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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-11-26 - Orange Coast Pilot. DUIBI CIAIT YOUR HlllTllN UllY PAPIR
IHUH">IJAY NU\/l Mht H _.., 1·rn1 0 I !l !>I G t l () lJ N T '( ( A I • I II • ~ I A " 'l c l N I '>
Who kept
Stockman ·
at home?
By STEVE MARBLE
ofUMO..tyl'lletl!Mt
The question being asked this
week by those who paid $100
each lo hear federal budget
director David Stockman speak
is, who pulled the rug on his trip
to Newport Beach'!
Stockm an, who ig ni ted
te mpers nationwide just weeks
ago by pulling the knock on the
President Reagan's economic
progr am, set off a new wave of
controversy by backing out of a
scheduled talk at the Marriott
Hotel less than 24 hours before
he was to appear.
A ccording to o ne loca l
lawmaker. others likely had a
h a nd in keeping Stockma n
grounded in Washington. D.C.
An aide to Newport Beach
Congressman Robert Badham.
who arranged for Stockman to
a pp e ar a l th e New p or t
fund-raiser Tuesday. said his
boss believes someone on the
Wh ite House sta ff canceled
Stock man's trip for hi m
.. But I don't belt eve you ·11 find
a nyone who will own up to 1t ...
said Badham aide Howard
Seelye.
One line of thanking is that
Ch ief of Staff James Baker
pulled the plug on the trip or
that Chief Counselor Edwin
Meese Ill, wh o reportedly had
argued with Badham recently,
called it off
"I 'm sur e al wasn 't the
president,~ said Seelye
Seelye said that as late as last
weekend, Stoekman had assured
Badham that he'd be at the
Marriott.
Badham didn't catch wind of
~"th e cancellation until late
Monday when he arrived at Los
! An geles International Airport.
An official from United Airli nes
re portedly broke the news to
him .
'"H e w as bitterly
d isa pp o i n t ed ," See l ye
recounted. · Ile was mad at lhe
White House staff for pulling the
rug ."
Badham's office was Informed
that Stockman had been asked
by Chief of Starr Bake r to
r emain in Washington to work
on the budget.
By Utis time, more than 200
people had paid $100 each to
a tte nd the luncheon a t the
Ma rriott and a rrangements had
been m a de to accommbdate
me dia representatives from
across the country
. Wh at the guests got wali Ken
KH achigia n . a fo rmer con·
sultant and speech writer for
President Reagan. There also
was a 10-minute phone hoolmp
with Vice Preside nt George
Bush.
Bush answered questions from
the crowd including ones like
~'Where's Stockman'?"
The vice president reportedl y
CSee STOCKMAN, Page A2)
:Inside:
Gift guide
A 40-page holiday gift guide
complete on where to find gifts
under SS, Christmas recipes. Ups
on how to select a living
Christmas tree and ideas lor
toys that are more than Jun will
be round in today's edition of the
Daily Pilot. ,
The sect ion als o includea
interviews wi t h second grade
students who explain what
Christmas means to them and a
piece on Hannakah.
_., ......... ., .... ~
Aerial view of Irvine Coast is from Cameo Shores in Corona del Mar toward Crystal Cove 1 topJ. Beach
and land between ocean and Coast Highway is part of new state park.
Belt rule ,
cancellation •
sparks suit
W AS lllNGTON I AP 1 The
insurance industry asked a
fed eral court Wednesday to
ove rt u rn th e R eaga n
administration ·s rejeC'l1on of a
r ule that would have required
new cars to be equi pped with air
bags or automatic seat bellS
The sull by more than 500
insurance companies challenged
t h e basis o n w h ich t he
Transportation Department last
mont h det er m ined that the
con troversial requirements
should be rescinded
The proposed rule would have
req ui red th e automa ti c
restraint!> beginning next fall
and 1lS defeat was considered a
maJor victor) for automakers
~at 1onal Highway Traff1('
Safety Adm1mstrator Ray Peck
based much of h1 i, dcc1s1on,
which wa:, opposed unanimously
by his scmor staff. on a belief
l hat moi,t motorists would
disconnect their automatic belts
and that manufacturers already
had reJl'Ctecl the more expensive
air bags
Hu t m a motion M'ednesday
asking the U.S Court of Appeals
to block the rescission order. the
National Asl>oc 1at1o n of
Independent Insurers challenged
Peck 's co n clus i o n th at
automatic seatbelts would not be
used
The association said Peck
ign ored n umerous i.eal hell
ISee BELT, Page t\21
Jack Albertson
dies of canc~r
HOLLYWOOD 1A P1 Jack
Albertson. a former pool hustler
who garner ed awards from
'Stage, scr een and telev1s1on
during a n acting career that
spanned ha lf a century, died
Wednesday of cancer at the age
or 74. his publicist said
Albertson. \\hose best known
work an recent years was his
p ortrayal o r a crusty but
soft -hearted garage owner an the
TV i.eries .. Chico and the Man."
had suffered from cancer for
about three years ·but d1dn 't
reveal 1t for employ men t
purposes." said Tom Mas\ers ,
··1t was alwavs under control
up until two weeks ugo, when he
took a turn for the worse."
Masters said. He said AlberlSOn
died at has Hollywood Hills home
a t 9:30 am , his wife. Wallace,
at his side.
Albertson won a Tony for his
performance in the male lead or
"The Subject Was Roses" on
Broadway, and an Oscar for has
performance an the film version
of the play
.\( '''" ..... { ('("( \//;.'
./dt k \, f)l•t (.\Ill/
He won t\l.O Emmys. one for
"Chico and the Man" a nd the
second for a guest appearance
I See ALBERTSON, Page A21
Stocks up sharply
NEW YORK <AP1 The
stock market. still benef1t1ng
fro m fa lling inlerest r ates.
recorded its second strong gain
in a row Wed nesday an active
pre-holiday trading
The Dow Jones average of 30
i ndustri a ls. co m ing off an
18 45-point adva nce on Tuesday.
rose another 7 90 lo 878.14
The daily tally on the New
York Sto<·k Exchangt• showed
two gainers for e\'er) stock that
lost ground. and the Big Board's
composite inrtex added 30 to
72 15
Analysts said the spark for the
rally was provided by rapidly
declining tnlerest rates and
signs of an improvement in the
rate of annation.
The gove rn m e nt r eported
Tuesday t hat t he consu mer
price index rose 0.4 percent in
October. down from 1 2 percent
the month before
The t·n•<.111 marketi., which
sl agc'd a \'t'ry strong showing
T uesday, had another good day
!'races of long term government
honds . "h1c h move in the
opposite direction from interest
rates. rose b\ SIO to Sl2 for
every Sl.000 an ·race value
Despite the slide in interest
rates, money mar ket mutual
fu nds continued their steady
expansion in the four day period
ended on Tuesda\.
AsseLS of the funds grew $.1 57
b 1l l 1on to Sl 79 99 billio n,
al'cording to the Investment
Company Institute. a tra de
association
Morning edition
due Friday
~save 011r coast:
By DAVID KVTZMANN
Of ... !Miity " ........
A rich man's game?
The Dall) Pilot will publish
morni n~ l'd1 t1ons ins tead of
afternoon cd1l1ons thi., Fndav m
addit11m lO Its regular morning
ed1t1on s o n Sat urdt1\' a nd Sunday ·
C1rculat1on ser\'1ct• calls
s hould be made to 642 4321
between t he hours of 7 a m and
10 a.m on Friday. Saturduy and
Sunday. Thia ia the first of a four-parl
• ier iea examining the elftcta of
California's coastal prese rvation
program on the 42-mlle Orange
County coastline Frlday'a atoT}/ unll
dea l with the battle between
devtlopera and conservat1on1ata
over the fluntington Beach area'a
. Bol1a Chica.
Nine ye&M after passage of
California's far-reaching coastal
preservation initiative, Oranie
County community leaders,
developer s and
environmentalists agree on only
one thing :
That the 1972 law, known as
Proposition 20, and the follow-up
Coastal Act of 1976, enacted by
the Legislature , had a jarrina
effect on management of Orange
County's 42 miles of beaches and
coves.
How beneficial that impact
has been is a matter which stlll
bitterly divides many members
of the cout ~ommunlty today.
To su pp orters , th e
controversial coastal measures
have brought about higher
quallty planning and also cut
down on the amount of urban
s prawl seaward.
But to critics, who aometima
admit the coastal laws resulted
in 1ome poaitive changes, the
political and economic price 11
1tlll too hiah.
Proposition 20 controversial
nine years after enactment
In particular, they blame
In flationary pressures which
h ave driven up the cost or
seaside housing -on land use
re gulation$ which have made
it harder for large and small
property owners alike to develop
their land. 1
In a statement which reflects
the thinking Qf many Or ange
County publlc of'1cials , Newport
Beach Mayor J ackie Heather
said, "(The Coastal Acll forced
us to take a harder look at tbe
coastline ... But it has also
escalated the cost or livlna In the
coastal area. A permit takes a
long time. It's expensive. You
have lo be pretty politically
astute to get development."
But without ProPoslUon 20 and
the Coastal Act, a«ordln1 to
former Laauna Beach mayor
Jon Brand, ''You would have
taad a much greater urban
sprawl and it would have come
right down lo the coast .''
And, explaJned forme r state
coastal commissioner Judy 8 .
Rosener of Newport Beach, the
Coastal Act "forced a change ln
t he focus of local officials,"
requiring them to examine
coast-related en vironm ental
Issues more closely than ever
before.
That these debates still ao on
In Orange County today
lndlcat.es the crn1ca1 Juncture at
which coastal plannln1 ha s
arrived.
Though highly developed In
places, It is here, between Loe
An1eles and San Dle10 eounUes,
t hat some or the rlneat
untouched COMtal o.,.n apace in Southern C&Ufornia can 1tUl be
found.
From tht vlewpolnl or Its
staunc~eat 1 upportn1, the I
Coastal Commission has been
a ble to ac hi eve t hese key
pl anning victories in Orange
County·
IL helped make possible, at
least in part, state acquisition of
large chunks of acrea ge along
the Ir vi ne Coast b e twee n
Newport Beach and Laguna
Beach for a new state park,
Crystal Cove.
-The panel helped improve
or force a reduction In the scope
o f ce rtain .larg e -s cale
de velopment projects, including
Aliso Viejo in the south county:
Irvine Coast between Laguna
Beach and Corona del Mar, and
the Laguna NlgueJ ·planne d
community.
-Through its local coastal
program, requiring new land
use 'Bnd zoning regulations, the
commission redirected city and
county planning errorts away
from the hapha1ard, piecemeal
work that had eone on before
1972.
"The threaf was that the coast
<See C0+8'f, Pap i\1)
ORAN GI COAST WIATHI R
Partly cloudy at times,
with 20 percent chance or
rain by evening.
·1NSIDI TODAY
ToddUr1 prepare IMtr first
Thanksgiutng /eaat, See Page
Bl.
IMDll
•
&I -Orange Coast DAILY PILOTn'hurtday, November 26, 1981
6 ~~~~
lf!h nstma Mol1rhauser. 5. serves vegetables to guests at day car centers Thanksgiving dinner
ednesday evenmg m downtown Costa Mesa park.
hildren prepare Thanksgiving
•
eal for Lions Park visitors
y JODI CADENHEAD
uw o.i1y l"ltet si.tt
Brightly colored hand drawn
vitat1ons to the Thanksgiving
east went out lo all the old
f!cople "ho frequl•nt Lions ' Park
tn Costa Mesa
The t'htldren who attend
l 'htld s Pat'e Uav Care Center
l''<plamed that lh~y felt sorry for
the elderly woman they had seen
pulling a wagon loaded with tan
c·:ins and bottles and lhe old man
who dug throu,gh the lrash ever)
llay
,. ··we decided to ask them to
<·ome to our Thaknksgiv1ng,
Necause they didn't have any
J)laae to go." explained Am>
htecper, 8. of Costa Mesa "We
wanted lo share our things wilh
ttlem "
1 With the help of director Mary
l\nn Summerville. the children
fixed turke). gravy, mashed
potatoes. stuffing and t'ranberry
sauce
First to walk m the door were
an old man and his wife The)
"ere followed by an 88·) ear old
man
··one of the persons invited
literally digs through the trash
lo s urvive .·· said M s
Summerville. "I don't want lo
think about something like that
But the kids accept it and want
to help:·
The 33 children between 5 and
11 , who attend the center. aren't
exactly well-to-do themselves.
explained Ms. Summerville
In order to attend the da) can·
center. which is funded by the
stale Department of Education.
the1 r parents must fall into a
relatively lo" income bracket
The three elderly people who
~ho\\ ed up for the Thanhg1\'1n~
lIB man, 3 o ·thers
g uilty in tax e vasion
A lluntmgton Beach man, who
wa s a s elf procld1med
jrchb1shop of the Llfe Science
('hurch, and three other people
~ave been convicted by a federal
b 1urt jury in San Diego of tax
Jvas1on and mall fraud in the
$0elling or mail-order mm1stnes
'The Jury deliberated less than
a day before find ing Wilham E.
rJrexler Sr .. 49, or lluntmgton
Oeach, guilty of 26 or 30 ('OUnls.
1J)cluding three counts or tax
~vas1on. three or mall fraud, 19
or assisting others in evading
taxes and one or conspiracy.
· federal Judge Leland C
~ielsen set sentencing for next
Jan 14
Also conv1ct<•d were William
.E. Drexler Jr . 27 , of Lone
Grove, Okla . on 15 similar
counts , and Peter and Barbara
From Page A1
Beaumont of Oceola. Ind .. of one
conspiracy count of defrauding
the government or taxes.
Alter the verdtct, William
Drexler Jr. claimed the four
were innocent and would appeal
They were accused or
marketing mail-order ministnes
a l Sl ,000 to $4,000 each for the
Life Science Church and of
falsely advising customers that
they would be exempt from
taxes by joining the church.
The Internal Revenue Service
~uccessfully contended that 1l
had never a pproved the Life
Science Church's tax·exempt
status.
William Drexler Sr was
denied bail and was confined at
the federal Metropolitan
Correctional Center. The others
were released on bail
A LBERTSO N DIES . • •
on a Cher Special. Masters said
,' ··He was one of the very few
fldors who won al l three
fwards," Masters said.
Albertson's last work was an
R
BC ~el evislon movie. "My
lody, My Child," with Vanessa
ledgrave, sch eduled for
flroadcast thts season. Masters
faid.
I
rortt Page A 1
The actor and dancer wa&
born June 16, 1907, in Malden.
Mass .. and grew up in Lynn,
Mass.
.. We were really poor,"
Albertson r ecalled in a 1976
ma1azine interview. "My father
tool( a powder. and my mother
had lo work in a s hoe factory to
support my sister and me."
ELT RULE LAWSUIT • • •
esigns that cannot be readily
isconnected and focused on a
Raymond Rasenber gt:r , an
attorney for the insurance
industry. "There are passive
restraints <seat bells as well as
air bags > th at a re n ot
automatically detachable.··
• eneral Motors design that one
nsu r ance exec u tive s aid
·almost invited you lo disable
l. ..
.. He was obligated to look
eyond that design at a true
assive restraint," declared
Ha l Parris, a spokes man for
Reck, said, "The agency will not
have any comment.··
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
Thomes P. Haley ' • ~ .. ~s--Oflle9
Robert N. Weed
"""'""' Thomas A. Murphlne ....
Mich ... P. Harvey .......,.oa.-
hi.~ .. 8ce'~.
~~l~Oodderd .)(.
l9!~ Schulman
~HL.ooe ............
Cero4 A. Moore ,,.,,..,... -
CleHlftff edwftMlng 7141142•M7i
All other depeltmente 142-4321
•Ar'N OF'Flet: ..... .., ... ,C-Melll.CA. _II...,_; e.1 .. ,c:-.-....CA ......
C.yrltM "'1 Or' .... C.. ,...,. ...... ~. ... _ ..................................... .. '*' .......... ,.,.... _,, .. ~ ......
.-ci.1....-.... ~c~•-·
dinner ate politely and refused
-.econd helpings They ate m
salenct' as the children laughed.
talked and Jostled around them
finally al the end of the meal
one dark-haired. 5-year·old
rushed up to one of the men.
~rabbed him by the hand and
wis h ed him a happy
Thanksgiving, Then she raced
out the door.
The man smiled and went on
e<.tttng his Thanksgivin~ dinner.
F e rtilize r
spill closes
SD freeway
A half-mile stretch of the San
Diego Freeway was c losed
Wednesday afternoon for more
than three hours when a truck
carrymg a load or fertilizer lost
part of its load near the Seal
Beach Boulevard exit.
California Highway Patrol
orricials said 10 bags or the
potent fertiliz e r . which
reportedly contained some
formaldehyde, toppled off the
truck at about 1: 15 p m.
Officers said within m inutes.
all northbound lanes were
covered in the fertilizer. For
more than three hours, officers
routed traffic off at Valley Vtew
Boule\'ar1 which, they said,
resulted in backing freeway
traffic up nearly five miles .
The fertilizer , they reported.
was not toxic
/ .. \.'IT ,\//\I Tl-.: .'iCH.\TCll
/fo1flJt'/ d 11t•r .\1111 kman
'
From Page A1
STOC KMAN
informed the gathering that he
had indeed seen Stockman go
into a meeting with Baker
"T he gene ral feeling,"
suggested Seelye, "is th at
Stockman is being muzzled and
there are indications he could be
eased out In time."
Seelye speculated that the
White House likely will h.ang
onto Stockman at least until the
next budget Is prepared.
.. Bad ha m t hinks highly or
him." Seelye said , adding that
S t ockman's controvers ial
comments on Reaganomics are
"overall , the same things he's
been saying ror months.
"Of course he used a couple of
b\J'u 'words he probably
Ahouldn'l have ," See lye
s uggested.
As ror the rund-raiser itself,
Seelye proclaimed it a success .
· 'OnJy two peop~ asked for
their money back. ~e saJsl. •
11hird suspect Dabbed
Arrest reported in abduction of 6-year-old girl
A third suspeC't hl!I been
arrested in the abduction nearly
two months ago or a 6-year-old
girl who was rescued
Wednesday by Los Anaeteai
sherlfl's deputies at a San Juan
Capistrano hotel.
Berta Atruro was returned
unha rmed to her mother early
We dnesday after s he riff's
detectives arrested Salvador
Camacho. 42 and his son Daniel,
21, both of Compton at the
unidentified hotel.
Laler in the day a third
suspect, who s heriff's
investigators believe actually
took the girl from her aunt's car
in a Walnut Park shopping
center lot, was arrested He was
identified as Ma1rnel Figueroa,
19, und he was be ln1 booked
alone with the Camachoa on one
count of kidnappin1.
Deputies clarUled events In a
news conference Wednesday.
Berta Alfaro was abducted
outside the Farmboy's market
In Walnut Park Oct. 1, and it
was not unUl two weeks ago that
detectives began following the
older Camacho.
"We just had a hunch that the
mother's boyfriend (Camacho>
might have been involved," one
detective said.
Tu es day ni g ht , 20
inves tigators, a helicopter and
an airplane tailed Berta's
mother. Carm en Atraro, and
Cam acho to a hotel in San Juan
Capistrano.
The mother w1111 left at the
hotel while Camacho and his son
continued on to Mexico, where
they purportedly picked up the
girl and return~ to the hotel.
Once detectives knew the girl
was safe with her mother, they
moved in.
What remains to be 11nswered
as why, arter nearly two months ..
Ca macho would decide to
reunite the mother with he r
dauahter
No ransom demand was made
during the time the girl was
being held, and detectives said
they will interrogate the three
men 1n an attempt to determine
a motive for the crime.
Troubled Sambo 's to close
4~ 7 of its restaurants
restaurants in 4 6 states,
including the "No Place Like
Sam 's" outlets in New York,
New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New
Hampshire, Maine, Verm ont
and Connecticut. •
Rumors have been rife for
som e time that Sambo's might
go belly up. The chain posted
losses of $77.8 million in 1979.
Sl 1 6 million in 1980 and $29
million this year.
CA RPINTERIA <AP >
Financially troubled Sambo's
Restaurants Inc., which has lost
more than Sl 18 million since
1979, said Wednesday it would
give .. serious consideration" lo
declaring bankruptcy if It!:>
lenders refuse to restructure its
debt.
At the same time, t h e
com pa ny announced 1t h ad
decided to close 447 restaurants
in 43 states.
Productivity off
Shortly after the restaurant
chain asked the New York Stock
Exchange to stop trading in its
stock Wednesday, S<1mbo 's Vice
President Arthur Dowd said the
chain s ubmitted a new
debt-restructuring proposal to
lenders Tuesday
in third quarter
.. If this proposal 1s rejected
and a notice or default 1s served
on lhe company by the lenders.
serious consideration will have
to be given to the fi ling of a
bankruptcy petition," Dowd
said.
Sambo's, which haq operated
1.114 restaurants in 47 states,
said it would now operate 667
WASHINGTON t AP I
American cor porate
productivity s lumped al an
annual rate of 0.6 percent in the
third quarter , the first decline
since the s pring of 1980, the
Lab or Department said
Wednesday.
The report, reflecting a drop
in worker output accompanied
by rises in wages and hours
worked i n the nation 's
non ·financial corpor ations.
furnished yet another warning or
future trou bl es in a
recession-plagued economy
South Laguna annex
decision postponed
Consideration of a proposal to
annex portion or South
Laguna rnto Laguna Beach .
Wednesday "as continued until
Jan 13 by the county. Local
Agency FQrmation Commission
The postponement was agreed
upon by commissioners to allow
Laguna Beach officials more
lime lo set policies on how they
would serve the 587 acres of
South Laguna if annexed.
Laguna Beach Mayor Sally
Bellerue said the city council
wants to annex the property
because it is a natural extension
of the city.
Opponents of the annexation
induding developers who
want to change the Treasure
Is l and trailer park into a
time -s h are condominium
complex -claim the annexation
is m eant lo block their
development plans.
A sta re report to the
com mission r e com m e nded
denying the annexation because
of the political implications. The
annexation was first suggested
by tenants at the trailer park.
The property in question runs
along the coastline from the city
limits south lo Ben Brown's golf
course and AJiso Beach County
Park.
Mrs. Bellerue told the
commissioners the city council
also Is wilting to annex the
re maining parts o f South
Laguna if that is requested by
those residents.
The Local Agency Formation
Commission is responsible for
making decisions on local
boundary lines and jurisdictions.
Lease cost
corrected
The University of Southern
California, awarded a five-year
lease to occupy Corona del Mar
Elementary School Tuesday
night, will pay S69,000 a year for
the Newport-Mesa Uni f1ed
School District property.
The Daily Pilot erroneously
reported Wednesday that the
lease cost was Sl6,250 annually.
USC plan s to u se the
elementary school as a n Orange
County t;_xtension Division for
g r aduate and pro fessional
students.
The elementary school was
closed down last s ummer
because of Newport-Mesa
dis tri ct's declining student
enrollment.
The non-financial corporate
s ector accounts fo r about
t wo·thirds of private busmess
act1v1ty in the United States.
Productivity m this sector --,
which excludes banks. stock and
commodity brokers, and finance
and insurance companies had
risen al an annual rate of 6.3
percent in the first quarter of
this year and 2.2 percent in the
second.
In a companion report, the
department's Bureau of Labor
Statisti cs said that .. r eal
spendable earnings," the money
a wage earner has to purchase
goods <.tnd services after
a djust ing his income for
inflation and taxes. increased
slightly at an annual rate of O 3
percent m October followmg a
1 7 percent decline 1n
September
Over the year, however, reaJ
spendable earn i ngs h ave
declined by 3 6 percent
A typical married worker with
three dependents had $224 .39 a
week to s pend compared to
$222.92 in September and S21 l 4~
in October 1980.
The 0.6 per cent decline in
corporate productivity from
July through September was
based on preliminary figures.
Th e l ast dip in corporate
productivity was in the second
quarter of 1~.
T he Labor Department also
reported on Wednesday revised
productivity figures for the
overall private business sector,
w h ich s ho wed that worker
output was not quite as poor as
first reported
Producti vi t y in private
business. including the farming
sector, fell at an annual rate of 1
percent an the third quarter
based on updated computations
of output
In a preliminary report on
private business productivity
between July and September .
the agency listed the decline as
being at an annual rate or l.9
percent. the worst an 31"l years.
Concord Mariner SG. Designed to accommodate the
most actJ.ve lifestyle. Handsome. thin. with a
S)Yeep-second hand and a date calendar. It's a
sculptural blending of stainless steel and wann, r1ch
14 karat gold. Water-resistant to 99 feet Accurate to
within 60 seconds a year. Never n~ winding .
Completely hand-<:rafteel In Swttz.erland. His, $890.
Hers. $840. Also available In all steel .
His. $590. Hers. $550 .
§LA.VICK'S
""' ........ SlrQ 19'7
Where tlw besr sUYprlsts bqin.
,lllNon lllMd (71•1 .... t•· ~ .....
Allo CirelW Loi~• SM Dllgo • lAl-.m
7 •
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. November 26, 1981 Al
From Page A 1·
COAST PRICES, PO.PULARITY MULTIPLY • • •
or Orange c;ounty would h&V('
looked like the cout or Los
Angt:lcs County. which is one
lur&c urban sprawl." tixplained
Brund. now pre::.ident or Luaiuna
Greenbelt I n c .. un (•n
vironmcnlulh;t organization
Oeveloprnenl pressures. other
i.'Ot•s tul advocates ins isted .
made It vital thal planning and
management errorts be
upl(ruded.
"There are Intense pressures
for development c in Orange
County>," said Dr. P~ter Green.
president or Amigos de Bolsa
Chic a . anothe r environmental
group
· "We're on our way towurds
our third mt Ilion people." Green
s aid "I would hope that we are
a stull• enough and that we are
wise enough to set aside some
oasis of natural beauty in the
cent('r or this urban s prawl. for
the s anity or lhl' people who live
in the area."
Cr1l1cs or the comm1ss1on's
w o rk cl aim nine yea r s or
coastal rule by the state has
1n rh<'ted numerous wounds
Dl'Pl'nding on who you ask .
this casuulty lbl includes the
small propert~ o wne r , the
homt• hu y 1ng public . local
or r1 c 1al::. them se l ves. the
taxpa ye r ~ and lhl' large
landown1.•rs
..
'tr It WllS the purpose or the
Coastal A<_t\ to create a place for
thost.• o( Ull who havti more
money, und to teel rid of low u.nd
mQ<lerate income i>eople and old
JHlOple from thtt coast. they have
done ah outstanding job," said
rorme r Irvine Compuny va<'e
president Gil Ferguson.
Now a leader or a coalition or
bus iness and labor groups.
ferguson s aid. "I think we
!>hould all be very cleur
Because or the Coastal
C ommission, many, many,
many thousands of us who live
in the coastal area have become
millionaires
.. And we s hould not denigrate
that." he said. "I hke money as
muc h as anybody As much as
I 've fought the Coastul
Commission, a s much as I fight
the kinds of people who urge
coa s tal commissions. tht.' fa<'l as.
they make all of us extremely
wealthy those or us who have
property.'
But not everybody agrees that
s kyrocketing land values can be
blamed on the Coastal Act alone
Instead. they cite the scarl'ity
of butldable coastal territorv
nd the magnetic a ppeal 1l ha·s
r many people who want to
ve on the coast t "I don't belt eve the Coa tal
A<'t was a major influ t·t.·
• • • •
here." said Pt>ter llcrmun. n top
aide to Orant( • County
Supervisor Thomas Riiey "The
licurcity or the lund and the
de!ilribility o( the hand were U'"
main foctor11
"I would :suy there 1s certainly
liOme impact in the <.:osstal
Act," Herman said. ·But the
1 eal reason I thank the Irvine
Company wall get a million
dollars a h>t (On the Irvine
('oust 1 tl> bec ause or the scarcity
of resources ."
Exphtinec.J Brand. a geo~ra ph~·
1nst ruc·tor at Oran~t· C:oa<;t
Colle.ie:
"I thtnk the maJor fal·tor tr\
pushing up housing <·ost!'I 1:,. on1.'.
1t 's a very des irulJlt.> a rea
Anytime ~OU ha ve u ven
d e:,irable area. housing <'O::.ts ~o
up And l wo. the interest ralt•:o.
have been the overall fal'lor an
s lowang down development
Which means then• are tev.c1
h o u !'les and the) an mo1 e
valuable
· 1 would admit. .. h t· sa11J.
· therl''s a c (•oastal act • la('tor
1nvolvl'd there, but I would !'la\
tl '!'1 a minor fut'lor tompured I;)
lht• overall trend
Orange C1)Unl~ Supt•n·1so1
llarrtell Wtedl'I'. a rrt:quenl
<'ll t 1t ol the Co a !'l ta l
C:omm1ss1on . .,aid u !>tuc.J\ b\ l\\ll
l ' n I \ l' I !'> I I \ () r l . a I .. I () ... n I J
When cities lost clout
Voters put coastline fate in panel's h a nds
Tht• turning point tn
management of the California
coast <'ame in 1972. \\hen 7 8
million voters rhroughout the
slat<• apprU\l'd J contro\'er!'l1al
mea!'lure known d!'I Propo!>1t1on
20 .
S1napl~ put. the 1n1l1ull\e
required 1>re p arat1 11 n or a
(' () m p r e h l' n s I \' c p I a n r 0 I'
handltn~ the 1.100 mile., or
!'l<'enH· :-horehne trom lmpenal
Reach to lhl' Oregon border
Land usc det·1s1ons were taken
away from local go\'ernment
ugent•tes whtt h tradit1onall~ had
adm 1naste r('d tnl'orporat~d and
unin<'orporated t.·oaslal land.
T emporary but rull author1t~
v. as lllaC't:d '" the hJnds or a
nt.•wh t reated Cahforntil CoaslaJ
('om m1::.s111n and '" '" n·g1onal
.1rfthall'S
Whtie tht• ('Oa..,tal plan wa-;
heing prcpart'd. the coastal
co mml sision -t c a tabllshed
... ontrnls on dev.-lopmt>nt. murh
lo the t hagrtn or laq~e and small
land owner'
In 1!175. a tompleted COdslal
p I a n w a s -; u b m 1 l t e d l u l ht.'
governor and thl' Legaslaturc
The folio\\ up Coastal i\l't ur
I 97ti ..., as thl·n t'nacted b~ the
l.eg1!'ilature but not befot e
l'Ons1derablt' eomprom1ses had
to bl' reueh<'d and numerou'
re\ 1s1ons made to the plan
Thl' controls established by
Propos1l1on 20 expired o n Der
31. 1976 and the Coilstal Act took
t•frerl the folio\\ ang day
The Ca l1rorn1 a Coas tdl
Comm1ss1on was reconstituted
under the new la\\ and one of 1ts
primary dut1e6 was to ra t1f)
-.o ·c.·alled Lor al Coastal
Programs c LCPs1 prepared b)
loral agencies to agam win back
der1s1on·mak1ng power for their
'trell'h of C'Oastline
An LCP is a loca l
aovernm ent's hand use and
zoning plan which would carry
out p l'll\ 1!'111111!'1 ol tht• t'oa'>tal
\1·1
l'ht· six rt•g1011al l'11mn11-.:-.1on!'I
111 lht• ... 1u1t· inl'luding lhl' South
I o .1sl Heg1onal Comm 1..,s1on
\\ h1d1 -..1.·n·t•d Orange and l..o:-
\ngelt"' l'Ount1e..,, "t'rl' gt\ t•n the
po" e1 tn 1:-,Ul' or dl'n,\ t·oa'>ltil
bu1 ld1n g IH'rm it ~ 1n lhl·
11H·ant1mt•
The panl'ls also reviewed thl'
l.oC'ul Coastal Pr01:raml,, befon·
the' wt.'l'e 'cnt on to the statt.·
panel
Last J um•. thl' ('harler for lh1.·
n•gwnal 1.·ornm1ss1ons ran out
and thl'\ were d1sbandl'd That
ldl 011.l\' the s tate Cc1u s tal
Comm1ss.1on to finish the work or
ratafy mg tCPs .md handl1n,a.:
C'Oastal building pel'm1ts
Once this task ,, complNed
the s tate romm1:-c;1on ts I 1kel~ to
re main an bu~trH'ss a'> an
ap p ea ls b oard and a'i J
watchdog to ansure that LCPs
urt" being adhC'red to
-DAVID KUTZMAt\.\
Partly cloudy
Co astal
P•ttt~ c.touch •t Un .. \ t>ul t•tt
"'°"I Of 100.Y (.-lnu .. W•Q l•I~
tor:t•y Wtlh • 20 pPfC.Mf <n..tnte Of
llQ.hl '~'' Dy evitonln(I (.ont1n..,..a
n11fd Wlll'\ ~ •n '"' '°' E-h•whittt", ltQnt ••ti.Off' w1nO\
tn,, mor~nQ Dr<om•no *"''"''" 10 to II onou ""' •ll~rnoon •nll lon1~1
f WO to .)..fQOC "".''" \Well ..... 1on191tt tncr••\1"9 <touch IOCMIV ••th
cnancr of rain b'f th•\ 4'Uernoon
California
Crt•n91nv to •••n ''°'" Yw•,NnQlon •<.ro'' ttw northern two-thiro\ of
C••••orn•• C..lo"'o ' \•11•' -.er•
lort <•U ovrr th~ '•""•' •nd \OulMrn Pl .. n\ ~ •ton9 the centr.tl
(,ult l°"'il ""'1 I .... nol1htrn All•nltt
(OHi
V-ttrm·u ..,.. • .,..,, .,., prfll•<...C •n
IPW 0 f'h0 V•Ut y •nc:t °" thrt <•nlt•I
Allanh< C.0.U, <ol<•r •Hl'Wr 1n llW
M1nf\\1~ V•ll~y •nd t"t' <•ntr••
•n.d \Ovt'-r n pl•l'" M"CI 1n UW .OS
lrom the mtO AUM\t•c {a.st .c.roH
.... \OUlhtrn °""' 11•111¥. ,..,,,,..,n
' .... ,, \OUttwtn Ne•..c:t• •nd tM
!iiout"-rn C•fltOf"n.e• C.OMI H•~ M•r
IO •tr• ortot<teo 1n WM.llfV'f"n f-. •ot1a.
•f'MI U\ ,,,. m1~ 1n "°"'thern t •••'
S mog report
1 ht Au Ou••ily M•n•gemt nl
fr•v••~-' .Oiwi10t't tor ~ •na O•\trict pr~h QOOd •ir QU..l•f'f '°'
OY\l)' w1~ ticlCQiy -~•Oi"Q into tf'ttl t veryon. in uw Soutn C.OA$t eu O.\tn
mo"ntAU)'S of l'Ot'lPhJrrttt C.••1forn1• tOd••
!.h .. te ind !>f\ll.•You• and o•er IN Th• AQMO e u1gneo Po11u11on S1•rr•• St•n<1•tO '"°'• c PSU r•hn9\ of .. ,
X •tlfffO ~,.-, W>r•.CStng ovt t t o r • I I re Q •on" \ "e S • n
IM rtM.f•notf' ot untr•t C•Ut0tn1• G •brt•t·Pomon• v•ll•y. S•n
tOCJ•' Sliow"er\ t100tnnig into F ttd•y F • rn•ndo-S•nt• C ••' 1 t• v•t l~y\1
Sno• love11°""'""9 to •llOul 2000 '"' llt•erll<le·SMI IMf'NrOlno •r••. ruQfl nort~rn mountMns tOO.y to .MIOut •nd low ff Mr t s. 1nl•na O' itnQt
•000 IHI >0ulhtrn !M•rr• Nev.a• C.ountt •no lM <oesi.1, -lr0e>0t11en,
I0<11~I eno .. r,.,., Gu•lv nortlWrly B•nnlnQ, """°l·E:ls1nore •nd 8•Q wlnat sr>r••d1no ov~, tn. 011tr1c1 8••r L.•• •r••'-
loOey '-•Qllt llm• temoerelurn -----------Oropp1n9 1n10 ll'f JO\ •I IO•er
•le••lo°'1•
U.S. summary
Extended
outlook
• .. 1 .. 1.r Horm o .. e1opeo ,. ~~",.s:u ::~, -=-~r,,"~~10~
V.Hnet.CMy .,...r , ... -· MMIW•il lempe••lv<~ lOC..I gvsly ... ,,,,, •I •no 1new >llo•er1 •Pr••o lrom llnlt!. C.0.-l'MNGMSllo ..
•nltrn Monl•n• ano V.yomtng low\ mostly 111047 Mounl••n "'""' •<rou, v.1uon\ln eno Upper le•elhi~l71047wllhtowsU1oao
Mo<lll~n
T lie swm, I,.. N•tion.1 weetMr
!>HYl<e W1d, coutO m•U Inf\ Te mpe .. ature B T 11.tnk~VtnQ. Clay IO rtmemtler . .I I • '
Wint..,. tlorm *'M"n4nQ\ tlfftt' up '"
no<llH~tr81 -norlhffsttrn S0..111
o oot• tor toCtlly ,..,"'Y '"°"' .. 11n 41 ••
llronQ, _1., wtno.. ... nv
T re•elolf\ .o.1~le' _,.. -too AlbU<I,..
In m11<1> ol Mlnnetot•, >OUCllH\ltfn Am.rlllo
Nor111 0_...,,.. -IM ff\lern 11.tll of An<l\Of'99
""yomlno 10< up 10 l lrKl>e• of ,..,. ~tN11 ~lllt '"-.... -''"'''WI,.... ~ •n • !>now -r• •ncl llUtrtes were Att•nlc Cly
wlCltly ><•U.,tO over tH>lrtt Ntw Belllmore
Enol•nd Blrml1>9nm
MA Tl ON
HI LA
ao 11
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l4o ..
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llo'1on • ,.
8ro•n$•1 .. .. ..
Bulle to 1'I ,.
Cll.tr .. ln 5(, ~ 0
(l\•rl\ln V.lt 0 11 c. ..... _ •• JO
(hl<•QO <l 1'
C1nc1nn•t• •) 21
C.••••l•nd '° J.I Co•um.,.... •I n
O•l·H V.ln It u O.nver )0 ll
0.\ MOtnl!'\ .. J.I O.troll '° 1• Oululh " JO E•o•M> 11 '° ,, •• ,w ...... II OS
H•t'UOf"O '° ,.
Helen• :ll n Honolulu to 10 Houlton 11 .a
1non•1>1•1 0 11
J•U1nvlle .. .]J
JuM•u J~ 3S
1t•n1 C.•lv •) l4o l Hll-s• S1
l11tle Rou .. l4o los Ano-t• •• )I
louls~lllt •I • ~mP'>I\ .. ),
Ml•mi II 60
Mll••uk .. ~ n
lllP"·St P ll Jl
HHll•llle SI '° New Or._ , . ..
New 'York '° JI Norfolk 0 " Oki• City ,. , ..
Om•I>• )0 )4
or .. noo ,, ..
Pl>ll•Ophte ., ,.
p,_,.1. ,. .,
PlllSburQI> ,. 2•
Sk ••• wfrt c IOYd' over lh• Bt""ar<ll
m 10·Ml,,llU•PPI ll•llo •nO Cllt 801"
<ffllr•I Pl•in• •nll "" •1-ntre. tr~---------------------wllh un4e--..otr w•rm -•l,..r 111 ---
Ille .oul ... n Pl•ln\. Tem.,., .. ..,.. .,ouno t,.. Miion •I
mloo.y -· ren9fd trom • 1-ot U •t sune, Monl , 10 • high of
17 el M<All"", 1 .. u . SURF RIPORT ' For 100.y, ,,,_ w~ lor11<nt 1n 1,.
-r C.rHI UtkH -Ml-tole,
cl\•nQ•"9 10 r•ln 1KrC>H Ille tower
Grett lOH, wllH rttn !.hOwt"
H•lltreO In lllt rt1I OI lllt
Ml»IHitlClt 11811tv.
Sc•H•r•O l.no• •Pto••ri w•r•
lorecut tn centr•I New Engt•no. wltll ,_ In IM nortJwrn Rockie>,
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Z11m1 511\laMonlet
~ ... port s.n 01t90C.-ly
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We're Listening ••.
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Pll•no,Me i. 10 Pll•na, ur-.. )0 '° R•p•o C.llv J.I » Reno .. ,.
llKnm-•1 JI
S.11 leU lS 31
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SI loult .. • SIP T •mp.o /I 0 SI Stt M11,. 1'I H SPO~•M JS , .
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WtChlt• 70 ..
GI.NADA
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t ••11•rv ll 10
EOmO<tlon JO °' Monlrtet JO Jj
0 11 ..... 27 JJ
RtQ•NI 1' 1S
Toronlo 11 II
Vancou.,,., •I 1'
Wtnntpeo JO n
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8-•· .. ..
Cut•<• 'II to
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Gu_._ • II ..... ,,. II ..
ltlftQSIDn 'II IJ
Mu•llen aJ ..
Mtrl<I• '° S4
MUi<Otlh II lJ
MOnlerrev .. u
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San Ju..,, P II '° ,,
SI !till\ '° ,.
Sun, moon,tidea
TOOAY
Flr\l lo.., 2:04 e.m 1.1
Fi<1I high I I• a 'I'· S •
!>Kono 1-J.21 pm -o t
*"-high • 40p,m S •
Sun MU 4.~l p m , rl"' Fruity
•.40a.m
MOon rl'" Frloay et 1 JO a.m .. MIS el~ OJ
What do you like about the Daily Pilot'? What don 't you like~
Call the number below a nd your m essage will be recorded.
transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor
The same 24-hour answerin1 service may be used lo record let-
ters lo the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must Include
their name and telephone number for verification No circulation
c•lls. please.
Ttll us what's on your m ind
'•
eco nomis ts s howt.>d thot 11n
u veragt: of Sl ,600 hud been
added to the prlre of eaeh hoint-
111 the cou. h1I tone beC'1tUISl' of
the punel's op<·1·atlons.
Thut study covered hou111n1t
prices In Oxnard. Ventura and
Cttmnrillo during the fir t five
years or the-comm1sslon 'i.
existence. from 1972 to l977
ln u speech to the Orange
County Coast Association. Mrs .
Wieder s aid, .. Multiply that s 1.1100 ti mes the thousands or
homes in the t·oastul ione. then
udd thitt product to the S70
million or c coa st commission>
~1dministrat1vc costs and
dl'cide for yourself. l!i the
(':.dtfornio Coastal Commlr..sion
\\ orlh it'"
Expanding on thO!'le remarks
1n u reeent interview. the
Orange County super visor !>aid
s hl· believes the same goal or
hl'ltcr t·oasla l management
t•n\ 1s1on1.'<l under Proposition 20
l' '' u I d p r o b a b I y h a v e b c e n
at•h1eved at much less cost on
tht.' lot·al level alone
· You don't gel government tu
bl' m ore res p o n!>tble and
1 .. <, p o n s 1 v l' h ~ l' rt• a ta n g <1
bUl'CUUl0 racy that IS not a l>
rt•sponstble a' poss1blt.' ... lhl·
rorm er lluntrn~ton Beach mayor
asserted
Shl' t·ontendcd tha t the ::.tale
t·om m1sston i.IOd its no\\ dt·funt'l
n·i.:wnal panels ht.•caml' totalh
111 ... ulaled " rrom lhe pcuvlc they
\\ l'rl' mt.'anl lo st·n l'
·1 think lhl· only thing thats
ha JIPl'nl·<I. that nobody s told thl'
'tor) about. 1:-n•ally t hl' cto llur
('llSl ror dutng tl. shl• 'atcJ Of the
( '11,1stal l'omm1:.-.111n s co..,t lo
\,1 \.llU~l'f'\ 0\1.'r lht• pa~\ ntnl'
\ l'JI''\
· Tht' 'tJ!Ylt' mone\ c..,t1matt'd al
.11>oul S70 mtlhon: could 1n)>ll'<HJ
hJ \l' ht'l'n USl'd for th<' purc·hast•
of 11pl·n 'pan· propt·rt~ l>~ lht.·
state. s he :-.aid
The 'upcn t!'l1lr aho 'itrt•sse1I
that s ht• "a' not ncct'~'anh
l' rt I ll' a I or 1 h 1• 1 n t t· n t 111 l ht'
c·11ast11l management hi W!'I I
y. Jnl to set the ret·ord ..,lratght
on that . s he said. · I wa:.
('rtt1cal of the manner m which
p 1• o p I e a s s u m e d t h e 1 r
rt.·!t pons1h1lit) and authority It
bl'l'a rnc almost autocratic
'"'''' 'l•i/Jf II t 1]!1 f1 /" f ttu 1t/l1 1 11 t' •I 11/t \ldlll I .:"\I •d '•i 11 • ,, Ji, I 1 ', ,, ,,. , ,,,, • 'ltt Jl1 'i'' ,,,, I 1t' •• , t ,.,, ,. ' • I ' I JJ• .,, ' t
And I thou~ht the pendulum
h.td s wung too mul'h 1n that
dlr<.'Cllt>n, On lhl' part or the Staff
<Ind some or the CO a !>tal
c·om m1ss1onl'r!> who took
tht•tr role an a \'t'r) 1mp1•rao1"
m ,11111e1 a.., I perrel\ 1.•d 11
l'ho:.e were the thin ~!" thut
dt..,turbt>d me." ::.h e s aid
What d1:>lurbed other:.. 1o1.wi.
pote-ntlal m1!lmanai:temE'nt ol
Cu I i f o rn 1 ;.i ' I . I OU m 1 I cs of
meandering l"oastltne
··Thl' l'Oast ts the numtwr ont•
asset in Cul1forn 1a. · "a•d
Lagunas Brand That'!> where
people go. It ':-. the number one
rerreat1on area The number
one 'aration art> a . It has lo be
prot ertt'd The people want al
protertcd
·And that's \\hat the Coastal
Comm1ss1on has donl' and that
process wall rontmue ." he said
Is the Orange Coast today u
better place he<'i.I USe of the
Coastal Ac t a nd the coastal
rom m1ss1ons '
.. Absolute!~ ... said Brand
't ou have u lot more bea<'h
.tC'C'ess for one· thing Orange
('ou nt v had bt'Ul'h a<.·c·C's:-
Jlrt.'ad) Statt.'\\ 1de 11 \\-US mon·
important
·one of the important aspeet
or the Coastal Comm1ss1on tn
Orange County is that tl has
helped us gl•l signtf1cant land
ded1 r at1ons the Irvine
Com pan) probably would not
have givl'n a!> mu('h land t along
the Irvine Coast 1 "1thout a
Coastal Commiss ion ." the
former Laguna mayor said
Another benefit of the Coastal
Al·t. ht· '\Jiii h,1, ht-<•n lht• lol·al
l'Oastul J>r<>).!I am:-•I.I • p, \\ htl'h
t1t1es and l'ounltl'.., nlll-.t p1t•par1·
to rt.'$:311\ nmlrol uf land u-.1·
clt•t·1:-1on' fo1 l't>.J~lJI t1.•n 1tC11' 1n
I h1.•11' JUrtsdH·\11111'
For bt>lk1 or \\Or-.c" C..1lttur111a
.111er' an 197~ pl.H'l'd 1n l hl'
han'Cf.,. ur the C'oa ... t al
('ommt~saon lt·mpot a r) liu1 lull
l'O ntrul O\l'I <111 p<11t -.. ••I
Ca1tro rnn1·, I.WO milt· l'Oa s1l1111·
Th a l u u l ho 1 1 I \ 1' I '' h c·
t l'lmqul'>hed to l1w;d u1!111.1!-.
onl~ upon l"Hnplt•llon and 'IJl1•
,l('tl'pla/ll'l' or l111• 1,1 ·1 ·~
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11•q111n•d to 111t•p;i1 t• lht.• 11:.wka,1!1•
of nl'"' zonmg and land u-.c• la"'
lllt'lude<l 1111• l'llll.'S M llunltn~lon
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H <'a ch S .111 ('I'-' nH· n l t· and
In int.• 1\l~o n •qu1n•d to pn•part•
a plan wa-. lht• 1·11u11l \ tlst•lr
Onh lt \tlll' \\h1thha!'>a..,mall
~I t\ er ot p1 Olh'rl) \\ 1lh1n th1
t•oastal area to .ulm1n1-.h•1 ha'
had th lnl·JI l'llU,tal 1110).!l'Jtll
UC'l'E'plt!(J tn full by tht• '\l3l••
Portions of the t•ount~ plan
dealan~ with 1\hso Vtl'Jo th1•
I rv1ne Coa'l. l.1;1gun a :-.i 11o(11c·I
Dana Point and Sunset Ht.·al'l1
ha\ e bel'n at·c·1·plt·tl tn \\ hoh· 111
in part
Tht•1 t• h;te l h• "11 , ,11 , I·
haphazard p .• 11111111:.: 1r1 :...o lh• 111
l'altfornta · ..,,11d Brand ,\nd
no\\ it \lo 111 ht.• mnn• logtt•al <.111d
takt• an the l·ont·t•n i-. ol till' 111.1:-t
·'.'low lhl·1 1• ,111• 11111hlt•m' .,., 1th
the Ll'P~. hl' 1·11nl·e1il'd I
"'ouldn'I dl'n~ 1ho.11 Hut mNall
it 's ~ood 'to ha\'l' lhem
ll o p crull~ tht·\ 11 ull b1
arloptt'd
E v l' n l' 1 , 1 1 1 ... u r 1 h , .
c·om mission ackno" kd).!t' th.11
t ht• I oral l'lla:-1 u I p ro).!r am~
Setting a new standard for tht' world,
for the future, a name that marks
lhc most extraordinary fusion of
design and quartz technology.
From the colJection, two
s uperbly slim faceted gem~
secured with lizard, h ers
with a sophisticated black
dial1 h.is a classic in gilt.
Great possessions, both.
SEIKO
LASSALE
111111lt1t.l'd ).!Ood I l''>Ulh
I think •mt• 111 lhl' th1nl!' lhal
"' ·" a c· c· o 111 I' I 1 :-. h t'<I "a 1 d
lla1rwt \\1t'<k1 ''h1c·h I think
•~ J pl11' .-. thut 1 the att 1
U''''lt•d lhl' 111(•:.JI jllrtMhl'ltOn'>
\O\\a,<I '"mt.• llt·l1hl'r .1tt.'
pl;rnn1ng "1th ~11mt· \l'r) good
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thal 1111111 ~J \\a'> lht• '>.tmt.' kind
111 l \\ 11 ll\ four P1 oµ 13 \\a !'>
.lud\ Ho-..t>nt•1 . "'ho ">Cned w1
1111• -.t alt.• ('11a..,1~t1 Comm1!'>s11m .t:,
.1 µ11hltt• m1·mht·1 101 four \l'Jrs
'.t Id I h 1· (' o u-.. tu I A r l had
11 n c1 11 1 • .. I 1 11 n .1 h I ) h e I µ e d
110111 OH ' ('oust.ti managemt·nt
J nd µI unnlng
.\ lct·tun•r in lhl· t.:C Ir \'tnl' <: 1· J du .it t' :-0.< hool 11( \l.111
;tJ,!\'nll'lll , .\11 .., Ho ... t.•nt'I -.a1tl
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tllt111 s1mpl~ p1oh1b1t1n)! 1t
'I hi.,· n·..,ultl·d 111 a 1.·hilng1.· an
tht· qualtt~ ol tll'\ elopmcnt '>ht•
""''<I In !'>1tm1: c·a!'IC'>. it fO• l·ed
cflfll'lllll ancJ heltt•t U~l'" or
''l'l'<tn!'ltd l· proi.wrt~
\n t'.xamplC'. :-.he said 1o1.a:-the
Ill •1p11'\t'{f l'OnslruCllOll Of 50 root
In ;11 !not l11gh <·011dom1n1ums
111' 11 th1• B.tl lir>.c l'a\ tl1 <1n Ill
'\1 \\ IH •l'I Jl1•;1('h
I liw1 all.' h111ught du"n th\'
c·11111 m"'lon1•1-. "ho wt'rt.· th('
'\\\ 1 llJ.! \ 11t1•' 1111 a Satu rda ~
Jlt1'1110011. :-ht• said. s howmg
tht•m tht· .1n•u ancl rl'veahng the
111,qq11•1 1111alt·nl'"~ of the
pr11p11:-1•d pz llJl'< I t·:' 1•n1 ual h I ht· 1·ondo proJec·t
\\ .1 .. I ''ll'('\\'tl
11 •th1.· c·11ndom1n1um
p 1 11 po" a I • " o u Id h a ,. e
<Set< 00 l.A~S. Page A4)
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, November 26, 1981 . -
DO LAWS ISOLATE BEACH PROPERTY?
tlftwahl•.U>
tompletely c hanaed the
rftbaracter or that area." Mrs. ~otener aald. b11 ll w11 • rreque ntly heard
~mphunt that the ataft or the
oaatal Comm iuion was
ll·developer, thereby maldn1
harder tor bullcSers to win
pproval or projects.
ari __ Aaked U his company's
,.tensive dealings with the
commiulon had Indicated such
bias, Irvine Company Visie
oPreaident Robert Shelton said,
•~I thlnk the Coastal Commission
tetatr takes a very hard line
Interpretation or what the
JtoastaJ Act policies" should be.
• "I wouldn't say we had to
:J.l,ecirlcally overco m e an
ti-developer bias," Shelton
id. "Our differences with
em had to do m or e with
eiflc issues related to the
nd ... "
ApJ)raisln g the Coastal
mmission starr. the Irvine
ompany executive explained.
suppose you could say that
e young people on the state
arr, wbo are idealistic, and
who hope to see as m~h or the
undeve l oped coastline o r
California remain pristine and
under public conttol as possible,
that this is certainly. probably a
motive. But 1 think they try to be
fair."
Muc h o r seasid e Orange
unty. including the valuable
v in e Coas t , fall s within
pec visor Thomas Riley's
strict.
In fact. most of the major
astal development planned
re is within the supervisor's
h District.
Peter Herma n, one of Riley's
top aides. said the coastal zone
would undoubtedly have been
developed more h.eavily if it
hadn't been for the Coastal Act.
\\ lHt•n rum lwm~." lwu tlrt' $hurt· uw11y C:vu.~t /11yl111:1111 ut·
C:t1µ1.,1ra11u Uttodt Allordullit' 111111."11111 ·1•111u111., u11 /!\,rn1• 11//c•1
/ '1,1µ.1sllw11 :!"
Herman. speaking only for
himself and not his boss. said
that whil e th e Coasta l
Com m ission he lped provide
more access lo beaches and
encourage projects lo serve and
attract the public, other aspects
or its operation were not so
productive.
In particular, he said , the
com mission was consistently
dirricult to deal with on social
issues.
.. <They werel completely and
totally inflexible on this issue."
H e rman said , ec hoing a
co mm e nt m ade by m a n y
opponents or the com mission
and the Coastal Act.
This criticism pertains a lmost
exclusively to the affordable
housing requlrments that had
been a part or most coastal
pla nning since 1976.
<The slate Legislat ure
recently passed a bill that
r emoves from the Coastal
Commission the righ t to
reguW.te so-called a ffordable
hous ing.>
Supporters or the commission
noted that affordable hous ing
provisions added to the coastal
act by the legislature in 1976
tended to divert attention away
from environmental issues.
to offer a set number of units at
prices below market value,
forced attention away from
management or natural
resources
Another view on affordable
housing comes from Jon Brand.
"I lik.e to go back to what
people voted for and what they
think they voted for," he said.
.. And I don't think they were
votmg for affordable housing m
the coastal area. And so I really
wouldn't want to gel into any
argument over whether it's right
or wrong. This wai. something
outs ide the purview or the
voters' mandate "
So, what was the electorate
asking for when ll approved
Propos1t1on 20'! Dad it want all
building activity slopped along
the coast. or merely curtailed
until better planning was
available''
.. I don't think they were
s aying there s hould be no
building on the coas t." said
Brand. "l lhink they just wanted
some logical planning that took
in conservation constraints ..
Mayor Jackie He ather on
Prop 20
• • •
they voted for . . The11e are all
emotional Iss ues. They sold it
t.maotionully Hopefully, It wall
not be cast an concrete."
Act·ordlng to Gil Fera:uson.
who once led an unsuccessful
1n it11ltive errort to have the
Coastal Comm1ss1on abolished:
··Under Proposition 20, the
. ieneral public was hoping for,
and looking for, more acce s. an
easier way to get lo the beach,
and they wanted to get through
these private communities, and
get to the snnd that they figured,
by golly, that's theirs.
.. And they were right The
beitch is theirs At mean high
Ude. it as theirs And that's why
they voted for the act." he said
Officials la ke I larraetl Wieder
continue to maintain it wus
probably unnecessary to have
i.uch an imuat1ve in the first
place.
"It's conceavable, and I reall}
believe this, that. even 1f there
had not been a Coastal Act . the
mood of the electorate in the
pas t eight y ears was that
officials. at whatever level. had
the respun::.1b1hty
·And if there hadn't been the
Coastal Act. 1t would have been
t he mun icipal officials. or
regional offic ials , who would
have had t o res pond 1n a
responsibl e manner for 1 beach >
access. ·she s aid
.Coast act advocates be~ to
differ
· · 1 thank 1 the Coastal Act 1 was
neccssar v." s :.11cl Brand "I don't
think yo~ could l'Vcr have gotten
a unified. logical. coherent
planning system with the 50 odd
t 1ties and agenl'ies that are
along the C'aliforn1a coast .
Obvious ly, the procei.s. l>t'fore
the Coasta l Comm1ss1on. had
fail ed. And tht• proof or that can
be seen m so m any areas of
California. where the coastline
has been 1rrc.•parably lo::.l "
O~ly Pl ... P .... "' O.ry ,......,_ ,
But he added, "There have
been a lot of rough spots. On
balan ce, however, i t 's been
beneficial lo the Orange County
coast."
Mrs. Rosener. for one. said the
afrordable housing provision::.. 1n
which developers were required
"It was a totally e motional
issue. They s a y, ·oo you
approve of a walling ofC or the
coas t from the citizens''· And
people would s ay. ·No. we don't
approve or that.. So that's what
c FRIDA\ : Bolsa ('hie a·,
prt-:-.t-n at ion ri~ht 1
Tirt• I rack~ 11eor \ eu·porl /J1t•1 llt 1 tlw l1·c1.\I 111 /111 •11111/t 'I"'/.\
Public housing
project nixed
In their first policy-making action as new
officers of the Orange County Housing Authority.
members of the county Board or Supervisors
rejected a proposal to bu11d up to tiJ
government-owned apartments in unincorporated
areas.
Although Sl 1 million in federal funds already
were committed to the project, the s upervisors
said on a 4-1 vote they oppose plans th at make the
government landlords.
Bruce Nestande. who serves as chairman of
the authority's Board or Commissioners -which
1s the same as the supervisors -said he ··strongly
opposed" the proposal because it substituted the
government for the private housing industr y
An equa lly intense Roger Stanton said he
sym pathizes with the public need for more
I housing.
"That doesn't mean we have to agree on every
solution that comes up," he said. calling public
ousing "an abject failure "
Under the proposal, the housing authority was
solicit bids from private developers to use $4.9
illion in federally backed state loans to build
om eight to 12-unit apartment buildings. fhe
m plexes could not be closer than one-half mile
om other subsidited projects, and no more than
o stories in height.
The conditions were imposed to e ns ure that
e government housing wouldn 'l overpower
eighborhoods or cause property values to go
wn. staff aides said
The apartments would have been operated
ilh the housing authority as the landlord and
reening agency for qualifying families. The
aximum income for a family or four was to be
1,500. Rents would be 30 percent of their income.
The lone supporter of the plan was Ralph
lark, who noted that voters had passed a ballot
easure in June 1980, to authorize consti:uction of e housing.
"We just can't turn our backs on the needs for
ople to have a place to live." said Clark.
Art Luna, executive director for the housing
thority. said the units were planned lo be much
rrerent from the stark high-rises that have given
blic housing its image. He claimed that rents
h o u Id h a v e covered cons t r u c ti on a n d
aj'ntenance costs.' although there would be no
ofit.
··Our calculations show that it would work
t," he said. "It would be very feasible."
The housing authority runs various subsidy
ograms involving about 4,900 units in the county.
said. and it has a waiting li st of about l.000
milies.
earl disease
eaths decline
WASHINGTON <AP> -Deaths from heart
d. blood vessel diseases declined 25 percent over
e last decade but the ailments are still the
umber one kUler in the United States, heart
cialists s ay.
A special study group of the National Heart,
ung ar\d Blood Institute said a coordinated effort
research and preventive program• is still
ed despite consid erable progress.
"Tbe arteriosclerotlc diseases, particularly
ary heart diseases and cerebrovaacular dis-
ue (stroke>, cause more deaths, dlsabWty and
jeollM)l'ltlic loss ln the United States than any other
roup of acute or chronic diseases," the 1roup aald
it• nnal report. Sblce 85 percent or these. deaths Item from
mplicaUons or arteri01clerosta -hardening and tlal of tbe arteries -research ln l.be 1980s
Id concentrate on thil condition. the report
i>r. Robert 1. Levy, the ln1tltute'1 director,
tM rapid decline tn cardiovascular mortaJl·
eM 1'70I, foUowina decades of alow decline,
flltlae mostdramatlc events ln medicine. •'lia abe 1'191. UUI decline became dramatic, -:==~•a: a 25 perceat reduction la the iii r deetll rate wtthln • 10-year 1pan,"
•aid illl ...... brteflq.
) ~
. '
< reat1•d b4 c.ustlq le~ul n·q11trt•me111., t•1r ll111/tfm11•1t.1 ·•11 •
Your Chrisbnas Starts Tomorrow!
Make Chrisbnastime this year more like yesteryear when window shop-
ping downtown was a family affair and part of the Chrisbnas spirit That
feeling is duplicated at South Coast Plaza. New decorations. New Santa
setting in ·a .wonderland cf animation, and cheerful Chrisbnas "scenes"
throughout the mall.
Santa arrives at 10 A.M . tomorrow, where you can visit daily, 10 to 9 P .M.
' 'til Chrisbnas Eve.
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Orange Co t DAIL V PILOT/fhur1day. November 26, 1981 ••
Singer
guilty in
assault
New heart drug OK'd HD man
gets gold bm
'1
BR IOE Aclre&s William W. Copp, "*'
Su:rnn Saint Jumes or Mr. and Mrs. WUUsln
und "Saturdu~· Ni&hl w. Copp or 4001 Flaard
F DA clears timolol to treat cardiac attack victims
CH ICAGO <AP1
Wendy 0 . Williams, the
feisty and Clamboyant
singer for "The
Plasmallcs" rock group,
has been sentenced to a
y e a r 0 f c 0 u r l
supervision for tuss ling
with a Cree ·lunce
photographer who took
her picture a s s h e
Jogged on a city beach
The photographer.
David Barnes, testified
that after he took three
picture s or the
30-year-old singer July
14, s he tried to grab his
camera, straddled his
back a nd punched and
kicked him 1n the back
and head Ile said she
also spat at him and at a
lifeguard who tried to
stop the fight. and trie d
to throw the camer a into
Lake Michigan.
Ms Wtlhams, a New
York City resident. was
convicted in Coo k
County Circuit Court on
a charge of batlerv
A ss istant s late 's
attorney Robin Shapiro
said Barnes wall file a
CIVIi SUll next 11\Ce k
seeking about SI mllhon
in punitive damages
La st April M s
Willtams was acquitted
1n Cleveland of an
obscenity charge ultcr
authorities charged she
pe rformed nude from
the waist up except for a
layer of shaving t rt>am
WASllINGTON <APl -A
drua used io treat glaucoma was
approved Wednesday tor heart
attack vlctlms after tests
s howed it can red u ce by
one-third lhc chances or another
attack.
The Food and Drug
Administration's approval or the
new use (or lhe drug timolol was
announced by the FDA
commissioner, Or. Arthur Hull
Hayes Jr He said the United
States was one of the rtrst
countries to approve the drug
for use by heart attack patients.
Or. Hubert C. PelUer, senior
vice president of Merck Sharp
and Dohme R esearc h
Laboral.>ries, which makes
timolol. said the drug should be
av a ii able to physicians In pill
form by Dec 9.
Hayes said the drug would be
userut for some of the 350,000
Ame ricans who recover from
heart attacks each year. Heart
disease is the leading cause of
death 1n the United States.
Hayes said prime candidates
for timolol treatment are the
50.000 people a year who might
otherwise die of heart disease
within two years of their first
attack.
II ayes said the test results
don 't show what will be the
long -Lerm effect of using the
dru ~ because the study covered
onl y three years But he said
that shou ldn 't prevent
physicians from prescribing the
m1.•d1 cution
·With. dala Lhal are this
dramatic. phys1c1ans wall feel
the) cannot j ustify not giving
the drug unless there are some
other medical reasons not to ...
he s aid
li e s aid FDA a l so was
THANKSGIVING
)
Quality Vested Suits. Pure wool
anJ wool blend Vl">ted ~utK. lndudc--
tamrn1'> Jes1Wll'r:. '.·1olid' ~lnJX"'
hemn~boncs plJ1d'
R~ !)l)C\1-l'iOl\1 179.90-209.90.
Pure Wool Sport Coats Solid
uilm bl.vcl'> lwt·t•d, ht'mn1-:lxm1"
-Rq~ I \i; L10 109.q().
Dress Slacks. Pw1 \\ti.ii Jnd ~'txil
blcnJ drc...s ,la1 ),..., Bdt lo(lp :.I; lin~
R~ 4-:;ll·4-Sll 39.90-46.90.
Raincoats. Sin1-1l<.' .md double
bm1~t<'d m1xfd, t\llh 11r
nut linin~
Rl·~ IO"i O\.l c:; Lll.l 84.90-99.90.
• approving the use or \lmolol for
hiah bl6od pressure.
Tlrrtolol belones to a class or
druas known as beta·blockers
and becomes the first dru1 or lts
type to be approved ror such
treatment.
Scientists at the National
Heart, Lung and Blood Institute
announced last month that
similar results had been
achieved with another
beta-blocker, propranolol, which
already Is used to treat
hypertension and angina.
Propranolol, which is sold
under the name lnderal by
"We may save
7,000 t o 10 ,000
Am eric an s a
year."
Ayerst Laboratories, was found
to reduce the chances or death
by 26 percent after a first heart
attack.
The FDA has not approved it
for use by heart attack victims
because 1l has not received an
app licati on from the
manufacturer , agen cy
s pokes man Wayne Pines said.
But Ayerst said Wednesday 1t
was making such an application
lo the FDA.
The agency has received and
is s tudying data on a third
beta-blocker, metoprolol It was
tested in Sweden.
Hayes said the promise held
by these drugs means "WC are
entering a new era 1n the
treatment of heart disease."
Bela-blocktng agents block
nerve endln1s that regulate the L .. ..... DI k Clrcl ... uun•lnat~ h r r h rt l\'l' prhuU<'er. c .. n ~ istrengt an r~u ncy o ea • 1 8 e 8 c: h , h a 1 b e
I t ti Al'h "'h t: b e 1· is o . ~ e r e muse e con rac ons ~ ou. commisslooed a aecdtW
1clenUst.a aren't sure how they mu rt• i e d at he 1· lleutenirnt in the Nlr
prevent heart attacks, they Holl)'WO<>d home this Force upon graduatl8n
believe these drugs reduce the w e e k . A rt e r t h e Crom Ortlcer Tralnl?f,
heart's workload buclt\'ard ceremonv. s 1 .a •· The FOA's approval of tlmolol lhl' (·ouple watch~d chool at Lack anu "r
for treatment or heart attack on TV u ·satOl'du, Force J3a.se, Texa1. >J
vlcUms' /oJlows publication of a ~ight" rerun. ' Copp wU I now 10 'lo
Norwegian s tudy that showed Sheppard Air Force
the 'drug reduced by one·lh1rd Base, Texas. Cor pU.t
both the risk of a second heart training. 11
attack and of death for heart He is a l980 graduale attack viqJlms.
For purposes or the study, of Cal State Long Beaf~· which was conducted in 20 .-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---,~~~~~~~~~~--
clinical centers in Norway, the
drug was administered between
one a nd four weeks after lhe
first heart attsck. The health of
the patients who received the
drug was foll owed for a
maximum of 33 months,
beginnmg In ~1978.
Hayes said U.S. use or timolol
is not likely to duplicate the
s uccess rate in Norway because '
or demographic differences.
"Even if we cut their death
rate by about one-third that will
mean that about 17 .000 or these
people will live longer." Hayes
said. "Even if we can do half as
well in practice as was done in
the controlled Norwegian study
we may s ave 7 ,000 to 10,000
Americans a year ..
T1 molol 1s manufactured by
Merck & Co of Rahway, N.J . lt
is a vatlable ai. eyedrops for
treatment of glaucoma It will
be sold an pill form for its new
use under the brand name
Blocadrcn
Timolol tannot lw used bv
per so n s s uf fering r1·om
bronc hial a s thma Its s ide
e ff ects 1n l'lu de fJt1gu1.•
weakne~s nauseu and d1zzmcs~
Snacker
111> BEEF STICK• Summer Sausage, 7 oz.
l'l11m C:uuda, two 2 uz. Cheese Spreads.
4 11z. Smoky !smoked cheese bar) 6 oz.jar
ofS,.eet llOI Mustard, Lal' Oval Wafers and
Stra"' berry Bon Bons No. 38 $16.98
Plu!i guaranteed delivery charge if happed
Big Roundup
3 lb MEE!-STICK• .;;um mer Sausage, 7 oz
Plain l.uuda, 5 oz. Smok) I. moktd chetse
bar I, 14! 01. Mild Chedddr Hom. 8 nz
Edam Stirk. 111-i 1n; Chet'M' 'n Ham and
StrawtX"rry Bon Bon~ r-io. 52 S:4J.98
f'lu:. guaranteed delivery charge sf sh1ppt'd
II
u
Premium Pak ·)
3 oz. SAFARI"' Summer Sausage, 7 oz. 11 Plain Gouda, 2 1n. Cheest Spread. 2~ oz. ! I
!ar of Preserves, 2~ oz Jar of Jelly and 11
Strawberry Bon Boos. No. 48 S8.98 )
Plus guaranteed dehvery charge V shipped
Mighty Meaty i' ·
I II>. BEEF STICK• Summer Sausage, 7 oz ~
SAFARJ"' Summer Sausage. four 4 oz
Flavored Chef'..e Tnangle'I, 3""4 oz. Pub ..
Sprt>ad. 8 ot. Nt'w York Medium Cheddar. rJ
Cracked Wheat Thins.Roz. Sharp Cheddar 1!
Stitk and Strawberry Bon Bom ... No. 14 ti
S28.98
l'lu~ guaranteed dl'11\ery charge 1( shipped
Say "Merry Christmas!" {
with a taste of old-time country~ .
If you're coming up long on
Christmas gifts to give and short
on ideas, put your mind to rest.
We've got over a hundred
d1ff erent gifts. With plenty of
choices in almost every price
range you're after.
Our gifts are filled with tasty
delights that include things like
our famous Beef Stick a summer
sausage, cheeses. jams, jellies.
and more.
And if you'd like your gifts
sent out, we11 gladly handle all
the details.
So come to Hickory Fanns""
and discover delicious gifts
youll be happy to give.
That someone else will be
even happier to receiv e.
ff ickor1 F•rms (JF OHttl•
We'll give you a taste
of old-time country goodness'."
South Coast Plaza Open oa11y 'Iii 9 p.m
Saturday 't1I 6 p.m.
Sunoay 12 to 5 p.n 1
Phone 540-6991 Lower Ca rou se l M a ll
• 4 1
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polyester/cotton poplin with acrylic
pile lining. British tan. Regular and longs.
I J r
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Reg 85.00 .. 59.90.
Cashmere V-neck Swute:r. Finest
100·~ cashmere y.im. Light blue.
burwmcfy, camel. navy, grey. white.
, Reg.135.00 ... 104.90.
Lambswool V-neck Swuter.
Washable 100·~ Australian G('('long"
lambswool. Camel. grey, navy brown
light blue, «ru 5-M L·XL.
Reg. 4000 .. 29.90.
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,ffn llu> ,J{~/idoy ,9lf hil
45 FASHI ON ISLAN D 644-2424
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Orange Coa1t OAJL Y PILOT/Thul'lday, November 29, 1981
PARTY BOUND -Ooug la:, Fairbank~ Jr 1:-
l lanke<l b~ flelen Il a~ t'::>. It'll. anti Lillian
~~a sh. at•• µart.\ an :"jl'\\ York to publ1t·1zt• lilt•
\I IH~o m111~ :\1ght ol lllll Slal'!'.> ht•1H•l 1t
·~-....... 1a·rlormam·t• Thl' bt.•1ll'l 1t. 1111 btthall ol Tht•
.\l'tor:-.· Fund. \\Ill lakl' plan· at Had111 l . .'11 ~
.\lt1Sll' 11..ill on Ft.•b 1-1
Representation sans taxation
Homeowners in Florida P anha ndle off t ax rolls
BRISTOL. Fla. IAP l A
puzzled m an walks into the
red -brick courthouse here to hnd
out why the local tax offi ce
failed to mail a notice in 1981. A
mistake, perhaps"
Wilfo rd Deason . Libert y
County 's veteran property
appraiser, c hecks the fi le
"You 're off the tax r olls,"
Deason says . "You don't have to
pay anythlng "
S ince 1980, when Florida
vo ters overwh elm1 n gl}
approved a con stitutional
amendment to boost homestead
exemptions. t he majority of
homeowners in 20 counties have
been removed from the tax rolls
In those rural counties.
located mostly in North Flonda.
a minority or property owners
e nds up payi ng for local
services. such as road repairs
and sherirr protection, local
ofr1c1als say
·w e hav e a n ew tax
phenomenon in the Panhandle
repre s e n tatio n with out
taxation ," laments J ohn
Thomas of Florida's County
Co mm1ss1oners Association
La s t yea r . a s tate
co ns titutional amendme nt
incr eased the h omest ea d
exemption over a period or three
years the exemption is $20,000
this year and will go to $25,000
by 1982 That means that if the
slate app,.111ser set the value of a
resident-owned house last year
at $20,000 or less. no properly
taxes were due.
Proponents o f increased
exemptions said the tax reform
would help offset increase!> in
property assessments.
.. We thought in 1980 that
maybe 10 or 12 counties would
have '" 1rop more than half or -----------------------
the1 r homes teads from the
rolls." said Thomas, a lobbyist
of t he s t atewide county
com m issioners· group. ··Nobody
thought it would be this bad "
The tax shift has produced
new pohllcal consequences for
local politicians
"Most voters in the rural
Panhandle can s ay to their
county commissioners 'Give us
more !terv1ces, · but the voters
don't have to cQnsider the cost," says Thomas.
The Panhandle no-tax-trend is
part or the reason the tax issue
1s h eali ng up again in
Tal l aha sse e The 1982
Legislature opens Jan 18, and
lawmakers are considering a
myriad of tax increases. Most of
the proposals. however, are
expect ed to die b ecause
polit1cian.<1 will be preoccupied
with redlstncting
Gasoline prices stable .
Market becoming increasingly competitive
NEW YORK (AP> -When higher Saudl price. Many of the
Saudi Arabia raised lta oll price world's crude prices are
• l2 a barrel last month and cut Informally peaged to the Saudi
production, many e n er1y price. mainly because Saudl
analysts concluded that Arabia la the world's lar1est oil
American motorist.a soon would exporter.
be paying a few cents more for a Q. What happened Instead?
1allon of gasoline. A. Two U.S. oil companies,
It has not happened. Standard 011 Co. Indiana and
And some analyst.a now aay it Conoco Inc., boosted their crude
may be next summer before prices by Sl a barrel just three
1aaollne prices rise by a days after OPEC announced its
noticeable amount. pricing agreement. But none of
Here are some questions and their competitors followed suit,
answers to help explain why and two weeks later both Conoco
gasollne prices are not rising as· _. and Indiana Standard rolled
expected and where some of the back those increases. admitlln1
forecasters went wrong: that market conditions would
Q . Are gasoline prices falling? not support the higher prices.
A . Prices appear to be steady, Q . Ho w Ion g c a n these
neither rising nor falling over conditions last?
A. t'or a number or reaaont,
many anulyst.a and oil company
officials say they expect the
market to Uahten next sprtna,
pe rhaps allowing some room for
price increases.
One r,eason is that Saudi
Arabia has vowed lo reduce its
production as mu c h as
necessary to prevent OPEC
prices from fallin&. Also,
demand for petroleum product.a
is expected to increase as lhe
U.S. economy rebounds from lhe
c urrent recession. And oil
companies have been drawin1
down their in ventories of crude,
giving them less of a cushion
against market conditions In lhe
future. " the last few weeks, according to
Industry estimates. The average
worldwide price of the crude oil
from which gasoline Is produced
bas edged slightly higher, but
gasoline re tallers have been
unable to pass along the higher
cost.
Paddlings increase
Q. Why?
A . Mainly b ecause the
gasoline market 1s becoming
increasingly competitive, and
man y gasoline dealers are
sacrificing part or their profit
margin to avo id losi n g
customers.
J oseph J Grish, president of
the Service Station Dealers of
America, said at an oil industry
seminar In Chicago recently:
"Never in the history or this
industry has the market sector
been in such utter disarray.··
Q What is the problem?
A. In a word, conservation.
Americans simply are using less
gasoline in reaction lo the huge
price in~reases or 1979 and 1980
resulting from the cutoff or
exports from Iran after its
revolution. The Department of
Ener2v's latest fiRures showed
a 9 percent drop in the use of
refi ned petro le um products
during the four weeks ended
Nov. 6 c<>mpared with the same
period last year.
Q . Why were analysts
forecasting higher prices for
gasoline after Saudi Arabi a
raised its crude price?
A The logic. seemingly sound
at the time, went like this The
higher Saudi price would prompt
many non-OPEC countries to
raise their prices, also. In fact
many did. Those higher prices
would prompt the oil companies
lo pass along the added cost to
buyers of their refined products.
But the biper prices have not
filter ed through to the retail
level because gasoline dealers
know they cannot raise prices
without losing sales.
Q. What about U .S c rude
prices?
A. Many of the forecasters
were wrong there, too. The
popular reasoning was that U.S.
crude prices would rise at least
Sl a barrel in response to the
Dade schools • ID
MIAMI IAP> Dade County
schoolchildren in increasing
numbers are m a king the
ac q uai ntan ce of "Mr .
Under standing" a nd simila r
wooden paddles that translate •
school offi cials' new get.tough
attitude into something t he
students can feel.
Paddhngs in county schools
jumped 27 percent last year,
with 16,750 cases of corporal
punis hm ent reported b y
principa l s. according to
stat i stics k ep t b y th e
224,500-student school district.
James Hunt , principal of
Booker T. Washington J.uruor
H igh School , r est s Mr
Understanding on top of his desk
in full view of students who are
sent to his office.
"It takes all the anxiety out or
their visits," said Hunt, a big
man with a wide grin.
Last year, as principal of Lake
Stevens Junior High School.
liunt admmistered 874 paddlings
the record for the school
system.
Hunt said the use of corporal
punishment is up because there
is a new, get-tough attitude in
the schools towards u nruly
s tudents. Dade school principals and
teachers who use the paddle
only 48 of 261 schools reported no
paddlings last year are under
lon gstanding orders to follow
procedurses set by the school
board. Rules apeclfy that!
The paddle must be )!Vooden
and no larger than 2 fee\ long,
• 2-mch thick and 4 inches wide.
It can be used only on the
buttocks
Elementary students can be
struck only twice, junior high
school students three tim es and
high school students four limes .
-Another princ ipal or
teac her m ust witness the
paddling, and no other students
may be present to contribute to
"r idicule or shame "
A principal n,u!\t notify
pa rents that their c hild was
paddled and keep a record of lhe
paddling
Hunt told The Miami News in
an interview lhat he thinks there
were more paddhngs than were
reported last year_
·1t hurts," t es tified
13-year·old Sonya Strachan. a
seventh-grader who got t wo
licks a while ago fo r fighting
with a fnend
Hunt said he tells students he
hates paddling as much as they'
do Some students curse with
pam when he whacks them, he
said
"It's OK even if they turn
around and call me a four letter
word," said Hunt, adding he'd
probably do the same "I want
to see some kind of reaction.
When I don't, I worry that it's in
varn
Not everyone is happy with
the trend toward more paddling.
School board member Janel
McAliley is opposed to corporal
punishment and has formed a
committee or 30 princ ipals,
teachers and students to study
Its effectiveness.
"What concerns me." Ms.
McAliley said, · is that we may
be uselessly paddling the same
kids over and over again for the
same orrenae."
Hunt. alsO on the committee.
said he prefers paddhngs over
suspens ions because s tudents'
classwork doesn 't s uffer with
the former
School stat1st1cs s how that
boys are paddled more often
than gir ls, that most paddlmgs
occur in junior high schools and
that more blacks are PJddled
thttn whites
. South Coast 111
An intimate shop i Mon. Thru S.t
10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
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Orange Cout OAJLY PILOT/Thuraday, November26, 1981 AT · ----------------------------------------~-----~--------------------------------------------
OETTING TOGETHER -Pia~ Yt 1'1g hl ~t>tl
Sim on. at t ht.' pia no. and a <:tor J a m l•::. Col'o
will l'o llabu r att' l or u Hroad\\U\-bound
mu:-.t<:al ('O ml•d.'. L1 tt ll· ~k. ·· l'ol'O ·"Ill :-.t a r
AP W.,......
1n l h t.' S 1mon·\\rt llen ::.ho\\. \\.ht<:h 1s
s<:h l'dUlt'd to opt.'n J a n . 21. l9M2. al lhl' Eu~l'nl'
t)' :\ t'lll T heult'r
She makes dreams happen
' Business helps firms turn fantasies into reality
P ITTSBURG H <AP I Why
waste time wishing on a s tar
when your dreams can come
true, reasons Aly Abrams, who
has turned one or her o wn
fantasies into a luc rative reality.
Ms. Abrams works at making
o t h e rs · .d r e a m s h a p pen .
charging from $250 to $5,000 and
sometimes more. per request.
She started her business. called
Dreams Come True. about a
year ago in Pittsburgh.
"It's the details in life that
make hfe interesting," she said.
'"Thal 's what Dre ams Come
True is all a bout, the little
niceties, lhe icing on the cake ...
M.s. Abrams. 33, a former
co r porate pu blic rel a tions
cons ultant, works primarily
with companies seeking new
ways to honor to p re tirees,
s urprise e mployees during
holidays or entertain visiting
dignitaries.
One of her mos t popular requesta from corPorale cllen\.8
l"\'olves producing videotapes of
retiring executives' lives. For up
to 20 minutes after a retirement
dinner, the retiree's personal
and business life is displ ayed on
the screen. And he, or she, gets
to keep both the tape and the
videotape machine.
"It's so much more exciting
for retirees instead of the us ual
watch, shake your hand. And
they love it," she said.
Ms. Abrams depends on about
50 free-lancers and an extensive
file to fill her orders, which
usually take anywhere from a
day to a f ew m on t h s to
complete
"When l need a magician , l
kn o w wh e r e I ca n get a
magician. When l need the best
cho colate in the United States. I
have a fil e on chocolate, .. she
said.
She's granted a bout 40 dreams
during the past year .. primarily
to s uch Pittsburgh corporations
Cops search,
find snakes
KEYES <AP) -A rattler and
four boa constrictors. one 10 feet
1001. jol~ county and federal officers searching for weapons
in a home a bo ut 10 miles
southeast of Modesto.
The search netted 10 firearms,
i nclud i ng several ill eg a l
a u to m a t ic w ea p o n s , a
quarter-pound of a s ubstance
b e li e ved t o be pur e
methamphetamine with a street
value of about SlS,000, and drug
par aphem aha, officials said.
as Westinghouse Electric Corp ,
PP G I nd ustries In c a nd
Roc kwell International Corp
Other clients have included
e ither c r eati ve indi viduals
without e no ug h ti m e. o r
well to do fo l ks l ac king
creativity of their own.
Either way, 1t makes for some
i nte resting dreams. which
nearly aJways are surprises. Ms.
Abrams said.
She once arr anged a surpnse
reunion for two women who
hadn't seen each other for l S
years. She rented a Porsche for
a day for a sports car buff and
located a hot air balloon as a
wife 's birthday present to her
husband.
Her cli ents "want to have
m ore run wit h t heir lives,
they 're tired of giving the same
g ifts ... Ms Abr ams said .
"There's no reason why a gin
can't be something intangible."
What about her own fanlules? Is playing fairy godmother to
others her own idea or 8 dream
come true?
"I don't know if l would say
this is my dream come true,"
she said ... But the thing that I
love is tha t it 's c reative.
organizing and pulling a lot or
details together, and the end
r es ult a lways mak es m e
happy."
laza Villase • x.per1ence
'Y NOT GIVE THE
if:T EVER ...
JR KITTEN IS A
_QVE & WILL BE
JYE0 FOR MANY
'ILLAGE
CENTER
~ng At Its Be1tu
.. Me 979.P.-rs
'
Presenting Etc's
greatest collection ever .
Our handcrafted 1981 limited
edition of opal, sapphire, ruby,
diamond and fresh water pearl
jewelry is now. on display.
e\. Celera
4 GI, ©k;~ .... 1'~1\ •e[ry [)d\o_... -~ 'r,.i~ Y fir: 11('"('\.~C\~ '-
551 4047
located by the Village Green
Language barrier broken
Hotline makes shopping easy in "melting pot"
CHICAGO l AP> -When
merchanll In a 1hoppln1 center
oa Ch lca10'1 mulll-eth nlc
n ort hwest aide tell t heir
lmmi1ranl cuatomere, "We
Speak Your Languaae." they mean business.
others . Koreana. Ruulana.
lndlan1, Jaraell1, Poles, Greek.a,
l tallana. Spanlarda, Germant,
Thal1 , FUiplnoe, J apanese and
Scandanavians. The mercl'tanll
aim ~o break the lan~a1e
barrier with all or them.
lm m ediately pl1tced to lh• •
appropriate interpreter. We
have a thrM·way conversation
and the interpreter relaya the
message to me immediately."
A telephone hotline to link
non.-En1llah·speakin1 cuatomera
with tranJ1lators who speak any
of n ine lorelgn languag~ has
been tested at Lincoln Vllla,ge
and will be Inaugurated Monday
ln all 28 stores.
For a start, they've hired
tran1lators who can h andle
Ru stlan. P o lish . Greek .
Caech, Slovak, Spanish. Italian,
H u ngarian . Ger m an and
French. But that's only the
start.
Linco l n VIilag e's
nelRhborhood includes, among
"I thlnk It not only will be a
valua ble service but wlll . . .
1pur business,·· said Franklln
Lee, the merchant who deviaed
the system.
Alongside counter slena that
read, "There I• No Langua1e
Barrier At Lincoln Village. We •
Speak Your Laneuage, '' is a
display or national fla1s . Lee
described how the s ys tem.
works:
"When a customer comes Into
my drug store needing an Item
for a s1ck child . . . he points to
the fl a~ and a call is
Eventually the phones will
manned by atude nu l n
language laboratory at nearb)'
Northeastern Illinois University
s aid L ee . F o r n o w , lh
m erchants ha ve hired thre
translators.
Lee has sent letters about
hotline to temples. churches an
different ethnic groups an
newspapers. He is learning tha
the hotline may have other uses
loo.
"We've had Inquiries fro
police who would like lo use th
hotline when they run up agalna
a language problem." he s_aid
TALL. llG, AND PORTLY DISTINCTIVI MEN'S
HOLIDAY ~PECIAL~
QUILTED VESTS $3 300 USUAlLY$49.00
DACROI~ COTTOI QUILT, STITCHED FOR LOii
WEAR16. IOW. FOR ntE COllli COLD. RAIY lfATllEI
.llft'la.. t IAT£R IEPW.EIT, BUT IASUIU e
I
642-3 177
South Coast Plaza
Village
CQfRI
TUDD
556-9678
llUY COLORS t SIZES UP TO 21 TAU & 41 81.
11
0PEN SUNDAY 11-5
1912 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
Santa Ana
For Store
Copper Tea Kettles From $20.00
to $69.SO -Cups from $29 to $53 Set of
4. Saucers $33 per Set, Spoons
$21 per Set.
,
l
I
...
·'
'I ,,
"'
• .. ...
ri
-f
-!.
OrangeCout DAIL V PILOT/Thursday, November28, 1Q81
,
Their ironclad fut11re looks hot
'4
Two leave lucrative careers behind for Old Time Blacksmith Shop
I AP ............
Todd Taylor. le/I. liammt'r$ part 01 a Jiri!plc1Ce st•l 'a.~ p<lrt11P1 0 111·1•
\'arner wat ches 8 utll le/t 111p-pa11 111g 1111>., 111r tilt' 111111 1•
··rt-fre$/l/ny /1/e a.~ hlc1cks1111lh$ rt-1111111sn·111 01 u11ut/11·r n•11t11n1
' Study challe nges
MONIWE. N.C. <API When
Todd Taylor and Dave Varner
decided to go Into buslneaa
together, they took a step back
into the past to forge their
future.
The two men left lucrative
careers to start up the Old Time
Blacks mith Shop near the
Mecklenburg County town of
Monroe. After seven weeks 9f
standing over a blazing rorge,
the ·men said they are enjoying
their new line of business.
·· tt 's a refreshing kind or life,"
Varner said. "We just got to
th inking there had to be
so m ethi n g m o r e to life,
something that would get us
back to the basics. Well, we
round it, and we love it. ..
Varner. 34, spent six years at
Charlotte Memorial Hospital as
a respiratory therapist. Taylor,
41, left an executive position at
PCA Jnlemational, u chemical
company.
Varner handles the business
end or the shop, while Taylor
works the hardware. The two
invested about u.ooo In the
operation, lncludln1 rental ol the
bulldlna"
Stepplna lnto the shop ls IUce
walkln1 into an Old West acene.
Taylor, wearing leather chaps
and bluejeans, heats a steel rod
to glowing red over the
coal-fired forae and be1lns
poundlng It into a hook with a
4-pound sled&ehammer on the
anvil.
Varner, a bul'fSt, bearded man
in blue jeana and boots, 1reets
v1sitors inside the rough.hewn
wood lobby. Black wroueht·iron
fireplace set.a, shovels and other
tools stand against the wall.
Taylor said he began making
fireplace sets several years ago
when a flimsy store-bought
poker reu apart as he tried to
punch up his rire at home. "I
just went out to the anvil and
made one that I knew wouldn't
tear up," he said.
"So far, most of our business
has come from repairs," Varner
added. "But what we're really
here ror is to make things from
other people's idea . to hav~
them tell 111 what they wunt and
we'll make It."
Taylor, who worked has way
throuah the University of Utah
1hoeln1 h ora es , spends
Saturdays shoeing local horses.
He has dlplom a from the
Western School ot Horseshoeing
In Phoenix, wher e he studied
corrective shoeing for horses
with bad legs.
The shop has stalls where
owners can leave their horses
overnight for shoeing.
Meanwh.ll e, ~he men said the
2·month-old business is off to a
aood 11tarl They have orden tor
all types oC tools, and they have
representatives sellin1 their
wares ln 11everal cities acrots
the country
They uncondltlonally
guarantee every piece they
make
"We don't have any urge to
expand a lot or make a lot of
things in a hurry," Varner said.
"What we want to do Is make
quality laslin& Items, build up
our reputation and have a good
time with what we're doing
along the way "
Split bridge tolls to s tay
SAN FRANCISCO <API The
experimental split toll on the
Goldeo -Oate Bridge -Sl on
Sunday through Thursday and S2
on Friday and Saturday has
been made permanent.
Bridge directors voted to keep
the system that has been tested
si n ce August , with an
expe rime ntal dis count for
people who com mute to work on
Saturdays
People who s ign a written
s t atem e nt that t hey work
regularly both Friday and
Saturday will be able to buy a
ticket booklet letting them cross
the bridge Saturday for Sl .25.
obesity theory ~ [JJ<Htt,a §Mui
BOSTON <AP J -A widely publicized theory
1that some people are rat because they do not burn
up calories as fast as slender folks is under fire by
a new study.
The latest report, hke the one it challenges.
was published in the New England Journal of
Med icine.
A year ago. dol·tors from two Boston hospitals
reported some fat people have lower levels of an
enzyme that regulates the exchange of sodium and
potassium ions insid e the cells
This is one of the basic chem1C'al processes of
the human body, and it uses up large amounts of
calories
The Boston doctors found that the red blood
cells of fat people contain. on average, 22 percent
lower levels of sodium-potassium ATPase. an
enzyme known as the sodium pump
The latest study, directed by Dr. M A Mir at
the Welsh National School of Medicine in Cardiff.
Wales, came up with far different results that lhl'~
say "are contrary to what would be expet'ted 1f
there were a metabolic basis for obesity ·
The Welsh doctors found that levels of the
enzyme were more than twice as high in the fat
people. They said the) used a different m<.>thod of
measuring the enzyme.
Santa Arrives
11 Huntington Cente1
1n the big red fire engine
this Fn at 12 noon
to klck~tt a great
Holiday Season at the
Great New Mall
Followed by Santa photos
and children s puppets
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750 ml , On&-Case L1m1I
IZ. 79 Reg S3 99
Ht:111~Gt:R 1980 CH t:NI N B LANC
I' •u11y touch of sweeln8" 750 ml
":J.59 Reg $4 74
("OORS LIGHT B EER
1 2 Pact.. 12-oz Cans
~!&.69 Reg $4 89
,, rnces Ett Thru 11129181
A , lt<•tm StLJ1ec1 to Pnor Sale
< 'e/1"''') A. ~•ldble ·MasterCard Visa Case P ,l(Jnts is•. 20'1>.
t).44.-7597
'-~~~~---------------------------'
1 0% off all merchandise
in store with this ad
Full Service FTD florist
We Deliver Locally
2642 s.. ....... load
Newport leach. CA 926~~
(7141 640.7910
. *•PALERMO•*
I ~RIOR VIEW HOME
Tota Uy . e modeled by crafts men!
Featuring ·Fre nch doors, wooden
shutters, pljnk floors, used brick
& p ool & s pa . FEE land
wtGREAT TERMS!! • * JASMIHI CHltC
12 7 /8'7. fin a ncing on former
model ! Hard to rind Plan 5
w /custom spa! $349.000 FEE.
Lowest Price!! • HIWPOIT ll,ACH OHtCI
26 70 s ... Ml4Jllll Ort••
17141 75'-1501 l114t 752·7373
<Ci:?
Walla-Blae
1111111&1111
•
ME RC HA MTS
DIRECTORY
Allyn·Bl1ck's H11r F1shk>n. 2618 Si n Miguel
Bink of Americ1. 2600 San Miguel
I eon1p1rte Bakery, 2616 San Miguel
I
1 Cout Feder11 S1vlngs. 2620 San Miguel
Dr Joyner. Orthodontic. 2638 San Miguel
Needleport, 2628 Si n Miguel .
~9494
759.4572
759-1100
759-01 81
759-0682
759-0567
Newport Hilla An1m1I Hospl1al. 2670 San Miguel 759·1911
Newport Hiiis Drugi, 2110 Sin Miguel . ~7373
Newport Hilla Florlat, 2'142 San Miguel M0-7INIO
Newport Hilla Trivet, 2634 San Miguel ....•.• &44·7371
Newport Hiiie Shoe Repelr. 2MO S-Mliau.t . . 840-7302
lor Schw1n. Gener1t Dent11try, 2638 Sin Miguel IMO 2970 ~arker'a P~tl, 2622 Sen Miguel . . . . . . . 840-0090
IR1tph1 M1rk1t. 26&0 Sin Miguel . . . 64+7992
Sp1rkllng CIHners. 2626 San Miguel
The Fringe Benefit, 2614 San Mlgu.I
Tr1dlt1on1t Jewelers. 2630 Sin Miguel
, Vlll1g1 Home Design, 2624 Sin Miguel
W1llter & Lee AHi Estate, 2670 San Miguel
Wh1t'1 Cooking?, 2632 San Miguel
Wine Country, 2646 Si n Miguel
Bud Graham & Son's UnlOl'I 76
840-9440
844-5080
780-8035
M0-9193
751H501
844-1820
6'44-7597
What's a Santa to do? He's promised all
his friends in Orange County that he'd
buy their gifts at Newport Hills Center
-and he can't seem to find it! Can you
help him o ut? It's really very simple -
and once you've figured it out. you'll be
able to meet all yo.' Christmas needs
-from gifts of wine. watches and
windup toys to pcensettias, pets and
pastries -all at Newport Hills Center!
(On the corner of Ford Road and San Miguel)
,
Complimentary Veterinary
Exam
(Get Acquainted Offer)
valid with this Certificate
Thru 12/31 /81
Free Physical Exam For
Your Cat or Dog -$19.00 Value!
NEWPORT HILLS
ANIMAL HOSPITAL
NEIL M. B0011t1AN, DVM
Paint and Supplies
Close Out
50-70% off
while supplies last
Top Brands
• Ben jam in Moore .
• Behr Stains
• M inwax
• Purdy Brush
And much more!
2624 San Miguel Drive.
Newport Beach, California 92660 (71 4) 640·919
T' I ,
Wwna
ss90
S840
SpKW...-.141lw.tca..
Wt .... -Croton -c.oncont
25°/o off ..... ..,
760-8035
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT {Thuraday, November 26. 1981 . --~ * * COIT PLUS ITORU *
'Tll THI
llAIOH TO
II JOLi.Y ii * CLOl!O TODAY *
* · HA,PY * THANKIQIVINQI ** *• ~ MOTi: * IOUTH COAIT
HOLIDAY ITORI HOUll'8 *
OPEN
MON.·8AT. ...Air
10 A.M.·I P.M. ~
SUNDAYS * 10 A.M.·7 P.M.
* BEHOLD THE NUTCRACKE"I *
The lengehdary nutcracktr com.a In painted * wOOd or In Coat Plue' own properly c:olorful
dealgn on a mug and paper acc: .. eorlea.
STEALING ltLVEA
LOCKETS I
FROM OUR CLOTHING ....
SECTION
A THIMBLE
From Thafland
P_.INTEO WOOD From Taiwan *
With fluffy detall end *
moving part1. *
Elegant bOx hH everything. A c:a~ed
Jade lnHt at top, 1avl1hly lncl1ed bra11
hlngea a'nd decoration, paddeq fitted
tllk llnlng and a tradltlonal •
braaa Chln•H lock, Jewe~ry -tr Section
With lnc:IM<!
aurrace
d"~n.
LOCKETS
15v,• tall 13•1.· tall 9%" tall 5y,• tall
12.99 9.99 6 .99 1.89 each
NATURAL WHEAT HARVEST COST PLUS' *
H.EARTS From Melllco DESIGNS FOR
Handcrafted decoration CHRISTMAS
of real wheat for tree, From Hong Kong
doorway or kitchen WRAPPING * 7• wide PAPER *
.64
9• wtde
.87
10'1t • wide
1.33
, ORNAMENTS FROM JI• ~WOOD TO FEATHERS
From Hong Kong
and Taiwan
NATURAL WOOD
NATIVITY 2V1" tall
.49 ~ ..
*
IJEtPLASTIC
.
"STAINED GLASS"
_ NOEL s· long
.... ~.36
~ GOLD PLASTIC
TRUMPET,
VIOLIN
PAPER GIFT BAGS
From Japan *
Solld re<f, green.
yellow, blue and
orange.
OR HORN
To 5• long 18· >< s· x 2· 1C
1.14 ii •.44 Pkg. of S Bags -fr
~ FEATHERY DOVES
White or Aed
3'/a • long
.39 ea ch
CLEAR ACRYLIC
COOKBOOK HOLDER
From Hong Kong *
Rec ipes are easy to look at
and sale from splatters and
choc.olate-y fingerprints ' ----: :: ,-~. ':'::.: ---~.:-:..., *
l • I 1t I I I ti
I : •' ~ I :: I I
I : 1:: I 1 I i' I I I 11
·-------~'-------~
HANDWOVEN ABACA
CUTLERY PLACEMAT
From· The Philippines
Clever placemat has a place for 1t
the napkin and cutlery. *
20· wide
* 1 ON A
WHITE PAPER
PORCELAIN COCKTAIL
MUG NAPKINS
*·
WRAPPING PAPER
From Hong Kong
*
*
1· and
1 l/• • long
9.88 each
From Japan 5• aq. Folded
:.0:~11 2.49 * .44 Pkg. of 24
20· x 30" Sheet Size 4• x 5'1• • I THIMBLE
•.4 • long
7.91 .99 Roll of 4 Sheets 3" deep
ROTATING ANOEL
CANDLE CHIMES
From Taiwan
SPARKLING CLEAR
WINE GLASSES
From France
Gracefully
flared and
sharply "powered"
by heat lrom
the candles.
~-.-lt!t• defined!
12· tall
1.49 --...:~
~g. of 12 * CLASSICALLY
COLORFUL CANDLE WORKS
TAPERS .f.
Red, Green
or White,
p'lua more
10·
From Hong Kong
UNSCENTED
GIANT ROUND
IN RED, GREEN
OR WHITE
.20 3")(8°.,.. .25 * 1.99
15· * 3· )(3"
.30 .99
SOLID BRASS * CANDLEHOLDER I
SCONCE From Korea
PORCELAIN
FRAGMENT
PENDANTS
From Thailand *
Old blue and white
porcelaln plecea are
handaomely
framed In
white
bronze.
* JELLY BEAN
STONEWARE
*COFFEE MUG
BLACK FINISH
ROSEWOOD PLATE * STANDS
From Japan
Colorful beana on white.
From Hong Kong
_ _ 5 SIZES
', 4• to 12·
', tall
' \
I
' ..
'1.19
to
3.79
SCENTED VOTIVES
IN RED, GREEN * CELADON GREEN • WIRE MESH 2·LITER GOATSKIN
OR WHITE
1 •1. • and 2 'I•• tall
* PORCELAIN SERVINO &
RICE BOWLS From China
Soft green bowie have molded *
flah and leaf aurface designs.
2 STYLES
4y,• dla
SPARKLING CLEAR OLASS-C:=:;.
VASES I A DISH From Turkey HEAT RESISTANT
Heavy glaasware la cfaaslc * CLEAR GLASS --~ ....
and heart-y. MUGS * From Eatt Germany
and Czechoslovakia
TEA INFUSER BOTA BAG From Spain
From Hong Kong Natural chamois finish
bag has plaatlc llnlng *
and red plastic fittings.
---2 LITERS 13" long
3.99
SLUB WEAVE
COTTON TABLE *
1\ .. ~u RUNNER From lndla
Textured cotton to dres1
up dre11er or table.
Assorted color combine·
tlona from beige to paatela.
*
From Hong Kong
Perenntal favorites
to hold fruit, *
vegetables,
greens and
decorations.
:µ•and * 36" tong
7" to 9• dla. *
3.99 9 '11 • dla e· deep 14 '/, • tall ~,.,.,,--11 10• 10 15" dia.
5.69 * 10.99 5.59
3-PLY COLORED GIFTY CONTAINERS FROM OUR BASKET SECTION
JUTE TWINE *
From Taiwan *
For ~!ii'l17ii l,jrfl. .. )~t:i:
wonderful
tie· UPS.
Natural,
green,
gold or
maroon
4 Balls
.99 and gold pieces. * caviar or truffles. 8 y,. dla. gy,. dla.
3· d•a
59
10· x1· x 5• 2.99 1 1
O 1 3 •;, • tall • each • .20
BAMBOO RICE
WINNOWING TRAY
From The Phlltpplnes
Make a decoration for
door or centerpiece, or
"flll" with treats. *
2 49 18Va. )( 23•
• 2• deep
CANE BASKETS FROM
LITTLE TO ENORMOUS
From Mexico
For letters, loga, Utter, laundry,
gifts and harvests.
NATURAL CANE
POINSETTIA
STANO
From
Singapore
Stalwart
support * for the * * plant of
the
5 SIZES •v.· to 12• deep
7" x 9• to 11• x 21·
2.79 to 7.49 *
season.
20· tall
10·
top dla.
FOLDING MAGAZINE RACKS * From Taiwan
RAYON PRINT HANTEN
From Japan
Ctaaalc 1tyflng and 1c
multlcolored prlnta
on llghl or dark
backgrounds.
One Roomy Slit
13.99
RAYON
TUNIC WITH
GOLD ACCENT&
From lndla
Well made tunic
has wo~en·ln
stripes and gold *
metatllc fine
llne checks.
Roomy Medium
13.99 ~ .
BAHLSEN COOKIE HOUSE KIT * From West Germany
A bulld·lt·youreell cookie hOuae *
makes dellcloua fun.
Kit contains assorted -
cookie•, auger and
printed cardbOard
structure. Makes
an 8" xe· x9•
tall houae.
Net Wt. 2 Iba.
11.2 oz.
11.33
GOURMET GROCERIES
BONNE MAMAN JAM SAMPLERS
From France * Strawberry, Blueberry, Orange,
Marmalade, • Raspberry ~
1n~ Apricot ... •
1 v. oz. Jar ~
.33 each -Fd .,
PLUM PUDDINGS From England
Perfectly aged and flavored.
INDIVIDUAL
4 oz .
• 94
BOXED
16 oz.
3.89
FERRARA RUM & BRANDY CAKES
Ready to se~el
RUM OR BRANDY * *
4 CAKES
PETITE BABA~, HI CAKES '"\
14 oz. Cans \ . ..,
2.19 each
ALPHABET
WOOD BLOCKS
From Ta iwan
Graphically colorful!
1 v. • sq. blocks
2 .25 Set of 18
FRICTION ACTION
TOYS From Hong Kong
All nicely detailed In bright, ~~~
durable plaatlc. CITY 1 * "TRANSPORTS"1 * With TIK TIK I
sounds. '
4 Assorted *}
3· long
1.49each
TOOT TOOT
HELICOPTER
Speedy turn·
around action.
5• long *
1.95
SPARKLING
ADVENTUftEA
4%" long*
2.29
NATURAL TEAK NE8T1 ... Q *
TABLES
FromStno~
COntemJ)Ofery
dealgn tablet * have tea.le veneer top•
and aolld
teak
Proper order for the
perlodlcala of the day. *
WALNUT FINISH
HARDWOOD
DIRECTLY ACROSS FROM SO HCOAST PLAZA
AT 1313 SUNFLOWER• SLIGHTLY WEST OF BRISTOL
TAKE BRISTOL EXIT OFF ,405 FREEWAY
1s· )( 13• )( 17"11 • tall
NATURAL BAMIOO
WITH 8UANT ACCINT1
11· x 12• >< 1s• tall
VISA • MASTERCARD
AMPLE PARKING
NO MAIL OR
TELEPHONE ORDERS
19131
and
framing.
* 1&• to 21 • tan •c~~
1&· )( 11· 1&" )( 21. 1&" )( 24"
16.99 23.19 31.11
• .,,.~ OPEN • ,."'
7DAY8AWEEK
MON • .UT. 10 ~M.-1 P.M.
SUN. 10 A.M.· 1 , •••
•• Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, November2e, 1981
She runs oldest store on 'Old House' Island
.PLAYS TITO -Al0tnr
Robt!rl l>e N11·0 will
.portruy Jn~•i> Bl'Oz
Tito in u muvw uboul
the life ul the lutt•
IYugoslav lt•utlt-r. u
Betgrad~ \H't•klv has
CHOKOLOSKEE. Fla. <AP> -
·'The Indians atilt come here, but
now they come as tourists," says
Thelma Smallwood, sitting on the
baytront porch or the 1eneral st.ore
her rather built tn 1917.
The dark wooden bulldln1 la oblon1
In shape and unat tractive, with
heavy s hutters over llll windows. The
wooden steps to the only entrance iq
front show the wear of Ume and
weather.
"I don't !$ell much,·• admitted Mlaa
Smallwood. "Everyone Hkl for
unllquea, but l don 't have any "
Thu while·halred woman hu lltUe
lo 11uy to most people and Hems
almoist reticent to talk about the
euly days when this quiet, small
community which covers only about
200 acres was reachable only by boat.
She was born and raised here and
shuns big-city living.
111 distinct aJong the aout.hwest edge
of the Florida Pcnlnaula because of
Its .. hJab" elevation 20 (eel and
because It Is built on a shell mound
'urrounded by manarove11.
Arohaeotoalsta and anthropolo1l11ta
have found 'ndicatJons that the area,
on tbe ed&e or the Ten Thousand
lalands, wu Inhabited lon1 before
the Spaniards explored Florida and
before it was settled by Seminole
Indians mlgratlne from Georgia.
population l8 1tbout 300, she said, but
durlna the tourlat season it lncreaae1
to about l,000 Some reUrffs have
settled here In recent years, drawn
by the peace and quiet; others
because of the good fl11hln1 nearby.
Miu Smullwood's father, Ted
Sm allwood, was one of the early
settlers or Chokoloskee, arrivln1 in
1891. Less than a halr·doien families
lived here al that tlme. In 1906, he
opened a general store. That same
year he became postmaster, a post
he held for 35 years.
•f·e portl'<I
I
In s ide, the place is <lark and
dreary; the original wooden counters
and shelves cluttered with old junk
mail. papers and seemln&ly useless
bric·a·brac Miss Smallwood rarely
sells.
The visiting tourist quickly notices
vintage paintings and handbills In old
dusty frames hanging on the walls.
"They·re personal and not ror sale."
she said curtly.
Chokoloskee, which means "old
house" in Seminole Indian languaae.
"Some people still say the island
was made by Indians who ate OYJlers
and clams and threw the shells
here," said Miss Smallwood, "but
that's not true."
During the summer months, the
The Smallwood store soon became
the trading post of the region and the
meellna place ror area settlers.
Designed,~
Finished ~
Installed -
----------· e1
28 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters
FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE
ON THE MARKET TODAY ... AT FACTORY
DIRECT PRICES! can (714) 548-6841 or548-1717
HEJllWOOD MANUfACTOllY 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa. CA 92627
r's Wicker
WICKER & RATTAN
~~~ Furniture and Accessories
In tht Anllpt G,,,/J Plaza
l80S E. Dyer Rd. Sanca Ana
f/)'f,... RJ WI f .. ,,, N ... ,_. F?)
(714 ) 540-7881 .. MM" ...
OPEN EVERY DAY
10 A..M. to S P.M.
CIOM<f Suncl•r
-'!<' r ...... c.r .. . _/
SHERMAN CLAY'S Cl-ftlSTMAS GIFT SUGGESTION
PIANO OR ORGAN
KIMBALL ORGAN
!a1y""1)1ay, Many .ut~lic
IHlllH An ictellf I~ IPft
8'ldge1 ptlced
$1299
1.MTED 9'A'\. Y
KIMBALL PIANO
An exoellnl .-.0 for the
money, Md w9 bmQ lfWrf
Y-• ol pielN'e
$1299
WE OFFER OUR OWN CONVENIENT FINANCING
., today'• tl(;lt money matttet. ct&dlt can be a protl6em. At Shermen Clay we
offer ru own'tlnandig. Come n and c:on'1>8'• ru rat ...
AUTHORIZED
STEINWAY
DEALER
SOUTH COAST PLAZA 545-0415
Haff Prtcel Walnut Veneer
HI-Fl Speaker System
Nova•-6 by RHll1tlc
Save'40
17995 ·~~
Reg.219.95
An all-in-one entertainment center'! Records directly off-the-air,
from 3-speed changer-even "live" if you add mikes. Cassette has
Auto-Stop, Auto-Level, pause control. Matching 18"-high speakers.
Priced for giving! #13-1199
Astrological Computer AM I FM LED Clock Radio
EC-312 by Radio Shack Chronomattc:e-222 by RHll1tlc
Give Two for the Regular Price of Onel
Save
'40 39~ l!)C!)(!)c
GJCi)Ci)
CJ(i)Cil••
Wc:::J••B
S.neri• extr11
Cut
4tr
21!~ 21°'° 37ee Off Reg.
47.95
Reg. 79.95 Each
Long-throw 8" woofer. 2" wide-dispersion
tweeter and tuned-port design combine to
deliver a wide 60-20,000 Hz response. Fea-
tures decorator lattice-wor1< grille. 19x1~x
7'h'.' #40-4030
Computes dally horoscopes.
More detailed than those in
newspapers. Doubles as a
handy 4-functlon calculator.
Fluorescent display. #65~1
Wake to radio or buzzen Easy-to-see
0.9" digits with PM and Wake indi-
cators. Snooze and 59-minute sleep
controls. dimmer switch. fasVslow
time-set, lighted dial. #12-1529
A Gitt Within
•Gift/
Peklnge•. #12--967 ...... 13.95
Raccoon. #12-97 1 ....... 13.95
Brown Spaniel. #12-979 .15.95
Cuddly C.l #12-983 .... 12.95
Frog. #12-984 ........... 14.95
Floppy Dog. #12-985 .... 14.95
Furry little friends with an AM
radio Inside. Handy external
controfs. Kids love 'eml
Betterlee extra
Electronic Bowling. #60-1009 ... 29.95
Electronic Repeet. #60-2142 .... 14.95
~'2'm".~1~. ~.~~~~ ~ .... 19.95
=~~'~ .. ~~~~':. ~.~ ... $.1194~
2-Ptayer Football. Reg. $29.95,
#60-2156 •....................• 19.95
Sporta Arena. #60-2158 ......... 19.95 .
~r,;~.~ ............ 29.85
'""'f'Hck Shot" Baketbell.
#60-2163 .....•.•......... ' •. ' .14..15
2-Ptayw , ...... #60-2164 ' .... 24.91
COllNc 1000 Flre ,.,,.y.
te0-2165 ....................... .. ....... a... #80-2188 ...... 19.91
Exciting Radio-Controlled Toys!
Gold Ponche.#60-3025 .... 11.95
SMrman Tank. #60-3037 ... 39.95
Dune 8U90y. #60-3038 ..... 59.95 ,._;;:;;,,:.
Sliver Ponche. #60-3041 ... 15.95 ~ .... -
Lancia Racer. #60-3042 .... 24.95 ...,......._.....,..~
BMW Recer. #60-0044 ..... 39.95
Ponche Tutt>o. #60-3045 ... 69.95
BMW Motorcycle.
#60-307 4 .................. 37 .95
FM WIN .... Mike. #60-2109 ..... 5.99
Eleetrontc Sharp Shooter.
#60-2124 ...................... 14.95
Poflce Car. #60-2379 ............ 6 .99
Roed P•trol Helmel #60-3004 .... 7 .99
Fireman'• Helmet #60-3005 ...... 7 .99
=-A~.~~~~~~~· .......... a .95 l
EC-351 Child'• Leeming C.lcutator. I~
#65-825 ....................... 12.95
Blec!Qack. #60-2353 ............. 5.95
"PWl,. ..... to
PUZZLER -:'\ll'\l l<llhJtd:-1111 111 '\01\\llh. \I 1111Jd:-. ,1 1,:,1•111\T l
h1 ~1111 ''' ·"·h.vt \ 1u,11lw111ala 1.111. H1d1,11 d-.1111 -.\·II-. h1:-pllt.t.ll'" 111 .111
1''1 111-.1\ I I lll'lll\'ll' IUI Ill I{ l'' ,l.111 :,:lll t.: llfl Ill '~.~Iii \\ h,tl 1ll,lh.l0 1 ll\•
1111 //ll'' dtlkl <'Ill 1-. 11111 11111\ l lt\• 11-.1 111 h.111d p,llllll.'11 1ll.dlt1L!.ll1\ IJ11 1
1111·h.-. ..:1 1,11.11ll1'l'tl 1111·11111111111.I 1'\1'1l \\'l\'l ,111 l1t.:-.,t\1 httll -.
Fine Jewelry -Appraising, Repairing, Custom
Designing and the Finest of Seroice
NE WPORTER IN N JEW ELERS
formerly Mary Ellsworth Fine Jewelry
1107 J a m boree Rd., Newport Beach 644·0130
•••• ESCAPE
Christmas
Gift
Special:
Tired of waiting m line41 .......
for exercise equipment at
r rowded health clubs?
Come to LaVonne Aerobics
( 1//1 ) I 'I/ I
\/1·111'•• '·''""
Want the cardiovascular work-oul
equ1valen1 lo running 3 miles.
without the smog or boredom?
Limited
Try laVonne Aerobics
Leave your troubles behind at
the end of the day with
a stimulating hour of
Aerobic E)(ercise Call today
for details
I . \\O:\:\E .\t-:ROBH.'S
FITNESS STUDIO
Enrollment only' 18832 Brookhurst
Fountain Valley
dOINNOW!
(714) 963-3444
&~cm Elli. & Garfield
Na t to Medley'• Ru taurant Free child care available
TIRE
BARGAINS?
If you don't see the prices in print
are you really saving money?
You hear a lot of radio and telev1s1on talk about
tire "bargains .. these days.
lM1en you want pnces you can count on. check
the tire ads m the Daily Pilot.
Shop the Dally Pilot before you buy ... get the
facts . . . compare . . . then you know you are
getting the most for your money.
Along the Orange Coast the best values are most
often advertised in the
Daily Pilat
642-4321
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfThursday. November26, 1981 Al I
Paul try ing to buy back Beatie tuneS
LONDON CAPI Former Bealle
l'oul Ml·Curtney 11> trying to b~ back
the rights to Beatles songs fi'om a
Urltish bro1tdcuKt1ng tycoon, with the
help of John Lennon 's widow. Yoko
Ono, u Ml·Cartncy auJ~ said
"PauJ hus a desire to own his euller
songs and everyone 1s talking," the
aide. who asked not to be 1denlifled,
said an a telephone interview with The
Associated Press.
The rights to the Le nnon-McCartney
compos1tions. wh ich include such
Bculles standards us ··Yesterday,"
"Yellow Submarine" und "Hey Jude,"
are owned by Northern Songs. The
com pany was purchused in 1969 by Lord
Lew Grwde and his ATV Music Corp
for 10 million pounds about S19
million at the current exchange rule
as the Beatles were breuklng up.
The Dally Express news paper
report e d that Grade . whose
com municalions empire includes the
internationally syndicated TV program
The Muppet Show, had rejected
McCartney's m ost recent offer of 21
million pounds about S40 m1ll1on
"I would like f'uul to have the SOl\ll
b3ck. but he muA t t•omc up with lhf'
right offer," it quoted (;rude as sayln11 The McCartney a ide confirmed Iii\
orrer "tn that regwn" had been ma~
and uddcd that Miss Ono w11s pnrty lV
the negotiations
The Daily Express quoted Paul's wift
Linda McCartney as saying ... Paul atMt
Yoko want to keep t ht' song!> in thJ.'
ram1ly Morally. tl t'> maclnt·ss that Pa14l
does not own any of the songs he wro\.£
Wtlh John. To Paul they are ll part or
him just as his children arc ' ---..-----
.II Sears I HUNTINGTON BEACH
SURPLUS STORE
We sell fi rs t quality and discontinued
merchandise from Sears Retail and
Catalog Distribution.
"'Was" prices quoted are the regular prices at which
the items were fonnerly offen-d by ( :ataJo~ or in many
Sears Retail store~ around the country.
CHRISTMAS
ORNAMENTS
30o/o to 50%
OFF FOR MER
SELLING PRIC ES
SEARS
SPEED CONTROL
S AVE 50 o/o
'''''·' :1.1.NOW 19.99
MEN 'S PILE LINED
CORDUROY J ACKETS
SAVE 60 o/o
NOW 19.99
F EATHE RL ITE EUROPEAN LUGGAGE
3 P I ECE SET
I .\ <..' 1. l I H::~
1 ·T<fl E H.\(;
I \\EE!-. E.\ DEH
I ::!ll Pl l.L~L\.\
\\a:-. IJ.l ~!;I
NOW 59.99
KENMOR E
GAS GRILL •z.1~17
SAVE 50.00
was 199.9.)
NOW 149.95
dl'l;I.\ 7•
K ENMORE MI CROWAVE O VEN
• SE~SOR TOL;CH CO~TROL.'> WIT H
• U l GITAL T I MER & RECALL
• :l STAGE l'LL'S MEMORY WITH PROBE A~D
HACI-.
NOW ONLY •349.00
SAVE 47%
\\;J-. !11!!."1
NOW 8.99
GIRLS
PANTS & J E ANS
S AVE 50%
"1.'t l' !J !1V
NOW 4.99
L EGTRICITY
PANTYHOSE
SAV E 30o/o
\\ l 'l 1' !t!IC'
NOW 69c .
COSTUME JEWE LRY
S AVE 66o/c
_,
~ ....
-
\\ <l" It IHI
NOW 1.99
TWO BURN ER
DE LUXE FOLDING
COOK STOVE a;2;1o1
NOW 19.99
/
'-------
-~ I v •
-
STOllt HO\JRS ~ .. ~,,..
IM.1t1••.•~1;••··· lla.1t1•A..•.••······
•
OrengeCout OAILV PILOT(Thuraclay, November26, 1961
Thanksgiving brings
us mixed blessings
fo'or Americans it ls a plus
und minus Thanksgiving
Inflation dunng October
dropped to u 4.4 pen:ent rate. t he
lowest for a long lime. And 1t
appear::. double·digil intlation has
departed for u tinw. with an
annual rate of 9.6 percent like ly
this. year. compared with 12.4
µercent for 1980.
Consumer prices arc inching
down a bit. as arc mtercst ratei..
That"s a plus tor many .
But apparently the µnee ot
these benefits is a recession that
is boosting unemployment. hence
lower consumer incom es. a nd a
continuing s tands till 10 thl'
ho us ing a nd auto m arkets
Rl'la iler s arc worned that
Ch ristma:, sales may not pack up
and many alread~ an~ c ulling
prices ins te ad of wa1lmg for thl'
traditional after Chnstm as sales
That's a plus for buyers who'd
like to bu~ a des ig ne r dress or a
cas hmere s weater fo r up to .5ll
perce nt off But at ·s a manu:. 101
the stores .
Tig ht household budgets e\'cn
set off the Thanksgiving ·turke.\
war" with lowe::.t prices e\'er on
t h e holida ~ bird. Again good
news tor bu\'ers. but not so fine
for growers 'amJ marketer::. taccd
with Lakin~ a loss
F'or Pnts1dent Reagan , the
hollduy up at his Suntu Uurbara
runc·h t unnot l>e Olll' ol undllutt.>d
jOy .
ll(>'s had tl'IT tl>ll' ta oubll' ''1th
!'>"\'Cl'al of h1~ µt>ople this ) car
l'ulunel membt!rs tanuhng with
each othe r a nd stty1ng hu1·sh
thin~~ about his economic plan.
not to m e ntion C o n .:re:,:,
bl• t' om i ng l'l' cid ri tr a nt UIH'l'
mun•
But lh t• prcs 1dt•nt cun
tongratulutc h1m:,elf tor making
u tunel~ and cffecti \l' move to
soot he European nl•r vcs with h1:-.
oiler to Iorgo dq>l o~ mcnl ol
ground·bUSl1d nul'll•ur m1~sill':. 11
till' So\ ll'b "11l rc<:1µro<.0.tt\.'
Tht• SO\ 1cts probuhl~ \\Oii l
do un~ :.uc h t hing . but lht•
maneu\'l'I' did furn• l'rt>s1dcn1
Hrezhm•\ tu h int lw mlghl at
lea:-.l be w1ll111 g lo lt1lk a bout an
•inn:-. µullbaC"k
.\O\\ that tht• pre:-.1dent hc1:.
p1 oµused a summit ml'l'ling 011
arm s r t.>duct10n a:-. :-0011 u::. lll'Xl
·'cat'. there":-. al ll·u:-.1 n·a:.on to
h q, IH' l h a t l h l' d I :--l ll I' h I n ~
... a hcr·rattlmg 0 11 hoth :.tdl':--ma.'
4u1t•t a l1ttlc.•
:\ki.inw h lll'. '' l' t onn· 111
anotht•r da~ ul Th.ink~g 1\'lng \\Ith
1111 .\mcncans l'ngi.lgt•d 111 "a1·
F 0 I' t h l' ... l' i.1 ll d II 1 h I' I
blessings. \H' l'Ull lw lhi.1nktul
Election ploy lost?
F o r u v. htlc 11 :.t•eml•d that
th o u s ands ot Oranj!e Cou..,l
resid e nts were des tined lo bl'
\\ 1tho ut r e p resenta tion m t h1•
..,ta l e Senate for l wo \·ear~
Now that hegans to a pJll'<ll
unlikely .
Under the mut h ·cnt1c1zl.'d
De m oc ratic: r e apportionme nt
pla n . the 36th Senatonal 01:,tnd.
extenrling I rom Seal Beath south
to O cea n s idt•. wo u l d bl•
renumbered to becume the 37th
Dis trict Thal \\u uld permit
assigning a n l•H'll numbl'r to u
proposed nt.>w ch~lru:t m <:entl'al
Orange Count~
The trac:k h ere 1:, lh~t
l'\'l'l1 numbered d1str1l't:. \\ 111 hold
t'll·t·taons m 1982. oclil numbered
not until 1984.
So with s tale Sen John
Sthmatz. Y.ho now rcpn.•:.cnts lhl•
t"oastal d1 stritl. departin g lo
cntcr the l.J .~ Senate rate. thl·
c.·1t1cs o l ltunlln ~ton Beuth.
Fo11nta111 \'alll·~. \l'\\ po1 t lk.1rll.
l'o:-.la ;\lt•su. In llll' a11cl Laguna
Bl'a1:h \\Ollld h.i' 1• 11<1 -..t•n.1ton.tl
\"O tt'l' 111 Sat'l'~Jn\\•nto 1111tll llw
1 ~K.t l'll'C'l ll>ll
U LI l t h l' I) l ' It I 0 l' I' ll t I ( ·
man l' u' l' r :. t' l' m :--d t'-.. t 111 ed t 11
\\ind up both in lht· C'lllll't:. 11ndt·1
s trong Rrpubhcun eh:ill<•nJ.!t' .111d
1>n t he June ballot '1.t a (;()I'
I' l'I l' I' t.> n d ll m t h i.I I ... l' l' k ... I II
un.•rturn the plan
It all th.it h.1ppl'll:--. l lw
dt:.ll'ltt:-. \.\ill l'l'l1t:llll ..... lhl'\ "' l'
11 1n 1 I the muddle 1 s :-.ort l'd oul
Al lt'iJ!)l 'o nl· c.·oast<il Jrea
leadt'I". l r\'lne ;\l;.i~ o r Da\ 1d !',tlb.
alreudy 1s pondenng going after
t he St·hmatz ::.~al m what he hope:--
"ti I rcm • .11n thl' l'X•~l tn)! 3blh
1>1 -..ll'l<.'l
We hOPl' It \\ill loo. \\hOl'\l't
wans the seat. It 1s unthinkable
tn t1·~ lo man1pulC1lt' thl· \Ot1·r-.. ol
OIH' o f thl' ke~ i.ll'l'iJS Ill lht• '>I .ti\'
11\ th I~ ffii.1111\l'r
Recognize dietary truth
In r etrospeC't the recent I urnr
in Was hington O\'cr whether
ket chup t also known as cabup '
could be s ubstituted on !)Choo!
lunc h menus for a \'Cgetable lo
keep costs do wn !>lnke:, us as
a n other c lear exi.lmplc that
Was hington types bureaucrats.
news media pundits. t'artoomst:-.
and the like s ampl~ ar l' out of
touch with r eal1t ).
Any obser\'atinn ol school
cafe terias o r the 'araou'., last
rood emporiums favored b~
SC'h ool ·age Americ ans would
quic kly de m onstrate the kids
have been substituting ketchup
for other vegetables routinel~
And . If older Americans wen.' to
be ho nest. thjs has been gomg on
for at lea st five decades .
G1\'e any r e d -bl ooded
Ame n can krd a <:ho1 ce between
an ounce of ketchup and an ounce
of green bean!), o r carrots. or
cabbage and y ou know whic h
item becomes the .. vegetable o l
choice:·
I •
• As tor all th<• older logic:,
1 O\ (·1· 2 1 CJnd under 101' ask them
ho\\ man~ m ade it through 'outh
o n ':,uth s tapl c.., as k t•td1up
'>andwicht•:. and ket<·h up ..,ll'\\
1 u nv. anted ,.ef.{etabll•:, dnm1wcl "'
kl'll'hUp I
Anyone knO\\!\ that an Olll1l'l'
nl lre nr h l l'll'~ l'l'ql11n•s l\\u
oun t·cs ol kcll0hup tu lllakl' 1t a
gourmet \'t'gl·tanan dl•laghl
.\nd <.imong the oldl·r gcntr~.
ketC'hup becomes t•:-.:--t.•nt1ul to
making such thmgs as t ottage
t·hct•se an lo a p:.ts:--abl~ ..,at 1:-.h mg
cl1l•l lunch
To sati-.1) thl' food 1>1111~ts.
th e adm1m~tratw11 1:--dast"rl'L'lh
backing ct\\'<.t~ from ck-..1~natmg
ke tc.·hu p as a sc hool lunth
\'egl'l<.ible. But don't think lor a
m o ment lh<Jl will c ha ngl' the.•
lilt.>t ime habit of' genl•rat111ns ol
..\mcn<.·an:-.
G h · en a <'ho 1 cc. at \\'.i 11
tonlanue to be. · ~o thanks on the
okr u ma·m . but I II hu\ c a big
Sl'I'\ mg of that ketchup ..
Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Oailv Pilot. Other views ex-presse(I on tn1s page are those ot lhe1r author-:. and artists. Reacter comment 1s in v1t
ed. Address The Dally Ptlot. P 0 Box lSOO. Costa' MeS<l, CA 92626 Phone (/14J
641·4321
L.M. Boyd/Love is healthy
People who've just faJlen in love
r;arel)! have colds during the height or
the romances. No. I didn't make that
up. ll is the claim or a French doctor
who researched a sizable sampling of
newlyweds.
In the town square at Griggsville.
Ill., is a $40.000 birdhouse. With more
than t,000 apartments. For purple
martins.
A survey of 1,200 people named
Jones revealed that most JonHes
ORANGE COAST ~HJ Pilat
oppose the Wo m e n's Liberation
movement.
First of the machine·m•de
cigarettes were Camels at 10 cenls a
pack.
Q. People close their eyes when
they kiss to heighten their senses.
right?
A. Some say so. lt is also said,
however. that they close their eyes,
because close up ir they look at each
other. they have lo do so cross-eyed.
That's uncomfortable.
Thomas P. Haley
Publisher
. T'9olnn A. Mu!!!tlne
Editor
&al'Mra Kreiblclt
Ef#ltorl•I P•oe Editor
~~~·-,,~-·-'f"'1M9tAlm ____________ _
Many are less than thankful
W ASIDNGTON -At the risk or being
the worm in the Thanksgiving pie, I'd
like to r emind Americans stuffing
themselves on turkey and trimmings
today that there are millio ns or
unfortunates who have little to be
thankful for this Thanksgiving.
The misery quotient is rising among
the needy and une mployed 1n this
country and their even more wretched
counterparts overseas -not to mention
the American farmer, whose reward for
outproducing any agric ultural nation an
the history of mankind has been to be
driven dee per in debt each year.
WHAT MAKES the plight of these
groups aJI the more shocking is that
many of their troubles are the result of
government action or inaction that is
unworthy of our country's heritage.
The treatment of the food ·stamp
program is a particularly s hameful
example of the new meanness of spirit
that has become popular in government
all in the s acred name or budget
cutting. The poor and malnourished
who have depended on food stamps are
characterized as unde serving free-
loaders by the likes of Sen. Jesse
Helms, R-N.C.
A million persc>ns have been knocked
orr the food-stamp rolls by budaet cuts,
and the remaining 2S.6 million face
drastic reductions in this critical
supplement to their meager incomes.
The worsening economic situation will
put an added strain on the food ·stamp
program just at t he lime when its
budget has been carved by $1.65 billion.
For eac h n ew per c entile o f
unemployment, another million people
become eligible for food stamps but a
tightfisted government has refused to
prepare for this.
There's another food s upplement
program that ha s felt th e
administration's economy knife: the
Agriculture D e partment 's
G. -JA-Cl-Al-D-IRS_D_I -._
Women-Infant-Children program. whic h
provides milk, cheese and eggs to
pregnant women, mothers of newborns
and s mall c h ildre n. Though the
program has overwhelming bipartisan
s upport on C apitol H ill , th e
administration has simply refused lo
s pend aJI the money that Congress has
allotted to it
ALREADY 200,000 women and
children have been dropped from the
program and that doesn't count the
six or eight million who could qualify
but lack the awareness to apply for benertts.
The problem or poor and
undernourished people overseas is not
money, but geopolitics. Charity
organizations are willing and able to
offer priva\e aid to many of these
s uffering millions. and it wouldn't cost
the American taxpayers a cent.
But because they live an a country
that doesn't rit into Washington's global
overview, the blameless poor are left to
s truggle withoul the help that is
av a ii able.
If a private charity wants to give
desperately needed rarm tools lo poor
nations like Vietnam or Cambodia, it
must gel permission from either the
Commerce or Treasury Department.
And the administration is making al
tough to get such approval.
Church World Services, for example,
was d e nied perm ission to gi ve
Cambodia earth-moving equipment for
irrigation work, a nd The American
Friends Service Committee was refused
permission to dona te materaals· for
mak ing school furn iture Friends
o ff1c1als told my associates Don
Goldber g and J o hn Dallon. The
distinction seems to be that pnmitive
hand tools are OK to send to Indochina,
but power tools and equipment are not.
FINALLY, WHAT do America's
farmers have to be thankful for today?
About all I can think of is that they are
still in business. many of them hanging
on by the skin of their teeth. The
average farm debt amounts to $68,000.
The farmers' costs for machinery and
fertilizer are al an all-time blgb; fuel
costs will only go up, and interest on the
money farmers tradHionally borrow for
next year's crops is out of sight.
Somehow. the farmers manage to
keep on producing This is something
we s hould give thanks for today,
between the turkey and the tube.
Apply biblical advice to Christmas
"F~r everything there is a seas6n and
a ti me for ever y purpose under
heaven," il s ays in the Bible.
That was obviously written by some
ancient sage who djdn't anticipate that
there would be so much money to be
made off professional football in July
and January. Money seems lo be the
only thing that affects the season
anymore.
There may once have been "a time to
plant and a time lo harvest that which
is planted" but now the natural season
for things is ignored. The local tomatoes
are long gone now in most parts of the
country and so are the melons. There
haven't been any real strawberries
growing in my part of the country since
August. but that doesn't mean the
season is over for tomatoes, melons and
strawberries in the s upermarkets.
They're shipping the tasteless pale pink
rooks from California and passing them
off now as tomatoes. The melons,
picked a month before they were ripe so
they'd be hard enough to ship from
Arizona, are here, and so are tasteless
hothouse strawberries. They're enough
to make an honest -to-goodness ripe
strawberry ashamed or itself
The seasons are becoming a blur on
the calendar. Between rushing into
the next season too soon. the way they
do with fashions in store windows.
ANDY ROONIY
staying with the last season too long.
the way the proressional sports teams
do, and vegetable purveyors try to.
we're losing the four·season definition
of our years.
Last weekend I went into the
department store over on the highway
nearest our home looking for a leaf
rake. <We don't bum leaves anymore
and I approve, but it makes fall a less
clearly defined season of the year. too.)
It turned out the store didn't have any
leaf rakes because they'd cleared out
their garden department to make room
for Christmas tree ornaments.
In order to help preser ve the
Truth soilletiDles irrelevant
Thought&. at Lorge.
People who shrug off wars on
poverty because "you ·11 always have
poor people" would never give up the
war on disease because "you'll always
have sick people" which Is just as
true, and just as irrelevant.
-Why is every important doctrine in
SYllfY HARRIS
the world sooner or later perverted by
those who claim to believe it the most?
-If the people who attend -not to
mention those who watch -such TV
pro1rams as "The Price Is Right" and
"The Newlywed Game " are
represent.alive ot the American
etectorate, then we are fortunate that
our political leaden aren't worse than
they are.
-NEA&LY ANYTHl::tean be
'"proved" u you ute • ' enouch
•pan of lime. but duration ofttn Ii•• a qui~e different. 1nswer.
Killers have always been fond of
euphe misms for what they do; the
latest, by the sealskin manufacturers. is
to designate the slaughter of seals as
"harvesting." ("Take" is another
double-talk word. as in "During the
open season. 174 deer were taken."J
-ln Scotland, lawyers nominate
judges for office, and get the best ones
-for they select the ablest of the
profession in order to rid themselves 'of
com petHlon and share the practice
among themselves.
"1Nf1DEL" Is a shameful word. no
matter which rellg~on uses it. if it
means someone who does not share my
particular faith : for If there is a
personal deity. he is sur ely large
enough to ignore doctrinal dllfe,rences,
or he is not worthy or respect and love.
much less worship.
-The basic, and eventually the fatal,
flaw In the United Nations Is that
countries act lndependenUy when they
feel they can get away with it, and tu:m
to the U.N. machinery only when In
danger of loslng or falllnlf ln t.helr at ma.
-How refreshlnC tt would bt ll I huce corporation advertlted lta mot.lvt
for dotnir business ea ·•profll" and not
''people.T•
Christmas season , I propose a
Chris tmas seasons law. It would be
ca lled .. The Chris tmas Holida ys
Limitation Act " Here are some of 1ls
provisions
-CAPITAL PUNISHMENT would be
mandatory for anyone caught selling
Chri s tma s o rnaments before
Thanksgiving
Magazines would be precluded
from issuing three Christmas editions.
the first in October. No magazine dated
·Decembe r ·· o r calling itself
"Christmas Ed1t1on " could be made
available before Dec. 1
Mail order houses would have their
mail boxes taken away from them if
they sent out brochures offering
Christmas gifts before Labor Day
Every Chnstmas tree sold would
have to be dated, like a quart or milk.
The tree would be tagged with the exact
day on which it was cul down.
-It would henceforth be illegal for
any store to have a sale sooner than two
weeks following Christmas day.
-There would be stiff penaJties for
any individual caught mailing out
Christmas cards before the 10th of
December.
-Ins urance companies, funeral
homes, hardware stores and real estate
operators would be forbidden from
.mailing out anything to anyone that
said "Merry Christmas" on it.
IF THIS Chris tma s Holidays
Limitations Act is made into law, it
could be expanded at a later date to
include provis ions that might help
preserve the integrity of all our
seasons.
If we can't make this a law. perhaps
the following item should be added to a.,
updated Ecclesiastes : "There's a time
for Christmas holiday celebration and a
lime when it's too early to cel~brate the
Chris~mas holidays.·•
CllllYm
Bet I'm a&oomler thu J'O'I an t0d91, Gu.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Thuraday. November 26, 1981 Al3
levator to space could be more than a dream
If a former JllASA sclenUlit haa his
way, a lot ot lhe romance 11101n1 to go
out of apace explorulion. On lb., other
hand , lh08e of us who would b&lk at
lttlna on top of a huae rocket will have
• ure It mundane alternative
m«1thod or makinll our first trip toward
th stars.
The scientist's name Is Jerome
Pearson. and his invention 1s an
Ill GRllNI
elevator from the Earth into space. It
would be just like the elevator you ride
to your orrice in the morning, except it
would take you 22,000 males up and into
orbit.
"WE ARE J UST in the research
stages now." Pearson said. "But there
are a couple of definite ways to do 1t.
and l think it's only a matter or time.'·
Pearson, 43, is an aerospace engineer
at the Air Force Flight Dynamics
Laboratory, near Dayton. Ohio. During
tho Apollo program he was a c1v1lian
engineer ror NASA ; m fact. he applied
to be an astronaut. but was turned down
because his eyes were bad
"They just wanted jet pilot types:·
Pearson said. "I knew I never had a
chance, but I had to g1 ve 1l a try."
So. if NASA wouldn't let him ride a
rocket mto space. he decided to direct
his energies at other ways of getting
there. He devised a theory of building a
giant cable from space orbit back lo a
ground station on Earth. and then
sending an electr1cally·powered
elevator, carrying humans. up the
cable.
Unbeknownst lo Pearl.on, a Soviet
scientist named Yun N. Artsutanov was
working on a similar project. but
became stymied because there was no
material readily available to build a
strong enough cable.
.. And that's still the major problem."
Pearson said "The project 1s perfectly
feasible. but we Mill have to develop a
( ' / '· \. ' .. 1. ' • • , ......
cable thut la llaht ~nouah. und al the
aame lime strona enou11h to let •n
t'levator climb Into s pace."
HE BELIEVE the perfection or 11uch
a cable may be close al hand. An
oxtremely thin material known as
gr8phltc whiskers is being developed,
and when it Is ready. the space elevator
can be built
"The process ls not that ditrlcull,"
Pearson said. "The Clrst thing we'd do
is send a space shuttle into 4itbit with
big drums or cable on board. 'Jllen we'd
drop the first strand back to the Earth.
When at got there. we'd start sending
more and more strands up the first
strand, on self-propelled climbers With
each new strand. the cable would be
reinforced. ll would be like building a
suspension bridge · ·
When the cable was strong enough, he
said, the elevator car would be attached
lo it. And then it would just be a matter
of climbing aboard, pushing a button
and riding smoothly up the cable lo
one's destination in space
"It would be tremendously
economical." Pearson said "You
wouldn't have to deal anymore with
rockets that cost miJllons of dollars and
need umpteen tons of thrust to lift off
You'd simply get on the elevator."
At lhe top end of the cable would be a
satellite positioned so that its orbit
would keep precise pace with the
t-levator's ground station. Thus. even
though the satellite was constantly
orbiting, its orbit would mirror the
Earth's own turning on its axis. and
would not float away from the ground
station. .
"The practical application would be
to lift an untold amount of tonnage into
s pace at a ridiculously low cost."
Pearson said. "This would be wonderful
for industry "
MORE IMPORTANTLY, though, he
said . the elevator would allow
thousands of people to go into !>pace who
would never thmk of riding a rocket
from Cape Canaveral.
"1 can env1:.1on a two-week vacation
1n space for Sl.000 or less." ht! said ·A
hotel could be built up there 1n orbit to
I •
Solid Rosewood Dining. Living.
and Bedroom Sets
TEAK WALL PLAQUES
SOAPSTONE INLAID
SET OF FOUR 36"x12 ea.
Reg $255 Now 118500
Lacquered
Planter with
Mother of Pearl
Inlaid 119500
Now '14500
~ reat € a"tern
Frff D.tl•ery In Orange COl9lty
South Coast Store
3754 South Bristol
Bristol Town & Country Ctr
Santa Ana 979·0322
Laguna Hills Store
23024 Lake Forest
Laguna Hills
Behind JoJos 951 -1188
The "S" is sensational
Instantly eye-catching with its
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cater to thu travelers. Once people
started talking about the fantastic view
or Earth that you couldn't &et anywhere
ul11e, l lmaelne ll would be qultti 11
popular spot.
"Yow aren 'l gotng to get the average
mun to ride the space shuttle Into srace
for a vacation. Because you've slit aot
lo !Jll on too or that very dangerous
rocket to eet up there and there's a
limit or how many people the shuttle
could carry, even ir people were willing
to ride it. The ide3 or riding an elevator
into space in a safe way might be very
appealing."
He sald he realizes that the idea or a
safe space elevator might be a letdown
to tho e Americans who grew up In the
John Glenn·Alan Shepard days of
tearful space drama -but "by the time
we reach tbe stage or the elevator into
.
apace, I'm suro there will be uven more
dan1erous thln1a tor the more Intrepid
explorers to do. There's atway11 room
tor danjler and excitement but there
should also be room for the average
person In space."
The way Pearson envisions It, the
elevator car would hold 20 to 30 people.
They would be atrupped into seau much
like the ones on a commerclaJ airliner
The climb Into apace would take
approximately tour hours, and except
for the flnt few minutes of lift-off.
would be as comfortable as a regular
elevator ride.
ALREADY, Science Digest magazine
has commented favorably on Pearson's
project. and he is convinced that it is
only a matter of time until Americans
are routinely rid10g the space elevator
"There was a time when I t.hou&bl my
project would n~vor have a c hanre,"
Pea non said .. People scemt-d to have
lost lntereict In ispacl! explorotlon. and
there were no funds for 1deus like this
··Sul now people are mltircsted In
space again, and there's a feeling that.
anything 111 possible. There are so many
practical uses ror a space elevator that
it seems hke a natural thing to follow up
on."
He admits that the Idea first came to
him as a fanciful urge based on his own
rejection by NASA as an astronaut,
candidate. If they wouldn't let him go
into space their way, then he'd do 1t his
way
··But every idea s tart!> out as a
fanciful dream." Peurson said "I(
there were no fanciful dreams. no one
would ever a<·compl1~h anything ·
Obledo's separatism may not help
Now comes Mario Obledo as a
candidate for governor. The state's
Health and Welfare Agency· director ls,
on paper. what America i.s all about.
His story is right out of Horatio Alger.
The 48-year·old Obledo grew up in
poverty in San Antonio. or a large
..
IAll WATfRS
family, he tells of sleeping on the floor
in a crowded room and working at
menial jobs Encouraged to seek an.
education by the druggist he worked
f or. Obledo became a licensed
pharmacist. He went on to law school.
working seven nights a week as a
pharmacist After that h e was
employed by the Texas .attorney
general and later taught at Yale before
his appointment to lhe Heallh·Welfare
agency by Governor Jerry Brown.
Unfortunately, despite hi s
m:hievement In American storybook
fas hion. Obledo is a professional
Mexican. Instead or seeing those of
Mexican ancestry as Americans he
seems determined to keep them in a
separate culture by vigorously
advocating bilingual classes, bilingual
ballots and bilingual laws. He even had
a s tatue memorializing
Mexican-Americans killed in WW II
installed on the lawn at the entrance to
his state office building. emphasizing
that in his mind they are a group
separate and apart from all other
Americans.
WHETHER HE could have been a
good administrator or not, the fact is his
obsession with this form of separatism
has sorely arrected his agency. He has
continuall y been embroiled 1n
controversy arising out of hjs efforts to
install Hispanics in all of the top jobs
and obviously distracted from his job
with his involvements with various
Mexican-American activist groups. As
a result, the scandalous waste and
fraud in Medi-Cal. the major program
in his agent.•y. is only a reflection of the
mismanagem e nt which ex1!>lS
throughout
Although he ha:. never before run
for public office, his candidacy must be
takep senou!>ly s inc<• he as entenng an
un<:rowdcd Democratic pnmary His
only competitors so far are L.os Angeles
Mayor Tom Hradley and Senator John
Garamend1
Has lack f)f campaign experience
does n't bother him , he is confident he
will win. The way he figure!> it there are
nearly one m1lhon person!> of Hispanic
descent regil.tl'red lo vote an Cahforn1a
HE ALSO MAKES the false
as:.umpllon lhi.it everyone with a
H1 5.pan1 c ~urname 1s a
Mex1can·American And the further
assumpllon that all Mex1can·Amencans
favor his separatism The educated and
intellige nt don't :.upporl him al all.
They see themseh es as Americans and •
strive for the unity which made the
nation great
ABC WMBERWISHES ilDU
A
HAPPW
TlllNKSGIVING
REMEMBER, WE Will. BE
aosn> THMKSGMNG MY.
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Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Thurlday. November 28, 1981
TIRES -Thomas
. Delunhanly. 48 ,
ilistrit't or Columbia
lice officer shut in
' h c M u I' l' h sussinataon attempt
()fl President Regan,
hbs retlrl'd on l'ull
dlsab1llty after 19
years or service.
..
r_ublic schools
J ear' vouchers
8 )' T HOMAS D. ELIAS
Calirornia's embattled public schools have
~on a three-year reprieve from a threat that
promised to gut their ever-shrinking corps or
supporters.
The threat? A proposed school voucher
initiative that would have provided parents with
tAxpayer-financed scrip they could use for paying
ition at prlvate and parochial schools. The aim
oC the plan, devised by two UC Berkeley law
pfofessors, was to force public schools to improve
e~ucational quality or lose many stu~nts.
Already beset by reduced funding, declining
~nrollments and a drift or middle-class students
toward private schools, public school officials
vie wed vouchers as the most pernicious
development of all.
; For under a voucher plan, new private
schools could be expected to spring up almost
overnight, with tax dollars providing the financial
base they'd need to attract teachers and rent
---------acceptable buildings. ••11FORllA Any po 11 t i ca 1 • 911 religious or ethnic group
fDCUS could set up its own
schools as long as their
curriculum included the
---------required basics. And that would mean a weakening of the
public schools' role as a melting pot, the place
where children or all backgrounds come together
&l)d gain some common ground. Of course,
elirollment figures from California"s largest school
lbstricts s uggest that role has already been
-eakened. "Minorities" are now lhe majority or
:ftudents in cities like Los Angeles. San Francisco
~d Oak.land, while whites have fled to suburbs or
;riv ate schools.
••• Vouchers would also mean a vast diminution CJ! the power or school administrators, whose
Ot,ulti-million dollar budgets would suffer cuts far
".oiore severe than any spurred by Proposition 13.
•• So it was no surprise when admmistrators and
'trte state's biggest teacher union, the California
1:eachers Association. led efforts to block a
ynucher initiative from qualifying for the ballot in
:1979, the first year the idea was put into ballot
lormat. And it was equally unsurprising that they
•nnounced plans to repeat their performance this
winter if voucher initiative backers tried again.
. Now the teachers union and the administrators
~an breathe easy -for awhile. The voucher
'bOckers say they won't try to put their plan on the
ballot until 1984.
But having fended off the vouchers twice,
tJUblic schools still cannot afford to rest easy.
For reliable educational research shows that
students in private '.ind parochial schools
consistently achieve at higher academic levels
•n public school students even when family _bf ckground and economic factors that influtnce
e~hievement are very similar.
J. That fact is the reason why many private
§~ools boast waiting lists of applicants, while
jiiblic school districts wonder what to do with
blildings that have become vacant because of
clining enrollments.
So far the drift toward private schools involves
~inly middle-class youngsters. But what happens
~er a few more years without much academic
fiJ'provement in public schools?
Parents wbo now can't afford private school ~ 'it ion and must leave children in public schools
ay begin to cast about for other options.
And when they do. the voucher system wUJ
ely beckon them
So the state's public schools may be getting a
ee-year reprieve from the voucher threat. But
y must use the time they've won to make
ademic improvements despite the financial
stacles In their path.
Because if they don't, parents will surely vote
give themselves some ed4cational options and
blic schools stand to lose thousands of students
d billions of dollars they now take for granted.
f Elias '" a colummst based m Santa Monica. J
Bank workers protest
~ MANILA , Philippines <AP> -Angry
fflployees of the Bank or the Philippine Islands
ve grabbed razors and makeup instead of picket
ns.
When customers at 10 of the bank's offices
iPlked in the doors. they were confronted by
'4ally bald men and women with beards and
ustach es painted on with eyebrow pencil.
The 75 men and 55 worben employees were
otesting to dramatize demllnds ror holiday pay.
al allowances, overtime and other benefits, the
mes-Journal or Manila reported. ll wasn't
mediately clear what bald-headedness had to do'
th job benefits. ·
Santa Arrives
Music prof esso~ takes his t-qha seriously
BLOOMINGTON, tnd . <AP>
When Harvey Phillips warms to hla
subjec~ he takes on I.he ri1hteous air ot an evanaellst.
His goal ls lo stamp out ignorance
and prejudice toward tubas and
tublsts everywhere
Why the tuba?
"Why not the tuba?" Phillipa
roars. "Every lnatrument -tho
cello, the violin or whatever -95
percent of that instrument is nesh. It
1s just u rational t-0 assume Pablo
Casals could very easily have picked
up a tuba.''
Phillips gets a bit touchy where the
tuba ls involved. It Is his livelihood.
And, it is his passion.
25 foot
tape measure
Phillips was one or the first tublat.s
hired by u major university for the
sole purpose to teachln& the tuba. He
acnerally tS acknowledged as one or
the finest players In the world.
Although some questions about the
tuba can get his dander \.U), Phillips
usually promotes his instrument with
humor and a flair ror showmanship.
The showmanship probably comes
from his early days playing in the
Ringling Brothers and Barnum &
Balley Circus band, which he Joined
In his teens.
Nine years ago, Phillips began an
"Octubafesl" at ln<jlana University,
where he is now a -dlstln1ulshed 6
professor of music. "We celebrate a
25'x1" wide blade tape measure that slays rigid up
to 7 reet. Power Lock feature for convenienoe and
easy return. Blade is protected for long wear. In-
cludes belt clip
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keep clnden 111 the flrepl••
Thia Is as beautiful •• It Is useful.
Accents your den with antique
tlfua detail 4 lold 1473. 1888 Reg. 24.95.
new crop or lubus OV('ry fall,'' hu
says.
Durinait the festival, the tuba Is
reatured lo solos. jazz concerts and m
more traditional formuts.
More than 140 universities across
the country now have similar
restlv~. although some are held in
··septuba," be says.
Last Chrirstmas, Phillips or1anized
a concert in New York City, where
all 500 pieces m the orchestra were
tubas.
Each Christmas, Philllps and his
students parade through downtown
Bloomington dress!)d in Santa Claus
suits blowing merrily away on their
tubas.
hand me the pliers
5-piece mechanic s pliers set with
handy plastic case. Ideal for home
or~ Reg 2395
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18" set of realiStic loolung oak 3895 logs made of high-heat mate-
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•coratlve htucets
Ct100te from a handsome aelec·
tlon of faucets desigMd with a naJr
of noetalgla. All are hand-crafted
IOlid brau and wuii.rless. From 8995 American Bath. 4 Inch center
Mt.
Arter lcuvlng thu circus, Phillips
moved to New York where he
attended the Jullliard School and
made a living playina wherever he
could.
He played the ballet, opera and for
television shows like "Your Hit
Parade," Sid Caesar's "Show of
Shows" and the ··Bell Telephone
Hour." He spent 14 yeara with the
New York Brass Quintet
He replaced William Bell, one of
the most renowned tublsts in the
world and bis mentor from Jullllard,
at Indiana University an 1971. Since
then, he has taught hundreds of
s tudents to appreciate the
a wk ward-lookini;t instrument .
Y1cuumlng success
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Dilly Piiat
THURSDAY, NOV. 26, 1981
CAVALCADE
BUSINESS
MOVIES
82-3
812
8 18
Thanksgiving is
when no one diets. See
E r ma Bambeck, Page B2.
....
D ~
0
....
DMIY PllOt l'-lly Gery......,._
Bertha Smith carves turkey while youngsters wait for a sample. Preschoolers help prepare Thanksgiving feast each year at the Smith's Day Care Center , Costa Mesa.
Fixing, feasting fun, festive
Pie crust dough passes taste test of Adam Dalenta, 2. Learning to roll it is Brian Irwin. 21':!.
-I '~ < 011< t'11/rt1/t'" 1111 \ltt·t11c.J <1 ba11a 11u clllrl 11111 ltt''
}lll<Jt't'\ T/w ll'\ll[I /.\ •11/llflflll /J/l'( C''
Every year at Thanksgiving Bertha Smith of Costa
Mesa does what few mothers would ever have the courage
lo do. She turns over her kitchen lo a bunch of toddlers.
She and her husband Bob Smith let the 35 preschoolers
at Smith's Day Care Center fix the traditional holiday
feast themselves well almost.
The gray-haired grandmother laughed, .. I've done this
for 18 year!j. It teaches them how to share and gives them
some knowredge of cooking.··
Everybody pitches in. Infants, still in walkers. shake
bottles filled with cream into butler. Two and 3 year-olds
pound, shape and roll dough for a pumpkin pie crust.
And when all the hard work was done. the best part
came. The 35 children marched outside to a long waiting
table and sat down to enjoy their very own Thanksgiving
dinner.
.
Kni1)Efs uiual.ly are used to cut fruit, but one pre-schooler' decides his hands iporkjaster.
(.
I
..
Fl ...
-n ,,
I
r• I
••
1)
r1 h i ...
'•
,,
Orange Coast DAil. V PILOT/fhuraday. November 26, 1981
•ANN LANDERS
• ERMA BOMBECK
•HY GARDNER
PLA VS FIRST LADY -
. \ I.' I I ~· :-..., J l' a 11
:-.;1.i p ll0 IO ll •ll•l t
:-.mth.·s dur111g lll mmg
ol . F1r:-t La1h o l till'
\\ UI Id. 11\ \\ lltdl :.ht•
p 11 1 I 1 a ~ ... E I l· a n o 1
H I I I I ... l' \ l' I I T h \'
I \\ 11 h 11 ll r l l'l l' \ I:--1111 l
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ht 11;1tk.1:-t 1111 t B~
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'
""' --.;;;: --~ ... ---~ .._ ----=-----" -
Reader offers thanks
DEAR ANN LANDERS: l have at
least a dozen problem• I could Lay on you
right now, but you deserve a day off. So,
instead of handing you a skull·crack.,r, I
am going to write a dirf erent kind of letter
and ask you to run it on Thanksgiving Day.
Thank you , Ann Landers , for
appearing ln the New York Dally News
seven days a week. On Sundays, you are
not easy to find, but I know you are in
there someplace -so I just keep hunting.
Thank you for having the courage to
provide a forum for every kind of human
problem in language that everybody can
understand. No four-bit words to impress
people with how s mart you are. I have
learned so much from your columns about
incest, alcoholism , homosexuality, drug
abuse, high blood pressure, early cancer
detection, depression, kinky sex, how to
handle pushy neighbors, nosy relatives,
book-borrowers, freeloading relatives and
drunk house guests. You even gave me the
nerve to tell folks to MYOB when they got
too personal.
Thank you for being brave enough to
take a stand on issues that most people
wouldn't touch with a 40-fool pole -like
those columns on abortion. Millions of
readers cheered you on when you said a
pregnant woman should have the right J.o
choose her course of action, and not the
legislators in Washington or the state
capitals.
Thank you for traveling thousands of
miles to talk to all kinds of groups and
appear on TV shows . It must take a lot of
ene rgy but it is certainly worth it. No one
can see you in person or on the TV screen
without sensing that you are sincere and
com milted to your work and that you
really do care a bout the people who write
to you.
Thank you for your terrific sense of
humor. Some days I walk around with a
s mile on m y face for hours because of
something you said. Certain lines from
your columns have become part of the
lan g uage. I h e ar you quot e d i n
s upermarkets, on bus es and even from the
pulpit. <Our pastor is a regular reader.)
Thank you for the comfort you have
given to millions of people who think they
ar e the only ones who have such crazy
proble ms . You have made so many
frightened, insecure folks feel "normal"
and less alone. Your greatest gift to me
was relieving me of the guilt I carried for a
long time. You made me see I was too hard
on myself. I stopped being a perfectionist,
and my migraines disappeared.
I grew up reading Ann Landers in
Oregon, and now my kids are reading you
in New York. You have helped me do a
better job of de ali_ng with the m, my
husband, my mother·m·law, my neighbors
friends and -most of all -myself. '
Have a happy Thanksgiving dear
lady . You deserve it. -A STAUNCH
SUPPORTER
DEAR S.S.: ~bat a day-brlgba.eaer!
And now t.be next letter ls exactly wbat I
needed to chop me down to size before tbe
bead got too big for the halo. It's from
Miami.
DEAR (? > ANN LANDERS: You make
me sick. Such gall ! Such conceal ! Such
arrogance! Such self·righteousn~ss! You
are never at a loss for an opinion. How can
one person be so smart? And your foolish
face is everywhere! No matter where I
travel you're m the paper. Even in Tokyo.
Please take early retire ment and give the
world a break. SICK OF YOU
DEAR SICK : Thanks for tbe bumbler.
I needed that!
FOR ~ts . O.: If .' ou havl' been act h eh
t'nga gl•d in worl~ il ·~ J>OS~iblt' that \'OU.r
irrt'gularit.' or lllt'n~tru alion at agt• 15 'ma\
ht' d ut• lo your athlt'lic training. ·
H a vt-.)our pa re nb talk it O\'t.>r "ilh a
JO ~t'~ologi~l. l ~uall .'. decrease in 1>h.)·~ical
a cllv1t~· wall re'iult in normal menstrual
c~ d e,. Tht>rt' c.rt• no long·lt'rm ill e ft ecl-,
pruduc<.·d h.' athle li<.· training.
FOR :\1R. O.: Black ~tools tha t per sist
are reason e noug h ror a checkup -even
thoug h .\OU h a\t' no p a in o r othe r
~.' mplom!.. \"o ur doc tor will d ecide
whe lhl'r the~ a re dut' lo he morrhoid~
<which us ually produce redde ned stools -
e videnct> o( rt'Ct'nt blet>ding l.
Is ak;oh.oLism rum mg your li/e? Know the
danger signals and what to do. Read the
booklet. "Ak:oh.ola.sm -Hope and Help,'' by
Ann Landers. £nclose 50 t:ents wdh your
request Wtth a loog, stomped. self-Oddreued
envetope to Ann Landers. P.O. Box 11995,
Chicago. IU. 60611 .
A day to forget diet
Sometimes I feel the real meaning of
Than ksgiving is lost in a flurry of turkey,
prayers and homecomings.
Whal we're really talking about is a
wonderful day set as ide on the fourth
Thursday of November when no one diets.
I mean, why e lse would they call it
Thanksgiving?
It's pig-0ut time throughout the land.
No sauces made from blue milk. No pies
constructed with sugar s ubstitutes. No
potatoes baked with the nutritional value
still in the skins. No trade-0ffs for the next
fi ve weeks for a spoonful of dressing.
IT'S ELASTIC waistband time, when
you not only plan on eating everything in
s i g ht, but us ua lly exceed your own
expectations.
I have come to a wait Thanksgiving
Day like a child with her nose pressed
against the cold window awaiting the
arrivaJ of Santa Claus . It's the only day of
the year I set my alarm. This morning, I
will get up a t dawn and have m y
turkey-preparali'on breakfast. This is
fo llowed by my turkey-in·lhe-0ven formal
breakfast with the family.
The third bre akfast I will combine with
s n acks and tas ting sessions with the
c r a nbe rries. c arrot-c abbage s alad ,
pumpkin c hiffon p ies, relis h plate ,
vegetable casserole and dressing.
flMA BOMBECK
AT WIT'S END
By three or four in the afternoon, my
fourth breakfast will consist of crackers
and cheese, canapes and hors d'oeuvres of
varying sizes a nd consistencies as I
certainly do not want to ruin my dinner.
AROlJND S OR 6, dinner will be
served, at which t1m e l Mil announce that
I have had nothing to eat since breakfast.
(Dieters are always managing the truth.
It's their way.>
After dinner, I will offer to clean out
the roaster only to chip the turkey skin out
of the grease and pop it in my mouth
before anyone notices. Every bowl l return
to the refrigerator as leftovers also will be
sampled.
Around 11 tonight, I will sneak out and
put together a dressing s andwich . . . my
last official sin before saying goodbye to
the day. As a diete r. I have had my day of
liberation.
If the president e ver put Thanksgiving
on a Monday, I don't like to think what
diet ers would do to him.
Irish pllh awaits Visit
Q : Is il true that Ronald Reagan has a
pub in Count~ TipperaQ·, Ireland. bearing
hi~ name'! U so. what's the slor~ '!
A : Reportt!r J . Robert Moskm. c:kar!-t
up this report an World Pn .•ss Re \·it'\\
·thisa"'a' ·. A bit ol brac:ken on a hillock
m Doolis·h. outside Ball~ poreen. was tht•
sac:red ea11h from whic h Thoma~ Reagan
of the parish set out for Li\'eq;>0ol and then
A m e r ica l'i n~ g trner'a ttons ago. In
Bull ~·poreen . J o hn o· Farre ll s Ronal<l
Re agan Pub fil es the Stars & Stnpes. has a
photograph of the t; .S . president. and wuit~
pa lientl~· li k~ &All Ba11~·po1·ccn 10 1· the
pre!i ident or the · .S. tu come m ca1·c:h ol
has ancestol's und to uuto.craph the photo. -
•· o r 0 u r O d d ll le s .~ ll e : T h t'
Inte rnational Football •~ederation hH toad
a&e>ccer playen to act Uk~ men and 1top all
tb~ hu1gla1 and kis1ln1 ~r .orln1 10111
-Juet a1 football, bHketball aacl baa.ball
players react after a good pla)'. Tiie lrotlP
called on attodallon1 to take dl•clpllnar~
action agairult the "unmanh· ~havlor" or
I
.......
Pf ISOllAlln Q.&A.
BY MARILYN AND HY GARONER
the athletes. <Maybe they're just posing
for T\' jeans commercials. I
A shc·c of' ph1losoph~ ll"Om Ray Geagt-r.
the editor. pubhshtff a nd longtime ownt>r of
lhl' Fa rmer's Alma n ac. "You know a man
ts s uccessful when the newspa~rs shu·t
quot in~ ham on subje<:ts he knmu .nolhin1&
aoout . · And ... There's a brightel' aid~ to
inllataon. A nk ke l goes u long wa~ now
You c:an c:arry il around fo r days without
finding u thtnH to bu~·:··
Send yo1Ar quesiums to Jly Gord111r ... <ilod
\ ou A1ked That . m <:Ofll oJ IM DadJi l'alot .
f>.U. &.i 19f>'1U. lrumtt. Cdffl 92714 .• \lanl11n and
1111 c;ardrt4'r wtll answer as man" qM~StlCilns ca
they c:an m tht>ir c:ulumn. but tht uolume o/ mod
1nakf1t pt1r1Wnol replies 1mpoa~1ble
. ..,,
8y PHIL IN TERLAN OI of Laguna.Seach
"I'm late, right?"
rou1 HEALTH
OR. PETER J . STEINCROHN
Chest pain
causes vary
DEAR DOCTOR: I'll give you one
peas (although you don't Deed It) -what
la the moat oabtand.lng symp&om of heart
attack? Undoubtedly you'll say .. chest
paln."
Well,-.iy f atber wbo la 76, baa been
complaining of chest pala lately. His
doctor says It lm't due to heart troable. He
blames It oa arthritis of t.be spine. He says
tbat Is a common cause ol discomfort in
tbe cbesL
Dela'& doctors sometimes minimize
complaints made by elderly patleata?
We have confidence ID oar doctor wbo
bas taken care of tbe f amlly for over 30
years, but isn't it possible be may be
wrong? ba't it Important to know wbedler
or aot tbe heart la all right? Do you have
any suggesdons? -MRS. C.
DEAR MRS. C.: We suppose you're
tired of bearing it : but , whenever in doubt,
don't hesitate to ask for consultation, in
this instance, for yo ur peace or mind if fo r
nothing else. We believe that your doctor
will be willing to call in a cardiologist. Not
only will it serve to double-check the
dia,nos is , but it will help ease your
anXlety. It's possible that your father's chest
pain is due to heart disease, even though
electrocardiograms are negative. The
cardiologist may or may not recommend
other t ests like cardiograms or the
coronary arteries. (At your Cather 's age,
it's unlik el y he w ill s uggest this
procedure.) Your own doctor may tum out
to be right -spinal arthritis is a common
cause of referred chest pain.
We have seen several patients in whom
such pain was due to biatal hernia. ln fact,
s uch hernia can sometimes simulate a
serious attack or myocardial infarction.
Ulcer pain is not a common cause of
chest pain, but gall bladder disease is
s uspect when a ll the heart tests are
negative. Pain from gall stones, for
example, often extends upward to the
chest, and between the shoulder blades.
After consultation, it's more likely you
will all know the reason for your father's
chest pain.
Dr. Steincrohn welcomes que8tion3 from
readers. He cannot anroJer all individually but
will include thou of general intere8t in thl3
column. Send your question.3 to him, in car e of
the Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Co3ta Me1a.
Calif.~.
.HER'B MEN
OUR MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO
Centenarian
still young
A huppy m un : "l have gn~ut respel't
fol' my bod)'. J oel Hildebrund. cur s
bclo\'cd a nd world rttnowned Prof o f
Che m ist!'). thus exp lains hb longevity in
un inter\'iew 1n the nirren!\t'u hforn1a
~l onthly . Ile has just t urned and the
eampus honored h im with u l'Cklong
l'elebratlon ..
MORE IULOE BRANDISMS: ··1 h ave
never had a headache. I have not dosed m y
lungs. \.\1th tar . I h ave lived a physically
aC'll\'e life ; l celebrated my 17th birthday
by swim m ing a h alf-m ile in 22 mmult'!'t ·
'He took up s kiing a t 40 a nd stopped a t 1;,.
a t his w1fe ·s insiste nce. ··1 used to bc <t
pre tty good skier but my legs no longer
obey m e very we ll. I a m probably dy111g
from my feet upward, which is better than
:-.t artrng at the top.··
M~SI NG ON : · · 1 recently read a
dictum that little creative work can be
expect t.>d from a m an a fter the age of 35.
T hat is unquestionably t rue because few
pcr!'tons do a nything creati\'e before 35. . I
tJke l'arc of a large g a rden whic h ts more
tun tha n swinging d umbbells . Red wood
tn·t•s I pla nted whe n 3 feet tall are now
neurlv 100 feet tall .1 ltve with my w1fl'
E mil\·. I have been in Ion! with her s 111t·e
the dav 1 met her. in 1908. ··i' met her at a mustl'al The momt•nt l
s aw he r l knew she was the wo m a n for me
T hl· feeling was mutual She turned 95 in
.Jane . \\"e are living 111 harmon~ with the
l nshman ~ wb h . ·M a~ ~ou li\'e till ~ou dtl'
and nl'\ l'r gnl\\ old It has bt'l'n u great
11 It•
llo\\ f1tt111g that a t·hamp1011 I!-> lwrng
honored
('.-\ENFETTl : ~orth Bl'ath ts agog.
Bob K<.1u l m ;rn . the \t.'lcrun poet und
diaral'ter. 1~ to g<>t a ~12.:;oo ·c reative
\\l'lling grant lrom :\a1·1 Endowment for
t hl' :\rt!:>. more mone~ than hl· hus l'\ er
:o.t'l'n at one time ~h.·u nwhllc. at Enrico"·
hl• as kl•d Crit1t· Torn Albnght. ·Le nd me
I 1n· bul'k:-. for a hamburger I ha\'en·l
:-.t'l'n that mone\ 't•l. Don Lanl' ol San
Leandro picked i1p ht!:> d ghtr. Claudia. at
S FO after s hed s pent two wk!'t 111 Sp<un.
<Anti. in t he course ol chttt·hat. inquired 11
~he had used her American E x press t'ard
ollen. Her g lum repl~ ··1 s hould have left
home withou t 1t ··. .Thoma s JI Wendel
t'aug ht Sen . A l a n Crans ton 1n this
horrendous gra m mat1cal goof· ·As one
\\ho lo,·es the la nd . J a m es Watt must go ··
S tu.' after cl as~.
)10RE GAMES : J ano~ (;ereben founu
., st•ll ·l'a m·eltng phrase nn a magazine
t'U \ t•r a fu ll -puge photo ol \"an ~lorn!'lon
eapt1oned ·.\ Stud~ ol Pnvat·~ St•ll
l.'anl'elen. from Jame~ Ha nsom I m
afraid I'm not \i.'I'~ good Ul :,t'll ·n tlll'ISnl
.\ncl People Y. ho makl' un:,utTC!\~l ul
:-.u1<.·1dl' attemµb often liH· to reJ;!n•t 11
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
INEED
AN
OUnJIDE
INTER.EST
BUT
I DON'T KNOW
WHAT TMERE IS
OUT SIOE T HE
UNIVERSE,
.., ~ ... M Ai4 •'9'14•.......,... U-• ~,,....,,_,,. ......... , ... tric.
Leo: Foil ow instincts
Friday, November rl
ARIES (Ma r ch 21-April 19): Plans
change, especially those related to travel,
long-distance communications , writing
projects. You'll be asked to review past
work and to improve procedures.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Expenses
exceed original estimate. But you also
receive quality goods. Accent on money as
it relates to one close to you.
. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Emphasis
on family, residence and lifestyle. Go slow,
highlight diplomacy, put aside funds for
unexpected expenses .
CANCEa (June 21-July 22): Terms
may not reflect actual situation. Obtain
definitions, clarifications. Emphasis on
work procedures, basic issues, nutrition,
health and dependents.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): By following
instincts, you make correct decisions
regardiDg change, variety, speculative
ventures and members of oppe>site sex.
VIJlGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): What you
anUclpat.ed ·would be a long, drawn-out
1ituatioo. will come to a s udden conclusion.
Emphasis oo security.
LIB&A (Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: Answers yoa
receive are lo the atnrmatlve. Green liJht
ii flatbed for new project. added
I ..
"'W - -;,....-._ ------
• HOIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
independence and short trip.
SCORPIO (Oct . 23-Nov. 21): Spotlight
on the gathering of necessary material, the
r e cover ing or los t object s a nd the
recouping or recent losses.
SAGITl'ABIUS (Nov. 22-Dec . 21): Key
is diversification, ability to laugh at own
f oi ble s , c ommun ic ati o n and
s elf-confidence.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You're
like ly to be engaged in club, group or
organizational activity. Cycle excellent for
rais ing money in connection with.hospitals.
c ha ritable causes.
AQUARIUS (J an. 20· Feb. 18):
Dialogue is exchanged with one who shares
basic interests. Member of opposite sex is
involved -feelinf• are expressed and
result is sense o fullUlment.
Pl8CES (Feb. lf..Marcb a>): Buaineu,
f amlly and pel'IOllal decisions combine;
you can make intelligent cboicet which
ultimately lead to profit. emotlonal
streneth. ·
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. November 26. 1981 Bl
'
GOING HOME -
Chuck Hayes receives
a warm send-off from 1
l'm p loyees of St .
Mary ·s Hoi-;pital 1n
Ka nsas City . Hayes is 1
the l ast of nearly 200
Injured in s kywalk
coll a pse t o leave a
hospital He and h t~
wi l e J av n e w e l'(~ serious l ~ inj ured
J u I\· 1 7 w he n two
s k\:Wa lks i n thl' It~ all Regerwy Hotel
collapsed. ktllrng I l J
µeople.
"It's A Whole Way Of Life" 'il!I
Newport Surf and Sport1'p•
We Got ltl Annual
Weekend Sale
!i
* 3 Days Only *
Fri., Nov. 27th
Sat., Nov. 28th
Sun., Nov. 29th
10-25% off
STORE #1
2224 Newport Blvd.
Newport Beach
675-7874
Ope n Daily
STORE #2
2101fz Marine Ave.
Balboa 1-'and
673-7826
Ope n Daily
DECORATOR
GLASS
PIECES
Adds style lo any table. any
11mt of the year A vibrant
hrt·red bast turns to a bl!ihl
&old top A great g1!1
C-Ompote 6 ~·· high $1.29
Chalice 8'" ....... $1.29
Diamond Point Oval Bowl
8~'"15". . . . . . . $1.49
Oval fru1I Bowl
8"112"' ..
Ir s the or1&1nall Chug a log has an engine and 3 cars lo
hitch and unhitch. run tor kids ol all ages. Choose from
an assortment of these natural wood toys
MIRRORED
CHRISTMAS
HANGING
ORNAMENTS
J9c each • __,_,...,,.
BAG OF 25
CHRISTMAS BOWS
59C Sllc~·on bows.
aSSOfted colors
Retail value SlSO
SANT A CLAUS CANDLE
IMPORTED
PRINCESS
CHAIR
ANO BOOKCASE
Bnnc holM somet'"n& e1ohcl These ttrUtlle. bun pieces are
hMdwoftft with reinforced
tOMtnlcboll. Mt1 and milch
with baslets lor a totefly new
tnVllOllmtnl
$}59 •
M#e decorlt1vt, h1ncbon<ll 1tems while ,ou learn r 1111 tor 111 acu Includes tools. pamt bniSh Ind
non·to.aic clly lftd paints-
As lhtftmd Oii TV w su.•
TISFACTION ALWAYS GUARANTEED -------_.;. ,, ..... "" ....... c.. • c-.nt.·• c.a. Mna • c-, • rm., • liao • ,...,. • ~ • G.-""" •
GI' ..... •• ............ • HIMI • ...,._ • ~ llldl •!Mio • Le C-. •Lt 1*1 • Le ... • Le .... • IA ... •
llllcl* • ....., "" • "°'~.....,... • ~· OilMlde • °'-• Oileff • "'"'*' • s.. ....... s..-..... • • s.ta re-. • s.. 6*111 • s..t.. lilalllte • lllll V., • s-v111ey • lot,.. • UJ11W • --.. • ~ • _. ..... • W.t l•~•WH!MillSltt •Ycca Ylltf
PIC'N'I~ YI DAI. Y f TO f ·• SUNDAY 10 TO 7
t •
Orange Cout DAIL. Y PILOT/Thurtday, November 29. 1981
.. ~ ........
111 the merger battle twt11 1't>ll .\lub1l u11d {' S St~f.'/
fur Marathon U1/ Co . J/w rf'111de11ts o/ 1-'mdlo.4
Uhw . site of .Waratho11 's ylobal l1eadqua1 Ia~ wa111
11othmg to do wlllt Moh1/ m. s1y11 .'ilum .\
Marathon's town
fighting Mobil
F INDLAY. Ohio IAPl When executives of
Marathon Oil leave the company's block-long
, world headquarters building here, they sport
baseball caps bearing the comp·any's insignia a
bold red M.
Across the strt:et, the local Elks Club 1s ablate
with Marathon signs a nd r ed ribbons. More
ribbons arc found along nearly every s treet of this
northwestern Ohio r1ty. now the battleground of a
corporate fi ght between two of the n ation 's
industrial giant!> Mobil Corp and U S Steel.
Last mont h, Mobil. the nation's second-largest
011 company, announced 1t was willing to spend $5
b1lhon to take over Marathon, Findlay's bigges t
emplo)er and taxpayer.
But it may have a battle from Findlay's 36.000
residents. especially Marathon s 2.400 wor kers.
who fear such a merge r would mean moving the
<>11 company out of town
Marathon. the nation's 17th largest 011 com-
pany. means a lot to Findlay. where the local
college football team is called the Oilers. The
company and the town have been together for 94
years
· The two are insepar able. · i.ays W. Bentley
Bur r , who worked fo r Marathon for 38 years as an
economist and personnel officer before he was
t.·leckd mayor
The takeover battle was Joined Thursday by
U S. Steel which said 1t was willing to spend as
much as $6.8 billion in an effort to top Mobil's bid.
''That's why the whole
town's behind Marathon"
and . according to Marathon President Harold
lloopman. keep the company's local operations
"intact "
"The value of Mar athon to this community hes
in more than JUSt dollars How do you calculate the
\'alue of the leadership Marathon employees have
~1v~n the town, to c1v1c organizations. the
contnbuttons to the quality or life ?" Burr asked
· Because of Ma rathon. we haven't had the
unemµloyment and econom ic problems ot her
area-. of the state have had," the mayor said.
·•ff Marathon left , 1t wouJd mean a major loss
lo this city Esse11.tial service~ would have to be
cut," he said. "We would lose the income ta x from
a $54 million payroll . plus the corporate tax that
Marathon pays "
After the steel company's bid was a nnounced
a n d a c cepted b y M arathon . Bu rr sent a
congratulatory telegram to US. Steel president
David Roderick. in Pittsburgh Ile then placed a
sign that flashes "Welcome U S Steel," in front of
City llall.
"Al least we thi nk this 1s a company that isn't
going to turn Marathon's headquarters into a
pa r king lot. · s aid Wa rd Abbey, a local
stockbroker.
"Now, that's not to say that Mobil 1s going to
rotJ over and play dead." he said "It wouldn 't
shock me to see Mobil make a counter offer
because it's an aggressive firm ..
Mobil offi cials said they were looking at the
U.S. Steel bid and would have no comment until
they studied the offer. Mobil lawyers argued
Friday in federal court in Cleveland that its
acquisition of Marathon would not violate antitrust
laws by reduci ng competition in the oil industry
Ted Bernhardt. manager of a Cooper Tire Co.
office near the oil company 's headquarte rs
building, said life here would be shattered if
Mar athon pulled out. · · rn a community of this size. losing a major
e mployer would really be a blow," he said.
"That's wh y the whole town 's behind Marathon
to keep 1l independent and keep it here." ·
Some 4,000 people turned out Nov . 11 for a
live-bl<>ck parade of support down Main Street
from Marathon headquarters to Central Junior
High. Participants, wearing "We Love Mara-
t.hon " Butt9ns and the popular red caps , paraded
to a tune appropriately titled, "We Believe in
Marathon.''
Business analysts say a major reason Mobil
wants Marathon is the company's huge reserves of
oil off the Gulf Coas t. in the North Sea and the
Middle East. •
Both city and oil company were born during
the Midwest's oil and gas boom of the 1880s, with
M ar alhon being cre a\ed when the Standard Oil
trust was broken up in 1911.
··nose were boom times and Findlay was a
boom town Cor a while," Burr s aid. "But then
economic times settled down M~rathon began its
pattern of quiet but consistent growth and
Findlay followed the pattern."
The U.S. Steel offer has lift~ most spirits.
Said Jane Walton, assistant manager al the
Elks Club, after U.S. Steel's announcement:
"There were a lot ol answered prayers, a lot of
happy people here at lunch today. Everybody was
lau1hln1 and kind of breathing a sigh of relief."
Hospitals with mOney ·problems hawk services
CHlCAGO <AP > -Then are lttak and
champa1ne dinners . Guarantees of 80·HCond
aervlce. And promlsu that nobody does It better.
It's all part ot a new advertlsln1 campalan to woo
the 1tilln1 public tlnd bring more patients Into the
natlon'• hospituls
market ror health care,'' Jerr Ooldsmlth, director
of health pla.nnin1 al the University or Chlc110
Medical Center. u id in an Interview Monday
"The Impetus to murkct comes from a scarcity or
dollun und patients."
And hospitals ure rculizing that to s urvive ,
they have to compete. The battle to attract patients is being waged
on the alr waves and ln print as an increasina
number of hospitals arts beginning to rely on
billboards, nt wspapel"$ and radio commercials to
lout cardiac unlls, cancer centers, emergency
rooms and other medical services.
ln Las Vegus. Nev., the Sunrise Jloapltal
Medical Center one of the pioneers of hospilaJ
m arketing otrers "baby bonds" where a wom¥n
buys a bond during pregnancy and cHhes 1t In
when her child is born with interest.
Judith GeduldJg, editor or the Profiles and
Hos pllatl Marketing magazine, says about 20
percent ot the nation's hospitals are marketing
their services.
It is Sunrise that otters a rebate on hospital
bil ls a nd d rawings for patient s to win
Mediterranean cruises.
In Schaumburg, 111., Suburban Medical Center
promises service to its ailing emergency room
"customers" within 60 seconds nat.
The reason for the promotional blitz is, In
large part, economic. "It's no longer a seller's
"J \ ==============================-~ A Wicke s Co mpan y
' Texas Instruments
~Spell'"
f •· ' tr..t''"'''l A1,
The remarkable talking learning
aid. Adds fun and excitement to
spelling, prono uncing and reading.
#SKSP. Reg 69 99
Tippee Toes Doll
Thi$ 13 " perky httle doll wiggles
as she pushes her stroller .+' 3 H 2
Regular
SALE PRICE
.19.88
17.88
Less REBATE• From Maue1 1.50
YOUR COST 16~8
From Mattel t.OO
YOUR COST 1688
•A.sic »l~~non for II.EBA TE coupon ----------------------------------
Quick! Easy! Little girls can
create hundreds of their very
own Barbie doll fashion
designs Reg. I 3 88
so••
Roller Derby
Shoe Skates
Boys, Girls styles and sizes.
Reg 19.88
•15!.8
.
223 EAST 17th ST.
And a number ot hospitals compete for
m11tcrnJty palienlil by otferana new pu~nts free
win or cbampagn with a steak dinner
Not aJI promotions are so snazzy.
St. Francia Hosvltnl , in the Chicago suburb of
Evanston, rt!cently broudcHt u series ot ritdio
commer cial s, promollnK its reg1onnl cancer
treatment center, saylnai that patlenl11 will see
"what makes us dltrerent is what makes us
be tter "
What the surge in marketing really proves ls
th ut hos pitals are no diffe rent thun other
companies. says Arthur Sturm, president of Sturm
Co mmunications Croup Jnc., a marketing firm
representing 10 hospitals across the nation.
"Hospitals have lo do business just like
everybody else," he said .. It I marketing> really is
appropriate be ha v1or. ·'
The Little Professor
A unique learning aid for children
age Sand up Explore basic math
in '4 levels of d1H1culty. #LP
Reg. I S.99 i •12••,, ~ Mickey Mouse
Talking Phone
Press the magic couch-tone
numbers and chat with Micke
!tchubby Chopper®
Knobbie-type wheels. safe. sturdy with
easy-to -reach handle bar~ and pedals.
For !ges 2 to '4 Reg I 9 91/ •
Mountain Man
Five functio n radio con-
trol off-road vehicle. Two
speeds/4 wheel drive.
(Batteries not Included)
Reg. 99.99 •ao••
Star Warsrt1 Or
Strawberry Shortcak
Play-Doh Action Sets
Reg. 7.99
Your Choice
0..-...0HMew,....-..... tMnt Te Miier'• O.,ttt
• " ...: • • ..... • ..... '&.'. ... ......: ••• -..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, November 26, 1981
Lost trees ruled federal tax deduction
WASlllNOTON l AP> -Could
ll bu that th Internal Rt1vc nue
S rvlce just dol'sn'l recownizc
the vialuc of a hcuullful sh:.ld
ltce'!
P erhaps. Or it could b\• Just
cotncldt1ncc that twice ln r.-cenl
days thu U S. Tux (;ourt has ,
ovurruled the IRS and allowt'<i a
tax dcducllon ror losl trt>es In
each cuse. IRS had argued th~I
the loss of lht• trees did not
decrease prnperty value
In a decision made public thhi
week the court held that the
Arlineton, Va . home of David .J
and Clora A Mc Keun had
dropped $15,000 in value bccau..,e
an 80 root, century-old block oak
lrco that dominalt'd the frool
yurd hull been killed by an'l't'b
t wo·ltnt• c·hc.~l.nut bore1 s
A fl'W duy11 e~ rhl·r, the t•ourt
found that the home of ihoma11
R und Theresa R. Uowcrs wuli
worth $19,SOO ll'H:t afler &
tornudo d(•i.troycd u duit:n tr.-es
on lh1.•1r l4 ucrt> lrat•t
(n the Bowers cuse, the IRS
relied on a real estate apprau1er
who t•1.mcluded that the storm
did not dumage the overall value or the land and property The
court rejected that randing
because it "seems lo be based
entirely on tht• conclusion
Electronic wizard challenges
you with 6 different games of
memor y. logic, chance and skill.
Batteries not included. # 3200.
that the couple had 110 many
l rcl'!I lhul a IOSll Of 12 CUU!ied llO
mcusuruhlc harm "
Then• wus 110 question lhul the
losi. of th(! Uowcris ' treeH wus
caused by a quick iand sucldl!n
easualty. the only lssut> wuli
whdhcr the value or fht-
property suffered bccuuse of tht>
los11
But in the McKean case. there
was a sc,·ond question Was u
loss caused by insects a casualty
loss'!
Under federal l<iw. a person
who Itemizes deductions may
c l aim a deduction for
non business lossei. "1( such
Sale Price 2aaa
'Ionka
Less REBATE•
From Parker ...... .
Hand Command
Turbo Prop
BigTrak
Watch computerized 81g T rak
carry out your program of
commands He tums, pivots.
fires lasers. moves .around rurn·
1ture1 Was 54 99
•20••
Big Trak Tr ans orter Sale •12.88
Electronic
Sky-Writer
A ~ace age electronic wand that
can magically scroll a message
lhrough the air #6070.7
lotins arise from Cirt-, 1torm,
i,hlpwrcck or other casualty, or
Crom thcfl "
The I H S l'On t end e d the
Mc Keans dad not dcmonstrute
"that thl' death of their ollk tree
wu• the r esult of an Identifiable
event or u suddl•n, unexpected or
unusual natuni." Judge William
A. Golle wrote
GoHc held that because lhe
two·lme ch estnut borer can
gnaw completely around the
vital cent('r c:ore of a tree within
a muttor of weeks, "the attack
on this tret-can thus be
characterized us ·unexpected or
unu!\ual in nature ' '·
. PRICES EFFECTIVE*' ·
~ NOV. 29th .. . ··-f , .
This one year ed1t1on ·
17" tall -is filled with metic-
ulous detail. II 1981 Reg. 59. 99
:~.~::~~h~:ny i•
blanket. brush & comb, as well
as a hat made especially for her
and she comes with nbbon too' '
•16••1
Electronic teachmg aid,
makes learntng fun and ex·
citing. #420. Reg. 46.99
(Sanenes not included)
Sounds of Service l
Realtsttc electronic sounds I
Features operating elevator. 2 :
lifts. grease pit, 2 service bays 1 and more #MSS Reg H 99 1
(Batteries not included) I
l~~~~~~~~~E~;:;~!!.!~ I
Reg J2 99 (Batteries not included)
•22••
'
·Fiddle Around
Farmyard
just rev·up the little farmer on
any flat surface and he· s ready
to work. For ages) to 7
Lite Brite
Children can create colorful
pictures that light up and
glow. Over 400 pegs. 8
colors. Ages 4 to Adult
#5455. Reg. 14.99
•10••
~;:;:::==;:;;:;::;~;:;;::===;~~:::;;;:::~•
REMINISCES R o n
R ~· u i.: J n \ o I u B .t r h .1 1 J
Wull~l'ti 1n un AB C T\
Thank6glnng s pecial th.at
h I ' l U l h C r , p I' ~ b I ti l' n l
R~u.:un. often told ht m "'hal
1l was likt.• to .:row up th(;!
:,on of un akoholac. John
W1lh~m Rt.>ugun. but that he
I u' t.' <.J h I '> I at Ill.' 1· ' l' r ~
mud1 ·
How to fight
'favoritism'
By JOVCE L. KENNEDY
Dear Joyce: My e mployer is very unfair. He
favors certain people in the office and if you're not
his favorite, it's your toug h luck
I am not h1s favorite but I am a very hard and
excellent worker. J've been complimented by
many in the office, including my employer but
when 1l com es to raise time huh, that's a
different story! If he can. he will get out of giving
you a raise J was promoted and then TY position
was downgraded how rlo you hke thaF'
As you can see. 1l as hopeless to work for an
e mployer who as cheap, has ravontes and who 1s
a lways raghl while you arc always wrong
Whal l ' m ask 1ng you 1s. what types of
businesses are best for
o ffice workers who Cite CAREERS and t ype'' I'm hoping
that you can point out a
few plac:es that would
have good work1n.;
benefits and a chanl'e to mo"e up and where the)
are fair.
-Ticked Orr In Chicago
I'm an your corner l believe at when you say
~our bo:o.!) ts a turkey :-.lot only does he not give
, uu the orchids and accolades and bravos and
huzzahs and respect that hardworking you
deserve, but also the cluck won't authorize a living
wage
:-.lo. I'm not cavalier about your plight but I
a m tryin~ to help you lighten up. The reason· To
"'an. 1t is essential for you to see the importance of
separating objectives from emotions.
You need a mental punching bag. With gusto,
describe to a tape r ecorder the vile lout for whom
you work Name names Spare no details Burn the
tape Your hostility m ay go up 1n smoke with 1t
Now you should be able to focus on making good
plans for your future
Pt'Ople-skills are the place to start You may
be u praze worker but your boss-management
talents could use attention. Perhaps you would
e njoy a community college course an interpersonal
com mumcation. Tr} reading some of the self help
books that discuss responding to others through
listening and feedback . clarity in creating
messages. resolving imbalances a nd other office
s urvival talents. Please give this s uggestion
favorable consideration because 1t could change
your life
Before you move on. researc h prospects for a
lransfer to another department. If you do have to
go. am o ng indus tr ies that orrer
better·lhan·average fringe benefits are pe troleum.
utilities . chemicals. metals and transportation
equipment
READER NOTE ·Higher Salanes llow to Gel
Them · tS Joyce Lam Kennedy's new booklet that tells
how In talk your way into more money on o new 1ob. or
how to gel o ro1$e For a copy. send a check /or S2 S(}
plus a 40-cent stamped. self-addressed, long wh1te
envelope to Sun f'ealures Inc . Boz ZOOOC. Cordi/I. 92007
1 c I 1981 Sun Features Irle
Could you exist
on $500 a year?
NEW YORK (AP> Imagine trying to live in
the United States on $500 a year. s pending 55 cents
a day lo feed yourself and your family and paying
$10 re nt a month. It was possible in 1893.
An article in the current American Heritage
magazine says an exhibit at the Chic ago World's
Fair s howed how a family of five could live and
hve comfortably -on $500 a year
Today. the U.S . Department of Labor says it
lakes a family of four nearly $25,000 to maintain
what is called a moderate standard or living That
family of four spends in a single week what the
1893 family of five spent in a year.
Inflation is pushing 1981 costs higher The
Labor De partment said Tuesda y that the
Consumer Price Index rose four-tenths of a
percent in October For the hrst 10 months of this
yea r, the index has risen at an annual rate of 9.6
percent.
The $500 budge t was part or an exhibit at the
1893 Chicago exposition. The exhibit was called the
New York Stale Workingman's Model Home and
was prepared by Katharine Bement Davis of
Rochester, N. Y.
Joseph W. Barnes, city historian for Rochester
and the author of the American Heritage article,
writes that the $500 figure was a little generous,
the average Industrial worker of 1893 earned
between $444 and $480 a year .
Photos With
Real Santa <Mdrere'1
PuPP91ShOw
... w+;c••••••• osussccs as; Ott SS ---~ --------. --~ ---. -'' -~ ''
Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT(Thurtday, November 29, 1981
dfEBDYlllllCS
PGBTDLE Ill COllPRESSOR
haOatN tlrM.
recreatkmal H••• or lnflatable hamlt\ll'e.
Worb from yovcor'e
dgarettellgbter.105
lbe.pNUwe.
12~!1&
DELUIE POBTDLE ELECTBIC llB
COllPRESSOB WITH IUTOlllTIC
PRESSURE COITBOL. 1 •77
Range la5to120PSI. • GEC:::-17
SPIRE TIRE
55c ~~i
Safte you when JtftJ baYea
Oat at tM wrong plac.at th•
W1'0D9 ttm.. Mecma f0\1 don't
hen-• to pull tM epaN out of
th•tnank.
Thie le pNtty •l1PP9'Y etuff.
why J'n ... D thle etuft .Up out
tM door through tM front Ng'leten
eo lent you wouldn't beU... lt.
MURRAY
~BICYCLES
MEI'S 2&"
8IL80l
CBOISEB
GloH black with gold f1nWl run. and eprocket.
Btu BMX t)'P9 fork. black with whlt•wall tlNs
cmd coaet., brab. #5022XU.
OB
LADIES' 2'"
llOITEBEY
CBUISEB
Chrome towing handlebar. balloon whlt•wall1
cmd coa1ter brab. Jn Flam Blac:k Curry f1Dl1b.
#5033
OB
llEl'S 2&"
10-SPEED
ILLUSIOIS
Stem mounted g.ar Mlec:tlon. etd. pull brakee.
and blaclrwall tlN1. Coa:Me In s.abawk Jlue
fl.Diab. #9478
YOUR 8888 CHOICE . . F.A.
GEllE TRDSMI I IER _ ..... 14!!
J.u't thle moderu world wonc:Mdul?
Who would'•• eftr thunk you
could open a garap door with a
button ~Tice ID your car?
Umlt 2P9r customer.
EVEREADY C OR D
UnEBIES
15!
CALL JOTTE~
DUAL-CASSETTE
ARSWERIRG
SYSTEMS
Thl1 aln 't no turkey. An1wen your phone on the flnt to
the fourth ring (you program It). Your caller haa one
mtnute to leaYe a me11age.
MODEL 2000 6997
MODEL 3000
WITH REMOTE 9997
a a D D.E. FIR EITRY DOORS
DID SPIDLE CRILL
PUEL DOOR
Amber acrylic pcm•l.
#N2045. ~~~ oa
0 a 4 Lm: PUEL DOOR
aaa a1a
aaa
Amber acrylic pcm•l•.
#K-2005
YOUR 11788 CHOICE
IOJDlllClllD
I E•DED CJ,ISS llD:BT
137!~01
Then'• DOthlag Ub a door for coming and golng
at home. 'lbeM CIN all IV." X 3'0" X 8'8".
PIOllTE BUQUET
TABLE TOPS
uxu I 4 77
30xso2377
BoUday IMCl80D la juat 29" atartlDgeoyoumlght 30 x 72 want to baYe GD extra
tab&.. WalDutfinleb. 36 x 72 33 77
Fii.im ms. I 5 77 Brown eDaJMl flnllh.
12" ROOF TURBllE
WITH JICI
1599
w.· ... not baytDg a .... harby f« Tbankegtring
thle 'f'M'i. We still had 90IM l.tt Offr from la1t f9m·
CLOSE-OUT! OWEIS-CORlllG
FIBERCLISS
CED.JIG PllELS
~"TERBA 2\t OR ESPRIT
¥4' PEHLE 2~
~"MJC'DOM 2~ FJISURED
l" CANE OR 3'1 SMDITORE
Ooh, tM plMl\lN le OD
DOW, J'ft got to get th1e
ad cloae poDto.
Llalted qucmtltl••·
2d panela.
GLIDDEI
COL8B llTlllLS
9!!
C....wltllalrearwancmtr...a;woa•t
.., ..................... " ........ ttwo ......... -........ , ..... ,..ago.
ROCKY MOUllTADI
CINE ROCKER
3977
UMd to bcn'e on. of th•H on th• porch bac.k on
tM farm. (Hey, let'• hear It for the farmen on
TbanbgiYIDg). Walnut finleb.
RUBBEllMAID I
TAPERED DESllill [
PLlllTERS z
8" 99•
7'/a" 1 29
8V2" I 59
RUBBEllMAID
MILi CRATE
4~!
H.re' •a h•lpful hint
f:rom helpful me. Bur
eome of th•M and put
plcmte ID ' em and gi••
'•m tor Chrietmas
glfte. In Blecu.lt. Cbocolat•.
Gold, orT•na Cotta.
(Today le the day Mom •P9Dde the mornlDg
etuffiDg the turlrey and the aft•rnoon •tuffing tu fam.lly.)lnchocolate. ,.Uow. or Nd.
11no111L LUMBER
GARBAGE DISPOSERS
MODEL 20
2 YearWammty
y, HP 2a••
MODEL 30
IY.arWammty
V. RP
4288
MODEL 50
Fln Year Wananty
~HP sa••
MODEL 70
7Y.arWammty
V. llP
7888
IOf. back hoa:M we used to th.tow ow garba~
•tuft Oftr the f90ee to the plg. ftowadcrp you can
get one of theee electric: pigs.
UH MEJ•o7 I • WHC tS CT?
l'M SoltlN,
luT ™' . l>t'tta CCIP
'fOU HA\le
ttl*:IEI>
IS CUf'
OF~I~-
& FOOT I I & ROUGH
REDWOOD
My wife UMd to UM tb11 to ~t my attention.. I
w.. got board faat with that. S.rloualy. mabe a
good fence or wbateY•r.
EISYDRIYER RITClltf
TOOL SYSTEM ~ 4 69 WJl..1~
You get twice tM turning power of GD ordinary
ec:rewdrinr. Real eaey to tlghten or lOOMn
ecrewe.
BLACK & DECKER
BAUL Ill ORE
77!!
u .. a• a hcmd cmt. yard cart. wood cart. or tab a
rid9 down tM etreet on It. (Puah It with your feet.)
Bolde up to 400 pouade and fold.a up ecny f«
ltotage.
BLICI •DECKER¥."
YIBllBLE SPEED
REYERSlllli DRILL
25!!
Bur one of theM now and recel" a SS Nbat. ID
tM mail from Black• Decker. Double llleulated.
YJ HP.
ROLYllT PORTULE
STOUU: SYSTEM
11 COMPARTMEKT
17!!
1' COMPARTMENT
21!!
S...'• a faDc:y tool bole. Jut roll It up and
•TerJthlag •tare ID plCIC9 wt th lllterloc:b.
BllCO 48 DUWEI
ST8UCE Cllllif
.• 97
Jlcmdy ........... (W.u......, ...... ...
.................... ..ai .... ...
Year'1S..eoeat • .._. ....... ...,.)
...............
MUSICIAN HONORED Les Paul. rsght. the
g uitarist who invented the solid body electn c
g uitar. looks over one pr esented to him by
Gibson Guitars at a party honoring htm tn
New York. Looking on 1::, Rick Derrtnge r. also
a guitarist
Mink breeder
plans encore
COALVILLE. Ulah 1AP1 -The creator of lhe
world's rarest. darkest and most expensive mink
plans an encore -if he lives long enough.
John Adkins says he 's determined to present
the fashion world with an improved Black Willow
mink . one more glamorous than the original Black
Willow, a senior vice president of Neiman-Marcus
Co. calls the finest mink avaalabl~
"There's a synonym for both John Adkins and
his mink and that's quality," says David Wolfe,
the Neaman-Marcu!> executive . "His product
and there·s no doubt about it is the finest in the
world. There's no other m ink that's even close."
Adkins. who has spent most of his 74 years in
the small city of Coalville, stunned the fashion
industry in 1966 when he unveiled the Black
Willow, a rare dark mink with fine, coal-black fur
He sold about 500 pelts at a fur buyer 's auction
In New York City that year One bundle had pe lts
that sold for $1 ,100 apiece the highest price ever
pa id before or si nce. Wolfe says
"He set a standard for quality that year that
has lasted ever since," Wolfe says .. John worked
hard to develop that mink and the results are
fabulous. Ifs a real example of diligence. where a
person's character a nd quality stands out in their
work.''
Now Adkins has developed through inbreedmg
an even darker Black Willow he plans to unveil in
1983.
But Adkins underwent surgery in October 1980
for removal of a malignant tumor on his pancreas.
Pb)<&\cians gave the father of Dine children two
rnontlUI to Live .
.. I've been lucky in thot l don·t get sack like
most people." Adkins says. "The doctor said he
was a mazed at how I w as h a nd ling the
chemotherapy I 've been fortunate and we 're
hoping I live long enough to start produ,•ing these
new mink.
"You never know how long you're going to live
-that's up to the Lord. But ~·m still wo rkang," he
says.
Adkins and has family have about 5.500 mink
at their ranch along Echo Reservoir an northern
Utah. the No 2 state an mink production last year
with sales of about 465.700 pelts worth $16 million
Wolfe says a Black Willow mink as prized for
its dark guard hairs and naturally deep coloration.
tn contrasL with some other mink coats that are
dyed black
THE MEDICAL CARE CENTER
TREATMENT FOR:
•INJURIES •ILLNESSES
17672 IEACH
H1111tlit4)tOt1 l•ecll
•ACME •ALLERGIES [:~f :IUdl!IJ •DIET •CHECKUPS --"
If ,·ott don't \Vant
' to drink -
That's ottr
bt1siness
COSTA MESA
MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Call 642-2734
Alcoholism Recovery Services
301 Victoria Street
Costa Mes•, CA ,_27
Approved for Medk•re
I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thur1day, November28, 1981
SQ. -FT.
AVE 273 ON SELF·
STICK FLOOR TILE
You can have a new
floor for the holidays
with versatile neutral-
toned tile. It's stain
resistant, great in
kitchens and play·
rooms!
NOW
orLY
REG. 4oe
REO. 7 .95 ·9.95
S/R
GRASSCLOlH
WAllCOVERlrtGS
Achieve a natural look
with subtle tones of grass·
cloths from famous
makers.
Adaptable patterns ~:lllll~~~tlr~~~~;?;t and cok>rs make an
•deal choice for noo~
•n kitchens. baths,
hallways and dens.
Shop now for great
savings I
REO. 58(
NOW
ONLY
REO . 23(
SAVE4430N
Al.JAN OOARRV TILE!
Invest in your home _ in.stall
quany tile for lasting beauty and
practicality. Its tough. flreck>n
glaze resists mars. adds a touch
of dass anywhere!
REO. rtOW
l..59 OMl.Y
SIDUIA EA
NfD """°"" PA TTetNs 7 '-• x 7 "• x 111 •
SAVE 503 ON 4" X 8 "
EA DECORAtOR OOARRY
lf<lrfEY ClAS3K: 6" X 6" X S/16"
HONEY BROSTIC rtOW OM..Y
REO. 79(
NOWOM..Y
KEM ANO """· 12 PA TT'!JtPIS
OAK PARQ<JET
REO. 52(
343 OFF CORK SOPER PRICED
TheWAU TILE 'BRIK' WAU. TILE ~ buuty of asy, lnexpensM decot-.ttr ,.. __ ,
genuine cork adds looks. feels .ig. uo"'
lnsut.tion .ct helps keep Light· ~· genuine brick.
down noise. 'IE>~
'UllmllM('
ACRYLIC
FlAT ..---WAU. PAINT Over 900 feahlonable ~ ~· qulddy mc1 =:_~;om.,.: 1· SANTA ANA ~ with lmOOlfh'lowll.. he Ql9bn colOf ~ 2801 So
...,, .. , W P*ll on Wiii .0. IJ.lt 999 . =-~~~ NOWOM..Y ~ ;.~~.~~SU
.a. u.tt 'M10fta.,.. caoea I 557· 1324 7 9 ! ~109~ i
REG. t.29 · 3.99
rt<>WOl"LY
SAVE 3330N
CERAMIC TILE! EntoY the durabiltY and easy ~ of the~ glued wall tie.
QOLD DOST
4114" X 4V•"
R£Q.1.79
rtOW
OfLY
PATTERN
FRIENDS -Egyptian and American troop~
shake hands after participating in joint
military maneuvers an the Egyptian dt'scrt
llPW.,.._
The troops practiced the maneuvers as part
of a jomt exer cbe known as .. Bright Star ··
Wa rm Up
To Our
25% Off
Coa t Sale
Every
Coat in
Stock!
die er non
S-PO RT SW EAR.wESTCLIFF PLAZA
I 17th & IRVINE
548-4121
T::tMf&~ .. ~as
' The shoppers were scurrylnv ana looking tor more ...
Veta's pink windows were warm with a glow
And Halllday's suit racks were running quite low.
Halrhandler's clients were hollday bdght
With facials ar1d haircuts that ltt up the night.
Jean Dahl was 1ust ready to lock all the dOOrs
When in walked a qent she'd not seen betore.
A 1olly old elf with a hall-empty sack
And a frustrated loott that toott her aback.
"I've searched the world over ... I've walked ana I've run,
And I've found all my gifts ... cept a few special OMS.'
I give gifts to millions, my tam1ly's 1ust tour,
And those must be special ... they mean SO much more.
t 've heard about Westcllff, its warmth and its cheer ..
And I've finally decided, those Qifts must be here."
Together they walked through the Plaza that night
Amidst costumeo cjtroters and trees tw1Mling bright.
Charles Barr's diamonds were twinkling too,
And Anthony's Shoes made his boots look like new.
At La Galleria he found his wife's dream ...
At Hickory Farms there was cheew smooth as cream.
Nancy Dunn Antiques had fine g1ft.s galore, •
Whtie Paper Unlimited had cards to explore.
Gifts tor the Claus kids were easy to tino,
With tMs Amies teenwear that's one-of-a-kind
And of course Humpty Dumpty for babies and tots,
And Xavier's Florist for forget-me-nots.
H 1s best boot was on when he left Westcllff Shoes
And StorekHper fuhlons made big North Pole news.
Crown Hardware had gifts tor his house and his sleigh ...
Doc Elder had glasses to help see his way.
One stop at Dick Vernon's tor sportswear so chte And Sn-on prescriptions to kHP his physique.
Westcllff Corners made Uaus meals a gOYrmet's oellght ...
The CINners presseo reo suits tor one special n 1Qht. •
Quick as a wink all his shopping was done ... t very gift for his fam11y -he missed not a one.
Arms p1leo high with presents he walkeo to his sleigh,
Pausinq a moment, .1nd turninq away ...
"There's something I'm missing; 1 can·t seem to place .. :·
Ana as he th0Ui3ht, slowly a smile crossed his tace.
"A quick stop •t Mairket Basllet, finally I'm through,
E:lght gallons of milk and eight loaves ot bread too." "That'll keep my deer happy the rest of the night,"
And I watched as the gent vanlstleo quickly trom sight.
I smiled, not teehng the deepening co10
Becauw suOdenly I felt 1ust a trltle less 010.
was It real? I thOught. could 1t be right to say?
That all Westcllft Merctwtnts hctd saved Christma1 Day r
For • certain man's family, the gifts he hao found
Were !.a verv special he'd 5earchea the world rQund.I And on each little package, the message was bright ...
Westcllt nl htt I
There has NEVER been a better time to v isit
Habb 5 c~
Giant Operating Crane
Unloads Barrels 6 Steel GirderS
• Ltghled Alco &Jpei 630 0tese1 Loco
• 5 way·acllon ()pera11ng Ganlry Crone
• 6 Colorlul Freight Cats
• 36 • •5" Olla! Track Lavout
• Power Pack w•lh Foiward and Revetse You r cost
with refund You pay $ 3 3 . 9 9
Less refund ssoo from Tyco s2a.99
POITAIC
FIREBIRD
IEADY TO GOWITH IADIO
1/20 SCALE
2 CHANNEL
5 FUN CTION
CONTROLLED BY A STEERING WHEEL
WHEEL TRANSMITTER FOR PROflORT
IONAL RIGHT & LEFT STEERING. RE·
VERSE AND FORWARD SPEEDS.
With Smoke
• l•Q'>UJO SI,..,., low""'" Smoio"
• 6--Untt Tra.tf\
• ,, p '-"" 8'1(1Qe.,.., ,,...,,. !>e<
• lb • ,..,. Ola.! frac11. l•.-nv•
• f't.Jwf ... P.c:a w,,,, rc:r<N#HJ 4nQ Rt vetM
LIFE. LllfE fl) HO UDN&L
LASER TRAii sn
•£-1oftvlll~ ... ,._._
•f-ytll-tnd-u ilpl-. ,_,,IO oonlrol JY'l1 ....
ROLLING
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CHOICE OF:
CATTLE CARS; TANKERS; BOX
CARS; GONDOLA; REFERS
B~ tr1ln complete with: DC switch • In•; 2 flit Clfl; A.C.L.M. mlul•: Ill· •II t• tracker: h1llcopt1r: truk: DC
PO-r PICll.
OUR PRICE $74.99 ~ ·1 -s19 99 ~TRESTLE SET L~?~t~if 564 99 "(/1'e • ~ FROM LIOHllL •
HO LOCOS ~ FORD
The OFF-ROAD BUGGIES -built to tt61• the lbu.e \Nt off.,oed ninnlnt ca-. They fwture fully lndepend111t front
Mtlfl9111ion; dunble we6ed '"'ult wmbly with centrlfupl
ehltdl; pneu!Mtlc belloon tlrw lhenct S"HftP Included); wlter
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LIST $119.95
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• .. .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT (Thursday, November 26, 1981 ..
Guns,-knives things of beauty
Craftsman etches nature, history in gold inlay
GARLAND, Texaa (AP> -
Sam Shortes simply 1ot tired of
watchtni hls research gel toesed
In the ttcbnolo1lcal trash heap,
an other victim of scientific
proaress.
So the former Texas
Instruments researcher has
me lded his scientific wizardry
with a 700-year·old art form -
etcblna gold-Inlaid tableaus of
nature and history on the metal
surfaces or knives and fireums.
"Technolo1Y basically Is a
disposable it.em," Shortes says,
"but I expect my works to be in
museums.''
J ohn Wayne liked a set of
etched knives done by Shortes'
Aurum <Latin for gold> Etchings
so much, he shelled out $2,000.
Shortes says.
Now Aurum is designing
li m lted ·edition, com ·
memorative, single·action guns
-possibly depicting scenes
from the late actor's movies -
as requested by Wayne's son.
Patrick . .. People were always giving
J ohn Wayne things," Shortes
says. "Then when they'd be
having a beer with a buddy.
they• d say, ·John Wa yne owns
an oil painting I did.· Well, it
makes me feel good to think
John Wayne would pay $2,000 for
work of mine."
T he average customer doesn't
walk into the Aurum offices in
this Dallas suburb and purchase
a single etched piece, which can
run anywhere from Sl.000 to
$3,000.
Shortes ins tead deals with
firearm manufacturers s uch as
Colt . R emington and
Wi n chester · though he
c urrently is busy planning his
foray into the retail world of
etched belt buckles and etched
office art
Colt Industries is the maJor
s tockholder, purchasing 61
percent of Aurum's stock when
it was just a fledgling company.
But Shortes still oversees all
aspects of the unique business.
and he expects to reap $2 million
this year.
Aurum is Shortes· baby
lock, stock (39 percent of ill ano
barrel
His 40 to 50 employees have
done "work with the fidelity of a
postage stamp" for a gamut of
organizations 2,000 engraved
knives for the National Rifle
Association, 1,800 firearms for
the Michigan State Pohce, now
2.000 engraved s hotguns for the
Los Angeles Police Officers
Association.
Shor tes says most of his
clients llail from lhe overlapping
Sun and B,ible Belu, tooling a
sort of Gun Bell that stretches
Into Southern California and
Mic higan.
His customers maintain a
common tenet, though. They
never fire Aurum 's crafted
weapons. f or that Wl'ula
diminish the value.
Shortes picks up a calc'ulator
designed by the company he
used to invent for and comments
t hat not one facet of his research
is .used to make the palm·s1zed
mathematical gizmo work these
days.
·The updated technique of his
artful etch1nl{s. ho weve r .
at all
Sam Shunc~ 111r111er 'J't'Ias /11srruml'1tl., rt'.'it'Ofl ltt't 1/1)\µluq.,
µ1)\/1J/ u1t/1 1111rn.:ate yuld 111/wd erd11114)\ tliut l11s 1,11r/u11d '/_1.ru.,
t'o111µa11q .. \11r11m 1-:1d111111' µni<ftwn
stretches back e ras to a 10
century acid etching process.
A large piece of artwork as
reduced to gr ace the small
surface of a knife or firearm. A
positive film of the a rt then 1s
taped to the metal. bathed in
m aterial called photo.resis t
Whe n expose d to light,
photo resist clings to the metal
and protects ll from the acid. the
same principle kids use when
coating an Easter egg with wax
to color certain portions
His crafts men can turn out a
good deal more than the four or
five m etalsmiths employed by
Colt, but Shortes insists. We're
not running a doughnut machine he re ''
· You cun be a really good
artt!il and ~uccessfully !>tarve lo
de.1th, .. he !>ays .. , m;iy be
running a busint•ss. but I'm an
artist a t heart ·
State CC to start
center in Bay Area
S.\C R.\~IE~TO .\I' fh,• l'alll1J1111..1 l'un~l'l'\,1111111
l'111 p:-\\ tll -.t art J l'l'llll'I' 1111 r rl'<.1 .... lll l' h i.and 111 "'·'"
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l'hlldn,·11 :-l't•tlll'l 111 lh1.· llall.!hl l>i-.1111·1. 11111 111•1 11•-.111r.1111111
111 t ht· F o1 l :\l.1-.1111 Butld1n:.. ,111d 1 l1·.11111p 1111 1111 1 h.1111 111
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h.1t·I-. ~1 -1.) .1 11111lllh lill hu,11 d .uul 11111111
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••• Orange C.oaat DAIL y PILOT{Thuraday. November2e, 1981 •
It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas Williamsburg •
• ID • •
8)' 8AABAllA MAVER
Ofttlt4-............
sturt uurly to collect und arrange the dritid and
natural mutcriala, she added
de1111ill• con111tlt•r1tble r(•Ncurch on thl' 11ub1ect,
added Mis Oli ver
ll'a bealnnlna to look u lol like Chrtstm11 at
the Colonhd Willlamisbur(t ftestor11Uon In Virginia
not as we know lhu hollday today, but as It
mliht have been rtilebrated by 18th-cent ury
Today, It Is well·known for lta arraneements of
natural materials and live ereens whlch adorn Its
18th-cenlury homes, 11hops and public buildings.
and IL'l 19th century Curler's Grove phrntalion,
just out.aide the historic area.
Libbey Hodges Ollver, aupervltK>r ol the Oower
section at Colonial Williams burg, said she and ttve
assistants had been knee-deep In natural materials
for the decorations all fall. Anyone who would like
to create similar decorations at home should also
· • £xcept for some Styrofoam !And floral ware
which do not show, the decorutlons m1&ke use of
nothing that might not have been »V»llable loc1.1lly
during the 18th century," according to Mis Oliver
The restoration doe8 not claim lhe decorations
are a uthentic since "there 111 really no r1rm
historical record or precisely how Wllllllml!burg
ramllles did decorate their homes for the hohduy,"
Neverthele1111, 1rnml' antorrnutlon ubout pa1't
Christmas custom1> ol the areu muy ~ inferred
from what jg known about pabl celebrullons
"From contem1>orary accounts wu can 11uy
\hlH celebrntlons were uis uully marked by a more
libf'ral use of candle& There was considerable
visitina, and dancci;. Cox hunts and gunpowder
Contloued Page Bl I
Vlr&inians.
The restoroUon. u re-cre11tion of that era or tho
18th century when Walltamsburg was the capital or
Virginia, has had seasonal t.lec-0rations since 1939.
U.S. leads
in home
TV sets
WASHINGTON <AP I
The United States is
extending its lead as the
world 's most tuned-an
nation with almost two
television sets for every
h ouseho ld . n e w
s tatistics show
Television Factbook,
published annually by
Television Digest Inc .
reports this week that
there are 162 5 m illion
TV sets an the Unilcd
Sta tes thi s ye ar ,
compared to 156 million
in 1980
With the Ce n :.us
Bureau estimating that
the nation's population
or 226 5 millio n is
d i vide d a m ong 82
million households. lhat
translates to l 98 sets
per household
No othe r natwn comes
close.
The F ac tb oo k
estimates that the
Unite d Slates h as
al most one-third of thi:
world's total supply of
TV sets, which climbed
to 495 million this yea r
compared to 465 m1ll1on
last year
The Soviet Union, with
an estimated 70 million
to 80 maihon TV sets in
u se. trails a dis tant
second. the F'actbook
reports. J apan , West
Germany, Fra nce and
Great Brita in follow 1n
that order
And with the possible
exception of Japan, no
o th er cou nt ry
approaches Ameri<.·u 's
per ce nt age o f
households "'1th even
one TV se t
somewhere be tween 97
percent and 98 percent
That las t category 1s
difficult to dete rmine.
editors of the Factbook
explain, because r~w
ot h e r natio ns ha ve
conduc ted extens1"e
sur veys
Wild pig
populace
monitored
LOS ANGELES (APt
The county Hoard or
Supervisors think 1t <;
worth Sl, 150 to keep a n
e lectronic eye on the
wild pi gs o f Sa n ta
Catalina Island
The board voted 5·0 to
authorize a study of the
feral pig population by
Dan iel W. Baber . an
Oregon State Uni versal~
researcher
Pigs ,will be tnipped or
s ubdu e d with
tranquilizing darts.
arter which they will be
tagged and examined
Some will have s ma ll
radio trans mitt e r s
attache d to m o n itor
their movements
·'Thi s pr o p o~e d
"reseanch project will
provide information ror
the deve lopm e nt o r
management techniques
needed for regulating
the reraJ pig populau on
o n Santa Catali n a
Is la nd," said Richard P
Kneer, chairman of the
coun ty Fish and Game
Com mission.
Pig s w e r e fir s t
brought to the is land 1n
t he 1930s to control the
rattlesnake population.
However, they h ave
been attacking deer and
goats and eating away
the isl~d 's vegetation.
Holiday Gift
Art Show /Sale
oa11y thru Dec. s
Huntington Center's
annu.l IUP« exhibit
of arta and craft• t..eutlng 55 top
talented 8'1Jata. From
thl• gr .. c tlTaV of un!QU9 o riglNll• you'll find a
perfect gift for evefYOM. e .. ch Blvd. and 405 Fwy.
.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Attractive way to
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llOl.wWITU
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THANKSGIVING DAY
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THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 26th THRU SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28th DITl'f 8lMltS AMI ltUlLS AT AU SAY4'1 STCMIU
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Contains Ice Blue
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT{Thursday. November26, 1981 Bil r
• • • Colonial restoration re-creates holiday of 18th century
From Pa1e 810
salutes Wl'rl• typical ln wealthy Vlralnl'a cities,"
exph•ined Ma. Ollver.
1t asci ms certain that colonists collected nat.lve
matenaJs. makln, use of the typical architectural
ornamentaUon o the day swaas. 1arland1,
plaQues and wreaths.
Today, arrangers prepare numerous lar1e
wreaths of fresh areens and locally-occurn n• fruit
such as apples and pomearanate11 which were
SAVEsae
.,_a,-.
2.11
arown In Virginia In the 18th century. They also
use oranges and lemon11 which were Imported in
those days.
·•Here at Wllllam11bur1, pine cones, cotton
bolls, okra pods and lotus poda as well a1
American holly, boxwood and Southern maanolla
leaves are common. so we alto use these m1terial1
ln our decorations," s he said.
There are, however, no bows on the wreaths.
"Ribbon w&lJ Imported and probably t.oo rare
and e xpensive to uH ln thls way, althouah we do
have some ribbon on a wreath Ill the mllllner's
shop," s he said.
Colonial table decorations did not include
rtowers, according to Ms. Oliver. lns teaid, tables
were laid ln a rigidly symmetrical rash.Ion with
containers or fruit.JS and nuts brought in as both the
dessert course and table decoration al the same
lime.
The liberal u 11c of plntlupplea ln the 1
dtl'Oralion.<J seemed 11urprising since pineapples
were hardly llkt!ly to be a crop In the Vir1lnla
urea. Ms Oliver explained that pineapples tbe
11ymbol of hospitality -were being grown ln
hothoust:11 In England
For information on the workshops, write
Colontal Williamsburg Foundation, P.O Box CH,
WilllamsburJ(. Va. 23185
SAVEaoe SAVE3&e SAVE4ae
Ridiculous
ordinances
'harmless'
&.4 u. TUIE
1.11
COLU MBIA , S .C .
(AP > Pants with hip
pockets break a n old
South Carolina law
des igned to keep you
from c arrying a
concealed pint bottle of
l iquor In North
Carolina, the law says
you can't plow a cotton
field with an elephant
i versity of South
ci§ft.: .• ~-=Al
CURLIGIRON COME SEE THE BIG VALUES AT OUR
arohna law Professor
Randall Bridwell
collects legal oddities,
and ha:. found quite a
fe w zany ordinances in
his search for laws that
have failed to die ~ ·~ SYSTOI ~~~
~ .• 19.99
_ 10.99
AD PRICES PREVAIL:
WE HONOR YOUR CREDIT!
Master Card
WE Will BE OPEN THURS . NOV 26th
THANKSGIVING DAY 9:00 AM TO 6:00 PM
SHOWER UP ='=°
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26th THRU SATURDAY . NOVEMBER 28th
Rid! la1t1e11no
and refreshing
.._....AWlltD"
~CARDS
'r---ft-i\~. 250SH& u 11 Cir* • .,.;_~ -1.59 ...
&=ff§tj 450 SUl(S
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•U"Lll._ ... ......
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1·2·3 Paint by
llllnllers
ltrc:un'WTD
S•mpte otl 111•nll119 lecllntQues wltll 1n
-""...,Candy land
AO-4 10 I 11q1111n only
I knowltdqt ol OHie colon to pray
• PUY or.nm WU U.S •-.r, C11SP QUIS • -..usnc ... mms
ChooM tr om " large :::':.,~~ 13~9J5 lnctudlno ~Asteroids"
11 Sav-on's regular .
low prices ca.-
~Siii~.l ~"::I49 ~< JOClr* -A I ·-2.49 ...
~ =:;;ti 500 SUl[S IB{' !",,."'l',, 2.99 ...
"CAMEO" Pantyhose
from BURLINGTON . ...,, ....
All SHEER
S1ll<·lll<e sottness2 s 3 throughout F 0 •
ULTRA SHEER
Ulhmate m
whisper l1ghl
sheerness
W..._T_.
Control Top
w•lh silk like f Sl1mm1no control 2 s5
softness a
ARM SUPPORT
Gr&OU1led
support lrom
waist 10 toe 350
SAVE•a.ao 8AVIE88•
~--WSEROLES ...... ~
•IW&ll& ·-··-
ICU,.... llClll"'
COOKI SHEET
-.tTD· Euy dean-up.
Buulttul 12'h. son v1nyt
doll with 12 l11h1on
ha11dos
"IWllT_,....
ICE CUBE TRAYS
Unbrtaklblt.
PMOF299C
8AV••t.oe 8AV•4e•
.. ,_ ACUoMI
THERMOMmR ~:·_, 1.29 .. MOLDS
lr!Qht tin
pt1tld •tMt. 'J jft
l"·ll"·lr' '1.'t\I IA.
SHOP 7 DAYS A WEEK!
SllOOPY s.n:c1
Dl•ll•RT
Contains Melamine r
plate. 9 oz bowl, thermo-
plastic 8 oz 1um1>lt1 and
s111nless steel fork & spoon
//&.49
12.cuP ~ MR. COFFEE -· . "· •cenuuro
•.•• -42.95 ' ~: ;:.::~JO.OD \.
:-~m 32.95 . -__:uu
• IUISllCl*J LlllS wm "rw 111 HMru IO IM& .....
C9m Al IU Yta -~ • "9 0 11 m.tt r• • ClffU.
• -.mB l91S lff8 • 1-1111 IDAIU IQ C11S1m1 • _, •t• Cl99I Al AU YY• -Sl-.S ftl '19DlllmCTrttlU
1.29
..... 1111 1 09 ,. Of 2 •
mPTY
GIFT BOXES
Oecor11tve boxes 1n foll,
Christmas colors & white.
For all your holiday
wrappmg
• 13 ..... llOCU
•U llo -. ITlll ..
• 11 .. COOlll
SPECIAL I
HUNT. HACH-Adlt,,. a lroold111r11t-Sprtft9d• 6 ,.,._,_leech & Qe,...ld N~ -1020 lrwlfte, W."°'"' u ·1L TORO -JQ11 9'eottftMlt .-oed 411tt...ON VIEJO -2SU2 Mert ... ftM .._.,,.
FOUHTAIN VALLIY -Mqnotll & Wemet llWINl-C""9fDr. & Wellt..t IANTA AMA -Jt11 IMlttl .,._. en.t
' I
In Nebraska. anybody
who works· where liquor
1s sold mu s t wear
clothing that weighs at
l e a st 3 pound s, 2
ounces
In Indiana, it's illegal
"to lead a ymang lady
a::.tray" while teaching
her !o roll erskale
In Helena. Mont , it 's
against the law to
· indulge tn unrestrained
g1gghng" on the s treets.
· A Mame law prohibits
anyone from stepping
. out of an airplane in
fli ght , e xce pt in an
emergency
Othe r laws aren 't
quite as ridiculous.
In Waterloo. Neb.,
barbers are forbidden to
eat onions between 1
a.m. and 7 pm
Bridwell says most
laws like these would die
r apid deaths if anybody
"'ere ever arrested for
breaking them
··Everything depends
on the e nforcement of
them." he says . "So if
they're never enforced
or prosecuted, they're
harmless."
Redmen
hunting
mascot
TAHLEQUAH. Okla.
(AP I Northeastern
Stale university students
have been having a lot
of trouble fi n ding a
mascot to represent the
Redmen. But many
agree that a giant prune
is not the answer.
The campus
newspaper has received
an outpouri ng of
anti-prune mail since a
woman dressed in a
prune s uit made her
appearance at the Oct.
17 homecoming game.
·'I received strange
·1 0 0 k s r r 0 m t b e
cheerleader.s . a nd
the athletes were very
unfriendly," s'aid the
prune.woman , who
a s ked n ot to be
identified because "l
don"t want to be r1re·
bombed In the middle of
the night."
S,h e sa1a s he had
hoped to add a new
wrinkle to l.he search for
a mascot.
T he tongue in-cheek
hunt for a new mascot
was launched after t\
caricature Indian came
into disfavor. Last year,
public relations director
Ed Brocksmith unveiled
a 6-foot banana "to help
motivate the students."
The students didn'l
find the ba n a na
appealing. however. so.
it s plit.
I
Santa Arrives
.... '
-..... ~ .... _.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, November 26, 1981
ckman stock spirals
rease fol~ws news of merger with SmithKline
TUBER ..........
prlcc of a s hare or
man lnatruments lnc .
on stock 101red 8 s points
e New York Stock ae Wedneaday followlna an nnouncement that the
Fldijtrton-baaed firm would
metae with SmlthKline Corp. of
Phll&delphia. SmltbKllne stock
drOfted 314 to close to 64'1•.
.\11nouncement of the
pr-tnary merger agreement
betllten the two firms ended
we.sis of speculation. On Tu .. ay, both companies haJted
trMIUig as rumors of the merger aa!Ald momentum. At that lime,
Bee\ptan stock had gained 4o/•
to cttise,at 34~.
ttt'e pact, subject lo the
neutiallon of definitive
agmment and to the approval
of Ule boards of directors and sb~olders of both companies,
callt ,for t.be conversion of each •i or Beckman common st into o. 7535 or a share of
S Kline .common. As of Oct.
31, ckman had approximately
mtllloo. Value of the deal Is in
the vicinity of $1 billion.
Two yean aao. SmlthKlln~
paid $259 million to acquire
Allergan Pharma<'eullcals ot
Irvine
•'The real secret when u lrnde ot stock like this occurs Is the
assumption that the new entity
will increase the earnings per
share," said Je(( Kilpatrick,
president or Newport Securities
Corp. "Wh&tt both companies are
saying is that they will both
benefit and prosper better as a
team r ather than as separate
entitles.
··Loo king at the financial
s tre ngths or both companies.
that's not a bad decision."
James MacLean, associate
vice pres ident o r Bateman
Ei c hler Hill Ric hards in
Newport Beach, said , "A
merger of this s ize would make
both companies stronger. It's a
ver y natural marriage."
According to a statement
released by the .com panies.
C hairman Dr. Arnold 0 .
Beckman und PreAidcnt W F.
Uullhuu 11, o wnl•r s of
approximlttely 20 percent or
Beckman's outatand1n1t s hares,
have agreed to vote their shares
ror the m eraer assum in &
acceptance or the definitive
agreement.
Robert F. Dee, SmithKllne·s
chairman and chief executive
officer . said in the release:
··Beckman participates in a
broad range o r scientHic ,
m edical and industrial fields
and t\as developed a worldwide
market presence The combined
enterprise will complement. the
com mitmenl or both compames
to the growing field of molecular
biology and biotechnology."
On Wednesday , a spokesman
for Beckman said the companies
would not comment further on
the merger.
Beckman had earnings of $36. 7
million on saJes or $618 million
for the fiscal year ended June
30. Smith Kline earned $308
million on revenues or nearly
Sl .8 billion.
OIL'S WELL Hcathrng thou:.:mds ol il'~l bdu" t hl1 l'at'th ..,
!'\llrfun•. thcst• \H·ll~ prodU<:l' ahout 20.000 barn•b ol llll a d<1~
al l hl· I lnt111gton lh.'al'h f1dd lll'l'l'a ll•d h~ \nunml l "S.\
'\l•c.trl~ 500 1l)11l1011 h.11 1 t+.1 ha\ t' h t't.'11 prod11t·1•tl 11 um I. llKI
\\ t•ll:-. U\ l'I' tilt' l><t">l 111 't•~ir:-.
Prime
dropped ,
by HOme
Sa n Dieao·based Home
Fed eral Savings & Loan A•·
sociatlon, the nation'111 sixth
largest S&L, dropped its prime
hom e loan rale one·hall or 1
per cent to 16'h percent.
The r ate on the adjustable
mortgage loan is believe~ to be
the lowest in Cahfornla.
On We dnesday. California
Federal Savings & Loan Ar.-
soc1ation lowered its prime
ho me mortgage rate to 16. 75 per·
cent on new loans up to SlS0,000.
That new rate represen\ed a
hall-percent drop in Cal Fed's
best r ate.
Kim Fletcher, chairman of the
board of Home Fed. s aid recent
dec reases in the last severaJ
weekly T ball auctions and the
recent reductions in the FHIMC
auctions contributed to the
S&L's dec1s1on.
20.$io1Jlillion shares outstanding,
wbUI SmithKline had about 67
~iguel firm
sh9ws gains
Bof A to acquire Wall Street brokerage
Fletcher cautioned ·. that it Is
still too early to det ermine
whether this move signals a
long·term trend.
.. A factor contributing to re
duced mortgage ratt?s for new
hom e buyers is the shift from
long.term fixed-rate mortgages
to adjustable mortgages A loan
program that can bend with the
market allows us to be more
res ponsive to inte rest rate nuc·
'Pb.e Fluorocarbon Co. or
Lacona Niguel reported a gain
or 3 percent in sales and a
de~ose of 31 percent in profits
for...lhe third quarter ended Oct.
31.
Sales for the first nine months
advanced to $66.5 million, up 14
percent over last year. while
e'arolngs stood at $2.2 million.
down 23 percent.
(>eter Churm, chairman, said
tbe...Sales increase came as a re-
sult•or the Reeves Rubber and
SEPCO acquisition~ J'he d rop in
profitability, he said. was due to
dej)eessed bus iness in th e
Miawest , Pacific Northwest and
In the semiconductor industry.
OPPOln'UHITY knocks often when you
use result-getting Daily
Pilot Classified Ads to
reach the Orange Coast
market.
Phone 64.2-5678
NEW YO.RK <AP l
BankAmerica Corp .. despite
what it called '"eccentric rules"
and '·inequalities or regulation:·
plan s to co nfront the
co m petit io n with a m ajor
incursion onto Wall Street.
BankAmerica, owner of the
w o rld 's seco nd -larg es t
com merc1al bank . Bank of
Ame rica, said from its San
Francisco headquarters 1t plans
to acquire Wall Street's largest
di scount brokerage house,
Charles Schwab & Co Inc , for
about S53 million.
"It's going to raise eyebrows
a round the countryside.·· said
Perrin Long, an analyst who
follows the securities industry
for the firm of Lipper Analytical
Services.
The acquisition would gave
BankAmerica acce!>S to a
lucrative market 1t feels it has
long been d enie d b y 1930s
federal banking laws
Samuel Arma cos t ,
BankAmerica presid e nt, has
repeatedJy said banks are being
thwart e d b y regulato r y
inequalities and should be freed
or them in order to compete with
secur ities firms . ins urance
companies and others offering
bank-like ser vices to a broad
range of customers.
In the October issue of the
London financial magazine
Euro money, Armacost said·that
with the U.S. economic situation
demanding "'the mobilization or
capital in huge quantities. we
ca n not a fford t o continue
operating under the p resent
eccentric rules "
Even t h o u g h bunking
deregulation i s graduall y
emerging, BankAmerica's move
this week would not seem to
re quire that.
BankAmerica s aid it had
s ig ned a letter of intent to
acquire the parent company or
Schwab for 2.2 million shares or
BankAmerica common stock.
currentl y worth about $53
million The acquis 1t1on will
require a pproval o f t h e
B a nkAm er ica b oa rd of
directors. C h a rl es Sc hwab
MINIMUM BIDS FROM $67 PER SQUARE FOOT
Originally Priced From $92 To S 139 Per Sq. Ft.
Special Auction Financing
85% Anandng -28 Year Amortization -13 112% Interest Ftxed - 3 Years
-OpUon To Close 1981 Or Early 1982-
NOTE: Complete financing lnrormatlon available at auction Information office.
s hare holders a nd regulatory
agencies.
·'T he addition of this financial
s ervices comp a n y lo the
BankAmerica organization wall
en able it to expand the range of
financial services available to
its customers," s ajd Arm acost
The company e mploys more
than 600 people 1n 38 offices
coast to coast. It had revenue or
S42 million m the fi scal year
ended Sept 30.
luat1ons." ·
Charles Schwab. founder and
chairman of the Charles Schwab
Corp.. s aid the merge r · will
enable both companies lo fully
participate an the emerging
environment.··
BankAmerica reported assets
ut the end of 1980 or Sll l.6
billion. Its Bank or Ame rica had
depos its or $89.3 billion. ranking
second in the free world to
Banque Nat1onale de Paris. with
U S dollar·equ1vale nt deposits
of S93 ti b1ll1on
Under Home Fed's AML. the
monthly payment is adjusted up
o r down eac h y ear to
re-amortize the loan balance
over t he remain in g term .
However, the amount of the
payment change is limited to 71ta
pertent of the prior year's
payment ,
··To continue the rapid growth
we see for the next few years
will take new capital resources
wh ich this merger will afford
us," said Schwab. "We expect to
continue lo be America's largest
discount brokerage firm in the
foreseeable future."
Ba nkAmeri ca's proposed
e nt ry into t he broke rag e
indus try is not the first by a
co mme r c i a l bank . B rown
Brothers Harriman & Co has
bl·en a member of the New York
Stock Exchange for a number or
years but because it does no
underwriting or securities is not
limited by the Glass-Steagall
Act of 1933 that drew a line·
between inves tment banking
and commercial banking
The monthly rate change 1s
based on lht! move me nt of lhe
monthly we ighted average cost
of fu nds ror the 11th District sav-
ings and loans The index 1s
published by the Federal Home.
Loan Bank m San F'ran<•1sco
C h arle s Schwab & Co.
rounded m 1971 , as known as an
innovator within the secunt1es
industr) In recent year!> the
compan) hcc, introduced unique
!>€.'rv1 ces !>uch as the longest
bus ines!. hour!> and automat1C·
transfer of cash into a money
market fund
The last tam e Home Fed's
prime was 11.t 1611 was May 6
Schwab does no underwntmg
either, Long pointed out. and so.
"as the law stands now. J thmk
1t'!> perfectly legitimate."
The final 30 ocean f'root home-sites. A
walled and gated private residential
communitv in San Clemente. Private
bca(•h and priv ul«• Swim and Tc•nnis
Cluh.
From $250,000
/ 11/t'rt'Sf 11/1/\ /fll(Jl/l lllJ.: lll'lltlfl/Jfr
1 714 1 498-~8:30or11 1 :31 277-9470.
PUIUC NOT1Cl PllUC lllT1Cl
STATIMINTO, WITHDRAWAL STATaMINT 0, WITHDRAWAL
,ltOM l'ARTNIRSHll"Ol"IRATING l'ROM "ARTHltRSHl .. Ol'lltATING
UNDllt ,.CTITIOUS UNDllt ,.CTITIOUS a~N~N~E WMN~-MI
TM tooowtnv per'°",.., wit_•_ Tht IOliOWlnt-""'"'" •II""'.-
COUICTOlll CCMNlll
Rer• CelM & Ma.... GeW & Sli.. ..
CALL FOR
HOLIDAY HOURS
Otildren's
Puppet Show
•• • 9•n•r•I pertn•r from th• U • 9•n•r•I parln•• lrom t he
per lner•hlP op•ret1n9 unelor Ill• perln•rtl\lp o.,.ralln9 unCl•r .... Ifs lh·e season to make
lktillou•-lrleU ....... of COHNEEN flcllll041• ~IMU ,, ...... 01 COAST kids happy at H untington
EGAN INC c " E CA RPET SALES MA IL CALL •I U H Allen••· Centers Great N ...... Mall at ._,,; Birch 51 N-P0<1 Bu el\. CA Hunll1>9t0fl 9MOI, CA f2'4 """ nwo · Tl>• 11c11t1ou• bulllletl n•m• with the reel Santa. caroling
The llctlllOUl bustneu n em• llet.menlf0<tl\tpel1n.,"'lpw .. lli.ct and entertainment See the
stattm.,,1 lor lht .,.11,.."lllP wH 111.., ""O<t 2. , .. In Ille Cou"4y of Oun91 ho 0,, Feb u ,.., in 111• county 01 M•••"• McGiii, uss Me .. veroe Mitc hell Marionettes 4 s ws
Or•ft99 • Dr • AP' ne. C••• Mew, CA '162' daily e very Thurs .• Fri., Sat &
F1111 Hem• and AdCl••n 01 '"• J-Sl•U•ry Sun !ti Ctirlstmas
Ptr\On Wltl\clr••l"9 Tl\Omu M Martl\AMcGlll -----------
COftllffn 14 O.r"'rlnQ. Irvine, CA "17US1'-.;;===•====--=~ .,,.. PUOll-0r...-Coesl Oelly Piiot, 1.
T~ M Con._n HOY S, 11, It. 2', '"' 0 .... 1 ,.,,,,n -----------Publl-0r...-coul Dally Pilot, PllUC MOTlC(
HOY S. 11. It. 16. 1 .. 1 47'HI ----------~
P111UC NOTICE
FICTITIOU$ auSINISS
NANll STATl!MINT
Tiit lollowln9 perlon• are Cloln9
busln•H •• ALIAS SCHMIOT ANO JONES.
21J72 Broollhuril SI ( ••U',
Huntl1t9lon -"·CA., .... Jol\n Ooneld H ildreth. 012
Molllllan• Or , Hunllnqton Bff<ll, CA n... William Ray-S.Cllrnlclt, 21372 llroolll\urst I •0 61, Hunt1noto1
11 .. cll, CA t1M6
Tiii• bullneu I• conclucteCI b'r •
~neral pertMnl\ip
J-0 Hlklr-
Thls st•w....,,I •es 111.-1 •Ith ,,_
County Clerll oi Oran91 County on
No• J. '"t ,,, ....
Publllr.cl Or ... CoHI Delly Piiot.
Nov. S, U, It, 1', 1"1 4771_.I
"CTITIOUI IUllNISS
NAME STATIMeNT
""TITIOV$ aUSIHIESS
NAME UATIEMIEHT
111• IOllOWll\9 .,.rs.onl ere <I01n9
bUltftlK~ •s TRE.ASU l<'r OISC.OU N l
C.l.t;ANERS, 11'!04 Hertior lloul•verCI,
C.aroen Grove, c...11torn1a n...o
S & S E.nlt•PrtH l . Inc. •
c...1110<111• CO<por•t-. SUO.oCl•ary Of
So•< a. Sp•n, •nt .• • W•\con,,n
'orporatlol\. 1•012 Ma9no11e.
wu1m1nster. C..llforn1a 91tt&l
T "" t>us1t>tt• •• c0ft0uc1eo "' • c0<porell0f\
S&S E.nlerpri .. l . I"'.
Earl H1lll»fl, Vice Prnl<Jenl lhll , .. ._, wes lilllCI Wtll\ Ille
C.ounly C.lerll 01 Oren~ C.ounly °"
Novemoer 11, 1"1
Fll .. 71
PuDlll!Wd Oranot (OUI O•tly Pilot,
Ne>• 19. :Z.. 0.C. l, 10, 1 .. 1 SOit-fi
NllPD
l'ICTITIOUS aUllNUS
NAME ITATIMENT
The lonowlnt jHroona •re doln9
bull ... U•S: TRINITY INVESTORS, 20tl SH
EYE SYMPTOMS MAY
BE WARNINGS
OF DANGER g
fhl•\ OM\ ind1cJ le the
l'\l'"
0 lhl'ni,ch «:'~ nl•ecl
h.-1 fl or that l'Ond11ton" 1n
I ht• htllh ,11'1:' t"l.IU :.IOf!
111 u hll'm ' "hll·h art'
1 I 11 1 n I! l h l· m :. I.' r 1 o u:,
hJ rm EH·s1~hl 1s too
1mpml:in1 to ne~lel"l an~
'IJ.lll' 11r ahnot mal '1s111rt
Ofl'lce areas~ maldmum fleJdblllty to build out addllionel space. Each wardtouse futures a 12'" 12' ground ~I door with mlnlmurn
16 foot tiuss heights. Otllltles all underground. UllltJ lndMdually metered. Ample paoong. CorTlf)lelely landscaped.
Tiie followl119 peroonl ere Cloln9
1111\lneu.,
PSYCHOSYNTHESIS PRESS, 701
lrll, Co.-1191 Mar, CA'l'JtU.
Co~~~=·~',:,~~~':!' Cove
L.ane, Costa MtM, CA ~
\ 'utldl'll. 'even· pain
111 lhl· l'~ l'S Sprt»tdlnJo(
"' 1•1 ltil• hl•.id mJ) ~ a
'll!ll or ).llaut·oma wh•<'h
(';Jl1 fll'"l l'll,\ \ ISIOll 111
hour., \\ utrh oul for
rl•t·u1 n nl! d1mminJ.? of
'hlOn. halos\_around
l i g hts. d1 ~10,,ions or
objt•l·Ls. dnubl<• \ 1:.1nn .
l' '( t' l'..,., 1 \ l' t ea r ' a n d
blinkinl!. rl'<i e~chth and
unequal pupils Wh en
medication 1s needed , we
can hll any presenption. EXCELLEl"ff TM SHEl.TER •.• The Economic Recovery Tax Acl of 1981 provides an excellent LDJt shelter fOf companies, under lhis type
ot rul estate purchase. You are llCMsed to consult with your KC)OUn~nt for complete details.
Pre-aucUon property inspecUon tours daily and weekends 11 Lo 5
lnteruted parties we 1>rged to physically Inspect an propertlea before Auction and to eicamine all sales documents Including Purchase &
Escrow Agreement., Form of Note & Deed ot Trust Homeowner i\ssodallon, Preliminary Title Report, and Public: Report.
m:2.~0ft CAI L FOii A OCSCl!IPTM. OROOiORt:
AIRPORT WE~T BUSINESS PARK
245 Fischer /'we.., Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626
714-957-8751
MU co~oucn:o ev
NATIONWIDE AUCTION COMPANY
3961 M.lcMh1.11 81 .. Ste. 2 10/212 Newport 8eech. Ca. 92660
714-752·2298
/o\tMll"' Cliatt. ~ ..
St•llfl<tnle Hiii, 702 lrh , Cor-de!
Mar.CAftUS
Oou9 Auuell. 715 8-lrut. P*=lll<
Peill•-.CA Tith bu\IMU Is ,.,,,ducl•d by •
llmllocl pett,.nl!IP
Steplw\le Hill
Thia 1tei-1 wes Iii.cl with lite
CCKlnly C-of 0rlfl99 Co.inly Oii Oct. a .1 .. 1
Rkl\•rd Ellla, a10 C.tdafl Wey, Sen 019911, CA '2117
lludcly Hllftll119tr, 7SCIO lron4•1•, C-• .. -.C.Att• Tllll tiuslnaH II conducted by .,,
111\lllC~atH M-l•tlOll ot .. r 1"4111 • ,.,,,,.,lfllp.
Ma11u.! 0. R k:e
T'llll IY-1 Wet lllecl with Ille
C-l'f Clerll of Orange County Oii OcL
Jt, "'' .. ,,.,.,
PuDI.._ Or ..... Coest o.lly Piiot, .. ,, ..
Nov. s, 12. H, '6, '"' 411~1 Publltlteel Or.,.. Coo~ Oelly Piiot, NOY. S, 12, 1t, M, ltt 1 411MI
PllUC •Ta
YOUti DOCTOR CAN
PHONE US when you
need a medicine. Pick "'P
your prescr iption lf
sh of ping nearby, or we wll deliver promptly
without extra charge. A
great many people
entrust us with their
prescriptions M •Y we
com pound and dispense
f'ICTtnous •UllNlll 'ICTITIOUI •UllNHS you rs? •
NAMC IYATeMINT NAMe ITATeMeNT I U00 -...-.. ... CY Tiie IOllOWll\9 P•rton I• doln9 TM .. 1 .... lne perttfl• ... "'"• ,.. rn-wa!Mu • .. : ...... ,...,... "-....,.,
COAST ME RC EDD HltVICI, WINOJAM.Allt INOUSTRIE$, IGJl JI I ........... · *041·1 11:""'11!'1 .. Str' .. I, Cotla MeM, 0.V..rd, Hllrltlftoton lffell CA *41, ~ ..... Callf~llleN• lto-ort WIH , IKH L• l'arle, & ·-
L•rt'\' .Jtftrn ~911. 1711 S6vtfl ,WftUlll Velloy, CA 'I-I ~!!l!!~!!!!!!i•i!J!!IJliliil!•ll!!lli~~ t lr(ll lll'Mt, S-to AM, c.llf9f114e MklMM L.. •-. ~ Le llltrle,t-tl7W ,._.. ... V.....,,CA'l7'1.
Tlllt lllut!MW Is CtMll«M -., llft Tllll Mlllftl 4t t~tH -'I' a IMMduai ....., .. ~
unyJ.IC .... 9'1 "*"-TIMI .........,_, _ HIM wttll .... TMI ......_. -.......... ~·· a.no .. 0.-Mtt ~ .. ~ Clef'll "' °""" c......, ...
.........,_ ....... --"---.... -~--·-U...lltN.._..._,._ ... _..._ .... t:µ~ 0c.....-11.11et .. ,,... ···'"'· ,.,.. ........ _, _______ _,_ Ol)'llQM .. ,_..,...,.,.._~,..,..,_.,,_, fl\MI.._ °'°"" CMlt Delly 114.... ..-..... ~ C.. Deity,,_,
···············~···········••••ll••••lllill••••••••••••••••llll ....,· "· '0
·"' o.c. a.,., .,._..., · '· '" ,.,., "" .,....
"" ..... . ... . .
. • pt ,. • ..
ROUND-RUG WEAVER Ho:--l' lhH'll' \\11rk-.
1111 an tllll'll'.tlv p.1111'111 1111 .t r 1n111d .\a,.11••
I'll).! Ill l ;,111 ;1d11. \1 I/ ~hv \\l'.iq•-. I Ill: 1 ll~> 1111
• 19.5 cu It. no frost refrogerator • 6.68 cu.ft
lreezer o Storn up to 8 lbs. ace, about 210 cubes
• 4 ad1urn1ble glass shellrn • Automat ic energy
saver syt1em helps cut OH•at1n9 cost e Moist 'Ill
F•esh sealed high hum1d11v
pan • M111 kuper with
.td1ustable 1empi1tature CE;;.~;;· s5ooo s1DOUOBLE ROEBAT~~
:U"f:: s5000
TOTAL .......
, .
t.,,
s20 cAsH
REBATE
' •• • •• • I '
2-ln-I washer wftll
Mlld-lasket 1"
hb!
I
·~-..........
..111 old "a:..:1111 \\ hl'l'I. .llld hJ:--11.·\ l'.tkd I Ill·
"l'l'l l'I )'t'111·l''' 1111h tu lll'r d.tl1..:IH1·1,
• 17 2 cu ft. no frost relrogerator • Adju11ablt
\Piii level gt~ss shelves • Low ()fHra11ng cost with
energy yver sw11ch an no•mat pos1t1on • 4 73 cu ft
freezer • Equipped for op11onal automattc ice
meker • Keeps fresh foods lons-r with Moist 'Ill
Fresh \ealed hogh hum1d11v
pan and Cool 'Ill Fresh
lower hum1d11y pan.
Cl IWTE 530°0
IAWIS/lllWlf'S
llSTAMT IEUTE 5 3 000
TOTAL
DOUBI.£ REBATE!
$60~
s20 cAsH
REBATE
Lanie capacity
washer with
Mill'-la•et "'
tub!
• 6 w-eye* IMl...cllno 1 14 lftlft Mini-Quick C)'Cle and -. c-....e cycle • I -....... , ... .,.... • 4
~:.::r~~.~~. '~,~·;~~~~~
~cold-~
. ..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, November 26. 1981
Going Out of Business Sale .
Rl11l911ol, Hordlca.
Head, CalMr. G.....-.
Htt11CM1, SaloMOft Ir RION ••• Up T Oben11eyer, H.C.C .•
Roffe, kffex. V eleda. 0 Gerry, Colmar, D ..... tre,
and more
80% and more
Everything MUST Go
•
••ck poc•&11MJ ... ,...... In
.ct ClothincJ 3 Days Tennis equip......t
and C lofttilMJ
Stat1Jng Fri., Nov. 27,
~e~~~ :mi Sat Nov 28 10-s p
,,. 205.00 19.H • ' • ' Ute lt0.00 69.H •.•.•
....... .. L .... ,...... s 5.tt-4t.tt s N 29 ~.:f,h~i=::-:Ui~1rn un.,. ov. ,11 am-5 p
-----· 4 ·"·"·" W-.. I.oh: SxtOl 2'0.00 I Jt.H
SXtO ZJS.00 I zt.H
225.00 I 19.H "Sil MART
2700 W. Coast 'Hwy.
Newport Beach
VISA and Mastercharge Accepted
OVER 300
LEADED TIFFANYS
All AT GIVEAWAY PRICES
--.....
s21
r99. 169.95
. . ..
-' .DOORS OPEN
10 AM SNAIP .
Fttl. MOY. 27
SALE DATES
FttJ... MOY. 27 10 om·9 pm
SAT .. MOY. 21 1oom-6pm
SUN.. MOY. 29 10 om.6 pm
MOALBASE
GLASS SHADE
15" high
•10•5
flOOI LAMPS,
WAULAMPS,
T Alli LAMPS,
TIFFANY SWAGS,
CHANDlllllS,
MA~NGLAMPS
All GLASS TIFFANY
COMPUTILY WlllD
U,TOJOOWAn
REG . 17995 JUST •211-
-· ...... U I 0 U F ¥ 91 I W 4 W
Clrci.nstances Require •.• Immediate Disposal Of Half Or More Of This Huge $2,000,000 Retail Inventory •.• In The
• Shortest Possible Time ... Regardless Of Cost Or Loss!! .
MEN'$ KNIT
SHIRTS
,__... "Joella'' Al -for
1 .. 2 •• wt ......... of • .,... ..
.... ..c1 allort ......... CNW,
Hlilrta. etc •. Al MW ~ I
..... S-.M-l-XL.
Sa•1a.w ..• Detplte tM t.ct
tluU we ufoyed • •ery
Mfflfacfory IMfsJMU Ill I fl I •••
we eMlcl • wMI twice • __.
1toc11 ................... ....
thH of Y"" -AHO MOii
AlllYIMG IYMY DA YI Ow
~ .................. ...
••load te.h tr•••11do ..
onntock RIGHT HOW.
Coa.N .. ..,, IYBY ITIM IH
OUR STOCIC Is ._...,.., ftrice
Slulled for 9UICI a11d
POSmYI DISPOSAL!
' Met1's & loys• BOYS ~'LEVIS11 LADIES PANTS
O.P. SOCKS Mt. c•rdlroyl.. wt ltelh. etc. ' ' C H I M I H D I f I It. , ' '
ShnJto 14.IW,,_,L "UITTAHIA.• ''llITT.'' "lOSI
HIPS." Ttle •"Y .... ,, 1tyle1
le9 SJZ.00$8 88 •Wfft C ............ atniicJhf s• '-ice • ~'.:!.a..;~'=
.tc., etc. Shin~ to 15/16. 4
Reci. $2.00-$4.00 pr.
Tlll1 11 HOT, repHt HOT fuat
mother C hristMas CleorC11tce!
This Is an all-out effort to
dlapou of approximately
SI ,000,000 In retail lnnntory ..
. Utterly re9ardle11 of c.ost of
loss incurred! The finest
merchandise of its kind that
money can buy ... to be sold
and sacrificed at an fraction of
the normal retail price! If you
-. In the mark.t fat' Items of
this kind ... HOW IS THE TIME!
THIS IS THE PLACE!! Nov. 20th
JACK'S #I ON~ Y -
WETSUIT SALE:
' 59 88 .............. 1------r------l«CJ-$13.SO "O ,, .. " "hrtl o Yalut•." OllE WEEK I #!_ SahPrice • -c .... laD•Fw.u .,.. Specla vroup
-ONE WEEK ONLY -i:::~:::~5.88 30% Off
~~1:: ..... ~1.a MEXICAN
BONCHOS
FLOJOS
Req. u;:~Sll.95 Olll YI
526.88
&
L.D. 3
MENS LEVI'S I..,... ....................... . .,..,c.,._.p. Re(J. S 19.88
Alt Sfua
59.98 OUI IHT11E sTOCI
)s1 ·1~88
WSW.-1
MENS
CRubber s..dalsl
RecJ. $4.98
How
53.98
521.88
LADIES
SWIMWEAR· . MENS BELTS
;.... ....... ~'Um" w.
: •..W, ef..,... _.colors
AMS-. UNDERWEAR "ISLAHD WUl." "HITT."
"JOCKIY" ~••era , ~rleh, ~--------, "SPHDO.•Hllflatoctllic..._el •·.wrta. ••r .W.ofa, .tc. an... JI GIRLS •• crodleh. ....._ 1 & 2 P'-• to 40. UiM,n. Bmll STOCll( .tc.. ... 1i.n2,,_,._
BmUSTOCI
YJOFF .M~•E t40W AT BLOUSES V3 ., &TOPS WStoraJ
CAI Starn Except Al Ow
VELOUR
SHIRTS
J.:b #I) "O.P .:· ""llfMtl"'9 loff" I _, i--------....., ..._..
"' "otfllloro', .. -.......... "C_,-.-
' "Coreor a.•
Men's & loys'
BRAND NAME
SWIMSUITS
"O .P ., " "Off1llore,"
"Q•lcksll•..-," "G&S" & _______ ........,._, .......
MENS PANTS
Dress met CalllCll
"IUTTAHIA " "AMCULS
FU9HT" "\IYIS" "MOY9" OH"
20%off
"Of'." H ............. •"Y Went .,.__...,.. _ _,.,~-.....
•fytff ....... c.WS. mca.dff
E ·"· --.y. .... _. ...... to-, etc.~
1, ,...._, •llwl21to JI .
1 .... .,,.... ,,.. .......
110 P"
WALKING
SHORTS
l«CJ-to1 59 88 All br-4 Hw, letHt atylH,
!2.l:~--• ..... ,..,,c ..... c...,.., ... -r-~ ..... ......, .. ~-. llto
JI
V3 OFF
IJ.cb u Mlyl
GIRLS PANTS
"CHIMIH DI Fa" llITTAMIA"
"UYIS" TlleM -el ..,._... .-,
YefY ..... ..,... .... CMon Ill
ahH 7t.14.INTIHSTOCll(
Re(J. $29.H
How
ALL
SWEATSHIRTS
"loMtle lroc*t," "O.P ~" ""W ..
50%off
All
Men's & Women's
Girls' & Boys•
O.P., lolt,
& "'atty others.
SKI
JACKETS
Yl
OFF
"O.P.," ''Ugtllaiw9 lo"."
IN SULA TED SKI
VESTS
"PACIFIC TIAK." o.--4 ,.tr ............................
........... dllcll.
HurryforChristmas SPRING SUITS
Bargains!
O'Neill, Animal Skin, Seal Tape.
All Full-Length with Falt-sleeves.
Reg.$155
Now·
Re9. $ I I 9. 9 5
Mow
581.•
I
t.
5 129.88 W -I N T E R i~
SPRING i•
L.D. 3--All colors & sizes LONG-SLEEVED ;
Re9. $ I 5 9. 9 5
Mow
Re9. $94.95
Now
5 139.95 574.95
Winters ... -
AH Colors & Sizes
Re9. $129.95
Short-Sleeved
Re9. $84.95
Mow Mow
....
$109.88 564·.95 ..
· SPECIAL &ROUP:
WETSUITS BY BODY &LOVE :
Slut 5-M-t.-XL
MH'1&WOtnet'1'1
loys' & Girls'
1 £ OFF Sea Suits ,II V., Price / 2 (Limited Selection) ·
~~~~~~ l SUNDAY I 0:00 A.M. • 6:00 P .M.
DAILY 8:l0 A.M. • 8:00 P.M.
JACKS # I l:J0-6:00 DAIL y I
I
• ll
~ •• • -... •4 '
.............
............ ""'"' -·.,....-
Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT /Thurtday. November 26, 1981 "" Outdoor manual 'best seller'
L .L. Bean guide to rival the Maine Hunting Shoe or chamois shirt ..
FREEPORT, Maine <AP>
Once every 40 years or so, L. L.
Bean lnc. lends its name to a
publlshtn1 venture that aoea
beyond Its familiar mall-order
catalog.
J udglng by the Initial reacrtion,
the latest work may turn out to
be a beal·seller. rivaling such
popular Bean products as the
Maine Hunting Shoe or the
chamois shirt.
Jn 1942, the company 's
founder, Leon Leon wood Bean,
wrote an outdoor manual called
"H unting -Fi s hing a nd
Camping." Nearly 200,000 copies or the sli m volume were sold
before it went out or print 25
ye ars lat e r . I t 's now a
collector's item.
cunoemg gear In the years since
L L. wrote his manual
The author ls Bill Riviere or
North Berwick, a respected
o utdoors writer and forme r
Maine guide who came to Bean's
president, Leon Gorman, about
10 years ago with the idea of
updating the 1942 guidebook.
A couple of years later, editors
at Random House approached
"It really was a lot more work
than any of u_a anticipated,"
Gorman said In an interview.
"We wanted to make s ure It was
just right; that it reflected well
on the company and that It was
factually correct."
The book ta written In the
simple, direct, no-nonsense style
that characteriies ,the colorful
Bean's catalog, which comes out
''It was pure agony. We really
sweated over the contents"
Gorman with a ~uggestion about
a Bean book on the outdoors.
The two ideas meshed , and
Riviere got cracking on his first
draft.
,
fi ve ~1mes a year with a total
distribution or 32 million copies.
That s tyle also was evident in
L. L. 's book, which focused
largely on technique, without
any anecdotal embellishments.
•'The Instructions are
condensed that tbe readtnc ti
of the whole book la only
minutes,·· L. L. wrote ln bll ·
introduction.
Gorman, grandson of the la•
L. L. Bean, said tt\e new boOk
focused on equipment becam.
the company percel ved •
great e r n ee d for I
com prehensl ve book ln that
field.
A s the project toolt shape,
Bean 's mustered dozens 6f
experts, including those wit.hbt
the company and some from ltl
various vendors.
"ll was pure agony. We realb'
sweated over the contenll, ov•
the tone, over whether to Ull
anecdotes," said Bruce Wlllar'4.
Bean's assista nt product
manager , who played a key rol•
In t he deve lopment oC the
project.
Uutduurs w riter 81/I Rw1ere. lelt. a11d L L Bea11 . I nc . Pres1de111
Leo11 Gnma11. dm :uss Rwwre·s 11eu: hook. ·Tiit' LL Hea11 t;111dt'
tu tilt' o utdoors." a cumprehenswt' ywdt' /1J outdoor LJ( tw1t 1t'~
Bean 's , the w e ll -known
camping outfitter, 1s back In lhe
bookstores this fall with a
second offering, ·'The L L. Bean
Gu i de to t h e Outdoors ."
Focusing on equipment rather
than technique. the book ren ects
the technological improvements
in backpacking, cam ping and
The proJecl. it turned out . took
seven years, w1lh every portion
of the book subJected to the
same painstaking scrutiny given
to a wool shirt or backpack
before tl earns a place in the
Bea n catalog.
··The object of this book 1s not
to bore m y r ead ers with
personal yarns and experiences,
but to give definite information
1n the fewest words possible on
how to hunt. fish and camp ....
Looking ahead , the publish•
and the camping outfitter plan
lo team up again next year on a
fis h and game cookbook.
Finding water
'unused muscle
GREEN FOREST, Ark. (AP> -Tanned,
rawboned, and stolid, Steve Work is a witch who
juggles inventories and time sheets as adeptly as
he handles the Y -shaped rubber rod he uses to rind water.
Work's 1,500 neighbors find sllgbUy laughable
the image of this brawny man slridinl across the
Ozarks, bis grease-stained bands delicately hold-
ing a dowsing rod.
To some he is a crackpot; to others he's a
saviour who bas found good water close to the sur-
f ace in the rocky s urroundlnp. In the past 10
years, Work says he has found water 40 times in 40
tries.
Held in both banda, the rod Is bent apart to
create tension . Where there's water the rod jerks
down. But the rod doesn't find water, Work says,
tbe dowser does.
"Like anything psychic, dowsin1 is an unused
muscle," be s ays. Before gardens and kitchen
taps, that intuitive muscle was essential for find-
ing food or water, he says.
Work doesn't rely solely on the shudders of his
dowsing rod. He uses a rudimentary knowledge of
geology for clues to water among the layers of
sh.8Je, limestone ~d dolomite cracked into buge
chunks millenla ago.
"There's water around, but it's not all at the
same depth like a smooth water table," Work
says. He &ries to find cracka where water
percolates thr~b the rocky layers.
To do1ne, one must C08C91t:rate, learn to read
the rod's signals, and avold being fooled by fan-
tasies, he says. Experienced dowsers narrow a
large target area by watching the movements of a
pendulum over a map drawn to scale. That's
called map dowsing.
Orville Wise. a geologist with the state
Geological Commission, say4 dowsers "can do a
very reasonable job if they don't let the business of
tbe peach sUck go to their beads."
But Wise says there's no scientific evidence to
show that dowsing is anything other than tom-foolery.
The 2,200 members of the American Society of
Dowsers, based in Danville, Vt., are accustomed
to geologists and others doubUng them. The socie-
ty says dowsing works but that there's much re·
search to be done before it can be explained.
A society member, Work says he also believes
in research but is more concerned about his suc-
cess rate and how much mooey his wella have
saved. He doesn't charge to dowse a well, because
the talent cost him nothing.
He dowses wells that are 50 to 200 feet deep,
although the water table closest to tbe aurlace Is
500 feet down. At $S per drilled foot, skepticlam comes dear. .
Work says employing a dowser makes more
sense than building a $75,000 home and then look-
ing for water. "Even a dowser can't put water
where it isn't," be says.
PACIFtC YllW
MINOIJALrAI•
Cenwtery Mortuaf"( Ctiapel-<A'ematory
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach
644-2700
,_CObelal MOlTUAlllS
LaQuna Beach
494-9415
LaQuna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
MAllOtl LAW,._MT. OUYI
Mortuarv • Cemetef"(
Cre,,,. tory
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
S40-55~
,_CIMOT ... S
~MOADWAY
MOtlTUAllT
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
IALTl-•BOM
SMITH & TVTHM.I.
..sTCUPP CMAflll -427E 17th St
Costa Mesa
6•&-9371
111 llTICI
Mc BEATH
A l. I <.: E M M c B E ,\ T If .
I' C ~ i d t' n t 0 ( If U n I I n j( I 0 n
Bcuch. Ca s ince 1926
Passed a"'ay on :\o\'embt'r
24. 1981 at Pal'lf1eu Hospital
1H 1the age of 88 Mrs .
Mc8eath was a member of
SeaMdl' Chapter 11259. Ordl'I'
of the Eastern Star. VFW
A111ciliun· Post #7368. the
Af11ericun Legion Aux1hu1 ~
# 133 und World \\'ur I Buh'acks #3260 Belo\'ed m o t h e r o f J T r a ,. I s
Mc Beath. Huntington
Reuch. Cu .. Verona Tolls
Aebersold of :\e\'ada Cit y.
Ca. and Mar~· Lee Smith of
Rialto. Ca .. S gcandch1ldren
and 4 great-grandchildren.
also I brothe r Robel'l
Windhum of Hunt1n 1tton
Beach. Ca. Funeral sen·lces w i ll be co nducted on
SaturcJu~. No\'ember 28. 1981
al 11 Oo AM at P ierce
Brothet·i. Smiths' Chapel
I nterment will be at
Westminster Cemete1·~
Pierce 81'0thers Smiths'
l'ttort uury directors. 536·6539
•• Turnyour unusabln
• Into e usabl9 e cillh.Cllll
I D•llY Piiot
Cl•ulfled
• 6'2·5671.
It a nm doesn't O\Nt1 at least one pair
of Levi's• Action Slacks . then he
doesn't know how good it can feel
to look this good. Lycra®/ polyester
gaberdine fabric stretches to move
with him. And it bounces right back
so he always looks his best. Men's
waist sizes 29-4 2. Assorted colors.
s1999
·®
MIA 1CUO E lmperlal Hwy, 1CroSS from Brt1 Mall. n41529-9974
CElflflTOllAJtTEllA 18600 Grld1-y, opposite Los Cerrito$ lrllll. 213192U883
FOUllTMll VAU.EY 9380 Wamtr Awi. Warner at tht 405 Fwy. 7141964-3001 ,,,.,_TOii lfACH 10111 MMns A111, Brooldlurst & AdMns. n419ff..3323
ua RMErl 23162 lrlercvry Rd, 1n t11t un Forat Cen•. n4/IS5-2'13
.,.,,, nfJO 25252 Mcintyre 405 Fwy, u P111x1t. n4151U100 OIWltll 139 S Tustin A11t, rusdn at the O.rrlen Gnwe Fwy. n4163f.t19t
1'UlllTI llUJ 11351 E Oollml, Mil~ Plienll Hfl#I ""'· 2'31964-6121 llNfftllDE 35()2 Tyler, oppos/tt Tyler Ma#. n416'1·1322
IMITA NIA 3430 S Bn1to1 A111, 114-mllt north of South CtMst Pim. n41967-8100
Wf,,_,,,lf 15412 GoldtnweJt St, next to Goldetl West Cootegt. n 41898-5541
Your California Clothing Store
Locations throughdut
California
STOREHOtMS
Non-flllM.
Sit 10-7, Sw\ 12~
M4t«apt cm
• s c ea4causss uses -
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/T'huraday. Novtmbtr 26. 1981
111------------------
King of the road trucker has roJling palace
n i 1 W I f SH 0 P -
b onsignor Thomus J .
11 • Brlen has been
"'ppointed bishop ol' .. ,the Roman Catholic
Diocese of Phoenix.
11 He had been serving
h~as vicar general or
Oithe diocese since the
May 18th death or
~ishop Jame s S .
,,~~ausch. n,.... ______________ __
'I.I '
MEDFORD, Mus. <APJ
Long-haul trucker Harold Brown has
thought for a long lime that he was
klng of tho road. Now he has a rolling
palace to prove ll.
Brown, a 6-foot, 3-lnch, 220-pound
former Army intelligence sergeant
who regularly haul s delicate
electronic equipment cross-country,
has plunked down the Initial payment
on a $168,344.34 tractor, as costly as
two Rolls Royce autos.
The lO·ton cab includes an 8-foot by
6-foot sleeping area containing twin
beds with bearskin blankets, custom
leather walls, a microwave oven, a
refrigerator, hot-and-cold running
waler. a generator, color, and
bluck·itnd·white televi11lon 11ets, alr
conditioner, a stereo system, two
wurdrobes, nuorescent lighting, a
flush tolld and wall-to-wall
c1:1 rpeting.
Brown. 60, says he's thmJdng of
installing a Telex machine so "the
company and l can talk back and
forth in case l ' 111 running empty
down the road and they want to reach
me
"I think I've got something that no
one else has," says Brown, who
estimates he drives about 100,000
miles a year in a career starting In
1945 when he left the Army after
seven years.
·'They tell me that the closest Uaing
to It on the road la owned by the
!\lniet, Barbara Mandrell," be aays.
"ll 's a cuatomlied sleeper for her
techniciana. I've seen pictures of it.
There's no comparison.
·'They told me when I bought mine
that I can thumb my nos~ when 1 go
by hers," Brown says. ·•I 've got a lot
or fellows jealous. But the young
ones, they say they wouldn't want
one tractor like this yet because they
don 'l deserve It."
Brown explains his Investment
simply. "J like the business, and if
you're going to be in the business,
you 'd better be the best. The
company once asked who I thought
was the best driver on the road. 'It's
me.' I told them. (( I didn't answer
that way, I wouldn't be worth puttlnt
on the road
"I'm very good at what I do,"
Drown say11 . "I've always made
money. l 'm just u good man."
Brown, who modestly addr esses
younger men as "sir," doesn't come
orr as a blowhard; he just knows he
asg~~
"Brownie's always been the kind or
guy who wants the best," says
Howard Goldman, who r uns the
Milton, Mass .. rirm Brown works for
as a driver-owner "Now that he's
got this, he's sort of the king or the
road."
THANKSGIVING WEEKEND SALE
' • I
Brand Name Fashions
Sate prtcn efredlve 11/27/81 thru
11/J0/81, whlle supplies last. Stytn
shown shown are representative of
die selection.
JRS •• DRESSY BLOUSES
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Fro work or evening cl De~uuful Cft>pe
de chine blouse by S1even Berry fu-
sorted scytes. colors 3 13 Rf'q S33-S36
OfEMIN Sl.J< IROUSERS s3599
Dressy raw silk 1rou~e1\ from Cht:>rnin
de Fer AssortPd colors Juniors 3 I ~
Reg S48
MOVIN'ON CORD JEANS
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cord Jeans 1n ,m clssortmenc of colors
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Wa1m 30-38 inseams 30-36 (Below)
Reg Sl9 50
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City publlc safety
l!ircc.·tor Wlll1 c B.
<.'lu y lon h u ~
promoted h1ms l.!ll
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twite
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Reg s21-s22
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den1rn Nl[h Lycr<l w,m[ ... 28-38
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SALE ON GALS'
WESTERN FASHIONS
In our Cowgirl dep<lrtment you II ferxJ
greclc vah.JPS on lamou ... rn.-lker \/\IP'item-
"'Y1ed Jt'clnS cind ShlrtSI Selecuons vary
s10te 10 ">lore so come 1n Clnd see
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, November26. 1981 817
Resear ers rooting for ginseng profits
MIL~ RIVER. N.C. <AP > ln
tbe land ot fertlle black sou and
tobacco Is a small flrden srowln1 a
valuable root that has been dua tor
centuries but hu eluded the plow.
Researchers hope the plot thickens
and leads to lfOflls from ilMena, the
s mall root tltaped like a human hand
tbat is belleved by some to be an
aphrodillac and healln& agent. Until
now, It •as been found mostly In wild
patcll es o n App a lachian
mouabin.sides where it Is dug up by
peollle looking for pocket money and
seni to the Orient where It ls popular.
''I'm certain this can be a
money-making crop for rarmers in
tills are'a," said Tom Konsler. a
horticulture professor at North
Curolina State University and leader
o f what Is ba ll ed as the only
&lnseng.for·harvest project In the
world.
A pound or the light ginseng roots
sells for about $135.
Cultivating 1insen1 la not a new
Idea, but growing it as a marketable
crop, like corn or tobacco. is. Konsler
and his assistants spend their days
checking soil acidity and the effects
or different rertilizers on the ginseng
plant. .
.. We s t arted this particular
experiment when we got so many
questions about growing ginseng and
found out we didn't have a ny
answers,·• Konsler aald.
The imme d iate t ask at the
Mountain Ho rticu ltural Crops
Research Station In Henderson
County la to rind out If glnsen1 can be
cultivated on a large scale.
Export of dried ginseng root..s to
Hone Kong from the United States
began In the t700s and most U.S.
ginseng is still exported to China,
although It Is not difficult lo get
now a days across this country
Ginseng 1s a delicate looking
fi ve·leaved plant. ln the fall the
seedpods atop the plant turn brilliant
red. North Carolina state law forbids
harvesting the plant in the wild until
after Sept. 1
"We know that gin1cng arown-4n
cultivated surroundings, lnsteadp~
t he wild. matures faster," a d 11
Konsler. an experl on 11nWe I
culture. "Glnseng roots grown In r
plot are bigger at three years thin
gin11eng In the wild after as much b
14 years." I
The cultivated plant is worth tells
than halC the amount brought by wild
ginseng. But scientists say there ls po
difference between the two as far ,ies
they can determine I
Ginseng experts and people frqm
all over the world interested 'ln
growing ginseng are beginning "to
recognize western North Carolina as
one of the top ginseng growing areH.
II
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Wllh Cl fashion nair Assorted
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Waists 28-38 Reg S25-S27
Belts. buckles. bandanas, bolo 11es.
straw cind felt hats .. Many 11ems are
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f'UEllTE HILLS 17851 E Coif ma. east of Puente Hiiis Man. 2131964-8721
RMRSIOE 3502 Ty/6r, opposite Tyler Mill. 7141687-1322
SAllTA MIA 3430 S BrfstOI A~. 114·mlff north of South Coast Pim. 7141957-8100
WEITlll#ITER 15412 Goldenwest SI, next to Golden West Cohge. 7141898-5$41
Your California Clothing Store
..
•••••• , •• ,soc a
Locations lhrOU!l;}out
Callomla
STORE HOURS
Mon·Frl 10·9:30
Sa1 1O·7, Sun 10-6
He accept ==
••• • Orange Co11t DAIL V PIL.OT/Thurtday, November2e1 1981
They're both oldtimers now
She plans to turn ol' Tabor Opera House into showplace
•Pl'roR'S NOTE -Thert woa .._. t'-" opera at lhf! old Tabor o.cn. HC*H In Lfodudlt Tht-rf! "°' lkoudud ond Ziegfeld &howgirli
Pd John L. SulUi>an Today, thert'I
1q"'ethfng more a new owHr
"-l•rmiM<t to re&tore 11,, old glory
Gltd g#U.
ay TAD BARTIMUS ....... ,.... ......
LEADVILLE. Colo. The
whHe·hai red grand m other
cblrps at the tentative visitors to
''come on in and see history'' as au waves an encouraging hand
towuds the grand staircase
It Is a welcoming gesture
Evelyn E. L. Furman makes
ozens of times daily when
urious travelers come through
e beveled glass front doors of
e old Tabor Opera House
Mrs. Furman is the Lour guide
l th e ent r a n ce to the
ree-story building that :,1t~. in
all its dimmed Victorian glory,
on the main street of this former
silver m ining mecca of the
~ln..-ican West
;But at 68, Mrs. Furman 1s not
j u1t a r et ir e d matron
volvnteering a few hours a week
~ tl•e civic good of Leadville. e lsn't just the tour guide al e 'l'abo r . She is also its
bookkeeper. booklet author,
c•rpenter, puinler, a nd janitor
MOst of all, she 1s keeper of the
f&WLand caretaker of its legend. ; "Y"ou see, I own the place," ~e says with a wry smile,
s anding under an antique
andelier needing pohshin.g.
' t seemed so important lo save
t e opera house that I talked my
ido\ived mother into buying 1t.
J
ow' that she's passed on and m a widow loo. it's up to me to
rry on."
She receives no financial help
om the federal or stal e
&Ye r nm en l . H e r o n I y
--alion funds com e from a
iadmission fee.
Tiie opera house was built by
ver king H . A. W. Tabor in 100
ya. When it opened its doors
a.t Nov. 20, 1879, 1l was
ad.,rtised as "the finest
I a ·y h o u s e w e s t o f l h e
ist1sslppi River" Among the
u .ooo boomtown r aldents, lt
was rumored that the marvtlous
new edlfiet> had COllt W ,000, not
counllna furniture and fixtures .
An afternoon do uble h1m glna
Cutled to sidetrack the 800
firs t-nJghtel's who turned up in
everything from Prince Albert
tailcoats to buckskins to see the
s how.
And what shows they were in
the Tabor's heydey
F lorenz Ziegfeld's beautiful
s howgirls danced across the
stage, and Houdini dis appeared
from 1t with the help of a trap
doo r John Phillip Sou sa
marched a band across It
Preacher Henry Wa rd Beecher
exhorted the Lord to hear him as
h~ s tood alone in the center of it
Boxer John L. Sullivan later
sc·orcd a solid knoc kout in the
same spot.
But, like u high-born lady
fallen on hard times and run
down at the heel, the opera
house slowly surrendered its
gleum and gilt to the lean years
of n eglect and unforgiving
elements that raked its brick
exterior at 10,000 feet above sea
level
I n 1955 a rumor s pread
through LeadvHle that the
building's latest owner, the.local
Elks Club. wanted to demolish it
and put in a parking lot.
That's when Mrs. Furman
pers uaded her mother. Florence
Hollister, to rescue the building
with her life savings and a little
bit more.
· · 1 can 'l reveal the price, but
the bank certainly knows,
because in the end we had to go
there to mak e up the
difference, .. says Mrs. Furman.
Born and raised in Albert Lea,
Minn., Mrs. Furman found
herself in Leadville in 1933 as a
summer nanny for a geology
professor and his wife who were
on a field trip
But there were still miners in
the area, and Evelyn Hollister
fel l in love with one. The
following spring she married
Gordon Furman and moved to
an isolated cabin at the Silver
Spoon Mine Below their small,
"TIME BANDITS .. (PG)
primitive home lived on old
woman w h o guarded h e r
property wilh a s hotgun.
She wore 1 unny sacks on her
feet and talked to spirits but was
always eager tor news of the
outside world, so Crequenlly
Mrs Furman's father ln·law
would take her hJs newspaper.
That is how the young bride
came to know the eccentr ic,
des titute widow with the
s till -lovely voice, Baby Doe
Tabor.
The onte-beauuful Baby Doe
was Tabor's second wife. She
married the former storekeeper
after his grubstake an th e
M a tchJess and Little Pittsburg
mines had made him many
tames a milhona1re. But his
sca ndalo u s di vorce from
long-suffering first wife Augusta
ostracized both Tabor and his
Baby Doe from society. When he
lost his wealth In the pa ni<.' of
1893, Tabor sold the opera house,
and its downhill slide began.
At his death in 1899, Baby Doe
returned to Leadville as a
scorned widow shunned by most
of the inhabitants or a town
Tabor's money put on the map
''There a re so many stones
about her it's hard to te ll truth
from fi c tion." says Mrs
Furman. 'but what I remember
mo:,t was ttunk1ng how lonely
s he must have been at the mine
in the winter
"When Mrs. Tabor came down
from the Matchless, she always
wore this riding habit thing, with
a scarf lied around her head
But s he didn't come into town
with gunny sacks on her feel
She hid them in some bushes on
the trail and put on a pair of
button-lop shoes.··
Baby Doe. who'd bee n
married in a $7 .000 wedding
gow n in the presen ce of
President Chester A. Arthur and
half of Congress <but none of
their wives>. was found alone In
her tiny cabin at the Matchless
March 7, 1935 He r body was
frozen.
· • 1 was so sad when I heard
the n ews ... recalls Mrs
NOW PLAYING
EDWUDI lllllTOl
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In the big red fire engine this Fri at 12 noon
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Followed by Santa photos
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Holiday Gift
Art Show /Sole
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°'---~·1 )0 NIGHTLY
•
u..-.12, .. HUttie.Noted
ABC and
Dallas win
top ratings
NEW YORK <AP) -ABC
arabbed fi rst place from CBS in
the n et w or k s' w ee kly
prime-time ratln&s race deapile
th<i conlinulne dimlnance of
CBS' "Dallas " and "60
Minutes,·· according to figures
from the A.C. Nielsen Co.
"Dallas." the top.rated series
in prime lime last season, was
the No l program for the third
consecutive week and for the
fifth time in the seven weeks of
the new TV yea r .
Herc are the week's 10
highest-rated programs:
J:: \. J:: l. )' \ lo: L n fUU \ ,\/11• llU II.\ 11pe111 /11111:'>11
··Dallas ,'· with a rating of 29.4
representing 24. l million homes,
and "60 Minutes," 28.8 pr 23.6
million both C BS, "'Three's
Company," 26.2 or 21.5 m illion,
"Too Close for Comfort,'' 25.3 or
20 .7 m illio n . and
Movie-"Moonraker," 24.3 or 19.9
million, all ABC; "Bob Hope's
Stand-Up-And·Cbeer, for the
Na tio nal Football League's
60th Year," 23 or 18.8 million,
NBC; "Happy Days," 22.8 or
18 7 million. and ··Dynasty,",
22.7 or 18.6 million, both ABC;
"M-A-S-H," 22.2 or IJU million.
CBS . and .. Lavern e and
Shirley," 22 I or 18.1 m1lhon.
ABC.
Furman. "But even then, I
never dreumed that my life
would somehow be linked with
hers, as it has become with the
opera house "
The Fur mans moved into
Leadville an 1937, a nd the young
home m aker open ed a sm all
apphance store The c:ouple ali.o
eventually bought a boarded·UP
house
Today i.he !>llll runs the
appl iance s tore. where a
custom er can buy everything
-from clothes pins and antique
bottles to a washing machine
For convenience, s he has moved
1t 10to the opera house, next to
the ornate lobby
T he opera house is not on the
National Registry of Historic
Building:, But Mrs Furman's
goal is to l-rttnsform 1l into a
s h owpl ace museum 1n her
l1fet1me. all through her own
money and the small admission
fee
Mrs Furman has s lowly
rt-stored most of the filigreed
1 ron chairs upholi.lered in
s<·arlet velvet The frescoed
ceiling 1i. faded, but the curtain's
hand-patnted mountain scene
now gleams.
The remainder of the-Top 20:
.. Hart l o Hart," ABC ;
··Facts of Life," "Loretta Lynn
T he Lady and the Legend,"
and "Geor ge Burns' Early
Christmas Special," all NBC:
Mov1e-"Mary Poppins." .. Dukes
of Hazzard" and .. Magnum,
P I.," idl CBS. and "Love Boat"
and "Fall Guy," both ABC, and
.. Real People," NBC. three-way
tie . ·
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RICH
tlllt)
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The return of the
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"A cheerfully lrTeVerent lark -
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, November 26, 1981 •••
'Paint Your Wtigon' proves bigger is better
8yTOM'11TU oftMINM'I ...........
Bl18er may or may not be better, but In the
case or t.he latest production Ill the llarlequln
Dinner PlaybouJe, lt'a pretty darned good.
lt'a "Palnt Your Wagon," Oranae County 's
first look at the vlntaae Lerner and Loewe musical
tel In lhe gold rush days of the wlld west. And it's
"bll" In many areas, not the leut of whlcb ls in
personnel three of its major perfor mers
resemble the offensive line of lhe Dallas Cowboys,
and they have voices to match.
The Harlequin production is a robust romp
with a nearly all-ma'9 cast !spiced nicely by the
visltlne "Fandango Girls" who swln1 into the
rousingtst can-can you're likely to see on stage>.
And it makes one wonder
why, In a Lerner-Loewe
repertoire that Includes INTERMISSION "M y F a ir Lad y."
"Ca m elot " a n d
.. Brigadoon." no local
theater group has hit upon the idea of staging
"Paint Your Wagon" unltl now.
The s tory is not overly complicated, focusing
on tho mlgratioo to California in the mld·1800s by
thousands or budy souls. e&t'h determined to
strike It rich. Therc'11 an obligatory love 11tory
lnvolvlna the mayor's d»ufi hte r and a young
Mexican, but by and large conntct t1kH a back
seat lo 1howman hip, und the Harlequin offering is
loaded with that.
Olrector AJlan Hunt has whipped toeether a
prodlgious production with an emphasis on vocal
power and hell·for·leather choreo1raphy thu
latter splendldly staged by Jiay Smith. The show
carries the n avor of authenticity throughout and is
thoroughly enjoyable.
H 's an ensemble attraction with nominal
s tarring honors going to Michael Hayward, highly
impressive as the founder and mayor of the gold
s trike town thht bears his name. CoUeen Casey as
his teen.age daughter on the threshold' of
womanhood handles the transition with co.,,foal
credibility, while AmJck Byram· ls excellent 1s the
Mexican prospector who woos her .
Carol Carle has some nice moments a• the
feisty Mormon second wife who's auctioned off to
Hayward by her greedy hus band <Bart Wvhams in
a fine comic performance>. Lyle O'Neil bristles
Freddie Fender not country
Freddie Fende r doesn't consider himself
country although he's got a large following there.
Instead, according to a flyer distributed at his
r ecent performance at the Crazy Horse Saloon in
Santa Ana. Fende r .. always thought of himself a~
a 'rhythm and blues singer.' ..
He certainly does have rhythm. And his
plaintive renditions of "Before the Next Teardrop
Falls" surely is bluesy It almost makes you want
to cry.
Whatever he calls himself, Fender has a
beautiful way or phrasing a tune.
Special favorites with the standing·room-only
crowd at the Crazy Horse included "Teardrop, ..
"Wasted Days and Wasted Nights" and the
foot·slomping "Rancho Grande ...
The San Benito. Texas. native is a prolific
songwriter.
"Once I get a title I can wnte a song ." he told
the audience.
Attired in a lavender and silver tuxedo and
accompanied by his four-piece band -two
guitars, drums and a baby grand -he gave the
Orange County audience a taste of things to come
THE :'1)RT THEATRE
ti!J tJ/bO
MON. Nil c ALL ~cA 1 ~ ~:t.00
Two French Mysteri es
"DEAR INSPECTOR"
JMPfr:ff(S T"lfff RATED PG
.·1·1,.f .<>l\.'•l>'•' t•JPONAllfL l\~All
WHERE
THE REDFERN
GRO\\S
A fRUE STORY
BASED ON THE BOOK ~ ev WILSON RAV.LS ~
· Sltt'1"9 JAMES WHITMORE
I EYERL'I' GARLANO •JACK GINO
LONNY CHAPMAN
And STEW.ART PETERSEN
At e1LLY COLEMAN
••••• llll·lllH[,lSlO H OIJlllOHO IHlflllHAll()HAl
NOW SHOWING
IREA, MOM Ina~ • 529-5339
ORANGE. UA City C...,_ • 634-191 I
WESTMINSTER. UA Mal CiMtna • 819-0546
COSTA MESA. UA CIMMa • 540-0594
"Masterful"
-L A Times, Shella Benson
"Wonderful"
-Newsweek Magazine. Jack Kroll r c===HARI=-==0TS=--0F-=F=1RE===
l
,. LAOO ~OMPIUfY ANO WNIHEA MOS AlUAK -......... o ....... <~<~ o--.__ .... ,_, __ ..,.....,.._
edwards NEWPORT
HU• COAST HWY. &"4ACAaTHU.
• awroa1 e O'lllfTllll 644-0760
by pertorming tunes to be on his next album
The album won't be released until January.
Fe nder quipped. becau!>e .. All lhey play an
November and December is ·Here Comes Santa
Claus.' " ·
"Laughing But I'm Crying, .. a, plaintive ballad
done half in English and half in Spanish with lots
of piano and fiddle backing, seems destined to be a
winner
Ballads are what Fender does best. and this
one is no exception. It's beautifully suited lo his
distinctive voice as it should be because he wrote
it.
Another or lhe tunes he penned, "Wait Until
the Morning Sunshine ... also 1s a strong ballad
offering with plenty of populanty potential
Rounding out his act were lotc; of toe·tappers
s uch as "Lovin' CaJun Style." "Sing Low
Alabama" and "Mexican Rose" plus a medley of
classic <·ountry lunes leading oH with the old Kittv
Wells favoriie. "It Wasn't God Who Made Honky
Tonk Angels" and closing with his own "You 'll
Los e a Good Thing ..
-By Sandie Joy
lo rious. ,, is unliktJy that any other
American Nm this yrar will tXCIJtt1 'The Frendt
LitutenanJ's Woman.'" -c-Sltobl, NIC·TV fTodaJJ
r:i:il ....._.... • .......,....
l!!!J --
_ ... __
NOWPlAYINO
IKWNllT auae CMWMI( WHTMIQTO
Nlwpcw1 Cllledomt Ontflll West llU 0760 534 1SS3 891 3935
NOW PLAYING UnelMAnma
COIUMlU
Soutft Coist ~u
(714) 546 271 t
(!o NUU l(C1"tl'tl , .. , '""""""' ... I
WUTil•TU
UA T•11 C.W-
(714) Hl •143
fAC•-•--aa. ~ Af_,...,.,c.,·d•i••~• fOv_...,..,.._.!_•Mt•'•'*"°" J
e enA""'"°" J eMll•• kumion J11ll6
llllulletll .
J elleWlll-y $teve l\lfltlKll
(.!Mrry .
lleuben S!Mn1 Rey"'°"" J.,.,,., bl•m l rvmllull1Doct0t .
Pttt1Jt {OO Woodllno
StrtllW-lnQ
MHlt-y
CrOO.er Ulle .hn
Ftnotnoo girl\
Ml<-1 HtJWMO
• (611 .... c;.wy Amie• IYrtm .. CM.iCerlt ..... LyltO .... t
. WtllH""'ter """''-..,.., ..,_,.."' • 8111<1 WIN nt"
'. Oov9Ce•"9fllff a.nwuttem• •. Ke l .. J lly.,.
1-.. Kffl"'t EOl(t ..... •••••• .>Miii ... _ Sile!• Ger.en, Kelley lhtn,
W-• 81 ... 11, Krloty L.H Roy
with enthusiasm as the tavern owner, while Walt
Hunter, the glant of a tall cast at S.7, provides
strong support, particularly in his rendition or
"They Call the Wind Maria ..
The aforementioned can·can number, the
choreographic hi ghlight or the show, features the
super·charged Yevette Van Voorhees and her
•BARGAIN MATINEES•
Monday thru Saturday
All Ptrformancea before 5:00 PM
(Except Special Engagements and Holidays)
LA MIRADA MAll Mrrada 01 l o1ecra n1
LA MIRADA WALK ·IH 99.t·2400
NTTl ........ ~
"THI! WATCHl.R
IN THI! WOOOS"-' "· Ul.1<11. ,.._ _
... -.--"AQINCY" ... .... -. ..... -.--
1'111, MT.~-· ,c:= "AAIDl!RI O~ THI! LOST A1'K" _""" ..... -..... ---"CAR•ON COPY".,_ •t:a.U&._,__, -. .. , .......... ----~·L·-'--...-----------"HALLOWEl!N II" .. , '· .. w."""
....~···"··--·--... "McVICAA" 4"' '· .. w,"""
....,._._.~. -•ir-.m
"TIME IANDITI" -•a:-.••--""----LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALK·IN
• •• .,.. . 'Tl
"AAIDl!RS Of' THI! LOST ARK"
I .... _ _., aTIMO
u .. ). tt ..... , ... ,. ,,
"OHL 'I' WHEN I LAUGH" 1111 ••• kll. .....,.
"SEEMS LIKE OLD TIMES" -I -·-
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WAllC·IH
Foeully Al Del Amo
21l/6M•9211 ... ,....::..
"RAGGEDY MAN" 1N1 •ue..•JA.••U-.uo.-
LAGUNA
.... .-........... -
facull'f 01 Candl•wood
213 / 531·9580
_ ... ___ _
'THE FRENCH UEUH:NAHrs WOMAN''1111 ................. .., ..
"McVICM"fll •ue.•a.-"QUAO..MHl!NIA" 1111 ·--·--··--__ ...
"ST'eVIE"INt
......... t:ll. ..... -
so. COAST WALK·IN
Sautll COCH! Hhway
01 ttaadway
494-1514
ntn~--. ntrf e-.m "TIMI 8ANDITI" 1N1 _,., .. _
"''· -1:11 .... ' ... -
---·--·~~·.= ..... -.-.----
... .,. """', O..• 7• JO \fl ._. 1: U ,._, 1•-'.., h u
IMPOIHAMT NOT ICE' CMILOREM UMDER 12 FRU! Htri..r ,., w ..... llH ,_,_ '" 6. :ID• ht S.o Heh 6.00 , ..
CM-fl $OUNO • YOUll 4111 CAii llADIO 1$ YOiJ11 ~
11J NO AM CAii IWllO WITll IClHITION ACa'JJaaY llOlll'Oi
-.-G "" '°'"*1. t• M4 ClllHI OllM-ICI at ON "" IWIO
ANAH!tM
ANAHEIM ORIVE·IN
fr•••OY ti ot lemofl SI
179·9150 w-·--"AOl!NCY" 1•1 -"ICANNu.I" 1111
Cltll JI SOUtlO
8UINA PAllJ
'*""""" -"SATURDAY THE 14TH" --"FllHOllH PLOT OF °"· P'U MANCHU" 1Nt
. Cr!!!!'~ ---
una.au T--~"aODY HEAr' 1111 -"PATERNITY" -
Cttot fl-..,,.. --0#--1111 -BUENA PARK DRIVE IN
..,,._nc ____ lfll -uncotn Ave we11 o< illlon A.UCI, • ~ I I .,......,
121-4070
BUfNA PAii~
LINCOLN ORIVE·IN .... _,_...,.,...,,nsY.~tTI
"Tllff aANOITI" 1Nt
t1nco1r. ••• ••., o• '"°"
121-4070
· ii·l''ill"I
Son O••oo J rwy o• lrooll11irtl (So)
962·2411
""ISIMtN~'!g
Hl ·WAY 39 DRIVE IN
Ttm ___ CNI.,,
.. AA THUR" t"'t -"PATERNITY" -
Clllt ff SOUNO LR-··--"AOl!NCY" c111 -"ICANNl!JllS" fllll
CIM JI SOUNO
LA HA81tA
LA HABRA DRIVE lt4
._ ........ ~-........... _
171-1162
I J~ANGf
-"THI! f<RllCO IOD" t"1
n.eY1.Ma1tttaRRQA WWW •~
"SATUIU>AY THE UTM" --"f1£NOla.4 PLOT O~ °"· P'U MANCHU" ,_ Clllf JI SOU,.O
lfo(ll a111a SO OI
Gofffll GrOYt fr-t
~ ..............
"RAIDERS OF THE LOil Al'IK" -.... "RAIH THE TITANlC" -Ctrot JI SOUllO ----___ ,_
"HALLOWEEN II" 1111 -"DEAD a IWIU£0" flll
CtltE A SOUND --·----· "RAIDERI OF TH£ LOST Al'IK" ....
O RANGE DRl\/HN
Santo Ano Jrwy
• Sro•e Co<tege
558·7022 ..,,.--·°'--'"' J . -..,,._nc_•_c ----""':· --I
A•1 I IA.. A 1 • A"t
MISSION DRIVE IN
. ,_ ., ,, " ... "
WARNER lH/11/f IN
'#0111t1 A•• •••I OI .. oc~ ....
M7·1 ti
noe~-.
"HALLOWllH II" C111 -"l~NGI M.HAVl<H'" 1111 -·----... --·--=:---r -·-··---
wf'll·drlllcd chanteuses Shela1h Garren, Wendy
Bissell, Krlsty Lee Roy and Kelley Ryan t who als01n
doubles eflectlvely us Williams' number one wlfe).tl
BPuce Wlnunt impresses aa both a larcenouf'·U
maner and u •hlfty 1ambler. while Ed Krie1et'fl
provides a restrained contrut as an Entll•h'' miner. •h
Technical excellence ls borne out by Bracf11
Elsberry's richly detailed scenic de lgn and Br11cefl
lleydon's Intricate lighting effects, both of which~
lend a realistic tone lo the show.
.. Paint Your Wagon" is a perfect choice rorN
the holiday season. a full-throttle musical with •"'"
energetic cast which wall play nightly except
Mondays th rough Valentine 's Day at thel-'
lla rlequin. 3503 S. Harbor Blvd .. just north of•J
Costa Mesa.
NEW!
Every Sunday
'II
I
11
I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTffhureday, November 28. 1981
ULICTEO -Kennt>lh
E. MOWl'CY. on: deun or utimissioni. u nc.I
records. huh been
el ected
pn~~t tenl·clect of the
Pocit)l' Associutio11 or
(."t>llegaatl' Re~tstrurs
u n d Adm1 ss l o n s
Offitc l's. H e 1s a
I' C S l d l' 11 l Of <.: 0 S l a
Mcstl.
.
Drug
device
laws OK'd
LOS ANGELES <AP>
-The state Court of
Appeal h as uphe ld
ordinances in Los
An&&le s County ,
Glendale and the city or
Los Angeles prohibiting
retail display of drug
paraphernalia to
minors.
The rullng by the 2nd
AppeUate District in Los
Angeles overturned last
year's Superior Court
decisions th at the
ordinan ces wer e
unconstitutionally
vague.
Th e ordinance
adopted by the Los
Angeles City Council
prohibited retailers
from allowing minors
unaccompanied by an
adult to enter a room
w h ere drug
paraphernalia is sold .
.Paraphernalia was
d!i$cribed as any device
~igned primarily for
smoking or ingesting
c.~rtain controlled ~bstanc es . The
ndale law de fined
!J:aphernalia similarly
~ specified also roach
c;r9?s, cigarette papers
~ rollers "designed or
~m m onl y used for
S--lJloking o f the
.$iibstance."
he county ordinance
regulate d sale of
~aphernaha displayed
~ adverti s ed o r
P.~Omoted 1n a w ay ~~asonably suggesting
· i use for controlled
ad}>stances. {;.
~ ....
·fucson
.~ ~
Qi ck name
dtosen
TUCSON, Ariz. IAP)
-Philip E. Johnson was
s unbathing when he
came up with a winning
nickname for Tucson:
"Th e Su n s hine
Factory "
T he nickname, which
replaces "Old Pueblo."
was s elected o ut of
about 4,000 entries The
contest was sponsored
by the city's Convention
and Visitors Bureau and
th e newspaper. lhe
Arizona Daily Star
"W e wanted
$0mething th at was
gblng to be different,"
said Don Sandstede, one
o( the judges. "It was
tbe best entry we had -
In credible as it may
SO\lOd~'
Sandsted e s aid he
S.-J1pport ed "The
9:\.ansh tn e Factor y "
hcause it elicited a n
ht\age or "a little guy
l"unning a round Ii ke
elves or dwarfs. making
little sunshines.'·
11lead lice , .
. wssening
-SACRAMENTO <AP)
...:.. Authorities say head
lice don't appear to be
as exte n s i ve o n
Sacramento County
school children as last,
year. :
But Dr. Paul Hom.
chief county disease
control officer. said the
situation could worsen
after Christmas -cold
w1e a t h e r a n d t h e1
doseness of r elatives
d{arinl vacations seem tq encourage lice.
For unk.nown reasons,
there was a worsening ot the lice problem In
Ute last two years. Five
yoars ago, the area was
(airly free or lice.
~ :
')
; DAILY PILOf ~ ta.ASSIAID ADS '
842•1818 •
•
Corigress Watch cites auto contrj.hutions
WASHINGTON (AP > 'The
Na tlonal Automobile Dealers
A uocl at Ion made camp a l1n
contributions totalling more th~n
$500,000 lo members or Congress wl1o
ure trying to veto a regulation
governing used car dealers, says the
public Interest organization Congress
Wat.ch. But spokesmen for several
senators listed as receiving NADA
contributions said after the report
was released Monday that there was
no connection between the campaip
funds and their opposition to the
regulation.
Congress Watch . whi c h was
founded by cons umer advocate
Ralph Nader, said the contributions
were made over lhe 30·month period
that ended last June
The Federal 1'rude Commission
issued an order in Augu t requiring
that used car dealers Inform their
customers of any mechanical derects •
they know about.
Congress. howeve e
itself last year to vet FTC.
regulatiorui within 90 days o when
they are issued. So far, n y half
the members of Con gres ave
become co·sponsors or resoluUo s to
veto the FTC used car rule. ' or 206 House CO·Sponsor • 175
received a total of more than S476,000
from the car dealers association.
"If Conitress vetoes this rule, 1t
will be inviting business groups that
can't make their case before an
impartial dec11slon-m1.1ker on the
basis or the facts and the law to come
to Congress and make their case on
the basl.6 of" the contributions. said
J ay Angoff of Congres11 Watch.
Congress Walch said nine of the 13
re presentatives who got at least
S7 ,500 are co·sponsors or veto
resolutions and five of the s ix
senators who received $9,700 or more
are backing Lhe veto move.
Senators who i:eee1ved al least
$9,700 and arc co·sponsorlng the
r esolution were J ames Abdnor,
R ·S .D.; Charle s E . Grassley,
R-lowa: Ernest F Hollings, 0 -S.C .
Paul Laxalt. R-Nev , and Steven D.
Symms, R-ldaho.
Responding lo CongreH Watch,
Grusley spokeswoman Beverly
llubbel said, "He'1 always been a
champion of Cree enterprise. ll is
naturaJ that business aroups would
t•ontrlbote to that kind of candidate."
Mike Freeman. Abdnor's press
secretary, said. "If Jim Abdnor were
selling his soul to everyone who
The study said representatives
receiving at least S7 ,500 an d
co-s ponsoring the veto resolution
were Hank Brown , R-Colo.; Martin
Frost, D Texas; Steve Gunderson,
R·W1 s .. Ray Kogovsek. D·Colo.;
Lynn Martin, R-111 ; Stan Parris,
R·Va .; Harold S Sawyer. R·Mich ..
Vin Weber, R·Minn., and ·Frank R. Wolf, R-Va .
out the carP-et anll
Resists soil . stains, shock,
and wear. Patented built-in
pro tection that lasts.
Ansoll
Allied Corp. Nylon
E3~~
Cut and Loop
Sculptured pa ttern beauty in Anso JV nylon. the
ultimate carpet fiber for easy care . Soft, natural
multi-tones in a swirled texture unmatched for
beauty and wear. An elegant carpet that will add
richness to any room.
Sale Price 512!!,.UqlL•
Saxony Plush
A deep, thick plush carpe t styled for today's dec-
orating needs. Beautiful in a wide selection of
rich. clear colors. Crafted of Anso IV, the out-
standing nylon with built-i n soil and stain
protec t ion . to assure carefree and relaxed
enjovme nt. · Sale Price 521~!,.u-..
Multi-Level
Multi-level interest and appeal in Anso IV, the
remarkable nylon with soil, stain and wear pro-
tection bwlt into the fiber to last-and static
shock control. This textured beauty in fashon
colors is the perfect dramatic highlight for your
decorating scheme.
Sale Price 514!!.,.U ••
Tone-on-Tone
Richly styled, this deep sumptuous pile in natu-
ral tone-on-tone shading will accent any room.
Crafted to rigorous sta ndards with yarns of Anso
IV, the outs tanding carpet nylon, it will retain
its beauty through year after year of rugged
perform a nee.
Don't ~ltSAnso·w. Sale Price 5 18~!,.u • .,
Best of all, you'll find carpets of ANSO IV nylon available in a wide range of decorator colors,
styles and textures~all with built-in soil and stain resistance) and all at irresistibly low prices.
Save up to 330Jo on . carpets of sOil
and stain r~sistant Anso IV nylon
STORE HOURS:
Mon. thur Sat,_
9:00 am-5:30 pm
Mon. & Frt. Tiii 9
GARDEN QROVE
12802 Knott StrHt
(I 81k. No. Oerden Oro¥e Frwy)
CE ANTOS
11~ South Street
(AcloM fforn IN c.nftoe Mall)
(71•) .... N57 • (213) SM-1129
'
PLACENTIA
127 E. Yorba Linda
(1 Ilk. W.11 of KrMfMI')
(714) .. Ma21
..
(21 .....
I
Since 1930 ets a~
LONG BEACH
340 E. 4th Street
CMroM fforn .... C21••m1
HUNTINGTON BEACH
15073 Goldenwest
(lehlnd Don JoM'• a COco'•I
(714) •3-7511. (213) Hl-2111
Ml .. ION VIEJO
2SOl8 Marguerite
(...., "-ipfl'tl
(114t .,...7444
J
Dally Pilat r.
THURSDAY, NOV. 26, 1981
TELEVISION CS
COMICS C6
CLASSI Fl ED C7
The Vikings are faced
with powerful foe Friday
in CIF football playoffs.
It's the veer vs. wishbone . .C2.
Sailors dethroned as 4-A polo chaillps
By ROGER CARLSON
Of, ... DMly """' s~
LONG BEACH Newport Harbor's Hlgh's
Sailors went 9: 50 during the second half without a
ioal and it proved fatal as Long Beach Wil son
High •s Bruins rallied from three goals off the
pace. then bung on to win, 12·11 Wednesday night
UI the CIF 4·A water polo title ~ame.
The victory snaps Newport Harbor's four.year
championship streak. giving the Bruins the 4·A
title' in their first·ever appearance In the finals.
Before an estimated crowd of 2,500 at Belmont
Plata, the Bruins, who appeared lo be submerged
with a 7.4 deficit in the second quarter rallied with
s even straight goals to assume an 11·7 le ad
midway through the fourth quarter.
The Sailors or Coach Bill Barnett regrouped.
and amazingly got back into it. But in the end, two
Marmo
s hots in the last 40 seconds hll wood and the Bruins
were home tree.
"Mis takes, we made the m and they
capitalized." said Barnett. "We just turned it over
too many times." ·
During the fatal third period when the Bruins
outscored Newport, 4·0, the Sailors were guilty of
eight turnovers, five more than their opposition.
Mike Howell connected with four minutes left
to pue the margin to 11·8. but the Sailors were to
hH wood after that and appeared completely out of
it.
J .R. Salvatorre, however, stole the ball and hit
on a fast·break with 2:04 left. tben stole the ball
again and Howell connected with 1:41 to ao.
Jim Bennan sent ~he crowd into a frenzy with
1: 07 remaining when he hit a penalty shot to tie it
at 11 . but Eric Elder turned the Sailors back by
connecting with 56 seconds to give Wil son its final
margin.
The Sailors got two more chances. but each
time it was just a matter of inches separating a
score from a thump of hitting wood.
Salvatorre was Newport Har bor's leading
scor er with five goals, Howell had four and
Bennan two.
Wilson countered with six goals from Jim
Peligrino whose shots seemed to have eyes. Elder
had a pair. so did Randy Reed. The Bruins'
leading scorer for the season, Doug Bolicek. had
only one goal
The Sailors appeared to have it their way for a
long time as Be nnan broke a 2·2 game with a shot
from the right as a Wilson defender let down ror a
moment coming after Chris Woolfolk's steal
Salvatorre added his third goal of the first
period with a medium·range shot to push the
DAVE THOMPSON
Marmo
Edison tops All-county picks
Lineman of year DiBernardo heads Orange Coast selections
By ROGER CARLSON
Of u,. o.lly ...... SIMI
Sllnset League champion Edtson High paces
the All-Orange County football selections with ten
berths, including lineman of ttie year Rick
Di Bernardo. a hard·hltting linebacker. as chosen
by the Daily Pilot. ~ao sinfled ~t for hls performNtce la Dave
Tho ~ o M.,_.na Hlth. • the Oraqe County Coa of the Year \n a season which bas round the
Vik ings in the CIF Big Five Conference second
round with a 10·1 overall record.
Back of the Year is El Dorado High's Cr aig
Rutledge, a 6--0, 170-pounder who is a repeat first
team selection after contributing four
game-winning touchdowns fo r the Hawks.
Orange Coast area athletes singled out include
10 first team, nine second team and 11 third team
players.
Edison's rirsl team stars include quarterback
Ken Major and running back Dave Geroux. tackle
John Cuviello. punter Troy Ri chardson and
Di Bern~rdo . while Marina quarterback Ken
Laszlo. receiver J eff Frandsen and defens ive back
Dave Hargrove were also honored with first team
laurels. or the 68 berths available. 34 schools shared in
the selections.
All.Orange County
First Team Ofrense
Pos. Player, school
TE -Greg Bolin, Fountain Valley
T -Cha rlie Steele, El Modena
G -Gene Murphy. El Dorado
C -Nick Gotovac, Es peranza
G -Jerry Heidrich. El Modena
T -John Cuviello. Edison
WR-Jeff F'randsen. Marina
WR-Greg Locy, Mater Dei
B Ken Major. Edison
Hl. Wt.
6·3 220
6·2 235
6·2 210
6·1 225
5·10 200
6-2 240
5-10 155
6·4 190
6·4 200
KEN MAJOR
Edison
DAVE GEROUX
Edison
Yr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr
Sr.
B -Ken Laszlo, Ma rina
B-Dave Geroux, Edison
B-Rod Emery, Fountain Valley
Flnt Te1m Defense
DE-Sean Foy, El Dorado
DT-Cbrla Jaha1an1 =on Viejo
NG-lobn Gammon. n)' HUis
OT-Walt P9denon, Paclflca
DE-Erle Coaldey, Villa Park
LB-Rick DiBemardo, Edison
LB-Brent Bieshaar, Villa Park
LB-Daryl Medding, ~ennedy
DB -Craig RuUedge, El Dorado
DB-Steve Rabon. ~vit4l
DB Dave Hargrove, Marina
DB-Chris Alvarez. Los Alamitos
Kicklng Game
Punter Troy Richardson, Edison
PK -Keith Vanderhoff. El Modena
Second Team Offense
TE -Kelly Bengford, Pacifica
T Bodie Newcomb, Ser vite
G -Brian Lopker. Mater Dei
C -John Katnjk, Foothill
G -Craig Dumity. Edison
T Chris Bakke. Brea-Olinda
WR-Greg Eskridge, Edison
WR-Mike Bowles. Cypress
B -Mark Templeton, FQOthill
B -Henning P\?terson, Esperanza
B -Mike Willes. Fullerton
B -Damon Sweazy, El Toro
Second Team Dt:fense
DE Bryce Malavasi. Edison
OT Ron Malerstein. Marina
NG -Pat Cemen, Marina
OT-Steve Garten . Valencia
6·0 165 Sr.
6·0 216 Sr .
5·9 110 Sr.
6-1
6·2 5-· 8·2
6·0
6·3
S·ll
5-10
6·0
6·1
5·11
5·10
210
~
218
175
218
180
170
170
190
190
170
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr
Sr .
Sr
Sr.
Sr .
Sr
Sr
Sr
6·5 215 Sr
5·10 160 So
6·0 205 Sr
6·2 225 Sr.
6·3 230 Sr
S..11 200 Jr
6·2 214 Sr.
6·3 215 Sr.
6·1 18S Sr.
6-0 175 Sr.
6·2 190 Sr.
5·11 180 Sr
5·11 170 Sr.
5·10 170 Sr
6-0 l91 Sr.
6-0 200 Sr
6·1 201 Sr.
6·3 235 Sr
JEFF' FRANDSEN
Marina
TONY CUVJELLO
Edison
DE-Brett Trickett, El Toro
LB George Rosenbaum, CapoVal
LB-Mike Adelman. Pacifica
LB-Dean Roberts, Ftn. Valley
DB-David Contreras, Santa Ana
DB-Vince Lopez, La Quinta
08-Greae Haly, FoolhilJ
DB-Cam Riley, Sunny Hills
Tblrd Team Offense
6·3 200 Sr
5· 11 170 Sr
6-0 200 Sr
5·11 205 Sr.
6·1 180 Sr
6-0 170 Sr
6-2 170 Sr
5.9 165 Sr.
TE Paul Really, Servile 5 11 185 Sr
T Paul Devich, Esperanza 6·2 235 Sr
G Greg Victorino. Ftn. Valley 5-10 205 Sr
C Rick Victores. Anaheim 5-10 180 Sr
G Mike Alvarez. Servite 6·1 220 Sr
T Mike Smith, Estancia 6·6 245 Sr
WR Joel Seay, Fountain Valley 6·0 175 Sr
WR Abel Cachola. Estancia 5·8 155 Sr
B Jim McCahill. Estancia 6·2 195 Sr
B Mo Printup. Buena Park 6-0 180 Sr
B J imTorok,EIModena 5·10 170 Sr
B Kennedy Pola. Mater Oe1 6·1 215 Sr
Third Team Derense
DE Scott Walkie. La Habra 6·2 190 Sr
OT Bob Lopez, El Toro 5·10 215 Sr
NG Kevin Kielty, Mi ssion Viejo 5·10 175 Sr
DT Rick Ponder, Edison 5 10 211 Sr
DE-Mark Alario, Canyon 5·11 190 Sr
LB Randy Reyes, Corona del Mar 5.7 180 Sr
LB David Keith. Esperanza 6·0 185 Sr
LB Damon Berryhill. Lag Bch 5·10 190 Sr
DB Rob Berr y, Newport Harbor 6·1 170 Sr
DB Mark Bondi, Irvine 5-1 l 165 Sr
DB Martin Nolan, Los Amigos 5-10 165 Sr
DB Craig Rakhshani. Edison 6-1 185 Sr
Lineman of the Year: Di Bernardo t Edison 1
B. of the Year . Rutledge (El Dorado>
Coach of the Year Dave Thompson I Manna 1
DAV ID HARGROVE
Manna
TROY RICHARDSON
Edison
Sailors' advantage lo 4·2
Later, Newport regained alb two point bulge
when Dave O'Donnell stole the ball to set up
Salvatorre's fast break
Finally, Howell hit a pair td' make 1t 7 4 with
1 50 left in the half
But then that 9: 50 of scoreless play Newport
mistakes and the Sailors were forced to
relinquish a its 4-A crown after a four year reign.
Villa Park defeated Century League rival
Foothill, 10-6. for the 3-A title. La Puente won the
:.! A erown with a 9·6 win over Crespi
Laker streak
reaches nine
LA rips San Antonio, 111-96
SAN ANTONIO, Texas <AP1 Los Angeles.
getting more ball movement and balanced scoring
under new Coac·h Pal Riley, rolled over San
Antonio 117·96 Wednesday night for the Lakers'
ninth straight !'lat1onal Basketball Assoc1at1on
win.
Jamaal Walkes. who ll'<i the Lakers with 26
points, said his tt:am 's morale wa:. high since
Riley replaced Paul Westhead a'> head t•oach last
week
"THE MORE movement on ofrense helps."
Wilkes said. "We arc in a much better frame of
mend We had a great overall effort Our defense
took San Antonio out of. their offense and we gave'
them a good lacking on their own court ..
Wednesday night's game was the second tame
Los Angeles has defeated San Antonio under R1lh.
while the Spurs had administered a 28-point
blowout to the Lakers under Westhead here two
weeks ago
Norm Nixon added 24 points. Magic Johnson
contributed 19 and Mike Cooper and Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar collected 15 apiece as the Lakeri,
won their sixth consecut1 ve road game and handed
the Spurs their first defoat in llem1sFa1r Arena
thas season
SAN ANTONIO started off well by outscoring
the Lakers 12·2 in a stretch midway through the
first period and held on for a 33-30 first quarter
lead.
But Nixon struck for eight pomts in the second
p\reod and Los Angeles grabbed a 58 55 halftime
lead after the score "as tied eight time-. and the
lead changed hands nine tames
Mitch Kupchak sank a free thro"' with I 48 to
go in the second period to give the Laker:. the lead
for good
KUP('llAK HIT the first two baskets 1n the
second half and the Lakeri, outscored the Spuri.
16·6 to open a 13 point lead that San Antonio
rouldn't overcome
Los Angeles led 90 78 entering the final period
in which San Antonio Coach Stan Albeck and
backup center Dave Corzine were ejected for
vigorously prole!>ting call!> h) referee Joey
Crawford.
The win lifted the Lakcrs to an 11 4 record
while the Spurs· th1rd-stra1ght loss droppt•d them
to 9 ·4 George Gervin led San Antonio with 24
pomts and Mark Olberding had 18
Edmonton
crowns Kings
EDMONTON. Alberta 1AP> Wayne Gretzky
continued his incredible scoring pace wath four
goals and combined with linemates Dave Lumley
a nd Dave Bunter for 12 points to lead the
Edmonton Oilers to an 11 4 National Hockey
League victory over thl' Lol' Angeles Kings
Wednesday night.
Gretzky scored twice in the first period -
when the Oilers took a 3 0 lead added another in
the second. when the Oilers increased the margin
to 7-1. and scored his 28th of the season early an the
third period It was the second time this season
Gretzky has scored four goals in a game and gave
him 28 m 24 contests
Lumley and Hunter. teamed on a line with
Gretzky the last several games. continued their
offensive output by combining on Gretzky's first
goal and two goals by Paul Coffey m the second
period. Lumley added his fifth goal of the season
late in the third period with Gretzky getting an
assist>.
Mark Messier had two goals for Edmonton,
with others coming from Brett Callighen and Risto
Siltanen.
Los Angeles got goals in the second period
from Marcel Dionne and Larry Murphy and in the
third period by Trevor J ohansen.and Steve Bozek.
Oilers goaltender Grant F'uhr stopped 38 shots
while Jim Rutherford faced 31 Edmonton shots in
the Kings' goal. '
I Haden gets
nod Sunday
(
.Golden West poloists advance to state tournament
, From AP dlapakbea
Pal Haden. a reserve for the
past three weeks. will start at
quarterback for the Rams
against the Pitts burgh Steelers
on Sunday, a spokesman for the
National Football League team
said Wednesday.
Ra m$ Coach Ray Ma lavasi
sald, ':Pal Haden will be my
quarte('back Cor the remainder
of the season."
' Dan 'Pastor lni, cut by tbe
Oakland Raiders earlier thl1
year, had started three straight
1amea at quarterback for the
Ram1. ·
By ED ZINTEL
OftMo.lly ...........
Once they got the first half out of the
way, it was clear sailing for the Golden
West College water polo team.
The defending state champion
Rustlers earned a berth in tbe
upcoming state tournament wtth a 9·$
victory over Loni Beach City Colle1e
Wednesday to win t he Southern
Callfornia championship at Cerritoe
College. I
The win upped Golden W11t•1
seasonal record to 26-0 and al\erward,
as he slood poolside In bll famWar
cowboy hat, Coach Tom Rerm1tad
talked of hla ,toy.
·'The reaaon we keep wlnninc la the
players," he said modeatly. ''We've cot
•
tre mendous balance and that should
carry us in the state tournament."
The state tourney will be 'held D:?c. 4
al DeAnza College and GWC wilJ be the
No. 1 seeded team. The other competing
schoofs will be Modesto and West
Valley from the Northern CallfornJa
secUon and Long Beach , the second
place flnlsher ln the Southern California
sec lion.
Golden West had Its hands full early
in the champlonablp 1ame Wednesday
aa Lona Beach •cored midway tbr'oufh
the (lrat ~r to take a 1-0 lead.
Scott tied the acore for the
RuaUera near the end of the quarter and
tb• teem• exchanfed 1oal1 before
GWC'a Guy Baker 1cored with Juat
three second.I remalnlnt to ctve the
Rustlers a 3-2 halftime lead.
"That was a definite turning point,"
said Hermstad afterward'. "Tom Grall
made a hell of a pass to Baker and then
lt was Just an indMdual effort."
Golden Weal then blew it open in the
third quarter, acorina four unanswered
potnts to take a '7·2 lead. Carl Salyer
scored two of the goals and AJan Chac!On
and Brett Del Valle st'Ored the others.
Chacon'• 1oa1 came on a fast-break
play. ending with a perfect pus from
Baker lnto the mlddle to set Chacon up
squarely in front of \be goal.
"That'• what's dolng It for us," said
Hermstad, "balance.·•
Hermstad aaJd before a.be 1ame h•
was leary of the 1corln1 \hr.at poeed by
Long Beach's combination of Mike
F adgen and T o m Martinea. But
M arlinez, guarded in the bole poslUon
by Baker. failed to score, and Fadgen
scored two goals, one late In the game
when the outcom e had long been
settled.
"Our shooting was poor in the first
half and I told the kids that since Long
Beach was unable to do much on thelr
6-<>n·~ opportunities, we were lucky n9t
to be tralllng."
Del Valle, Salyer and Baker shared
scoring honors each with two coal•
while Robert Thomas, Chacon ud Lurtd
all had one for the RU1tler1.
Goalie Jim Rau had some ftM .....
late ln the 1ame to pr..,.. tM WIB.
In the 1ame few teeGDcl lllC!e, Llil
Beach nlpPed Saddlebas. N. .
\I>
f
I '
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thul'lday, November26. 1981
;;UCLA, Michigan
·•violating agreement?
' a From AP dlspatche
CHICAGO The Big Ten 1s [i]
keeping a tight lip with "no • •
t·omment" on what h as been a
violation of the "gentlemen's agreement" that
" football teams in the conference and the Pac·lO
'' do not play each other in any postseason game
c1tcept the Rose Bowl.
Eyebrows were raised whef' Michigan of
·1 the Big Ten and UCLA or the Pac·lO last
. , Saturday landed in the Bluebonnet Bowl to be
played in Houston New Year's Eve
The Big Ten had agreed to send the loser of
the Ohio State-Michigan game to the Bluebonnet
Dowl where it was expected that a Big Eight
team , most likely M1ssour1 , would be the
opponent. Suddenly, UCLA popped up in a most
., embarrassing fashion.
u The Big Ten and the then Pac 8 entered
their first flve·year Rose Bowl agreement back
an 1946 and since have met annually in the
grandaddy or all bowls.
For years, the Big Ten would not allow its
members to play in any other bowls until that
policy was changed on May 12. 1975. Five
months later. the conference's Joint Group or
faculty represenl1tlives and athletic directors
voted ·'that under no circumstances would a Big
Ten team meet a Pac-8 t eam m a postseason
football game othe r than the Rose Bowl."
Quote of the day
"When we turn it around, I'm going to
boo the fans... New Jersey Nets Coach
Larr y Brown, angered by the hooting of
his te am on its home court
Penguins cool off Montreal
Rookie Pat Graham scored two
goals and goalie Michel Dion stopped
' 39 shots as the Pitts burgh Penguins
shaded Montreal. 2· 1 Wednesday night in the
N at;onal Hockey League The loss e nded a
fi\'e·game unbeaten s treak for Montreal. while
the Penguins climbed to 7-1·2 in their last 10
ga mes . Rick Seillng's 13th goal of the
season at the 25-second mark or the second
period s n<.ipped a l ·l tie and sent Buffalo to a 3·1
conquest of the slumping Detroit Red Wings
The win was Buffalo's third in a row and
saddled Detroit with its fourth loss in five
iiames Marc Tardif and Mario Marois
both tallied an the third period to help Quebec
rally for a 3.3 tie with Hartford Dave
Silk's bal·khand scor e with 2. 29 left lifted the
New York Rangers to a 3·3 deadlock with
Toronto Was hington s Darren Veitch
scored has second goal of the night with 45
seconds to play to gave the Capitals a 4·4 tie with
Mrnnesot<.i
Kansas football coach rehired
Don f'ambrough , who led Kansas
l n1vers1t:-. to its f irst wanning
football season an rive years. was
fl'\\ arded Wednesday with a two-year c•xtenMon
on has contract. The announcement by Athlel1<'
Director Bob Marcum , followed by one day
F.1mbrou~h 's selel'laon as Bag Eight Confere nce
l'oach of the Y e ar b ) the Assoc iated
P ress Even though Houston Oilers' owner
Bud Adams acknowledges that the team·s
recent pt>rformance displeases him. he says
that Ed Bllt>s .... 111 r eturn as head coarh next
H'<.ir ·'f'q~ never l'ven thought about firing him
( lltles 1 Gl'lt1ng rad of ham 1s the last thing on
m) mind." said Adams
Tr pucka sparks Detroit in OT
Rookie forward Kelly 1'rtpuella m
scored si x polnts ln overtime
Wednesduy nlaht to lift Detroit to a
129 122 NBA victory over Kamu11
City. A mlssed s hot from d1rcclly beneath the
baiskct set up a 17-toot jvmv shOt by Kanaas City
guard Phil Ford that tied the game 117·117 with
19 seconds ten In reaulation play Tnpucka,
who had 17 point~ overttll. scored the first roor
points In overtime ..
Larry Bird hit a season·high
32 points and Robert P arish
1u.lded 20 as Boston overc ame
a s putt e ring sl1tr t and
breezed to it:. I llh victory In
13 gumc:.. t:t2 lOt over
Golden Stalt' Juhnny
Davis scored 10 of his 28
points in the finul four
minutes to spark Indiana lo Ii
Tr1pucko 1 O 8 I O 2 t r i u m p h o v er
Cleveland. The defeat was the seventh' in eight
games for the Cavaliers The Seattle
Supe rSonics traded forward James Balley to
New Jersey Wednesday for rookie Ray Tolbert
and a second-round draft choice in the 1984
college draft . Center Bill Cartwright or
New York has a chip rracture in his right ring
finger and his playing s tatus will be determined
orl u day·to-day basis. lhl' Knicks sa id
Wednesday.
Yanks may go after Reggie Smith
The Nl'w York Yankel's are •
showing an interest tn free agent
Reggie Smith, ac..:ordrng to tht' New
York Post. The new:.paper ~aid Smith. a
36-vear-old outfielder with the Dodgers before
declaring his free agency following the 1981
season, was examined Tuesday in New York by
Or . J o hn Bonamo, the Yankees' t e am
phys1c1an A spokesman for the Yankees said
Wednt>sday, ·we have nothing' to say about the
story no comment." The Soviet Union
won the gold m edul an the men's team
compet1t1on Wednesday night at the world
gymnastic~ compet1t1on with Japan takrng the
sil ver and China the bronze medals Relief
pitcher Ken Brelt was placed on waivers by the
Kansas City Royals, one day after the club
ended its exh1b1tion tour of Japan The wife
of New York Yankees patcher Tommy John
gave birth Wednesday to a 7·pound l)oy. officials
at New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center
said The baby. born to Sally and John at 9 a m .
has not yet been named
Television, radio
Following are the lop sports events on l \/
today Ratings are .••.• excelh nl , .•• worttl
watching, •• fair: • fo rget 1t
~ 9:30 a .m .• C h annel 4 ./ ./ ./ ./
NFL FOOTBALL : 1<.ansa) City at Detroit
Announcers: Dic k E.nberg a nd Merlin Olsen
Bill Kenney, the forn1t-r San Clementt-l-11gn
and Saddleback College star now leading the
Kansas City Chiefs, will be on the firing line
today. The Chiefs hope to take over a temporary
lead 1n the American Conference Weste rn D1v1s1on
with a win tooay while Detroit 1s struggling for a
National Conference wild-card berth E:ric 1-11pp1e
directs the Lions offense
~ 1 p .m ., Chennel 2 ./ ./ ./
NFL FOOTBALL: Chteago at Dallas.
Announcers: Pat Summe rall and John
Madden
All the Bears can hope tor 1s to play a spoiler
role for the rest ot the !>ea50n Dallas, bt>hino Danny White's passing ano Tony Oor'i>e tt 's
running, 1s tied with Philadelphia for the lead 1n
t he National Conference £:aste rn (J1111s 1on
standings and 1s v1rtually as'>urro ot a playoff
be rth.
F-ootball
l<.N X ( 1070),
(1070)
Hockey
11150)
RADIO
l<.an sa'i> City at Dt-tro1t , ct J(J" 111
Chicago al Dallas, 1 p m , KN X
Ki ngs a l Calgary 6 20 om . ~PkZ
El Toro, Capo Valley, MV take to CIF road
Sea View League ch<.1mp1on El
Toro and South Coast League
c·o <'hampions M1 ss1on Viejo and
Capistrano Valley are all on the
road Friday 1n t he second round
of the CIF football playoffs as
I he second round unfolds
El Toro <7·41. with Damon
Swc·azy·s running the catalyst
.afte r di s po ~i ng or highly
ma-u
1802 £ ll*lla
I blot• •· I'll Ntwpo<t fwy•
t3J.ll80
"
r e garded Warr ~n . meets
Foothill lligh 's 10· l Knights al
Tus tin High an the South ern
Conference
Also with 7.30 s tarts an the
Central Confe rence. Mission
Viejo takes iL-; 10·0· I record and
defensive credentials to Boba
Grande to duel Rancho Alamitos
18·31 in a rematch.
The two m et in non league
A llghtwelght precise
l11ting boOI with the
accent on comtOft and
convenience for the
Intermediate to
advanced l•dy sider
•t&IS
warfare and M1ss10n cscapt·d
with a 9-7 decbton Mission
Viejo. with defensive tac kle
Chris Jahagan 16-212, 2301 the
key, has allowed no more than
s eve n points t o an yone a nd
bla nked seven opponents
C ap1strano Valley 18·2· l 1 1s at
La Palma Park an Anaheim to
tangle with Anaheim 14·5-21
Cl!DJIOS
Los Ccrrttoe C.cntc-r
PUl.LD1W
H20 l CNplMfl ;) w.th •. ., 51 ,,..,,
87CMl71
Opposites attract
Marina battles Bishop Amat in CIFmatch-up
l:Sy R00£R CARLSON
Of .... 0-'ly ............
The wishbone vii. the veel', Power vs rinoHt,
the Angelus l.C41J(Ue v~. lhf Sun1et Leagu41, 9 2
Bishop Amat vJJ. 10 1 Murlnu
It's the CIF Rig five Conference football
second round matchu1> ut Wc11tmln11lur lliteh
Friday n1 1(ht und the couches Involved ttN•m lo
echo 1.:u<'h Oltl('r tn tcrmK of the task that Ilea 1thead
·We've played vN•r teum11 llkt Sorvill' 1tnd
Loyolu," s aytt Btshov Amat Coarh Jim l'atrt<·lo
.. ttul nobody runs 1t us aood as Marino.
"KF.N LASZl~O is u K<>Od quurterbaek and w£•
ha vl' to l>t op ham , und h1 1t rl'ce1v<.·r. J ctr
f'rundscn " ·
Viking Co1trh JJav(' Thompfwn HO.Y!I the test 1~
as big us any th11; year "Lookina al the films, it's
spooky," says Thompson
"But I feel WC pluy<-d u very r1ne game lu:.;l
week and If Wl' ke(lp play1nJ( like thut We'll he
tough ..
The Amat ob:.tacle lnclude11 two·way tu<.'kles
Don ll1t1 <6·3. 2501 and Ron Brown <ti 4. 2101. the
latter said lo be bound for Notre Dame with 4 5
speed in the 40
PERNELL TAYLOR. a 5·11 , 191>·pound Junior.
has run for UI tou<.·hdowns and linebacker Mark
Ca z"'res t 5· JO . 150 i.r I has s pearheaded the
defense
Aside Crom a 42·3~ four overtime defeat to
unbeaten St Paul 1n the Angelus League
title·decider, Amat 's only other loss was 28·21 to
9·1 Monrovia. which, according to Patricio, took
advuntuge of seven Amat turnovers
"We missed 24 -tackles und Monrovia played
perfectly," sayi, Patri<.·10
AMAT'S WISHBONE isn't the gambling type
you would l:XJ>C<.'t from an Oklahoma-l>tyle. The
Lancers are stnt·lly a power team and the game
may be dec1dl:d on just who is the s tronger an
terms of line piny
Marin a's offensive line has enjoyed -a
reputauon as a surging group, but is expected to
receive stiff comp.:t1t1on from Amat 's strength.
"They don't pass a lot," says Thompson. ··And
yes, from lht• films their opponents have
overplayed the run You have to, but the pass
beco mes effective 1r you do
"Bishop Amat has a full complment of plays,
they run with power. power, power. but l'Ounter
with tht• fullbark. t•1lht•1 hulfbuc:k ilnd the p<.iss
"T H EY l'LAV A LOT of man t o man
secondary and U SC' an eight man front as a
defensive base. so we'll have to throw the ball
some tt·s a t rue wishbone tn alignment, but
mostly it's power footbull orr of ll ..
Amat ha:. actually ('Orne within an eyelash of
an unbeaten season 1 a s ts the case· ror Marina 1,
and Patricio says 1t 's bct.>n done ag;un1't physical
and strong people
Baseball school
slated at OCC
Orange Coast College baseball <'OaC'h Mike
Mayne lnunr h('s lht' farl't of six i1••11111nn11 for h111
Orun~c Coast Ha~l'l>ull St·hool No~ ~ for bo}s.
a~es 8 18
The OC<.: coach. who ha~ guided the Pirates to
hli<'k to -back So uth Coast Conference
chu mp1onsh1ps and the state community college
title two years ago. w .. I de al with baseball
fundamentals. skills. techniques artd strategy
The opening sessions, which will be held on
Sundays Nov. 29. Dec. 6. 13 and 20. will be for
bo) s. 8-t3 during morning sessions The same age
group can register in the upcoming sessions which
be~m Dec. 28 and Jan 3.
The same dales apply to the 14·18 age group
with sessions scheduled for afternoons. Prices are
S50 for tne 8-13 )ear olds and S60 for the 14·ltl
) ear olds
Mayne will be assisted by other high school
and c·ollege couches an Southern California. along
with selected varsity players from the OCC squad
All sessions will be held at OCC. Enrollment is
limited to tht' r1rst 60 applications received for
each sessions
For more informal ion. phone 556 5767 or
751-0568
INF L standings
"W •'vt accomplished some things," says tht
L1ncer1' boH .. But the greatest lhang IS comine
from behind twlce to beat Loyola, and we rallh:d to
bul Mlt•r Oel ond Servile.
"Wo'r 1a runnlne team "
Patricio cllillm/ his lt-am 1s 11mulll!r th1.n
Murlf1U, that with the l:XCeptaon or hilll two big
t1H·kh•K, the 1.unccrs are only an avcr&Kt' isized
tc»m
MARINA'S GAME ts enhanced by the return
ur r.·t·ulvcr Bobby <.:ritchf1eld , whiC'h 11hould take
1wme or the prl'ssure off Frandsen
fo'randsen caught seven pas~cl> for 227 yards
lus t week the sum total of the Vikings' aerial
~amc .
Critchfield has caught 23 for 382 yard; to
complement Frandsen'i.. 41 catches for 1.014 y ards
during the season .
Halfback Rick Tobin is also expected b<.ick,
but without a lot or practice under has bell. is n't at
full strength. Ill:. replacement. sophomore Enc
Karman. reeled orr a 58 yard touchdown run last
week. so the Vtkes don't appeur lo be hurting in
that department
Toban was side lined with a broken finger.
Critchfield is ba<'k from a knee 1nJury whit·h
proved less damaging than at farl>t thought
Lasorda inks I
one-year pact
LOS ANGELES 1AP1 The customary
on e·year contract for returning managers or the
Los Angeles, Dodgers was signed Wednesday by
Tom Lasorda, who led a collection or batthng
veterans and fearless youngsters to baseball's
world champ1onsh1p in 1981
Also retured for 1982 were the Dodger t'-Oaches
of the past year . Monty Bas gall, Manny Mota,
Danny Ozark, Ron Perranoski and Mark Cresse
'I'm very, very happy and honored with the
contract I've just signed." the 54-year-old Lasorda'
told reporters. Voted National League Manager of
the Year by The Asi.ociated Press for 1·98t.
Lasorda will ente r his sixth year as manager m
1982
I N IUS f'IVE seasons as manager the Dodgers
made the World Series three times. los ing twice to
the New York Yankees m 1977·78 before beatrng
the Yankees four games to two last month
"Now that we have learned to win a World
Series, ~e s hould be doing it more often." s aid
Lasorda, who noted that the 1981 team foatured
rour rookie rehef pitchers. a 20-year-old p1tch1ng
'>lar. fo'crnando Valenzuela. and a 23 year ·old
cat<'hN, Mike Sc1osc1a
But he added that the Dodgers will need to
improve their team with a fifth starting pitcher
a nd some raghl·handed htllmg bench strength to
survive in 1982, when "everybody will be gunning
for Ul> "
Asked 1f he's like a longer contract. while he
directs players with guaranteed multi.year deals.
Lu!\ordn said one year satisfies him
"IT WAS T HE pohC') of Mr llate Dodger
ownl:rl Walter O'Malley, contrnucd b) Pe ter
O'Malley And when you start th1nk1ng about more
than one year you start talking about securat) l"ve
been with the Dodgers 33 years I thrnk that·~
pr etty good security ...
The amount of money Lasorda will receive
was not disclosed . but he said his s alar} 1s
"alongs ide the highes t paid managers in
baseball "
Lasorda took over as manager 1n 1977
succeeding Walter Alston. who had 23 one year
pacts with the Dodgers
IN ADDIT ION to cred1t1ng the Dodger
players, who did not give up in 1981 when down two
games to Houston in the NL West mini-series,
down 2·1 to Montreal an the NL Championship
seriei;, and down 0·2 to the Yankees. Lasorda
s hared credit with Dodger scouting director Ben
Wade. minor league director Bill Schwe ppe and
Vice President and General Manager Al
Campanis.
"************
: JOHNSON & SON :
« • • ..
NATIONAL ('QN FER ENCE
Western Divis ion
AMERICAN CONFERENCE tr Presents ... • ..
W L T PF PA Pts.
San Francisco 9 3 O 270 214 750
Atlanta 6 6 0 328 253 .500
Rams 5 7 O 268 271 .417
New Orleans 4 8 0 166 261 333
Eastern Division
Dallas 9 3 0 289 232 .750
Philadelphia !) 3 0 297 172 .750
NY Giants G 6 O 242 213 500
Weste rn Division •
W L T P F PA Pct. ti
8 4 0 241 194 .667 •
8 4 0 303 224 .667 ..
7 5 0 370 312 .583 •
5 7 0 195 239 .417 tr
4 8 0 209 289 .333 tr
E aste rn Division •
Miami 7 4 1 275 238 .625 •
Denver
Kansas City
San Diego
Oakland
Seattle
NY Jets 7 4 l 265 244 .625 tc
Q)
~ ~
I
• • ,. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Burrs.to 1 5 o 237 209 .583 •
New England 2 10 0 257 277 .167 tr St LOUIS 5 7' 0 248 327 .417
Washington 5 7 O 250 294 .417
, ......... Greell ....
Central Division Baltimore 1 11 o 209 412 .083 •
Central Dlvlslon •
Cincinnati 9 3 O 330 224 .750 !
Pittsburgh 7 S 0 275 229 .583 tr
M mnesota 7 s O 280 ~ 583
Detroit 6 6 o 291 2S4 500
Cleveland 5 7 0 208 261 .417 ..,
Houston s 7 o 210 263 .417 tr
Tampa Bay G 6 0 217 191> .500
Green Bay 5 7 0 220 286 .417
Chicago 3 9 O 176 275 .250
, ... , .• o-
K•n•u CllY •I 0.lroll tCh ...... I • •I '·'° a.m.1
Chlc•oo ., 0.11•• ICM ..... l 2 ., , p,m.I
rt.ms •I P1tbllur~,..",:,.cw:r10 • m I
8•111morw •IN•• YOO'-Jell c 111t1n ... 11 •I cie ... 1-GrHn 8•v al Mlnnetota
SI. L.oul1 ., ,..,. Entl•ncl
WHl1lnQton •I 8ulfll0
T •mpe &.y •I -O<l.-Allant. •I .. _,on
O.n.,.r •' Sir\ O'-Nt ,. YOl'll. Gl•nO et $.ti\ Fr•n<IKo
OOl•nd •t SHiii• -···o-PM1 .. e111111a el Ml41ml 10..-1 7 el t • m I
.. « ..
iC
tr ... .. .. • .. • • tr
ti
:·········•••*************************•
! Pete's Picks at. 14% LUXURY • LEASE
: nAM
MFL11
Picks of
TheW.-
THAHkSGllHG
DAY
D .... over CMc..-
Detrolt onr K-
SUNDAY
A ......
over
Hoeato. , ....... ,
over
LA.1-
Mew Yorti•._..
: EXTENDED THROUGH MOVEMllR .. • tl
tl •
MIWHOUlll
PUTS 1£PMTIDIT MDI
OPlt4 1:00 && le 1:00 P.M. IATUIDA YI
... .. ..
lit .. .. .. .. .. ,. .. .. ... .. ... .. .. ..
'
Orange Co t OAIL Y PILOT/Thursday, November 26. 1981
It's better late than never for this f oothall game
Despite records, there's plenty.at stake.as Orange Coast meets Golden West Saturday in 16th annual rivalry
8yCVRTSEED£N
Ofllleo.ifyf't .........
The one·lime September Classic of community
colleae football games urrlve two months latt11
Sllturday night when Golden West and Orange
Cota11t banG heads In the 16th edition of their great
rivalry.
As far as the South Coast Conference is
concerned, the GWC·OCC duel nluy be at the
bottom of the totem pole, but for followers of the
contest, not to mention to the combatants
themselves, lhls batlle C7 . 30 p m at OCC 1 should
be as intense us ever. r
Mellllwhlle. down the road e bi . Saddleback
College tries to close out the season with a perfect
record when the Gauchos entertain Riverside CC
1n the Mission Conference finale I 7: 30,.
Here's how the flnal week of regular seaaoo
play shapes up:
Golden West at Orange Coast
GWC punter Scott Giem leads the South Coast
Co11ference with a 40.4 average, and OCC kicker
Mitch Olson 1s second with a 40.0 mark. Saturday
night's game. therefore, just may sellle that close
race.
Yes. OCC and GWC JUSl aren't generating the
excitement of previous "Victory Bell" contests
this year. simply because the contest closes out
conference play.
In the past. the game has usually opened the
football season , and interested observers were
hungry for the duel. The results were big crowds,
some in excess or 8.000, which showed up to enjoy
the entertaining rivalry.
Saturday night. OCC and GWC carry 1denllcal
J ,6 records into the contest, and neither is headed
for any kind of post-season bowl game
"The rivalry just doesn't have the meaning it
used to have. That's obvious by the interest from
the public the last couple of years,'' notes Rustler
Coach Ray Shackleford. "It was always a bigger
game at the start of the season. I think a lot of
people won't come simply because they've seen a
lot of games and who wants to see a 3·6 team
anyway'!"
Despite the dismal records. an anticipated
crowd of 5,000 is expected lo be on hand Saturday
for one of several reasons:
a 1 Both teams do boast offense~ which have
proven they can put points on the board.
b 1 Neither team wants to finish below the
other in the South Coast Conference standings, and
onl v a tie would rectify that problem
cl With the series even a 7·7-1, Golden West
can go ahead of Orange Coast for the first lime
ever with a victory.
"You can throw out the records in this game
because they don't mean anything," says OCC
Coach Dick Tucker ·1t 1s always going to be a
good game "
The principals who have the power to make
the game a good one are the quarterbacks -
OCC's Clay Tucker and GWC's Sam Aiello.
Aiello has thrown for 1.741 yards and 10
touchdowns. while Tucker has shaken off the
freshman jitters to throw for 1,258 yards and 10
touchdowns
Holiday racing
schedule filled
By ALMON LOCKABE\'
Deily l"INC IMll"t Wrl ....
Racing sailors who failed to get in on a
T hanksgiving or "turkey" regatta last weekend
will have a final chance this weekend as holiday
regattas are scheduled in every sector of the
Southern California Yachltng Association
The only Thanksgiving regatta scheduled in
Orange County is at Dana Point Yacht Club where
s mall boats will race inside the harbor on
Saturday and larger Performance Handicap
Hacing Fleet I PHRF> yachts on outside courses
Sunday.
In the Los Angeles-Long Beach area. Cabnllo
Beach Yacht Club will host a Thanksgiving
regatta for all classes Sctturday and Sunday. and
Seal Beach Yacht Club will come up with the third
race of its Sunday Sailors race on Sunday .
In the Marina del Rey area Manna Yacht Club
holds the only act ion with a Turkey Race for
PHRF yachts the fourth in the Manna Series
The event ~ 111 be held Saturday
* * * s...~
S•nl• Cl••• Retl"9 .t.~WK••hOll
Autumn Cnell ~rte\ ~•turd•'·
Lewr ClrcUll, S.luraey hn 01ego Y«hl C.lub Jun10<
t h•mp1onsh1ps ~ l•nQlt·"•nOtOI ~luroey
Cor......,. YKht (.tub l""9•1r~n
S1r 1•s 1tnv1t•t•on•t h•no1c•o>
wna.v <><uni-Ye<ht tlub -Co.>t•I
* * *
!>erit\ I PHRf-1 Sunoey
!>ou1nwtuern YuM C.luo
Gr•h•m Sn.na S.•rt•\ 0\•M•<•Pt
Su"<l4lY
-...-1~ ...
Ventur• Y«hl Club Fell Strit\
No 7, w .-y
All·H~ YoKhl Club All FIM" l>••. w.-y S11nl• 8•rbere YeClll Club
1 "n·•Y r.u • .siuncs.v
W reckless wins
M OTC class race
Capistrano Bay Yacht Club's Mission Series
which concluded last Sunday reatured a Midget
Ocean Racing Class 1 MORCl for the first lime.
The winner or the rirth race and overall series
winner was Wreckless, s kippered by A.G. Kading
of the host club. Second overall was Going Left,
sailed by Steve Fr anta. Dana Point Yacht Club.
and third was 0 W. Haroled, owned and s kippe red
by Roger Ritzdorf, Balboa Yacht Club.
In the Performance Handicap Racing Fleet
divis ion. the overall series winner was Holo Kiki, a
Class B entry skippered by Rick Raff. Capistrano
Bay Yacht Club; second was Martinique. Dave
Cooper , Capo BYC. and third was Thumper II. Ji1T1
and Sandy Lucchessi. Capistrano Bay Yacht Club.
* • *
Flltll •«• wlnneo
C.L.t.SS A lr'1u1nper 11, Jim •nd
$a llllt LuC<heHI, Cepo BYC. 2.
AewhicH, K....,y KuM, c-eve. l
Der-St.,., Ren<ly DeVort, CePO
* * * eve.
C.LASS 8 I. Antl'l~tlOll, Bot>
M<lnlyre, OPVC., HOIO kl-I, Rica
Rett, C.-8YC.. J F"""y Feelln.
Ptlt Me-.~ BYC.
Connors won't play
CINC INNATI 1AP1 -Second·ranked J immy
Connors is going skiing with his family rather than
play for the United Stales Davis Cup tennis team
in the 1981 finals against ArgenUna next month,
Arthur Ashe, the team 's non·playing captain,
a nnounced Wednesday.
Ashe also an no" need the members of tbc U.S.
team, whlch will play Argentlna at Riverfront
Coliseum ln Cincinnati from Dec. 11 lo 13.
Tbe squad will conslst or top.ranked John
McEnroe, Roscoe Tanner, P ter Flem lna. who ls
ranked nm. in ~oubles with McEnroe, and Eliot
Teltscber.
1'ucker, ln focl, has come on strona In his la. t
thrt1e aam . adding mor" than 600 yard!l and 6
TD1 ln his tut three sames, includlna 226 and
two TDs )n u 20·14 decision over Grossmont la•t
week.
And, ii Tucker does leud the Plr1Ates Into the
end zone even once, the Pirates will have snapped
FOOTBALL
an elght·quarter TD drought against the Rustlers.
The last time OCC put six pomts on the board
against · the Rustlers was in 1978 wtien OCC
recorded a 34·24 victory.
Since that year, the Rustlers have rolled up
30-3 and 30·0 victories.
Last year , Aiello guided the Rustlers to a
touchdown victory with a pass as GWC rolled up
36:; yards total offense compared to OCC 's 88.
The Pirate defense, however. has tightened
considerably and played a big part in occ·,
respectability this season.
"I think they're a very good defensive team
second or third in the conference in total defense,"
points out Shackleford · · 1 think this game is going
to be a lot better than the last couple we've
played "
Golden West, me1rnwh1le, draws s1mllur
uccoladet from Tuek~r.
"I think It's a damn good team and they've got
a great oCfense They run well and they throw
well,'' 'l'uckcr 11ays
"I think Aiello might be the best quart~rback
In Golden West history." Tucker adds "He'~ big
and he throws the ball with authority lie also has
some good receivers."
Leading the GWC receiving bnttade Is the No
I pass catcher in the conference Gil Rhode:s.
Rhodes snagged eight passes for 80 yards last
week against Fullerton and now has 785 yards to
his credit.
Shackleford says the Rustlers are looking al
lhe contest as an important game
"We're gomg out there to WIO It A lot or
schools will be going to bowl games this year
Neither of these teams are going, but It ~hould still
be u lot of run" Shackleford explains. Neither one
of us wants to lose the last game. The winners will
have a very good taste in their mouths while the
losers will have to wct1t until next year like they
always do."
"We're glad it's (ltle game1 at the end or the
season." addi, Tucker "ll 's something for our
player:. lO look forward to It should be a great
game and I expect il to be close one way or
another
·1 JW.I think 11':-. &omx to ~ u fun aiamc to
watrh bc<·uuse of the offenHc , " he atdds.
Riverside CC •t Seddleback
1'h~ Gauchos try to fini&h the season with a.
10·0 record a feat never accomplished by
Suddleback. but they'll have a hard·runnina1
RIVl'fllldc CC i.quad !>landing 111 their way I
The Tigers ('Urry a 6·3 oventll record lnto the I
t•ontC!st. thanks tht• fine running of Tony Cherry.
lh1.• M1sswn Confon>nce's No. 1 rusher with 976
yardis on 111 carries and nine TDs '
Cherr) hct~ S(•ored on lourhdown runs of 80. 84,
90 a nd 75 yards twice in heli>lng the Tigers to a 3-:
conference mark.
"We haven't had to play a team which can run
like that," admits Suddleback Coach Ken
Swearingen. :
The Gauchos huve already locked up the '
Mission Conference championship and will play
lhe winner of lhe South Coast Conference in the
l'onv Bowl lJcc· 5 at Cerritos College
·Former Laguna Beuch lligh standout Lctnce
Stewart has been reSPonsible for most of tht
Gaucho suc•(•es!> Stewart has completed 79 of 132
passe~ for 1,092 yards and 14 touchdowns He's
also earned the ball 10 for mne more TDs
Saddlcback needs ju:.t 22 points against lhe
Tigers to '>Cl a school record for most points m a
!\Ca~on With 3.'Ui
·sllll~Allt Sl~ll~ltS
PRESEN TS
Or1111 C111ty'1 BlllEIT SKI PARTY
NOV. 27-28-29
ffl I la 11 La • I Ja • a..11 .... ti I•·•·
11 s 1r>e years gre~ "'°°°' slu .,,.,.,, Three llAI daya ot continuous
enter1.11nmen1 Ind lun Oon1 """ "'
Save on SKI BOOTS Save on BINDINGS
~rling Comfort Salomon 222 Reg. $120 Reg_s1o s 3199 549" . IOW ••• MOW •••
HanM>n 'ilva '89" Marller M21l '49" Reo sm -... Rro '86-...
Ht•e<~::ts St=• '89" Salomon 226 '59" Reo SI ... Aeo sao .....
NofOJCI Nova '99" 80 81 Salomon 626 '69" Reg $140 -... Reg S9S .....
Hanson C~anon R '99" Muhr MJOSI
Reo S200 ..... Aeg $121l-...
Noro1e1 le= '129" 80 81 look N 77 C
Reg $180 ... Reo SI~-...
unoe XL 800 '139" 80 81 S.IOmon 727
Reo St9S ..... Reo s•25 .....
Norcttc.i Hurncane Reo $200 .....
Reg. $85 LI01ts' & Men's Powder '29"
.~29'9 Shelts Ato S4S .....
Koos Thennll Undtrwur 14• Aeo $10 .....
RM<1IOle SllebiMas'49" Thtnne! Undl!wtar '&" Rt!Q 10$130 -... Aeo to Sl8 .....
ladtH r as1MOn Sulls '79"' Reg 1171 ..... Sc:on = Rio S18 ... '8"
Mttl' Slil 'tltsts '29" COmboSlli~ ti• llto $19-.. Aeo $18 .....
Selec\Slli~ 91S-Wool ScaNts ?' Ato 1osse ..... Ato ,, ......
A4lli Streich 1'11111 Aeo s1os • ... ...... Sid WD PIC*I Aeo s2so-. .. 49'
Cflilel!1fl'I PlfUI 91P Sunlln l.atlofl • "'° ......... Ree.,_ ..
Mtll'\!.~-Sll AtcollClifDn• • ""$$ ..... .... '2f1"·'4r i.-. Siii Olo.-~r _..me;; "'° '40 -.. .... 11'2'
bll /.lltf!MI Soclll '3" .... '1" .... -.....
.. ,... ... ,. ...... ___ ,. __ " ... """ .... "-.... ...... ........ FRIDAY 10 A.M. to I P.M.
SATURDAY 10 A.M. to I P.M.
SUNDAY :tO A.M. to I RM •
>I
:a )'
~
C: ~ ~
FREE
Get au ttlis and "'°" with your admission •••
.... ,/ .,
(
,.:..
,_
Orange Cout DAIL V PILOTIT'hursdey, Novembef 26, 1981
,,,,,.-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
,.
;; ,,
Hollvwood Parll
WaC*llo.\Y'l •HULn '''"'"a•,-11 .. , .,._.,_.,
"UT ltACI.. • h•lonlll
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••Y•I AQ M.k IWHar111191 • .. t.oe
'lnM<loro COrllll"lroal 10 to
Al_. ra<lld. Mr. Pfau, Trtllot, Cllll\<I
81Ht, (;ollT9 Wally, Pro4o.tor Gr-. (AIOI
Mlltrou, S..<9'11 iNli•r. ~ .. , ~,.,..,..,
I-lo.I, JUOI'• Prt,..;e I.ff.
Time: 1, lOt/S.
1acl*O •M:I. One mile
s..1ion of Swing tPlnu,1 uo 4,40 uo
B091•Y IDll~yel I.AO .l.00
Ha rKy'' Hone' ISlblttal J,.jC)
AtlO reud. Clr< .......... t. Koret. AWi -Grin, Hot Tra<ll,, "'OP• And Pride,
tu.11111 .. """· FantHU< Red. ll"'9 t ...
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MeCIO N' Arllor.. IOtlvarinl JM
AllO r-. """''-· e .. tar GIOw, Stray
• Lltlle, Co111t 01\attar, Party Sanos.
Cooatrl,a,
Tim• 1· tOlJS
U llXACTA IH I palo ..0 SO
llOU •TH RACE. Orw milt
Traek J-IWCorronJ I &Cl
t Fetj In..._ tPlncevl
~·•-IHawteyl
3 00 1.40 1.0 no
1.to
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Jam Man IMc:HarQUel -v ,.,..,n , ...... 1.,1
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S.00
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Alto ra<ao· Cac>toln Tvlty,
CrMk, tl\Oian O . Jet Ptrale,
A~llFet-.
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U EXACT.II fl 41 pol<l ,lll 00
II X TM llACE. • turlonQ>, No HOidt ..... ,..,
IVateruwele) ) 40 2 eO J,&C)
Mr . A~an IOrlttOal l . .O l 40
f wo SIGH I Ramirel) I .o
Atao •1· Stky Jo, F•me or f-1...,.., Palrtol , Em•nary, Rell 1 Owttaw,
Aragar><e, -•11. lhlaf of J-. Fr-11
Cemm•-· Time t 0'41~
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N•turally Hte.e tOl111arn1 11..0 1.20
Carol Lita (Galllt-1 4.20
Also ..... JetH•en. Fllft9 Dll\Q, .......
NurM, IW Uilnovat<lla, Lal\Cll,,. l.OOY. c-1.,,."°.
Time: l:OUtS
U EXACTA 1"'41 paicl "O 00
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St• <ontotatlon PAicl UI 00 w1111 ''° w-lno tl<Uh tflwellorvsJ
EIGHTH •ACE. I \/tt mtte\
8 .. A S<OUI l"°"Corronl • 20 • .0 UO tmpehenl 1.eft IV•l4'ftlllel•I .,.., ,,..,
Miu Huntll'Qlon IHowl•YI l.60
AllO rattd: lAnQ<W-. Arti.en, Swrft 81ro.
f:le•n Pel~. I Got~
Time t 41 l 1S
lllNTH RAC:I. I I It m11ff
:W-In l""'C.•onl 1 t 00 •.IO 1.•
Mr. Aee<tor tO.I~••> 4 00 J.20
Give ... 1mWt"115(H-I •.GO
Alw , • .., H-.o. f:IKI to Run, -
AQeln, Scwtne sc ... 1. PeQQY • f:o. Pteawn4 1_.,ts, lr..,.11nvc.ro-.
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Atte-.a: U, tto.
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WEOflUDAY'I R&$Ut.TS
111• .... , ........ -uio.1
PlalT llACL O...mll•P«•
Et Rey IUc:o CCt-1 14.00 4,00 J,10
Brllt'-t O'SNie (Gouclf'eaul J tO 1 tO
a-G1QI Frost I T-••I 1 tO
Alto , ... , Gold ca.a. Gr..clpa Aocuy,
Captain wtllta, •~ Ra .. n.
• -<ouPlaCI
TtMt 1 04.
U EXACTA (M l PAtd ... 00
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l.•t1n Ster tVetl-ft911Mnl 4 tel 1..0 J.:IO
Priori,., t,,_,I l 20 JAO
Mou1a11 1.-1 J.20
Alto rac.ao Alley Br-, Danton, 0oMrt
P11<1ta1, u.mtier Pwl•
Time 1'04 4/S
TMIRO aACl. One mlle-e
COWlftry J .. l<>e 11-1 • S &Cl l .40 J 40
$.<ratrillllne Raitt Tr-.yl t 00 S JO
Ovlet-IMar<-••'1 •.oo 4tto IKllll. SUr>s.el 8ffocll, AMY' Ullel,
Da rln9 Morltetey, Rall A1oer, Bye Bye
$.Cotty
Tl!"• l 01 4tS
U IXACTA I• 71 petd M.PO
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY ........ ., .....
1922 HAllOl l&.VD.
ltOV •TM •ACI.. One lfltl• p.ce
Mr Jw I ICtlffl 13 .0 •·• J 40 S•••llllt Meek .,CM'OI II IO 4.JO
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lw"' 1419 IHlltl 20 40 1-40
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Also ••<•d "'••• Oun, hnar>d•llall, \1111,.,lt One T lme, Miu k11nle•, Print,.,._ ..
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U l.llACTA IMI paid t l,314.20.
II• TM RACI. One mile trot '-"._,·~•All) •. oo
No 8et CINlll•reeon1
440 140 •. oo uo
'40 Cn11t, \term
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Time l 01,
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S<otl"9 OrlW tLl9'1tntlll I ao 410 1 .o.
BlarMy \lr•Y IK...o!HI ) eO 4,00
Strlklft9 IAllOlnl 2.40
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L-1n9 Gift .. Ke..-H•••"· EnerveU< IC.td. limo: 1 01
U UIACTA t I t i J>AICI tAI <Cl
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Fro•tword ICroortenJ • JO 1 40 J JO
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Alo Valet 1MCC¥1'l 9 00
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Straww-IM•t<,.,.111 • 10 JOO
ReQUHI\ Jet t Flore\I l 00
AtMt rKeO. Sunny Ooo, P119rlm Ple•\ur•.-
O"arter M•h••. St••rm•n\ f r•n. Ato
Rubella, Sun lrtp
lt ...........
U E XACf A 11-ll i>ai<I '" to
IEGOfllO flACtE . lSO yaro~
Ro11QllHurr1<.-(FryQ.a1J •ID l to 300
Ktmal• t ,,.......,., t tO • 10
si-s a l.ot ICn-rl •ID
At\o r •c•O Ot14 M•k1n9 Memor•ei, Ok·Booit.~ Clll<ll, C.ut• Aocut, Moo Lowe
Lan, HAOIM lk a C1tar11er. 111• ~·~•. ~-Limit~
Tim• 1.4'.
lHIRO llACI UOya•d'-
Fla~llY "°4G-1Gllhetl •> .0 lJ 20 t1 &Cl
Sir J•t 8119 tCMODUI ' t toQ • 20
f 1111 Me -tMlt<llelll J IO
AllO rec,ao wnat lrCMt>t•. 0•\111n Mome,
Hutller Nl9ht Jal, Dano "'"~ Neno.
Samlet JUQ. MKllAY Mor<11•
Time 11.ll
ll EXACTA IHI palO U21 . .0
llOU •TH a AC I C)O 1atd\
VouK--tMlt<Nlll 1110 S.0 •.O
Craig G4 tALriOQAI S 40 J &Cl De. Sc>111ir• 18'-tl 1 00
AUo raea a.t v-Watt.i, Suri !>pl-.
Mldt•nd R•bel, Bl•c• GolO Dl1111ar, tm
Arura Too, CAl<.ll l.lltk, ~tOI• J.Ck_
Ttm• 10 Ill
ll EXACTA 1 .. SI PA•OMCl.40
Std condhk>na
Hare .,. IN le'"I \lrfflorn •"I conclltlor>l
•• ••PCl't.O _, by .... ••\O<t>
lerul -11 I~ ,,..n,.,._, 2•tnc.ll w .............. 11 ....... ___ .., -· -
-j)O-, <to I (Mir&
'"'9A• -• to It Incites ne•. 11-~•
tncll baM, -· --1>.ed --· 4 <llalfl.
S.IN• Vallef t,100 teet <IOWd t.100
1 .. 1 J tnc.llon NW, 42-tnc.n l»M Po--Po<lled _.,.,, OOnOOla, <alll• tar, 10
doubt• C,..lrs, I lr'91e C:IWtr
H••••••Y Valley 11 inches ,. ....
.i.-f.c>..tO..<ndl -· _...., -· •• <llalri, J "'"Ka lltb.
Mt. ·--J ln<JWt IWW, 1'-t~tnc.11
DaM, --m«.Nne er-....i Po-. IUllOIWr.tl-
llerra Mll tt.oocll -) 1nc11es ...... u 1nc11
ba.M, ----·.•<llalf~ .,,._ -1 ••• ot ...... 14 ,,..,, """
ll•H. POWO.r ano P•Oltd po ... O••. 11111 -···-¥t. •-J to S , .... ,,.,,,.,... ,. 1..-•nc.11
MM. oowoer, ~ < .,.,,,
M.t11unetll Meto•tal• l tnc:lla. ntw.
U ln<ll baM, P<Kk"° po .. .,., and trnn _.,.,,,.,., __ _
J-........, l , .... ,..,new, 1s.1ncn
baM, PO<llaO-r, 11111-allon
NBA
wu,.a•Nci>Mn••Mce
llt<UlcOlwiu..
l'ortl•no
L.M ... I
c..1•11Matt
• 1. lie'-o• • J .n1 t l1 •• 1~
""""I• Seattle
I • )It J • $ .)4t >
$ I MIO Jn
Mn 01•1111 J • lU ' -•Ot•IM• . . . .,, ••n AnlOl'IO
Utall
Otll•a•
l-IOlll.tOI\
........ ,cit~
• S..1 J s MIO tn
• .421 '"' l HO l\1 0•11•• 1 12 on 1
1.ASTl.AM CONlll Rl.NCll
All.,llC Ol•ltlM
111111•0.IP'li. 1 t I
8ooton tt 1
Ne• YOO 4 •
Wa>lltft9lon • a
...... Jar .. y J 10
C...lral OllllllM
I ' • s
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UI
•» . ., .•. ,
VI
I
I
·~· Atlent•
Detroit
Mllwavl>.•
tndlent
CNUVo
• s
I I • • 4 •
~ 1~. oe n .
c1 ... 1.nc1 -. Lata~me•not ln<h-..._..., •• Sc.r ..
Lollao 111,...,......,.. M
tftdleno 1111. c1,.,.1_ 102
8oston ltJ, Cio4clet't !>t•t• 101
Oatrolt 11'1, Kan.a• City tJJ 1011
San Ol4t90 el UIOh, " Oallat et Oen..,, n
HOU\IOll at """-nl•, n
Portland•• S.a111a. n , ......... ,Gem••
NCI Qame\ K-led
Laker• 117. Spurs 96
1.0$ 4NGEl.&S -IC.UO<h•k •• WllkH 2'.
Al>dul·J•..0.• IS. Hl1on l •. John.Oii It,
C.-r ts. l..and-•oer t , M<C.• 1, 8•-1 O lota i04tlf.ll t11
SAN 4HTOttlO R Johnton •• Otlludlno
1e. G J-4, -• 10, G•fYln 14, C.r1t1111 •. B••U o. Ben-• s, (lre .. er 10.
C•r tlrw 11, R.,n, O Total• )1 11·1' ••
k-.. , Qoler1.en
LO\ 4.nQt..... 'JO 11 l2 JI 111
r.an Antonio l3 U 2l II-•
Foutao °"I None Total louts LM
AnQelO 1-~ AntonlO 11 la<llnl<al rouh
Coritrw t. !>arl Antonio Coe"' Albe<k 1 A
U ,•U
NBA leaders ,,........,.s-..,1
$COfllHG
Whlll, S... AAIOlllO
Dentler. Ulall
Mal-.Ho;.&ton
. ..
• 1 tt
ti 11S
tJ Ill U U1
10 t7
11 ltl
10 12
10 ..
11 111
" lltS ..... ,. ,,. lJ t
,. .... ..,-.~
E11e1t.i..0Mwer
Erwlft9, P1>11-1pn1a
Rounotlal<I, Atlant• v alTCln•Qll. Oeftwr
AQUlrre, 0.11••
tuet, D~n .. r 10 " •EM>Y .. OIMG
91 )II 11.0
• »2 27.1 ., Ml au
tel tSo1 U.4
)9 ,.., 241 .s m :a.•
SI JU 1:2.•
JI 2t~ Z2 I
.. 1:21 220
Matone. Hou!.lon
POW>Ohe4d, Allanl•
Sl•m•, ~.tllla 8 Wllll.,.,.\,N J
.... -.. •Q tl 11 tO/ 11' ll I
10 Ml /) l)t IJ I
IQ JJ M tl• 11 • u )Cl ~ ... ., 1
A.SStns
J ........ ~
CllMU, PNi..tpNa
Moore, $erl Mtonlo 0••••. Dalla\
Ran.My Portl-
.... ·~ u •• ,,_.
t1 114 •.S
11 •O. ••
11 u • ' .. ,.
FllLD GOAL Pl ACE HT AGE
It i.• llCL
tr.11\Q, ~nSca.. '1 140 ~I
..... ,. San Di990 ,, .. ~
0.wklnt, PNi..lllN• t S 10& ~
(taper, ~ U Ill .tM
Etv11'9, ""''-lllf\IA IJ) 210 ~
Community college
MallCIOTOUaNAM.NT , .. ~ Ca411etttl
l'ttMr'• ~,... -...... _
I p m lil'et«<I"' -IN•ll
• p m Saotlt-..Ct. •\ 1.-lllH<ll CC ... .......,..o-1 p,m -_, __ .,.,, IOMr ••
--....._-c.c -
' p rn -•rd'• 014Ja par'k w~ "" Sedclt-"'-&Mel\ CC --.-
Thia week'• trout plants
LOS ANGii.AS -C.Utalt uu. t.rvU•I
Lake, L-I.Ml•, Slof> c. ...... , 1<1 .. r 1Ea"
Fot-l, Santa Fa R_,,_,
fltVIRSIOE Porr" RaMr•o.,, S••"""'
I.Ali•
\AN LUIS 09tSPO
L .... rwl.Au
SAii DIEGO Doe,. Pond, S.n Vt<4'ftl•
Ne\.erf'..,Ott'
KE•N H¥1 Park Lake, IC.em ll1war
t 8oreft Pow•rhCHJM to Oemoc.r•t 0 •"•
l•oaila Dem to Borell Pow••'-te KlcJ
P-••-lo I.A'• 1-l•l
TULARE -Kern Rtwer tl'altY .... Dam 10
k A J Po-rhoui.a, JOIW\\or>dalo ll"OllA to
F•irv•...,0-.m>
l llYO Owen\ Rtver tS 811dQ••
Oo•nUr•em to St•••rt Lane>. P1eet..-nt
va11ay R.--r
' THE LIGHT TOUCH
COSTA MISA-541-1 IH
...
I
C•ll 142-5171.
Pul • felllf word•
to work for ou.
$190.06
Photos Wrth
Real Santo
Brtrlg lhe little ones
to Huntington Center's
Great New Mall for
memories they·n never
toroe1 with lhe Mitchell
Marionette Christmas
Shows and a visit with the
real Santa with the real
beard. Instant Santa
photos only S2.88!
LEASE
F 1 it•nit ot our' \H 'lll 111
I ht• .:111('t'I ~ '1111 t' \\ti h 511
111 h•·1 11111'k•·I .1nu
l"I n11• h Olflt' \\ 11 1\ I h1•
l?l •tll'l ll'' Ill l ht• ._,t fll l'
pot lwt
•••
11 ~ ••ll don l t l\1nk 11u1
IJn1tt1:.tl!" .... 1·onru~tni.:
co11 si lje1 ·eronom~
size .. In soaµ boxe' 11
means larRe. tn (':.t r' 11
means small
•••
T t' n 11 t i. µ r 11
h'l'hn11·111n •••
I 11 h
\'ou ll't'I J hlllt• tw 11t•r
,tl}oul l11t\ 10 11 1unk tood
"hC'n vou reahu "1t1'1•t•
I"" Ill~ fm ti \\ti h 1unl..
m11n1•\ ....
Modero. man s ldt•u or
rouahlnA 11 tic 11u1 'l\'ln,.:
t h \' n111ht without 11n
eh· cl n <' bhinktl.
NHL
CAMJ'el.LLCONlll••Mca tfftr"-OMu., w
IOIT-IOI\ L T 0111 OA "' I, • > "' Ven<o.twer • • 4 to . ._.. • IJ 0 t1
C•IQary • ,, , ..,
ColortOO J It • )7
NarrltOI••··-Mlnna.01.o II 4 • .,
t.l\IU90 ~ , I lot WIMljla9 tO • J • Detroit I 10 ' ..
SI L0<.11' I ., • llJ T9'0nt.O , II ' .,
WAI.IS COfll'l•t.NCI
..... l<k 01111aJ ..
N v ltl•ndlto tJ • 4 I)
Pllh0..•9'1 " • 4 • P llil•O.tpflta II ' I ,.
NY Renootrt • ,, 2 /J
Wa"'lnQlon , 14 2 II
--01¥1tlM
Ouabe< u 10 J 114 80\ton " • • .. Montreal 11 • 10$
8ult•IO 11 • I~ Harlforo J 10 • ..
Late ~me not 1nc1.-
w...._y'akor ..
t:.omonton 11, Klft91 •
O<MDK J Hart lord)
8ull•lo J, 0.troot I
Pllhbur91t 2 MOntraal I
r oronto S N-•ork R•ft99t> 1
Wau.tl'Qlon 4 MtnnHola 4
W1nn1-I, Color-2
("l(aQO •I VMl(OUYlf, n
G-Te111 ...
Kl ... t •t CAtoaty
Pllllaoet0fl1• •1 Botton
St Li>llil at NV hi_,.
Indoor tournament
,., MltOft, ll<lly)
Finl fl-Mt\tlel
.. » n u ... , . •• 17
l it 10 .., • " " .. u
91 lt .. 11 tQ) .,
II )0 .. Jt ., » ., II
el 12
10. .,, •• ,.
n n u 28 .. ..
Jonn M<Emot a.I Toma• <;mtcl, ..0. •·•
Jdw Lui\ Clerc °"' G-Ma .. r, •.J. w AOf t•no p..,,.u. ort Gu11 .. tmo \#11•,, ......
• 1. i.an t.•ndl net Corr-8•ru1ut1. I> t,
M
South Atrlcan Open
CatJ--tl "'" FlntR-~
Vll.ol Ge"'laltlt Clef, 8er'¥rd 8<MIM.,, •I,
.. 1 D•nt• Vl~Mr •• tr.Im War ... Kk, .... 1 ••
1 t•n V•IQOefl Clef Halnr C.untnardl, • t, •~.
Anorew P411\J.on Gel JOM! t.u" O•m1an1, .. I
t-1, Shaf",.OOd !>lewart a.I Frill 8ueM1~
, •.. 1 ...,,_,,
$ecoM R ... no Sl .. ln
1>.athy Rlnald• 091 Jann•I•• ........... 1. ~.
t 1 Pam C-te oer 6M1Mr• Harmer, l·S,
..0 Suee Rollt""°" Ott! And, .. L~4"G .. l.
1 .....
Women a tournament
lat S~y, AJqtr•ll•I
Se<OMR ... MSl"'t" (:won~ c.oot-C•-••y ~ !>N~on
W•l\11, .... ..0, Marte Ptnte•ow• CHI Mtma
Jau\O•«<. W . I .. ••. Cllrt\ f: .. rt t.toyO oot Anr• OC.tyomura ... 2 • ..., p.,,. Sllrl.,.r
oet Corinne van .. r, .. ,. •·'· N•nc:v ~••rotn
CMI t.•ndl ReynotdS, .. I ·~ An~ ~ .....
oet B•llY H•QttlMn. ' • I •• M•rt•ne
fiilevtat1to¥e Cllti ~'tot''• 8•.ckwOOCI, t;-1
•J
PCAA 1tetlstlca AU~HlllG
NO. Y• TO A.,._
Ger•kl Wttfll•. !o.J Sl
lt'O '°'~'""· ~·•-S• M.•ur•<• lu,,.wr U S.
JtO 1 o.J • 10..J
lH •l'I J a.J •
llO .-1 •)IJ I" ,.,0 )1 2 OoUQ Lano L8 ~· LennvMont~• <-1:1 ~1
l l l'IJ t )6 I
RaCUYING
t1m KeMM,S....JOWSt
w r•td Wtllhi .. , S Jow St
C.l•v•O 8rC)illllrf\, P.c: lh<
LOU!\ L.•-l""'V•• l 8 ~t
Norm br-n. Cal SI f'ull
'>t•<ev tt .. ioy !>an .-St
N•. VOt TO Avt.
~ ,,, tl• ,, .. •>
,. l '1 10'
;i. Ht ,. I
40 UI IS~ u )09 ...
P AUING
St .. e Clar•>on. SJ SI
J•ll leolord, Frl'\no SI
I om St Je<_,_ U F .. u
0oVQ Sa"-fl Ulall SI H•rt•v Mltl•r. P« •rt<
PA l'C Y•t TO JM '" 1.•~ 1• uo 111 1.11• , 1
'" .. t »o •
... 11 1 111 '
", " 1,10. )
TOTAl.OP'P'ENSE
St.•• C.ta rlo.>on, ~ JOt4 ~I
Tom St Jec-. C•• SI f .. 11
Jeff l t'Olord, F rl'\no SI
OOUQ Samuels, \JI.,., SI
800 Call•ev, Cal St F ult
A ...
Vdl Vlb..
1.131 11l -1
' 1tO , .. .J
l ,l'IO ,,, •
"' 127 •
1 "' 114 I
Weier polo
COMMUNITY COU.IG I ..c.ic.,.,.... .. ,,_,.
I•• C:.nl .. •l o.~
0-W"4 '· L-e aa.tll cc • (,oldltf\ Witt I 2 4 J •
l.°"O tt-11 I I t 1 S
Clo~-· KOtlllQ O.t Vall• 1, •• ...., 1. S•fyar 2, ll'IOn-.. I, (.11,uon t, luftG t
t.ono 8u<ll "4orl11Q ,.,..,,...,, 1 f~n t .
l(let l
TIN,. ll_,. ION•
SadOl•O•<k ,, Vent11r• O !Ventur•
torfell.01
s.flta Ant t 1, ,111larton 10
hddl-k II, k<it• Al\<I tO
IK-llt .. e
1.011(1 bff<ll • Mool-k I
~ . ' . "
MVP winners
AMI RICAN 1.EAGU I
,.,.1 1<00,. f tftQPr\, M11w...,•M
1..0 C..OrQt i:lflttt, ... ,. .... t lh
U19 Don Bey lo•. AnQl>I•
It/I Jim Aiu Bo•ton
10 I Roa <.or ..... M1nneM>t•
"16 fnun~n Munw11, N•w Yotk
t'1S l'rao L '""· bo\1on 1'1• Jail 8urrC>uQI\>. t ta ..
1'13 Revtt• Ja<k\OI\, Oat.t•no
1911 Ot<t. Allen, Ch•<•90
1•11 V-Blue, 0.'l•nd
"10 Booe Powell i:l•lt1mote
1<it9 HMmon IC.lllot>re ... MlflMM>t.•
,.... 0..W•M<l.All• """°'' , ... , CM' "•''"en1\11.1, ~ton
ltM Fret* HotHnM>fl, 8•1Umot•
tt.S ZOtlo V••Wlll'\. MtMe\Ola
,.,.. brOOo<\ RoOon.on. 8a1t1...-•
1""3 lt\ton H Ow•fd ...... Yor~
19'1 M1<tr..•'t' Mdntltt, N•w 'for"
1 .. 1 kOQef M•H\ N•w 'f'Ot~
ltliO ROQltf M.9n1t. N•• YOl"ll
1'S'I N•ll1e t oa, (._Pht •90
1"SI Ja<k•• Jen..,. ~ton
IH I Ml<keV M.lnll" N~w '°'' "~ Mk k.•'t' ~ntlo, New 'fOf k
l~S) 'fOQI 8'-ff•,. N~ 'rOrll
19S4 VOQO IMrre New 'fOt •
ttSJ At R_, Clhtlel\d
101 8ol)oy S"""t1, Ph oi-lpn<•
t9Sl Vogl 8"rr<1, N•"' 'fOtk
ttSO Pfltl A111ulo . Ne .. '°'" 19•9 Tao 'wll1tam• lM>l.ton
lt<li LOU ilo<Hlr•°"' Llt>Yt>l<1nO
1'41 Joe 0tMa9Ql~ N .. , '0tk
.... t ed W1ll1~m,. Uoston
1'4~ H•I ..... WhOU\.e'. 0..l•Otl
t9« H•l Newnouwr, O.lro11
19'3 ScluO (Nndlt'• ...... YOO•
tt42 Joe Gor-.. New Yo,.,
t'41 .)Oft DIMa91110, New VOto
1'40 H-C.rlMnbetQ, 0.HOtt
1'19 JOA OtM&IQQoO Nt'W Yo ..
ltll J1mn11• F o••. bo"tun
1'17 (.h.arh¥ Gf'nri"Qer 0.Uotl
19Jt ........ C..llr'll, Ne .. VoO
ltlS Hon._ C.re..noo"ll 0.trOtl
19~ Ml<.k-•v t.ocf\r•M. 0~1roh
"ll JUY\m.~ J.011J1 PP\tl.aotlP"r•
1'l2 J•mtrw.-f oll:. ..,hil.O.fptu46
1931 L.,ty <.¥ov•, Phot-11>"••
1982 TPA Tour Schedule
Jen I 10 -Tunon Open
Je11 t3>11 Boll H-Oewrt Cl•uoc
Patm o. .. n
Jan 21 14 ~nta Opl>n Plloan••
Jan 11-lt Andy Wlllta"'t·San DleQO
Opo11, Sa11 OleQO •
Fett •7 Blno Cro.ov N••-• Pro Am
Pe4>ttte 8eect\
l"ab lf.14 H•w•ll.., Doan H-ulu
Feb ••2• GI ... ,.,,.pCMll LOI Anve~
()pan
Feb. U.21 00,.1 Ea.iarn Open, Miami
Mar<ll .,, a.. Hill C:toul<, ~·-· Fi.
M•r<h tt 1.C t nvertery Cl•'"'·
L•...i.r'llitt,FI•
Mer<h 11 n Tourne ment P••••t' :;1Wmp-1p, _,._. Vaoro. Fla
M•r<ll ti 7t Tournam•nt Pl•Y•"
C1'ampl0Mlllp, Ponte Vrdre Ft•
4pr II 1~ Gr••••• G••fMllorO 0-.
Gl"fffllllaro,H C
Apr II• 1 t •·The Maltart, A11QU1ta Ga
Aprft U ti MO NY To11rn•men1 ol
ci.emolOM, C.lilled
April H ·ll Tell•hatue Op•n.
Tallallauee, Fl•
April U ?$ USF~G Ct .. tl~ New
OrtHn•.
April 1'-Moy 9vron Net'°" Cleul<
OallM
Ma, •·• Ml<ll•tol> Hou\lon Open,
"'°"'Ion Mey lJ..1' COIOftl•I National 1nv1ta1..-..
Fort Wottll
May 20-U -Atla(lla C•at.1•< All•n••
M•Y 11·30 Memorl•t Tournem•f'I
Oubhll, Oftlo
Ju,... U -It-()c»n, BtUWMla, Md
J11nt llHJ Danny TllomH·M•mp/>I\
C1Ht1<.~t
J UN 1'·20 "us ~. Pellblt B•IKh
J une t • 11 M4H'n .dac tu r er '
H•n•v•r-We-1tc~\ttr Cl•,\I<. Herr''°" NY
JUiy '°' -We\l•rn °"""· o .. BrOOll Ill
College football
TOTAL OFFENSE
J wty • 11
Mll101e11Ue
J11ty IS 11
Valft'r Ill
Jiiiy u 1.
k011'"4
J11ly 11 U Anlle11''" •u.c11 ClaHI(,
w1111am'°"'" va
J11ly tt AllO 1 Co1111.te11an Ooe11, Oahllle, Onlerlo
Aue I• • "GA G1'amPIClll•NP T111w
4110 lt 1\ ,..,.,.m, 0•••• J r o,.~ ..
l-larllord Olloln. "'••fford, <..onn
•"9 "n 81110 Ooen 0••"41 lleftt, MKll o~:·· J .. 1' World krl~ ol (;oll, A-tpn,
~"' ts s.01 • n S•Pt l .. lt
tie S.pl ,, ,.
Ga
• ( oa.11. lndl<Olt, H V
8M1li ot IOtlon, "'"°"·Ma,. H•ll of !Fa,,.., Pt,..11111.t,
"°"trier11 C)pe>n, Columlllut,
\<!pl )O.()c I
Tu
Ott I 10
0<1 u 17
0<1 i1u
u Jal. AOllal'W, lea
Under ~Uallon
P.-ola~ r.nwcola, ,, ..
0 <1 1' JI Dl,lley World Tea"'
Cllamplom/111>'. Ulle 111-.. v1,1a, '9a
CART 1982 schedule
T lie 1912 Champ1onuup A11to Ra~1n11
I H m• PP(, Indy (M WOtld S<Pt I<'\
M •r c n 11 Kr•<o 1so. P ho•n..,1
lnlt·rndhON I ~Mt>w•y f'P'Ol!nu Ar11
Aprtl l) Atl•nt• 1S\I A lt•tt t•
lnt .. rn•t~t k-.•wav H•o,pton U•
Junw tl Gould R,~ MAY\ I Ml, 'Wl\UW\\1n
~tilt~ F-•1r P,.rk. ~w•y W•'' AU,, "°"
July • t.tt-v4t9MtO ~ 1'-•'0"""t•r~t l:h.ttk_.
l i .. ehOf't AHPDrt C.lt-Vtf•na. Ot'HO
Julw t(t. Norton M1<.l'\1~n )00. M ic.n.QMti
l nt•rn•t1on•1 ~ow • ., t::;1uo;.•yn, N11tn
A11Q I A b Cl•O Ton1b•tt•n1Wu-.n1\AI,
'W1\con\1n ~tattt .,. • ., •. .,,.., ~ ... o._., • .,. ~~t
Alll\ W"
AUQ 1~ lo C. antlOUl'<f'G
Auq If# l~ AnQith•\ l tmtJ\ l •}'f(,lrn1• ~
C""HDmf'ff"f\I FftVf'l \1ctr lnt•H ,,•l•On•I ""•<.e••• k v•rwck S .. p 1 ,._ k040 Amer '4 " 100 J~U•O
Anot!rl(d tlkhctff LO"-t' Vtt\
~Pt l• ~lroo ,_,..,!#, "' •nd f-,.,. t)CJ
Mtt t'H g •n tntr1n•t1on•I SPt"e d •••·
broot .. yn. Mt<n
Oct ti t..•Wr\ f.t•l~tf' C..r•na Pn. IW
t,.d .. Wf\ Jl.1ltk• ~\ 't'f'9d~ h •w
Ott Jt <..Ol'A ~AHO t)C A\.tttJIOrUf'UO
Htt. •'00 AOOl•Qw1 Mlta1<-o C.1ty M~.a1tC,
Nnv • Miller H U4'1'\ \.ti~ 1)4.i Phorr"I••
tntt'rn•t·of\if J.t«•••Y J.it.ot-nt• ltr11
1 rt ( Ak I tt ttm\ •ha •tt-••PU\. h·a to'"""'
p.tt 1 1n Inf' u \ Aulu ( IUO \Jf"lt I 1«1t•tO
UvJ1,.n•P1>'•' ~un ~.,. 1\
Wednesday's transacttona
IA~EIALI.
4.,,_K .... Le .....
...N~A~ Cll Y RO'O•L!> w~ .. •d 1<.e1>
f;tf'ttt O•fl "'-''
... 1 ...... 11..e-
LINt•NNAt l RED~ Announo o tn•t
M 1tlt V••t eutt1 .. 1oer ~ t\..O (Otl1w to t•rm1 on
• tf\re• yt"•r ~Uf',tt.C.l N•"'"*<J H•• ~y lJort\I\
"Uf'Kff 1•40Uf" l)oltf'"ll'tQ lf'\lty(.l()f
LOS AN<..ELI ) OOOC.l R~ )1Qnod Ion>
L•5oord• m.in•Qer ano Monh ti4'\Q4tl
Mann')' Mota D•MY 0 1•r• k ""' f>•rr•no1&•
ond M•rlt. (rt\\., «·•lnt'\ 10 O"f v••r
9ASKETIALL
.... ,_ ••>Ae11Mll •,-.......
MIL"-AUkEl l:IU(K~ Al.II•••«! Junior
~rlOgf'm•n l0tw•ro..qu•rO k•INW!G bob
O•nor109t tOf"tlw•ro
'>EA Tl l E )UPE R)CIN It '> l ••O•O
J•mt1 8 .. t~y tor._,~,O IO 'M New Jtrwy
Nf't\ tor Ra1 1olOlfrt •o, .... ,.,.0 •no •
W<-Of'IO rouno ,_. Ot4'1t f t-.o.t•
F00l8ALI.
Hltlonal F--.,11 La .. we
OE 1MOt1 l IONS Act•••teo C.ary
(Je nt_.ho" Qu•rre-,b•'-" 'h••"-•O .JfO
"1ttc1tn•t', 04rfM\t vt-twt iii ,
PHILADELPHIA EAC.l.~S Ptau o C.t•...i. H ............. __ ..., -· Ofl U.
lnfurao ,.....,,.. 11\1 StV-0 S.•••• fot...,, t1oht ,.no
SEATTLE Sf:.tHAWt<S Pl•<<'G ,,,..
Norf'Y'•n rotOOit! hf't'l»<.~f'r on ,,_.. '"'""ea
rrlftrvt 11\t S..9r..a W •IM>ti 4Uv•ret t11<9llr
ST LOUIS (ofoJlDINALS S•o-k tn
t ime\ c»t~~ t~•I~ Pt.c..a O•iw• ~lte'f
o.-ten\tVt* t«.lii.I•. on lht'" 1n1urf><I r~wrv• t•Sl
WASHINGTON REOSl<.INS Acllw•t"°
L~C.,•rth McOM\1et cornero.<• Pl«.eo
C.n..lrl•f Vtf'•v~ fll"M;':O..t•urr on Into •nf"4'.0 , .. , ... ,.\t. li\l
HOCK~V
N•llo<WI H<Ktiar Le .....
COLOl<AOO RO<..ldES lr•<Hd L•nn~
M( Oon•to n 9f\I .,,nq '""" • tourtn round
'"' or4rt thOl«f' tot~ <r..•1q.1r1 F~•tntt lor
[)on l .. wtr lfttf Nln<;i .-NJ bob M•<Mttl~.
rlQM ¥11olnQ
SOCC~A
.. ...... A.._-l<a" -<« LH9 ...
I AMPA 1:1.AY l<O~Ol l S ~·-Mt•~
<..OtU'\~ll, Of'ff'fK)U
TOk ONl O 8 hu •rCI ,,.W"d,.eG (,Qt~
!.wfftrtr \.tr••f r S•'lf'K'd Ot1tn L.f't'Mi, °""•
~lendt>r
C.OLL.LGE
'lAt'tSAS l •lf'n0f'4 t~ (Ontt.c.t OI [)on
f •m brOVQt'I. nit•d tootb.:111 l<'-8< n IPH<MJrQl'I
I ht I '>IA ..... '°" WILll;,£~ A~t.-0 ttw r..,\HJthlhort of
Rollie ~cnm..at n.-.a tOOUMll c.u.c n
OUTSTANDING
VALUES!
NCAA INDIVIDUAL LEADER
LeadJng Rushers
Allen, USC
Walker, Georgia
Redden, Richmond
Diana. Yale
Meyers. Navy
Dickerson. SMU
Eare. Drake
Btlis, Cincinnati
Poole. So. Ill.
Lawrence. Va Tech.
TC Yds Avg.
403 2,342 212.9
349 1,666 166 6
284 1.349 149 9
293 1.442 144.2
245 l , 119 133 2
255 1,428 129.8
290 1,353 123.0
246 1,226 122.6
229 1.092 121.3
287 1.201 120. I
McMahon, BYC
Kofler, San Diego St
Eason, lllino1~
King. UNLV
Clarkson. San Jose St
Campbell, PurdUl'
M arino. Pitt
Holly. Princeton
Shon. Ohio U
Page l. Ar11. St
Yds
3.458
3.133
3.331
3.105
2.7 14
2.~
2,242
2,446
2,643
2.318
/\vi(.
345 8
313.3
302 8
282.3
271 4
255 4
249 1
244 .6
240 3
231 8
IA.AND HEW
1911 vw
DIESEL RAllfT
FACTORY STICKEQ . $7670
DISCOUNT
$675
SALE PRICE
5 6995
LEADING PASSERS
M cMahon. BYU
M arino, Pitt
Pagel, Ariz. St
Belue, Georgia
PA PC Yds. TD
423 272 3,553 JO
294 178 2.348 32
293 162 2,291 26
171 103 1,383 11
Eason, Illinois 406 248 3,360 20
Campbell. Purdue 321 185 2.686 18
Holly. Princeton 338 206 2.622 16
Kofler, SD State 379 229 2,951 19
Ramsey, UCLA 205 122 1,631 14
Jordan. Clemson 174 D6 l.496 8
RECEIVING
Nelson. Stanford
Harvey. N Texas St
Durham, San Diego SL
Sandusky. UNLV
Kearse. San Jose St
Hudson, BYU
Raugh. West Virginia
Bryant, Purdue
Dean. W. Cflrolina
Champine. Colo. St
G
1 I
8
10
11
10
12
11
11
11
11
PC Yds.
67 846
48 660
59 866
62 1.230
56 779
67 960
61 585
60 971
60 839
60 829
JIM .MARINO
VOLKSWAGEN-ISUZU 1
11711 MACH ILVD.
HUNTINGTON .llACH CALL 142-2000;
•
(2983) (177663)
BRAND NEW
1981 ISUZU
4X4 PfCkUI'
SALE PRICE
s7595
( 1262) (00889)
1981 vw
VAHAGOH "L ..
Blue/blue 4 speed
trans. & air cond
Executive cer in
lovely condil1on.
(033887)
SALE PRICE
OHLY
'10,995
I Ill l< ... 11 \' -MORt•-
1.'CIO. • * "Friday The 13111" (1•eo1 8at1y Palmer, Adrl,
enne King. TM reooeninQ
ol a aummw c.mi>. clole<J
20 Y*"• 18111« anlf thr"
mutelerl, atlrec:ll • vindic·
!Iva klllet who knUH
unauepecttno teen·ag«• ·a·
l t10 8 ITAATMK
et 11 D . oat0-.ca Howe
lNTINOM
11:30 ClJ IMHI MOiia IN
A new lamlllf movee Into
Iha nelghborh~d and
ev..-yooe 1Mrn1 • leaaOn
abOUI ""' lmot9Mlon• ll:M 8 STA" TRI.I<
1:46. 14EALTHf'1£1.D
A.M.Wf.ATMEA
5:60otNEWS
1:00 • WAKE UP· 8 GAU.ERV.
.Q!VOYAOE
0 IT CAN BE OOHE
Q) JIMMY BWAOOART
Cl) NEWS
• ~ITIE8
THAOUOti THE ARTS
(I) PU8UC AR'AIRS
l:OO (C) a a "Tark1TM0118f"
(1979) Documentary Nar-
rated by Peter U1tonov
The Ille ol • playful 011 .. is
tr-0 lrom his birth In a
hollow lrM lo hil epoc bat·
tie wltn the leader or a
hound pac:ll ·a·
(I) * * *\I, "My BrllWanl
Car-" f 1980) Judy DIVIS,
S11m N8'11 In 1urn-ol·lll•
cen1ury AU1tralt1, an ind•
pendent young woman
,,_ to make • ca,_ u a
wrttet ClesP1• aoclal pres·
auras lor her lo marry
1:150 IHOEPENOEHT
COUEOE8: 8URVIVINO
THE'IOS
e:25 9 ED AUEN
1:30 8 MOANING WITH
CHARLES KURALT
U HOTFUOOI 8 DAYBREAK LA. 8 FAANl<l Y FEMALE
G) OREAT8PACE
COASTfiA
II) HECKLE AHO JECKLE
(I) MOANINO WIT'H
CttAALE8 KURALT QJ JtMMY SWAGGART
0 • • • "Caddle" ( 1981 I
Helen Moree, Jack Thomp-
son A young w oman
leaves lier comlortaDle
auburban home and rier
er~ husband. determined
10 lalte full rffponlll>lllly
lor suppor1tng lier chlldran by doing ..,,.. .. _ odd
IObS Siie can gel
7:000 8TOOAY
• 100Cl.U8 D 9 aooo MORNING
Ml/IEll/flCA I ,... FAOOZL.Ea
CAln'OONe
G) 8U088UNNV fll 8U81NES8 REPORT
7:30 0 THERE 18 A WAY
Q) CARTOONS
8'i) YOGA FOA HEAL TH
(Cl *•* · The Hielea·
ways" (1973) lngrod 8¥g·
man, JOllnny Doran Two
Clllldran run away lrom
hOMa and hide 1n New
YO<k Cny·s MetrOPOl•l•n
M~ ol Ar1 wt>ere tney
ff• befriended by a •P.111·
ed r411t1use ·a·
8.-00 8 Cl) All·AMEAICAN
THANKSOMNO DAV
PARADE
Htghllghll of nohday
parlldeS 1n New York. Phil·
adelpl'lla, 0.lroll Toronto
and Haw111 ""'" be 11\0wn
Wtlllam Conrad hosts
1:00 8 JACK lAl.ANNE
G) NPPER
fJll MISTER ROGERS
S) *a 1~ 'The Money
Trap·· ( 1966) Olenn Ford
Elke Sommer When the
com1>1n111on ol a .. 1. 11
gt,,.., to • detective. he
decides 10 steal 1t1 con-
1en11 to aotve a llnenc111
crllls brough1 on by 1111
e•lr1vegan1 wlla
l:30 D LEAVE rT TO BEAVER 0 JIM 8AKKER
G) OENTLEBEH
II) POPEYE
0 •*'"'"TM Spirai S1alrc1M' ( 19771 Jacque·
Una B111et C11r111op11er
Plummer A beautiful deaf.
mute 11 l8fror1zed by a
myaterlOUI killer Who lurks
In Ille l/1ad°""'8 IUrfOUnd·
lnO an elegant mana;on
'PG'
9:00 D QINf'l. ·e1
0 lWIUGKT ZONE D A.M. L08 ANGE1.ES ga I LOVE LUCY
Cl) AOMPEA AOOM flD SUAME 8TREET OJ MfRV GAtmN
9'.30 0 IB NI'\. FOOTBALL
Kanus City C111er1 al
0.lroll LIOnl
8 * * "The Big NolM"
( 19"4) Laurel and Hardy.
Arthur Space. Two ecatter·
brained guard• must deltv·
er an e11peiirnen111 e11plo-
t1ve 10 w11111ngton, o.c.
Cl) * •·~ "JalOpy" ( 10531
a-y Boys, Leo Ooroay
The Boys dlscoN I IOI•
mula IOI making guokrle
and lry lhair ~ ,, jalopy
r110lng.
(C) • •.,. "JallhouM
Roell" (1857) EMa Pr•lelf.
PARADES Wilham Conrad 1 lnSel> will
host a thr~e·hour s pecial bllluling Santa
Claus and Ceaturing rive parades at 8
this morning on KNXT 12 >.
Judy Ty1e1 A youno prl•· °'* IH,,,. to play the gul·
lat, and all.,. 1111 , .......
CiimbS 10 111rdom D lWIUGHT ZOHE
8 MOVIE
G) 8EWl'TCHEO
g) MOVIE
10:00 8i) THE A.AT CW BEINO
FULLVHUMAH
C>< Leo ButcagUa nignly
acOlllmed 1peake< and
popular aducalion piof111-
11<>t .. use. pruen11 n11
en1hu.,aat1c mesaag41 or
"Love your fellow human
being .. rn COME BLOW YOUR
HORN
Ellloll Gould and Allc;a
Gho11141y star 1n '"'' Netr Simon comaay 8bOUI a
ratormad playbo~ who '
flnda hit younger bro1nar
followlng Ill h11 fOOlllec>S
• TWIUQHT ZONt
D (JJ LOVl &OAT (R)
G) I DREAM CW JEANNIE 0 • • "Loophole Albert
Fonnay. M11ton Sheen Ten
$IOt\ bulldl 10 • shalletlng
cllmn among the mem·
be•I of a gang who are
planning 10 e.acure an
e1aoora1a bank robbery
from t,,. -e<s below the
SlrMI• ol London PG'
10:30 D lWIUOHT ZONE
G) THE GHOST ANO
MRS. MUIR (I) •,..,"The Trail
Beyond f 19341 John
Wayne. Verne Htlha A
cowboy journey• 10 tne
Northwa11 18•"10ry tn
searcn of • gold mine and
am1asingg11I
11:001) .jN$10E OUT: THE
MAGIC CW TV
D lWIUoHT ZOHE D II§) FAMIL y F£\JO
0 •a ·~ "The Trap"
f 19591 RICNtd Widmar.
Tona LOU'M A IYf'ldlC31a
teade< terronres • sm111
1own wto11e 111emptong 10
nee the country
G) SUP£R PAY cAAos fD WHY IN THE WOAlD'
(fl FAMOUS CLA881C
TAUS
"Mesi• Of ri.. World" Arll,...led ,,..... v ........
story or a ywng man wflO
unw1t11ngly become a
involved wllh Iha inventor
ot • tllntu1oc ny<ng peec;e
sriop 1s 1old (RI
I 1:30 0 FAMOUS Cl.AS8IO
TALES
Meller 01 The Wor1d
Animated Jutes Verne·•
story or • young man wflO
unw1111ng1y becomes
onvOlvad wolh Iha Inventor
or a fantutic lly>f!Q peacl4I
I/lop Is !Old IR) D TWIUOHT ZONE D RYAN'S HOP£
«D ®l N£WS
'2) INOEP£HOEHT
NETWOAA NEWS
8i) MAC..Ell / LEHRER
REPORT
CI •**''I 'The Bid And
The Beautiful" f 195:.» Kirk
Douglas Ulna Turnet A
cold·haar1e<1 Hollywood
proouce1 alfecta the ltvet
of several people pursuu'il
a1a1dom
12.1>0 QI * • •', "Oa\lld
Copperheld' (193S) WC
Field•. Freddie Barthoto-
mew Baffd on Iha 110.y
by Charin Dk:liens A
young orphan boy grows
up In the EllQland of the
1800s
Q) •*'·>"My Favorite
Spy f19Stl Bob H«>e.
Hedy Lamarr An Am«I·
can 11nterte1ner lmperson·
ates • llPY on ordet 10
Obllln Merel plans for Ille us
0 * • • "One On °"41"
( 19771 Robby Bensoo.
Aonella O'Toole A boy
wflO goes 10 COiiege on •
baalcetbatl aonotarlhlp 11
1bu1ed by the coach
tcorned by his 1u1or and
used by the IChool tor 111
own purpc>Ma 'PG'
IJ TWIUOtfT ZONE D O ALLMY
CHIU>Aet
Q)CI) MOVIE
8i) DICK CAVETT
Cl) NlW8
(%) T'H£ FUOITM
12:30 I) (I) NFL TODAY
8 TWIUGHT ZONE EID OVEA~Y .
1~IO THE FU0"1YE
1:00 8 (I) HR. FOOTBALL.
Ohleago &Mrs al o.1111
Cowboys
0 (8MACY'8
THAHK8GMNG CAY
PAAA/JIE
The 1991 e<llllOn ol 11111
llMUal holiday ••lravagan-
H WIN be lelecall lrom
Herlld aqu.,e in New Vor11
City
D lWIUOHT ZONE
SI OAEAT
P£AFOMIANC€
fS) * • ,..., "1 he Money
Trap" (1966) Glenn FO!d,
Ellla Sommer When Ille
c:omblnallon or a aale 11
given 10 a detective, he
decldea to steel Its con·
1en1a to sol"8 • 111181\Clal
cr1111 brought on by his
Hlrevaganl wife
1.30tC **"Tar.aTlleOll.,. ..
( 1979) Oocumenlaty N•r·
rated by Pater Ustinov
The 11re of • playful otter 11
traced from 1111 blrth 1n a
hollOw lrM 10 his epic bat-
tle Wtlh the tellder of a
hound pack ·o· D . TWIUOHT ZOHE
1:45 (Z) a** "The LOOQnl
Yard" ( 1974) Burt Rey·
nolds Eddie Albetl A lor-
mef pro quarterback doing
ttme In • Soul""" Pf'llOn
tt given 11\e JOb coKhong 1
group ot convicts for a no·
nolds·barrad 1001ball
garn4111g11nst 11\e guard•
2:00 fD OREOOH
SHA.KESPEARE
FESTIVAL: A DREAM IN
PROGRESS
T111s doc:umentary 1oucnes
on the dolfocull Illa Inherent
1n American theatre and on
lhlo llf>8CJ•I pioblems aaeo-
Cllted wllh repertory com·
pan+es
0 * **'• ·G1oria
( 19801 Gena Rowtandt.
John Adames A rorme<
gun mOlt oecomet the pro-
tector ol an orphaned 6-
vear-old Puano Rican tar·
g411ed by Ille unae<world
tor Illa 1nto1m1toon he car·
r-In a battered brief·
cue 'PG U TWIUGHT ZC>Nfi D O OEHEAAL
HOSPfTAL
• 8UN*AH ., <>AEGON
IHAKE8NAM
FUTIVAL: A OMMof IH
uo~ze..
·~ 3:00 CC) A MOVll ST AW8
OAIJCJHl'D
Franlt Con-anC1 Tr1nl
AIYarldO 11ar 1n this •torv
Ol al~girl lna.-
achool, who 1uddenly
blcomet super .popular
aner lie< claull'latea !In()
out her lather •• • moVIO
"" UL 8.C.: THE FIRST
THAHKIOMNO
A!>lrnaled A ca_,-,an end
"" piefld!OC'lc pall eel.-brat• a moat unutuel
Thankegnnng D 1\lllUOKT ZONE
D EDGE OF NIGHT
Q) THE FUHTSTOHE.8
Cl) 8UG88UHNY
fl) OAOWIHO Yf.AA8
S:30 8 a * '"' ·Tne Stooge
(19531 Dean Martin. Jerry
Lewos A singer decides
thll he nMCls hos partner
to 1>41 a success
($ • * "Tne Ullte D<•·
gona A g.ang Of kidl
trained In karate. r~
one of their rrienaa when
ti.. pot1c:a ara unable 10 do
10 'PG'
8 lWIUOHT ZONE
(8) COUNTRY MU81C: A
FAMILY AFFAIR
S-111 of country rnus.oc'1
bell« known performing
famlllel are featured
lndudtng Dollie and Shel·
ley West. the Kendalt, and
Larry Ganin end Ille Gatlin
Bro1riera
D PEOPLE'S COURT 8 MOVIE ga 8U08 SUNNY AHO
FRIENDS m acooevooo
9) VOYAGE
3:"6 Cll * • * "Ln Girts"
(19!>7) 0-Kelly Mitzi
Gaynor An American
mut lcal ahow hill ,,,.
European clretill when
comp11cat1on1 artM
4:00 8 C88 U&AAAY
"Orphan•. Waif• And
Ward•" Char... 01C•en1'
street thief Fagin reads r
11l<ee 1alel 1h11 encompeaa
orphan• In alt lllAl)M, alz ..
and'°'"" -~ THANKIGMNO
8ld c-piovtdea tile
m1in YOlce to an animated
llP-tentuy with a -
MO' lboUI ecok>gy.
(t) **'A "Jallhe>uM
CHANNEL LISTINGS
Rock" ( t957) EMa Prwllly,
Judy Tyler A young ~
on..-lelrrtl lo P'llY Ille gui-
tar. and anar hit NllMN.
ctlrnbe 10 11erdom. 0 * • 'A "TM Prince And
The Pau&*" ( 1977) Mani i..n.... OINer Aeed. A
prince 11rtc1 of G«emony tr'"' ldenllllel wllh Ille
IOOIMlllke Mend, I l*IP8f
who le afraid ol rtmeinlng
~pclOt ·..a·
9 l(N)(T <CBS>
8 KN8C IN8Cl
• l(fLA (lnel I e KABC (ABCI
• Kf'M8 <CBS>
D KHJ-T\I llnd I
eKCST I A8Cl
• I< TT\I (Incl I
e1<COP-TV (Incl I
• KC£T CP8SI
KOCE I P8SI
0 On TV
t l ·TV
,. HBO
C (C1~11l
!ti IWORI NY., NY
@ tWTBSI
I (ESPNI
• (sr-llmttl
• $9otll9ht
e !Cable N•W1. Network I
...
8 OM L.IMAlrt
D INTMOAl.MmC ~ • TWIU9MT JONI -1 ~ w.LAALIOM
.IJW:l8./~
MPORT
WILOOMI MCt<,
KO'TTlfl a eoe NIWtWl'T •:IO• INTMTAINMIHT TONCIHT • TWIU9HT ZOHI
I THI .WW IUNOH ....,.,_ "°°""' (~ -~~ 1:00•~
fll.AYHOUM "Tiit Ot .. I Qllly HQOl<lnt'
A tf)lfllld l:Kll Mlblllered
12·1Mf-old •llen'IOtt to
.., with Ille con111n1 I*•
1on1I or1111 ot balog
"nobody'• kid "(RI
• AmMOOH ~YHOUll
18 (1)9 NIM
UTTI.I H®M OH
TMEllMllM
.THllHCMDllU
tMJ(
I ICOOeYDOO
8DAMI ITM.ET
ID YOU AHO THE I.AW
0{) •a* "Pe4a'e O!AgOft'
( 19771 Helen Reddy, Shel·
lly Winters With 11\e hell)
of a Cf!Ubby OtMn dragon
n•mect EUIOll. an orphan
eecepee It.om hie nutv
toalw lamlly and together
the IWO Of ,,..,., head 104'
Maine 'G'
1:30 (I) IMHE'MOVU 1H
A ,_ family m°"" Into
th• neighborhood and
everyone learna a le1aon
at>out flrll 1mpr...ion1
k'6C%) • • "Give Her The
Moon" I t970) Mull1•
Keller, a.r1 Convy A rlc:t>
American tndu11r1a1111,
vacationing 1n Europe.
compllcat" ev..-y<>ne's Ill•
when he decides 10 m11 ry
• wlnn .. of a village beeury
pageant 'G
-EVENNG~
t:OO 11D8 HEWS 0 CHAAUIE'8 ANGELS 8 TMASUM HUNT
Q) THE MUPPETS
Guest Paul Stmon
G) HAWAII FIVE-0
A JeW9I thoerl 1n the gu•ae 01
8 aoclallle Mii OUI 10 llNI
• lreuured gam belonging
lo Hawaiian 1oya1ty
ft) BUSINESS REPORT
{Il) 00< CAVETT
Guest David Niven f Part 2
~jC8SNEW8 @i A8CNEW8
afNBCNEW8
¢,MOVIE
*a a "Tlle HldNways
( 19731 Ingrid Bergmun
JOflnny Doran Two critl·
dren run away fr om l\ome
and hide •n N-Vor•
Ct1y s Me1ropOlllan Mu'MI·
um or An. where 1riey ore
befriended by a 'P"l1ed
recluM ·a ·
(SI MOVIE
•• " "Hot Le.MS And Cold
Feel" ( 1978) Jim Dale. Don
Knbltl In Tha Old Wall
twin bro!'-• -one rougll
n tough, the Olhef a cny
bred milquetoast com
Pit• rn • grueling contest
to -who wlll tnher'll 111011
lathe<'• lortune ·a· 0MOVIE
* ...... "lfOlkH f19801
Roger Moore James
MMOI\ A dllPP&f, woman-
hallng frogman ts called In
10 thwart the plans of
1111t0rtlonta1a wt>o lleve
114jae91ed a eupply ""IP end ere ltveet.,.rng 10 claatroy
!WO Horth Sea Oii rlga PG
I:*) 0 8UL.LSEYE
Q) W£LOOME BACK.
KOTTER
When Horeheck·1 hllh '"'* d-. Arnokl dectdft 10 tall• ovet as head or Ille
house (Part 21 m KCET NEW88EAT m BUSIHE.SS REPORT
(()(8NEW8 III &AAHEY Miu.ER
HllTll becolnM outraged
when Ile •• fired upon
trlaaed and arr•ted by
two zelloua unllormad
patrolmen who ~ll•v•
he' a a rOOber
7:00 8 C88 NEWS D ...CHEWS D SAHTA AHO THE
THRUIEAAS
T11¥M h11>erna11ng bears
dtecove< 1"9 m&glC and
wonder or ChrtStmas ror
Ille first 11"'4! D A8CNEW8 8 YOU ASt<ED F~ rT
Feetur•d T a•w an s
Snake Alley Mad1c1ne
Man' and Tll4 World's
W•dnl Halrsly11s1
Q) M•A •S•H
COionei fl9911 lu•ns up at
tile 4077111 wanllng pen1C1t
lln 10 b&rt8f for lnform&-
11on
Q) .IOKEA'S WILD fJD OVEA EASY
Gue111 phllanlllroplll
Cyril Magnln and 11<1 COUI•
In R1bb1 Edgar Magntn o
{Il) MACHEL/ LEHRER
REPORT
(I) TIC TAC DOUGH
(Ill EHTERTAINMEHT
TONIOHT
An onllf'lllew wllh Rock
Hudson
(lt THE MUPP£TS
Guest Elke Som,,_
(O)MOVll * * * "The World's Great.
est Athlete" ( 19731 John
Amoe. Jan-Mlehael Vin·
c•nt A coach who I• hav·
ing a run of bad luck
retumt 10 1111 root1 In Afri-
ca and diacoveu a 1uj)41f
athlete ·o·
7:11('%)MOVIE
• * ·~ "SmOl<ay Aod The
Bandit It'' ( 1980) Burt Rey-
nold1, Jackie GlaHon
s i-111 Bulord T Jia1ic.
c.111 In 1111 !WO lawman
brother"I to 11op a telir.c:t
boolievo-. Ille Bandit.
trom traneportlng 1 baby
elephant 'PO'
1:$0 8 I OH T-.. TOWN
Feet\Ked: 111111 C.. Tech on
"Ditch Day": <Ml! an avla..
11011 mu-.um and the
mur11111 whoH work•
gr~ the Welll. I look II
lrafflo aclloole 8 YOONG NOPl.l'I
INCIAL
"Atomic t.eoa" A vltilor
from OUI« .,,_ provldee
I YOUftO r\IMtlr with eome
muctt-. ...cled oonlldencie e HllOLl'l IYI
A "*iklll lluOent (Ron
Hoftrd) Mtlllng flJn Ind
ldlt'8ntuf• on a sum"*
•--'Oft 10 Alrlel dleoov-
... ~lffllatt
I MATOHGAMI ... A•t•H ..... ..,... '° ~.
pretent·O•y. 1tet11IO•
--,....
Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT/Thuraday, November28, 1981
TUBE TOPPERS
KTLA e 7:00 "Santa and the
Three Sears." Three hibernating bean
discover the magic of Christmas.
KNBC I) 8:00 -"Osmond Family
Holiday Speclul." 'l'ony Geary and
Lorna Patterson Join Marie and Donny
Osmond and 33 other Osmond&.
KTIV 8' 9:00 "Merv Griffin."
Gov. Jerry Brown and Art Buchwald are
gues~. '
KABC fJ 10:00 ··Ronald Reagan:
at Home on the Ranch." Barbara
Walters interviews the president.
g11nar1rio or •0771h ltornl
"" II) TIO TAC DOUGH
fJl) MACNEIL / LEHREA
RE POAT m NEWS
CJ) P.M. MAGAZINE
Mam~• 01 u 1rao111on11
rerm lemlly return 10 work
on their land. an mtervlaw
wllh Hollywood slar·mak.,.
Jay Bern•1.,n
@) YOU ASKED FOR rT
featureo French Bna
ong •nd r11e WOtl<J •
Smallest Hor .. ' I.Hi FAMILY ~uo
lti!IN810E THE NFL
tlovla Len Oaw1<>n 1111,d
Noet. Buon1contt prei.a111
hoghllghlt or crHIC•I
games analy•11 and pr11
dtc:hons of upcoming con
Int• In the NFL
8-00 I) l)) MAGNUM. P J.
The 8•·Wtla of a wolO
macho noveltat hires Mag
num lo protect riom untll
sl\e l\as cOllectll<J th<> back
enmony due 1'11" 0 ~THE OSMOND
FAMILY HOLIDAY
SPECIAL
Tony G..,., end LO<nl
P11t•raon ,oln Mane ono
Donny Osmond i nd 33
memtwws or 1ne Osmond
ram11y to ceteoraie the 1101.
oday$ 0 MOVIE
• • • "M11ede 011 34th
SlrMl f 1973) S.bas111m
CabOI David Har1man An
old man named Kris Kiin
gill '' norea by Mecy·s to
plar Santa Cla.n on trio
Thank s,ooving Day par ad• D (1b MORI( ANO
MINDY
A dec:ts1on ol Mindy's
prompts Ma<lh 10 bel·eva
lhA1 rios pe1.,.nt1 don 1 !Ova
111m anymore 8 MOVIE
* * • Tiie Swist Family
Rcib•n:;on 119761 Marun
Molner Pat Delany Baseo
on the story oy JOllonn
Wyu The Idyllic e.1llen<:a
ol • tamoly 11ranc>ec1 on an
1aland ts 1n1arruo1ed by lhe
•rttv•I of a lor1une-l\unllng
Bt 111111\ mercenery ID P.M. MAGAZIHE
Membera of a trldollonAI
farm fltnlly •etlJf'f' 10 wotk
on ,,,.., !arid. en 1nt-
w1111 HoffywOod lllr-makfW
Jay 8erns1e1n Joan
Emoery on how rooe UM
11xo1ic planll Or waaco
on fir II aid fOf ran v1C11m1
II) MOVIE
• • ·~ "Bortn 01 A l agoan<l
f 19731 Documentary An
Ofpllened coyote pup .,.,,
lures out into Iha wide
wondrous world fD OHE lA8't SOHG OH
HIS MOUNT A1N
Glen E•um. wno 50 vea"
1990 opened up the moll
popular Climb •n N0<1h
Arne<oca -lne E•um Rodg<'I
of 11\e Grand Teton Moun
1a1ns -11 profiled
{Il) SNEAK PREVIEWS
Ao9., Et>e<t and Gen11
Soakf'I "OSI an 1nlormal•Vfl
IOOk II Whit I n-•1 lh"
mov'8S
C MOVIE * • * 'Just TeU Me Whal
You Want 119801 Ah
Mac:G•ew, Alan King A
w9ellhy business tycoon
lhln~• 114 has "'' m111rea1
well 1n line untll sha
dem•nds he put het In
charge ol a recently
acquored movie aludto R'
$ COME Blow YOUR
HORt-1
Ellloll Gould and Allee
Gholltef 1tar In 11111 ~
Simon comedy 11b0ut a
•&formed playboy who
londs hlS youngllf bfotnar
totlowong 1n his foo11111ps
0MOV1E a a Tar1ta The Ollar
f1979) Documentary Nar·
raled by Petlf' lnllnov
Tile Ille ol • ptayfUI ollat 11
lraoed lrom his birth 1n a
hOllow trM IO hos aplC blll·
lie With 11\e le.tder ol a
hound pack 'G'
1:30 tJ ®,) BEST CW THE
WEST
Sam mlstakenly wounds
himMll, Ind Ille MW 1111
1>eg1n1 falling apart
G) All IN THE FA.Mil Y
Archie 1nadve<1ently ceu.-
ea • mantelly retarded gro-
C41'Y store bO•·boy 10 k>M
hie )Ob
fJl) SNEAK PREVIEWS
Roger Eben and ~
Sllleel hOll an l!'llonnallve
IOOk 11 wll•l's -al Ille
movies
6i) POATfWT8 IN
PASTEL
(ff)MOVIE * * "19• 1'' (10T91 John
Be4ulhl, TOll'tlfO Mlf\IM
All ... , ... bombfnO ol ,...,,
Harbor. Southern CalllO!·
nle ctvtltana anel mllHary
r>e••onnel ra11c1 """" unb<i·
oled panlC 10 -01 a
Japane.a 111ack In their
own bact.y81d 'PG
t1>0 I) KNOT8 lAHOIHO
Std diet leaving K&tffl
a1one to cope with lier grlel
end 111e management of
111s bua1neM 0 Ol DIFF'RENT
STAOt<£8
0 ({O) BARNEY MILL.EA
0.elricll I portable alrMI
anelyze1 lloOS working
whll8 lie • ou1 on a c:•ll
leaving ll'le olhe< delec:·
11v•• convmced rie·a dNO
CiJ MEAV OAlfflN
Guests Governor J•"Y
BrOllffl. Art Buchwald, Pett•
LaBette Eki&t>eth Or-
0) WHY IN THE WORLD?
al) NASHVILLE MUSIC
0 ZJ MOVIE
• • • • 'Ordinary Peo·
pie ( 191101 M&ty Tyler
Mooie Oonatd Surne<land
A gu11t.rldden teen-ager
trying IO put hot hie back
1ogethB1 1111er "'' orotnar •
dHth and ri1s o""n auk:lda
a11emp1 ··~ OUI 10 NS
complacent fllhe< and ""
cold reserved mother 'R'
I 30 0 ~GIMME A BAE.AK
~arl embareue~ Nell onto
011111ng. then gain• we.oh•
nun sell
0 ~ TAXI
rr .. cabb..S turn into .....
p1oc:la.meo s11t1nk1 ar>d en
connoisseurs •lie< Ela1n11
d1aws • reciut1ve but
talented at1111 out or 1111
SIUdlO 0 0 THE VISrT A TION
MYSTERY
Host B ob Newhart
Guesta tootball coach
Gerry Faull. llwt UniYt!tllly
nf Noire Dame GIM Ck.ob
Mother lar11U Ille Lon
don Players
fD THE RIGHTEOUS
APPL.ES
Starltglll Starortghl A
Los Angetes reco•d e"ecu
l•v• o"eu the Appi. •
r.eqrdong aud•toon
{Il) AMEAICAN 8tcYUNE
0MOV1£
• • "HopllGOICh" (1980)
Waller Me11riau Glenda
Jackson A lor,,_ lni.111-
gence 909"1 It aidolO 0y an
Old name 1n dodging ,,,.
KGB and Ille CIA, ""'° ere
trying to pievent him lrom
1><1bhsn1ng 1111 memolfa R
10 00 0 (() JESSK:A NOVAK
Jessica's car and apart.
~• at• Dfoken 1n10 by an
u"known admirer
0 (!!HILL STREET
8UJES
A tormer cop offers to pio-.,,,de uilormatlon on poftee
corruption 1n .. ct>ange IOf
lretKlom •nd a new >danto·
ly IRI o a mm NEWS tJ o.Jl RONALD
RC.AGAH· AT HOME ON
THE RANCH
Be11>er~ Waller11n1erv-s
P1~1 Reagen et l\Of'ne
c.n ht& Cahl0tn1a renc11
Eli) U.S CHRONICLE
Rural Cmne Snaaow On
The Land Jim Lehr.,.
l'Umines t,,. g•owth of c11-
""n watch Q•OUPI on 1so-
IOled areu as 1 result or
their reaction 10 an oul·
hr.at. ol crime
C MOVIE
• • • Goida Lo..-f 1980)
Golda Redner. Don Novel-
lo Rodner reprtses tome
01 har Saturday NIQlll
Live characters tn lhla
him rec:otd ol her llmlled·
run one-woman Btoaawey
show Whleh also 1nctue1ea a
BeallM modlay Oy Falh•r
Outdo Sarducc1 A
$.BaARRE
John Byn<9r all&#s you
thongs SlrlnQW 1118n l•uth,
191ger than Ille. &nd zanier
111en anyt111no vou've -
seen
10!30 ID NEWS
(I) INDEPENDENT
NETWON< NEWS
ft) CALIFORNIA
JOURHAL
Featu•ed the em .. gence
or the Unlled Farm Work·
t'fl Is traced by concen·
trallng on evenll tn Iha
Oeleno area; en 1nt.-v1ew
with Cesar C11avu
{Il) THE lAWMAKEM
CorrHponden11 Linda
Wanhelmer and Collie
Roberti join Paul Duke IOI
en up.to-1he-mlnute sum-
mary of Congraaalonal
llC1hrlllea
AEMboteEA WHEH ..
''The 8lrd1 AM The 9en"
Dick Ce\1811 IO<>kl al the
tredltlOns and ....oiut1on1.
tile rlgldlttea and ffb«11ee
11181 mllke up A"*'lca'1
11wey..chan01no M•u•I
lllnderdl.
(S) l..AFl'·A-THOH
f<. ciomedllt't hott and louf
GOll'IO conlH1811t• •hO
oom,•I• •o•lnat on•
another ,,. ... Med "' 11111
unoen,q,9d oomed~ oam-..._
11i00e e e <Jloa NIWI 8 IAl\NAY tlQHT
Host MICllHI Palin
Oueall TM Doable Btoltl. .,.
I •AU&. HOQAN
THI MNMOfioll
o.otge thlnlll UOn9I " ""'"'* of him lor -hiving 91.0U.ted frOn't ·=MIU Benny playt 11"8 top T\I
delecllvee
• OO<CAVITT
Gueet Otvld Niven (Par1 2
ol )}
D ...etOE
WAaHIHOTOH
(O)Ot4MTMM
JOUANeY (TlMa
APPN>XIWAn)
l S) WHAT'9 UP AMfJlllOA
featured· Amerlaa'a only
matador • group Of 11-
month· old awlmmara,
h<>memlde alfOtlh and Ille
darlog Youno men wno ny
them. •
1 1:09 (.t) TMI FUOITIV£
"FMr In The o-t C11y
11:30 8 (I) QUINCY
Oulncy and hfll men10r are
on IWO aldel OI I -
Oulncy II convinced 11 an
••ample Of • 11orn1eoc1a 10
gain 1neurance money
lraudulenlly
O IBTOHIOHT
Hott Johnny Cuaon
Gues11 Mclean Slaven·
son. Bud GrMn1pan Tr.a
AnQ81 E,,_.,1>18 01 Calilor
nil.
D ®J ABCNEWS
NIOHTUNE 8 BUT CW OA<>UCHO
Q) 'tHE 000 COUP\.E
1nvot.1ng hos ESP, Fel1a
warnt a Silepllc:ll Oscar
not 10 attend a gall d1nnet
11 Which he 11 10 be named
Spor11wrl1er of 1r.a Y-
(1) SANFORO ANO 80N
To lmpreu l1mon1·a
lulura mother-in-law, Fred
decldee to ge1 1nto the
bOOll ol world record•
fJl) KCET NEW88EA T m A TOM COTTLE
8PECIAl.: OH Bf.ING
OEAF
Tom Colll• 1nt11v1ew1
Annett• Poaetr abOUt the
c:halt.nges or being deaf ~MOVIE
• ••'<\ TM B.td And TM
BHullful ( 1952) Kirk
OtlugJaa. Lana Tu1ner A
cold-hearled Hollywood
ptoduee< a1tect1 11le Uvee
or sever aJ people pursuing
llffdom
H tNSl0£ THE NF\.
Hostl Lan Dawson •nd
Nlc;k Buonlc:on11 pr-I
h1gh11gn11 OI crlllcal
games analysis and pr ..
d1C11ons of upcoming con.
lnll tn Iha NFL
(0 )MOV1E
8 • '<\ Slat Trek •• The
Moloon Picture" ( 19791
Wllllam Shal"41<, Leonard
Nimoy Tll4 for...., c:c>m·
mander of 11\e U S S
EntarpilM rM-blet hi•
Old er-and Mta off on a
m1sa1on 10 find the mys1er1.
OU$ ....... responsible for
Ille deslructlon of numer·
oua Federation staratllpe ·o·
OMOVIE
•• "Tiie Vl1Hor" (19711)
Miii Fetr ... Jotln HU11on
An ancient 11renger lrom a
dtstanl gal11y c:ornM 10
Ear111 lo destroy an 81111 8-
year-okl glr1 wtiO 11 aea-
llned to be 1114 mo1her 01 a
~l>I malevOlenl race
'R'
11:56 (%)THE FUGITIVE
' The Judgment (Part 2)
~MDIGHT-
121J0 8 MOVIE
* • * ''Adventura1 Of
M81CO POio 119311) Gary
Cooper Baal! Rathoone
Tll4 travels ol 13t1Klentu')
explorer Marco POio bong
him 10C111n1
D QI VEGAS
A boytlood lrlend of Dan a
raturna to LH V99as 1• 11
hn man With orc>e<1 to kill
bOth Dan and Pl'><ltp Rotn
(~ 8 MOVIE
• • • ., The Stooge
( 1963) Dean M1r11r1. J•rry
Lewt1 A Singer dec:lae.
11181 he needt his partner
to be • 1ucc;ea1 m MIKE DOUOLM
Guesll Dalla R-. Car·
men McRM . Biiiy Daniels.
John OenkWOfth Stuar1
Levin. George Llorens
aJ AOOKIO
Ryker bel!lendl Jody tile
son of • man wllo ti now In
jail SI P£OPL.E AHO
OAGAHIZAT10H8 CS)M<ME * * "Alls Of fury" ( 1973)
Bruce LM . Marla VI A
martlal erta ••pert ltnda
unexpected danger when
he goe1 to work In • Bang·
kok Ice factory 'R'
1t'.30 D 8 TOMOMOW
Gunia· Congraaawomen
Miiiicent Fenwlcll. El 811·
vedoran ~in. leader
Guillermo Ungo; Chila
Rl....,a and '-daugllle<
; CON'Te.1POAAAY
HEAL.TH l8SUU
"How Sate la Our FOOd?"
MOVll
• •"' "The Private Eyae"
11980) Don Knotta. Tim
Conway T'-.o t>urnbllng
American delectW. -
called In to invettlglle a
..,,.. Of mur<lerS In an
Engllttl cutte. 'PO'
11!AO 8 (J) THI IAINT
A dlplolnet 1-In ol'fncM
na!lon l\ftne up tl'lltelllO.
lllo('O ""'h ·~ of • mllllon dolal'I In
,.;-::.TOP. .... w
MS!WOMNIWI
MOVll • * "0"'9 Het TM Moon"
(1170) Mlt'll'te ~-"'1
Coftvy A r1ctl AtMr1GM
lndvflrlell•. v-tlonlno In
l urope. oo"'plloel .. .-,_·1 llftl lllfleft N
CleCICIM to m11try •
ol • vlll•t• beeuly
llflOMlll. ·o·
1110• MOVla • * Yt "Tl'o8 lldllM Cllon" ('970) JMfl Oabln. Aleln
~ After -l!PlnO lfewt'I 'r~ pdlce, e II
""' refuge wOh Ille MafMI
1:101= Yt "Plan 9 ,,om Outet
Space" (19$0) Beta Lugoel,
\. Mona Mel<lnoon. UFOe
contllnlng e1rante Inhabit·
tnl• lrom an unlloown
ptanel lnVlde Earth,
(.C)MOVll
* * •"41 "S-..p1 Away"
( 1075) Meriengela ~110,
Glancar&o OleMlnl. Ol(ect·
ad l)y Lina Wenmull«. In
order to Mlntl\18 on a
~ed Meell11nanM11
iflanel, I Slcftlan MllOr and
an hallan toe:llllte mua1
Miiie '"* -Ulll anCI pollliclJ dlH .. -.
0 MOVIE
• • • •,;, "Tile Parilla.a
V-" ( 1974) Warren Beat·
1y. Paull Prent111 An
1nve1llgat1va reporter
111emp11 to unc;o...., a
nauonwlda network ot
pOllHC&I .......,,.
1:."6($)MOVIE
••-The 8ltc:tl'' Joan Col-
lina A million dollff Clll·
mond 11 h1da4n on e beau·
t llul body and one man la
determined 10 atop al
nolhtng 10 find 11 'R'
1:501) NEW8 D MOVIE a a a•,;, "The Liv• Of A
Bengal l ancer" ( 19351
Gary Cool*. Franc;t!Ot
Tone England'• lndlan·
based Laocera w1r a1 1i.t
belll••· no melter wtoal the
odde
2:00 D EHTERTAIHMBfT
TOHtOHT
An lnlent-with Roctt
Hudson
Q!NEW8
(HJ llotOV1E
• • •;, "The Bu1htdo
Blade" (19901 Richard
Boone, Jamel Eltl Jo4\M
A U S Navy command«
lffdl I band OI American
MlllO<I and neUve Japa· n-111empt1ng 10 rec<>"lr
a symbollc awor~ of
Japan R
2:28 8 MOVIE •*''I "Poor Devil" ( 19721
Sammy Davia Jt , Jade
Klugman Wilen an ovet·
wor11ed accounlanl ottett
to Mii hi• IOU1 for a c:hanoe
10 get,,,.., with 1111l>OU,1
bumbllng deVll decldn lo
Ilka him up on 11.
2130 0 HEW8
2:J6 (ZJ MOV1I
a• a ' The Longell Ylll'd"
( 1974) Burl Reynold•.
Eddie A1ber1 A former P<O
quarterbecll doing tome 1n
• Southern pr\9on IS gNeo
Iha fob ooacNng a grouc>
of conV1C11 lor a no-hOlda-
barred football gam•
~UllSJUMd• a:00 m WOVtE * e V, "Arwo" (IMlll Rob-
"1 Mitchum. Peter Falk
An over·caullou1 and
ttubborn ~al ~
lu<ne Iha AnZio ln¥811ion
Into a dl1111er
ti) MOYIE * * . .., ·~ .. ( 1949) Bri-
•n Oonlevy. Ella RalllM A
welt-<oncet"9d pl04 l)y •
'#Omll'l and ._ par
to dlspoae of ._ huabend
Yla an 'acddenlel" Cleetf\.
t.oacllflr• irontcatty tor
ac:MmlnQ pair
8:168 NEWS
3:30 (¢)MOVIE
*a * "Just T4111 Me Wile
You Wanl' \ 1110) AD
MaeGraw, Alan King A
wealllly bualnMS tyeootl
11111\ka Ile hU Ille mitt,_
-II In line untll Ille
demand• ha put her In
charge ol a recently
acquired movie S1udlo. · R'
($,}MOW * • "Young And-
Frea"Wllen 1ragedy I
• young boy 10 jCMn a
on train in t~
_,,he~·.
Indian glf1 end blg1na
MWllfa. 'PO' 0 A 8AAE TOUCH CW
MACMC
Wortd-clut magician Shi-
mada. the amoll
C8rr1ilnl end an
"a11ecvtion" by gullot
ffa IMl\nd In thla
lllteCI .-wig ol tflOIMllfi•
and daullng megleal ...
>M 8 MOW · * •.,. '°Chope>y And
PrJnCeN" I 1973) A
ed Ch009)'. the CrldlM
Angel, Is hel¥1f1-<Mlll tq
act 11 gullldlen -''1' 8llY9t1and ptlncMe. ..
.t;aQ 0 MOYIE '
* * *. "~<J!Nwy ~
pie" ( 1990) Mery T)tet
Moore, Donald Su=:t A guilt~
trying lo put his 11'9 ~
together lh ... ,,.. brOttllot'•
claalh and 1111 own ~
allempt rMChll out to "' compllOln~ lllhet end h4J
;old,,__, moetwr ~' • •:M (%)MOVIE {-
,, • ,, • ··Ot<dlnery .....
pie" (tNO) Mery Tyter
M~,Ooneld~.
A gull1-rldden .......
trying 10 put .. ""' MOii together ,,.., Illa "'°"'9('1
death end Illa -llllOldl
attempt r88odl9 °"' 10 .. ~··--Ind .. ~ ~ ""°"*· .,_.
by Armstrong a 81tluk
. .
t
~ •
TRI
FA1'11LY
c1aca;1
by Bil Keane
by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
"It's the Mormon Tavtmapple Choir." ''I wouldn't watch It If I were you. It'• rated 'R' •• for
rubbl1h."
MARMADl:K£ by Brad Anderson DENNIS TH£ MENACE Hank Ketchum
7'~
11-1'>
"Do you suppose he'd know anything
about our pumpkin pie that disappeared?" ~ITS lHE SNAE WAY Irr QJR HOUSE ...
TAANKFUL-I OUT STUFFED ~II
BUT I COULDN'T
HANDLE 1'MAT
MOON Mt:LLINS
I . Wt;LI., FOL.KS, WHAT -me ~fSULTS Do You THINK OF MY S~OULD 8~ IN... 1'H,AtJK5GIVING
PRODUCTION
lNIS YEAR ?
#
:.ci.:.:.r.:= .i.--i~-+--
.... • l •
51 Adjllllt ~
53 Fabf'le
55 Slttk•
5e Put.ln-e.y'•I
!alt•
51 Scouto-'-"4 ..... -+ ....
5e OrM11o eo Umellrld
81 Adlm'•
gtlndlon
12 OfllCe copy • "0..-.._..i....-11_.. ....
and .....
\
PMNlJTI
I GUESS YOU'LL
BE OUT ALL ~y
A8 USUAL---
GORDO
AND )OU
ALWAYS COME
HOME
STARVED
WAIT
JUSTA
MINUTE
00 , A FEW {
1'0 \.\l(t ~ OEW't~
"f'otf.l<t'f_,~ AMO A
co.teust'i ~"~u ~
PL.US ONe KNOWN
ON &..Y "T"O AN OL..P ARMAPI &..L..O IN
l-ARE!PO, -rexAs !
by Charin M. Schulz
t9y Tom K. Ryan
by Ernre Bushm1ller
YOU CAN TAKE ALONG
THOSE DOG BISCUITS
FOR LUNCH
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Bat1uk
&J£; <X)OR ~~L5TIV\A5U~
NOW A~D Al()fD lHE ~ !
by Kevin Fagan
11M (,LAO 1~
ft\.•'S V10W"f L.NE
1Z>~ 'f'llli\
by George Lemont
ONE! L..IVIN6
NO"i. SeQUl"T"UR / Mee! I s ANO"T".He!R.
Anti-infection
drug hailed
lllJNNEAPOUS (AP> -A new Clrut cou1a
belp block a deadly fortn of lnlectlon that preya on
or11n lr anaplant patlen ll, especially thole wh o re·
celvo kidneys, a University of Minnesota Hoapttal1
r ea~raay1 .
PICTlnoln IVIW•IM
llMl9 If AT'llM•T
, ... Mli..tl119 ---., ..... 119 -..!111t••t1 Ill 110.MIALTM CINTI•. ti) 1104fllALTM CINTl•I. 11' Int 1711' ,.,_., C.W !Ntt, CA_,,,
,..~ l-M!--1 tnc:•••• Ca 0.1 ...... ~.,,_ ...... ,, t1' ....
tn• llrelt ••· C. .. -..; CA euJ, Tiii• -.,,.... 11 co~IM •r • , ... ,., ...
T-1-neti-1 IM. ,,.~
Miit. VICe Prtt1411f!t
Tllla ~ •• fl*! wtlll Ille ~ly Cltt'tl tf ~tn99 C...fttY 91\ ...... J,H91,
,IC'flTIOUt lllU ... ...,..""'.,.... T"9 ...... lllt .,.,_, lrt llei"I ...... _.,
o•••o• COU HTY AUTO TllAOI•, a .. t RIClllff, lvlta '"· lrVIM, CA ft1U Wlt l•11• Oeler C•rffr•t1•11 I• Cell..,.,...,.,..,, ... ,.,.,.., 1uc-.
W .. t•, ll'WW. CA '21U.
Tltlt IMltlMst h C..iflKle<I '' I "'""'' ...... Wlelallf C)My c:w.
l(elallr.Wlel .... .......... "''-.~ .......... was flltll .......
Orange Coast DAIL. V PILOT/Thursday, November 26, 1981
CHRISTMAS GI FTS
WI TH A
CUSTOM TOUCH
C1 .,
The dru8 acyclovir WH found eftecUve In
flihtln1 c1tome1aJovlru1, or CMV, In several
tranapla nt p atlenta tested over 14 montba at
University h()spl\als . Dr. ffcnr)' Ballour saJd.
C:-ty c~ .. Or ..... C:-Cy -
Htv.), '"'· .. ,...., .. ., ..
..,..., ..... Or ..... CO.M Dally Pli.t. ............. Or .... (Mp Dally Plitt,
.. We 're very encoura1ed by our resulta,"
B1lfour said, add1n8 that an intravenous form o r
t be drua could be avuilable to ptlyalclans by early
next year.
.. ..... J, 12, It, .. 1•1 061 .. 1 Nev J, ti, It, 9'. 14'1 47t.>41
l'IC'YlllOUI 8UllNIU NAM& STAT•MaflT
Ballour. director of the University Hospitals
clinical virology division, said C M V la the most
common disease to strike kidney tran splant pa·
Uenta In the first six mont hs alter sureery.
l 111 1011-1n9 .,.,_, are aolnv
~ ........ ,
CAI su•ll.TY CHEMI CAL
Sul'l"LY CO. 1111 SU11£T\' 6UPPLV
CO. "'' Monrovle, Coale Mew, C •lil«IWO 0.21 "It's a greater ris k than oraan rejection," he
said. 'Jbe body sometimes ratlles its defenses to
rteh t transplanted organs.
"•Pll•n ICuhlanaar, 1••• MOMO•I•, ~I· Mau, CalllOfftle flti1 o•-~ ...... NWN\rovla, Cotti ~ C.thterl\W '2621 T he virus attacks about 60 percent of kidney
trans plant patients a year, and between 10 percent
to 20 percent of those str icken die, BaJfour said.
Art llllhl-. 1..U C:.1vo Ori.,., Sell Lau City, VWll
"''' °"''""• " cond"''" "' • .. ~,··~ He said C MV's symptoms resemble typhoid
fever -chills. high temperature and severe
headaches If the Infection s preads, he said,
pneumonia, encephalitis a nd bleeding ulcers may
result.
StajiNn R""l-11111 ll .. !IH.-1 Wti II-wllll Ult C..,llly C..,,. of Or-(.-ly on Nov 11. 1•1
PtrWt Pvl>H.,_ Of-CotM OOllY Piie!. NOV. It, Ja, 0.C:. l, 10, ltll ~I
Scientists believe CMV rem ains latent ip the
body until a patient's natural defense system has
been s uppressed by drugs used to prevent organ
rejectj()fl, Balfour said. l'ICTITIOUS 8UllN•SS NAMt: ITATaMaNT In a vol unteer program, the University
Hospitals began testing acyclovir on 16 transplant
patien ts in April 1980 and e nded the study in J une.
Tiie lollowlfle perM>t11 are dolf19 """-· .. CA PITAL MANA GEMENT llEAL TY, INC .• JU W. First St , Svll!I 2U, T111tln, CA tt610 I• C.fllOfnla
<"'90<•00lll. Eleven subjects had received kidneys, four got
bone marrow and one received a heart. Nine pa·
tlents received a cyclovir intravenous ly while
s even others were given a placebo. All were sick
with various symptoms such as pneumonia, in·
testlnal bleeding and e ncephaJitiJ.
St anlty "'°""*"'· 1 »11 E. E vaM, Aurora, Cotor-IOOU
Kim L.owftdel, 1<1< (a C..lllornla ,.,.,.,._, ,.,, E. EYOfll, A11~•.
ColOr-IOOIS. Tllll IMdlneu la <OMu<led l>Y • llMlted__......
"The patients with CMV who got acyclovir had
st"tistkally significan t shortened per iods or time
to lhe day of improvement,·· Balfour said
CeplUl ~ llHllY Inc.
$ ........ M.. TllOme>Mn
Vice """!dent Tiii• -wet flied wllll IN County Ci.rt. of Oranoe Covnt1 on Nov. l. 1t11. D uring the s tudy, none of the subjeds receiv·
ing acyclovir had the virus detected in the
bloodstream after one to two days of treatment.
F11_,
Pvl>ll.,_. Oranee C:-11 0.lly PtlOt, Nov S, 12. It, 2', ltlt H 11 .. 1 Two patients receiving acyclovir died, while
four deaths were reported in the placebo group.
Since the number of s tudy patients was s mall,
Balfour recommended that the research continue FICTITIOUS aUStNaSS
NAM~ 5TATEMENT Possible side e ffects of acyclovir include
kidney impairment, although careful dosage reg-
ulation could avoid that problem. he said.
T II• 1011owlno perso11 u ao1ng
bus.ne•• •.t.. 8VRltHAM RAC.I"(; PROOl.IC1S. 20J11 A<ec•• ~lttet.
~n ... AIW. tte1911U, (.alllOtn1a 92101
JOfln Uldff 8urn1Wm, 2Cllll Acacia ~''"'· s.nt. .an. ><elg1>11, c..111orn1e '2101
• The drug was developed in 1974 by Burroughs·
Welcome, a private trust in Research Triangle
Park. N.C . The group filed with the U .S . Food and
Drug Administration in July for a license for in·
t ravenous acyclovir, Balfour said.
11111 ..._i<'IHI •I tonduC.ltlO OY en lndlvlOuel
.-8"'""'°m Balfour said a licen se could be approved by
late December. and the drug could be marketed
about \a month later.
1 lltt •• _._, w .. llled •• ,,. ""' C.ovnly Clerk of Or•nve t.ovnty on Novem-17. 1911 '11M11 PMl>l1.,_ Or-c.o..i O.tly 1'1lol,
l'ICTITIOUS 8U"Nt:U MAMt: STATIMINT Tiie l•llowlng o•"o" ts doing IMltlftff 1 .. ; f ·LINE MAlll(ING OISTllltlUTOll,
, .. RechnJ ... SI .. C•I• Mew, CA ftW. CC.Vna1 s. L.lllo<dlt, i... llOChHter
M, Cotu-. CA mn
T"ll INS!""• ll <~led 1ty .., IMIYicNal, c-uii. s u8of'oe Tlllt .._I WU llild wllll tt.
C..,,.ty C1tr11. of Or-C°""ty on
Nev.'·, ... ""-...... 1 .... Orat191 CoHI 0-11y PllOI, N•v. S, It, It, 2'. 1''1 •1~
C,P11'11
HOT ICE OF TllUSTEa·s ULI TS No F 1111
0.. Dec-. 10. 1'11 al 10 00 .t. M llFS SERVICE COllPORAllON H dlllV •OPOlnlltd Tru\let under end 011t1uant lo Deed ol TruSI Otle<I
lfoWmt>e< 1 1m r..:..-No~ 10
1'71 H IMI No 1~ In boo1t l?OJ,
P<l9f 3'7 ~ Offkl&I lltcoreh If\ I ... affl<• of tllt Covnty Re<ordtr ol
OrMt• c-ty Catllornla WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCT ION TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH CA!HIER'S CHECI( OR CEllTIFIEO
CHECK. lpayal>le at lime ot •alt In ••wful money OI""' Vnlled !.tetHI •I llepul>ll< "-•1 Savin~ Ofld Lo.an AHoclatlon, 1ol00 E 11111 St S.111a
Alla, c.tff '1701 au rl9"t 111i. •"" lnl•rt•t conwyltd 10 •nd n-Mid l)y It ullCler said 0.•d of Trull In lhe
~..,..-1y lit..-111 wld c-•• -Stet• Ottcrllled •• Lot 13 of Tract No USI '" , .... City of Fountain Vall..-. COVllly Of 0r .. 911
Sitt• of Calllornl1 .. per M.aD
"'"°fded I,, S-Jt4, P999s I .,.,, 1 Of Mltcell..-MaP'I, In "" otll<t ol IN County Recorder of Wld '"""'Y EXCEPT alt oll. OU encl otller llydrocertion su!KttncH In ..,., vllder end/or IMI .....,, be produced at or l>el-a ~ of 500 feel from "" wrface of wkl I-bV1 wlll\out u..
rlt M of --9ac• eniry. •• rotMrved '" Ille .,_.., t'KorOtcl Novemller 10. 1m
In •0011. ttOJ Patt »t 0111<1•1 lll(Ofd\
Truslor C HER I LV ltN SWllETLANO, A SINGLE WOMAlt AMO JO..N SWEETLANO ANO GAV SWEETLAND. HVSBANO ANO WIFE, ALL AS JOINT TENANU Record ewn.r: Al\lo1rwll• c.r-.
T"• 1lretl addreu and otller ce111mon .,...19na11.,,., 11 a11y. o1 Ille re61 property dHcrll>ed at>ova h
1111rportM to be· "'" Mt a.meter :1rc1e. ,_,, •• ,, v.11..,. C.lllO<"ftla .,,..
Tiie _,..1gnec1 ''""" dl1<lalm1 .,,., llal>tlley for any lncorrttlNH of nw ti,... lddreu -_, commo.1
"'l•n•tlon. H any,......,. i.reln
.. Id \Ole Will bit rnadt. '1111 without covenant or warrtnty, upreu or
lm•ll" ,..,,.no tltle, --.ion ... tllCumttr-••· lo N'I' Ille unpaid N lll\Ct ol Illa ft04e!JI tocurM 'Y Miid OeH of Tru.i, lo-wit S1M.S1J.OI,
l"CtvcllftO .. ~ In Mid nttehl, edvance\, H 11111'1', vtldtr t,_ terms of
Miid 0-411 Tnist, '"'· ,.,., ... .al\CI t"> .. fttff ti lllt Tl'\lfl .. -el lllt INtta c t...-i 1>¥ Miid OetCI ol T n111
PilUC llllt
"CTITIOUS 8USINIEU N-IE5TATl.MENT I lie following perJOn II doing
l>u~llftS at.
ltO•. 1', »,OK. 3. 10, ltll ~HI
F llMIJ
P..Oh.,_ Or-Coatl Oelly l'lltl,
ltov 1', Ja. Dec: l. 10, 1•1 >OIHI
NUllTa ESTRADA C.AROEltllt(; -------------SER\ilCE, 111 Milrrill Pl••. ~I• l'ICTITIOUI a USINIU ~ ... C•ll"'""• mv NAM« STATt:MaNT
ConGetK•on E~r-, Ill -•rill TIM foll-1"9 ""°"' are dol.,t P~•. c.one Mo>.a, C..111«111• t1•11 bu\iness ••·
Tiiis -IMI~ " 'OftOVCtMI lly .,, COAST LEASING, UOO BrlUol 1nci1 .. oua1 Streel Nori". Svlle ng, N••POrt """-"'<-Eurao.a ae~ll. CA nM0
111•1 ii..--... "'" ••Ill tr,. Jim Slemon1 1mporl1, Inc . •
co .. nty Clen Of Oranoe '°"'"'' "" C•llfornl• GOl'-•tlon, UOI OV•lt. ltovemoer 11. , .. , Newpo<1 8Md>, CA.,...
F17aelJ Tllll bol\IMU II <OMllKle<I lly a P..Ollwwo Or-co." uaoy ,.,IOI. c«11<>reti0rl ltO•. 19. Ml, Ok l . 10, 1911 loOll .. I Jim 51-lm00<1\, Inc
.Hfw\M. lkl-r Sac./CNef Fin. OH
SU P a a 1oa COUllT
C A Ll~Oa 11 1 A, COUNTY
Tiiis a\Al-1 wet flied wltll llM
County Ci.r11 ol Or•n9P c-ty °"
0 I' Nov. J, "" 0 " Mek ..... & Gaff Aa_.,. .. u. o •ANoa. 7• CIYk C..... on ... Wffl
'-laAM.~ft1t1 MA•llll AGa OF ,LAINTI FF; PAM•L.A 8ROWN o•rlNOANT: THEO OO•• D. v••NA Oaoa a TOS"°" CAUSE AND OECLAAATION FOR COHTEMPT C.-s« NUM•••: M JIMI MO'TICa l
·--A191w---·-..... Otfa .. Utt
N~ 8-11. CA fM6I ,.,,_
l"Ul>ll"*' Or-. Coa•1 Dally PllOt,
"9• S. 12, It, 2', t•1 41HI
A G-.npt Pf'OCeedlfto 11 crlmlnat 111 ,.., .. ,.. II Ille court finch you In N,._.,
<Ofttempt. , ... POUll>I• penalllu NO:~~:i:.:~::ro~°"
'"<luoe lell--llM. COAJTMUSICHaVICE, You -lfltllled to-earvkn of •n INC SHAalS
attorney -thOuld '9 <Ofttulteo NOTICE IS HEllEtlY GIVEN IMI p.-.ptty ln -r lo aultl you 11 you COAST MYSIC SERVICE INC .. 111 <-afford Ml attor ... y, -C-1 rtdffm 2t of Its lharfl
may --'"' ., -y llO f'ePf'-Tiie datt flaed for r-mpt-'' '°"· AVISOI November JO. ttt1 •I 5 to o m
U __ __,__toc1t cc1ntvmac1a .. l'a<tll< O•yll91111 1me, •no 111• " ..,__,,_, red9mplloll orlu I• YOO 51 per ,,.,.,e, d• lndole crlml11al. SI la corte la lntludlng •fl ac<rv•d Aftd unpaid •n<-•• .,. conturnocla, • ~i.,.. posll>IH Inc Iv yen Mntencla en I• :.•:~~: ~::.,."'•'• lo "" date
<•r<•I y mun.. Tiie pfec.e at Wlll<ll "" or after Ille V•l•d Uant •1 derecllo de 1°' date flud lor redemDllon, Ille wrvklol cit .., ......, • ,.....,. .. i. ,,.,.,~,..may ooce1n ... ......,., lot
.,... <~\Air "'~kl• para -,,,. ,_,..,.,.'°" price "" ..,,...-, of
pueda etltttrlo. SI ldttd no HI• .,. tllelr lhare t.enlfl<etft for t,,. ,,..,..,
<Ofldlcl-dt ll099' lot N"'klot cit to lie ,......_ 1, lfte office al Evan 11" ...,....., 1• <Ot'le lo PCMI•• '**•• Grvl>er C..f' A localed at 11•00 .................. It • .• ""·To c TE~ .... Me' .. BROWN llr-llurst SI .. SI• 10), Huntington 1. I " ... ....... t BH<h, C.ilfornl• 2. YOU ARE OROl!ltEO TO COAST MUSIC SERVICE APl"EA• IN THIS COV ltT AS INC •
FOLLOWS TO GIV£ ANY ll!GAL by Jo.achlm balktno, •EASOM WHY THIS COUllT Prttld9nl
SHOULO NOT FINO YOU GUILTY Pvl>tllNd Oranp C.Oetl O.lly PllGt, 01' CONTEMPT ANO PV NISH YOU Nov tt 1' 1'11 fCDt-11
FOR WILLFULLY OISOllEYINO ITS ---·-·---------O•DERS AS HT FORTH IN THI!
OECLA•ATION ll•LOW AHO
REQUIRE YOU TO PAY, FOii THI! -------------BENEFIT OF THE MOVING PARTY, FICTITIOUS,UllNISS
THE A TTOtlNl!Y FEES ANO c:osn HAMI H ATaMaNT
01' THIS PltOCEEOING. 111• 1011ow1no pertOft •• OOlftg A: 0... 12/4/11; .,.,,,_ l . .S, In bu1lt1tU H ; CERAMIC Ol:SIGlt o.,t. I. MA l E RIALS, JU"' Heliotrope,
1 : Adclreu ol co11rt: 100 Civic C.Monadel-.CAtt.ll. Canter on .... $ettt• Atlt. CA '2111 RICHARD 1 C.AllLl~LE, JIJV.
OAT•DOct. I, Ital. Hellotr-.C.•-oet Mor. CA fl•U. ~ALOE. OWEN llll• l>vslMlt Is <-11<tK by aft
,....., tf tllt S-IOr Ct111n lllCllYld...i.
IDltotl W, MfU.a•, I• Rl<Nrd T C«Hlle
"91f, .........,,..... 11111 Kl-I ,. .. lllM wllll lllt ....,.AM,CA""6 (.ouftty Cltf'k of Orange county en
CJMI ..._, Ito•. 11, 1'11
...... ltl!M Or11191 CMll O.tly .......
Nov. S, U, "· ,._ t•l ...,, .. , 1'11Wl PllClll-Or ..... C.0.11 Dally PllOt,
TIM ~ICIMT _, •alel OetCI of ------------NOY, It,,., Qe<. ), 10, ltll $014-.. 1
f /VU lltratofore riatvteel and
ditlt.,.red" IN"""°'....,..• .. r1tten Oeclarttlen oti Oefaull -Dem-ler Sale, tncl • wrlll•" Nollce of Oeltult •ftll Election to a.11. Tiie llM•••..,.... ,..,... .. kl Notice ef O.fa .. 11 .... a1«1..,_ to Seti I• tit rtco...., tn Illa county Wfltr• !fie rffl ,,....,,., "ioc-... ,..,,... _..,. ..,.. c.nwo J
......... ~k Ftcle<ll S•Ylflti, 11+-S.t·•
'frllMM: RF$ ~le• c:.r-ttloft .-tt. C....... M. ~. tt).nMttt
o.tt; .......,..., "· I ... • •Fs •••v1c1 CO•lllOIUmON .-.... T_ 9y~H.llO...,.J.
..,..1.=t"'.:CC:~o.11y ,.."" ...., It, M, OK.>,,_, MtM '
PtCTn10UI IVtlNIU
NAM9 STATl•NT l'ICTITIOUI aUllNll.ll
T"t rttl-lllt "''°"I• •tlftt NAMalTATIMINT
'""'""'••: Tll• lallo•fnt '"'"" Is Hing JUST «J NATURAL P~OUCTS 11 .. slntu at: NEWPOIU LIOVOR,
'11 ,, 1111...,tlM AYtll ... , N"'"'1 2M4 ltKltk c:-t H..,_ay, New-'
ltecll, c:Mlfwlllo9** 8ff(JI, CllllltrlMa ...... lv•r-t/.· ~. StO 9"ttl Pla""E aflUOLCNO, HI Ll11cel11, •a Monterey Par•. wu"rooll Plt U , C••I• Mtt•, CMtfWNetf7Sf CMll_,.-.,
TMt ........ " Uf!M ... .., .. llll• ..._. I• ~ ... ,, ... .,......, !Mlvitwl,
._..,..~ ~ .. ,..,..a.no. ....
TMt --.... -fltM wMll IN Tl* ~ -Ill .. w1111111e C-tT ~ flf Or-.. c:-.tl' .. ,_,, c;.ltr'fl ff Or' .... ~T eft N......,.., a.,.., .. ,,_ ..... ,.. .... .,,,...,.
.......... Or .... c.-omtf....... ...... ..... Or ... c.Mtl Deir,= ""' 12, tt1M,0ec.a.,1"1 ........ '"11. It, M, Oe<.1, , .. 1•t .....
••
•tVlfltOI C:OUlf'fY
IUN•lt» COUH -..-.. .. ... o.a.Ot • ..._..,ca . .-,LA1NTll'F: &.II.A Fa•N lllAIOH. OllFaNbANT OllOllOIA MAI ZEOl!ltAll, l..OllllAINI VIOLaT
HUl'I', JAelt IATOIHI SHIOTA, oM ooas 1. 11.11~~ 1M.11111 .... c.........,,,_
HOTICEI Y°" MW lllNfl _., TM
<Wit may dlKIW .... .,., \'fll WI-,_ ....... _,. llflltM .,... ,....,..
wltlllft a • ., ...... lw lltf-..left
Ml-.
II 'l't<I wtlll m _, IM -'" tf en anorney 11111\b ......... .,... •-.. •• 11rompt1y " that yo11t written
,,_,., It ""Y· may t>e llled on llmt.
AVISOIU\UCIMtldo~ El tr1 ........ ~ tlKlelr c ... tre U4,
•lft a11dlencla • mtftot que Ud.
rttOCH14a dllntro • » dl•t. Lt• I• lnlormaclClll -11.-.
" Ullell -tOlklt.ar al <-.It ..
lift •t>oeaclD on HI• ..... 10. dttlerla heurlo lmmedl•tamente, de ttl•
mtMfa, tu ~· H<rlla. al i..v
•lg ...... ~ -.... ,.,_. ·~· 1. TO THE DEFENDANT: A C:lvll compltlftl hat l>teft !tied l>Y Ille plelnllll .... nal you. II .,.... wllll to
cltlon4 11111 ._...I, .,... -· wltllln a day1 titer lllll wmtNfll " .. , ....
Oft you. Illa wttll IN1 c..,'1 • wrlll!tft
••-.. to""' complaint. u-.,... de to • .,_ cltfault wUI lie ..,, .... tft
apt>tlutlon of trw pltlnlllf, -'"'' cout1 mey ..,tar • l~t ~ln•I
you for ti. relle4 •-In tflo complaint, •"1<11 <011ld "'"" In garnlsi.n-t of waon,&aklno of m-y
M P<-r1y or otllor roltef .......... lft
"" <omt>lal"4. Oe\M: J_.,it, ltll C>OffALO O. SVLLIVAN, Clerti ay II. ALVIZO, Oepvly
Gt.EN G. MIU.I• A P,.... ... _I I.Aw c:.--.. ,,. .. ,....,,,_.. .....
S.llerw .... ,C..._I P"l>lllNd 0nnte c-t Otlly Piiot. Nov 11, It, Ml, Oe<. >. 1'11 •..Wt.
'UPl:RIOlt COYllT OF CALIFOllNIA COYNTY 0' ORANG€ CASE NO. A·1111U OllOEll TOSHOW CAUH
ICC, 12/1)
t N lHt: MAllldl 01' IHl: APPL1t.A110" 01' MVY llEL ELllAbt:IH Mlt.Ht:L f(Jk (.HAltGk
Of-NAMt: WHEkt:A!i, Pe11t10ft•t MUYREL
t:LllAbt:lH Mtc.HEL l\al Iliad •
Pe1111"" w11111,. c.i.r11. Of'"'' Coun '"" en orO•t Cr\•ne1n9 her n•tn• ., IOllOWS ln• n•m• o • Ml.IYRkL
candy • restaurants • children• clothing • gold
jewelry • beauty auppllea
cards • lampa • allk flower• • tlea
men'• clothing• co1metlca
dried flowers • vitamins
stereo's • kittens • skirts
•sweaters
haircare• puppies
buttons 'n' bows
women's clothing
flowers • boots
ski gear• hair care
pot holders
cruises • skis
back packs
basketas
decorative soaps • chlneae furniture • llngerte
r--------------------~ I $1 INSTANT PHOTOS $1 1
I WITH SANT A I
I $1 .00 OFF I
1 t·Ra .• :-.AT .• M ~ .• :-.oo\·. 2;, i11 & n I
I !'i.\T. a. s t '·· ot:.c 5 a. Ii I
:-.AT. a. ~t '·· oa::c az & 1:11h 1 I ..;\T.·Tllt;RS .• HE<'. 19 to :!llh
• 11 a.m . · ~ p.m. $1 II
Mus t Bring Coupon
, ___________________ _
• ....
ELllAbl:IH MICHEL IO btlH 1-~~---~~--~--..-~------~~-~-..-~~---~----~-r-~~--~---~-~-MICHEL
11 I!. ONOEREO IMI all per-.
1ntere••eo 1n .,.. •bove.ff\HUM m•U•t
•-•r blttore lllll L°"'I el 10:>0 am. 1-------------1-------------
I ~ ,,
t ' c. ' ~ ' ~ \
"' ~ ~ ~
I
on Oe cemll., JO. tUI , '" Ill• tovrtroom of O.pt ;, al 100 C.l•K
<.enter O"v' wou, ~enl• At1•.
L•••torn••. ano "'°'* <•vM, If .,_y, Why 1M pell!-10< C ....... 01 Mme
FICTITIOUS au•tNEU NAME STATE M&NT FICTITIOUS 8uSINISS NAM& SlATIEMENT ' "CTIT10US a USINUS l'ICTITIOU' 8U"NUS ~ NAMI: STATaMt:NT NAME STATEMENT jl t tle tollOW'"O perM>n\ are dOtl\Q T ft• toUowrt;no e>•r,on i \ doing
buMMM M bu\lf .. U .as \'wllH VOU llt MIOoO. 1200 C .. y VENlURE REALTT. 191U
Tiie l•ll-lng Pl''°"' are Ool"9 1>u!~:~•o•l119 Mr\on " doing I V
DU$lMMas. lHE PANlREE lltb _ _. ••
IEACH·GA.'!_"IOrflLO ~~NlE:.·I StrHI, Fountalft \i~lln, C•lllo•n•e
L TO .• 1..S a.v•-W, ~-....... '110I
•hOulO not C. gr-K i l IS foVRlHl:k OkOt:AEU 11•11 •
Ot'W 01 llllli (Jr .. r IO -\.-W ll"l>lllllla on 111e ·oa1ly Pllet .. a
f\t••P•o-er ot oenerel <""''•tto" pr1n1eo '" vr-<--ntw, U1tteft11e,
111<• • -,.,. -wcc .. .iw _.. .,_ "' __ ... , ____ _
pelll•on Oeted .. __ 11.1911
llrlK• w s..n-r.
Slr••t, ~t•oort t:t••<-f'I, C•ilforn1• MacArthur BoulUt•rd, Sult• J2~.
'2..S 1rv1ne, (.allfornl• '1111 lta••I O.•tt Ht<lla, 1200 Cley Harry °"'oloM>n, It.OJ Emtralo Slntt, N--1 8ta<ll, t.alllorn1a Bay, L-a .. <~11, (.alll0<nle '16$1 n..a Tnl, bod!,...., I• cona...:1~ Dy •II
,...,,,.. M. Strom•n, -c.1ey ,,.,,,y ...... ,
ilt••l ....... ..,, ••Kft, C...Ht•'"I• .... ,-,y H•fr")' Wotortofl ,,..,, Tiii\ _ _. -filed •1111 u. Tiii• DYllMU " <Ot1<1vctoa Oy • County Clerk ol Orange coun1y °" -r•I -1"'"'11P Novemi.. 10, 1•1
llMOI 0.MI "•CO Fil ....
Milr, Callfortlla'262f 8r1Ke 0 Waflhn 5091 (Jlepat• GeM99 0 . 8uc<ola, Manatltlt Drive Rl~llk c..ti~nla t:UOI
Gen.rel ""1ft..-, 1MJ tl•'l'lldt Or1w, "''~ _,,...,· h condv<t.a Dr •n c..-. oet ~. c.tlfonll• n..25 1no1v10 ... 1 C•t,,.....,.. C. 8..c<ol•, -·•1 en.c. o WMllln
,.,..,..,. IMS 8a)1.ldo on .... c..... Tiii• _.....,I;.,.. filed wllll Ille del Mar, C.111-nla "625 CllrlstlM J . lllK<OI•. a ........ , ... ,, .. , .... ~ of Ora1199 c-•Y on Partfttr, l..S 8tV1lclt Or1w, Cor-NovembtP< It. ltll
del Mar. c.tltornle tltJS • : Jl>Oge Ot Ille !M4>o<•OI' (.out I
.IOSl"°H A NGH.O
11111 ............ 1 ... llled ...... Ille
Coullly Cle<k of 0<•"90 C.ounty "" P .. 1111\hl!CI Or1n9t to.UI D•lly P1lol,
Nov 1•. 0.C l , 10, 11, 1'111 $19".fl Tlllt l>uslftff\ II condll< led ,, • •
llmlt..s pttt,.....lhlp '
F11UJ1 Pu1111.-Orange Coal! Dally Ptlot.
Ito• 2', o.c l. 10, 11, 1•1 111-..1. w MIM'I'. Aftelle & n atuer . l.aw\'en
1 ... Sell ....... Hllll ae.. ,........,.._,u.n ... ow ..... P11l>hWWd Or-C.0.Sl 0..ly POIOI "o• ... 111. '-· J, 10, , .. I ~·
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
ALICE M . E ASTMAN
ANO OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTE R EST ATE
NO . A111109.
T o all h eirs,
beneficiaries, creditors
and contingent creditors of
Alice M . Eastman, aka
Alice Mattie l::astman
and persons who may be
otherwise interested tn the
will and1or estate:
A pet1t1on has been filed
by Thelma A. Conlee, aka
Thelma Allen Conlee In
the Sup erior Court of
Orange County requesting
that Thelma A. Conlee be
appointed as personal
r e pr esen tative to
administer the estate of
Alice M. Eastman (unde r
No.,.ml>of 11 1"1 FtlW PwOllWWll Orangt CO.st U.1ly f'llOI, Nov, 19.1•, O.C:. l, 10. 1911 )0111-11
NIUC Illa
FICTITIOUS 8UttN•U
•AME ITAT'IM•NT
T 11• l•ltowlng o•••on 11 dolnt IMdlMUat: CLE ANING l(tNGOOM, 12U W C:."'"" Pl., Stnta ....... CA '1101 Oora Vlllel.,.. Gonuler. 12U W Genlden Pl., Santa AM, CA '1707 T'llh l>ulltltt.1 11 cOftduc toct Dy en
lndlv .. • o.r.v111a1 .... Tl\11 ~ w11 flied .. 1111 Ille
Ct<1nty Clerti of Or•"90 c-ty °" Nov ~. 14'1 1'11 ..
Gooroe o. e..cc-. ,
Tiiis SIM-I ... llled wllll ""' ....c Illa ..
County Clerk ol Oranoe County °"I-------------I ' Oclot>er 17. , .. , OF : NOTICIEOl'A,,LICATIOll FOUU NOTICE O F DEA TH • ' 11o•CHANGEINOWNEllSH., P .. 1>111t.ctOrat191CoaJIOaUyPllOI. O RMA N FR EDER ICK .'
1---~--------
OF ALCOHOLIC No• n. "·Mi. Dec 1. 1'11 "''"1 I M P S 0 N A N 0 0 F l ~
HVIEllAGE LICENSE p E T I T I 0 N T 0 A 0 . ~ Tow11om11~;2t:....,..,. MIC llllf M I N IST ER ESTAT E NO. "
ROOltEY CURTI~ EARL atld TEDI -------------A· 110678.
GREt:"•'•OPIYlng lotlle FICTITIOUS8UllNEH To all heirs ,
D•P•rt-n• of A•c-uc a. ... t.09 "AME STATEMENT beneflcar les, creditors and Control for •J' On Sale a.er & wt ... 1 P .. b P•e"' 1 10 ••II 11co11011< ~::.~0~~'"1"g 119"0"' .,, doing cont ingent creditors of
t>ever.ago •1 1'1'1·U ••eel\ COASl ROOF-ING C.OMPA"Y. Norman Frederic k ~:.~~~Z;!~""""ngton hull, mi EH• st eert...-Pte<•, ~·· Simpson aka Norman F.
P1111t11het!Or'"99C.0.>1oa11yP1tlol ...... camorn••'110' Simpson aka Norman Certlli.a ROOler,._ 1ncori-•lt0, a 1tov >•. 1•1 Ho, .. , ca1itor11i. cor-"11'0'" U•l Eau s1 Simpson and persons who
Plll>llM!oll Or-Coal! Otllr Piiot, ftlUC •TIC£
NOY J. fl. It, il, 1.1 "717 .. 1 ------------
Gertrude Place. Santa AIW, C11t1orn1• m a y b e O t h e r W i S e
mos interested in the will ,.,::;;;.=•,.. .. " cono..cied by • .and or estate .
NOTICE OF AP"'-IC.ATIC* TO S&Ll..
Al.~IC 81VEaAGE• lo Wlletn 11 _., c-.. 11 llllVCI! 0. WAHLIN, h •Pl'IYl"O I 1,,. OtpenlTWftt o1 Alc-•k a. .. r C ... trol lor ... , .. Ori Sele a..r & WI
I Piii> Eat Pll to ull •1<011011 1Mver90" st llt'li Magnotla, Fountal v a1i.y, Caltlomla P111>tlsl!M 0..MI!* G.,.11 O.hy Pilot .. o ... ,., Ital 511).fl
f!CTITIOUS 81.151NEH
NAMI STATEMENT
The rollo•1n9 o•r\on '' ooino
bu••rte•-' ., p PRECISION PARTS, JUI'> Ea•I 1911\ Strffl. Coot• Meu. C.alllorni. .,.,,
Steven ,,.,.. ... ee.-r. lUYio EHi 191n Street. Costa ~·•· C•lllornlf .,.,,
Tllh ~~· •• <oncN<lecs t>y an H'tdlvld .. .al
Sl•ve-r T Ill\ ll.._.....,, we' lllecs wolll l'-Co•mly c .. r& ol Oran~ C.ov111v Oft ltovemt>H 2•, 1'91
c. .. 111 1to 11ooto•1 A pet ition has been fifed
ln<orporet:'_, A. H•O•, Prft-t by M arilyn L. Simpson in
Th•• .u1eme111 ••• 111tc1 '"""""the Super ior Court of
Covn1y ci.rk ot orar190 '°""'' on Orange County requesting
1tovel\'ltoe< "· 1t11 Utt that M arilyn L. Simpson
Pv1>ll.,,..,Orat191 ,_ oau:1~1io1. be a p pointed as personal I
Now.2•.0ec.a.10.11.1t11 s1n .. 1 represen tat ive to ad· I
minister the estate of . NU lll1Cl A petition for Community •
Property determination
A:!::!:~~~F pursuant to section 650 of
uH 011 l'fCTtT1ous the Probate Code Is 1olned
th e Independent ...Celllf ,1161•1 Pvlllllt.cl 0raft91 CO.II 0•11' P1lol,
Ito~ 1t. Dec: l. 10, 11 '"' St-1
ausiNEUNAMa w i th the p e t i t ion to r ... 1o1iow1no_ .... ,_ _ administer the Estate,
IM., .. Of IN lktltlous -·~· ....... . , AHO s. 1ten SvY• Cir< ... ~, •. The petition is set for
#MW, C.Uforftlatlt1' hearing in Dept. No. 3 at
Tll• F1c11110 .. , a .... neu 1t•m• 700 Civic Center Drive, J
Administration of Estates i-----------Actl . The pet1t1on IS set for Tiie loll••lng perwn1 .,. doing -------.. -,~Ill'-[ ___ _
hearing in Dept. No. 3 at buil~:~u FRAMING ... 10? EHi rwa.llloo llK
100 Civic Center Drive, si .. -. Uftlt L. s-1a .an.."'"'°'"" west, tn the City Of Santa '2101
An a, Ca 11 for n I a on 011•ll11 '""'''· 110 CrHtmot11 Ple<t, Cella Mna, C..llfornla '1101 December 9, 1981 at 9 :30 Jol!lu ""'11 sw1t u r . o u
a. m . Or••"''" UM, Irvine. C•llfornl•
IF YOU OBJECT to the nm
g ranting of the petition, Tiii• ""-',,." 1' <ot\Clvcieo lly • QeMtal Mf'lllorlhlp
you s hould either appear °""'" Sflulor at the l)_eiiring and State TlllJ l\Al...,_I wa1 tiled wltll lhe
your objections or flle ~~i,~~104 Or-'"""''.,.
written objections with the 1'04.MJ
court before the hearing, Pu1111"*! Or.anoit c.oa11 O•llY Pitot. Your appearance may be ,_ .. _..., __ ,._._o. __ .,_10_._11_._1•_1 __ ,_11_w•
tn person or by your
attorney.
NOTICI 01' •At.A AT .. UeUC AUCTIC*
re1e"IO ID -Wti llltG In Or-\JU • t"'-C, f s FICTITIOUS •UstNHS c .... nly Oii Mey 11, Hit •• est, tn "'C' 1ty 0 ant a
NAM• STATIMENT M•ro11 E"'"' St•-. 1t01 s.. •• A n a , Ca I if or n i a or. I
111• 1o11o•lng "''°"' ••• oolng c1rc1e,Col\AIM1tw.c..111orn;ao•21t December 16, 1981 at 9 .3C· IMltlMilH Leny G. ~lelllft9$. llJll E .. 1 ltllle GRAF't<IC ONE. •6, J000 "••Dot Drive.~ ltlguel, C.lllornlat1611 a .m .
ao111e ... rd, S..11• AW. C•I• Mew. Tiii• bullllftt ••• '°"""'1'° "' "" IF YOU OBJECT to the ~lltorn•a'2627 ulllncor_...., auoc1a11on 01i.r ,,..,. granting of the petition Jofln "°""" O...r-. o&a E•trwr a panfttftNp h Id I h ' C9't• -· CAlltorn11 n•21 M11nl11e 51,.,na you s ou e t er appear
C. ChrllllN Over-. •JO U!Nr, Tllll ..... .._ w• flied wllll IN at the hearing and s1ate c~1•Mew.ut1fornl••,.21 county c1etk of Or•ll90 c ...... 1y"" your o b ject ions o r t ile 1,.:1~11~u~' '' conautied t>y en Nove,,.t>or 24, 1•1 ,. .. ,.1 w ritten objections w ith t he
JOMO--ana Pu1>11111ec1 0r-eoasi oe11y P11ot. court before the hearing. '"It ...__ •n filed •1111 tllt Nov '•· o.c:. >, 10. 11. 1•1 !.., .. , Your appearance may be.~
cou111y cier11. of Or•noe C°""1Y ""1..-------------In person or b y your a t· -Novem11ed•, 1•1 "".... Piil.iC l9nt( torney.
Pvllll"*' Cit lflll't Coa•t Dally PllOt, ------------I F Y O U A R E A
Nov u ,o.c.2.10,11,1•1 mw1 l'ICTITlou••uJtNU S C REDITO R o r a cont· IF YOU ARE A
C REDITOR or a
contingent c reditor of t he
deceased, you must file
your claim with the court
or present ll to the
personal represent ative
appointed by the c o urt
within four months from
the date of first Issuance
of letters as p rovided In
Section 700 of the Pr obate
Code of Californ ia. The
time for filing claims wilt
n ot expire prior to four
months from the date of
the hearing noticed abOvt,
NOTICE tS HEAEBY GIVEN I.Ml Plal llT1C( at t :OO e.l\'I, on ~' tOUI, ltll.1 ____________ _
HAMaSTATaMI NT I t -'"It f the ..._ Tiie lollowlng perton la dolnt ngen Crvu Or 0 _,...
..... 1 ..... -.. ceased, you m u s t file your
YOU M AY EXAM IN E
the file k.ePt by the cour t.
If you are In terested In the
estate, you may f lle a
request with the court to
receive special notice of
the Inventory of este te
assets and of the pet ltlOf\S,
accounts a nd r'eports
described In Section 1200.5
of the C.llforn la P robate
Cod e •
Bredley K. Schwan
Attorney at Law, 1116
Nt ,rport 91vd., Ctlt•
MH~, ~ t2'Z1 • '"*-°' ... c-Otltf .... ..... , ...... , .. , -...1
O•AHOa COAST PLASTIC MOLDING, IHC. will Conclllcl 1 PIOOll< tlKllOfl to wtllly 111tlr .. .,. 1n I,,.
vatlovt mo6dS -m««taft -lo •rtd11<• 111a111< part• !tr Ill ce11str .. <llOl'I ot • 11rodv<t called
"Cl'llOt'' --., ,,_ lttrlkofe TM Wlawlll • C*ldll<MCI at IJO We•
lltll •ireet. ~ ww. C.utomfa. OtMCll "41orefftbef U, 1•1. Oll AM(le COASl PLAS1 I MOl..01..0, II<. MO'W.ttlflM, ~·...,._ea. nw ""4141 ...... Or-CoaJt O.tly PllOt
H•11,t .. 1•t Stot4
/
NOTICI 01' Al'PLICATIOM
l'Otl CHANGI: IN OWNERIHIP 01' A&.COMCM.IC 81Vl•AGI l.ICl!NH
...... U..1"1
Te ....... ft May~-•
l!LOV ane ISABIL LOPIZ •ta IPtlYltlO to 11\e O•••rtme11t OI Al<ehOll< etWrlOI CAtllrol lot ·•o u
Oii S.IO .... & Wiiie 11"\111, l!at Pl.I M Hll alc~ltc Mvtr• .. • at 1~ Harbor ltolfftw•d, $ulle I(. 1'-taln
11a1i.~ .,,.
PVOI~ Orefttit Cott1 o.lly Plltl.
NOY 2', t•I SllUI
llOSTON PAC:IFIC COMPANY, claim w ith the c ourt or
•J.U Grkllto A-. ,,_..,.valley, present It t o the personal Catt~~~~.,_...,, «U4 Grack1e representat ive a ppointed
Av1n11•. F-.t•ln va11ey, u111orn1 b y the court within four '"°' • mont hs from the dlte of T111s ......,.... 1' ~'" ,, first Issuance of le tters as
ll\Cllvl4vtl RklWll, ...... ..,. rrov lded In Sect ion 100 of
1111. 11ateman1 -,. ... wtt11 h t Pro ba te Code of
cou111y c1er11 ., Orenee eo..M, California. The time for
N...,._14' it•t ,. filing claims w lll not ex-
.,....,. • .,.. 0r ..... c... oau1 Pl pl,.. prior to to ur manthS :
MO¥.'" o.. J. '°' 11.1•1 mM from the date of the i..r-
lng noticed above.
Y OU MAY EXAMINE the flit k-s>t by the court. If you a,.. ln\erestect In the
estate, you m ay file a r .. quest with the court to ,....
c.elvt speclal notice of the •
In ventory of est.te Md of
the petitions, l<COurU .ncs '
report• OHcrltled fn Sic· •
t l on 1200.S of ttl•
Cllltorni. Pr•• °'*' --· ,.,
Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT /Thurtday, November 28, 1981
Al'WI ........
Thu ta the tw-of di~ bomber.a Douglas SBD-4. which waa found
Mar Ra1ding , Calif., with the remain.I of. a pilot mia8ing 38 y~ors.
Missing 38 years,
remains found
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) -
Although Mildred Pelzer Lynch·
doe s n't k now it , a c hance
discovery on a remote mountain
baa solved the question that
na 1ged her for 38 y ears -
whether her son, a young Navy
pilot, was killed during a World
War 0 trainina flii bt.
T he government confi rmed
tha.t r emains round in the
wrecka1e of a Douglas SBD-4
near Mount Shasta in California
were that of Lt. Lom e Parke r
Pelzer of Iow a City. Mrs .
Lynch's only other son, Henry
Pelzer, was killed in the Battle
of the Bulge when his tank took
a dir ect hit.
But Mrs. Lynch , now in her
90s and living in an Orlando,
Fla . retirement home, bas not
been told of the discovery,
fam ily friends said.
Tbe stories a b o u t the
disappearance of the local boy
were being retold here again
after the confirmation of the
death.
Mrs. Lynch "kind of thought
that someday they would find
som ething," said Arthur Leff,
who was the family lawyer when
the Pelzers lived here.
"She was always hopmg that
they would find some clues of
w h at had happe n ed , som e
verification of whether he was
living or dead."
Pelzer, 23, was flying alone in
a twe>-seat divebomber that was
part or a formation, according to
records. Tbe squadron hit a
violent spring blizzard March 13,
1943, near Redding in Northern
California .•
''They went th.rough a cloud
cover, and when they came out,
he wasn't with the m," Leff said.
"They never kn e w wh a t
happened to him. They never
found a trace of him. They dJdn't
know whether he ran out of gas
and went down in the ocean, or
whether he went down in the
m ount.ains. "
Last month, a search party
seeking an old man came upoo
pieces of the dive bomber in
tr ees and brush in a remote
ravine. The old man was later
found elsewhere.
Sgt. Dennis Boatner of the
local sheriff's department said
the plane was for the most part
TV eye cuts
lawlessness
on beaches
SATELLIT E B EACH. Fla.
<AP> -The kids who used to
ha ng around the Atlantic Ocean
beaches drinking beer. smolcmg
m arijuana and making residents
nervous have stayed away ever
s in ce t hey s howed u p o n
television in school.
T he police are watching the
beach with a videotape carnera.
and the kids know the tapes
might be played in sc hool. at a
cit y council meetin g or on
t elevision ne ws progr ams -
because it's been done.
A television st ation heard
a bout the project, requested the
, videotape a nd ran some ~l ips on
'its news show.
' The videotaping experiment
has been so successful, cutting
t h e n u mb er o f yo un g
lawbreakers nearly to zero in
one part of the beach, t hat the
City Council bas voted to buy the
police de p a rtme nt it s own
camera to replace a borrowed
one. said City Manager Dick
Shinn.
··They are d o wn the r e
breaking the law and disturbing
tbe comm unity peace." said
poli~e Lt. Art Staehla, who Is in
cha r ge or the videotape c rew.
''Some of these kids hassle the
residents, smoke mar ijuana,
'.trash the area and car ry on. And
1 there was no way we could
• control them with patrols. We
tried arresting them , but we
'couldn't get them out or there.''
The program is simila r to one
in Miam i Beach, whic h is
l n atallln g TV cam eras to
destroyed. Sear c h e rs found
re mnants of a gold w atch, a
piece of what was believed to be
human bone, a belt buckle, a
pencil with '"U.S. Navy " on It ,
yellowed pieces of tr a velers
checks, four machine guns and a
leather nametag from a flight
s uit.
The tag read "Pelter."
Using records from Lemoore
Naval rur Station near Fresno.
officials confirmed tha t the pilot
was P elzer. The sea r ch for
r e latives involved the Iowa
Department of Veteran Affairs,
the slate a r c hives and t he
University of Iowa.
T he pilot 's Cather, Louis
Pelzer, was a history professor
at the University of Iowa and the
author of several books about
' ' I t w as a
e t e c om p l
mystery."
the Midwest and history of the
upper Mississippi River. He died
in 1946.
Mrs . Lynch was a popular
Iow a City a rtist. Sh e later
married a retired Ar my general
whom she also outlived .
Peli.er "was flying from Los
An geles lo Seattle a lot, domg
routine runs all the lime," said
Bill Petersen, a fr1e nd of the
family from Iowa City.
··on one occasion, tbe"'plane
and Pelzer just disappeared.
T hey never knew jus t what
happened. There was absolutely
no explanation on wha t could
h ave happ en e d . I t w as a
complete mystery."
A search of the rugged terrain
was called of( after several days
and one year and a day after the
crash, the Navy declared Pelzer
dead.
Friends say the loss of two
sons. "had a deep effect" on
Louis Pelzer , althoug h he
managed to continue his work at
the university.
"There were times when he
could hardly talk," said Sabina
Pelzer, a friend from Iowa City
and a distant relative.
Smoking
mars job
chances
SEATTLE <AP) Smokin1
may not only be hazardous lo
your health, but it m a y be
hazardous to your ability lo get
a JOb, according to a s tudy by
t w o Sea ltl ti Un ive r s i ty
professors . ·
In a s urvey of more than 200
Puget Sound -area m a nagers
with htrtng responsi bilities,
more thun half said they would
h i r e a non -s mo k e r over a
smoker If given two othe rwise
e venly mat ched candidates,
says C. Pa trick F leenor , an
a ssoc iat e p r o f es s or o r
management.
"What was interesting was
that nobody said he would pick
t he smoker... F leenor said.
'"Something like 54 percent said
they would pick the non-smoker.
The other 46 percent said it was a tOSS·UP
'"If y ou a ppl y s impl e
probability and rigure about half
the lame in the ·toss-up' category
the non-smoker will be picked,
then you're really looking at
something hke 77 or 78 percent
of the lJme that the non-s moker
would be chosen."
After saying which candidate
they would hire. the m anagers
were ga"en informa tion from the
U.S. surgeon general's report,
sho wing significantly higher
a bsenteeis m for s mokers as a
group, plus some information on
the assumed impact of smokers
on non-smokers in the-sam e
wor k area . T hen the y we r e
asked to choose again. and the
non-s moking job candidate's
chances soared even higher 88
percent said they would pi ck the
no n -s moker. wh il e o nly 12
percent said at was a toss-up.
The managers polled worked
an a number of fi elds, including
retail. ser vice, fanan<.'1al a nd
health care areas. The survey
was completed this rail
F l ee n o r a n d co -w orker
Wi lliam We is. a n a ssociate
professor of accounting, backed
up their questionnaire data with
p e r !>o nal 1nter v 1ews with
respondents and other managers
who were not part of the survey
Fl ee n o r . a n e x s m o ke r
himself, said he was unaware of
an v instance an which a s moker
h a·d claimed d iscrimination
because of his preference for
tobacco, but there are cases of
laws uits and union grievances
hied by non-smokers subjected
to the smoke of co· workers
But h o "' do managers
de termine s moking habits when
tnler\liewmg JOb appli cants"
· · Manv non-s mo ke r s ins ist
they can tell a heavy smoker
bec ause of the cigarette smell."
said Fleenor. ·Some of the more
a c t ive ly di sc r imi n ato r y
man agers do such things as
sim ply have ashtrays handy
Jo b inte r v iews tend to be
stressfuJ for most people, and
most smokers wall s moke in a
stressful situation.
··One manager. a non-smoker.
even has a pack of cigarettes
ava ilable a nd offers t he m to
people he interviews."
.~ ........
1 monitor at.reet.s In an effort lo·
re du ce m ug1t n 1 .
purse-snatchi ng, ahopliftlng and f other crtmes. '
PUIPY LOVE -L1WID Starr1 • reeJdent of the Eutem Star
Nursing Home ln Pboenis, 1eta aome affecUon from a pair
of sbc-week-old Dalmatian pupplel. -\ \
....... ,..-... ...
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A s
s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
I CLASSIFIED
INDEX
h.. ~.~.~........ ~:.~~ •••• , •• •• ••••••••••••••••• ••• ._... I OOJ Ci...,.., I 001
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
T t Pllct YM U, Ca•
642·5678
llOM fll SAU
t..fol lol"" l•l> .. a.iw ......... . , __ .... .
C.-Mllot t.ltMtu
0--lll n ,_ ... \'ollo) -.......... . 1 .. ... """""aun ""'-"'"' l.of ........... .,_v,.,. t::1:.::::• ,_,~&<'•ff''""° '""•""" s .. 1 ..... s..&111.w .... ..... ~.., ' --·'" .. IW UTATC ...,, .. , ... s. ••
A ............. io.lt
Ille IM
"" .... ,. 1• ... ...
181 IOtll , ... -11111 .. ., ,., 1• "" "" ,. , .. , .. , . ...
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPOAT_UN ~Y ,.....,.,Moller.
All real eatate 1d
vt r t l aed l o tbla
newapaper la aubJed to
the Federal Fair Houa
ln1 Act ol JJl8 which
maltn it U1e1al to ad· vtrtlst "any prtftrence.
limit ation, or du
crlmlnatlon bastd on ran . color, religion,
aex. or nallooal ori1in .
or an intenucn to mike
\\I ~l I Y '\;
TAYLOR CO .
Hl·.i\l.T<IHS ..... 111 1· l~llh
OWHH WIU. AHANCE AT 13%
Newport Beach duplex. 200' to beach.
Very attractive bldg. beaut maint by
orig own 4 Bdrm 2 Ba & lge sundeck
up. 2 Bdrm & patio lower. Call for new
low price and terms.
WHUY M. TAnOI CO., HALTOIS
21 11 S• ....... Hl•Road
MEWPORT CEHTH. H.I. t44·4t I 0
::::... "r.> l Ctmtlff1 ~,, .... ~~·;:y:•1
, ....
""' l)lt , ..
llOI JU ,,,. any aucb preference. ·-------• lim itlllon , or d11 --------1
0..W ... l .. tloelt
...... i.M lllO•N 1 .. _,,_ .. , _,,.,,_,
,.,.
IQ -... cnminallon .. n.=-. 1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
Thu newspaper will not TWa n•=I ~
l.ouM Solt M•tt Hmt Trtt P1il• .. -.o.w<1ktw1 -UiO ltoowln,ly accept . any oc· ... ~ 1dverlisln1 for real uuww -estate which 11 "' v1ol1 S ltS,000 Ullt ... --t"'3r~·~ .. o.i~StM· ~ .... A.Mtlilft r.,lft, \hou• lul~tau[•....._,,
Ru l l.etM•-
-llllll 1...u-.;l<Ll'w....t&w""-''------1 Seller w 111 carry balance ... _______ .. 1t 123 interest. Choice 75 .. 1111
!Nil
•• comer duplex 3 bdrm. 3 lllOIS: Act.wtlMn bath up; 2 bdrm, 2 bath --ASSUMULE
14.5% LOAM
Nur new Woodbnd1e condo tl(uch desired
single story. 2 Bdrm 2
bath. French doors, lov·
ely neutral W /W carpet!
and beautiful patio.
SIS2,000.
ICllJALS
...... fw11111.-.. JMS ......... l•''-"'"..... -._,,., ... lot -
( ...... Ull1UUft' r11tr• -
down Can convert to ....W died..... large home. Submit all ~ .cl ,..,.. ~ otrers. S796.000'
fWt I ·~· n. ... ..,Prop. c .... .-.... L•' )4Jl
DAILY PILOT.._. ......
......, fw .. flnt •'75-7060•
To._r.,. l.l<ll To.~'"' >1ra
Dit.tMtn "''" »»
luorrect lHertlo• •-------.-,. o..eir'-n l •t _..
.,.. ""• llGll A•hl M*°'• .. 75f.ltlt Afb t"r• Ort l •' • -.... -·-· -Klll4'b M~f'4• .... ~Moew, •nll ~==--..:.~=:;-. :: Ho.MtfwW. • ......... ~•o• •lOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'c·Jf.::'i.':1'"' !: G ... nl I OOJ =.-::-.:~ :: ••••••••••.•.•••.•••••• ~ --
~:.~ "..... !: Find out about the h11h I R H LT 0 R S
HAPPY
THAMKSGIYIMG Sincere thanks and be51
washes from all or us
675-1771 11·" --.i. -eam1n1 real estate sales Te,...! Locatto.! IUSlll£SS, lllYEST career opportumties This house bas 11 all A~· MUil, nll&llC( w i t b T H E R E A L I -..... ~'.~--•• ,..,· -ESTATERS Llcensing s~me lu ge l.sl and se ler I ~-....---:;:· "''" will carry 2nd Lar~e ...... _ .. ~' ,.,, school fees completely family home locat.td an l ~"'.:.":t::.... : refundab~ Lo school of Newport Heights area
,..,,.1 ~...... IOI your choice Extensive Very private Alarm ~ .. rn. -aales lrauunfi. For ln system pool w brick AM04111COUllTS. (ormauon,u 751:§191 walkw ay Spa under
PUSOllALS r IRYHlon Pridt 111ebo Coiy fam ily __ .l!s!.' rom ""' Of OWMnhip M°gJ!r:·~~tc~:~ ~~[h Telllng the most people
pobs1ble IS important to
t he SUCl"f SS ol iln>
garage ~ale Make ~ure
\Our s 1s l1qed 1n
Clas s1 f1e d phone
~2S6~
,.,,... ~ COM duplex. So of bu1lt-1ns and lormal din· ~.';'.::; u. P.C.H . 3 Br 2 Ba·2 Br I 1111 area Come see 1t ~.~;.. we Ba. Assumable loans you 'II love 11, 1389 000 -OWC paper Seller · r...... scmcES MX. leuebaclt Br exchange D.M. Mcnt.al 11!,!' __ I
...,,,,. .,.,.,.,.,, -equity for hociie In COM 760.0US 552·7~
fllPl.OYMllll & For appt call Nan ~------------...... ~!'::~.~~~ATION ~ Ira• 759-~l
tt.11•"•111 .. M f. t JUI.
M(ICHAllllSE
""-' A,tpl!•M~\ .. ..,._ ::r.::; M•t•n •lt ('.,,.,., 6 r4w~M c....
°"" ., .. " '°" "'"""'•• c .......... ---,_,
tJ-NM"• .. ., ..... ,
llll'W'f'U ...... . lllV~ ... M ..
'lt1'-f .. l•tilN_..,._. °''"'' ,.,. •• l~• ..... =~~~.: ........ ~ ~ .. Rf"\t•.r•• •• , ~.,-......... , •• i;t,.,..,
IOATS & MAl111(
lOUIPMllll w.w. •. ...... » ... 'nHO lort4•W.,.•t•11> ........... .......... o..n .. .....
..... ~ .. Owt,, ..... ..,.s.:,
...... k••ar
TUMllTATIOll
Mrrtfl
(•ll'lflltn 'W;iif' 111..e ~rwt •tt
I =~>-~·· Tr..,..Tr1.-r-1 !~t.~: .... rt.
AUTDMOllll
Gftfrol 4.Mi4tlilll'\ .. , ......... .
llttrr-•t""'' '"'''' .. .. ~ •• .,,".-41 ..... d Jir.•tt
r,-....-~ ,...,
AwMW•t1"4 .............
AUTDS. IMP9tllD
f.i.t'llrr•.I .u.a-.. ....
Aw.I•• ft••l~1 ....
l -~ l>•l>• trn •r· , ... -· ,,, ... , ,_ ........ ~ .... ..__
w.od4 ... ,,,.in ... , ....
110• ,,...,
P#V.K· • .......... ~ ......
lb ao H ..... ., ...
Rout ~ ..... ,. r., .. ,,._, ..
\ufhwtftl
\If'•
:,,. ,....,., ............
•m Defer part ol monthly
-payment on Uus charm
: in1 Balboa lJland home
:: Ill H..-.V. Ur = 67$.U{t
.....
--CINI t1111fh : COlilD
::: Daarable Trina mdl 3
::: Br 2 Ba. vu" p1uo. prof
-decorated Assumable
:: loan at t<l'k owe 2nd
-T.D. For appt call Nan ~lira
-I OCIAM YIEW :: Custom 4 Bdrm home
-with 2 Bdrm rentals :,: Huce matr Bdrm. 2
-frplca. p&Uo & dttlt. 2
•119 .. ..
"> tllll ... .... ,, .. -... -IUI
•lo> -
doors to beach. SU0.000
= !-~~---~-,,., •U.S.YITBAHS
-FREE LlST OFHOMES
'"'' •1111 •M •Wt r11 flu mt '111 .....
•"SJ t i.O
•lll wa.
f1L.' ,;»
1111
WT.a .-:-..
'~" fl .. fl .. 'fl' .. ,a •
;(411
fl!.! mo r.i1 ....
World R.E. 5*7777
SlifjOO W TO IEACH . Owner will make financ· 1
inl lhia SttUrity gated. 2 Bdrm condo easy' All
new decor and applian·
cu -comm. fu tures
pools. tennis. saunas 41 apaa HlllTY ' T~n Mar·
qun . •Cl 7~1H221
:: NO DN, equity share, 1st :J:t time buyers, 3 bdrin •• 1 ba . mo only $94.000. p. . only
•m C~f31i* Kltl\r HD\. -
""' -#I• .. 11 •17 --..,, z ~ ------Ml -1116) ---Wll
UMIOUllH SAMfAAMA Wood1lde Villaae coodo,
2 BR. 2 Ba, new carpet, and 1ood financing. ..900.
UlllllOOf t1()MfS
Realton, 175-tOOO
DtStmsSALI Seller be!llnd on pay· menta on 1paclou1 3 bedroom bome ln
HARBOR VIEW HILLS. .... ooo prl~ reduction tor ql&ldr 111e.
Walkr.r 1: l 1:r.
AP.11l 1!;1t1rr
RESIOfNflAl Rf Al f SIAT[ '>ERVICES
S2,200,• FEE
70' PRIME IAY ROMTAGE
Localed o n ma in turning basin wi th
2 separate loll> P icturesque S
bedroom home. pier . float and
sandy beach
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
tE
110111 ILlllS ca.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
SIMGLE LEVB.
ILUFFS VIEW!
Lovely Vu 2 BR. 2 BA -End
Unit -Decorator Wlprs. Drapes -
Plantation Shutters Sep. Mst r Ste
-Super Financing Lge Assum
Low Int Loan Shows Like A
Jewel I S255,000 A "Joy or
Newport .. L1slmg
COSTA MESA DUPLEX
Love ly Duplex. E astside C .M.
Great Oppor For °""11er Occupancy
& Income. Ea Unit Has 2 BRs. One
Has Patio Other Has Pvt Yard.
Recen tly Ca r peted . Paint ed .
S179,500 .® --..........
759-9180
#2 Corpcultfl'leu
Mtwport C"""
DOING BUSINESS
UNDER A
FICTITIOUS NAME?
If you have just filed your ntw
Flctltlou1 Bu1lne11 N1me and
hive not yet aubmltted It for
publlcatton, ple11e don't forget
that tht !Imitation 11 30 day1
from date of flNng. TM DAILY
PILOT wlll publlah your
1t1tement for $40.00. Our
clrculatton Include• tht .. nttrt
Orange Co11t ar11 and .... ,
notfc11 appeer In all ecldont. In
orcfer to aubmtt rour ......... ,..
for pubkatlon Hnd ...,....
COP1 Md I cMctl to ntl OM, Y
PILOT, P.O. loa 1•. Cotti1i
Me11, CA. ma. W.'I .... ,. ... '°' lntonUtlon -= . ldftfllll ...........
Ext.m.
Oran e Coast DAILY PILOT(Thul'lday, November 26. t981 0
~.~~~ .............. ~Wt .... ~Wt ........... Wt .......... Wt ....... ,.,.Wt .......... Wt HeeMtllerWt ........... "-"U.kdt' •
"...,.. 1002 ··················,·oo···: ··················,·00··4!: ··················,·oo···; ·•••••••········••••·•• •···•·····••••·••······ ················••••••• ••·•••••••••·•••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••·•·• ...................... , • • •••• ,.. 1002 c .... MeM 1024 .... • ....... .,.,. ..... ''" ... ".... J c........... J2J ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••
N•OMHOU.SI WATllWAT9 ~on~1all!_!:.!'1·~ ctorn BR J 8•. So. ol tfw'J. ow.
WIUCAllYI
tUl$ldf Co ta Mtu
homt' plus ln·l•w 11.nil 3
Udrm main ~e pl111, 1
Mdrin I blth 1U11t. 1-'an
ta tic location with RV
atcd I CIOSt' In lo Newport 1rltool1 and
lhopplo1 Call now Only
SIU.SOC>
675-3411
J IDI MEWPOIT 2-s~ s 119 0001 Lowest pri«'d ! Br 21..,
Ba coodo ln complex •
Two·sly spUt level. enrl. waraee. cuJ de·sar, pool
&i lepnls. Low down
Owner to t'arry balance.
Jog lo beach• Mocivated
slr·takt advantage! Call
Bob Burdic k , agt
;
RVM* -----
DECOIATOI
COMD0-$15,000 f ormer model condo In mint condition. Hosts
views of creenbelts and
swimming pool Owner
will carry (lnancing w1lh
I wo. Call now'v
SEA CO E PROPERTIES
7 '4·63 I ·6990
ZOMEDDUPUX s 117 500! 3 B(lr older £ome on de·
ep R·2 lot Excell. rental or b\IUd out a duplex 1 Name your terms' Low
dn payment OK! Call fast, Bob Burdick, agt
1
C,le ~ a/ n.wparl
J REALTORS
US.Ult -;:;
CUSTOM COMDOS: Pret11Hy Heier
c•1tr.ct'°"' 2 ,,....CffH C .... ii So.
of Hwy l•cotlo-. Poulblt ct.olctt of.
omtnltl11 Md color If pwci.aHCI eorfy
tftMCJt.. con for cMWh.
COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS
2515 I. Coost Hwy .. CoroH ct.f Mw
675-SSI I
EMERALD IAY
PROFESSIONAL ILDG
151 o·M. Coad Hwy. LOCJUfta l•ach
• 3208 Squar e f''eet
* Excellent Financing
• T riple Net LeCJses
• lrle al F or An Owner 'User
Please ront<ic·t Lori Livings ton
-1010 Mal·Arthur Blvd. Newport Beach
17141 752-1111
COMMERCIAL IU Al £SlAI£ SERVIC E ~
UMDA 15&.I HOMH
Prestlae pool ramlly home. Main
c hanne l vie w from beautiful
traditional, 4 bdrm, 5 bath home. Slip
;,r 2 large boats. Sl,4~.ooo.
Wide lagoon view from seectacular
architectural design 6 bdrm, s bath,
play room, dark room & den. Slip for 2
large boats. $1.350,IXX>.
LIDO ISU HOMES
Featured on Homes Tours this lovely
traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm . 3
bath home, newly redecorated. Priced
to sell quickly at $475,000. Must see.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus
lge rec reation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings. Great for fumily living.
Excell ent value at $420,000.
PENINSULA POINT IEACHFIOMT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wed ge, from prime large lot. 4 bdrm .
3 bath custom home . 3700 sq. ft . featuring marine room. $1,385,000.
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
J.tl ~ .• ,,.d. 0· ,. '• b !-,,", 6161
J8r. )Ba. lat e f.nS,... P•YWI-llAU'NUU. Y .iJ~a nUK pa .. °" Y fplc dud •· Aad7. ~· Spectacular vltw1, MAIMJAlm e1·Z2111t ndy•. f71 $511
•U 1 vtmAMS ~prawll"' 4 bdrmi.. a a bdrm, 2 bath. Wtttcllff C.M. 4oft.D v • Fret 'u.t ot ffome1 blltb1. a frplta. w r;T Home. CloM lo 1cbool1. 1310,000. •lntfln Br 2 Ba 0Jldtt11 • W R. BAR. beamed ce!Unt. park• t.-.. Room tor H!l1.1 HHJJa MU OK. •1mo lit. 6
OCEAN VIEW Ur. 28a rem. rm .. l1e kllcbm. ~~pauk>e. Good rtftanc· Docton &ootln1 ror •ml Jut. no clepollt.
deck ~ard, aec iatt. bu&• mHter 1u1te. f:•· 1111· n..aoo. prertlce l.n recreaUOll -*
$185K. Owner l·l.1M934 panalve patio Ir pool area. Dbl WW. motMit JJ24 .... .,~-• eru w /roct rimmed 1ttuJ> for Ch.l"Pf•etlc ~ 191 • waterfall. oa C·l lot~ rrom IASTSIDI t&?.iOOO. new 1hoppln1 center.
3 bdrm, I~ ba, priced alSSION RIALTY Clear Lab 0.111. Ca.
under market to ull a l lot,000 Ternu. ERA
now. Priocoolyt A Sherwood Propertlet1-Xlm::.111KX-----
Kathxf3l=WAI\ Sat.Dec.~.Newprime VllWIH 707/tSHm __ z Br. entltd 1ara1e.
l·2 WTSIOI view L11una Bu ch HIWPOIT MTS I•~= Adulll~~opeta. '475/mo. Charm Inf oldtr Udrm estate. Fiftucina avaU. 1 Iv Bd 2 t 00 mW. wlllon. Gl·W .
I brick fireplace cove.:td Min bid .-is.ooo Call w~l~:• •~nil~ •••••••••••• .... ••••••• Eutalde 2 BR, 1 BA. I car
patio, park·llke yard. Pa u I Ry• n. A 1 t . Owner w7rt1nance Cali Comm/lnd111 unit. 1'00 1~r. fenced yd. peta '
Room tor 2nd uni&. Only · t 0 r de ta I 11 C u r t sq. ft. Baker/Fairview luds OK. lrifl5 per mo. 317
1$1U,OOO! Fantutlr op. l.etllM... tOIO ' area $395/mo. loq £llthSt.StHtOhyn .
portunlty! CaJJMS-0303 •••••••••••••••••...... -.5 Bdrm 3 Ba. nu crpt/
No Down! 2Br Patio COSTA MESA paint, walk to •rbooia. COLDWeLL
BANl(eRO
home 120XJ40' lot + sml build· Meta del Mar, lt50/mo S104K. pool/1pa/1auna Ins. Priced to ull B®Koou1t.1:stm1. + $26,000 Chuck Spiller, 2 BR 1 Ba dplx, 1ar. 1ml
Act(Ht! &r.WJ·~ MIWPOITCllST l· fenced yard, 1maJI child
==-= .. ="=-=-.i=-==~ Htwport INdt 1069 Flr1t tJme b117era make Loh for We JlOO P:. ~'tl;:r.~~ep.
Owner Anxioua! ••••••••••••••••••••••• your lat Sood lnveal· ••••••••••••••••••••••• E' Id 3 B famll .. ~
S,25 000 i--------i menl! 2 bedroom condo •acres ot land Newport 1 e r Y ....... ~. ' I .u -· wltb veulted relllng1, 'Beach. OK ror Condos, Frplc, 2 car pr, med Super price reduction on __,_. wet bar and sundeck. Office or Medical Bid a . xrd.17~/mo. ftU102 \ this prell7 4 bedroom Charm thruout-larJe Prt _. • 3bd 2ba 2 Colle&e Perk home IMn& room, formal din· Ccv al 1165,000. 641-07§3. Alen!. rm, • car &•r.
Enchantlni diolna area, inf room and country t' Cote Realty llilla•t• DeMtt, ~i:l%1~~ Park. IHS
relaxlnf (arruly room. kl cben flua 2 Bdrm & Investment lnort 2400 Lovely 2 br .. 2 ba., w/ rp. crack ling nreplare apartmeo . All for only •••••••••••.•••••••••••• 2 car aaarr .. enc .. y1 ard w/ Nice size lot needs a Ul· 1289.SOO. Brin& us your 640-S777 PalmSpnnpCoodo oatio1'125,MS-72S3
tie tender loving rare trades. CalHordetalb. ••••••••I 187 700 ------Assum e loan al below 642-5200 r-Furn OnGoitClub Dr. E'side 3 Br + den.,~I. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:1 market lnteretl! Owner JM. 714 /320-9544 , 568·3113 1795/mo. Call Chnstina :'" , will help with financing. .,i1tr.o I 071 Bkr, .... ss .... 7~·n ..... 13..,._ ____ _
Muat see to appreciate ! •••••••••••••••••••••• ""-" f 5......_ Spanish·style 3 br 2.,., ba ~~ Call979·2390 ARLlNG 28RinvUlase v.-p~ •600 condo, .,., mi. from t T aettlng. 2 l..Ues pools, •...,..... •r ' ocean. alt. auto. gar 1 Dalebout rec a reas · family ....................... Mmo.*!1255eves
OwNr Wll ~ -------· perfect. Sll0,000. HAWAII 4 b r . fa m rm RV Bay & Beach If a sharp low main SPEC(••s•LE L..... U Have houses. condos. Eut.side. moo/mo. 850 tenanre 4 Bdrm home ,... "' lots for sale o~ ex moves you in. 63J-6890or with rwuom spa & BBQ Fee around, w1lk lo rbange. ~ply. Nielsen 642·~9'1
R I E tat interest you, see this beach. super nice, 2 Br Ru.lty, 2.6 Kainehe St .. 3-"-"'b,,...ri<=pool:....·-.. -a-a-N-orth-, ea S e br a nd ne w Se I e r l home + =· ;:n~~I •••••••••••••••••••••• Ka 1 I u a. HI 9 6 7 3 4 SllOlitmo lll50 moves you
Property. Fantast1r :!~~~budr Spi. ·~er, 8_! MeWla "--
1
ul08J262-98611 in. §3l-6?9oorH2·S417. ~'AOOnfsi.!J111 prtre 63 ,.. 1100 HI ht• 2BR. lBA. No Dop. $425.
•• •• •••••••••••••••••• Excltmgt 2100 6 4 s v l c t or I a . • •. C E A N F R 0 N T ....................... Sff.9124 Thanksaivina Greetilas LAG UNA BCH. new Trouble Selling Your ................. ~------[>URI(» i. from $29,BOO, rent $400 Property• Trade It with Yny PriYlh
REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949
C::. C:.,f' ( r T
..,.... l >µ( )P' .~ T ,~ <1
As we gather i.lround the festive table, .499-381 the Great American Neat and' clean. 2bdnn. ~ll l~lelterns _.,,. .. ,...,781 WEOUfT.I I may we take Lime to express our t rue • ._,laghw.._. 1040 --:~;;:=~:;i--1~:;:;;:.:;~;;;;;;;;; Trade Co. We have bun· dble sink. bath. enc yd ' -·-'"",,., I we ran no ~er afford gralit ude for our Great American u";;;;•;.•:;;;.,~·4•"Bd;;.• 4 Bd~!~=· on *EXCITING* i~ies ~r~a~~~~! !i:~~.cW-~d, Pets ~-············' to malae payments onl Herila~e and re:.oh e not to j ust w/dunng rm.-Be5t l&U · sandy beach in Newport Throu•hout caur . VIEW LOTS our4Bd 21,iz 8aWestcllff receive but to conl r1bute somt•th ing lion Great terms! Shores Enjoy the lovely hhltwSdt CallN~w orn1a. ;-•o~vrw
CO ROM • DEL M,,,., home. Asking 11249.000 for rutun• eeneration~. 12S too_Bllr848-0709 bic patio and closeness w 1 t b o r w; th ou t . 67}37S3 , ~ · ;~0~~ ~·a~c "' -LET'S DEAL. Norm or No Qu1hfying Pnde o( I lo ocean, pools and Len· furniture, 2064 Green· Will trade Swordfish Boal ;.6' 106 CM 548-IM?S 4 la rge lots v.1th bay & ocean view Kasey , ownrt agt ., 1617WESTCLIFFDR...H.I. 631-7300 ownership everywhere n1s. szso.ooo.with good brier ~orM m Laguna for eqiua l equulllty In 642•7743 on a quiet tr ee line d s tre et 1·n 63H2G6or548§492 Fantu tic Sol Via ta owner financing. HJlla n1ce11t5starpark boute. Call496-~ Sb---Bdrm 1 hom ~~ wtpool. S136.000 Bkr 642-5200 Grea•.tPn ----arp4 poo e.
Co rona del Ma r. Can be purchased ,............ 1143-0709 Beautiful 20x.S3 Lancer ..... SllOO Immed occup separate!) o r a ll t ogether 75'"; • ew~r...-1..,..._ Home . 2er 2Ba Thu 1s ...................... Cul ·d·uc. 34'0 San
financin° a vaila ble. s.595.000 per lot ~ I H__:rr-10,.. the Best Buy in town Fwillhk:4 Rahel. 979·537o or " a on this 2 Br home that ---., M ....t •-......&.. ...................... 540-7618. Judy MA£:NAB will make a great rental ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bea~;':r ~l~oblle ltlmd l I 06 2 bdrm house w 111r. O\lla.~ t>r sta rter St'ller Wiii ]0'IOGfSlp Home W/front lut l2'x uoouoouoouHuoou yMd. avail DOW. SnS + ., y •we; rrute terms just for and orf water cOndo an 19. Liv Rm 12• x 10. r1e 4 Br 3ba $1400 mo ~ uc dep. HS:83!!9 ~Al "JV you Just Sl79.SOO Bet St'abridce. lmmarulate OCE,,,, ~o~ Master Bdrm Enclosed I blk to bay Blllns, Jmmar 3BRl 2BA. lrg ~ lerhurry ! 3 bdrm . 2...., ba 2 IY~o~' p atio. Nur Hoag hQ.§73:§163 fam rm .w/11>lr Cpts. ·-<>--·-Cireplaces 2 ball'Ol'lies. ""~ Hospital SZ3.SOO CoateMtte 3124 drp~. bllinS, 2 car gar
(7141 6 73-4400
12131 628-2821
TM Ho~or Area's Loftc)tst
Estobfiwd bol &.-eo..p.y
I l.i \JllJ( )J.t
HAPPY THANKSGIVING TO
OUR FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS
FOR A WONDERFUL 1981
LUXURY PENTOOUSE ON WATER
Int.Nor 11 right out of .Arc~itectwal
D~t ond off•rt ctr.natic quality NYllMJ
"'ro.ghout. Spoci«* 2 a..d.. dttt wf"'
s.ductln ma1ter wife wi"' fireplece.
lrou, I.oded glens & GRtiqw occenta.
loot slip aYOi~. l1Ji1 Is °"'f for tM
diacriminotinCJ. $725,000.
LOVELY LINDA ISLE-URGE
Protected' by g,-.eMry & on wot..-wttft
room for l boof'5. A "showcoH" l1t
t•ery woy. Large lftOlhr bdrwt + 4,
formol di1t. rm., lcrge fam. ""' with
professloHI step-dowa bar. dip poof &
spa. s l .395,000. 631-1400.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
REAL ESTATf
l 11(1 V. L'"'' liW1. N..,.-p. •I lltod< I
II> Mir I'll' A.,.
l\.ilhu.l l.i.ond
611-1400 '7).4900
u ns ARE DOWN. COME AND SEE
• PEPPERTREE HEIGHTS
F \()~001\'IINIUMS
OfNf! Hs. Fri/Sot/S• 12 till dtt1lr
2600 llock SOftto AM An .. Costa Muo
Reaut1ful 2Rr 21 ~ baths t\ 2 Br 2 ba.
homes . From . 129.500 to $139.500.
V1\ . Conv 1~ non-0wncr financing
µIa n~. Som t• s tartin,:? as low as
12 518',
SOUTHERN CAl.IFORHIA
REALTY
5~6-5605 631 -6194
Co~sy to lrobn
Climb
Aboard
our
Gift Train
and sell yeur
Handmade. ttems.
It's so easy ...
Just call 642-5671 and
ask for your
JJ. beau &reenhouse Wtn · New r ust. bit 2 sty. CLASSIC ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avail Dec lsl S700tmo. dow A g1ve·a way at FrenrhNonnand)'.3 BR MOIUH,.,..,,."' iet street, 3 Br 2 Ba Yrlx.5ff.4834or642-9178 aDDU '205.000. By uwncr (2131 & den home. Can be """' r p Ir . b 1 e yar d 2bdrm duplex, new crpt.s. 1 -rr tf -~lll? -split.189$,000,0 WC 3711 06 H SALESbor ... _ Gardener S700mo enclosed yrd, gar. no ..... ,.._, I 006 lniM I 044 SwMrt..61lilll --27 ar · """206 A 673-3477 Df\s. H6S. 64k79'Z7 C'"JJ / ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• DOYEi SHOllS 540-5917 EASTSIDE 2 story, 2 bd .. S81 Park Dr. S750 mo. Jhank~gi11ina w..ftyowoww..,_,, *•EXECUTIVE DEC.HOME I chlld' petwelrome. le 3Br. do& &r kids OK -" Def tr part o( monthly Med style courtyard COST A MISA 1 pvt yd , 2219 Virginia Olmec m-zog
payment on Olis rl\arm LUXllY Pool. Jacuzzi Overloob Furn 1 bdrm trlr home Turn o f the century
mg Balboa Island home 2 Bd r lownh ome in b1y G1luy Dr. Formal Close lo ever thing Htw,.,t .._. l t 69 Mansion 1907 reatored I lflH....,~Ur fablllous Woodbrldae din.rm.2frplct S71S.OOO 2 __ ••••••••••••••••••••••• owr 12'k 11100 QlO 1 __ 4w.tff 2000 aq ft. pr:ot dttorat· fee ' UDO ISLE dlanning 4 w/209. dwn. eta C.M. ~ ,....... 1 OOJ I ed • upgraded tbruool . ,,..,.,.., 1600 bdrm, 21-) baUs. lrt•un· CM-.CXJ!IS •
STAR GA'ZER:•tt• i••••••••••••••••••••••• 5A1~~u700maMblelloa ni: of l ABSOLUTELY '"•••••••••••••••••••••• ny ~~0•1~Plm~up· 1 Br Ouple.l,larceLiv-1 t---.----tt, 11 H • n1t1 ~11.--~---1 '" us see MO MONE IY OWHH gn 17 mo. ear· inc rm built-Ins utill ~ •-e>o.1, 1o ..... ,c-;. i;.. ""LI'~·~ 1 \ j Verv Qmetl · Y FOR SALE OR TR ADE IY. 8111 GomdY,VHJ§l. paid v·ard. cardener """'"'"' •• ,._ s .• ,. c-, i.-1.P 12 bdrm'. l 2bH dm. 2 (~i)\\bodbrldt<' DOWN•. Newolfirebldg Want someth1n1 xtra Near park. buS 4r shops. r, J<••''" -.oJ• ,,,. r .. c1uv IJJJtltot't f I 2 d Prime OC:Airport Loc special In a 2 Br S3@5/mo.W=3&03 I ~i:;~~·:~'' ....,...,., , .. ., '°' d•::: :~~gar~ p/o~g/,6 Re.ilttj MEWPOIT CUST 6000square feet Tow~hou.se, rompletely 1._llNcjt• '-dt 1240
'" m.... ...... oc':''::;... ~·9364 551·3000 CONDO I GoodCinancingavaU fum , '89§.Mo.760-9ll7 ........................ , :=:"-~;::-~:; .,,. , l{, !Coroee .. Mw 1022 1~ l'larrallu t'li••. l_n..., Take over payments o( 759~11 EASTBLUFF luxury t'OD· • CLOSE TO BEACH• 1 ,.,_ "'..... ........... i •11111 l2400 mo Prinn ls onl do 3 bdrrm. 21,1z batM. Exec 3 Br2ba. ram rm. :?:::: !~. :0 •Bl •••••••••••••••••••••• Lowest Pr1red S1ngll' C1ll Barbara Chambers. C d lai :(' -5pltl·lev. el. $107S mo. T1 frpJc.d1nm&rm.9SH l?l 1
::::.. !::=-, ~~:::".. 0411GOMA Family. 38R Home In _A..ufil..£!:7~-I t_~_•..._-OW• tle lns.9~3)2().eict7371 5 Blks to ocean.EleaanlZ '
... ,.,,. .... New elegant 4 Br Vic I r vine ' Xlnt f i n • IYOWHEa -•"""" 1700 Jl.J&w11 Br F m'I Rm ar Den , • .,.... ..,,._ '"'• t o r1an partial v u. SllS.990 Ca.IJJuhe. ·••••••••••••••••••••••• Be•rh house.2Br lba off S850M ~ush . 1 :;~ :;!"'" :;:.:::_ t cto r 1 7~_,414 n"-00l3 PrilML.oc.tloa! l'W Super exerutive rk' · 1 o crpU.2<t ,,_, .,.. u...... ownr ron ra r 1nan _.!.&J ~-m Newport Bear h 2308 rondo. J BR, 2s t r y st. p g, wtnler renta Ba Cedar 4c glass. sun· ::~" ::::. ~:::. e»tocoo .. •-YA!I.~~ M.wTwtletodHws CUffDr Unique 2bckm. •Iden. Upgraded Xlnt IS00.97Z·lW!) deck. dbl r ar pn, ....... .... ,... ~'II < $25 OOODOWM down 631-5737 Adf 1 1'2 ha lar•e linnc and f111an caraae. fully malol. 11-.,. ,, • .,. '"" "·1' ' -_!A.L_ • 0 • ONTHEBAY 2B 2b yard Adulta no pets In·' ::~ ::::..._ .. ;:; 11. •,.. Lg assumable loans JBR. 2"2 BA 5220 Wilnut I din area Panoranur ()Illy StOOO cm! $ IX50 r . ~ quire at siz lSth St 1
••--111.. .,_ •1117 : Remodeled 2 br . nirl' NrJetrrey 1135,000 le>"'. ff.arbor B1y·Orean PYtprt1.54f.7IX50 ONWATERlz Bl:~!Y ~ · 1 ~:;_ t~.. :.::: ,:."".:•:t, ratio. R·2 kll WI plans dn owe Call S48-3209or View. Enough spare lo acious new coodos 10 M to $1100 N c l JBR H 6 :!:'.:. ~=--::= "'"~•I or unit $249 .SOO 7514287 bu1l~ $450.000 MUST arden Grovt .noquah L AGU NAoO~~AN · Blks f~sa:'11175 p~~1r ' """'..,-'"°"' ........ o..... 11111•»· Owner Agent A SMA-RT--SEE. • fr LDg. Owner "'•LI sub FRONT M R alt ~~ ~=·· ::~".. ~11 " ~ -9S7~1'3!l.. iD!iUS.tlt•Ull 1 s1dl1e mont.hly payment 2 Br2ba S1000/mowmter oon.,tl.lp u I
::;... :":~... :;::,."" """ IRVIHE TERRACE START i Minimum dwn. 3bdrm. W•• ft• Hwt 2 str condo 2 I bdrm 1
..... .,..... ~~: FIXER Owuning l oor own home 111/J'Yo ASSUMAIU I ~~ati 3ecg. ~~dg~~~aprnart· 1' Ur Ille. 611·1400 3b/ Adlts ,ciruy~ no ~: ~c;.,.,.i ®"'""' , ,N<Mut Pnrt reduced OWC tst st1 ma.es more sense LOAM Cal~.9160 840~ an Harbor Pines In H.H. T.D al ll''c. Exrl'll than renung Start With owe 2nd on this lovely ~sem . I area Pool /jac. S62S.
SllK&,,Nlt CAPTAIN KIOO
C S R E 8 D A A C E W A 0 P l G P W T
S N 0 E 0 N T U R R R l R l A 0 W 0 M
D T E S E S E E E A S E l R I S 0 I E
I E N W A T D A C T 0 C D L M N S N A
P A R 0 Y R A S 0 A A I 0 l I T I E N
S N 0 U U 0 A V R 0 N R A T H A N Y S
A L H M S G R T l E M M I E T A M R A
l T M N A A K K R R 8 M G P S I R T R
N R C D U R E S T U P 0 A L D I S K 0
E 0 A T 0 A I R D R L C S I R E S H A
T M 0 Y V .S A 8 T D A H U T L R D R A
R P W N l U G P 8 E E D N A 0 l 0 E C
T E S A 0 R A U S I 0 G
N I N S S L G S L 0 E G T R G A W S
0 D C E 0 S E R E C S S A G A 0 A M A
........ ~ 0t ~. F~ lrld lloit It 111:.
-..i S. Crftlill Mt I ;
11\na ,..__ ..... YWW f,.,,,., " ...., r,_-. o.._,, Wllld t
IOlltOfl .... -..... Llftdoft ,_ Ti. GaW ...
Tomorrow: Fallow
':~=.' S~\\cillA-~t.~s· :::
Wloo4 ,.,. QAf • POU&ll -----
location. Won 't last. thi5 well kept I bedroom, spacious ruslom pool ....... Uw"'wllMd Refsreg. 213/498-H _•
I-re Astle a t 7SIH221 t ba th end un it in home in Baycrest, 3Br. ...,....,...., 20001•••••••••••••••••••••••1 .., __ ... ,.. ............... Orange Tree Condos 3Ba + le bonus rm ......................... ,.. 1202 ..... c _..
• Outstanding rerru 1399.SOO · 1 MAKE AH OFFH! ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• 4f bdr1m. 2 ba. lf1v rm.1 • · llonal fa cilities. $76,500. ()penSattSun 1.5 1e. .... .a.•s ~n;i• y room. orma
Adullonlycommunlly 2048C modo Rd 3 1 p . '""'-dining. bonus rm. 2~ om re nrome roperties Yearly·Weekly Winter car gar 3000 rt l99S
H.,._Y'lewH•
Ftnelocation,beaUllful3
Bdrm 2 Bath w/family
S41H022 Easts1dt Costa Mesa 2 a 4 Bdnns . Call J . sq . -•••••••I 20~ down Owner will i '· • · 1m Cherry Lakt Estates. 363 rarry j JACOIS IEALTY - . 979-5370
Newport Olen Court, j PROPERTY MfiRS Ma\nlf1cenl Pool Home.
Npt. Bea New 4 BR. 3 ~~· I 675-6171 3B . l•\BA, Loft 11200 BA 3 200 sf 3S K dn 15. NEJ -mo. 4 t 32 Morningstar sume'2 Vr '210 K 1it at ..... I..... 1206 Lan e . Huntin gton
12.9SS./mo. O.W C COf~ntJ!:'f\'! Tit:.. 0 ••0 •u• ............. Harbour. Agt Call serond al 133 2 Yr lOO -!f-t;¥ IBalboa lslandWaterfronl Barbara.
K. 642·0430 631·S74S. 714 6-11 0763 3 Br 2 Ba. Yearly le~ ~'@_ __ '"l!!•••••-•l~lf~5::23:..:l'AM:=:."'5~Da·IRVlltl 675-0043. Will ro·OP 292SCollr~e An• lllOOMo.n~~-2 Br I Ba. yard, near 1'" .____._ wtbkra, Co~ta Me~a. CA ..... , .... 1207 be a r h . $5 7 S t mo
DliSTIC
HDUCTIOH! 2 Br so. ol hwy. Sl.95.000 Open SatlSun 1-4. 32JO
Su vlew Ave. Bernita
Ellertsen Realtor
67}2373 __,7.!.l7 ~""
Coste MtM I 024
-'041 ....................... .136·8312 J!I!_. -
.. ,,,_ ,,,..,_ HAHOllllHH-ltwei!wJtoa ~ --UMDa MA.lllT IY Owta PIOPlln Hnoir 1242
OlMMMAUTY 3 Bdrm, 3 Ba, VIEW 4·Plex. 121.200 lnrome, MANAGEMENT ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• Located on l.be popular l h I th 91/t~ lo"" on """'tract. suuua W'1MrYB BOAT LOVERS Dix N o r t h E n d w i l h own ome n e prl'· ... wu """" • adult Bayport rondo brealhtakin& white sllgious private com· 612 CalJe Campana, San YIAILY ·COMM'\. Outstanding penthouse water views&city nigbt munily with tennis Clemente. ttW sq. n. vi ew o verloo king
Ucb•·. n-1· ... ......i for lo court, poola 'spas. Xlnt ~UOO. 7l4~58ql._ harbor. 2+2. Boat s;!:f.i
••••••••••••••••••••••• w L,,;:D 61.KV Cinan.cin o wllh 11ar11e as I: mainl•na"""' by James • " · A.PPU Y"' • 1 -avail lhru Peter's La · 4 .R E.SIDE HOME "' "'"' sumable loan. Pri«d ror ,...... ' Lashley the homt · .... ·•-.-.. Near n~w 4-plu. 2 inc. Call 12l31S82·3SIMor LEASE OPTIOM rut urea beamed ceil· imm.,... ''""'at .. ~;:· bdrm. 2 bath earh unit ~·1136 . _
Prime cul-de-sac loca· ings. redwood accent.a 4c l<>'tlS llAL: with fireplace, enclosed lnlM 1244 lion, Sl0,000 option + Iota of tile. 3 bdrm. 3 675-Jll t atlo, garage. ~% 1st. ..,.,..., ...................... .
SlOOO mo takes il. Part of bath ' den built oo 3 ow llS9JOO. Bill Grun· Luurious 2br. 2ba l'Oil· GOLFCOUISI &
rental applies to down levels with out.side ac· HARBOR RJDGEHOME do. Xtra lrg !iv rm. over .,.rTE UTE VUS payment one year rrom cess to each level makes Wrnt VIEW lookil)g bay. Sec. bldg. "
poaeulon. Yo11 r an 'l this lbe perfect choice 3 br .. 3 bl., 3 car gar.. ST Alla UMITS Y~d.~r1~nd P.!~k~!'I San Joaql.ll.n 2 Rd 2 l:ia
·l-""""" .... ,_KIO~-· j,. $480w'000o·.._... ~~ c":f~·n~v~I! r ~0:; I ~~ce11n.~.~~~ c.,, .... _ .... Ull ~,~:· cC:1i~r.11~;
--
t thl otf for the arowina family. fam. room, aeparate din· Only 195.CXX>. 2 Bdrm' l ~) condo. dm. ~t hu, 2
. ~ ..•................•..• ~ ... vie•• privacy It quJd SIZS,OOQ, O!per7§0.lt77 rate. Owner motivated. a br., 1"' bl .. frplt .. bl·n Glen. acts. 13Hl213 or
can be iound In this uni· u YSHOllS M.I. Make arrotre.r dlallwalher, 1tove. db~.
NHOOM HOUSI 1ue a bdrm. 3 bath • Private COMmun.itJ. 1ar .. ••ter • trash pd.,
JBr. l Ba.lerieyard 1m1ly room home. New ,renctieoum,.., · llntareadupleaU, 11t
,M,000 , ... f41·0'1&1.A&1. ~I~~~ ;;fuh~ with home. 8eU'ledtfool ad~:t. !...~· dep.
HUM T 0 , , UAftMcAa ~~~~~·~pl~~· 1714 J·~~J.Ozu/C2UI Twnhomt',""'3JM'.:Sba.
low "' ...... ,_ ....--· I AILOO& I
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I
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RVMf..'<
II I I r I II MISA... at hocnt • ·~ t.o t~ Brl1ht.1m11. ..'1)1J p•tlu. 1(11. l'art. pool. f 3 Bdrm 2 bllh. fireplace, bncb from th11 :S bdrm Appro1U501q.ft. C.;_. ...... JZll JJ~. lf7S/~ ICSJ,M7
I I neat Ii clean. Lar«e lot. home tucked awey oei • 2·1tor)'.S.bedriom. ................ ...... llNfAl.S TEAB A 1 l•l•lltd •towntlltt WU to • Very beat or lerm1. ~ •ttteL Hardwood l batllt.•flnlU~ MAKIUS_AN_Of"P'Ea·· •br.Zlllrit.4doortlo 2ttr.IR11 mo
4 I I r I ., small tlltt ""*' ~ cllMcl I SIM.500. "'· deck •• br!ck Ptmily room. Two unlta 2 _ .. -I otae ,,., $1$00/ mo Zftr. 2 Ha 1111$ i -..1 .... ....-........ •nt_.... loyM•"_..... 11r ~tio with INlluN fruit rnva~beadMlonba•'. • 1•-· ""-• r .. 111•.....,•aA"K..wwt 38r.Zlh -• ~-'"'" _,........,, ..,,._ ' ·--· • -.. 0 ...... --ti 11 ' ~Ill ria onl'1' Ke• .. ., """ · 7 • .,.. .• if'\•-r-1 • ..,,., -------.1ndt1lct "Boy laltever--" • 1.o1•77--·· ·-~a •rtna.Clalldne'• · · UI., leec8'Llv'-• 1 •a 3Hr.2"1i! -•"vn I y A A T p M I ' · · -u Owoer will titlp with ,._,,.rti.M-laou.r l __ __ I la. 11,;: !..'!f!. ~· Ur z•, Ma ms I j I' I I' 8 ~ !'-.. °':',. ~ ;•a,•_Ownt-•,•. •sa•R•. r•ea-1nn•. fmaACln•. sm.ooo. f;,rctecl ·Pee. SH&Tll 1 H1 Jrla. •r.:i'iu • • Rr . J Ka llTS '-· .................... _._~"'".....zi ........ ,..,......,, : 2BA, rrpic, ... North. ... oner. HewhlitlW Jn·•~-·~. . . 4t_;~·~--= ' I r r . '"'~· IA>W• lnlereat ....l.IAM.ci .... m.l:llE::lll'IX.-..f o.&1 .... .,_ "'" I bl to Md. Martlet.. _d • "IN' "'IUMlftfO r r r . I' r I lit. JJUA di. owe 2lld at No ...... .,..... ... ... .. ........ Yr ... tri· OC'a •oat .......... d · U'"""11kJ PdJ.. l'arM.
llflltS IN 59\/All• 1.S~ ..,... .............. plH ,. Coa\e •n1. lJ! ..... ar .. Z"M.0.· 2 Ir. l .......... .
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SCIAM41T'1Muw•i .. C' t.t ... Hllll WANTACTION? Tt ,a.et a. laJ, All....-..UC...~ ~·--
;..__ _____ ....__ ____ ...;._-1.._..;.._ ____ &..:...; _____ ...L:;;:;Cl;;: .. ~lf;ecl::~=::MZ::.:::.5171=:~-.J~C114t 4'4-1111. •• M .. ~ tq-.--'· Dai~ Pilot Christmas Ad-Viser
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"4r :11••11 Afallitslla""""'-Afullits•t•....., ........... 4JH 11..W tl..W 4400 •?••cc fa/ ...... ...... 1421 .............................................. ······-~··············.. ''"'•*! ...................... .. .................... C.. W... JIJ4 Mt• rt.... Jl6t EANFROHT Z It• Br fire for Lew l2IO tq 1.ett I ~
....................... II OMI Ofl ..._.. JIM .......................... r.H.............. ~"!~'· Wanttr Weellly I 1~' .w;t!fti~ ~ ~C:.~t tt. With BaJrony Alrpor1 tt ...................... . > KR 2 ll11, r.n111 !llotY THI LUCIY NW ....................... 1 bdrm privatt yd Ga Oceanfront for Wlnt•r 4Vll.lb.l.L.m.m n n 1 • · · Complex. 0,,es .... ., 5005 A• .. cs ••• 11 OG ~~:~Kt·~·nr~~r\l~k;~·~l~~. ~·;~ ~s~03~~.~r~·~ ~·N.r!r\l~t~od~ ::&~1.'e:':~l~11· n~ ::~·.~~~·~ l•l. Ooor A tol~l-50.12 )49.~-osiNG.LE~E:·~~·I;· ...................... .
ftrl'1otllm ... t1:4111.1tH1 $11.SCJ Townbomt VILLAGE rtreplau pool pvt NO F££1 A.Pt. lr Condo wkcod.a,Jl , •DILUXlowtCIS• 11IXECSUITH., tlnabu•lnttu tllrna out
J.11° m • l'OMM UNITY 2 l 38r r.a••• ll07 P,atlo, dishwasher. 00 rentala. Vitia Rtntala. HAWAII'! 1.2 • hoom. Noleuert' In Newport. bu two win ALL u nd 11 5 llDIOOM 2l1., 81 1600 lllGOO »q. fl ....................... E/aide, 111 ln •·lrat z Br __J7}·4tJUlnikfL :tBR, ZBA. Oceanfront Quired Adj. Alrporter dow olflm n11I hn turea l~~f!ti~~ • •
·rurth.'rutk lh1thl•n1h 0 port luxury ariaaes, br . 2 ba . I bl to beach, Jarden apti From s.W> EASTBLUf'F lbr . pool, •J>t at tbe lllkal In J!Qtel l3S:. HZ med. 175 ' 190 IQ fl Dtspliy cam, wauhng
Sl11•1 Mu hydro tubs ln muter Zcar car•&• ~1:2941 quiet area •ln&le llduJt Honolulu. Don PetUjohn I 7TH STlllT lrotn '495 Rttept . ron room rh11ra, Beauty
t;ot.Ol'!N ~~~~-r~c:J1 1 b~~~\~I _ 81~-6AIDIHVISTA ....lllU!tlf.~/UlQ,l+t·47[/ t:m2GlJ!ll.. COSTAMISA ruenct rm mcl Sec'I Salon hairdryers ind
PllOl't:RTll':.'i hrepl1ct1, mltro w•ve View 2o8up~x Y,eaRrly,. up , 2 8~ 2 Ba. '.f'Own~I OCWHOMT C:O'n~~:~~v/':ietbe:,~h 2or 3 room otflcuuittt t;':l~N~~ Airport hydraulic chairs, mlr 1~ I~ ov .. ns. ftnced patlOI ' pu r . ti.. . rplc, •klli&bt, paUo, yard, 11 Avail. Ott I.It. Spacious ly montbJy tfunt lkh A/C plenty ol na Util -•--__ rora. shelves and plant.s &.,.... 1--.h l14t t•rd11 Priv1te eltgant Cir Adulu _, Tt.h St. built Ina, laundry rm 4 Br. 2 Ba. Upper, frplc, 538 UL · · inti· Avail ooJ C•ll Profeaalonal Attorney 's Alao, make-up, ahampoo
••••••••••••••••••••••• lv1nri: only1 LS mlnut~• 61S 4t74 _ Adulu only, t'•t OK $525 washer/dryer, 1ara11e. C'-Realonomic. · 87(._S?OO ortice aulte In South ind h11ir produclll on: AN l"RONT Mub1lt> from Fuhlon lshmd, 7 Kinaslze 3 Br w/frplc Mo Submit on cbUdr.n & .rlltw ----~-Oran1e C-OWlty ls atek Call 631 9i~ or Give yourself a
Christma s bonus
-sell unneeded
items 1n me
llomtt frurn S'7~111 S10tio mt~utesto SC Plua ot New decor Sl3 W 8ay, tsk.M<il!'t_ Sii·t4!?... ~eta USOO/Mo TSL I• PtrilCHy! are 2 ore suite in pre 101 compatible pro after6.898~
mo 499 ~t$ 0 C: Airport Just Hst of Y rly S82S S36· l441 , 2 Br Twnhse, mature )!meertltsl42·l@L _ Larae homr avallable st11ioua ~1rport area. 31S ft alonallenantu uch 11 ICI CllAM STOil
1.tase·lr11. 2bllrm, 2b• ~ew~rt Bl~d & ~of ft!UU9 _____ adults only, no pets, UDO VIEW t:leaant & Dec22 lhru J1n2.Sleep.1 SQ. ft. For details call uttomeya, CPA accoun
home. idnt v11:w. iitt'1ots lo 1:n atleff~ n:Y·m~~t~ Of'OltO .. w.-llZJ '4.25/mo 75.S W. 18th St. Ire 2 Br. 2 Ba. 2 patloa. 8 to 10. AU amenltle1 In· &51·6226_. __ __ tanu, insurance broker, U9UIOATIOH
Crescent Rily. IX'Klled 63~ 5439 2473 Orange ....................... ~9~7 __ _ !rplc .. Adult1. 11200 I ~udi~& a~una 11 si:go DANA POINT 250' investment counselor, 8 freuera, rdr11 .
01k rtr.. frptc. l)lush Ave C 't•Mei• OZYl Br.Dupltx.frpk 2 br. 1 ba No pets Sr.~ __ __ or etai ca < 1) Sl7S/mo. soo· SJS(>/mo phy11olog1st, rrcru1ter stora1e rack&, min
rrpt. new lutthtn Avail for /.e ~le 11 t pool One e mplyd C1tzen pref Rent nea. Veruilles Comer Pen· Gil 34210 Violet Lantern Full service suite + equip. It ~upplies Reas.
11nmw U2QQ. ~9-1 Sll80 bu ~ew ·~;::i ~boo female, no smoker, pet1 ~ rv . thoiue·2 br. 2 ba. Avail Dill Indian Wells condo. 3 97S.1120 1men1Uea. alhlellc club. 67S·283S art11, S48·89S2
Dai~ Pilot
Gift Guide can 642-5678 NewportlMdl lHt sa6o SSSO/mo. 2bdrm: ~l&Ht1Sl0.!!4CH999. La. 2 bdrm.1 ba ~ rM ll2..."Yll1~,6'JH.7JL ~R , ~· spa, tennis, --;q rt Men Vtrde r~ee parking. Call Cor -~"---:--
••••••••••••••••••••••• 2•,ba S7SO l800 i mo PECTACULAR OCEAN -Sl7S dep Ldry fac · area rrne.9Sl·m5 WANTED a experienred •d osla for o
Chr l atMoa
Ad-Yl•or
I.Aase ucl Lindi Isle 6 Total · ~et bldg Call & CITY LIGHTS VIEW. Adlt.s, cat ok. 2009 Maple ....... to SMr-t 000 ~1!3 ---............... 44~0 Travel Agenl that would
Br S Ba formal drn SS4 9160 · 840 11703 all From every room. large St. Mgr Apt K S.IU861 ADULT UVIHG ••••••••••••••••••••••• -------HI -"' like the opportumly to F.R .. 1uai-ded1ate.ten'. S.P~ ' · I Br. S83S/mo Call flL _ __ 2 bdra>.2bath,nor.u. (;AYROOMMATl Pn..H.tldlLoc. ••••••••••••••••••••••own a part of a new
nis.beacb.roomfor 21rg Newmultilevelt wnhse 2 Meultnr§42.}ID4!ll.:... 2 bdrm house w/gar, USO mo. ht. ut CONTACT.LargestGay Approx h oo ft oUice lnAILSPACl agency.Send resume to -------..J boa~ ~ ~r mo Bob Br Zba frplc pool Jac & bd1 rm, 1 bath, bltnt. yard, arall now SS7S + +sec~ty.63l·li~ffD Male/FemaJe Service 1n apace. Pres t111oua l.280 rt H bo Bl d Box 728, CtODaily P1lol. or ov e oop, agt i.ec systm . Ma~y u re rig, rear unit . 1 ~~ 1 ...... Westc r So C a I . G . R . C Newport Beach locallon sq. . ar r v P 0 Sox 1560. C M IAYFIOMT 7~1 __ -lras. $800 mo yrly lse garage space Avail AduJtsoverMl>ttf upper !'kwportBeach _t2_ilP Comeseeltnow' +storage ~mo 92626 i7~7.9Y_ _ _ ~J;)/p1,f IMC> mo 2 Br. 311 W Wilson qwet F nonamkr. C.M. house ~H.w,.t Aldtift/ Realononuos 615-flOO laYt~.....,~-cem ..... rarty
Nt:;WPORT 11w1t11J your
church, club or offirc
hohd1y party ·catering
& boats avail 646-4419
115 CANYON lBD. Gar . fridse. wshr. --~1 21TI _ Yrl lsr furn/unfum Responsible $171 /mo. Tot•........ 0 ..--a... 5015 Lux u rl o us Thre e dryr patio mint cond Br. I Ba. 2 blocks from 2 rm 1 ba S300 incl util ul1.Y ..A c' ,.,.v .... steps to' ..:t utlll....lli>.£..Q~ Call·.,.., .... forannrt tore or Office. 13.SO sq rt PP-,_., b d T b h ' ' beach non smokers no ' · 1 .,_.., a • ...,." -..-;.._..., ::zz..:.:_ M v rde Are ••••••••••••••••••••••• R~chb~~.'.or.~ Ma~,!i ms 846-7584 pets 'Newl) redeco~al· ~tl"63t r>i~611erlon. !Kb, MW mo. trZH~L-'h"P NnssTfi Ft~ s~~ B .._YFRO..._.T esa e ~1z/ Hard working young man
tones 3000 uare f TowllliCMIM ed 1395 mo 675 1997 or · · -2 br, I ba, l67S1mo. yrly br h rl/Ji x. A " -----seeks 1ilcnt partner in a
Overiooks ~h lee"~t U1tfwW•d 3525 ~U&tL _ En~sls1~: 1 ~r S27S/mo. lease. Carport, open u~i~a~ 951.er/t~.k~ Primeotrlce. 780·~.:-COMtf'YVllecp /i.B~op_e~ 646·9!1~
golf course. S2790 month ... _ ................ Bdrm yrly $400 Avail 8·S fk ia'Vi it ' call bet. bea1J.15.0llt>~·~ -w~d ys (2 13 >889·3279 ta Mesa. ~ llQ. ft. Office or retail shop Tax Shelters 4 to t n&ht SCR~EJS
Yearly lease. 117 Ru e Mac ~BR VIUaLocae. ~70 now No pet ~hil d N 3 B Pool R --OCEANfRONT ~h suite S17S/mo Ut1la in spaceava1limmed1ately oH in '81 RKOVl!r taxes ANNfrff
Grand VaJee Open Sun· smoT rrts f.& Single person pref 433 Uetwl r d w' ,eke rsm Lrgd2 Bkr ,2 Bah w fl"\>lc. H B house w sh;;:;$J1s cld 779 w 19th St 4SOsq ft $475mo pd in '78 '79 '80 F.vans ,.)ftUl'1 day 1 ·S.. To see call enms ou c..lr 1 .5 L Set! 1 s p11 a o sun ec res ly paint· · .1 eJ , _.. 8SI 8928 673~ · • 0 1 M h 631-7300 Realtor Call Ro . 9S1 ·6243 or r1 . over gar ap Coast Plaza. Call collect ed. up~r S92S. 2 Br 1 + ,.., ull . r t'r requ1reu ----~-. ---8§1·642.5_ -Ill og out ' J}ave_'!l 9 :4426_ ~al only 11·28· IOAM to 213/377-6606. Ba lower $825 Yrly ~UJl!l__ --Deluxe Perunsula Office .-.rcld SOO Share~ m an lrv1nt' Abate Pantry -
ll... --wnhse 2 BR I\., ba Agent 67S 9432 or Roommate to shr 3Br Approximately IMO sq fl b .. als 4475 Thnft&Loan sr.ooo HOTTODAY
OCUHFIOMT
HONIE
4 bdrm. 2 bath t•om-
p I el e I y remodelt>d .
bllns, frplc, SLSOO mo
LIDOISLIE
IAYFIOMT 3 bdrm. 1 bath. frplc.
blw, S9SO mo
associated
811 0 • [AS ll[Al •0115
J ,' "' • , LC" Q • I I 4 •• j
Funlitlted ent or le~ 2 Br 2 Ba pool pal.lo JUnt cood · 844-9060 Ask for Nancy hse, $200 mo Close lo So Catbedral Ceil.rngs with ...................... 8Sl·913S I v1s11ed a town that was •••••• ................ g a r a g t' a p t ~ · 646-6789 Nir'12.!!._ .C.sl Pl111aJi!>Ct.M1·1ili Trussea. Skyl.rghts, New 000 Sqrt commerical - -so small. that when you
..... , ..... 3707 Washertdryer, 709"'1 . Se w· d wnhs 2b-Female to sharc3 bdrm Carpelrng Wood Par b · h MOMytolom 5025 draled weal ht>t ••••••••••••••••••··~·· He I 1 u l ~.ope . C'd M •• PoW 3126 H~a 1~c!0 w ~ r n{ homt wilhpool m Irvine quet. Air 'Cond1horun& usine~s or :::es~= ...... ••••••••••••••••• somebod)' ans~ered and
Smalllbdrm,ulllincld, 64001!!Wl mo __ ••••••0 ••••••••••••••• L""J.7,,,.} poo . Ne.&.ot1!l>IL»t.llP.L $1 160 mo Leave SO<h sql11 2.., .. 7 ... P 443' YntweC.-ltal said. 'Bo)• 1s II ever S38Sto S400 bdrm 2 ba large Sj)a_,,.,~ Y""--ave ut .....,.. \.,. .,... ..
673...t928 osto MtM 3124 round' noor. En ihsh Upper 2 br . ocean front NB prof gentl writ share Mt'Ssage l:!amillon l!DS}t _ l11tilltu Loc.s HOTTOD_AY.
-•••••••••••••••••••••• g d Bid W g1 I l bt>aut. home w' fem I * •613-6606• • v l C· 'tal Avail Lo t & tr.-~ ~JOO 1BR 1blockfromc1<•ean Tu or g asher· vu, ex g rms .ou rps . 30~~76()..~ ---lndustrialBldgforlease enure ap1 s ~ u
A\all Der 1 ·s1 mo lo MEWLYDECOlt. dryer. gar OPEN SAT· p_r.ef mdl agt' cpl over -· E 17111Str9et 3000 sq ft olfirr 10000 for Business Start up ••••••••••••••••••••••• m 0 s 4 7 o · m 0 l Br gas pd. eocl gar SUN $575 34001 Amber J.6Q!!arl.Y.§42·3912 f .d2.5 gr l''er to shar0 ~ Delux~offirespace with sq rt. warehous~ at'28< Also do business loans.1·-------·
805 5~2631 __ d ~as~er. pool Adults Lantem!A BEACON BAY-NEW lg 2 ~lrJ>Ortu~l~~i ts':e~r La~ 17th St . frontage for 6 q ft c 0 s l a equ1pml!nt leasing I
B AYPRON TA GE ~~ --- -$420-2 BR. nr Oana br .. 2 ba.vu1dtw,elect .J?.!Wi''util 754.«JS lease Compelltivesq fl Mesa /Newport area 8SS..:98!J __ fQUNDADS
Beach. Pier, Prkg 1 Br 3 Ir To.._. Yacht Harbor D·25081 range w/ ~b oven, gar .. M F -b-nnces rail Rob 631 6994 Av a i I 2 I 82 Ca II 2.....a I 3rd I fl[E
S I •<NJ Ulls pd Tiii '' 1 d pd La Cresu Ownr wld, tenms. pvt. bch , . 2 bd . 2 a . z.:_::.1. = -71 .... 8706 -ARE nR ~ 1 ~ .. ew Y ~r gas · 49'4.Q48 dock. Adults SJ..200/mo $242 50 mo HB •,bl fr 840 sq fl prof office su1le 4-1'"-". Eqiiffy Lo.s ~d~:w;t!: ~ 1117~~~~ ~~JJa.fu.~1· dswhr -OCEAN VIEW I yrly. dys lm-3.\35. eves & .Reh . av111.J2 1963.:5483 I w1ocean view· reception !Retail StOrl!; 1•ho1ce loca· 1 Fast fu odrng Tom Bkr I Cal~ --I -wknds673=~---F ASAP CM art Pool. rm /2 large orr.ces/ sep I lion by Newport ocean 646-3921,645-4199 LUXURY IA YFIOMT Costa MHG 3724 2 Ir. l lo A9t From Dana Point most • 2 BR 2 Ba Big Canyon Jae $242 + ut.1 Bobby equip and storage rm front 800 sq fl S750 mo --· '42-5671 38r.~Bawit.hboat shp ••n•••••••••••••••••••Ne~I> decor. C:as pd ~ent~eb:~t ~~un:~: twnhm. pvt gar. S975 ~70536.MJ..I~--Newport Center Design o7S-~1~ ... 673~1 _M~Trvst 1--------
Jlva1I. no•• Many CASA DE ORO encl itar .. pool . rlshwr Onl 4 unlls lBr I mo Marlha Macnab. Female> Rmmte 2 Br. 2 Pina New carpel .
1
'2400 sq .fl .. s ofhres &I DHda 5015 Lost Great Dane/Lab amenllies. S3SOO Mo. • ALL UTILITIES PAID ,hdults.641·~3 w•f/pk & 2 Br widen' I Ul._64~ _ Ba view, Prom. Pt paint SJ.65 per sq (l work space W Costa "00•••••••••••••••••••1 mlX Black. V1c olChap
Orokec 61H912. -' Spar1oub i! Br. t Ba S39S Hurry for the best view i 2 Br t 1' Ba Townhouse 5400 mo Avail 1mmed 1714 I 759.9044 Mesa. or Placenlla & Sattltr MhJ. Co. I mi.!l..!Jl QuM~ 494~
Compar e before you 3 Br. I' 2 Ba $425 Uiun S62S to $675 Adullb. no slyle .<dulls. oo !*ls Call Ans~er Ad '4118. -C vua-19th. Arnple pkg, SI~ All types of ~al eslate Lost 11 20, orange Tabb) '4EWPOlrT H(;HTS renl Custom design 4.r.l'. far .....!!@I S48 9~ I pets Days 643·0212. $42.t~~ 642 4J0024hrs I ~ ,__,.... I mo. Ownr/llltr _1'1S 3568_ mveslmenlssmce 19'49 I k1llen Behind Pomona
Likenew,c11Stombu11t3 rrat~res Poot. BBQ. 95 Mo 2 Br.18a Apt Wkfilli~L~.L WATERFRONT Room ma tl! ror lg 10 ffm or retail shop S •dalrMcj ltl Stb.201~6l!!L -
bedroom. 2 bath, formal cov rd garage. sur· Garattt>. washer 'dryer, Nt>wport Is Beautiful Townhouse rn HB. c·lo~e ' spacuva1llmmedll:1tely h.clustriol lttttd 4500 p 2..ctll>s CASEY'S GOME! dining room home Eal· 1 rounded wilh rilush all bu1lt·1ns. Small child OCEAHFIOMT 1.600 sq ft 3 br . 2 b:i . to orean. very n1r e • 4SO sq rt S47Smo ,....................... 8 months old Male
U!K area in kitchen Bay I l1ndscapmg ~du I hv OK. no pet.s. Only l year 2 bdrm. 2 ba. newly de bu 111 1 ns. fp . 11 ew I S36 054S 673 6S22 Cosla Mesa. 12')() sq ft 642-2 IJ I 54S-06 I I I Grey and white Tabby
view. SlSOO monlh Ytar· ing ahl ll5 best No pets old <;all for appt ror~•e,~ B~n appl, urpelS drapes lhru out. l't1alure, liberal male ~hr HWPT rwlU" STIE Indus Ir 111 I b pace Wtduw has money for cal Collar-w tag We
ly lease 631 7300 I Bae furn fromS380 TSL MGMT 642'!6()3 re n11. ll)'_.~mo d<X'k sp avail. ref rt-q 3bctrm homa w sam" I ~ 1 "375/mo f>IJ.5340 T 0 i. SlOOOO up No lo\e and miss him · I I Br furn rrom $465 ---filml!.. 673 6100 ' "' · ' Luxurious swtt11 ava1 ---· · Realtor -·-· 2 Br furn from $.\SO STUNNING largt> t & 2 2 bd~ril:'° 2 ba, rireplace. 1 • --, Nr Dana Pt Quiet "'I 383 sf office 3 , ail. for 8700 sq ft Warehouse 1n-credit check no penalt> REW.A RD '
36SW Wil'iOO 6421971 Br 2 B:i Garden Apl yr old uparades pool Wf.STCLIFF 2 Br l 1 & rt'f ~ S3SO m o I bl fN 1 cludrngJOOsqfl oHlce Call Den1~on A~i.oc j da835-4700exts.t. OCUH & MT YU ..,U\ M M t' -d Its Pool 710 W 18th Sl. ldry ~ . · 1 Ba Townhouse. Adults '1 496 71111 su ·,use m onefr u P s 11>'751 Noyes Irvine In· 673 7311 e' ID IQ1Qor_613.;00_ ..,.,., o a ure a u , -. '1't'lt I onl)' no pel~ $600 Mo Sh b I h , t'X<' u111ve o ice com M C t Losl 11 22 CM C·~ker m New deluxe 2BR. 2BA. no pets Qu1l't & seC'ure THE VICTORIA!'\ 2 Br 8Jl:'J!to> 1728 B ed f~rd La fll! .r my eau oust . plexes Airport !'lose quire aros1 . <•. rwx Mochret Rah Mt«} "" ix
Great deck & yrd Sec 19~ 1 Ne~ port R 1, d ~ ~a r ne ~ h· decor 2 Br Apl !"ear ocun. 548 7533 I ~:~t-,l~P;j_11r;:;;e,~ + Includes ~ o or 9 s 7 9 i!6 h o r Sl!llCE EARLY 1981 I ~~ ~ ~:ie~ "S~~/8~50 &ate.U SO Adul1s 64ti.3V.3 adults Nn r rpls cl~an. dsh-.shr,_gar;ii,t> . , •Recept phone 64611).14 lst&2nd Trust Deeds ID Rt>~ard'S46-47J9
l 630·6934, 642 8808 D•o 'oMt 3726 drape), bll ins. p3llo {\v_ll].~t..ML.Ci§.1 ~ Twttilt 31901 ~ lo shr 3 br dptx. 3 ba. •Ut1ht1es •Jamtonal ln~1de & OuL~1dc Storage I OWNER NON OWN FR ---6+1·8722 I Call bl~ n 1 56:Wi·4120 H--"-'"'-•--'-3140 •••••••••••••••••••••••1 Nwpl Hgts. $2381 mo 1 •
H bo •• .. ••••••011•••••••••1 "G' •.• t u 70 _,_,,, _ __.. Co1y newtondo Adults I Juhe97S-424Sdvi. •IOOfreet'OPll'S mo or m otor home . llhru4un1t:. lla\e ,oml'lh1no \OU
SBR 3BA 3 G r. · • E ( -'-2 B r • en, rp <' er M Jo' net'ded 1mmt'd to ·~. """' ~ dnl tu sdl • l la!>:.1fled ar rView Homes Suot>r I Br 1 Ra ~matt 1 667 ill 0"..f _ro ••••••••••••••••••. ••••• B d r I R .J I •Ampleparlung automobile & ~m a~I PetcrOob'-Br··L~r .. " ·
C l·D ·Sa· J.~.r 1r \llla.rourt).ird Adultb, EASTS10 r"';j"1 r . THEWHlffllETltEf facilrties S495 mo s har 3 BR l wnhsc l •K11chcn •Set1'yi.en I lra11eredboats64S4tl32 7606827 §46-6016
1
ad~ d(i j1 "'ell C~ll u De ~9362mo nopet.s P15mo 4931813 1 gar pallo . .i u ls. no Lu.xuryAdultumtsataf.
1
SS2·9430 I ~ b:y vi •w $400 ;na1lablt> SellthrnJisfasl wtthOa1ly . 'liOW l'HlSliiR E~~;1132:8644 H ...... CJfOft leoch 3740 pt•IS $400 MS 016.S -fordable living. 1,2 & 3 Ap~ ~ 1s9 0649 . 8~2 194!1 art C~ll Roxa~llll{97S·0740 Pilot Wanl Ads_ jCla~s1f1~ Ad~ 642 5678 ·
Nwpt Crest Condo. 3br ••••••••:•••0 ••••••••• /-·-8tym~~1~U:~f.~1l:~. or Ullfwwltlled Jt001 6PM •• e e e •• e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e •
21..,ba, 116 Kamal11 Cou rt H.B. s FtHEST I I ~ l'd tennis coor1 , Jaruu1. ,••••••••••••••••••••••• Respons1bll' roommalf lfZS, 962=0'778 !lv ms&l Spanish Estate Ll\tn&' • ' .. puk lib landscaping S E A W I M D wanted, fl!male. age. • •
Beautiful park·hkt> sur Most beautiful bldf ln l VIL' •GE 2S·3Sl no PfU. lO share 8-DAY WEEK SPECIAL •
THllLUffS
Spacious 4 bdrm, 3 bath. fam home New pamt &
c.rpet. Mon lo ready
Sl2SO per month Agt,
64().5560
Balboa Island Walerfront
3 Br. 2 Ba. Yearly lease moo Mo. n0:o:w1
Harbor Vu Hmes. 3 BR 2
Ba, pvt yard, immed oc
cpy. SI 150 mo ind
grdnr. Call Marilyn. agt
·17 ' Vu condo 2 Br 2 ba.
beautifully furn111hed
Avail Dec Short term
Mo/Sl400 Cheshire R E
1$9·1877
Lrg 3 Br w1boatsllp. P\1
area. walk lo ocean.
195Q/mo. Mt 7~!1»3-
Avail Nov 24 I bdrm on water. S650 mo. W1nlt'r
...cm...fil.l-7~ -New NB Condo 2BR.
2~'2 BA, 2 car ga rage. frplc. Washer dryer.
Adults, no pet.s. Near
Hoag Hospital S900
Days. 549·4243, Eves
~--
Newport~ 4br t3ba on qwet cul de·
sac Walk lo schools ~ds ok $1200/mo Refs. A~aal. Jin. J, 646-2011 _
! LUSEOPT10H
Me arly 2000 sq ft of dustom11ed featurl's.
'two separate master
QJ1tes and huge pallo all tp lhe gated community
of VILLA BALBOA
(iease option available
tbr I yea r S249.SOO Call
_.m. Cote for further m·
rbrmataon
*Cote Rt'altv
& I nn•st m ent
640-5777
'
roundings Terraced HB. Ge-nerou& rm al· ~ townnome ln Irv~ 2 •
pool Sunken gas bbq. ~ lowance New l&2 bdrm luxury RR. 2 BA. frplc & itar • sporklrng fo11ntJ1ns • •" _ ~~ adult apts in 14 plan:. 1 acceu lo :.w1mm1n11: 1 • 8 Days 3 lines • 8 Dollars
s p a c I 0 us r 0 t) ms Your unused Deluxe poolside 11lr:t I Bdrm from $490. 2 bdrm I pool jar & lt'nms courts I •
Separate llinmit ;irea items could large 2br 2 ba. bltns, I from $570. Townhouse SJ()() per, mo tast mo & I • II s easy to place your 8-0ay Week c1ass1f1ed by mail and it • W :i I k 1 n r Io se ts dswhr t t 2 miles bearh frum $640 + pools, ten 11 utr l Call Sal or Sun •
homelike k1t~·hrn & Adlts. no peU $4.SO mo I ms waterfalls. ponds' AM a1S52-4167 costs 1ust $8 -thats only a dollar a day' To Qualify for this •
cabinets Walk to llunl bP. SOffieOne'S 5J6.~ Gas for roolung & heal To share 2 lxl Condo. 1 j • Sf)eCtdl Oller YOU must be a non-commercial user offering
mgtoo Center --· ing paid From San child OK S21l0 mo plu' h d f 1 1 SBOO d · th 1 • 1Bd1.llfum.S485 Chris tmas DELEWAl!rtHES 1 01ego FrwydriveNorth ,, uul ·,.,1 s &Jl!'.444 1 e mere .in 1se or saeuo o per a ano e once mus
To•nhouseunfum S511S on Beach to MrF.idden wknds &days 6425833 b(.> 1n your ad The cost s tays the Same whether your ad •
Adults. no pels
Ut1hlles f'rt't"
LA QU INTA HERMOSA 15211 Park.side L.n I blk
W of Beach, 3 bllts S ol Edinger
_li]-544J
Loci-a leodl l7 48 ............•.....•.•..
Luxury slud.io. spa, TV. maid service. phone~
JJIS -.u.. 499·22Z7_
Beauufull> furn Suite 2 Br 2 Ba Spa. Sauna,
Satellite T\' m :11d
sen ice StllOO mo
499 ~
wporUtodt 37 69 ••••••••••••••••••••••
THE
"GOOD
LIFE"
YEAR·AOUNO F\ltf
SoL131 Acllv1l1es 01
rr•rt0<• Frtl' Sundily
B•,JOCh • fl80'' •
Parl'es • P1~1 m01e
S II th SPACIOUS I BR I then Wesl Oil McFadden Sh I 1 ho -f • e em Fireplace. walk In to Seawind Vdlajtl' r I? Ull mew.pro need~ eight days selling time o r JUSt one •
rlnsets. dishwasher, I l7 l4)893·Sl98 rers~~ l~t. last & • With an ad gara_ge. pool & laundry Ocean frt Lg 3 Br 2 ba P • A • fac1lilJH uppt'r 2 car ~ar fpl yr Share s~arp ho~t'. f oon Use o ne word 1n each box bout 4 word5 make one •
Under the Pets considered, adults ly $01200 mo' N. B I lain \alle>. S21S md e cla ssified line of type M1n1mum ad is 3 lines Please print I only S«Oper mo 642 3443 ullls N1ck964 2768 I •
Oal'ly Pi'lof 19221 Deteware St Ill 40001M ~· to shr 3 br. N R ' e plainly tSo olGarfield> oo.s S27S Resp . no smoltl' ur • ...... _,., ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• dru&~ •2131•"" •7•1 e Gift Guide 12 br. 11.t ~rpU. d1"P,5.1t:JAU~OBe~~~l~lOC~~~i ,,.. lo :h; 2 b~2 .. ba Jpt.I • r, ------------------------------, •
Call 642-5678
nd asl f •• tlle
Christmas
Ad-Visor
, bi t.Ins, Wtuhkup. pallO, Hwy. Laguna Beach C M S200 mo + S200 • t &ar. S600 ~ -I Daily We81y Kltrhen lj1SI 645·17~ e I I Br 4 bllts from beach avail~b1e Lo~ winter F JS SI plus. share 2 br 2 I •
S350 . mo uW pd Kitch rates 49._5294 I ba pool. k11chen. 24 · X • I "2P!!IM~..l!J~f .. 98S-49~-----60 ' safe . cool. moblle I • Large. cleap 2 br. 1'2 ba Balboa Inn S90 & up home & all. 642·9932. 1f •
I twnhse. 2 levels. ,., mr weekly Ki tchennelte. honesl & lld..)._owner I • beach adults no pets oceruront 675-8740 I . • I 14.IU§o.1J!rL_ _ Near OCC Pool. Non Cs~ 2~7:i;,dt>~ f ~~ • •
2 IUdsOK! I ~.~1iraft::,~~eM . Sl70 util 646·4060 • : •
Spacious 2 bdrm. all lFor -;;;-man -newly de-: Prof M Ftoshrroodom 1 • LITE&lltJTIE xtr.as. new carpets1 co rated pnvate room & N B nr Hoag Hospl • 1
Like new I Br Apts patio. gar Avail now bath, frpk S2SS. melds S22S + ulll 646.3554 aft. I •
w gu or ca rpo rt $40S mo lsl. last S200 ulils. Easts1de. C M 6J>!!l • I
Upstairs w balconies. sec. 831·9303, 847 0422 64S OIQ8 M F share exclusive •
pool. spa, bbq. laundry l4 1 PM)___ -Lg bdr. t;°~nl. pvt ba . Park Newport Tnhse • I •
S470 & up Mature ! SftECIAL ltd. kit .. priv CM. Tennis, pool, spa. Jan • I
Adults NO PETS Mes11 Style your own apart 642·1fil.!ill.71! 1S9-004B.,__ -I I •
P ines . 2650 ll:irlu. menl <You decoratt' we Rm. pvt bath, patio. en Responsible femalt' to • I Publish my ad for 8 days s tarting • 5'9 2447 pay allowance). I year I try. k1l ch prav Quiet share 4 Br Newporl •
lease. See at 6200 Ed· adll. non smkr. Utll pd. Heights home S3SCl m · • auaaliB"U i.D.w.!n...«Yilt.Jkb -~~H~Al~ rids uttls. 631 IS49 & • Class1 f1cation ~ rev LIVEINARE.50RT Hohlt Motels 4100 67S0236 --"'-----------------•
APAITMIEMTS Tennis crts. tge pool, ...... : •••••••••••••••• Office...... 440 e N ame
Beautiful garden apts. sall!la. gym, hobbl fac . Live on Newport Beach •••••••••••••••••••••• • ------------------------•
Pat101decks Pool&Spa. social procrams. ge I s1001wk Pine Knot HEWPo.T A ddress e Heat pd Adults.no pets b r co ndo , D W . Motel 6302 W PCH. NB .....,...,u. • •
BACH S38S wash/dry. spar deck ~-0440 PE"'"-I C t Ph • • Hy<l11>m•1•age . 1BR S4J0.$440 Secure. beaut grounds. Yearly-0n thebeach fum-Spacious executive ,or • I y Zip one ______ _
Swimming • Got! 2 BR 1'• BA S505·S51S ocean breezes ssoo. rooms. Kitch. & Ba. S290 (ices across from <.:tty • Chec k or M.O enc losed 0 •
GREAT RECROTION·
Tennis • Free Lessom
IPIO & pro ~llopl . 2
•" Ji th Clut>< • Saun.1
011v1ng Rangi> 2250 Vanguard 540-9626 6~01».. & up per mo. + S290 sec Hall All services ava1la
BEAUTIFUL APTS --------'""" 3144 dep 2306 W Oceanfront ble. 'optional' From 225 • • Single~ I" 2 81'0 EASTS4DE ••••••••••••••••••••••• NB sq rt. up at reasonable C harge my ad to •
•tiom5 • ru1n1$hea 1415 2 Br. 1 Ba Poolside Condo I BR SSSO/mo. 2 __ 6 rentals. No lease re •
"untumi5hfld •Mull Apl l.aundry room. 1 st~y comer mdl. La.ke S1E• • • • ., MOTB. _suired, cal1673-J002_ O """"' # Exp • l 1v1ng . No f'P(I • h'ld OK N>lS Call p In e $ Rec. r a c II . ''"'·A-• ··-3 J3r 2 Ba, lovely yard Mooe•£ Op~n D~••v l' 1 · no ,..~ Wkly rentals now avail EXECUTIVE • tcellenl cond11ron q •· ., foraUit before its gone JI I $112 & up. Color TV SUmS •
es_!tj_iff ll<ll0,~~789_ Oakwood !SL !.l!l_l. -642·1603 iL.,.. leodt 4 Phones In room :.!274 0 # Exp •
i R2BA.view.endunit, Garden Apartrnent• WESTLAllVILL.A(;E ~~~~·vi:~~·i);j~;i•&•i 'Newport Blvd .CM IN • •
t.rnnis.nopets.1625 ~r H-por11kld!H fmmed occupancy Br.Apts.Newlydecorat· i4i:.744S H!'I~~IE • L------------------------------
lfa o .. waltr paid Adult only complex ed. refrige dishwasher. MEEDAPLACE7 ,.__ WE 'LL PAY THE POSTAGE ··-----··--·--• 3·17~7..~3013~ 880 lr>inl'••11~1" Pool.spa,laWldryroom, disposal, healed pool, Reas.WeeldyRates ~ewlux.ury.offlces1:1ace • r·-·•••••• 1
B .U FFS 4 Br 3 R11 1714) 645'11°" patios or deck..'!. No pets. elevator. aubter. pfkng Kitchenettes-Phones 1 n I rv 1 ne s bus 1 est 1 1 •
auty All neut li ke Hewport BHChS. Garages avail S850&up.C&ll494·8083......_ "Z"Channel Movies renter! Easy Frwy ac • 1 II NO POST AGE 1 •
w 11200 AJ(l 64H."68. 1100(1~'~1ss..r;;;31111~ gac~~.,.. I............ I S•ctr:r, 1967Newport cell Avatl now' Call • I ~[( lSSAR~ :
0134 -. ~ 8~. ~ ~ lfil...!99-5716ey wjcpd B ru.l!~~L ford,tails. : If MAILED I •
d r m . 2 l.,ba. 1324 TSkM&mL ~ tBr.Oceanview,walkto The faste~t draw an the S51·!!JJ_.64MUO • 1 1~ fH[ 1 •
atelle Ln · $980 /mo OCEANFRONT 2 & 4 Br B rport ~II aid Victoria Bt•cb, laundry We51 a Ua1ty Pilot SELL idle items with a • &· UNITE O S l At ( S 9 -~.6757~ Av11I Wanter Wttkly l lSJ!o cQu et 'adult/ no rm at ~ praae. IMC>I Clas~1hcd ,\\I <::ill To Daily Pilot Classified o ~ •
C.._.. 3276 Mon..thJy 1>i3-7'-7L pets. sss w. s'ay , uliltlncld,~·9938• duy&t2·56711· ~d. e ~ BUSINESS REPLY L.ABEL °" • ••••••••••••••••••••• Oceanfront 2 Br 2 Ba 543 Mew,...t .._.. Jl6t • c ~ • rOla~hAo~~~u~~~~n Wee kly or Moothly Eut1ldr 1, ZBR, n•t,ural ••••••••••••••n•••••••I w ""ST CL•ss PE11¥1T ~o •J cosu 'ilES• C •ll ~o11~·• ii •
lt'W. vacant. newly de· Wtritec 1&:: . w 0 0 d ~ e I It n ' fl ' PAii ....... IT I Need more cash • g rated 3Br. 28a. fam Immaculate 3 Br. 2 61 cabinet• utllltlu pd "'' rru• i ~ POSTAGf WI\.~ ij( ll&I() H' AOORr'-'-lt •
. dbl iar•itt . •i: yd ~o~np~e~:ir ~u'~~h'.,!, · tto..l.....--COUMTIY ewe l for Christmas buyilf? • < Orange Coast Daily P ilot e
·llli,Si2Ml99'1 S7SO /mo ProptrlY 1lr2 Br. u~1ra.1tove. UYIM9 t • I •1 p•1 ~
llOlllf, H2 ~ANa mo.. adult•. rel ·;u.J{~ lachelon. 162 bed room I Sell your unneeded .. II y I DI •
34H AU11ct1ve uPSJ(tr dupla . ..ar.d .. 13SUSJ& 9'1m'm8· 1IOO ~ items with a low • 2' e • ..................... 2 t>r 1 ba ~•n view Larae 2 Br. 1~ M. Patio lr!! ---tM - , t d de the e o 1111 Sprin&• Arn • tau ft.dry: carpon: &r pool Ad•IU. S471, Duplea, .,.cain, I Br, 11 cos a un r 1
MC1Mtr1y C.C.> Coado. Wlftter SS7S + l«Urity 91' $41lo.: la, frplc, praie. N.ar Oatly P tlot Gift Gulde • I
RR . 2BA. w(atrlum. R e fa . HI U U • Udo ~.a~a. 9IOO 1
olf • tennis. Dally, I· PlaC'ln• your Cl•11lfled 1ear lt:t. Adda, ~ Call H2·5678 • ' Illy • ....ob' nlel p I he ~I' I -ad 1110.... jlllt ..... II MYt nft. git • :
ull 114 -Ul·H OI f()jlr~:l ~·,. ... u:"' ~ •iv• UI • rail • lM :w~ t.':J..:!'~,'-! .. ... ... • '
P ' Oi\11,Yf'IUYr phone aftdw11 hetpyou •= . CWW..Ml-VIMr • ' ~:.:t 8ER\':;:il~~RY worf1~~wfll&N· •• ,.. ··················-·-
Box 1560
330 W. Bay St.
Co1t1 M111, CA 92821
~ '
3 .................... ---·F~.-.. ---·1..,......, .,...... c......., Serrictl ••••• .,... ,..._. ,.._.., ~ ................... .
N.L, •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• McCry1ta1I Ctrumh•TUt
SPECW. c('~~~~ ~1i:1nI' ~i•hd:.~ ood j)ltlol, d~b. weod An&••• Cltanln& Sfrvlte TI l 1 t • J a p. n t •• CWM W' y°"" ACT Vaodtobua Land.acape e ..... ,..... Dnlna rleared from 110 D11tlncll"~ lnJlall11t1Pn• r O wlndowa Uc'd. Rua Atrordable tilts, ex· Nurtery, l1ndlt'1pln1' HAULING· e3 • ltS M1lnten1nr1, tol ZS yrs up. Ut. ~J • f'lumbln11 Re~r1 1.14' 1408746 IM6 11l11 ~1 67 a-Da ~~ l et 21 24. Der J_ohn or Rl~~flJ-~tl clualvety aervln1 N 8 malnt. Tree trimmlna Ii HAULING/CLEAN UPS o r • o Pe. I 1 w"' • Bonded. Ins Reb Color f reee•t. M"M ~ ROG i::tts TU F. WORK
, fll ' te~dlfdB·:,~&St~:orfn"i t'INEPINISHWORK ar!!.:jg-4eel clun·upa Spec. In Dirt Shnlbl·~ :f:klera.,:lan Lit. ex rt ~CllJID!.£.L_ Klt rhenea'th•'tocir;
hit' At.Lyou p11y 11vail Wann homey at Doon hun1. Oecka , COlltnlcten.4htMr9 8on11l prunln1 .~9900 rem .,, 91!2.f.548 ---NELSONSPAJNTING 19.95 FmntCratt.mm
tor11 mosphere lfarborArea. Remode llna. Randy ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• X 8 ZH UW. NG C-;:---Have tool• will work ' Int· Ext, Ru Com, DRAINS<:l,l':ANEO SP Ro&tn 730 4141 :!Oday 11tl Olrer lor Elm srhl '7S.S718 _ c--a..d Gardenlrul&rvlee A· A · .canup, Land1t11H1, h1ull n1 arouallt celUna.a. ref., Free eat on all rt'palni. · ·
In lb( Prine. M().6e88 73().7~ --a6 S.,.,'--c ... ............__ C• Completdf1inlenante removal, demolition, treea Clean-ups mlar Uc. f eeett. .21SJ'1 27 yruxp. 2A hrt. f,... s.r.u
D••LY _,..., -....---All4 30 uy •111 job. $20/up. SSJ·Wl 11 "" "" •d22 O ••••••••••••••••••••••• -looh. M... / ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• Maaler Oullders, cuslOm ,...,,....._. ~ Reaaon bit 83J·0022 -PA I N T & R N EEDS • c. -14...,, ... v 4 E--c ll PkOf Se"lc~ •i::• WeCareCrl)t Cleaners quality, roomaddltlona. Japant•e Oardenlnc Ii --· M•••rJ WORK :JOy~.up ,int , JAY •a.uo A ?ti
saVICI ••••••••••••••••••••••• steam clean &uphol~ Lie . Larry Wt ndt ll La.ndac1pl.ns Mo Malnt tto.Mc...... . ...................... ext., I CC cell. Davia '°°' Sen'IC• • .,.." Complete servkl' 1111 •• DtHCTOIY VachtHullClumnt1 Truckmountunll (213 1 921 ·8SU , (2 13 1 TreeTr1m In ,!48-J!ll ••••••••••• .. ••••••••••BRICKW ORK . S mall ..f.!!latl.nJ..M!·S~ __ ••••••••••••;•••••••••• slump 11nndln11 10 yrt,1
DO ITNOW• C I I U d l Woi:!.1.uar. MS·3716 944-1468 G • l D l u .. MA Want1 REALLVCLF.AN job• Newport, Coala HCYfTUBS exp L1r Ins ~9* 1
Aakflor'S... om p e :c.rvl~erwa trsh1mpoo &steam clean Dryw.. - -,. WAKfm,. "'~~U:E'CillGlnfilm Mu a, lnlnc:, lteh. RALPH'SPAlNTING PORTABL£.s •Eitpe~t Tree rrunina•
Servire Dlrtttory Boa tJ ll ome-;ep~s t'rpts 10 mln bleach DRYWALL/ACOUSTIC owio1. 1 1na. r: •· ROBlN'SCLEANlNG Brick Block·Cem.:nt Llr'd, Free . 964·SS66 Sw1mmmapool Su v1ces 957 11.1*1
You r O•ily Pilot Jim 846 Ol76 Color brighteners, wht ••••••••••••••••••••••• M . eel 1 iln
1
r · runt MS·S · f75·3175 Exl/lnl·Reas.·Prompl & IN·GROVNOSPAS Commerr1al Llsndac11pe1
Rep~ntauvr r11r pent r)', fiberglass. Hall, llv/din ~s St!>. ~4yrsexp F\Jlly hc'd & !a~1~:&a.n~437~110~ <'~e:;~c!;:thor~7 frpl.'a. Xlnt wor k Qualltypl&ILowestrales renwdelina , TypMc)Stnlce
•41-5671, td lZZ Glau & Wllldow rhan avg room S'U O, couch Ulsured S32·~ ~5737 -· De Pend ab I e Pat In O.C. Neat, prompt Insured and llr d ••••••••••••••••••••••• •·-----l!!!lll nets replar d R bb SlO, rhr SS Guar ehm. D--.-O -11 ddl -CLEANING KI NGDOM 846·0638 se!.!:__84&-~_L~49 r RIM R()SJ..;POOl.C\ I'M YOUR TVP t::
e 0 >' pet odor Crptrepair. l~ve s ry~la • • 11 ·,H..cty•• Ruld./Comm 'I Also Mu onry our specially &57 S44SQ.r494~5778 • f ut& llt'<'ur11tl! Aecom~ 752-1102----15 yrs exp Do work r1~'ni nro~mt~xate~~~~r ••••••••••••••••••••••• Janitorial ser vices. Clean, qultk, depeoda· CUSTOM ~~,~~TE EXl'l!:RT POOL CARE , RevlSionted1t1na1
••••••••••••••••••••••• BOAT MAINTENANCE ~Ir. Rels .... ~1-0]01 894-37671 Carpentry Masonry 556·8470 ble We do any sliejob! EXPERT R Ab1hl)' Pool ' Rep111r furmatuni a )Jlt'<'tahty • At'rur1te·Re~Poni.1ble S&e H~U~OR~ No Steam/No Shampoo ..__~-:::.. DRoof1nllll StPlumbiJlT't Quality Housecleaning •631·20CM• NU-8RLOOOWKRATi:!2.1•03 Service Tim 968 2187 'Call m~ for all your· At'rlg for sm busllles:. rv1ce • epa1r St S 1 t f t unomC• rywa urro t e Ith p IT h ---------'" .-!.. · l 11 nffds P:itt}' Completrset up ~erv1ce Stbock Boats 873·2050 d ainF pe<'ll 15 · 15 ...................... , Remodel J B 646·9990 w 8 ~~ our Custom Brick, Stone, SUrvlne House Punters Property M•1ia1•.t ypin 6003 Reason11ble...: ~O ~ C -I y h -l}'.,_!rtet$1 839-1582 ELECTRICIAN priced Jat'k or -~II Trades Call _e 156 Block. Concrete, Stucco. Free Est. Call Jeff or •••••••••••••••••••••• ~I .
Co,mp IC t M~lnt & KALUA c·--c ·•E r1oh1. , ...... est1mata on Reis. Free est. s.9·949'l _M I ndy at 545·0231 p1rnrn'rly Wliildow C'--'--Alr COfldftioMMJ/ ean1ng, u p'd "' reas ..,. ' ,. " "'" • Day or Night S..C _._, -......., Htaf"'9 Clark 61_5·71~24 hrs_ ..§.t~rl~an 675 3321 la_rge oumalljobs • Ja~k,67.}~14 ! •Hol~ creanW• Mo•lllCJ Palnllng. tnter1or1Ex MAMAGEMEHT •••••••••••••••••••••••
• •••••.•.•••••.••••••••••• ltiilden Corpet/.,,..,..hry Llr. l39662~_ -67J.03S9 Home apt repair paint. 25% f::rni.;J,'(!Jllfl. ! ••••••••••••••••••••••• terior spec1aUzi.ng rental Orangr Co art>:i 15 yrs Ori~~1=~ ~~ni!oC:e~~he:.
R ~SID ,COMM 'L ••••• •• •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• General Mamt , repair & 5 t u c <' 0 • r 0 0 f 1 n g . M aintena11re *A· I MOVING* prop Neat, !Wasonabll' eitpenenre. Call Cor 111fo 631 7698 fo'reeest1mat~onlarge GElWtcK&SOH Carpet & uphobtery de11gn.rreeest Quality masonry, <'nrpcnlry, flomes&7S·9'15SOffices Top Quality. Spel'lal 631 ·47!0. and rate1t 'LA-ttheSunshineln'
or small Jobs. 8.15 7396 Builders Sine 1947 e I e a n e r , r r e e ~k. 835·7396 etc 548.()g49 care In handling 25 yrs Paperiltg 9634112 Call Sunshllle Window
AJfllloff Add1t1ons, rem~ehng, S<·otchguard, Ooor wax Elertr1r our Specialty HOME IMPROVEMENT EXP. HOUSECLEANER exp.vCo'?'IPftlllve rates. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Roofinc) l'lt>11n1~Ltd __ ~11115J
••••••••••••••••••••••• plans. Free est. Reas In 97~-----Clean. Quirk, d~penda· REPAIR, PLUMBING. Reliable, refs Frtt est N!!JL ert1me. 7»1353_ The Paper Hanger, Prof •••••••••••••••••••••• CLEAN WINDOWS
Driveways, parking lot Lie '310942 549-2170 C ..... /~ ble We Do Any Siu Job' htatrng, t'arprntry, elec, Call 24 hn 955-2418. •A BC MOVING-Exp . mstall Derorator qual Oruoge Cou~I Roofm g FOR THE HOLIDAYS
rep:llrs sealroatin• ----••••••••••••••••••••••• -·-"~~,H~.~~'-'1 • _ tile. f'reeest NoJob too .:.a..::_ prof . low r;1tes Quirk, fo'rrust._Steve547-428 1 Reroofmg Repairs 642.~1~7~L.
S&S As. halt 631 41:9 ~ocHAL.i COHSTI. TllOMPSON 'S Res. Comm'I al yn; u ~mall 645 22111 Good Ho.••pillg rarefu~erv1f!:.~·Q4!0_ HANGING SlO/ROLL 646-~Jl.33
Lie P I Custom homes, Cram CONCRETECONSTR per, Do my own work Hordwood Roon Guaranteed Everytime STARVING COLLEGE Quality Abo stnpping Kt::PAIRS FOR LESS ~ l
. . • ng. re mod. French Lit' ~393383 642·8482 ~r d. Al 646-8126 _ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Chai:_he T7o.6980J!)'./e!_ STUDENTS MOVING rree est Scott ~9325 Shingles Oat decks 30 ALLSTATE PAVING
1
doors, skyllghls & patio ~ ----LIC"D E CT co L TlZ 436 --• · · Sealroating. Striping, covt.>rs. IWS-36S2 Res1d Concrete. Also LE RICIAN HARDWOOD FLOORS Exp'd lady to clean your . 1r ' 4 Plost.r/ltpalr yr~ F reeest. 71tt2]25 • If it's got
Repairs Comm Reh ----sport courts. Ltr . 374067 Qual work -Reas rates Cleaned & Waxed home, xlnt service Call Insured 641 8427 , ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ne" & re-roofing, pnced h di
•39736264.S-811!1 ltMOdtfSpeclalst -~b851·1966!!!1J0'7.!.. __ 645·1950/631·S!J72J om Al!l1!!m_!..832-4881SA Glot646900_! ___ ~AT_fH U~GRO'!t_ PLASTERPATC..:IUNG right Free estimates • an es ---I Custom carpentr y. •John Mullaney &Sons• RoorCo•trillg HcMillCJ Good Houserleanln& P .... 9 Resturtos Int/ext JO 6319255 • you'll grab -
Attonttys 11.erks. patios J S. ~onst cement t bra ck . re ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Exp'd, &ood references ••••••••••••••••••••••• _yr~:lleaLPaulJ4S 2977 S.cw~ Sy.&-a sale ••••••••••••••••••••••• Co Nobody does 1t bet· landscape tree remov CRPT LINO.WOOO DUMP Jo os Call aft.S m 631·4284 f ine painting by Richard ED'S PLASTERING ... , • ._ •
01.VORCE.St:PPORT t~r' Lie, bonded. Free wood decks L1 r'd Installed /repaired Lit• &Small Movin~Jobs -HOUSECLEANING -Sinor L1r.ins. t3yrsor All Types Int or Ext o~~·n•;;·~~:;t~~;·~jd;:; faster in
lll(rease decrease. al" es!_.CallJ~~~-11 __ 7702953 •369260 Gre11499·5142 <:all MIKE 646 1391 EXP'D.NB/CMtCdM. happyN B customers. 645·8258 Restuct'Os I 'II ed B I • Da1'ly P'tlOt ~•dents bnnlcrupt -:-----~,.... -Th -" 63 44 o ----oca Y own urg ar
851:3!1J11i83.'l I~ abifttt M4*.ilg Crea live Concrete Work GardtttiMJ Haul. cleanup, ronnetl' 751·21670eves _a_iu<.J'OU__ _!:. I Neat patches & textures Alarm <.:o. Sea Coast • classified
- -••••••••••••••••••••••• St'otl Jonas Aft 5PM.
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••••••••••••••••••••••• removal Dump Truck Hotn;.~ -Hohday Spe<'1al, ext/mt Frtt eat 893-1439 Security, 2488 Newport ads. ,.. ... ,,
labytlttiMJ 'ab1netry Spertalty. 848·5577 Frerest Cleanups Tree Trim'I( Qu1cks_erv 642-7638 •••••••:';:;? ••••••••••• painting Prof Rsnbl -• · -Blvd<.: M 642 3490 • ""°
••••••••••••••••••••••• k1uhens, Bathrooms & C I Tiit Hauling Maintenance HAULING & D MP WA NT E D. Re I ire d tl'.!e t!b Steve547 '281 Plastering. patch, reslur --I 642-5678 ~ Babysitting M> homt' l'ustom to your style No ,,._ c Arme 548-8414 LARRY 'S PAINTING co Int . Ext Reas frre SwJmmiftq l.nlOltl I H IL he LI Rf bl 11, ••••••••••••••••••••••• -JOBS.ask for Randy, M1dWesl University est Ref96J..Olll6 5399697
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••••••••••••••••••••••• •-•------... 0 ~~~s681Wt'• • e JO 00 !~~ 2004 • Hansen's Ceramic Tile I t".idillac1-tu (;0 l'arh 1 641 84?7 Pr~(essor & Wife desire Fall Spet'1al 1nl /nt, -::L J will tea<'h your child to
Babysitting, our C M Custom Cabinetry -All CaJ!.aft _4R_1!!,_9124639_ Holl "t'mofrtht• mar·ki·t I lge truck Lowest rate In Newpor t /Lag un a 645.:2~ _ i.hould altAa)'rh1·1 k lht• Cert1f1ed Red Cros:. tn· for WHITE elephants ..,
-· ---l Floors Showers Tubs Whitlt'H'rlht-Fa1t HAULING Stu~ent has lo Housesil/rent Home dry w all 645 93113 . l'eoplewhont't~lvt~l'll' swim my heated pool GetGRfo~ENcash ,
homes. 1 yr & up, any. kinds, 7 yrs design exp Classified Ads. your one· WithJl'l~l>lfli·it \ii Prompt CalllS9·l9'1S area during Mo o( Ott. Have somet.tung to l>cll? Sen11·t'Darcl'lor} inth1· strui·tor Le.!> Short w1thaClass1r1edAd
llme 642 ~ 64&S759 Free est 7»6409 _ st<>2_sho~& center _ l'all 1..,ow ' 64:.! 5tiitl Thank oo_..fourt Call 7~-~ __ Classified ads do 11 well DAILY PIL{YI' .§:t6 ~!.O C~ll 642·5§78
' lpWClllhd 7100 HttpWClllfed 710 H.4pW..t.d 7100HelpWClllhd 7100HttpWClllhd 7100 lpW..ttd 7100 H~Wonted 7100HelpW..ied 7100
~::;:~~:;:··;;;~:·;~· .;::~~::;;;············ ·····;;·;~·~·~~;·····1 ·:~~·;~;······~;;~·1······················· ;;;;;;,:::;·;~~··~~~:· ;::~~~················ s:~;;~~·;r:::~;;;v·e····:..
dustnal temp pos1llons P lime full <'hargt'" 3 t:ood t)~in.: ,kill~. Alln fem~ly I PARTTIME Hosp.,isacl-eplJn~JPll~ LT I ndustries•~ u WantSecunty•.wearea
no w a " a 1 I ab I e d11ys per wel'k <.ill I ~UJ>t•ranr l>hollt• manner. 95J.-09'7l I Mailingoperations ror u p rerpt Heavy pandmg their Uldustnal NATIONAL <.:ompany
/
Woman/Men American Cori n n e wk <Jy!' II Jble to ,,.ork efflt'ientl) I --No exper req'd Must be phonea HB Conv Hosp sales force We offer with Regional ()(fires &
Labor Core , 6281 63136.SI I uniler11ml'pre:.~ure Al Needle w~rk k•t ,pr~ dependable and ava1lu 18811 Florida St llH RUarantt.'edsalary+ex· Warehouses In tht-
Manrhester, Buena IUSIOYS lr11rllvt> sal.ir) & Pull thread. cut abnc, ble on call Npt Bch 347.3515 cell comlTl.lssi<m. group Glazing & Industrial
ParL _ _ Day' & na hls Georl(e s l>t'ndit~ for nght person 5h•.PI>111& Ff!'.'TJCt:Cl.142 f ashion 1siand area.
1
insurance. ~hort hours1 Trade Industries. We
Assemblers We will Camelot ~ B 673·3233 I Please call 9793666. a~k 1 Mww-C:Olllp 760-0501.8 J0.12·:.> l.E.1...v-TM~ SAM 12PM, 12PM ~PM., ha\I• an IMMEDIATE train Apply 7 AM · -:.t • .:.. for Kathy Live in for lady recover " .. ~ ..,..., room for advancement opening for a Super,.
MacGregor Yat'hts. 1631 Cake Decorator wanlt'<I iog from stroke 6 da 00 I Earn while you learn I Call Mr Sal}ds631 2741 _ Sales Person to Ex Plill!lll~06ta_Mesa"-~/~~r~~~~..os;,'ll tn11n GEMEUL.OfffCE •.da off J hrs off dunng PAITTIME ~N~E~T~~N~ C:..,~ S~/Manol)linHt I f.1::·~;'{oo~s~p~i'e~u& ...
! Don 1 s11 home
while your ad is
running 1n ·the
Daily Pilot
Classifieds Let
ANSWER AD take
your messages
24 hrs a day for
a whole week tor
1ust $5 00.
BAB VSITTER Mature. -p T aflrmoons. I 6 PM . d.a S50 da .. "" & bd 6·9pm Expandmg yooth tear h you r rea t 1 v e Nutrition Co IOoklllR for E q u 1 p men t 1 n a n
lovi ng , exp. person, to CASHllYl musttwabl11tol)Pt'& Co uld s h a r e Job rounsehng fi rm has financing. 1031 Ex surt'ess oriented in established territory
' rare ror 10 mo old boy in HOUSEWAll SALES I sprll 979.1711 w 11 n °th er nu r 5 e openings for 3.5 sharp changes. investor de dividuals who desire an I Based out of Orange
my Irvine home F' T Full or prt1me Apply 11 d 646 8l83 Nov 27 onl}' outgoing mature peoplr velopment & t'UWlbehn" above average mrome (' o u n t > W 1 l ho u t th 12'18 8519372 air resstn)o( ~ss1stant. N ,. ( h ff C• II r ru • Crown Hardware. 1024, s;il plu~ l•P'· pref urs1ng lo motivate ambitious Eitper rounselors re .orl e1re orts a orl <hern1ghl Travel Must
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Babysitter 1.rvine <Westrllr()NB I maturrperi.on µlta~·•nt l LYM tG-13 yr olds.Call 2-Spm rc1ve 100"4 <'Omm This appt No phone 10 be M ature En
Needed Prefer in my CHEF'S JohMy's Hest atmosphe~ GI! B~h 3 11 30 Conv Hos p NB 642·4321, ext 343 Ask for 1s an unusual oppty forl terviews Mr Ua'15 l7H 'j thus1ast1r. Take Charge
home 14 mo old 4 days now laking apps ror I 197 2333 a:.k for kennit> Jrea Pos attitude & Andn!a n ght person Conriden 894 8798 lndl\ 1dual Who Works
a week 540 9529 or chef's ft dl)'s /pl rules. I Williams 11m1les needed , xlot tlal 1n terv1ew Call Sales I best under m1n1mum1 673 0322 Exp "d only Apply ~t Hatrstyhsl benefits Call 642 8044_ Pi W Vince 546.$880 HAUGHTY LADY Su pen 1s1on In Return
Need Babys1uer, my 3.5 PM Mon Fri only I Be your own Bot.s Sub Nursmg I •u orii Lad ie beromr a "' e 0 r r e r
home . 963 -934 2 2250 E.l7lh St alTuslln lease apaceln NB Ask MU•SISAIDE Nttdpeoplewiths~npt Naughty Lady salesl •CO M PETITIVE' Fullllme, salary nee Av SA I 1 Ch k G7SZ046 E 'd 11 hlfl style or penon1h.ied1 Restaurant r ep ' Call "lillon SALA R Y + ro m-
Oneinf1n• one toddler or -Ut' • xper . a s s . handwriting for p1et'el IUSTY_, •c•.... 968 Ol78 m1s~1on • ex .... nses. • -::..: -c•m.tr•L H·aow•a"S•'"S Conv Hosp Nwpt Bch I work at home Send l"u.I A" .... ..UO"-A ,"' "''° "'uc Bring)oursm1le &Jom I lll89 W Co 1830 Ma in St . at Sales car allowanre •In•· Call 642·5678 to
ad place your
Lnowi __ _J I IYsrnB Realestate synd1ra11on ~ ull tlmt.' /\p11I) 1n us' f ree m r med den·l samp e to m M A h 1 Part time Salei.. u suranre & peru1on plan · P•~nnAneed-... tom,.,,. prO<'essmg rlerk for NB I Pr r ~on l' r n "' n I tal & 11d ins Call monwealt~. Sui te D. ar rt ur. rvme, "°"' per d Motherhoo·• 1 Ir \Ou are the per5on "'e
'"""' aJ ""' ln\'eSt firm ProrcS)eS I Ila rd .. Jfl.' l(t!ol Ir\ IOI' 642 8044 Fullerton CA 92633 tn I accepting appl.irations u J re looktnl( for. Please' 6 )'r old girl after new in vest mvolv1n~ NB I elud e return address' KITCHENHELP Maternity Bouhqu«> Call, Tinker Baumstarl.-
school. l :SSpm to ap b k d l5 & d 1 ll.'d OFFICE MG«':./ ancl...ehone number DISHWASHERS Fashion Island. flrx dl our LO!> Angeles Toil"
Lost & FOtllld 5300 P~no11oh s15a prox 2 '5pm everyday. an epo6I eat HotPfal · ----Day & ni&ht shifts avail hrs Eves wkends <.:.ill Mon· Fri MUST BE follow up Oependab1hl> I I 1111.r EXEC. SEC Plasllrs Apply in prrson Mon M1m1 759 9951 ~· r e e :-.; u m b l' r
DEPENDAli L t: & accuracy rt'Q Com n1t1rmte~ ror exp111dJn1:l1wfirm SETUPPBSOH Fn.9AM 5PM 180ll3i2 6361 In .
Los I Whippet an' tu COF:US Would Lo' e to Stonecreek Elemental'). putt'r exp helprul Call l'ot.~l''!. i!Ood l \ p•nR in Irvine mdustnal rom We are look111g for an ex I Salet P"'50ftt ten lt'WS begin :'liov 30th ,
.................•••... ••......•.••.•.....••..
Shogun. blk IJrn t>f(e f'.irtyw1thyouCallSue · 714 640·0123 abihl) skill' 111 bnsir pli•x Salary com penenced Mlf formJer Neededfor l-'ullorPT 81 RESL M !.' mark tnl!~ !'ll'llM' l·all 11r Ot'bb1eanytJmr ::f~sbr•~f:~s':v~~~I ~ __ math Uffltr'" "~~r:ir mtnsurate ";•th exper uon moldllll(produrtion ,Sales ll'mporaq pos1t1Qns.1 REQl:IRED_EOI:: 67~S536art6 953936;1 5S2 04Gl anerS·30pm Comm"I Cleaners want ti'e NetApnrl ll<arh Call Mr S1m ond~ Co paid health, vaca·j Owtsi•Sdff µresentinl(netA µrodurts SA.LES Found M Rik" whl lg · · ed . dependable & ~on ho:.1.1itat 't'tltnR 8333622 llon &hol.idays 2ndsh1ft Positionopenselhngre in local <lt.'pl )lores I Wanted. Worn.in pre"'
dog II 21 on \"11·turn1 St A T oudl responsible Pays well Conta<'I '" lrrnl' Hull I Part time -opening only. 4 , ader ad advertising to Phone l21J> 937 2608 for fer red ,.ilt>:> of desirable
CM 548 t.15:l1 Banlrlng Flex hrs P time I h40-ll9S-O MOT HE RS', Perm 1 Apply at I rc11.ant.s111 a pro mtenietA •'l)'ourare.i produrt nOI d rosmellr_
Found r IA ht & brn of Class ... EW ACCOUNTS f time. subshtutt"S l'all llOL'S~:CAH~. Lad) lo P:.rt time 9 ., In orf1re' I OIAMGE OAST ~nt~r) E.lt SALES PERSON full or t'Jrn up lo $10,000 per,
G1.int Chl'd,l'tho.ir11 Est'orts Modeling NewportBalboaSavinds 831 6856111e.mesi> t•arl' for l'ld1•rl). non lnyour Home Phonere. PL.A S boll nt comm1ss1onood& p.artllme. \tdeo store )ear PT tAorkmOC rabbit. M hlk Lah m1~. M F &C I " . h<'ilnddrn Woman LO\ So nus programs. R I f .... r 11 f; M Ian & 'Ahl ltouml mi~ oup es has im mediate opening Counter help for dr> I el C'oMa M!'l.u homt• 1>epllon ml' Clerical. 850 W 18l ., C M co benefits Apply at sa es. expt'r pre erreu ~; ~~ a ·'es .-
;1;,. pl Anim.il Shelter ~~MC~ Visa for an upenent'ed New cleaner . .:ocxl hours 1\p O~n r~m & bath. non Some Sales ~-The Pennysa\er t660 I Call Lyon 642 ls.14 ror in _,
644 ~ Tro•tl 5450 Accounts Counselor ply in person. ~!135 ~moker e\tl> & tAktnds
1
_ ~~-Pre·st'hool 01n!'l'tor. mm Plat'enha, <.: M I ten iew ap~ SANDWICH SHOP .,
Found G Ids~ es ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tht.s is a rhalleng!~g I Warner, HB !2131862 92K3 PAIT TIME E C E + 3 units :id ' FA RCO in r M •
KOREA 1Ha1r Gla~sesr ~·;:,. r~~::s.~3 pos1l1on With a lern(1 c DESK CLYK/ m.J!!!Str!ll_!e 4:!14 9353 I Sales SALES I Coun1t'r kll!'h('n asst • Vt( Easl Olurf St>tAfXlrt .... o ppor tunity for al Housekeeper. l'hild l.trl" r RECRUITERS Sll'ad) Job y 30am Be~ch . Ahou1 '1 -.·1·ek countnes _~l~ .. p E 0 p L E E MIGKTf~~~I :•~e '\Prefer rt>llrtd EVEJINGS Printmg ' ForlHnhnGnwp Exerut1vr search f1rm l 3 3opm ~ .r 16th &: ruto 64411147 FLY FREE' Pan Am 2 ORIENTED" person xper pre us :l\•e a) w o tA ;inls homl' Plateroomhelper Mon 3
1
1 k b ~uprrior. l'<Kta Mesa. for I coupons. 13 coon Full insurance benefits ref .s Appl) in person I .ind family &\ard, room We are prestnlly seek· PM lo approit 8 PM, Call us about the out I see s right af(l(rt'ss1ve 631 J0.1Z FC~t~d gr~·;• ti~rr~lr~p~ tries H n w a II $40 & paid career apparel California 6 Motel. 1441 and wage da 847 2244. mg adults with pleasant Tues 1 30 PM to approx stand an g career op rerru1ters who t•an think , 1
Blue t·o llar \.i i 631·3669 Salary commensurate G"lerA_ve,.<.;~ e\84021112 personahtJes whowoold 8 PM.noexp.n« App.
1
po rt unit1ei. as an1 and grow rn:h Call Seasonal Help
Harbor Baker C ~1 EmployintWI & with experience. Please DH IVERS WANTED Housekeeper, Sun & Mon be interested Ul working I ly: Pennysaver. 1660 Insurance Agent Train 1673 2902 GIFT WUl'f'ERS •\
Call 751 6370 PrtponH. t'Bll Early morning home de only llou.~<'leaning & in Sales & Promotion ~larentla__Av!...._ C M. 1ng will not interfere Startin 11 11 JO Days:'
Lost Siamese ~t>al ~llnl, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ms Oen.oy Pansia livery L A TIM F.S rhild rare. Lall Bt'h w1thDa1lyPilotCarriers I with you r present Have you read today's e\en1nn~ & wet'kends
M 11 22 Vrr l'ypre~~ Schoolt& 714~ lrvine &N~wport are~s· area fi418700 dys. 10 l o 15 years old employment Classified Ads' If not. Appl) inµersoo (ruwn
Tree Lane. In inc hntntcffo. 7005 HIWPOITIALIOA $4 25 + mo Jess I Eva I. eHs wkndi. Unl1 m1ted earn!ngs RECE"fTYPIST I I you're m1ssmg the besl llardtA are 1024 ln1n1. Pluto $594532 s•YIMGS&LO•.,.. I .. .,_0.,~. 497.J983 ava i la bl e t o right Arltve realeslateoffi re ~451~ _ barg_a1ns1ntown' A'e :-.. B
fe~a1/t{1\g Kl ;fo ~ Now Enrollhng Chris 1100 Irvine Ave , NB Earn Christmas Money I IHTEIROGATOI· I 8 30PM. Monday thru groomed. personable Ill I Lo R Sh • • •• • • • • •••••••• • • •••• • A An ~ ~ ---1 person Hr 5 :.>PM tol has openlllg for a well
QrS4l·3017 llan Pre-School 320 E. E O.E M/f Painting ducks part I Mll:aU:ft • Friday Some Saturday dividual. Musi beexper I
18th St . Costa Mesa time Let the artist 1n Q;llj>..., availab1hly f or ap. w/typ1n11 s kills 45 Lost 3 wks ago Oran1:e A-SP er 1 a I Progra m you arise Eves & Sat '1 PART-TIME. p o 1 n l me n t. c a 11 , 60wpm Real estate ex I while longhair M 1 at' 646 ••23 h • •100 "'e kend "nd u . .,., Banking S3.50 r Interviews Sat I • 1" e .. P 642 4321, ask for Ben per desirable. Call d11ran~!agonl~l~a t I~ H.tpWOlftd 7100 I~ a m 9 11 at 19001 Call 552·3173 Ar my Wtll!ams. Suzan631-0213
RetA a r Pleas~ ra II ••••••••••••••••••••••• JOI MAUET ~a;den (at Garfield 1. :;serve Be all you c:an ll!!!"'!l'!!!!!!!!'!!'lll!!!!!!l!~!!!!~~I
9621488 Por+-n..Ttler llllllll!lll!!l!!!!lll!lll!!l!!!!lllmll!I-~ SELL Idle Hems with a
Found Sun t:,1· 1n ADMIMISTIATIYI NewportBalboaSavmgs ESTIMATOR Daily Pilot Classified Wr~trl1H Villa . Nil SPECtAUST isseekiogamature,well Merhan1ral Engineer le~alSec't Ad6425678 beaut pale orange lab ~ ed · d d 1 h d I t .,.. ______ _.. _______ ~
b Ph M~ groom m 1v1 ua w o mg egree or equ1va en Newpo ctr Real stale
Y )Oung cat one p IT TIMI loves working with peo.1 w 1 l h poss i b I e L · L F 71 4 323 2!">59 llll l2 29. A • pie for the pos1t1on of establlshed rllenlele an itigation aw irm
642 1911 .in SIOO weekend and up. PIT Teller. Excellent rerinery piping Meri seeks exper'd Legal Sec
Found Wh1pprl l'up Ca ll 552 3173. Army opporturuty (orastable. d1an Construrl1on . wt ithh goodandtypSinHg,k~llc
orange blJrk mark1nl(s Reserve ~all you ran "bl t La11una Nigue.lt.831_·8686_. ap one s ' s \'1r. 3.'.lrd Newport lllv1l he res pons a e person ° == -Salary~ 64Q.6960 _ ~ H call Patli75 4986 l•-lll!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!ll!!!ll!!!!!!!IPl leam and devtlop in a --------•I Found Blk Poodle mix. ALL ROUND OFFICE growing association MAICE
Fem. Skyline Newvort p ER SON for rast Banking or S " L ex 1 fir a.I l...._ HOUSECAUS OC Sheltrr8914~1 pared medical dist penence preferrledPIPa1d ,..,.UWll To P ot entia l 1,os
l.ost While Persian cat Super sharp. Typ career appare ease call a An ge I es TI me S
\Ir ere'< St Laouna 11· c t call: Subscribers & earn Big , .. 1ng w1 ing ompu er M o p D=llliw Oeach. Missing Nov 21 back a round hetpru 1 5· enny ansia rNll Money doing it' As n
('a11•94 1880 " (714)645.6505 Sales Representatwe for ., Chance for advance r'61POITI LIO• Aft l.ost Gray Corkat1el m e n 1 s a I a r y "'°" A · A Ir the Los Angeles Times
w or t•heek s. 11:.il n eg /benefits . Call SAVIMGS&LOAM t!j2·5&JI Circulation Department Penm$ulo 673·0'l87 beginnmg ll·»8l betwn 1100 lrvine Ave .. NB U't you'll eam a guaranteed ~·ouND Small blk & tO.nQOn~7587. _ "'!!E!!.0!1!!.E•.l!!!!!•l!!!•!!l!M!!/!!F lll!!!!!!!!!!llm!!!!!!!!I•••~ wage + generou.s Com· while l10J. vi<' or Crown I'! m i s s 1 o n s o n t h e
VJllcy Ph) It Golden AMBITlOUS COUPLES ii p•iat · · • Subscriptions you sell. l.iillll'rn <.:1111 831 3631 wa nting lo supplemen~ la J I .. . . .. . .. .. .. .. .. . . . Hours are from 4PM to
to 1denllf) family 1nrome on a Pllrt· •• I 9PM daily. Training will
f ound n r 19 th & lime basis, rail for an • : be provided All you
llarbor. $iirooyed. oldtr 3.eJ>l 67S.:~· : ; ! need is 1 good ap·
female, bm lthr rollar Ans we ring Ser vice. : Id t' • l'.J..,. · 1 pearfnt e & an en· ~·riendly $41144SO graveyard shift avail . : ,. ver ISIM ~ ~ thusiastic manner. " ''"...ts 5350 typing 35 wpm. C111l · ~;11per. n<-wsp11pN til;~uy llilll'~person to ; you think this poellion
••••••••••••••••••• •••• 631 0140 J;_O_E.:.. _ __ hnndlc k1•.Y. am1unl1' for Oranl(r Coim · i might be right for you,
UECUTIVI 0111ly l'tlot Sal:1ry. rommls1rn>n ond ; glve us • call 957 2361 "'sum • A/I• UM& cxt•cll1•nt bt•1wfiL11 <:rowth opportunit1e11 ' !•·..:.l .:;:12CM=.:, _____ _
24 boJr F.5<.:0RTS c· -ror person with career 11mb111on)l S4?nd STOPU 9Sl f 112 Ml' IVIS• ..-R com11lele re¥umc tu Murii f endel. l'O i • ..,..., ' ,. F /time. aomt account Box 1560. Co11t11 Ml':1• CA '2626 No phone 'Take lime lo rtla1 and -••-••••9' 1n1 exp e r I e n c e 11 1 A ~·,, 1 o por 1 shop •l llorM. In aim· ~ C n""'Ullt". Mul l be ('II ll, p t'UH ,.n • .,uii P ' " pit with Dally Pilot .,~.., m~a~hlne ~. Xlnl tunlty l!:mployer • Cl111ifled Adi. And if
24 Hrs &O·OllO rompan' benefl\I, Call ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ' you bav~ aomethln1 to c-~ Balboa •rint, S.N7l. • 330 w. IAY ST.,. COSTA •SA, CA. t2t2' ~~1~· 1fi~' Ad ~:•ndl~
sr6WiHTs
NEEDED
Earn $30-$60 per week.
Tfips & Prizn. c.1.-.
Cll•c• • IJt-HOI.
cl -__ co-=-_> __ , )
\V4NTBD ( ( __ <05 ___ ) )
Newspaper
Carriers tor routes
in Huntington Beach,
Fountain Valley & Newport Beach
• Good Earnings
• Super Trips
• Great Prizes
._._.AW""-E.O.E.lltrlH " ~N EOU•LO"ll0"'""""'"'"'6n11 : • • · •or • '!!!!!!!i!!-X!!!!':=!·!!!l!!'--!!!'l~~~~~~~~~~·~ .. =·=·= .. =·= .. =·~·= .. =·=·=··=·~·~··~·~·~··~·~·~··~·~··~·~·~·~ .. ~·~·~··~·:_· Mt~M'J'l ___ ~~J!~~~~~~~~~==~~~~==~~.1:.~~==~~~==~==============:::::::::::::::::::::::::=~
Cll
THEODORE
' ROBINS
FORD
• I ~~1\W ~r ,.., • l 't' ~J
( ll',f fj M t\,\ '· •• 1 1 'I
WllUY
CLIAMCAIS AMD11UCIS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
' .
' ..
'i -'b I JOO
•
SADDLBACI ...w 28402 MarperiU Pkwy.
M luion Viejo
A very P'twy. exit
(olfl.S Fwy.)
l l 1-2040 4'Mt4t
Cloled Suadan
1911 IMW
CLOSEOUT
SAYE!!
Sales alld Lualna at
competitive prices. Ex-
cellat service and parts
dept.
Good selection of pre-
viously awned BMW • other fine can ln ti· telltnt~.
'77 8210, Low mi .. I
owner, S27SO. evu,
IC2-1102
'80 200 SX Sport. A/C,
stereo, rue1 14.lct.. 2IOK
mi. Beauty• economy .
•• 995. 0/8/0. 84.S-4U6
or 548--27 SI •
'M Datsun 1200, 4 cir, 4
apd, wort car, S7'5.
MS-ml
'8'1 SlO, S3CJO.. econom1
car. Needa minor work..
JoAmtt, 631.f758 belore
2PM.
'74 DATSUN 710
Xlnt cood .. new parts 112000.B.O. 175-07SS
''76 Datsun 8%10, red,
am/fm , 12,000 mi, J0.315
mpa, very ad cond.
$2200/080. -..101.
,. ZIO'Z. ~. 1IDt cond,
9'400flrm. ss.ecz.
'17 ROA.llSTER
Collector's item. SlOOOor
bat olftr. Nl-Zltt
Det.ol.. '72 I • ••••••••••••••••••••••
.......................
'1' P'l1t 124 Sprt Cpt,
Good CCl9d. lllt olftr.
Et11 c1ll•1S11
• ATLAS CHRYSUlt~YMOUTH
2929 Harbor Blvd , Costa Mela. Tel ~193-4 3 blocks
aouth of San Diego Freeway ott Harbor Blvd. Complete
,body shop Sates. Service Parts. SefVioe Dept. open
Monday thru Friday 7.30 A.M to 5.30 P.M and 8 A.M. to
5 P.M. on Saturday . • HACH IMPORTS
848 Dove Streat. Newport Beach Tel 752-0900 C.11 us.
we're the specialists for Alfa Romeo. Peugeot, SaalJ &
Maaerat 1.
• THEODOIE IOltHS FOB
Modern aales, service, parts, body, paint & tire depts.
Competitive rates on le ... & dally rentala. 2080 Harbor
BIVd., Coata Meaa. 642-001 O Of ~11.
• JOHNSOM & SOM UMCOLH ..aCUIY
2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Meu.. Tel. 54()-5630. 57 Yeace
of frjendly family Hrvice -Orange County'• olclfft Lin·
colnl-Mercury dealership.
SOUTH COAST DOMI
2• Harbor Blvd .. Cotta M .... Tel. 640-0330. AV Mrvlce
apeclallai.. ~ustom van conV9r9i<>na.
• MIWPOIT IWOITS
3100 W. Coaat Highway, Newport 8HOh Tel.
6'2·940!5/540-1764. The Ferratt HMdQuettert.
•
,
Orange Coalt OAILY PILOT/fhul'lda , Novtmbtr 28. 1981 CIS
MATCH THE NUMBERS OM THE
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES • NEWrOIT DATSUH
888 Dove Street. Newport BMch. Tel. 833-1300 At the
triangle of Jamboree. MacArthur & Brestol behind
Victoria Station. Sates. Serv1oe. Leasing & Parts Fleet
d11()()unta to the public.
• HAIEltS CADtLJ.AC
2600 Hart>or Blvd . Co•ta Miu. Tel. 540-9100. Orange
County's Largest Cadillac dealer. s.i.. Service. Leu-
Ing .
• DAVID J. PMLUr$ 1Utac"'°"'1Ac.MA%DA
Salee • Service • LMtlng 24888 Alicia Partcway
Laguna Hills 837-2400
• TAMITDATSUM
"er..~ ....................
13731 Hartx>r Blvd, Gwden G~. T-.o blodcl eouth of
Garden Grow Freewl)'. Selet. SeNlce. Pwta. Our aim
is coml)fete cuatomeri Ntltfac.ilon. Shq> ut and avoid
paying too muc:hl Tel. $54-9000
• ALAM MAG MOM POMnAC..SUIAIU
2A80 Harbor Blvd., Cotta Mela. Ttl. Mt-4300. Sal .. ,.
Service, Leaelng. _"Mr. G~ICtl."
• HOUSI 0. IMPOIT$ w•c:-•11 ............ ~
8M2 Menchffter Blvd., Buen• Peril (on Senta Ana
F,_.ay). T•k• S.aoh BIYd. offremp -ahetp right on
Menchffter.
DIAi. MER-CEDES (21S or 714)137-2333 • AMMmMMADA "OlfrAC-.......... •• .......... Lllllil .... ..
801 9. An-'*'" llvd., AnlN6M ... tllO. Jutt north of a.nta Ana Frwy. Of'I AnlNtm IMS. Celt "' ffttl
"WI ME HAAO TO llH>-4UT WORTH ITI"
• • IOI LOHGPU POMTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd .. Westminster. Tel. 892~1 Orange
County's oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Saie..
Service. Parts.
• UHIVllSITY HONDA
2850 Harbor Blvd , Costa Miu. Tel. 54().9640. 1 Mlle
South 405 Freeway Sales. seNice, perts & leu1ng.
• SANTA AMADATSUM
2001 E. 17th StrHt, Santa Ana. Tel. 558-7811. Your· Original Dedicated Datsun Oeeler.
• MIUCU MAIDA
W•"-mowdl Our new location la 1425 Beker StrHt,
Coeta Meta. Tel. 54$-3334. St~ by & vlalt our brand new
lhowroom and '" why we'l'9 the t1 Mazda dealer in
Southern California. Sales, Service. Pam and Leaatng.
• ALLIM-OLDSMOll 1-C.ADILJ.AC
SUIAIU..MC l'MICICS
Sen Dteoo Fwy. at Ave~ Exit on Cemlno Caplt1rano In •
Laguna fillguet Tel. 831 ~-OD>
COST A MESA DATSUH
2845 Harbor Blvd , Costa Mesa Tel 5'0-6410 Serving
Orange County tor 16 years 1 Mite So 40S
• SUNSET FOttD. IMC.
(Home of Wilhe the Whale). 5440 Garden Grove Blvd ..
Westminater. Tat 636-4010
• MANIC PROTO LINCOLN-MIRCUIY
SefVioe and Pans Department always open 7 days a
,y.wk 7:30 A.M. to 6:30 P.M 848-7739.
0 COMMIU CHIVIOLIT
.21128 Harbor Blvd., Cotta Mesa. ~ 20 yeera Mrvlng
Orange County! Sales, leasing, aervioe. C.11 5-46-1200;
apeclal parta line; 5'M-9400; body ah&p line; 754-0400.
• CHICIC IVllSOH POltSCHl.AUDl-VW
415 E. Coaat Hwy., Newport BNch. 673-0800. The only
dNl«shlp In Orange County with .theae th'" greet
"'9lcee under one roof!
• l
IOY CAIVll IOU.S ltOYCl-IMW
1640 JetnbOr• ROtld. N9WPQ'1 8Mch. ~ S..... ~ Par11 And L ... lng.
fOR FURTHl!R INF~RMATI0~,,42 5678 OR TO Bl PLACID ON THll
AD, CONTACT voUR DAILY. •
PILOT RI'-.
•••:P•• • • 0 a a c soc c a 3 a as a 33 &333223&4
•
NEW 1981
T-1000 HATCHBACKS ·
•
. $ 995 Down AND
Cash~~Trade ONL y
Tax, Ucem:e & Doc11111e11tary Fee
SALi PRICE S49'5.00 ,... ha, le. & Doc. fff. Sttl.00 Dow• ,...
uoo.to .... SI I 1.00 D.M.V. llc.w ~ .... SJO Doc-•fwry
F.. f« •tote! of Sl406.H 0.-P.,...t ..d SI lf.U ,-r -•Ml
f« 41 ..tlld. S401f.f4 Aemlce cti.rp. ui. 11.41'!'.. Deferred
~ ,,Ke S7 I 51.10 • ...,,...ffd c,.....
MILEAGE EXAMPLE:SER .#226230
PER
~CNTH
Equipped with:
• 4 Cyl. Engine
• 4 Speed Transmission
• • Tinted Glass
• AM Radio
• Cloth Bucket Seats
• White Sidewall Tires
• Heater
• Body Side Moldings
Use these numbers for comparison
Your mileage may vary depending on
dr1v1ng speed. trip length and
weather condlt1ons. Actual highway
mileage will probably be lees IMMEDIATE DELIYERYI
OR 5996 Down Plus
Tax. Lie MM & Documentary Fee
AND $15997 ONL y · ~E~MTH
SALi PllCI $69'5.00,... tu, le. & Doc. ...... S9'6.00 Dow• ,...
$420.to tea. Sl22.00 D.M.Y. ~ dlerp ..d SZO Doc-•ry
F.. fw o tettll of $1551.to 0.-P.,...t. ce .. or tr.de, •4
SI H .'7 ,-r _ _... f« H ......._ SJS9'.l0 Al-• c'-'9•· A.I.I .
ZO.JJ91.. Deferred ,.r--t price SHH.JO • .,,.-o•ect crectlt.
EXAM PLE: SER. #1 10916
CHOOSE FROM 2 DOOR COUPE OR 5 DOOR HATCHBACK
•SuggetNd ,_,orice_INY hive_..., ln.e.tled acc:.eeortea.
All On 8o6d On Approyed Credit.
All On Plua Tu & Lloenee & Doc. '"· AH On 8'lbtect to Pftor Sele.
Prloea Good Thru Monday, November 30, 1981
Equipped with:
• Factory Air Cond.
• Automatic Trans.
• Power Steering
• Power Disc Brakes
• White Sidewall Tires
• Low Mileage .
• Choice of 4 Cyl. or 6 Cyl.
• Front Wheel Drive
• AM Radio
• Deluxe Wheel Covers
• Body Side Moldings
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY I
··~----------
----
2 uift (,uiae An AOverl1smg ~upp1ement to tl'l(: IJa1ly t-1IOl, 1 l'lurSOdy, lllO.,,~n1t>er d>, l'illl
Christmas and Children
Holida-y Gift Guide ~J·•~ -~ -
Christmas & Children Starts Page 2
History of Christmas Cards .. Page 4
Choosing a Video System . . Page 6
Holiday Decorations ........ Page 9
Gifts for Under SS .......... Page 20 go hand-in-liand
Pets for Christmas ........ Page 26
Homemade Treats ........ Page 28 ..
Choosing a Christmas Tree Page 30
Christmas Recipes ........ Page 32
Santa Calls Kids ......... Page 36
* • • • • •
Holiday Gift Gulde is an .ctvert1sing
supplement to the Dally Pilot produced
by the Special Sections Stan
Special Sections Editor Janine Fiddelke
Special Sections Writers .. Beth Baldwin
Nancy Hew4 tt
By BETH BALDWI N
Of -O.oly PlNt SIMI Do second -graders picture
Christmas the same way you once
did, or have television and other
modernizations forced perceptions
or that old-time holiday and its
traditions lo change?
ir lhe thoug h ts o r th e
second-grade classes or Bear Street
and Killybrooke schools can be any
indication the answer is yes, and no.
For example, Santa Claus. the
granddaddy or good vibes, hasn't
changed one iota. He has, according
to the 22 students interviewed: .. a
white beard. a moustache that ourls
up like the purple pi~ man
(advertising cha ract er J. 1s real
jolly. rat, has a red suit, sin.gs
Jingle Bells and carries a bag with
presents.
Indeed, eve ry year at least a
handful of personal sightings leave
no doubt that Santa is still making
DESCAMPS
stqle primrose bordier
E~ganl French Linem .
and Domeatica for Sophiaticattd Entntainmg.
South Cout Pl ua
.• 11>.._• ••
'
the rounds. At Killybrooke. Michael
Henny was a witness. ··1 saw him
last Christmas putting d own
presents and eating doughnuts.::
Michael said .. Boy. was he fat
Nana Daneshuar and Aaron Puckett
we r e also eyewitnesses lo the
annual phenomenon.
Of course. a rew particulars
concerning Santa sightings ~ill
always vary within each family.
Quiana Droughn wouldn't dare try
to sneak a peek at the old man at
work ... My mom saw Santa Claus
once and she didn't receive any
presents," Qolana said ... He . d~~
not like for anybody to watch him.
Mothers and father s m ay be
pleased to know that Santa's tellers
may still be mailed lo the same
address; the North Pole. But why
does he live there? Becky Amlin
said Santa lives there because. "the
See Page 7
Pooyan Mehdizadeh
Jerr Bryne
. ., :~ ..
~·:1· .~ !' t ...
•
The
Most
Popular
Holiday
Gift
LeSportsac.
Soft. Luggage
Systems,
handbags, and
accessories
in 80 styles
and 17 colors
and prints. See
the full
collection at
your exclusive
LeSportsac
shop. Write or
phone for our
new
Christmas
catalogue,
y~s for the
asking.
Gift Guide-An Advertising Supplement to the Dally Piiot, Thursday, November 26, 1981-3
Let us spend time helping you select gifts for all
the skiers on your list.
The Snow is Great! Happy Holidays and Skiing!
Mon.-Fri. 10:00-9:00
Sat. 1 O:Q0-6:00
Sun. 12:00..5:00 2500 West Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach, CA
~=-
(714) 631-3280
t
4-t.•lt Guide -An ~avertislng Supplement to the 1.Ja1ty P11ot, l hursaay, November lo, 19111
Christmas cards relatively 'new' custom
Pictured clockwise from upper Left : the first commercial
Christmas card designed in 1843. The moral fiber of the
Victorian Age is illustrated in the ornate card beside it.
Turn-of-the-century cards often reflected the coming of the
mechanicai age -as does this one with Santa piloting his own
plane. Cards in the .. Roaring Twenties" were as cheery as the
times.
By LAUREL TAYLOR
c.,,1ey ..._ 59Nk•
When you send Christmas cards
this year, you'll be observing one or
the "newest" yuletide traditions .
While some Christmas words and
customs predate the birth of Christ
(such as "yule," the name given to
t he ancient Scandinavian feast
honoring the god Thor>. the first
commercial Christmas card was
sent a mere 138 years ago.
Designed in 1843 by English artist
John C. Horsley for bis friend Sir
Henry Cole, a London businessman,
Horsley's card carried the simple
message, '"A Merry Christmas and
a Happy New Year to You .. Even
today it is the mos t popular
expression of Christmas wishes on
our cards.
On his very first card, Horsley
depict.eel " a joyful family gathering
with their glasses raised in a toast
On sidebars artfully entwined with
holly (symbol of eternal life> and
ivy (sybollzing where God wa.Uted >.
he illustrated acts of Chrislian
charity.
An edition of 1,000 of these cards
was placed on sale at Felix
Summerly's Treasure House in
London in 1846. Only a dozen of the
original cards are known to exist
today.
American artisans were not far
behind their British counterparts.
The leader was Louis Prang, a
Ger m an immigrant, whose
Christmas ca r d s are still
considered works of art. Pr ang
often is called the father or the
American Christmas card.
I J
Throughout its short history, the
Christmas card bas not onJy been
an easy way to express holiday
greetings to friends and famiJy, but
has also been an accurate refl ection
of human concern.
In the 1870s the moral fiber of the
Victorian Age was appropriately
illustrated in ornately fasruoned
cards. These outlined the ideals of
church, family and community.
Among them were the first
mechanical cards -when a tab on
the back was pulled. the greeting
came into view.
Turn-of-the-century cards reveal
the incr easing rel iance on
mechanical inventions as well as
the growing awareness of women's
s urrrage, a hotly debated issue at
that time. For example, it was then
that Santa abandoned his sleigh and
piloted his own airplane.
Another represent ative card
shows a gaily dressed woman
driving along in an automobile
(rather dashing at the lime> piled
high w1th packages.
During the "Roaring Twenties"
everything was coming up roses or
mistletoe. Cards of that period were
joyful, bright, smart and imbued
with just a hint of the age's
permissiveness.
Even the insidious nature of war
found 1t.s way into Christmas cards.
During World War II, cards were
bedecked with soldiers as well as
5antas <some with helmets) and
were sent by thou s ands of
servicemen to their loved ones at
home. The message on the cards
See Page 16
r•••• COUPON ••••
I I
I
I
I I
I
Two standard size prints I
for the price of one with 1
each roll of 11 ~126-135 1
color print film at the
time of developing.
One Coupon per Roll
Expires 12·15-81 .. --------------------.. -------------------... .---------------COLOR PRINTS IN JUST ONE HOUR
COLOR ENLARGEMENTS
FROM SLIDES IN JUST ONE HOUR
Nite Fiim Drop
111 ••r SlnlCI •• Eltn ca1rt1
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Suite 119
1000 Bristol North (North of Jamboree>
Newport Beach • (714> 851 ·2358
••••COUPON•••••• I
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I I I Two standard size prints I
1 for the price of one with 1
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I Expires 12·15-81 I , ______________ .
NOW AVAILABLE! PHOTO CHRISTMAS GREETING CARDS
......-.--.~-..--. ...--
~ ........
2411 I. Ctt. Hwy.· . c ...........
O....,JeD..-•SW.
21111. Cll. Hwy. c--.......
Gift Guloe-An Advertising Supplement to lhe Daily Pilot, Thursday, November 26, 1981-5
For AH Your HOIM lmpro .. ,... .. Mncb
2666 HartMw It.cl. Costa Mesa
.., • ....-.c1w1 .. ...,
10% to 20% discount
504'12 So..., .................
Tuttle• Antique•
,...., •• , ... l'fe•...-.••"'-·C:-t.a •-..
Aadqaes •Oak Furaleare
GlasJ1ware
2809-A Mewport ltYcl N.I.
Order early for choice of col0t & frame.
Europe• White GooM Dow•
Comforters & Pillows
Custom C.Omforter Lovers
Shams & Bedskirts
Gift
~rtlficates
Available
497-lltl
.................. c.. ........................ ~ ...... .
NOACK'S
1199""•.W. GHh For E•eryo•
Special Gifts For Special People !
Silver · Pewter · Armetal ·
Charms · Pin Sets
·ANO LOTS MORE
lllgr•• ... Dw•PnmiMt
170L 17•st • .,~. C:.tlwM-j Wte 117 ~~ 646-Jl41 '
· ... ----~~-....··~-~-----
I
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f i
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o~t. f\." ...,,.,.,., ~~ I
c, HOT AIR I
BALLOON i q> RIDE (fl) I
~ v!
\ SPECIAL l
GIFT r
\\. CERTIFICATES I
2940 Grace Lane
Unit A
t
I
t Costa Mesa r (714) 549-9922 ~----~ ................................... ...._
i I HOLIDAY
f
I (
WlllyROt .... a layCniM
Y achtillCJ Newport.._.
Consultants 1114> 67S.2t6o
COUPOM
LEWIS IROS. IA TlllY
w~ are running 3 survey, therefore. for the next
two weeks only c until Dec. 11. 1981 •. we wall
give :myonc bringing this coupon in lo us. a 10'.
f11sc·ount orr the wholesale prkl'S on ;&ny batter~
or battene~ purchased at our fuct.ory at
110 E. I, .. St .. C .... M ...
MoR•Chedls
I
f
b-G1tt GtJlae -An Advertising ~upptement to the Ua1 ty f'llot, 1 hursaay, lllovember 2&, IYlll
Video systems allow freedom to choose shows
By BETH BA.LOWIN o1-,,.... Net MMe Home may be where lbe heart is,
bul the heart of most homes is the
television. This Christmas many
families are expanding television
capabilities wilb the purchase oC
video cassette recorders <VCR> and
video disc systems.
With a VCR or a video disc
system, lbe viewer has complete
control over what programs he
chooses to watch at what time. This
is done by simply plugging either
system into a television set. In the
case of the video disc system the
television screen becomes a vehicle
Cor watching pre-recorded movies
and other programs. The VCR does
the same, bul also bas the ability to
record programs d1recUy from the
television set.
This r ecording ability is the
primary appeal of VCRs, according
lo Dave Brower of Video Cassette
Rentals of Costa Mesa. "Take for
example, the World Series playoff
games started al 9:30 on a Monday
morning," Brower said. "People
who owned VCRs just programmed
the recorder and watched the game
when they came home." Brower
added that soap opera viewing is
lhe number one use of recording
programmability.
The added convenience of being
able to buy pre-recorded cassettes
for the VCR was an afterthought,
Brower said . "Mary Poppins,"
"African Queen," ''Pete's Dragon"
and "Annie Hall" tapes can be
purchased at an avera1te price of
$55.
There are cassette swap clubs
and rental shops for viewers who
prefer not to collect tapes. It costs
about $10 to rent. a pre-recorded
tape for three da ys. Of the
educational, block bluster, nostalgic
and many other types of cassettes
available, recent film releases and
a dult films are Brower's most
popular rentals.
VCRs have basically lhe same
controls as a tape recorder with a
few added features. VCRs can be
programmed between 24 hours and
seven days in advance to r~rd a
program. The number of days
reflects the price range of VCRs.
which cost between S550 and $1 ,200.
Other features include still frame,
which allows one to view a single
frame at a time ; single frame
advance, which allows one to ptay
one frame at a time; and visual
scan, which allows one to watch
tapes in fast forward and reverse
motion.
Someone preparing to select a
VCR will find there are at least 60
different VCR models. However,
there are only lwo basic formats,
Bela and VHS. According to an
electronics guide, both perform the
s ame and have only slight
differences. VHS r ecorders can
tape one hour longer than Beta, bul
Beta recorders are more compact
and slightly less expensive.
MAKING HOME MOVIES
Someooe already equipped with a
VCR is only a camera, a power
source and 25 feet of cabl' away
from being able to sbool home
moyles. . AlthouP video •bootinl reqwres
more equipment t.ban 1uper·I fUmLaay tM complete proceu of
video ftlm malEb\c &a tlmplu. Video
camera HtUP• autoaudully ~rd 908Dd u well • Im••• w a enl. Tbe.Y at11e>
require less lighting lo pick up
pictures.
Another advantage of VCR
shooting lies in the developing
expense. A blank five or six·bour
cassette, which n ever needs
developing, costs $12 to $15. The
comparable total expense of buying
and processing· 1slx hours of 8-mm
film is $1,418.
Someone interested in freedom of
m obility s hould buy portable
equipment or equipment that has
portable components. For example.
a tape recording section that
includes batteries can be used ln the
tield. A separate piece, which stays
at borne, is lhe tuner·time that
bandie s the tim e ·s h i ft
programming.
How does the quality compare~
Brower claims that the VCR picture
is not as clear as film , but lhal an
amateur photographer will never
know the difference.
VIDEO DISC SYSTEMS
If the buyer's sole interest Hes in
walcbing fav orite m ovies or
programs, he may prefer the video
disc system. Instead of a cassette.
HAPPY HOLIDAYS FROM
the system uses a disc package that
closely resembles an album cover.
The package is inserted ln1o the
disc player and pulled out, leaving
the disc in the machine. Within
seconds a program appears oo the
television screen . Each disc
provides up to two hours playing
time .
Paramount Pictures. United
Artists, Walt Disney and other
studios have released sucb films
and programs as "The Godfal.her, ..
··Butch Cassidy and the Sundance
See Page 15
~saC'Xletde &nter
SHOPS & RESTAURANTS
Albertson's Mar1<et .....•...•......... 751-4270
Bank of America ..••.....•••......... 759-«76
Biibo Bagglns .............•......... 545-1718
Mesa Verde Florist. .................. 549-5115
Coco's .............................. 540-9651
Command Performance ............... 5'0-6153
Dolphin Hair Fashions ................ 540-0600
Edwards Cinema Center ...••....•.... 979-4141
Faah'N Splash .•..••.....••....•..... 957-1055
Hamburger Hamlet .........•......... 5-46-7392
Ice C&pade& Chalet .................. 979-8880
Mesa Verde Travel .......•.•......... 556-8311
Mlone's Restaurant .............. : ... 979-6735
Music Market ....................... 546-0038
Photography by Jeffrey ............... 545-6786
Reubens Restaurant ............•••.. 540-9672
Southern California Optical ............ 751·1185
Spa Lady .............•............. 540-9822
Swensen's Ice Cream .......•......... 556-6937
Vicki's Sunshine Factory ...•.......... 549.3399
2101 Hotbor 8/vd. • (~ & Adams) Costa Matl, CA
·I -7
Nicole Haddard
Payson Lemeilleur
Josh Bennett
Christinas
and
Children
From Page2
Gift Gulde-An Advertising Supplement to the Delly Pilot, Thursday, November 26, 1981-7
reindeer like it windy." Andrea
Nelson said it is more a matter of
convenience that keeps him there
year alter year. "The North Pole is
in the middJe of the world," she
said. "By living there Santa can
easily reach all of the children's
homes."
Tina Trimboli added lbat Santa
likes his privacy. "He lives there so
that no one will know what he's
making for Christmas," she said.
Children do seem to have a more
exact picture of the North Pole,
perhaps due t.o television viewing.
Their description or the North Pole
r eveals a place ·'so cold that
humans can't swim in the water.
Polar bears and penguins stay there
a nd whales come sometimes."
Overall, the place ··is so icy that
reindeer live in ice tunnels."
Of course, a few children seemed
lo draw an image of the North Pole
from storybook concepts. Nina said
the North Pole is "made of sugar.
spice and ice." Santa's home as
made out of candy.
T h ese times h ave mad e 1t
possible for at least one student to
arrange a personal visit to the icy
wonderland. As Michael described
it. "f took a jet to Lhe North Pote
during the summer." What djd he
see" "Well, there 's a pole. like the
one Ul the barber shop," Michael
said , "Santa took me around the
shops where the toys are made.··
Whal else djd he see? "There are
lots o f wo rkin g s h ops ," he
concluded.
St i11 , even Twentieth Century
Living hasn't been able to provide an
explanation for all or Christmas·
unsolved myste ries. Take for
example, the unusual powers many
aoimaJs acquire during Christmas.
Has Bugs Bunny been able to
explain to chlldren what reindeer
eat that gives them the ability to fly
around the world in one night?
Never mind,' Josh Bennett figured il
out. "You feed them mes." he sajd.
Heather Burnett sees their diet as
something more like "bouncing
kangaroos." Nina thints they
probably prefer water and candy.
Quiana, who al first appeared t.o
have been reared in the new age of
nutritional consciousness, took
exception t.o Nina's answer. "Candy
will make them die, it won't mate
lbem fly ," sbe said. "Melt some lee
cream so that they can lick it."
Perhaps a more nutritional
alternative was offered by Roy
Serrano, who said they may eat
win1a . Payson Lemellleur
preferred changing the subject t.o
the South Pole. (There's alwaya one
in every generation.)
Some of the olher responses to the
question of the reindeer diet couJd
be a reflection of some of today's
dinner discussions. Billy Flick, for
example, said reindeer live orf
premium gas and lettuce. Chao
Nguyen said t hey probably eat
vitamins and tomatoes.,oav1d
Enger, .thinking on independent
terms, simply lbouabt about
Santa's tummy and guessed jelJo.
Rudolph .the fted·N2!_ed reindeer _ See •••• u
8-Gift Guioe -An Aovert1slng Supplement to the Oa11v ~1tot , l hursoav, l\lovember 2•, 19111 ......................................
hiqueur-tasting partie
entertain With _ spirit
By ANITA MIZNE&
c.eer--~
With the holidays in the offing,
chances are the burning question in
your mind is what kind of party to stage this year.
It should be something d.ilferent
-yet something interesting and not
too complicated.
An unofficial survey reveals that
for many partygoers the ultimate
fun {s a dessert and liqueur-tasting
party.
ll enables guests to taste a
variety of liqueurs and flavored brandies either in glasses by
themselves -or poured over basic
desserts, suc h as ice cream ,
pudding or pancakes. They can also
be stirred into coffee and topped
with whipped cream.
There are no rules about how
many liqueurs and brandies should
be presented. You may even have a
few already on hand.
A selection of at leas t a
half-dozen, say, three each of the
liqueurs and brandies will offer inter esting choices. And they'll
keep things lively as guests mix and
match.
The terms liqueur and cordial are
used synonymously. When a cordial
is made with a specific spirit base,
such as bourbon or scotch, it is
identified by the spirit; bourbon
liqueur, scotch liqueur, etc.
Cordials made with a brandy base
are called fl avored brandies.
Cr e mes are the sweetest and
s moothest of lique urs, but not
necessarily cloying. By definition, a
cordial is any alcohol-baaed product
that contains flavoring elements
and a specified amount of sugar.
Liqueurs, flavored brandies and
cremes come in almost every color
and flavor imaginable.
Favo rites among a classic
repertoire include:
Cremes: creme de cacao, crerne
de mentbe, creme de cassis.
Liqueurs: triple sec, coffee,
apricot, blackberry. cherry, peach,
and orange and blue curacao.
Brandies: coffee, blackberry,
pe ach, cherry and ginger.
Consider the initial purchase of
t he liqueurs and brandies as a
long-t e rm investment. Unlike
wines, they last indefinitely and can
be used until the las t drop.
Now some table.setting Ups from
DeKuyper, a maker of liquers,
flavored brandies and cremes. ·
DESSERT SUGGESTIONS:
Ice Cream and Sherbets: assorted
flavors. Ice Cream Cake Roll.
(Topping Idt!a : stir three-fourths
cup coconut amaretto into one and a
h a lf cu ps warm butterscotc h
sauce>.
Small pancakes: keep warm in
oven set at lowest beat.
Puddings : fruit C baked or
s teamed), rice, bread, custard,
Bavarian cream and mousse .
Cake : pound, chiffon, marble,
light fruitcake and plain
cheesecake.
Fruit : strawberries, mixed fresh
fruit bowl and fresh or canned
pinapple "sticks."
Nuts: toasted almond slivers
and walnut or pecan halves <use
topping for treats).
Whipped cr eam : whip heavy
cr eam with confectioners' sugar
<one tablespoon sugar per one-half
pint cr eam). (Use topping for
desserts or coffee>.
SPIRITED COFFEES AND
TEAS:
Cafe Royal: float two teaspoons
coffee liqueur on strong hot coffee.
See Page U
A deuert and Uqueur-talting party spell& hospitality t.vUh
/kivor and flair. Here, Coconut Amar~tto adds a touch of cl<us
?o ·d'ft b'~mn 11111. • .-
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_._,
Gift Guide-An Advertising Supplement to the Dally Piiot, Thursday, November 26, 1911-9
Decorations follow
old-fashioned trend
'Tis the year for an old-fashioned
Christmas -large, white kernels of
popcorn strung in scallops around
the tree, candy canes hanging from
the branches and the rich, spicy
smell or hand-made pomanders
throughout the house.
This the word from interior
d es ign er Jo Ann Jordan ,
vice-president of sa les and
marketing for Inte riors by
Lusk-Serengeti. "With the trend m
home furnishings toward period
pieces and the antique, hand-made
look, Christmas decorating is back
to the warm woodsy basics of years
gone by," she said.
Recently returned rrom a tnp lo
the North Carolina furniture marke.
Jordan noted that the country look
i s ext r e m e l y popular
Manufacturers are using a great
deal of white bleached pine and are
g 1v1 ng particular attention to
detailing traditionally styled pieces
··so, the very newest look is the
very oldest," she said. "Decoratmg
for the holidays fol lows t hi s
old -fashioned trend "
J ordan suggested baskets full of
pine cones and s prigs or greenery
as a ciassic, economical decoratmg
idea. For traditional charm, apples
or oranges pierced with fragrant
cloves and hung on a ribbon or
string are perfect
Just before guests ar rive. Jordan
suggested placing cinnamon sticks
UP
and
AWAY
with
Hello Kitty
and her friends.
Enter the wonderful
world of Sanrio where
and cloves in a pan of water ()l"
kettle on the back ol the stove and let them simmer slowly. This will
release the most delicious scent
ever.
For ~ift.s. Jordan recommended brass accessories since they blend
well with almost every decorating
style ... Brass towel racks and other
bathroom accessories, brass chests.
campaign chests with brass handles
and brass lamps a r e always
welcome gifts." she said.
Other suggestions are mirrors,
hat trees mirrored coat racks for entry halls, candlesticks or blanket
and bedspread rac ks . All are
economical. yet smart, original
ideas.
Friends and relatives who live m
apartments or small condos present
special gift.giving problems Any
gift to them must be carefull y
considered with regard to size.
Jordan suggested nesting tables,
12"·14" cigarette or wine tables.
small consoles, pillows for extra
floor seating, or recliners that take
up little room.
A desk is always an appreciated
gift for both men a nd women
Lingerie chests are ever-popular on
women's lists.
Oriental rugs and game sets are
t!XCellent, long -lasting gifts for
!)pecial friends or relatives, Jordan
said.
life is filled with fun and
adventure. When you are
looking for a special gift, look to
Hello Kitty, My Melody and the
Little Twin St~rs ... and start a new adventure.
-c .... -·-· Ill
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~-------------------------------·~ Gift Guide-An Advertising Supplement to the Daily Pilot, Thursday, Novemoer 20, 1981 11
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Men's Fashions
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12-Gitt Guide -An Advertising ~upplement to the L>a11y t-'1lot. 1 hursoay, November 2b, MU
Kim Phuong 4
Tina Trimboli
Clllistrnas and Children
go hand-in-hand
From Page 7
is pretty much a modern invention,
though by now he is accepted by
most families as a genuine holiday
tradition. What makes his nose red?
"He s wallowed a light bulb,"
Andrea said. Kim Phuong nodded in
agreement to the very logical
reasoning. Tyler Scofield figured
Rudolph's nose was spray-painted.
Probably one or the all-time
haziest facts of Christmas is the
qualification or how good you bave
to be in order for Santa to keep you .....
Andrea Netson
on his good side. The children were split.
Some judged goodness as it
affects Santa. Becky said she knew
a girl who didn't believe in Santa.
For this, all she found on Christmas
morning was a nut in her stocki11g.
Quiana said "not trying lo stay
awake lo see Santa and singing
songs to him," was good insurance.
Others simply applied good to
everyday standards. Andrea said
See Page 22
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The new all-in-one cosmetic that
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'12.50 value now '9.50
•I
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~~r. ell hard-
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urdcz.r e ep:nt coot> or
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oncz. of a.Jr ~tire!
fourtmm ~t crlora
includmB lav:znd¢r,
moe,.s ~,aubttSinz,
slat<Z. bfuci ard pU1k,
plue oll thi 'boSla!>.
Gift Gulde-An Advertising Supplement to the Oailv Pilot, Thursdav, November 2~. 19.;1 -13
Xmas gift-giving ideas for woodworkers
By ANDY LANG
"""'~ Got a woodworker in your home?
If so, it's not too early to consider
giving him or her a woodworking
tool for Christmas.
Most people who plan such a gift
think in terms of power tools, but a
do·il-yourselfer or at-home
woodworker might appreciate a
hand tool. Hand tools are enjoying a
resurgence of popularity as
hobbyists enjoy the slower, more
careful processes afforded by them.
Making sound choices from among
the myriad of band tools on the
market will be much easier if you
know what to look for in terms of
quality, function and usefulness.
Tools built t.o Inst usualJy will cost
more but generally are better
bargains than those offered tn
special sales bins . This does n't
mean sales s hould not be
patroruzed. OnJy rarely, however,
will top quality tools be offered at
much less than their regular prices.
How do you judge top quality? By
price ? By the co mpan y's
reputation? The question was put to
Garretson Chinn. president of
Garrell Wade, a supplier of
woodworking tools and materi11lc 'd
"Those things count," he s~w:
"but the best method for judgjng
quality in a hand tool is to hold in it
in· your hand, feel its weight and
balance for ease of handling, and
closely examine the construction
and size of its fittings.
"You may think this requires
some kind of special knowledge and
skill, but you would be amazed at
how much even a novice can tell
about a tool by handling it and
examining it closely and carefully."
The feel or tools is especially
important in hand saws. There are
crosscut saws for culling plywood
and backsaws for more precise
work These us ually have
rectangular blades stiffened with
steel or brass along the top edge. To
determine the quality of the saw,
feel the comfort of the handle,
note the quality of the st.eel blade,
and general overall balance. A high
quality saw will have finely set
teeth and will require less frequent
Try a dessert
and liqueur-tasting
party this year
From Pages
Put a sugar cube on corree spoon.
Saturate with liqueur. Heat spoon
near a candle name. Ignite Lower
llaming cube into coffee. Stir gently
until name dies.
Cordial Espresso: add a generous
splash ot liqueur to -espresso or
double.strength coffee. Stir well
Top with a dollop of whipped
cream. ·
Dutch Cale Mocha: add a splub
of creme de cacao and coffet:
liqueur to double·strengtb coUee.
Stir gently. Add whipped cream.
Curacao Tea: combine two
ou n ces orange c uracao, one
teaspoon lemon juice and one slice
lemon in large teacup. Fill with hot
iea and stir·. Garnish with cinnamon
stick stirrer.
sharpening than ordinary saws.
A gift choice might be a "nest of
saws" which features three narrow
blades interchangeable on one
handle. Two blades. known as
keyholes, taper to a small point and
are useful for making cutouts in
wood and for cutting on curves. The
third blade often is squared orr and
i!> used for general cutting. This
makes a versatile, practical gift for
many home and shop uses.
Wood chisels also are available in
many varieties and are excellent
Hot Mint Tea: Fill a teacup or a
heat-pJ'QOf glass almost to the brim
wit~~9n~lolllfo-,, , pep rctdnt s6inaPJM. Add . . .~ I ;J ... •p:•\I\. \,. I'' . ··W~·
for all·around usage. There are
morose chisels, used typically for
making door hinges fit ; paring
chisels for trimming work; and
cabinetmakers' chisels that can be
struck with a mallet for heavy
forming work
A qua11ty chisel. whatever its
type, would have· a forged steel
blade with a very keen edge, a good
balanced feeling when held, with
handles or special wood, such as
boxwood, white beech or rosewood.
For woodworkers who enjov hand
finishing rather than using a power
tool, a wooden or steel plane can be
very useful. Wooden planes are
hghter than steel planes and,
therefore, less tiring to use.
There are different planes for
different uses. The jack bench plane
is used for preliminary work; the
jointer bench plane is used for fmaJ
s mqqthing ori flat surfaces . A
spokeshave plane can s hape curved
surfaces on tables or chair lep, and
a block plane is s mall enough t.o use
with one hand and Is suited for
working on small items.,
-.
14 C71tt (7u1oe An A011ert1sing Supplement to the Daily t'tlot, 1 hursoay, November 2b, t 'lltll
Toys can help to develop a chi ·ld ~s v.ision
For the holiday season, cooaider
giving toys and games that
contribute to children's vision
development, suggests the
American Optometric Association
tAOA>.
The vision skills developed during
infancy and lhe preschool years are
the same skills a child will need to
learn to read, to participate in
sports, to learn in school , lo drive a
car and to perform virtually any
task at work or home throughout
life, the AOA points out.
The national association of 22,000
practicing optometrists in the
Geot apples
Geot baskets
Geot bears
Geot bells
Geot books
Geot brass
Geot colendors
Geot ceramics
Geotchoirs
Geot chimes
Geot docks
Geot crystal
Geat dominoes
Geot drums
Geot eggs
Geat flasks
Geot games
Geot geese
Geot gloss
Geot hammocks
Geat hooris
Geat ivory
Geot jewelry
Geat kites
Geot lamps
Geat leather
Geot masks
Geat molos
Geot ornaments
Geat porcelain
Geot rugs
Geot swans
Geot tools
Geot toys
Geot vases
Geot weovings
Geot whistles
Geot yo-yos
Geot things
United States offers gift ideas for
babies through five months of age
that help stimulate an infant's sense
of sight. Those suggested for older
age groups will help develop a
child's general movement skills,
including the eye·hand coordination
skills required for writing and
participation iri sports; shape and
discrimination skills needed for
reading and visuali2ation and visual
memory skills needed for
comprehension and for the ability to
interpret concepts. The AOA
suggests these toys that work for
children as well as amuse them:
-Birth to five months: crib
mobiles ; sturdy, bright, large
rattles; large, bright baUs; bright
rubber squeak toys.
These toys develop eye-band
coordination, teach shape concepts
and encourage both eyes to work as
a team.
Six months lo 18 months: large
balls and blocks; wooden blocks;
toys requinng sorting of shapes and
sizes; large puzzles; riding toys
pushed with reel, not pedaled.
J'hese toys teach visualization~
develop orientation, general
coordination and directionality.
·Giving is a
.Great Th ing
I
I
I ~
I
BIRD FEEDERS
by Petew Kilhom
SOUTH COAST PlAZA .
NEXT TO BUUOCKS ENTRANCE · FIRST LEVEL
-Eighteen months to three
years: toys requiring hammering of
pegs; bean-bag OT ring-toss games;
toys requiring sorting of shapes and
sizes; large puzzles ; wooden.
blocks: toys encouraging crawling;
tricycle; rocking horse; large balls.
A tricycle helps develop two-sided
coordination of eyes and body
Sorting objects encourages use of
both hands, as well as visualization.
-Three to six years: building
toys with large components that
snap together; stringing beads;
puzzles; chalkboard; crayons:
ringer paints ; modeling clay;
simple sewing cards; large balls;
toys call.mg for matching up parts ;
peg boards.
Painllng, coloring and clay help
develop more s ophisticated
eye-hand coordination. Puzzles
encourage s hape and form
recogrution, understanding of units
and wholes.
-Seven years and over :
basketball ; football ;
softball-baseball with bats and
gloves; ping pong; badminton;
jump ropes ; pogo sticks; roller
skates; plastic· discs for to.ssing
between players; follow-the-dot
games.
These toys develop vision skills at
highly sophisticated levels.
Before purchasing toys, examine
them to be sure they are well made.
It is also important to consider bow
appropriate an intended selection is
ror a particular child .
Manufacturers often give suggested
ages for a toy but il is wise to keep
the individual child in mind because
children develop al different rates.
If a gift falls into the category of a
"toy that isn't really a toy," swch as
a chemistry set, minibike, sled or
skis, lhe AOA cautions that a pair
or safety jlasses be included.
See Page 2J
.. "'-.
Gitt Guide-An Advertising Supptement to the D•llY Pilot, Thursday, November 2.6, 1981-15
Jewish celebration preserves ~traditions
Hanukkah, like CbrLStmas, is a
time fo.r gift giving lo the poor and
to each other, according to Rabbi
Front of Temple Beth David in
Westminster.
Traditional dinners, decorating
the house and feeling joyous are
a l so comme morative o f the
historic al victory by Jewish
ancestors over forces who would
have destroyed the Jews' religious
freedom, Front said. The Jewish
army, led by Judas Maccabaeus,
overtook Antiocbus of Syria, and
rededicated, through cleansing, the
holy temple of King Solomon.
Christians who wish to celebrate
Hanukkah with their J ewish friends
can do so by exchanging presents.
In keeping with tradition, gifts
would be given during any of the
eight days of celebration which
begins this year on Dec. 21.
Jewish children receive presents
from lbeir parents each or lbe eight
nights . Front said the mos t
extravagant gifts are given on the
first and last days of Hanukkah.
"On the days in between we'll give
them spankings or c lothes
whatever we feel they deserve,"
Front quipped "Seriously, on those
days we give items that are really
needed, such as clothes. or even a
donation to a charity in the child's
name.':
Front suggested that anyone
wishing to give a J ewish friend a
gift may want lo do so bv sending a
Santa's guide to
video systems
From Page I
Kid," and "Rocky."
Viewing can also include musical
performances. cooking lessons.
s ports events and ch ildren's
programs.
A video disc system costs less
than a VCR. D'6cs cost between
$14.98 and $27.98. For this reason,
consu0mers living in the mountains
where the reception is bad. or in
foreign countries may choose a
video disc sy~nd be able to
stockpile pr7e~recorded discs for less
money.
Persons interested in watching
adult films or programs that draw
specific a udiences would prefer
VCRs. Brower said that video discs
must have a broad appeal in order
lo draw a large enough market to
recover high production costs.
Brower expects further problems
to develop due lo the fact that the
video disc syst>e m h as three
incompatible formats. Differing
formats keep discs Crom being
interchangeable. As a result many
movies and other programs may fit
one disc system, but not another.
Although the VCR also has
incompatible formats, there are
only two. Most pre-r ecorded
programs are available in both
types of machlnes.
Brower also feels that just as the
78 record speed was discontinued
due to lack or use, one of the three
disc formats may be eliminated. If
this happens some disc systems
owners will have lo buy new ones.
Whatever video equipment "the
consumer chooses, Brower said be
should be forewarned. "Once people
betin buying video equipment, they
can't atop. They become video
addld» .... oft•• •top ... ~~· -• re1ular t1'JJ1ti• IMs~~--t'P.., ~.~ ......
•
donation to the friend's temple or to
a charity in that person's name.
Besides gift giving, probably the mos t popufar symbol or Hanukkah
to children is the candelabrum with
seven or eight branches. called the
menorah. According to the story of
Hanukkah. when Judah set about to
cleanse Solomon's temple he bad
only one small cruet of oil. Due to a
miracle. however. the oil lasted for
the entire eight days that Judah
needed light to work bv. Thus. every day during Hanukkah a
candle on the menorah is lit. This is
why Hanukkah is also known as the
festival or lights.
During lhts holiday the children
draw pictures that celebrate the
victorious battle and play the
dradJe gamP. -
A dradte ts shaped like a top. ll
has four sides. each with an initial
that stands for, "A Great Miracle
Occurred There." The dradle is
s p un and played in a similar
manner to dice, with different values given to each initial.
A tradJtionaJ food eaten during
this lime is the potato pancake,
called latke. Lalke is molded in the
s hape of the s hi eld or Judas,
according to Front.
Perhaps, because all of these
traditions. Jewis h cbifdreo,
according to Front, have no st.rone
desires to participate in Christmas
traditions. "We simply tell them
that our neighbor s do things
differently because they have
different customs. and that's
usualfy sufficient." he said.
r·ront does not recommend
buying a Hanukftah bush. "This is a
desecration of Christianity and a
mockery of the Jewish religion," be
sa14. "Just as Christ should be put
back in Chr istm as. Hanukkah
c u sto m s s h o uld r e main
traditional."
bo waps to sap@ /OJJe pm.
Visit our 60 specialty stores for a gift that will
long be remembered. You1l enjoy holiday
shopping in a relaxed, unhurried atmosphere.
1 C ' I
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lb G ilt Gu1ae -An Aavertising.~upplement to the ua1ly ..-1101, l hursoay, November 21>, IYl:ll
LTD Ed. Latho ··Heart of a Chard·
PEN HOUSE
-Meet The Artist -
Sunday, December 6th 1-4 p.m.
372 North Coast H wy ., Laguna Beach, CA
10:00 a.m.
(714) 494-2675 ro 5:00 .m .
Corduroy ond Shetland °"' Ol\Jltled Stlebld Cl9# nedc sW9CJlel "°"' 8osl0n llOdet oomes 111 14 great oc1on ond oo·Oldlnalel Wll!'I ovr VflfY own
pie llrnlled l#lcM-wale COIO ponl the ponl II o'°*lble
"' ton. ~ "OIV and '°""'
Giye a grill ·to the· man
in your life at Christmas
Christmas crisis?
Don't know what to give Dad or a
bachelor friend who has everything
imaginable?
If that's your diiemma, here'a a
somewhat unexpected ~f\ idea.~
How about buying the man in your
hfe a covered kettle barbecue gnll?
A s hiny red Happy Cooker kettle
looks Christmasy. With a restive
ribbon tied on the handle, it will be
an immediate attention-J(etter
under the tree Santa himself will
be envious.
If you Uunk about it, a grill's a
logical present for the legions of
men (or women !or that matter>
who ertioy cooking out. When they
discover their gift is one or the new
adjustable kettles from the UNR
line of quality covered grills. they'll
be even more pleased.
This unique five-position
adjustable system Is an exclusive
feature By simply moving a lever.
you can raise or lower the fires.
giving you much more control of the
heat than with conventional kettle
grills. Air now is also adjusted
automat1cally.
Another Happy Cooker exclusive
feat ure is the hinged lid, making it
the easiest operating kettle grill you
can buy.
Giving a covered grill al
Christmas makes sense. With
mcreased interest in leisure home
cooking, more retailers are
stocking barbecue equipment
year-round. Thanks to the kettle's
protective dome Lid. you can
barbecue, no matter what the
weather. Turkeys, roasts, hams and
duckling barbecue beautifully this
way.
The heat reflected by the cover
grills hamburgers, hot dogs, chops,
ribs a nd steaks lo perfection.
keeping nare-ups to a minimum
Jn addition to the adjustable heat
control, this top-of-the-line kettle
has the same quality features that
other Happy Cooker covered grills
are known for. They're made of
durable porcelainized heavy gauge
steel with chrome-coated steel legs,
and have interior ash catchers that
lift out for easy emptying.
So. solve you gift problem with a
kettle grill. Make someone who
barbecues happy year.round.
Cards "new " tradition
From Page4
expressed emotions ranging from a
wistful hopefulness t o str ong
patriotism.
T he 1960s were marked by a
dirferent kind or turbulence. Man
was re-evaluating_ his view of
himself and bis enviroment. We
were reaching out beyond the limits
of our planet.
An extremely popular CbrUtmas
card of the late '80s -a photo ol the
e arth taken fro m an Apollo
spacecraft -nemed to symbolise
l tat . ·pltj~ Qt ., ~-.UIPJ,, .. o.e &opqdlllo'~tl\~'-9
Jn the 1970s an emphasis on
health and conditioning became
almost a mania. Lighthearted cards
s how Santa -though still a bit too
round -joining in on the fitness
craze. On some cards he is pedaUng
a bike loaded with gi!ta. On others
be is jogging rather than employing
his reindeer power .
Jo 1981, researchers report that
we seem to favor cards that embody
t he \rue meaning of Christmas.
Fine art from both old masters and
well-known contemporary artists,
reproduced oo Cbristmaa cards, is
tncrustqly popular.
.,, 8eeft1•J1>J b'J'>fl l\~i<l a ff
Toys are more than fun
,·~~and games for children
By TRUDVE CON NOLL V
C•••rloewsServKe
When you set out to play Santa
this year , you'll be buying more
than playthings.
Toys are the tools or childhood
that educate as well as entertain
and should be chosen carefully.
"Toys provide children with a
primary learning experience," says
Grace Ulbricht, consumer adviser
to F. W. Woolworth. "Toys give
children the opportunity to learn by
doing and the games they play
leach them about life."
Toys are scaled-down versions or
real-life objects and with them,
children are able to c reate
imaginary, lifelike situations.
When properly chosen. toys aid a
child's physical, mental. social and
emotional development.
Children have played with toys
since ancient times . In the
pyramids or Egypt and the buriaJ
mounds or Persia, replicas of dolls
and toy animals were discovered.
But while toys existed an history, it
is only recently that we have come
to explore and understand their role
1n a child 's growth and
development.
Toys help children develop
specific skills like walking. talking
and reading. In an increasingly
complex society, they also prepare
children for adulthood by building
self-confidence and self-expression.
"Toys can educate a child to the
world and, at the same time.
protect him or her from it by
providing a s pecial and private
place where the child can develop
his or her individuality," says
Ulbricht.
You can guide a child's progress
through various learning stages
through the choice of toys. The rate
of progress will vary from chHd to
child but certain activities are
maintajned throughout childhood
and into adulthood.
Toys that have been put away
after a child has lost interest can
often be reintroduced at a later date
providing new play experiences.
"A toy by itself cannot teach a
child, but with good interaction
between the child. the toys and
others, the child can learn many
things." explruns Ulbritch.
·'Children develop a sense of
values by playing with toys. They
learn to get along with others and
unders tand interper sonal
relationships. A toy, such as a
favorite doll or teddy bear or even a
story book. reaches out to another
aspect of ltfe, it teaches the child
about love ...
Ulbricht believes that children
who have something to care about
and feel responsible for are better
able to comprehend the feelings of
security and companionship.
When it comes to selecting toys,
take into consideration the child's
age, ability and above all, the
child's safety. Don't choose toys
that are too sophisticated
As a rule of thumb, the toy should
be just a shade beyond the child's
level of competence. And, it goes
without saying, the toy should be
fup. Ulbricht has the following
slfl'fesUc>nl>' ·ntt 'l6ysl"af' dlffC!r~nt
ages: • • . ''
B a bi es nee<! t~~~..,.t~re
particularly r esponsive to those
that arouse sensory perceptions.
Musical toys are good choices. So
are sort, cuddly dolls and stuffed
animals .
Brightly colored toys, too big to
swallow, are the objects allowing
the baby lo "play" with his eyes.
When able to sit up. the baby will
be ready for ratUe, cups or boxes
that stack or simple storybooks.
From 18 months to three years,
the toddler needs toys for active
physical play such as balls, wheeled
vehicles and even basic sports
equipment. Thls is a time for a toy
that the child can ride on or nde in
to aid hls physical growth.
Play furniture, play appliances
and costumes are also good for
imitating the adult world in which
the chHd finds ' him or herself. At
this age, the child is also ready for
modeling dough, fingerpaints or a
blackboard with chalk. All or these
toys are available at the local
variety store. For a reasonable
amount of money you can begin lo
build a toy chest that will carry
through more than one age group.
Preschool children, from three to
s ix years. are c andidates for
eagerly acting out grown·up roles
and adult s ituations. Consider
pretend toys such as puppets,
theaters, dollbouses. telephones and
any miniature real-life scene such
as a farm, fort or village
Outdoor sports equipment ts also
popular. You might consider a first
two -wheel bike with training
wheels. AJso, records, books, prunt
sets and puzzles.
Children begin to increase their
social awareness from six to 10 and
will take up tabletop games like
pingpong and board games like
Monopoly or checkers.
"Coml>rehension is also
heightened at this stage," says
Ulbricht. She advises science sets,
printing sets and any materials for
craft projects.
For the active, select a pair of
roller skates, sled or even a first
pair of skis.
You can help develop a child's
imagination with girts of paints,
clay and sewing sets. Books and
records are perennial favorites that
cross age groups .
After children pass the age of 10
they begin to show signs of specific
talents or inclinations toward an
area such as science. music or art.
Their "toys" should encourage the
dev e lopment or these skills .
Woodburnang sets, magic kits,
advanced construction and
handicraft kits are good choices.
Sports equipment like table tennis
or rackets for tennis or handball are
popular.
Records. books and gai;nes that
require knowledge gained in
classroom study are also favored by
the nine to 12-year-old.
Once a child reaches the teens,
you can anticipate the need for
playthings that merge with the
interests of an adult. Specific
hobbies. sports interes ts and
sop hi sticated e le c t-ronic
computer-based games are
reguired. At this point, the \'"~'ftfld·adull ~6ver at\d~h8ed&
'"a r~11 glitle lt\'etltfc ·.•rid lastfliflyl ex~:ru•~-r~oil '1.
'
110. ..
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tr
18-uilt Guide -An Aovertising ~upptement to the L>a11y l-'1lot, l hursoay, "4ovember ~b. ,._.,,
Making gifts make Xmas fun, personal
By DIANE BRADFORD .
c:.teY ...,_Serva
This Christmas, surprise your
friends and family by giving
ceramic gifts and accessories.
Even if you're not an artist , ~ou
can make professional-lookmg
ceramic items ranging from tree
ornaments to cookie jars.
Why nol try your band at making
a ceramic Christmas tree equipped
with multicolored Hgbts? Or a
manger scene?
-
This is the magic or hobby
ceramics, one of the fastest growing
crafts today. Hobby ceramics are
suitable for the whole family and
don't require expensive equipment.
Even a be,ginner can achieve professional r,esults from the very
first project.
To begin a ceramic project. the
hobbyist may choose a piece of
"greenware," a pre-formed
ceramic item. Many ceramic
~tudlos and workshops carry an
Surprise your family and friends this Christmas by making
ceramic gifts such as this snowman and Santa Claus.
,ee l
" I -
'
LA-Z-BOr
Pre-Holiday
SALE fromsm
·Select '!roup
inventory of greenware.
New technology has Introduced
creative methods of customizing
ceramic pieces that are limited only
by the imagination of the hobbyist.
New ceramic colors that t'an be
used with an airbrush afford a son
blending of colors never before
possible.
Texturizing provide s
innumerable surfaces by applying
materials like s tring, cereal.
cotton or wood shavings Even
three-dimensional effects are
possible.
Many popular design classics
such as lmari or French Tole
patterns. American lnd1an motifs
and flower and vegetable designs
are available as decals.
Custom decals can be made to
specification to perfectly match
accessories ranging from wallpaper
to fabric designs.
Supplies and kilns as well as
instructions are available al the
more lhan 20,000 hobby ceramics
studios nationwide. To Ctnd the
nearest hobby ceramit's studio
consult your local Yellow Pages
under .. Ceramics Equipment and
Supplies."
Or write the National Cerami<'
Manufacturers Associ ation,
Teacher Certification Program,
P.O. Box 601. Citrus Heights, Calif.
95610. for a Cree listing of certified
teachers m your area
The more adventurous hobbyist
may want to start the process from
scratch by purchasing the mold and
pouring liquefied clay, called
.. sl ip," into the mold. The
procedure is as simple as pouring
gelalin dessert into a mold. Once
the clay has dried. il ·is unmolded
and emerges as greenware.
The hobbyi s t clean s the
greenware by smoothing down the
mold marks and any undesired
roughness with a damp sponge or
plastic scouring pad.
The piece is then fired in the
studio's kiln for a s mall fee or in a
low-cost kiln for home use.
Some hobbyis ts prefer lo buy
greenware that has been fired but
no t stained or glazed. This
greenware. called "bisque," comes
out or the kiln with a matte white
finis h that the hobbyist can
decorate wit.h a non-firing glaze or
slain.
The piece 1s now ready lo be
decorated with a variety or ceramic
colors and glazes.
1f a non -firing stain 1s used. it 1s
not n.ecessary to refire. ~hen dry. 1t
1s simply sprayed with sealing
fixative.
A variety of effects 1s possible
fur or wood textures, marbleizing,
embossing , raised designs. metallics
and lusters. Non-toxic stains and
g lazes are used for kitche n
accessories and servin~ pieces
So. if you prefer lo c reate
handcrafted . one -of -a -kind
Christmas items , why not giv e
hobby ceramics a try this year?
THIS AD WORTH s50 OFF
THE PRICE OF ANY
CRUISE or TOUR
Outside The Continental U.S.
ReNr1ation1 Mu1t le Made ly Dec. 24th
Cal How: For All Your Tra•el Need1
-
I
Gift Gulde-An Advertising Supplement to the Daily Pilot, ThurSday, November 26, 1981-19
NOACK
A ~rulrzM gtfi-
i>r someone ~I
Da your holtc\aV shopp1~ now
•CROSS PENS
•LIGHTERS
•CHARMS & BRACELETS
• GOBLETS & BOWLS
'
•PICTURE FRAMES
•MINIATURE FIGURINES
•TANKARDS
•EXECUTIVE
)JO-\Cf' ~trr ANO eN~I~
170E i71h 3t,,,(l7 Oosia~ b'fh-31~
(Aava ~'°"' \J~~ptrg 9l") .-. . . .
BUTTONS AND BOWS -
BOUTIQUE
ANNUAL CHRISTMAS PARTY
FRI., DEC. 4tll IEFIESHMIHTS FIOM 7.9 r..M .
15°/o OFF ALL MERCHANDISE
FEATURING:
•The Romantic Look
•Knickers-All f.olors
•Jogging Suits
•Yves Daniel Designer
Pants
•Annyzapp
•Mini Skirts
•Corduroy Walcing Shorts
•Corduroy Tailored Jackets
•Gold Accented Blouses
1790 E. 17th ST.
COSTA ME SA
645-6731
M-W Ir SAT. 10.6 THUlt.-FRI. 10-t
111
Locahd In YOllS Sho't'.:2. C.ltfer
MnttoCd*•*
-.,
~ . ~
I • '
; '\
I !} Gigantic Christmas Sale
DEC. I st-20th :-, . •i
ANUOHP'WSH
S..oert>a ,.. .. Mt °'*"" ,,_ "'"' ..... ......, ... dVllMoly
'12" --·~
AHS01¥ $11110 conhot, acotch tv¥d ••••n ""--'15" ..... _
·~ IOO~e H'ILON a, •• , f()I aoart~nt ~ Of OAlfte -'7" --.,...
LINO UM REMNANTS
•Armstrong FOi V • Manningto AMS,
• Congoleum CAMPERS,
•GAF Etc.
*COURTEOUS. FllBIDLY * SALE ATMOSPtBI * GUAIAMTIB> LAIOI
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•SAVI
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P AR(i>UET AND PLANK
FLOORIM'i FIOM
5 I 19 sq. FT.
MINI ILINDS 60°/o OFF
CUSTOM DRAPES
s I 00 OFF ALL FAIRIC
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Reg. •1t1 Mow
'39500
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20-vilt Gwae -An Aavertismg Supplement to the Daily ~1lot, 1 hursoay, November Lb. 1981 '
Ort THE WATERFRONT
In rtewport Beach
by Captain Warren
I have walked the deep c~vems of steel and
glass on my holiday shopping and browsing
tours ... I have seen and been 'midst towering
buildings in glarlng sun with man-made
attempts at Christmas color, sense and scene
... but have found my Yuletide haven for
browsing, shopping, sipping and supping on
the waterfront in Newport Beach.
Here I have found quaint, festively decorated
shops nestled 'neath nature's trees ... along
cobblestone streets ... created from warm,
charming and living w?O~L . and resting on
the shore of one of Gods loveliest harbors.
It Is called Lido Marina Village ... and it is a joy
to visit at Christmas time ... to wander its
paths ... meander along the waterfront
... pause for sustenance as your eyes sweep
the everchanging panorama of skiffs and
Boston Whalel'S ... of yachts to dream by and
fun-fiUed, Avalon-bound sails of white.
Come on down to Lido Marina Village on the
waterfront in Newport Beach and help me
c;ount. It's a wonderful way to spend any part
of a pre-holiday morning, afternoon or the
cool of the evening. Chart your course on any
freeway heading towards beckoning chann
of Newport Beach ... wind up on the Newport
Freeway South 'til it becomes Newport
Boulevard ... continue towards the sea
... cross Pacific Coast Highway over the long·
standing Arches Bridge to Via Lido ... left
tum and on your left is the entrance to Lido
Marina Village parking ... validated, of
course.
It's a refreshing change from the sameness
and sterility in charm of some of today's SO·
called architectural triumphs ... it's worth the
drive and the challenge in finding ... it's a
wonderful place on earth to relax ... enjoy
... breathe ... be yourself ... and, yes, to seek,
shop, sup, sip and save at holiday-time ... on
the waterfront in Newport Beach.
By the way, enjoy the Christmas Boat Parade
on the waterfront at Lido Marina Village
... December 17th through the 23rd.
Yes, come to Lido Marina Village ... 1'11 be
lookin" for you. We're open from 10-9 daily
and 1().6 on Sundays.
Happy Holidays!
LIDO MRRJNA VJl.J.AGE
Just off P.C.H. at Newport Beach Blvd., f, Via Lido
a~.ality gift ideas with a
practical price tag -$5
If visions ol Cbriatmas bills are
driving the sugarplums right out of
your bead, it's easy to get back in
the holiday spirit knowing there are
gilts you can still buy tor under $5.
They may be fewer and farther
between than they used to be, but
with careful shopping. you can still
find quality gifts with a practicaJ
price tag.
For example, games don't have to
be electronic or expensive to
challenge and amuse players. Some
ol the basic, non-mechanical games
that today's parents enjoyed as kids
are ~till around to happily oc~y
youngsters of the '80s -and most
cost $5 or less .
One such game is the perennial
favorite, Cootie, in which playen
roll dice to determine whether they
add a leg, an eye or a tongue in
their race to complete their bug
first.
There are many other family
favorites that have been providing
fun for years. ,
In Stadium Checkers, players
strategically plot to move their
marbles down the stadium and out
the center goal by rotating
concentric rings.
Tiddle Tac Toe is a winning
combination of two all-lime
classics, and Skunk, with its special
pair of skunk dice, keeps the laughs
rollings along with the dice. And
Tickle Bee, the magnetic game of
skill and concentration that bas
tickled fancies for years, joins all
these games from Schaper to offer
pure entertainment at a coovenien'-
cost.
r · ~Jfdl.o URir~ IJIPer·luunan
strength, about $2.50 will let them
match their power agajnat that of
the super cartoon heroes. The
Incredible Hulk and Amazing
Spider-Man muscle meters test and
inc rease kids ' grips, as they
squene the meter up the scale from
"sick" t.'.> "ape.'' From Kusan, the
muscle meters also make great
stockioi stuffers. Toys that stimulate creativity
don't necessarily have to tax the
pocketbook. Playmobil, the toy
series of "little people" figures and
accessories in various themes, has
a new Discovery Set that costs
about $5.
A perfect introduction to the toy
system that runs on a child's
im aginalion, the Discovery Set
contains three figures plus cogtume
and accessory pieces from 10
different "families," including
Poli ce Rescue, Doctors and
Knights.
Playmobil is also covered by a
unique Fun Guarantee, .stating a
child must have fun with the set or
your money back.
For action-packed play in the
family or rec room, Whirley Bird
-brings athletic fun indoors. Players
toss the plastic bird back and forth.
competing for the highest score as
they catch the bird on the handbeld
targets.
) naugu rating-the
second century of Seiko,
the new Seiko Lassa le.
Setting a new standard for the world,
for the future, a name that marks
the most extraordinary fusion of
design and quartz technology.
From the coUection, cwo
superbly sllm faceted gems
secured with lizard, hers
with a sophisticated black
dial, his a classic in gill.
Great possessions, both.
SEIKO
LASSALE
RAFF
jeWelff
•
Gift Gulde-An Advertising Supplement to the Oallv Pilot, Thursdav. N"ovember 26, 1981-21
Irvine UNICEF store
spreads Xmas meaning
Buy a Cifl for ooe and benefit
many. That's t~e bargain orrer this
holiday 5ea90Cl at the UNICEF store
ln Heritage Plaza.
The UNICEF organization· is a
non-profit, non·discriminatory,
non-political body dedicated t.o
helping Ute needy children or the
world. The Irvine store, opened in
its name, also is non-profit and
dedicated to the same ideals.
By buying any or the girt items,
holiday cards and handicr afts In
the store, the consumer can be sure
that any profits will be sent to the
troubled locations in the world.
Besides the familiar UNICEF
cards, puzzl~. desk calendars and
books, the shop bas items from all
over the world. According to one of
the volunteers at the shop, Lynne
Davanzo, there is brass from India,
g lassware Crom Finland and
Sweden , weavings from Latin
America and box plates from
Poland and Russia.
Dava.nio said these items reflect
the s tore's policy of trying to
concentrate on buying goods from
impoverished countries. but also
seeking and selecting the unique
gifts that will draw shoppers into
the store. .
The store has been opened for a
yea r already, thank s to the
dedication or volunteers from Irvine a nd neighboring com munities .
Davanzo said she expects the store
to pull in at least $10,000 from the
sale of holidav cards in November
•
and December, but that the store
needs all the support it can get.
"We can't do it alone," Davanzo
said. "We need help. There are
ornaments at the store that start as
low as 50 cents. If you buy one
ornament, you could be showing the
world's children you care."
Davanro gave examples or the
way UNICEF money could be used.
Eight cents can buy pencillin.
Twenty-seven cents can he lp
immunize three children against polio and $1 can buy a pound of pea
seeds for a vegetable garen
The store, located at 14250 Culver,
is open Crom 10 a.m to 4·30 p.m ..
Monday through Saturday.
Vision toys
From Page 14
These glasses should meet the
American National Standards
Institute standards and parents
s hould encourage their use
wh e never these potentially
hazardous gifts are used. lf the
child needs a prescription ror good
vision, an optometrist can prescribe
it for use in safety eyewear.
To keep bills down, remember
that many homemade toys can
serve the sa me purpose as
purchased items. Homemade items
will provide the same boiday
pleasure and are just as effective as
purchased toys in helping children
develop and improve their visioo
skills, the AOA points out.
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22 <:.1tt uuide -An Aavertismo ::.upplement to the lJa11v ..-11ot, 1 nur!><lav, November Lb, 19111
Michael Henny
Aaron Puckett
Chau Nguyen
Christ01as and Children ~''''~ ~ .... ..;.
go hand-in-hand
From Page 1%
you "have lo be good, but not
perfect." Chao said lo be gentle.
nice and don't be grouchy.
Gary Smith and Matt Wright said
good means not saying bad words
Billy and Matt figured it also
included "not missing the toilet · ·
Perhaps a few future lawyers
interpreted good in a legal sense.
Aaron said stealing was bad,
punishable by not having a Santa
Claus visit. Michael said anyone
who carries guns and s hoots people
can forget about getting presents.
Christmas lists reveal the same
presents as aJways, with perhaps a
little more mechanization Train
sets. games. pianos, bicycles. dolls
and skates run the gamut. Quiana is
no exception, al least a~r as this
year's list is concernedl9'1 want a
T1ppee Toes doll this Christmas and
a motorcycle when I grow up," she
said. Heathe r wants a trip to
Hawaii. Nicole Haddad wants to
have a baby and magic that will
never run out
What do these children wish that
Santa would brmg their parents?
Nicole wants mommy to have a new
baby Payson wants his mom to
become a movie star and his dad to
become a m11liona1rc. Billy wants
h1s parents to receive a new house
Other children hoped their
parents received new telev1s1on .
waterbeds, cars and vans. Nina
took adavantage of a wish and
hoped her parents "get everythmg
in the world." Michael was more
specific. He wants hi s parents to
have "Money, money, money."
With the ever-strengthe ni ng
focus on presents at Christmas.
some might wonder if children
understand Uie meaning or girt
giving. Christen Smith said that it is
to celebrate the birthday of Jesus
Christ. Josh added that Christmas
is Jesus· present to us because he
wants us lo love each other.
or the 22 children interviewed
only three had doubts, if not
absolute proof that there was no
such person as Santa Claus. "I don't
belive in Santa, un less he uses the
same wrapping paper as my mom.
The only way I'll believe be exists is
1f I get Atari . <video game>.
because it costs so much." David
agreed that this was a good test.
Josh believes in Santa Claus. but is
confused because of a contradiction
in logic. .. U Santa is so fat. how
does he fit down the chimney'! he
said.
Nicole said she knew a girl
named Rachel who ··didn't believe
in Santa Claus, Jesus or Mother
Nature. Well. she did believe in
Santa Claus. but she thought her
mother didn't."
Nicole has no doubts that Santa 1s
alive and well. She put her parents
through a test on Christmas Eve.
··First I checked to see if there were
dny presenLo; under the tree. I there
weren't>. Then I went into my
parent's bedroom to make sure
they were asleep. ··After careful
scrutiny she determined they were
both fast asleep for the night. "Once
my dad is asleep, he could never
wake up,·· s he said. to put presents
under the tree before morning.
Christmas morning. the children
have all received presents and are
busy enjoying the day. but what
about Santa? What is he doing? "He
likes to come home, be cool, he
down m bed and watch the fights on
television," Payson said .
·• 1 th.ink Santa would like to have
a year off to take a vacation,"
Nicole said. Who could possibly
repl ace hi·m ? His wife. s he
answered. That response alone may
be proof that times and traditions
are a changin', just a little.
Nina Danesbuar·
•
Christen Smith
Daivd Enger
Gift Guide-An Advertlsln9 Supplement to the Oatly P+tot, Thursd.iy, November 26, 1981-23
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lntegraling Chri$tmas
decorations into plants
By PAT PIDLUPS
c.!•Y -5e"'lu
Houseplants that make a home
look like a tropical forest during the
summer sometimes look out of
place once Christmas decoration.a
go up.
Don't think the plants need to be
banished to a portable greenhouse
ror the holidays. Marie Smith, a
designer, has some pra'Clical Ups
for successfully integrating the
living accents into a holiday decor
scheme.
"One must first understand that
not all houseplants can be
decorated," Smith says. "But there
are several that can handle the
added weight of small ornaments or
other decorations. Meanwhile, those
that can't be decorated can always
be dressed up with gift wrap and ribbon around their pots."
Among the common houseplants
that can be adorned with ornaments
and other small holiday accents are
the Norfolk Island pine, weeping fig
and rubber tree. Sturdy bonsai
specimens also can be decorated.
Ferns and other smaller plants of
similar nature are best lert
untouched.
''The size or the plant, its
structure and its health determine
. if it can be decorated," Smith says.
"Strong branches and stems are
necessary. Plants that aren't
healthy shouldn 't be decorated."
When decorating houseplants,
have a good supply of small
ornaments (handcrafted yam , satin
or tiny glass balls) available.
"Larger ornaments add too much
weight," Smith explains.
Ir you 're looking for an
alternative to ·traditional
ornaments, Smith s uggests lying
small yarn bows on plant branches,
using cutouts from Christmas cards
as light-weight ornaments or
adorning the plant with fuuy yarn
pom-poms. These can be found in •
gift wrap departmennts of card
shops or stationary departments.
.. Just be sure oot to use lights,"
Smith says. "Even the smallest,
coolest bulbs can upset a plant's
tender system."
To dress up plants that can't be
decorated, wrap their pots in
reversible gift wrap so that the
exposed edges will be attractive.
Use a large band or ribbon as an
accent. Finish the project with a
striking holiday bow.
Make some macrame holders in
holiday colors for banging plants.
"Friends and relative will find
the projects interesting and the
whole family will enjoy the
decorating challenge," she says.
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Gift Guide-An Advertising Supplement to the Daily Pilot, Thursday, November 26, 1981 25
Easy-to-make, gift
ideas fof the stockings
By ROBERTA CHOPP Up!.,_...,,_
It's Chris tmas! Once again.
reindeer, Santa Clauses, sugar
plums and candy canes abound.
This year, along with these
traditional ornaments, you can take
advaota~e of a multitude of craft
and sewing ideas to convert any
room into a "winter wonderland."
.. An increasing number of people
are opting for easy-to-make fabric
cutouts to create the ir hohday
magic," says Janet Laue, consumer
fabrics manager for Eastman
Chemical Products Inc., marketer
of Kodel polyester
"'lt"s an inexpensive and fairly
quick way to add a personal touch
to any celebration, whether for gifts
or decorations."
Homemade holiday stockings are
just the thing for saying ··Merry
Christmas." They can be filled with
"'Stocking sluffers " easy-care
cutouts such as tin soldiers, rocking
horses or a menagerie of animals
that any chlld will love. There are
enough cuddJy options to melt the
heart of even the coldest snowman
With a simple ribbon attachment.
they can go right up on the tree or
hang in the window to wis h
passersby yuletide cheer. Or, use a
bit of imagination and bend hangers
to fashion a mobile festooned with
holiday cutouts.
What Chris tmas is compiet e
without a holly wreath? Wreath
cutouts decked with poinsettias and
stuffed with fiberfill offer the final
festive touch to any decor.
A variety of quick-sew quilted
placemats in holiday prints can
s pi ce up any holiday t a ble .
E ye-catching quills depicting
scenes of Santa and his friends
work a s wall ha ng ings or crib
blankets.
Easy ·to-follow , s t e P· by-ste~
10structions are often printed right
o n the patter n s . Eve n an
inexpe rienced sewe r can stitch
the m up in the morning to set a
conviviaJ mood that night.
For holiday finery ranging from
tablecloths and napkins to tea
cozies and pol holders, many fabric
stores stock up on s pecial seasonal
fabrics both quilted and regular
-that tell the Christmas story with
sleighs, evergreens, tree ornaments
and all the patterns that have come
to mean Christmas .
X mas cards
From Page 16
T o day yo u h a v e a better
opportunity thao ever before to
c hoose e xactl y the c ard that
reflects your own feelings. About
300 card publishers produce more
than 7 billion cards annually and
nearly half or these are Christmas
cards.
As you look over the cards you
will receive this year, see if you can
i de ntify t h e o nes that card
collectors, in years to come. will
determine most closely represented
Christmas 1981
14.58
Yn, J4 ~ •> a renutlc:ahk pnce far fine
muon Lt.ct'. npec,ally ...nm ~ cons1ckrs
rhar mch p1eceo wu 1nd1v1du.ally hand
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m crad11101uJ wh1re & off-v.+ure In ..dd111on
co our pla,ema1 11iustracC"d (approxun:a1dy
11 x .zo·· and also availablt in ow.I). weo
h..ve qu1e a r.inge of ocher s1z:n .mJ shapn
inciudmg doil1ts (6"' 10 10"'), run~n ( \6""
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The ocher siz:C$ arr .ils.o ouumnding val~.
ranging in price from SI m S6) 99
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26-Glft Guide -An Aovertls1"9 Supplement to the ua11y ..-1iot. I hursoay. November ~I>. l'flSI
Let a pet ·answer-gift woes
Love and Christmas go
hand'in·hand. And, the face
of any youngster will surely
brighten at the sight of a
Living bundle of love in his
stocking this year.
11 you've liven Dad a tie every
Cbriatmu few u loot u you cao
remember, )"OW' Mom atil1 bun't
opened tbe boWe ol perfume you
save her five Christmases a.10,
your brother alrndy bu every Hot
Wheeb car ever made twice over,
your sister bates your taste in
clothin&, and your best friend ended
up livine the bar gluaea you 1ave
him lu t Chrlatmu to hi.a kid abler
when abe moved out, maybe you
should try giving tbeae
hard-to-aatiafy people oo your lift
Hat aomethin1 satisfyin1 for a
change.
A pet may be tbe perfect anwaer.
There's a pet to fit every life style,
per1ooallty and budget. But much
better is tbe fact a pet will' be
enjoyed far longer than a toy, a
bottle ol perfume or a necktie.
And animals aren't just for giving
to children. Many senior citizens
enjoy a small pet for
companionship, and a doe Ol' kitten
can be a present the whole family can enjoy.
While puppies and kittem are at
the top Of children's "most-wanted"
list, there are many other types of
animals available that will delight
young and old alike.
GenerallY. children abould not be
expected to handle the
responaibllity of caring for pell
until they can begin doing things for
themselves.
Small, euily-cared·for rodents
are ideal for youngsters between
the ages of four and six. Hamsters,
gerbils, guinea pip, mice and white
rats can be housed ln reJativtl
h Deck The Halls
We Wish You A Merry Chn~tmas!
Whenyou-
Browse through the Mill
You'llftnd-
Flowers, Antiques, Birds. Candles. Dolls.
Berries, Baskets, Bean.. Blum's Candy.
Bells . Boxes, Decoys. Ribbons. Potpourri.
Cinnamon St.ix, l landmade Ornaments.
and more
Yourown-
HoUday gifts and decorations.
fresh and silk Ooral arrangements
by our award-wtnnlng designers
Created for YOU!
Visit us Monday through Saturday
from 9:00 a. m. tJI 6:00 p. m.
crbe
I l'loweti--
small caaes, handled with ease, and
make responsive, amusing pets.
By a•e su, kids can be expected
to handle some of the
reapooaibllltiea involved in ownin&
a puppy or kilt.en. ,.. lon1 a parenta
guide and teach them about cariq
for their new pet, children will
know and understand tbe joys and
rewards of pet ownership.
By the time a child reaches the
age of eight or D.ine, a parent cao
feel conlident about lntroducin1
blm to some member of tbe bird
family. Altbou1b canaries and
parakeets are fairly hardy, birds in
general are more delicate than
other types or pets and require
careful, gentle handling.
Many children enjoy teachin1
their birds to talk and do tricks.
Since an ei1bt-year-old'a attention
span is usually longer, be or abe ii
somewhat more patient when it
comes to devoting time to the pet.
Birds make cheerful and
entertaining pet.9. Since they make
easy-to-care-for pets and are
inexpensive to feed, they are great
gifts for a busy mother or
grandmother.
As a child's interest in science
begins to develop, usually by the
age of 11 or 12, fish-keeping may
become a very attractive bobby.
More than 20 million Americans
own tropical aquariums, housing a
total ot some 340 million ftsb. Fish
are also perfect gifts for the
man-on-the-go. No matte bow busy
his schedule, be will find the lime to
relax. and enjoy the tranquil beauty
or a fish or salt water aquarium.
It is an educaUonaJ lift, too. Dad
wlU eatjoy teachinl the children
about the wonders of underwat.er
life such as bow fish and plants can
breathe underwater.
Fish, especially the fresh water
types , are perhaps the moat
inexpensive pets to own.
To start a budding aquariat on bis
way, a 10-galloo capacity tank la an
adequate siJe to buy for the novice.
Many varieties of faah and plant life
can comfortably inhabit a tank this
size, and the care and maintenance
or a lreshwater tank la simple
enough even for children.
Aside from the tank itself, a
thermometer, mt.er, pump, iraveJ
and Jlghting cover should be
purchued.
A belioner's freshwater tank and
accessories c an generally be
purchased for less than $30; a
saltwater tank for under $100.
Besides being inexpensive,
easy-to-care.for and educational,
fish are one of the few pets that
complement any room setting. A
colorful, brightly lit aquarium can
act as a centerpiece, a topic of
conversation, or dress up an
otherwise bare comer.
If you're planning to give a puppy
or kitten for Christmas, an
innovative way or doing it is givine
a Pets are Wonderul (PAW> girt
certificate offered at many animal
shelters.
It's the perfect way to give a
frisky pup or kitten because it
allows the recipient to chooge his or
her own pet, malting sure there i8
See Page 36
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Gift Gulde-An Advertising Supplement to the Daily Piiot, Thursday, November 26, 1981 -27
Druming up some
cheer for Xmas
By SAM LA.Wl'ON c..I•• """' .. ,,,lu Party-giving and Christmas go
together naturally. Why not add
something "new" this season by
putting music into your holiday
restivilies?
Research by t.he American Music
Conrerence shows that one out or
every five Americans plays an instrument. So you should be able
to tap the musical talents of some
of your guests. Ask each of your
guests t o bring along any
instrument he or she may play.
Everything from guitars to
triangles. flutes to bongos and
violins to French horns will add to
the merriment. Part of t.he fun will
be hearing what types of sounds t.he
musicians can create with a variety
of instruments.
For your guests who do not play a
"portable" instrument, be sure to
have a grab bag full of s mall
instrume nts harmoni cas ,
tonettes, flulophones or lone blocks
-at the front door.
These s mall and inexpensive
instruments can be found at ooe of
your local music stores.
For an added touch let your
friends lake the instruments home
as gifts.
To keep all your friends involved
i n the mus ic -making , have
someone lead them in a "rhythm
section." using tone blocks, bells or
castanets lo accompany carols such
as "Silver Bells'' or "Deck the
Halls."
If the group prefers· caroling,
have everyone gather around the
Plano or orRan for traditional holiday harmonizing or str oll
t hroug h th e n eig hborh ood
accompanied by a guitar player.
For a special treat, have the
preschool and kindergarten set act
out a carol, such as "We Three
Kings" or "The Twelve Days of
Christmas " The older children
s tud yin g music in s chool can
provide accompaniment for the "actors."
If your family wants to do the
entertaining, a "family band" can
sere·nade guests with their holiday
favorites. Take requests, or lead a
sing-along.
By ringing in the season with a
musicaJ party for your family and
friends, you'll give them something
they'll never forget, and have them
singing all the way home.
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• CHRISTMAS SPECIALS ON BLANK TAPES, ATARI AND
INTELLEVISION VIDEO GAMES •
• OUR MOVIE LIBRARY IS ONE OF THE LARGEST IN ALL
OF O~NGE COUNTY!
POPCORfj • • CLOWNS
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• t i
28-Gitt Gu1oe -An Advertising ~upp1ement to tfle Ua11y f'1lot, l flursoay, November ~o, 1981
Say "Merry Christmas" with a trio of homemade treats.
Recipes for Apricot Date Chutney, SjJiced Apple Relish and
Cranberry Lime Conserve are simple and delicious ways to
show you care.
A .HONEY BAKED NAM IS
ALWAYS FUUY APPRECMTEO!
HONEY
IAl(f 0
NAM
Homemade hollday treats for everyone
-4
·Sugar and spice and
everything nice
By WILLIAM STEVENSON
C-.1•' Newt S..Vk•
The holiday season evokes fond
memories of fragrant food aromas
drifting from the kitchen. This year
why not re-create some of these
spicy scents with a trio of
homemade fruit delights, Apricot
and Date Chutney. Spiced Apple
Relish and Cranberry-Llme
Conser ve.
These recipes each contain fruit,
raisins. s ugar and spice, but they
differ just a Little from each other.
Apricot and Date Chutney, spiced
with ginger and coriander, capture
the spirit of the faraway Orient.
Even though it may sound exotic,
this chutney is simply made with
bite-size pieces of dried apricots.
dates, raisins, brown sugar and
white wine vinegar.
What delecta bl e arom as could be
better than the cinnamon-apple
combination'! Like a chutney,
Spiced Apple Relbh contains
vinegar. but is less s picy and the
fruit is more finely chopped.
Another native to our North
American taste is the tart red
cranberry. Although the cranberry
grew wild in marshy bogs long
before Columbus discovered the
New World. Cranberry-Llme
Conserve is a refreshing
contemporary taste treat the early
settlers knew nothing about.
A conserve is also a blend or fruit,
s ugar, raisins and spice but no
vinegar is added. Instead the
quantity of sugar is Increased to
give it a jamlike quality.
These three recipes follow the
same general home canning
procedures. After the fruit is
prepared and and cooked according
to the directions. it is packed into
hot home canning jars. Only jars
s pecifically manufactured for home·
canning should be used. Leftover
mayonnaise or peanut butter jars
just won't do.
Leave the proper amount or head
s pace, one·fourth ·ioch for these
recipes. Wipe the jar rim clean
because food particles can prevent
an airtight seat.
Place the lid on and screw the
band down evenly and firmly. For
good results, follow manufacturer's
lid package instructions.
Now, you're ready to process .
Relishes, chutneys and con.serves
must be processed in a boiling-watet
bath canner. This is a large,
covered pot with a rack for holding
the jars and bring the water to a
boil.
Add the hot jars of chutney, relish
or conserve, and begin lo count the
processing time after the water
returns to full rolling boil. Allow 10
minutes for each of these recipes.
Remove jars from the canner and
allow to cool. After 12 hours lest for
a seal. Remove bands and store.
That all there is to it.
Make two batches, one for
yourself and one to give away for a
special holiday gm from your
kitchen.
J cups brown sugar
2 • • cups seedless raisins
2 cups whlle wine \ lnegar
2 cups water
I tablespoon whol1t mustard W(•d
I teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons ground glngt'r
1 teai.poon ground coriander
P repare home canning jars and
lids according to manufacturer's
instructions.
Soak apricots in water to cover
fo r 30 minutes Drain and place in
large.saucepot. Chop the dates and
add to apricots. Add remaining
ingredients and simmer over low
heat stirring frequently until thick,
for almost one hour. Carefully ladle
into hot jars, leaving
one-fourth inch head space. Adjust
caps.
P rocess 10 minutes in a boiling·
waler bath canner Yield · a d\>zen
eight-ounce jars.
SPICED APPLE RELISH
3 pounds apples tabout IOI
5 cups sugar
I cup golden raisins
, , cup chopped w·alnuts
't cup vinegar
I teaspoon ground m~ce
' , teaspoon ground allspice
I pouch liquid pt"l'tin 1:1 ouncf'S 1
Prepare home canning jars and
lids according to manufacturer's in·
s lrucllons.
Peel and core apples and place in
a solution or two quarts water. one
tablespoon each vinegar and salt to
prevent darkening. Drain and rinse.
Chop apples and measure four cups
into a large saucepol. Add sugar,
raisins, walnuts, vinegar and
s pices. Mix well. Place over high
heat and bring to a full rolling
boil. Boil hard one minute, stirring
constantly. Remove from heat and
stir in liquid pectin. Skim foam.
Carefully ladle into hot Jars. leaving
one-fourth-Inch head s pace. Adjust
caps.
Process 10 minutes in a
boiling-water bath canner. Yield:
five 12 ounce jars. '
CRANBERRY-LIME
CONSERVE
! pounds cranberries
I lime
t cup raisins
4 cups sugar
'2 cup sllven'd almonds
•, kaspoon coriander
'• teaspoon all pie•
t pouch llquJd pec:tln (3 ounces>
Prepare home canning jars and
lids ~ding to manufacturer's
instructions.
Wash cranberries, cover with
water and cook until skins pop.
Puree in a blender or food
processor. Cut up lime and grind in
blender or food processor. ·
<.;ombine pureed cranberries,
ground lime and rabint in a large
saucepot. Simmer, wiUa cover , for
10 minutes. Stir occasionally. Add
sugar . almonds and spices and
bring to a rapld boll. Boil one
minute, then add liquid pectin.
Remove from beat. Caretully ladle
into bot Jan. Leave one·fourth-inch
head space~ Adjust caJ)e. .,.,
Gift Guide-An Advertising SYpplement to the Dally Pilot, Thursday, November 26, 1981 -29
Winter Upholstery Sale!
Stock Items or Special Order
REDUCED ... for this event!
Suell mtnufacturart u : WOODMAAK·
STANTON COOPEH Included
ALL LEATHER IN STOCK ••. 250/o OFFI
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QUALITY • DESIGN • VALUE
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maternity boutique
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NOVEMBER
'II, 28, 'J.9
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495-2623
Q z ~ •
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M! TBIO!\O
CLOCKS
Timed fo r the holidays ...
SAVINGS UP TO 50o/o
ON SELECT E D CLOCK~
WE FEATURE ONE OF THE
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WE llAVE THE Tl\11:: t'OR 'i'Ol'
Check thl' warrantie:-We
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Expert repair!! done on prem1?>cs
We carry the following famous name brands
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MOM'S & KID'S
MYS
·atABCWMBER
Special Discount Days
to Shop for Dad!
November 27 through December 23
1:00 to 5:00 p.m.
ABC's Chrisbnas Gift Ideas for Dad:
Propane Torch Kit
Vise Grip Set
Mitre Box & Saw
Tool Box
Igloo Cooler
Power Tools
Carpenter Apron
Screwdriver Set
Car Care Kit Garden Tools
. . and much, much more!
THIS COUPON IS WORTH
%
off
of any purchase during
"Mom's & Kid's Discount Days"
November 27 through December 23
1:00 to 5:00 p.m.
Not Good on Sale Items
Coupon must be presented at time of purchase
Offer expires December 23. 1981
140 E. 17th Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
646·3281 •
Douglas fir
Before buying living
trees, buyers should
trace their roots
By JO'J'UBU
Ceirlo Newo ie"'lc•
A tivrng Chn stmas tree can ftll a
house with natural beauty and
fragrance for countless hohday
seasons -or it can die soon after
the first of the year.
The difference, says an expert,
often hinges on the condition of the
tree when you buy it.
The advice -let the buyer
be ware comes from Joe
W 111iamson, garden editor of Sunset
magazine.
William son and his s tare
anterviewe<l almost 400 West Coast
owners of llvmg Christmas trees, as
well as nurserymen who grow and
sell them. Their survey shows that
the most common reason a tree
doesn't survive past the first year is
because it has a poor root system -
s omething a s hopper s hould
investigate before buying.
Basically, says \\ alhamsoo, lhe
tree comes to lhe retailer m one o(
four different ways. It's important
lo know the difference:
-ll may have been field grown
and recently had some of its root.a
with soil around them, dug up and
wrapped in burlap.
It may have been field grown
that same way and then -just day~
or weeks before your purchase -
been put into a container, most
likely a 15-gallon pressed-paper tub
with potting soil under, over and
around the burlapped root ball.
It may have gone throl;lgh both
the above steps and then had-a ruu
year or perhaps several years in a
container lo grow its roots out of the
burlapped ball and into the potting
soil.
It may have spent its entire life
in nursery containers
Williamson says methods three
and four provide the mos t
trouble-free tree. Methods one and
t-.o can cause problems.
"When you have balled and
burlapped roots, the digging
process leaves some or most of the
root system m the field," he says,
"The remammg roots may t>e
unable lo nurture the top -
especially through that week or 10
days the tree is in the house."
Al the nursery, It 1s difficult to
tell a container-grown tree from a
balled-and-burlapped tree recently
put in a container, so ask. The
nurse ryman will be able to
distinguish the dirrerence.
··Do not wiggle the trunk to see
whether the roots move or stay
firm," warns Williamson. "That's
like sque<izing peaches on a fruit
stand."
Trees recently balled and
burlapped are less expensive than
those that have spent a year or
more in a container. If cost is a
major fact.or, you might want to
buy a freshly dug tree and hope 1t
lasts.
Like cut Christmas trees, living
ones can .be relatively cheap or
quite expensive. A Douglas fir, for
instance, can run from S16 t.o $50
and Colorado blue s pruce from $6 to
$120.
Williamson says 1f your tree has
s pent a year o r more 1n its
container, you can keep it almost
anywhere from after the Holidays
until the next Christmas.
"But 1r 1t was cut this fall, you'd
be wise .to baby it through the first
year," he adds. He suggests putting
it in part shade and out or daily
wmds.
Tt~e Sunset survey found that
longtime owne r s of living
Christmas trees keep them m a
variety or containers. ranging from
wood to lerra-cotta.
One Alpine fir has spent 10 years
in a metal washtub with drain
holes.
A pinon pine has thrived for 18
Christmases in a whiskey barrel.
Whatever the container, make
s ure it is portable. A large tree and
container can weigh upward of lSO
pounds. A container with handles or
wheels is a must.
Hand trucks come in bandy for
transporting a tree inside, and even
a s pare skateboard can make the
going easier.
Once the tree is inside, you'll
want to make certain the noor is
protected Crom any leakage.
Terra-cotta saucers work well
See Paice 31
Gtll vuiae An Ad11ert1Sing ~upplement lo tl)t' Ua1ly ._.1101. I hur!>day, November 2f>, 1981 JI
Before buying a living tree, investigate its roots
From 1•a~1· :111
un dernealh containers. But first
make sure the saucers are coated
v. it h g laze on t he inside. An
unglazed c lay saucer can ooze
enough v. ater to suun a floor
Other methods work equally v.ell ,
pizza pans, auto d rip pans. plastic
dis h pa n s, sandw i ches of
ne"'spapers and plast ic or foll .
She suggests such l1ghtv.e1ght
tree brightener~ as c·olored paper
fan:; and freshly <'Ul flowers.
"The nov..ers v.111 only last three
or four days before they have to be
replaced. but when they're tucked
1n the branches, the make a
beautiful tree." she says
If the tree was cut within the last
six months. you'll need to water 1l
every tv.o or three days, enough to
keep the soil ball m01st whale it's m
the house Many nursery m en
recommend watering"' 1th ace cubes
since they release \t. ater slo"' ly
Post Office sets deadlines
for. Christmas mailings
Buy a Christmas tree this
year that'll beautify your
yard when the holidays are
over. There are many
different living Chnstmas
trees to choose from but
nursery owners advzse
··buyers to beware · ·
Established or not, all living
Chr is t mas tree s should b e
thoroughly soaked before they're
brought inside Most nursery
1n s truct1ons recommend a n
1n house stay of only seven to 10
da}S
To assure that the stay 1~ not
harmful to the tree. be careful ho"'
you decorate it . Hot lights definitely
should not be used, since they wi ll
damage the branches.
Kathl een Bren ze l , S unset
associate editor, recommends small
tw111kly hghts "because the give off
no heat and don't harm the tree in
any way."
SANTA CLAUS
CALLING
l'o insun· all Christmas <'ards and
p:.ickages gel lo their des tination by
Uel' 25, tht' United State:. Po:.1
Of11cc has requested all C:hnstmJs
cards anct g1fl:.-. he mailed by Dt•r
14
AC't·ording lo Lylt' \'er Plam·k
postmaster of tht· Costa Mesa main
post office. if packages are sent
f1r'.'>l etas:.. the date dead11ne for
<irrl\·al by Chnstm:is as De<' 20
ON'. 11 1s the deadline for firs t
dass letters and packages betnlt
mailed to Europe and the Far
Eastern countries. Packages and
1etters mailed to Asian countries bv
TIIE MOST MAGI CAL
CIIRISTMAS GIFf OF ALL!
(~i\'1..' ~·our child the thrill of u pc 1-sonal
com·cr~ation \\'Ith Sunta Clu11s! Sa nt a w ill
ask fi 1r ,·ou r ch ild b\' numc. I Ic'll listl'n to Iii..;
or he r Chrbtmu~ fa011 tuslc~, a nd C\'Cll udd tit~
persona l t·o111111 1..·11 ts you usl< him to. Sa nta\,
mul<i ng hi-.. list a nd ch~ck i ng It t wkt' a nd
,·01ir cltilcl wi ll l<rn1w he '~ on ii.
( 'itll li-1r a ..;am p le of Suntu's m cssugc and
to arrange H t'•Hl\Clli<.:111 tim...-for your child\,
111agkal I i\'t' phone call from Sunta. 1;, .. 011 1 ~
~ln.00 prepaid, you can udcl womk r to your
d iilcr.., holid ay l:nd1m1111Knt.
720-0134
CALL EARLY TO MAKE YOUR RESERVATIO~S.
SANTA'S TIME IS LL\1 ITED. (H E HAS PRESENTS TO DELIVER.)
Nov. 30 will arrive by the 25th.
Ver Planck also requested that
Christmas cards be bundled wtlh
the card :.iddrei.scs all facing lht'
!>J me d1rect1on "That wi ll help
cltminalt· some of the handling
process. speeding up delivery." he
:;a id.
lie also said fragile packages
.. hould be prof)<.'rly insulated with
Styrofoam or other c ushion10g
agents and all packages should
have addresses placed inside the
wrapped package in case anything
:.hould happen lo the outside
wrappin~
-----.. -
32-Gilt Guide -An Aovert1s1no ~upplement to the lJa11y ..-11ot, T nursday. Novemoer 26, 191H
Super holiday recipe ideas to try at Christmas
Mince and pumpkin team up
for one of the most
compatable combinations to
grace a dessert plate since
apple pie joined up with
cheese. Amaretto di saronno
gives this recipe its unique
taste.
HeraJd Angel Pie
four egg whites
'• teaspoon cream of tartar
1, teaspoon salt
I l'UP ~ugar
In large bowl or electnc mixer
beat egg whites, cream of tartar
and salt until foamy. Beat in sugar,
l tablespoon at a time; this should
lake about 25 minutes.
Spread t wo-thirds of the meringue
over bottom and sides of a greased
9-inch pie plate. Fill pastry bag,
equipped with large s tar tip, with
remaining m erin g ue. Pipe
decorative border around inside
edge of pie plate. Bake at 275
degrees for 60 minutes. Turn oven
off. leave meringue shell m oven 1
hour to cool. Remove and cool
completely on wire r ack. Fill with
Choco nut Filling
Choco-nut Filling
I eo\elosw unrla\ort'd i.tt>lalinl'
3 tablt·.,poon' .. ugar
' • t•up water
I 6·0UOl't" packagt" of \f'Oli '"l't•I
t hocola te mor,l'li.
four l'U )olk_,
•, cup ('oc.•onut \mart>tlo
I cup lwa\ .\ de a m
toa~tt'd rlake coconut
In· top ol double boiler combine
gelatine and sugar Add waler ; let
stand 3 lo 4 minutes Cook over hot
water. s tirring constantly, until
gelatine 1s dissolved. Add chocolate.
stir until melted. Remove from
heat; beat in egg yolk. one at a
time Gradually stir in Coconut
Amaretto. Chill in refrigerator until
mixture thickens and mounds
s lightly when dropped from a
s poon. Whip cream ; Cold into
c hocolate mixture . Spoon into
prepared pie shell. Garnish with
coconut. if desired.
SaroDDO Miac•Pumplda Pie
I 9·ouncc> paC'kagt' cuncl'ntratrd
mincf'mt'at
"'•cup water
·~ cup Amaretto dJ Saronno
l unbabd I-inch pie shell with a blgb
fluted edge
3 eggs
l ·~ cups milk or evaporated mUk
Z teaspoons pumpkin pie spice
3• cup sugar
I ·~ cup canned mashed pumpk.ln
In a sau ce pan , combine
m i n cem eat, which has been
crumbled. with water and Amaretto
di Saronno. Cook at a boil, stirring
occasionally, unlit mixture is very
thick. Cool. Spread mincemeat
mixture evenly m lhe bottom of a
9-inch pie shell.
Combine remaining ingredients in
a bowl and beat un<il s mooth and
well blended. Pour mixture into pie
shell. Bake in preheated 375 degree
oven 45 minutes. or until pie is
puffed and a silver knife inserted in
center comes out clean.
Cool thoroughly before cutting
into wedges. lf desidred, pie may be
garnished with s weetened whipped
cream and chopped pecans
Holiday dessert time will be
an occasion for
"compliments to the chef"
when you serve this
delicious Herald Angel Pie,
along with spirited Yuletide
Punch, both made with
Coconut Amaretto.
Note: Some 9-inch pie pans hold
less than olhers. so only half fill the
unbaked pie s h e ll with the
mincemeat m ixture , leaving
enough room for the pumpkin layer.
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6 assorted brewery labels
reg $40.-Christmas gift pnced S 19 ~
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(one of over a selection ol 100)
Approx 14" high $1060.00
Authorized Uodro dealer
Fooled Salad or ~terpiece
Bowl or handcut lead crystal s· diameter. 4i,. high
Special $24.95,
BeaulJlully gilt wrapped.
PUNCH BOWL "BYZANZ" with
matching punch cups or cocktail glasses
lrom Germanvs hne1tt crystal mfg
KLOKOTSCHNlK :m, full lead
STOREWIDE
SALE
UPTO 70% OFF
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Fri., Sat., & Sun.
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LIGHTING PURCHASE ,,,,,,,
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Gitt Guide-An AdvertlslnQ Supplement to the Dally Piiot, Thursday, November 26, 1981-33
Super ho~iday recipe ideas to try at Christmas
IWWaJ Neaelrode Loaf
~ CtllP nlelu
\; cap wu&e J•lc:e Jeua, .... ra&ed ~ C9P •&u, dtvkled
l cup mlll, tcaldecl
l &eup111 nallla
l w....-fn&ed waa&e peel ~YI cape_ lleny cream, divided
A tightly sealed plastic
container molds and holds
luscious Nesselrode Loaf
frozen rmtil you're ready to
frost it.
..,
.,.. cap cMpped ••
i,, cap mlud cudled fnalu
l ~ packa&e lady flqen
cudled cllerrlea
H&ellca (optloaal>
lo small saucepan, combine
raisins and orange juice; simmer 2
to 3 minutes until raisina are
plump. Set uide until cool.
In small mixing bowl, use electric
mixer to beat egg yolks with ~cup
sugar unW mixture is very thick
and falla olf the beaters in sheets.
Gradually stir in scalded milk.
Return mixture to top of double
boiler; coot over boiling water,
stirr ing constantly until mixture thick~ and coats a metal spoon.
Cool to room temperature. Stir in
vanilla and orange peel.
Jn small mixing bowl, beat egg
whites until frothy; gradually blend
remaining ~ cup sugar. Beat unlll
stiff, but not dry. Beat 1 cup heavy
cream until sUJf. Fold egg whites,
whipped cream, raisins with juice,
nuts and candied fruits into egg
yolk mixture.
Line sides or a ~-gallon plastic
freezer container with lady fmgen.
Spoon c ustard mixture into
container. Seal; store in freezer. To
unmold, allow container to stand at
room temperature 10 minutes. Run
a knife around the inside to loosen
lady finders ; turn out onto
container's textured seal.
Whip remaining ~ cup heavy
cream. Spoon into pastry tube .with
star tip. Pipe cream around top and
bottom of loaf. Decorate with
cherries and angelica. Makes 10
servings.
Oraa1e Cruberry Cab
Z ~ cupe aultkd aU-parpoM no...
I cap Apr
.... teupooll ••ll 1 &eupoo11 baklaa powder
l w....-bakJac loda
I cap claopped walawu
1 cup cbopped pitted datel
1 ~ cap1 fresll or frealll rroae•
craaberrles
grate Ii.Dela of two orugea
2 egga
l cap butWmllk
~. cup vegetable oll
I cup oruge Julee
I CllP A&ar
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In a
large bowl, combine flour, sugar,
salt, baking powder. baking soda,
walnuts, dates, cranberries and
orange rind. Stir to blend.
Add eggs, buttermilk and oil and
stir until well blended. Pour
mixture into a greased and floured
10x4-inch tube pan. Bake 1 pr or
until firm to the touch. Let cake
stand for 10 minutes, then unmold
onto a platter. In a bowl, mix
together orange juice and su1ar
until sugar is thoroughly d.laaolved.
Spoon over warm cake slowly to
allow it to be absorbed into cake.
Cool thoroughly before cutting into
slices.
Sphiled YaletJde Pucb z cupe onllge Jwce
111' CUIN cruberry Jalce
I cap lemc.·Ume IOda
I cup Coccleut Amaretto
31' cup ll«ht ram 1. cup oraage liqaear
lee
lemoa~
FREE, CONSULTATION
oraagesUca
In bowl or pitcher combine
oranee Juice, cranberry juice, soda,
Coconut Amaretto, rum and ocanie
liqueur; sUr to blend. Add ice.
Garnish with lemon and oran1e
slices, if desired. Makes 6 cups.
Two very special cranberry
cakes, Orange Cranberry
Cake and Cranapple Coffee
Cake, are simple yet festive
fare to offer guests during
the holidays .
ft •
34-Gift Guide -An AClvert1smg ~upplement to the Ua11v pilot, 1 hursoav, Novemoer ib, 191S1
North Pole isn't the only chill for Santa
By JEFF WEIR
Copley New• Service
They warned me not to say .. Ho, ho,
ho!" but the warning wasn't really
necessary. J couldn't have said It if
l wanted to.
My beard wouldn't let me. Every
time I s poke, the chin str ap
threatened to fly over my nose.
They also told me not to move
around in front of the chj)dren, but
t h al proved a n unnecessary
caution, too. Wherever l dared
move, my pillow descended into my
shorts.
The wig gave me a headache. The
beard made me Itch: Tbe suit made
me sweat. The boots pinched. The
makeup dribbled into my eyes.
Most of the kids were so scared or
bewildered that they wouldn't leave
their mothers' skirts. The brave
ones who crawled into my lap were
tongue-tied.
So what's a Santa lo do?
Fortun ately , a relief Santa
extricated me from the terminal
boredom after two hours.
On the way to my dressing room,
though, an overactive youngster
g rabbed me lrom behind and
lapsing into my everyday person l
growled. "Hey, kid! Cool it!"
Oops, forgoL
Santa Claus a lway,s stays in
character. Even 10 the face of
adversity. Or attacks from the rear.
The children must have known I
was a fraud. They rarely gave me
the time of day So in heu of a lot of
Christmas encounters with the kids,
J watched the screens in a nearby
television department. .
There 1 was. stuffed into this rare·
engine-red Santa suit, perched on a
makeshift throne in the middJe of a
busy shopping center. Alone. People
passed. by . ~ontinuously. but few
said hello. Most just glanced my
way, then kept right on walking.
l did manage to corral a few
youngsters who, after considerable
pleading, swallowed their fear and
climbed aboard the old lap. Here's
how it went.
"Hey, hey. hey," I said "Santa's
very happy you came up to see your
old buddy. How are you? Are you
getting happy for Christmas?"'
No sounds escaped from the
transfixed c hild. His mother
s tepped in with moral support.
"Come on, Joey, that's Santa Claus.
Don't you want to s ay hello?"
Joey, a tough customer, stuck by
his guns. Silence.
Mom tried again. 'Tm right over
here (10 feet away). Don't be
frightened. That's Santa Claus. He
br.iags all the presents from the North Pole."
Joey spoke this lime ...:. with his
tears. And then with a low
"W aaaaaaaaaiiilll " that
crescendoed into semi-hysteria
before Mom plucked him up and
ran off.
Jennifer did a variation ao the
Joey theme.
I buttered her up first. "Hi,
Jennifer. Santa's very happy to see
how you've grown-since last year.
You're a very pretty 1irl. Would
you llke to whiaper in Santa's ear
what you'd like for Chriltmas?"
Jennifer didn't waste a word.
·•No," she said.
"Ho, ho, ho, bo ... well, you have
been a &ood girl tbis year and eaten.
all your peas and carrots?"
"No."
my elves in the North Pole?"
"Yes."
As Jennifer retreated, cane in
mouth, to the pleats of her mother's
skirt, l gave her one hist booming,
"Merrrry Christmas, Jennifer. See
you next year, OK?"
That did it. Jennifer fl ed.
The "candy cane cure'' tauebt me
a practical lesson -when all else
fails, give 'em the goods
And 1 did. As it turned out, none
of the remaining kids could resist
my candy cane lures.
About midday, just before my
relief arrived, the traffic picked up
and l tried a bolder ploy to win
converts.
Why not let them greet Santa with
an open-palm handslap. just like
the athletes use?
One boy went for 1t Most didn't.
Near the end. l became
combative.
"How would you lik'e to pull
Santa's beard or pinch my belly or
have me recite the names of my
reindeer backward?"
Most of my innovations fell on
deaf, terrified ears.
The children. as a group, acted
like I was going to give them a
tetanus shot.
"Would you lite Santa to .Sve JOU
a very special candy cane made~ ~---lliiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiii---~ ........ ----~~~~~-----
Gift Guide-An Advertising Supplement to the Dally Pilot, ThurSday, November 26, 1981-35
!H_E_STORE
FOR COOKS. W11!-.¥T1S 'iotiomari..Hlt•t•nsupplying
Cookwart' lO smous cooks IOI .. 1mos1 lrYc.-f' dt'c<1CM'<i It )'OU rt-IOOlunq '°'
~ lalt>S! t«hnologrc~l 1nnov"rron ~Ktt'CI t1j prol~SIO'lal chef\ 0t c1
Wl1pi(' kitchen tOO ple<M C~ cYld V!\11 U\ N I ()( O.Jf t'QUIPf!lt"l! •S OI
t~~Qual·ty
WILLIAMS-SONOMA
~ ~l'l Co.nt PW.t • JJJJ Bt•>JOI siri:t"I ~ (O\ld Mn.1 0. '12626• 714 lSI 1166
W<J FMNCISCO •COSTA MEY>• BEVElll.Y HIU.5 • Ol'll..IAS
MLO M.10 • MINNEN"OUS • Wl\SHINGTON, 0 C
Annual Christmas Walk
A day of traditional
festl•ity and fun wi II be
hosted by fourteen
Village Shops on
30th & 31st Streets.
Date: Nov. 29th
'n1ne: Moon to 6 p.m.
CANNERY
VILLAGE
HOLIDAY PARTY ENTERT AU~MENT
We 'll make your holiday party one to remember with our Rudolph
Reindeer. Elf. Sadie Claus. Santa, or our Caroling Quartet!
CALL 645-4726
Purrr ... f ect /or
Christma$
Choose from the
gorgeous selection of
robes in a rainbow of
colors just in time for
Christmas.
,.. . ,
l I
...
36 Gift Guide An Ae1vert1sing ~up 1ement to the ua1ly l-'1lot, I hursday, November'"· IYlll
-111 ..... --·-
For Holiday Giving:
LLADIO, --rHE COLLECTOR'S CHOICE,"
ILLUSTRATED "FLOWER ARRANGER," ONE OF
THE MANY BEAUTIFUL FIGURINES BY LLADRO
OF SPAIN. THE SPECIAL GIFT FOR THAT SPECIAL
PERSON THIS CHRISTMAS.
VICTORS
SOUTH COAST PLAZA 546-2700
You make the .difference.
\\'Ith the United Way.
3903 Metropoltt.n Drtwe, Suite 500
Orange,C.ltfoml8 92118
(714) 134-2252
• A Public Service of The Dally Piiot 11:1 & The Advertising Council
• ............. t .....
of Orange Countv '°""'
TUaka to,.,., it wcwb. For.n o1 ....
Tbis year Santa will be making personal telephone calls to
children and others in the Orange Coast area. Reservations
can be made by calling 720-0134. There is a $15 charge for the
Santa Call.
Santa gives children
a call this Christmas
This year Santa will be making
personal telephone calls to children
and others in the Orange Coast
area It's part of a new Chnstmas
service being offered by Santa Calls
Company of Newport Beach.
Parents can call the temporary
"North Pole Office·· m ·Newport
Beach and schedule a personal
phone call from Santa. The Jolly.Old
Elf hunself will call kids or adults
al a pre·arranged time starting
Dec 1 through Dec. 20.
Santa will be checking his "hsr ·
and asking the ··right" questions
about Christmas expectations.
Smee parents will have a chance lo
give Santa clues beforehand. the
con versation should be a magical
experience for kids
"Santa's taking time out Crom
Christmas prepara tions lo make
these personal calls as part of his
continuing effort to keep the Spant
of Christmas alive," said one Santa
Calls spokesman.
There is a SIS charge for the
Santa Call. Reservations can be
made by calling 720-0134. You 'll
hear Santa's recorded message and
receive a return call to set up a
lime for his live. personal message
Give a pet this Xmas
From Page %6
no chance for disappointment
because they didn't get the pet they
really wanted.
A PAW gift certificate includes
the cost of animal adoption,
usually between $20 and $50 which
includes vaccinations and either
spaying or neutenng costs.
lf the local animal she.Iler does
not offer PAW gift certificates, you
can make you own.
One way of giving a gift
certificate is by Wl'apping it up with
accessories such as a collar, dish,
and leash.
GIFT CERTIFICATE
F.OR A NEW FRIEND!
TO:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FROM:~~~~~~~~~~~~
Thls certificate Is redeemable lor a:
0 DOG O CAT
Gift Guide-An Advertising Supplement to the Daitv Pilot, Thursdav. November 2b, 1981-37
South Coast Repertory Presents
•.
STMAS
CAROL
(!{J By Charles Dickens
Adapted Eh Jeri~ Pall'h
Decembe r 9·27, 1981
'I 111·:-. ~JI lo:\ cnmg., ul 8 OU p m Sun E\ l'OlllJ? al 7 3(1 p m
Ma11m•t>!> Oct·emhe1 12. 13. l!l, 2tl. 23 &.. 27 al 2 30 pm
Detcmbl·1 24 at I no p m and I !Klµ m
BEGINNING A NEW FAMILY TRADITION!
La\'1sh <·oistumc:.. magn1hecn1 sellmit:o.
JOd a sto~ ror th<! ai.:ei.' S<>e 191.h nml111 \
London 1·ome t11 hie belorc ) our e~ t'S in 11111'
11111 ~tJi!<• produt·t1on of tht• I>1l"1 .. t·n ... ('la,.,11
\'ou II meet Tim Tim Hoh l'ratch1t Jml
of c ouri.t· old S<·roo)!l' hlffi1't'il' Retaptut t' the
'llint uf Jn Old 1-'a1>hmn1•d Chnstma., in th"
fO\ uu-. hohcht\ 1•\ cnl'
3 Weeks Only!
Order Your Tickets Today!
T1dce1 s SIU. $11 . $12
i [)1,1·ou11h for Ch1hlreo &. Group<, •
1'11 t•t•l t'll H'
John-Oa\'ld Keller
And Featunng The SC R Formly OJ Resident l\rtlsts'
CAL L AND CHARGE IT!
(714) 957.4033
.. ----------------------ORDER FORM····--------------------·
: Name Please indicate first choice lLl and second choice W of dates • :
I 1:;, eningl'I Matinees I
I Add ress \\'1:•soLD 0 \J.J., m 1 t•'ri SOLO Ol'T_ m 1 1 Su11SOL.Q.Q.Y'!1 pm 1 I
I -1 hus()LD «!U!.. p m I ...... SOLD out m I -Sun SOLQ..Qll.T.J p m I I
C·aty z,· p -Fri ·sc;t..o OUT m I -!:lun SOLD OV'.Io p m I .., Sat LSOLD oui:.. p. m I I I Sat lsijL D OUT m j Tue!SOLD our,) m I '-1 Sun 1sm..t>nll!:> p m I I ~lln sof.o ot:'r J pm -WedSOLD OUT ' Ill I ~Wed sot.DOUT11 p m I I T I b l\11•:-so1,o 0 !"I:) m I -\Sal DEC 26 18 p. m ' ~Thur DEC 2A II 00 p.m I I e ep one \\ t'<I ~m.o ul''f m , Sun UEC' 27 17 311 p m • ·Thur SOLD 0 tl1\() pm 1 I
~ S I h11rS(>1,D ot'T,, m 1 Sun OEC 27 12 :ltl p m 1 I Regular Tickets __ @
Children's Tickets ____ @ -S
DO NOT SENLJ CASH Total '"' S
I have enclosed a c heck payable to-
South Coast Repe rtory
Please charge my MasterCard I I Visa
Account II Exp. Date ___ _
I 1<'k!'ti. an· nonrclurul11hll· Jnd 01111 t'\C'h.ong1·ahlo-
Lu\\ l'nn;I Pi l't'll'" Pl'l lorman<·c Ike 1•mhc1 H al II nu p m
l'.111 llo' OllH l' 101 rll•tali<;
I
I
I
I
Ticket Pnces. Fnday and Saturday Evenmgs $12, $1 1 I
Other Performances. $1 1, $10 I
Children under I 2, $3 off each ticket. I
CLIP Tiii!> COUPON ANO MAIL WITll PAYMENT I
AND SELF ADDRfl~flD STAMPED ENVf.LOPR TO I ~ South Coast Repertory I
'1::"" P .0 . Box 2197 I
Authorized Signature Costa Mesa, CA 92626·1197 I
·-----------------------------------------------------------· A pubhr 'i(.'TV•l'l' sp()nsorsh1p of the Orange Coast Daily Pilot
)
~
' ~
t
I
~
(
\
~
)
l
~---~--------...---....................... .......
38-Glttc.>ulde -An Aaverllsmg Supplement to the 1.Ja1ly ..-1101, 1 hursoay. November ~o. IYlll
-
Oster offers gift
Idea that grows
Truly a thoughtful holiday gift,
the Oster Kitchen Cenle r brand food
preparation appliance 1s a gift that
grows.
t-'ive appliances in one -the
Osler Kitchen Center unit is a
mixer, doughmaker, blender, food
grinder and slicer/shredder/salad
maker. Now, this multipurpose
appliance 1s even more versatile
than ever with the addition of two
new optional accessories· the -PQWCL
puree ·n· ricer accessory and lhe
automatic JU1ce extractor
accessory •
Add those t o the list of
accessories al ready available
(citrus Juicer. can opener, ice
crusher, sausage maker kit, etc.)
and you can see why the .. Kitchen
Center" is a gift that grows
One or more family members
may want lo give the five·in one
Kitchen Center unit, while other
relatives or friends add option
accessories . Or, accessories may be
given later for other holidays or
special occasions
The KJtchen Center <1pphance 1s
designed with today's lifestyles in
mind, making food preparation
fa ster and easier than ever before.
Wherj! time and space are at a
premium, this appliance saves on
counter space and requires only one
electrical outlet
Oster offers a gift idea for your kitchen
that grows and grows and grows. F'ive
appliances in one -the Oster "Kitchen
Center" unit is a mixer, doughmaker,
bl e nd e r , food grinder and
slicer I shredder I salad maker.
Wi th a ll of th e o pti onal
accessories. the Oster Kitchen
Center appliance is a gift that
grows with the rec1p1enl, adapting
to the famity ·s changing needs.
1• VIDEO M~~VIES ! ®
~
Video Cassettes
For Sale or Rent
*This may be your last chance to
buy these titles "ever."
MOVIES
Dressed To Ki II
Big Bird Cage
Reg.
$10.00
45.00
Humanoids From The Deep45.00
Honey Suckle Rose 55.00
Love At First Bite 65.00
Meteor 60.00
The Swarm 60.00
Time After Time 60.00
NOW
549.95
529.95
529.95
539.95
549.95
544. 95
544. 95
544. 95
Video Cassette Rentals
1114-1 HAllOl ILYD. COSTA MISA, CA ~
VISA. · 646-8928 ~ . .
ffte Ultimate in Intimates
Exciting Christmas
Gift Giving Ideas
FEATURING:
• DESIGNER LINGERIE
• TEDDYS • CAMISOLES
• MERRY WIDOW CORSETS
• ADULT COSMETICS
• EXOTIC NOVEL TIES
• GARTERS• STOCKINGS
• AND OF COU ASE
THE SCANTIEST OF PANTIE S
r----------------, I I 5°/o Off M.L PUICHASES I
I WITH T .. S AD ~IL 12·25 I L----------------~
369 I. 17tll St .. C.M.
W1llportS~••
(Across from Ralph's)
548-6444
Gift Guide An Advertising Sopplement to the Daily P ilot, Thursday, November 26, 1981-39
C ROW ll HARDWARE
9SANVO
Lightweight stereo
cassette player
M44JO
: ~~~11~:ntrol $ 5 9 9 9 • Headphone 1ack
• Balance control
• Automatic stop
•LEO operalton 1nd1cat0<
.CUiSINA°lli
SALE
Ust
DLC IOE SI lO
DLC IE SllS
DLC 7E S260
SALE
Sf4.ff
$1 lf.ff
$114.ff
Cuisinart Dtlll0ft1trati0ft
Saturday. November 21tlt
POPCORN
PUMPER
by WEAR-EVER
Make gourmet popcorn using hot air
instead of hot oil. No oil means big,
llQht, greet tasting popcorn. s1 9 99
araun
C itromatic 2
~u -
• Easy to c..1ean
• Cord Storage
• Simple to Operate
• Maximum Juice ExtractJOn
s1999
!:!=.
9&ANVO
CLOCK RADIO
AM/FM DIGITAL
• 100% Solid Slot•
•Computer Type LEO Oisploy
• Ele<tronk Slffp Timer
• 3 ·Woy Snooz/Sleep Off I Alarm
Limited to supply on hand $ 2 9 9 9
Prices good thru 12/3/80 · -
OUIMET
KllFE SET
by Chicago Cutlery
GHS
Includes: Oak Block
Four Knives &
Sharpening Steel
$4.999
First and only full cy-
cl e machine that
kneads t he dough
and creates fresh
pasta right 1n your
home
~
Travel Smoke Alann
by First Alert
With bracket to hang
over 'doors Self-
conta1ned. battery
operated Use for
travel or install
permanently in your
home Comes with
travel case
Includes battetY
$168~8 -
CROWll H ARDWARE
'4it?r>
• WESTCLIFF 1024 IRVINE AVE .. NEWPORT BCH. 842-1133
Next to Sev-On Drugs
• HARBOR VIEW 1614 SAN MIGUEL DR., NEWPORT BCH . 844-8570
.across from Rogers Gardens
•CORONA DEL MAR 3107 E . .COAST KWY. 813-2800
· 6 blks. south of MacArthur
(
LARGE SELECTION
OF CHRISTMAS
UTE9AND
TREISTAND9
• -MOW IN. STOCK
•
•
-
NEW&USED
• MIYATA • COOK BROS.
• S-R . • SCHWINN
• CENTURION • PEUGEOT
•ROSS •S&S
• COLUMBIA • TORKER •
I • LAND CRUISERS
• G-T BMX • DIAMOND BAC
• JMC • MOUNTAIN BIKES
01 .. LJUlU ~~"7'il'~ .-.-i~_... . ~~·~_,,....._..
COMPAK AT 0 171.H THOUWJDS ALL ~:it'~~ BICYCLES,
PARTS, SE~WioN & ACCESSORIES
ANYWH~ 10%-30%-50 % : ,,:~~~ ' 20" z..RIM WMHU .~~i!A \, SAVE '10000 c,~:a."::='s'
READY TO llACI Fiii'.£ WHDL
BMX BIKE ~:I=
nca.'2M.• 5 19499 :~if:
=·