
Social Security dispenses benefits the
checks are actually disbursed by the
Treasury, and Social Security has little
more to do with the checks
SO WHAT, you say? So this There
are some $203 million worth of Social
Security checks oul there that have
never been cashed. Ru t the agenc.·y has
to write them off it::. bo<>ks as money
paid out
There are any numbe r of reasons why
the checks weren't cashed They may
have been lost in the mail They may
have been saved by the recipients for a
rainy day They may have been stolen,
rejected at the b ank and then
destroyed The rec ipients may have
died.
Whatever the reason, t he money has
been "spent .. by Social Security, even
tbouah lbe Treuury hasn't had to pay
out the money. So Social Seciirlly Is
deprived of the use \If thl' und1sburst.>d
funds .
So far. thl' uncashl·d b1..•nef1t checks
total $203 million. Ct.'neral Accounting
Office auditors csumaled ;mother $112
million will .iccumulate over the nt•xl
four years At currt-'111 interest rate1.
Q.
-JA-Cl-A-ID-fR-SD-1 -~
the use of these m illions could be
putting hundreds of thousands of dollars
m the So<·1al Security trust fund "'hen·
1l rightfully belongs.
And 1£ the checks oulsland1nR are
never cashed a likely poi.s 1b1lity in
man' cases the hard·prcsst.'d tru ... t
runds Y.ill have been bilked out of
millions 1n windfall tntumt.> b) B1i.t
Brother at the Treas ury
There's a nother potential problem ul
the troubled Social Security -;ystem
.. Program tnlegnly auditors earlwr
this year discovered w1des1>rcud
s loppiness in the handling of Ml•d1carc
premiums and welfare Cl\crpaymenls
sent 1n to Social Security
This involves m1ll10ns of doll..ir:. in
checks, cash and money orders from
older Americans participating m lhl1
Social Secun~. Supplemental Secunl}
Income and Black Lung proerams. These payments to the government.
though 1nd1v1duall) modest. often
l'l•prescnt a serious chunk or the senior
l'itTzen's budget The lt!ast the Social
Sl'c.·unl) bureaucrats could do would be
lo set.' th:it the money 1s handle d
carefullv
Yet the audit!>, which my associates
Tony Capaccio and Lucetle Lagnado
exammed with investigators for Sen
Orrin Hatch. R Utah. concluded that
lhrou~hout Soc1ul Security's collection
Jl'Paralu:-.. the potential and
awareness of fraud was of little
importance 1n the handling of cash
rece1µts
T H E: AUDITORS uncovered "the
most flagrant practices" al the 1,500
d1 s tril'l offices where most senior
c ll1zens make their deposits The
pattern of sloppy handling was noticed
at lh1..• six national program centers as
"'ell · Dunng our review ... the aud:tors
reported , ··wt.' found numerous
def1c1cnc1es and weaknesses 1n the
control of cash tollecuons in program
service centers Personnel seemed
lo place e mphasis on processing
workloads on lime with awareness of
fraud a secondary cons1derallon ·
Although the auditors failed to
uncover '""lances of actual fraud. they
noll'd with concern that "internal
t•ont rob m place "'ere not conducive to
J sound system of checks and balances
(and 1 the i.ecunty measure and
facilities used to store cash and related records were deficient ..
Reagan's California memory blurred
Throughout bis long presidential
campaign (was it only last year!)
Ronald Reagan's continued theme was
a balanced budget. Tbat in itsell, given
the momentum or the bureaucrats and
tbe liberal Congress, seemed an
impossible dream.
But Reagan pledged more than that.
He said he would reduce taxes and cul
spending. In addition be pledged to
build up "our weakened military "
Now and then, along the campaien
trail, reporters, especially those from
the nation's capital mos t knowledgeable
about the difficulties presidents bave
getting congressional a pproval or their
programs. would ask "But, Governor.
how are you going to do all these things,
balance the budget. cut spe nding ,
reduce taxes and build up the
military?"
"Well," Ronnie would drawl and give
his boyish grin, "All I can tell you is
that we did It in California."
OCCASION ALL 'Y, some reporters,
who had ta.ken the trouble to study
Reagan's eight years aa governor of
California, would challenge him on that
claim.
Reagan would then smi.lingly shake
his head, observe that "Here we go
again. All I can say is look at the
record. When I became governor the
state was bankrupt. We cut, trimmed
and squeezed and gave the taxpayers a
refund and when I le ft office after ei1bt
years the state had a healthy surplus."
In the eyes of many Callforruans has
statement was a blatant falsehood.
Ronnie was either a liar or so stupid he
dido 't know v. hat had taken place
during his reign.
But Reagan is not a liar. Neither is he
stupid. He s poke in sincenty and most
or what he claimed was true He fudged
llRL WATERS
a bit on c harging the sta te was
bankrupt. It was only getting close to
the bottom or the barrel A small
inflation-caused nse an revenues or a
slight tax inc rease would have sufficed
He did provide tax rebates, in fact,
he did that tWlce. And he did leave
office with a surplus. It is also true that
he cut, trimmed and squeezed. But he
did it in the wrong places
WHAT HE DIDN'T mention IS 'that
during his administration taxes were
trebled. This resulted in gigantic budget
inc r eases brought about by the
unnecessary spending Reagan was out
to stop.
He had come Into office with a budgel
of $4 billion. When be left it was $10
billion. Worse lhan that, by signing the
ne w tax laws, Reagan created the 1
s urpluses wttich allowed his successor.
Jerry Brown. to go on a spending s pree
the likes of which have never before
been seen From SlO billion the budget
has rocketed to S26 bilhon .
In the face of those facts how was it
possible for Reagan to make tus claims
fo r a reco r d or eco nomical
man agement? Did he not understand
what he had done m California? Or was
he lying'!
Those who have observed Reagan
during tus year s in politics conclude
that he is an honest man, sincere or
purpose and truly believing what be
says. There is no question he fully
intended to cul taxes and spending in
Califomia and believes he did il. And
there is no doubt he wants to do that in
Washington.
HIS PROBLEM is that he lived too
long an the never , never world or
Hollywood. He is an actor playing a role
mlo which he has put his full being. He
reads lhe script and believes in it heart
and soul. His mind has been shut off to
the realities.
Although many Californians knew he
had railed to achieve his goals as
governor. they nevertheless voted for
him for President with the hope he bad
learned from bis experience and could
get the job done as President. Most are
stiU hoping he will tum the tide.
But his admission the other day that a
balanced budget is still a long way off
was a let.down. Ronnie had discovered
reality.
Sex instruction debate misses real issue
Should "sex Instruction" be given in
the public schools by teacben, or at
home by parents? Social workers and
lheir cohort.a insist that schoola have an
obligation to teach "the facts of We."
Religious leaders and their minions
point to parents as the proper purveyors
of s uch information.
This running debate is again rearing
its h ead in many Am e r i can
IYlllY HAllll
com munlUea -bul the ar1W11ent ls
trivial and technical. miutnc the vital enter -oamely, I.bat what wt call
"•ex educaUon" ie larsely bloloSlcal
and can be taupt by anyone wbo la
frank and free ud informed.
What ls lmportlnt to youn11ter1
powln1 up 1' far lea the lmowled1•
about the or1aa1 and meu1 of
reproductloo thaa tb• emoUooal and
p1ycbok>Cical and aoclal aaped.I ol the
' '
7 9 a
sexual act among humans. They can
pick up the first easily enough; It is the
second that batnes and confuses them.
NOT THE "what" a nd the "how" but
lhe ·why" and the "why not" need to
be Instilled in young people -and
neither teaching in school nor preaching
at home is the determinant factor in
sexual conduct at1d standards. Rathe r,
It Is the emotional atmosphere and
atti~ude in the family and in society at
large that count the most.
The important thing here is not so
much "the facts o.f life" as th~ feelings
of life -feelings of love and envy,
domination and exploitation, givingnesa
and takincneaa. These cannot be
d la1rammed on a blackboard in a
claaaroom, or even venUJated verbally
ln lhe family room.
ln deallnl With the HbJect ol aex, it is
the emotions and aenUment.s that need
to be trained and shaped, more I.ban the
Intellect needs to be Informed. Like • man.Den and morall ,..,a11y, suu&l
bebavtor-la picked up by obHnatioD
and lmlta.tlon, not by what la aald but by
what 11 doee, and by l.be feeliatl tUt
accompany lt.
If the a tmosphere is loving and
honest and open, then the odds are hi1h
that the young person will befin to
regard sex in its proper light as an
adjunct to the whole personality, and
not as a drug, a diversion, or a weapon
to be wielded or withheld.
Neither slack-jawed permissiveness
nor thin-lipped disapproval ia an
adequate means of transmitting sexual
s tandards .
C'811Y Cll
It's an insult lo the noble ThantaC1vln1
bird to use lts name •• a putdown ror
people we dJsUke .
J.V.
That's no joke sun • • •
Tucson, alarmed by cancer, starts sunshine index
T UCSON <AP I Thi s
city thul wan u. lo be known a!I
the Sunshine f<'actory also lcuds
tile nulion ln skin cancer Now it
will rollow a practice be&un by
the only place whe re ther e's
m ore such cancer
That's Queens land'. Australia,
wh e r e 11 I a r m ,e d and
frightened by the s un's effect on
the s kin of its resid e nts
ne ws pa pers and broadcaste rs
report s un-power readings for
e v e r y quar ter o r a n h our
between dawn and dark
With Friday's editions. the
afternoon Tucson Citizen began
publishing a Sun Intensity Index
a chart s ho wing the damaging
power of the sun 's ultraviolet
rays in t erms or ho w many
minutes of ex pos ure wo uld
resu lt in the sk in-re ddeni ng
condition known as sunburn
Tucson 's sun is a killer .
d e rmatologist Mic h ael M .
Sc hrei be r says. Schreib e r
conducted a tlccade of study
wh ich s howed that Tucson 1s the
na tion's leader in skin (·ancer of
all kinds. from death·deahng
m e la no m a lo th e less-letha l
basal cell and squC:1mous C'ell
carc inomas
The latter two can be removed
and cured completely 1f t reated
early but <:a n spread
dangerously 1f untreated. he
said
But the sun 1s considered a
co n tr i buting f ac t or to
m e l a no m a , one of the most
letha l and one t he incidence of
whiCh has increased 340 percent
he re over that decade. he a dded.
Schreiber said the increase
was higher t h<1 n would be
expected sn terms of population
growth.
.. I t 's "orr~1ng u~. thi s
tr e m endous increase in skin
cancers here." he ~aid People
are s 1m pl) ::.pl'nding more time
rn the sun. The 1untan continues
to be a s ign of beauty a nd
arrtuence."
And though public eduution
has holpe d s ome what, the
message that the sun and its
tanning a re dan gerous "isn't
getting through," he added. "It
scares us."
In Queen s la nd . s ince the
mediu b a rrage of w a rnings
began. public awareness of the
The message.
that sun .and
t. a n n i n g . a r e
dangerous ''isn't
getting through,"
a Tucson official
says. "It scares
us."
sun 's d a nge r h as bee n
heightened dram a tically and
has begun to r e duce the
incidence o f s kin cancer . he
said
In hope t hat something s imilar
v. ill work here. Schreiber joined
forces with the University of
Arizona Cancer Center to set up
equipme n t which re ads ~nd
r egisters the sun 's intensity
every half hour.
T hese rea di n gs o f t h e
ul t r a v io le t ra ys the n a r e
computed into the number of
m inutes within wh ich that
in tensity would produce sunburn
per haps 15 minutes a t noon in
m1d·July. maybe 50 a t noon 1n
mid·J anuury
1'h~ compututlons are based
on untunne<l a veruge Cauc;aslan
s kin type. Darker skins will take
longer to burn, liehte r ones will
burn (a a t e r . Sc h r e I b e r'
explilined.
A tan h e lps p rot ect skin
against sunburn but already is a
sign of con s ide rabl e skLll
damage, so it's small comfort.
Schreiber said.
And wanter visitor s can be
c aught off guard by Tucson's
relatively cool win ter s un, he
pointed out. Low humidity, high
altitude. few cloudy days and
low a tmosphe ric ozone m ean
there's much less to get in the
way of the sun's in tensity here
t ha n in o ther locations. he
expla ined.
And don't count on clouds for
protection damag ing r ays still
w ill come through unless the
clouds a re extremely da rk and
he avy', the local s kin e xperts
say
T hey also point out that in
Tucson. the sun is so intense that
eve n s h a d e i s n 't a d e qu<1 te
pro t ection beca use the
s unlight reflects so s trongly
from so m any surfaces
Dr Thomas Moon. assistant
director of the u n1 vers1 ty's
c·a ncer center, stud 1t was
simple to fight back "Just
wear a sunscreen
··Now a d ays. we d o h ave
sunscreen s that work.·· he
a dded .. Yo u do n 't have to
change your lifestyle. j ust we ar
one .··
SF laydffs due
SAN FRANCJSCO <AP > San
F ra ncisco 's Social S ervices
Department plans to lay off 153
workers by Dec 14 to cope with
an estimated $2 million cutback
in funds
-
Or nge Coast DAILY PILOTfTuesday, Novomber 24, 1981
A~Wtrepft9to
EYEBALL TO EYEBALL T\\11 I l.1m111gt1t•-... r.1111 \\ ,111'1
d ripping lrom ht·<.iJ....., t'' l' l',1d1 111lw1 .11 \\ .tlll-1 :....111111· /.1111 111
Stonl'ham .. \I <1:-.:-.
---~------
Women doctor progress lags
l 'll ll'.U ;o , .\I' .\ 1 l'""t'.tn lh·t ..., .. , ..., I.i d, •it
.1:-.:-.l'rll\ t'lll''>:-. 1111 tht• p.irl 111 \\llllll'll .ind d 1 .... 1 11111111.1111111 .rr.
111 b1Ltn1l' 1111 ;1 11nd111g I h.11 l1•rnal1· ph_\ -..1l·1,111:-.111· pr 0111111t-d
mon.• :-.lo\\ h 111 ... 01111· 1llt•dll .II 111lll'l..!t'"
'I ht• rt•:-.t•LJrdi. puhh'>ht.'d 111 I hl· .J11urnal 111 I 111• \ 1111 •111 .111
:\kd1c·JI A:-.:-.oc·1.it ton ..., .. , ., 11 I ..ikl·..., lt•111.il1· dm·t111-.. .tlu>11I
t "' 1c·t• us long Lt:-. nwn i11 l1l' pr11m11t1•d 111 th11...,1· 11wdw.t!
t:Ulll•gt•:-.. ,11\tl till' fJl'l l't•flldgt• 111\\Ulllt'll1111 lllt'dll'.tl ld('ltll11•-..
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:-.d1oob. :-.aid th.it Ill m.ul\ lli'-t.111l't'" thl'l l' 1:-. .111 nld 1111\
11t•l\\llrl-. th.it 111-..tv1-. lht p11111111l11111 ol 1111 •1111\1•1 1·•p1,dh
qu.il1l1t·d krn.111'-..
'Ringo glad
to be back
in England
L ON D ON <AP > RlnjO
Sturr, back In Urllaaln with hi•
n ew wire after two years spent
m ainly In the United Stales,
i,ays he's ha ppier than ever .
In an inte rview with t he
Sunday Mir ror, the drummer,
singor anti former Be atie said It
wui,n't rear or assassination that
broug ht him home some s ix
m onths a rter ex-Be alle J ohn
Lennon WilS slam in New York.
"I'd been ma king an album
every Novem ber and releasing
1t the following April It was
bt·t·ummg bormg, like workmg
in l:I factory," the 41 -year-old
m11l1onaire mus1c1a n was quoted
a:-. suyi~.
Starr. whb has a 17th century
mansion in Berkshire. married
al'lrC!>b Ba r bara Bach, his
~l·t·ond wife, lust April.
'Barbara h as c h a n ged
l'\ t:r\ thin~." he said. "Look at
int• I'm smiling more than I
,., t•r usl'd tci and I'm in love ...
Starr's latest album, "Stop
Jnd Sml•ll t h e R oses," is
lh·du·atcd to Barba r a. It also
<'JI rn .. ·s the mscript1on "Thanks
lo My Three Brothe r s," the
01 hcr Beatles Lennon. George
ll<trnson and Paul MeGaFtney.
I always thought of them as
n1' brothers bee a use I'm an onh <·hsld And they still are.
,., l'n though one 1s dead ," Starr
was quoted as s aying
Man sentenced
BOSTON (A P 1 R o be rt
11.i)c::.. lurmer assist a n t
p111ft·:-.sor <1t Nort h east e rn
I n 1" t-1 -.It\ v. a!> sl'nten ced to
pris on aftl'r pleading guilty in
"hat uffi1·iab called one or the
h1ggt•st Y>clfart•·fraud schemes
111 the s tall'. t h l' atto rney
~l'ncral s ufflcl' sa)s
Museum gets
war tale tapes
WASlll NGTON (A P I A collect1on of
day-to·day CBS Radio news broadcasts from
Wo rld War 11 is at the National Archives
The collt!ct1on documents the war from the
Nazi invaswn ol P1>l<1nd through the Allied victory
over Japan
Commentators heard on the 3.500 origina l
recording discs include Elmer Davis, Edward R
Murrow. Charles Collingwood, Douglas Edwards
and Eric Sevareld.
The collect1on is the g irl of the University of
W <ishington
Take the bus to
~ •ti next year.
Frate rnity disbanded
PJllLADELl'lllA c AP 1 C1tsng "a continuing
p<tltern of '>l'rl0U" chsc1phnary problems,"
including r<1t·1al haras!>ment. the Umver slly of
Pe nnsylvan1(J ha!-ord1•red its Ka ppa Sigm a
fraterml) c·hapt1•r d1!>banded
. ~
m MEDICAL CARE CENTER
. ~
TREATMENT FOR:
•INJURIES •ILLNESSES
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17672 BEACH
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•llGHOMEA
HORI OF PLEITY
OF FLOWERS.
Hurry In and pick a
cornucopia overflowing with ·
fresh fall flowers and Thanksgiving cheer
<;g~BQ!;§
;· et a convenient location near you.
Wouldn't it be nice to have an
extra $3,000 next year so you
can take that dream vacation
you've always wanted?
Well, it's possible.
Because that's how much you
coulq save in just one year by
riding the OCTD bus to work
each day.
Here's how: Most of us
think the main expense of
operating a car is the high
price of gasoline. But there
are many hidden costs that
quickly add up. Like depre-
ciation , maintenance, insur-
ance, even parking charges.
In our area, that totals more
than $13 per day. And that's
for a car driven only 20 miles
round trip to work .
The bus costs just 75¢
during morning and evening
rush hours and 60¢ at all
other times. And we offer the
option of either taking one of
our regular routes that cover
Orange County, or our
express routes specifically
planned around large
employment centers. (Fare
on express routes is $1.50.)
Th help make planning
your trip on the bus conve-
nient, we offer a free Ride
Guide, which most major em-
ployers have available, or you
can call OCTD at 636-RIDE
for a copy and a personalired
route schedule that fits your
specific transportation needs.
And, since 7 5% of the Orange
County population lives
within 3-blocks of a bus stop,
it's very convenien t .
So take a ride to work on
t he best bargain around town.
And have a vacation on us.
-
Cost of operating a car
for one year.
Daily Round
trip miles
20
30
40
50
Standard
Car
$3392
$3696
$3900
$4304
Compact
Car
$3309
$3594
$3880
$4166
Source: Runzheimer and Company, Inc.
Costs are as of August l, 1981.
• ,. ft • • • •
"' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, November 24, 1981
Afte r 10 years, • lS Cooper alive or a skeleton?
SEATTLE 1AP1 D .H $200,000, probubly wus un aging.
bumbling crook with nothing left
to lowc. suys the mun who
tracked the myth for n decade.
Cooper', who jumped mto ll•J(entl
by Jum1 lnl( out of the bul'k of a
Jt.'tlln{'r' und vunlshrn~ with
,. II< .... I .... 1' ) . / \I 1' I-. /,'
I> Ii Cuo11~·1
01'1.'!lsed only in a dark
1'usinl'SS ~u1l. whale shirt,
narrow lte and loafers, Cooper
disappeared laterally into thin
u1r the night of Nov. 24h 1971,
somewhere over sout west
Wa~hangton He parachuted out
the back of u Northwest Airlines
Hoeing 727 with 10,000 $20 bills in
a bunk bag strapped to his body
lit> becamt' the first, and only,
"success ful " parachute
sky Jacker In American history
His notoriety helped to lead to
elaborate airport security
syst e ms and redesign of the
Boeing 727 jetliner so the rear
door can't be opened 1n fhght
"It's conJt.'cture, but I think he
was a !>tupid, (,lesperate rascal. a
lJrutal. unscrupulous man who
endangered the lives of more
thun 40 people for money and
caused his own death, .. :.ays
Ralph l11mmebbach. th~ FBI
agent assigned lo the Cooper
case hcforc he retired last year
· lie wu:. n•r) llkl'ly an ex con
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
1--.i.o11ter nd Serf•
1922 HARIOl IL VD.
COSTA MESA. -541-1 156
who wus going to makti one luKt ,
des1lerate go for the blai one,"
the 56 year·old lllmmelsbach
11U1d. "If he made it fine Ir not,
he.' probably felt he hud Vt'l'Y
little to lose."
The fo'Bl reels Cooper 's
skeleton li es crumpled an the
thick forests o r southwest
Washington Conceivably ,
agents say. Cooper 1s buried
under tons of volcanic ash
because 150 square miles or the '
l>earch area was coated b}
Mount St. Helens· erupt ion last
year.
But no one can prove Cooper
isn 't living a smug ltfe of
anonymity somewhere. enJoying
the profits of his uir piraty
The case remains the FBl'l>
only major unsolved skyjacking
and his disappearing act 1s
celebrated in twangy son~
T-shirts, an annual celebration
an the tiny town of Ariel, Wash .
and a new movie
To publicize the movie. "The
Pursuit of DB Cooper,·
Universal Studios ofrered SI
million for anformution leadinJ.l
to the arrl'sl and conv1ct1on of
Cooper, who'11 numr probably
wasn't even Coopt•r Tht• studio
:.till has thl' money
l las sturt ub u folk hl'ro bt.>g~tn
when a .. Oun Cooper" l:>ought a
one wiiy l1c•ket on Northwest
A1rl1nes f"llght 305 from
Portland, Ore . to Seattle
Moments after takeoff, Cooper
hunded u l>lewurdess a
hand written note. announcing
thl' sky1ack1ng and demanding
S200,000 and four paruchutes He
also openl'd his briefcase and
showed her what she later said
looked like u lx>mb
I nstrucllOn!> wern rad1ot.>d to
the ground and, whilt' the plane
circled Seattle-Tacoma Airport,
money and parachutes were
rounded up Cooper
t' h a 1 n · s m o k c d f 1 It c r · t 1 pp e d
l'lgarettes C1nd bought and
sipped two bourl:>on and·water
highballs during the
ncgotiat1on:s
In Seattle. the 36 passengers
and two i.tcwardesses got off.
\\ hilc onl' stl•wardess and three
eockp1t tTl'wmen !>tayed aboard.
Coupl'r bctaml' fidgt'ty as
f'l•l udan~ look too long and told
lhl' sll'ward1•i.11, Let s ~ct th11>
l'trcus on the road "
Tht• plant• look ofl ror fll'nu,
N{•v, ut 7.3711 m , whllt• a storm
raged outside l'oupe1· wa~ alone
1n the pu:ssengcr sec·taon and the
crew remained 1n the t•ockp1t At
8 11 p m., the crew noti<'l-'<I a
drop 1n cabin pre!>sure ,
1nd1cating the plane l> rear door
was oµened
FBI agents whu :.cramblcd
aboard in Reno lound no Iran• of
Coopt•r and u legend wa:.
horn
In Fl'bruary 1980 , an
8-year old boy p1cn1 ckang with
his fctm1ly along thl· Columbia
lliver west of Vancouver. Wash .
unearthed pal'kl•ts of rotting S'lO
billl> from the s and, wh1l·h
tu med out to be S5 ,880 uf
Cooper's loot
A hunter on a road near Cai.t ie
Hock found a plu('ard which
wind had rippc•d from the wall of
the plane's !>tu1rwcll whttn
Cooper 1umpcd, ll1mmclsbat·h
said.
After 10 ~ar!-. of '>l'arrhani.:.
·w e knm" 1.000 peoph.' who he·
uan 't oin<.I 1.000 11lucct1 where he
dldn 't lund." says One Ifill,
FU! s r><1k(•sman 111 Seattle
I 1< \I 11.f·./J \/) 111
I hi t/1111,,,,.,_,,.,, •1
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• CONSTRUCTION ACCIDENTS
• PERSONAL ACCIDENTS
..
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462-6463 .......... .., .. ""
•
Daily Pilai
TUESDAY, NOV. 24, 1981
CAVALCADE
STOCKS
TELEVISION
.,, . .,.....
Anaheim's "bee lady," Eliwbeth Schafer. 94 . holds 1930s portrait of fa mily taken during depresswn. She
said she began raising bees to ··help carry the family U1rougl1" hard times.
Elizabeth studies quality of honey. She sells an average of three or four 1ars of honey a day during
harvest time wluch occurs three times a year
82-3
86
BS
I
It · has been 10 years
since D .B . Coof)er jumped
into legend with $200 ,000.
Story, photos Page AB .
D
0
Mrs Schafer lifts hive to determme 1/ it's ready for harvesting The City of Anaheim tned
una~eas/1'll11 to revoke her pemut tq keep the beei two ~ar• aoo after neighbors complained.
A protective net hat 1s wo m by Elizabeth Schafer as she prepares
to harvest the honey on her three quarter·acre of Land.
Mammoth
quakes caused
by volcanoes?
MENLO PARK 1AP 1
Volcanic activity five miles
below the earth's surface may
have caused a series or
earthquakes since May 1980
near Mammoth Lakes in the
Sierras. according to two
governm ent scientists.
The theory was advanced in a
report by the U S Geological
Survey. which said land known
as the Long Valley Caldera rose
as much as 10 inches before the
. quakes
Survey geophysicist James
Savage said in an interview that
an underground dome shaped
swelling or a chamber of molten
rock probably caused the
upheaval
Savage also said the bulge
probably triggered the quakes
a long e xis ting ea rthquake
faults .
The idea that volcanic activity
can cause quakes 1s
controversial. however Alan
Ry all, a seismologist at the
University of Nevada. holds a
different view
Ryall believes the quakes
originated along the
little·studied Hilton Creek Faull
oea r Mammoth Lakes, and
caused the s urface uplift by
di s rupting the chamber or
molten rock beneath the earth.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Savage and sur vey geologist
Malcolm Clark have studied the
region since the first series of
quakes hit it in May 1980.
Flu shots could cause overreaction
BOSTON IAPI Ordinary flu
s hots take n by 22 million
Americans every year can slow
the body's metabolis m and
make the recipient overreact
dangerous l y to corpmon
prescription drugs. a stud• says
The researcher s say
physicians should give the shots
to people who need them.
particularly the elderly and ill.
despite the potential
comp l ication s . But they
cauliofH!d doctors to watcti for
possible reactions.
··We are tryin g to alert
physicians that maybe som e of
the untoward drug reactions
that have been seen in the past
in these patients that haven't
been easily explained might be
due to the flu shot," said Dr.
Cr aig J . McClain. one of the
researchers.
The doctors began their
research after a heart patient
s urrcred a nl'<1rl~ fotal reaction
to a common drug following a
flu shot
The d octors hel1c\e the
influenza vaccine slows the
liver's ability to break down
medicine and remove 1l from the
body . Because or this. the
substances :.la) in the system
MIDICINI
longe r than usual , sometimes
giving an effl'Ct similar to an
overdose
Their study was conducted al
the Minneapolis Ve terans
Admlnistratton Medical Center
and publis hed in the New
England Journal of M~1cme
To test their theory. lhe
doctors gave a drug called
aminopy rinc to 22 healthy
hospital workers. 12 of whom
a lso got flu shots . Then they
measured the rate at which the
aminopyrine was being removed
from the body.
Within a week, amtnopyrine
metabolism was depressed
between 22 and 74 percent m the
people who had the shots. This
effect gradually wore off , but
metabolism was sllll low three
weeks later
They theorized that the rlu
shot somehow depres~es the
hepatic cytochrome P -450
syst e m , one or the major
processes by which the liver
gets rid of drugs.
"We think there are going to
b e a b n o r m a Ii ti e s i n ttre
metabolism or a variety or very
clinicall y relevant drugs that
are metabolized over this p .450
system." McClain said. "Almost
any drug you can think or is
metabolized to some degree by
this system ...
Among drugs that ma y
temporarily be too potent are
warrarm. a medicine used to
prevent blood clots in heart
patients: dilantin. an epilepsy
medicine. -and theophylline, a
drug used to treat asthma and
ch ronic o b structive lung
disease
The study team began its work
after a heart patient almost bled
lo death alter getting a n u shot
while taking warfarin to prevent
blood clots.
"lie had been quite stable on
the drug for 11 or 12 years. and
we were trying to figure out
what all or a suddef\ prompted
this guy to go haywire."
McClain said.
The researchers believe the
flu vaccine may suppress drug
metabolism by inducing the
body lo produce Interferon, a
dlsease·t'ightlng chemical.
Air crash
payment up?
C HICAGO <AP l The
families of victims of a crash of
a DC· 10 may be paid thousands
more in damages by American
Airlines and McDonnell Douglas
Corp. as a result or a federal
court ruling.
The defendants have admitted
their liability In the May 25.
1979. crash which killed 273
persons and the only Issue to be
dete rmined is the amount of
dam ages in the 100 cases still
pending. ,
A ruUng by Senior U.S.
District Judges Hubert L. Will
and Edwin Robson bars defense
attorneys rrolTrlfSktlfg Juries to
d ecrease t he awards by the
amount or incom e taxes the
victim would have pat In a
Ufetl me.
A lawyer for M c.Donnell
Doualas said the decision would
be appealed.
The Long Valley Caldera lies
just east or Yosemite National
Park, about 200 m iles east of
San Francisco and 30 miles west
of the Nevada-California border.
The measurements by Savage
and Clark showed that a 22-mile
stretch or u .s. 395 between
isolated areas known as Toms
Place and Crestview rose 6-10
inches between the summer of
1975 and the spring or 1980.
The Long Valley Caldera
marks the remains or a towering
volc ano t hat exploded a nd
collapsed 700,000 years ago. It is
still considered a potentially
active volcanic area. according
to Roy Bailey of the survey·s
volcanic hazards program in
Reslon, Va.
Diatrict liable
SACRAMENTO <AP> A
state •PP alt court 1ay1
reclamaUon la not. irrl11Uon,
t.Unfore a San J~uln ComtJ reclarnaUon dlatrlct can be sued tot two drownin11.
. '
1:--
--------~ --. --. ' . . . .
--------
Orange Cout DAN..Y PILOTITuffda~. November 24, 1981 •
• ANN LANDERS
· • ERMA BOMBECK
•HY GARONER
DRIVE-tN SALON? Business continued as
usual after a car plunged through the window
or a beauty salon in Everett. Wash. Rae
Bennett, shown s ty ling hair or customer
., ........
Jamie Lilley, said of the mishap ... It was like
in s low motion. lt sounded like a bomb went
off. and then there was this car.··
I v.anted a pov.erful
sound system for • Iona
time. but nev. stereo
components cost too
much for me
Then I tned the Daily
Pilot
Daily Pilot classified
ads offered hl&h quality
used sound sytsems 1n
wider varieties and lower
prices than I ever ex-
pected
Now l"ve sold my old
system through the dai ly
Pilot and found a bigger
a nd better one in the
clanified section
lf you want a quality
sound system at low
prkH, shop the Dally
Pilot classified ath
H you want to sell your
sound 1y1tem. Jult call
the friendly Dally Pilot
elaulned ad-vlsert.
llily Pilat'
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------·-•
Fare practice 'rapped'
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a
l6·year-0ld high school student in Calgai-y .
Al be rt a t Canada 1. Last week I rode the
bus. I bought a ticket for 50 cents. The
driver said, ··1'hat will be 15 cents more.
You have to pay adult fare.·· When I
refused, he told me to get off the bus. Well .
that was just Cine with me.
Why should I pay adult fare on a bus
when J am not considered an adult at the
box-otrice of an adult-0nly movie·~ Also. I
am not considered an adult when it comes
to buying Uquor.
When I am REALLY considered an
adult. I will be 'happy to pay adult prices.
but ror the lime being I am not a child. not
an adult but a teen-ager. Come on.
Calgary. get your act together. And don"t
tell me ··it's the law.·· because ir that's the
best answer you can come up with. this
city is in trouble. Ll PSET TEEN
DEAR UPSET: I've heard the same
beef from U.S. teen-agers.
Here's the story on Calgary-from Rod
Love, executive assistant to Mayor Ralph
Klein : Anyone from 16 to 65 years of age
must pay 65-cent adult fare on the mass
transit. Student passes at a reduced rate
can be obtained for those from 12 to 15
years or age. Calgary's mass transit
handles 38,000 a day. Uke every other
public traHlt system on the North
American continent, they are struggling to
keep rolling. Inflation is a global problem.
So, kwitcherbeerin' -or would you rather ,
walk?
DEAR ANN LANDER$ Recenll~ our
daughte r was married Wh e n s he
announced her engagement. we agreed to
gl\·e her S2.000 to s pend If she wanted u
lavish wedding and went over that amount.
she would ha ve lo pay the differ~nce
herself. Anne is 23 years old and has been
on her own for several vt~ars She lives 100 miles away. · .
The day before the weddiQg we sat down
with the bills . Anne had spent S2,800. The
guest list got out of hand. and we ended up
ordering more food and beverages than we
planned on. Anne 1s upset because we did
not come up with the extra s8oo.
She took three vacations last year. My
hus band and 1 have not been away since
1978. We also bought he r S300 worth or new
clothes and gave the m a lovely wedding
present.
We want to be fair. but we don "l want to
be foolish. Help us do the right thing.
TAPPED OUT IN TARRYTOWN, N. Y.
DEAR TAPPED: LEND Anne S800,
Interest-free, and agree on a pay-back
timetable. For newlyweds, both employed,
she should be able to manage S80 a month.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: You say that al
60 a person can be in his or her prime. How
about stating the reasons some of us don"l
feel that way about our old goats".'
Yo u ca n ·t pic k up a magazine,
news paper, watch TV or listen to the radio
without getting the mes~age that a woman
must keep herself sexy. beautiful. clean.
s lender and seduttive or she"IJ lose out.
How about the man"' He gets spiffed up
for special occasions. but 00 percent of the
time he looks like a slob. Becau~e he 1s
retll"ed. there i~ no need to shave. bathe or
put hJ~ teeth in . exl'epl to eat. Hjs bell,·
hangs over his belt and he looks eight
months pregnant Sexuall) arou~cd b~
that·: Impossible. You always seem lo be
on the man·s side How about pnnting th1l>
letter and g1 \"ing u~ women a break·:
~EEO \'OL;R SL;PPORT l:'li VA:'li ~L"YS
DEAR VAN : You've got it. But the
major problem is the shortage of men ove r
60. The old goals don 't have much
competition. Darned shame, isn't it'!
Are your parents too stnc:t"' Ila rd ro reach"'
A11n Landers booklet. Hugged by Paretlls:'
How to Get More ,..reedom. · 1:ould help you
bridge the generation gap ~end 511 c:ents with
your request and a l o11g . s tampe d
sel/-addressed envelope Iv An11 Landers. Pu
IJuI JJ995. Chicago. Ill 60611
Wedded life takes toll
The other day on a talk show when J
mentioned being married for 32 years. the
audience gave me a standjng ovation.
It was the kmd of tumultuous applause
usua lly reserved for an 85-foot redwood.
Katharine He pburn or a battleship
returning to port.
It was sweet. It really was But at my
age. I don "l need approval . . . I need a
booster shower.
Boy, for awhile I had il all going. Wh a l
with the loot from two kitchen showers.
three miscellaneous. one bathroom. one
personal, and my mother calling in a ll the
IOUs ... I figured I was set for life .
I HAD A TOASTER for each finger.
blankets for three beds. enough dishes to
throw a slate dinner and enough gadgets to
play ··stump Julia Child:·
Dishtowels'! It was three years before I
stopped treating th e m as disposables .
Around the third year . I chipped my egg
separator and bent my cake tester. but the
storehouse groaned under the necessities
of life.
The year the children started ctoing
dishes. I lost the six sets or glasses. three
sets or dishes. silver setting for 16 and a
coffee pot that drowned when the electrical
plug was s ubmerged in water.
The year the children went to camp. I
lost four complete sets or towels. two
flMA IOMlfCI
AT WIT'S ENO
complete sets of sheets. two pillows and a
Jewe led clock with two people m 1t dancmg
to ··The Anniversary Waltz. ·
THE \'EAR THE c hildren gave a
carnival in the back yard. I lost a card
table and four chairs. a large punch bowl
with 16 cups. a colander and three pots
1 worn as hats in a parade i. pl us a popcorn
popper. hibachi and all the wickets from
the c roquet set.
When the children went off to coll ege. l
lost our television set. 9 x 12 rug, five
lamps. car. sewing mactune. typewriter.
bathroom heater and chess set.
When the children went to their own
apartments. I lost whatever was left.
You see before you the broken re mains
or a storybook wedding . . a woman wh o
uses old shorts to dry dishes . . . who uses
corn holders to tack notes on the bulletin
board . . . who steals plastic spoons from
fast food-stores.
Go a head, someone. Surprise me with
a boos ter shower. I'm free Saturday night.
Speaking of favorites
Our favorite actor of ANY year is Ed
As ne r , who. whe n asked whether he
planned a political career after Lou Grant
retires mused:
"What people do to politicians these
days, ifs really not worth it. And there ·s
no money in it unless you're a crook. I love
what rm doing these days, but I also love
s how bus iness and would like to do
som ething for the people in it. How·! By
trying, if I have the lime, to unify the show
bus iness guilds so that,·· he told writer
Steve Sonsky of the Miami Herald, "when
one goes, we a u go ...
Meanwhile he says he loves the power
of his status, the options he has for helping.
the doors it opens. He also loves the
restaurants and the women who s mile at
him. who once wouldn 't give him the back
of their hand.
OUR FAVORITE exhibition of
ingenuity appeared in American Heritage:
··Jn building an atomic plant you spend a
lot of time just looking for weak and lucky
points, .. the Westinghouse project
manager for Shippingport told a write·r.
"One day an X-ray revealed a defect
inside a bend of lS·lnch pipe. It was a hard
place to gel at. We considered dismantling
the pipe, but that would have been costly
as the devil in time and money. Then we
learned of a firm in Georgia that hires out
midget welders for just such Jobs. They
,
Pf ISOllAllrJ Q.&A.
BY MARILYN AND HY GARONER
sent us one who was just 39 inches tall and
he crawled into the pipe and made a good solid repair ...
WE THINK Ronald Reagan will get a
chuckle out of our favorite Bob Orben joke
of the week: ··Yesterday I told my son to
do his homework, pay attention in class.
study real hard al\~ some day he might be
president of the JJnited States. He said.
·pop -don't threaten me·~·· tOrben. you
may remember. was ex-President Jerry
Ford·s hired sense of humor.>
Our favorite, if candidly sassy retort :
When shapely Elizabeth Ward. our newest
Miss America, was asked if she padded her
bra she answeTed: ··Not a lot: ..
Our favor\te recollection of the late
Jack Kofoed's column concerned a major
company noted for its hiring or executive
persomel. Each new member wu greeted
as a family member, who soon (ound out
that Development Company X was an
outfit that named a street alter you one
month U:CS chased you down lt lbe next.
fOUI HEALTH
DA PETE A J . STEI NCROHN
House calls
r e p e at a sk e d
DEAR DOCTOR : I'm too }Oung a
mother to remembt•r "hen doctor~ used to
make house call~ a~ part or tht>ir daily
sch edule. But there are times wht>n I "ish
somt> pediatrician or ramily doctor would
be willing to com e out tom.) houst>.
For example. a few weeks a~o our
:l ·year ·old dau ~hter dt•velopl'd a
te mpera turl' or about 104 . She "a ~
cou ghing and quit<' ~ick. But Ute doctor
l'laid. "Bundlt' her up "di a nd I'll see he r
in the oHice." )1v hu~band came homt'
from work a nd wt• brought her to the
doctor. lie look blood lest~. gave ht'r a ~hot
of antibiotics and wt' took her homt·.
f'ortunateh. !'>he fell bt'llcr in about
three or four day~. Rul suppost' s he had
pneumonia'.> lmag int• "I UCh a ~oung child
outs ide in a car during freezing wt•athn'.•
-)IRS. F .
D~AH. M HS F \\e can unckr..,land
'our anx1el~ So t•an man~ olht•r parl:'nl!->
" h o h a v l' h a d .., 1 m ii a r e :q H• r a· n e l' ..,
\\.ht.•ther do<:lor!'> ''Ill a gain bt• making
houM· calb 1s debatabll•
In many ins tances, making s uch c·<1lls
m1g ht help in d1agnos1s a nd trealmenl.
Gra nted that an the doctor's omce x .rays
<rncl blood tes h art• <1\ all<1blt• But h<>U!>t'
\l'>lh haH' po..,1tl\ l' \ alul''>. too lie re ::. Jn
l''ample. quott·d in a recent artu:le from
lhc .Journal ol thl· Amt·ritan \kclll·JI
. \..,..,Ol' I al llln
.\ H-~ t•<Jr old g11 I sulll•recl I rom a:,thrna
\le d11.-;..tt111n::-. d1dn I hdp mut'h fh(• doctor
\'1::-.1ll'd till' httll' girl .., home and d1scon•red
J lint· ol dust' unused ..,hot'" underne<ilh
lwr bt•d fhl'l'l' \\ t·n• Sl'' t•ral dust' thro\\
rug.., hanging on lhl' bl'drnorn "alls
Ht•mo' al ol tht·~t· tlem.., qu1 c kl~
1mpro\·l'd \\hat had bel·n slubb11rn
.i..,lh<1m;.a .\ hou..,l' v1s1l \\a!'> th(• l'lue lo
\\ h<.1l aill'd her and what to do for ht•r
A n o l h l' 1 l' ' <1 m p I t• u n !'> u (' l' c .., .., I u I
ll l'<.ttment ul o he::-.11~ 111 J ~oung!'>lt•r l'ht•
pt•d1alnc-iun '1"1tt•c1 th1· l'hil<I .., h11ml' I le
found mJn~ high talone snack~ m lhl'
l'l'l n gl•ralor. TV room and m the parents
ht·drnom
Wht•n lht'M' t•as1I~ a\·a1labk fat
pr od1u·er-. \H'lt· n •moH·d. t he child 111-.,1
\\eight ll ::-. l'\ 1denl that in m~iny insla nct.•s
hoU"ll' Vl '>l l.., an• 't•n bt•nt•l 1c1<ll
t>r .'\ll.'111crol111 u•elc omes quest 1011s I rum
readen. Ile camwt m1swer tJll tndll'tdulJlll/ hut
1c1/I mcltl£ie Ilw.\e 11/ qeneral 111tern;f 111 t/11,\
column Send .11111ir qw•st11>11!> 111 111111 111 cart' 111
t lie Da1l11 1'1lot /> n lfoI /56(1 C11!.la .\lesa
Ca/1/ 9lti:Lti
'JIER48 MEN
OUR ~~N IN SAN FRANCISCO
"T Benef acior.
tuned out
Life is a cabaret: Howard Young
pussed a beggar on the sidewalk al Mis h·
and New Montgy., a violin and a s leeping
dog beside him. Afte r giving him a buck.
Howard pointed to the fiddle and a sked .
llo" about a tune ·: · :--.;o. · · replied t ht.•
m e ndicant. .. 1 d on ·t wanna wake up m )
dog'". .Comedie lle Carne Sno". in thl'
d umpi,: .. H' my hfe wen~ a m ovie. this 1s
a bout t he time 1 ·d go to the s natk
b ar.. .Ted lles kett . tht.' contat·t le n!>
man . O\ erhanl 1t in the 5lti Sutll'r eh.'\ alu1
ont• \\Oman lellmg another about a t'l'l'l'p
I couldn't warm up to him 11 \\t' wert.>
tn•m<1ted together
GOL'R~ET Gl'LCH: Ch1to ma' l>e
los ing out to Lodi. "host.' ~ews·Sentinel
ht.•ralds a c·ook1n g toup under a
11' l'·Column headline r e ading. Make
TutO!-> With Tang~· Sauerkraut .. I'll slltk
"1th Zipp) ·s Ding U ong;:, \\1lh tato
s aun·. .And Patncrn Lt•chner fon" ards
till' Stockton Park-Rt•t• dt•pl !> 111\ 1l a t1on to
da~::.e.., al Se 1lerl Center. \\hen• ont• ma \
Ll•arn to took and l'n.10~ l'h11wse foot a·t
1h bl·~l Pas~-
PRESSl~G O~: .-\tt' \\';.alter ~leda~
\\J!'> bu~mg the c hc.1 mpag11l' at L Estargot
on L'nion. hanng 1ust won u Sl.050.000
"ll'll lt.•ment 111 Auburn lor a group ol ~orth
T a hot• hl)meowner::-. ''ho s ued Re\ nold::.
l'oi p .llld ,, dl•\ l'lopl'I 101 Jlkgl·d l~ 0 IJult~
,tl 11 m111um 1·ool1ng \\alll·r ~l'b :w
Pl'l 1'l'lll l'hl· \\orld lltrlh Tu J gu'
..,h;.ak 111g h1.., head O\ t.•r lht• Sll.000 pnn· lag
()I\ a ro~·ota Supra. Dealer ~l artm S \<\ I),!
... milt•d II ~ou (·c.m l .ti lord a To~ota . ~ou
t«lll al\\;.i~.., hu.' a l"ad1lta(· d ht• Cim;.11-ron
._t,11 I'> .1l Sl-t 1100 1
~.\)ll::VROPS KEEP I al ling Do ~ ou
think 11 ::-. .Jll 1ll.'m thut .\l a l'!'>tro .Jullth
R1<lell and "'l'\'t•ral ml·ml>er.., ol his 13uflalo
J>h il hJrmo111c "t•n\ to Tomm\ !'> .JO\ nt loi
b u I I ;.a I o .., l t• " ' ~ .o r ~· µ I '
ne l·e~..,ar~ 1'a1 l'n Be ngb..,on ·wh~ 1..,
Hl•gg1t.• .Jal·bon <:ailed .\Ir O<:lohl•r '
Shimon Crn1g \·an l'oll1t• Hl'l'all..,l' hl·
a I\\ a'.., gel!'> hot that month Kan·n Oh
I l houg ht rn ;.i ~· IH· ht• "a:-I ht• n udt•
c l' n t e r I u I d 1 n s o m t• m a g J /. 1 n l' I d
m1~::-.ed Th nm a' t'hH.' Jot· I t; re,· ,11
.\JJx\\tdl::. Plum 111 ·..i ~l.uou Bnt1::.h ulalt·1.
\\Jrmup pants a nd lt-nn1 s s hoes .
1mmerc;111g himself in a chm•olall' suuffle
TRtE ( \~FESSIO~: I lrll'd to g l'I
.i rl'l und "h1·11 I ".111-l·d out 011 T1 lll'
l'on ll's~1on!'> al lhl' HO\ J I. hut no c.h c.·l·
( >n ly J gestUl'l' 11 1 d1..,gu..,I . i.ltl~ Wa~ I IO\\
tould .John Gn·gor~ lh111m· 1 \\Ith µerhap"
too mlll·h help I mm 111~ ''ill·. Joan U1d1on •
t 11 rn h1~ e)o;<:Clll•nt no' l'I into something M>
lt·d11H1!->I~ unpll•.J:-anl E' 1·11 Hohl·rt Du\ all
1·,111 t ..,iJ\l' 11 ,11\d lJl·,111> h l >l'Zl'IO .\11
.1111 lw11l1t do),!
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
SOMETIMES
I DON'T CARE
IF I NEVER.
SEE TROUBLE
AGAIN .
Gemini: Focus on job
\\ erlnl.'~da~. ~O\. 25
. \RIES 1.\l;.arC'h 2 1 .\pnl 1!1 1 \ou gel
i.l ct' o u n l 1 n g '' h 1 c h t· I ; 1 n I a •.., I 1 n J n <' 1<1 I
p1 <:lll l l' .\('C'ent on Sl'( n•t:.. lam1l~ l°l'Union .
renl'\H•d '>l'n::.t· ol d111•ct1on uncl !'>t'l'llrtl~
T.\l'Rt'~ •April :!II \Iii.' lO t l0
nnlt1'>10ll
dom1natt·~ \\<Ill until ;,mother da\ lor rnomt·ntntt ~ dt•l·1..,1111h \\ a11 . l1~ll'n .
obst•n l'. prt•p.irt.· h~ o pening l11H•.., ot
('l)n1 nllllll('<ltlOll ( 0hl'l'h. d1t•l.
(,E:\11:\I 1 .\l<.I\ 21 .Junt• 211 • 1111t1al
t lurn ol t'X<'1tt.•mc1-it -.,uh ... 1dl'!->. hut m•t•d not
n •suit 111 dl!<>l'Ollrugt•mt•nl Focu~ on \\orh..
dl'pendt.•nll>. rt•allz<.illon lh<il ~l·nou.., n•\ It'"
ol pron·durt'!'> 1::-. nl'l't'!'>!'>a r~
('.-\N('ER 1.June 2 1 .Jul~ 22 • You let>I
111\ 1goralcd. I rt•e a nd capable ol 1mpnnl111g
sl~ le. .\!embe r ol oppos 1lt• sex I igurcs
prominentl~. Rl'lallons h1p 1s hea\ ~.
LEO t Jul~ 23-Aug 22 i Emphas is on
propcrt~. scc urit~ m e a s ure .... long·lt.>rm
arrangements. agreem ents affecting ho m t•
.md lamil~·
VIRGO t Aug . 23-Sept. 221 · focus on
moveme nt. mes sages. short tnps. re lal 1\·es
who art:> sincere but possibly mis informed ,
Pisces. Cancer . Scorpio persons fi gure in
scenario.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221. Accent Qll
authority. promotion. responsibili~y and
relut1ons h1p thut 1s intcns 1f1cd . Empha!.i1S
a I l> o on budget a r y r e v'1 e w . s p e c i a I
• HOIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
pa~ rnt•nb . t•ollt•t:lions and localing o l 10..,l
oh1eel::-.
SCORPIO 1 Ut·l 23-~o' 211 Your
t• 11 o rt::-. rcn•1 n • added rt.'togn 1 lion
l' m p h as 1 !'> u n l' h a r i !'> m a . µ e r::. on a I
••Pl>l'..11 anC'l'!<>. exeellt'nl 1udgmenl a nd
prt'tlSl' timing
S.\GITT.-\Rlt;S 1 :'\iov. 22 Oct 21 •
\\ hal had been a restricting 1nfluenc.·c 1s
rem oH•d . Chanct.• ex 1~ls tor \Oll to be m on·
111dt.'Pl'Odl•nl. c r eat ive a·nd l'ffl1ct1n•
C:\PRICORS tDl.'c . 22·Jan. 19 t r\ hopt.>
or w1~h thal seem ed out·of·reach tan nu"
bl•t·umt• a rcallt~ Those who · pre\'IOUs ly
oppo::.t•d ~·our t•ffort s will no \\ becoml·
a I lie..,
AQlJARlt;S 1 J a n 20-F eb. 181. Lines of
communication open emphas is on social
acl 1v1l~. populanty and plans for possible
l np a broad
P I S<.'ES 1 Feb 19 -~ar ch 20 1
Fa ,·orablc moon a s pet·t coincides with
added knowlegc. s piritm1I development.
t·om mun1 cut1on. tra\'cl and the solidifying
of long-range o bject1\'CS .
Orapge Co est DAILY PILOT fTueaday. November 24, 1981 ••
FOOD FOR THE NEEDY The Rev Edward
Balak1er chetks tans uf lood donated to h1::.
Wal'saw pansh The lo<>d. which <:am e from
West Germany . will b~ given to the mo:.t
need~ childre n. l'oll..,h labor lt.•ader Let'h
•
Walesa warned last week that lood s hort age::.
l'OUl<I spark nolb and <1ppcaled tu the "orld
tor emt•rgem·y ::.h1pn11:nts tu help Poland
th rough the \.\ll1tl'r
1ng
-------·------·------• • I UOUT I AIOUT I AIOUT 15-PIKI I
! $1.99=1. •5.99=r. •$7.49=r !
2 Good loi llvee p.ecu ot "'"' gotOffl !Hawn I Good lot 111ne ptttts 01 iu•ty golden blown I Redr!lll th11 coup0n I011 C11ry Pack 101oeo g g Kenlutky fned Chicken plussmgle 1er.1110~ ' I Ken1ucky f111d Chicken wnh lout rolls t I wrl!! htteen oiecu ot 1u1n golden b•own ~ u ol cole sltw muhtd polttoes and o•avy 111gt cole 111,. 1 large mulled potatou Kenlutky lr1eo Chtden I ""' two otlen z
tnd 1 roll l•m•I tw~ olle•~ pet purchne 1110 1 mtd1um Qtt•y ltm.1 lwo otle•s per per purcnue Coupon good only 101 tomo1 I Coupon good only 101 tombtn111on wntte/ I purchne Coupon good only to1 combtnthon I nthon while/dark orders Cus1omt1 Pt rs I
dlfk orde•s Cu51ome• POI 111 appl•ttble whtltidark otders Customer 01yull 1ppl tll apphttb1e ult> It•
I stlu It• I cable utu 111 I 1 ., .. Mt1 t io I t ~ ; ~11e1 t•P•"> l • e' ., ti w Ollt• r•un•~ (JtLernop· c 1~81
P1ttU mty •lty II p1•ht•pll1ng IOctltOnl
I P11· '' ""Y vary II PM11t>011tog I Pr.tu ""' •• y ti p1r1tc1p1ttng locations I Coupon good only 1n Sou1ne1n Cthlotn11 I
101 thons Coupon yood only Coupon good only 1n Soulhern C11ttorn11
tn Soulnttn C1hro1nt1 ~ I I ..
__ .. ___ COUPON --·-------L
~ntucky Frie~ Chicken.
ZPEOPLE FbRl
An offer
fit to be tried.
There's a new way to get fit at Holiday Spa Health Club. It's
our Pre-Holiday Special. And it's more than worth a try.
Stop by today. Bring a friend and each of you can enroll in a
special non-renewable one-year membership ~half the price
of our regular annual plan. OR JOIN BY YOURSfLF AT HALF
THE REGULAR PRICE. You'll get the finest physical condition-
ing exercise equipment available. Individual programs and
guidance. Plus steamrooms, sun rooms, saunas, whirlpools,
hourly aerobics dance exercise classes for women, jogging
and more. Come join a Holiday Spa Health Club. Try our
Pre-Holiday Special. Get 2 people for the price of 1. And get fit.
o.·op by ror free guest tour today. Bu\ hurry. the offer .is almost 0 \'CI'.
0... .... 2lOO HlltJor It.id. (Bel*ld Thrtlly Dlug). 11'41 541).3311 ........ ,,.... 2"01 Mcia Phy els., 0.., ,,_.,
I'
L
·'
•I
..
I
.. . ...... p • -
Orenge Cout OAJL Y PILOT ITuffd.ay, November 24, 1881
•
e1ua0t• ICAllY ... .....,. .... "'-"
: Irvine Co. post filled
&ld1ard G. Slm has been
appointed vice president of the
Irvine Company's Community
>' Development Division. Sim, who
plans to move lo 1rvine, will be
c responsible for manaaement
., and operations of the division,
I which is the company's lead
entity in tbe plannin& ano
development of residential
n communities throuahout Its
1 75,000·acre Orange County
!J holdings.
* ., Terry R. Perldaa has been
named director of the financial
planning services department at
11 Pacific Mutual Life Insurance
I Co.. Newport Beach. Perkins,
l who lives in El Toro, was
;
J
president of the Newport Beach
Estate Planning Counuil in
1977-78.
ti •
I Richard H. Coleman has been
11 appointed senior vice president
11 of administration for Far West
Savings and Loan Association.
t1 Coleman, a resident of Laguna
I• H i 11 s . w i 11 s up e r v i s e the
J fol l owing departments :
o purchasing , administrative
s ervices , p o l icie s and
procedures , syste ms and
I• maintenance.
I
II .,
• • '
* Glenn Girardin has been
named executive vice president
of BEST Life Ass urance
Company of CalifornJa, Newport
Beach. He lives in Mission
Viejo • Norman J . Weinberg has been
appointed group marketing
manager of computer and
systems products for the Wyle
Laboratories Distribution Group
in Irvine. He is responsible for
the overall marketing strategy,
product planning a nd Wyle
di v isional sales support
programs for the computer and
syste ms products activities. • Carmen Berry has taken lhe
position or vice president and
DC lllllEil .................. ,
savings manager at the home
office of Huntington Savings
near Golden West Street and
Warner Avenue.
• JoAml Beekmu of Fountain
Valley has been appointed an
agent with the Allstate
Ins urance Co. She wlil be
working In the Allstate office
located in the Sears building in
the Westminster Mall.
• Arlene G. Johnson has been
named manager o r the
Bolsa-Golden West office of
Home Federal Savings and Loan
Association. She lives in Costa
Mesa . • Ed S blpcott has been
appointed director or marketing
and sales for the Surgical
Products Division of
I rvine-based Shiley Inc. a
medical products manufacturer.
\ He lives in Santa Ana. • Carrol Beals has been named
ass istant center manager of
Fashion Island. Fashion Island
is a regional shopping center
development owned by The
Irvine Co.
• Phyllis Rippel has been
appointed to the National
Organization of Office Products
s tanding committee on
c ommunication s and
government relations. She lives
in San Juan Capistrano. • John L. Sebon has been named
vice president of sales and
s upport of Century Data
Systems Inc .. Anaheim. Century
Data is a subsidiary or Xerox
Corp. • Mel CastUlo, formerly chier
Each way with round trip purchase
engineer at San Dle10 Solla
Enalneerin1 Inc .• haa been
named general manager and
chief encineer for Hi&hland
Geotechnical Consultants, a
newly formed s ubsidiary of
Irvine ConauJUn1 Group Inc . • ICeuedl C. Walc.1y has joined
K e nneth Leventhal & Co.,
Newport Beach, as manaaer or
financial planninc and control.
* Boben S. W11bbun1, a partner
In the investment banklna firm
of Montgomery Securities, San
Franciaco, has been elected lo
the board of directors o r
Irvine-based SAN /BAR Corp.
SAN I B.<R is a major supplier of
electronic eq uipment and
components, microwave radio
s ystems and service to the
telecommunications industry. • John .. Tom" Ward has been
named lo lhe new post of vice
president stores for Region II
for Mervyn's. Ward lives in
Fountain Valley.
•
EECO Inc., Santa Ana, has
received a contract worth more
than Sl million from Four
Seasons Hotels Ltd. of Toronto
to provide co mputer systems ror
Four Seasons properties. EECO P~esident Patrick F. Cadigan
said Four Seasons also indicated
it is considering EECO Systems
for 21 additional properties over
the n e xt four years . The
proprietar y EECO computer
li YSte m will be used by Four
Sea sons for reserv ations .
registration, guest history. guest
receivables. c ashiering a'nd housekeeping • Allee Co rp., Anaheim .
reporte d sales for the yeu
ended Sept. 27 of S3S 5 million
vs. S40.5 million the previous
year The company lost· $2.3
million compared with $334.000
las t year
Each way w~round rrip purchase Each way with round trip purcha.~e
;; ... • .. .. • ..
' I
1 I ..
.
O' I •' .J I .J
I
I
.J
J
J J I J J J
J I J .J
J J
I J
J t
J J
J J J •
Each way with round trip purchase
Start packing.
Because Continental's
low discount fares put 46 'cities
coast to coast, plus Mexico.
Hawaii and the South Pacific
wi thin your reach.
All fares show9 are each
way when you fl y round trip .
And require that you make
reservations and purchase your
ticket 14 da}S in advance . You
Each wuy with rnund trip purchase
must also stay overnight Satur-
day, but no more than 60 days .
If you can 't wait, we have
unrestricted fares at slightly
higher prices.
Our discount fares are
subject to change without
notice. And seats are limited.
So hurry and call your travel
agent, company travel depart-
ment or Continental .
The Proud Bird
CONllNENTAL AIRLINES e
Le n di~
rate
reduced
SACRAMENTO <AP>
-Capital F e deral
..
Sa v lnl• and Loan Ttn• Spread
AHociaUon hat r.ciuctd llb.BKEPSTICl<•Swnmcr S.~.t2nl. lmprompeu tu residential ho mt Mlld Cheddar Hom. 7 ()&.Plain Coud~i 7 uz. SAFARJ• Sumittr Saueqe. 5 oz. mort1a&e interest rate 8 m. £dim Stick. 7~ m. KOPPELZAr. • Edam Bar 8 oz. Medium Cheddar Stk:k.
from 18~ percent to lSl'I Chttte. 5 oz. Smoky <amoked chttw batl 3 oz jar 0/ Swed-Hot MutW'd and percent. and Strawbtrry Bon Bon No. 37 '22.98 Strawbmy Bon Boos. No. 2 111.98
lt w 81 the sec 0 n d Ptus auaranteed delivery charge 1! eh1pped Plus guarantttd delivery charge ihhipped red u ctlon in ho m e 1J---------------~-_..;:;._ ______ __,=====t
mortcaae rates this
month by t he
Sacramento·based
lender. which cut Its
rate from 18 percent to
16:V. percent two weeks
aao.
The 15~ percent rate
is the first reported drop
below 16 percent by a
m ajor California lender.
Last week, California
Federal Savinas and
Loan Association
dropp e d its home
mortgage rate from 17 1-'z
percent lo 16~ percent.
Taaty Treat l lb, BEEF STICK• Summer Sausage, 5 oz. Smoky (smoked cheese bar), 3 oz. jar of
Sweet Hot Mustard, Cracked Wheat Thins
and Strawberry Bon Bons. No. 58 Sl9.98
Plus guaranteed delivery charge 1f shipped
AJI Cheese
5 oz. Smoky tsmoked chttae barJ. 7~ oi Hoc Peppt'r Cheest'1 two 7 oz. Goudas. two
2 oz Cheese S~eaos. 7\.'J oz. Aiiple Pie Cheddar, 8 oz Edam Stick and Straw~rry
Bon Sons No. 30 519.98
Plus guaranteed delivery charge 1f shipped Spokeswoma n Carol Schatt or the Callfornia"---------------L-----------------,
Savings and Loan Say"Merrv Christmas!" League s aid most ;-.'(
Ca Ii for n i a I enders with a taste Of Old·time COUDtry goodn~. currently are charging
between 16'h percent to
18 percent interest on
home loans.
T -b i l l
• co, ntimles
decl ine
WASHINGTON <AP >
The govern ment ·s
borrowing cos t s. a s
measured by its wet!kly
auction· of short·lerm
Tre1tsury bills, have
fa 11 en for the fifth
s traight week, hitting
the lowest level s ince
September l!B> .
About $4.7 billion in
s 1 x-month bills were
sold at an average
discount rate or 10.915
If you're coming up long on
Ouistmas gifts to give and short
on ideas. put your mind to rest.
We've got over a hundred
different gifts. With plenty of
choices in almost every price
range you're after.
Our gifts are fiJled with tasty
delights that include things like
our famous Beef Stick., swnmer
sausage, cheeses, jams, jellies.
and more.
And if you'd like your gifts
sent out, we'll gladl y handle all
the details.
So rome to Hickory Fanns""
and discover delicious gifts
you'll be happy to give.
That someone else will be
even happier to receive.
ff icko'1 Ferms
01 ONIO•
We11 give you a taste
of old -time country goodness'."
Vi .. it a nearby Hickory Farms store at:
South Coast Plaza
Lower C1rou1el Mell
Open oa1ly 'til 9 p m
5aturoay ·111 b p ni
5unoay 12 10 Sp n .
!'.-hone S•O-b99~
«... 1981 General HotU Corpnralioo Offer vahd ill pam •. ,pallng lllCkory Fami1> 1.lure-.
percent Monday. down~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ from the 10.972 percent
of one week earlier. the
Treasury said.
The government also
sold about S4 7 billion in
three-month bills at an
ave rage rate or 10.56
percent , d own from
to 693 percent
Local. county. state. nation-al and international
events come to your doorstep D ·1 p·1at
in the bright . light and lively II J I
Our
ee
Certificate
pays
That's the highest rate allowed by law.
So open your All-Savers Certificate
now. And earn up to $2000 tax-free
when you file a joint return, up to
$1000 tax-free with an individual
return .
The annu~ yield on this account Is equal to 70% of the average yield on
one-year Treasury BIJls as of the most recent auction. Yield remains 10
effect for full one-year tenn of this account Minimum investment $500
Withdrawal of principal results In substantial Interest penalty and loss
of tax exemption. May be sub1ect to state Income tax.
L:J!JAVCD THRIFT
'-.... 14151 R.dhtD Avenue ~ 25252 Cabot Roed
Tuaun, CallfOfnll 92680 L.aguna HUis, Caltfomla 92653 (714) 731.6941 (7f4) 581-1700
620 News>ort Center Dnve, Suite 101 N~rt 8-ch. C.llfomll 92660 (714) 644-9490
I
.. -
-r urther din
f or economy?
~.\ DIEGO t BW> The nationul economy
could rt-main rticeHIOn·bound until th4.' serond
1tage or lhe tax cut takt'I hold ln mld· 1982. said
J ohn J 8111les, prcalderft or the l''t.'<feral Reserve
Bank of San Francisco.
Ballf'll s poke in San Diego Monday &ll a
luncheon meeting or Sun Diego community leaders
and the directors or the reserve bank's Los
Angeles office.
·'But meas ures to d eal with the current
recession s hould be viewed in the perspective of
lessons learned from earlier downturns,'' he noted lie said a key point to remember h1 the difference
In policy 'tesponse to lhe two oil prlct a hocks <and
ensuio1 recesslonsJ of the past decade.
"In the mid· 1970s strongly stimulative fiscal
and mone tary poli cies led the way out of
r ecession, as the United States became the
·locomotive' or the world economy
"The price, however . was an upsurge ln
inflation which laid the groundwork for muc h ot
o ur present difficulties."
The red offi cial continued, "In the last
Severa.I years, we have adopted a different
res ponse to a major 011-price shock a more conser vative stance.··
TAX-SHELTER
your income!
A unique business expense 1s available on a
hmlled basis lor Tax Sheller purposes
You must act now. because tl'le sooner you act the
more income you can shelter
If you are In the 50% tax bracket here's how we
may be able to help you reduce the 1u bite
Income 1n the 50% bracket
Tax Payable
Spendable income
sei.tt.rieg S20,000 °" • 4 to I &MtsJ~
$20.000 10,000
10000
Cost 5.000
Tax Payable nil
Spendable income Sl 5.000
We can shelter any amount up 10 $500.000
For full particulars at no obhgatlon write or phone
us
C.AMMOM IUSIMESS
SYSTEMS
Phone 851-&425
4000 MacArthur Blvd . Suite 3000
Newport Beach, CA 92660
Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, November 24, 1981 ••
J .... .............
GOING UP Jo,1.·µh E l "ull'. 1n1hlhtw1 111 thl' l ho\ l·l.11111 l't l·:-~. h,1 ...
.1111111t111n·d plun~ lo huild <.1 27 ~ton lmH·r. nlll\ l'1ll 1oa1 'l>illT .111d hotl·I
"'"' 11t1m 11 1ll'..1r th1..· I .ah· En1· ,111111•l11w Tlw p11111..·t·1 1 ... 1.1hl,wd .it :-.l:!h
1111111011 .111d ""' h1..· hu11t 11\l'I lhl' l'\:1,1111g l'n·:-:-11ll1t l '
Computer pact set
E PCOM Computer Systemi. Inc.,
Newport Re ach, a newly formed
su b s 1d1ary of EPCOM lnc . has
reached agreement in principle with
D 1g1ta l Scie ntific Ltd to
manufacturer and market a new
business computer :..ystem developed
under OSL sponsor ship. E PCOM
Computer Systems will be headl'd by
J Terrence Greve. an EPCOM
director recently appointl•t.J ai.
president or the subs1diar~ The nf>W
micro computer sy~tt·m i:s a
development or OSI. •
military orders while last year~
fourth·quarter income was increased
due to reversal of previous tax
accruals n o lon ger dee m ed
necessary. Backlog remuined at $3 3
m illion on Sept 30. •
Jo'ullerton·based Valencia Bank will
become the anchor tenant of Tower
II in Pacific Mutual Plaza. The bank
will occupy 11 ,900 square feet or
office space on the Plaza level The
bank, with assets of $160 million, is
t>xpected to be open for business In
the Newport Center locatio n 1n
March 1982.
State could suffer
Job outlook worsening in California
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Many
residents of Callrornla may be In tor
a bad timo during the receHlon dupltc .11ome pre dlctlont from
economists that the state should pass
relatively uniscathed. the Los Angelt11
Time• has reported.
La s t 'month Ca lifornia 's
unfmploymeot nale rose from 7.2
percent to 8.1 percent and the job
the Times reported in Its Monday
editions
commercial and lndusll'lul ~ork bul
now lh»l u. 11turtinc tu d1u ppear,'' hr
11uld. "1'tl • £intn<'in1 Is nol cominM
tuictther any morl' "
I.Ht yeur tht' f'1rc11tone Tire and
Rubbl'I Co plunt. which employed
nearly 1r.>e> pcop\c. cloi.lld . down 1t.,
ma nufact uring operutloo a In
Auaui.t, the compan y c losed th
WMl'hnust•. laylnl( urr lhe last of Ila
workl'rs.
In S<1hnn11, which has seen a wavt'
ur planl dOllin~ll in uddition to the
White service industries contmue F1restont' ~hut.down . a candy factory
to expand. construction bas lost and "' food packer recently closed,
thousands of Jobs, m a nufactur"'8--c llm1natmg about 800 more jo~
Indus tries have retrenched and even ~ lot or people left lOWn to look
th e unce ·mu s hrooming high for work," 1>a1d Harry Gamotan,
technology farms h ave neurl> president of lht' rubber workerlf
stopped growing. local "Hut u lot of them, hav"
The news paper observed that the rl'turncd Either th~) couldn t fin.cl
picture is looking bleaker all the time Jobs or .Lhl'Y got lal.~ off again It i.
"This whole area 1s llat on its pretty <hscouragrng.
back." said Carl Brandt, buslnesi. Cahforn1a, wh1<'h has led the na tion
agent of Local 2931 of the Plywood in emplo) rnent growth for the pai.t
and Veneer Worke r& m Eureka. ·or ::.cverJI ~cars. is st1lll creating more
maybe 1800 people in the lumber Jobs than it 1s losing The recent
mdustry around here . all but 300 or t r e n d . h o ~ e v e r . 1 & on t h t•
so are laid off. When they expanded d1scouragm~ !>Ide
the Redwood National Park in 1978 New chums for unemployment
that was bad But this is much insurance. ror l'Xample, have beeu
worse · dimbing steadily since August and
Two pulp mills JUSt s aid they are are substantially above the levels or
dosing for the month of December, the last two years .
he said "We've always relied on the In Ot·tober according to the state i.
lumber and fishing industries Now Em 1> Io y m en l 0 c v e Io P m en I
you're starting lo see the hospitals Department. more .than 60,0011
making layoffs, the grocery Store::. la1d nff '.'Orken filed 1n1t1ul
starting to lay off .. unemployment da1m s. up from
Jerry C rem1o s, execut i ve 55.000 in Septcrnl>er and 46.900 in
sec·retary or the Los Angeles County August .
Building and Construction Trades .. When tht' number of cla1 ~ gel11
Council. said ... We're in big trouble over 55.000. we start to w~rry, s.a111
m the construction industry There John Mulford, an e(•onom1st at First
JUSt aren't any calls coming in. The Interstate bank of Ca~1 forn1a. · When
p lumbe r s union ha s n 't even 1tgetsabove60,000.1lsserious
disp atched an apprentice in two \\ c sct·m to keep pushing our
weeks." rcCO\l'r} ~cenario Orf rurther and
Cremins estima ted that 18 to 20 rurtht'r every month, .. he :;aid
percent of the workers 1n resident \\ e · re not I o o k 1 n " for an
construction are unemployed employml'nt pickup now until lah•
·~e·ve been gettin g by on next ~car E I P Mic rowave Inc., Newpurt
B e a c h . r l' v o rt 1• d J I 9 p I' r c e n t
increase in salt!~ for the fourth
quarter ended Sept 311 Sales of S2 8
m1ll1on com part .,"' 1th S2 .4 m1ll1on in OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
last ye<1r's 'lu<.irlcr Net income was
SlR·t .ooo. or 16 cents a share.
•·hmpart•d with $381.000, or 35 cent1>.
l'u 1 r t•nl quarter an<.·ome was
1
1 t>eJuced. accord mg to the company . .. _____________________ because or discounts related lu large
I COLLICTO--ll-S C_O_ll_N_l_ll __ _
.... c ..... , ~ 0-.&s.1 ...
11·2HI
... y .... I It•~"-...... M14M "'6PS. V.,> Mel.It MU M
loOP.,.a~ Mtt.• .... 7 ••
'IO , !>llnr 6-•11•.• '1U..• \-t.Mll l'l•IA 11111-
11141-
UPS
LUI C.1'9 > P<I l.,, • .._ Up Jo 1
I' .!.O t •' Up 11 l • > • ,., uo 10' j , Up 10 0 ) • ' IJp 10~
A TRS..SO Color Com-
PUter •• the perf9ct gift tor the whole femftyf
Play exciting games,
track finances, write
your own programs,
and that's just for
starters!
r &AJu.'S ... .,.,..... ---... -. C.t \ • ,. ,...., ..
...... ' ........ ..,.~ 41 '°"'' £) o«'f
I .a to;#• • ..,..._t .. ~ A,-.•1
COST A WllA641 • 1289 .. ,. .. __
•1•-~95-0401 Htnc:._c.,... ••
fSoA °'"90 ,....., ., A•.-,~ I
1•" Cl e Up "I \tO • 11 j Up II• ) ... IY.>' • IJP 11 _. •• ,o.,.upU• a-. • ' Up 1S I '2'• · 1.a Vo •>> 1'• Up 11 l
•1 , 1 UP •2,
I . • UP U) 41 • S , Up 111
.... 0 UP II a J... .. IJP 11)
6 • • "'-Up ft 1 > CJ '1 UP II I
1', • " IJP I\.'
• Attaches to Any
TV (not Incl.)
•Uses Handy
Instant-Load
Program Paks
• Enjoy Fast-Action
Games
• Eight Vivid Colors
Plus Exciting Sound
Effects
• 4K Memory
• Fully Expandable
A OIVISION OF TANOY CORP~ATION
SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST
RADIO SHACK STORE ,
COMPUTER CENTER
OR PARTICIPATING DEALER
PRICES MAY VARY AT INOllllOUAL ST.ORES ANO DEALERS
OCTDWill
plan your bus
triJ!for u-
---F
)
500°0 TAX SHE LTER
PAY MO IMCOME
TAX FOi 1911 A.MD
GET REFUNDS 01
ALL TAX PAID fOI "'°· '7', '71. ·•Ill• • U CllP IUEllltCfS
Call 645 -0864
·103l a:
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Newport Sea(h . .
MUTUAL FUND
Ach•n'-H 0.<llned
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---" ....... __ ..,... ••• 0 . 0 •• 0 a a .. s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tueeday. Novembtr 24, 1981
.---~~--~~---.
. . . ...-
$ 3 $ 5 $ 5 3 3 5 $ 3 0 i 3 3
How to cu
ski costs
Thus is the week thal the skiing season opcn11 in
the Unite<l States nnd there 111 no better time to
stress to you tiki burts that, with proper planning antJ
flexible travel plani;. you cun 11laah your ski vucution
costii by M minimum 20 percent to 30 percent
If you plan your
ski vucallon ror this ~ period , you C''1n
a('h 1c ve •ul{nificant
s a v1 nJC b 'l'hi:s Is a,c
known ns lhc
··shouldc1·" i;eason SYlVIA PllJfu-..?
\e<irly 0 l'C t•mber. ~ ~
J a n u ary through
early February. most of Apnl1 and hotel lodgang then
runs 25 per·ccnt to 30 percent lesR than the busier
holiday weeks
At Colorado's Copper Mountain. this ·buper
season" c·overs Nov 24, Nov 29 to Dec· llS, then ufler
April 10. 1982 In addition
I 1 Shop around for air transportation. There are
spet·1al fares 20 percent to 40 percent lower than
normal if you meet their rei.tnction!-1 . Tour operator8
who buy seats an bulk or charter their own planes cun
offer add1t1onal ~avings Ad vance reservationis are
cssenltal . 1t'i. not uncomm on for busy holiday week!>
lo be bookt·d six to eight months an advanct'
!"or instance, last December 1981 , lodging at
Kc:ybtone Arapahoe Hasan was 90 percent booked by
July I, i.ays Fritz Opel, a director of Breckenridge,
Keyslone1Arapahoe Basan and Coµper Mountaan. all
an Colorado There are alwayb some ;.urhne and hotel
reservat1rnls available al the last minute. but cho1<·c:.
are limited and prices are higher
21 Conb1der urr ~peak tr<i vcl. Most \I ac·atmning
skiers travel from Saturd:.iy to Saturday. you ean
save money by traveling midweek Airports also are
le:.:. crowded, ~round transportation lb easier to
arrange, and chec:kmg into hotels 1s swift('r
31 Use pubhc• g1 ound transportallon at resort!>
Renting a car that remains idle while you ski lb not
cost eff1c1cnl In increasing numbt>rs, sk1erb rely
upon public ground transportation to gel to and from
resorts Continental Tra1lways, for example. s ervice-.
'Sk i the Sum mit d1rec·tl y from L>e n ver·s
Stapleton Airport and downtown Denver to Copper
Mountam. Breckenridge. Keystone and two nearby
towns Fnsco and 01llon
4 1 Evaluate your lodgang choices You can st a) an
a single hotel room on a m ountaan and s ki to your
door. or save 30 percent to rAl percent h) lod ging
nearb). Slo1>eside condo m101ums are at a premium
}t'l you actually can lower the c~t per peri.on Six
pcoph: m a two bedroom condo 1 with foldout sofas ,
wall c·o'\t less per person than two peop1e an a
one bedroom t•ondo Families are part1rularh
attral'ted to ·ski condommiums. kitchen fac1 htaes
avoid c~tl) restaurant meal!.
5 1 Students al m any r~orts fr~uentl) will be
issued a dil!>count on a full·day hft ticket llavc proof
of your student statub with )Ou
61 Many resort!. orfer discounts to g uests who
pu1 l'hast· multiple da' l1rt t1ckt-ts U!!>ually the
m101mum 1s a two or three-day ticket
7 1 A half da) hft ttt·ket ma> be a\ailable 1f )OU
lake to ski. bul also enjoy a few extra hours s leep in
the morning. This discount begins as early as noon at
some areas
81 Group rates are offered ut mos t s ki resor~
~ ith requirements rangang from 10 to 25 per group
The group will receive discounted hrt tickets or a
compllmt•ntary hft ticket for one person over the
m101mum requirement great for famll) or rnends
to ska together at a savings
. ' I
AMERICAN LEAD£RS
NEW YORK IAPI !>elH, -•Y s pt•t•
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Or1ng1 CoHt OAJLV PtLOTffuesday, November 24', 1981 117
CM CiviC redi.scovers the successful 'Separate Tables '
11 TOM TITUS Ot ... ....., ..........
Thirty yeara betote Lanford Wllaon brou1h1
hla dlver•e per1ooalllles toaetber under ont
crumbUnt roof In "Tho Hot L BalUmore," British
pl1ywrl1hl Terence Ratllaan accomplished a
aimtlar feat with "Separate Tables."
ll waa a successful pl•Y that spawned a movie
version <and Oscars tor David Nlv~n and Wendy
Ulller I, but It 11 virtually unknown ln local theater
today. Its rediscovery by the Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse has re111ulted
in a solid production
rich in ensemble
excellence.
The sc,ne Is a
boarding h otel in
postwar England where
a col l ection of
unfulfilled but proud
individuals c ling to
their sense of "class"
and watch their live$
tick away. Each has a
stor y, and Rattigan
explores them all, some
more intensely than
others.
There are few weak
links in director Pat1 T a m b e I I i n 1 ' s J · \.H: .\ f(;/J
12-member cast, which plays oul this sensitive
drama with depth and insight. Rattlgan's
c haracters (save for a young, happy couple.
seemingly out of place 1 s hare a common bond of
chronic loneliness, and are complex, troubled
THE PORT THEATRE
h 7 J b2bll
MON. Nllt: ALL ::.t::Al::.>L .UO
Two French Mysteries
"DEAR INSPECTOR"
people who require and receive dimension ln
their Interpretations.
Mott lmpresalv or the Cost» Mtsa east ts
Jane Nllh as a meddlesome matron attempting to
control the lives of her fellow 1ue1u as she
manlpulatt..'lS her mhlblled dauathl~ra. Mias Nigh
(lives &a dellcloualy deleatful performance and
. turns a ba le stereotype lnto a real person whose
need to dominate is as pitiful u any ol the others'
secret yearnings .
Also excelllng Is Les Reed u a pompous
ex·mUitary orrlcer who comes to grips with his
shame after an e mbarrassing lndiacretion Is
revealed. Kathy Byrd la achingly effective aa Mias
Nigh's reticent daughter who aids in·.aeed's
emotional repair.
M1trty Green and Robert Kokol are splendid as
a divorced couple, reunited under stress. who
rebuild their love-hate relationship in the play's
most dramatic scene Kathy McTlghe realistically
underplays lhe sympathetic proprietor of the
hotel.
The young lovers who inject a note or
fres hness into the decaying atmosphere are nicely
enacted by Corbett Barklie and Pierre
Beauregard Pat G1lchrisl is convincing as a
"Masterful"
-L A. Times, Shella Benson
"Wonderful"
-Newsweek Magazine, Jack Kroll
4 l AOO c!OMMNY N<O WAANEA MOS. llEUAM _ _...,...llJI060•---·~~ Juffrfk'S T~lfft RATED PG
o--_.__ ... ,_,_ ____ ___
edwards NEWPORT
Mf.AIC04ST HWY.&MACAITHUtl
aiiWl'OiU • O'CW1'ma 644-07'0
• ''" t t •lA".l ••'l<V rc1H<>NA D£L 11.~AH
Drn1e·in1 Om 6:30 NIGH LY
Under 12FAE£Unl-Not9jl
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
Ille ....-C,.. ot,.. , • ..,.. • ro ---HOl.f ... _._,, ot _,....,_,.,,_,.°'"""'-
~ AU.AOHAOMITl'EO ~-"""-
~ AU. AGE.I AOlolfTl'(O ~-a..-s.._....
~ AUTROCT'lO u_,, __ ~
,.,.,_.,_, 0t ~ <Nwd••n
® NOONEUNDEA 1tAOM1mo
'"" lt!NI ... , ..... lftc.n-M9Mi
M.L a m "'"° im ~IL,., ,.,e1,v1
f)I( llAl. OT-TMI MOTION PIC'TUlll
COOi Of llil" llEOUU TION
1-cl SS.000 ---Wlftlll bJ ....... -. cl,.,., 11111 psWllllll propaty.
COST A MESA • 370 E. 17th Streer • 645-8700
HUNT INGTON BEACH • 16075 Colden West St.• 8-l7-7771
MISSION VIEJO • U395 Alicia Parkway, Suite 2E • 770.2651
Alicia Town Pina
SANTA ANA • 1224 East 17th Street • 5"l7·5871
RESTAURANT
DIRECTORY
For The Orange Coast
ITALIAN
VILLA NOVA
3131 W. Coast Hwy. 642·7880 All major credit cards.
It alian c uisin e Overlooking
Newport Bay. Dinner ser ved night·
ly until 1 a.m . Piano Bar. Banquet
Facilities.
STUFT NOODLE
215 Riverside,
Newport Beach 548-7418
Restaurant Writers· Award winning
Restaurant for the past 4 years
MEXICAN
TNT TACOS
N' TEQUILA
3300 W. Coast Hwy. 548·2224
All major credit carch
Happy hour 7 days -4 7 p.m . Sunday
Brunch 10-3 with complimentary
champagne.
AMERICAN
AIRPORTER INN HOTEL
Mediterranean Rnom
18700 ~acArthur Blvd., l rvint>
Spectalhlnt In Continental Culalne 7 deya a wHk
Featuring Sunday Brunch 11·3
All major credit carda ecccpled Racrvetlona w.mo
.. ....... ,. , ........
A .,.,,.. .,. hr-• ••111 .. ft, tlre<l .. t'I' 1'•11 h-111111,
i.<l\nlc411 -·~-11 ... '1 H._11, ..... ,,__, LMt'I' W•ltll, -•nie. Tflw9'en Wt1191! a.111n1en .. I • ""'II Dec. t _,, Ille
CMi. ~ CIYI< 11'1•¥-tt tfl '""' Ot.,.._ ~ 1'411••-· C•l.a WV.lll...,.¥elt.lltlMiUt • THICAiT
MIM ~llem .... ., ., ·--· IU~mtfl ,.,., ... Ml•".., . .. ... ,. ... ,. ._...,.
Jfffl , _. .. • • .. • • • .. '°""''* .......
Mt\. Aell-e.41 ...... , ........... , • .. • .. .. ... J-Nlell .....,, -""'*' .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. . . .............. l'•I Olktvltl ,., •ow• ...................................... ll•r~"'-oo'"" , , . .. ........... II-Wllltfl91d
Mltt C-, , , ' , ,,, , Kel\'l'Mef ..... AM'"""'~. . . . I I I. • .............. ...,,W-Gf'9eft JOl\n M•letn1.. . .. . .. .. .. . • .. .. .. • .. .. . .. .. • ... II~ K.-.i s.,1111 trt•lll!Ofl.&e11 . .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. . KMllY •vrt MtJOf Poltoc.• • .. . • ............................... ~t II ...
painfully shy noblewoman, Barbara Silverman ls
Cine as a dotty old dreamer, Ray Judson la
somewhat uneven as a retired schoolmaster and
Rebecca WhJlfield sparkles as the hotel's Cockney
maid a bit of a cliche but an etrectlve one.
.. Separate Tables" la a Ions. somewhat talky
play which depends on sklJlful characterization to
accomplish its ends. It receives just that at the
Ci vic Playhouse where it will be on stage
Thursdays through Saturdays at s· JO until Dec. S.
• SOUTH COAST Repertory 1s preparing a
•BARGAIN MATINEES•
Monday thru Saturday
All Pertormancea before 5:00 PM
(Elctpt Speclll En1111ment1 Ind Holld1y1)
l jt, MlllA(Jjt, MAd Mirodo ot lo1ec10111
LA MIRADA WALK·IN 9941·2400
MTllMWIM9_.._
"THIWATatP
IN TM« WOOC>e"INI m•.-·-.,,..-
i.a-.~ "AO&NC\'"1111 ·--·------·----· ,_Mt.-. tAI, •-"ftAIOU.I Oji THe L.081' """" --·· ... -----"CA .. ec>N ~ .. -•1:-. 1:-...,.,,.. ...,, ...... , ...... --..... ~-~··--'--~t--~~~~~~~~~ "HAUOftaN II" .. '· e.w. TMI --ua.--·---"llcVICM" 111 '·'•·.,,., ·----,,,-· ... -LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALK IN
..., ~---· ,,..,_,,m "TIMI aAHOtTS" tNt ·-----
'ocv11y 01 Conore wooo
213/531·9510
... _.,,,. • •n --r THE "'"SUIT CW D.a . COONll "~I CW THI LOST Mil" .. ·------.-''IOUTHl"N COWORT' 11'11 11'9~··· .... ,......... ..... ......
'ONLY WHIH I LAUGH" i-. ............
"HbtS LIKE OLO TIMH" -.......
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WALi( ·IN
FoeUIV Al Del MWJ
211/614·9211 -·-· "RAGGEDY MAH" 1"'1
lkll. ----t:a. -' I
------"THE FRENCH LIEUnNANTS
WOMAN" fll .1: ............... ..
"Mc:VICAA" fl! ·---"OUAOR°"4ENtA" 1111 ...........
O~ttllO MliCMW*M e ......... ,..,.
t , • ., Jlt • to • ~, ·~
--Sovlll Coo•• fl•woy
o• l •ooowoy
494J.1514
_..-..---.--.-.. .i•• ••.
"TIME aANOITS" 1N1 iE '' _, ...... ........ ... ,.,..._, .. ... .,. """' .
.... .... ..... .,_,JO
IMrORTANT NOTICl " ................. ..
~·so .,
" Ill) .,. c.u ~'Ill
--"" f'Oll1*1. ....
ANAHllM
ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN
,,.....,., 91 of Lemon SI
179·tll0
"Ft~NDISH P\.OT OF
OR. fU MANCIW'. -
• Cl~_!'!-~ -----.... ----.---------,--..,.-n.i-.--------
"AQINC't"' 4'11 "90DY Hl!AT' 4'11 --"ICANNElS" 1111 "PAH .. NITY" .._.
Clld •1 SOU•O Cl"t fl M>UtlO
&lll NA pjt,fil' ---CIP--1111 -BUENA PARK ORIV( IN -----"'-1111 ll"C:Olfl A'(e W•tl Of CflO"
121·40-70-
eut "4 • i ,,.,.
LINCOLN ORIVE·IN
ltf"C olrft Aw• ••., ol l nott
121·4070
11.1111.01
Soft 0M90 f"twy OI a.ootl ...... 1 (So)
9'2·24a1
-·-·-= .. _. ..
,,.., _, ---·,,.., r1111Um .. ,. ... MNOfTS" --"THE FAllCO JOO" -
,.. Y&Alrl •• ~
"SATURDAY THE 1CTH'' ... -"flENDllH ~ M
OR. fU MANCHU" -
""" .. ;;.~;f --·-™• "llAll>e"I OF THI LOIT MK" fMl-----"A"Tff\Jfl" INt -"PATE .. NITY" -Ulll-·--"AQENCY"lll) -"ICANNlftS" 1111
CIW JI IOUllO
A HA~QA
LA HABRA DlllV( IN -·-·'""' ................ 17HM2
6/.AP.t •t
-.. "llAIH THI TITANIC" -Clll( ·fl IOUllO ---Tiii-~"HAU.OWUN 11" tllf -"DEAD • IURllO" 1111
Cl!ll·fl IOUllO --·---· "llAIOl .. I Of' THS LOST MK" -
I ORANGE 0111Vf IN ---------J . -_ ... _.,_ ---·· --
..... ... .......
MISSION 0 111Vf IN . --·------"' _,.....:;_._. -·-=-·--..
return engagement for lb holid1y producUon of "A
Chrlstmws Carol " Thu how will pl1y from Dec. t
to 27, aae1un under lh~ dlr ctlon of John-David
Keller
"A Chr1stmu1 Carol" will pl•Y nt1ht1y except
Monday:s at 8 p m. on the malnstage, with Sunday
performWlec ut 7 · 30 And weekend matillffl at
2.30 at the f''ourth Step Theater, MS Town Center
Drtve, Costa Mesa. Re ervatlons 957 4033 .
NOW PLAVINCI
AJIAllUM HllTUl&TH IUCI MlSSIOll Vlll .. UC£ loge Edwards Cinema Miuron V1e10 Mall Stadium Drive In
772·6466 848·0388 495·6220 639-8770
llU IHlll OlWE OU.Cl Brea Plaza Woodbrtdce Orange Mall UA City Cinema
529-5339 SSl -0655 637 0340 634-391\
COSTA MESA Edwards Cinema Center 979 41'1
. ..
..
..
..
•
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOTITuH day, November24, 1981
-EVENltG~
t:OO 8 D 8 HEWI 0 CHAAUl'I ANOE.LI
C) TAIASUM HUNT ID THE MUPP£T8
Gu"t Elton JOl\n
Cl) HAWAII FlVM
One of McGottell s ltusled
1nvee1igators 1s eccused or
11k1no a b•lbe lrom a nur
' \
D '"'""'~ TM linlnClll M111• 01 tne
OtP'lllll-O• I• plle;«I In the
h-.nd• ol • menl•ltY ''°"'
O•Phl n end • foul
t11fT14*ed hOfM 8 THMl'I
OOMl'AHY
Jee; tel• u bell to k.11• •
1011oe< Into th• 1110 •
-.>1rtment u I plain
clOthN pc>llCleman •tenO•
~ard Q
ID MIRV QAlfflH
GuHll 011on W•ll••
Rone 8u111t J1mH
~"m. Jiii and l~• U111
fJl) OOY88EY
"MHllfl 01 Metal N-
dlllOQ lec;hn~ uled by
lrChHo4og1111 In EurOIJ"I
hav• r1dk:1lly lll•rld H>•· °' ••• concern I no 1 ne devel
oe>ment 01 me111 techn<>IO
~~MOS
cotk:ade•lef
&i)ROl!lllftl~~...,...---;:--~~..._....__........__~~~~~~~
"Tile lh•ll 01 The Stitt'
With ttw help or comput ..
unlm•hon and •1unn1no
••tronomoc:al Ort Dr Carl
Sagen 1how1 l'low 11a11
are botn hve 1nO 011 (RI
Q H MOVIE CD DICK CAVETT
Gueal Patnc•a Neal
(() CBSNEWS
@) ABC HEWI
GfHICHEWS
<C MOVIE
• • ••,··Time Aller Time
( 111791 Mal<:Olm McDowell
David Watn9f H G Wetla
chaee1 tl\e onramous Jeci.
the RIPCMI• lrom Vtelorlan
London 10 mooern-day
San F•anc:taco throuon lh•
use or • time machine
BIG IMPRESSION The otti,µnn g o4 llll'
l3l'l'"lls tu1n Ht.•ars t'Offi\' iH 'l'Os::. th \'
g1g..1n l1t· pa\\ 1 mprt>i,s1on ut B1gµ.rn
" h 11 l• I u r ..1 g 1 n g I u r n u b 1 n T h l'
Bl'l'l'l\~tain B\1iffS :\ll•l'l B1gµa \.\ ut 8 .:!11
lo111gh1 1111 K.\; Hl' , ~.
fl• 't "8ea• 1111nd' t 111801
Donald S.ilhetlano Vann
n Redgr•v• An Arctic
wealhlr-researeh leam s
mind 1sn t 1u11 on lh• ell
mo1a whtlll 115 membeta
are loroed ln10 a 1ign1 tor
thelr Vfl<Y wrv1val PG
'PG'
(!i)MOVIE
•*''>··Toby And Tile Koo
ta Bear ( t981 I RoH Ham~
love 1c111>n and an1mat1on
combine to 1e11 the tale or a
young l>oy and h1& pet ~o•·
la In Aus11a11a s lronttlf
di~ 'G
ISl LAFF-A·THOH
A comedian hOll onO lour
comic: con1es11n1S who
compete age1ns1 one
anothet are tealutecl •n ttors
uncensored comedy game
ShOW
@ MOVIE
•fl Brea~1ng Glass
(1980) Hazel 0 Connor
Pl\U Daniels A 8t1l1Sll punk
pop s11r's lllestyte u10.
1ru1te1y laads 10 trag&Oy
'PG'
CUO 0 BULLSEYE
0) WELCOME BACK,
KOTTER
fD KCET HEWSNAT m> BUSINESS REPORT
(()Q!HEWS
OJ) BARNEY Mlt.LEA
S JAM90A£E IN THE
HILLS
"Sup•t Bowl 0 1 Counlry
Mu soc: This unique coon.
try music testivat ltom
West V11g1n1a leaturM two
days of p1otun . s1ng1n and
l1ddlm and includes such
stars u Emmyloo Hams
Conw1y Tw111y 1 G Shel>
atd Alabama and many
mote
7:00 I) C8S NEWS 0 NBC NEWS 0 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
D A8C NEWS 0 YOU ASKED FOR IT
Featured F amoly
Breadwinner la A Squ1Hel
and· How To Melt• A Poa·
tage Stamp
Q) M'A'S'H
While a M!liltCtl gOC"S on IOt
a dog that brt Radar
Haw~eye det1es litanlt 10
take care ot a case or hy\
1enca1 pat aJyS1$
Q) JOKER'S WllO
fl!) OVER EASY
L1v1ng Alone Guests
Mart0n Blaus1em Lally
Rolh Laverne Gu11toyie
Jack Kautman r?
~ MACNEIL /LEHRER
REPORT
fJ) TIC TAC DOUGH @) ENftRT AIHMEHT
TOfilOHT
An 1nterveew with tom
AndetlOn
~THE MUPPET&
Gue11 Hatty ee1aron1e
0 MOVIE
• • 11 Somewhefe In
1 une ! 19801 Ch11st0pf\et
Ree""'· Jane Seymour
ObsesseO w11h the portrait
ot • 19th-century 1c1ress,
e mOOetn-dey New YOtk
playwrtQht u-hypnoei1
to 11 •vet 1>eCk 1n time 11no
meetllt!r PG
7:06 ( Z I MOVIE
fl * * * · Ordinary Peo·
pte ( 19801 Mary fytet
Moore. Donetd Suth.,taoo
A gullHioden 1een·eoer
1ty1ng to put hll Irle Oeck
together alt., hos 1Molhet'1
oeath eno his own suoc:1oe
alt9mpt 1eac,_ oot to hi•
complacent lalhet and Ills
cold. •e-veo mothe• R
7:30 I) 2 OH THE TOW..
Featured c:omeOfan
Jonatnan Winters; rock
11nger Jimmy Messln• •
10011 at wtoa1 happens
when PresiOent Reagan
comes to h11 rancn 1n San-
ta Barbara
0 ()!FAMILY FEUD
U LAVEAHE & StttRLEY
&COMPANY
Laverne and Shlrley eno
up II the cont<ots when
they w1" a ptet>e 111p to •
p1oress1one1 football
game
0 EYEON L A.
Fellured a v1111 ;o Los
Ang8es helflh 51)U a
teport on ma11111 Ilda •
look at 111egel 1•ce cart 0 MATCHOAME
0) M'A'S0 H
Both CharlM and Kl1no«
oevetop 1on\1ntte 11aiaon•
... n11e f0<get11ng 1he11 lrou-
btes at RO$,. s Bar
Q) TIC TAC ~
ID MACNEIL/ LEHRER
RE POAT
a.i) HEWS
I P M MAOAZIHE
Bos1on1an~ who art '•Ohl
'"0 oaGt( &gJ,u1st Nuw .., u•
City 08tk1J1Q ''rtt°S j:j ~ ""
testan1 1n 1n1' Mis• T ""
W0<ld Deauly paoeant
\J.A) YOU ~ED Fr·
Fea•ured tA• .,~ v•n1i1
tndtari 9,,c1,.. and
Sp11t1n9 CQtra Of Alt1
ca
H MEN'S G't'MMASTICS
C'-•e,.1,~ Patee• 1nv1ta
honal !J ,mp1dn~ Bart
Cof'\,-;er 4lnCJ "' ._.drt -'"9
and ff'lrf· " .,.r •1 hJd
Ch115 R11J9~I CCl"l ... llf on
m.~ $«Je< hll wt!-h di ;n ,, ••
IU<e~ M Jr~ ( • .. ho tS
relurn1ng 10 the \C>Otl'Ohl
oiler a l1l e·threaten1ng
IOJUfI._
8:00 I) fl SIMOfi & StMOH
tPrem.etel Jameson Par
ket ano Get aid McRa~
star as twO brnther' wno
nwn and ope•ate a tree-
wheehng dllkhve aoenc:v
'"San Diego 0 ~ DAFA' DUCK'S
THANKS-R>A-GIVIHG
SPECIAL
Anima1eo Dally°"'" oev-
•S<rS • otan to a11ow n1s lent
CHANNEL LISTINGS
f) KNXT ICBSI 0 On TV
C!) KNBC !NBC I l TV
0 KTLA llnd 1 .. HBO
CD KABC tA0C' i c t(1n1tWHI
0 Kf'MB l(RSI • IWORI NY NY
0 KHJ TV tlnd ., tWTliSI
Clll KCST t ABC.r E <ESPNI
CD K rrv 11no 1 s 1Snowt1me1
Ill KCOP TV I Ind J 0 5POtllQnt
ftl KCET t PASI " t (.\bll' NPw\ NPtwori. 1
'1l>KOCE !PBSI
10 show lhel• apptoc1011on
for all ria·a done tor mom
over the ye8fa (R)
0 MOVIE
fl I Fty1ng M1&htl ( 1976)
Robert Conrad, Simon
Oaktend Pappy • BoyltlQ·
ton and 1'111 band ot eetial
da1 edev1ts enc:ou"tl't pet I·
toos advenlures on tlle
Pac1t.c Outing WOfld War
II
0 @) t{APPY DAYS
0 MOVIE * • 1.i, "Sam Wh11key
( 1969) Butt Reynolds Chnl
Waiki<
0) P.M. MAGAZINE
Designer celeb11ty Catol
L11tle: • contestant 1n tile
Miu Tell World oeeuty
pageant Cn.t Teti P••·
pares • d•lll from ~ltover
turkey, Paula Netaon on
Cht111mas shC)pp1ng wollun
a t>u009t
Q) MOVIE
·1maoa 0 1 Bruce LM
EID COSMOS
The lives 01 Tt,. Sii••
With the IMllP ot compulet
anim1111on and a1unn1ng
as1tonom1ca1 art Ot Cart
Segan 1hows how s1ars
ate born hve and d..i tR)
a.i) NOVA
Notes 01 A Biology
Watchet A Fllm W1tn lew-
is Tll0m11 B1o4og1&1 and
award wl<'ln•ng autll<>< Or
Lew·~ Thomas r1+veals
SO,,,_. ,, lhf! mr.t .. flOUS
wondfH' t hh ~
C MOVIE
• • • • t 1 I 11)631
MJr • l1c..i Ma~tro1ann1
C••ud•ll Ca•d1nate Direct-
"'" t> f IK!Pnc.o ~ ftlt1n• An
ltrfWOi!' I> f' f ~ 0 tV!CtQ<
,, "'''b •\.• ,.., "'" t>al.t
l.lt18 .,. t .• tf •• -1tlt,.
in hi p. ~1 t t
$ ai:-AJ•,
.ionn b ,..,~..,.
.,.. ""OW t• ... t•• .,, .. , .... ,.
h 1g ;oo •II .. .,,.
+t • P\.M '" ... , FT
' ... ,
.hf,
8r0f1 .., \ \o I,.
wtla . ", ' .•• ,,.,1 r~.
eact otr-4' "' • • ., .. ot
dOUble·d418hng
8~ U ~ THE BE'llENST AIH
BEARS MEET 8IOPAW
Animated An overblown
fhan-sg1v1ng iegeno lhad-
ows the 8erensta1n Bear
tam11y s hOhday vn111 11\P
Chlldren 11raiohtetl lll1n9s
O<Jt (R)
0 11) LAVERNE ANO
SHIRLEY
l enny .tnd Squ1ggy inter
rupl Joey Heathe<lon on
natt0naf ,...,_,sion 10 tead
one of '""' scnpts .) Q) AU. IN THE FAMILY
It s Arch111 s brtlhdly and
he s more su1p11~ l>y
what 11 Nys on 1111 1>1rth
cen11ica111 1rian by htG
1urpt11M1 par ly
S MOVIE
• • '7 Rouo" Cut 119801
Burt Reynolds l esley·
Anne Down A 8rillsh
soc1aht1 lures an 1nterna.
honal 1ewe1 lhier out or
retir~nt 10 llt!lp he< steal
S30 000 000 1n d1omon0s
'PG
9':00 I) (JJ MOVIE
A Small Ktlhng (Ptem
•etel Edward Asn91 Jean
Simmons
0 IHTEANATIONAL AU.·
STAR FESTIVAL
l11a M1nne111 Wayne N-
ton 8en Vereen Lota
Fal1n1 '"-Muppel Mon
lle11 eno tile Harlem Gto
betrot11t1 11.-r In 11111 aono
and dll\Ge spec;11l trom
Get many
1:1& 1 Z1 MOVI€ * * Gove Her The Moo11
( t970) Mat1he Katie• Be•t
Convy A roeh Ame<oc:an
1nd\>stroahst vac:at•onitlg 1n
Europe. comp ltcatet
eve1yone'1 Ille when Ile
decides ro marry e winner
ot a village beauty
pageant ·a
9:30 0 (1_.Q) TOO C1.0SE FOR
COMFORT
MU<iel 1nv11es a slod -1ow
bum home 10< T hani.501v
1~ d1n"4I<
10:00 U Qj FLAMINGO AOAD
Wealthy Moc:haet Ty•one
c-to TtutO and uMS
rHs gntrrierw who is Sam 1
ex-wile on a plol to gain
valueble land that Sam
8110d8SltH OOQ>CD HEWS
0 ®) HART TO HART
Jonathan 1e11n1 lhat 1111
near fatal accident was
ptan~ by an ecGeflltlC
art Golleclor Wt>o wan11 10
aOd Jennifer to h•s cottec
(l()n (,) ID PRE.8ENTE
0 MOVIE • * • 1 , Manhattan
( 19791 Woody Allen D<ena
Kealon A potgnant loo~ 11
ta~en at the d•y·IO·dly
ovents 1n tht' 11fe ot a New
York Coty comeoy wrilttr
R 0 MILTOH BERl.FS
MAD. MAO WORLD OF
COMEDY
A look ~t tn• gr1.a1 lun11y
men ol all lime 1nctud•no
Butn$ ano Allen. LJul'&I
and H9'dy. CnatM' Ch"1
Mn. Groucho M.,.1t: -*'~
8@ony Fltp WijM>n, AbbOll
ano Costelto. Steve A~
w C Fie!Os end 1n1e<v1_.
''"'" IOC> come<111ns hJ30 0) NEWS
Q) IHOEPEHDENT
NETWORK NEWS £D tNOEPEHOEHT EYE
THE YEAR OF THE
04SA8LED P£R80N CD ODYSSEY
Maste<s Of Metal New
Oating teciln1ques used by
a"riaeotog1111 1n Europe
riave tedteally alle•ed lht1
<><!IS con<;ernong the Oevei
opment ot "'4tlat tecrinotO·
gy t.J
C MOVIE
• • • W1ae 81ood
( 19801 Brad Oourif Amy
Wright An emouonally
oetectoed ptl'athet con
tends with a nandlul >f
peo()le ..Ch Of whom
won11 10 esptOft him IC>< 11
d•lfe•ent 1eason PG
S THE WACKY WORLD
OF JOHATMAN WINTERS
Gues1 Wayne Newton
11:00 IJ 0 D lfOJ ll9I
HEWS 0 SATVAOAY HIGHT
Host RtClle•d &en1am1n
Guest Rockie L .. JONS
iJ PAUL HOGAH
0) THE JEff£RS()H8
George has • cnance 10
NII his t>usinea
Cl) 8EHNY Hill
Benny goes on taf1r1
fl) OO<CAVETT
GUflSI P11t1et1 Neal
H MOVIE * • fl "Th& 81ue Lagoon
Only the title small • IS
By JE RRY BUCK
"" T•lnk.., Writ ...
LOS ANGELES The only Lhing s mall
about tonight's CBS movie "A Small Killing" 1s
the tit~.
You not only get gruff Ed Asner as a
detective working undercover as a s kid row
derelict. but you get Jean Simmons as a college
professor masquerading as a bag lady Plus,
you get a cracker Jack s uspense story and a
nice little love s tory lo boot.
Asner is a narcotics officer trying lo gel th.e
goods on a dealer who uses bag ladies as
··m ules" to deliver Lhe drugs. Miss Simmons is
doing research into the problems of the elderly,
and develops a friendship with a bag lady
played by Sylvia Sidney After the bag lady is
mur dered, the viewer learns she has been a
mule.
MUCH AGAI NST Asner's wis hes, Miss
SI m mons doffs he r c hic attire for the
band-me-downs or a bag lady and seu herself
up as a decoy. Asner scoffs at lhe idea she can
help the lnvesttaation, but soon oomet around. tn t he end, she enllst1 the ·aid of 1 most
improbable PQSSe to wind up the cue.
The movie ... filmed around Jllkt row in
t ot Anaetes. I mmediately 1fl1r A•ner
eompllltd work oa his ca.c; series ·'to. Orut"
MtHMOll.
AllWr hU pla,ed polk emftl before. He and
Barbara Stanwyck did an • .,... or ''Tile
Untouchabl•" u • ~ble .......,, ..n.. It
didn't in*e It. He••• CIA diirbl "WnilllM
Affair ... And he was on t>oltce Story" three
limes, including the pilot.
"BUT THIS IS the first time I 've played an
undercover cop.'· he said ... And the grunginess
1s new Out on the s treets whea::e we were
filming. I was sometimes mistaken for a real
derelict One thing I li ke about this picture is
that it shows a public servant who will go to
great lengths to get the job done.
.. And there's humor in the script and In his
lime Humphrey Bogart would have done tt like
a king. You can almost say the story has an
·African Queen· situa tion to it. ..
Asner's character is something or a loser.
His wife left him for a lifeguard. which is sort of
twis ting the knife.
But Asner himself Is no loser. Just two days
before the in terview. he was elected president
of the Screen Actors Guild. And his portrayal of
Lou Grant, first on "The Mary .Tyler Moore
Show" and now on his own series, ha!I made
him one of television's most popular actor11.
Sex movie topic
HOUYWOOD <AP> -"The Joy of Sex,"
Dr. Alex Com for t '1 tuustrate d 1 ulde to
unhabJbti.d p.leuu.re, Is National Lampoon'• l9tat .aovAe venture. lllm producer Matty Slmma111 U. coannned.
Tbe IDOYM dlvillon of the naUonal monthly humor ma11a1ne I• producing the film In
eaejiiM:tian with Paramount Pictures.
\
TUBE TOPPERS
KN BC I) "Daffy Duck 's
T hanks -for·1ivlng Special." Daffy Duck
dt!vises scheme to allow has tans to
thank him for all he'~ done for them.
KNBC 1J 8:00 "The Berenstain
Bears Meet Bigpaw." Overblown legend
oversh udows the Berenstuin Bear
Family's holiday
KNXT f} 9 :00 "A Small Killing."
Premiere showing of a movie starring
Ed Asner and Jean Sammons.
KAB & 10:00 "Hart to Hart."
An eccentric art collector wants to a dd
Jennifer to hi s collect1on
( t9801 Brooke Sh1t1<1•
Cht1>topher Aikin• T.,.o
cri1tdren asp;weflce th•
pangs or 11111 tovt wll1l11
d111eovering hie and 811411
otht• alter lht1y "'"
1n1pw1eclleO IOQetner On ii
deStlttOO 11tano R
$1MOVIE
• • ', v1v,) Las Vegaa
1 t964) Eh11s Presley Ann
Marg•et A la• Veges
.sw1mrn1nQ 1n~lruc tor
1>ecomos lht' ob1U<;t ol
alltoellon tot 1.1 sport~ c.111
nut eno h" 11.111on lt1otnd
0 JUOY COLLINS IN
CONCERT
JuOy Colhn• 1s i<><n4'<1 by
the Hamt1ton SymphOny
O•cnes1ra ;110 Roy Rogo
,in in 11>1s 'old ou1 IHI'
lorman"' l&f'ed hve neur
T0ton10
Z MOVIE
• fl•, Ttli! Great McGn
nagall Spike Milligan
Peter Sellers Woll1am
McGonag .. JI IS lhe wOf'IO s
worst poet yet "" •ettms
to find todde• 1or his P""
evetywhert
11:30 8 CJ) ALICE v.,a statll Oahng a mot11
Clan tR)
0 Qt TOfilOHT
Host Johnny C11"011
Guests Oav1d B111n11&•
Juliet Prow~ D o:ll A8C NEWS
HIOHTUHE 0 8E8T OF GROUCHO
0) THE 000 COOPL.E
re11• ~ 9randlat,,.1 '°'"°
OUI by his wile oecau•fl Of
n15 ;nsane fcalOlJSy otr•¥e\
II lllS gr.and.on I Plrl ,,,.,,,
Q) SANFORD AHO SON
Fted tells I WOtld Wit II
'10ty 10 nit ijrandM>O I l
be fD KCET NEWS8EAT CD CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS
0 MOVIE
• • Tne N1bbl .. rs I t9791
I yd1a Sh•mf' A •nu~t;,1110
tnTrOduc.es ~"' wife 10 hit
m1Slrft$S,. trlf' re-suit ~ fun
anrt garN:> u " mn\ag"
pa•IO< k
-MIDHIGHT-
12:00 U MOVIE
• • "' Blflff Of Noon (fO•H I WHll•m HOid.,,
..... ,,., B•·••r 1-ou• ~•uni "' ef• IP.Aw,. i '-;ur .., ' 1f
O•der to ti;in~r,.c.rt thl' U 'i
ma11
0 110 FANTASY ISLAND
Mr Ro.at~t mart•• thr
bof!8ufllut .,,.,,,,, ,,., nt t••·
d1Aa""' (RI 0 MOVIE
• • Lhato !. l J,r d
t t9721 c.11 .. 11.,. 810,.,~1
Jae~ Pll•nc•· Altet lhl'
C1v1t Wtu memtwra. n• ;.e
bl00dlll11sty posse •1.llkmQ
8 llAll·l>feed kolief Sllr1 k~I
•no one .inotl'W'r
0) MIKE DOUGLAS
Coriosl A"OHIP < roocri
Gu .. sts Rf Pd R .. m1;0
Jes~ o..on t.uy & R.;1n.•
Q) ROOt<IES
For~t a 1ou9h carPf" ~op
1a•e~ S tO 000 ••om Ille
M:-ol I robl>efV
fI) EXPLOAING
LANGUAGE: THINKING.
WRITING,
COMMUNICATING
@ MOVIE
fl • •, Escape F•om Alea·
ltaz ( 111791 Chnt East·
wood Patrlek McGOOhan
A llardeneo convict.
retutn11<1 •lie• h11 llrat
esc.ape trom 'tile Rock '
p11n1 tO bre•~ oot 1ga1n
'PG
12:061)11 1 MCCLOUD
MCCioud travel• 10 Avtlfl
11" 10 lhwarl th" Ne"' York
moo • plan to 1nhlt"la
Sydnvy
12:30 0 ~~TOMORROW
Guest• Trie Ca11 G10t1a
Swant.On
fl!) CONTEMPORARY
HEAL TH ISSUES
The Nutrition G11p
C MOVIE
• • • • Time Aller Time
t t91~) Malcolm McDo .. 911,
Oa¥1d Warne< HG Wells
chasM the 1nf1mous Jaek
1"6 R1ppet ltom VtC10t1an
Londo11 10 modern-dey
S.in Frttnc1sco through the
use ot-" hme machine
PG
S MOVIE
• •, Fo.e• 119801
JoOie r osier Sally Kellt1t
m.;n The v1c11m' or bf<>l<tlO
nom"• ano uncaring Pat
.,,.., tour teen-age girts hy
to ooolhe lht111 emotional
wound• througn dr"9S 11n11
St!A R
12:36 Z MOVIE
e • '• Tne Outs1d11t
I 19781 Ster11n9 Hayden
C•a•o Wasson A young
1de.;hs1 t1ave1s ro Norttletn
lt&land 10 10.n 1ne itruggle
•or •rioependence R
12:45 H MOVIE
• • , F OOlir Around
t 1980) Gary 8uuy
Annette 0 Too•• A natvo
coun11y boy ft11lS to win a
beau11tur soph1S11cated
colleQI!! coed .iway ltom
her snot:>t>tsh hence and
ncr ttqually uppity lamoly
PG
1-00 0) COll.EGE FOOTBALL
Notte Dame d Penn Stal.,
Q) INDEPENDENT
HE'TWOAK HEWS
t 100 MOVIE
• • 8tac1' Gunn
( 197:?1 Jim Brown Merton
t..ancsau tn an 111emp1 to
ptOVt<lfll suppott tor a moll
11ri11ic. band or blac:l\s. a
qroup ol Voetnam veteom•
10b 8 bool\ie 10.nl
tO NEWS
130Q) MOVIE
• • • The S111pper
1 t%Jr Jo .. nn•• WOOdwara
R1chord Beyme• Af111r
''"y1ng in a small •own to•
• bttel oe•oOd 01 1ime an
ea• c.trn1val star OK•OM to
move and atart ov"'
UiOO MOVIE
• I> ' Hitler t 11162) Ri<:h
a•d Basenart M8ft0 Emo
A psycholog~al 1nterpui1a
hon I~ go;en 10 H1t1e1"s t1n&J
d•y~ or po-holed up in
a bun~ ... IO<trHS ""'h h1S
m•atres.Ji
2-00 0 ENTERTAINMENT
TOHIOHT
A,, 1nterv-.ew w ith Lon•
And"'"""
JOHN DARLING
i!=tlW r,::, dOCUl!Mllll81y iOOl>I •I
tfl. ptltOn of AICllt Ill uol NIWI l:IO NtWt
ICIMOVll
• • ·~ "'How ro a.11 rn.
Hlgll Cott 01 living'
( 197111 ivlMI h!ftt J-.
JfflJCJI L... No longet
able to kM(> up wHh lnlla
11011 th••• O•eoon
houNWtvet t1Hn 10 la.tc.t'ly
IO 1>41tenc;.e thetf ~II
1'0'
{f ) llZAJUll ICIH
JOM iynet ahoWt you
HllllQt ettengei thall ltuth,
latgtr then Ille. and IMllet
tri11n enythlllQ you've eve<
~ tn t""41 at1c0te P'"'
en11uon1 lrQtn the SllOW
111n11 a11ttr• hb<ary
O MC>VIE • * • * Cn1na1own"
111174) Jack N1Ch011on
Faye Dunaway Du11ng the
tll30t. a p<1va1e 08lt1Chve
1n11Mt1Q11" • c... '"'' t WNla I lt8tl ol COttUP.
li()n '-1 Ind mutdlt R 2:~0 HfW9
2:46 ( Z I MOVIE
• • ·Give Har The Moon"
( 11170) Marthe Kellet, Seti
Convy A , tCll Ame<ICan
lndu11r1at11t. vacett0nlt\Q In
Europe, compllca1e1
ev.,yone ·1 Ille when '"
decldeS to metry a w1n11ar
ot 1 v1111ge beeu1y
Pl)QHnl G
2:64 fJ MOVIE
I fl fl TM Man Who
Coold Talk To Kids I 19731
Peter Boyle Robert Reed
3:00 0) MoVIE
fl fl * M8j0t Du11dN
I tff5) Ch••lton Heston
Richard Haws
$ THE WACltCY WOALO
OF JONATH.AH WINTERS
Guest Wayne N-ton
3:30 S MOVIE
"' • • '' Tile China Syn
d•ome 119711) Jacl< Ldm-
mon Jane Fonda Mte:hael
Douglas An amb1l1ou1
telev111on reportet 116•
suedes a con1c11nce·
srrlcioen engineer 10 aid
he< 1n "8f ell0<1S to Otelk
a m.a10< st0<y on an <M:c1
dent at a nuc1ea1 powet
pt1n1 PG
3:45 U MOVIE
• • ' MAil From Cauo
I 1954) George Raft Gian.
ne C9tla Canale
4:20 Z MOVIE * Ill • Smol<ey An<J Th•
BanO•t II' 11980) Bun Rey-
nold• Jackie Gleason
Sn.rill Bul0<d T Juatice
ca.It~ m ru1 two taw"'an
l>fothets to slop a retired
boollegger tne Bano11
ftom "~OO<•"'O a beby
elephant PG
4:30 C MOVIE * • ' , J•11noose Rock
119571 Elvis Ptestey Judy
l y•er A yoong pr1sone<
M!lrns 10 ptay the gu•te•
1.1no aller h•' releaM!
1.llmb1 to ~taroom
Wedne•dafl'•
Da111 i •r Mot"lr•
~MORf--
7 30 C • * • Advenc.e To
TM Rea• I 19641 G~n
Foro Stella Stevens wr..en
a company ol Union sol
O•et' rs Oeta118cl 10 Quard a
gold s/'lopment Ill(' capta•n
ta115 lo< a female Conted
ef•le spy
8:00 S • • • Some1h1ng 01
Value ( 19S7) Rock Huo
son Dana Wyntet Tiie v•O·
tenet! encounte•l!d by •
peacemaker turns him 1n10
a ~er ol venoeance
0 • • Breaking Glass
11980) HaLel 0 Connor
Phil Oan1el5 A B•msn punk
POV Star s lttestylt Ullt
ma1ety leads to 11~y
PG
t:30 Q) • "' Ja11 Busters
119551 Leo G0<cey Hunt1
Hall
C • • le•o ToSoty
01,,f'n McG1v<n Den1M
Hldl•~ ·~ ctt110tNd ma11. n.di"O
money '°' ellmonv pey·
inentt ... tllOed wjlh recioe-
~ I Walla CM COll-
1~ • dMd body ..
pwt Of 1111 new p.t(tlllt"'/9
will! 1 16-yett-oid girt
•It()'
tO'GC>ll l • * * Tl!e llYe
l-ooon" ( 1M01 Brooll•
Stol•ldl. Ohtlatoplle•
AUUnl Two Cihlld~ •• ,,..
rlenU I he P"'O' Of tltel
love wNle ditc0¥«1ng "'' 8nd HCh Othet lh .. they
are 111\lpwt&Cked together"
on• ~1.a 111ano 'R
•·· )11e-..-.1 Men In Th41 w .. 1 ( 111111)
CllarlM Btooeon. l " Ma•·
"'" Two ootlawt theta a
hatted '°' ..en other ano
1 to... 01 doubi.-d .. hng
10:30 41) * • Sant• F•
Stamped• ( 111381 JOl\n
Weyne Ray Cor•io•n
11:00 0 * * · 0...l>ec ( 1115 I I
COf'1nne C:elvet. JOl\n 9.,.
1ym0f• Jr
11:3()1 C * • 11 8howt111 Juoc·
hon 11115&1 Ava GttOnet
Stawetl Gt1ng1r An
Anglo-lnd11n girl 111r1ng on
Plllustan e•pet"""8 an
ldenllly ct• ... u Ille strug-
glH to'°'' out ner nstion·
el 10y•llte1
12:00 0) * * '» Impasse
1111611) Bu•t Reynold•
Anne Franc11
Q) fl e •, ··My Dear Secre-
tary' ( t948l Laraine Oay
K11k Douglas
0 fl*'• FteakyFrlday
1111771 JOOll f'oalet Bet·
bar• Harrrs The w0<IO ••
1urned upl•d.,.do..n 10< a
motnet eno Oaughl., whO
m1gic1lly 1W11ch l>OOiet
one latelul dly 'G'
Z1 * * "\ "Th9 OutllOer"
t t978) Ste1t1no Heyden
Cr81Q Wasson A youno
1de1hst 11ave1S to NOflhem
Ireland to 101n 1ne $lruogle
fOf' independence R
1:00 S fl • • Som.thing 01
Value ( 11157) Roel< HuO-
•on Oana Wyn1e1 The ••O-
leoce enc:ounteted by a
peecemaker turns him 1n10
1 -'<er of vengeance
1·30 C e * * 'The Big Red
One ( 19801 lee MINIM
Man. Hamill A 1ouoto A•my
C411getnt leads IOUt Y°""9
rnexpeuenc:eo recru11S into
the viote<'ICe·lllled Irey or
World Wit II combat 'PG
2'°° 0 * * LOOC)hOle'" Albe<'!
FtnNy M1rt1n S'-! Ten·
a.on bu<ldl 10 • &NlltlrfOO
c11mu •mono the mem-
bers of • g•"fl WhO ate
plen"'ng 10 e1<ecu1e an
elaborate bank rObt>ery
from the_,. b4!1ow lhfl
streetl or LOf'ldon PG
2:10 2 * • * A Sense O!
Lou I 111721 Documentary
This ekatn•n•hon ol lht!
pol1tic•I prOOlems OI mOO-
e<n lretano attempis 10
ma_ke the issues 1nwotveo
unde<ll~abte in huma"
tltfms
3:30 0 fl "'•, Valdet 11 Com-
ing I 197 I I Bufl Lan<Hll!<
Susan Clar•
C • • , B1ac:k Beauty
t 19461 Mona Fteeman -
Rte:hlld 09nNng 8...0
on the story by Anna
Sewell A r>tOUO a.no a-
somely Oeautllul horsl!!
••oe•~es man orverse
ovirnets
$ * e '' Hurtly FO< ~t
ty Boop t 1980) Animated
llO<Ce of Tommy Smothert
S.11y gels 1n10 pot.tic• and
lighls IO< womens rtgnts
PG
4:26 l • * * fl Ordinary
People' (19801 Mary Tylet
M00<e Donald Sulhetllnd
A gu1ll.,ldden IMfl~
lr)'ll'l9 to put his kl• l>ac:ll
1~ther elter ll1s bfol,_ s
oea"' ano "'' own t<HetOe a11empt •etc'-oot to hos
c:omptecent fatht!t and his
cold ·-vol!'<! motllet R ':'° 0 fl • • • n-. SP<"' or
St lOU•S t t9S71 Ja~
Stewart Murray H111ntllon
In 1927 Chartes A Lind·
1>ergh 1>eeomes lllf! lttsl
man to lly nonst~ across
the At1an1~ Ocean to p.,.
1S
by Armstrong & Batluk
tF '1'.>U'D LIKE COPIE S OF THE ~CIPES l='OR PRE~tt-6 A HOLi PAY IUR KE'f ~HAI VOU"-IE.
5€EN MERE. TODAY, WE'LL eE1 G LAO -ro SEND ~EM ~ YOU.
SIM PLY SEND A 5eLF-ADDR~D
5TAMPEO et~
'"TO 'TURKEY.' IN CARE O~ =n:l1~ STATION .•.
r
!
.............
UNDERCOVER COP F.d Asner plays a
narcotics ofnccr who goes underground to
get the goods on a d r ug dealer ln ··A Small
Killing .. at 9 tooaa b.l on KNXT <~>·
I '
Farrah to star
LOS ANGELES <AP> Several writers are
pre parin~ scripts and concepts for a new ABC
series starring Farrah Fawcett, the actress who
r reated a sensation five years ago in her
t'O starring role in "Charlie's An gels."
MGM Television s pokesman Bill Barron
said recently that Miss Fawcett has a firm
13-week commitment from ABC with selection
of the final concept to be made by the actrm,
her repr~entatives and MGM Television. 1 ~
In "Charlie's Angels,·· which debuted on
ABC in 1976. Miss Fawcett played one of thra.
beautiful private detectives The others, at firs),
we re Kate Jackson and Jaclyn Smith. •
Miss Fawcett left at the end of the fi rst ye~~
ufle r a contract dispute with the s how ~
producers A court settlement of her contra,qJ
required her to make guest appearances in 11i~
episodes of the series.
I•
I 'Simon' premieres
< A P l C BS o H e r s an o l h e r n e'w
c r i m e · s o I v I n g p a tr L o n l a h l i n t tf.'t
edvcnture-dram a set les debut or "Simon i
SI mon. · · But these ct.tectlve brllt.Mra, dlff erftt
as nltbl a nd day, are 1\rictly nm-ol·U.mill
fare.
Jameaoa Parker la wooden• the cl•• nr;
button-down brother, wbla. OWnld MdM)lf
brlDll 1 comic t.oudl to lbe _. *'-_,. •
aDd ahowerlnf with women. . I ~
T.a,,.t•a pUot II aloW~ U. ..
laleat In tMa buly IMIOB ol Crl•....,. II ... llli...,. -. like .. ......,........ o
. '-
Dally Pilot
TUESDAY, NOV. 24, 1981
COMI CS CS
CLASSI F l ED CB
He wasn't well received
Despite anonymity, Young became one of OCC's best
By JOHN SEVANO
Of U-e Dailw ~illol SIMI
The year is 1967 and Doug Young all 5·6, 125 pounds or
him is about to enter his junior year at Corona del Mar
High.
After playing two years for the Sea
Kings' C football team, Young figured to
progress one notch higher to the B's
"I would have, too," remembered the
former wide receiver the other day, "but
they had a coach there that was 10 limes
wor se than George Allen.
"IF HIS TEAMS LOST, they would
practice for two hours afterwards And, ar
a player fell he could start over someone
else, he had these ·challenges· whereby
the two players would go to the sidelines
and fight (literally I for the po:.alion
Whoever won was first string ·
Quickly sizing up the situation, Young
went to varsity coach Dave Holland
then in his first vear and asked if there
was anyway he could sidestep the a·~ and
JUmp to the bag club
"I told him I'd do whatever he wanted if
I could play varsity.·· he added
Well. as things turned out. Holland
allowed Young to remain with the varsit y
squad, although instant stardom was nol J >uiu; ) ,,11111,
part or the package
IN FACT. YO UNG 'S presence as a Junior <ind :.enaor was
so obscure, at v.ould probably be difficult for Holland to
recall today Just what pos1t1ons Young played
For the record. Young was a third .. tring quarterback as
<i JUntor and a win~back as a senior
"I maybe saw the ball four lime!. a gam e ... s aid Young
of his senior season "I caught a rew passes and ran the ball a bat."
But that was it There were no headhne:.. no fanfare no
bright light:.
Young wouldn 't give up, though II wasn't in his nalUre
He took the summer orr to go lo Europe and then cntolled
at Golden West Co llege upon his return
AGAIN, HOW EVER. things d1dn t clack for the scra't\ny
wide receiver .
"By the lime I reported to pral'ttc•e thl•\ already had
issued their uniform:. They dadn t e\ en ha\ e one left that
rat me. I was also a couple of days tale and they didn't
treat me very well."
So Young left and enrolled at Orange Coast. wht>re he 1-UI
out the year to work himself bac k into shape.
Finally. in 1970. at all came together
After years of battling, struggling und
fighting, the 5·8, 140-pounder reaped the
rewards of h.is tenac·aty
Young finished the season for the
Pirates with 43 receptions for 474 yards
and ri ve touchdowns a total which :.tall
ranks second in OCC's rt.·c·ord book for
wide receivers.
HIS NEXT SEASON he compiled 34
catches for 689 vards and seven Tl>:..
giving ham a two year total of 77
receptions for I, 163 yard:. and 12 TD!..
numbers that rank· him second on OC("s
all lame pass recel\ 1ng ltl>t
To Sa) lhe least. at was a s weet t·ouplt· of
years for Young. who never really did
anything in high school. and went on to
have a quiet college career
Young was pa rt M a potent one two
offensive punch featured b\ the Paralt'l> in
those days especial!) during his
sophomore year with St.:ve Monahan
I UC LAJ flanking the other side of the hne
or scrimmage and Alvin White t Oregon
Stale I at quarterba<.·k
T llE TRIO EASILY led the Pirates to the confe renn·
champ1ons h1p t wtth a 5·1 record, 7 2·1 overall ) and
into th playoffs. whe re they were upset by Santa Eosa on a
w(•t, soggy field.
·r was so s hort. I developed a quiet ft t'rreness 1ns1dr
me," said Young ·1 wanted lo :.how I WCI '> a:. good a'>
t.'\ erybody else
I w<is the kind of a person who would JUSl work h<1 rder
I re ally never thought or second placc ..
In c hara<.'ll•riiang his asset:.. Young said I w.il>
dc·fan1tely lacking in siz e. and I wasn·t super fast. but I was
t1uic k Ancl . when I got the ball I wouldn't drop at ·
WllAT YOlJNG DID DROP. however. following OCC was out of s ight
Oh. hl' went lo US l lJ and played as a Junior. but a ralltng
uut \o\-tth the coa<.'h al the end of the season µrompted
Young to forego has final year
"ll was runny. but m y coache-. did a hellu\ a good JOb or
d1s1llus111ning me. :.aid Young We we re romething hkc
<See YOUNG, Page C2J
• ·UCl's mean old man 1s
CdM should challenge
for league basketball
croum, among others. C2
GLOOM IN ANAHEIM Tll1· l<.111i-. l-.1·111 1 ltll p..11111-o .i
-.oh:m11 p1<·t1111· :-.u1HIJ' .1111·1 H." \\ l't "< 11111).! ..... r; 'L11 d
ltl'ld ).!11,d 1111 lilt• l.1 :-.t pl.I\ til llh· )..!.inll' ).!0iH l ' S.111
Franl·1 .... c·11 .t .I.I .H '1t·t 111 '
soft at heart
Anteater UXlter polo coach in love with life; all else, the wins and _losses , is secondary
....
l
Will Elway
he Cal's
inew coach?
BERKELE Y t AP 1
U.oiversity of California Athletic
Director Dave Maggard says
that Cal received perm1ss1on
last week from San Jose Stale to
talk lo coach J ack Elway as a
possible repla~ement for Cal's
~pger Theder
·~M aggard fired Th e der
Mio n da y a fl er th e Be a r s·
l!eason-ending loss to Stanford.
and both Elway and former Cal
.quarterback Joe Kapp have
.11XJPressed interest in t he job.
noi'I do want to find out more
,,bout Cal. I'm interested ... s aid
Elway. ,
1111Elway's Sparta ns won the
f"a c i f i c C o a s t A t h I e t 1 c lt~sociation champions hip this
season, stand 8·2 going into its
Pmal regular-season game and
wiil play Toledo in the California
lY&wl game next month San
.Jase beat Cal 27·24 and also beat
a nother Pa c ifi c -10 team .
Stan f o rd , wh ose s t ar
quarterback is Elway·s son.
J ohn.
Maggard, who had promoted
V>eder from an assistant post
~ur years ago, said a leadership
9Pange was necessar y "in light Al t h e p a s t t w o y e a r s ·
p~rformance. · ·
He called Kapp "a very
~pique Individual with some ·~usual talents. I think they
~er it looking at.··
K a J> p , t h e s t a r t I n,g
.earterback on Cal's last Rose
tlOwl team, the 1958 squad, is
openly seeking the Job.
Many refer to him as the "mean old
man " And. upon first glance. Ed
Newland would appear to lave up to that UC IRVINE
players. and I respect lhem. I try to
g1\t.' them 100 percent and I think the)
_g,,·c me 100 percent an return
hike. physical fitness you name it
"I FEEL THE RE are four stc p'>
toward being s uc·t·cssful You have to
work hard. you havt' lo risk wha t you've
dune, you haH' to h:l\e '>elf conhdence
and yo u have to ha\e long and
short term goa b Too many of our
) oung p<."Opll' are not goal oncnted. and
that's wh\ thcv have such a hard time
athtcving. an) thing
billing. JOHN llis body is farm and tram. has "THERE ARE SO proft'ss1onab in
features are ha rd Al:.o. when he SEVANQ our sport. so I str ess to m) pl<1ycrs to l<.'arn c.1boul life 1-0 that the" <:an ~wan s peaks. there's a certain sureness and ,
strength in his voice. much like the one '\O mething for them:.clves That w a)
your hi gh school µnncipal probably Lhe\ II achieve something an the 1mts1dt•
had Those accomplts hments. however. "0 rld ··
\'es. exterior Iv. there 1-. a certain a re secondary to Newl and It ·s the N l'\\land ':. achievements are endle:.1>
meanness to Ne~·la nd , but beneath that people a nd the ex per1ences he In 27 year., as a coach, lhe SJ-yea r old .
c ru s t y o Id fr a m e I 1 cs a so rt . remembers The wins and losses., Well . who can probably do more situ pl> than
Newland fel'l s if therl' s one
1wrt1cular thing he·-. achieved. at s the
warm-hearted teacher who as in love they're 1us t a blur J al'k LaLanne. hgure~ he·s won more lhan 2,00Q games. Again. however. with hfe and has pla)ers "To me. athletics is the closest thing although impressive. the numberl>
ah1lit\ lo IO\l' and bl! l<ned
I reall) ft•l•I th..it s a un ique quality.
s :.avs Newland. ht" h<irdened fat·1al
fraturc'> suddcnl) t urning sort 1·m not
ashamed of bl•ing able to love people. or
to gel emotionally involved. or ki ss or
hug m~ players J do it all the lime
THIS YEAR MARKS the 16th an we have lo hfe ... says Newland ·1 aren't as important as the more than
which Newland ha:. been Lhe head water always tell m) kids that wan or lose. the 2,000 athletes he 's probably come in
polo coach at UC! During that span sun wall always shine the next day contact with
there have been 317 victories. countless That's why I like to say I teach. not I have a phtlosoph) for everything."
PCAA champ1ons h1ps. one NCAA title coach he explains. "I havc a philosophy for
and five second-place finishes. "I really like my players. all my the way I dres!>. the wav I nde ..i ~~~~~~....:..~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~_:_~~~~--'---'~~~~--=-~~~~~--=-~~
"I've> alwavs felt vou should hve b'r
l''<a mple Ir 1° want my playen; lo be rii .
ISPt-UC' IR\'l ~E . Page ('.1 >
APW.,._...,.
\tmnesota .'t 'i't'd Hrow11 1s pu~l1ed r11 grou11d hy 1\tla11ta s l:Juddy Curry m ,\t1mday 111yl11 ·' !JOltlt'
,.
Curry hot, and so
are the Falcons
....
ATLANTA t AP I Buddy
C urr~ said at wasn't the r1r-.t
tame he hart scored. "but never
has a touc hdo wn ml'ant so
much ..
Curry's score c a m e on a
35-yurd interception return wit h
only 4.06 rem aining, enabling
the Atlanta Falcons to edge the
Minnesota Vi kings 31 30 in a
bizarre, mistake prone Nataonal
Pootball Leagul' gam1· Monday
na g ht
"I d o n 't kn o w wha t
happe n e d ,·· the Fal co n s'
linebacker said "lie I Minnesota
quarterback Tommy Kramer>
threw a popup pass and I Just
Jumped up and got at ·
THE POPUP came because
Atlanta derensave end Jeff Yates
belted Kramer JUSl as he threw
the ball, making it flutter well
off t arget into the area Curry
was protecting.
Curry's touchdown put Atlanta
in front by 10 points and the
Falcons survived a safety and a
late touc hdown to s nap a
two-game los ing streak.
"We're our own wors t
e n e m y ," sa id Atlant a
quarterback Steve Bartkowski ,
who hurled three touchdown
passes, two In the second half,
after the Falcons had s puttered
through the first two quarters .
"We went out and responded
to the challe nge in the se~nd
half," Bartkowski added.
·'They eave us plenty of
opportunities to win and we
rl'tUrnl'd lhl• fa\'or. 1-atd Coach
flud Granl of thl• V1k1ng:. ·No
one guve anyone the game They
1u:.l played better ·
CURRY'S RETURN ga,·e the
F alc·on s a 31 2 1 lead a nd
1mmNhalely a fter Atlanta gave
up an intentional safely. Tommy
K r a m t• r h u r I e d h 1 s fo u rt h
touchdown pass or the game for
the Vikings, a 16-yarder to Joe
Senser with 1.07 left. to chop
Atl anta's margin to one point
Athanta recovered the ensuing
onside kick and ran out the
clock
Th<.' Falcons. traaltng 21 ·7 after
a la c klu s ter rir s t -half
pe rfo rmance in whi c h the
Vikings pa cked their defense
apart, got back in the gam e with
a swarming defense th~t shut
down Minnesota in the third
quarter. holding the Vikings to
only 15 yards .
Bartkowski cut the 14-point
halftime margin lo 21· 14 when
he connected with Junior Miller
on a 3-yard scoring pass on
Atlanta's first possession of the
second haJf.
BARTKOWSKI cam e tight
back three minutes later and
nailed Wallace Francis with a
29·Yard scoring toss that tied the 1ame with 7·24 left in lbe Wrd
Quarter.
A 32·Ylrc,1 field coal b)' llltk
LUC'khurlt put. A'''&~ ..
•lay early .... 9u.art.r
•
1
t
I I
j
' I I
!
f .
.1
'
• • !" .. • • ., -
• Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. November 24. 1981
ubble gum cards
blowing up in worth
From AP dispatches
CULVER CITY Once a form •
of currency among k ids who chewed
bubble gum, baseball cards are fast
becoming an Item or real value In the hands of
adult collectors.
With lhal in mind, hundreds of colleclors
turned out al the Pacifica Hotel In this Los
Angeles suburb for a weekend conveotion billed
as the "Southern California Baseball Card
Spectacular.''
Among them was collector Rich Motzkin,
17. of Woodland Hills. who was selling his
collection or 10,000 cards.
"People collect because it's a hobby that
everyone can do without any special
requirements," he said. ··1rs fun, interesting,
you learn a lot about basebatl .... and 1l's
wo rth money."
In 16-year·old Gregg GarCinkel 's
125,000-card collection is a 1963 Pele Rose rookie
card he said he paid $9S for. The high school
junior from Granada Hills keeps all his cards in
a s afe deposit box and has insured them
"lt started when the Wall Street Journal
mentioned baseball card collecting," said
David Soffer. 17, organizer of the t wo.day s how
Quote of the day
UCLA place-kicker Norm Johnson,
whose last-gasp 46-yard field goal attempt
was blocked, enabling Southern Cal to nip
the Bruins. 22-21, and cost them a berth in
the Rose Bowl: ·'The roses. 'The Rose
Bowl went through my head as I was
kicking the ball."
Allen heads Kodak All-America \
Quarterbackt Dan Marino ot 0
\op·rank d Pittsburgh 1nd Jim
McMahon or 8rl1t)am Vouna, 1lon1
with runnlna ba~k!i Ma.rcut Allen of USC and \
Herschel Wilker of Georala, head the 1981
Kodak All-America ft'ootball Team . . The
S7th East Webt Shrtne game wall give
Stanford's Andre Tyler, leading receiver In the
Pac ·IO last year. the only chance t-0 11howcase
his talents alter sitting out the !H?ason with a
broken root which Is nearly healed now
Tony Knap, football coi.ch al the University of
Nevada ( l,.as Vegas) for the past six yean,
reslJned, seylna he planned to retire and run an
apple orcl\ard ... University of Illinois football
coach Mike White will coach the collegiatt!
all·stars ol lhe north team during the Blue-Groy
game on Christmas Duy Starling middle
linebacker J oe Norman hus been lost to the
Seattle Seahawks for their final four regular
seas on games because or a knee injur y
Player, others convicted of fixing
NEW YORK -Former Boston m
college basketball pla)'er Rick Kuhn
and four other s were convicted
Monda~ of conspiracy to fix BC games in the
1!178-79 season to profit their betting syndicate.
The government said the five had conspired
to manipulate the scores of Bos ton College
games so members of the group could beat the
boQkmakers' point spreads in belling.
Con vi c ted or cons piracy to commit
racketeer ing and sport bribery and violation of
the Travel Act were Kuhn, 26. of Swissvale,
Pa ; brothers Anthony and Rocco Perla, of
Braddock Hills. Pa., Paul Mazzei of Pittsburgh
and James Burke of New York City
Ai> the verdic ts we re read by the he ad of the
eight-woman, four· man jury in Brooklyn federal
~ourt, relatives or the defenda nts cried or ..
placed their hands to their races. Kuhn's father.
Frederick, said he had no comment.
Prosecutor Edward McDonald, a forme r
basketball player for BC in his fres hman year ,
s aid the verdicts we re ··satisfactory to the
government."
The defense ~ttorneys said they would
appe al the verdict.
U.S. District Judge He nry Bramwell set
Jan. 8, 1982 as the sente ncing date. The
de fe ndants could receive a maximum or 30
years in prison and $45.000 in fines.
The Al l-Berblck fight must go on
NEW YORK It will take "an ti.I uct of God" to atop Muhammad All's
com eback flllhl in the Bahamas next
month rrom toking place, accordlng to the ead
o r lh6 compony promoting the bout
All wus paid Monday as scheduled for hlJ
Dec 11 bout aaainst Trevor Bcrblck, aald
J a m ei. Cornet iu!J , pru id ent of Sporl a
lntcrnuttonuh.i Ltd .. the promoter.
There have been rumors that the fltchl,
scheduled for Dec 11 at Nussau, would not be
held
"lt 's been in u rocky position from day
o ne.·· Cornelius acknowledged In a telephone
interview from Nassau "But we stood firm,
and All's standing firmly OOhlnd us. Ali has
been in Nassau s ince Sept. 21 . and lil this
point in time it would take an act of God 1r th~
fight didn't go on ."
Aaron, Robinson go for last honor
Home run champ Henry Aaron •
and two-league Mo~t Valuable Player
Frank Robinson head the list of
fi rs t ·time candidates whole names will be
placed on the 1982 ballot for entry to baseball's
Hall of Fame ... The Kansas City Royals
scored two runs in each of the last two innings
and blanked the Yomluri Giants en route to an
8-0 victory in the final game of the American
League's 3'12-week Japanese exhibition tour ...
Trac k star Sebasllan Coe, who holds two world
records, was voted Britain's Sportsman of the
Year for the third straight time ... Glenn
Anderson scored three goals and added an
as1sist and linemate Matti Hagman also had a
ro ur-point night to pace Edmonton to an 8-4
victory over Detroit in the only National Hockey
League g ame . . Dan Roundfleld, the power
forward who led the Atlanta Hawks lo three
wins last week, was named Player of the Week
in the National Basketball Association ...
Mathews Motshwarateu and his teammates
captured five or the top eight spots as the
University of Texas (El Paso> on its fourth
straight NCAA cross country championship
Television, radio
TV: Football Notre Dame vs. Penn State.
I a .m ., Channel 11 Taped Saturday
RADIO: Basketball Lakers at Dallas, 6
pm . KLAC 1570 1
.
Sea KingS
to repeat?
Sea View balanced -Errion
By EQZINTEL
Of .. o.ily ...........
Corona del Mar High basketball coa.ch Jack
Errion, who last year guided hh1 team to a CIF 3-A
title, jwn laughs when it's suggested to him that
the Sea Kings might be the heavy favorites to win
another Sea View League title in 1981·82.
"I don't know how anyone can consider us big
favorites," the veteran coach says. "This league Is
so good now, anything can happen."
That seems to be the case as the expanded
eight-team league shapes up for the new season,
beginning thls week.
Corona del Mar figures to once again make a
s trong bid for a league title, despite the graduation
of some key performers off last year's team.
But the Sea Kings will get a good challenge
BASKETBALL
from Costa Mes a which has two top players
returning and plenty or depth and .Es tancia which
has an all-league first team guard back to lead the
offe nse.
Newport Harbor.
new to the league this
year, and Univer s ity,
both have Cl F playoff
berths in m ind whale
Irvine, El Toro and
n e w ly added
Saddleback also presen~
a challenge.
In s hor t, the Sea
View League should be
one of Orange County 's
all-around best with
ba I a nee from top to
bottom.
Here 's how lht!
teams shape up.
Big plays weren't enough for CdM Corona del Ma r .Juck 1-;iuu1t
With the loss to graduation of all-Cl F performers
Jeff Pries and Mark Spinn. Ernon says that the
Sea Kings will re ly more on balance this year
Yonkers, Lara, Case.almost triggered CIF upset over highly-touted Doumey THE DEFENDING CJF 3-A champion Sea
Kings have a strong pair of guards in senior Chris
Lynch and junior Mike Hess along with able
back·up in Dave Vansteenhuyse. a junior Some big plays carried Manna High's Vikings
and the Fountain Valley Barons into the CIF Big
Five Conference football playoffs last week, but
three others by Corona del Mar stars didn't quite
get the Sea Kings enough against top·seeded
Downey in the CI F Southern Conference
elam inallons.
Nevertheless. the dis tance.going plays <>f Ken
Yonkers l79 yards>. Joe Lara !64 yards> and J eff
Case (52 yards> with passes from Eric Woods
won 't soon be fo r gotten by Downey, whic h
survived a major upset with a last.ditch field goal
to prevail, 24·21
Fountain Valley's Joel Seay stunned Del Rey
League champion Sl. John Bosco wilh a 64-yard
dash with a pass on the Barons' first pass play of
the nig ht, while the week's topper was a 91-yard
touchdown pass from Manna's Ken Laszlo to Jeff
Frandsen
The V1kin gi.. also pos ted a S8·yarder. as
sophomore Era(' Ka rman. in his rtrst varsity
competition . broke a touchdown run
(Last week 's big plays of SO yards or more>
91 J eff Frandsen f Manna 1. TO pass rrom
Laszlo
79-Ken Yonkers 1Corona del MarJ, TD pass
from Enc Woods
78 Joe La ra <Corona dt!I Man, TO pass from
Enc Woods
64 J oel Seay I Fountain Valley >, TO pass
from Matt Stevens
5S Eric Karman (Marina 1, TO run
Seay Yonkers Lara
57 Bre tl Trickett (El Torol. TD run with rumble
52 Jetr Case <Corona del Mar 1. TD pass from
Eric Woods
Season
99 Ric hard Aguirre I Mater Dei>. 98 Seay
1 Fountain Valley l , 96 Mike Fiscus (University 1.
91 Jeff Frandsen <Manna 1. 90 Onassis Nixon
t Costa Mesa 1. 87 J ohn Moreland {Woodbridge,,
84 Dave Geroux <Edison 1. 82 Todd Will iams I E l
Toro 1; 81 Kevin Mc Den non (Laguna Beac h I :
80 Lance M art1n I Corona del Man , 79-Kennedy
Pola c Mater De1 1 2. Ken Yonkers (Co rona del
Man ; 78 Joe Lara <Corona del Mari. 76 -Mark
Bondi tlrvme1, Greg Locy I Maler Dei 1. Joe Lara
<Corona del Mar 1. 75 Charlie Brown <Mission
V1eJo >; 74 Onassis Nixon <Costa Mesa 1: 73-Scott
Slier <Huntington>. 72 Jeff Frandsen (Marina 1:
71 Greg Locy <Ma ter De11. Rod Emery
c Fountain Valley 1. Rudy FiRueroa 1Woodbridge1.
From Page C t
YOUNG • • •
Marina High St hoot 1s enjoying one or those years to
remember with its 10·1 football record and CIF Big Five
Conference second round berth a gainst Bishop Amal
Friday.
5-4 m y junior year a nd they
expected us to be better The
coaches blamed the season on
lhe players, and I didn't like thal
very much."
F ootball n ever figured
prominently into Young's future.
any way , so rather than
compromise his beliefs and
principles. he decided to leave
lhe ~ame
And wide receiver Jeff Frandsen, a 5-10, 155·pound
senior. e pitomizes the Vikings ' sterling campaign, having
caught 41 passes for yards for a dozen touchdowns
His performance in Marina's 33·7 walloping or West
Covina. seven catches for 227 yards.
including touchdown passes covering 91
and 39 yards, earns him the Daily
Pilot's Player o f the Week laurels for
the Orange Coas t are'!. .
Quarte rback Ken Las zlo went lo the
air 10 times against West Covina and all
seven o f his complel1ons were to
Frandsen.
The 227 yards earned amounts to a
JS.6 yards per catch average, which
s hoves Frandsen's season average up to ~·rand.ten
24.7 yards per catch.
For the season the Vikings' star has se<>re4_ on
plays covering 91. 72, 67, 58, 47, 39, 39, 36, 34, and 32 yards
-exemplifying his big play ability.
Additionally, Frandsen is Marina's threat on kick
r eturns and has scored twice with two-point runs as the
place-kick holder on PA Ts.
EMROU.MOW
CoHfonfo Gotf'a ,.,... a... ... P'rCMJ'Cllft
SAM JOA9UIN GOLF
COt,IRSE
FREE LESSONS with
PURCHASE OF '20°0
DISCOUNT
RANGE CARD
Present this ad and recetve 3 Fr
L-.. Trevino Balll ~you enroll.
To 111ri11CCIII151·1522
Today. Young, 30, works for
the Our Gang Arts and Crafts
establishment in Newport Beach
as a sc ulptor. The firm
s pecializes in dragons. castles
a nd wizards. with the la tter
being Young's s pecialty.
ll 's been a decade now since
Young enjoyed his two most
prospe rous seasons as a player.
yet the m emories are sti ll
etched in his mind.
"It was fun ," recalled Young.
who then turned to the present
and added, "a nd, you know, l
still have good hands ...
•
69 Herbie Campbell (Westmins ter >, Rudy
Figueroa I Woodbridge 1. 68-Ron Malers tein
1Manna >. Laszlo 1Marina1. Steve Sv1tenk9 t EI
Toro >. 67 J eff Frandsen t Marinal: 66 -'Mark
Bondi (Irvine>; 65-Brian Head <Costa Mesa >.
64 Bob Critchfield IM anna >. Joel .Seay I Fountain
Valley), 62-Greg Neff 1Marina1; 60 Ke nnedy
Pola (M ate r Dei >. H erbie Campbell
t Westminster >. Ray Urmson "'<E s tancia I:
S9 Mark Bondi t lrvine >; SS-Curt Wenzla rr
1 Estanc ia >. JeH Frandsen I Marina ). Campbell
<Westminster>. Eric Karman <Marina); S7 -Brett
Trickett c El Toro1: S6 Dan Blanck I Laguna
Hills 1, Rod Emery 1 Fountain Valley 1. Ken Laszlo
<Marina>. 55--0amon Sweazy tEI Toro>. St.eve
P a tterson (Corona del Mar), Dan Thompson
c Huntington I, Gil Ward !Harbor>. 54 -Joel Seay
1 Fountain Valley>, Kevan Beres I Mission Viejo 1,
52 Craig Rakhshan1 <Edison >. Todd Williams I El
Toro >. 2; Jere Case <Corona del Mar>: SI -Eddie
Nunes <Westmins ter I. Beddie Arabe <Laguna
Beach 1, Rudy Figueroa <Woodbndge>. 50 Kevin
Beres 1 M1 ss 1on V 1ejol, Eddie Nun es
1Westm1ru.ter1. Ball Brig ht <Corona del Mar>. Eric
Re inholtz I Ocean View l. J oel Sea y (Fountain
Valley 1. 2. John O'Callaghan I Edison >. Jeff
Ho lmes <Mission Viejo>. Todd Cage < Saddleback I
Last week's statistical leaders
Rushing
1 Damon Sweazy (El ToroJ, 27-155; 2. Tony
Valente c Manna 1. 9-89, 3 Rod Emery (Fountain
Valley>. 15·86, 4 Kennedy Pola (Mate r Oei>. 13-75.
Passing
l Matt Stevens <Fountain Valley>. 13·21-0, 250
... ards. 3 TDs : 2. Enc Woods cCorona del Mar>.
S-16· I, 230 yards. 3 TOs : 3. Ken Laszlo I Marina >.
7 10-0. 227 yards. 2 TDs. 4 J im McCah1ll
1 Estanc1a 1, 13·35 4. 196 yards , l TD. S Ken Major
1 Ed1son1. 13·31 ·0. 128 yards. I TD.
NFL standings
·'The guards should be our strong point
because the front hne net!ds experience.·· Errion
says. "The thing about this team 1s that the re are
no real superstars yet. That's not taking anything
away from them because there are some very
good players But I've been blessed with some
great ones 1n the past so this year 1s a b1l of a
different challenge "
Errion figures Lync h to be the m ain orrens1ve
punch after a good s ummer
Up front. Dirk Kincannon, a 6-312 senior . wall
take up the pivot. with Hank Goebel to step 1n with
football finished.
Garth Olson and Brad Hollings worth are
currently lhe forwards. Kurt Peterson, a senior,
was set to be a starting forward, however he broke
his thumb and 1s expected to be out another four
weeks or so
Ben Davis. up from the JV squad, figures to
see plenty or play ing tim e at guard
"I thank this wall be o ne of those leagues that'll
be competitive all the way through from game to
game." Errion says "Last year. we'd spurt from
time to time but we'll have to be more consistent
this season If we do. we'll be very compet1llve ."
COSTA MESA With two top starters from
last year (Ken Bardsley and Jim Pelichowski >.
plus three pa rt lime s t arters returning, the
Mustangs should challenge for the league title.
"This 1s potentially the best team I've coached
al Mesa," says Coach Tim Parse! ·In addition to
the returnees, we have some good players off the
JV team lo give us good depth "
Bardsley. an all·league forward with a 19.3
average in 1980 1s a three.year starter who,
according to Parse!, as one of the bette r all-around
players in the county.
Pelichowski, also a rront hne player . was last
vear's leading rebounder with a 7 S per game
<See SEA VIEW, Page C41
************* ! JOHNSON & SON · ! • • • p •
NATIONAL CONFERENCE AMERICAN CONFER ENCE • resents . . . •
Western Division Western Division • •
W L T PF PA Pts. W L T PF PA Pel. • •
San Francisco 9 3 0 270 214 750 Denver 8 4 0 241 194 .667 • •
Atlanta 6 6 o 328 253 .500 Kansas City 8 4 O 303 224 .667 « •
Rams 5 7 o 268 271 .417 San Diego 7 5 O 370 312 .583 • •
New Orleans 4 8 0 166 261 .333 Oakland 5 7 0 19S 239 417 • •
Eastern Division Seattle 4 8 0 209 289 .333 • •
Dallas 9 3 O 289 232 .750 Eastern Division • It
Philadelphia 9 3 o 297 172 .750 Miami 7 4 1 275 238 625 tr •
NY Giants 6 6 0 242 213 .500 NY Jets 7 4 1 26S 244 625 -tc it
St. Louis 5 7 o 248 327 .417 Buffalo 7 S O 237 209 .583 : Pete the .. Greek" :
Washington 5 7 o 250 294 417 New England 2 10 O 2S7 277 .167
Central Division Baltimore 1 11 0 209 412 083 • tt
Minnesota 1 s o 280 269 .583 Central Division tr NFL's •
Detroit 6 6 o 2'91 254 .500 Cincinnati 9 3 0. 330 224 .7SO • Picks of •
Tampa Bay 6 6 o 217 190 .500 P itts burgh 7 5 O 27S 229 .583 ! TL-W-A-:
Green Bay s 7 o 220 286 .417 Cleveland S 7 O 208 261 417 « mr ... It
Chicago 3 9 o 176 27S .250 Houston S 7 O 210 263 417 « •
1MNav'•1<-• THAHICSGllHG •
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' .
Orange Coatt DAILY PfLOT/Tuesday. November 24, 1981 ca
. Estancia has a sister act, too
O'Meara sisters net Eagles some big victories on the tennis court
By HOWARD L. HANDY
Of IN D.ily ...... lt1H
'1'hc:re'11 unother sister act on
the hlUh 1:1chool women's sports
lfl:l'n\' but thl11 tlmc. th~y both
1>luy ror the same school
Et.tunciu.
The O' Meara siste rs are
tennis players for the Eagles
under coaches Mark and Cheryl
llirtler and their t eam has
compiled an Impressive 22·0
ove rall a nd 14 ·0 Sea View
League record.
The Eatles wo n their rirst two·
CIF matchu and although they
are unseede d des pite their
record, could go a lon1 ways.
"We l<>1t in the quarterfinals
last year ln t he Cl F playoffs."
Mark /says. "But we only lost
one player from that team ...
This year's outfit Is paced by
sin g les playe r s Sus an and
Catherine O' Meara. Susan is a
sen ior while Cathe rine is a
freshman and Is No. 4 ranked in
Southern California. Sbe is also
nationally ranked In her age
division
In the recent Sea Vi ew League
individual championships, the
O'Meara sisters combined their
talents to play doubles for the
first time t his year. They
fini s h ed second but c ould
improve on that In the CIF
playoffs that are upcoming.
·'They grew up In Costa Mesa.
playing at Mesa Verde Country
Club," Hirtler says. "Catherine
plays in all national e vents but
Sus an is interested In other
~ ........... _,..__
S~ O'Meara bCl.8 hel~ E•ltJnda to.a 22-4 record.and halo tM U1lnil •mlfmal• thu JieOT.
Coast five, GWC meet tonight
This rivalry isn't as intense as its football counterpart
Whill· Golden Wet.t and
Orange Cousl colleges continue
their mten ... c football rivalry
Saturda~ night 1n the Soulh
<'oa'>l Conf Prcn ('e finale. the
..,C'hllols' b.iskcthall t eams go
hl·ad to head tonight in what.
ha!-.tcall~. as 1u s t another
pre scusnn l'onte..,l
·\l'l1on b<•gins at i 30 m the
O('l' J:\m and each team
c·an it·.., ,, I 11 record into the
1·onll':-.I Ot'C disposed of Rio
llondo, li11 5!1 in cHert1mc Friday
111 ghl "lull' Coldt•n West lopped r u 11 t ·rt II n I) Ii 5 4 l h c <; a m t'
1•vt•n1n g
Th I'\ I l' cl c r In It l' I y the
la\'Ol'ltt•s .. <,a\., G we Coach
J 1m Greenfield of the Pirates
"They're picked No 2 in their
tonference a nd th ey 'll be
playing at their place ...
'They've got a couple of kids
back tTruiett Hallon and Darin
Rowen1. so I'm not surpnsed
thC\ beat Fulle rton ... says
OCC s Tund ~ G1ll1s fo the
Rustlers
Gillis will be looking for a
better s hooting pe rcentage
tonight when the Bucs hos t the
Rus tlers OCC shot a dismal 29
percent from the fi eld but still
ma n a~ed to nip Rio Hondo last
week
·But we still battled back. I
Novaquatics seeks swimmers
rhc• NnvuquallC'S age group
'(V, 1 m tt·am of Irvine recently
:ulrlt•d a Master'> d1v1swn and 1s
k>ok IOI? lnr nt•w mcm bcr~
• Masters sw1 mmin~ has been
c1ll \ mateur Alhlel1c Union s port
<inc'(' 1972 Compelil1on is
<1ff1·r1•d at local swim meeLs on a
monlhlv has1s
In a <ld1t1on. n a tion al
t" h a m p 1 o n s h 1 p m e e t s f o r
s w i mme rs . 19 ·80. are also
scheduled
Men and women are eligible lo
compete in the Masters s wim
program tn their res!)('ctive age
g roup 19·24. 25·29. 30·34 all the
\\ ay lo age 80 plus
Novaq uatics workouts a re
conduct ed a nd coa c hed by
Laura !love, a former s tandout
swimmer al Long Beach State.
think that showed this team had
some character:· Gillis says
The Pirates got 12 points
apiece from Chris Beasley and
Rick Riley, 11 from Jim Baldwin
and 10 each from Frank Luongo
and Greg Krohnfeldt in a
balanced scoring display
G WC"s top scor e r against
1-'ullerton was !>Ophomore Art
King who pumped home 19
points. while Hatton added 14
and Bowen chipped in 11
"King played we ll for us,"
G reenf1eld says of his 6·7
forw ard "He's really our only
bi g guy We need him to clog up
the middle.
Both coaches play down lhe
rivalry as!)('ct of lhe contest
··t thtnk the rivalry is more
for the coach es t h an the
p layers." Greenfield explains .
"In the long run. J"m not s ure 1t
ma lters. But we both recruit
from the same a rea and that
seems to be a bi g deal "
Adds Gillis "T here has to be
some rwalry s tnce we recruit
from the same area. but ri~ht
now we 're just trying to get into
the season ..
Golden Wesl leads the series.
10·7
• thlnaa alooa with her tennla.
· • 1 expect them to do well In
the Individual doubles
competition. They both bad a
c hance to play alnales but
decided to play to1ether aa a
doubles team Instead. In hilh
school, they can't play both."
The top doubles combine for
the Eaglea this season has been
j unior Clady Lancaster and
so phomore Cami lle
Cunningham.
Other members of the team
include the third sin1les player.
Tracy Ehlers. a junior; doubles
teams Ann Carey (junior> and
Gia Barbarino (freshman);
along with Kerry Clevidence
<sen lor > and Li s a Drake
(junior I.
With onJy two seniors on the
roster, the Eagles figure to take
up where they left off when play
begins next year.
"This is a highly motivated
group and is much i mproved
over last year," Hlrtler adds.
··The highlight of our season so
far has been in beating Corona
de l Mar twice, especially at
CdM.
·'The biggest thing these girls
have going for them is a desire
to win. They never quit and
when they are down, they have
been able to come back.
··our team motto has been:
·Don't think about winning but
about the e ffort you put into
trying to win.' That's been the
secret to their success all year.··
Hirtler is the head pro at Los
Caballeros Racque t Club in
Fountain Valley and has helped
the Estancia girls in their quest
of te nnis fame. Several of them
now spend time at that facility
rather than Mesa Verde but they
a l l remember the d ays of
learning lo play the game at the
Costa Mesa courts. Catherine O'Meara. just a freshman. 1s ranked No 4 in Southland
Getting the jump on '83 PGA
Riviera CC selling tickets for championship
If you a re one of those people who like to look
we ll into the fut ure and plan your sche d ule
accordingly, then the announcement that the 1983
PGA championship at Riviera Country Club 1n Los
Angeles is now taking ticket orders is for you.
One of the four most important golfing eventt.
in the world, the PGA championship will be held
the wee k or Al.lg. 1·7 at Riviera in 1983 and will be
the first time 1t has been played m Southern
Callfomia since 1929. For those wanUng prices, a season ticket I Ir
purchased before Dec. 31 this year > costs S80 Add
another SlO if you purchase it next year and after
Jan. 1. 1983. it will cost SlOO.
Daily prices will be SlO for the practice round!>
on Monday and Tuesday; SIS on Wednesday for the
pro·a m ; and $25 daily for each of the four days of
the championship.
tr you need any additional information.
contact the 1983 PGA office at <2131 454·6PGA or
call Riviera CC t2l3! 454·6591. • • •
I F YOU WANT TO JOIN an active group, try
the Rancho San J oaquin Men's Club. They now
have 422 members and are 28 s hy of the limit of
450 New memberships cost just SS8 and the group
is one of the most active in the area.
Team goU starts in January as well and the
group has j ust com ple ted a s u ccessfu l
member-member tournament in honor of former
member J oe McGrath.
For further information. contact the club at
957-1955 or stop by and play a round of golf on the
newly refurbished course.
• • •
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT, the PGA tour 1s
')
HOWARD L.
HANDY
now known as \he T PA 11'oumament Players
A.;sociatlon 1 tour anc1 a new logo has b<'en released
to ind1eatl.' a'> rnuc·h
The T P i\ group writ t:lrmrnatl.' Monday
qualr(vmg :.t''>~1on ... l>t'g111nmg with the 1983 :-.l'a.,on
l,;ndl.'r tht• plan. v1r1uull~ all <ictrn• TP1\ rrH'mber.,
will be freE• from quJl1f\ IOJ? undt·r J "l't of rult·~
and proccdurt·:. "'hl('h \\Ill µrodu('t' a ranking of
thosl' rn l'mtx·r.,
l'layl.'r!> holding long·tl'rm 1·xemptwns "'111
head the h~l of rJnkl'd player-, with the 125 leadl·r:-.
from the yeaf·l'nll officwl mone) list forming tht·
!>CC'o nd por ltnn The third µortiun will bt•
compri~cd of players f1111'>h1ng from nnc to 5(1th
plus lll''> from \\hat will hl'l'Omt• a ma1rir
once ~r yca1 qua II() 1ng ..,c:hool to he held after ltw
rom pletmn of thl· n•gular 'l'<.1.,on
l mplcm('ntatwn of tht· 1\ll eM·mpt tour w-111 m
l'ffect. begin "'tlh lht• com1wt1l1on for tht· top 125
po::.1t1nns on the t<Jfi2 mont•\ 11 ... 1
Mesa hosts Alumni five
Costa Mesa ll1 gh s varsity b.iskc-thall ll'am
will be on displa) tonight when the Mustangs hos t
an Alumm team . hl'g1nn rng al 7 30
The n·~ul:tr ~t·ason bci.eins Dl't'
College football OUTST AHDIMG
VALUES!
81~ Sky Conference
C.I. -Missouri Valley Conference ,..,, -W LT W L T ,., fJA W l T W l T PF PA
lcl-"O SI • I 0 ' I 0 :Z. IJI tu1w ) I 0 • ) 0 :io. , ..
BolM St • ' 0 •20 :111 1m Or•h ) ' 0 10 ' 0 ll2 ...
Mofll•M s 2 0 1 Jou. 1n s lll•n<M• ) , 0 1 ol 0 230 II•
l<evM•·R-• J 0 1 • 0 JIO ,,. WICllll•!il J l I •• ' 160 Jd
Woller 51. • l 0 1 • 0 211 221 W f .. H!il J J u I o1 0 1•1 ?ll
l<t>rlMrnAr~ 2 s 0 •!O U.U7 1no1•n• SI I 4 I S ) I 2'7 1 ..
Mofll-SI I • 0 J I 0 1'1 1n l<ew Mu1co~I ' ) 0 J ~ 0 IS/ 11&
ld•ho 0 I 0 l . 0 llO U4 lllono•• St 0 ) 0 J I 0 I•) 1.0
Ivy League Conference Major Independents
C•I. 5-W LT fJF PA
W LT W L T fJF PA Pll"burQll 10 0 0 )Al '1
So "''"'"'"'"
ti 1 2ol.J IS Y•lo • '0 t 10at1'J , ............. 0 )21 10 O•rlmoutll • I 0 • •o• U1 Penn SI 0 ~1 Ill Princeton s ' ' S •I UIJI» Mloml, Fla 0 10I llO H•"'•rd • J ' S ol I 211 113 WHI Vlrvlnle u ISi 14'1 Brown 2 s 0 l ' 0 1» uo Colo•t• 0 lll 1)) C.orne11 2 s 0 l I 0 t• U6 . lri N•V'f' 0 lll Ptnn
'. 0
1~121..-J.tor10• SI • 0 1)1 UI COlumbl• '. 0 I '0 lit 20 HOiy (.rOlS • 0 n• ,.,
YlrlJlnla Tech • 0 111 IU Mld-Amertc•n Conferen·ce South C•rol•N s 0 11s I .. c.t. s.-C.1nc1nne11 • s 0 "' Ill
W LT W l T ,., PA l<otre 01me ) s D 211 til
Tot-• '0 • l 0 20 14.S Temple s s 0 111 ·~ Mloml,O. • I 1 I 2 I '" 1)4 Tut•ne s s 0 l•S IJI
Centr1I MkNOIM' I 2 0 1 o1om m NE LOUltlltN ) • 0 JD'I UI
IOW11"9 GrMfl ' J ' SS 1 US IJ:1 .... ..,..~ "990' s • 0 m 41J
0 1\to U '. 0 S •ODl2S1 En1 C1rotlN ) • 0 242 ~
W. Ml<hi90ft ' • 0 • , •• 11'0 Willl•m t. W..rv ) • 0 1'2 21t
Kt nl St. J. 0 ~ 1o , .. 1n Loult•lllo s • 0 llD 211
l oll SI 2. 0 4 1 I IS7 Jll R11tgen ) ' 0 , .. JOI
N. llllnols 2 1 0 2 • 0 ,.., 211 Syr1cut1 • ' ,., ,..,
£.MlcN tM 010 0 0110 •'31 Riehm-l 0 110 m
Army l I 0 12l J09
Nor111 T .. u St 7 • 0 0 201
-mph" SI I 10 0 IJ J09
,
JIM-MlRi'N·o
I VOlKSWAGEN-ISUZU 1
11711 BEACH BLVD.
HUNTINGTON .llAC~ CALL 842·2000
IA.AND HEW
1911 vw
DIESEL RAlllT
FACTORY STICKEEl
. $7670
DISCOUNT
$675
SALE PRICE
'6995
(2983) ( 177663)
IRAHD NEW
1981 ISUZU
4X4 PICKUP
SALE PRICE
'7395
(1272)(02088)
4 speed transmission
AM·FM stereo
& e sunroof.
(1•9265)
SALE PRICE
OHLY
57995
Orange Co11t DAIL v PILOT(Tuoaday, November 24, 1981 r-------~----------------------.._, ~------------------------.....
NflL
F•lcon1 31, Viking• 30
"--·~ Mlnnoot• r 11 0 ' :Ill
All•nl• I 0 U 10 41
M in Run•d t 11to 1r on1 IC.romor
IO•n,,..i.r klOI
All JM:k'°" I ~" "Ont IUrlkOWOI
(LvOllU"I kt<kl
Min A•t.h•O 41 P•'' fronl K'•"'•' I Oenrnel•r kl<kl
Mtft Bruer J P•\• t 1om ~t•ff'•' 4 U•nmeier IU(k )
All Miller J pns lrom 8••"o'"~'' (I.II<'"""' kl<kl AU ~r_,c 1' 7~ .,.." tr om 8•rtllo•\~1
ILuOnur\I k•<•I
•II I'<.. L110hut\1 l1
AU (urry Ji 11\ttrt•ptton reh1rn
11.IKkhur\I klOI
Min 541elv J•-H.t110\ll11ttnc110M
M tn S.n\ttt •• o•''-trom Kr•m•r
COel\nu1or k1<l!I
f4 S•.I*
IMIYI-· Sl•t .. uu RUSHIN(, M1nnnol•. 8rown 1' Hil,
Youn9 1 J l ttWtrl\ t '•· U•tl>t••tn 1 ), tti.r•m•t to, ~hlfe-1 l AU•nta. Anortt'W~
1) ti 1.••n II ol, J.OCUOO I 0 6.rlkow•k1
1m1nu'1
PA\SINC. M1nn•~ol• tl.r•n'•' 14 d •.
lJO All•nt•. ll•rt•°'"''' 11 J1-0. 2 IJ R(;C(;IVINC. Mtnn .. o••. Alin•O ~ 1)1.
Brown >l). Sen~r • S., Lewis 2·WI, White
2 II, C.•lbruln I •. llrue• 1 J Attent•, 1. .. n • u Jenk111\ >~ ~'."'"•WI J«•...,. > ll. ANI••-•) 12 Miiier I J
COLLEGE
Top 20
lh• loP fw.nly IMms of\ l ... AUat~IOO
Prtn <Oii-•OOttMMI Po41 wl\11 ,.,.. P•~·
vot•' '" par~thttes,, ,..."°" t t•coro MIO
lol•I polnl • Polnl• D•••O on
10-19 II II I• I) 14 IJ 11 II 10 9 .. , .. )-' l 1·1
I Ptlhl>urQI> UO I 10.0.0 1,1'1
1 C.ttn\loOn U I 11.0.0 1.U•
J C.eor111• • IO I. "1
• Al•lloa,.,... 8 I I 1.0~
) NtDr•M<• • 1 0 1,01)
• 5.o ""''-''' 101-0 "U I h•I• • I I _,..
• 5.o C.1111o<no• ~-HI 197
• M1•m1 ~II 1-2-0 1111
10 ,.orll\ C.M041no .,.2-0 Ut
11 PeM ~I t·7.0 ..-l
12 V.•lih•"O•on •·2.0 ~
I) •owl • HI ...
.. ll••Qh~ '"""" 101.0 111 I> On10!.l a J O llO
16 ""''"'9'1" •Jo m 'I ~ M l\\.l\\•OC>• 8 1 t l.C
•• ... ''""" ~· • 2 0 J)J 14 IH.l ll I) I 1""1
10 v. .. n1"Cj\OO ~I f 1 I I.I'
Colle~e schedule
Hlf'" •\ ltw m•1or uH..-~ roouw11 w twcwl•
tor tN r~•notf ot 1"' W>•\On n ... ._,
Pt nn •t R •< hmONS
lf>.tl\dl 1_.•,l\ A6.M
FrM11,_
""°"I Wlltr.,.,
Ar 110n• •I~'"°"• \I n
AIAb•m4 v\ Auburn •• li1fnul'\Qh•"
1(.1.,.nn•l I II I) Oil m ~
J-I Or •d• St •t f.-1or KM
totor .oo St.alt>•• MA••1 "'
bo\tOr'I (011'9f' ~t Hoty (. tO\\
0~1•1\0<T\1•I0•11"0"'" ~t
Ptnn SI •t Pitt 1(P\.tnnitt 1 •• lrfl • th 1
HOV'\°" •t Rt<•
Atr J-eru "" '-O...OSI ., 100.\'6
frifOf"1hT•-..•S. etS.~..)OM ~ ,n
l • m•r •t '!.oulttern Ml\\'"' .poi
V•nM-tOtlt •• T•~s\.tt
"'""°.LI\ llf'90••t 14'>•\ f;I Poo
l.Ou•\••"4 ~te•£ •t l U1¥1t n
" ro1n•• lf'(r. ., 'V1ro•n·•
Mtur,61y,0. 1
C.,,f'OrQ1• •t CAor914 Tf'(ti t(.~nrwl I •I' .,,..
Sovt1' C•rolm.• It .., ....... n
Arm, v\ "-'""' •• Pthl60f'tPf'h• ,(~~I •t u t )t ,,...
Community college schedule
IAll 9-a\ 1 JD P"', llfllH• N>tMI
SATUllOAY
s...tll CNst CAf\'-""•
C.OIM n W~I •• O••-. (.Ol\I (.,rO\\~t •• Mt S.11 Antonio 11 l01
(f1'rr1to~ •1 ,.,_v•••non
MIMtOlft C...t...-efK• If'""' \t(llP ., ~1.-bM. ..
Palomar •t ~nl• AA• !Mn o .. •90 ({ •• !>out""'•"•'"
_,....,.,.Coal (.of\1 .. •n<•
LA. .. UlfbOf •t LA ~uthwt>\.I \I 1"
l •\t l.01> 4'ngelf"'\ •I 'tliilf'\t LO AnQljHft'
I JOI
lO\ .,.,._ (.( •l '<oo '1onOC.
-.._i1i.tt Geftl .. •M•
L.0"9 ~•ch (L 111 P1uu·
E• C.em•N:t •1 LO\ •1"9"1t'\ 'Y•ll•'f
P•wdt,.. e1 ~·•Mon•<•
Wft\e<fl Slat• C-le<-•
~•nt• &•rb!.tr• el C..nvon\
VtfHUfA al l lllft
H•nc.ocll. •t (,t•ncl41f'
Often c..1 .......
OHen •• &nl"4-¥•11•y 1 1 )01
Mir•C~t• ., M t s..~ JM into I/'
lmp~r,.1 V•lfPV »t SAn &ernarOtM V•H•\
JI ,, ,
21
I•
22
l1
JO • 24
LOI Al•mltOI
MOHDAY'S llESULT5
112111 .. i-41.....tffllerM -1"'91 P'IRST llACE • .oovoro•
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AIM> <KOO F•IM< C ... t, MU CN<. Cutt
POOKll, Ar-~. Forever Snea, C..-\
C...m. hll HHrl l•llltlvr
Time 70 11
U EXACTA Ct.SI pelo UJ.20
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Arr-Cf\orvtr tCre999r1 1 IO • tO J tO
Fl•m•1>9 ll9fll t Pauht1el It .O l.t#J
C.-y loSllllCHar11 lM
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l11n9 i•u
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l f'\t JOurnt yman. 1 •ttorca f • •h1on,
C.ll•roe• 1 o -My ~•rtttt Empnu,
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11mt 11 ..
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l'OU•TH llACIE J~ •••O•
!>onol•l>le\lt• 1 V.•tOI .h 00 10 IO c 00
"'l>fllM< 601111 .. IP"IAtl • 00 1 IO
C>eMrt JOkft IMl\c~llj l 10
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Tome 1& ICI
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l'll'THllAC.E C..Ou•O\
TruO •• •0-1(.,..,_,, .,.., 11 IO )lCI '•a•°"'""' r..,...., )00 loo Ht~\ 11 ll\~ ILO< •t.i J 00
Al\O r-._f!O f l19nt Ylllf' ~POt II Moun
Mo<"•t s.n...ootr ttTW LU( .. .,. t.o•n f-°'• A J,., ~••mtnoC.•t v.•v•on .,..,.,
l U'Jlf' 21 4J
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$111TM llACIE uo. .. a•
I Or\111• ~Ill I Pault!WI • 10 J "° 1 IO
W•-Nft Y"1 tH.._,.,.1 l M i. --I*• 11~·· soe AIM fKeid U t n\ l.-..<ky $.ev~ 0. VUte.
C..fUl\tn. C.000 R••iOt\ 0•\ M•\
11mtc •~"
SIEVENTH llACE bou•O•
liny Hf'~IMltC,_111 •.O 410 J1(J
!)ir ftir1tn.ArounoiH•r11 )tie) l*" l ••• ~.,,.,, ,,........ l.,
Al'C ••<f'G ""''' 1 r" k_.CJrit>I Y•m • "•utf'r 1101oty \S..1n1
1 une t1 11
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••111 \.1~ WllMtnQ hCtiPh flWI' "°'~J $.l
• •< .. S•• "°",.,.,."°"" cw•a ~ ac,, •''" i.1 wmn1no tl(~f'h tour n()fvio''
E tGHTH RACE 1SO ,.,. ..
l/\lrtllirw1tonl:..__.,,.~n •H•'" 1"'1 •CCI J-IO
f •• , .. ,...,. 1-... 1.... J 00 J 10
Pr1•m \ 8•r1f'f I P1l1t.rnton1 ~ 9(J
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l r•POh l.acJ'f VHunq LAd~ Yllt.tnQ Vut"n
Tim~ 11"
U EXACl• O·• IMIOO '31 IO
HIHTH RACE l~v••O•
(.11101p11 1c...rd0u l 00 1 lO Z.O
S.yn Oon,.no1or 1H••l1 110 1 oO &on.cl~ AWftH 'TrNWrf'J 110
Al\O r •<f'd ... , I "'h•P. L.fO' BOOM, wnn ~ • ..,. Jt l 1n'f (rv"'t•I R•u• L•<I f-1rwt
Dale
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UEXA(.lA 1.,_. Po•OUIO
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V.••hlng1on
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ltl"lt
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I 12 J II ., 11
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V.l!ihlf\11'°" ) 14 I al 1' II
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Cotor.00 "' C.••~·•
NHL leaders
IT"'-~'"•"·"'
Cr•l>k> E.-1on r., ....... -0-...... ._
~v•rd,Ght(-
P Sl•stnv 0.-De<
Sm1tl\ ~1rww1i0t•
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.. )U.t..,
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4c. ton Montr.-••
ll'f1l..,.,C.N<-
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11 II It
II 26 JI .. u :a.
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Monday I transachol"IS
IUEa.t..LL ............y_
SEA11LE MAlt•NlR~ A-s.mmw
~t>lbOrn e>tlt~• 10 trwtr 40 m•n winter ro,ter
.. OC .. IE Y
~I LOu1~ l>LUE!> C.•lleo up Joe
M uUtn "0ht .-ino •no Ai•"' l em .. w,
c.entf'r from 51••• L•'t et 1n.,. Lentr•t
t'10C.,t"Y l ••Qut ano .,,., 1;11r 11 1on
oe••"'"m.n ''0"1 trwu "'-•"4tton '""'°' ftO< .... , ...... itti1114tff'
COLLEGE CALl!ORNIA .,,.., l<o~· fnea.r
1100 1-lloall <O«ll
N l VA(;A-L.AS Vt C.AS A""°""'eo I.ht
rt~••9n•110f" ot 1 on, ,_ n~ twteo toouw11
(06<.h
Area high school f oothall log
SUNSET LEAGUE u Oc"•" v...-..
U MvrihnqtO" &.'"" 1 (ell_,
11 • H
Newpon H.,bor {1·9)
) M•rlno 13 C111ifl•eno V•ll•v o 11111u1on vi.to Edison (10-1) n E t Dorado
4S S•nl• AN
"El -... 0 M tlllllll'> .. ,.,..., .. 0-.
19 Merino
O Oceenv1ew JI WH \mlnster ,.. Humlnotoo Bea<'> »• Fount••n V•ll~y
CIP'
Fountain Valley (8-3)
16 ~•n1• AM V•llfr¥' n E1 Toro 3 SI Paul
10 S.rvlle ,. l •kewoo<1
3S Hunllnoton 111'1><" J Merln.t '7 O<un lllfw
l3 WOlml~\fir
13 Ed1""1
CIP'
Ju ~I J (lftn b<>'><O
Nov ,, SI Paul •• , 0(.( I
0 10 Fountain V•ll••
1l 0 M•riM 1
1 ,. ,.
0 .. ' ., > ..
\) 10
10 •• 10 ..
11
I 71
SEA VIEW LEAGUE
Corona del Mar (7-3-1)
Hunll"QI"" 84te<'> ~nc•-m• C•o•u.-va11 ..
Utt1w-rsih
E•l1ncle S•d01tl>8<~
f.• Toro
'""I"«' Co1taMew
Nf'Woort Haf'bC)r
Cl,. n • ,,
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10 o Com Me•• (2~1 to O S.nte &na
0 11 5anll-10 I& I.I)\ Al•mllO.
,. 1 "'PWDOr1 Merb1f'
1 Unlve.-,ttv
1 lrvlN' • s. __ ,
I El Tort> u Corone .. , Mor
7 Ett•n<I•
El Toro (6-5)
Cacilflr-Vt llWY
Fountain Vell~v
MIUlonlllelO
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CoslaMey
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From PaoR C?
SEA VIEW LEAGUE OUTLOOK • • •
uccorlllll61 lo Pursel
Returnln~ lettermen Inc lude aiuuda Steve
Cook <9 s connK ;average last year 1 and Jetr Field
1rnd forward John Ra~hebuger. lust seaton ·s moat
lm1>roved player for the Muslanas
Contending lor sturting spolS will be 1uard1
Dave Palmblade and P1tul Edson, the co-MVPs
from last year's JV squad and forward John
Strayer, a strong Inside player and good
rebounder .
"This should be one or the better reboundlna
teams in the league," suys Parsel. "We had a good
summer and wtlh continued improvement. we
should challenge for the league lath~.
"Our goal is to make the CIF playoffs. which
would make us the first Mesa team to do lhut 11lnce
the '65-66 team ·
ESTANCIA Eaglei. Coach Larry Sunderman
who like h111 l'ohort. Estarw ia footbull coach Ed
»lanton. always seems to get the most out of his
available talent, Is looklnl( for the Ea1le• to run
und gun this yc1o1r
The EaglNI won't have great heil(ht, with only
one pluyur ovl'r fJ 2. 1.0 Sunderman 111 hoplna
consi11tent dcft'nlll' llnd U (ust paced offenSt! will
orf!lt.•t that
.J etr C:amlnor u fl Ill 1wnlor point gu1Arct. will be
thcf Euwlt••' 11uu1tc rt11H•k " this !le1uon
Sundt.irmun c•ull• Chrdnflr 11n ·1ntt•n11e team
pluyer " lh• w11• IHI All C'rtt 11 lectaon lit•I y1·1.r und
Iii ttw typu of 11h1 yn1 wl111 ''''" curry • team
Anoth,,r 1 ~I urnlnM •llu tu 111 rorwurd Stt>vt•
Krulftlf 11ln11ac w1tt1 lut YtHir • alxth mun. fhndy
Tlrl, unotlwr (orwurd
l111 from 111111 you'• J\1 1<,uud Ill Chr111 Mu ydolto
und Urlun MHll1u11.I hoth llt-nlon
·'rht• h •ltfCIW Wi ii he IUl>f'I t11urch . llllYIJ
Sundcrmun. Wt! l(IV" ourl'lttlVt!li u t·h11nt·e 11 wt!
N HI "f't 1it1od <l~f .. n•t-t1nd rt-boundmM
lh1 vl ntt G1.11d1u•1 Ill thnt' und Jim Mc(;uhtll
1 the root bull lt•um s c1u1u·terb11 t'k who 111 u 2 ran
play l(uurd or lorw11rd 1, will glvt' uis a l1rt
UNIVERSIT\' Th..-Tr0Jut111 ure havuq(
somt' nan~ thinica. said uboul them by oppot.10K
('Ottc ht.•11 und with 1mm e qui.hty "tarter i; returning,
huve LO f1aur~· ill\ u darkhor!>t! If not a ('Ontender for
the title
Brad Guesi.. a 6 6 1otm1or. was a second team
a ll lel*J(U~ sele<.•tion last year with a 10 I average.
and, uccordanK to coach J eff Cunningham. may be
on~· of lhe fine t cenlers in the county thu• season
At forward. the Tro1ani; have Craig Rowe. a
6·3 senior. who 1s a i.trong. a ggre1os1ve player
University does lack height beyond t hose two
players, however Qnly one other player 16-3
sophomore Norm Stolzoff 1 as over 6· l
Al guard. Randy Myers should provide some
leadership for Una and Troy Lari.en, anothe1
">enior. is a good ball handler
"The experience gamed last year 1 when Uni
cam e within one wm of quabfying for the Cl F
playoffs 1 s hould help us a lot this year ... says
Cunningham We rould be a very good team an an
o utstandmg league. The key for us will be the play
of our guards ..
Look for Un 1vers1ty lo be right the1 e .
challenging for a playoff s pot again
NEWPORT HARBOR Coach Jerr)· DeBusk
i.ays his Sa1lor1o will be very tnexpenenced but that
doesn't mean the~ "'on 't be tn the thick of things
ai. the~ enter their first year of Sea Vie w Lea gue
play
Byron Ball 11-Newport s only returnanc player
so DeB\.1.1.k lS looiunc ror Iota of amprovement
during the pre season so that the Sailors will be
respecte1ble by the l1m1: league play rolls around
We ha\·e some deplh and we 11 be aggr ess1\e
1 as DeBusk·roached teams usually are 1. ·· De Bus k
i.avs ·But the other district schools s hould be the
po·weri. 1n the league
At point guard. Newport Harbor will have
Bnan Folk . a 6 O Junior e1nd at the other guard wall
be Grt'~ Seib~ a 6 3 i.enaor who IS rom1ng off a
good football season as !'lewport s quarterback
At forward 1.., Ball and Scott Liner and at
l'tnter 1s Joe Seager. a 6 7 Junior
Also seeing plenty of art1on will be guards
Scott ~1dmore. Steve Pelletier and Pat England.
all senior..,
IR\"l~E Al Herring roach fo r the
Fro m Page C1
l.urr11 ...... utult'1111u11
I
Vaqutiroa, uys that Irvine's strength wall be
.. uttltude und tc1tm unity." I
That may or may not be good e nouah to k•v
I rvlne in the league race as the season wears b n
becuuse the Vaqueros ure minus any real "star1.
uccordina t.o their coach •
"We reully have to execute well as a leant. ·
llc:rrlng s u ys · Our weaknesses wtll .,t.
incxp«!rience and the lack of a big man." I
The only 1 t•turning varsity letterman from l•!St
yeur 111 forward J ohn Baxter, a 6 O senior •
At center 111 6 4 Junior Doug 8ro1ov1r h andlat
th(• other torwurd spot 111 James Carver, alad u
junior '
Al acuurd, lht' Vaqueros have Robert Akers, :i
IJ o Mt>n1ur· ;.rnd Do n John Ii, a 5· 11 i.t~nior
t:l. TORO Churgera coach Tim Travers 11ai.
11roc·la1m(-d the Iheme ror his team th111 season .a~
.cetllnK tu know you
That s becau1oe 1-:1 ·1 oro has 13 Ot'w perform~r s
w1lh lhe ~raduat1on of l:uil year i. dll i.en1or team
Ther~ 11> only one player on thl' i.quad w1lh aJlY
upprec1able varsity exp •nent't' IK> the Churgeri.
maturity will be telling as the M!llSOn pro.cresse~.
Travers belu:ves El Toro has an out"de stuit
at a playorr bpot a nd s hould. 11t le1:1st, ~ct 1n 11
1opoiler·s roll' in determining who fan1sht'I 1n tJw
top three spob m lugue
Jr nothing eli.e, El Toro doei. h:.vt-~ome h..-lght
m 6-7 sophomore center Jeff Arno ld ltlnd e 4
forward Jim Martinsen
There are three transfer studenlS for tt'tt-
Char~eni thlS season who fiaure to contribu\e
Those are forwards Jam Hammel. a JUnaor. Bretl
Trickett. a senio r and his brother Dan .,
i.ophomore guard
SoM y Lewis. a 6-1 JUmor guard. 1s El Toro s
most talented all around player with 0Her.1o1n
punch
The Chargeri. figure to concentratt> their ga m ..
around a sohd d efense. hoping to pull out soml'
close games
SADDLEBACK We re JUSl hoping l<1
compete well, .. says Saddleback fourth-year couch
Pat Quinn "We know the other teams are strong
but I ttunk lhat we can catch some teami. sleep1nR
part1rularly during that part of the season wht'n
we're playmg three games a week ..
In facing facts. Quinn knows that he doei.o l
have the talent to pose a serious threat to t.p ..
leacue talle. but he seems to th1.11k the Roadr.wllfl•rs
will hold their own. '
Labt year. m the F reeway League. Saddleback
f1n1shed 2 12 However eight of the games were
decided by three pomts or Jes:.
·we II have to rely on some good outside
s hooting ~caui.e "'e ·re so s mall 1 no player 1s over
G Jon the roster 1. says Qumn
The best shooter for Saddleback 1s Larr)
Davenport. a 5·11 senior guard Playing alongside
him 1s 5 5 senior Brad Labsa<.-k. the playmaker
Tro) McAhi.ter. a 6·3 JUOIOr. IS the cent.er clnd
e1t forward as Todd Cage. a 6·2 1un1or and J ohn
Woods. a 6-0 i.enior
There 11on t a "'hole lot of experien~ for
S:addleback lO draw from but Quann has given h11o
fa ir we1rn1n~ Don't take the Roadrunners lf>O
light!}
UC IRVINE'S MEAN OLD MAN • • •
then I i.hould bt· fit m)self If I
"'ant them to bt· on time. then I
t·an't be late I \'e told m~
pla) ers hundreds of times I
"'ouldn t trade m.> bod.> for an.>
of theirs and I \e ne\er ~n
late
"IF IT'S I MPORTANT. then I
feel I should do 1t myself. too
The happiest relationship I ve
ever had is with m y own son
I Geor~e 1 He h such a strong.
s trong person He 's his own
man. but he's my best friend
He 's not afraid of me ..
Newland 1s the first lo admit
that h11o bark 1s worse than his
bite. yet there are many who are
uneasY around him
•J m a ver.) reared person
Why? I don't know, .. he says.
"Ma ybe it's bec ause I 'm
ohysir ally mt1m1datmg to some
!Xtenl Plw;, I tend to be very
honest about stuff ··or course. when you like
:. o m e b o d y t h a t c a n b e
intimidating to a certain extent.
too ··
As for his p layers. respect
m ight be a betler word than
feur
"'MY PLAYERS know not lo
screw around with the old man
about certain thlngs,.. he says
with a smile "There's a line
they know they shouldn't cross
over. If we 're having a bad day
at practice, l won't punish them
in the form of extra h'ps, or
s1tups, or anything like that. tr
they don't want Lo learn, then we
don•t practice. l have other
things 1 can do to make better
use of my time."
There are various ways in
which Newland calms himself or
relaites. He'll listen to music.
work with wood, sit in a chair
and sip beer on occasion but.
more than anythln& else, he'll
exercise -whether U be sttups,
ridtni a bike or running.
Ah, yes, runnlo1. It may not
be Newland'• most enjoyable
pleuure. but if he's worked ~
before or after 1 game, that a
how he'll relieve the lensaon
In the re c ent PCAA
champ1onsh1ps. an fart. he ran
e i gh t miles BEFORE the
Anteaters game with UC Santa
Barbara. and he ran sax miles
Af'TER ha s team lost by a single
goal to Long Bearh State
· 1 have fun every day." says
Newland ··1 have fun teaching, l
h11 ve fun working out , I have fun
s1 pp1ng beer I just think hfe 1s a
lot nf fun
, At my age, the only thmg
tha t ·s important is time In each
da v there are 24 hours a nd it's
how we use those 24 hours that
counts.''
You can bet Newland and
the people he touc hes are
getting the most out of his time • * • T H E WATER POLO team.
which finished third an the PCAA
championships last weekend. is
seeded fifth for this weekend's
NCAA championships
The Anteaters wil I open
against No. 4 seed UC Santa
Barbara at 10:30 a .m . Saturday
with the winner advancing to
meet top-seeded Stanford at 7
p.m .
The championship game is
slated for 7 · 30 p.m . Sunday • • • THE ON-AGAIN, off-again
relat1onsltip between basketball
UCI loses
• swim opener
The UC Irvine awimming
teams opened their 1eason
Saturday night, with both the
men and women IOllnl to UC
Santa Barbara ai Jierit11e
Purk.
Th~ men were out1eored,
60·51, whlle Utt women ..,.
beaten, a.._
Top lndJvtdUal llfall IW UCI
included Todd ,\ .. Mtm\a ~•ct.ory in the • <*Ilk illl _1.9 ...
<.-oach Bill Mulligan and guard
Jason Worki.. the darling of
Cra wford Hall , 1s apparent!) off
again, only this tame 1t seems
for good
Works wall not accompan) the
team to Oregon for Saturda) ·s
encounter with the Duc ks He
has been indeflnatel) excused
from the team for what the
coaches are citing as "personal
reasons ..
It· s been no secret that past
two monlhs that M ulhgan and
Wo rks haven't exactly s ee n
eye.to-eye on a number of
issues. ranging from Works ' role
to his being time for practice.
M ull1gan insists. however,
that Works recent departure
has noth ing to do with any
d1Herences between the two.
"I've had a hard lime dealing:
with the whole thing, .. s.lys
Mulligan. who has tried every
conceivable method to strikt a
common bond between the two.
· 1 could keep Works and play
under his condition s. but I
refuse.
··I might sacrifice a loss ~ut
there are ce rtain things ou
have to do.
"1 don't want to say he's a ~d
kid He 's not. He's just ii\ a
different world than we are d
I'm not qualified to deal th
it .•.
The whole affair has bee
tryina o ne for Mulligan,
there have been many s leepl
nights by the coach trying
find a solution.
For the time being this ls
best answers though. And,
what It's worth. MulU11n
the right move.
•• t
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..
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THE
t'AMILl'
ClaCt:N
by Bil Keane
\\How 'bout a little one-on-one?"
'9..\R'l.\Dl'IU·; by Brad Anderson
"Empty candy wrappers! A definite cluEJitn
the case of our missing candy bars!"
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT(Tuesday. Novtmber 24, 1981 Cl
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
-
ll·•'f
" ... And what seems to be our trouble?"
PMNIJT8
MOW CG\iE lMEWf tlVER
ENTERED VOV IN AN
''UQ.Y 006* COHTEST?
SHOE
'WHAT'S GOING
ON IN THERE?
GORDO
8ECAIJSE IM so CUTE I WOULO PROBABLY
COME IN LAST!
PRICES RISE
SO FAST-··
'Mo ~MER !H~E~EST/~ THI~~ Btlf¥0 ~rrorr ......... -------.
WH£N YOU OIE ,THEY MW OIMESAN' ~NNIES OUT Q=YaJ 1 ~
by Charles M. Schulz
8lJT ~ll~ST IN
QUICK RET005 0 • I
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by f om K. Ryan
by Jeff MacNelly
by Ernie Bushm1ller
THEY'RE TRYING TO STAY AHEAD
OF THE CLERK ,. -:-
WHO MARKS GROCERY STORE
THEMUP ~
~
by Gus Amela
· Jl.DGE P.\RKER by Harold Le Doux
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ACROSS 59 Old
1 Line ol c111ts Creek
6 lownclty city
10 Sailor 61 Branl
14 Card game 62 Vt'nom
1 .. Ro11 63 O.ap11anous
16 MaidSt'fvanl 64 lrr~ular
11 Gentry 6'> Ma1kele<J
18 Ut.•h •esort 66 Caushcs
19 °'"'~ 67 Rel yr w11e
.'0 Oan1sh k1nQ
,';', 1115¥\f'l'lh DOWN
,'-l Su·~111 I Buy on
.'Ii A~to111~h Gamhte
,'I R.111,11 .'Soll c111nk
'".t~t\.~ 1 Rf'l;ilfld
I I H,..;tet1v t f'>ul back
I,' f ,111(1fi1 :. f •'Wl"
n r '"rt'" Ii Arolll
I~ H1•.10 I (iYf'I q11rmettl
J8 f'>.11( "''° 7 Sl111p1•
:19 ( \1v1t"·~ fl P.trk
11111 f•t•ththly C<>1orocto
11 I lower 1~01 town
I) 1\111.1 11 H11t~
4.1 llw.1111\ 10 Pfa114•f
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!it USSR li\kt 27 Sitto
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I DON T l\NO~ II= Ill e>E Af>LE TO
5TA) AT THE HOTEL' I '\NA:;.
M06MC' fl'r FANf, THl5 EVENIN6'
THCY ~LM05T TORE ME APART •
THE PAIN ANC7 ~ILIATION
C CAN HANDLE
UNITED Fealu1e SyndlC81e
MondaV's Puute Solved
?8 CenlPI
?9 Anxious
:10 Sturdy
34 WWII planes
15 Vuqoslav
statesm111\
16 AvOU<'h
11 0.M>fdl'I
J9 Wood
hy~lh
•O Loses COOi
2words
•1 0tslgn8tt
43 80U
44 Foog1
46 Biie
., $jl 1(1•~
48 comic
Sadly funny
49 5oflm111
~ Postp. lllt!
SJ Pan 01 n Chi t=-'t'--t--.--
nete mft:ll
SS Lampblack
S6 Being Lei
57 Close a
htwtl ., eyes
60 Ofdef Abbr
------
11·21
t'l'NK ,. "INKt.:RBEA~ by Tom Bat1uk
~ WOULD lHANK5GIVI~ · TH£ TURKE.4 l~'f OUR
DINNER BE Wr'JW){.rf ~E NAnONAl BIRD! ~llONAl BIRD ?
1 DI DN'i 5Pf..) WHICH
~'
BRABBLE
DR.SMOCK
I l(N()~ f14A1',~.
I W."> fl.Of.ININ(, 10 (LA-S$
aNU I ff.L.I. l10o.>N ~
51'l~, l\MO M-4 fM1'1.£.~
~EOff!
PeOPL-e SAY
1'"HE:Y t...tKe DOC1'"0RS ...
eu-r et::HINP
IHelR e>ACKS,
DO 1'"HeY ReAt.-t.-Y?
NOW IAKe YOU THREE
cSUYS t.'M PL.AYIN' Wl1'"ri 1"0DAY .•.
FOR BETTER OR t'OR •o RME
t-t>NE'{, MRS. SHE.'.s A MRS.,
HARDACRE. 18N'l GHE ?-THAI
COJl.Dt4'T BE AS MEAN8 SOMEO~E. ~ BAD AS ALL LD\/ES HE.R ~ 'JI· iHRI!
IF~""my',YOO
SHCU.D BE. ABLE
To GE.T ALON<?r
WrT'1 HER ... I
r,r~~ BET SHE'S
VER'/NICE
~E !
by Kevin Fagan
by Lynn Johnston
80~ A
WALNUT.
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Orange Co11t DAILY PILOTfTuHd•y, November 24, 1881
'·· (. ' If..-• . . . •.(...
The se signatures represent
the many Daily Pilot employees
who have contributed to the
United Way campaign.
Bow afloat ~au?
. . : ") .... _
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'' •
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POWER OF A STORM I\, 11 lalll':-111 a11
d l'l'l ''=" rn.ul on .1 :-l l'l p 111 l • .11111 M.'p.1 1.11111~
I ht• .\\latll It' 1 •n·.11 1 .111d :"!<UHi~ 111111~ B.1.'
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" I I 11 ' I' LI I I Ito..· (; at o..• \\ ~I ·' \ ,II 111 11 .ii
l<1·1·ro..•.1t11111 .\ro..•.1 .11 ~JIHI~ 111111!-. \ .J
City opens heart to rape victim
New Zealand woman finds compassion, help in U.S .
TALLAHASSEE, F la . IAPl
The traveler, alone and far from
her New Zealand home, had
been left for dead along the
roadside -raped, robbed and
battered about the head.
Tallahassee. This money's to
help you get out or the hospital.··
together for the long trip over
here," Sim pson said ... At that
point. I think Talla,hassee had
realized that this was a girl who
With her fam ily and friends on
the other side or the world, the
people or Tallahassee united to
help the 20-ye ar-old woman.
Their embrace was so firm her
father has p ledge d to tell
everyone in New Zealand about
Southern hospitality.
President Reagan s ent best
wishes to the young woman, who
had recently graduated from
nurs ing s chool in Auckland, New
Zealand. and decided Jo tour the
United States before entering
the job world.
was in critical condition
and had a chance of losing her
eye. You can imagine throwing
a c ement s lab on someone's
head, also being the victim of a
s exual battery. That's why
people in Tallahassee came
out ...
The hilchhlking trip began in
Virginia about two months ago
and took the woman to Panama
Wives of Leon County sheriff's
deputies gave the woman a robe
and slippers . Members of a
college sorority, remembering a
brutal attack five years ago at a
sor ority house and the recent
rape and killing or another
colle ge woman, bundled up
s pare bluej eans, s we ate r s,
pajamas -and a teddy bear.
Said one young well-wisher :
"I 'm sorry that happened to you , but
everybody in America isn't like that.
I hope you get well soon so you can
see some of Tallahassee ... "
Hotels and restaurants offered
their hospitality to the parents of
the young woman. Strangers
gave money to a bank account to
help the plumber an d his wife
mak e the trip fro m Ne w
Zealand.
City, a Gulf·I ront town an the
Florida Panhandle. From there,
s he headed for New Orleans.
When the pare nts arrive d
three days later. flowers. baked
goods and gifts were awaiting
them.
.. Tl\e &irl had nobody, .. swd
Dlck Simpson of the s heriff's office. "And everybody thought.
·Maybe I can do something · · ·
A man offered her a ride about
7 a .m . Nov. 10 -but instead of
driving toward Louisiana. he
drove ea.st to Tallahassee.
.. The~ just can't believe the
type or hospitality." Sampson
saJd . ..Her ra t.her told m e that
ever ybody in New Zealand will
know about Southern
hospitality.·· Even children contributed to
the well-wishes Fourth graders
at Hartsfield Eleme ntary made
cards with rainbows, sunshine
and flowers drawn on the front
One boy taped Sl .25 to his
mess age :
O n the outskirts or town, the
man stopped in a wooded area.
raped and tried to stra ngle her.
then dragged her about 70 yards
into the brus h, s lammed a
cement slab on her he ad and left
he r. police said
The parents say they and their
daughter don 't feel bitter,
thanks to the town's good will
.. She didn't feel alone. and
that took the bitterness out ... her
mother s aid. ··w e never had to
worry ." ··Dear Ne w Zealand friend
Hi My name is Isaac . I'm in 4th
grade I'm sorry that happened
to you but everybody in America
1sn •t like that. I hope you get
weff soon so you can see some or
The woman. whos e identity
has not been released. struggled
to the roads ide, where a
passer·bY s potted her and called
the sheriff's o ffice
.. She has a s trong s pmt, .. her
father added. "She going to be
fine ·· "When I called the family that
night. they had to run out and
g e t mone y and c lothes put
The attack er has not been
apprehended
DEATH NOTICES
('ROSR\" Hm ('ro,.I)\ uf <: ano11 ('ti\
( ·11i11n11l11 ancl Emm.t 1>1·1111
"' s.i11nJ ... Jtl!'>J' Jncl
..,C\ l'rJI llt•'l'l'" Jlltl lll'Jlhl'"'
F r t l' 1111' m :.1 ' 1-.1 II I 1 n m
·, 11111'.\I to H 11111'\I •111
.\lon!b \. '''' l'nlhl·r :i:J. Hl!ll ,11 l'rl·i·tl' 1111111\1 .. .., ...,mtth-.
'1111111<11' \\ h1·1 l' funeral
'l'rl 1t·1:' \\tll IK· «11nd11t'tl•d 1111 TUl...,dJ\ '\11\l•mltt.•t 21
l!lXI .11 lit fMI.\ \I \\1th ftt•\
l>o Thom .. , \\' o,,.1111n
pa-.101 ol thl' f11 ,.1 ("ht ''t1a11
( h ll I' l' h U I I I I' I ,t I I II .J.!
I n t l' 1 m t' n t \\ 1 I I h 1 • ,, 1
BEHTllA \I t'HOS ll Y
J Ill' j .j ;J l'l"..itll·lll "' ll unt1nJ.(lon lh·.oeh. t'.1
l';i~~t>ll J \\J\ 1111 Sund<"
'\11\l•mh1:1 22 19111 .ti
11 u n I I n J.! I fl n II l' ;1 (" h
('11n\ all"n•111 llo-.p1t.tl \Ip,.,
(.'10!.b) hJtl 111•1•11 ,Ill Jl"l t \I'
m l' m h ,. r " I 1 h 1· F 1 1 ' 1
l'hl'l'>l lJll l'hllllh Ill
ll11111 1nJ.!ton llt•Jc h l".1 ,,..,
I 11 11 J.! ,1 ... h 1• r h ,. ,, I t h
til·rmtlh·tl lklm t•tl 'hl••t ul
S' I, 1:1 :-., L•·t-.1111 0 1
I i'u n t 1ni.:111n Bt>.ll'h l' J
E' t•rl'll' l'ro..,h.' 111 Bel I l" .1 \\ l" 't m In ... I I' I l' l' ml' t l' I \
----------~ l'tl'l l l' Bt othl'r' !'>mtlh' r " .\101 tttJI \ till t'\"\111 'o jJli tiS.111
l' \:\~ ,ACIFtC YllW
MIMOllAL , ...
Cemetery Morluary
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1l1c View Oro11e
Newport Beach
644 2700
McC04tMK:ll MORTUAlllS
LaQuna Beach
4~·94 15
t"19Quna Hills
768·0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
1:: \Kl. \\' l' \'\;'Ii 1 t•.,11h·111
ol f:I T11ro (.';i I' JS-.l•1I J \\ J'
o n ;\;o\l•mhl't 11 l!lllt
S U I \ I \ l' d h \ h I ., \\ I I l'
,.. I ;J n l"l'" " J ll f.l h I l' I ,, n d ~on t n ·l:J\\ £,orl .011d
.\t a1-.hall St~ II 111 t'o..,IJ
Mt>:-.u. Ca i:r:.1ncb on J11hn
St~ II uf 1..1.:unJ llolb l':.1 . 2
gn1ndda11J!hlcr.., .larnll' and
s u,.:.1n Sl \II ot co,,1:.1 .\ll'~a
Ca :1 i:n•.il·lott ,indt·h1 ldrt>n.
J u:.l tn . Rr ando n a nd
Stl!phantl' St~ II of l.u1wnu
11111". Ca t hrothcr OJI<.'
C<i n n of St. Geor~l'. L:la h
und numt•n1u!'> n1ec·es and
H•llOI LA WM-MT. OLIYI
Moftuarv • Cemelery
Crematory
nephe\\S. .\Ir. Cann was it
rl!sidenl nf Orange Count~
ror 19 ) ears lie "JS pui-t
pt't•i1 1de11t of lht-Forest
Garden Socrul in El Torn.
Ca .\ll'm11n al ~t'r\lt•es "111
bt> hl'lcl on Wt•dnl'Mla~·.
No\t>mber 2S. 19111 J I
1625 Gisler Ave
Cost• Mesa
540-5554
,_CINOTHHS
~•OADWA'f
MOllTUAIY
I tO 8roac1w1y
Cos11 Meu
&42-9f50
IALTl---OM IMITH A TVTMtLL
WUTC""' CHAPll. 427 E t 7t'1 St
Cost• Meta
64&-8371
3:00PM m tht> Gn11·e Chupt>I
of St Andrt'Wll Presb~ leruan
Churrh or Ne\\port Beach
Prl\'llll' Interment at P11c1fir
Memnrl»I Park. Newpo1·l
Beurh In heu or nowers the
rum ily r'c.'quest:s memorial
contributions bt' made lo the
American Hearl
Assochation. Pacific Vie\\
Mortuatry directors.
DeBE LLE
l.OUIS DeBEt.LE .
resident or Laf\ma Beach.
C». P11ued aW•Y on
November 21, 1981 In South .-Cl..,,,_, La1uma. Ca. lie was owner
SNITMI' MOrNAIY of lht O&D Bootcl)'. Laaunu
t:z7 Matn S1 S.•ch 5'.lrvlved b> hls "tre
.._,ntlnQlon Beac:h Nroma. 3 sons . Rt chord
~ De8eUt ol Fountain Valley. .~--------""'!"·"~..,j Ca .. Lauren De Belle of
J.,JJ.!Un.1 11 111-. C'.1 .111tl \l11r111.1n 111 ('1,...1,1 \h•,,1
Wan·l·n l.h•fklll• ol B11ultl1•1 ·o111 :;·,:,1
l'ol111 Jdo I d.HtJ.!hh•t r>111 h
('I J m h It I 11 I Bo 11 Id1· I .
('olor,11111 .11111 I ''''l'I.,
.\I 1 11 t n• 111 \\ h 111 " 1• II 111
Art1.1111a Cl.111d1tll' c;, J' tw1 J.!l·t 11r <"111111 ... 1 ...
(.' J md la Ktrk 1>1 ( 'ol11r,1tl11
ancl l>11nn <1 .J11nl'' 111
A n a h 1· 1 m (.' .o -
~' andl'lllltln•11 \h•nwrtJI
Sl'I"\ ll"I'' \\ tll ht• hl•ltl 1111
TUl'-.dJ\ :'l<o\1•mht>t 2~. WHI
.o I 2 1iu I' .\I :.1 l l h" H a \
F.omrh l'h<1p1•I "1lh HI'\
fh11m a:-. \\'arml'I'. pasl111 ol
I ht• l 11111 .. 1 .\l l'lhcodt..,I l'hu11·h
o I I. J I! 11 n ,1 II l' J t' h
ofl tl'IJtmg l'rl\ Jll' hunal
II t:ll~
110\"T
\\ E -..; D E I. I. \ 1111\ I
IJJ..,~l·cl "'" J\ on '"' 1•mh..·1
211 1':181 Born .\1ml 2:l. 1!10:1
tn F1111 Fatrltl·ltl \IJ1111•
!'.Ul\l\l'IJ ll\ hi' \!.lfr I.All., .J
ll u~t of Tu .. 1111 l'J '""' 1l ,1rla11 \\ Un\I 111 l'111111tJ
1h·I \l.11 CJ b1olh1•1 ... l.11111,
1111\I ol Ht\l't..,uk l'a .11111
l.tn\\011<1 1111,t 111 L.1J.(t1t1J
H1°d<"h l'J . i.:r<itHlc·htldt l'll
('h•·rt .Juchlh Jilli rum llu\l
.\I 1• m1111.1l 't'n 11 t'' "111 "'' ht•hl 1111 T111·,1fa\ '-11H•ml1t•r
'l I I ~1111 JI I I 1111 \ \I JI
l':.1l·1l 11 \"ll'll .\h•murwl 1'J1 I..
Ch;opt>I In 11~·11 111 llm\t'I''
nH·m111 tJI t·ontnh11t 11111 ... m.I\
hl' matlt• to lht• ('111 111 llop1•
J' i.H " 11 t t· \fl•\\ \( 11rl 11.11 \
dtt t'l tfll'
<;l.fo::\~,\ .\1 llEll'-.
rl'..,t<Jent ul Co:-.lu .\1t"•il . t'J
for !>!'> 't>ut-i. Pa,..st>d ""a\ •Ill
:\m l'mbt'r 21. 1981 Shi• ,,..
-,ut\i\l'<I h\ hl•r t•htldtl'll
J im 11l'hn. jud~ s h11111 Jnt1 ,4dopt i·ve J 1· r r ' 11 l' h n a n d II 1:1.
1:1 J nd1·hrldren Gra\l':>tdl'
!>l'l"\"ll'l'S will hl' hl•lll on homes Tul'sclu\. :'lim t•mh1•1· 2~. 19111
at Ill 1101\M al llarhor 1.a\\11
.\kmonul Purk with Bl'\ needed
Bnt1·t' Kurrll'. pustot ol tht'
~1·e,.b~ terian l'hurc·h of tht> Permanent homes are <: o , .... n u n t . 11 r r 1 t• 1 u 11 n i: Sl't'\'ll'~ undt•r lhl· direl·ti nn needed r o r .orange or llarbor l.u\\ll·~luunt OllH· Cou n ty babies and
.\lortuun llf co~tu .\lt.> ... a children.
:1-&0 555.& Sl umbl'I' Room The county's Human
n~trtalum will hl' ht>ld un Services Agency says It
Tul'sda~. :"oH•ml>l'r 2.a. 19111 is taking only eight
rrom 8.:.JA:\1 to IU OOA.\I mon ths in some cases to R ENN EDWARl> R RE~:" JR mat~h an applica~t with
rei1ident or Costa .\lesa. <:u . a child, although 1t m ay
sinct' 1947 Pa!ISed ""a' on take up to two years.
:-.;1" em~r 21. 1981 Ill' was a No specific lim it on
m t• m bl' r or 1 he \' ,.. w Income or education is
lluntln1tton Bellt•h Post required to apply.
hanng been 1-etlred lrom tht• For information caJI
t;nltcd Sta~t's Marine Corps 834·4321. and ask for a
C w .o lie as ur\'lved b~ hli. 8 0 c I a I w 0 r k e r i n
wife Merit le. c h 1 I dtl' n adoption
Edward B Renn Ill. Ev11 ·
l.upham or Sun Clementi!. Cu and Jessk11 l.undr~ of
~1115ion VleJo. Ca •. Jame!\
und Wlllh1m Shuman: also
survlv~d by 1 icrandchlld
A11ron. Gra\e Ide er\'lcea
wlll be held on Tue~duy.
~ovember 24. lll8t 111
l.UOPM »l Harbor l.awn
Memorial Perk Servlc s
under the d1r•ctl()n or
Hubor l.uwn°Mount 011\'e
Gas use diP8
SACRAMENTO (AP>
-A ucuat .11101lne uaaae in California wu
lhe lowe1 t for that
month in tlve yeara, the
Board of Equallutlon
H id.
•
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOTfTueaday, November 24, 1981
! (
Mission serves Indians J.: 1·
Services have gone on for 165 years in SD County 1
PAL.A IAPI -The Indians at
M Inion San Antonio de Pala
have worshipped In the aame
lon1 and narrow, cedar·beamed
mission chapel for 165
uninterrupted yeara, a claim no
other California Indians can
make.
Despite greedy Mexican
landowners . ravaaln& white
settlers. floods and earthquakes,
the Indians have remained
faithrul to Pala Miuion, which
is located in a farm-filled river
valley near the foot or Palomar
Mountaln i.n northern San Diego
County.
Pala is the state's only
miss ion that has ministered
continually to the needs of the
lndians. the people for whom the
Franciscan padres origmally
es tablis hed the 2l·mission chain
more than 200 years ago.
Si n ce its m ost recent
restoration was completed in
1959, P,ala Mission has been the
spiritual center for s ix nearby
reservations or Mission Indians.
so call e d by th e U .S .
g o vernme nt bec ause most
Southern California Indians
be c ame C hris tians al the
missions.
·About 200 c hildren from
kindergarten through eig hth
grade attend the only mission
school an California, said Sis le r
Mi c hae l e en, the school 's
principal. The students. more
than 40 percent of them Indians.
art: bused in from a 10-mile
radius stretching into TemecuJa
in so uthern Rivers ide County.
Indians still attend ser vices al
two minor missions on Indian
reservations, said the Rev
Frank Difrancesco , P a la
M 1ssion's associate pas tor. but
Pala Is b y far the la r g e i.l
community.
But the miss1on ·s s urviva l is
as tenuous as it has been sance
Padre Antonio Peyri overs aw
the making or thou!>ands o r
adobe bricks and tiles for the
firs t permane nt building!> in
1816
··we are strugg ling for our
existence ... Sr M1chaelet!n said
··we are very much dependent
o n our fiesta and the s ale or
Christmas c ards made by the
children ··
However. she added. although
the re a.s a long waiting list. no
child is turned out or school
because or inability to pay
tuition.
Rev. DWrance sco s aid the
mission needs the busloads or
tourists who vis it on weekends
and the thousands or people who
attend the annua l Corpus Chnsti
fiesta an late s prang.
The religious feast has been
celebrated s ince Pala M1ss1on·!>
founding among the Lu1senos
Indians, as the Shoshone an
Indians of the S an Luis Rey
Mis sion were calle d b } the
Franciscan Fathe rs, and the
Cahuillas Indians
The Luisenos generally h ve on
Pala, Pauma. Rincon. La Jolla
and P ec han ga Indi a n
~~-~~~'] , .
Rei.ervat1on!'> The Cahu1 1la:. It\ l'
on the Cahu1lla and Santa Rosa
re servations. a ll sen cd b' thl·
mission
The l.u1:.enos a nd Cahutlt<i ...
Wl're JOtned h~ the Cupeno.,
Indians in 1903 when thl'v "'t'rt' e~ 1c le d rrom t h eir Y.; JI ne1
Spran~s ho me land by a l ' S
Su preme Court d N·1s1on Toda\
th e three In dian 1u·oup ...
1nte rm1ng lt' rree l ~ throu~h
marriage and busane!'>s dealing.,
Pala Mission 1s not une of the
m ajor 21 California m1.,..,.on ...
but a n "as1ste nc·1a . or i.att•lltl(•
m1 ss t0n lo M1 s:.wn San Lu"'
Rey. located 25 m iles \.\C:.I PJl;1
M 1ss1on was designed a., pal'I "'
a n ambitious plan lo ercJll' ,111
inland chain for lnd1 <1n~ who
could not reac h the coa stal
missions. but the plan died
Within 15 vc·ars or llS fuunclini.:
Father P n rt reported th1·
m1ss1o n had .t .300 Indian
converts But in ltl36. Fatht·1
Ru e na ve ntu ra Fortun1
s ur rendered M 1ss1on San Lu"'
R e' <1 n d P a I a lo l h l' rw"' h
i n d e p e n ti l' n t M 1· x 1 1· a n
gove rnment
F earing lakl•over h~ th1·
United St ales 11 vt•ars late·• ~ex 1can adm1n 1:-.lr~to1 Pio f'1c·o
""hi lht· IJnd 1111 S2.500 in silver
a nil "'hl'at to two M ex1can
l'1t I n ·111 ent·iirs. d dea I l a te r
\ tmlt'tl In t ht• L' ~ government
·\.., 1hl' Franc·1scans left the
m1..,..,1on thl' M cx1r:an
la11dt1\\nl''" and while settlers
pll11Hll-1 t•d m1~swn timber and
t tit· .1111J <111 hut a fe w of the
111111.rn.., dt"l''-'f'>l'd 1
11 " \\ (• \ l' I t h (.' m I !'> s I 0 n . s I
1 t•m11h•11t>"" proll•tlt>d 1t fr~·' ·1'
I 1111 ht·1 fl Jma~1· and p ries i·
1·1111t1m1t•d to "i)lirad tt'ally alle ~ • ' lntl1Jn nt.•l•ds Thc first repai t •
It t' .l: a 11 1 n 1 8 K 5 B u t a n
l'a1 thq11akt.· on Christmas Day, 1x•rn ..,.., 1•rt•h da m<i ged the · . , . d1;qll'I ~ •
\111·1 th•· l'upenos Indians· \
t•arnc 111 l!IOJ. t he Landmal~ CI u b or Southe rn Callforftl
bt·~an further r estoration.
ll<IQd 1n 1916 toppled the
to\\ t•r hut 11 "'J S remount
Fl\ e \ l'an. o l rebu ilding J
F.1thl'r .J )1 CJrrllo tompl~
m "'~ 11m rl'pa 1 r~ 1 C
l.11..1• J D \ olher Ame rican• I
t.1m1I" tht· M1.i..,1on India ns wift1 t't'lt~tu Jltt 'fhJnks~1 v 1n ~ thif''
"1•1•k \\1th J big dinne r and ·
tha11l..l11J l11 hiJH' f •.
Drug niay arrest
high cholesterol
Naked
• Jogge r
till' duldn·n \.\Ill hav<.• a d<iy off •• ,
t rnm a "t'hool the Indians art' • 1
I NIUC MOTi:( . ;
"CTITIOUS eUSINISS •
I NAMI ST4TIMINT I r,.. 10110 .. 1n11 por•on ., oo'"'' I bu,.,,. .. ,,~
WESTEION ENTE RPRIS E. 11Mt > •• 1
1
8••<" 81,,,,. HunhnqlOrl llea<ll, Qi. •• , ., • ., , 1
F,.n• T<ac:y Morrl\ t.ao Edl .... r
BOSTON <APl -High levels or cholesterol an arreste d
the blood, which doctors say contribute to the No RT 11 L 1 r 1 1. 1-;
de aths or hundreds or thousands or Ame rica ns ROCK. 1\rk 1,\ I' I 1\
each year, may someday be controlled with a new m <1 n arr l'.., u· d "' hi It•
medicine developed in Japan, researchers r eport Jogging nakt·d do"' n an
Tne expenmental drug, called compactin, has Arka nsas frl'e"' .i \ .,,1111
bee n successfully tested on people who have an 1n 11 w as JUSl ..,0 mt•thini.? he
herited disorde r that produces high blood had to do. at'<'orcling to
cholesterol and leads to early heart disease. poh ct'
Even though much more research rem ains to Motonsh calkd ~talc
be, done, doctors s ay the medicine may someday po lice with report'\ that
be useful for the millions of otherwise healthy peo· a man \\Ith no dothe.., 1m
pie who have too much cholesterol m their blood. was J 0 g g 1 n g a 111 n g
T he s tudy was directed by Dr Hiros hi westbound lnter'>lali• 10
Mabuchi at Kanazawa Univers ity S chool of bc twel'n Little Hock and
Medicine in Japan and published in today's New Lonoke
England Journal of Medicine p 0 11 c e s a 1 ct J 11 c· I
The doctors gave compactin to seven people Coop N . 3R. of Noilh
with a condition called hypercholesterole mia Such L ittle Rock l!aH· no
victims often have two or three times the usual reason for his h<'liavior
levels or cholesterol in their blood. They are fi ve except 10 sa~. · 1 1u .. t
times more likely than normal to have heart dis· fell hkl• I had to no 11
• ·~ Hvnt•"91on Beac,.. CA., .. , I
I ,n;::,•,~u'::"~" " conauct.o by .., • • f
I
Fr-l Mo<rh J
No" • 1'11
rru' lt•t~t ••l fHtO wtt~,.• Cou,.fy Cltrk or Orano-County •. i ,,,
Publl\n.d Or•llQe Co••• Daily No• 10 17 ?• 0t< I 1•1 C'4J
f'UIUC 1111:£
l'ICTITIOVS aUSI NEU N4ME STATEMENT
l "'f' tn1tow1nq ~''°"' •'• clDil ":Y\1,,f"\~ 41\ COUNTqv TRAOITIONS ?tS _.._,.._
~· Co\I• _.,. C• m11
l •urA Etititbtth M•rc"•Of'I~•.
1h1 Sf '°''a -~• Ca '1611 l ynn q~ C"-OW•<k s>O T
••• ,.. .. """°'1 8uc~ C• ., .. l
T"'' Ou\lnf'\\ ts ronctuc t•d tw
1tmn~ ewtr1nft\hlO
l-• E Mar(IU0<1a!IJ
I T .... , \l&tf'n'\fl'f\t WA\ filed with
r ov"tv C ltrk of Or•nqe Covftty
'1\llovpm~r t) 14111 "" ... Publl\IW>d O"•nQe Co.\! Deity "11~
l'<OY 17 ?• 0.. I I "II -« eas e, which often appears when they are in their He was ;.irrt'sted on
40s. charges of walking on •
The medicine lowered in their blood levels by l h e f r e c w a y and ____ ,.,_IUC __ "'1t£ ____ .. f'
29 percent a form of cholesterol called low d ensity 1 n d ece n t ex 110 s u re
lipoprotein, or LOL. offic ials s a1<J p1cT1T1ous aus1N1H 1 •
LDL causes ratty depos its on the blood vessels. NAME sTATIMENT 1
causing them to become narrow and c log . This r),• 10110w•n9 o~••on " 0014.1 bta\""HU condition, called h ar dening or the arteries or ------------1 wooo SHAPINGS rsn s1e1.t,
ather osclerosis. contributes directly to the heart PVIUC MOTIC( :,~.iR Hunt111111on 11 .. c ... C•lllo<ftllt
attacks and strokes that kill 800.000 Americans l'tCTtTrovsausrNus Ru, .. 11 E Rout10• Jr ''"
each year. NAME STATEMENT Edlnq•r No 8 103. Hunll"Qlon 9"(11.
In an accompanying editorial. Ors . Michael S 11u!i~:.::~1ow•r19 0'"°" " ootng '·~~~;"~::::, 1, conovc1.., 11'1'
Brown and Joseph L. Goldstein of the Univer sity E Gs .ex E cu T 1 v e G 1 FT tn<11v1ou•1 !. ,
of Texas Health Science Center wrote that com· SERV1ces. n u Rln r An •101. Ru•wnL Rou"ll•J• • Newoon a.«11, CA .,..., 1 l llh \lal-1 wH lllecl wllll 'It l'\4 pactin may help more than those with G•e90<Y J•me• Kelley, nu River counh c1erk 01 Or•t1oe Cou111y 9 f 4
hypercholesterolem ia. ""' • 101. N-111 .. c11. CA ,,.., I 0cioi.r 10 ''" • Thi• bu\IMH I• <-v<l.0 by an "' Cholesterol is an essential chemical that is 111C11v1oua1 Pubn•-0r..,.,. co .. 1 oa11v"
used to m ake cell membranes and hormones . Gr-o . K••i.v Nov 11 ,. DK '·' "'1 ... '
H This It.I-I W•I 1111'11 Wllll IM owever , it is dangerous when too much circulates county ci.,,. °'Or•• '°""'Y on oc1. " in the blood. · », "'1 -----.,.-.-~---•-t
Campus arms OK'd
VISALIA <AP> -A College of Sequoias
committee narrowly r ecommended t hat three
cam pus police officers be allowed to carry guns
when patrotllng at n ight and on weekends.
The parking-security comm ittee made up or
staff members recomm ended that approach S-4
but rejected a prop osal to let officers ca rry
l'lr-..._,. 'I~ Publl-Or-Coe&t O.lly Piiot. ----"-'.'------Nov. 3, 10. 11, 24, 1•1 '11MI
l'ICTITIOUS au11N•U NAMa ITAT•M•NT Tiie lollowtnt P•rton I• dol119
llutlMUM' 110 JIM'\ GU•LITY M•AT ANO
OELl,ATllMN, ... H--1 llWO., C•t.Mt-.CAtMl7. Je_ I-...... IMP v.IW• ti~. •1• ...,,..Qt,,CAt .... T11f • ..._ ........... . !NM-... •
..
Or•nge Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Novemb41r 24, 1981
PICTITIGIUI I Ulllflll
lfAMI t l'TIMt NT
Tiit ltl!Wl11t N ftt!lt t •t f t lPlf
'4itl11tu '' IAl!IAl!A S ll!tOAL \HOllll'I
110 C' Ulll \l •••I (Hi t Mtu
c.11ror"1' titn
Iii tit Htllr 1•11• lutlu1 t U l1
011110elk I tM, H11nll1191011 IHCll
C•lll0•11I• tJMI
Kurt H llHIM tM12 Dv11Delk
l e nt. HUllll,,.IOll htcll C•lllornl• ., .. ,
ll••l>t•t t Kl119 tit f 11111
\l•HI roote Mt\t C•tllo•nlt tltJ1
T1111 11u1lntH I• unducltd h •
tlfMrAI Nt1twnh1D
""' .. tt ... l\n Tiii\ •1•1-1 w .. llltll .. 1111 Ill•
(OUllly c1,rk ot o .... 11" CoU'lh 011
... Ytmlltr IJ 1 .. 1
'"*' l>llbll•hed 0.•"91' "'°'" Delly Pilot. ~y 1' )4 ()« I I 9'11 .......
PUBLIC NOOCE
"CTITIOUS I UllHUS
NAMI STATIMIHT
Tiit tollowino l>tt\On It dOl"O
°'™'""" t<NOLlWOOO ASSOCIATES
""• LU Rtmlllt\ SUH• 100 Minion Vlt to C• ~•91
Altll••d R SttnlOI\, tnn LO
l!amblt\ Sult• 100 Ml11IOI\ Vttlo C• ., ...
Tllh tMltlntO I\ On<IU( ltd l>y 4'
llMlttd 0¥11••ir>hlD
Alcherd R Sl•lllOI\
Tiii\ \l•t-t ,.,, 111.., with tllt
tov11ty Ctt•k ot O•tn0t Cou111v un
Octo~r ,, 1'1111
Ft741/S
1!HODIS, 1(£HOALL &
HAl!lllNGTON
A ""''•"lo""t l.iw '""" •1't Mac""'-'• 81Yd Sulit Its NewPO,, IN<JI, Ca t1MO
Pul>li\lleel Or•noe Co.11 Dally Pilot
Nov II ,. Dt< I • "" \011 ••
PUBLIC NOOCE
Ns-titJI
"ICTITIOUS 8USIHI U
NAME STATIMEHT
t nt follow•no ~r\on\ •re ao1no bu,ln~s' .,
EAST 8LUF"F UNION SEAVICE
HOV•"• a... 0-o -00•1 a.. .... Ca 11460
Brue• l Bowder'I 11'1 At\un•
an• Hu<\h"Olon Be..:" C• ., ...
Sf't•rrfoe J Bo-woe.n 1117 Alt.un•
I •nr Hull'tlngton e .. c,, C• 97& ..
r,,1, bu11ne1' f\ condutted OY
ndlYtOu•I~ CH\;~ .. Wlle1
8ruct L 8ow.Mn
~"ff J 8owtllln rr .. , , ... ~,,. •• , h ied w tth '"•
ot.nty Cler' of Or•nQt-Coun1y on
'lovemo.• 17 t'ltt
'HHtt Pobh\n.d Ot'•n~ Co•\' O•iJ~ P•tot "IOY ,, 1• Dec I I l'ltl ~10.fl
PUBUC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IU"NEU NAME lTATEMEHT
T ne tollow'no oer\On\ art doin9
°"llM\\ ~h
HUNT l.,GTON H•RllOUR
OOCICStOE SERVICES 'loOt 8ra .. i..
""'"• Munt•nqton S..iMl'I C•tlforn11 .,, ..
Juh•n A M•r • 1.0. 8'•v•t•
Or.vr Hvnt1'le)1on Bfo..Ch C•llforn••
•?&•9
( ,.,uo ( Jontt\ )8 Su"""' H tfl ,..,,,.,. C 11hfotn1• "11U
Pfttf'lt LUfde" 1t11 EIO.f'll No l'
1U4' M •Y {•Hforn~• •1•11
'" \ lrJU\H,_,, '' <onauctf"O th •
~.,,,..,,,., o•rt,,,..,.,.,,D
Jullan R ..-.,, ',..,, ,,.,..,.,,.,,t -~" filfll(t ••fh .,, ..
)tJf'llh ('ffof~ l'f OrAn(lo' ro""'" on
""""""'lY't 'l '"' .. .,_
PuC>lt•twod <>-•"9' C~\t 0• 1y P1101
""' ll 1• 0ec I I 1"91 .. II) 11
PU1uc *ITICE
STATEMENT OF AIANOONMENT
OF USE 01'
"tTITIOUS I USIHESS NAME
rn,. tottow"'o Dfl''°" ""'an.~
.,,,. "~of U• f " t t•OU'\ ~''""°'' ne,.,.. TE RAV S 1t01 H a•bO• 8 1•0 Coott• Mtt.a (•llfOfnt.t .,.,.
,,,_. 'HHt•OU' 8u1tri•'" N.tm ..
rlr,r• 1 II] •bO.,... ••\ f1lf'O '" 0"4"9"
~"'"'0'\0.Cf'moto• u l-''"""-t' 8 O....m' * 'l1h C)lrH1
••unl1"'QfOf"I Bf"•'" (•l1ftVft1•
PUBLIC NOTlCE
U AlfME*l 0" A9ANDONMINT
0, USE OF
Flt TITIOU\ llUStNES\ NAME
FICTITIOUS llUSINESS
NAME U ATIMENT
Tn~ to1tow1no Ofi'n,on '' 001no
tkl'\•nt\\ .\
WEST CON!>TRU(TtON ,00 W
VICtO,.•• Unit ( l (Ml• ~\•, (.A ,,.,,
W.lRPEN E WE ST /00 w
V1CfOf t• Utut ( l (Olla Mtu (A .,.,,
Th1\ bU·\U'W•''\ t'\ conduct.a Oy •n
lnO•Ytdu•I wa'''" f w.,,
Thf\ '\4l~I w•\ t1l.-c:t wit,, Ow
Cou11ty Cle•• ot 0--(OUfllY 0'1 O<t
JO,~,
l'll•tt• Publt\,_ <>'8'19" ,.,.,, Oall, Ptlol
.,o~ J tO 11 1• 1'91 ., "11
PUBLIC MOTlCE
,.CTITtOUS I USINEH
NAME STATEMENT
T llt lollowino .,.''°"' ••t clolno
bu1lnen •t
WH tALIGIC, IOI W 8t•tr C°'ta
Mt\A, Ca t•i.
Robert I( M<Adtm•, 1'07 Cttlo
cltl Los A14>mot S." Cle,.,,.nlt Ce .,,,,
El•IM M<AO<tm\, 1"°1 Celle del
LOS Ala~. ~n C~,,,.,.lt, Ca '1'11
T,,lt t>onln"s I\ CondUClf(I l>y tll
tlldfYl\l•I
A-r1 IC M<AOtm•
Ttl" ttet-t WIK llled with tllt C~nty Cloro of 0ta11~ COllnty Oft
~o< •. 1'91 Ft1SUI
Publl•-C>tr1Q1t ,.,.,, Da lly Piiot
No• tO, II t• 0« I, 1 .. 1 *WI
,.ICTITIOOS au11Nass
NAMI STATIMINT
Tllo lollowl"O porton I• dOl"O
.... 1 .. .-...
MAIO '0A YOU 1110
We•tCttfl. Hutltlt\Olftl .. e<ll (e .,. ..
D•vhl Owtn tro,ow, 1110
Wevtert lt, HWl'lftMt9fl 8Htll Ce .,...
Tl'llt .,.._., It CoMUCIPd llW Ill
lt\ftvl4Nel ow.er•..., flit• .............. Iii .. """" h '°""'' Cleta .. 0r-. c.-. .,. --Jftll """'' hllll ... ~C....o.ltt"' ...
MeY IP tlDK• e !tit .......
PUIUC MOTICI
fllC'llY!tul I UllNIN
NAMl ITATIMINY TM fl!IMIJlt -111\t IA ftlflt
11\tMlltH•l
•AHOl•L IHO T•AOt HO
COMlllANY, M COl .. lt, c .. i. M .. e, ca_,,.,,
St•"'"' o. ltlmcMt. ta•• ( ....... (otll MtM, Co. fht7
StovOfl 0. w.l*rt. IJM4 CMlllM
\llOlllO, ~Hit'-. Ct tlt»
Tiii• llll•il•H• It Ul'HN CltCI lly I
llMllOCINl'l-\1\!P
,...,.110 ltlmcM•
Tlllt •t ... ,.,....I ""' Ill• wltll 1M
Co11nh Cl.,k ot Ottnoe Cov11tv '" NovemDtr t, ttl l
fllCTITIOUt t Ul tNIN
t6AMt 'TATIMINT 1 llt t1111111l11t ,.,,.,. It .. 1111
911•11\tu ..
A t.OtN'S C.AllPllU ANO
OllAl'l"IU .... , l'l•Uflll•. ""' M .. a. CalliofNe tlt11
T lltoeltfo Aloen llllOyt n, l•Ot
My•tlowoou '"""' to••• M .. • (tlllOrlllt '>tit
Tnl• llol~llltU I• •-"'toll by •n t11<11YIG11tl.
T'--t AIOtfl lt11ov.,.
T "" \lel0fn9fll we• lllM w1tll Ille C.ovn'~ C.tt•k •• Ot•n11t Ct11ntv 011
Ho .. mbtl 10, ""
'"Wit l'OllU l'uDll•-or.,. c .. ,, D•lly 1111101,
Pu1111.iieo 0r111oe '"'' O•llv Pilot NOY u. Det '·'· 1$ , .. , ,,~ .. NOY 10, 17, t4, 0e< I, 1 .. 1 41lt.el
PUIUC NOOCE
l'ICTITIOU' a U$1NIU
HAMI $TATIMINT
Tiie loltowlno pe•.-11• ••a Clol"O
IMl\IMUA\
TUSTIN FINANCIAL 5eRVICE$,
IOU At el Hiii ""•nu•. Tuttt11,
Callfor11I• 93*
Weller Jemu M<Graw, Jr • 14t U
Rt CI Hiii A~tfl;,a, Tutti"· Ca11for11la .,..,
Wan<H .>oyto M<Gftw, 14'23 RPd
'1111 Avenut, T\ltlln, Ct lllornlt t>MO
This llutlntu II <Oft.,.,(lt d l>y •
0•11e,.lpertner1Np
W-J McG•-T 1111 Ulltement wu flltcl with Ill•
County Cl•rt< of Ott noe County Ofl
"CTITIOU' aUSIHUS lllAMl ITATIMa NT
t II• tollowlng .,.,..,,,. "" do•no
IMl11fl•n •• S"'N I A ANA LOCX.C, J111 ~ Mtlll
St•ffl, S.nte Ant , C:.t lilor11t• ~2101
Ja<k P ~Y. 111• •-• Str .. 1
Gotll -"· C..ttl.,.t11t '2•Jt JtaMttlo ~Hdley, 111• lllw•
)lrfft. Co.te Mtw, Callfo. n1a t1•1•
Tllh llll••twu '' <tll011tl.., t>Y •n tnGl¥I011tl,
J -lte Ht.Ol•Y
1 hi\ tlatefnonl '"" ltleo """" Ille tou11ty Cit" 01 0""99 County Oil
Novtmo.r 10, l'ltl
,11'4U
Put>ll"'90 Or-(..,.,, CJ•"• l'otol 0<10~• S 1w1 l'l,IW NOY 1', 0e< I, I, U, 19'1 ~I •t
Publl•hed Or•noe CN JI Dally Piiot,
Nov l , 10, 11, t•. t•t O~t
l'ICTITIOUS I U$tNU S
HAMii STATllMllNT
Tllo loll-IAO "'Ml"' ••• dOlllO
thl\1n1u .,
LEO A H O FRA N C E
ENTE RPRISES, ltil 81rch SI , S111to
UI, Nowpor1 Bff<h, CA t2t60
ROBEAT L 80tES, lttl Me ..
Or Ive. L·S, Stnl• AM. CA '110,
ICENHETH T FAANCE, USS
Mew VorOt Ortw EHi, • ..... c ... 1.
MeM,CAt?t»
T 11" l>uslnou 11 conduc ltd by •
OeMr•l .,.r1Mr\ll•P
R-1'18otH
T"I• Jlel-1 '"" llleo •1111 llW Coullly Ctort. ol Ortl'Ot COVlltf oft O<t JO,"" Pl1..sJ
Publl"'9CI Or81>9t CoHI Delly Pltot,
No. ). tO, ,, 1•, IWI HU-ti
l'ICTITIOUS 8USINIU
NAMl ITATIMENT
fr.a toltowlno P•''o" u Oo•l'IO
bti\l"'-U e\
A S TOH ES THROW 1G W Cool Htg,,way, No I, Newp<>•I Bu ch
Calito•nlt ""3
Kuen "'"" GoldJt••n. l71S CltY
Sltffl B Nowport 80.cll C•lltorn ..
t?atl
T111, .,.."""' '' ,onoucteo tlT .,. ll\d1v1d~I
KA'#\ Golelttir1n
Th" ilM..,_I ••• 11~ •tll\ !toe
Co\lnlv Clerk 01 O,.n~ Coulllv on
O< tot>t• 11 t'9t ,.,,,...
P111>1t\lllCI Ora-. Co..11 Oatly Pilot, "'°' J. 10 II 7• IW1 HU II
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI llUllNllSS
NAME STATllMENT
Tht tottow1n9 P4'''°"' .,, OotnQ
OV\H'"' •S
PARK llOO LTO 1711 SE
llrt•IOI, Su•IP 71ll, Senta Arw. C• t1107
R-n L w .. h IGH>e-•I Part-)
7U7 S E B"""' S..llo 70l. ~I• An•, Ca 97101
, ........ v t<•mln.-at cc;.,..,ai
Pl't,_.rl l2l1 S E Brt\IOI Suite ?OJ, ~ni. Arw. Ca ~JOI f,,., bv\tM\\ I\ (Ol"ldutt•d bW' •
IU't'H,•d p.trt:rae'f'V\1p
ROCleftL Wl\h,
G.twtal Pa'1nitr
Tht\ \t.~t -~ tiled ••tt' 1"'-COW\h 0..k of 0.-,_,., Oft
Now•"'~ •J '"'
NIUC NOOCE
1 t'U\ ,,.,~ ..... ftlf'(I ••tf'I '""
k_<>u,..h c1..-ri.i o• <Panf)f" rourth on pr to.,.., 7& ,,.,
1'11-1•
Pt1bh\twd ()'~ (o.tt.t OA•lv Pilot
NO• II 1• 0t< 1 8 1'91 \00811
l'ICllTIOUS IWSINl[SS
NAME U ATI MI NT
1bu!ihn•.,~0~~0"'1nQ IH'1'4n\ •r• dolnQ
El OORAOO PAATNEllS. l TO , >»-• C.alle .. ,,.,._, Sulk C. S"" Juen
C•P,.l••rw> CA t2'1S HVHTE A ENERGY
CO APORATIO.,, • Ct llfort1I•
<o•p0rt11on, ~ Ollt Av1.-. S11ltt
C. Sen J ;,an (Apisl•-CA ~•'S RALPH ( PHELJ.N, JR . llO't
C•ll• Avtador, Suitt C hn Jua n
CtP'"""° CA t1'1S Tf'lf~ bu'•~'\S '' c.ondut t•d by a
11m1l•d per1ne r\lllp
HUNTERENERGY COAP
8y Aatpll E Plltt8'1 J•
Thll Jlat~t .... loltcl Wltll , ...
County Clt•k ol Or•-. C011nty on()< I
JO, ....
Y"'TllS .... NISSEH
.. l'rflttMMtt ~ ......
ATTOllNIYS AT LAW
-" .... Mel11 h., s..ltt ,.
""'' ...... Ce. n7tl
Pu1111.-°'-c ... ,, O•tlv Pltot,
NOY ), tQ, II, U, IWI H 7 ... 1
PUtuc •occ
l'ICTITIOUS 8 USINISS
NAMI STATllMllNl
Tht lolto•lllO 04non1 .,. doll\O
bvlt .......
VALLEYCREST LA NO COMPANY,
111 Lido l>tni Ori.,., H-t 8tedl, c.11 ..... 1.~
Vol Visit i!tlelet, In<~ 1 Cttltornta
(•r .. nllofl, 111 LI• Perll Orin , .... ..,, 8"<11, ClllNtflll ~
Tlllt """""'' h t~"ee llY • c~•llM VII~ I t*"-Ill<
.i.lln \.,CW<! I/, ,.,_., Aq t IKt
,,_..~_ ............
C-tv Cltn If ~ CMIMf 111 ....... ,..,, ....__..._ ......
'""' 2 I CllU-,.._,. .. .,._
-c..... ..... ,... __ _
NIUC llltl
l'ICTITIOU' aUStHIU
NAMl.STATIMI NT
J n1 •ottowtng c:wtr\on' ''' 001n\ bUllll41UH
NEV'llPOIH Pf:lROlf:UM ~UNL
IO 11, Lid., !ti FtWOI\ une, 'iu•te llJ
I u•lln, l •lllorme 9lt00
Pat H c.ot11ten, S40l lo A••ntdt Pe Imo•. O•anQit, Calttorn,. 9lat~
M H 0.<U rd, 901 HIQh<.loll
!Mtnt• .AN, C.•t1torn1•
I rH, Du•·~' ,, COtlOtJCC~ Oy •
II t'ntted prM1nrtr \IHP
Pel H Coc:llr•n
r hi' ,-.ttin'W:nt ... , hlld ... n ""'
County Cit"• ot OranQt C.ciunty o•
NOvtm bH IJ 1911
F ll)UI
J ACKSON, KIDDEll &
SUCICLtlfG
"""""'"'"'"'• S.U•• .... -·· ,..,.. .... ... Nn r""1 Ceftt., Ori.,..
N•Wl'O,, ha<A, Ct. t2MI
P11bllshtcl Or-{.O.\I Oaoly POIOI
hov 7•. 0.C I I, IS. 1911 )1~11
FICTITIOUS llll~INESS
NAMI[ STATEMENT
T ht lofto"''"til Qet\On '' Ou•nv
t>U\lf'ltl\' .,
''" Al'C, PkCJl't~lli.) NUMIH:M I LIMt1ttJ tilt A01"MS
f INANCIAL C,HOUI' J lorpOr•tt
Pt•••· !M.ole 100, h••Po•I tl"tll 1.4
'l'lMO
Al•n L Ao•m~. 104 Lrno• '''' No,.oort bit«n, c.a lf'14'0li
l hi\ DU\tMS\ • ~ (0'10Ul teo b'f' ..
ltm•1•0 pr4rlntr\l\1p
Alilin L AO•m\
ff'\1\ \.l•lf'r'lenl w•\ fll.O #1lh IM
C..ovnh <.l .. r11 ot Or•ne)t': <..ouflly o"
ho-.f'm~r I• lit!lt
FllUH
Pubh\hloa 0t•t(Jll! C...O.\I l>•tl" f-'tlOI
"0• l• i-I a I) 1'1411 )0• 11
NIUC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IVSINIU
NAME STATEME.,T
l n• tollo"''""fJ ge, 1on " Ootf•~
C>u\tM\' •\
C.Rf:All()N (0N~11<vc.11oi..
C.OMl'1"NY 110 .. ,,.,,.,,, A•• •I 0
l O\lo Mt~ U 'l?•ll
~ltvf'n M """""'OY I .. ) An•fW1rr .... -'"() <.""" ---C.• ~,.,,
'hi\ bt..l\1twn~ I\ (_OIJ.Ovt tH:J Oy •f •no•"'o"•' 5-teWln M l(•oneoi;
I"" \i.t~rwnl ••\ 111..a ..,.,,, tn.
(.ov.fth <..6-r• .. CJf'•~ <..oun1, Of
frrrfo••mtlle1' 11. 1"\
P'VIUC NOTICE
FICllltOUS aUStNESS
NAME S1ATEMENT
1 nt •OllO••nQ P'f''"°"~ •rf' cto•+i~
bu\1n~n .,
l<C>SENtMAl ~ AS!.0(.tAl l:S >-• l••-1...,,. ~'Toro. Ct Vl•SI
""''"•'a A kou•,,tna1 1•till
L•r•OO y,... E:I 1oro (• V?•Xl
'-•n•y<U JiiovntN1 JM-11 l •r .ac
l •n• E..t loto L• •nlO
)•1¥.00r b•\Ull4ft \4/CI .,••Ut< ~
(Jr 1wf S..n J u.n l • 'OUJ
kow ~' WIO ...... ~. o .....
S•n J11•n. C• ~~17J
lht\ tk.i\Hllt1\ t\ (Ol'IO\l(tf'd bT •
Qif'"'Pt•I Nf'lntt\l'h(.I
Ro<,..,d A HO>Wn1r..1
f f"ll\ \lalf"t'ntf'\1 Wiit\ flt...a w •fh ti'W
"'IUC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSIHESS
NAME STATEMENT 'f"I• tOtlOiilllr'I~ ()t'rM>n\ .,~ OOJnQ
bw\tnitH.t'\
O NE "'IC,hl STAHU!>, 117/
Wt\f( hft tJ,•Vfl, Nl'WPo'' 8&•cn c..
~Ml
Anthony PulrtM 1000 t1100t>n
v111~ .. t..ni;ion Ao.Ml lAQun• M•<tt
C.• 'll•S1
MoC"""I U\IMM'<I• 111~ N~I
nn1111~' C..• ~
AnthOny ~utr1no
r "'' \l•te,,.-.,nt 'tllr•\ ftlt"CJ with ow
County t.'"'" ot Vr•nQt> touf'ty on
"40¥tmbf, 10 1~1
Fl1._
J.tubll\MO OrM'!~ lo•st D••IY
Poto• No• 1• De< 1 I . 1), •Qtt )IS/ 11
"ICTITlOUS llUSIHUS
NAME STATEMENT
Thr fo11ow1n9 ~''°"' ar• oolnQ l>Vt•M\\ .,
CORONADO PARTNER\ 717U
L•\ R•mt>ita\. Suitf" 100 M fHtOf'I Vfelo
Ct ~&"
A\\O(fAtfl"d lndustrl•I Pt'OperUt\
ft (t llfo..,u cor-•flonl j100 81rc11
S••ttl Nowoon B.,.,,, ca t?WO
B•rfon P•'tnfH\ (~ C•llfornl•
o•n•rel o•r•n•r,l\le>, 1171) l •\
R•mlllH ..... ,. 100 M•Hlon Vt•IO C•
976'1
Thi' 1>u11""" I• conducttCI bv • <l"M<•I e>al'1,_,.,,.p
AttO(••tt!'d 1nou1tr1•I
PrOQ1t'1if'\
BY Oon<lld W Giimour ............ ,
Thlt Jlal-1 •0 \ '11"° Wllll tllt
Cou111y Cler-ol O••'lflt Coull\• °"
O<IOl>t•71 '"'
llHOOES, ICI HDALL &
NAlllllNOTQlll
A "~ .... .-..., Law C..,.
•m M•cA..-Ill ... ., s.i .. !It
Now,..,, htdl, Ct '26tl
Put>llJ!Wod <>'""9t Co.ut Dally PUo1
Nov 17 1• Dt< 1 8, '"' SO?t 11
l'ICTIT10018 USINISS
NAME lTATI MllNT
Tll• •ollowlno Person h dol110
llolt1119H "
N t!Wl'OAT ,LOll lST UH
flf t WPOr1 t lYCI Nu fpOrl •••<II
Cell10rt1I• '*'
Ylclllf "llllfl YIClt, 611 LldO l'af'll
Ottwe, NO. JO, H•wPOtl aucll ,
Cell,.ml• f*)
Tillt IWll!ltSI It c...OUCIH b' a11 IMI• ..... "lditr " Yod
"''' ....,_ ... lllM •llfl ""' C-'Y C.. If Ot-..,_ c;ewit' .,. ..........,,,,,..,,
IT A llMI HT O(ll AIANOOMMI NT
OflUH OJll
PICYITIOUI a Utt!lll U NAMI
t 11 1 101towln1 P"ton• ll t ve
e1N11cio11.o lllt 11M of Illa ll<tltlo11t 1llMltl1toU l\trt•
JAG or UILtfJOANIA. 211111, ....
Q(a•n 'ro!ll Ntwport thull C•tttorn1a~
11u ~llllttov• llu.,nou Ne mo
rtltl'fed IO •bO•• wa1 111911 1n OranQO CountvOfl No.,..mbtr ti, 14'0
J•e 1.,..,.., ~1"911 c.1 ... •11, ""' ~ttcllh l.ane Hun1t11g10" Qu ,11,
C.t ltlO•lll•tt-
1 "'' ll\lttneu w•• <llllOll(l.O llY tn lllOIYIOIHll J •D lthwt• ~lllQh (trawt ll
I h" tltl-1 w•\ 111.., wtlll lllt
{Oullll ( ltr .. 01 U,.110. (O..ftty on
Novt"'"'' JO, t•t ,. .....
Pullh•lllHI 0-~ to..11 D•tty f'Uot
No• J•, Oec I, I. H t"I ~·II
rvsuc NOncc
'ICTlllOOI I USINIU
NA.Ml UATIMINl
l he fOllOwlng P<l"OI\\ .,. do1n11
tHaln•n .,
8EAU ~NJ loRPHl~i;S lo. 1,,.111
~''"'· A ~•wPort U.e<h t.a111orn1• •2atl
ELllA JA"'l OVkHAM
t f:t118l>tll> Jan• Ou•naml, lo. C.• ant
Stre•t, A Newpor1 0.•<.h. C.~htorn1•
ti .. J
GOROON JOHN OUllHAM JO.
<-••nt S1tut, "'· Nawt>Orl llU<" Cttttorn,. 92atl
l f"l1t bu\!nH' I\ (Ol\CIU(htd by •n
IN:Uv•OWI
t.hz• J•nti Ourt\lnt
t ni. "•ltm<rnt ••• 111.., w1111 tilt
l.Ounly C.l•rll: ol Or•n99 (.ou•lty on
Noon11>or JO. '"' Fl1Mt0
PUDll•lle<I OranQit (.,.\I Ot lly l'olol
No• H De< 1. I IS, 1911 ~171 II
PUIUC NOOCl
NOTICE OF DE ATH OF
DOR O THY LUMB
VANDERVORT, a k a
DOROTH Y L .
VANDERVORT, ANO O F
PET I TIO N T O
ADMINISTER ESTATE
NO. A·11 1208.
To all hei r s ,
benet1t1aries c.reo1 t or'>
ano tont1ngen1 creo1tor '> ot
Dorothy Lumb Vanoerv ort
ano person<, who may tx-
ot herw1se 1nteresteo 10 the
w1 II ano or estate
A pet1t1on h as been !tied
by C.har les E:. v and er vort.
Jr 1n the ~uperior Court of
vrange County requesting
that tharlE-s E:
vanoervort, J r ano
George Vv Vanoervort be
a ppo1nteo as per!>onal
reprl!Sent<Htves to
aom1n1ster tht-estate of
[Jorothy Lumb Vanoer vort
t unoer the 1n0Ec'penoent
Aom1nistr at1on of E:states
Ac ti 1 he pet i tion 1<, set for
ht-ar ing 1n l.Jept "40 3 at
100 (.1v1c Center [Jr 1ve,
VvPSt, in the (.1ty of Scrnta
Ana . C.ul tl orn1a on
l.Jecenitx-r 23, 1981 a t ., JO
,1 ni
IF-'r()u Qljjf:.(.l to the
granting ot thr· pet1t1on
you '>houlo Ptther appt·ar
at lht:' hearing ano '>l ah
your Ob1ect1onc, or tilt
wr1ttf'nob1ec t1on<, w1th tht:'
court tx-fort' th1: h1:aring
Your appearanc" may b+'
1n person or by your
clllOfnl''y
IF YOU AkE: A
<..RE:OllOR o r a
c.ont1ngent creo1tor ot the
O!'cea<,eo. you n1ui,t l1IP
your Cldtm with the court or pre<;,e nl 11 to the
personal repr .. sentat 1vt-
appo1nteo by the court
within lour mont hs f rom
thf' oate of ltr-.t 1ssuanc.e
o t lt:'tter '> Cl'> prov 1oeo "'
':Ir" t ion 700 o t the f'robate
lOOt:' ot (.a1ttorn1a 1 ht:'
time tor f1l1ng tla1m<;, wtll
not exoirP prior to fou1
mont hs tron1 th• oate ot
th" h earing not1t{•O abOve
YOU MA'r E:.XAMINE
!ht tile kept by the court
If you are 1nte r e.,1eo 1n tht:'
t'State you may 1 tll a
fl'Quest with thf' <.ourl to
rece1vt-'>Pt'Ctal not 1< e ol
thP inventory o f estatP
dSSet s a no 01 the pet 1t1on'>
acc.ounts ano rt:'porl<-
Clescribt'O 1n ~ct1on 1700 S
o t t he Ca11torn1a f'robate
tooe
Publ1sh£>0 ()range toast
Datly Pilot N OV 24 , 2S.
Oet 1, 1981 SIS4-81
P'VIUC NOTICE
FfCllTIOUS I USIHESS
NAME STATEMENT
ff"I• tollow1n9 ~''°"' •rt 001nu
DU\•n•s~ 4 \
Al L S r AR MA t N T f: ., AN C l
SEAVtC.t: 1031 'nt-\tmtn'\t•, .A.Vfl'w,
(C.\I• Mt\t, l•lllO<n•t '1•11
C,rtQory A V•OrQ~ 10l•
Ywf\ttntn\ter .Avf'nut (O'tl• M~'•
t_a11•orn1• nt-11
(.hrit tOPhttr L A•n t t lOlf
Ywf\ltntn\let A..,f'nue
C•htorm• '2•11
(O\te ~,.
'hi\ bU\IM\\ I\ tonau-. t•O by •
qerw••I p.1rtnret\h1p
C.•-Y A C..Or~
1 tu' \t•lf'fTiiiMI •H tlitG with tht
c.o""'" C.lerk of 0f•no-(_O\fnh on NO•tmO.r 10 1'1111 ,., .. u
P11bll\ht0 Ora<>Qe '°"" D••ly Pilot
Nov ,. OK I • IS ''" ~.,
PUIUC NOTlCE
l'ICTlllOUS llU$1HESS
N"'MEUATEME NT
l ht to11ow1n9 ~rwn'\ •'• OoH19
t.Ma 1n•u .,
LANOSCAP!o II, "" P.,k Ott•o.
CMI• Mew. CalllOtn•• t7•11
Withem ( C.llh•ll, Wt Pt •k D,,,,.
(Ml• Melt, OlllO•ntt t7UI
Ste-n M<K1ni.y 12'0 (.Olt-.
CM ta -"' Olttorrwt 97•7' Tf'\15 bUSHM•\ U tOnCIUtted by •
~Mtal PM'l,,.tlhlP
Wllh.,.. C Cllhtll
t hi'\ ''••ement •.s 111.0 wun trw tounty (ler~ ol O••n~ l.ounty on
No•eml>ol<10 ••• fll0 Ml4
Pul>ll\'*I Or-C.0.\1 Ottly PolOI,
NOY H De< 1, I, IS, 1'91 ~tc»•t
l••>wt AMa .. u 1toi10 TOC1C•o11011111 !llOl ICI 01' t•un••·· ••L•
o, 1u1.• '"""''"'• ""HO. t-..wt 11otcL .,., .. .., 1,1.c .c .1 '·•· ""1 a .. ,.,,
.. Ott<t "f\lteDy tl•Yt l\ tt <•e1lllOl'I ti "" U '*9Mllel l .. t. I I t 00 A M ,
tne "'"'"' ~ 1ran1Jer•ru1 IMt • 1111• lnWt-• -'''™ \.om .. nv, O..lk .,.,..,., " •UO..t 10 t1a m-°" o •uty ajlpOtntoo 1r11llff UncMlr '""
P•"unat ll'Ollt•IY no1010.01ter 1111,.11ent lO 0-ot ''"" IMll•ll •~
IHKl•INO WPlttn-tteO re<or-11 ,_ 1•1.
I .......... Ill .. \0 Dv•1neu •uor••• .. llUI HO JUN. tn -UllO, Pf99
Ol tnt •lll•noto .,.,.,,.,.,,,., ••• Ill, OI QlllCIOI HatO•OJ tn ll• OlllU Ill
JAi V'llV"o Lt•VI, II) w IYlll !i>llHI. tho l.OUll\y lolOCOtO•• ol V••n••
t.'1•1• MfoW,Ltlol<lfn•• '"" "°""'~· Uill\lfnlt , WIU. !>&LL Al I ML LVl.A I IUI'< I .. LaUIOtll•• QI Ille t'U bLIC. AVl. I IOh I U HtC.n•ll I
,,.,.,, e•o•Ulovo Olll<f or pr1r1<11.1el UIVVl;.IC IVR LA~H. l.A~hlllol •
"""""" 011 0.a ot '"• "'''"0•11 l.H .. 1.11, VIC l.ll;Nll .. llV C:.nLI."· lrtn•te•Or I\ ')AMt All AllV• lo tptyal>I• •I """ 01 W I• Ill ttwtvl
All o'n•t t.1u•11H•' n•uHn a flQ morttY <M th• VnUM 'l•l••• •t •he
•OOle\\U U\tO by "'" ullonoeu Wiii,, l•ont•lltr""ttOllWVIOVrenot
h•n\l••Or w1thm UWft ,,.,,.,, t4•t P•\t C..°"'"Y \..OuflhCM.i .. ._ .... tn tn. aG0
'o "' •• ,nuwn to 1no ont•llOoO 111oc' ol wot lo•ntt All• i lvo , 1"'""•••• .,. "'"'N" 11t,,11•••v w"t tin !ot.), i.an•• An•
I h• n.,, .. ," ttl\O IN\fn•·•· Of .,. '-••UOtAta, ... ,., 1111• ana '"'•'•••
'"'•ouvu tr#t\l••••u1 •'• c.O•W•Yff 14 ~now htto ,., •l vtwlet
'', v Pl-'"'""' "-A.~t,, anu • vv""' u• •••o Ueeo ot ''"-'' 1tt the grQPrit l_.
""""'"'"'· ••) Yf 111tn )4'•••· "'°''• MtiM, \lt1ii1•t•o m , •• o <.ovnty •'"" ~·••• '-•11••tm•, "ll•11 O.""'°"° • L.Ot ,,., h'1<.t $)),, l.1ty • n•• tl'W tJ<-"V P.,rt1Mn1 noretu ,, 01 "•wllOfl ltN(ft, C.4!W1ty 01 V•#>O-,
tl•Htt.,_0 ,,, Cl•' .. ''' •• • •••"'•'· ~·••• ot l.•l1torn1• •• , O•r m •P l ov•,m1wn1 "0t>0"'111 1no )toe:-. .,, tec.oroeo '" ~ \\II ..,.,.., t It> I
., •ot ut Ut•l t•H••n H\n ., , •• ,t•ur•n• UWt I\ tO<•t•O •l ,,, ~ ..
l~tn '>Uwt \.Ott• W••. '•1ttv,m• .,,."
I fUt btJ\Atle\\ O•n .. yMO by H-. ••1U
11,.11\l•run\J •I \41<1 l<KitfltOn"
\.A~I flit Ml..._t;~f"l)t1th'
• tuu IMhO w111. tr.n\••r '' Hth••KMPO '"
""-luO\UflMlMllWO •t ln4' u•11<• O•
V\t..)lt:. .. ~ MUIUAl t:.:)\.."V~
l.Vk t"\Jt('41 I~ ..,.., 11..iell• A-.e >v••• • ,,, LCI\ Al•nutut., \..•UIOfnl•
lV/441 t>O ur dfU1U U4H.¥0lOWr It ......
It'•( tUOl"'J W~liienG\ .,_Q flOltCJ•'t\
I ,l. tU.1il!. If tU1\IWf I' \ULll•tl \Cf
t..•a.•<11n1• \iWIOt'"' Lunut1••' 1•1 \..UQtl
>•~ t100 • IVO
inch"'•"•• Mlt<•il•ntOv• ~p\, •fl ,,... Ull1te OI II• LOUflly Mt(OtCHr 01 HIO
LO..nly
l;ll.(.l;Plt .. (t IHl;Htt-t;VM '" O••,
V••, m1ntr•t' •nO ~•O•O<•,bon
•vO,t•nt•t1 In •no '-t.n<Mr \•10 l•no. Out •Unc>u• tn. riQnt Ot \wrt•t• entry ••
•tMr \l'•O tn ..,.,'°"''OMO\ Of ft(OrU
I ru"o' Of tKCHO own.r \11:.UHVL
t>LA"t. ANIJJIJIJI In t>LA"I:
t ,,, '"••• •oo••'' •no otn•' ton1mon C.MQn•••on. '' e1n.,4 01 rne
ra•• PIOO-rh U•H.nha •OOY• "
PU•POrleG to l>o Oii vmltQIOll l<O.O.
<..oton• Ottt ~', <..•l1toro1• 'h• '-ilnotf'\IQl\4Jd t ru\ttt"• OU1<.l•utt\.
•nv •••Dtllty IOI •"Y 1nc.ouectrw'' u1
tf\e "'"' .uare\\ eino other comnton I hf' n.,,-~ .tlG "'°°' t'\\ 1.11 I~ PtJt \Qr1
w i\lt w"on1 \.iilltltl\ nl•Y lA 111~0 •\ 0•,1Qn•t•on. ti •ny WtOWt'I ftwf•lll
Wt )ft.H f'rlf MVIU~L L'!>\.HVY\ ~·1ow1•w•llllf'fo.O. bul w 11nwt
lV.,...,.VticAi •Vf'lt '°"' ..,,.,.,110 """ c.o"tn•n• or w•rr~ntr •Al''•'\ or ~"lh 111, L.V'\ ~••llulO), (..•l1 tvr111e IRlPll•O, r~f'O•A\f ........ PO\MO•(HI, ur
ViJllV CHlO .,,.. '~"' U•Y "" llllftO ,, • .,,., etic.umOr•nUH, '" ll•Y th• 1.1no••O
LIY' •fly tH~QtlOf \n'6fll .,,_ Ll6:.l.t.Mt>t.~ &>dlctntl Ott,. nc:Me,\J ~UltO OY \•10
LHtt'O Qt t 'u~t 10 ""'' '''· 't4 •u •nttUOH\Q •\ P'O"•Ot'O UI \1110 "Ote\'I 11 h•I #llH fl I'\ It .. (IU\IU.,i. O~h
t>ttl(Htl lnt:' \Vfl'tutt111t•••Vfl U.81•
\P•t•f•l!O itl.IU¥t."
lJ4l•O NO"t'tllC..r , l._.I
N t \J t\V "" """f'f\,t
tVVlltll tHJI f\Ati4V
oov•nCtt'\, It "''· UtlCW-r ltw tern1\ 1;,1f
\410 LJ~l'O Of t '"''' tee\. \t\4trQe\ •no ••P«n\•' Dt trw 1 tu~~ ,.no Ot tn•
lfu\h tr••ttKJ Oy \4110 Litteo o• l rW\I
I f\t twfWlte.t•ty v~r WIU l.JeeO \ff 1n1MUea 11 .. ht•,~••"
t·vUll\rwG ""9:_.~ \.u.i\l ll•llr ~dUI ''""'' n¥r•lOUH• t ~f(UhO ti1no
"""• ,, 1~1 >•Ii., o•l•••t•a t(.I uw un~wr\rQNrO • wr11wn
PHUC NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEAE8Y GIVEN 1 ... t
Comn-,•rc•B•n~ '101 Dov• Stre•I
Newoor1 S..c n C •hfornl• •16'60 h•\
filed '*''" tht> i:eo,..r11 O•P0\11 lnwr•rKt-Cot'PQl"alton ..,, •ool1<•tl0t'I
for FeO.tal ~\It tn\ur~• covennQ
''' Cotta Mes• O ff•<• •hlc n •ooUc•Hon ww.u •<ceotf'd tor ''''"0 on
O<too•,-1• "'' TP'I• o•rm•"•"' IOCtllon ol '"" t>r""rh I\ '110 P•r> Cent•' Or1v• (°"I• ltVU C•h•o,.n1• '161•
A"'V Of'r-..on Ni\f\lnQ lo coml'T'f'"lt Of"
this •PPllC•t•on m~.., t1r,. hi\ commenh
tn w rtUnQ •Ith UW AtoQ~•I Otr•<1or
of f P'I• Ff'd•r•t O•oo"' '"'urenf' •
Co,.oot•11on •I "' RtQ•on.• Off•ct ...
Montoo,....rv Str••I Witt >.oo S•A
f:.r•n< l\CO C•hfOfn•• ••tO• If •ny o•rw., M'\ir~'\ to orolttl th• qr.tntu\q
of tf"ll\ •OOH<•tlc>t\ .... t\4H. 'to"' to do
\.o •f rw ,,,_, • wr•tt•n nolfc• of ""
nttnt wltn tr\4" At"q1on•I Olrecto,
w1tt11n U My\ ot ttw d•tf' of 11\f' t•''
DUbl•<•flon Of trH\ noflc• ff'I~
,,On< ont1otnt••, oort1on\ ot lht
•OPl•<•••on .,. on flt~ lft .,,,. At-Qlon•I
Ott1(t •U o•'' o t ..,,,. oubltc HI•
m•lnt•1~ tty-t"f Co100,•t1on fhl\
tu• •"' •--•i••ttit• '°" OUbltc 1n\c»<tl0f'\
Out H\Q ,-f>9Ui&r fJu\lt\f'\\ hOU'\
Pvbll\nt'd our\u•"I to ~fct11>n
10) t 4 fb )t t of '"" Aute\ •"d Rfll'qu••t~\ Of tr. ~ .. <ll!,1• Oeoo\lt
l"\UtAf\C~ (C)rOOt'dtlN"I Corn~''•8•"' Bv
'-'"""''"" 0 ~•I< l\um "' ~n10t' y ,,,. Pr ... \10f'.-it 'c.,,,.f',
Pvbl"f'W!id Or•nq. Co.e\t O•''" Plfot
NO• II 1< 1'191 SOii I t
l'ICTITIOUS llUSINl[H NAM• l'TAT•M•NT
Th• fotlOlllltl,,.. PWIOft.A .... _,"9 MiSI,_.,, H
A LltED tNSUlATION
COMPANY 08A Po•m •,..111 Pipe Prodv( u Compa ny C• (•ltfOtf"ll•
CorPO•tllonl 1•111 SP'•nootlt Str .. 1,
Hunllnoton Btacn. Calt10<n1a '1'41 J•m•' W•ll•<t W1tt1a m•
Pruttlllnl ~ Country Ctul> Drive
Co•I• Mt~. C•tlf0<n1• 92•:16
J•me\ f,,om•\ WHh•'"' Vi<•
Pr•tldent 1\ Po1n\•tt1a. •'vtn•
Cahtorn1a
Aone. B•ol•Y WJ1l1om• JO,.
Country Club D''"' (o\t• M•'• CalllOrnla m»
Thi\ l>u\IM'\\ '' conducted by • coroor•t~ •
All-tnwtt loon Co OBA
--"'Pipe ProouctsComoenv
J....-.nW With.,.,.\
Pr~t
'"'' \t•W.~t ••' l1lf'CI w ith 1"4: County (lo•• ot O••"O<' County 1>n
O<tol>o• :JO 1'91 ,.,,,..)!
Pul>I .. ,,.,., <lr•"llf Cot•t 0 .. 1, Piiot
Nov l 10 II 1• 1 .. 1 •11MI
PUIUC MOOCE
N~tt
l'ICTITIOUS 8USINUS
NAME STATEMENT
T ht toUow lno p.e-r '°"' •rt cto1nQ
bU\.lnn\•\
MISSION ESTATES 1100W Co.it
Hl9hway S...lt 110 .,ewpor1 BHC~
C at11or11i. 'Ml c; PAAICER OEVElOPMENT,
IN( 7'111 llol•"°'· Ml\tton Vi.Jo,
Ct llfO•"'• t1t'l1
COATS ENTERPAISES, IN(,
«IS Vt• E-•eru• Stnl• llorbt .. Ct llfornla '1110
lD DEVELOPMENT , '"'C 2100
Wt\1 Cool Hfgllwty, Suitt 710, "'••PGl'1 Bffch Celllonu• t1 .. J
Thi\ t>usuwn\ t\ (Of\Outtff by •
oeMral .,.'1Mf'Jllfp c; P•rker O.wl<>om•11I Inc
By G•eo E Pt•ktr
Pre .. o.nt
T"I' •!al-I wot filed •1111 llW
County Cler' ol Ort~ County Oft
O<tolle• 11. '"' "°'IESlltVE,MUMl'lll
& NUOHU ,,,.,._on ....
New,..,, IMCll, ~I• tJ..e ,.,,.,.,
Publl.-Ortn00 (O<ltl O•lly Piiot,
NOY ] 10, 11, 1• IWI 0 11 .. t
rulUC NOOCE
l'ICTITIOOS I U$1NU S
NAME STATllMINT
Tn• tollow i"Q Oifr\on\ arp do•no
bu\11\f'\\ .,
LIOO .,ORTH 101 Lido P.,k
Orlv• N•\llfPOrt 8••<1\ C•lltorf"lt•
'166]
J F' Penney J C Penney
Tru1t• .. , und•r tht wlll of l w
Brl99J )4/1 VI• Lido Nt•l>Or1 ll•tc:h
C•lilor111a ~
Alan J MIOle <0700 P•wo Arl>ol
lta'IChO Mlreoit Ct llf°"ll" '71/0
Alltfll M Ellloll Trust JltO A
Airport Loop Aoad Coi" Mou
C alll0rt1la t?t»
0 W Ellloll Tnnl P O !lo• 11
Lo110 8f'aCll Ct lllo•nt• ... W••I o.: .. ,, 81Yd Lono Stech c .1110-,..11
tOllOI
Thh bonlntu 1i <Ol\Ouct.O by •11
lt1Cllvlduet
Al"" J Mic"•
Thtt "Mt,.,.ftl •t1 111.0 •1111 Ille
Cou111y Clerll of Or•nQe Covntv 011
HoYt"111er IJ t"t ,.,, ...
l'ul>ll•twd Or-CotJI Oally Pllol
Nov II 7•. OK I. I. 1't1 ... 7-81
l'ICTITIOOI a usu1•u
NAME STATIMINT
T lit to1tow l110 P•rton ll do I no
tMlilnHt as
THI! St Olllt'S (LUI , ti l'alOl,
trYlno,CAf»1$
Marty11 A~ Ottt•. )I l'alOt,
l"•IM, CA "'IS Tiii• l>onl-It <~ttll II'( lfl
lfl(llvld11al.
Mlrl'l'fl A. o.tt>
Tlllt ~ .... tiled •"" ....
lJ'°t. ••r•l•On 01 Uettllk.llt •no V.ru•no
tor ')••e •no • flll't11ten fltQti«.• u1
lJ.,f•ult •no L le< t1on to ~Ii In•
unow1 ,1gn•o l au\eO \dlO ,...OJI<• u•
lJ•••vil .nu thttt1on t<.1 ,_., t9 Cf4I"
Y•Uu6f.O 1n tnt lOVOI, ..,n.,,. '"• , •••
0'00•r ly '~ '""-•ttrO 1 ru\tew or "•ft'f
tonou<h"V ww 1 t l~t-,,..)Vk"'Nl.t:.
.,_..., I ""'~· l.VM ... #'\f'.' .._.,,. Mein
:)I )4nUI "'N \..A VJJl,JI 11• ~)J JV.lfJ
JUt (.t-WILLIAM!)
lJ41.. let ,..O""~"nt..r '"*'
t HI• tn\ur ~tt •ND
I fU)t l.OfHP,.n ..
d\ \410 I fU\1•Y,
by JUrl~ V.1111.0\\
... 11.'C>h\rlf'C.I UfM'l\fil C..Ud\f '-'•llY r1IOl,
f"l.v .. J4 Vl"\ Io l"l'bl >11.J•I
PUBLIC MOTICl
SUl'Ull04t COUllT
O~CALt '°llNIA
COUNTY 0 ,. OltANOI
l'.O ltlllll
S-. ...... CA'11'1
MAlllllAGI 01''
PETITION ER 8EI TY JUNE
POWERS
" E s Po N o e ., T c H " 11 L E sl f HOMAS POWEAS, J R
SUMMC*S ll'AMILY LAWI
CMll NUM8111· 0 1" ..
HOTtCl[t
y.., ,...,. ...... .vM. Tloa c..t ,...,
•tc:'-• ....... , ,... .,._ -Wl"ll lie••• ....... , ... ,._.. ..... -•
..,, ...... i. lllfenNIU.. ·-· II YM ..,..,_ la -\lie .. YIU .. •
•ll-ay Ill Wt ....... ,,,... --.. .. ,.,....._., ...... , ... , ·-· .,
"""'• .. It .. ,.-· a.11 ... "' ""'•· AVllOI u .,.. ... ..... ............. It
trt....,tl _.. M(l4it ceMI• u•. ""
aMle11< .. a --U• ,__. ....................... -..... ...... _.
SI U11H -Mll<llM ti <•M,. fe
.... _.._ ... ff .. ·-· -la ... eerie IA"'-•4••••Mettt•, •• H t• m.e•••, Ml ,........ • ••-..c• ... ... , ··-· ---............ -...
I TO THE AESPONOENT
Tiit Dtllllorw• ht• llled • petition
<onternt"'Q your tn4r-f'i.., II yoy •••I
to Ill• • ·-wlltwn JO day• or Ill•
d•tt tf'\•t thh "~ I\ \trveO on
VOii, •O"' Otlautl mty lie o"t~eo t nCI
lhf' toutt m 1y enttr • 1ud9"'•"t <0<1la1n1no 1111un.uw o• otnt• o•dtr\
conc•rnlng d•v•••on o f property.
-Ml '-1 Clllld Cu\IOCly, '""" •UflOOtl, tltorMy teH < ... IS, tt>d MKll
01.1>0• rell<t4 " may lie granttO l>y tho
court T,,t o•rnl\f\Ment of w•oc'.
to tno of .._., or prooerw °' ol,,.,
court authotltl>d PtocffdlnQi may alto
'''"" O•ttcl A~ 10, ttlt
LEE A. 8AANCH,
Clor•
8y SHAROfol KUPKA
~y
JAMI$ W. a tSNOI'
t SH foe. CN.t Hwy., Me. -
U l llM 9Mc:Jo, CAf!UI
h i U U I _.,,
Pul>li\lll>d <>anoo Cotti Ot lly Pllol NOY 10 II, 1•. OK I , .. , • .,....,
'U l'l ll lO ll C O U ltT 0 ,
CA L ll'OllNIA , COU N TY 0 ,
OltANOE.
, .. Clvk CaMar Ori•• W•• P.O .....
r.t111a AM, CA nnt
llUltlllAGll O" lr"-PI T IT I ONE It CAllO L S . lllEltllY·lllllTTOflf
lllSl'ONDENT lttCHAllD IC lllltTTC>N
SUMMONS (FAMILY LAWI
CAii NUMllEI!: 01Mlt1
NOTICE I
You ~,,. _,....., T"e court may
<Meld• ~llllt you without vou• t>tlno
n-e•rd unlP\S YO\I rf"'lr410"'d •ltP!ln JO
dtY\ Rt.., tho 0111ormat-1>etow
II you ... ~ to -• IM ""•i<• ol •n
•ttorney In tttls metter. Y'O\.I '1't0Uld oo '° oromptty M) ,,,., your rtt1oonM or
Pltao•no or.,.,, may t>e llleo Oft limo
AVllO! Uttod h• •ido domandaoo El
lrtbvnat -dltcldf• cont,. UCI fin
•udlencla • ,.,,.,_ aw Ud •9"""'°•
dtntro de JO di" Ltt It onf.,.mecton
Que woue
S• U•teo duu >Ollclle• ot conw)o ck
un ·~ tn Hit awnlo. oelleda
h•<•rto lmm•Ol•••rn•ntt. d• ••I•
m•~'•· w retPUftt• o •leioe< toft, s• ~•V elou<\a, DWde w r reoistraCI• •
ll0"1Po
t TO THE RESPONDENT
l 1'19 oet111onu het "'"' • pettt to"
conctrnlno '°"' mtHttQe II \'OU tall
to Ill• • r-•""'" JO day• ol !tit dtle lhtl INI ....,.,,,_, It M....0 on
you, your .ieu11 may lie enttrecl •nd
tho court m•• ""t•r • fvdomtnl
<Oft.,lnlno lnfun<JI,.. or _, "'"°"
conterftlno dlwlt lon of PfO,,.rty,
•POUMI •-1, Child tutlOCly, clllld
>U-1, allo<ney I"'· <01l1, tnd •VCll ollltt reti.t H may llt qranttcl by llW
court Tht o••nltlltntnl of waoes.
lt l<IAO ol money ... P•-rtv .... °'"'' '°"'' aul-ILect prO(-lnQi mt y also r~1ult
OAT£Os.ot t2, 1 .. 1 LEEA 811A.,CH
C'"'11
8y J T RUNYON, Oe9"1y
Pullll-Or-.o C..\I Oelly Pllo(.
NOY I, 10, 11, 2.4, tWI •n M I
ITAT•MllNT 0' AaANDOtlMllNT
OP us• 0 1' l'ICTITIOUS
llUSIHHS NAMa
Tiit lollowl"tl 11o run1 ~•••
•b01'141-""' ... ol Ille l'l(tlllou• 8UtlntUHamt.
A & T ENTERPlltSU. '"4 lolM
.. ,,. Wttl..........,, CA '7ta
T 11• "lcttllout 111•11111• Nam•
reftHPd tD abo"" wet filed In 0f""9t
C.UlllY on I l·M I
Pa11I T-ke. t 5-lwt, l•Yltle,
'"'""' Ull AIOnle'llt. ~ Sol.,.., ltvlM, CA
tt11S
T1111 ~ ... c.-.Ctee llT • ..,..,.I ,.rtftfft!\111.
l'tu!TOO'Wfke
Tlllt ~ •• flMNI _.... .. C.0.fllY o.r1t tf CW1t119t ~ tll Oct.
•.1'11. .......... ----...... ........... c.... Dlllff ,....,
CtllfllY Clet'll .. 0r4lfltt Qoo.wity 4'ft Ott .
S, Hel .. ,,... lllPWl P17Mtt lllt-
.._...... ~ c-tt o.11, ""'· l'vllll.,_. I> ... 0..tl 0.lly l'ltot. '°'*'tllM Or .. ~ o.llY "'-" 11""41"'" or .. C..-Dlllly ,.... ..... 11;•i'll.9llLI,... ..... .... IP,11, 0.C, 1.e,"" .,..., ...... >,Ill. 11, 1•, Itel •llHI Nn. I, IQ, l1, t4, Hi t ,,,. .. , It•~. I , 10, 11, t.i, "" •nMt
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A s
s !
1
F
I I
El D I
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
.......... • ••••••••••••••••••••••
,, ,.., ,. w. Cll
642·5678
llOllSlS f 01 UH
lk..u''' t w'"'~""' tt-..-.....-.1.-1 .. , ..........
'""-"' • .,,~.., I "'
( (if..,.hAflolflll\ t •'" t Of'dQr'w~.01o1 rm t n' '"""~ . ..,,. 1 .. -...n111
tltwfM•n • "'"' Jlruplt'O~I ft! ""'-•ht,. ~ .. ht,.,,.,,.
.. JI t\IO '#I I,_,
kWll'"·• M~ .. ,.-1 • Kl;•r d .... ,,, "''•' ................. '""""''••"hi \.,.attiUftfhhhl'-
ktflll•I• t1J "'•"' f..., ....... -........ tilf11• MrMe• ~"""''"',..,•' ,,.,41.,.,.., "'"'•' ir.i.tcw,,• ............ .... tt.-..1.1,
8USlllESS, lllYlSI
MOil. flllAllCl
... 1no•1I"'*'. ~"\l,f\n~v.•"'"° l••••«tlll" .. Ml,.,.,...11 111 .......... lil ...... _....,.,, r •• "
.. ut ... l' v..tto1rd• .. ..... , .. ,., ,,,
W OUllCUUlllS.
PUSOllAlSl
lOSI ' fOUllD .. ~ .... ,.. .. , ..... .. ., ... ,,_. .. ..... ,, . ., ...
.... ..., •• 1. .......... i-.• ........
SllYIC(S ... ....... ,,. .. ,,
Ul'1.0YM!llT &
~PAUllOll
..... "'-' .... ,,. ''""'"'~ , .......... ,. , .. ,.,14. IOI\ \I.'
MUCKAllDISl
""" .. "" ·~··" ... ... .,
f't •.•. f ..
lilwl4'tt '8•1'' •I
t •"••••'-•111 _. •r••* ...
'"' .,,.. 111 ''"' ~ .,,, .... ...,.
1 • .,.,, ... , .... _
• ...,,,.,..,... •• vw ,,.,.,. ..., ............. ·-· --""'•"··~ •... rl
'f .. \#1.! '""''"'"''"'" llll'11o •• •" ~. •'' ~ ... ......... "'••"f' 't11fll1I'•• ..... ,, , , ••Ill ...,1,11, ..... '. .... , ··.r ......... ~ ""•ff
BOATS ' MAllN£
(QUIPMCNI
lrtt·-•I ~. v •. ,,_." "'• v ••• •l Ml, •••• ..... , Ii\ ..... ,,., ... ,
""'"•' '• .. . .... ........ .... ""'"' . h.J.Lo ~-1.i•
IUNSPOUAflON ... ., .... " ,.
t.t..-10" t 11 ....., r,,..,... ""°"'". ~,::.: 1 ;"'. ...: ..
I • """~ I I ~ ''°""'"''" .• ' . AUIOM081l! , .•. ,..,,, ... .., '' 14, .,. ...... .. .. ......
I,. •• .... ...... t .
AUTOS. IMPORTED
"" .. -,. \Iii. I( .....
""'' '..... ... 111 • ~,. • ·"-· -n..-..... "••·" .,., . . .. u •• ~.
J. -
I "" """ .... .. . ~ .....
"'''I "' "''' ~ " .. ...
'•"' " .......... ,
itllft I ..... ,, .... " ~, .. ,. .. ..... .... ..
'"' . I •''"'
'··'·.
\ofllt'•
\II ·-. ,,, . ,..,,
I ,..~ I •
AUTOS. M!W
AUTOS, USED
°'"'•'ft•tl.i • .,u. ·-· llV •• '"' ,,.,..,.,,
1 ..... l'I ._. ..... . .... " "-· ""'" ~ ... ~ ..... , ..
I ~ •"' l'•01•l1•
'""''"'' 11 \,-..
...... , .... M,
1• IM 1111
ltll .. 1• ::: IUI
I 1 ... .... ,..,
1i111
IQlt 1~1• '". 1-.
I ... HM ltlla ,...,
II~ ..... ,,,,
jUJ ,.,,
flf,0
l>I\ Ill<;
""' .... ., . .,
""' """ ...
EQUAL HOU&tNG
OPPOR TUN ~T V _
Publislttr'• Noffu:
All rral utatr ad
v('r tl•ed 1n th 1~
newapaJ>fr 1.1 sub)c>tl 111
tht f t-dm1I Patr llou)
lnll Ai·t of I~ wht<•h
m.ikr~ ti 1lltl(al to ud
vtrt111e 1111) preference
l111111a1wn or d1~
rnm1n1111on ba~ed on
rd<'t', 1ul11r , rel11(1on
nx ur n11uon11I on gm
or <in llllt'lllJOll to mue
ilfl)' ,u!'h prr(trtl\Ct,
l1m1lo1t1on or dla enm 1nauon
Th•• nr11.~p.1pe1 will not
knO\l. IO.!ll> .irc1·pt .-ny
adl't>rt1s1ng for re11I
esl.ite \l.h1ch ~ in ~wla
uon of the la\I.
ERRORS: AdnrffHn
thould check their odt
dally oftd reporl tr·
ron h•u•dl .. tfy. TN
DAILY rlLOT ou.,..,
l eblllty for tht flnt
hicorrect inurtlo1t
Of'lly. . ..
•Liv .. ,, . ... ... 1 ~~~!~~!~.~ ....... .
GeMral 1002
I······················· .. ~ -.....
.., ..... ..
•I -. .. -
'" " ...
IJ
I
I
I
•ft1 I .. , ... ...
"•
.... ..
...
EXECUTIVE
ESTATt!
Anahl'lffi ll1lb t.11~1
lt1dge' He:iuttful 4 fid rrn
2 • b.ith horn« rc.11uru11(
famtl) room. forrn11I
d1n1o(l p<.1ul irnd s pa pl~ l'lt) ltght and ca
0)00 \lt'\l.h Cu~lO~
thruuul LIX'aled at 961
~outh Buont' Ctrrlt>
Op1•n llou~e Saturda)
I 5 Only mi.:ioo
$98,950
COSTA MESA
011.1wr vo 111 t ar11 f111ant
IOI( 11.1th 'm.ill tlown · '.I
Bdrm Wdl mJtn1Jtnt'd
Gre.it har.:.1111 . .irl nov. •
1>46 7111
lt-l!$U
3 IDR NEWPORT
2-sty $189,000!
IAll>t''I Plllt11 :1 Iii 21
H.i t 11ndu 1n .-omph·\
r\l.o ''~ w1t11 .. , .. 1 ••nd l(.ir.i~1· 1ulrl,·,,11 pool
& lt'nnt ,,,,. li11""
ll\l.nN Ill I .11 r' hdlJtll'l
.Ju)! lu '""" h' \111tl\ dlt'd
,,, tJk1 .. 11, .. m•i:< c .. 11
UolJ llurdttl. Jl(I
.~9 1221
13°'0
SI 7,000 OWM!
Ht'ht'\ r 11' \ f,.n1.-~t1t
hom1· 11o 1th ldTj?1• h' tn.I!
~nd IJmth .1r"a' Hri(•k
l11t•pl.111· 'un111
k111 h•·11 1 hul(t bdrm'
I '.": ltJlh~ (,rl'JI ftn~nt
tnl? Sli UM du"n 13'
' I tnlt'rl''I I .ill for rmm
detatb ti4li 7171
. .. ZOHED DUPLEX
SI 17,500!
l llli r uld1•1 h111rw on d1•
•'I> It 2 lot t.~, t'll n•ntJI
.... 111 llu1h1 ""' ,, <luµlt'\ , [ "'J m•• '0111 l1·rni' l.o\I.
• 1 dn pJ' mt'nl •II\ Lill
fd~I Hull Hunl11 I. Jl!l
; ~ 1759 1221 .. . , I
;,:, .
::! EASTSIDE
CHARMER!
~"'P~I !'Utl· 3 licit m l
lli1lh 'hJrm1•r 1111 Itri:•
R 2 lul lhw of .1 ~tr1tl lu1
.. , onl\ S il~ 9511 t'Jll
=::-~6 2m ..., .,, ft.• .... .. ... ...
"' "· ... ...
...
THE REAL
ESTAT&:RS
Tiit 9lcPtt Mii-Mt••
Oii lhl Orqe <:out.
DAILY PllDI'
CLASSIFIED
ADS
rov COii Sell II. 11111 It
Y,90t " ...... .._ Ad
(142•5178]
Giit ( .. S.rnu
fo.t Gi .......
.... .
Ornngo Coasl DAILY PILO I I 11t ... d11y Novi rtltlfll l 1 1 t1tn ('9
"-tt For For ii_._ Hou'" For SaM Hoetwt For S. Hout .. For S• Hotiu•' For Salt Other r
' S• "-ttt For~ "-'"For S. H.••• For SIM Howttt ,,_ ••••• -. ................ 1. 'c·::::::_::_::••••,•0•2•: l•n•·::~····•••••••··,·0·4·: M·:·~,··o·r·f·l·:ac···h····,·O·:·,· l"co-"' '"•-t• '~000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..................... & .... ~ ~~ • 0 .... ~ ,. ~ ' •
.._,., IOOJ el IOOJ G__, el 1002 G....-.. 1002 GtMrol 100 •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••·••••••••••••••••••I••••"··• ,,,., •••••••• ....................... • ..................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... o• ow~'
\\ I· ~ i I "1 '.\
TAYLOR CO.
·I'"'}~~:~~~~~ 11111111 • LINDA ISLE HOMES IRVIM~~~RACE * * EXEUCRUYTIVE h~~~~~~1~.~R~~~-· 1
w1lh I "'"" 1•11111 \\'.ti l'r11·1• r1•tl111·1•1I tlWC hi LUX 1, '" 1 1 •.• I •1 1
,,1111v Wu11 t 1."1 111 f>rt:stic 1· pool lam1ly holllc M:.i1n • 'I' 11 .11 "" 1·:"·1·11 :1 llcti 1""""""" 111 111., 1 1.o1,. .... ,,.,, \li'll,1~~1 flw111•1wtlllll'l11 ch unnt•I Vll'W Crom bl'UUlllUI IJ>'I~~P,aa 1111.,1111111 W11t1 I 1 ..... 1 1,1111111111, \\umlt.11,f~, "''''
.......
1~1 II 11 .. II
with 1111• 1111.11111111• Hl\11 lru<l1l111nul. 4 hdrm, 5 ~ath home Sh11 :.;fl • Ctll'): "'"1' ill:l 7f.!I 1::21 ;!IMMI ''I II 111111 1l11 n1 ,, ,, I ' I •I .. HI :\I I ( ll\~ -.1111 1· l'.14H 1'111 ol l~'""l•11ll\t'l\1tll•111 . 1r 4! lurgt• tmal~ $1.4!*5,000. ·~I" 11111·1.11lc1I 11111111111 I I I I. I ..
'.
.,.,., ~.:rm
llG CAMYOH IROADMOOll
I ,tlf t\lf,lalt• l(t•11ll111\ 7! ... 1111 1\1\,U lll.ildo• 111,lfl " o•f
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
$122,900
WALK TO
BEACH
llw111 r will m:1k1· lt11J111
mi: I hi\ ,,., 111 ti) J.:Jl1·rl. '/.
llrli rn 1·1101111 1•:"y' I\ II
lll'V. rlt•t'hl •1111! ,11111h;111
f I•\ '11mm r .... turt•\
I""'" lt•nn" 'JUnu' lo
'""' llurr)'' '1'1·11 '1Jr
11111•1, ill(\ 7~i!I l:!ll
~() II'\. N1111l> ,h .. 11· l\l
llml' liuyt·I'., :1 h1I I liJ
only S!1<1,ui1 11n11 •ml>
<.:11111;:11 4h4~ Kuth.> 11i;nt
AMAHEIM HILLS
12.5%
l.uxuriou' hum1• un 1·1ir
nt:r lot ~ ti<Jrm,, 'I lmlh'>
C11nl1lc\'cr rlt·1·,k,, 1111111, -~p11 & firt• rmi: t'hctk
lh1i. ont out t1ic.lu) •
Redh1ll~Re.1lty
1;7;) 7:wo
MOYI IN FOR CHRISTMAS
N1•w cx1·lu~1 vc·' ll:ir•l lo lm1I l'lun I 1\
uni,¥ 11m· on m;.irkN Lml'lv 5 hclrm~.
f um rm , form;.il 11111111~ rm. :1 hulh~
Slu1·1·0 '°" s lum flhlom· 1•xlt•rior 1\ h l~h
windows. B ri~hl o"1o. ~u1111y 111lt·rior Air
1'111111 :1 tur ~ur <'all to .. 1·1· sxso.1100
1ndu<linJ! lhl· lund
WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS
21 11 Su Jooqi.tln Hllh Road
NEWPORT CEMTER. N.I. 644-4910
~ ' I
,i I
A ..-
o/ newporl
REALTORS
675-~~.IJ
OWNER'S PRIDE Nahral dKorator wood
p0Mfl1t9 & mantris make this 3 Bedroom &
dfll unit OM of tht most llltiqye ift old CdM
+ o I ldrm .-.ntol. Alt for $384,500.
COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS
2515 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar
675-5511 LEASE OPTION
S5,000DWM
and S!J5o pt-r mo lsubmltyouraWP1tenns. IHOliHGE
Deluxt> :>;cwport <:lt>n Derer part of monthh CONDO . VACANT
gartkn home Ov.nl'r 1-. pa\ ment on th1~ l hJrm ,l'l't.I 1u 1n1 l'd'h 1 h"
moll\ Jtetl' Form.ii tl111 mg UJlboa l~lant.I humt· hrand nt·v. 3 BH I ·hath I
mg. r.ir£'pla~ ..... plu .. V.l'I 8ill Hardesty, R"r unit v. lrpk. 'k) hk. I~ ...
bar Sparkhn)! p<iol. ~pa 6 75-28,6 beaut, \l(t 5411 t llil! or
Onl} Sl36.900' II urn. 5!>i U'Ji5 Jlm'
r all 673 ~ 642 5678 jWant Ad~ C~ 5678 THE REAL
ESTATERS
' So Oregon R1\'er lul on '
srent(' Rogue R1Hr On
hv. \ 3 ml no ul RORUC
River & 4 m1 So t;r.rn1\
Pus~ Trt.<e!. & i:d 'k 11ng
200 ft frontage. IOCJ fl ·
dept rrnm Rt\ er lo llv. ~ I ~000 675 0294 . I •U.S.VETBAHS I
FREE LIST OF 11m 1 ES I
World R E ssi; 7777
ADORAIU I
&AFFORDAIU
A las1erull\ redc1•>rJled
3 Bdrm home v.1th .i I \ r
old rour and R\' !>pal't•
Seller ma) a~~"t in
finam·mg ,\II th1'> for
Sl26.000 Cdll nov.
9'19·S370.
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
DECORATOR
COHD0-$85,000
Former modrl rnndo m
mint cond1t1on llosts
\'l('V. .. or gr~nbt-11!> and
sv.1mmmg pool Ov.ner
v.111 tarr) rinancmi; v.1th
lov. dov. n Ca II oov. ,
@ SEA COVE PROPERTIES
--11~·63 !-4_!90
TWO HOMES
$79,950
Old. but ('harming 2
Bdrm bungdlo>A !'>OX 125 ·
rornt'r lot Ov. nl'r v. 111
help v.1th fmdntln)! c .. 11
fo r mort• dt•lall,
546 2313
THE REAL
ESTATERS
Sf'YGUSS
OPEN DAILY 9·5PM
77 M n11tt•1·1111 l.111 .11 m11
\'lt'v. 1'"1nam·111i: • l'.111
Nal.1111'. .1)!1 t>ifi t~M•I
4 BEDROOM
SI 05,950 l'n,.L1 1\11,,1 h;i1 i;.1111'
llclrm. :! h,tlh W1lh -~•·.
1111\\ II p.1~ llll'llb .11 ~r,r,1
flt'I' "'" A 11111~1
~lti :.?:11:1
lnh'n.,_1 I:!'•'.
~'t·. t'.111 llllV.
THE REAL
ESTATERS
FIXER UPPER
. \ hi I It• ""lc•1·oral 1111: 111
111alw 1111, l.11 i:•· 1.1111hl
Ill)! l'.IUl'h flUllll' .1 l'l'.11
11a111h llii; 1111 aml lnl:. uf
111•1•' \ 'k Ill)! $17.1.!MMI
Climb ' 1
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
NEAR NO. BlYFROHT.:.UL rs.
0ftly 4 years "•w with appulla9
Httrior L~ 4 bed. 3 bG. ho.-+ I
bed. opt. 3 flreplacK. catt.dlrd ulliftgs.
30 ytar lo°" for approx. $250,000
01111ntablt at 13. 7 5%. owner
motl•at.d-s•mit al offers. S475,000.
LIDO HOME + APT.
Adorable beach retr.ot with 2 btd.
hotne & I btd opt. it! o St. to St.
locatioft. $355,000.
WATERFRONT HOMES,111.c
REAL ESTATE
NJ/>\\ l""" H .. , """'II"'' iw ... 6J 1-1400
1,, "!or"' A
B.l>O.th••'
'7Ut00
RFSIOfNTIAL Rf Al ESTAIE SfRVICES
US Y TO IUY AND
BEAUTIFUL TO SH!
Absolutely gorgeous C<1mbndge
t.'nd unit on the gr een belt in
Uni versity Park JU)o.t steps from the
pool ,\ spa. Assume a large loan
anci move into this 3 BH. 2 bath
rondo with remodeled k1ll'hen . lots
of tile. atrium lm•a kf:lst room with
skylight. air t·onclil ioning plus
amentl1cs gulort.• S159.500
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
---,-
lflK & lfNlf YUCATAN rflUNSUlA
C D E l H E T C A C E 0 V R D 0 A 8 0
S R A U S T R U M E A I J S K l H C A
C R G C T l A It 0 T L M 0 N N Q H I R
Widt• l11~1111n vu·w rrom :-.pt!dtH·u lu1·
ur('h1tt:Nurul design 6 bdrm . s htt th.
pluyroom. da rk room & den Shp for<!
large boats SI ,350,000
LIDO ISLE HOMES
Featured on Homes Tour:, this lovely
lrad1llonal spu t·1ous. <.•uslom 3 bdrm. 3
bath home, n<•wly rl'<iecorated. PrH·e!'I
lo sell quitkly al $475,000. Must see
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, C! bath µlu -.
IJ,!e recreation room & 2 patios. Heam
ceiling~ G reul for family living
Excellent valul' at $420.000
SPECTACULAR
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MESA VERDE
WATER WATER
EVERYWHERE
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PENINSULA POIMT IEACHFRONT
Panorum1C' bay & ocean view ul
wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm .
3 bath eus tom home. 3700 sq . fl 11
featurin g marine room. $1,385,000. Ul'41QUEIH
Old C orono del Mor
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Roy McC~. R"r.
548-7729
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FANTASTIC FIMAHCIHG Lovely
Stewart Plan in Turtle Rock
Highlands, 5 BH. 3 BA w 3 l'ar
garage Call for fmancmg details
& appl. S459.500 Lorraine Rennie
752·1414 (K50l
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OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
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1.16 HEW WOODIRIOGE LISTIMG
Ex('epl1unal 3 BR. Choite Corn<.'r
Lot Grt Loeation. Beautiful Area
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Ste W Mirrored Wardro~s Sel~ct.
Land~t<i pmg S172,(XX). · ·
D.M. Monholl Rltr
760·0835
LEA SE/OPTIOM
Eashide/2 on lot
S I 52,500
675·1771
Mobile Hume'
For Sol• I 0 Rclboo ~ J7
HEW OM MilkET!
Remodeled Ins1'1e .."1o. Oul Neutral
Tone~. Cpgradl'<i C~. 4 BR 3 BA
Exec Home On Quiet Str In
Westcllff. -Pvt Gatea Courtyard
Entry. Ney, Landscaping W Timt•d
Sprinklers Owner Wil l Carr~
Finance \\' 20'. Down
759·9100
#2 Catpcwelt Piao
M•wport C...tw
Spy9lau Mansion
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673-7300
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WALK TO BEACH Hew Turtlerock Homu :-..11 1'"1"" "' 1'• '11 ' I'' :\ hdrrn ~ h,ith, ., \lur~ $0 down tt:ll :;7:n J\J;l 1\t;l H r1 1'•1 • '1
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NEW BUSINESSMEN
Contact the DAILY PILOT for
Information regarding the
county requirements for using•
Flctlttout Buline11 NaMe.
MM3211XT.m
lolboolsland 100~. l111Jm. :t h.i l·.~1r." m \pf''"'·1 1·~• '1 11 11 ,
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lift Hardesty R"r 'fl\1•11111:, pl.1111 al""' "' ,1 I i" ·' ' hi I ol' i II MAKE AN OFFER I, 6 75-2866 \hlllll,'I' ( ',oJI lo/tl,I\' I 11" pl.1y pa I k
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Corona del Mor I 02' $171.!HH• F•·•· ''''" 1rn 11""' 1 I I ,. I I "~ I I • , .. I ••
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PROPfRfY
MA NAGfM~T
SU MMER WIHTFR
YEARl Y ·COMM L
Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesda • November 24. 1981
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S.c11rity Srstt-•••••••••••••••••••••••
Sllrf'lll Ka by111ttinK. our c.:. M YIN•: FINISll WORit ' llanaen 's Cerumic Tile Cleanups Tree Trim '11 Haul.cleanup, roncreltl •:xp'd l1dy to clean your •A BC M OVINCi ~;xp.. llANG INC SIO 'tWl.1. ,-u,w. hom~• 1 yr &c up uny Ooor11 huni. Dtrka. fo'loors ·Showers 'l'ub!! ll1uhn11 · Malntenanct removal Dump Truck home. ~lnl servke Call pro( low rlllK Quit'k t1uahty Alic> 1lr1vp111.: ~ 57 Pir n.., time.s42M!l2,646·~7~ Rt>m odrllnii R11ndy Callalt •em,im-4839 · Arnle$4841414 Quirkaervi M2·7&38 Olo .. 846_!001 ureiulaervl~ MZ <M to' fros\ St'Cltt6459~
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30ltay ad Y11ch1 Hul1Cleani1111 We C'nt Crpt Cleaners c tNctlo. C c leu 11 ups SpN' · In HAUL.ING" DUMP ,,..... Insured 141 M27 Hutut·cOll 1111 1.·xl 30 I ~ 111 1t•t1l'h )uur child 111 ···········••••·•·••••·
mUit' Completl' Underwater Stearn <·leun &uphob MHt::"&il<k-1'$.CUl~Om Bonsiuprunm& llJ0.9900 JOBS.11.,kforf\flldy, •••••••••••••••••••••• WATCHUSGHOW' yr& Neat .l'auJs.t5 2'J77 ,l'lffi m) tw111td pool DAILY ServtC't' Truck mnunt unit II dd X5B 641 MZ1 ANT J.: D Re t irtd -• ED'S l't.A.o.,··n:HIN(; t c-rttfttd Hrd t'rO'I in rtLOT Jim 6460171i Work (IUllr 64S :1'716 qua ty, l'(IOfn 1 ittons. Gardeni~Setvke llAUl IN" Student hH Mid West U111 veulty .... All1'ypes Int or ~ ~I ,1ru1 t or Lt·• Shon "h •. -l,1c Larry Wt'ndt•ll (' I ,_ • v p f •. W'f d . • •••••••••••••••••••••• ·~~ ""~8 llt• .. IUt'l'll\ SaVICI Roat llomr repa 1 r~ " ampoo "'~lean1 rlean, \213) 921 6~41. 12131 ump ele amlcnance l11e truck. Lowest rate. ro caaor .. 1 e Hirt Fine alnlUI' b Kil•hard "0"" V411146111 DlllCTOIY carp"ntry, rtbcrgluss Color bri"htcncrs. wht !H4-1488 646 ~ Afl4 3U Prompt. Call 759·1W76 lo Housesit1rent Home Slno~ Lie ~Y 13 yn. or Neat 11att•ht•'< & trxturt·~ Tilt
OO ITNOW • Glags & wtndow rhan 1·rpts 10 min. ble11rh. Dnrftt. ... S..kn J11p11nese Gardeni.ng & Th!nk1ou~_._:._ In Newport/Lagun11 hippyN 8 rustomer\ f,..•••t. 893-1439 ••••••••••••••••••••
A .. .., 5-dN nels rc-plared Robby H11ll. llv 1drn rms SIS, •••••••!••••••••••••••• L1.1ndsr11p1.n& Mo Ma11>.t CLUM UP YOUI ACT ~r~a1 ?IOdu~! Mo of Dec Th1tnk )'OU ti.'11 4410 l'lai.terinl(. i>Jhh tt'•tu1 \h·Cr> ,I.ti C:c1.im11· J "·
't'ourOa1ly P1lot 752·1102 a;g room S7.~. roul'h E M DSCN&CllK TrttTnmmrng.~311il llAULl~C!.J2:5 _83H993 a ------llohday Special. l'XI ml N Int . f:xt lle.i~ Irr•· Clhlln1'11\rln,1.illi11100
Service D1rrctory Boat Maintenance It llaul !e~~~~ ~rpr;':~ ehm packaging/Sh mtl prh G A RWD E M I M G I llAULING/CLEAN·UPS L.chc..... painting Pror nsnhl l'Hl lld963 UIHll, !iJ1I ~)n l.11· •~0117411 IWll Klll2
ReprnentatlYt' outsServiee&Repu1r 1~ Dpair k Call~3701 ANTED Dirt ·Shnille-Trees ••••••••••••••••••••••• Freeest.Slevt•S4742.81 '1uMbl•9 11111:~.HSTIU:Wol<KS 642 5671 ext l22 ~hock Boa~673·2050 yrs up o wor M<>wlng, ed1tln11. r~tktna •. r•moved ""'"·""·" Vandenbt-rg Landscape -' • l\1trhen liulh Fluor~ • • f!l)'lSelt Re(sS.31--0101 Drywall ~we eping t-'r r "~-. ~"""'!Maintenance . co l LARRY'S IAINTIN(, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Firlt'~t('r,1fl\trl\'11 lll!!!IR••llll!!!!l!•l!!!lll!!!lllWkten No Stum No Shampoo ••••••••••••••••••••••• esti 1 645 4372 l' AZ HAULING Cleanup, 0 r 5 c a Pe I awn 5 fall Special int ut. Draini. rleared rrom $141 Acc...tt.g •••••••••••••••••••••• Stam Spel·iahsl f'a:1l DRYWALL ACOUS~'IC 645 ~;,es or removal, demo Ir I ion. apnnklen, design Lie' dry w a II 6H 9383 Plumbtnlil Rc1H11" ~ I> lloi;en. 73011741
....................... GHWICI & SOM drl'.. 1''ree etl 839· 1582 14 yrs exp. Fully ht d & nny size Job $2()/up 412901 979-5146 64~·2U7 frl't' \'!II M&M Ml !.1033 T,... Service
Accurate.Respons1ble Builders Since 1947 · -tn5ured ~·SM9 PtantC11re/G11rdemng Heasonable 631·0322 ----· ----Pool Strvlce, R-ln
Arctgforsm.bustness Addi od I FRANK'SCUSTOM D . D II ·'d Indoor/Outdoor.World'~ ---MCHCNtry C1utot11P~ .,..-.... ...,C •1:
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c 11 1 tons, rem e mg, CA RPETCLEANING ave 5 rywu · au 1 Best PnM 549-5139 Ho111tc'--9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ yrs exp. Lie 4~1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• JAYE '"11;1; Aiu;
& Romp etesetup/serv1ce plans Frttesl Reas •We Do·ll Right • lions, comm'I. Ul.'OUSltl' •••••••••••••••••••••••BRICK WORK Small Bonded Ins Refs Color llO'I'TLllS l'um11lrt1• "'f\ll'I' ~nd
easonable_. -~().SSJ4 ~131~ _§49·2170 8'47-78-1.2 ce1ltnRs. texture:. H•dy._ W1ntaREAU..YCLEAN lobs Newport Costa e~ 963-00llDtck f'OHTAHl.~#'I ,lump gnndmg Ill )t' A.lrC ..... D.9/ MocHALICOMSTl. 894_3767 ....................... llOUSE~Cal1G1ngham Mes~ Jrvlne' Refs NELSONS PAINTING &INtllWlNl>~l'\S t'A1'1.1r l~f.4U!l:MJH He.tilit Custom homes. Cram IALUACl"CA.lE Eledrical l'rp~ntry P~ta~nry Girl. Freeest.645-5123 675.317'5 . lnt·Ext. Res Co m. Sl41mm111i:1>oul d :x1>rrtTrrl'l'run1111(•
••••••••••••••••••••••• ding . rekmllodh, French St~m clean. [tS-3321 ••••••••••••••••••••••• or;':,.~7{' Stu~: ·~~e ROBJN;,CLEAN ING Bric k· Bloc k Cement acoustic ceilings, rer . n•modchni: l'ommar1al l.JlldSl'ilf>t'
RESJD./COMM 'L oors. s y g ts & PKlto Ca'INt/Upltolstery ELECTRICIAN pmed Remodel J 8. 646·991JO Service u thoroughly f rp I 's. Xlnl. work he , Ire~!_ 837 2637 l n~url'll and hr !I S1•1 \II t·<. ~!:17 K:WI ~::i:m;1~~~ge ~ers 84}!52 ....................... 1 nglll. free e1lllmate on Gener:il Mamta1nance cleanhou.se 540.ml57 Dependabl e Pat PA I NTER NEE US l'~~~~~/;.~'~:!w" Typl119Serrice
RtfROde4 SpKiald lc"rpet & upholsteq lari:eor small1obs Hepa1rs&~coratmg HOLIDAY SPECIALS 6'!.:~-WORK 30 yrs exp . int . f:Xl'EHT l'OOl.l \H~: •••••••••••••••••••••••
....... Custom carpentry ~ eh n e r · r rt' r LI('. llJ9662l 673·<m9 •{luaht,,Y• Ra}•64()..St44 ByTheHOUSEMOUSE Masonry our specialty ext , acc. l'e1I Dav•~ b 1 p 1 I \I YOl 11 r\'P~:
••••••••••••••••••••••• decks, pattOS J.S Const' 1 t<>t9c72ga~~rd. floor wax General M11ml · repair & Ge.,rl_67H59:S af!L Clean. quick: dependa· ~alntinj 847-51116 ".·~ /\r\.'1c1l'_> •Ml1,1~101~ ... t:~·'.,'1rH? j • FJ\t & Jn 11rat1•
Driveways, parking lot Co. Nobody does 11 bet nJl ·""""' -design. free t.'Sl Quality Jack or all Trades l'ull CLEANING Kl NC DOM ble We do any si1t' job! •""' ''"" -• IC1·1 ''11111 1~1!11111! sl'Sai~s. hs~:lc~alt~~=9 ter' Lte.•, bonded t'rt'e CttMtlt/COIM:refe work SJ) 7396 Day•u;::~~lk!.l4 • Re~1d .1Comm 'I Also -~6.11-2000 RALPH 'S PAI TING Property Manogement l11rm.1tttni: •''JI''' 1,il1t)
L sp 8 • est Ca11 JoeS59-5511 •••••••••••••••••••••••Electric our Sperialty JJntlon ul sen il'eS Custom Brt<'k, Slone, Ext/I nt Reu Prompt ••••••••••••••••••••••• • t .tll 111t• for Jll H1ur ~cLLSTATEPAVIN-G CabiHt~ THOMPSON'S Clean. Qu1t•k' depend.i HoMt~•flMll!h 556 8470 Block.C~rete.Stucco L1c 'd frtt~l 964-~ PROPatTY t1p111i:n~~~~~·11~
S ••••••••••••••••••••••. CONC R ETt: CONSTR ble We Do Any Size Job' & Rtpal Quality Housecleaning Refs Free est 549.9492 Quality ptg/Lowesl rate~ MANAGEMENT Realc~atmcg, Stripinl(. Cabinetry Sper 1alty. ~c.llJ9~ 6428482 •63l2004 • ,. 1" w1thPersonalTouch mOC Neat.prompt Orani:eCo -"1'•1 ,~,,., IHnlMJ ep:11 rs. om m IR es k1'tch•ns. Bathrooms •· Restd Conr re.te, Also R ,. 'I 20 "a rpenl ry. e eclrira I I B th <c. "l<I! Movi-.. e~pt•nem•t• ( .Jll lor '"'" Window C """"362 "•<8l8l ,. "' Li ei.. "omm yrs l'X ('on l' r n In •· h" ll l" r e """"'Y .1<1__ ...., • •••••••• serv ~5684 636 7149 d ,._, ·....,. Cus tom lo your style No sport rourts r 374067 per Do m> own 14ork ' ' "' ' ' ••••••••••••• • -.in rate~ • • •• •• ••••••••••••••• ••
A.ttorwya job too small ' Bob 8511966 84J 70711 Li('.'d_AI 6468126 (,.e;r;c~ 11 ~1"0/3J~~ •Holdft s..dat• •A.·I MOVING• ~~~TEO~~~R~~TE 963-8182 oni:~~~IJ~~n~~~ •. w;~her
••••••••••••••••••••••• •631·~* •John Mullaney & Son~• LIC'D 1!:1.l'X'THICIAN 968.6493. 25'. Ol''f"\ c reamni:' Top Quality Special LOW RATF,S Roofln9 •::JI 7G9ll
DIVORCE. SUPPORT Custom Cabinetry All Ce me n 1 b r 1 r k. rl' Qua I wortl Reas. rates I mmat·ulate <"are in handling. ~ yrs NU BROO~ 6'12_1403 •••••••••••••••••••••• • Increase/ decrease, ae· kinds, 7 yrs design exp landscape. tree remov. 645·l95-0/83l 50'12Tom Mamtenance exp Competitive rates Oranjill' Coa.,1 llooftnK cldent.s. bankruptcy f "'ood d l'l'k s Lt l' · d -llome 11pt repair pa mt, llomt's 675-9755 Offices No overtime. 730 1353 Starving Houi.l' Pain ter.. Rerooftni: tlep.111,
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t .tit Su11~h111r W1ntf1114 851·3938/833-0220 . ree esL 7»64Ql.I 710'2953 Roor Covel"IRc) i. t u r co . r o o r 1 n I!. H ,.1.--1,...... t'ree Est Cull Jerr or 646 2389, 5411 1u1
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~ r .... ,.,I qua I \t'f\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... rea l\'l' • onrrete o," I CRPT LINO WOOD etc ~8-0849 " .-r ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wood patios. d~ks. wood Scott Jo~as Aft Sl'M. lnstalled11-epa1red Ltr Hardwood Roon Rehable. refs Free est Ca reful tourtt•ous & I' ..i..... Shingle!\. Oat. dt•rk\ .m Babysitting. My home windows Ltc d Rea~ 84!1 5577 Free ~l 369260 c 99 2 l"all 24 hrs.~ 2418 t'h Pl 11 97 056 .,. • ....,. yrs fo'ree ~t no in.s Hot Lunr'"~. U". Raf Jo"'n o Rick 979 321" . --· • c ll .• reg 4 -514 ••••••••••••••••••••••• r-od u ,j,--eup s Cil 4 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . •• ~".."' -'"-r , -·-0 ll a\t' ,11mt'lh11tlo! q 1ul 'llA~OWOOOfLOOfili wo nOHt-F"wJ »SMIHIMUM IThe Paper Hanger. Prof t-le14 & r~·rooftng pr11 1•!1
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Wet Ad Help! 642·567! P1.!gt Want Ads. Jdsdutt 14l'll t..!2 54>711 Class1f1ed ml-.tlott 14l•ll n1t1me,8.12 4881S 1\ L'harlteT10 &980dy l'_\ Cla~:.1f1t'd Ad!. 642 S678 Freee_st SleH·S47 42111 63t 9~S
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.... ,.... 3207 'Costa MHG l224 l"la. J244 Newport leoc.t. l26' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport leoc.t. l76f. Coro.a dtl Mar 3122 Coro.a del Mar 3822 Costa Mno 3824 Coita Mesa 3824 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••'•••••••••••••••••••••••Palm Sprangs Area •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••I••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
•OCEANFRONT• 3 br pool Mesa North lrwnhome ne~ 3 br 3 bJ I cMonteray l' c I Condo Immaculate 3 Ur 2 Sil COZY I Br Duplex. frpk. 3 bdrm, l ba, bl-am i·etl I 2 Ir ·1 la~ r \~T~llH. lrt ... h : fir
Lux.condo.2 br.1i.,ba. S8001mo 195-0 movesyou fpatro. i:ar l'ark .'po1i HEWPORTHGHTS. 3Hll. 2BA w atrium Wt rtl t'r Renl;il p ool One emplyd mR.hlt>&air;.S7SOmo Newl} ci.,.1·t1r (,J, 1111 .:.11 r1ur10. J<lu lf\ nu
l trplc, view. Sec. bldg . ..!!!..:M.!:6990or&t2:.5497 Jae S9?S mo 8.1J.9057 l.1k1• 111•\1 ~·1L,t11111 h1111t .I .:olf & tenni) Dail)', Complete!) rurnished. I female, nos!"ol<er, pets NOJ!.els. Agt673 S354 l'nrl 1:ar ptx>I rhh"' pt'!• <.t1N1 '4/illlf,,
rk . .675-7264 i•Br 2ba frplc frml din l11"d1tH1111 -h.11h 11111!1.rl I wc.>1:kly & monthly rate~ $750 mo Property I Lease$510 6049'.19 bdrm. 1 bath bllJI) Adulb 6425o;3 ,.~~-........ Mer l2221 1ng f~mr~ beaut REMTALS il111tnl!t1H1111h111111·~.11 Hatl 714 )5811001 House642~6421010 SPECTACULAROCEAN refr1g,rc11run1t I l11~11h11N'l!rl BJ --. kite.hen 646.154~ bl 2Br I Ba S700 111L .. 111·,1111l..111lw11 ll,1\ !15PM rthrk ' &CITYLJGlfT'S VIEW ita rage i.pace \\.i1I ~pacioui.2 Br IU.• S.'l'•J I'·''" 1·.u.1.:1 \1Jul1):1~ ·······················I . "n 2 Rr 2 Ba S'i9S I h'" ) I ~•• 1111"11h \ 1·.11 c--..1.-t-L-"'" L• I 12 I y riv lltl' ~· mo 3 Rr I', Ba $-1!5 I .11111 \ r "' Ill t·r n11 "' l ' 3 br 215 Iris 4 doors lo I 3-9 m · 1 1 --m--~rom e\ery room. arge · J dr r ~ I •uu 'I•,. ' \ . . -. 3 Br 2 8,1 $875 \ , •• 1 '" ti.I I '.11111 I U fvntished 3425 I Br $635 mo Ca II Agl, 875 2373 >-.i. poo '"" .... ~, .,.All• . lu ~~:~Ii!!
ocean front. $1.500/ mo BR. lBA. No DoRs S42S I J Br. 2 Bu $900 t'urn Ht•aito1 It Mearlene642 S7~7 da s 82"-Sfl'NNIM~ I.tr~(' I I\ :.! LIT"' & IRITE Cal1Barbara67S·3007 645 V1 ct o r1 a 114 JBr 2, l:lu $925 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Y ostaMno l .. Hr 2 HJ •:arilt·n ,1,1 1::
Beach Living, large 3 Br ~6-9124 B , IE OME OF W11 lk to beach A\"all •••••••••••••••••••••• I' I -y, 1 1 I 1._,. 111·" I Hr '·t•••
B . -.C r .3BJ $11'75 OCUH&MTVU TH"'LUCKY~ ~<' 5 I Br newderor HEWLYDECOR ou .iu Kt •"' ,. ~·r nr '"'l"r' 2 a. garage, patio S85-0 Very Privah 4 Br 311 DJ S97~ \t·14 1Mu"' !1111 :!II\ 1:: "'"'"' ~ Adults no pel.S 1 B 1 • Tiff \'lCTOHI \\ Hr l P'''"" 14 h.il1tmir· &07 Ins 634-1535 & Neat and clean 2bdrm Le Ra1surR1ti8331WlO I c;11·.11 th•~,\ •111 ...,,., Rrnl in l"l>l>l.i Mes11·~ 719'' ll t'l;•ltrope d r hga~ pd lrnA<' ·11!1"r l "' ~.ir Ut•14 h '"''"' 1>1101 'l•a ht~, t.1u111l1• m -2233 . l ''I 0 \I II I N t'\l(t'ST l(at ed 20 was er IJ(Jll IUI) d I ' · dble sink. bath. enr yd New Condo 2BH. 281\ j ~ •1 .. 1· , ' '. 11 ' T ' h • • • VII L Gr 972 ~06 642 5073 · J u ti' ·" ~ 1 q1t' St ; 11 A. 11 11 \I.ti 11 r1·
Br. Charmer. Gigantic f Pireplare. Child. Peb Patio. Nr Park & Pool ~ "·'~.,.~··'·" 11 12 i<irnx own omt ' A'· ' drJpe,, hll 111• µJl1 11 \olulL \11 1·1o·1 ~ \lc)J
Den. Frpk, gar. $695 ok. $600 ~~ I No a.&b 67S.9646e\·e~
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OC'a most prestigious ci 3BR. 217BA. frpk, spa d ('ul tlt• ..... H $1llMl11111 I hydro tu, b\ '"1 md <tSler flrunr h • AOO • DAILY PlLOT Adull.S 642.S(173 t'la~stfwd 1~h 1.12 ~711 \\ .1111 \cl lk:.ulb t..!l 5Cii~ bl. lo buch & Market tn **Ou. V-iew 2 Br 2 B.i Wet bJr '•llH 111 \ .It .111;.11 o pure u~ury .ar~lll''· 1 '"' i.~ •••to• ""'1cby Service Dlrtttory tn the enrl gar . l>O<'I. ru, ... hr I
" $795 + SD 2243 Pac1f1c ~aragr oor opener, I llc•~'.ll:t\ 10•:! suite. urm11 totnf? 1'4•11"• • Plu~ mor• -•
ty. ! J4. lbr., ~"'2 ba. Con· .. 8 .. 106 CM. ~8•847s close lo pool. S750 mo ~:H·~.M.l<! lil•t•t I rooms. wood burn1n11 O.llEAT RECft!ATIOfll: ••••••••••••• e e e. e. e •• tl e ••••• do deD. 2 fp, S, lg. din . M2 7743 752.5668 I r1rrpla1'f'!I mt~n>·WllVf' ,.......,..,, .... l .... ~
pvt. patio, 2 car encl __:. -BR ., Ila ~nitl ,1or\ ""14 h111111· ., l11 :! i,1 • U\'ens r~~ pu1111~ & '""' \ '"" \h<>o• • '1 • ar 1200/mo .,.,c:ouw• Easts1dt 2 bd ro1y cot ~ . . 111·0 un l.1il11 tl11t•l1w11 d . J' I • 8 DAY WEEK . ·"'.,..°"°" tage. gar . yd . pal10 l14nhseonparkhke,el 'I'·' 1.111 l11h11~h11t 111 ).tr s rt\ale eef?unl "''''"'"''"•<>.11"'" • SPECIAL BR 1 Ba, So of Hwy, kids & pt'ls 5595 ltnl( 2 t•ar garat?t' ,,.,. i.:ll lc:'I ,11 1o'i.l.~ll>X lt\IOR onl) I~ minute' • "' 1'"""" ~11•· • • •
lplc, yard. ssoo. Andy, 631-4320 r1replare. li:e palt11 ~I •i:• from Fash1un Island. 71 ~~~~.~·~·.:i..q;. """ 3 lt'nes 8 Dollars • 851·2269 wkdys. 673-5569 mo 759 9:llli : , . mtnules lo SC Plaza or • 8 Days eves br, 2•2 ba 2 sty rondo. 2 I :-;14 pt l , ,.,1 ' unrt11 .1111 I ti C: /\1rport Just rai.I or I BEAUTIFUL APTS •
. car gar. small yard. aleoch 3248 !' "·' =1il\.u11.1l11 l'm11 t I Nr14port Hh·d & 50 11(1 s.nglf'\ I & .. HM • It s easy to plac e your 8-0ay Wet> .... CJJ"~. "··· j IJ 4 Br. 2 Ba. Children " relng, ~ 63_1·7!117 •••••••••••••••••••••• St.!~ 'II•:' tl'iil\ 11\ °''i;' s· 0 f St· rt '""'"' • ~'""'"'"O .., T'cJ ,1 • ru OKd ll60!mo lsl & -4 Bdnn -I home CEAN ~'HO~T ~lob1lt• I;:: atteffooor:? mo~lh &1Jn!u<n1:>11 .. 1•Aik•I • costs JUSI SS -lh(ll 5 only a dollar add I T ll• I , • ~9: eposit 529.9626 s:1To Imm~ ocrup ~~m4~r=r.sotoSl•._'0 1 THEILUffS 631 54~9. 2473 nrani:r ~~~".?i~·o~;..;~~:,,; e spec ial oiler you rnu~t be a non·LOmflwr .al 1i ... i'•1 111 •• , •
JZl4 Cul·d sac 3490 San , Sp.1l'1t1tt' lhllm1 :ch.1th. Ave ,CosLa Mesa Q10& • merchand1~e fo r Slllf' UJ') to $800 pe r a('j ,1111: lt1t • ( r (t• 11 •
M... Rafae l 979-5310 or 2hd. 2ba . f' I & pall<! I I.lilt h1111l1' Nt•I> pantl ,\I New 2 BR 2 BA Ctv Cnlr Oakwood be in yo ur ad The cosl Sia"" lh<> '-a mu S.W-7618 Judl'.. Adult!!. no pt't~. nt'ar 1·.iq!i•I M1111• 1n nwh I area p00I Ja~ tennis Garden Apertmenta • ' "'" ., ' • n:~bts;.e~~t ~ae~~~ -;..~ 3240 :1~~~ shops S6SO mo ~~~~Ji''' mo111h \l!t upf?r~ded Art 6 PM: needs eight days s e llt nQ rime o r 1u-.I on1" •
S 'Ired ••••••••••••••••••••··· I "" t21315925006or t714 1 NewportBeadlN. • aru. ma enc '" HOMES FOR RENT CICJlllla N~ 3252 846·8538 880111~;·r:5~i11104"' • •
pool. $825 mo. David, 3 & 4 Bdrm S6SO-S72S. ·······················111.llboa blJ111l W.Jll'llffllll For rent/lease option lo Use one w ord tn each 00.ll At)OU I 4 wor :::. rn.1" t.. fl/"(
646-!255 Fen re d ya rd s & Sea Terrat•e Gard1:n l J llr 2 11a \'1•11rl~ h•aM' buy New 3bdrm. 3ba. HewportBuchS. • class1f1ed line of type M1n1rnum tll IS 3 ltnpc: p,.! I· r· •
Br. enclsd garage garages Kids & pets llome 3 bdrm+ dl'n. 2 $111Mt \lu 7i111r:11~ 51'00·$850 mo 2bdrm. i1cx\j~t~li~.5;·1.J' '""' plainly •
Adult.s,nopets.$475/mo welcome 545 2ooo ba. fam ily room Catt• llJrbu1 H11l~1· ~.,IJtt·• 2•1ba. S750 S800 mo •
T13W.Wibon631-41189 A enl nofee guardt'd romm "'11h l bt•'I 11t'"' 1 H1 :l Ila Total ~er bldJl Call • •
esa Verde 3 Br. 2 Ba • CLOSE TO BEACH. ~ach. leMIS. pool. )al', I ~)() '.'o il~l l!lii I 554·9160 . 840 li703 art I I r------------------------- ----..,
Fam. Rm. 2 Frplc's, 2 E 3 8 2b f sauna $950 per mo Isl 1.m i•I\' ;i HIC ! 11,, 1·1111tl11111 Spm A~rftneftls I • I -I •
car gar. Gardener S895. f xjc d r a ra. ~.;::;I + last + $200 sec. NO Wc•,frhH an-.1 9:.•10 \~I I Ne w mulll levc.>I twnhse 2 U•fw oWshed • I I • Sier ra Mgmt Co r c ...J!llll-rm. PETS 1714\ 8571200 nrl ;5•111111; Br2ba rrplc pool Jae &••••••••••••••••••••••• 641-132~. mm to bearh. 2 bd · 1 675 6892 \\\•,1d1rr tH•1L-..· hlw n1·~ sec i;ystm · Man> e' al»oa lslaRd 3106 e I I •
tslde 2 BR, I BA, 1 car ba · dbl gar · No pe~ Brand new Execul 1\l'1 1 llr .I 11.1 t>•••I \Int lras S8(X) mo yrly lse ••••••••••••••••••••••• I I aar. renced yd, pets & ~ home with view J Br :i "'h'"'" Sl:l541 11111 r.111 67S 7i.13 I.1ttle lsld Rayfront. side • •
kids OK. S585 per mo. 387 964-2283_ B a f. a m H m 1 ~:H·~ 5-IH -ti!M7 w -lie avail 2 Br 2'' Ha Illa.. I $ 8.00 I •
18thSt ~eves. POOL SPA $1300 mo !11.11bor \'u llmt'' :111u .! Tou~ 3525 r p. 2 ('~r j(ar. 3\311 • I I
tnrl gardener & pool IC1 11\I \anl •mm1·1l111· now 'I rl) lease • I 10.60 I •
astside. lmmac 3BR.
2BA + lrg Fam rm
w/lrplr . Carpets .
drapes, blttns 2 rar gar
Avail Dec 1st. S'ISO mo
Yrly. Call ~-4834 or
...:o6'2.=-=·9~17:..::;8 _____ _
West.side. 2 bdrm. I ba.
yard, gar. Avail ~r 1
$525 mo. tst & last +
de .~·0113
br .. gar. fenced yard.
patio, carpet/drapes pet
OK .~7506
MEWPOl'T HEIGHTS
Small I Br. garage.
ard. 00/Mo. 64-0-7814
ew Custom JBR Home 6
Blks fr Bch S975 Par1r1r
Moon Really
• •846·28.SO• •
st ry condo 2 lg bdrms.
3ba. Adlls only, no pets
Harbor Pines In H II
area Pool J3C $625.
Refs req_ 21314911.2535 ,,
btc laCunta
4 bdrm. 2 ba. hv rm.
family room, formal
dining. bonus rm. 2•,
car gar. :nio sq rt S'995
Call Jrm
!779-5310 4 bdrm. 2 ba. den, large yd. f195. Sunshine Mgt agnihcenl Pool Home
Co. 7M·13S4 3BR. 11.BA, Loft Sl200
Dix 3 br. 2,., ba rondo. mo 4132 Morntnl!Slar Lane llunt1 ngton new. all xtras. 2 car Harbour Al(t Call
encl. flJ:.,.~3429. -Barbara,
East.side 3 Br 1 Ba. ram 848 1469
rm. No dogs.S675 268
Costa MesaSt.~9341
. •••••• ••••••••••••••••• Sl250 Ask r D ~en1ce No pets plea~e 1 P' SI 1511 mo in• I Reau! 2 br lusden 2, mo or a\e l •
for appt call 545·2000 j!nlnr t;ill \1.1111\11 ·•l!I b· . hp 2. , Schwe1ckr rt 6428235 or j • 13.20 I APent no fee I ;..r,2 n I l a tov. n ome. car 645-9144 ev~ Ajenl ' I • ... ~ · ' i:ar . pool s pa, nr I • 1 luiottY~ 32671\'11 111n1t.1 ~. ICr :! ."·' Bristol Rrdhl $700.mo lbooP~ 3807 I 15 .80 I • ••••••••••••••••••••••! l11'.1ul1fulh l111111~lwcl ~ 0178 •••••••••••••••••••••• • I I
HOM ES FOR RENT \\ ·111 l>c•i .shorl , .. m. Mal' Arthur \'tllage $570 2br . 2 ba . I bl to ~ch. • I Add S2.60 for each addlt'1onal line for 8 times • 3 Bdrms S6SO·S125 ":' Sl_l~MI 1 h1..,h1rt• 11 ~-mo 28R Supt>rLoc P& rargaral(l' I
Fenced } a rd s &l r.11 1111, I S Tenmi. Courts Et r 675-4912 • I I •
garages Kids & peb I.rt.?~ H1 11 hoal,hp pit I Call Rob. 951 6243 or each Houst W U. • I I • welroml' 545 20011 .areJ \\Jlk to 11t·1•J11. Da\'e 31 9514426 pa110. 2Br Iba. yrly , prd
Agent,ooree $950 ntll .\i;I i1~1i1:1:i:1 -family, 675 8793 a(l • Pub lish my ad fora days starting I •
Newport leoc.h 3269 \\,111 '"'.:!I I l.tthrn on l~r+iMllhfwwlsMd IOam Class1f1cat1on I • •• • .-••••• •••••••••••••• ".ih·r .•• ~'>41 1n~1 \\ 11\tt•t •••••••••••••••••••••• 1ew Duple:it Yearly. up. • I
Lt•ase eul l.mda blr Ii r.111• h1.1 .1~1 ~.\ . lboa ,.._.. 3707 per 2 Br , lrR LR. frplc. •
llr 5 llJ. rorm;il 11111. ~(' ... :'I. II '"""" 2111! .••••••••••••••••••••••• gar. Adults 200 71.h St • Name I
rH i:uar<ll'rli.:a1r.tl·11 ~··II.\ :.i 111r i.:.11.1i.:t· B AY FR O NTA GE 673·437J... e Address___ I •
ms hr•H'h m1mfor:!lri: 111111' WJ,ltt•1 dnl'r Bearh. Pier. Prkg 2 Br. mgsne 3 Br wlfrplc • I • l'lclcll~ S.~MI ~r mo llnh 1\ilult' 1111 I'll'!\ \1•.tr $700, 1 Br $600. ssoo New deocr decor Sil W
or Do\ 11• l\nop .1i.:1 lloaJ? llo~t}ltal S!lllO Adults. uhls pd Till May Bay, Yrly S82S 536-1441, • City Zip Phone I •
759-1221 Days. 549 4243. Evt'' 27th 303 E FAgewater !WO 5719. _ I 1-------1 ~6·9306 11sn-2866. Balboa Pl short walk to • Check or M.0 . en closed 0 I •
llG CANYON Newport Heicjih Small 1 bdrm. ut1I inrl'd. ocean & bay lrm .. ba & • •
Luxu r 11111' Thrt'I' lhr3hJOlllfUl('lnJl!h• S38Sto$400 sm kit 6755538 eves Charge my ad to I berlroom~ T14o halh' ~ar \\,ilk to ,,·hooh 673-4928 only • I •
H1chl\' drmr.1lt•1I Mulrrl l\1ds ok $12fMI mo Hl'f~ 1 BR 1 block from ocean 0 -# E I • 10111.'\. 3000 MjU:trr ft•rt ,\\•;111. Jan l 1>16-2017 Avail Dec 1, '81, mo to • m4 xp Overlonb lllth 11•1• or , _________ m 0 s 4 7 0 m 0 • I •
i:nlf (·ourw S'l7!lllmonlh 1 lr. .. sr.~iou 8051~27-2631 • 0 ;; # Exp 1
1
• Year!\ lea~•· •7 Hut' ..,_ 1::vr1 "
Gr.ind·\ .tl~'t' Op1•n Sun :\earl~ 2000 sq rt or Coda Met0 l724
<Lt\ 1 ~ To '<'" c·..ill l0ust11m11ecl f1•ature' ••••••••••••••••••••••• • L I • fi."11 iJOO.Kl•allor Two sep11ralt• ma~ter S3.'i0/Mo. Mature adults. ------------------------------1------•1 suites u11i1 hul(l' pa11oa11 no pets. Quiet & secure Your unused e r--·-···--WE 'LL PAY THE POSTAGE --------------e
1
iia-l ea dpl;,-ga-;., sml
fenced yard. small child
OK No pets. $475 + dep.
19$4 A lhy~r .. ~~
F.;side 3 Br ramily home
Frplt. 2 car gar. fn('d
r-------•I m lhc l(alrd l'Ommunil~ 1991 Nl'wporl Hl vd l'femS COUid • 1
1
: • 3242 OCIEAMFIOMT of \'I LL.I\ ll/\l.llOA 646·8373. '4{ PO<,,IA(,( 1
HOME k;r·'~~l'~~11;1!1'.1;~~1~·~11; LocJ-a 1eoc1t l74t be someone's • : "l 1 <i<iAF11 : •
~ .. f72!1/~._~tl02
. 2bdrm. frpk. ~frla.
nit. 11a.s1water pd 140
brillo. f'T3.1'117 .•
rm. 2ba. 2 nr iar.
foJIUr r ark. HU.
131 ·4214.
•••••••••••••••••••••• OAT LOVERS Dix
adult Bayport condo.
Out.s tandlna penthouse
view overlook i nK
harbor. 2+2 Boat shp
auil thru Peter's Land·
in11. Call m:rneHSIM or
Z82·1136 .. 3244 f..tl\'tly 2 ~ .• %be .. wt fp
.-..J rd I •••••••••••••••••••••• ;::i: ~·f.til: • &OLFCOUISI I
t:'11iM J ,.,. + *"· pca111. MITE UTE YUS
.,., Call <..'llrillln• S.n Joaquin 2 8d 2 Ba
557-1112 1 C'Oftdo. den. wd INlr 2 . atJtr J br %'•bl ur Jar. tomrn. JH'OI, ".••4•. 11 •I. fro111 ms1mo C.11 Cn111 or tttt••· IU . ..u 1ar. Glfll. •ltl. 131 0211 or ........... --''· '•• , .. ·-II Pl'Cs __.. jii;L ........ RVM ~
4 bdrm. Z b:tth. t•om Wm t'oh• for f11rth1•r in ••••••••••••••••••••••• • : 1 \4A 1t l0 I •
plctdy rcmodct11cl . rnrm11111111 Lux~ry stud_lo. spa, TV. Christmas .., 1,,f • hlln~. lrpk. $1500 mu ,,. maid servtre. phones, • !
0
~ • uoo1su .l.Cote Realty 111tswk.499-m7 Sell them • ii> ',., ,,,, \)ti\·l ~ Q •
3 bdr~n~~~rrv11-. ·+·&~s~f~ent !~~~~~ ••• !?~! with an ad e ~ BUSINESS REPLY LABEL : e
hltnid!l~Omn !OCEANFRONT 2 &4 Br • g ftR~T (l A~~P£R.,.tr o.io '' co~i .. .,.£\• ,A11Fo11 "'' • 1-------1• Avail: Wlnter Weekly / Under the " 3 Hr ~ nu. lovl'I) yunl . Monthl)'. 673-7873. • : oOSrAGE ........ Ill l'A(' A• •;X.llf '''I 0 • <''CC~·llt•nt t•onilltwn • SHORTTERM -• Oa1'ly Pi'lot < Orange Coast Daily Piiot
Wc.>Strlltr $UWl Mil li711!l I OCEAN1''RONT 3 br 11pt • eO •
s..c...... 12761 Avail bywk.or mo c1·tt Guide • ~ Da1·1y P1·1 11" • n••••• ••• .. •••••••••• •' A ent 675-8170 1'0~ SAl,t:OR Rt:NT ;0ceanlront 2 Br. t Ba. • i3 •
Nr (;1tltnllt l."hurrh. iwn Weekly or Monthly. • 1 Box 1 it~ •
""'· \'l('lft(, 1W'1ttlY cit ! Wlftttr 7SU. Call 642·5671 r JQ4J umtlUlir SHOO Mn .. rotated W . 2~ I.am. ·.,"OU --• t 330 W. B1w SI. •
llrukt>r17Mlt2 rm. dbl,;,.;· 111 yd .. ' all nl flf t11 I ' ,..,... ... ....,. m •· . nnuwvtcecoolteror CL...1... ... 1 e Co1t1 Meta, CA 92121 ,,......... llu. Wit 1119 wtUI _.tolell.11la~uud ..-
DAILYPlm D.aw ..... a.utf..: r. lh D~t,/ilot ....... • I MaYIClll~ a..:.,._
associated ,,.
----
-
. .
Orange Coo.st DAILY PILOT!Tueade , Novemoer 24. 1981
T~is Variety of fine Scliools Coulil Introduce You To A New Tomorrow
'
~ •,, . ·1~ I.,. f • '
I
r•••••••••••••••··~ I CHllSTIAM flli.SCHOOL I
I SPECIAL PROGRAM TO I
woaKIMGPAIENTS I I I 1 n;A<.:111Nc 11rn1.~. l'H.U'"1'S ~ c1n:A nv ~: I
AHTS. I MORALl'rv. rouR'ra-:.;v. SAl-'t.rv
Learn How to use
Wang, IBM 0$6 & 01splaywrtter
Xerox 860
CaM
SCHOOL FOR 1.u1c OFFtCE Skll lS
Pr•ttM\:
"How to Updoh Yow
W rlttett Office
Co1MtwticatioM"
Tues .. Dec. I, 1.3 ft .M.
\
.. ·
I
• <_ I
"! ~~· , ~~ :· \ ,J .. -
1 Don t s11 home
for f urffttr information
regarding advtrfiling
placement in ffte Schools
& lnsfrvcfions Directory
call Louise Griffiflt,
642-5671 •• , 311
I
I
I
1-...'IM'~ I
I
I o:~ I . '.,
: HOT LUNCHES .•
I NUTRITIOUS 1320 E. lltll ST.
I SNACKS COSTA MESA J
(714) 556-6604
C.... Tralllq. Pl...t luitm
Doys • fntlMgt • Salurd9p
EARN MORE M0toetY
Become a Word Processing SpecialJSt
Excellent Career Opportvnities
WORD PROCESSING AND INFORMATION
SYSTEMS 2232 S E B11stol-Su1te 106. Santa Ana. Ca 92707
A-OlflMf<l••<allOA"'°~ (_,, ... t.t1
FH : SI 5 per person
Jonuary ChnMS eow Fonwllftc)
Be111nn1na Grtf!ll Shurth:111rl
Shorthunll Hrubh uv ,\ 'l'r,orh1·11pt ton
T> Pini< Re\ ll'v.
ltow to U5t' lht• t:lt•t'l•<"lll' l Jlrnl.1t11r
f'1llni.: Hult·~
Coll for Clau Schedult
1714 1 641 -0678
3 400 lrvlfte A•• ..
Ste 207 N.I.
.. .,
' · while your ad is
..... ,.
I~\. )
running 1n lhe
Daily P ilot
c1asslf1eds .~el
ANSWER AD take
your messag~s
24 hrs a day tor .
l
a whole week for
jUSI $5 00 "
Call 642·567S-o .-1
place your 8dJ.
now'
SEMI-PRIVATE
DRAWING
CLASSES
\\
\
:1~
Featuring: ~j
• Fre!.h 11l'\\ .IJ.>prnath ~ ;
·Learn IO:-.l'l'. n•all~ :-.ee \\hat jl
you an• d I'll\\ 1 ng I/
• Learn ho\\ lo llSl' the right 111
side ol \'Ollr brain · ///I
• Build l'Olll tdt nre 111 self by ,
masll'ring llaSll' ~kills \
• lnd1' 1clual attention
• Smtill tTas!. s1£e·hmil ol'°:5
student!'>
• \\'arm µo:-.ttl\l' .1pprn;.1<·h to
l'rt'ali\ It)
Classes are form111,g rum. 5
week Sl'SSIOl1' homt· :-.IU<llO
Aoults '.\Ion . \\ t•d . Fn IO 1
\'outh:i agt•:-. 10 15 \1 011
Wed . Fri. 3 '.lll lo 5 :lo
$7.00 .,..-class
r1,1si-e-. taught h\ a te;.id1er
\\ I l h (' a I I t t t' a d1t1 I' s
credenl1.1b
962-7657 ofter 5 p.m.
22011 Hula C ircle.
HuntinCjton boch
········----------
JOLE E MILLER
Vll{ \I I It \l'l"l · I Ill 1111'1
Has openings for students of
ages and level s Gr ad u at e
Weslmi nster Cho ir Coll ege,
Princeton. N.J
631-2789
Pat's Place of
Exercise
2411 E. Coast Hwy.
l
Corona def Mor
559-41 50
AEROBIC EXSlCISE
CLASSES
To mt•et every Sl'heduli ng llttl'cf
Ne\\ 6 30 Momm~ ClasSt.>J)
l'all lor Compllmt.•ntary Cl<1ss
~,PAGE SCHOOL
,..._,._J OF COST A MESA
Growth W1lh Hon«-nnd Year -"°'
. AGE 2 THAU GRADE 8
~ ENROLLMENT NOW IN PROGRESS
~ REASONABLE RATES •; ~~~CTm,
::n:::: l'OOl ., ... ,,..u
'fVUY ACCllOfTB IAT.
l'JOA Ill. TO
lilt Vougnon r 011111¥ 1.)0 ' Ill
••ltW Ai.-IJlll IMJAllO
--.NOllOvt ·•·te~ ,,.,,.,or.......,..,-.... ... •Qt--G..tllllDt."°"'°""•'_,..., t 7H 07l ., f71•HU
Mon11ng. aftl·rnoon &
l'Vl;'lllng l'laSSl'S P ac;/;;c :Jrave f
'Scfwof
6 I 0 E. 17"'1 St. Santa Ana
(714) 543.9495
&tabh!i.d 196)
f 11tJ11r1al i\ocl l'roii.:r.111" \t 1·rc·tl1lt-.I 111
the• \\ 111•11lt111c I 11rnm1"wn ol lht.•
\!JI ton .ol \ '"" 1.1t11111 111 r 1 Jtll• &
Tt•t>hnH':ol ~whtN1b
Student Improvement Center
TUTORING
DIAGNOSTIC TESTING
INDIVIDUALIZED PROGRAMS
Reading
Comptehenslon
Grammar
Molh
Algeblo
Study Skllli
642-9088
Retraining In LITERACY BASICS
Is our spec ialty.
NOW in
HUNTINGTON BEACH
WHtmins~r
Montessori School
AG ES 2112 thru 6
l•dMdMIAtt.•tlo<o
Cltlldrff proqr•u a1 ltwir o-r~
Fl.II Day Proqr-
betO!lobi. T t1itioA
Day Car• 7 I 5 el'lt-6 pm
S 172 Mcfoddtft Ave .•
Huntington leach
ll•twn• lot.. Chiu Md Gr°"°"'I
Coo•I U... C:O-ity ca,..,_c_,_
•o&ifl•ood LHrMog C..r
(714) 898-3883
L
Office a.,..tal 4400 htl..eu oj
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Opporhllity ~ ~ SO!) i.q ft Mesll Verdt' •• .................... ~ LOSING LEASE. '.qol( area
54S-4123
,Deluxe Penin!>ul.i Ofrlrt'
I A 1.1prox1malt'I) 940 ~q ft
Cathedral Ct>1bngs w1th1
Tru:.~es. Sk) bghb Nev.
1 l'arpetrni:. Wood l'ar
' quet. i\1r t:ond1t10111ng
SlltiO mo Lea\e
Mt>S!>Jl(e
!It •bl;J 6606•.
ting business. selhrt& 041
ALL supplies and h>C
tures includ111g
Display raseb. w1...,.
room chairs. e .. 11t)'o
Sa Ion hairdryerC-11t~1
hydrauhr chairs. mii:
rors, shelves and plants:
o\lso. make up. i.hampob
dOd hair produrts
Call 631·91~
E. I 7tti Sh-Ht after6,_898"""""~::::.:.:.'-_,._
Ueluxe omc·e i.part> v.1th ICE CREAM STOii 17th St frontage for
leuse Compelillve sq ft LIQUIDATl()Mt f\
i>m:ei. call Rob 631 699.i 6 Creeiers. rt>f.ng:· ~ -~ I stordge rarlts. m1sr !WO sq Ct prof ofrlce i.u1te equip & i.upplies Reasl
w 11cean v1t•w rerept1on 675 2635 afls 548-8952 rm 2 large omcei. sep 5 ·
equip and storage rm l e\ ~ -:'oiev. port Center Dei.11(n WANTED a experieNleCH
Pia la New car1.1ct Truvel Agent that would·
pJint SI 65 per Ml ft like the opportuni~ t<f.
17141759 9044 own a part or a new agt'nry Send resume to
ConnHy Villoge Box 728. l' 0 Dally P~
tHf1rt' or retail ,.hop P O Box 1560 C M ....
~paet' a\ a1l 1mmed111tl·I~ 92626 ... -
t50sq Cl $47~ mo I ._ _ _. 1 673 ~ I n••Snncm Opporiwlity 50 I 5'
HWftT EXEC STE •••••••••••• ....... ~-,t
l.u>.unous suite<. a' ail I Hard work mg young 11\AO•
:183 '' office avail for seeks silent.partner ia a
'ub lease in one or 'l;pts !'\Bpropt'rt} 646 ~2~
t•\t'IUSl\e ofC1c·t' c·om Tax Sheltt'rs 4 to I rig.ht
1olexes Airport t ln~e I off'" '81 Rerover 1Ue$ ln!'lude~ pd '" '78. ·79 ·so ~\.aat • Ret'ept phone ~t 6425 "I :.i
• l't1hllt'S •Jamturi,•I
• 100 free <'<>P•l'l> mo I Money to Loan 5025
•Am pit' parkini: ••••••••••••••••• .. ••••
•Kitchen •Sett\ ~ti\ VflttWTC ....
ll\JllJblt> . I luaineul.ocMt •.
t'JJI Rox.rnne 97!\ <Yi40 Venture Capital j\va1t
Uffll t' Cor Lease 12'!0 ~Q lor BusintsS Stan up :
rt W 1th 8Jlrun~ \irport Also do bus mess loans. ~::'.~.~ .... ~!':'~~-~ .... 1~!"::.~':.~ .... ~!~:.~ .... ~.~.~ .... !~~':': ............ !?.~~ ~~:!~!!!~.~ .. !!.~~1~;:'!~!!!~.~ ... !!.~~I Cumplt'~!I~ ~u~;ient leasing:
Costa Mno 1124 Cllla PoW 1126 ..... C)toll IHcll 1140 N.wpo..+ leoc:h 11 6' Newport leocJI 1869 (' d M P \ t e n Sharr 4 Rr homt' tit ... n "'~prof J?l•ntl. v.iJl ,h~re lusifteas l.tal 445 ort9aC)H. Tnnt -
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• l!ll( l ~ardt:•n p .. t•u Be&) & th'l"'JO ' u ht JUl horn!. \4 r~m ••••••••••••••••••••••• D••d• so1s1 ~Mo 2 er. 1 Ba Apt. Br. 2 Ba Pool. Jacuu1 Br 4 bib from beach W ltclff IU1>per 2 br , <>«!an front I Furn Beam~ «1hn1i I Av•cl 1mmed 675 2637 uver ~ J37S i60-Q!I02 -••••••••••••••••••••••1 Caraee. wubtor/dryer. s.s9S/mo. S3SO/mo uUI od. Klkb • vu, u lg nna .nu cplll . L & V e r Y n 1 l' e C:all all 6 i)tature. hber11I male shr I HT AIL SP.ACI s.ttter--~ '
all built Ins Small child 1131.-is a_pj>llanr~ ind.~ Lar1e 2 Br. Piiio. Pool pref mdl •1<e <·p l Mi<'rowave Util int> Srrio~ .mus1cnns only-3bdrm home w ume 1280 sq fl Harbor Rlvd 1111 lvpn ~•I nt1te !
OK.nopets Onlyl}ear 1 Br I Ba reCrige rge.dean2br.1'2ba Newly derorated S600)rl)642lH2 \lu't hr 11uirt_ rt''!' no kooks' Girl into "r l>JnJf't ~lu•l'I P'1 • ~torage M:Jmo inHstmenlhsmceCM9 i
oldCallCorappt 1hhwshr Nortuldren.no twnhse.2 1evels.'2 m1 I Adult.s6'4.S~u.2 ,Ba<·h 1•1or .11.11 on ~fi~1'r~1krkbt~~~d:1.1 1 mus1rloolongCormus1 f00 ~~1~' ~35o mo H~alonom1cb 6756700 SpeciGliDiKj ltt ~ TS!;:_~GMT 6421603 pets /\\all Der Isl beach. adults. no pel.s I br apt w1stove. reCrii.:. Peninsula ~mu 1 , " .PK .:.or r1ani. to share with 1 2..ct~ 1
s.18S mo 714 8S7 1200 $475 960 2392 j prlt& On Peninsula <:all 675 1642 I ki; 75!1 1363 Mui.t have slud10 :.va<'t' Shr m' he.ou' hou'<· Store ur Orfirt' 1350 sq rt I 642 2 171 545-0ill
I Br E side. !>mdll but 2 bdrm 2 -ba large --675--0612 an. Spm 2 bdrm . t I , 1.i.: bdr lu rl'nt P\ t bd ·I Can pay 1200 CustJ i; .. r . ~IJJ. In int•. S31"1 ~ Mt>\ a \'t>rde Area • --
coz) w lot~ ur nea 1 ~round Cloor English 2 ICids OI! 11 -e;:--C-ondo. S5SO -~1o 1 winlt'r o:!.i~\ 1~,!d ~1 11 ~I ~ 1 t J>rl\ (' .\1 M e~a area unly: pre ', ut1b 731116.'lot•\·~ 545 41.23 1 W1do.,. has mone} C'!r
wood S345 Adul1.s onl~ Tudor Bldg Washn Spacious 2 bdrm· a 11 v e rs a i 11 ell C a 11 1 mo & up bl5 llJ.l2 1 642 147611117 pm I fer a b~y by l?l'l ht F tu ~hr 3 br tlph J hJ I T D 5 SI0.000 up .-.;o, ~l 1660 dryer. gar OPEN SAT xt ras new carpels; 2 t 3 8 2 J 7 8 S 4 o r • . • . .. , , Hm P\l bath patio rn Wend)· 631 2973 ""pt Hi:b $2311 mu C oim«y Vi.. t_redll rheck no penalt)
SL'N S575 34031 Amber patio. gar Avail now 2131830232JR1rhard IRl::Atc>~ B;" 'Ii~.\\ Ii: 2 Ir~ k11t'h pm Qu1\'I Rmmtr v.Jnlt'd to 'hr 3 Juhe975 l24~d\~ I <Hf1<"e ur n•t.id shopj ~all Denison Auor
lfe81iB!llf
Aft A.RTME:HTS
Beautiful -iarden apts
Patio decks Pool & Spa
llt'3t pd Adults. no pelS
BACH $385
I BR 5430·$440
2 BR JI• BA SS05 s.'115
22.50 Vanguard >t(}-9626
USTSIDE
2 Br I Ba Poolside Apt
Laundry room I rh1ld
OK . no pets Call for
appt before 1t.s gone
TSL Mtnt 642 1603
WESTLAKE VILLA.GE
l mmed oct'upanc}
Adult onl) complex
Pool. s pa, lawidr} room.
patios or det'ks Nn pets
Garages 3\'aJI
Bat'h S360
I Br S415-$425
2 Br 54& $495
TSL Mgmt f\42 1603
E's1de I BR SZ'l5 mo Nu
pets R & II lnvr~lmenl
752 2197
& 2 Br upsta1r-; l>IO\e
adults, ref's, l'OUplr1>
prer $3S5 mo 646 8727
aqitr 2 Or 11, ba l'at111
& pool Adults S4i5.
979·5425 or &iG-6789
bdrm. pmatt' \d Gas.
water pd Rec remod'd
$425 No Pets &15 7636
F1replat'I', pnul P\ I
pat w d1sh .... ashrr on
E i.1de. all in '( Ir!( 2 Br
l(arllen ;i pL~ Fmrn S.'i60
~i 2tUI
La_n~ern ~~ $-405 mo Isl. last S20<> I --, · br 2 bu Vu. ti ~ 1·lr1 t adll . non ~mkr Util 1.1cl. Br Laguna lkh homi· I · 'PJl'l' a\ a1l 1mmed1;itel) 673 731 I _ St'C 831 9303, 8470422 LIDO VIEW El~gant &I 1an..:1•w dblmt'n.J?ar I $225 ..,Y.l>l lli:t.:. 6422515 1275 mo ('Jll 1,,t',Goroqu 15(hqfl S475mo : l'PLEX lg 2 br. 2 ba. (4-7 PM ) lrg 2 Br 2 Ba 2 pat1rn. ... d lt'nm.s p\I hl'h 497.301· for lfll't 4150 673-6522 Moc:hrefRats MM. •
SS25mo Closetobeach ·---frplc Adulll> $1 20:1 dot·k Adulu. $1200 mo Hot•ls,Motth 4100[ ' •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• • l SINCEEARLYI~ •
Martha, "93-6019 SPECIAL I ~75-6~9 I \'rl~ dys 835-~'15 1''''' & 1·••••••••••••••••••••••[PJna l't 2HH. 2BA Rr'i ,20 :< 211 at 51;;1 w lllth St Colmmercial 5 Isl & 2nd Trust Det'ds ••
420 2 BR. nr Dana Style your own apart !New oceanview2BR2•1 .,.knd~6733llf\ L1H 1111 'l/ev.pon Beal·h Wht M '• ulib $250 l~I <' ~1 Sturai:e nnh ettfoh 447 0\\:-.iER SO~OW~ER .
Yacht Harbor D2S-081 You decorate we BA.' gar $750 mo Da)' 2 RR 2 Ba lht: l'Jtl\un s1110 v..i.. l'~nr . l\not &I.isl 4930987 Slllo f!IO Jd1k!'>4l12Zii ;•1;;,:·5·r~·:.~~~;;~17;il lthru4un1t.s
La Crest a 0 v. n r rel 1 year 646 5800 Eve ~7 6689 tv. nhm P\ t i.tdr s•1;~, I '1otel ti:kY.! '\\ Pl H. :-.11 IBcJul towTihom<' '' nu IOffi R....&al 4400 ~ . h Peter Dobbs. Brol<u . 494 6848 ease See at 6200 Ed I . . 645 11-1411 I f h h I h ce ..,... I bu~mess or ~are ou'l' I 760 6827 646 6016 ·-. H Brh Versailles Corner t>en mo Mart ha Marn.ch. · rom 1· . rvt 1.11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ti' sqft 2 far 'PJ\t' --
OCEAN VIEW mte! in unt tbouse 2 br 2 ba A\a1I li4211235 ·e.irl\ '"' lh1• lx>J1h fur11 $325 • '' ulil DanJ l't 1617 Wt.'std1rr 1'. B Wdnt hJ\e ut1I 645 illW 443
From Dana Pomt most ,...,.... 3844 now• £7SO ITT537tr7 2 Rr 11, Ba Tn.,.nhou'l' n••m' Kit1h &. Ba~! llJ09!lt0 lifil SUil :\Jlh\ Cmanrial 1n l 71~ f llam1lton2D c M Anno1Mc.....,.../
bl rf Ilk I ....................... b c d . , be h ~t~ It' AdulL.. nu peh I & up per mu I S290 ~('(' 1\ bl floor Ai:enl 541 5032 I ftersOflcb/ scenic u ' e new I bdrm Spnngs deluxe r • on °· near &<' · t.o~c ""u~ I 1h>~1 2306 \\ lkt•anfronl R. -k Ft h ·1 lndu,tnal Bldg for lt'a~t' lost & FcM.d Bt-the f1~t occupant' condo 5450 mo Da}' full 5t'C ur1ty pool """'mo~"""" \fl l~P nunsm I: 11 ' r · MEWPOIT :iooo sq rt offlct' 10.000 ••••••••••••••••• .. •••
Ont) 4 units 2 Br 752·1983,e~~28!18-sauna, 1ac1U11. l()m. no jS011 CI.~ 1176 tiiHI~ ~~a1~ A tlpl~o .+ h!~ 'ENINSULA i.4 ft v.are~e .ii 28'1~1McetMfttt 5100 v. Crplc & 2 Br v. dt>n pelS WO. 752 2318 d~\' ••••••••••••••••••••••I $266 s . . t , f , q C t l o , t a llurf} ror lhe best view I Condo 1 BR IMO mo 2 S40 7576eves )ld s 'h I nn ? SEAL.ARI( MOTEL Ulll\ 957 6773 f\46 !H53 'paunus e'et'u I\(' 0 \I s ...................... . di L k . --pams arl(e I . -1 ~ kd 213 101!1 32"'1 flee!> acros' from Cit) . esa . e~ pon ,1re.i S625 to S67S Adults. no slry t'orner m a e WESTCLIFF 2 hdrm 2 1J \ dinmit rm frpl1 3 Wk I> rental~ nov. a\ 4111 i h} s 1 1 · ' H.ill All sen lt'eS a\ ail a \ \ a 11 2 l 8 :! l .i 11 '
pets Days 643·0212. Pines Rer facil ba.Cireplare.pool adlls hlkqobt'ach S4GO I $112 & up Color T\ ,ea I ble ·opti~nal Frum 225 ill 64S8706 I \
Wk11.ds 661-0441 639·0279 only Avail t2 15 $600 496 7151 ~hunl'' rn room ~274 n, house to shar(' $.115 sq ft up JI rt'a~onahle ~ Stort• for rt>nt m the heart ~
OCEAN FIONT LOCJllllCI I.ad! 1841 631 5596 lid Spanish largt' b!Udlll I "t'.,. port Bh d (. M + 2 util rt'fer requireil rent a Is •fo lea~e rt' or Corona dt>I ~hr on
2bdrm.2 ba.newl) de ....................... pano O('tan\ll'v..3blk' l.41>i4~s 114747RI qu1red,call6733002 II PJc1C1r Codi.I Ii~) i
t'orated Bit in appl. OreanV1ew Deluxel&2 toheach,$26() 196 7151 I NE.EDA.ftUCE? M 253.~Joshr 3br2ba Hal $795 mo llersel9680133
r Id """"' 0 Br Apts. Newly decoral ... DULT uv1 .... G I{ w kl R ls home. rrnt I I utll EXECUTIVE I "1·1~11 Stor~ "OOICO lt1ca re rig. ry . ..,.,., m · ed. refrige. dishwasher. "' Y " Souttl LOCJWM! 3186 , t'JS tt Y ate' 673 9051 evt' SUITES n • ~ ' ' 837-5370 disposal. heated pool. 2 bdrm, 2 balh. no pets •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• Kll<'hent'tles Phones IN I lion by Nr~port ocean bdrm. 2 ba. firepla<'e. 1 k 1550 mo 1st. last Oceanfronl Srnl t Br Z Channel MO\ll'~ Roommate tn ~hr 3Br front 80Chq rt Si!IO mo elevator. Subler pr nit +security. 631·2093 s t o \' e & re r r ' J? l' Sandpiper. 1967 Newpon I hse. S200 mo tlo~t' lo So HERJT A.GE I 675 4185, 673 14111 [Jry01~5~pgrades. pool. ~up. Cat1 49uos3. 1606 WestcbCC Or w It ar a ite ssso mn Bl Costa Mesa 6459137 Csl Plaza Rod 641 1414 ftUIA 2~011 SQ IL 5 offlc" &. ~-7321 LLuxurky llBhR 0c51kea1n vBiewh Newport Reach 1:. t Is t. ., I' l u r 1 t > oc .... ion ........... 4250 Female to ~hart' J bdrm 'Jtv. luxur) omce spa< e ~ ork space W Costa
Br Apt Near ocean. ~~~·Also IBR ~or j 4982~1 •••• ~ ... :::' .......... I homew1thpoolinln•nl' 1n lr ~1~e ·~ ~u~1P 'I Mesa. nr Plal·en11a &
clean. dshwshr. garage ~SO 714 751 4293 T till 3890 ll'EAN t'RONT 2 & 4 nr Negotiable ~ 11231 center f,asy f ~ \' ~l' 19th i\mplr pkit S1560
Ava.!! Dec 1st 6610252. -mo .:__ _ -br condo. vu fountain •~•••••••••••••••••••• \vail Wmter Wt.>1!kl> Fem only JR & uH•r I l't'~\ A\Jll no.,. Lill mo o ... nr bkr 675 3568
I ldrM. ir hodl M1lhon Dollar Clubhse Cozy nt'w rondo Adults I Month I) 6i3 7873 ll c e ;i n s 'de l d \I I Cor dt'ta1b lndustriol Rmtal 4500 .~~~~~.!~.~~ ~499·5716ev wknd Sauna. pool. spa. gym. Br + den. frpl<' R{'(' .ri: Mt home. lllj? Bl'ar. m~ mo it~r 'P ~Ult'! I 55 1-1211 640..4230 1 ............. ~ ........ .
Ml-I -le52 billiards, sec i:rd Cacllit1t's S4'1S mo nr ski art'a, hohrlays & area673·6311 •DELUXEOfffC ES• 22!lS Laituna lan)on Hd
THE WHIFR.E TIH ........ :?::: ......... ~mo&97·Sll4 TOf!.1 5S2·!M30 • wkt>nds ti141866 8662 IF. 25 or oHr to shJrr 2 1.2 & J room No tea~err '1 I A· 53SO SQ It un
l.uxuryAdultun1l.!Salaf ondo 2bd 2ba WO Newport Beach Condo to nn.ittt.d -l~A-WA ll " bd duplex. near OC quirt'd AdJ Airportrr dl\1ded area. l'Xl'l'IJl 2
rordable llV111g 1,2 & 3 . mo Call .. 497·2S09 or rent or lease I Br. l Ba Apar+mt~ .......... ~ 3900 2BR 2BA Oc r l airport $175 bl & I.a'' ll111f1 1133 3223 9 12 rei.trooml> & off1CI! Ill Br Well decorat ed 495-1064 oc~view.Ml·SS4S._ or Un~-• ean ron I I ut1I 7$44435 l'l'lhngs. parkini: ror :10
Give yoursel f a
Christmas bonus
-sell unneeded
items 1n the
Daily Pilot
Gift Guide
Call 642-5678
ond oslc for o
Chris tmta t ,
•~Visor Ol)mp1csiupool.lighl -Vrly !Br, fumunfum ........ •••••••••••00••• apt a t the llikai in ,pus. 1 17THSTREET I rars.add1tmnali501 .. q j
park hke landsraping ..,..,., . ' b h U ltl\ 673 ....... 1213) 261Mll9'l $242 SO/mo llR ''I bl (r 2 3 fr ddJarent y, 30 11arkinu --------·
ed tennis court. Jacum. 2 ~~~ Bamo~ndallo ut1l pd, <'lrport. steps to S E A W I M D Honolulu Don Pelt1John IM ~ . 2 od . 2 ha COST A. MESA. r.1 concrete hloc·k hl!t11
Most beautiful bldg in 4972509or4951064 _c_·J::!!"'~· ""'-'-VILLAGE Mammolh 3 br rondo.1..bch ,_av~11 t21963S483 ,"(·.:1:~~r~~k~u't~t~l l '>Pdt'l'S 111 O\~rhrad
llB Gene~ rent al rtltadt 3169 Lgelbr.2 ba.deck.blt New 1&2 bdrm luxury sip~ 10. wkdy' SR!i. F ASAP CM .ipt Pool; Ind Mall nov. Call doors . 2 off1t'l' & J:!t.'.~BWMA\'E·~. t:B<f.1~._.~,·~1·1·rr~1
lowance wpo '"5• gar 1 blk to ocean d I 14 I I k d $110 t I J $242 t I n. bb I v '"' r ' ....................... Yrly. 673.2571 a u t aplS in Pans w n s . per ni f ac + u 1 .,., Y, Rralonom1c~ 675 6700 re~troom~ 3\ 111 ~C)(ll) SISOO 640 6800 846-00~ PARK IHWPORJ 2 br, 1 ba. '675/mo. yrl) Bdrm fromS490,2 bdrm ReSt'rvat1on only 957 0536,641 l<k56_ !Share 2 ok suilt' in prr nv.nr Al(t W1llcon,1clrr lost & Fo·-~
lHdy·MonM! ntft from $570. Townhouse 499·5304,4992517 lmmed M f' lo shr NB Slll(IOUsairportarea :liS ground ICdse & '.ill' of WllU 5300
'\dull over..O rommuni COU~T CLUI lease Carport, open fr:om 1640 + pools. ten, ompletely Cum beuch JBR. duplex Step$ to sq fl ~·or rleta1b rall I he impnl\ men" for ••••••• .. •• .. •••••••••~
Z Br 1981 Maple ,\,r ty lmm;iculate 2 bdrm. lfViMG beams. (213)86S·2S42 ms. walerfalls. ponds . tottaiie pvt quiet Wk Bt'h $200 mo Isl la~l 1151 6226 · your deprer1a1mn .id
i\dultt1.up!lta1rs.n11prts I'• ba Huntington Bachelors, 1&2 bedroom OCEANFRONT Gas Cor cooking & heat ly . mo~thl) Hunt Bch Call t ill ll JO l'M 'antai?t' Onl) '111·an1·~
$.'195 Sierra \lgml Cu Landmark Condn apts &townho~es Lrg2 Br 28a wfrJ.>ll'. ing patd from San 5361156 6156014 DANA POINT 250· '"15 yrs Rea,on,.llle
1'41 1324 Wa sher & Dryer, 2 From n 111.11000 644·1900 .sundeck, freshly paint Diego Frwy drive North - . • . Sl75 mo 500 S35(\ mo base rent + c·mot "'II\
W ~:sTSIOE Sp.irk ling patios. welbar. bit in R & --.r=:-!!-;--• ed. upper 1825. 2 Br 1 on Beorh to McFadden tfltols to~ 4300 FBemale Rmm~e 2 Brl' 2 34210 V1111!•1 1.:rntern mg indo 1\tld1t1onal 1n
dean & Spac·1ou.\. lhr . I o 2 car gar ~75 per Duplex . upstairs. 2 Br. I Ba lower $825. Yrly then West on McFadden ...................... a view. rom l 1 975 1120 formation Goud Ht• II
r.irpels. drapes 1h11 de po s 1 t Ca 11 Lidos oppmgarea.$600 544.9050 Ask for Naney (7 14 )8935198 1CONTACT Larges~Gay 642430024hrs Approx lioo rt nfru·r h11lbrook 920<!11 hwa~her.ran~e&rrfriR \71417594381 Ask for ~:1;. 1~~~· ta~~l~ef~o ~i~~ls. _ OOMI 4000 Male/FemaleServtrein 1 f 1 j space Presti1tinu~ 7 1 4~721}4422
FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
Cal~
642·S671 •
hd . freshl> pJtnlrd. mo Isl & lasl + $300set.' Ba. Cr~lc. ~arage Near A gent 675·9432 or to Seaw1nd Village GAY ROOMMAT~ ~~~·~:s~~~111\dm~~~., Printt Notlch Loe. t;~tate. nW E M1~~10~.
N 11 Pr ts S3ll5 m 0 Mr Bingham_ CallS.:.5.:. -Avail now 1 Drive by a Wind townh!e 2br nr ...................... S ° C a 1 G R (' Too~ ma e ll~lr I I( Newport Brac."h IOCJtmn. 8700 !IQ h Wllrehou~e 1n f;4~1l914or5.529723 )eluxe poolside xtra 6141i'J Clubhouse Ave. Hoag H08p. W/D pool, .agunaS<!ach.M.olor lnn. ~213)~_9. 't:v.;~t:eoa~t1~rry'1~1:~;Po • Cnme~ce1tnow' rludingJOO ~qrt oHl<'t' Lost Cireut llun1• l.11tll
GARDEN VISTA. 11urJlt' 2br 2 ba. bltns. 494.6303 SJ!! ~SO 548-7~ _ 985 No. Pac1f1c Coast , GN GRF.t:N ra~h 536 OS45 · M•wport A.rdws/ 16751 Noyl!!-In 1n1• In m" Hll•1<'k \'11 or t7'h.iJI
2 llr 2 Ha Tov.nhoww. dswhr t•t miles beach Hwy, Laguna Bearh T'* ..... ~ quire ManK1 t'o ni·xl man in I r111ngt• ·~ t.lll ~kvhl?ht. p:illo. )art!. :di Adlts. no pets. S4SO mo NO FEE' Apt & Condo I Daily Weekly Kitchen Corwmn:ell·phanl.' SELL idle 1tel'n.'> w1lh 11 •• .....,. door 957 92ti6 or 1.0~1 11 lfl nn<· f')•"j
h111ll tns. l.1undr• rm ~·8362 rentals. ViUa Rentals. WISTCUFf available Lo~ winlrr with u C111~~1fird Ari Daily Pilot Cla,k1f11•d <'1111 642 4&W Cor uppt f\46 1044 llurnH'~t· malt• •'<th \ II\
J __§15·4~1~ l}rokt'.!:__ Newly decorated 2nd I rates 494.5294 Call 642 ~711 ~d 3011 'iQ rt. 2 orr.res 112, 14 I /\clolt~only.r:itOI\ S.'l2S DELIW4RErtMIS Oreanfront for Winter story condo 2 bdrms. 2 1 -& It 1()x l4 l& rHcptmn R.ttt• W..ted 4600 2Zni & lt'\ml' llf";,JJI:
Mo Rentals. Furnii1hed & full baths. rirepla<'e. , alboa Inn 590 up aru. fum1sh1.'<l. stor<•Kt' ....................... li42 13414 ' TSl.MGMT M29412 SPACIOUS IRR ' . d b bit I weekly Kitchennetlr, Need more cash ' ii "I .. ~~~'"'! (i/\RA(Jt;ll('l'(J\'1lt11n•n1 t'uund 1\11,t r,JlitOl l F r"pla~e wilk 10 unfum Broker 67S·49t2 mtrrore ar. . in I f 67•87•0 •pace11vu a11e ....... , .... .., 'h h 1 l>rluxr 2 RR 1•rrnm1c 1 ~ ' · ~ · •• · ! · -kitrhen overlook1n«i ocean ront " " M •· :"ilhr in l\ki..i \'t•r<k rror S 1'P cri ~u .. 11 hr-it
l11trh rtr. ow. nt•w <'Pt. rloset~. dishwasher. BR 2 Ra condo. newlf. aw1mm1ngpool ~per •Compl rum II R rm. for Christmas buyina? I YFRO T i;mo:. 5491«2211 M.111-ll11rtk'r<'11lh1· ""1'.1 morr $411~ t l11i1t 11ara11e.pool &laundry palnted,rpts,tplc.poo , mo AdultsonlY I rolortv,towtlll,1•1<'.wk " BA H lrt l'tllort•c1 ~t ;1l o·.
tl4!l 11193 ~:{~,·~l\~~~llidtrcd. 11c1ull" adlta only,~ ~l~-171 .. , 67~ .a400 I ly wash. S36 ll\44 Sell your unneeded Prlmt otrirt' 760 IM4U ..... 11/IM"t/ ~~·~por~ lk•111 h 1\nll'lit9 l\r T..wnhse. maturt• 'ASTBLUFI" lbr., pool, " ~.., N OCC P I Non FWt.-ct ' 1' trr li-44 :.\.Vi only S440pcr mo. qu.1tt uea. sin"le adult. IJIJI Ut-ZIH ear 00 · items Wtlh a low M~ Milt ....................... Found. malt• t';urn '"ii .1dulls only, no pt>I~ 19221 OcltwartSt t.cM ., ••• 787 ; Smoker Malt Sl70. t d d the Newport 8e11ch 7001000 I ~ ' 5425 mo 7M W lllth St <So.olCarlieldl ~_1e1J_.>Jim-~ -HARBOR '~$·2SIOaf\ei:_6PM.:.. cos a un e r ·~ft main Ooor ldt11I ........ rit•r m1x. l apn1•1 (', ~9S01 ,. .... -oc• ... ..-~ F 1 d Daily Pilot Gift Guide o" .. ts'tr soo• •.rra~'M ~1.~1 llM " '"".._,, ~_.., • or woman nt w 'I e· 1rlnt Av11lablt> Jan 1 -.. --• hi' 1~nhw. ll0011q n. I'' br. kids ~. "°peU. OW. Avail. Ott. lit Spacioul corat•d pnvatt room Ir 2400 Wu t Cst llwy ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• h lund. twa~n1t t 11l '
ba. patK>. Pf"t•. kld'I '*· Slattr' Gothard. tlean. 4 Br. 2 Ba. Upper. frplc, bath. rile. ms. inclds Call 642·5678 ~3611J Sp1+11t1--........ I l'lllll' II 21> t'on1ham'1 . u -x 673 5719 v• .. Id I t Id ,. ,.. _. bt-t l'rinmon • l'a ~ t " $4n {l'fl0 '40-IO'JI Wllntr rytr, 11ra1e. A 0.\'IWNl ol uU a. as • e. " . C01t1 Mtta. ~ sq ft lnvtslors wantfd. n•w M$ '410 .. ,
br J ba No .,.ta Sr br 1,., ba crpta d11>1 Submit oa thlldren • WjllOI. Md ... for• au.Ile. $l7$/mo. Utll. in IO<'atlon. AM rcw Jo1« ) \ti C1t~n prtl Rtnt nti. blloln•. w tD hkuf: patio: i pets. 11500/Mo. TSL lliirbor lnH'''IYl""t t'o F1nd •h•l you Chri1._ .._Vlaor ctd . 119 w l9t h Ht HosklnsOft, &u tla$1 ot 11 thln•a r.t W1tlli lllif
Mf.ll1f ev ... _ _ ar JIOO. ~ ProptrtMI "2·1903....__ Dally Piiot Cl as "921. 531·05.M i»tlcM W •M Adi i 11'1 ·--
'
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r'uund II 2ll HI Wht ~hll' llusll~ 1'111rvww 'Huller
)41 ~11111
~ 11unll litrj:l' llt1H't•l11t
W"'''hlt' l:M, 1111rncr nll & 1d1•nt1fy 642•36111
l,;l!lt 11 211. ur .. nl(t T11bb)'
k1lt\ln H<-hlnd 1•11mun11
S.-hool l'M MS ISllO
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tueaday, November 24, 1981
..... ~~ ..... ?!~ ~.~~ ..... ?!!! ~~~ ..... ?! ... ~!~ ... ?!~ ~?~ ..... ?! .. ~~!~ ..... ?! ...... ?~ ..... !!.~ ~~~~~ ....... ~~.'. ~~~.~ ......... ~!.~!
A/ll&Uttl CA~~~~muo ~,., 1::=rinlllt NMd ...... w.:: rt s.ie:.ro1...-.11a1n .... .:=-.., ~:1~~\R~TO,:R~ ~.~,l1,:!'!J:11t"!:'
CLIU Nted1 t t.empomy PIT a ~~,;!t-:.':n~:f:e7. Olftc., ff,I , .,.., Wrtt. 1tylt ~no11~1~ OroHd Intl oppty Star.t lea 11/aG Dly. 1, SUS t1 011hwuhtr1 :gu&K1r,~~k Jg\.-r ~·1t1mt, i.onw 1trount tullltr to wont II\ our £1 No UPft ntt Wt will ClualnedM '*· Dalb' llaedwrlUaa for plttt Amtrlren °'8_pltY no.w tYtaln•• • Wffkend1 J!OO •• •
1 n II t' • Pt r 1 en t t Toro ator.. For furthtr1 train ~.-Piiot. P.O. Boa l,NO, work it flOmt. ltftd hirtns S1• RePI O>K Apply IO ptf'IOtl' Crown IN cltt IOJO 2)'r old l.<1H111fllt M1.1k1••
nt-c·uiu ry M u1t be Info ind lnltrVltw. cell· Gtner~I C oa ti Mtn, CA .1 11mple to .. w Com to MK It to Y• qull!y. H1rdw1rt, 1024 lrvlnt ••• ! ....... ,........... lnlo 8td SIX!
m1th1nt unmted Xtnt Ul·UU, Aak for Pr 1 1 11 ~05'0. , monwullb, Suite o. Send R11ume to Mr. --MotoNtaeeOrndTour M8-0141
rompan' btMfil Call Chttltr. EQ~. id~~t'i'o:~i i:::~~· MedkilStmtary hllerton CA am 1n· ~!9:,t', 4"0rant, lrvlne Stt/Rtcept. ~Lew ln112 tpeed. blll lr\'d, I 011pl1yC1b1net
Rulboa •rl~. $41·~71. CA•~ J..t14# • · t:1perleaced iltdlca.l elude return 1ddre11 ..x.r...RL!4_ Firm. Good lk lit, self yr old. mo or 810 1m f.(l\l 11 ti Klk 1·111. wh1tl' t; 0 E. M/flll -Seerttary. Pront 0tnce .>J!d num Saltt starter Non amok er ,,.o-tm Mi~
muu,tiu:hl'. wht n1k11111~ i---11111•-llll!IW'f HOUSIW~SALIS 111.aoaaer for Snull PluUca MaatcrCraR o1 M1nlll1 ~-Man'• 10 apd E.rt-lltnt 01nettt Set Wroui:ht irun
Nr W111lnu1 & t'uher In Autmbltra ll«ht In Full or Plllme. Apply: ... llAL OMCI Orthopedic Surrtry UT .. ,.SOM le now 1cctptin1 for cond '7& bue. ute111111n • l'hr~
I rv1 nc-ll rwtinl s100 dWitrial Lemp positions fr~w~ ,~•rd1 wUaffreN. 91024 P. IT aRtl"llOOnl. l.f PM, Practice. Weare lookint for in••.-qu1llfltd Siies peop&.. •SICllT'Allll• 8'75-mifttr 6 $200. ~o 211'17
M2 tm7 n o w a v 11 11 a b I e . rv n~ es~ -~ must bt able to type l T rl td M/t PIHM A~ person. Word P~wTrelnee
Woman Men Amtric•n CHl!:F'S JohMY'• Reat •~t'7t·l7Jl Pfi enc M/ for~· 1801 Sou r In the Liauna Beech, 113,200. s~:~111~~ .. ~t .. r"reJ~~ Cllmrn ~lie box •P""I<
II c;~~~h~'Sc~~~!le l.11 b o r Co rt , 6281 now. t1kln& 1pp1. fo~ ijalrdreulna 111l1t1nt, ro.:&S/BCOITS ~~ ;:,1~:.ru v1u: Antique 0 , . Word Proccuor, frvlnt wheel1 '80 LI Chick fu11m m1ttrou ~t·ur
<:rry 11nd whit" Tubby ~ u n r hrster, Buena chef.a ft d1y1/pt nltn. ul. plua lips, pref. tln emaleunly tJon It hoUda • ziMt ahlll Great Benellt.t. ll4l400. new tlrt1 •chain. I& new. 1100 675~" U
' .. I llrk -Exp d only. Ap~b' bet. m1ture person, pleu1nt I . openln OJnJ.yy 4·ao-12·ao Lia Relnckr1A11.1nc. 844 ~l Corner br ~. 1111tq wht. ;·~~ •• c:~l~r ,;,1;:1:h1:e Assemblers. w e will a.s ~M Mon·Fr1 only. atmoaphe"'. Laa. Reh. Needle work kit ·prod. Apply:,. '· · · Salet .o208lrchf'At'MEOE NewSRBJcycle,21 ... w16I ~~~ha~~nd,dl~~~~rje~~·
RBWAltO ' train Apply 7 AM 22.SO 17th St. at Tustin 497.2333 uk tor Bennie Pull threlcl, t'Ut f1brlt', OllAM.iCOAST ~S.. Ntwport/13UUIO/free
dll 113.S 4?00ut 54, M11cGrc3or Yachts, 1631 _Av. SA WUIJ1m1 1hl le . P 7»0142 p• ... -s Potlllon opm 1tUlna re fl50, muat •ell. 1225 M11ple dbl IMld. new Lio• ev61~ 1970or6736987 Placent1a,<.'-Ost_a.At~· I H1lrttyU1t NurMry I asow~'& c M ader Id ldvtrtilln1 lo OBO Top curler for 21 mlllt , lriplt' drt'Ut'f
•... IYsmB CUllC ... •. Be your own Bou. Sub ML.M...._,. · .......... ~· · · loulmerchanttlnapro-SICllT'AIY blkt!J.~.4'7S.52iJ w1n111t ch1n11 drop lei1f I.mt 11 zi CM l:ocker mix "' R I -d i I I NB L ...-_,.h I --lecttd ltrrltory !x Excell• t OPPortun1ty lO apd Se111 best bike dealt . $425 II pt· Pet11n F'. wht " be•Kc curs. llouseslller companion ti eat.1te syn 1e1t on eeae apace n . Aak; • r I e w o I e' • • Pte·lt'hool Dinctc>r min u llent t'Ommlulon Ir for hl~g~wered In Newly tuntd. Xlnt t'ond din rm aet w16 can«' hk med ~11e 'Soow1e" No for 13 yr old boy Isl 2 process1n1 t'lerk ror NB forChuck,e?S.ZOM I nu r I' r y '~et In I t C E + 3 unill.· id. bon"• p,....1m1, &ood dMdu1 ... ~•ypina .f16obo. 146-1.. uph cha ir~. HuHl't & 10 Rewud'6464139 wk$ofDec Call Invest firm ProctUH H ID .... 15 mpoa•lbltl.ndividu1ll4 · · · · -.... .., • ....... ---E new invest tnvolvlna A w-AUS 111ume poalUon u Ir mlnlJtraUve.•13$3. co. benffita. Apply it '•hortbandlkl . lluat Schwinn a1rl1 cru11er. ~'h1n11 clollt't , 1800 ~~:~:~~.es ~:l1t'~r~~I~ ~!'t~W :~~ bank depmitS "cletaUtd Full lime. 1f Pl)' la rl11tor 11uard. No t:lpe; Prinun1 The Peaay11ver, IMO be ... rtlliYc' HI r. f70. Xlnt cood t'lll Sarrif1ct I 67H896
19th & II arbor Work ----follow .up. Depe.nd1bllll.1 ~ t r • on ' r o w o req 'd. 30 bra per wk. Plateroom helper Moo S Pl ti .M. ll.lmr l able to auume S411~k ror Bl•ke 4 Pt' Bdrm Set. S7S Twin
640·3484A!.kforLon Bab)sltter wanted full Ii accurecy req. Com· 1rdw1re. 102.4 Irvine, Conllt'l. Jeu: (7141 PM to 1ppro1 I PM SAUSClm ...... re1ponalb1lity 8oy'1Triumph30"I0·1pd Bdr m Ht. SJS 3
11meMonFn my home puterup helpful Cill N.8. Ml"'2tl TUHt·SOPMto • N rtStltJone h Cooualal Newport SSO. 20 .. foldlna bike aqu 11 r 1ums & .i r
Lost Wh ippet. an& to Co~ta M~•-642·1l69 __ 714/640.0W. . HOMEMAKERS " Nurain I PM ~o exp ne:P~: • 'i~1 me Tue~d •ur ~:r~1!:tG.:'r""' I unique mlde by Toyota t'e11or1e•.~ 631~18
Shoicun. blk brn bge BABYSITTER Mature COLLEGE STUDENTS 1 LYl't ty · Peooya~ver 1610 throush S.tu.rday Pol · ~ 631iH!._ t>1k Frame W1.1tt'rbed
markings Pleast call loving, u p. person W COUICTOIS tam M per hr hsekttp· .. ... Con Pl~ttntla Ave CM tloa 1nll. Will lnln "--•·ct p Boy's N ....... , IO Q na..A, w air Fr11m .. ~ 67S 8S36 art 6 rare for 10 mo old boy UI In& in Irvine. CdM Ap. ~u · -Y. Kolp NB ---·• . _Hl.12 M E ..,.,.... . ttlY. ..,ma ·~ 842 938
Lost httle bm cat w burr my Irvine home F1T ie~~~.ebu~x~T1~· ,~:~· prox 12 hrs Pf'r wk Girl •rer1· Pot. :UJud•1" 1ec.,11aht · ~ ..:.._mlllGlll. a2100 Xlnt t'ood 81.00 Queen Anne f~rn. Iii
underside 1abyss1n1an I thru 12 18. 851-9372 Cill for 1 't. 839-T2J&O. Frld1y Homt Strv1rt1 :: ~· ~ e ~at ,..,_ ~ ----41M.Ql9 desk It chair, rotftt ta
Vic Tustin & Chrf L>r Babysllte; ·---559·5022 net.a. :642 · u.ttJefltlf DH1mh•1 *llrAIJIS MEN'SIOSPD ble' low bo> $400 C'il
NB R EWARL>• 642 7~2. Nteded Prerer m my Comm 'I Cleaners w1nt· H u'l•I Nursln1 Pluab Newport Centtr P /Ume, 2 to 4 daya. Cir Work temPoruy jobs Royce Uruon, xlnt cond 962 3S97 eves
6'&·0IZ9aft s :Ml home 14 mo old. 4 days ed • dependable & ~ • ......._ MUISllAIDI olrit't needl receptionist net'._. hr 213/t71 U36' cloeetobome. ~ 673 889Cl
Found M Blk,. wht lg a week S40·9S29 or responsible. P1ys .well Poueu ood '7""" I Exper'd., Ill •hlfta. with front ofllu •P· 714/~1·07 VI~~~ Bike Sile!' From Sl25 lo Off white velvet sofa
dog 11 21 on V1rtona St 673--0322 fF/ll.ex ~.'::"tp /ti me e1•1 ibillty 1~111 in Y:a:I~ Conv. H01p. Nwpt Reh. pun nu to enawer It ~ 135(). Cruisers, ClaH1cs, 1 SIOO · 2 end Ibis., l'Offt'e CM..~8·0533 Babysitttr needed for 3 83~ ~;"~':'· 1 mith. 'omre ln llttrac· Brln1 your 111)1le ' join ~n 1nd do llaht typ-Sales ~~J ~~·~ 110 :'ta N 7[' ~b~ r !1~\ ~·~~1 Or:~g~
'Found . F wht & brn ytar old daughter . . live NewPort Buch us! Freemjr.CMd.,den· 1.teperbr.9to4Mon ,.,.." ... .,... SICllTAIYl.L 646-4539 redwood pmu1· tbl $40 Gu1nt Cherkerboard Rellable~7718 Counter help for dry Non·hospltal settina· tal fl life Ins. Call: thru f'rl. Cell Shirley I Stcretutal po1iUon In __ ca11 493.!J9tll
rabbit. M blk Lab mix. N d 8 b ----cleaner, good hours. Ap·1 Con.tact Ms Irene Ruiz: 642·'°'4. MUea.644-ZSO'f Cell us •bout the out· 1cllive Newport Center Boy's 101pd, ridden Bunk beds & dres5er M tan & wht Hound mix hee 11
9ys5i3tte9r3, my ply 10 peuon, 6935 640.8950 · -i~':./ llC--...S11' 1t1ndlnf c1reer op· Rultor's olrice. Front twke, llkenew, $7~
Nwpt Animal Shellt'r o m e · 42 . Wamer,HB. · --v~ -_.. .. _.... '' portun ties as 1n otrlce position requires _~.:..~· Wood I yr old, 111r lds
6'M·36.S6 Fulll1me. salary neg. DRA --HOUSECARE: L1dy to DIC. SIC Swllt'hboard fl light typ-Jnaurence Agent. Train· good telephone voice, l'"'ldh tld .,., 1025 mattresses Paid S500
r7u7d -M Sm a 11 One 111f1n!.__oneloddler ~.--YI t'are for elderly, non· for exp1ndifta l1w firm Ina. Ex«l.ient benetlla. Ina will not Interfere 1ypIn 11 , SH ' a p . -•·••9 ._,,_ Sell for SZ!S ChildJ wht STOCllPllSOM bedridden Wom1n Lov· in lrvlnelnd~Jcom· Cell: ~: pm hrs with your p· rtsent ruoar1nt't. Real ... ta•· ••••••••••••••••••••••• dresser w,han"lng LhauApso Vic Harbor II ~ ,,.... ..-... "' " ~e_w~rtBlvd 615 ~ IAIYSITTB . Fulltime. Tues .. Sat. ely Coal• Mesa home. plex. S1lary t'Om · Cl :_.,_, employment experience help(ul<but MOW36'/FT clf!s~~
F o u n d G I a s se s Person needed to meet 2. 30-11 : 30pm. Fringe Own .room & beth, non· menturat.t with aper. llCll'f 11'Y91$T not euentlal. Prefer Redwood 2X8 3eekwte. OAK ARMOlRE
6 yr old girt 8 ft er benefits. See Hlrold, ~ smoker eves ft wkends. C 111 If r . Simonds: I•.•_• • 1113-4511 loc1I rnidte&. Few ln 4·20' Iona• ilao redwood English, xlnt rood KOREA !Hall Glassei. I school. 1.upm lo •P· E. 17th St., C.M. J.213) M2·9:1!1_' -133·3122. t~·,!!!~.~orte1otwn~ll lervlew ull llfn. Duhl fencing DKk ' fent'tng ttX t;.t5 11787 Vtc. East Bluff Newport -H ,... """'._.. •• .. W..an ... T.tor C ~ -Beat'h About l week prox 2 4Spm everyday. DlUYaY. ousekteper. child care, P1rt·llme 11 (roomed. ptr'IOllablt in Salts Rea'"' ~-di o. 1n1t1ll1t1on av11lable WATERBF.D ~644-!~7 Mon Fri MUST BE Ovt'r .18: Good CillC. hvt 1n Prefer retired MOTHERS;. Perm. dJvlduil.Mllllbeexper. HICIOIYFAIMS Rea tors -4910 Lowett pnt'tguar Jim Kin&blZ.t',rompletewllh
Found Tn Color Collie I DE PEND ABLE dnver s lireme & MVR. lady who w1nls home , P•r1·tlme ... In Offi«, w/typinc 1111111 45 Oppty sell eourmet SIC'Y,lllC.r. or!~·~~6409885 all arceuoriei; ;ind
M Vic Ralphs Parking Stonet'reek Elementary, C.M. Bl Ml-5571. 1ndfimily Bolrd,room l Jn your Home. ~rt· fOwpm. Real estate ex foods It &ifll for Publish1111 firm louted STEEL BLDG KITS book5helf headboard
Lot It 171.h CM 646-0534 Wood bridge. I rv1ne IDEN TA L F / l ind wiae da 847 2244. ceptlOft. Soov ~ncal, per. deainblt Call holld1ys Flu hrs neu J W Airport Sttks You build 20Jl40Jl9'H w New rond111on S2fJO
.Qu..646·18S2kes Ref 's Please call Ortbocfonllt'. usisL 1 ~1e _e,•l4C>;H~ SomeSalts. Suu Fuhlon 1-land6'M030 bri1bt 1ndiv1dU1l to 2 htO' doors Sl285 l71~75l-8616
M2·0461 atur6 -m per pttC'd. Call&44·l•OS Housekeeping servit'e I Ul-«IOD • WeaulJ(f Pl.ua642.(Je72 perform w1die v1nety of Build rn 3 wk.nds NEVER t,;St:D Sob bed SCRAJl.l£TS needed full ind p11 rt. office duues. nus r1n A B C 547 1445 s 180. Qn bdrm SMu
Banking DENTAL ASSISTANT. time help S4 50 to r;tan I PllJ ft1K Sales didat~ should hne a U~td Plywood 40 pc s bunks $200 M .t t ANSWEIS TB.18 i:'~'!!t~~ ~~ ':~': 63!-41l8 b!t.._9-S I~ ----IMSUL.AnoM pleuin~ ph<>!'e voice, S/16tbi X 4XB S2 20 Per 1ren boupnngs T-.n
!Adger Tenor NoLeTellerneeded New ofc.EX]>RDAonly S7.50 ' EfDllS EXftrltnt'ed self f~:::1f:~~~&;~:I Sheet 55731773 $80, rull $90. Qn SIJO
Chose Always I Independent Bank needs hr tos•·rt ·-.-· IMTllaO.ATOI: I I.I. n ....... m .. rr mot1V1ted -It. e1m 'd I . M c....... 10115 MORE 11 770-JSOI RELEASED experiencedNoteTeller ... -.. """"" We Ire pnsently Sftt. •ig -·· ,_...,.. "°"11 er r11nee rs 9" ~
I'm not too sure of my I Bark ground an City Na· DESI C= MBa Ing 1dulta wllb pleu1nt ~·~ R'4' .f~ ~mE :Uif:~ ~U\~1::~ Eves, $49-4834 ....................... F'~h~~'/s~ f1:~t~~~~
new accountllll ~~says I uonal Sysltms desired). MIGHT A OI SIOO/:~~~d up I er::= ~°::!d I NV ESTM ENT Wiii tuminc UI Signed LCF SH~CLllllC Pst~~::n ~·~~.17~l'R2 St!ll 714 833 8280
U Im 1udJted. he II lie a I Xlnt bener11s. Salary Exper pm Must hlVI! Cill 662 3173 Army l S 1 Ii p I lelt'h you uutlvt' t'onlrlt't Wort any are. Por at'Uve. sportswear Adults (7Sea 546.9965 Walnut Dining room St'l yellow nbbon around a j based on exp. Saturday ref's Apply in person · n 1 ea rom~on Cl i E Ca 11 Steve ( 1 1 4 ) mrJr. FuUtime. ~
tree u n t 1 I I · m 11nterv1ew 1fdes1red Catilomia 6 Motel, 1441 Reserve Be •II you can with Dally PllolCarrvrs cbi~~~s~Cl~v~~~r d~ .54().1196 -----· D-,1 1040 t::i~~r~~~~\1!~~~ ~RELEASED Call 497~11. Gisler Ave., c M be. 10 lo U years old SALES START MOW ..................... .. --M Pete~rauons -Unlimited e1rn1nas velopmentll~llng Loral Amway dis · KEESHONO PuP6 AKC SlOO 080 646 6437
ound F'rl 11 20 l.ri; ---DraperyW°'*'-LAD1£S DISCOUNT auil1blt' to right E1per. counselors re L.T. lnduatriea lS U · lributorolfersoppt'y Cor Champ &1re Mtfo' Pet& Wkdys 493-17:11Evt>s
Cat. gray llf!er stripe witlvserger. blind stilrh STORE needs m1n1ger person. Hr 6:~PM to cein 100'4 comm This ::=:nfo~r ;:;usc:n:: good earninp. You pick i; how Pvt pt y L1\ rm set. 2sofas, l11bt1::.
BI u e co 11 a r \ '<' BANKING ex per for a 2 person • u tea pc>rsonne I 8·30PM, Monday tbru ii an unuau.I oppty for 1uaraot.eed aaJary + ex· µie ho~rs. We tratn For ~l.3169'1 13U alt 6 pm & book shelves Si.'iOO Cdll ~atl~:i~~~ker. C M JELLER workroom Hourly r1te Ple1H t'lll Ann• Bell, Fnd.ay. Some Saturday ri&ht penon Confidtn· cell. t'ommisaion, group lfil~erv1e_w....._6J3-~, _ SHJH TZU pup$. AKC Ani.v.er ad • 562 L _ + Cullmed1C1Ja.oddtn· 213·749-4041 1u1lablllty f'or IP· tial interview Call WUrlDt't, short hours Teacher Pre&hool.BA sz.soandupC'uhonl)I 1 6424300.24hr<>
Ptrsoeah 5350 tal benerils. -l al'-' po1ntment, call. Vince~ &AM·l2Plf. l2PM-'P11 , ftMootessonrt'rt1f1c11lt' 638-knl Qualll) Din rm 't'I
••••••••••••••••••••••• Careen Y .. C• ~13116 If .ia l '4Z·4321. Uk for 8e11 room for advanttmtnt '". .. 997-1333 1 nirvl"d ta lilt' 44llll i
EXECUTIVE CamO.! DRIVERSWANTED Newp0~nrfteal lau WllUims. C•l1Mr~~631.J'74l V1tetp1rting,fullorpan Dobe1-P.. l'es. 6 \ehl"t uph
• SUITE• Euly momma home de-L1tic1tlon Law firm RESTAURAHT SetlH/td I lime OptJUngs U1 pliu AKC. &ood t.emperment r ha 1t5 S~OO Drtxl"I
24hour ESCORTS GREA T WESTERN livery L.A. Tl ME~. seeks eaper'd Let•I St< Nutnt~ Co .£.::for S3 76 start Ca II J 1m 6 btoaul1fuJ remales "" lle.ritagt bookca'>t' $21J1•
tSl-11 ISA SAVINGS bu 1n im· lrvine•~areu. witil aood typAoa. di~· 'AITTM Y•U If.YO 1t.1t•uu orlHted ••· ~--_ l red From l200 I RCA uereo. milbog
med11te ~c ror 111 $425 + mo . Jeu : l.lpiwloe Md SH lllll.11. llll•U-.operaUons K fM W dMdu•la wt.o desire an w.. t•6• 1-~9:5!2-r1b.._JIOO d4 Z306 . ~a~~S~~tb~'! ~~~s~: enlhus1u11c: and outco-~ ' Sall No exper. req·d. Must be ·~ rllUlllll abon avenet lnc:ome ••••••••••••••••••••••• * Newfoundland Pup AntiquP Walnut OV1 tbl or Debbie an)11m11 'n g TELLER on a ~Ible IDd n11la· llW few lhe1r tlfort.s Call for :Wf•11 • 1005 A KC Shot:.. "'or med & 6 ch .. 1n. A ilea I .i1 ~936.1 PART TIM E basis in lXIC.SIC'Y LIVE·IN I ble OD t'all Npt Br h ....,.,, ippl No phone in ••••••••••••••••••••••• Champ hnt'~ $400 to $4~' 631 1716
-our COSTA MESA Gpod typ1n1 sk11l1. MOTtm'S P11bloo lalancf area ~rv1ews Mr D:1V111714liTheodore Hav eland S600 ~mt.sOK 962133S
' M 43 Sks " r 30 40 br1nch superior pbooe manner, 1 7tlM50l,l .JO.lZ.30 I CAil. 'S A .._ ._, 114.1711 I Chtna, JOO+ pcs Sl600 Dobie Pups AJCC 5 "ks 10 rt dt~1g1Wr u;u1h v.1th i~:eda:r'°J..e "'::a~~~~~ Prrnous r1nancial in ~~;~i~ ~~f ...,. ••lllett, FULL or 1Sa';4.KHTY -~~ Tails r ropped Line ~~11:hinl( d"t:~' /1~;!~
Bo• 883 Balboa slltullon expenenre or tr1c:t1ve 11l1ry fl lde1I s1tuat1011 1n PA IT TIME LA.DY GlobtWenuc.:u1ntq o1k Bred S200 SJOU I 1·ush1on~ S47S 1 CA9~ cash handling ell btntfiLSforrightpenon Newpon 8e1t'h ""I rAITlM .......... ~ Lidies btt'ome I 6st.k dp/tall 1700080 1 ~s224 '• btHled gla~' lop Please uU m.w. ask 1v1tl.lb&t Cor mdiY'ldual 1-tpm P.:xpandinc yout.h 1 • N•ufhly Lidy ulu Antq. 01k 4 stk w drp sh1b Tiu 311 mo. f em. "orree t.iblt-with hi•.i\ 1 SEXYESCOITS ~:.~~":ublt~~~:;~t rorKalhy to1Jvew1t.11fanuly,un tounulinc firm bu dotilMJ .._..,, '°"" ~179C all Alison ., dslt.ongcond.RS P P rul l Ptd1grtl'. USO -.oodb;,seS22:S
1-6)0.0426 barkground helpful for 1D(ant. and asaume l optttiilp for 3-6 sharp "-*•• ..... tw: SU-922:6 Needs non -.ork•nl! Eieninp8483396 FUU CHAnl h h 1 d Salfl G--d--. -G--mother s.8-8181 I . l\no-.ledgeof 10-key and us-0 u s e 0 I outioinc mature people c,,.._.. P1rt time Sales ti· ran m1 s erm1n -1 Cou('h modtm "'llh Tro•el 5450 light typing u required I ~s ...._ rupol'lliblliUes Pleau to motiV1te 1mbitious ~•mill er. d Mother ho d , Black Forest rut'koo UKC Amt'r Pit Bull pups "ood un anns ohH, ol
••••••••••••••••••••••• ExC'ellent oppt 'y for ull (213)1Ml.f711 lCHJyrolcb.C1ll2Spm rHSOMMB. tatern1ty Boullquoe l rlot'k. '400/bst Cash 6wks Qu1hty pu~rrom or. xlnl t'Ol'ld SISO IJll
F'LY FREE' p A You'll rind our Slllanes ~::~!~.d~di~~tel~o 642-4321 , ext. JG. Askror Fuhion Island, rtex . ~~10 ----S200~8 Z4SI m 3288
2for I l'Oupons. 13 compellllve. benefits ex operating witb ChrisUin MAii Andrea. ASSfSTAMT hrs Evn1wkencts C1ll Early l900's lrg wood tool 17 mo Bm wht mixed P\'t S.ile Reunnj? :Wll
__ countnes 6.11 3669 t•tllent, aod working pnndples. M .. t be at'· HOUSICAUS MAMA~ I Mimi 7S9_-99$1._ chest w /orig tools Chihuahua 3 lbe. female 1nic 01 lmo~t romplrl•·
rond111ons romfortable tion & people oriented T o Potential Lo s Photograpers n'eeded S..,.,.._ P..!.bst.Casb~~J.11_. No small Children fr~ q u., Ii l) h ~ 1• h I <I :~lta~l' apply In person Experienced i.n business A D ' t I t I T I m e s P1rt time or full time bc.INf ...... .... Nttded for Pull or p rr Gustave Dore illustrated to IOVl!!J home 857 5168 furnin~hin~ GREAT oper1t1ons. Wort direct Subscriben 'e1m 81g fltff{t'IJlj!1l·~.:. ,..__, ..,. ~ temporary poaillons boots 125 · f76 2 lg en CUODLY COCKF.RS I • •963 ~··
ly with chief ~et'ut1ve Money doUlc 1t • As 1 Photo l1b needs driver. ....._ "'-_... a. p~tinl new produ~ g r1 vi n gs. W 1III1 m Will bold for Christmas C: r 1 b I 1 k e n e-. S!HI WESTBM officer of rut growing SalesRepmentlllvefor prefer lite trut'k l .....,..., 1n lool dept atores Hor1rtb. 170. SJOO AKC.Swks old.blonde&I Bedroom set. 4 p1t'•'t 7005
...•...................
SA VIMGS firm to cllT)' out pohry. I.be Loa Anaeles Tlmn h1lcbb1ck C11Jf 0r1Vtr fl"'M& Pboot (2tJI t:J7.2lfl08 for Chimney crane S75 I rhpgn,_ $200 540 944-4 sm _gd rood ~ 41 11
Nov. Enrollhnj! Chm l200P-41 make business opera· C1rrul1llon Dieputment Lie: +1mple wunnre 1nteniewJn.Lt~I'!!.;__ i Au1t!1lian wooden 3 Goldn Ret pu~ AKC No Hotpoint ~:letll H
uan Pre·Sthool 320 E CttllltrDr uonal &: budget pl1ns you 'llean111uaranleed Also vinous lab duties. T~-,.,.., SALES PERSON fllll or child s btdeods $100 champ hne Sho" doj!s StoH' drop 10 "'''
18th St . Costa Mtsa ' Structure upitaluallOn Wiie + generous Com ~__l____ - -2 • S PM et: pert time, video atore 1' lbrt "4·2960 --1 S200ea ~61264 <'lean1n11 O\t>n. SZ>c1 3 P•
•••••••••••••••••••••••
SP e c 11 I pro gr .i m Cotto Mete Hire ' delegate small I m Is I Ions on the Hies, taper preferred Anrb•tet 10 IOI Free to gd home (;olden I ~erllonal SIOO Cht'~t of ,,.,,_ ..... sla.lf of key -rsonnel Subst'npt.aoos you Rll F' CARL'S J C11t LJ"" .............. 1 .,..,.. d T .....,.~ AA EOE,M F .-I or Class1rltdAd r. . .... _.._..,«UI ••••••••••••••••••••••• Retriever Gd wat1h r""ers SlOO .tblt'' Must be motinted ~tr Hours ll"t' from 4PM to ACTIO lerview I ' H R RE I r (( d • JobsW..ted, 70751-lllll!lm!!!~l!!l!!llm•~!!ll starter Ell,entnt'twtt.h 9PMd1llY Trliruncw1ll N --ARBO A A 'doj MaltS48-47911 '-0 t'l' tn "'11'
••••••••••••••••••••••• Bookkee-r Reil Ealllt limited be provided All you I D•~I~~·~ llOUC.....Dr. APPLIANCESERVICE '1 German Shephard pup cuion.il SI~ 10 Sl;, TYPISTT llS<'nbe ..-.. ...,..,. 1.-1....... SALES WebuyLISedapplJ1nt'ts p 6 ... _,.. ... • M LCHM ORE''i~lt;2t, ra r P time full chuge 3 partnenbips & pro)tcts need 11 1 1ood ap· AO. ISOR ~ llCl1.,._5 w llrec.'ODd •es. w~ ""'·.,,,ta , "'ants •oritathome dlYs ptr week Call a + S1l1ry & com-purence ' an en 642-S6'18 "''lllll -e~ .. gu1r I blk&ublt M 3blk F 2 Din rm tblt' 4 h1ghb.i1>. _ ~s~ aft 6_pm C o·r 1 n n e wk d y s 8 pensahon open, t'om lhus111t1c m1nner. If EqUIJ()ppty En<'ullve aeardl rmn 1 ltances. 5'49-3077 I blk M 847 9824 -.1rker chairs Sli$ \n
"-"" W~ 7100 631 3651 mensurate with ex you thtnk OUI J>OllUOrl Employer MIF Mdts bri&ht •Umt1ve 1 IUY APPUAMCH .:__to Y-1045 llque drtsser • mirror
• ~T ~ b ...._ . ...., f recndters wbo can thmk , -~ -SIOO Antiqut Codi ti1n. &. ••••••••••••••••••••••• IOOICKEEPa. F/C penence " lblllty AIJ IDlC I ""' n., .. or you, SELL idle Items With I ind a row rtt'h Call ....,.. 957_:!b33 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• \.!Se, SISQ 4974056 .t.cco~ ,.~ replies slrictty ronflden· give UI I Clll 1157 2381 Dall) Pilot Classified ""'ll lhi .. gs r-Wltb D11ly tn-aoz Wuher $86. Clean works lrAff I .... MIX "' --.,~ Real Estateexpenence ttal.fori11l1Jlf!date('()(I utl.20t AdS42S618 ""' --· ood d 1 I "' -. Cumer(;roup •alnullbl needed ror rap1dl) gm-. prtferred Bank reron-sideralion, send brief re . Pilot Want~ ~orb C~ 111e~~~3n PUPPIES 84i S&l<l 2 bed!> st-0ra1?1' b11l:.lt'r
mg resliurant chain c1lt111on,gener1lledger. sume including ex · ........ f ·Needed good homr GI a:lnt rond SlOO ~5'12'.!3 Corp ore.re Dulles 1nrl trial b1lance Needed •·~ _._ L b Sh b k I penence. sa .... ., history mo • ep mn 1 Rtrhntr SJO Rock 1n" 1•hr mo an reconc1 1allon. 1mmed Ask for Mrs ,_._..._ "'·1r1 1• t'U ft refr1g __ .. d ,. & requirements to ..,....,.._,.,..., 1 .,., 0 g""" 1sp. hkf's kid• S2S Desk maplt> S7S b1weekl> ~ales po<;tm1ts Dez 640·9900 Professional Develop-knocks often when you rreuer. froslless. 968 7sss 1.,;mns $I!> ea 645 ~21 & credit card rhaq:es me t Services 1 ~ use re1ult-getting Daily ~ icem1ker. brown. l350 '¥ analysis f.•p prt'f & BUS BOYS n · nc., _,, Pilot Clasaified AdJ to ~ ) 63l·30ll8 Fwwitwe 805 lhdt a bed St1~1· J>lll
salary commen~urate Days & nights George's Newport Certer Dr ' Sle reac:h lht <>ranee Coast (, -....................... lied Gd Cond. $125ot)I) w ll b 111 t y Ca 11 Camelot, NB..: ~3-~ _ 47o. Newport Beach, CA market. Lady Kenmore washer & Elegant J)e('an coffee 111 • •675«i!>S• • !15
l714 >519 ~ 92660 . Phone642·5678 111 dryer, harvest gold, ble sel w ·wall un1ls. xlnt fabuloui; hu1?e 72 l<ln" '
ADMIMISTIA TIVE
SPECIAUST
MEEDB>
PART-TIME
$100 weekend and up
Call SS2 3173 Arm)'
Reserve Be iill )ou 1·an
be
IUSIOY Classified Ads. your one: f1...~~f!orl, 1425 bolh rond .. J7SO 966-~IO 36 l.\<ldt. '•. th11·k <:)r Experienced Breakfast h . '"""'°'
& lunch stufl for Towers slo...P_s_opp111grente!:. Rerr1&er1tor. frostfree. * * I BUY * * fl'e ta bit> SIOO 644 i4lH
Re staurant. Laguna icemaktr. Sl1S Good Good used Fum1turl' &1 O.ik dl"'k 1;0 ,\ J6 4
Rurh Apply to Jan cood.644--070 · Apphances OR I will dra"ers JU.'l rrf1n1'hl'(I
flood 497 4417~xt _41S _ F r 1 d 1 e . 1 4 c u f 1 , sell or SELL ror You SJi~ 960 1898
CAI WASH ( ~ ) FroaUree. $200. Free:m, MASTEIS AUCTIOH Mo\ 1 n IC M u" '1111 "
full & p lime help. APP· ~ upriaht 16 cu ft. S200 646-1'!', Ul-9'25 AP art m" n I r u 11 "f
ly in person. 29SO Harbor 642,5790 _ CUSTOM DESIGNJ::K rurn1ture .tll llC';1u1tful
Bl d C .. 1'0nd <.'1111760 043'• \ . ... Fridge S12S Sora loveseat uriic I
_ Q& _ CA~ Rl.lnS Good • $1400, Sit' '650 96li S210 Din ~l't walnut M cflll
MBITIOUSCO Pl.ES F'ash1on lsl1nd retail Newspaper ••75l412110••___ 11uya~..... M~le 6 uphol 1·h .. 1r' want mg lO supplrment store E•pr pref fast Entrfy eff~ient 17 Cf Le ,.._,.. '""" . I hke ne-. SiOO f"'S 34X.'I
ram1ly inromt on .i part d r h f'rost Free Sears refr11 a -967 8133 Rosewood bar ~'JI~• itt•'lo.
time basts. rall for iln :,;:;;e~~ ~~e':go:; smoold. MOO. Smoked glus din :i;et r reden111 ,,.,H·I & '""'
appl 67~·<1230 wknds req Call Riy or
1
c • ~1037 S350 Contemp sofa bed. rha1ri; r1I<' 2111 iSI 117!1i
Answering Stn1«t Jim 6445(170 EOE arr1ers for rou· tes
1
-A--....--=0... un~ed.._M00966~ltl S.-hool l>t·,k~ ('h1h1 ,s; graveyard ~h1rt a\all · 1 . -SMT• KIN G INNERSPRINC: r, p1,l v,0111l1•n S<111
r pinit 3~ -.pm Call 1r,uir IO\lr 11M "turr for Hu h ="'------84..8-~ EXTRA FIRM mattrri.,. Ta hie,. 511 121317i4 144!:'> ~I 0140F.Of' l nt'" i:nmf11'~ 'Allh J in ntington Beac I Refrl1erator, H t'U rt set. never used, worth Match1n" gof11 & lln ' ' l'IJ"1l11'<1 ad tl42 56711 1old, •Int cood. ll2S. SS30, ucr S241 del " F \I-II-& N esut. brown ar be11tt Pal.IJ P1·1m ··················· .... : ountain •wcY ewport Beach =•tor. fnllt free, :~~eh wt. ~~=no:~ rr11~~ t~·~~:h~e ~i very ct ee n . st 5 s 1218 del. Usually home ~7 t84s
: : ~ -•3~~~ 754·7350 Off1t·t· '11·~k.' ,11111 m:u·h . . Sal _ST MTS Stove. Gaffers Ii Sattler. 20 ~oras. New S9ll 1~1v •'ll'h n·i:1i.l1•r. ~11n.11rh AdverttSllW es work• fine. l{ood ~"'d UtaU 1118 Skt•pt·r~. l:.ili.·h·r. 1•ou1·h lll.:J i!llli
'. . . .
I·''"'' o1•11•p.1111·1 .1;~ji1111 -11h·~l1''l'l<Oll to a..IEEDED 1150. 548-8~13,$48·~ 1199. ~'A(.-r'OKY ~,7 S7CJtl ('h11n~1n1t ch•l'or ..i·llinl!
h.1111lk l.1•1 .111·1111111\ fur Ora11111' c·oai.l n 'I Bltn dbl 1111 oven. Mlolt11 Sofa 6' ltW1t, "4.•11w & 11nllltut•:<. n•pn"h11111111:-
1l.11h 1·11111 S.1l.1r~. <~1mm1,:11011 1111tl e Good EarnirlCJS CALL like new . Rolll!Atrle lnl'I Cold Uff11(n <~ouc1 tAlftd pwturi•i. It 11r1~.1,1,.,t 11.,
•'"'l'lh·nl ll\•111·f1ti. c;n114th "f'l."lrhmllk.,. Sl50. 873 •1 9CIC18h Only 7en :11'73 <'•II for •Pl> 1 ih,
1111 ftt'"on "11h 1·,1n.''f .m1h11~in11 ~·ncl EMn •l&O pe,t Wlett. • C......r Trfac CIRCULATION writ SiP1lure UpriPt Bf.AUTIPUI. Unf\wood 1m lllUIS, rH~ .. knit,
rc1111pl1·h· n1~11111r to M.1111 ~'c.•ntk'I. l'O ,...._a a.a-111>...-~. ~ r-DEPARTMENT fnitt rree trtaH'. Xhlt Co<'kt1ll Tltlllt t'rt-t' imxn
nil l~. it1 n 1,r ,\a t:11unl Opp•t ~--·•IJt.oMlt. V~I nK .... --~ . · e..n1 •'-C'UIMurM ... Wt 1111 110, 1~~1 r11,111 \l(''J('A •OM.'k No..., !_•c.,.. r•~ ..,_!llW; • l!....._..&'p..L.-s ..., form .,.... 3d' w1lJl
t11n1ll ~:m11h1H·r _.._ ~~== :..c::i~-= i~~~·;•,·;~"i;~·; .. j;••
.... ... ,... ..... r. --· M .. If· l •r11tmu laU•lll 842-4321 ....... a 'llP f'ftlllf. l'Wf ........... ., '" 111',
,. •fi --~~ •"8 naM•1t..-: t .. .. B!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..;~~~~---------------:------.....;;....~!!!~~!!!~~~--d,!4 •~-~Mllilillil~ ::::'~ , •
_,
' Oronge Coast DAILY PILOTfTuesda , November 24. 1981 ('13
...,,.. "" Ml1ct•w-IOI ,... I017 loett, SIM to•o Atltot ,., Wt MM• w.w tHO ....... .,.rted ....... l...,.,.W ....... t.,orltd ....... UMd ·······•·····•······••· ··•················••·· ••···············•····· ..............•...•...........••••............•••.•••..................... : •...••••......... ••·••··•······•········ ............•.......... •·····•··········•····· Ho1sn..,wsa
Two Kt'11
Thoniuichhl'flti.
!tlill 11310 6'2 ~ l'~('\
Tt'11t:entSl0Ufl11·h1nt' It blur t'rontl'd Amuon ltll HaWt" 'IMPORTANT t712.JttH" t7J2 Toyota 97' Cedlhc tttS lo1w~ MlllW)'"' l'rrfo1•l l'11rrot w <'llit'. t.11ut ' t't>lort'd aall, <'Omp tn<' N(fl'ICE TO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• •••••• •••••••••• ••• ••. •••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • for 111tmt> ruom t•ntt'r t11mt Only $400 64211.$12 trlr '"°°IM7 5023 R EAOER.s ANO '7!l 'rHVO'I /\ l'OIWl.I .. \ 1 tA t ucl ~~1.111 iii· \ 1111 llllnml'ntl , •• ,... ()II() "0V00T".!L'RS 1912 MODaS ca.-"·~ •. t 7" "'"'mt (""''1•11 1un J<N l'r yuuna lovrb1rds w 27 ' t;a11hna ·75 Xlnl "' LI\ w.., ,.11..,-. C ";H" • ""''r or 1•1'\1110111> o 0 ·""" _...., i•
&4UGt4aAfl61'M Rt'W blk wroutthl iron ~nd L-Ot<k'd f'Vt"'y Tht prtre or ilfltll "' n"""' -~ °' th1~ Un(' 1 t')I 1•0111111• id ~IO 1•m 1113 .os .... 3 ,,. 1dvrrt11ed by Yl'.h1clt NOWlll 73 J ..... HHty .iulu 1Tt.JIJ!ll14~J 1 '7!1 t:hto hlk w 11•11 111·v. l'ONV ~·ott XMAS' WEDDING DllSS c~e, f"' u• llll90 .. ,sz 11119.. dutrrs In lht' vfh1cle Fortht'I ~I drala In Muat nll, bnt ol(t>rovl'r 11'49741 ~ 'l'ht-<IClun· llrt•1> .. 11ttw 1m , JH 101
V 1• ry wtll 1ru 1 nt•d Wunt to locill b ... ullful on M1tnx kittens, 3 M, I f , I 2V Ct F'IYtnl( Put<·hm.an dau1flt'd 11dv.-rlu1na SouthtmC1111fom11 $4000 Chut'k or Oary H obin~ Dir llarbur 1111 $I I.um or iJk• m ,.,
1• o A wl',lt•rn or your wedd1n11 d1)'' beigt, 3 11ry, $20 u Tr11lrr MllstM'll M11kc 1·olumn1 dUfs not •n· C'omtSeeU1'rod11y• Da9$e·1281 t'Vts wknd1o fil vd ru~ta Mi•:.J b.-Mll.1115! '•~i.J!HIJ t:nich~h. " )'I'll ultl, 13 llHl' for m11I rh1ffon 64S 7964 ufrrr 631 4729 rludr any 11pplicablt & 7SI 4274 ' ' 64i OOIOor s.w 11211 t111nd~ Nll•t' th~poi.111un, we-ddm11 dr~s. prlnt't'llll P'-.01 It °"9tt 8090 lo.+t, Sips/ LUXl'I, hrense, triuuCt'r SHAU 711 l'urolla SR :> lltbk C>\ll Ill Sf\ 11.1 .t.
ribbon Wlnnt•r, ~ound, 1·ut, purl tnlald butllt't', •••••••••••••••••••••• Doclla t070 ree.. Cin1nct' ch:trttl'•. A (', AM t'M. mm 1n11 111\ '1l11~11:'18· h~t'\4
r c I( l NI l' rctl' 11 Ullo hH·t ~ltt'VI'$, &IU' "mo Grand Phmo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ftt'I tor 1ur pollution ron Ca.• H...-0, mu~• St'll S3.GW or n () ~ ,, 41111 05!t9 or 752 ll!M tve1I 1111·ludt'd I f'leu:1e l.'JO() New purl ••di.' lie. f)Owl'r trol dtvlre c:erti(1raUOnB S4DDlHACIC '73 JC'Mfft HHly 536 8536 '7 8 H I u 1• C' 11 \' I> t'
Ho4tteta l'all1•ve11ln&:1G7376113 Ml~ or ~all,upto'°ftel.nu ordealetdoi:umcnlary IMW Muataell,beill'orft•rovrr ~:ln:itn l't' J.11111l1•d ' •••••••~•~.!!.~~V11lll'ttlt.:o•noper11tedpool 'Y1m1haTw1nKeybo11rd brokers. $00month preparallonchurgt'sun· 28402M11rguerltel'kwy. 9'!S006·128tl'hudla'". o7r51(~:.27ry4 ·72 ('oronu llt•l1t1hlt· ~9SOC'leuutJ4.1 575i ')'/\l'PAN M' II II .. i!('('t'bNOrteM w. rhythnl,' like n°w. ''all64!1 ""17 less otherwlae llf)t'('lficd' MissionV1e10 " • lran~11llrl;llwn s"ou '7!lt'Olll'fo:Di':VILU:
tt•rowuvr xt1 Need~ rtt('Ovcnng S300 • '" • •• by the advcrtis!~ Avl'ry Pkwy "•it• wkends t'all An!lwt•r flll •IM. full J" r mm1 i·ootl ·Und"r w11rrunty Xlnt ,,.681114 i.al·rifi('~~is S41111242 Want1.1d. Sl1r Cur J~ •n H42430024hr'
l'Ond $2SO 841 43.31 '" Old Upright 1'1iino troll.-r 8r111to l'utl(I rvi GetMrol 9510 WE PA y ., I ·2040 495.4949 Mada 97 38 "'* '110 SJ)orl 1.'1111111•. • lot1dl' $7:.:'!lri ~·1~· 11~~1
W a t e r b r 11 . s 1 s llOS I' lied l'lt'i" whl $250. Homt.' Pn•r WlllJul( lo •••••J·:,~~~·. ;:A·1~·s·.·••••i TOP DOLLAR l'lo1tl'd Suntluy~ •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• S1lvt•r 14.1\ Mi I'S s ,1iJ Camaro 9917
Refrigerator. $35. Soru <'hllir, walkt•r All for 494 ~ p11y top$ ror Prime lor "'p"'i'/!K"u""'.! Stt•r1•t1 kall} ~t "hi •••••••••••••••••••••••
& m11trhmg ehair ~O !~J~ .. ~!ft'r nC'ur nc" Piano unt•QlK' upr111h1. Hrion, 9534287, 731 SZ31 " '" FOR USEO CARS ~0110~~7 S7H!l '711 l'i\M \HO \11 1111111 ... , 8169 ""9,,.,,,., c· I f'rom 135 Available at .. ........ .e.M"""-1 Tht MottbcJH.g .illtO , ...... ~ 1.1111· tf1•1 ~ .... eves ircu l890, )( nt rond. loot•. S ...... & local Gov't Aurtions I "'-"MA ...... V"" r.n OfY v • 977
Jtwetry 8070 llP Ho t u t1llc1 Muho~11ny, •wry key~.I Sid ....,-90801 Jo'or Olrettory r11ll P'ONTIA.C/SUIAIU IMW~Or .~.~::~!!' ........... ~~,,w,h.:·;·1,,1:;~~::1~ ::;";.'.
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~{1~~,~~,;i::;2t ~~t. rnmpl rl'stort'(I & reran ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sul'j)lus OateCentt'r ' 2480 .tbrborBlvd VOLICSWA.GEH I I 3 !; ;\ \\ \ I s ~, .•. , <her 200 natur 1.ll 71455l6379 UnJQUl' t man llydru 415336-7800 COSTA MESA LtostC:O.Wh pn.scHE Thi•udurt• HulJu" 1111 EMERALDS, w"i"hing Carpet. 140 yds Liicht n p ... CJ 809 plunr bout Pml·d to 549·000 549-1457 McLantttlMW!! "" t I C """ Green Good l'ond S2 -"' • 11 t II 833"""I FLHTMASTEIS I Or•---AUDI ll.1 rh11r llh1I t u~t.• ota o 100 Ct~ i\p •••••••••••••••••••••• .,e . mus ff """' PORSCHES llY ...._ M1''" .,,., t1111 1 "' pra1sedatS18,000 MUST yd Kne1 sscl Short Maicir 7590810 CONSUMER IJOw,,....Pe.! luicelhl.'t u1111t•1ut1t'1110( 5IUlllll
SEL L Bes t orrer' ~-4189 t5os. Gezt' bmdings,looh.Stonlp 9090 RUYINC&LEASIN<; WANTED (]l•l_SZJ:.Sl.ll for }our 111mp,1ri""'
640·8688_ 51, · Bathtub enrl<bure & xlnt shape SSO 494 4524_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• SEHVICE Allow us tht' opportunity 1>hopp1nir < Jll u' for '61 Carnoro 327 rrame -· All m11ke~&modcll\ d th h Olt• ... G•C""tUTV'S 1·11m1wllllH•ll'J't'tJll'' 1111 s r1 l"l DIAMONDS _, Stor•, R•s"'---", to rons1 er e purr ase "'" s ""'"', a \ . 110 ,J .. 111.1111 64L9193 ~ .. .---Lease any 1981 or '82 on 1 d r 1 "'11t.2. .,JO ,. 1 , 1 at 70'; of appra1sill r lar 809 DRY SJ()RIP[ C or ra em o your<' ean ~sT ,,._,,,., , .., ,., ,out , ""'''
Pn'"-•P"!>_ 7'16218 El" h"'p>"\ bod SIOO. ...................... 11D ~:: .. ~!:;"''"'YOU Po<><h• t"°"k woth U• & ~ S>IW ""''"
Men 's 14K gold band v.heel <'hair SlOU l.OSING Lfo.:ASE. quit Moolhly hoat & RV CALI.NOW• Today• •r.......,... ti!l t\1t11Jm .l.:io
New originally S235 Sell t'ubo\•er t'ampl'r $400, tmg bus1n~!>.1>elhn11 out i.toral(l' for am s1ie. 24 fl7~ 9J5lNl:tll3.Hl836SA 11~ \'W roRSCHF.·Al'l>I $11W tP0~..:4615 848 0816 847 6177 evl' ALL supplies and fl'< hr H' tu r • l Y. r re e ', IW ~-.if11i Mazda ·79 RX-7. 'uto. lo 4 IS ~; Coa~t ll1wa\ %:1 •Jlto L'I Ir lures I lud laun1·h1111ot & WabhlOll ........ I &.(,(, Salt'~ Ser.'I('(' l.C.tbmg M 0 Mocld1Mry 8071 "" el'lnr rar I t nc mg 11ri n le llt'i. N!!wpnrt """.!."tlMS ... ~ ..... otu '" m1, x Int rond S750V tit H.iy~1d1· l>rl\l' I C ltt•rol.t 99 2
••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 post D1spluy ra~es. wa1trn11 Dunt.'' 1131 B:trk Bay Classics 952 , o&i111 .. 11ut 111 .. 1 JO' CAJNER 557.9901 dys, 951 511211 Newport &•a1•h li7:1 l~IO(J ••••••••••••••••••••••• WOODWORKING S4115144 ruom rh111r!>. Beauty •••••••••••••••••••••• ""'""111, • ...., ... u..ZUJ k ds .,,,. '6• \'W I ft ~-ht Ch _1.j '80 Salon hairdryer~ and Or New11orl Beat·h R.l.J.5 1{X'E·Btv1W eves w n_ __ "" " t' "' ri11 • t•rvllll'•
MACHINERY Pool table, 4x8. S350 hydr:rnhr l'hairs. mir 64405l0 P'RETTIEST WEBUY ..,..1 .-..,"•'·-""~'Nll~ M rat' 9739 door. '73 lt•rt door ~I M0ttHSportC~
-83l·0400 Seagull 111 hang ghder, rors. shelves and plants '57 T·llRD 11i...1 "'""" 411111'"'" •w,,.,...,..... •• ~~•••~•••••••••••••• l.'a('h West~m ~II It• w hi t:rnno1r11ral I 11 I .111111
Ch-'s .... ~ta.. & l!_eaut .. $400 673·3873 Also. make·up, sh,·•m""" IN TOWN! CLEA ... CARS 197" flM W "'""' 4 ... 1 rim!> rur Super ll1•t•lh• tr11011 . Jll l'•111tl t•t1
" ...,Jn L "'~ •"'"'DTRUCKS " """~· ~.,,., ORANGE $20t•J 5411!1741 'lA811("'lll> Stnlcn 8079 2 Naug owige ~hairs S..15 ancl hair produrt!>. TrcNtsportatiOft lfST OFHI! """ nl.'w Ul;iu1mnkt AM FM • "·"
••••••••••••••••••••••• & S70 Electric V1bra. Call63l·9'1.64or ••••••••••••••••••••••• tOOOlJK7.J stereo l'a1>sette, spurt COUNTY'S '62 \'W Bu11 :•fow pa1n1 ONLY $4995
· Belt S..15 640·52J.16. urter6~89tl6110'J Campen, Sale/ !>lt'l'ring wheel. new EXCLUSIVE rebllt•n..: moo 67:12114J. HOW.ARDC~not.t
I lon ullhty trailer 4'it5' Restaunintlablt's Rtttt rad1JJ~. 69K milt•) MASERATI 67331130 DoH· QuallSt:.
like new S2SO. I::ve 1t45ea 646.,184 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $4950 1111· 117~PAElt'all DE"'• _SHIP '79Mn1 . redw whlktt111 NEWl'OHTIH:l\t'll ~1·2S30,days_966-623.L ~ • ('A MPi':H s1u;L1. for GHhard 673 0930 or All.al lmma1 l.11" m1 S"l.'1541 833-0555
f I l' SIOO I 642 01311 We'll deUver anywhere Juhn 77U !1788 1 Ce nu 1 n e 8 r a z 1 I 1 an Swaps 1096 ore ~.uner · h S U ST A h lall4972JJJ KVU'1W """Autr1."'ht1 mteworld' '79''0111 fJ••·MI l.1k1· EE SFIR ! met ysts over 1 raral ••••••••••••••••••••••• " """" .. BE CH IMPORTS '-"""" ea Only~ per stone' Wurlitzer fW'.lmaker or Motorii~d•s 9140 HIGHIUYY tan 111.000 rn1 Ht'M of A. Nev. $Hoou Oa)' Wt>ha\t'<1J{<lfMl,eh·111011
640·8688 gan for Cuno t•abtnet of 1 •••••••. ••••••••••••••• Top dollan. for Spofl)I rt' r , take o H' r I b t' 8411 Dove Street S$9 713!1ht'l5 6 p m Ot1n or \ f \\ & l " t 11
Westmorland Sterling, equal \Slut' Sl!OO 77 PUCll MOPED. low ••CLASSIC!!•• l';irs. Bui(!>. l'.11npt•r., 4~9456 752-0900 15 \'W louk good run' l'heiroh·L'
George & Martha. hke 631 4207 m1it•a1:t.> xlnt 1·und S:J7~ '66 MG 914 s. i\ud1 ':. Oats• 9720 1969 llarbor Blvd Jit1otl
new I 633 3962, art ~PM I Rodio, Jrt lipm 631 5179 I.uh or MS$$$ ha~ 1(001' ihk fm l l' Mti H ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 631-7170 I 9'J7 14674 I
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1150 54().9444 1 14 Sanyo Ptonet>r rrc· & 11.\T\\'IS 'Ho Hhll 1'01( MP 01rs 13731 Harbor Blvd or714 637·2333 1·0~~ ~:!l~O 0110 .111 It I 111011 ''"""' -1t·1·r111
Ideal Chnstmas gtfl ror jMl1celtaMoMs l~.I>e.sar $l50 54811242 wo m1 s.1110 r1rm l'Jll •CLASSIC ~ Gorden Grove 646 ,51;.i brJk"' I\""'''""' 'Pl•I
wife. daughter ~ 19641 WClflted 8081 zenllh 25" c•olor t1 . i:.11lll076.1f16pm * '66MG ** i SE LLINGYOURMW 'll4\'WHJJt1 H1Jlt1·n~ .:!I ""'I 'lml rmt 11'11'1
Mercedes8enz220SEB W .. t.•d•••Th••••Le•••t••·.~A·~~ beaut dk walnut, xln1 /Motorc'f:les/ 1.otsor ~ ... has"on·•mtl' JIOOW l'o<1stllw-~ 554-9000 WfPA.Y tin·' S51MI ;\1h 111111' S-ll!l!t 'lht•d1111 ltoh111 Body and mtr m xlnt .!'n e e ter cond .sac $195 lll"rnlor S 9150 -. ,.. < Nt>wportllearh wurk l'.ill~t7t!f.IJ1•H l\lr IL1rlwr llhd d For the Pepsi Challenl(E' nort ti.SO 966 82to coo " this hllte baby New 642 941X> TOP DOLUR SS ( con Newlyreblttrans, G (U d th C .,_-l!' . 1••••••••••••••••••••••• 11 a in I , F ron l l'allJark Racon tbOU "1nl!l1· 1>01 1 \\\ .,._t,1 \11•,,1 i.1~1N1to111
AM1F M Cass~tlt' 8 or~o~i or:'n::.w~u:~; 19" Console l'Olor T\' '76 llONl>/\400fo' t1r1•,(w1rt•s), Slartl.'r. WANTED! JIMSlEMOHS ('O~IOl.'lon~ hh11k 11111)'1 ~-IO ll:!ll
lrark.Newmleraor On SIOO 10 the person who Sl50. 12' Blal'k white l:Jh .1•!1·an.~OBO <:t•nt•rutor. Rr~ulator IT IMPORTS !tun,., i:o11d wJ ' t•\ Dod9e 993S
ly 56.000 m1. $9,000 or find• one .,.., ...... 2 ,eort ac de SIOO 842 4624 l 631 74!!n 54S 6ZSll H II 1 t 1, 0 u , w ir 1 n.,, L,,atel rriUt.li•( 0.)111
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••••••••••••••••••••••• l Esperiall> want Ph?no, ~trk ~.l.50. tulor, !17!13021 ,!>l'il~2Jlll• 1 Tunt•up 2 "et.'k,., dl!O !I XJ !1311µ111 l1·rmi•r}.'i'.l l.'>!l•f!.!:I
LOSING LEASE. quit· GermanRehcsl5514464 T\i. R<.A 2t Con~oll' (iREATl'll Sllllneecl,Nt.> ... ru1:. ,\ 9.ilKIGI i'I ll\l'I 1121 ~I"'"
Lingbusiness,sellingout -Sl..25.5459223 Cre.itl'hnstma!>Bu) rral s .. ectht'an• S3000 TOYOTA-'OLYO .~":..."?:!.!!. ........... ~ 19/0 Merredes 2110SL ,63 RlS ,Int runmn,,: \l olll'I I t\I .rnlo
ALL auf:i:• and fur· ...h&M.rW '76 Su:ulu 370 RM xlnt Or Bei.t OHer Ple;i~e """--"•" lonf\ "!':io Hardtop I tond ne111 IJrei. .im fm l i\M t\I )tl'rt'O i\ ~uper
IUie1iJ1cudln1: lotl I•• a Al l'Ofld .neverra«'d ~ Call .. 4!r7""4722 ---1 c.......... ~~~r:lttfria'?;;;,ures I stereo 556A003 flnr (Jr •t6S,l)\t 1 Display C&HS. wal1Jn1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••~•.;••••••••••••• eYenl11& 730-5791 '63 Rambll!r Wagon Xlnt "••~u•> •Hf.U n 'TO Oataun 510 % dr khaki -~ --81 Rabbit Coo\ert1blto tr411l3l s:i:t}9 'Mwudon-
room chairs. Beauty er} rare Ma rt in '• \ am.;h.i \ lr.il(o Ill l.1kt' • rond . motor hrei.. l!ood ;;:~~26 St1l'I~ tltutt f750 '8'1 JOO SD MBZ Wlutl' ll'IU'<I '"" ~hnwrnom ftnhin.. Olr H••~r
Salon hairdryers and Guitar Mod s 18 w ra)e 0 Rt'\\ w 1th low t.>a'\ m11..,, lrans 646-1125 Top Oellar ~·'1 Tan Ll'Jther Int I 111n1l111on SIOll•1 Mlot~i;," 11 I\ d 1 .,q J \I• , • hydraulir rhairs. mer SJ25 Gibson Aroustrr pluH\lrJ\ 646 4629 Rtc~otioftd Pid 77 R2 I u l.11" m1 JOI\ mr S29.00:> 979 !IJOO • 1-12 1-11nor'>lo ll211
rors. shel\CS and plants n) Ion strano SISO after I 11v.n1• r S:!i so 1· \ e i. O.i) s Onh -·· " h r j -2 11 d , , 11 1 \I 1 Also, make·up. shampoo " '79 llOND \ t'X!lllO 61\ m1 YdliclH 9510 b-12 11112 . • '" .irrnJ011 <• 111 n·,h ' 11 .:• ·" n dh rod 6pm or betv. 6 & \!J n\ t'\lr.-,• l>JI\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1-'utYoorl'ar' 61! 230 All Orti: ~rv. PJllll t. Itri". \Int rond 111n<1 Hun' 11n .11 '»h
an t~l~l;,r;: 7 30am TRA\' 6467909_ . ' i591i!llj l-:H'l't.i37M7 Dune8ugg)&Trlr JOHNSOH&SOH IM!;tto\\,11(1'.° l'J~,m~ll'\., llead S2400 j SJ2511 5U1.t1:11 'IWJ'*i3 •>rt)!1t11 ~11n 1 \l .. i..-111
a . or MXR PHASESHIFTEH I Sl600 liittc~ $,,4011 orrt r li4~ 2255 642 ~,646-!17111J u1 (.' R hi I h ft•i afl•r6 898-6809 7<" Triumph ••·1nn1•\1lln ••Kt«" .• MB " <•JI\ J 111 '"' " t • C ~ R'-.. Sq 1 "100" dual controb
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770.0347 ~5 t7l4 I 751-8.516 I d b'I i9 .mil KU S111Uk,;, I~• l>S I Rodi 9540 l'rl'm1Um pm·t•, ··~tra' 549 41!!11 '79 300 SD Tlrilo ~5011 l!I~ ifillh work s.1u1••;11 •w , Be_aulJfulNewWhtWed V1ol1n and Viola xlnt se s . snowmo le OH 110t) Hoth ror1······················· 11111dforan~u:.1~l1•Jr 110 zoo sx s \ ,. I
dmg Gown. Never been ftond ·~~"" each or best S II d St2uv oHt•r s~ Ol46 79 L'hcnowlb Rll«' buicgy. 1fore1gn ur domt•.,lt(' 1 ·,· 1• por1 · 1
20•K· Mint ro11d, sunroof -+ '75 YW D~r Ford 9940 ~ ~ e your use lllJSCC loaded 14500 or 10 uood l'Ond1t10tl ~ll'rt'O UI.' llljt'I ' I other ICtras JO 600 mt (' I 1 • •••••••••••••••••••••• worn. Sitt'9· 10 SIOO ofrer 552 7698 Ill rwv. 1111011.t X l.2SO. , . :'il't• l'~ ~'>r..1 ' m1 llt-<•ul) & t•1·onom~ 893-417.f 1.1!1 OtlO m1 ii)()( m1•1 h i'I FllH II I Tl> \\ \1,n'
631-5794 't w Bell mai: Ill hdnwl nfr 675 3568 $6.995 o fl 11 tii!S 4l26 '· wrul $1 !l.'itl !#.J 1•11 1 ''' \ a--.C-.I_F_a_rru""'·--1y"'"1""e-~-Club Steiftw~Upric)ht I ems In our Sl295 644 8549 4 Wheel DriYH 9550 s . 72 Mercedes 220 Diesel. 96J •~130 fl ·' 1111' Jll II''" I 4 Id Li d D • p· or Ill 27!M, 30 mpo eas•· m·•111 • ' . 'll't'1 1n~ hr.1k1·' ~ l.•tl Membrsbp. SSSO/ torr. yrs O · e new con a1ly llQf '79 Honda 7W htadt•r ••••••••••••••••••••••• '61i l>.1t!>Ull ll.'l~I. I tlr 1 lenanrt' 011 ·,~mli uh 11 73 \ \\ Thm.~,.·. lKJ.'I( I .l!Jlt• "1ntlo" nw1J 1.
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Dys 540·9601, eves beautone.$4,400 nt'vrrui.1.od,rnori~ pki.:. '6!1 11HONC"O ~ptl wt1rk i·ar.S'ilS 673_.,.,,, "' l,1ftk1l:.5'1:!.1511111fr rn.iroon 1'u11 <..l'l'l'I 559·40$9 ~!89 Ci.ft Gui·de $75 541 18'15 N r.~:1>s wottK swoo _,., Ii s :\St~ s~ l'.l<I' 64$ 1s111 G • · Th1·11t1111,. th11t111' Ph Gu1tar, $50. Roui ~skis 6 pr pearl drum set, w Br and n r ~ s u 1ui.1 " · '' ·73 :.riuz KS.10 1 1111 nt•w 1M 9742 Vol•o 9772 11 ... 1i .. , Bl1 II 1·,.,,"
w/Look bindings, SISO Paiste rymbols. stands Call 642-5678 US450T Mc1111n11. MUST Trvclu 9560j I pi1in1 1Clnt mu~t ,1.11. •••••••••••••••••••••••I·•••••••••••••••••••••• \I 1•'" • 1 ! 11111 r• '" Sears Carousel slide & hardware. 51 .000 SELL St75U OH01•••••••••••••••••••••••1 $35()0 549:1443 Il l YOLYODULEJt >11111:.!ll
proj, $50. Maple bunk ~·~2 mtdaslcfora 6753230 Klfo'OHDtTONl'ICKl'P I ·~11tl.11l••1 lt1111 'D•lo--97•1 A~'SOH 'l'\Olti\\1:1-:nH''\n · 71 ~·11nt'\t ,1 \\J~on bedframcs.S"IS 552·6720 f'ENDER ChristmasA~Ylsor w dual wheel'. clual 1 .. 1.1 \11•• .i11111w1 ..... _, & ...v $1ii'Sl iiHMlrimnmL•<•n•l
ev TELFAASTER Motor HOMH, S./ tu...i. propanl.' or l!a~ •• 8 •• R •• A •• N•••D•••N••E••W••••• 2:rm·m_t:11.~· COVE.RS l SA.US. SERVIC"' '•II ~.:,,. u•amp UN\ .. usts"ll Rtttf/Storogr fl60 \H JUI" ld1•alfor5th WEIUY Lt M'' 71th 81 .. 67 cemenl blocb, wood 1 .. mmAd '63_.,.,t•129c•1 " G I 901"'••••••••••••••••••••••• v.herl tr~1l1•r 11Y21.>121 l'S~:l>l'ARS&TIH'CKS r~s us, ru I A.HftLEJ.SIMG l '
shelvin&. l11 >7'xt
1
,· ~ ... tttera "'RENT 22'deluxmtrhm Th"odur" u 0i.1"c. Dir l'OMEINOI! DELOREAN .. eierused.Si5ea O\'F:RS J-:'Asnt:l.l\Elt\ .!~~~~•••••••••••9 •• 9•4•5• bo ... R D 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••-4 I 6 If k " ,-n ""'-~ Mana63JTIVI I ~mso ar...-.. lOOaU. 642 5670 ogers rum ~et. pr. Tax Oeduruble dona s ps se root S295 w II J rbor IJh ti . ro~ta CALL FOH ' ' v "'1 t:~ l'EHT~ ; )( \l ·'JI., \ l u I '
Lazy.Boy chair. SSO perrert rond. S400 or lions Boats.planes.i·ar +ll·m1 PP 6408S85 Me ~a f;H 001u or FREEA.P'f'RAISA.l I 1'<1u1v111•d m'"'" 1.11!
Am is h Rorke r. SB5 best offer 673 3547 Please <'all 213 930 1w 25 motor home. fully i;elr I MO 11211 Cormier De Lillo IMM EOIAJE ·;s M idgrl. IOI.\ mi · xlnl EA.VOLRUVIOI(£ "" ••r " rt•t 1111 f .. m T . nd & belt A£a F & ROLET SJ500 080 121J•S319751 I raclion sta · VTTICe.Wtwe 1 7 · r a 0 0 r . 'I 0 n d r on t .i > n l' d S 5 5 II O 12 l'u:.lom Ranrhi-m T,10 CHEY I t1 • ,, r '·" ~::1•1•
S. 548-4727 Ecpii,....t 8015 fiberglass. ~~ rnntl 549 3077, 557 l6J9 m.in) xtras lo hst 1;1Xld 1821 l REACll BL\ I> DELIVERY ber 3 751 -l\J.'> afl '* 1966 llarhor Hhd !li'I Kl.INt nrlU•>'•"7"
Co Io r TV . S 2 0 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S300 Ken Trallen, T,,.,,ef 9170 Cond S2300 612 546o.1 IWNTINGTON n~:ACll MGI 97441 l'OST.\ Mt:.">\ Mt rcunt '9SO
Typewriter, ~ telertl AVIN 780 oCf1re rapier 644-Sl~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646 978() 847-6087 or Honda ....................... , 646-9 303 540-9467 •••••• ~: ••••••••••••••• 0 6•5 6521 E es S3 500 ESS Inc 5 333 ·;2 Opel Huns good ~l'v. -11 .. \ 1 ys, ... · v · · lo......_M_..._ lfardtoptt•nttratler.~111c11E\''•TO~'l'irkup 49. I •741 r 5 W 'Tl!ni:n ut1,1rl(• c•9·16&5 _549-8172 ...,a -..... I 8 ood 1 -•• hrakei-& otht'r p.irh 4"' to 1, · · . ""' -Eui'..-90301'1.'l'ps ,g conutmn ll(•aq dut}. Juln s ta A 1 .. h1ll11111 x,\I "'"ti' L1kenew Ping Pong Ta losing office. metal&. q ,........... 9978679 I (' d A.lltos.l~.cl an na $600 646·1lJ'iliaft6pm I ~.~'~.1211'<lnl rnntl . ~Ml ~·rm t.Wlill '\11•·1'\1 bl Of( wood desks, chairs . ••••••••••••••••••••••• · r a 0 ' a 1 r on · 'T"""'"" o I 97 '"" e $50 Bes67 l er partitions. f1·1~. 1~kArs. 2 HP Evmrude In top 12 t·ampcr trailer. " t\M F~1 tape, lilt ... heel ••••••••••••••••••••••• 540 7430 pe 461111•,u \Ill ' I ....... II r1 Muitonn 9952 ~7~ "'"'"'c I ll\""118 $4999 .... ~·, 9707 •••••••••••••••••••••••'·~ .1 ... ..:, t•1m1· .,, -----m1sr 631·2570 ask for Shape' Sl75 Also Mount. ~ltl\ e. srnk S ps .'1 $750 ' ' ' ' "'llU I • 'Pl'l lal "Jtnl Juh hlJt'I. ••••••• •••••••••••••••• APARTMENT SALE Bob S20 675·3563 wknd 's & 631 0129 e1es I Thl'oclore Rohm~. Olr . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 301 W W· \ Exceleftt cOfld , Id :1 1 . 1.t1 \lu•t.rn~ .iul•• 1w11 V · red d bl LI b Ill I l' t Jmt•r 1 q~ ( ·-· · "'i:o •• JI!" ''' .1 •ptl ery nice w t /4 eves. T •1_ Uffl... 9 80 < ar or \'t ns a 72 AUDI 100 I 1 blOl'k Wt•sl of \lam I owner :>pel 1h 2 t1r load •d $Iii ~1 f"< 3 • .,,1 1
11.11111 i:<"•l1 11url ~.m rhrs.Couch,earthloncs. Rerept1onBooths70x84. ., rai ... rs, 'J I Mes a 61 2 0010 or Xlnt runninu rond I Ani:h1B1uc673.'ltli7 . ,1 , " "·'"'" n1h••,1uf1 !>\I ii'.,;',
kngszrompwalerbed solrd oak. contem loats,P'oftl' 904\j•••••••••••••,•••••••••• S.IU·ll211 Clean bod.v. ciean '"IAat 9725 ,
74
0pefWOCJ 11!;
11
0l.\O llk)(tr -.111k 1;i;1,
1111 1,H,.fl•·ntwrul
amping equ pmen · porar • · bed trlr Nt>wtires. SJJ5 '64 Che\ 11 T . sht bed ter1or 25 mp~ Nl'w ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·'· l111n\ 1 s; 10 1 x:· x.1 ~1 C . 1 t Y custom built ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnt rond s xa· truck ·'
1
,,, .. ,
misr. Call anytime but !Int cond Ml 6.S4S Partwr wllllted! .... 8618 PU, Ii ryl. hpd, SOK mi ' ·74 1''1at 124 Sprt Cp1• Gr.-~1 mp1: ~t·v. ('1t·.r r.1111>.12 f;il!·I · 111 • "' 1
,,..., tires. 11200 6313(l!7 I Good cond l'Asl u(fnr vth1na All n•q•1111s ''lnl I ~l :!.\Ml Fri/SatnJ hl.640-2326 I BM Exe<'. e le r 24 ft Searay S.D Im $11500B0498·6924 ,... • " • ·73 \'11hnll~1Wal!t1n ,, I Lo d d S JO "ut St I pi-.. Audi 79 ~. Mrnt cond Eves "all 646 1528 f.4ti !1557 111011 •. 3,.,.1 lllll, · t.h \I 1"1.111i.: \ 11 ""'" 1981 Sp.('e m, vader oame lY""writer. new platen macu ate. a e . I "' o "ce, -·• . 0 p k U Lo d d , ... '"" , " ,.., · & .. --·--'-9"00 75 atsun 1c P l a e + more MLIST P' Jtr I" 11•,tun•tl \ 1111 marhine Coin operated (rollerl. serv1red. $195 mo inrluding NB slip t "'cc~• "' owner JSK mill's Lik1· SELL ' S795()1or assume H0ttdo 9727 onche 9750 54X !Ill~ niml S?.l~I t '\.\'I 121:• Cockta.·1 table sty In 64.5.4631 e•niu11 de•rv,..11 cc7 ~.,., ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••• ••••• • • • . • f>I t ~ = """'1 "" -" New Auto. Camper S16Slease. Wlrnds&ev1·~ •••••••••••••••••••••••. • • •• • •• 111. , '"''' 1 n11· '"n $1500. Da (213l642·1143 stopdmmgthroughtrar 40'0WENS.Tn·rabm 1n i--------·1shell, MllK S. El<' 9570357 VISITYOUR 80 PorH~t' 9214 Full) roor 1\\1 r~I (",l"l'llt· Olds mobile 9955
ext 2101. n 17 t4 I fir. Send a complete 1 live-aboard slip Npt A.TTINT'IOH i:•• 7836 loaded 8K miles L'llr:i 12L' f 1 "'., .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"" 1981 BMW ORANGE CO"'ST ~-und S)·~tem 1•2 u •, l " mt ()l•r l'f ""j "1 ;; 0111:-. O~H<. \ I llr 960·5928 page Cars1m1le m 4 mm Harbor642-~ MG'S "" '"' " '" 324 951·1 L N Y k 2TONN "'AU COVERS VClftS 9570 CLOSEOUT HO ..... DA orllJI 2684 " · \ lil'n.I! .111tn Ir.in' ,111 Gorgeous wht wedding to A. e w or . P'Wlt IO"'T SUP' ,., • " ~~~n :s~ IO J~~rra~ .~~r~~p~?'es x~~:ro:X: Under mar~et. $9,999 F~~:!~~.·~;~~81 ;~·roit"o0~A·N·c:~;;;; SAVE' I HEAD QUART, IEIRS ~~~~or~~~ ~,1,!~·r l~nr:'::,1: Autos, UH<t ::·,0~: ( ~;','11' t1! 1;\1;1;·,~~ ,·
642·80913-9P_M_ <.portl494_6765 Trlr, ail xlras mrl ship Maria631·7797 lvemsg equipped 1nrlud1n11 •<·e TODAY snrf am fm l'aM• J l' ··~··••••••••••••••••••I ~·~1 Th.-d1111 llnhrn,
-to shore Call Mar k box, sink. AM FM . •• UHIVERSrr·y Must ser sis.950 PP IUtcli 9910 1>11 1r.1rt1111 111 .. 1 S~~~~l~.E~rv~,~~?i d~~lf~51nS11rh~1s:~u~e p96\77~· n V 11 0 c:a;e~r 11~~~~.,n~;, Sales and Leasrng at SALES&SERVICE 559·8689.da737·6Sl6 •iW·i~:::.ic«~;.~;~;:j:jj;•; ~~:~~·~1 ~11"" ~.'ml1t "r
EdSJO..M.51 drawers Sponfrsherman lJTEIOOYWOltlC Theodore Robms. Dir . rompet1llve prtres Ex OLDSMOllLE '67 P 912 Cpe No ru.~t cir 6nl IA1Jt1l·•I liJINI · ~
Ntw push button am 760-321] 26' ZIOHP Dsl '8l !Hmo Up to SO"', off your body Harbor Blvd . Co~ta reiltnt service and parts HONDA.
1
X Int Cond Blur lllk m1 5't49S '7 4 CllHcns
rad1o(or Luvtrurk S2S ... 1087 ManyFactOpt +more shopestrmate• 536-9832 Mesa 642 OOJO or dept GMCTRUCKS Nrwtrs.ChromrWhl, 6.1tll'im \,k1n 1• '\II••• 1>1.: 11~1·,
..__111!1!!!11!!!1!11!1!!!!!!1!!!!111111-•I 540 sz11 63t 2.121 $4115142 c dlll-99 t .111 ·'" ~ llt'1·k• 011, 4.!M-4SU. •••••••••••••••••••••• 24' 270HP '828' Beam I"' • Good selttllon or pre 2liSo llarbor Bll·tl I ' 0 nuC 15
Sfo:l.I, idlt> ill•IJllC with ;i CITRONCOC:KATOO 2Stat l44j!alfuel For Sale. 280Z boot. S35 14 Ford, :MIZ. at. ps. pb. viously owned BMW & COSTA Mt:.SA '711 Turho Targa. rrtl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,;11t0 9957
Barellll)'J>l', Ul!t' S625 23' 2SSHP '80 (uJI eq·t~ /\M tFM car stereo S20 xlnt cond, lo m1. Sl&.50. other fine ra-. 10 ex 1 540.9640 r11arl'Kd wheeli., f' rs. on COMTir..u .. "TING ••••••••••••••••••••••. ()1111)' 1'11111 ('l,ll'l'iftrtf iuc ._., 4 I:' ,0 ZlJ Cl>2 t:•z 0787 an 6 ··"'dv• ~•5 9""2 "' ~ 6 m1, f11U.~l !>('(' lO ap ..,..,-...,._ A1i .....,.~ -__ .. _s'!._ . ...,_:._ '" .. ,. ,,.. '"·"" -cellentrond1l1on '74 C1v1r llalrhb .... k, ph. CADILLAC? i;! Pl\lo HI ''11111 I CHE •• pri-r1 alc•. S35 ,000 l I II I l •1ftth..-a...... •oo VY BLOC:K A.lltosW..ttct 9590 clean m1 SllKKIOllO "•2t"'t.• Wr 'PeriJh11• 10 ''""l'' '"'''' r.1n' ""' 1 ·11 ~ Den't need it?
We'ft bet •
someb1dy does! 1'~1fte~~~
Me beaullful
,,_JSIC by
~sl"1g ynur
ll!Wanled mus1~1
11Striment m
the ~ly Pilot
Sift Glide
& ~ ENGINE SIOO I W I ,,.. "'·• f ,\ ,\\ f \1 r.111!11 1, 111111 Loaded VHF'C 8., TV • ••••••••••••••••••••••• <' a so have a lease 61!!8617 or thr bu~1111•" P\ """-"t"• h I 1 •· f 1 t r .1 11 ' l' 11 r 1 ,, 1 1 , , '\' ·outriggers. live bait '"""''" I WI NEID YOUlt rompany l at ea~es '80 Honda f'l"l' IH,(llKI m1 Roll1 Royct 9756 l't'u •n• "'pro 1"'s111n:i 1 1 1 i r r w , , 1 i ., :
trim labs. SIC<'ps 3, trlr 4 Indy Mag.~ with new GOOD USED CAil! other makes or .aulo~. $7~00 i orrer 1141> 2KHH . ••••••••••••••••••••••• laNJt SriectiOft Th1·1wl111" H11h11" I >II
Rebll3SOOMC I F.60xl5 Goodyear : Anythingronsiclcred l~u.rksandvans Forad 645~6 • I OfHtwl981 ll111lt111 111111 111,t.1
MUST S&.Ll l'olulass tires, $.100 for : 1977lhru 19!!0 ' ~~~·~~~1P1~~~~~!1\'°" 00 '69 Honda 3Sn. Ol't'd:1 "1 DEAL£R IN U.S.A Codiltoc, '1 n .1 ,,. ~ •11111• ,.,
SSi-8231 j ~l.6450792:645·0721 I·~· 7141972-IZ70?l41r.et9Gll work SIOOfirm J)(""'t.t r"Ar'A rrR NowlftStocll! !111111~11
28' Truj11.n immarulate !Smellblotk<:hevyc11rh&' &46·8184 : l~I \J'\J\VC N \Bl R FOR SALE w /~llp.0Nwpl Bch : Intake from 'B i Jo'oragooddealant1111xxl '80 llOND/\Al't'Ort1 >ldr, -~ 1 ~ "~
112 ,000 r1rm P Jl'.•Corvcttr!K&Nalr(llter , le 11rterulesservtce.ee S.,pd. ll<>111rw1thxtru~. (' \1)111 \. i i 1'111111. d1·.111 "·•II &4&-8955 Mtl M'I up for whole system' , sharp 7$2 Will 1 Cl ,J ; ;/ , '"' n 1111111n111 i: ~ "" rl
·. f ' h' Bo G Ready lo bolt on. 122.S. & I /•H iil··. 1,,. tr.111~1141rtJlll1111 ;11 11 .. 1 IS 11 in1t at ot 9$1·8838 befort 10.aoam i • .!1 "'°'-ttt C-.fy '79 Acconl LX , ... 1. \ ..... •.111 '"" OllU ,,.~ 1:,;uJ11h1·
Everything! Ready to or1Cttr9·~m , 292S Harbor81vd PS. A<.:, AM 1 ~'M . II ~ t7'2 ,., ~hluuwn l""*t II••
Go'Trlr.2moton.SIZ50 M · •pd -bit Sl7S ' COS"'A M.,...A tr1rk IO.._"r'SllA RI" • ••tn l s-fl• ••t• • •64$.21a• • uncit .. • • "' • · · 1 ~ SAlES-SEA't'ICE>-LW1HG · ..... -" ••••:•••••••••••••••••• 11l St-\ llh· lmma,• 1 ;ir ' 1 ..... , -> "" •
1 ~ R 225 £ T 10 trans /llnh1te. 979. 500 20ew iat!WnAANA ~0R07SI M(lf i.4Sub11ru\\'.aic /\1r1'0ftd fully eqptd. 111 ,~. ~"' Mll•llU Jnaia!r.'~ fl 7~P~~s rtblt.,j200.813-3873 TRADE' W~-; •so 71 4J83S-3171 ·17 llond1 <.:1\IC Stan ~·1~071t <od Iran.,. 1·u to ll pprt'rnat r MZtMI, ft, •• C ..
'
.. J.5671 ..t ... fer Fart orv W•rranl" tve aomethln11t 11ou c-"•n SL. t 1"1 H C~9S_EOSUNOAY dud Tran11m11mon ' or makr 01!tr 97 !MU ........... ~ ... .__.16~11 ,. , , , ~ • or . 1vt • Looka Good Run: <'ooct l>ou1t 54A llWT MClft • ri 1 8.,.1 • ....._ "lil ~~·-.. a,.~ • ... Clll'l I 111 ~Yher Loadtd. want to stll' t1nsif1ed homt Ir ~ with 3w Htvt aomethina to sell' S2$00 Firm • ' to 1 am MM. We'd. •·n bll -=~~ ~
L,....;.:.,....,, ___ -!':~!!!!!??:=====~ _ 144.2293 964-8222 8 $ ads do It well. 642 S678 • · d wt • &» luw. Clu~lflcd_ Ids d(l 11 well 963 2784 124 Wkndl • ' ·----;;..
"' ~~
----~
Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/TUHday. November 24, 1981
Landmark Smoker Study;
•
Former higher tar smokers acclaim MERIT
· "Best-tasting low tar IVe tried:'
The most rigoro us MERIT
re earch to d ate has just b een
comple ted .
Result: MERIT sm okers
confirm taste a major facto r in
·comple ting the ir successful
switch from higher tar
cigare ttes.
MERIT Taste Sparks Switch.
N ati o nwide survey reveals
over 903 of MERIT smo ke rs
are glad they siv itched fro m
higher tar ciga rettes. In fac t ,
94% d on 't even miss their
f armer brands .
Further Evidence: 9 out of
10 fo rmer higher tar smokers
report MERIT an easy switch,
that they didn 't give up tas,te
in switching, and that MERIT
is the best-tasting low tar
they've ever tri ed .
MERIT Beats
Toughest Competitors.
In the econd pa rt of thi
study, n ew tests confirm that
MERIT d e liv ers a winning
combinatio n of taste a nd lo w
tar when compa red with
highe r tar leaders.
Conlumed: The over-,
u 1helm ing m ajority of smokers
rep orted MERIT taste equal
to -or b e tter than -leading
higher tar bra nds.
Confirmed: When tar leve ls
we re revealed, 2 out of 3 chose
the MERIT combination of low
tar and go od taste.
Year after year, in study
after study, MERIT remains
unbeaten. The proven taste
alternative to higher tar
smoking -.is MERIT.
0 PhUlp Mn1t11 Inc. 1981
Reg : 8 mg "tar:' 0.6 mg nicoune-Men: 7 mg "tar;' 0.5 mg
nico1it1e-100's Reg : 9 mg "tar:' 0 7 mg nicotine -100's Men:
10 mg "taC 0.8 mg nicotine av. per cigarene, FTC Repon Mar'.81
-1MERIT
I<)<)s
l
• • * * • *
DRANGI COAST YOUR HDMITDWN DAllY PAPIR
TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 24. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Fiscal crunch niay force state tax ·hike
SACRAMENTO <AP> An
aide lo Gov. Edmund Brown Jr
s ays the Brown adminis tration
is turning to a lax hike as the
only way out of the state's fiscal
crunch, the Sacramento Union
reported today
The news pape r quoted Lu
Haas, Brown's spokes man and
press aide, a s s a y ing that
.. revenue enhancements" a
euphemism for tax increases -
we re likely to be needed to
resolve the dilemma.
State Department of Finance
ofhc1als have projected a $747
million revenue shortfall for the
fi s cal y e ar If eco n o mi c
conditions don"t improve
And the Commission on State
Finance said that s hortfall may
swell to S3 billion during the
1982·83 fiscal year. spurred by a
stagnating economy and the
likely passage next year of two
tax culling 1mt1allves
If approved by voters. the lax
initia tives would full y index
state income taxes to account
for inflation and abolis h the
state inheritance lax
.. We think vou have to go for
revenue enhancements,· Haas
said
H e added th a t t h e
adm1rustrallon is developing a
li st of potential ways to raise
revenues next year
··There's no concept that has
emerged," Ha as sa id ··we
really don't have a feel for the
dimensions or the problem ..
The current year's budgt't
totaled more than $25 4 b1Jhon.
Tlw state constitution prohibits
iJ defi cit
Brown has already called for a
5 IJl'rct'nt cut in the '"baseline"
budget<; of state agencies next
)ear. a move that would save an
e:.t1 m ated $180 millio n The
go\ e rnor has al !>O ca lled a
moratoriu m o n s ta te
construction
Haas said the action was "not
e nough," adding that the
ad m inistralion is considering
··no cost-of-living adjustments
for anyone."
Those cost-of-living raises or
adjus tments, the so -called
COLAs, comprise one or t he
most expensive segments in the
s tale budge t , with each
(See TAXES. Page A2>
'Business1n_an bandit' robs pair
Dave Stockman
coast no show;
budget blamed
FederaJ budget. director David A. Stockman canceled an
a ppearance today in NewPort
Beach ·m order to remain in
Was hington D C t o foc us
attention on thl' nation s latest
budget problem~ ·
··And you u.in read into that
whatever you want.·· s uggested
an aide from Newport Beach
Rep Robert Badha m s offi ce
·oday.
Badham had in vited Stockman
Prime rate
at lowest
level in year
NE W YORK <AP •
Ri>flect1n g o the r d eclinin g
interest rates. several major
banks today lo wered their pnme
lending rate to the lowest level
in a year
C itib a nk . ra nk e d
second largest amo ng U S
commercial banks. a nd First
Nation a l of Chi cago. the
nint h-largest . cut their prime
rate to 16 pe rcent from 16.5
percent Chemical Bank. ranked
sixth largest. foll owed suit
Chase Manhattan Bank, No. 3,
went further, dropping its prime
fro m 16 5 pe r cent to 15.75
percent
The lowest equivalent prime
rate was in mid November 19fM>
when the prime varied from 15.5
percent to 16.25 percent.
Chase today said it lowered its
prime because interes t rates
have been declining and loan
demand slackened.
As an illustration or how other
interest rates ha ve fall en
recently. the Federal Reserve
Board rePorled the federal funds
rate averaged 12.94 percent in
the week e nded Nov . 11 , down
from an average or nearly 14
pe rcent in the previous week
Today. that rate opened as low
as 12 percent
to appear at • noon fUnd-ralller
today at the Marriott Hotel.
The word from Badham's
office today was that Ken
Khachigian. a former consultant
and spt.•cch \H iler for President
Reagan . would fill 1n fo r
Stockman
Stockman. offi cials said. had
-;chedulcd a s peaking tour in
Cahfom1 a weeks before he set
off a wave of controversy by
ra pping P resident Reaga n·s
economic progr a m during a
magazine interview
La te last week . a ides to
Badham said they were told
Stockman would !>llll show up
for h 11; date at the Ma rnott
B) Mo n da), t h o u g h , a
long distance guessing game
bet ween Washington D C and
Or ange County erupted on
whether Stockman·s tour was on
or off
··He finall) cancl'led Monday
al 4 . 15 p.m. Eas tern Standard
Tim e." Badham 's office
reported
In Washington. a s pokesman
for Stockman said the federal
bud ge t direc t or had been
working with the president on an
interim bill to kee p the federal
government operating
The preside nt offer ed the
22-day budget bill after vetoing a
budget bill passed by Congress.
Stockman also was to appear
at an Anaheim fund-raiser for
, Re p Willia m Oa nnemeyer .
R Fullerton
Pair escape jail
PLEASANTON I AP> Two
prisoners at the Santa Rita jail
crawled through the attic or
their barracks, stole a deputy's •
van and escaped, according to
g uards . Lt T. P . Harris s aid
26-year-old Joseph Lloyd
Rom e ro of Oakland and
21-year·old Louis Lee Rieger
escaped Monday night after
hot-wiring a sheriff's van.
Miami crime feared
Burger King move would take 700 jobs
MlAMl <AP> The Burge r King Corp has been based
here since il was founded in 1954 . but company vfficials say
lhey may be moving the corporate headquarters. in part
because of the area's crime rate.
"Burger King chairman Lou Nl'eb has been having
trouble attracting new executives from other parts of the
country. Also. our execut1v~s travel a lo~. and t.hey:r~
becoming afraid lo leave the1r families behind Jn M1am1 .
co·'ounder James McLamore said. !-.. •
McLamore said Dallas was a leading candraale as new
home of the-chain. second only to McDonald's In number of
restaurants.
1 r the company movt!s. 1l would take 700 Jobs with It.
Tim. H.ll5 1uu1111~ tius parkl'cl l>e!i1de tire late.~r n111del 1s lilt' neu mascot
J ramilt "'·''mt IJlllt' <1nre11 b14 Gary Coo,x•r 1t \ lmuu.:11 u.\ Uld Yeller
oa11rl'rl9tstaH-
101 the Urungt' Countl/
'Old Yeller' OCTD's mascot
1925 hand-c rank touring bus brings lore to district
By GLENN SCOTI
Of 111• D•lly l'i"" Si.ti
Just as the U.S Forest Service has
Smokey the Bear, the Or ange County Trans it
District has its image-making mascot
for promotional use for fi ve years. After
riding m it during two parades. Ralph Clark,
chajrman of the d1stnct "s Board of Directors.
suggested buying it
Clark convinced other directors the bus
would be a needed promotional tool for the
district -and that wailing five years until
the contract expired would only increase the
cost.
And guess what? ll"s a bus.
Not just any old bus. This one already
na med ··Old Yeller" for its color l and
perhap~ to add a little sentimentality>. 1s a
four-cylinder. 1925 hand·crank tounng bus
o riginally used in Yellowstone National
Park .
Adding to its lore. the bus was driven by
a young cowboy by lhe name of Gary Cooper.
who after living the hfe or a bus driver
decided he"d rather be an actor.
The transit district s pends more than
$200,000 a year in ad"ertising. i'~unds for the
bus came from a separate discretionary fund
controlled by General Mana~cr James
Re ichert, who negotiated the s ale with
Farell.
Transit district orricials added their
latest and oldest bus to the ranks last week
a fter paying $39,750, including tax, to its
former owner, William Farell of Huntington
Harbour
Farell, retired general manager of the
Long Beach Transit District, said he had no
plans to sell the bus. which he said he's·
driven in hundreds or parades. including
twice in the Tournament of Roses Parade.
"But if I was going to sell it to anybody. I
preferred to sell 1t to OCTD. ·· he said,
<See OLD, Page A2)
Farell agreed m September to lease the
rare. lO·passcnger bus to the transit district
Government doors open again
Reagan approves stop-gap spending measure
WASHINGTON I AP) -The
federal government i~ back In
bu s iness a nd President
Reagan's running budget battle
with Congress is cm hold after .
approval o f a revised
em~rgency spending measure.
"Of cour se, we now must
come back and do the work all
over again In lhtl Congress on a
bill that can be signed," Reagan
said Monday nlaht after he
signed the stop-gap spending
bill, which expires Dec. 15.
Shortly afterward. Reagan left
t h e White House for his
Califor nia ranch, a
Thankseiving1\tacaUon that had
been delayed a day because of
the budget impasse.
In a telephone call from Air
Force One, Re&Jian told lhe
Republlcan Ooverno r1.
Association m eeting ln New
Orleans that the battle with
Congress had been "a game of
chicken , and someone just had
to bring it to a halt ...
Reagan's acceptance or the
measure ended a confrontation
with Congress that led to the
president's rirst veto and the
layoffs of hundreds or thousands
or federal employees.
T he president's supporters In
Congress said the episode was
fresh evidence of R eagan's
resolve to slash federal
spendina.
•But furious Democratic leaders uld the skirmishing
that left the government
technically Insolvent for nearly
67 t)oura wq only ·•a charade."
Reatan beli~ves •'there Is a lot
more work to be done," said
deputy White Ho use pTeat
secretary Larr Speaket. "He'•
looking forward to working with
Congress when he returns."
On Monday, Reagan vetoed a
$428 billion emergency spending
bill, expiring July 15, that a
bitterly divided Congress sent
him Sunday night. The House
th e n voted 367-26 for a
Republican-drafted compromise
that expires Dec. 15 -as
Reagan requested.
The measure Reagan slined
simply extended the interim
spending legislation that expired
at midnight Friday.
Democrats wante<t to extend
Interim spendtng authorlty
throu1h Feb. 3, but the
Republlcan plan wa1 aubaUtuted
on a vote ota2H 76.
T hen the meas\lre aall•d
tttro u1h tbe R•·
pubUCllH:GDtrolled S...te, at.
~
$16,050
taken
in Irvine
A well-dressed man somehow
s l ipped t h rough the Fluor
C o rp ·s extens ive security
system Wednesday a nd stole
$18,050 from two men who were
servicing an automated i.ller machi n e at a satellite
corporation oHice building in
Irvine at Main Street and
Jamboree Road. police said
today.
The armed robbery, the first
ever at the huge e ngineering
corporation. occurred at 3 30
p.m .
· The man dressed in a
two-piece business suit and
carrying a black briefcase was
described as being in his late
· 20's, 5·foot-10 with brown curly
hair and a mustache.
The two e mployees o r
California-Canadian Bank -
Frank Amexcua and Kari KuUer
were forced into a \toreroom
by the man who tndicated he had
a gun m his coat pocket, Police
said. He then forced t he men to
open a safe.
After getting the money, he
tied up the men a nd fled. The
men were able to untie
the mselves and call Police .
The automated teller machine
1 s jus t one or man y such
machines at the Fluor Corp .. a
Fluor spokesman said.
A s pokesman for Fluor said
security officials were trying to
figure out how a person got into
a corPoration building without
apparent authorization.
Policeman mum
LOS ANGELES IAP> -The
lawyer for Signal Hill policeman
Jerry Lee Brown, who discussed
the death of college rootbaU star
Ron Settles in a published
interview, has refused to let
Brown talk to tbe district
attorney's office about the case.
r.iiiiiiiiiiiii-
·ORAIGI COAST WIATHll
Mostly cloudy tonight
with 30 percent chance of
rain tonight. Variable
clouds with local gusty
winds Wednesday. Highs
· 60 to 66. Lows tonight SO to
56.
INSIDI TODY
A Tucson new1paptr i1
publhhing a doil11 sun
intenlity inde.r. ~e Page A7.
'
11011
,
•••••• Orang• Coast DAIL y PILOTfTUHday, November 24, 1981
• I f
I I ' I '
-~-......
}'reezmg ram 011 ll~ated .~1dewalks 1111 tht' \ 1<:01/et .\/111/ 111
downtown i\/1T1111:apol1s produced t/i1,, tog 111\e effect tor
pedf.'stnam;
Snow, freezing rain
travel with death
~Y The Associated Press
I.• Rai n and snow hit large 1'~ections of the West, the central
Ji.':ppalachians and the
'ty1 ississippi and Ohio r iver
·'yalleys today as winter storms
'continued across the northern
''S tates.
'· The latest storms have hit
ttardes t in Minnesota and
'Wisconsin, and the Nat ional
'Weather Service said more snow
'and freezing rain may be in the
'offing for those s ta tes late
J\onight or early Wednesday, and
'\he foul weather could spill into
·"'southern Michigan.
Two d eath s Monda y 1n
·Wisconsin were attributed to
'weat he r . Ch icago & North
'Western Railway conductor Lyle
j\lle n. 50. of Adams slipped on
lee and fell under a freight train.
'La Crosse County authorities
''said. Winnebago County officials
•11s a id Lori Ann Hess. 16, of
J Hartford, died, apparently of
"expos u re, on U.S. 41 near ~Oshkosh. An ice sto rm Monday
.,rp aralyzed much of south~ast
Minn esota. 1nclud1ng
bl M innea polis and St. Paul
JICh ildren ice s kated on the
s idewalks of the Twin Calle!> and
traffic was at a standstill as a
coating of ice seemed to cover
everything.
Even mail delivery was called
off m the Twin C1t1es.
Police estimated that up to 600
vehicles were stuck on a stretch
of f nterstale 94 south · of Elk
River. Minn. between Rogers
and St. Michael Most drivers
had to wast about three hours
before the road was sanded and
they could get s tarted again. ln
E l k River itself. about 100
vehicles stacked up at the
bottom of a hill before police
blocked off the highway
Hospit a ls reported bumps,
bruises and fractures from
people filling on the ice There
were scattered power outages as
well
In Arizona, meanwhile. an
air·pollution alert issued Friday
remained in force for the
northeast and south-central
part s or the Stale for today
lbrough Wednesday, when winds
fro m a PaciUc s t orm are
ex p ect ed to b reak up the
thermal inversion. Phoenix has
been cloaked with high amounts
of carbon monoxide.
Cop's firing of gun
ruled accidental
~ A shooting m which a Laguna
Beach merc ha nt na rrowly
'missed being struc k b y an ~offi cer's bullet has been ruled
'accidental ~Y a police review
~board
"Afte r d iscussin g a nd
I reviewing alJ the faCtS and all
'lhe attendant circu m stances ·~urrounding the incident it was ~unanimously ruled an accidental
j!ischarge," Lt. Terry Temple
·said Monday.
•J1 T h e s ix ·m e mber poli ce
1/irearms discharge board or
r eview m e t last week to
,determine whether Officer Mark
.;Vuille discharged his weapon
with justifi cation Nov. 15 inside
'Jl Laguna ~each jewelry store.
The incident occurred 1ns1de
the House of Tai shop at 917
G lenneyre St. Officer Vuille was
responding to a silent alarm at
the address that had been set off
aragedoor
crushes tot
RANDOLPH, N.J . <A P > A
todd ler died after s he was
pinned beneath an automatic
garage door while her 3-year-old
brother operated the controls.
police said.
Christine Frischmann, l'~.
died Monday on the operating
table in Morristown Memorial
Hospital t wo hour s afte r the
acci d e nt at h er hom e.
a uthorities said.
She s uffered a crushed chest
a nd p unctured heart, police
said.
madvertently by Fred Hershey,
part-owner of the shop.
As Officer Vuille entered the
business through the front door
w i th his weapon 1n hand.
Hershey reportedly came mto
the same room from the back.
The officer discharged his
revolver. sending a round
through a display case The
bullet ricocheted into a wall a
few inches from Hershey's head.
Lt. Temple said the incident
was unintentional. addmg there
would be no disciplinary action
taken against the officer
Big question
• • gets airing
STORM LAKE. Iowa t AP>
She heard it here rirst on the
radio
John Lawson. 24 . sard Laurie
Taefenthaler was sitting on his
lap when radio station KA YL
broadca s t a 30 ·Seco nd
commercial he had bought it
included a happy birthday
message and a ma r riage
proposal.
He said she turned lo him and
said, "You know I will! ..
They tentatively set the
wedding for next September.
4 rescued in fire
PASADE NA t AP l
F1 re fighters rescued a doctor
and three custodial workers who
we re trapped by a lire that
swe pt the fair Oaks Medical
Building. a spokeswoman said.
O"AHOl COAST DailyPHat Cl••alftH ......... 11"'42-117i An ...._ .............. eu-4121 ...... ~ ::.-::i=,--.ec:~CA. ..
~""Or-. Cllll PIA PI C ~. __ .,., ..... , ~ ...... -.... ---·---·"·'* .. ..... ..... ........ -.
YOLN,Mt ••
Road funds fight stalls
Congressmen coaxed for Santa Ana Freeway money
The struggle to entice more
fund s to Improve Orange
County's t.ron~portat1on system
continued Monday as local
leaders couxed congressmen for
funds to widen the Santa Ana
Freewl?y.
Th e occasion wa s a
congression al hearing at ttie
Santa Ana City Coun cil
Chambers 1n which J e rry
Patterson, D·Sunta Ana, and
GI en n Anderson, 0 -Torrance,
received testimony from a
handfuJ of the county's Influence
leaders.
The two congressm en are
members or the subcommittee
on surface transportation to the
llouse of Representatives·
Publi c W o rk s and
Tra nsportation Committee.
That committee is considering
legislation s imilar to a bill
already passed by the Senate
authorizing interstate freeway
widening as part or a natiorual
road maintenance and
reconstruction program.
Local leaders left no doubt
that they back a n y federal
programs l eading to the
expansion of the freeway from
s ix to eight lanes with a new,
s mooth surface.
··Reconstruction o f t h e
existing six-lane facility alone
will simply serve to improve a
m ulli·mtlllon parking lot,"
obser ved Da niel Grisel. a Santa
Ana C ity Councilm a n a nd
m e mber of the cou nty 's
Transportation Comm1ss1on.
In less than four years, Grisel
said. planners think that the
s i x -lane freeway will be so
clogged that rueful drivers will
b e ca ught in "stop.and-go"
conditions on the freeway 12
hours per day
Mo r e than m ere l y an
mconvemence. severe freeway
congestion also means a rough
time for the local econo my,
spea kers sai d . It m ean s
products don't get to the market
on ti me and workers don't get to
their jobs
"We see the haodwr1tang on
the wall, .. cautioned Malcolm
Ross. chairma n of the Orange
County Chamber of Commerce's
Transportation Council.
W hJle local officials are
hoping for federal monev to help
widen the Santa Ana Freeway.
the speakers said more taxes
eventually mus t come from
county residents if &r ealer
impJ"ovement.s are to be m ade.
Irvine Compa ny President
Peter Kre m e r and c ounty
Supervisors Thomas Rlley and
Ralph Clark all s uggested that a
majority of taxpayers will
From Page A1
TAXES • • •
·percentage point in all the
COLAs costing the gene ral fund
about $250 million.
The COLAs include welfare
grant increases, state pay raises
and more than a dozen other
items tied. by law, to inflation
r1scal experts estimate that
an across·the-board freeze on
the COLAs would save the state
about $2 billion but spark a
political firestorm
"All we know is we have to
provide a bala nced budget."
Haas said "It'll probably be a
component or things ...
H aas said Brown plans
meetings with l egis lative
leaders to attempt to achieve a
consensus balancing the budget
lie also said Brown will begin
meetillg soon with his top fiscal
advisers to prepare his 1982-83
budget proposal. whic h 1s
scheduled to be r eleased in
January
Diana short,
gets ahand
TETBURY. England <API
British t abloids said today that
Prin cess Diana didn 't have
enough money to pay for candy
s he bought at a local s tore so her
bodyguard made up the
difference
There was no immediate
co mment from Bu ckingha m
Palace.
T he papers said the incident
occurred Monday at a store In
this Gloucestershire village,
whe re Diana and Prince Charles
have made their home.
The tabloids said she selected
chocolates. fudge and son fruit
chewies costing M.99, fumbled
In her purse but came up short
a n d her bodygua rd detective
handed ove r some money to
make up the difference.
Mishap kills girl
HILMAR <AP> -A 4·year-old
Hll m ar girl was c rushed to
death when she fe ll from a scoo\>'
buc ket on the fr ont of her
rather'• tractor and was crushed
und e r tbe fron t wheels.
au\borit.les re ported Monday.
Julle Andr.cle waa /ronounced
dead or mualve hea Injuries at
Emanuel Hoitpital ln Turlock
ehlr tbe eedclen\ Sf'""d8Y.
'
·-
cons1dur a local soles or easollnt:
tax ll they und e r stand the
money will go on ly toward new
road construction
"We cannot rely on federal
and state aid," said Kremer .
wh o c alled t h e s p ecia l
countywide transportation tax a
"reallsUc part ot the solution "
Clark told the congressmen·
that the county 's plan to
construct a mass transit line to
link Anaheim with the John
From Page A1
W;ayn~ Alrport am\ all the
majo r co mmerc i SP I and
industrial atops In between
wil l help relieve t r affic
congestion. The new desl1n also
would lead t() new higher·denslty
residential development in the
heart of the county w here
middle-Income people can live·
much closer to their jobs. hr·
said.
The mass transit line and th(•
widened eight-lane freeway ar<·
OLD YELLER IN ACTION.
two key pMrll or the count>
Tron1portatlon Commiulon's
'program to relieve conaestlon
along the 110-culled Santa Ana
Freeway Transpor totlon
Corridor.
The cost or the package of
improvements is estimated at S2
billion, which works out to about
Sl .000 per each of the county's
two million residents
-Hy <;t.r;,\ ,\ S('(J'f'/
• •
explaining that his vehicle will get proper
care and shelter.
Farell said he bought the bus in the
mid 1960s from a friend in Utah who had
purchased it from a rancher in Montana who
used it lo transport bis seven children to
school 15 miles away.
an investment as well as a promotional tool
He said an appraiser valued Jt at $60.000
once several repairs are made.
The bus will be repaired by district
mechanks early next year. he said
"After they all finished school, they just
more or less parked it." Farell said.
After that. it will be entered m all of the
major parades in Orange Coun ty, from the
Garden Grove Strawber ry Festival to the big
July Fourth p-rade in Huntington Beach.
This bus was one of the few models that
was not destroyed at the national park in a
garage fire in the 1930s. he added. Farell said
it a lways draws a response at parades and
will prove to be worth the exi>ense.
"It's one of the best m arketing tools they
could buy," said Farell "I know. I'm very
promotJon-minded myself "
But first, it wall once again grace
Colorado Boulevard an Pasadena on Jan I ,
1982. Part of the sales agreement mcluded a
stipulation that F arell gets to use it for the
last time to fe r ry the president of the
Tournament of Roses Association an the
prestigious event.
Mic h ael B a rnes. the di s t ric t 's
com munications director, said the bus will be
But never fear, says Farell The transit
district's new image will continue to roll on
"As long as they keep it up," he said.
"that bus will run forever " •
Oil world warned of shock
Current worldwide surplus called temporary
VIENNA CAP> The current
worldwide surplus of crude oil 1s
a te mporary cond1t1on that could
end with a "Jarring shock,"
Sa udi Arabia's oil m inis ter
Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani said
today
·'The ex1stmg 011 surplus 1n
the market doesn't mean the end
of the energy problem ," Yamana
said at a sem inar sponsored by
the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries.
·'Th ts is a trans te nt phase
during which many may relax in
the sense of false security that it
gives," he said. "but al the end
of which may cause the m a
jarring shock."
Many energy analysts believe
the oversupply of oil on world
markets will end sometime next
year with a rebound in economic
ac tivity and a continue d
drawdown of 011 stocks held by
the international oil companies
Yamani. whose country 1s the
lar gest source of imported oil
for the United States, warned
that oil·rmporting countries
might be poorly prepared for a n
end to the oil s urplus. and "they
wi ll once again look to OPEC for
comfort."
Sepa rately, Iraqi Oil Mmister
Abdul Karim charged th .. t the
Untted States had led an effort
to mani puf~e oil s tocks and
bring prices down
His remark implied that Saudi
Arabia . wh i c h kept 1t ir.
production hi gh despite protests
from other OPEC m embers,
p l ayed into the hands of
industrial 011 consumers
Karim said the surplus was a
threat to OPEC membe r
countries. and complained about
the organization's inabthty tu
·produce oil at the rate at which
1t wants."
Yamana, whose country ts
known to oppose programmed
011 production within OPEC. said
later that K ar i m 's s peech
represen ted m ostly Iraqi
views ..
Victims' hairs Illatch Bonin's?
Criminologist testifies in Freeway Killer trial
By JACKIE HYMAN ._ ............. ~
LOS ANGELES An expert
criminologist testified that hairs
found on three Freeway Kille r
victims appeared to match those
of defendant William Bonin.
· · l found the physical and
m icroscop1e characteristics to
be consistent with having come
from William Bonin," said Los
Angel es Coun t y S h eriff's
Criminologist James G. Batley.
who srud he also compared the
hairs lo those of more than half
a dozen other suspects and ruled
them out
Bonin. a 34 -year-old truck
driver from Downey, is charged
with 12 murders of young men
a nd boys whose bodies were
' found dumped near Southern
California freeways, leading to
the case's Freeway Killer tag
Bailey said hairs found on the
bodies of J ames McCabe, 12. of
Garden Grove. Rona ld Craig
Gatlin . 18, of Van Nuys. and
Marcus Grabs. 17, of Germany,
were "consistent" with Bomn's
hair
H owever , under
cross-examination. he said. "I
can never be absolutely certain
that a h ai r ca m e fro m a
particular person ...
Batley said stat1st1cs weren't
available to indicate the
percentage of probability that a
h air actually be longed to a
person whose hair it seemed to
m atch.
''It 's true there are no
percentages available." he said
"However. experimentally I've
eliminated something like 10 or
11 different people. so that
s hould give you some idea of
how strong the identification is."
Among those he ruled out, he
said. were Vernon Butts, J a mes
Munro and Gregory Miley.
Butts, who was charged 10 six
of the Freeway Killer murders,
committed suicide in his jail cell
on J an. 11, the coron.er's office
has said Munro has pleaded
guil ty to one cou nt of
'Extend a
eompCime~ ...
....
se cond·d egree murder and
tes tified against Bontn
M lley. 20. whO pleaded guilty
to two counts of first-degree
m urder , co n cluded has
testimony agamst Bonm. dunng
which he described .in gruesome
detail the torture-strangulation
murders of twv youths.
The witness. who has been
diagnosed as having an rQ of 56,
described the r eb 3, 1980.
killings of Charles Miranda. 15.
and young McCabe
However, he admitted under
cross-exammat1on that he could
not at first identify photographs
of the two youths.
"Is it true that the only reason
you can 1dent1fy these two
pictures is because the police
told you who they were" .. asked
d e f e n se attorney Wi l li a m
Charvet. who is representing
Bonm
"Yeah," Miley replied.
JS f'AIHtON ISLAND
NaWl'OltT~ ",., .......
'
Mojave Indian
chief recalled
Fort Mojave Indians voted
to recall Tribal Chairman
Llewellyn Barrackman and
his wife. Betty. by margins
or better than 12 to 1. the
Bureau of Indian AUu1rs
"aid
The un0Cftr111I vote was
124· l I in ravor or reculling
Barrackman and 124·10 in
ravor or recalling hill wife
trom her post on the tribal
council, a<.'l'Ording lo Allen
Anspach or the BlA's tribal
operations oHtce in Phoemx.
The 757 m e mber tribe ,
headquartered in Needles.
OWn!_\ a 41,884 acre triangle or
land in Arizona, Cahtornw
and Nevada
T h e National P ortrait
Gallery 111 London says the
Princess or Wales' offic ial
1Jortra1l. slashed las t August
b~ a protester from Northern
l rcland, will return to public
d1spla)
Tht• offH·1al portrait ol
P rin<.'L'S!'> Diana has been
lull) restored a nd will go on
'1ew this wct•k the N at1oni.1l
l'ortr<11I Galll1n annoum•cd
4'P.,..,. ....... ~
.\1/rt,'S.\ l.u111 \11<it'f\l)I/ Ill 1\1\/(/• /II (/ll<Pll/•I· ·, ,. ,.,.,
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Tht· p a1nt1 n g. 111
w ate r bast'd ;u·n·lll·s on
l·ann1s. portra)s the former
L a d y I> 1 a n a S p e n t' e r .
wl'anng iln informJI pants
!'oUtl. '>t'Ult•d bdorc a dr:.iwin~ ·
room d oor 1n Buck1nghJm
Pali.In'
i\l'lor Ed Asner plays t he
rnlt· ol newspaper editor on
tt•lt•v1Mun and labor leader 111
rt•al hf<· hut ht• had only
h.irsh \\ord'> 101 buth the
r1 (.'S!'o ancl thl' lei.tdl•rs or
Amt·nn1·:-. h1g unwns
Soml·Whl·n• along tht'
t11w l h•ll uut ol love \\Ith lhl'
111 t·ss, ..,;11d ,bner, s lJr of
I ht> l' HS tt•l t•\ 1s1on )'.ho\\ ·Lou
1;rJnl ahout J dail~
Ill•\\ ... papt•I
Tht• tununi.: prnnt ea mt•. ht·
\<lid. \\Ith thl'
non < m t·ragl.' ul a ... tnkt'
"' t ht• Si· n•t•n \dtir" <; ulld
ol "'h1th ht• " tht• ne "'
p1 l''oldl•nl
\..,nt•r \\a)\ in lh·s ~1 01111'' to
'Jll•ak al a t·t•lt•hrat1on lot tht'
\ mt·ric·an l''t•der<J t 11111 of
l.<.1bn1 s IOOth h11thda'
Forml'r L' S Ht•µ ltob('rt
Ka um an of :\I Jr~ land !'o<lld
thJt hl' ha.., 1kJlt '>U<'t'C'"!'ofull~
\\ 1 t h h 1 s a I 1· oho 11 !'om a nd
ho most.·xuahty i.tlld inte nds to
run agarn Cor the seal he lost
lai.l year
p11•1/111; •' /itc 1111 •I \/ ' ,,, ;}411• 11 ti •• ti • • }1. ; •• "
T h l' 4 4 v C' <1 r o I d
l{cµubl1tan. wh·t> held Lhe l~t
D1 slritt c·on~re!>s 1 onal SC'al
lor e 1~ht years. Si.lid at a
IH'\\s tonfe re nte. ·1 t·an ll'll
.' ou th<1t tb1..· µroblems are
11' t•r .ind done"' 1th
ti/II,/ \I "//hit I 11//1/11// t ij i' ,; '"' d. "';>1•1 ' ,, • .I I . ,,
'I I . ,,
;t•1 'th.'
•• t /t 1: .. . . ' .
~\" 'f.\~ Outlook cooler Tuesday
Coastal
Occ•\1ona1 a.gnt r •1n 1onui)ht
P•f1fy ctouoy 1na coot VH-CJl\f'Wl•'t
With QU\h 'tlltlnG~
C.O•\t•t. 1n1•na to.,,.\'" 1iCk l<hnt•I
Int.Ind n1Qll• in 60\ W•t•• •1
~ls,ewF\tr• t1Qrtl v•tt•blf' w1nO\
n1Qht ano n'4tn1nq haur\ c.c.onn"O
~\l to \C>Ulf'l~I 11 10 n knoll 1n
atl•rl'\oon\ I wo to J too·1 wt'\lf'rl'f
\wetl P~cre>I S to I ff'f'1 outer 'llll;•llf'\
~•n N !COi.Ji Island nortnw d'U
C.louor
U.S. sumniary
FtH'llf'"Q r•m MlO \Ifft f\ave l •llf'n
f rom nortnwt\lttrn ltt1no1\ to
toulhfi•lltirn M1rwws.ot• •nd turned to
Extended
outlook
!>CIV1'1lkN l4'll~VkNIA
(Jf,~~ kl 4'!<lAS MO\lh <I•••
wtndy •nd coot th1t o•rtl't t tuudy
41 11n•l*' not In oort10f"I\ H19fl\ .o to~~
O•f'r\\ v~Ulf"t 011\f'r••w h tCJ ~~
UPPflr ~W'' I\ •"0 ·~ IO 1) tow fr
OE-Wt ts l-OW'\ 1) to J) Owt<n\ V•11r.,
J) to 4) ue>o.t °"\erh dn<t ·~
loweor c:JfWrl\
LOA~IAL ANO MOlJNIA1N
4RlA~~ NllHll• t.l••r •~C•Pf \Ofnf'
ctouO\ •t t1mt\ '" tnf norlf\t'ff'I
moul'\l••n\ '#ftnd~ .ti t1Mt\
M a1ntv 1n moul"ltcun\ In tOd\ttll
•reat. HtQt\s •2 tO 11 lOW\ 1n
.Os •n<t ~ SO\ N.cM.wn••n n19n\ JI
to•) LOW\ in 10\ •ncl to"""' J(j'
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8•tt1mort'"
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(f'Mr tUn Vv\I
C.MytnM
(n•< •90
tolum~
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Honolulu
1nor•o11•
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Junf'•u
0
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3• so lO S.n D••QO .. )/ I• ~n f-f".tn 6) )4 peoolt' trom ,~.,-10b\ ttno torc1~
\OMf' \Choo&\ to Clow
l ne s1ee1 ••s ~•"••it Mona••
arounct M1ntW•PC>tt\ •ncl ~t Paul,
•ni<h l\.o ttnt st~rtf'O 10 re<OY•r from la4'1 .._,,.., i 10.inch \nowr4'11.
•no m•ny 'choois l Ourls ctno
Ubr•r1t'S Wftfl <.I0\#0 T hou1 f~lilr
1\•I• tme>IOW'f'\ wno 90t 10 worti
\fer• WM nome Mlnnupoli\ St p..,1 1n1ern.1t10MI
A1rport NI~ IM1<11ng\ I« •l>Out •
nau nour 10 lft crtwo t.•no '""
rut"nir•ys
The St P...,1 F '' • O.c>trlnwnt \•10 par•mtOI<\ ·~soono•o to 1s
•••tMr·r .. etPG calh 1n • •• ,.r.our
pertod, most H'lvofv1n9 tr~uturt\
wttereo 1n 1•11•
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Mlnnewt• to IM t•iltrn O•kol•\ •ncl
ac ros' Wt\COns1n •no norlhr-rn
1111001$ I~ Sckith U.kot• Hl9nwo
Patrol .ci'll'l'.O no lr•vt!I '" ""'• north••ilfrn countitt
A•fn fetl from soutl'W'rn M1nour1
into i.ot..nhetn tt"Kt1•rw •M .... ,,.,"
pert• of Kentu0¥ ano i.nn .. see
R:•6n1h0w~r\ we,.e K•H•ttO 011u
II\• Pa<1f1t MOtlhw•'' •nd horn
nof'lM,.n C..t1f0fn•• lo nonMrn Ut•n
tdaf'to •nd we\tetn Mont•n• h•d
l'IOW
CIOu<ly •l11n eatenoeo throuc;in tllt/!
nortll.,n -<enl••• Roolt/!s co In.
f\Jgf\ Pl•un1. •no oYe,. lhe lo••'
Mlu1u1pp1 V•lley •no •tton
P"'nlylv..,I• 1n10 New Jersey •nd
western New E"91and ~ 1w1.ieo sno .. fell ea•I 01 '"•
lower G•HI UlH h m,...atUf"H •rouno 11 .. .,.,'°"•I
2 p m E!'>l r...,i from• 1-01 n •t
Braolord, Pe., to a n1911 01 " •I
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tot •II •rf'•\ ot th£ "°"" lO•'' •. , twun
AQM[.I r•t1n9\ •rt-a~ IOllOrw\
QOOCI 0 100 unn.taltn,u1 tot \f'n\1ttv•
peop•t. 10\ 200 u"n••llMul for
•'-'f'f0nf IOt·lOO •no na1•rOOu\
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Sun "''' • •• p m • rt1e 1 Weo,.uo.y • l.I • m
M oon Uh 4 01 pm., rl u t 'i\ltoneMllly s lS• m
We're Listening ...
What do you ltk~ about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like?
Call th(' number below and your message will be recorded.
transcribed and delivered to the appropr iate editor.
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ters to the editor on any topic Mailbox contributors must include
their na me and telephone number for verification. No circulation
calls. please
Tl'll us what's on your mind
642•6086
I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, November 24, 1981 s
Transit
plan
hacked
A bout 150 senior c 1t1zens
cr owded into the meeting room
of the Orange Co unt y
Transportation Comm1ss1on
Monday to urge support of a
pla n to <'O n so lidat e
trans portation services ror the
cou nt y's soc ial se r v ices
agencies.
If the sp ectators expected
confrontation. however. they
didn't get 1t. The commissioners
said they, too, like the idea of
combining the services.
According to a consultant's
report ordere d b y the
tom mission. 259 social services
agencies in the tounty provide
some type of transportation for
their clients Ninety-one of them
own their own vehicles.
Most of lhose agencies do not
belong to a t·oordtnated network
aimed at 1nneas1ng efficiency
a nd keepin1< costs down. the
con!>ultant contluded
l'nder the plan µroposed by
UAVE Consulting Inc . all of the
a gcn ties would be united under
a tcntral1led ag(.•nty the
Commu n1t ~ Dcvt>lopmenl
Council that would coordinate
driver train ing. insurance,
equipment purchi.tsing. vehicle
maintenance. ac(·ounting and
refrrrals.
The program 1s expectt'd to
t a ke three years to put anto
l'ffet·t
Most of the seniors attending
the c·omm1ss1un meeting at the
county Hall of Administration in
Santa Ana seemed to believl'
that the central1zl.'d scr\'1ce
would increase their ab1lil\ to
find rides to hot lunch program~.
cl o ct or-.; off 1 el':. a n cl sot· 1 ill
arl1v1t1es
One native said transportation
ha' become more d1fhcult from
tht• time when he was a child
i.tnd residents had tht•1r nv.n
hor!>es and bugg1e)
C11mm1si.wn mt'mbl'r:. •Hl'
st•ht•cl ule<l to take action on the
recommend at 1on to l"u nsuhdi.tlc
the i.en1n• at lht•1r meeting tn
two' \\eek., The t·onsol1dataon
s tudy \.\as mandakcl by the !>late
lcg1!->latun·
Judge nixes
telephone
solicitations
A Tustin man has bt•en
ordered by a n Orange Count~
Superior Court Judge to ccai,e _a
telephone )o.Ollc1tal1on campaign
in whic h callers fall to d1i.<'lose
th<.il onl\ half of the
contnbul1on., go lo 1·h.inl~
Wilham Wilkins was l!'oSued
the restraining order b) Judge
Thomas Crosb\ The order
enJOins Wilkins ·rrom represent·
ing incorrectly that he is a
volunteer and a doctor seeking
charitable donations for the Ray
of Hope activity center for men·
tally reta rded people.
W1lk1n!'o w as a ll egl•dl ~
sulH·1ting the c·ontnbut1on' for a
c h aritable C hristmas party.
ael'orcling lo thl· lawsuit filed
l a -. t "' t• c k b ' D 1 a n e
Stavenhagcn . dcµul) dist rict
attorney in Orange County
Tickets to lhl' event we rl' sold
for SS each. but Wilkins did not
re\ c·al to donors that half the
money was u :-.c d t o µay
personnel making the calls and
l'Olll•Ct1n~ lht• money Ms
St a vt•nhagcn said
Offle1als at the Ray of llope
n•ntl'r told investigators they
"er<' unav.are of possible illegal
aC't1v1t1e!>. a nd were he lpful
during an under
With the approaching holiday
aeason we would Ilk• to lake
this opportunity to think our
frtend1 •nd customers for the
goodwill •l).d 1oy1lty that hal
helped to build our buslnen
b1g;er and better eY*'f year
APWI .........
NEAT SLICE B .1111Jl 1~ Huht· .r nll·mlH·1 111 1111· \ll1l'l ll".t11
H1111llll'I ;Jill-! I l'.llll do"l'" 111.., l'\ l'" lrul lllJllJJ..!l .... 1 ... nult· .1:-
lll· ... 1111\\:-Ito\\ 111 l Ill .111 .1ppll· 111 Ii.ill du1111g p1 .r1·l ll"l' lor t ht·
\u .... 11.cl1.1 \11ll·111·.1 B 1111mt·1;.i111.! ll·,1111 ~\tllll'' \1hl1.rl1.1
MS patients told
new drug perilous
By JODI CADENHEAD
Of Ille O•llY PllOI Slitff
Multiple sclerosis patients
shoul dn "t become to o
o pt1m1s 111· a bout published
repor t s h era lding lht·
tOntrovers1al drug interferon as
u new effect1vt-tre atment. sa vs
Or Sti.tnley van den Noort. Ot.>an
of the l 'C lrv1ne Medical School
An article published Frida) 1n
Sc·1entl' magazine .,ays th<il
patients trC'<.iled al <.i Buffalo
hospital with the a nti ·\ 1ral
c hem1t·al s howed improvement
in their d1sea:.c. compared lo
another group gi ven standard
treatment
Dr van den Noorl. who serves
ai. c hu1rman of the medic<.il
advisory board of the Mult1plc
Sl'll.'ros1s Sot1et). said that
pubhtat1on of the s tud) done ill
the Dent Neurolog1c Ins titute at
M ii lard Fillmore llosp1tal tn
Huffalo on 12 human subject!>
was pre mature
· · 1 would consider that a pilot
sludy," he sard ··1 don·t think 1
would have published it because
the numbers are loo sm a ll · ·
The head of the lJC Irvine
medical school said interferon 1s
too scarce and expensive a drug
lo be offered as a ho perul
weapon again s t the slow!\
progressive disease UHtt affects
the br<.i tn a nd spina l cord
Toys sought
for Indians
Tht• A:.s1st;ince Le<.iguc ol
Laguna Reach l!'o -,eek1ng
d on.il1on!-o of <1 1111!-o .... tuffl'<l
animals. toy ... and gaml')\ to g1vt·
lo Indian t•h1ldren at Chri..,lmJ!>
/\::.\!'>lance l.l'.rgUl' \olunteer.,
t•mpha)o.l/.l' thl' dolls a nd toys do
nnl n<•cd to bl' OC'\\ That·.,
b cca u..,c the group h old.,
\\Orkshops each Fndil) mormng
b eg1 nn1ng at 10 t o repair
old to)S ill lhc chaµtl'r hou~e at
517 Catalina St
If ~nu \\ould like to donatt•
g ifts. cas h for ga:.olmt• and forn1.
or help repair toy)\ l'Jll 494·609i
o r d r o p h ) t h e L l' a g u t• ...
l'urnabout Thrift Shop at 526
G ll•nncyrl' St
<@
riiEM WISE
··Even 1f we had interferon tu·
the bucketful ll probably wourd
not be th(' answt.'r to Ms:· said
Dr van den Noort in a telephone
1nterv1e"' · Ba ... ed o n an
underst anding of how interferQn
works, the chances 1t will make
the patient worH' arc a bolit
equal to the chance:-. IL \\ill make
them better ··
Interfe ron 1s a rare and eosth
drug thill has gained fam e 1n
experimental canter treatment
l11ghly purified blood s amples
li.tkcn from 12 donors would be
0(.'l'ded lor o n e dose or
interferon. said Or 'an den
;-.; oort
It 1s almost useless lo d1~<'uss
the drug unlit ne~ technique.,
make mas) production possible.
he added
l''or the las t year the MS
Sot1ety has been conducting
t ltn1cal studies of its own 1n San
U1 ego and San Francisco on
abuul 100 pati e nt s u si n g
rnlerreron Those tests will be
completed m about s ix mon°'5.
according t.o Dr. van den Noort..
Dr van den Noort said he
t!x pe c t e d th ose f1 nd1ngs
involving more p~tients would
be more conc lusive than the
!>tudy done in Buffalo
Coast trash t
pickup to he [
delayed2days
R u b b 1 s h pi c k 1.t p w 111 b~e
delayed one d ay beg1n nin~
Thurs da y beeause of
Thanksgiving j
Hesidents wh ose r egular
service day 1s Thursda) will
h ave their trash p icked up
f''rrday. while Friday ~ervicc
customeri. will have ser vice Ofl
Saturday Regular!) schedulep
service will resume Monda);'.
Nov 30
Communtt1es inc luded 1n the
holiday schedule ar e Lagun'a
Beach. H untington Beach.
Newport Beach. Irvine. Costa
Mesa. Fountain Valley. Lagurla
:"i1guel and Dana Point.
C ity halls will be c lose'(!
Tbursday ilnd Frida
'
Ac~Gtll----
la••W
We shall a1w1ys try to merit
your confidence. We are
grateful for ~ contributloM
10 our Mite.a Met wtlh to aend you end ~ur_ femur
gl'Mtlnge .. ""' ~ '"'°" . ''°"' -...,. • Ch!! ... H. lerr Jta1Mlt:L --.-1~,_. ... .,.,4
-~------~~---....-----~--~~~~~--~--------------------................................................................................... ~ ............ 1111 ........ "'
A 4 s Orange Coeat DAILY PILOTfTutaday, NO'ltmber 24, 1981
Oil firm seeking
niore Libyan crude
Bv lbe A.uoclaled Press
M aratbon Oil Co. has said
it Is negotiating with Libya to
Increase purchases of crude oil
from that North Africa nation,
and a trade Journal has reported
that Italy is considering raising
its crude purchases from Libya
,Marathon ·s disclos ure
Monday followed a report by
Conoco Inc on Friday that
Libya had offered a reduction Of
about Sl. to about S36 a barrel
on an interim basis,.. 1n the
price Conoco pays for the crude
1l helps produce for Libya .
Conoco called Liby a 's offer a
·i.1gnificant move·· but added
that it was "still not compet1t1ve
enough in the c urrent t'rude oil
market.·· Conoco said 1t had no
immediate plans to buy any
Libyan oil at the new price.
lt was reJ)9rted in London on
S unday that Libya 's official
news agency had quoted the
Libyan otl !>ecre tariat a s
denying it had offered a pnce
1 eduction.
··These false report s are
designed to weaken the unity of
OPEC ... the news agenc) JANA
said. Under the Organ1zat1on of
Pe troleum Exporting Countnes·
rt•<:ent pricing agree ment. Libya
~as allowed to charge up to S4 a
barrel above the c artel ·s
he nclimark of S34. It set its
ufficial selltng price at s..17 50
Marathon. whic h 1s a me mber
of the Oas is oil consortium that
includes Conoco and Amerada
lless Corp . declined to s ay
whether it had bet!n offered any
price l'On cessaon The Oasis
group produces a large p0rt1on
of Libya's oil
William Ryder, a spokesman
at Marathon's 1''tndlay , Ohio.
headquarters. s aid company
ofhc1als had been negotiating lo
increase Marathon's s hipments
from Libya. Those talks are now
in suspension, but Ryder said
Marathon believed it had "the
basis for ongoing discussions ··
H , would not elaborate
Marathon had taken an
ave rage of 17.300 barrels of
crude a day from Libya during
the third quarter and an average
64 ,300 daily an the firs t nane
months of the year Ryde r said
th~ company took no 011 an
Ot·tobcr and only one shipment
so far this month lie declined lo
d is close the s ize I)( the latest
s hipment
Meanwhile, a '.'11.•\\ York-based
trade Journal re p o"rted that
ltalv'!> state-owned 011 company
AG. I P wa s con s 1d e r1 n g
increasing its c rude imports
from L1bva in reaction to import
cutback:; recenth announced by
ltahan private 01i <·ompanies
Platt's Oilgram News quoted
a n un1dent1fied s ource in Rome
a s s aying Italian authorities are
c ons ide ring every possible
s ource of s uppl). including
Li b ' a It al ) !> prl\ ate o il
companies had been taking an
a\'l'ra~e of about 285.000 barreb
of 011 daily from Liby a durang
th1.• first nine months of the ye<ir
but halted all purchases last
m onth. Platt·!> said
"
'
.. ,, ...........
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11111ltt l•llh
Ethics office
probes Allen '8
l
....
sale of firm
WA S Jll NUTON 1AP 1
Nutlonu l 1rnc·1ulty '"lviaur
Rlc hurd V Allti11 w1·otu In a
aovt.1rnmtJnt rtn1mclul dl1c·I01ure
11tutumunt thut hr 11old hi•
con~ulllnM rirm In J1tnuury 1978.
but now, uccordlna to u White
llo u11u luwyt>r, uya the s11le
ul'luully took JlhH.'l' l'Urly this
)'N.11'
Quu1tlonl'd about the ule
thlle, White llOWle counsel f'rcd
i''ltll<llnti uld Allen sent hani a
mtimo lu11t week l'IU.1tang that hv
hud miatakcnly put down the
19711 dahl unrl hud mtiant to wrik
Junu11ry 1981
In llw dllll'losurt• statement,
Oll'd lust February, Allen suad
hi' 110 lonli(t'r wui. president of
Potomiu-lnternallonul Corp. us
of Junuury 1978, und added in
punrntt\eiws "sold bu111ness ··
Hut l''lt-ldmg could not explain
why , it the s ule of Potomac
I nttl rnullonul hud occurred In
J u11uur> l!J81 . thl·re was no
rnc111111n of cllht•r lhl' 1;ale or
Allen·h r1•t•ent owncn1h1p of the
11rm under tht! tn('O mt' and
U!>!>l'I!> se<·taon of I he fanancaal
4 UC'>tlOllllUI rt'
Hob Flynn, an offtcaul of the
Government Ethic· it Office, s aid
Monday that 1f Allt.>n hud made u
l'Upttul NUin on tht' i.alc of the
farm, thul C1mount i.hould have
bee n lasted undt'r 1nt·ome
Fl y nn als o i.aad f ed eral
re~ulutlon !> r e quar .. that
nom inces last on tht.•11· d11>l'losun•
1>tatemcnt11 a ny 1ntcre~t m u
bus iness held al the end of the
pre~edang calendur year
ldcnttCled, said Hannaford had
ktpl details of the purchue
"elose to his chest "
Hannaford Is a rormer aide to
Reagan and a past business
purtner of Michael Deaver, one
o f Reagan's top three White
!louse aides.
On the White Hou11e disC'losure statem~nt . Allen said that he
had received a S75.000 salary
from Potomac Internation al m
1980 and had been pres ident of
the l'onsultang rirm from Au~ust
1972 to January 1978.
But Potomae lnternational"s
corporutt.' report!> on rile with
the Distric t of Columbia, las t<.-d
Allen as president of the firm
through its latest annual report,
dated March 13. 1980
Know ingly a n d willfully
statmg false information on a
government financial disclosure
s tatem e nt 1s a felon y
punishable under federal lav.
b) a fine up to Sl0.000 and up to
fi ve years m prison. ac·cord1ng
to the ethics office
Allen could not ~ r eac·ht'd for
tom ml'nl o n his d1~dt1!>u re
1>tateme nt . but Pe ter Uatle}
Allen s !>pokes m a n , r eferrt-d
l"tt lb Lo Faeldmg. who be'ldes
twang White !louse coun!>el had
represented Allen before lhl' l 'A 11
m e n ente r e d the R t'agd n
ad m 1mstrat1on
Task force upgraded to major command
Peter Hannaford . owner of the
Hannaford Corp . has 1>a1d the
firm acquired Pot o ma c
International on Jan 18. 1981 ,
t wo days before Pres ident
Reag an 's inauguration and
thret.' days before Allen received
Sl,000 tn cash from a Japanese
journalist who had interviewed
firs t lady Na'ncy Reagan
He sent me a note la!>t "~k
and s aid h e had m a d e a
mis take ... Fie lding told The
Associated Press S unda) night
l-'1elding noted that A llt!n .sbo
made m1stakes m his d1 !><.·lo-.ure
s tatement on the date o r his
White ltou!>e appomtment and
the filing date . putltnli? dc1\\n
· · t981l · for both whe n he had
m eant 1981
The Jus t1 C'e De pa rtment is
co nduc tin g a prt'l1m111.iq
tnV(.'St igC1t1on or Alle n s reC0l'IPl
or the Sl,000 from a J ap.int'!>e
JOur n al1 i.t to see If an
independent s pecial proseC'utor
!>hould be appointed.
WASHINGTON 1AP1 The
P c ntagoo has upg r a d ed a
~mall task force at Key West ,
Fla .. mto a major com mand of
l ' S forces in the Caribbean
The ne w Carabbean command.
lt1n1ted al the southern lip or
Vlorida. wall have no forces
assigned to at permanently , but
will be able to draw on US.
Navy units in the area plus
Army and Air Poree elements if
required.
The Pentagon did not directly
answer whether this move is
re la ted to pos!>able l ' S m1litar)
optio ns reported unde r stud)
ll o \\cver . th e P e nt ago n
aC'knowll•dgl'd Monda) that the
aC't1on ··reflel'l!'> the contmuinlo(
L'S interes t 1n th e vita l
Canhbean are a
The command amounts to J n
expani.1on in the importance of a
Contangt!nty Tai.k Fon·e c reated
b y fo rme r President Carter
about two years ago, when the
United States was objecting to
the presence of a Russian
brigade in Cuba
Ros si gnol, Nordica, Head ,
Cc ~·er, Garment, Hanson,
Saloman and more .•.
e
Backpacking Equipment
and Clothing
Secrl'tan of State Alt.'x ander
M lla1g . and P res1de nt1a l
Coun!>1.•lor Edwin Meese 111
10d1cated that lht.' t.;nited States
m ay tx.• aµproac hing a decision
point on ho" to deal with the
C1llegl'd rn1 lt ta r) buildup an
(('fta!>t rull'd ~1caragua
Adm1nistrat1on o fflcaals have
accus ed the Cubans of funneltng
arms into Nicaragua and have
claimed that s ubs tantial
amount.s of such arms have been
tra.nssh1pped lO leftist guerriUas
m El Salvador
W l'inlx·r~e1 ~:.11d Sund a) that
then.· as (·ont1ngt'nC) plannang
going on to look at what !'>hould
hl' done or "hat s hould bl'
recomme ndl•d ·
In announn ng the upgrading
of the Contmgenn Ta sk Force
1nto a m aJOr t·om mand. the
P e nt<igon !'>aid ab are a o f
rt.•i.pons 1b1l1 ty wall include
w u ter!> a nd 1!>lands of the
Caribbean Sea. Gulf of Mexit·o.
und portions of the Pacific
Ocean bord•r1n~ Central
Ame rica
Howeve r, when a sked Sunday
night from whom his company
had bought the cons ulting nrm.
Hannaford said ... no comment
You c ould a s k me 25
questions. but all you're going to
~et 1s no comment · · Other past
a nd current officials of the
Hannaford Corp. a lso refused lo
discuss who had ow11ed the firm
before Hannaford bough t it
One, who askea not to be
A'lle n s aid he received the
money on Jan 21 after helping
t o j:l rran gt.' the 1n ten 1e w
between a Japanese wome n s
magazine and Mrs Re <.1gan
Allen said the money \\as
intended as an honorarium for
Mrs Reagon, but that he
intercepted the SI.000 to avoid
embarr~sang the first lad)
Obermeyer, H.C.C., Roffe,
Kite)., Veleda, Gerry, C olmcr ,
Demetre and more ...
g • ••
ln3Days Tennis Equipment
and Clothing
Up To 80% and more
Starting Fri., Nov. 21·, 10 am
.. -... ~ -.-,.....-~--. ----.-,-
Sat., Nov. 28, 10:00 am
Sun., Nov. 29, 12:00 pm
9:00 pm
6:00 pm
5:00 pm
Ilea ch
I I
)
I
j ,
--~-------.-.-.....~~------~---------l!l'J!
Orange Coast DAILY PfLOTffueeday, November 24 , 1981 s Al
~UffiU~
Temporary tangled speech eyed
Study indicates women more likely to stutter just before menstruation
LOS ANGELES <API
Everybody stutters, althoush
most or us don't stumble to the
Point of speech disorder. But a
new s tudy indicates normal
women are more likely to
develop minor speech problems
when their stress levels are
considered highest. just before
menstruation.
The rePort introduced over the
weekend at the a-nnual
convention or the American
Speech -Language -He a ring
Association seems likely to
generate the same controversy
as its 1975 predecessor. which
angered women's rights groups
with its focus on b1ologically
induced beh.av1or
"The ERA folks jumped all
over when the original study
ca m e out -·why are you
p1ckin1 on women?' " said
Valerie Tallman. a graduate
student at the University or
Southern lllino1s, Carbondale,
who co-authored the latest study
with Dr. Gene Brutten.
"It's true there are four males
for every female stutterer," s he
said in an interview Friday,
"but the profession has taken
the position that negative
emotion is the basis of
s tuttering No one has
e~tabLished a wide nuctuation in
emotions among men the way
anxiety levels in women have
been tied to menstruation."
A I t h o u g h o n e m i 11 i 011
Americans suCCer pathological
stuttering, Ms. Tallman noted
that "all people have some of its
components. our ·urns and ahs ·
our ·you knows· what we call
interjections.
"We all repeat words and
phrases. revise our statements
or fail to complete sentences.
but those problems aren't
commonly associated with
negative emotions, as stuttenng
is."
ln the initial study, two of
those stuttering components -
interjections and revisions
Old Titan missile site sold
Surplus dealer trades land, $15 ,000 for facility
CHICO (AP) An obsolete
Titan intercontinental missile
site near here complete with
underground tunnels, rooms and
silos has been purchased by a
Manteca government s urplus
dealer
Robert Lague got the 51 acre
site on a rocky hill north or this
Sacramento Valley city for
Sl5,000 plus 104 acres of for est
land in S1Hra County. the
General Services
Administration said
Lague couldn't be reached
immediately, but his wife.
Margaret, said he had bought
the salvage rights to the
installation for SI ll ,000 in 1971
She said he stopped "tearing it
apart" in 1973 and had been
negotiating ever since for the
property itself. She said they
had "just been sitting on it,'·
with a security guard protecting
things
When he bought the salvage
rights. onl y the missiles and the
electric generators had been
removed. Mrs Lague said.
T b c government paid SJO
million to install three missiles
~1th 10 megaton warheads and a
range or 6.300 miles m 1962
They were declared obsolete
three years later
A tremendous explosion at the
Reagan to skip
Capitol gala
SACRAMENTO 1AP1 President Reagan
won 't attend reded1cat1on of the rebuilt Cahrornra
state Capitol because the project had such huge
cost overruns. the Sacramento Union said
A story from the newspaper's Washington
bureau quoted a former Californian now working
in the White House as saying political
ramifications rule out the president's attendance
at the Jan. 9 ceremony.
site 1n May. 1962 injured 50
people.
Mrs. Lague said the silos are
175 reel deep and there are
several cavernous underground
rooms with domed ceilings One
of them "is like a coliseum," she
said.
She said she had no idea what
her husband plans to do with the
property. He's gotten all kinds of
suggestio n s for building
underground malls , garden~. or
us ing it for gram storage.
· It ·s on a rocky ht tie hall It
won 't grow anything. And it's
hot The last time l was up there
1t was 127 degrees. · Mrs. Lague
said
appeared heightened among
pre-menstrual women compared
to their occurrence midway
through the menstrual cycle,
when self-confidence supposedly
peaks with the surge 'Of
hormones.
But Ms. Tallman said the 1975
survey involved only 10 women
and didn't use a control group.
Her work provided that control
by matching 17 college-age
wonten who didn't use oral
contraceptives with 17 who did
The rationale, she explained,
was that women taking the plll
don't experience the mid-cycle
hormone boost aceompanying
ovulation and thus could
demonstrate whether ovulation
actually affects speech
Each woman 's cas ual
conversation was tape recorded
twice, once midway through her
monthly cycle and again within
48 hours before menstruation.
Overall, the women showed
the same pattern as in the
earlier test. And Ms Tallman
noted that women who didn't
take the pill were even more
likely to hesitate, interrupt and
repeat themselves in high-stress
times than the earlier stud·
showed
-Conversely, women using the
pill showe~ few s1g n1ricant
s peech differences al opposite
times of the month "What's
even more interesting,·· she
added. "1s thal there was even
less ptirase repetition by these
women just before menstruation
than among th e no n -pill
women "
APW1 ........ lie
STRIPPED OF GRANTS I> I \ 1.i l I l 11 ,j ! l 1111 • 'I l l I. \ \\ .i •
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111-.111111\· 11 1 h .. 11111 lil'\ ""'' ht \ 1111.11 1·d ... th-1.1 1 I 1rl1·· \I lh II
'I• Ill 1l•d 1111'11 1111 fl l..,I h ll••\\11 .:1111•111 \'11-1111 '• 1 II:_
•\fl\ I illl\'111.., •Ill 1111111.11, • il 11• • 1• •" • •• .r 11 1_ Ill• I "'
\11.• , •• I 11111 ··
642-5678
Pul a ft>•c u•ords lo u•nrk for 11uu
111 the Daily Piloi
Lock in today's higl\ rates.
There are many ways to earn high interest
for the future!
Money Market Certificates-Six
months of rate protection.
"Some of the political ramifications we are
concerned with are the excessive cost overruns ...
the official said.
"When you put the president up there you are
sort of pulling his approval on that. things like
$100.000 gold chandeliers ..
The news paper said people close to the
president also felt il would be a poht1cal minus to
share a platform with Gov Edmund Brown Jr
and the Legislature's Democratic leaders
CAUTION
All Savers Certificates -A year
of tax free interest income.
30 Month Account -The
highest yield we offer for
any amount.
IRA/Keogh-High tax
deferred income available Democrat Brown. running for the U.S. Senate
seal held by Republican SI. Hayakawa, has
campaigned against Reagan and his policies
Rebuilding the Capitol to make 1t earthquake
safo was planned when Reagan left the governor's
office in 1975 It was lo cost no more than S42
million. but has ballooned to more than S68
mil hon.
The ded1cat1on ce remonies writ end a
weeklong privately.financed celebration of the
reopening or the 107-year-old domed Capitol m
downtown Sacramento.
Work began in March 1976, to restore the
building to its original e legance. plus a new
foundation and reinforced frame to withstand
possible earthquakes
... ''HOME OF 1lfE
ENTERTAINERS''
(---------. -....... ~----,
KNOB RADIO P. o. BOX 3159, I I ANAHEIM, CA 92803
I
OTY STATE ZIP
PHONE(_) BIRTiiDAY __
In ordrr 10 brl~ 1 ---------"'°"' ~your f nor-· I flt mttrtainen into 2 your home. pie-. -------
lilt llvft cl your
favorit' tonp: 3. ---------
FALLING
INTEREST
RATES
to everyone starting
January 1, 1982.
Call or stop in today, and ask our
Savings Counselors to help you
determine which of our many
investment accounts will meet your
individual financial goals.
Tomorrow may be too late
for today's high rate!
' -... --Wntcldi Aaza, 1100 lrvlne Aftftue,
-4/~_i~-•
'·
]
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I
u
11
I
11
11.
II
II
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•I.
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11
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Daily Pilai
TUESDAY, NOV. 2'4, 1981
CAVALCADE
STOCKS
TELEVISION
Arw;......,....
Anaheim's .. bee Lady ... Eltzabeth Schafer. 94 . holds 19305 portrait of family taken during depressiori. She
said she began ra1S1ng bees to .. help carry the family through" hard tirnes
Vau1d Schafer administers first aid to his grandmother after she was stung while checking beehwes.
Elizabeth studies quality of honey. She sells an auerage of three or four 1ars oj honey a day during
haruest ttme which occurs three times a year
.
82-3
86
88
,,
It has been 10 years
since D.B. Cooiper jumped
into legend with $200,000.
Story , photos Page AB.
D
Mrs. Schafer lifts hiue to determine if u·s ready for haruestin~. The Citu of Anaheim tned
lm$UCCeHfully to revoke her permJt to keep the beea two yearl ago oner neighbors complained.
Mammoth
quakes caused
by volcanoes?
MENLO PARK I AP >
Volcanic activity five miles
below the earth·s surface may
have caused a s eries of
earlhquakes s ince May 1980
nea r Mammoth Lakes in the
Sie rras. according to two
government scientists.
The theory was advanced in a
report by the U S. Geological
Survey, which said land known
as the Long \'alley Caldera rose
as much as 10 mches before the
quakes.
Survey geophysicist James
Savage said in an interview that
an underground dome-shaped
swe lhng of a chamber of molten
rock probably caus ed the
upheaval
Savage also said the bulge
probably triggered the quakes
a lon g existing earthquake
faults.
The idea that volcanic activity
ca n cause quake s is
controversial, however Alan
Ryall, a seismologist at the
University of Nevada. holds a
different vi ew.
Ryall believes the quakes
originated along the
little-studied Hilton Creek Fault
near Mammoth Lakes, a nd
caused the s urface uplift by
di srupting th e chamber of
molten rock beneath the earth.
A protectwe net hat 1s worn by Elizabeth Schafer as she prepares
to haruest the honey on her three quarter-acre of land.
Savage and s urvey geologist
Malcolm Clark have studied the
region since the firs t series of
quakes hit it in May 1980.
Flu shots could cause overreaction Air crash
payment up?
The Long Valley Caldera lies
JUSt east of Yosemite National
Park, about 200 miles east of
San Francisco artd 30 miles west
of the Nevada-California border. BOSTON lAPJ Ordinary flu
s hots take n b y 22 million
Americans every year can slow
the body·s metabolism and
make the recipient overreact
dangerou s ly to common
prescription drugs. a study says.
Th e re se ar c h e r s s a y
physicians s hould give the shots
lo people who need them .
particularly the elderly and ill ,
despit e the pot e ntial
complications But th ey
cautioned doctors to watch for
possible reactions
··w e are trying to alert
physicians that maybe some of
the untoward drug reactions
that have been seen in the past
in these patients that haven't
been easily explained might be
due to the flu shot,·· said Dr.
Craig J McClain. one of the
researchers.
The doctors began their
research after a heart patient
s uffered a ncarh fatal reaction
to a common drug following a
flu shot. ·
The doc tors believe t h e
influenza va('(·1n e s lo ws the
liver's ability to break down
medicine and rt•movc 1t from the
body. Because of this . the
s ubstances stay 1n the system
MIOICINI
longer than usual. som<'llmes
giving an effect s1m1lar to an
overdose
Their study was conducted at
t h e Minneapoli s Veterans
Administration Medical Center
and publis he d 1n the New
England J ournal of Medicine
T o test the tr theory. the
doctors gave a drug called
aminopyrine to 22 he althy
hos pital workers. 12 of whom
a lso got flu s hots. Then they
m easured the rate al which the
aminopyrinc was being remdved
from the body
Within a week. ammopyrme
metabolis m was depressed
bet wet?n 22 and 74 percent in the
people who had the shots. This
effect gradually wore off. but
m etabolism was still low three
weeks later
They theorized t hat the flu
s hot somehow depresses the
h e pati c cytochrom e P -450
syst em. one of the maJor
processes by which the liver
gets rid of drugs.
··we think there are going to
b e abnormalitie s in the
metabolism of a variety of very
clinically relevant drugs that
are metabolized over this p.450
system:· McClain said. "Almost
any drug you can think of is
metabolized to some degree by
this system.··
A m o ng drugs that ma y
te mporarily be too potent are
warfarin. a medicine used to
prevent blood clots in heart
patients ; dilantin. an epilepsy
medicine. and theophylline. a
drug used to treat asthma and
c hroni c obstructive lun g
disease
The study team began its work
after a heart patient almost bled
lo de ath after getting a nu shot
while taking warfarin to prevent
blood clots
, "lie had been quite stable on
the drug for 11 or 12 years. and
we were trying to Ctgure out
what all of a sudden prompted
this g uy to go haywire ...
McClain said.
The researchers believe the
nu vacctne may suppress drug
m'etabolism by inducing the
bodr to produce interferon. a
disease-fighting chemical
CHICAGO (AP > The
families of victims o( a crash of
a OC-10 may be paid thousands
mor e in damages by American
Airlines and McDonnell Douglas
Corp. as a result of a federal
court ruling
The defendants have admitted
their liabillty in the May 25,
1979. cras h which killed 273
persons and th~ only issue to be
determined is the amount of
damages in the 100 cases still
pending.
A ruling by Senior U S.
Dis trict Judges Hubert L. Will
and Edwin Robson bars defense
attorneys Crom asking juries to
decrease the awards by the
amount of income taxes the
victim would have pai in a
lifetime.
A lawyer for McDonnell
Douglas said the decision would
be appealed.
The measurements by Savage
and Clark showed that a 22-mile
s tretch of U.S. 395 between
isolated areas known as Toms
Place and Crestview rose 6-10
inch~s between the summer of
1975 and the s pring of 1980.
Th e Long Valley Caldera
marks the remains of a towering
volcano that expl oded a nd
collapsed 700,000 years ago. It is
still •considered a potentially
active volcanic area, according
to Roy Bailey of the survey's
volcanic hazards program in
Reston. Va.
Di8trict liable
SACRAMENTO <AP> -A
s lat e appeals court s a ys
reclamallon is not Irrigation.
therefore a San Joaquin County
reclamation district can be sued ror two drownings.
l •• s Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT!Tueaday, No¥amb6r24, 1981
How to cu
ski costs
This as the week thllt the skung se11:son opens in
the Un1lt.'<1 States and thl're Is no better time to
slrl'S!i ltl you ski buffs that, with pro1>er plannlnic and
flexilJle travel plans, you can slnh your ski vacation
costs by a minimum 20 percent lo 30 perc~nl.
If you plan your
ski va<'UtlOn tor this ~ period. )'OU cun
Uc ha evc s ignifica nt
sav ings This 1s ~t«
known as th e .,
.. :>houlder · season SYlVIA PDIJfu-? 1early December, ~~
January through
eurly f'ebru.ir·y. most or Apnl 1 and hotel lodging then
run!> 2.S percent lo 30 ·percent less than the busier
hollda) wel'kS
At Colorado's Copper Mountain, this "s uper
season" covers Nov 24. Nov 29 to Det• 18. then uner
April 10, 1982. In addition .
11 Shop around for a11 transportation . There art-
spt!C1al fares 20 pertl·nt tu 40 percent lower than
normal if you meet their rcstnrt1ons. Tour operators
who buy seats in bulk or charter lh(•ir own planes can
offer add1t1onal saving~ Advance reservations are
l'SSential. it ·s not uncommon for busy holiday weeks
to be booked 'ilx to eaghl months m advance
For instanct:, last Oecember 1981. lodging at
Keystone Arapahoe Basin was 90 percent bookt!d by
July 1. says Fritz Opel, a director of Bre(•kenr1Clge .
Keystone Arapahoe Basin and Copper Mountain. all
1n Colorado There are always some airline and hotel
reservations available at the last minute, but choices
are limited and pncl's are higher
2) Consider orr peak travel Most Vill'at1on1ng
:o.kiers tr11vel from Saturday lo Saturday. you c.in
s~tvc money by traveling midweek Airports also are
h's~ crowded, ground transportation 1s easier to
:u range, and chel0k1ng mto hotels is swifter
3) Use public ground transportation at resorts
Ht!ntang a tar that remamlt idle while you ski 1s not
co~t cHtc1ent In mc-rcasing numl>cn., skier" rd~
upon public ground transportation lo gl'l to und from
rl'sorts Conllnc•ntal Trailways, ror example, service~
'Sk i the Summit" directly from Denver's
St apll'lon Airport and downtown Denver 10 Copper
Mountain. Breckenridge. Kl'ystone and two nearby
).owns Frisco and Dillon.
4 1 Evaluat.e your lodging choices You can stay m
a single hott!I room on .i mountain and ski tu your
do(lr. 01 save 30 pert:ent to 50 pt!rcent by lodging
ncal'hy Sl11~s1de condominiums are at a premium,
yet you actuall} can lo" er the cost per person Sax
peoµlc m a two· bedroom condo <with foldout sofas>
will l'O~t less per person than two people an a
one bedroom condo Families a re particularly
attracted to s ki condomm1ums. kitchen fat:ilit1es
avoid t·o~tly restaurant meals
51 Students at many resorts rrequenlly will be
issued a dbcount on a full ·day lift ticket Have proof
cir your student ~tatus with you
61 Many resorts offer discounts to guests who
purt•hase mul11ple day lift tickets Usually 1111.·
minimum is a two· or three-day ticket
71 A half-day lift t icket mn) be available 1f you
like Lo ski. but also enJOY a few extra hours sleep 1n
the momln~ This discount begins as early as noon at
some areas.
8 , Group rates are offered at most ski resorts
with requirC>ments ranging (rom 10 to 25 per group
The group will recciv<' discounted hft tickets or a
comphmt:'ntar) lift ticket for one ·person over tht'
m1namum requirement great for family or rnends
to ski together al a savings
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
10:E.~:c~~ '1,,..1 Oow Jontt •"9•
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AMERICAN LEADERS
NEV. .. ORK (API S•r.\. MOnclAV \ pt•O
•nd ntt <h•nQt> ot tM titn t"\o)t •ct•"•
Amtrl(.., Sloe~ f.•~""'nQt ·•~. 11..01119 n4110ll•llY •I .._. IMn II
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M41tMlll l '° 200 , ___ )( '. . .. ;-
S..oronEt>G • I• 000 Huds600 9 11,IOO
Flult•Jolln U ,lOO R•nQ•rOll )>,500
Nem. I NYS ~ 150fl
l HO\\ lnll l Pleyboy En
4 DuQLI 1.17111
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SILVER
COLD OUQlA TIONS
lo"oort morning •tAtnQ .. 4\11 ""
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ORANGI COAST YOUR HDMITDll DlllY PIPll
TUE SDAY N O V£ MHl A 24 198 1 ORANGE COUNT Y CALIFORNIA 2 ~ CENTS
Fiscal crunch Blay force state tax hike
S AC RAMENTO 1A P1 An offlc iuh. have Pl'OJected a $747 s taleinhe ritanc·c tax a deficit adjustme n ts. the so called
aid e to Gov Edm und Brown J r million revenue s hortfall for the ··w e think you have lo RO for Brown has alre ady c alled for a COLAs, comprise one of the
po litical firestorm.
··All we know Is we have to
says the Brown administration 1 1 s ca I ye tir i f eco n o m I c revenue enhanceme nts." Haas 5 percent cul in the .. baseline" most expensive segm ents in the
is t urning to a tax hike as the rond1lions don't improve s aid . budgel.'> of state a gencu.!s next s tate budge l. w 11 h ca c h
provide a balanced budget."
Haas s aid. "It'll probably be a
component of things.·' only way out of the state 's fiscal And the Commission on Stale H e a dd e d l hat l h e yeur. a move tha t would save un percentage point in a ll the
crunch, the Sacramento Union F inance said that shortfall may administration is developing u estimated S180 m illio,n The COLAS costing the g('nera l fund
reported toda} swell to SJ billion d uring the list of potential ways to raise governo r hat> also called a about S250 milhon
T he newspaper quoted Lu 1982 8:1 hscal year, spurred by a revenues next year. m o ra t o r 1 u m o n stale The COLAs include welfa re
Haas said Bro wn plans
m eetin gs with l e gis lative
leaders to atte mpt to a chieve a
l'Onsensus bala nc ing the budget.
lie a lso said Brown will be&ln
meeting soon with his top fiscal
ad visers to pre pare his 1982·83
b ud get pro p osal, wh ich is
sl·h e duled to be released in
J anuary
lla as, Brown's spokesman a nd s tagnatin.: econ om y and the · "There's no concept that has construction. gr ant increases, sta te pay raises
prt'ss a1dt'. as saytng th at ltkcly pas:.ai:e next year of two e merged ," Haas said . ··w e Haas said the acllon was "'not a nd mo re than a dozen other
.. revenue e nh<mcemcnts" a tax -cuttm~ initiatives. really don't have a feel for the e n o u g h ,·' a dd in g th a l l h e ite m ., lied. by law. to inflation.
e uphe mb m fo r tax 1ncreases Ir approved by voters, the tax dimensions of the problem .. ad m 1nistra t ion 1s cons 1d er1n g F iscal uperls estimate that
wer e likely to be needed to 1n1t1at1ves would fully index The c ur rent year's budget "no c·ost-of lt vmg adj ustments a n a cross the board freeze on
resolve the dilemma state income taxes to a ccount tot<.ilcd more than S25.4 billion for anyone... t he COLAs would save the state
S tate Department of fo'man ('(• for 1nflut1on and abolis h the The state const1tut1on proh1b1ls T hose cost-of·ltv1ng 'raises or about S2 billion but spark a ~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--"~~~~~~~~~~~
..... P.-.,._"' •tc ............
'Turkey war'
rages along
Orange Coast
By JOllN NEEDHAM
01 llM Dolly POOi Sl•H
T he Thanksg1v1ng turkey war a ppears to l:>e
1n fu ll swing 1n supermarkets along the Orange
Coast
Theo <:ham stores are offe nng the lowest
prices tn 10 years because of u turkey glut and
t·om pel1llon betwtten the stores
In an tnform;.il poll of a rea markets, store
Pl'rsonnel repor ted tha t their stock of frozen
l>arga1n pnet.'CI tom turkeys 1s near ly depleted
Of the sUpl•rma r ke ts polled, Ra lphs
reported the lowest prtCl' per pound at 34 cents
'.'/ext 1n line v.as llughes El Rancho a nd Market
Basket. which an• offer ing a Thanksg1vmg bird
for 35 t·ents a pound
Bob Le(', ml•at manager at the E astbluff
L>nve llughes store m Newport Beach said his
suppl} of baq~atn h1rds wa.., nearh cleaned out
·We ve ordered more, but 1i seems e\'e ry
other store m the chain 1s doing the same
thing .' Lee said lie said an a mple supply of
brand name turkeys arc still available at fro m
75 lo 79 ten~ per 1>0und
Ma rkel spok es m e n s ay the diffe rence
bt.>l ween nat tunally advertised brands and the
bargain brands often 1s the label
TURKEY SHOOT -Jonathan F leischmann. 8. of Fountain Valley, in bow and arrow contest, conUnuln' through Wednesday. Boys with
takes aim during a "Turkey Shoot," sponsored by the Boys Club of highest point totals will win Thanksgiving turkeys.
Fou ntain Valley. Youngsters in four age groups try for highest scores
A spokesman fo r Market Basket at 7600
Edinger Ave in lluntmgton Beach said his store
1s ~elhng 1b cheapest bird for 35 cents a pound,
while the Safeway in Laguna Beach's Boat
Canyon listed the hig hest or the bargain prices
<it 39 C'ents a pound
<See TURKEV WAR, Page A2 1
Stockma11r's
Newport talk
canceled • 1''l•c1era l hud~l't d1n•ctor Da\·1d
i\ Stockman canceled an
J ppearam·l' today in Nev. port
Beach ··in order to remain in
Washi n g ton D C to focus
Jttent1on on the nation s latest
hud gct problems ·
And )OU can n•Jd mtu that
"hatt:ver you v.ant, suggested
Jn :.1 1de from N<'wport Hcach
Rep Robl'rt Badham s office
nda)
Bc.1d ham h ad Ill\ 1tl·ll Stockman
to appear at a noon tund raiser
t0da\ at th<' Marriott llotcl
T he word from Badham s
office t oday was t hat Ken
Kliach1gian. a former consultant
and speech wntcr for President
R eagan , '.l.Ould fill 1n for
Stockman
Stockman. offleials said. had
scheduled a speaking tour in
l'alHom1a week., before he set
off a wave of controversy by
rapping l're..,1dent Reagan·s
econ o m ic program during a
ma~azinc• tnlervicw
L ate lasl week . a1dl'S to
Ba dham said t he) werl' told
Stockman would still show up
for his date al the Marriott
By Monda.>. though, a
Ion~ distance guessing game
bet Wl'Cn Washington 0 C and
Orange County e r upt ed on
whether Stock man·., tour was on
or off
"lie finally canceled Monday
al '1 15 p. m Eastern Stand<c rd
Tim e." B a dh am 's o ffi ce
reported.
fn Washington. a spokesman
for Stockman said the federal
bud get di rector h ad been
working with t he president on an
interim bill to keep the rede ral
gove rnment operating.
T he preside nt o frered t he
22-da y budget bill afte r vetoing a
budge t bill passed by Congress.
Morning papers
Thuraday, Friday
The Daily Pilot will publish
m o rning ed itions instea d of
afternoon editions Thursday and
Friday of this week In addition
to Its regula r morning editions
on Saturday a nd Sunday.
C irc ulation ser vice c alls
s hould be made t o 642·432 1.
between the hours of 7 a.m. and
10 a m . on Friday. Saturday and
Sunduy
t
'\ 1' \11 11) \l-1\/•11/d
J; II :t_.·1 r ) 't t /H \ 0t C 't rt/cl '1
Prime rate
at lowest
level in year
"llF.W YO RK 1 AP 1
R l'f I e 1· t 1 n g o t he r de cl i n tn g
1nlt.•r est r alcs. several major
hanks today lowered their prime
ll'nd1ng rate to tM lowest level
1n a vt•ar c· 1 l 1 b a n k . r a n k e d
se<:ond lar gest a m o ng U S.
com mercial ba nks, and Firs t
Nat io na l or Chi c a g o . the
ntnth largest. cut the ir prime
ra te to 16 percent from 16.5
percent Chemical Bank. ranked
s ixth largest, followed suit.
Ch ase Manhattan Bank, No 3.
went further. dropping its r>rime
f rom 16 .5 percent to 15.75
p('rcenl.
The lowest equivalent prime
rate was Ul mid·Nove mber 1980
when the prime varied from 15.5
percent to 16.25 percent.
Chase today said it lowered its
prime because inte rest rates
have been declining and loan
dc m and slackened
As an illustration of how other
in terest r a t es h ave fallen
recently. the Federa l Reserve
Board reported the federal funds
rate averaged 12.94 percent in
the week ended NoY'. 11, down
from an average of nearly 14
pPrcenl in the pre vious week.
Tod ay, that rate opened as low
a s 12 percent.
'
Government hack in business
Reagan's budget battle with Congress halted by emergency spending measure
WASHINGTON <AP > The
fede ral government is back in
bu s iness and Pr esiden t
Reagan 's running budget battle
with Congress is on hold after
a pp roval o f a r ev i sed
em ergency s pending measure. ··or course. we now mus t
come back and do t he work a ll
over again in the Congress on a
bill that can be signed, .. Rea gan
said Mo nday night a fter h e
sig ned the s top-gap spe nding
bill. which e xpires Dec . 15
Shortly after ward , Rea gan left
th e White House for hi s
Ca lif o rni a ran c h , a
Thanksgiving vacation that had
been delayed a day because of
the budget impasse
In a telephone call fro m Air
fo'orce One. Reagan told the
R e publ ic an G ove rnor s
Associat ion meeting in New
Orleans that the battle wit h
Congress had been "a game of
chicken, and someone JUSt had
to bring it to a halt. ..
Reagan's acceptance of the
measure ended a confrontation
with Congress that led to the
president ·s fi rst veto a nd the
layoffs of hundreds of thous ands
of federal e mployees.
The president's support~rs in
Con gress said the episode was
fresh evid e n ce o f Reag an 's
r esol ve t o s la s h fe d e ral
spe nding .
But f ur io u s De m ocr at ic
lead e rs said the skirmishing
tha t l e ft t h e governme n t
technically insolvent for nearly
67 hours was onlv · a c ha rade ..
Reagan believes "'there is a lot
more work to be do ne ... said
d eputy White House p ress
secret ary Larr y Speakes '"He's
The measure Reagan s igned
s imply extended the tnlerim
s pending legislation that expired
al midnight Friday
loo)<ing forward to working with
C<¥l gress when he returns ."
On Monday, Reagan vetoed a
s./28 billion emer gency s pending
bill, e xpiring July 15, that a
bitterly divided Congress sent
him Sunday nig ht. The House
t h e n vot ed 367 ·26 fo r a
Re publican drafted com promise
t h a t ex pires Dec 15 as
Reagan requested
Democrats wanted to extend
inte r im s pe nding a utho rity
t hroug h F e b 3, but the
Re publican plan was s ubstituted
on a voteof221·176
The n t he m e a su r e sailed
t hr o u g h th e R e ·
publican·controlled Senate. 88-1
with only De mocratic Whip Alan
Cranston of California voling
against it.
Reagan actually gained little
fro m the confrontation in his
efforts to hold down s pending.
Congressional o fficials s aid
Save our shoreline
How well was O range
County's valuable coastal zone
managed ln the past nine years? . . ' And what does t he future hold
for the 42 miles o r scenic
bea c hes and coves along the
OrAnge Coast?
In a four-part series that"
begins Thursday, the Dally Pilot
looks back at nearly a decade or
controvers ial state coastal
controls, examines projects and
de cisions and looks ahead to
years that promise either a
dream or a nightmare for future
coasta l residents a nd users.
Daily Pilot reporter David
Kutzmann inte rviewed local
o fficials , develope r s.
environmentalists. community
observers. state orflcials and
others ror his series which runs
t hrough Sunday.
1
SllUl<l!:/../St D~\. ~L<Jl'.\11':.\ '/'
St'rtl'.'i to prof* pr()flrt'SS
t hat on an annual basis. the
m ea!.ure Reagan signed calls for
a bout S27 3 b1 Ilion less in
s pe nding uutho r ily than the
mea~ure Rl'agan vetoc•d But S25
billio n of that would come from
de fense. where Reajtan wants to
spend more mone~. a nd only
S2 3 billio n from domestic
account s. where he wants to
s pend less
And the bill will re matn 1n
effect only about three weekl>
With Reagan's signatur e ,
normal government operations
"t•re resumed
Rea gan said thl' m easure he
\'etoed and his order to cloee
·non·essent1a1 · offices and send
an estimated 400,000 fede r:.l
v. orker5 home were necessary
b('ca usl' tht' bill was fiscally
ruinous. pavm g "the way for
higher 1ntt•rest r a t es a nd
1nfl atum . and a cont inued loss of
investment. Jobs and economic
growth ·
Oil glut may end
quickly, Saudi says
VIENNA 1AP 1 The current
worldwide surplus of crude oil 1s
a te mpora ry condition that could
e nd with a "'Jar ring s hock ...
S audi Ar a bia 's oil m 1n1ster
Sheik Ahmed Zafl1 Yama ni said
todav
"The existing oil surplus in
the market doesn 't mu n the end
of the energy pro blem ." Yam ani
said at a seminar sponsored by
the Organization or Petroleum
Exporting Countries.
·'This ls a transient ph se
during which many may relax in
the sense of false security that il
gives." he said. "but al the end
or which m ay cause them a
jarring s hock."
Many energy analysts believe
the oversupply of oil on world
markets will end sometime next
year with a febound in economic
activity and a c ontinued
drawdown of oil stocks held by
t he Internationa l oil companies.
Yamani, whose country Is the
largest source of imported oil
ror the United States, warned
that oil-importing countries
might be poorly prepared for an
end to the oU surplus. and "the1
will once again look to OPEC ror
comrort.''
Separately , Iraqi 011 Minister
Abdul Karim charged that the
United States had led an e(fort
to manipulate oll stocks and
brln a prices down.
His remark implled that S.udi
Arabla, wbltb kept ltl
producllGn bilh dllplta prl&tl'la
from otlter l>PSC" · •••~
played lato be It••* •f lDduaU'ial ml_. .....
Ka rim said the sur plus was a
l h reat t o O PEC m e mbe11
countries. and complained about
the organization 's tna bility to
p roduce 011 al the rate at which
1t wants "
Ya m a n i. whose country i'
known to oppose programmed
otl production within OPEC, said
la t e r t hat Kar i m 's s peech
··re presented m ostl y Iraqi
views" ·----------DRAN~f COAST WfATlla
Mostly c loudy tonight
with 30 percent chance of
r a in tonight. Variable
clouds with loc al gus t y
winds Wednesday. Hi.ghs
rain. Variable clouds with
lo c al gus t y winds
Wednesday. Highs 60 to 66.
Lows tonight SO lo 56.
INSIDI TDIAY
A Tuc1on newspaper ii
publ uhing a dail11 aun
intensity muz. ~«.Page A7.
INDll
• I
I
t
!
IUITlllTll lllCH I f DUITlll VllllY
bllyPllat
TUESDAY, NOV. 24, 1981
CAVALCADE
STOCKS
TELEVISION
Marriage survives
longer than the gifts. See
Erma Bambeck, Page 82.
D
a
Hµt!.-~gt~!l.: .... h~igh! ..... limJJ .. !.<!~ sh~rt for ballot
By PATRICK KENNEDY
OflMOeMyf'IMlw.tt
Huntington 8each residents
trying to limit the hei1ht or new
bulldlngs to three stories in the
downtown coastal area say they
have failed to get· enough
signatures to put the proposal on
the April municipal ballot.
Dan Coffman, chairman of the
Citiiens for Reasonable Coastal
Development. savs the group Is
2 boards
to hold
• meetings
Two special meetings are
scheduled tonight by school
district trustees in Huntington
Beach and Fountain Valley.
Huntingto n Beac h City
<e lementary) School District
trustees will meet at 7:30 p.m. at
the district headquarters. 735
14th St. They a re s lated to
con sider 8 perce nt salary
increases, retroactive to July 1,
1981 . ror the d i st r ic t 's
management and confidential
employees.
F o untain Valley Sch ool
District trustees will meet al
7 :30 P'.m . in the district
headquarters, 1 Lighthouse
Lane. The trustees will consider
a recommendation that Nancy
Harding be h ired as the
district's public information
offi cer.
Adult school
• opens 1n
Huntington
A new adult school has opened
on Golden West Street near
Warner Avenue and is open
from 1:30 p.m . to 9 p.m. Monday
through Thursday. according to
offi cials of the Huntington Beach
Union High School District.
Students of high school age or
older may set their own
attendance hours and work at
their own pace using prepared
materials, according to district
officials.
The adult school program also
is available at the learning
ce nte r on 1025 1 Yorktown
A venue, east of Brookhurst
St reet in Huntington Beach.
For more i nformatio n
concerning high school diploma
o pp ortunities and school
programs. call 964·6855. or go to
t h e ma i n o ffi ce at 10251
Yorktown Ave
$315,390
donated
Mc Donnell Douglas Corp.,
which operates a plant in
Huntington Beach. and its
employees are donating $315,300
to United Way agencies in
Orange County for 1982.
The total contribution was
divided betwe en two
organizations. with $144 ,100
earmarked for the United Way
of West Orange County and
$171,200 for the United Way of
Orange County North/South.
The West County agency
serves H untington Beach,
Fountain Valley, Seal Beach,
Westminster, Garden Grove and
some nearby unincorporated
areas.
Trustees to study
minimum standard
Huntington Beach Union High
School District trustees will
consider instituting a minimum
academic requirement for
students involv e d in
extra-curricular activities and
\illthletics at the regular school
board meeting tonight.
Other items also ·will be
discussed at the 7 p.m. meet~ng
at 10251 Yorktown Ave .,
Huntington Beach.
S.olon to 8peak
at Valley meet
A ss emblyma n No l an
Frlnelle, R-HunUntton Beach,
wlll be "'IU•at speaker
Wednesday et the monthly
breakfast meetin1 conducted by ,
Fountain Valley Mayor Ben
Nielsen.
The event, whlcb 11 open to the
public, wtU bepn at 8 a.m. at
Brewaters rettaurant, 10830
. W1mtt /t,ve1, Fountain Valley.
now aiming for the June ballot.
The group has untU March l,
to eather the signatures of 14,000
Huntington Beac h voters .
Coffman said the. group has
gathered 3,500 signatures so far.
the city's Local Coastal Plllll
which must be aprroved by the
California Coasta Commission
before it becomes official.
consists chletl)' ot two·atory
commercial buildings built In
tbe 1920s and 1930s. The
$urround l ng blocks are
residential.
Ci ty officials have proposed a
six·story building height limit
downtown with the possibility of
allowing taller structures if
several landowners consolidate
large parcels of land.
Coastal commiss ione r s
rejected the city's proposed
coastal land use plan earlier this
year. but the proposed building
height regulation wasn 't an
issue at the time.
conman's eroup of about 20
volunteers also wants to restrict
density In the coastal ione to 25
housing units per gross acre,
down from lhe 35 units proposed
by the city.
That proposal is included m
Presently, the downtown
s hopping area neu Main Street
and Pacific Coast Highway Coffman Identified the coastal
o.i1,,., ... , .... ..,...
1'111s IY25 ruu1111y hus por/.:11d Oe!Ude tile lotest mvdl!/. 1:; Iii!! 1ieu masc·ot Jur ll1t1 Orange Cuu11t.11
Tra11s11 D1st 11c1 <>11n· dm·e11 by (;arr1Cou~1 .11 s Jrnvwn o., Uhl Yd/1!1
'Old Yeller' OCTD 's mascot
1925 hand-crank touring bus brings lore to district
By GLENN SC01T
Ofa..o.Hy~~
Just as the U S. Forest Service has
Smokey the Bear, the Or ange County Transit
District has its image-makmg mascot.
And guess what? It's a bus.
Not just any old bus Ttus one already
n amed "Old Yeller" for its color ! and
pe rhaps to add a little senlimentality>. is a
four-cylinder. 1925 hand·crank touring bus
originally used in Yellowstone National
Park.
Adding to its lore. the bus was dnven by
a young cowboy by the name or Gary Cooper.
who after living the life of a bus driver
decided he'd rather be an actor.
Transit district offi cials added their
latest and oldest bus lo the ranks last week
after paying $39,750 , including tax, to its
former owner, William Farell or Huntington
Harbour.
Farell agreed in September to lease the
rare, lO·passenger bus to the transit district
ror promotional use ror five years. Arter
riding in it during two parades. Ralph Clark.
chairman of the district's Board of Directors.
suggested buying it.
Clark convinced other directors the bus
would be a needed promotional tool ror the
district -and that waiting five years until
the contract expired would only in<'rease the
cost.
The transit district spends more than
$200,000 a year in advertising. Funds for the
bus came from a separate discretionary fund
controlled by Gene r al Ma nager James
Reichert, who negotiated the sale with
Farell.
Farell. retired general manager or the
Long Beach Transit District, said he had no
plans to sell the bus, which he said he's
driven in hundreds of parades. including
twice in the Tournament or Roees Parade.
"But if l was going to sell il to anybody, I
preferred to sell it to OCTD." he said ,
explaining that his vehicle will get proper
care and shelter.
Farell said he bought the bus In the
mid·l960s from a friend in Utah who had
purchased it from a rancher in Montana who
used it to transport his seven children to
scl'lool 15 miles away.
.. After they all finished school , they JUSt
more or less parked it ,·· Farell said.
This bus was one of the few models that
was not destroyed at the national park In a
garage fire in the 1930s, he added. Farell said
it always draws a response at parades and
will prove to be worth the expense.
"It's one of the best marketing tools they
could buy," said Farell. "I know. I'm very
promotion-minded myself."
Mi c hae l Barnes. the distri ct's
com municalions director. said the bus will be
an investment as well ·as a promotional tool
He said an appraiser valued it at S60.000
once several repairs are made.
The bus will be repaired by district
mechanics early next year. he said
After that. it will be entered in all or the
major parades in Orange County, from the
Garden Grove 'Strawberry Festival to the big
July Fourth parade in Huntington Beach.
But fi rst , it will once again grace
Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena on Jan. 1.
1982. Part or the sales agreement included a
stipulation that Farell gets to use it ror the
I a s t time to fe rry the president or the
Tourna ment of Roses Association in the
prestigious event.
But never rear. says Farell. The trans it
dis trict's new image will continue to roll on.
"As long as they keep it up," he said,
"that bus will run rorever."
zone as l ,l>OO yarda inland from
the mean high tide.
"When 1 started this 1 thou&ht
we'd have about 200 volunteers,
but we've only gotten about 15 or
20," Coffman said. "But I'm
sure we'll qualify the measure
for June."
He says the group is belng
assisted by political science
students trom Golden West
College who are getting class
credits for collectine petition
slenaturea.
T he old dowotown shoppln1
area appears headed for
redevelopment re1ardlesa of
height regulationa becauae :n of
the brick structures have been
condemned u hazards ln the
event or earthquake.
The condemned buildings are
tentatively sch eduled fo r
demolltlon within three years.
according to city ordinance.
Huntington
crash kills
6-year-old hoy
A 6-year-old boy was fatally
injured and a (9.year-old man
was seriously hurt Monday in
unrel ated car·pedestrlan
a ccidents in Huntington Beach.
Dead is Justin 0 . Bennett of
Huntington Beach, a Crest View
School Cirst·grader who was hit
at 12:30 p.m. while on his way to
a baby sitter 's house, school
officials said.
Police traffic officer John
Berens said the boy apparently
darted ae!rOSs Slater Avenue at
Geraldine Lane and was struck
by an eastbound auto driven by
Ronald Joseph Pepper, 20, of
Huntington Beach.
The boy was taken to Fountain
Valley Community Hospital with
head and chest injuries, police
said.
A hospital spokesman said the
boy died at 7:35 p.m .
Gayle Wayne, a spokeswoman
for the Ocean View School
District, said Monday was an
early dismissal day al Crest
View School. She said lbe boy
bad taken a school bus ride and
was walking the last few blocks
to his baby sitter's house when
the accident occurred.
Mrs . Wayne sai d the
Intersection, located near Lake
View S ch ool . i s normally
supervised by a crossing guard.
She s aid the boy apparently
arrived at the intersection when
the crossing guard no longer
was on duty
Police sai~ investigation is
continuing .
In the second accident. James
Owen German or Huntington
Beach was crossing Hamilton
Avenue at Spyglass Lane when
he was struck by an auto driven
by Edward Albert Papile, 30, or
Hunti""'-on Beach. Police said.
German also was taken to
Fountain Valle y Community
Hospital, where he was reported
in serious condition today with
internal Injuries.
Investi1alion is continuing,
police said.
Mass age parlor
owner files suit
The owner .of a Huntington
Beach massage parlor has filed
a lawsuit seeking a court order
to allow it to operate at its Main
Street location.
Allan Grant's request for the
o rd e r on behalf of his
Huntington Health Center Is
scheduled to be heard in Orange
County Superior Court on Dec. 7.
Grant alleges in his lawsuit
that a city ordinance passed in
1979 discriminates against his
business because it allows no
more than 10 massage parlors in
the city.
City ofCicials denied h is
request for a permit In October
on the bas is that 10 other
massage bus inesses already
exist. Grant appealed the
decision on Nov. 16 to the City
Council, but was turned down on
a 4·1 vote with two abstentions.
Grant said he sought the city
permit after recently buying the
health cent er from former
operator Ben Story. The city had
revoke d Story 's licen se,
claiming his workers lacked
proper certification.
On Nov. 11, Grant was cit.eel
for continuing to operate the
center without a permit. He is
as king the court to prevent city
officials from charging him with
the misdemeanor.
2 robbed at Fluor
A well-dressed man somehow
s lipped through the Fluor
Corp . 's extensive security
system Wednesday and stole
$16,050 from two men who were
servicing an automated teller
ma c hine at a s atellite
curporation office building in
Irvine at Main Street and
Jamboree Road. police said
today.
T he armed robbery, the first
ever at the huge engineering
corporation. occurred at 3:30
.P.m .
County continues fight for road funds
.
Leaders coax congressmen for money to widen Santa Ana Freeway from six to eight lanes
The struggle to entke more
fund s t o impro ve Orange
County's transportation system
continued Monday as local
leaders coaxed congressmen for
funds to widen the Santa Ana
Freeway.
The occasio n was a
congressional hearing at the
Santa Ana City Coun c il
Chambe r s in whi c h Jerry
Patterson, D-Santa Ana. and
Glenn Anderson, D-Torrance,
received testimony from a
handful of the county's Influence
leaders.
The t wo congressme n are
members of the subcommittee
on surface transportation to the
House of Repr esentatives·
Publi c W o rk s and
Transportation Committee.
That committee is consid~ring
legislation similar to a blll
already passed by the Senate
authorizing interstate freeway
widening as part of a naUonal
road maint e nan ce a nd
reconstruction program.
Local leaders left no doubl
that they back any federal
programs leading to t h e
expansion of the freeway rrom
six to eight lanes with a new,
smooth surface.
··Recon s truction of the
existing six-lane facility alone
will simply serve to improve a
multi·million parking lot ."
observed Daniel Grisel, a Santa
i\na City Councilman and
member of th e county · s
Transportation Commission.
Jn less than four years, Grisel
said , plaQners think that the
six-lane freeway will be so
clogfe(l that rueful drivers will
be caught In "stop -a nd-go•·
conditions on the freeway 12
hours per day. .
M ore t.h a n m e re I y a n
lnconvenlence. severe freeway
congestion also means • rough
time (or the local economy,
s peak•rs said . ft means
producta don't 1et to the market
on time and workers don't get to
tbelr jobe.
"We see the handwriUng on
the wall," cautioned Malcolm
Ross, cbalrma.b of the Orante
County Chamber of Commerce'•
Trensportatlon Counctl.
While local otflclala ere
hoping ror federal money to help
widen the Santa Ana Freeway,
the speakers said more taxes
eventually mus t come from
county r esid e nts If greater
improvements are to be made.
Irvine Co mpany President
Pete r Kremer and county
Supervisors Thomas Riley and
Ralph Clark all suggested that a
majority of taxpayers will
consider a local sales or gasoline
tax if they un derstand the
money will go only toward new
J'O&d construcUon.
"We cannot rely on federal
and state aid," said Kremer,
w h o ca lled t h e s pecial
countywide transportation tax a
"realistic part of the solution."
Clark told the congresamen
that t he county'• plan to
construct a mass transit llne to
link Anaheim with the John
Wayne Airport -and all the
major commercia l and
Industrial atopa in between -
will help relieve traf fic
con1e1tJon. The new d•lp al.lo
would le.ad to new hilber-clemlty
retideaUal ckvelorpmat m tbt
hettt of th• Yt OUBlJ •h•rt
middle·income people can live
much closer to their jobs.
The mass transit line and the
widened eight·lane freeway are
two key parts of tbe county
Transportation Commission's
program to relieve contestion
along the so-called Santa Ana
Freeway Transportation
·Corridor.
'rhe cost of the package of
improvements is estimated at S2
billion, which works out to about
$1 ,000 per each of the county's
two mllllon residents. ·
-By GLENN SC.:<>TT
Cop's firing of gun
ruled accidental
• A shooting in wblch. a La•un•
Beach merchant narrowly
missed beJn1 1truck by an
officer '• bullet ha1 been ruled
accidental by a police review
board.
•·Alter dl'lcu1ln1 and
rtvlewtq all the factt Ud all '
the attendant clrcum1tancu UM
1urro= UM lDd•IM 6t .. • 0
unani ~ NW a ace'..., ..
dlacbu ... " lL TWIT ......... aald "cmdq. .........• , ....
-------------~--
llllll IEICH /llUTH COAST
"t ... ~ -
----
••HJ Pilat
TUESDAY, NOV. 2~, 1!81
CAVALCADE
STOCKS
TELEVIS fON
82·3
86
88
Marriage survives
longer than the gifts. See
Erma Bombeck, Page 82. D
Laguna annex hid termed slap at dev~lopers
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of ... o.llY ""'MoMI
The sta ff of a county
commisaton 11ays Laguna
Beac h's prime motlvatlon In
seeking to annex a portion of
South Laguna is lo prevent
several developme nts from
occurring.
And they'll recommend that
the Local Agency Formation
Commission turn down Laguna's
Laguna's
De Belle
succumbs
Services were to be held today
for Louis D. DeBelle, who owned
and operated shoe repair shops
throughout south Orange Cowity
over the past 18 years.
Mr. De Belle, who lived in
Laguna Beach, died Saturday al
the age of 63.
As a 12-year-old, Mr . DeBelle
became a cobbler's apprentice
a t the Goodyear Shoe Repair
shop in Garden City, Kan.
After learning the leatherwork
craft. the enterprising young
man bought the business from
his bosses.
He later moved to Colorado,
then to Coalinga, Calif.. where
he constructed schools. He
moved to San Diego in 1959 and
three years later moved to
Laguna Beach where he
purchased a shoe repair shop in
the downtown section.
He operated D&D Shoe Repair
for nearly eight years, during
which lime he opened shops in
Mission Viejo, Laguna Niguel
and Laguna Hills.
He sold the shops at various
times over the years and retired
from the business last January
Mr.-OeBelle is survived by his
wife, Neoma, of the family
home: sons Richard of Fountain Valley; Lau.ren of Laguna HiJls;
and Warren of Boulder. Colo.
He is also survived by a
daughter, Doris Cramblit of
Boulder and sisters Millicent
Whittwell. of Arizona; Claudine
Gravberger, Colorado. Camella
Kirk. Colorado and Donna
Jones, Anaheim The couple also
have seven grandchildren.
Boy s Club
t o sponsor
art exh i b it
Members of the Boys Club of
Laguna Beach will participate in
a "Fine Art s Exhibit" tn
January with artworks to be
displayed at a counlywide
exhibit in Westminster.
Club members may enter oils.
watercolors, pastels, sketches,
drawing and sculpture work.
The best local entries from the
countywide exhibit and
competition will be entered for
display at a regional exhibit,
and the finalists will appear at a
national exhibit in Was hington,
D.C.
Laguna contributors s hould
have their works at the Boys
Club no later than Jan. 8. For
more information, call the club
at 494-2535 and ask for Karene.
LB history
d inn er slated
A poUuck dinner will be held
Dec. 10 by the Laguna Beach
Community Historical Society,
beginning at 6:30 p.m. at the
Neig hborhood Congregational
Church.
Admission is a dinner dish,
and after the meal, society
d irector Marge Roley will
perform a historical skit called
''Hats Off to Laguna."
The church is located at the
corner of St. Ann's Drive and
Glenne.yre Street. For
information, call the historical
center at 494·9965.
Senio rs to hold
annual meeting
T h e annua l membership
meeting of the Senior Citizens
Club of Laguna Beach will be
held Dec. 7 , with awards.
.election of board members and
Christmas carols .
The meeting be1lns at l p.m.
In t he Veteran's Memorial
Community Center. 384 Le1lon
St. RelreshmentJa wlU be served
followinc election of new officers
and b oard m e mbers. For
information. call 497·2"1.
I
request when the panel meets
Wedneaday, suggesting the issue or annexation should include the
e ntire South Laguna
community, not Just portions
that take in t.he Treasure Island
Mobile Home Park and Hobo
Canyon.
otrlclala know the city's
Intentions regarding the two
development proposals.
The LAFC meets at 2 p.m
Wednesday in th e Hall of
Administration Building, 10
Civic: Center Plaza in Santa Ana.
Running roughly from the
city'a 1outhcrl_y limits to the
mouth of Aliso Creek, the new
clty parcel about 1,050 acres
-would include Treasure
Island, Hobo Canyon, and the
Ben Brown restaurant and golf
course.
In addition , the staff
recommends Laguna Beach
prezone the intended annexation
a rea in order to let county
The portion of South Laguna
sought by Laguna Beach ln its
annexation proposal is roughJy
the northerly third of the
untnco.n><>raled t.own .
The proposed annexallon was
Initialed July 7 by the Laguna
Beach CUy Council at the urging
of residents or the area -many
flus 1925 t1111r111y hus. parked bt>stdt' the latest mudtJl. ts rile llt'IL' masoit
/'ra11s11 VIS/net <Jrt< t' dnt't>U by Gar11 Coopn 11 s J..·rw1ut1 a ., Old Yt>llt>r
D..., P .... SUff "-ti
tur r ht' Orange Coum y
'Old Y e lle r ' OCTD's masc o t
1925 hand-crank touring bus brings lore. to district
By GLENN SC01T
Of llM D•ty ...... SUff
Just as the U.S. Forest Service has Smokey the Bear. the Orange County Transit
District has its image-making mascot.
And guess what? ll 's a bus.
Not just any old bus. This one already
named .. Old Yeller .. for its color (and
perhaps to add a little sentimentality>, is a
four-cylinder, 1925 hand-crank touring bus
originally used in Yellowstone National
Park.
Add.mg to its lore, the bus was driven by
a young cowboy by the name of Gary Cooper,
who after living the life of a bus dnver
decided he 'd rather be £n actor.
Transit district officials added their
latest and oldest bus lo the ranks last week
after paying $39, 750, Including tax, to its
former owner. William Farell of Huntington
Harbour.
Farell agreed in September lo lease the
rare. 10-passenger bus lo the transit district
for promotional use for five years. After
riding in il during two parades. Ralph Clark,
chairman of the district's Board of Directors.
suggested buying it.
Clark convinced other directors the bus
would be a needed promotional tool for the
district -and that waiting five years until
the contract expired would only increase the
cost.
The transit district spends more than
$200,000 a year in ad vertising. Funds for tbe
bus came from a sgel!ra~~ . .!Jiscretionary fund
controlled by Ceneral Manager James
Reichert. who n egotiated the sale with
Farell
Farell, retired general manager or the
Long Beach Transit District, said he had no
plans lo sell lhe bus. which he said he's
driven in hundreds or parades. including
twice in the Tournament of Roses Parade.
"But if I was going to sell it to anybody, I
preferred to sell it to OCTO," he said,
explaining that hls vehicle will 1et pr<>per
care and shelter .
Farell said he bought the bus in the
m1d-l960s from a friend in Utah who had
purchased it from a rancher in Montana who
used il to transport his seven children to
school 15 nules away.
"After they all finished school. they just
more or less parked it,·· Farell said
This bus was one of the few models that
was not destroyed at the national park in a
garage fire in the 1930s. he added. Farell said
il always draws a response at parades and
will prove to be worth the expense
.. It's one of the best marketing tools they
could buy," said Fart-II. "I know I'm very
promotion-minded myself. ..
Mi c h ael Barne s, t h e di s trict's
communications director. said the bus will be
an investment as well as a promotional tool
He said an appraiser valued it at $60,000
once several repairs are made.
The bus will be repaired by district
mechanics early next year, he said.
After that, it will be entered in all of the
major parades in Orange County, from the
Garden Grove Str awberry Festival to the big
July Fourth parade in Huntington Beach.
But first, it will once again grace
Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena on Jan. 1,
1982. Part of the sales agreement included a
stipulation that Farell gets to use it for the
last lime to ferry lhe president or the
Tournament of Roses Association in the
prestigious event.
But never fear, says Farell The transit
district's new image will continue lo roll on.
.. As long as they keep it up," he said,
"th al bus will run forever ...
of them mobtle home owners at
Treasure Island.
The LAf'C staff su11eata
those residents. and others
Ii ving near a proposed 100 u.olt
development al Hobo Canyon,
are seeklng annexation in the
belier the city would be t.ou8}ler
on developers al the two sites.
Seve r al South La1una
developers have opposed the
annexation try, includin"
Daryouth Mahboudl·Fardl
who ts proposing 699 unit.I at
Hobo Canyon -and Dr. Paul
Esslln1er, a major landowner in
South Laguna.
Also oppoeed are partners in
the Treasure I s land
develo pment project, which
would see 440 time-share hotel
units replacln1 266 mobile
homes al the 29-acre blufrtop
site.
·Colkge eyed
as site for
big TV tower
Saddleback College in Mission
Viejo might have a 250·fool
television broadcasting tower on
the campus under a proposal
being considered by. d istrict
trustees.
Anaheim-based Storer Cable
Television has offered to lease a
small plot on the campus to
construct at its own expense a
tower and 10-by-20-foot building
to house electronic equipment.
W i 1 I i a m S c. h r e i b e r .
Saddleback's director of public
information. said the cable TV
company als.o offered to install
three dish antennas to allow
mic rowave reception and
transmission at the college.
Sc hreiber said Storer has
offe red to pay Saddleback
$10,000 a year for 10 years to
lease the 100-by-200-square-foot
plot on whi~h the tower wilJ be
constructed.
If the proposal is approved by
trustees. Schreiber said Storer
also bas offered to give the
college $10,000 to be used toward
the pur c hase o r broa"cast
e quipment for Saddleback's television program.
He said the district also would
be given a channel on Storer's
sytem on which to broadcast
c lass offerings a nd special
events.
With broadcast capabilities on
the campus, Schreiber said the
college could then push forward
with its application for a
broadcast permit fro m the
Fed e ral Commun ications
Commission.
He said the net cost to the
district to expand its existing
television facilities at the South
Campus in Mission Viejo would
be $35,000 the first year and
about $25,000 a year after t}lal.
Saddleback already offers
public se rvic e oriente d
programming to local cable
television stations . However, the
programs have to be video taped
and hand deli vered to the station
to be aired.
Conclusion of an agreement
with Storer would allow the
college to broadcast directly
from the campus. A clause in
the proposal also allows
Saddleback lo link up with other
cable stations in the area.
Schreiber said trustees have
voiced co ncerns that t he
broadcast tower, as high as a
25·story building, would be
unsighUy. He said the district
board would be discussing
whe re the tower s hould be
located on the campus before a
final decision is made Trustees
are scheduled to resume
discussion of the proposal Dec.
13.
Thief gets $16,050
at Irvine plant
A well-dressed man slipped
pa s t the security system
Wednesday and stole $16,050
from two men servicing an
automated teller machine in a Fluor satellite building in Irvine,
police said today. ·
The man, dressed in a
two-piece business suit and
carrying a black briefcase, was
described as being in his late
20·s. 5-feet-10 with brown curly
hair and a mustache.
The two employees of
California-Canadian Bank -
Frank Amezcua and Kari KuUer
-were forced lnlo a storeroom
al 3:30 p.m. by the man who
indicated he had a gun in his
coat pocket, police said. He then
forced the men lo open a safe.
After getting the money, he
· tied up the men and fl ed. The
men were eventually able to
untie themselves and call police
well after lhe robber had
departed.
The automated teller machine
is located in a building the Fluor
Corp. uses on Jamboree Road
and Main Street in Irvi ne.
The main h eadquarters
complex for the engineering
corporation is on Mi chelson
Drive and Jamboree Road.
A spokesman for Fluor said
security officials this morning
were trying lo figure out how a
person could slip through the
security screening procedures
the company uses on all its
buildings in its attempts to ward
off industrial espionage.
County continues fight for road funds
Leaders coax congressmen for money to widen Santa Ana Freeway from six to eight lanes
The struggle to entice more
fund s to improve Orange
County's transportation system
continued Monday as local
leaders COIJXed congressmen for
funds t.o Widen the Santa Ana
Freeway.
The occasion was a
congressional hearing at the
Santa Ana City Co uncil
Chambers in whi c h Jerry
Patterson, ·o -Santa Ana, and
Glenn Anderson, D·Torrance,
received testimony frorir a
handful of the county's influence
leaders.
The two congressmen are
members of the subcommittee
on.surface transportation to the
Ho use of Representatives'
Public W o rk s and
Transportation Committee.
That committee is considering
legislation similar to a bill
alreedy passed by the Senate
authortzina interstate freeway
widenln1 as paft of a national
road maint e nan ce and
reconstruction program.
Local leader• left no doubl
that they back any federal
pro1rams leadtn1 lo tht
expansion or the freeway from
six to eight lanes with a new,
smooth surface.
· · Reconstru'ction of the
existing six-lane facility alone
will simply serve to improve a
multi-million parkin g lot,"
observed Daniel Grisel, a Santa
Ana City Councilm an and
m ember of the coun ty's
Transportation Commission.
In less than four years. Griset
said, planners think that ·the
s ix-lane freeway will be so
clogged that rueful drivers w111
be caught in .. st op-and-10"
conditions on the freeway 12
hours per day.
More than · merely an
inconvenience, severe freeway
congestion also means a rough
time for the local economy,
s p eakers said . It means
products don't get to the market
on tlme and workers don 't get to
their jobs.
"We see the bandwrltlng on
tbe wall," cautioned Malcolm Ron, chairman or the Orance
County Chamber or Commerce's
Tran1portation Councll.
While local o tflclal1 are
hoping for federal money to help
widen the Santa Ana Freeway,
the speakers said more tatces
eventuaJ ly must come from
county residents if g~ ater
improvements are to be de.
Irvine Company Pr sident
Peter Kremer a n d county
Supervisors Thomas Riley and
Ralph Clark all suggested that a
majority of taxpayers will
consider a local sales or gasoline
tax if they unders tand the
money will go only toward new
;oad construction.
"We cannot rely on federal
and state aid," said Kremer .
who ca l led t h e special
countywide transportation tax a
"realistic part or the solution ...
Clark told the congressmen
t hat t he county's plan to
construct a mass transit llne to
llnk Af\aheim with the J ohn
Wayne Airport -and all the
major comm ercial and
industrial stops ln between -
will help relieve traffic
congestion. The new deslcn also
would lead to new bt1her·den.slt.y
residential development in lht
heart of the county whert
middle-Income people can live
much closer to their jobs.
The mass transit line and the
widened eight-lane freeway are
two key parts of the county
Transportation Commission's
program to relieve congestion
along the so-called Santa Ana
Freeway Transportation
Corridor.
The cost of the package of
improvements is estimated al S2
billion, which works out to about
Sl ,000 per each of the county's
two million residents.
-By GLESN scorr
~op's firing of gun
ruled accidental
..
111111
TUESDAY, NOV. 2,, 1991
CAVALCADE
STOCKS
TELEVISION
82-3
86
88
---·------------
M arriag e survives
longer t han the gifts. See
Erma Bambeck, Page 82. u
East Irvine faces crucial vote on preservation
The Irvine City Council will
consid .. r tonight whether to take
steps towards designating the
historic East Irvine area u a
preservation zone and
establishine a city commlss1on
to protect it.
Lary Hogle, city director of
Community Development, has
submitted a recommendation to
the City Council favoring the
preservation effort for the rustic
area near Sand Canyon Avenue
Park pool
• corrosion
costly
Aluminum pools in Irvine's
Heritage Park AQuati cs
Complex are starting to corrode
and it may take a $100,000
construction project to remedy
the situation, city publlc works
administrator Harry Ehrlich
said today.
The corrosion has been
noticed in the form of bolts that
have been breaking at a rate of
three per week in the SO-meter
pool at the complex. Ehrlich
said. ·
More than 1,000 bolts were
installed in the sides of this pool
after it was discovered in 1976
that the newly built pool was
about one-half inch short of 50
m e ters. The bolting system
stretched the pool to 50 meters.
Ehrlich will ask the Irvine
City Council tonight lo approve a
Sl0,000 expenditure to hare an
e ngineer to come up with a plan
for solving corrosion problems
at all three pools in the complex.
He explained that the broken
bolts in the 50-m eter pool
indicate there m ay be a
corrosive process at work in all
three pools an the complex.
Ehrlich said that the apparent
corrosion problems in the pools
have come as a surprise to city
s taff members.
The pools were built at a cost
of Sl.6 million by t he Los
Angeles-based Ruane Corp.
Mesa p anel
OKs lwsp ital
housing pla n
Plans for construction of 148
resident1aJ units on 10 acres at
Fairview State Hospital for the
use of employees were approved
Monday night by Costa Mesa's
Planning Commission .
The project. by Butler
Housing Corp. of Irvine. 1s
schedul ed to go to the City
Council for approval on Dec. 7.
The project is planned to
provide "low income" houslng
for state hospital employees and
is the first part of a program to
eventually bui Id 500 units :Jt
Fairview over the next three
years.
Frank Kindstrand, Butler vice
president. said the initial
project, composed of one and
two-story structures, is expected
to cost about $5.6 million.
Butler was awarded the
contract in 1979 when it was one
of four firms bidding to lease
Fairview land under a program
autborized by the s tate
legislature.
If the council approves plans
okayed b y the Planning
Commission Monday, ground for
the project is expected to be
broken in April, said Francis
Crinella, the state hos pital's
director.
Mus ic Center
plans bac k e d
Plans for the $59 million
Orange County Music Center
moved a step forward Monday
night when Costa Mesa's
Planning Commission approved
final development or the project.
The commissio n also
approved an amendment for the
South Coast Plaza area's master
plan to add the two-theater
com pl ex and a 16-story office
structure in the Town Center
complex just across Bristol from
the s hopping plaza.
Also approved -in the package
was a $10 million parking
slructure to be financed by the
sale or tax exempt
certificates-of -pa rllcl pat.ion
notes.
The complicated parking
structurt finance arrangement
calls tor the owner, C.J .
Seaersttom and Sons, to leue
the parking bulldln1 site to t.he
city for $1 to qualify the notes
tor tax-oxempUon atatua.
and the s.&nta Ana Freewity.
The East Irvine area Includes
a number of structures built
around the turn or the century
inc luding the Irvine Country
Store, a blacksmith's shop, a
bean and granary building, a
hotel and farmhouses.
passed an advisory measure
favoring a new civic center on
Barranca Parkway and Jeffrey
Road to replace the c urrent
undersized one at 17200
Jamboree Road.
cenle·r.
He said that current pl&n1 are
for all three public agencies to
form a joint-powers agency
which would sell tax-free bonds
to Clnance the construction of a
new Clvlc Center.
A separate malter to be
considered tonight is a dticiaion
on the selection procedure for an
architect for a new Civic Center.
Irvine city voters on Nov. 3
Irvine Assistant City Manager
Paul Brady Jr. says .that the
Irvine Unified School District
and the Irvine Ranch Water
Dis trict have each e xpressed
interest In participating in
building and use of a new civic
The Irvine City Council Is also
to consider toni&ht:
-Final adoption of an
ordinance activating the city's
Indus trial Development
Authority.
o.11, ...... ,..., ......
This l9l5 1Uur111g nus. parked beside tlle latest mudel . IS lilt' 11eu: masc:ol for the Orange County
rrans11 D1s1 mt Unc:e dncen by Ca ry Cooµt:r 11 s l..-1111wn as Old Yd/er
'Old Yeller ' OCTD's mascot
1925 hand-crank touring bus brings lore to district
By GLENN SC01T
Of u.. Oallr l'fiec SUft
Just as the U.S. Forest Service has
Smokey the Bear, the Orange County Transit
District has its image-makine mascot
And guess what? It's a bus.
Not just any old bus. This one already
named "Old Yeller" for its color (and
perhaps to add a litUe sentimentality 1, is a
four-cylinder, 1925 hand-crank touring bus
originally used in Yellowstone National
Park.
Adding to its lore, the bus was driven by
a young cowboy by the name of Gary Cooper.
who after living the life of a bus driver
decided he'd rather be an actor.
Transit district officials added their
latest and oldest bus to the ranks last week
after paymg S39,750, including tax, to its
former owner, Willia m Farell of Huntington
Harbour
Farell agreed in September to lease the
rare, 10-passenger bus to the transit district
ror promotional use for five years. After
riding in it during two parades, Ralph Clark,
chairman of the district·s Board of Directors.
suggested buying it.
Clark convinced other directors the bus
would be a needed promotional tool for the
district and that waiting five years until
the contract expired would only increase the
cost.
The transit district spends more than
$200,000 a year in advertising. Funds for the
bus came from a separate discretionary fund
controlled by Gener al Manager James
Reichert, who negotiated the sale with
Farell.
Farell, retired general manager of the
Long Beach Transit District, said he had no
plans to sell the bus, which he said he's
driven in hundreds of parades, including
twice in the Tournament of Roses Parade.
"But if J was going to sell it to anybody, I
preferred to sell it to OCTD," he aald,
explalning that his vehicle wUI get proper
care and sheller.
Farell said he bought lhe bus in the
mid-19605 from a friend in Utah who had
purchased it from a rancher in Montana who
used it lo transport his seven children to
school 15 miles away.
.. After they all finished school. they just
more or less parked 1t, ·· Farell said .
Th.is bus was one of the few models that
was not destroyed at the national park in a
garage fire in the 1930s, he added. Farell said
it always draws a res ponse at parades and
will prove to be worth the expense.
"It's one of the best marketing tools they
could buy," s aid Farell. ··t know. I'm very
promotion-minded myself."
Mi c hae l Barnes. th e di s tri c t 's
communications director. said the bus will be
an investment as well as a promotional tool
He said an appraiser valued it at $60,000
once several repairs are made.
The bus will be repaired by district
mechanics early next year, he said.
After that. it will be entered In all or the
major parades in Orange County, from the
Garden Grove Strawberry Festival to the big
July Fourth parade in Huntington Beach.
But first. it will once again grace
Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena on Jan. l ,
1982. Part of the sales agreement included a
stipulation that Farell gets to use it for the
las t time to ferr y the president of the
Tournament of Roses Association in the
prestigious event.
But never rear, says Farell. The transit
district's new image will continue to roll on.
''As long as they keep it up," he said,
·'that bus will run forever ··
-Final adoption of an
ordinance renewtna the contract
under whkh Dewey'• Rubbllh
Inc. plcka up trash from city
residences.
-A proposal lo pay for a
study on an apparent lack of
apartment u.nita In Irvine.
-A health plannln1 study
sayin1 the city wUI need a ml,Jor
hospital by 1990.
-A request by the City PublJc
Works Department for approval
or • $10,000 expenditure to hire
an engineer to come up with a
plan for solvlnJ corco1lolt
problems at the Herluae Parlit
Aquatics Complex.
-The formation of a
non -profit corporation that
would issue bonds to bulld a city
animal care cent.er.
The city councll will meet at
7:30 tonight. at 17200 J a mboree
Road.
I"'
Smooth thief
gets $16,050
inside plant
A well-dressed man slipped . tied up the men and fled. The
pas l the sec\lrity system men were eventually able to
Wednesday and stole $16,050 untie themselves and call police
from two men servicing an well after the robber had
automated teller machine in a departed. Fluor satellite building in Irvine,
police said today.
The man, dressed in a
two -piece business suit and
carrying a black briefcase, was
described as being in his late
20's. 5-feet-10 with brown curly
hair and a mustache.
The two e mployee& or
California-Canadian Bank -
Frank Amez~ua and Kari Kutler
-were forced into a storeroom
at 3:30 p.m. by the man who
indicated he had a gun in his
coat pock~t. police said. He then
forced the men to open a safe.
After getting the money, he
The automated teller machine
is located in a building the Fluor
Corp. uses on J amboree Road
and Main Street in Irvine.
The main "headquarters
complex for the engineerinc
corporation is on Michelson
Drive and Jamboree Road.
A spokesman for Fluor said
security officials this morning
were trying to figure out how a
person could s Up through the
security screening procedures
the company uses on all its
buildings in its attempts to ward
off industrial espionage.
TV tower proposed
for Viejo college
Saddleback College in Mission
Viejo might have a 250-foot
televlsion broadcasting tower on
the campus under a proposal
being considered by district
trustees.
Anaheim-based Storer Cable
Television has orrered to lease a
small plot on the c ampus to
construct at its own expense a
: tower and 10-by-20-fool building
to house electronic equipment.
William Schreiber ,
Saddleback's director of public
information, said the cable TV
company also offered to install
three dish antennas to allow
mi c r ow ave reception and
transmission at the college.
Schreiber said Storer has
offered to pay Saddleback
$10,000 a year for 10 years to
lease the 100-by·200·square-foot
plot on which the tower will be
constructed.
If the proposal is approved by
trustees, Schreiber said Storer
also has offered to give the
college $10,000 to be used toward
the purchase of broadcast
e quipment for Saddleback's
television program.
He said the district also wouJd
be given a channel on Storer's
sytem on which to broadcast
class offerings and special
events.
With broadcast capabilities on
the campus, Schreiber s aid ttie
college could then push forward
with its application for a
broadcast permit from the
Federal Communi ca tions
Commission.
He said the net cost to lhe
district to expand its existing
television facilities at the South
Campus in Mission Viejo would
be $35,000 the first year and
about $25,000 a year after that.
Saddleback already offers
public se rvice oriented
programming to local cabl~
television stations. However, the
programs have to be video taped
and hand delivered to the station
to be aired.
Conclusion of an agreement
with Storer would allow the
college to broadcast directly
from the campus. A clause in
the propos al also allows
Saddleback to link up with other
cable stations in the area.
Schreiber said trustees have
voiced concerns that the
broadcast lower, as high as a
25-slory building, would be
unsightly. He said the district
board would be discussing
where the tower s hould be
located on the campus before a
final decision is made. Trustees
are s c heduled to resume
discussion of the propos al Dec.
l~.
County continues fight for road funds
Leaders coax congressmen for money to widen Santa Ana Freeway f rom six to eight lanes
The struggle to entice more
funds to Improve Orange
County's transportation system
c ontinued Monday as local
leaders coaxed congressmen for
funds to widen the Santa Ana
Freeway.
Th e occasion wa s a
congressional hearing at the
Santa Ana Clt.y Council
Chambers in whi ch Jerry
Patterson, D-Santa Ana, and
Glenn Anderson, D·Torrance,
received testi mony from a
bandfuJ of the county's inOuence
leaders.
The two congressmen are
members of the subcommittee
on surface tranSportatlon to the
House of Representatives'
Public Works and
Transportation Committee.
That committee is considering
legislation s imilar to a bill
already passed by the Senai..
authorizing Interstate freeway
widening as part of a national
road ma intenance and
reconstrucUon program.
Local leaders ltfL no doubt
that they back any ft!deral
programs leading to the
expansion of the freeway from
six to eight lanes with a new,
smooth surface.
··Recons truc tion of the
existing six-lane facility aJone
will simply serve to improve a
multi-million parking lot," ob~erved Daniel Grisel, a Santa
Ana City Councilman and
member of the county 's
TransportatiQn Commission.
In less than four years, Griset
said, planners think that the
six-lane freeway wlll be so
clogged that rueful drivers will
be caught in "s top-and-go"
conditions on the freeway 12
hours per day. .
More than merely an
Inconvenience, severe freeway
congestion also means a rough
lime for the local economy,
spea k er& said . It means
products don'l gat to the market
on time and workers don't get to
thair jobs.
"We see the handwriting on
the ""-11." cautioned Malcolm
Rosa, chalrmab or the Oranae
County Chamber ot Commerce'•
Tr•n•portation Councll.
While local ortlclala lre
hoping for federal money to help
widen the Santa Ana Freeway,
the s peakers said more taxes
eventually must come from
county residents if greater
improvements are to be made.
Irvine Company President
Peter Kremer and county
Supervisors Thomas Riley and
Ralph Clark all suggested that a
majority or taxpayers will
consider a local sales or gasoline
tax if they unde r stand the
money wiU go only toward new
J Oad construction.
"We cannot rely on federal
Bnd state aid," said Kremer,
who called the s pecial
countywide transportation tax a
"realistic part of the solution."
Clark told the congressmen
th 8t the counly·s plan to
construct a mass transit line to
link A¥,helm with the John
Wayne Alr:port -and all the
major commercial and
Industrial stops in between -
will belp relieve traffic
con1eaUon. Th new deai1n also
9fould lead to new blsher·denaU.y
realdenUal development In UM
beart o( the county whert
middle-income people can live
much cl05er to their jobs.
The mass transit line and lhe
widened eight-lane f'reeway are
·two key parts of the county
Transportation Commission's
program lo relieve congestion
along the so-called Santa Ana
Freewa y Transportation
Corridor.
The cost or the package Of
improvements is estimated at .$2
billion, which works out to about
$1,000 per each of the county's
two mlllion residents.
-By GLE."i.V SCUTT
Cop's firing of gun
ruled accidental
firearm• discharge board of
review met last week to
determine whether Officer Mark
Vu.Ille dlacba.rpd bi& weapon
with Juatlflcatlon Nov. 15 lnllde
a La,una Beach jew.lry store ..
10111 CUii
DlllyPllat
TUESDAY, NOV . 2•, 1981
CAVALCADE
STOCKS
TELEVISION
82-3
86
88
, .
Marriage survives
longer than the gift.s. See
Erma Bambeck, Page 82. 0
Costa Mesa Planning CommiSsion chief quits
By JE88V CLAUSEN
Of .... Deity,...."'"
Richard Carstensen, Costa
Mesa Planning Commission
chalrman who created a stir by
mo vine last Oecem ber to
Newport Beach, has resigned his
commission post effective
today.
Carstensen handed bis letter
of resignation t.o Mayor Arlene
Schafer today at City Hall.
He cited busin ess
commitments, many of them in
other counties, as the reason for
his resi£nation.
Fairview
housing
backed
Plans for construction of 148
residential units on 10 acres at
Fairview State Hospital for the
use of employees were approved
Monday night by Costa Mesa's
Planning Commission.
The project. by Buller
Housing Cor,p . of Irvine. is
scheduled to go to the City
Council for approval on Dec. 7.
The project is planned to
provide "low income" housing
for state hospital employees and
is the first part of a program to
eventually build 500 units al
Fairview over the next three
years .
Frank IGndstrand, Butler vice
president. said the initial
project, composed of one and
two-story structures. is expected
to cost about $5.6 million.
Butler was awarded the
contract in 1979 when it was one
or four firms bidding to lease
Fairview land under a program
authorized by the state
legislature.
H the council approves plans
o kayed by the Planning
Commission Monday, ground for
the project is expected to be
broken in April, said Francis
Crinella, the state hospital's
director.
C rinell a sai d the units.
constructed lo condominium
specification s , s hould be
available for occupancy by next
November.
"Rents are expected to range
bet ween $400 and $600 for one t.o
three-bedroom homes." be said.
·'depending on the interest rates
for construction loans."
Man arrested 1
in Costa Mesa
robbery case
Costa Mesa police ·arrested a
local man late Monday on
s us picion or armed robbery
about 13 minutes after a bandit
held up the Union 76 service
station at 2201 Newport Blvd.
and fled on foot.
Being held in the city's jail in
lieu or $25,000 bail is Todd Edwin
Barrowcliff, 19, of 378 Avocado
Ave.
Police said motorcycle officer
Karl Schuler spotted Barrowcliff
getting on a motorcycle in front
or his home at 7:25 p.m. just
minutes after a thief, who
indicated he bad a gun In bis
pocket. took S380 from a service
station employee.
Schuler. responding to a
radioed description or the
bandit. moved in with help from
officer Harlan Pauley to hold
Barrowcliff.
Gunman hits
food shop in
Costa Mesa
A "cust.omer" who asked for a
package of cigarettes at Hoagy's
Corner in Costa Mesa late
Monday pulled a sawed-off
shotgun Crom the paper bag he
carried and demanded cub as
the sandwich shop's clerk
banded over the smokes, police
said.
The gunman fled from the
shop at 6H Baker St. al about
1: 35 p. m. with all the caah in the
register, police noted, a stiU
undetermined amount.
The robbery was the third
conducted with a shotgun during
this month, detectives noted.
lnYestlgator Phil McCormJck
said law enforcement officers
report that about five dlfferent
bandlta have turned to •botCUN
in c onductln1 robberies
tbrou«hout Oranie Countv.
Mayor Schafer said the
council wlll not be able to
olliciaJly accept the resignation
until its next meeting, Dec. 7.
but that she accepted
C a rs ten se n ' s le l le r o1
resignation "with regret."
criticized for allowing a non-city
resident to remain at the helm of
Costa Mesa's Planning
Com mission, only business
reasons were listed by
Carstensen as reasons for
resignation.
That requirement would
become effective in January.
1982.
Carstensen is preside.nt of
Mesa Grande Corp. of Costa
Mesa. a real estate development
and Investment firm.
He was appointed by the
council to the Planning
Commission six years ago and
was named chairman three
She said Waller Davenport,
commission vice president, will
act as chairman until the·
commission elects a new leader.
Carstensen said today that his
residency in Newport Beach has
nothing to do with his decision.
Mayor Schafer concurred,
notini that while she has been
The stir over Carstensen
remaining on the commission
was brought into focus Nov. 16
when the council, urged by
Councilman Ed McFarland,
introduced an ordinance making
residency in Costa Mesa a
requirement for holding a
commission post.
ye14rs ago. ~
In his letter or reslgnation. he
told the mayor. •·1 simply do not
have the time to continue as a
m ember of the Planning
o.11,,._,..,._
This 1925 ruurmy bus. parked besute rhe latesr model. 1s the rwtc mascot for the Orange County
Transit D1stncl U11(·e dnve11 bµ Gary Cou,:wr. 11 s k11uw11 us Old Yeller ·
'Old Yeller' OCTD 's mascot
1925 hand-crank touring bus brings lore to district
By GLENN SCO'IT
Of IN Dally ...... S'8fl
Just as the U.S. Forest Service has
Smokey the Bear, the Orange County Transit
District has its image-making mascot.
And guess what? It's a bus.
Not just any old bus. This one already
named "Old Yeller" for its color <and
perhaps to add a little senlimentaJity>. is a
four-cylinder. 1925 band-crank touring bus
originally used in Yellowstone National
Park.
Adding to its lore. the bus was driven by
a young cowboy by the name of Gary Cooper,
who after living the life of a bus driver
decided he'd rather be an actor.
Transit district officials added their
latest and oldest bus to the ranks last week
after paying S39,750, includtng tax, to ats
former owner. William Farell of Huntington
Harbour.
Farell agreed in September to lease the
rare, 10-passenger bus to the transit district
for promotional use for five years. After
riding in it during two parades, Ralph Clark,
chairman of the district's Board of Directors.
s uggested buying it.
Clark convinced other directors the bus
would be a needed promotional tool for the
district -and that waiting fi ve years until
the contract expired would only increase the
cost.
The transit district spends more than
$200,000 a year in advertising. Funds for the
bus came from a separate discretionary fund
controll~ by Gen eral Manager James
Reichert. who negotiated the sale with
Farell.
Farell. retired general manager of the
Long Beach Transit District, said he had no
plans to sell the bus. which he said he's
driven in hundreds of parades. including
twice in the Tournament or Roses Parade.
.. But if I was goirlg to sell it to anybody. J
pre ferred to sell it to OCTD." he said.
explaining that his vehicle will gel proper
care and shelter.
Farell said he bought the bus in the
mid· 1960s from a friend in Utah who had
purchased it from a rancher in Montana who
used it to transport his seven children to
school 15 miles away.
"After they all finished school, they just
more or less parked at," Farell said. ,
This bus was one of the few models that
was not destroyed at the national park in a
garage fire in the 1930s. he added. Farell s aid
it always draws a response at parades and
will prove lo be worth the.expense.
"It's one of Lhe best marketing tools they
could buy," said Fart:ll. "l know. I'm very
promotion minded myself."
Mic hae l Barnes. the di stri ct 's
communications director, said the bus will be
an investment as well as a promotional tool.
He said an appraiser valued it at $60,000 -
once several repairs are made.
The bus wall be repaired by district
mechanics early next year. he said.
After that, it will be entered in all of the
major parades in Orange County, from the
Garden Grove Strawberry Festival to the big
July Fourth parade in Huntington Beach.
But first. it will once again grace
Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena on Jan. 1.
1982. Part of the sales agreement included a
stipulation that Farell gets lo use it for the
last time to ferry the president of the
Tournament of Roses Association in the
prestigious event.
But never fear. says Farell. The transit
district's new image will continue to roll on.
"As long as they keep it up," he said,
"that bus will run forever."
Commission. .
"My business activities have
Increased tenfold over the put
three years. My major projects
are in San Bernardino and other
counties throughout the state,
requiring extensive time and
travel outside the city."
Carstensen, who moved to
Costa Mesa In 1965, said his
firm's headquarten has and will
continue t.O remain in the city
where he owns several
properties "even thouch my
temporary residence remains
outside the geo1raphic city
boundaries."
Mayor Schafer said today that
she allowed Carstensen to
remain on the commlulon
because he promised he would
move back to Costa Meta with.in a year. That wu tut December.
·'There baa always been
comment," she admitted. "But
he hu been a dedicated,
bard-working commluioner
with an excellent attendance
record. ··I was shocked when ho
walked Into my orrlce tbi•
mornin1."
'Frustrated'
NB planning
aide resigns
Hal Thomas, a Newport Beach
planning commissioner of more
than two years, has resigned,
citing plans to move out of the
city as well as frustrations with
the city's seven-person planning
unit.
Thomas, who offered his
resignation during last
Thurs day 's com mission
meeting, says he will move to
Santa Ana where he 's a
c onsultant for a firm
r ehabilitating buildings of
historicaJ interest.
The co mmissio n also
ex pressed a feeling of
"frustration " with the
commission. which be claims no
longer is doing "any serious
problem solving."
"It just seems like we spend
more time look.ing at lot lines
a n d s et b a c k" s t b a n r e a l
problems. We just let the bi1
issues motor off, .. he said.
Thomas cl aims the City
Council does not pay serious
attention to the work of the
commission or "cuts up all the
compromises and planning we
do."
He said the commission spent
con siderable time putting
together a pottcy for the city's
local coastal plan that wo\.Lld
have required the city to use
certain revenues for buying
open-space land , public
boatyards and launch ramps (or
boats.
·'It was a good idea. a
compromise that took a lot or
work and time." said Thomas.
adding, "but It never got to first
base with the council."
He contends one problem the
council has not faced up to i$
traffic.
·'The city is facing the
question or ·how urban a
community do we want to be?' II
we want to be urban. then we
must be willing to permit
parking structures and rapid
transit systems.
"If we're not willing to allow
those things. then we shouldn't
keep approving all these
offices." .
He claims the plannina
commission bas become
"jaded" to working on such
problems because the council
"just doesn't give our ideas
serious scrutiny.··
The city is accepting
applications fo r Thomas·
unexpired four-year commission
term.
Thief gets $16,050
at Irvine plant I
A well-dressed man slipped
past the security system
Wednesday and stole $16,050
from two men servicing an
automated teller machine in a
Fluor satellite building in Irvine.
police said today.
Th e man, dressed i n a
two-piece business suit and
carrying a black briefcase, was
described as being in his late
20's. 5-feet·lO with brown curly
hair and a mustache.
The two employees or
California-Canadian Bank -
Frank Amezcua and Kari KuUer
-were forced into a storeroom
at 3:30 p.m. by the man who
indicated he bad a gun in his
coat pocket, police said. He then
forced the men to open a safe.
After getting the money. he
• tied up the men and fled. The
1 men were eventually able to
untie them.selves and call police
well after the robber h1 departed.
The automated teller machin
is located in a building the Flu
Corp. uses on Jamboree Road
and Main St.reel in Irvine.
Music Center
plans backed
Plans for the $59 million
Orange County Music Center
moved a step forward Monday
night when Costa Mesa's
Planning Commission approved
final development of the project,
The co mmi ssio n also
approved an amendment for the
South Coast Plaza area's master
plan to add the two-theater
complex and a 16-story office
structure in the Town Center
complex ·
County continues fight for road funds
Leaders coax congressmen for money to widen Santa Ana Freeway from six to eight lanes
The struggle to entice more
funds to improve Orange
County's transportation system
continued Monday as local
leaders coaxed congressmen for
funds t.o widen the Santa Ana
Freeway.
The occasion was a
congressional hearing at the
Santa Ana City Council
C h ambers in which Jerry
Patterson, 0 -Santa Ana, and
Glenn Anderson, D-Torrance,
received testimony from a
handful or the county's influence
leaders.
The twb congressmen are
members of the subcommittee
on surface transportation to the
House of Repreuntativea'
Publlc Works and
Transportation Committee.
That committee la conalderinc
le1l1lation aimllar to a blll
already passed by the Senate
authorllinl interstate freeway
widenlnt u part of a naUorial
road maintenance and
reconstruction profram.
Local leaders left no doubt
that they back any federal
programs leading to the
expansion of the freeway from
six to eight lanes with a new,
s mooth surface.
'· Reconstr;uction or the
existing siJC-la'ne facility alone
will simply serve t.o improve a
multi-million parking lot ,"
observed Daniel Griset, a Santa
Ana City Councilman and
member or the county's
Transportation Commtssion.
In less than four years, Grisel
said, planners think that t:he
six-lane freeway will be so
cloned that rueful drivers will
be caught in "~top-and-go"
conditions on the freeway 12
hours per day.
Mare than merely an
inconvenience, severe freeway
congestion a1ao means a rough
lime for the local economy,
apeaters 1ald. It means
product. don't 1et to the market
on time and wortera don't tet to
their Jobi.
•
"We see the handwriting on
the wall," cautioned Malcolm
Ross. chairman of the Orange
County Chamber of Commerce's
Transportation Council.
While focal officials are
hoping for federal money to help
widen the Santa Ana Freeway,
the speakers said more taxes
eventually must come from
county residents if greater
improvements are to be made.
Irvine Company President
Peter Kremer and county
Supervisors Thomas Riley and
Ralph Clark all suggested that a
majority of taxpayers will
consider a local sales or cuollne
tax if they understand the
money will go only toward new
.. road construcU.on.
"We cannot rely on federal
and state ald," said Kremer,
w h o c a 11 e d t b e s p e c l a l.
countywlde tramportat!on tax a
"reallatic part of the aolullon."
Clark told the con1re11men
that tbe county'• plan to
conatruct a n.11 lran,alt line to
link Al\aheim with the John
Wayne Airport -and all the
major commercial and
industrial st.ops in between -
will help relieve traffic
congestion. The new design also
would lead to new higher-density
residential development in the
heart of the county .
-By GLENN scurr
Mrs. Gerken, 83,
dies in Newport
Mrs. Vircl.nia G. Gerken, IS,
of Newport Beach, died Mon4ay
al Hoac H.olpltal after a brief
illne11.
Bom In New York City ill ta,
she h .. ' been a Newport Beach
resJdent llnce im. Sbe alto ii a
foTmer Pasadena realdent.
She leav• four IOD.I, Walter
8 . ot Cena• del llar, Cllarl• H.
of WU1D9t1!1• lU.. P. Jam• ~ Deern.ld. w., and Joba L. ol
ICWbne. plaa lt IJ'•nde....._
.
• • • a .. N
NYSE COMPO iTE TRAN ACTION
OUOUTio.tt l~UOI HAOUOl'i , ....... \'0111(.MIOWIO ""c11r1c, .... •ono• HtlOlf ANO c••CINIOtl 00(11 IJl(MA .. I .. A•O lllflOllTlt I Y fltl "HO AlllO 11111\Tll•lt '
,
a c a a c a c c a s a o c a a 4 0
Dow Jones Final
UP 18.45
CLOSING 870.24
How to cut
ski costs
This is the week that the skiing iseason opens in
the United St ates and there is no better timt-to
stress lo you ski buffs that, with proper planning and
Ot>xible travel plans. you can slash your s ki vucallon
t·osts bv a minimum 20 pt·rct-nt to 30 percent
If you plan your
ski vacation for this
period , you C'an
achieve.> si~n1f1cunt
sa v1n~~ Th1i.. 1s
known a s the
'shoulder" !>eason
<ea rly December.
January through
SYLVIA PORTEa
early February. most of /\prll I and hotel lodging I hen
runs 2.'i percent tu 30 µerccnt less than the busier
holiday wt'ek&
/\l Colorado's Cop1wr Mount ain, lh1s "super
St!uson' tovt•rs Nov. 2•1. Nov 29 to Dec 18, then artc1
April 111. IU82 In add1t10n
11 Shop around for a11 t("ansportallon There arc
spt'Ctal (ar('l> iG J>t'ft't•nt lo 40 percent lower than
normal ti you meet their restnct1ons. Tour operator'
v. ho bu) St'als 1n bulk or chartl'r their own planes can
offt'1' adtl1ttonal suvings Advance reservations ure
essent1.il, it's not uncommon for busy holiday wl•eks
to be bookl·d s ix to eight monlhi. 111 advanct'
For tn!-.tance. las t Dt'tember 1981. lodging at
Kt>ystonc Arapahoe Bas in "Aas !lO percent booked I.iv
July I. :-.ays Fritz Opel. a director of Brec kenndg1•
Keystonl' Arapahoe Basin and Copper Mountain all
in Colorado There are always some a1rltne and hotel
reservatwns available al the last mmutt', but chott't'S
are limited and pnc·cs r;rE-h1ghc1.
2) Consider off.peak travel Most vacat1on1ng
skters travel from Saturday lo Saturday. you can
save money l)y traveling midweek Airports a lso arc
lt>'s t•rov. cled. ground transportation 1s easier to
arrange. ,.ind checking mto hotels 1s S"Atfter
31 l'i.e public ground transportation at resorts
ftt'nting a c:ar that remains idle while you ska 1s not
cost dfic·1ent In increasing numbers. skiers rely
upon public j(round transportation to get to and from
resorts Continental Trail ways, for example, service'>
··Ski lht• Summit ' directly from Denver s
Slapll•ton /\1rport ~•nd downt1Jwn Denver to Copper
Mount:un, Urct'kenridg('. Keystone and two near by
town!> Frisco and Dillon
41 Evaluate your lodging r ho1ce!' You t•;1n Sitt) 1n
a sin~le hotel room on a mountam and ski to you1
door, or ~u\t• :IO percent tu 50 percent by lodgmg
nearby Slor)<.'1>1de rondom1n,ums are al a pr.-mium.
yet )OU actually <'an lower the cost per person Six
pt.>oplc 10 a two· bedroom cond<> <with foldout sofas 1
~111 <'OS t les!> per person than two people 1n a
onl' bedroom condo. fo'a m1hes are part1cularl~
attracted to ski condominiums kitchen fac1ht1e!>
avoid c~tl rci.taurant meals
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
llllW YON( (.Alt) -..... -Pf ... ...., .... ~ ol ,,.. '-moot Kil .. -v.,,. -~ -lr-..O ••• -...,. •• --
US !ilHI I 119 100 ~~ • l't ~~:~;· m:~ ,~ . ·~
ISM 0 0 SOO \I~ • I•• Snt"9lnt > •11 IOO ""'' • •, E11xon • • U ,JOO l2', feu <o Inc li>'.bOO )I•. • ' F•l~I ~ 001 •OO l'tt<l 't ghi i~f; •• fiH~ u:: · ,~
O.m 129 000 1) • •· 011 l ll,100 l6'• • '• Amer l tS IOO ll'• y Corp ]II SOO 19 • •
UPS AND DOWNS
AMERICAN LEADERS
MflALS
C.epper ,. ... U <•nl\ I PO\lnd
M\lln•hons
Le1411 J1lolonh•-
l.UK -91.. C&llb ~ Geltttt•d
l In" 2S~ Melll• W~• (OMllO'ilt lb
Alumlnwn I•-«>"""'• 00\>l>O "' ~ Mercury Ml• 00 Pl'' II•>~
P .. H11um \l81 00 lrOf Ol , N ~
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
u !i
Le-; momrng lmng '39100. up \1 11
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14 Vtndo (;o lS So1ui'lllnFon •NIM UOpf 17 PtlEI U Opl tt Benner Ind
GOLD COINS
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of OOld «II,,._ (OIT\Nr.O woll\ F rkMY'l POO.
IC.,......_, I troy 01 • ..,ii. U. oft\.< 00
M•ple ... t. I troy o; , ""'4 JS, 011 \.<.00.
MUl<M ~ PHO. I , troy 01 '500.IS, Oii ... ,, • ••••r1a11 100 crown, "°' troy 01 . "'s.oo. 011 n se>
Fr 111ktw1 · "'°°OJ, "PU O•
hrl<ll LAI• l1•1ng U-7 00 l>KI wp '4 00 "'°° 00 "Iii tel H•••Y & H•rm•" ont, O••h QuOlf'
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