HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-11-27 - Orange Coast PilotDIMlf CUil YOUR HOMITDIN DAILY PAPIR
f HIUA¥ NUVf MHI H .'i l'•ttl OHANGl COU N TY 1 Al It Uh N IA 1~ CE NT S
• Wetlands' battle cnes sharpening
By DA VlO KUTZMANN
0( .. o.ilY Pl .........
When Peter Green looks out over Bolsa
Cbica's 1,200 acres or knee·deep marshlands
and sun·dried rtelds. he sees an invaluable,
irreplaceable natural resource that he feels Is
on the veree of extinction.
"You see," Green explains, "up until 1976,
90 percent of the we tlands in Southern
California had been developed.'· ·
But that was before the Coastal Act, the
leglslallve follow-up to th., voter·approved
coastal initiative of 1972, a save·the·coasl style
measure that ushered In the era of the
California Coastal Commission.
"I think Bolsa Chicu would have been
developed, it would have been dred&ed ... ii it
wasn't for the Coastal Act," says Green,
president of Amigos de Bolsa Chica, an
environmentalist organization.
California once boasted about 300,000 acres
of wetlands. Now there are onJy about 80,000
acres, according to state coastal planners.
And in Southern California, Bolsa Chica has
been tentallvely identified by state biologists as
the biggest of the surviving coastal wetlands,
that is, a habitat for fish and birds, including
several endangered species.
That gives the area a significance that
could potentially lead to conflict between county
officials, who support development proposals at
Bolsa Chica, and the state Coastal Commission.
which is responsible Cor protectmg the
remaining wetlands In California.
In coming months, key judgments will be
made about Bolsa Chica, including a rlnal
ruling from the state Department or Fish and
Game on whether the coastal area is indeed a
wetlands.
watching the outcome or these decisions
will be various community factions
environmentalists , developers, boating
enthusiasts, outdoor lovers and government
officials.
~ost interested of all will be the principal
..... ._ ... .,..~-.
landowner of Bolsa Chica, Signal Landmark
Properties. Inc., which wants develop·menl
in excess or $170 million featuring expe111lve
w a t e rfront homes. a boat marina and
commercial centers a ll in conjunction with
the preservation of a portion of the mars hf and.
According to company offi cials, their
proposed use of the area would benefit all life
forms birds, fish and man
The ma nna and waterways, they say,
would lend beauty to the area and a proposed
regional park with riding, biking and walking
trails would open up wildlife areas to llllerested
nature lovers .
The matter of financing that portion or the
project benefiting the public, however, is still
unresolved Cost estimates place the price tag
for park~ a manna and water channels at
about $179 million, well above previous
estimates.
Tentative pl ans call for some sort of joint
rinancmg venture between the private and
public sectors.
Nevertheless. environmentalists like Peter
Green argue that the area one of Orange
County's most prized undeveloped coastal
parcels 1s a public resource which should be
s pared from development activity altogether.
Coastal Comm1ss1on officials look upon
Bolsa Chica as having .. t he largest potential for
well ands restoration 1n the state of California,"
according to Tom Tobin of the commission
staff in San f'ranc1sco. a position that does not
preclude some form of development there.
Much of Bol sa Ch1ca's future depends on
whether the Department or Fish and Game
officially classifies the area as a severely
degraded wetlands. The authority to make this
determination. in consultation with other
agencies, 1s given in the Coastal Act. according
to Ron llein of the Department of Fish and
Game
! Because of previous actions that led to
<See UPCOMING, Page A4)
Pelicans sun themselves during a break from fUhing chores at Bolaa Chica marsh along coast near Huntington Beach.
This 1s the
secorld article
1n four
e.ram1n1ng
effects o/
Ca llforn1a ·s
coas t al
preservatwn
laws on the 42
mtles of
Orange County
coas t lane
S aturday s
story will deal
with the Irvine
Coast between
l..oguna 8eGch
and Newport
Beach
Change on s tance
denie d b y Heather
Copter drops, 3 rescued
By FREDERICK SCHOE MEHL
Of~ o.lly PlleC SYff
Newport Beach Mayor Jackie
Heather is denying assertions by
Orange County Supervisor
Thoma& Riley that s he altered
he r s tand on noise-limiting
takeoff procedures scheduled to
be implemented at John Wayne
Airport.
In a Nov. 19 letter to Mrs.
Heather, Riley complained that
the mayor bad made a
"dramatic revers al" on tbe
acceptability of s uch
procedures.
Riley in the letter reminded
Mrs Heather that during airport
noise hearings conducted in
February, she criticized Orange
County government for not
actively s eeking Federal
Aviation Admini s tration
approval for changes that would
permit pilots of commercial jet
aircraft to in s titute
noise·limiting power cutbacks
during takeoffs.
The supervisor said Mrs.
Heather now appears opposed to
i mplementation of s uc h
procedures.
"Jackie. we have all worked
long and hard on this issue of
taming the airport ahd as I
mentioned, I will respect your
decision if you are sincere in
your belief s, but a n
inconsistency from one piece of
the puzzle to the next, lo serve
s hort·term goals , cannot
possibly be beneficial to any
interested party." Riley said in
the letter.
Both Mrs. Heather and Robert
Burnham, acting city attorney,
sald the mayor had not altered
her stance.
Mrs. Heather said she has new
concerns about the cutbacks u
a result of recent evaluations of
takeoff procedures conducted at
the airport by the FAA,.
The FAA tested thrust
reductions al altitudes of 700 and
1,000 feet and found negligible
13 ~xecuted
BElRUT, Lebanon <AP> -
Thirteen leftist guerrillas
flghtlng Ayatollah Rubollab.
Khomeini's Moslem reeime
were executed by tiring squads,
Irani~ officials said Thursday.
•
Coast Guard cutter iaves passengers. north of Catalina
noise differences . Following
release of the study results,
Donald Segner, FAA associate
administrator, said new takeoff
procedures would be
implemented whereby power
cutbacks couJd be made at an
altitude between 400 and 700
feet. Segner, however, did not
specify a specifi c altitude.
Pilots must now bring their
aircraft to 1,000 feel above the
ground before cutting back on
power lo reduce noise.
Mrs. Heather and Burnham,
in separate interviews, said the
FAA appears ready to permit
power cutbacks at altitudes less
than the 700 feet evaluated
during the six-week study at the
airport.
Both said studies should be
conducted on whatever standard
the FAA decides to implement.
"If they're assuming a big
<noise) difference between 500
and 700 feel, why not test it?"
asked Burnham.
Mrs . Heather said safety is
her paramount concern. She
said no change in the takeoff
<See AIRPORT, Page AZ>
BROKEN BONE Prime
Minister Menachem Begin,
68 . of Israel was admitted to
J e rus alem hospital with
broken thigh bone suffered
in fall at his home.
Stock tables
Quotations of issues traded
today on the New York Stock
Exchange will be published in
Saturday's Daily Pilot.
AVALON <AP) -Three
people escaped injury when a
helicopter made an emergency
landing Thursday on the Pacific
Ocean about seven miles off
Catalina Island.
Two passengers and the pilot
-a n employee of Helilrans -
floated in t he water while
hanging on the com m ercial
helicopter's balloon-like
fl otation device . The
passengers were rescued by a
Coast Guard cutter about 20
minutes after the helicopter
went down north of Avalon. said
Coast Guard Petty Officer Pat
Gallagher.
The pilot stayed with the
aircraft until it could be towed lo
Avalon.
"Our paramedic checked
them (the passengers) and they
were wet, but in Cine condition,"
Gallagher said.
Jason Max Adams, 31, and
David Beers, 53, both or Studio
City, were on their way lo
Catalina to visit relatives for
Tha nk sgiving when the
helicopter lost power.
"This alarm went off, and we
began to descend.'' Adams told
Rain may last through the day
Highs from Gulf of Alaska storm t o be only in 60s J The rain that began falling
along the Orange Coast on
Thursday night likely will
continue through most of today
and, possibly, part or Saturday.
The rainfall figured 8$ a
factor in several minor traffic
accidents throughout the county
as travelers headed for home
following Thanksgivine
celebration s . No serious
accidents were reported by local
police agencies.
The National Weather Service
said there is a 70 percent chance
rain will continue today,
decreasing to 50 percent tonight
and early Saturday.
Temperatures wUI reach SS to
63 today and drop to 45 to 50
tonight , a ccordi ng to the
forecast.
Meanwhile, as much as 1 ~
feet of snow fell in the Sierra
Nevada and more was op the
way . wilh clear weekend
weather for skiers eager to take After an afternoon break in
advantage of the powder. Thursday's steady s nowfall,
O ff-and-on showers also
spread as far south as San Diego
as a Pacific storm moved out of
the Gulf of Al aska along the
California coast.
* * * Two water spouts
sighte d in Laguna
At least ~wo lar1e water
spout.a were spotted Tbunda,y
off Laguna Beach, with
observers report.in' that one bad
touched down in the ocean.
Neither apparently touched
land, alt.bough one was said to
have hovered hlgh above
Laguna Beach.
No damaae was reported.
.u
occasionally heavy snow was
expected overnight in the Sierra.
Winter storm warnings were
posted for the Sierra and Lake
Tahoe Basin throueh today,,with
a travel advtaory for haza.rdou$
driving condition& in the Mount
Shasta-Siskiyou area.
·'The late weekend look.a just
great," said John Plankinton, a
forecaster at the National
Weather Service. "The skiers
should be able to get out and
enjoy all that new snow.·•
Al Squaw Valley USA, the
8,200-foot elevation 1ot 14 inches
to 18 inches of snow by dusk
Thursday, and It was snoWln&
hard al ni&htfall.
Boreal, at the top of Donner
Summit. bad lS inches of anow,
while Sugar Bowl had 6 lncbet .
The Associated Press in a
telephone interview. "We were
there about 15·20 minutes when
a helicopter and a Coast Guard
culler arrived. We jumped into a
raft and the Coast Guard puJled
us on board."
He said they got to Avalon in
time to eat some of the dinner
they had planned
·•1t was rushed. We only had
about JO minutes." he said.
He and Beers were planning to
return to the mainland aboard
the final Helitrans night out of
Avalon, he said.
Blac klist ing
r a p denied
a t O nofre
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An
administrative law judge has
denied blacklisting allegations
by an electrician refused a job
at the San Onofre nuclear power
plant after he filed eight safety
violation complaints.
But Michael Flanagan, who
quit his job at Bechtel Power
Corp. in April 1980 after
becoming upset with San Onofre ·
training procedures, said he
WO\lld file a similar complaint in
federal court.
"I need the job to earn a
living," he said.
"Call ll what you will -
discrimination, blacklisting,
whatever -I 've not been
allowed to work at my home
local's largest job s ite,"
Flanagan said.
The ruling by administrative
law judge R.S. Heyer concluded
that Bechtel and Southern
California Edison, majority
owner of San Onofre, were
innocent or charges in the
complaint and that Flanagan
was not hired "for legitimate
business reasons."
176 kille d
MANILA, Pbillpplnes (AP> -
Strong winds and waves brou1ht
on by Typhoon Irma killed at
least 178 people on the main
island of Lu1on, tbe official
Philippine News A1ency
reported Thursday.
·' l 'm pretty nervous about
going back. but I figure you get
thrown off by a horse and you
get back on again. This kind of
thing probably doesn't happen
very often," Adams said.
The re was no apparent
damage to t))e Bell Longraneer
aircraft, sajd a spokesman for
H e l1trans , w h ich flies
passengers between Los Angeles
Harbor and Catalina for $3o
each way.
Helrtraas reported to the
Coast Guard that one or its craft
was having engine failure. A
Coast Guard vessel was
dispatched from Long Beach, ·
and a helicopter from Los
Angeles International Airport
was over the scene five minutes
later, Gallagher said.
Th e downed pilot, C huck
Rogers. 38, of Redondo Beach,
stayed with the helicopter unUJ a
Coast Guard towboat arrived lo
bring the craft to Avalon.
Investigators for the National
Transportation Safety Board,
the F e deral Aviation
Admtnistratlon and Helitrans
were m Avalon to investigate the
cause of the engine failure, said
Helitrans spokesman Craig
Weghorst.
ORANGE COAST WEATHER
Rain likely to continue
today along the coast with
a high near 60 and an
overnight low in the upper
40s. Clearing Saturday.
·1NSIDE TODAY
The end o/ a romanUc
evening ojtm enda in a hot
tub tM'e da111. See P• BS.
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Orange Oo•t DAILY PILOT/Friday. Nowmb« 'D, 1Q81 -Thanksgiving varied
AmeTWan& eat heamly, J)lay hard, give thanks
By TIM Aaeecla ... Preu
Salton playtd rootbaU at the
South Pole, pflioner1 and poor
people tot • taste or turkey. and
M•cy'1 liant balloons uabe~
1\ta C1au1 lnto Manhattan
'""'ht oa actMd\lJe. ··"' '"~Americans, entreated by "~ealdent Rea1ao to "lend a
helpln1 hand ," celebrated
I\ l'bank1tlvln• wltb a cornucopia
11 " food, a bit of fun and a bunt
,. of charity.
'<fl "There were some who scorned
b11 ' •
tbe traditions. Ve1etarlan11
publlct.Md meaUee1 dlnnen in
Hvtral cltl•. reclUna Georae
Bern ard Shaw's dictum, "I don't
eat anythif\IC with eyes."
And there were some whol
holiday wu 1po1led by reallUea
of the naUon'1 troubled
economy.
A1 about 1,000 blue-collar
workers at a General Moton
plant in Linden, N.J ., were
prep1trin1 to 10 home
W ednetday nl&bt, tbey were told
not lo come back.
;i,et it be, says town
:t;iverpool finally to honor Beatles
.){Ue LIVERPOOL, England CAP>
al. The Beatles put their
b;qmetown of Liverpool on the
0~ap, so to speak, and the city is
,i1it.f)Out to return the favor.
h ti.t\ housing d evelopment
0~nlng today will have four
b!IO.&in streets named John
l ~ennon Drive, Paul McCartney n~jly. George Harrison Close and
Ri,ngo Starr Drive.
~ttJ The tribute comes 11 years
'< 11fter the group split up and
•,Jl@arly a year after ex-Bealle
;, ~phn Lennon was fatally shot in
'1 ;'(ew Vorll.
'~~'The Uverpool City Council has
n~en reluctant to commemorate
1\f\e home-grown singing group,
which revolutionized pop music
1.,¥> the 1980s.
· , But in June, foll owing
111fJ;essure from local Beatles'
ans, the council approved
nd.laming the streets after the
n ioursome, first discovered
IJf\•\
playing their music in the
Cavern Club underneath a
Victorian warehouse on 10
Mathew St.
The oew housing development,
Kensington Fields, is about
three mlles 'from Mathew Street
and will consist or 120 dwellings
selling for $30,000 to $5.2,000.
The builders, Wimpey and
Co .. said they wanted to honor
the Beatles.
"They put Liverpool on the
map. Wherever you go, when
you mention the Beatles you
think of Liverpool," said Pat
Leacock, co mpany legal
secretary.
The three remaining Beatles
live in Britain. Paul, 39, has a
farm in Scotland, house in
London llftd collage In Sussex;
Oeor1e, 38, has a mansion in
Oxfordshire, and Ringo, 41, lives
in Berkshire.
~)late on All Savers
" ~lo drop 2 percent
'l:i '
hnr W ASHING T 0 N C A P > -
·Savers planning to buy a
<tax -e xempt All Savers
'<ere r t i f i c at e c a n e a r n a
n significantly higher interest rate
by doing so today or Saturday
1Hnslead of waiting until next
Cl )Neek.
\l; ..-On Sunday, the interest rate
h"Atill fllll more than two points to
,.j.,,34 percent, government
officials said. The rate for the
real of lhls week la 10.77 percent.
At the lower rate laking effect
next week a saver would have to
est lll,900 for one year to
rn the maxi mum $1 ,000
wed tn tax-free interest for a
gle person. Married couples
ng joint lax returns would
ve to invest $23,981 to earn the
ximum tax-free amount or
,000 they are allowed.
y comparison, according to
mpulations by New York's
iban.ll, a single person buying
certificate at th e current
eenre s ists
'ape atte mpt,
·abs man
51-year -old man was
bbed in the chest in Laguna
guel on Thursday after a girl
ieved to 'have been the victim
a rape attempt wrested a
ife from her alleged attacker,
Orange County Sheriff's
artment said.
he man, William Wayne
er, ol San Juan Capistrano,
s later arrested by deputies
ponding to the incident in a
rklng lot behind a commercial
ter.
A spokesman sald
estiptors were told by the
I, 17, that she encountered a
n near Camel Point in South
gumt about 4 p.m. who said he
s too intoxicated lo drive and
ed that she lake him to the
mercial center in the 27300
k of Camino Capistrano.
... rriving at the center, lbe
an pulled a knife and
tempted to rape her, the
ket•an said. The girl took
d ol tM knife and stabbed the
n, he said.
eer, initially treated at
ssion Community Hospital,
a transported by sheriff's
puties to the UC Irvine
ical Cent.er in Orange. The
rl was not injured, the
keaman said.
OftANGlCOAST Diiiy Pilat
interest rate would have to
invest $'9,285 to earn $1 ,000 in
interest. For married people the
current rate requires an
investment of $18,570 to earn the
maximum tax-free interest.
The new rate will be in effect
for certificates issued for about
the next month, until another
rate is announced after the
government's next auction of
one -year Treasury bills. The
rate on the certificates is based
on the sales of the T·bills.
The All Savers interest ra e
paid by financial institutions
was limited by Congress to 70
percent of the average annual
investment yield on the one-year
bills. That yield, as determined
1n Wednesday's auction, was
11.92 percent, down from 15.39
percent last month.
The highest rate on the All
Savers certHicate was 12.61
percent, the rate in effect when
the certificates were put on sale
Oct. l.
The decline is the fourth in a
row since the certificates were
introduced Oct. 1, from the
in itial 12.61 percent in the first
thrff days they were available
to 12.14 percent for the rest or
October and 10.77 percent in
November.
Consequently, an investor
·W o u I d b a v e t o b a n k a n
increasingly higher amount, for
ooe year. to qualify for the
maximum tax-free interest.
The certificates are available
until Dec 31 , 1982, unless
Congress decides to extend the
program.
Phone office
closin g in SC
Pacific Telephone Co. oHicials
have announced that the
company's San Clemente office
at 140 Ave. Del Mar will close
Monday.
An orrice spokesman said
several small offi ces throughout
the state are being closed
because they are no longer cost
effective.
After Nov. 30, Pacific
Telephone customers may pay
their bills at Ace Hardware, 106
Ave. Del Mar between 8:30 a.m.
and 5:30 p.lh. weekdays.
Bills may also be paid at the
hardware store between 10 a.m.
and 3 p.m . on Sundays. The
depository box at the old office
will be retained, the spokesman
said.
•
"It'• Just heartbreakin1 to 1et
laid off at this Ume of/ear, and
J Ju1l can't understan how the
plant can do that.'' said Mrs.
Ttrry Thyfault of Jersey City.
one of the workert.
Reacan. whoee federal bud&et
cuts have affected many social
welfare pro1ram1, aald ln
proclaiminC the holiday that
''Thanks1lvln1 has become ·a
day when Americana extend a
helpine hand to the leas
fortunate. Long before there was
a aovemment welfare procram,
thl1 splrlt of voluntary livinl
was ingrained in the American
character."
Reaaan and his family held a
traditional Thanksgiving dinner
at their mountaintop ranch
overlooking the Pacific Ocean at
Santa Barbara . The menu
included turkey, cornbread
dressing. giblet gravy, strine
beans, sweet potatoes with
marshmallows, fresh cranberry
mold, olives, carrots and celery
strips, mincemeat pie with
brandy sauce and persimmon
pudding with brandy sauce.
Big parades drew hundreds of
thousands or spectators in cities
such as New York, Philadelphia
and Chicago. New York 's
M acy's parade, which
traditionally kicks off the
Christmas shopping season,
featured a 104 -foot ·long
Superman balloon and a
SO-foot-tall Snoopy balloons.
Football grudge games were
waged on onJy a few college
campuses across the country.
And on a field of Ice at the South
Pole, the first annuaJ Penguin
Bowl football game pilled Navy
personnel against civil research
workers.
The game, preceded by a
frosty parade, was played at
Williams Field, about eight
miles from the McMurdo Naval
Air Station. The Navy Penguins
went against the civilian Skuas
from the U .S . Antarctic
Research Program, who named
their team after the native
gull-like birds.
On the North American
continent, many heeded the call
to help the unfortunate.
About 1,000 elderly residents
of public housing developments
in Chicago w e r e offered
seven-course dinners cooked by
master chefs at the Gaslight
Club in the Palmer House as
guests of producer John Cutts,
who was in town fllming a TV
series.
In the South Gate s uburb of
Los Angeles, BllJ Panagakos, a
Greek immigrant, offereCI Cree
turkey to senior citizens and
icapped people who came
into his restaurant between 11
am and 3 p.m.
Alex Fuller. a 7-year-old brain
cancer victim, spent the day on
the beach at Panama City, Fla.,
thanks to the generosity of the
people of Nashville, Tenn., who
raised $35.000 to help the boy
and his famiJy.
And at the world's largest
walled prison, about 70 miles
west of Detroit, the 5,600
inmates were served turkey
drum s ticks . candied sweet
potatoes. dressing with gravy,
cranberry sauce. cote slaw and
a c hoice of pumpkin. pecan.
cherry or peach pies
"They've served chicken in
the past, but I 'm kinda
old-fashioned and traditional,"
said Don Sharp. food direct.or at
the Southern Michigan Prisoo at
Jackson, Mich.
From PageA1
AIRPORT . • •
procedures utmzed by the five
commerical air carriers should
be permitted until the specific
proposed change is thoroughly
evaluated both in terms or
safety and its noise-reducing
effect.
The FAA 's Segner said new
s tandards would be
implemented by the end or the
year. He said the standard
selected would reduce noise by
between six and 10 decibels. A 10
decibel reduction, he said. would
have the effect of cutting in half
the noise perceived by a person
on the ground.
Mrs. Heather and Burnham
questioned whether such noise
reductions actually could be
realiied. Burnham said the FAA
presented no data to support
Segner's prediction.
Woman b e ars ,
sex tuplets
HILDESHEIM, West
Germany CAP> -A 26-year-old
West German woman gave birth
to sextuplets Thursday -three
tlrls and three boys -but one of
the baby boys died shortly after
birth, according to doctors.
Doctors at St. Bernhard's
Ho1pltal laid Ellsabet.b Notaom
the wife ol a local butcher, i.Dd
the surviving five babies '"1'e
dolnt well.
But t.bey said they could not
1ive a long·term pro1noal1 for
the Infants, boro two months
premature.
'
.AEAOANVI LLE Workers put up tent
.,, ..........
shelter for some of city's homeless and to
protest s ocial c utbacks of R eagan
administration. Tents may be up for the
winter.
Thursday in Lafayette Park across from
White House as part of a "Reagan ville."
Washington Community for Creative
Non-violence organized project to provide
Pardon of Nixon supported
Reagan says F ord move 'step th at h a~ to be taken '
SANTA BARBARA <AP> -
Pardoning Richard Nixon was a
"step that had to be taken,"
says President Reagan, and he
would have done so if he had
succeeded Nixon
Reagan, in an ABC television
mterview broadcast Thursday,
said that he approved of the
pardon Gerald Ford granted
when he became president after
Nixon resigned because of the
Watergate scandal
"I think that it was the main
step that had to be taken lo
bringing this country back
together again and ending the
bitterness that was dividing us,"
Reagan said In the interview
with Barbara Walters.
On oth e r topic s in the
interview, Reagan:
Said he worries since the
attempt on his lire that his
public appearances could
endanger other people around
him.
Reiterated that he still
s upports David Stockman
despite the budget director's
critical re marks about
Reaganomics in an interview in
The Atlantic Monthly
Said that possibly his
toughest decision as president
was his veto Monday bf a
stop-gap s pending bill that he
said exceeded h is budget
targets.
Speaking of the assassination
attempt, Reagan s aid, "The reaJ
concern that I have is the
knowledge now that I could be a
threat lo others because of what
happened to others when this
started."
In the same interview, first
lady Nancy Reagan said she's
thankful today for "my family,
my husband, my children and
obviously that my husband 's
still around "
Reagan said he is completely
recovered from the gunshot
wound s uffered in March 30
assassination attempt in which
White House press secretary
James S. Brady, a policeman
and a Secret Service agent also
were s hot. Brady was the most
seriously wounded, with a bullet
in the brain, and was released
from the hospital this week.
The R eaga n s h el d a
traditional family Thanksgiving
dinner at their mountaintop
ranch overlooking the Pacific
Ocean.
The guests included Reagan's
brother, Neil "Moon" Reagan
a nd hi s wife, Bess: the
president's daughter Maureen
and her husband, Dennis ReveU;
and the Reagans' youngest
daughter, Patti Davis. Reagan's
sons. Michael and Ron, said they
were unable to attend
Nativity scene challenged
ACLU chapter in South Dakota protests governor's plan
PIERRE, S.D. CAPJ Gov
Bill Janklow wants to go ahead
with plans to display a Nativity
scel)e in the state Capitol
rotunda despite threats of a
lawsuit from the American Civil
Liberties Union.
The scene depicting the birth
or Jesus is more of a seasonal
decoration than a religious
sym bot of Christianity. the
governor said.
"I think the Nativity scene is
part of the American scene,"
Janklow said. "To some people
1l's like Barbie dolls "
But Evelyn Griesse of Sioux
Falls, head of the state ACLU
chapter, said the organization
"would probably take legal
action."
"It would be hard to turn our
backs on s uch an obvious
violation of the First
Amendment separation of
church and state," said ACLU
lawyer Stephen Pevar
Warm Up
To Our
25% Off
Coat Sale
Eve ry
Coat in
Stock!
die
'
Janklow said Wednesday,
"I'm not thinking about the legal
grounds.
"What I'm trying to capture is
the spirit of peace on earth, good
will toward men, and that's not
religious."
Dollar, g old
t r a ding lig ht
LONDON CAP> -The US.
dollar was mixed in European
Cinanc1al centers Thursday, with
trading s ubdued by the
American Thanksgiving Day
holiday. Trading in gold bullion
was quiet.
Few traders were willing to
take a firm position in advance
of the end of the month.
Gold bullion lost $1 an ounce in
Zurich, declining from $410.50 a
troy ounce Wednesday, while in
London it dropped to $409.625.
But Pevar said , "I don't think
there's anybody who would say
it's not a religious symbol."
JankJow, who issued a public
request Nov. 16 for South
Oakolans to donate a Nativity
scene, said be has since received
several offers.
JankJow, a Lutheran, also said
putting up a Nativity scene in
the rotunda for the first lime in
m e m ory would not be an
anti-Jewish gesture.
Pointong out that his late
father was Jewish, Janklow
said, .. Would I do anything lo
affront the memory of my father
or my relatives?"
He added. "I got requests
from some people of the Jewish
faith to include something
involving their own Hanukkah
season and I told them ir they
told me what they're interested
in, we wouJd try to obtain It and
put it in the Capitol."
I
Holiday special
for family
LOS ANGELES <APJ -
Michael and Kathy Accard.I t.b1a
week acknowledaed their
s pecial Thankagivln1 blessing -
victory In a court rllht over
can cer treatment for their
2·year-old daughter Amanda -
but after months of inte nse
publlclty, preferred to celebrate
Ln a private ramily reunion.
The Glendale couple are
spending t h e h oliday w ith
relatives near Las Vegas. They
declined requests for interviews
and wouldn't be specific about
lhelr location or their plans, but
expressed a "ver y deep
gratitude" through family
spokeswoman Lorna Bentley.
"T h is i s a s pecial
Thanksgiving for us." Accardi
said ln a statement Ms . Bentley
released, "to be free, to be
together with our family in th.is
country and to know that we
Americans continue to have the
very rights and dignity afforded
us by the founding fathers of this
country."
"We have been very touched
and would like to wish everyone
a very s pecial Thanks giving."
Anaeles Co unty Juvenile
authorities bad threatened t.o ,
juil Accardi, 26, and remove the
blonde you ngst er from her
parents' custody.
A ccardl took his daughter
from protective custody ln Los
Angeles Children's Hospital on
July 16 after objecting to what
he called "e xpe r i m e ntal "
cancer treatments begun
without his con.sent.
The family fled to a cancer
clinic in Tijuana, Mexico, where
Amanda 's convention al
treatment was supplemented
with Laetrile the
controversial subst ance made
from apricot pits -which is
banned in the U.S. After three
weeks, the girl's disease was
judged in remission.
The parents and Juvenile
Court Judge Richard Byrne
finally agreed on three years'
treatment f or Amanda ,
combining radiation. bone
marrow drug Lnjeclions, weekJy
blood tes t s and painful
tri-monthly spinal taps. Byrne
t hen dism issed legal action
against the couple.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, November27, 1981
Staff
'bugs' .o
itself ·:
,/ HARTlo'ORD (AP> -WUUlin
Hamilton lhoutibt he waa 1ettlA1 a tupe of the public hearlng on a
complaint he Wed to the 1Lat.e
Freedo m of Informatton
Commission. • •
What he actually got. waa' a
tnpe recording o f an
orf -th e -record otrlc:e
con versation about the case by
commission e mployees. And
Hamilton didn't like what lae
heard. -.
Hamilton. of Milford, ~d
three othe r people file~ a
complaint again11t the town
Board of Education. contend.Ql1
it failed to give sufficient nott\:e
on its vote to consider sex
education classes.
The commission h eld a
hearing on the case Nov. 16 aftd
offered Hamilton a recording M>
he could prepare a brief. But
thanks to a mistake on the part
or the recorder or the per90n
running it, the tape he received
conta in ed 21f2 hour s o f
conver sation in which the staff
made "off-the-cuff" remarks. '
On Sept. 29. the Accardis
ended an 11-week court batUe
over Amanda's treatment for
leuke mia during which Los
"Amanda's doing very well,"
Ms . Bentley said Wednesday.
"She's a bundle of energy. She
can't stop talking about Mickey
Mouse and turkeys it's been
all one or the other lately."
BAYONET TRAI NING Inf anlry trainees
from the 1st Infantry Training Brigade
jabbed and parried their way this week
Al'W .......
through the Army's first new bayonet toursl'
since it was dropped in the earl:-• 197ff!.
Ham1l~on ~adn 't l,hought the
comm1ss1on was very
sympathetic in the first pla~.
The tape. whic h includ ed a
re m ark by an FO i I awyer
saying at was "unfortunate" th•t
Hamilton would probably Mn
the case, didn't improve his
opinion Mrs. Lois Cunningham dies M esanwins
T anglewood
music award
Th e fam i l y ha s been
alternating between a loaned
b e ach house in Tajuana ,
relatives· homes in Los Angeles
and t heir r e ntal home in
Glendale, where they plan to
re turn permanently Monday.
she said.
Laguna Beach businesswoman operated shop 40 years
··1 was a bit surprised lhat
t h ey could be so s tupid .··
Hamilton s aid in a telephope
interview.
Heidi M. Ruby, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs . John Ruby of
Costa Mes a. was awa rded lhe
C.D. Jackson Master Award at
Tanglewood. the Berkshire
Music Center in Lenox, Mass.
The annual award was one of
num erous awards given for
o uts t a nd ing m e rit and
performance at Tanglewood.
M 1ss Ruby. 19. is a third year
student at the Curtis Institute or
Music in Philadelphia. where
she studies flute.
The award was named for
C D Jackson. who was a trustee
o f the Bosto n Sy mpho n y
Orches tra . He w as v ice
president of Life magazine as
well as senior vice president or
Time lncorporated al the tame of
his death m 1964
Accardi has not worked since
July. but his job at a Glendale
furniture company remains
open and he has several other
offers.
"Michael's anxious to gel
back to work so they can start
living a normal life. They owe a
lot or money," Ms. Bentley said.
"There's a fair possibility he'll
go back to his old job."
The couple have a $10,000 cbe<:k
for movie rights to Amanda's
s tory from a Ho ll y wood
co mpan y , Land s burg
Productions. but she said they
haven't cashed at
"Michael signed a piece of
paper in a high pressure
situation. and there are legal
questions now." s aid Ms
Bentley.
Lo i s 011t e r bridge
Cunnin~ham. who operated a women s apparel shop in the
Hotel Laguna for more than four
decades. died this week in
Honolulu.
She was returning from a
thrt!e-week trip to China walh
her hu sb and George
Cunningham whe n s he was
hos pitalized at Queens Medical
Center
He r 40.year career as a
Laguna Beach businesswoman
began m 1941 when she visited
the Art Colony with a friend.
She noticed a vacant shop in
th e Hot e l L ag una , and .
according to acquaintances.
peeked through a window and
said. "TIUs is my shop."
Because s he did not have a lot
or money. the enterprising
woman partitioned the shop and
~\' ,./'Chance of showers
........................... T"'.'.11
Coastal
l'OINT CONCEPTION TO THE
MEXICAN BOROER OUT 60 MILES
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Temperatures
·MATIC>tt
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642•6086
I
laved and sewed in the baC'k.
selling ht:r dresses in the front.
There was suc h a demand for
her dresses that s he opened a
factory m Santa Ana. eventually
hiring 30 seamstresses to design
a nd produce dresses and
ltngerie for he1 Laguna shop.
It was at this lime that she
marrie d photographer P~ul
Outerbridge and changed the
name or her shop to Lois-Pa ul.
She ran the factory and shop
and her husband handled the
sales. selling her dresses to such
accounts as Neiman-Marcus .
Bullock's Wilshire and other top
stores throughout the nation.
After a df'cade. the couple
decided to return to selling
women's apparel out of the
Laguna Beach shop. which as
stil l i n ope r a tion Paul
Outerbndge du~d about 20 years
ago.
S h e marri e d George
Cunningham about two years
ago. During her years in Laguna
Beach, Mrs. Cunnmgham was a
m ember of the Laguna Moulton
Playhouse Firi.t Nighters. the
Laguna Opera League ,
Philharmonic Society of Laguna
Beac h, the Lagu na Beach
Mu seum or Art , a nd th e
Co mmun ity Pres byterian
Church or Laguna Beach choir .
Besides her hus band, the
Laguna Beach woman leaves a
son. Burt Weir of Costa Mesa. a
grandson, Bud Weir or Laguna
Beach ; a grandda ug hter Denise
Weir of Lake Havasu . Ariz .. and
three great-grandchildren
Funeral services for Mri.
Cunningham are being arranged
by the family.
Hamilton said his conclusion
wa s ba s ed . i n part , on
conve rs ation in which one
secr etary schools another o n
how to run the recorder.
Commission C hairwoman
Judith L a h ey blamed ijie
"bugging" on poor equipm~nt
and an overworked staff. "It
has n 't happened before," she
said. "The tape machine dicfil't
link up."
Hamilton was so irked that he
called The Associated Press and
s hared the tape with Gov.
William O 'Neill 's office .
Gubernatorial coun sel Jay
Jackson asked for an
explanation Crom Ms Lahey
The commission. c harged with
insuring public access to
governme nt information. was to
hea r parts or the tape and
discuss the incident at a meeting
Wednesday, Ms . Lahey said.
Twa1 the nll!ht before Christmas and allthrl)uQh.fbe stores ...
The shoppers were scurrying and looking tor more ...
veta's pink windows were warm with a g1ow
And Halliday's suit racks were running quite low.
Halrhandler's clients were holiday bnghl With facials and haircuts that Ill up the night.
Jean Dahl was 1usl ready to lock all the doors
When in walked a qent she'd not seen betore.
A JOii y old elf with a halt-empty sack
And a trust rated took that took her aback.
'I've searched the world over ... I've walked and I ve run
And 1 ·ve tound all my gilts ... cept a tew spec1a1 ones.
"I give gifts to millions; my tamtly's iust lour,
And those must be special ... they mean SO much more
I ve heard about Westclitf, its warmth ano its cheer And I've tlnally decided, those Q1tts must be here. •
Together they walked through the Plaza that night
Amidst costumed carolers ano trees twinkling 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 cheese smooth as cream.
Nancy Dunn Antiques had fine gilts galore,
While Paoer Unlimited had cards to explore.
Gilts tor the Claus k1os were easy to t1no,
With Mes Amies teenwear that's one-of-a-kind
And of course Humpty Dumpty tor babies ano tots,
And Xavier's Florist tor forget-me-nots.
His best boot was on when he left Westctlff Shoes And StorekHper fashions made big North Pote news . Crown Hardware had gifts tor his house ano his sle1gn ...
Doc EICS.r had glasses to help see his way. One stop at Dick Vernon's for sportswear so chic And Sav·Ot'I prescriptions to keep his physique.
~estctift Corners made (.taus meals a gourmet s ae11ght . The Cleaners pressed rea suits tor one special n1Qht.
Quick as a wink all his shopping was done ...
E; very gift tor his tamlly -he m1ssea not a one.
Arms p1leo high with presents he watkeo to his sleigh,
Pausinq a moment, and turn11lQ away ...
"There's something I'm m1ss1ng; 1 can·t seem to place ...
And as he thought, slowly a smile crossed his tace.
"A qutek stop at Market Basket, tinally t m through, f;lght gallons ot milk and e1Qht loaves ot breao too. "That'll keep my deer happy the rest of the night;
And I watcheo as the gent vanlsheo quickly trom sight.
I smiled, not feeling the oeepen1ng cold
Because suddenly I felt 1ust a tritle less 010.
was it real'? I thought. Coula 1t be right to say'?
That all Westcllff Merchants had saved Christmas Day 1
For a certain man's family, theg1tts he haa touno
Were~ very special he'd searcheo the world rouna. And on each little package, the message was bright ...
Westcllff Chrl1tmas to .ail .and to all a a lllftd nlahtl
Orange CoMt DAILY f>tLOT~rlday, No\19fnbet27, 1881
Rent control eyed to roll back Irvine €0. lease. rate
8y T, MAaaLE ... .. ....
M•mbln ol • Newport Beach
bom..-.r aroup, upset wltb
th• 1k.Yrot.keiln1 value or la.ad thet ..... rrom the lrvlne
Compal\)', say they intend to
tffll a rorrn ot rent eonll'OI to
roll back their annual lease
rate..
The 1ro"f· known as the
CommJttee o 4.000, says lt wlll
meet with Assemblywoman
Marlen Beraeson early next
month to · dtscuu poulble
le1l1laUon that would control
leue rates.
From PageA1
The comm.Ju ... whlch clatm.1
there .,.. 4,000 homeowners ln
Newport and Jrvlne lbat leue
property from the development
rlrm, ls protatlnl adju.atmenll
ln land leaaos.
The leaaet, put to1ether ln tbt
1940. and '50s, call for
homeowners to pay the Irvine
Company 6 percent or the land
value every year. Wlth land
values aoartna , tome resident.I
claim thelr annual ratea are
going up as much u 6,000
percent.
One homeowner says hla
annual lease ree has jumped
from Sl.800 to 987,000. Others
quote almllar leaps.
Barbara Youns. a
spokeaperaon tor tbe committee.
uya the meetln1 with Mrs
Beraeaon la Just the start or
some poJIUcaJ muacle·nextna oo
the part of Irate homeowners.
Aides to the aaaemblywoman
confirmed that a meetJn1 with
tho homeowner aroup has been
setup.
"She'll certainly be happy to
meet with them and Uaten to
their concerns." one aide
remarked, "but she's not certain
that there's anyUllJl& she can do
tor them."
The lrvtne Company replied
that an at~mpJ to roll back
lease ratet and land values
"could hurt Iota of people."
"U property we own la cut ln
value by the 1overnment,"
explained Jerry Colllna, a
s pokesman tor the development
firm, "then the aame thln1 hu
to apply to the 1uy'1 property
next ®or. That's the way the
Jaw workl."
Committee leader Youns ••Y•
her aroup, which ii con1iderin,1
launchln1 a claas action suit
aaall\lt the Irvine Company, hu
tnatruct.ed It.a tawyert to elJ)IGH
po11lble a.nU·U:.l vlolaUona on
the part of th• development
firm.
Antl·tnllt laws prob!blt tlrma
from rea\rlctloa trade by
en1aslnc ln price fixlna. Mrs.
Youn1 contend• th• Irvine
Compa coot.roll the land market
ln NIWlMWt and Irvine becaute It
own a ao much property.
"We don't know what ln the
world the ant.i-t.ruat act has to do
with fair market values,"
countered Coll Ina. · · u 's the
market -closed escrows on
reulea -that controls th•
value."
Mrs . Youna 1ay1 the
committee hu collected 145,000
lo cootrlbutlona to ft1bt. the
Irvine Company. She aaya the
aroup Intend• to e1t.abU1h Itself
aa a poUUcaJ action committee
aod blre a lobbyist to aco to
Sacramento.
·'It Is tlme th e Irvine
Company realize how serious we
are in our united effort to obl~ln
relief from oppressive land lease
escalaUon." she said.
UPCOMING DECISIONS MAKE BOLSA CHICA PRESERVE A CAUSE CELEBRE. • •
diking of Bolaa Chica In the late 18905, which cut
off the area's umbilicaJ cord to the sea, the
lowlands have steadlly deteriorated. Tbe only ·
exception has been a 200.acre state-owned
parcel in the lowlands ror which tidal gates
were opened in 1978 to permit entrance of ocean
water once again.>
A designation of the area by the stale as a
degraded wetlands would have a dual-edged
effect: As a degraded habitat, Bolsa Chica
would come under the wetlands protection of
the Coastal Commission.
But the possibility of development would be
kept alive if it could be shown that some
development -a marina. for example -aided
in restoration efforts, said Hein.
Orange County planners are currently
weigh.l.Qg overall plans tbat call for construcllon
of S,700 homes, an 1,800-boat marina and an
ocean entrance to Bolsa Chica.
Supporters of such development describe it
as a "balanced" use of the land.
Especially from the viewpoint of business
and labor interests, Bolsa Chica represents an
Important opportunity to meet the needs or
various special interest groups, from boat
owners to homebuyers as well as wildlife
enthusiasts.
· · ( Bolsa Chica I has the opportunity of
becoming a prairie like our Back Bay <In
Newport Beach) when the environmentalists
et through with it . . Or it could become a
tifuJ area both ecologically and for people
lf they would simply develop it in a baJanced
w y." said Gil Ferguson. leader or a coalition of
b siness and labor interests
"And they could do that," said Ferguson, a
f mer vice president of the Irvine Company,
w o offered this sanguine assessment:
.. 1 do not think that Bolsa Chica will go the
s me way as Upper Newport Bay because the
p blics who are interested in fighting there will
n t be put down by community selfish interests
T e voters. the fishermen. the people who like
rine sports, are going to fight this thing.··
But so will the environmentalists. for whom
lsa Chica is becoming a battle cry with
s tewide implications
.. Certainly it's a big battleground," said
f mer Laguna Beach Mayor Jon Brand. now
p es\dent of Laguna Greenbelt Inc.
And Peter Green. who teaches biology at
0 Iden West College, said his organization.
A igos de Bolsa Chica, believes that, if nothing
e e, it has the law on Its side.
"If the Coastal Commission is going to
e force the Coastal Act, and the Coastal Act ls
q Ile clear on what is allowed in a coastal
w tlands, there can be no urban development
t re," he said.
But there are complicating factors -what
e state coastal official caJls a '"sordid
tory" -which makes Bolsa Chica's future
ything but easy to predict. .
Foremost among these is a controversial
a reement between the state and Signal that
1 intended to smooth out difficulties which
a ose during Signal's purchase of the huge area
I 1970.
The problem evolved in this fashion
After t he company purchased about 1,900
res on the Bolsa Chica Mesa and in the
lands for $20 million. 1t found that it could
n t obtain clear title to the land because
rtlons of the lowlands apparently belonged to
t estate -as tidelands.
Signal officials , in turn. claimed that the
l ds il purchased had been conveyed to private
o nership through a Mexican rancho grant and,
t erefore, were free of the slate's claim that
rtions qualified as tidelands.
To remedy the situation, the state's
esources Agency creat e d a s pecial
l ter-agency task force that formulated a land
s ap agreement with Signal. That pact was
s ned by then-Gov. Ronald Reagan in 1973.
The agreement worked thjs way: The state
r ceived about 327 contiguous acres at Bolsa
lea for marsh restoration and a 14-year lease
f r another 230 acres. If the state provided an eao entrance to Bolsa by 1987, StgnaJ said it
ould transfer ownership of the 230 acres as
ell.
Signal officials said the land swap gave
em the right to develop their property free or
blic land trust regulations. They also said a
ction of the Coastal Act allowing
velopment if it restored degraded wetlands -
as specifically written to permit
* *
o.lly ,.... ,,_.., • .....,. K-
Pe llcan taJces flights as bu.stood of Coastal
Co mrmsStoners tours 2CHJ acres of Bolsa Chica
implementation or the 1973 agreement.
Coastal Commissioner officials disagree
with this interpretation.
Green's Amiaos de Bolsa Chica challenged
the constitutionality of the land agreement in an
Orange County Superior Court lawsuit filed in
1979.
The lawsuit contended that the land trade
violated provisions of the state Constitution
prohibiting the selling or trading of tidelands
held in public trust.
The legal action is still await1ng
adjudication at the state appeals court level.
Even though the environmentalists claimed
they lacked political clout in their efforts to
preserve Bolsa Chica, they did receive
assistance of a sort when the state Coastal
Commission staff let It be known that it felt the
entire lowland marsh was to be protected from
development.
For that reason, Signal backed legislation
by state Sen. Paul Carpenter. D·Cypress. that
would have removed Bolsa Chica from the
jurisdiction of the Coastal Co mmission ~nd
returned it to the control of Orange County
officials. who look more favorably on mixed' use
of the land.
Signal spokesman Wayne A. Clark said
Carpenter's biLI would have affirmed the land
trade agreement and the company's right to
develop its holdings.
However. the measure was turned down by
the Assembly Committee on Energy and
Natural Resources. It will be heard again by the
panel next year. The prospect makes
environmentalists cringe.
The county, meanwhile. believes that Cull
implementation or the land swap agreemeot is
consistent with the California Coastal Act. And
it has been preparing plans accordingly.
Spedfically. planners are continuing their
work on a draft land use plan that calls for
development at Bolsa Chica 5,700 homes and
a 1,800-boat marina.
Under this proposal, which would be
forwarded to the Coastal Commission for final
approval. the state·owned 327-acre parcel would
be expanded to between 400 and 600 acres for a
* .
et exclusive status?
pper Newport Bay marsh provides lesson in control
If the state Department of
lsb and Game decides that
Isa OUca is indeed a weUands
abltat for fish and other
lldlife, the western Orange
ounty marshlands will join
pper Newport Bay In that
elusive company. ·
Both areas rall within the
astaJ llOlle administered by the
allfomia Coastal Commtulon.
Unlike Bolaa Chica, howeve:r.
ere bas been considerably less
troveny about the weUanda
atus or the Newport Beach
aterway.
The bltaett problems whJch
ave atflicted it have had to do
lb ~ siltation problems,
r runoff from taricultur~l
end development projec:fl
\hat dralnl lnto the bay and
clogs it with auorted muck.
Most of this 1Ul comes into the
bay from San Dtego Ct'ffk.
Ron Hein of the state
Department of Fish and Game.
which owns the bulk or the upper
bay , said the Coastal
Co mmission bas become
Involved on several occasions
with Upper Newport Bay
matten ..
He aald a Fish and Game
restoration dredclnt project
required comml11Jon appt"Oval.
as dld a Back Bay sewer trunk
Hne proposed by the Oran1e
County SanitaUoo District. The
trunk line project wu orl1loally
approved by the South Coast
Re1lonal Commi11lon, bot
rejected later at t h e 1tate
commlleion level.
Tb• sanitation dl1trlct
resubmitted the proposal and it
was eventually approved. The
project ls now neari ng
compl~on.
Hein 11Jd there are I several
protective sections In tbe
Coastal Act or 1976 under which
Upper Newport Bay falls.
Protection of 'Wetlands Is a
s pecial duty of the Coastal
Com million.
Thia makes lt unllkely there
would ever be development ln
Up per Newport Bay, wher e
severe corwtralntl or mlUtllk>n
requirement.I would be imPOMd
by the commluion, Bein aald.
Siltation problem• art betnl
bandied principally by state ...a
re1lona1 water quality control
ortic.lala.
-pAVID KUTZJIANN,
weUandl habitat reserve for fish and bird.a.
Additionally, the plan envisions an ocean
channel to the proposed manna that would
provide tidal nusbing for the marsh, which, tor
the most part, was long ago separated from the
sea by a dike.
To officials at Signal, the plan ls both
partially acceptable and partially unacceptable.
Clark said the firm had no objection to most
of the residential and marina aspects, but it was
opposed to setting aside 600 acres rather than
400 acres for wetlands preservation.
"Signal's interest Is to provide as large a
saltwater marsh as possible," he insisted.
But the county plan, Clark said. would
eliminate construction of expensive waterfront
homes and jeopardize Signal's overall ability to
make money on the project.
"The specific interest is that <the project)
be economically feasible," the company
spokesman said, "how you make the project
pencil out."
saying nothing was to be done, and those who
had the other extreme point, who wanted to do
more than anybody would want, total
development. let's say . . "
ls 400 acres or 600 acres of restored
marshland enough?
Signal officials and county planners :say
yes. that it is simply too expensive to try to
restore the entire area to its former status. status.
Peter Green and his supporters say no.
"There are so many things wrong with
development plans at Bolsa Chica that they
would be dismissed entirely,·· Green says flatly.
But he adds ruefully:
··we don't have much political clout at the
present lime.··
<SATURDAY : Irvine Coast blueprint
open to debate . 1
Explaining the county's position on the best
uses for Bolsa Chica, Supervisor Harriett
Wieder said in an interview: Santa to arrive
' ·"The Army Corps of Engineers and the
state Department or Fis h and Game, everybody
has conclucded that <Bois a Ohica) is now a
degraded wetlands.
"And the only way to reinstate it to Its
wetlands status, which is so very important to
the ecology of the area:· she said. "is to do
something to bring water back in.
in Huntington
··So the final conclusion, which is what the
plan that's now in the hopper is all about. is that
600 acres -or 50 percent -be for development
of some kind , and then the other be
environmentally restored wetlands."
Concluded the supervisor m whose district
Bolsa Chica is located: ··It's a balance ...
A former mayor of Huntington Beach. Mrs.
Wieder has been a frequent critic of the Coastal
Com mission, believing that creation of a new
layer of state bureaucracy was unnecessary to
meet public demand for better oceanfront
planning:
Addressmg the question of local control and
Bolsa Chica, the supervisor explained:
"It was obvious from the public hearin1s
<the board held I that there were many tradeoffs
that were ertected to make the decisions we
ultimately came to. A.nd that was on the part or
the people who had the extreme point of view.
Sant.a Claus will arrive via ftre truck at
noon today at Huntington Cent.er shopping mall
to kick off the Marine Corps' Toys for Tots
campaign and a series of community programs.
He will step out al the main entrance of the
mall, located at Edinger Avenue and Beach
Boulevard in Huntington Beach.
Sant.a and the Marines will accept new.
un~rapped toys for dlstribution to less fortunate
children. Sant.a also will pose for photographs
with youngsters.
The center's 14th annual community tree
lighting ceremony will take place at 7 p.m.
Friday. Dec. 4. Girl Scouts and other youth
groups will participate. along with the 3rd Wing
Band from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station.
Youngsters from Orange County CampCire
will decorate miniature Christmas trees with
band-made ornaments Dec. 14-21.
Caroling and other entertainment 11
planned at the mall during the pre·Chrlstmas
weeks.
November 12, 191 8-November 24 , 1981
widt
~~~~
and
~~
~
Retail Advertising Staff
Orange Coast Daily Pilot
' ..
SHOW AND TELL Sixth gra<.fr ~tudenb <Jl Town and
Country Eleml0ntur) ~thool 111 Stl't'l'a \'1sta, r\nz . gt't a
('ham·c to tuuc:h "SniC'klc:-.. · <.in 11 toot pct p~ thon owned b~
Ualt' Lmdnl'I' Lmdrtl'I' brought tht' 11.KJ·pound -.nuke to tht·
:-,l'huul a :. part ol a ll'l'lUl'l'. lie :.<.a~" he got lhl• :-,nake from
the Lo!> Angcll'S Zoo l~ ~ l'ars ago
Turkey raffle raises $3,000
Ora·nge Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday. November 27, 1981
TV ministries decline
600 ,000 viewing homes reportedly lost in one year
N E W \'ORK ( AP > -made for an artlclt ln the June "ilve evidence by Feb. 1 that
Televl1lon's 10 moat popular 1111 ue of All ontlc Monthly they bav taaktn concrete 1teps
religious 1how1 lost more than rnugazine, baaed on Nlelsen to stop the dlscrimloallon ·•
600,000 viewina home. between reports on llyndlcated shows ror NBC, In a letter dated Nov. 24,
May 1980 and May 1981, an l''ebruary and November 1980. I 1& b cl e d t be ch a r I e of
industry oraanbatlon said. ln ,the AUunUc article, "The discrimination "Intemperat e
The 6.6 percent decline Birth of a Media Myth," William and groundless." There has
occurred even thou1b most of Martin criticized popularly been no response Crom the other
the programs In the Top 10 , accepted figures on the size of networks.
including the R ev. Jerry the audience ror "the electronic All but two of the programs
Falwell's "Old TJme Gospel church" and concluded "the lost viewer households In the
Hour," "Oral Roberts" and the audience seems lo have reached year, and total l}udienc«:' for all
C hri st I an Broadcasting its peak and begun to shrink." 10 dipped from 13.4 million In
Network's "700 Club," reached Martin , a professor or May 1980 to 12.7 million in May
more stations in 1981 than the sociology al Rice University, '81, the TIO said
year before. One TV evangelist, Kenneth
The analysts from the Copeland. increased hi s
Television Information Office, household audience by more
an industry organization Robert Schuller's than~ percent 10 the year, Crom
s upported primarily by the 198,000 l o 298,000 But his
television networks, was based ''HOUT of Power" pr 0 gram ranks ninth In
on the latest available Report on households or the 10 major
Syndicated Programs Crom the T e C 0 T d e d a n denominational shows
A.C. Nielsen Co. Robert Schuller's ··Hour of
A Nielsen spokesman. BiH tnCTeaSe Of 1.4 Power," second in total
Behanna, said the household households to "Oral Roberts,"
figure for each show represents percent also recorded an increase in
the average audience for four audience 1.4 percent
weekly broadcasts in the The drop in hous1:1holds was
survery period. The survey of most precipitous for Falwell, the
syndicated programs is taken ~a 1d "the usefulness or the analysis s howed. from roughly 1
three times a year, during the broadcasts as t ools or million last year to about 835,000
ratings .. sweeps," which evangelism the primary this year 16.8 percent
provide the basis for advertising justification used to raise money Falwell, reached at his office
rates. must be ~eriously questioned in Lynchburg, Va . said he did
Roberts, a pioneer in TV "This is not to say, however. not know how many households
evangelism whose Sunday that the electronic church 1s "Old Time Gospel Hour "
morning :series dates to 1955, has dying," Martm added, "or that reaches.
the most widely watched of the 1t brings no benefits to the · · 1 ccin only s ay that the
programs, the TIO analysis evangelical community." Nielsen information in the past
showed. Hts household audience The TIO analysis comes at a hcis been based on the 'Old Time
l.4 million in May 1981 time when the Coalition for Gospel !lour· being on 250
declined by 12.3 percent in the Better Telev1s1on, backed telev1s1on :-,tat1on:. W<:'re on 392
year. largely by Falwell's Moral telev1s1on :.talion:. and have
Pegg y Geo r ge , gener a I M ajorily, is demanding that the been ror more than two years, so
manager of Traco, the agency three major networks "stop there':. a maJor d1 sl'rcpancy ...
that handles Roberts' weekly their discrimination against June Hall, a spokeswoman for.
Su nd ay broad ca:. ls an d Christians, Christian values and .. PTL Club." which retorded the
prime time specials, cite d Christian rul ture an their second greate:.l declane 1n
growing competition as a reason programs " audicnt:l', 14 6 pertent. said,
for lhe decline in his share or the The Rev Donald Wildmon, "We really can't go by these
DOWN 12.3 PERCENT
Rev. Oral Roberta f lJ
•;lib
1lo
t wol
)j('J
•.:q
:•PN
l~lfb .. ,l\6
•1ow
) ltf t
l11u1
I r111
'"'" •11o10
IJmt
Members of the Exchange
Club of Laguna Beach raised
nearly $3,000 in a turkey raffle to
aid the Child Abuse PreveQ!.i,on
Program.
Tickets for the rarfle or 12 tom
turkeys were sold al various
locations in Laguna Beach. The,
turkeys were donated to the club
by a dozen local companies and
ind 1 viduals.
audience. col:llition chairman, threatened ratings at all. R<ltings don't DOWN 16.8 PERCENT
The findings reported by the the networks Nov. 12 with an always give a true picture of the , , td
T 10 parallel those or an a_n_a-.:ly'--s_is __ e_co_n_o_m_ic_bo_,y'-c_o_tt_1f_th_e.::...y_d_o_no_t_· _w,;.;....:.;ch.::.ol:..::e;.;... ___________ R_e_v_. J_e_r_ry_F_a_1w_e_11 ____ ..,..;,-
Symphony curbs
patrons' cough
DENVER 1AP1 The Denver Symphony,
tired of competang with the hacks and wheezes of
croupy music lovers. is orrering Cree cough drops
lo patrons
Joy Olenski, symphony assistant director or
public relations. said the measure was a response
to complatnts from mus1c1ans who had to play for
audiences full of colds sufferers
She said s he had read of orchestras 1n
Minnesota. Boston and Baltimore which gave out
cough drops before performances. Ms Olenski
contacted a cough drop company. which offered
Cree samples
The cough drops would "bring a silence so that
everyone will be able to enJOY a complete score
uninterrupted by a symphony of coughers." she
said. "Our sole aim , however. is simply to Stine
the tackle rather than cure the cough "
Stolen dietary
plankton found
FRESNO 1AP1 The owner and bookkeeper
of a health food store in Fresno were arrested
after police seized 830 cases or plankton dietary
supplement reportedly s tolen from a Santa Cruz
rirm.
A Santa Cruz policeman anvestigatmg the thert
of 1,000 cases o r Sp1ruli na read 1n an
advertisement that the product was being sold al
low cost by Suddenly SHm Health Products of
Fresno.
He ordered a bottle and found that its lot
number matched one or those stolen from Light
Jo~orce Products of Santa Cruz, police said.
Fresno police booked Robert Ascue. owner of
the health food store, a nd Roscoe Haile. the
bookkeeper. for investigation or possessing stolen
property.
Officers recovered about $81,000 worth or the
plankton product. Plankton is microscopic animal
and plant lire found in water.
Heroin impounded
HONG KONG CAP> -Police have seized more
than 11 pounds of heroin, worth $166,000. from a
couple whose motorcycle crashed into a taxi, a
police spokesman said.
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DEAR PAT DUNN: When I flied my IMO
l•come tax retum I rorgot t.o Include &be
l8co1H from one of my W-21. Do I add Ulla
onto my Dest year's return?
· S.T., Coata Meaa
No, you muat file an amended tax return
for 1980 on Form 1040X to make the
correction. The Internal Revenue Service
explains that you may never combine Income
or expenses Crom two years on one tax
return.
Tip on tax p08tponemenl.
DEAR READERS : The Callrorn1a
Department of Housing and Community
Development offers the following tips about
applying for property tax postponement by
the Dec. 31 deadline To be eligible an
individual must: be at least 62 years of age
on or before Dec. 31, 1981; have owned or
occupied as a principal place or residence on
Dec. 31, 1980, the property for which property
taxes are to be postponed ; have a total
household income of no more than S30.200 for
the calendar year 1980. and own a home
which has at least a 20 percent equity
Local. county. state. national and international
events come to your doorstep D ·1 p·1ot
in the bright . light and lively . II J I
When an individual files a claim for tax
postponement, the state enters a lien on the
property in an amount equal to the postponed
taxes . Seven percent interest is added to the
lien. Neither the lien nor the interest are due
until : the owner moves out or sells the home:.
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allows future property laxes to become
delinquent. All or part of a lien can be paid al
any time. In addition, the lien can be
transferred to the new home IC a home is sold
and another one pur c ha1ed . The
postponement claims must be Ciled between
May 16 and Dec. 31.
Clalm forms for the' tax postponement
program are available through the Bureau of
Senior Citizens Propef'ty Tax Postponement,
Controller's Orrice, P.O. Box 953, Sacramento
95804 <phone: ( 916) 323·5701 or toll.free
(800) 952·5661).
The Department or Hous ing and
Community Development publishes a fact
sheet on other housing.related tax benefits
avallabie to seniors and the disabled. To
order, send a self·addressed envelope to: Tax
Benefits, Department of Housing and
Community Development, 921 Tenth St..
Room 102, Sacramento 95814. Claim forms
are not available from the Department of
Housing.
• "Gol o probltm? Then wnle 10 Pot \.. l Dunn. Pat will cut red lope, g~thng
"" tM on~ra ond ochon you need to
•
1ohlf! inequitie1 m government and
,.... bu.dneaa. Moil your q~1hon1 to Pat
I I Dunn, At Your Scvlce, Orange C00$1
Dolly P'llot, P.O. Boz 1500, Co!to Me$0, CA 92626
WANTED -Blll
Wilkinson, imperial
wizard of Invisible
Empire, says at
Fre s no , political
parties will be
co mpetin g for
support or Ku Klux
Klan by 1984
presidential elec~ion.
Act1v1ty Center. 3 mos.-18 mos.
Reg $17, sale 113."
• 19.S cu It no frost refr1eere1or • 6 68 cu h
!teeter o Stores up 10 8 lbs ice, •bout 210 cubet
• 4 ed1u1teblt glen lhtlv11 • Automahc ener9y
l.tYer 1y11em htlPt ct.II operet1n11 cost • Moist 'N
FrHh M•led tugh humtd11v
pan • Mut keeper with
• 17 2 cu h no lrott 1efro9ere101 • Ad1uuable
split level ghru thelvH • Low ope1f11ng cost with
t ntrgy l.tVtr switch rn normal pos1t1on • 4 73 cu fl
frette• • Equipped for OPl•onal au1oma11c •C~
maker • KMP\ fr esh fooch lonqe• w•th Mortl 'N
Fr11h suled h19h hum1d11v
Art Kit. ages 4 · 7 Reg S 16. sale 111.99
Wheelle Dragster, ages 4.9
Reg . S15, sale t10.•
1t.\,,......AA.e '''r'P I\\ ,·. t ( I~ -\ ' ' ( ~ ' . \\.. . ('_)
Woodtop Workbench, ages 3·6
Reg. S 15. sale t10."
Telk·To·Me Pl1yer & Boal<, ages 4·10.
Reg. $45. sale Ut.•. (also avell1ble:
additional ~s. eech rag . $7.50)
ec:tiunablt 1empt11ture
Cl -~~1
s5000 $ 1000011 •ow'~~ :s.:: s5000 .
TOTAL .....
s20 cAsH
REBATE
2.-.1 wotllerwtltll
Ma.5-lollwt ,..
pan and Cool 'f'fFr~h
lower hum1d1ty pan
Cl IWTE s3ooo
IAWIS/UIWlfS llSTAMT UTE s3ooo
TOTAL
DOUBLE REBATE!
5 60~
s20 cAsH
REBATE
--
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, November 27, 1981 A"I /.. I ......_. ____________________________________ __,. __________________________ ~
Diana
ousted
valet?
EARLY ARRIVALS -Thanksgiving Day has
arrived and so have Christmas trees. Sales of
the firs will begin Saturday at Noonan's lot.
2111 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Worker
<a bove> helps unload and stack the first
delivery of 1,000 trees.
LONDON <AP )
Now that Prince Charles ·
Is married, the bachelor
wbo served as h is
personal valet for 12
years la lookina for a
new job, a Britis h
tabloid says.
Buckingham Palace
said that Stephen Barry,
who accompanied
Charles on world travels
before the heir to the
British throne got
married July 29, intends
to hand in hi s
resignation and will
leave the job in April. A
spokesman described
the parting as
"amicable."
However, the tabloid
S un said Princess
Diana, Charles' bride,
"ts behind Mr Barry's
departure."
Diana, who is
expecting a baby in
June, "is taking a firm
line over the
appointment of staff at
her Hi ghgrove home,
and does not like some
of her husband 's
r's Wicker
WICKER & RATTAN
Furniture and Accessories
/11 tht A1111q11t G11tld Plaza .
I SOS E. Dyer Rd. Sanra Aoa
( 0,.• Ri tJlll f ... 111 N,..,,.., ~
(714 ) 540-788 1 """M!rF""
OPEN EVE.RY DAY ~ 10 A.M. to 5 P.M. -~.,4)
CIOMd Sunde,. _,.. _,/
servants." ~===~===~~~~~~:=:!:~~~~:=:!:~:=:~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_:::_.:.:...:..=.:.:=-~~~~--.!-~
Robinsons ------------
THANKSGIVING SALE AND CLEARANCE
26%-60% off
WAMSUTTA: STEVENS,
MARTEX~ SHEET
CLEARANCE, '3.99 TWIN
You'll find a vast selection of designs. colors and
sizes in flat or fitted styles (patterns and sizes vary
In each store) to mix or match.
Robinson's Domestics. 30
Sorry, no mall or phone orders this time
Twin
Full .............. .
Queen . . . . . . . . . . .
King ..
Standard cases. pair
King cases, pair
Orig Sale
$9·$10 $3.99
$12·$13 $6.99
$16·$17 $9.99
$19·$20 $13.99
. . . -. $9·$1, $5.99
......... $10·$13 $6.99
SPECIAL SHOPPING HOURS:
FRIDAY, 9·9:30, SATURDAY, 9·7, SUNDAY, 11·6
50%-60% off
THE IF-PERFECT PRICES OF
MARTEX: CANNON• AND
FIELDCREST~ TOWELS
'5.99·'7.99 IATH
Choose thirsty, deep double-loop terry towels.
Luxor<e and Patrician~ in 100% cotton by Martex.
100% cotton Coronation by Cannon and Charisma
(reverses to velvety velour) 1n cotton/polyester by
Fieldcrest. All available in a rainbow of colors. and
the slight irregularities that account for these great
savings won·t affect wear. Robinson 's Bath Shop,
31 To order, call toll-free 1-800·523·7600.
Bath
Hand
Wash
Bath sheer . .
If perfect Sate
$11·$24 $5.99·$7.99
. ' $8·$15 $3.99·$4.99
. $3.50·$4 75 $1 .49-$1 .99
$25-$45 $11.99·$18.99
20%-27% off
100% EUROPEAN WHITE
DOWN CHELSEA PILLOW
Our luxuriously comfortable pillow is at our lowest
prices of the year. And encased In a down-proof
white cotton cover: by Globe. And you'll save
through Sunday, November 29. in Robinson's
Bedding, 54 To order, call toll-free 1·800·523-7600.
Standard. 20"x 26"
King, 20"x 36" ..
Reg Sale
$55 $39.99
. $75 $59.99
Robinson 's Thanksgiving Sale and Clearance ends Sunday, November 29. Hurry In while quantities are plentiful and selections extensive. All Items subject to prior sale.
ROBINSON'S COMPUTERIZED WEDDING GIFT REGISTRY
MAKE AN APPOINTMENT WITH OUR CONSULTANT AT YOUR NEAREST ROllNION'I •.
Wl'LL RICORD YOUR GIFT PREFERENCES IN EVERY STORE VIA THE ONLY COMPUTERIDD SEIVICI IN SOUTHERN CALIPOINIA.
I
•
Orang• Coa•t DAILY PILOT,frlday, November 27, 1981
...................
COMPACTING THE TRASH -One of four landfill compacting machines owned by Orange
County compacts trash at Coyote Canyon Landfill near Irvine's Turtle Rock area. County
officials say each compactor can increase life of a landfill by 20 to 30 percent. As largest
landfill in Orange County, Coyote Canyon collects 4,500 tons of trash per day.
Space contract signed for big telescope
BALTIMORE (AP ) -A J ohns Hopkins
University astrophys icist has signed a $5.9 million
contract with space agency officials to develop and
operate a telescope to be mounted on the space
shuttle.
Arthur F. Davidsen. a physics professor and
head of the project, said the 36-mch telescope is
scheduled for a space flight in February 1985 by
the National A e ronautics a nd Space
Administration.
Called the Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope, the
instrument will be able it to observe extreme
ultra violet light, som e thing that no other
telescope can do
Watt irked
by jab at ,
religion
HOUSTON· (AP) -Interior
Secretary James Watt, a devout
Chrfatian, refused to re.pond
when an ecolotlat wondered bow
be reconciled h.ls beUelt and h1t
•·apparent dl 1re1ard or
endanaered species."
After a speech to business
leaders about expanded leaalnC
ot Cederal lands to energy
companies, the controversial
secretary read a question from
Patricia Reiff, president or a
conservaUon group.
Her query began, "JesUJ said
not a sparrow fell to the ground
without God paying attention.
How do you r econcile your
Christian beliefs ... · •
Watt broke orr and sharply
responded, ··I will not read tbe
rest or this insulting question.
1' m continually surprised at
Americans. I thought we had put
religious bigotry behind us "
Ms. Reiff, president of the
Cit i zen s' Environmental
Coalition and a professor of
space physics and astronomy at
Ra ce University, said she JUSt
wanted to know how Wall
reconciled has reli gious beliefs
Wi th has '"apparent disregard Of
endangered species · ·
Ms . R ei ff said she was
··shocked" Wall interpreted the
ques tion as he did ·· J'm a
Christian loo l certainly did not
mean the question to be bigoted
J JUsl thought he was being
h:. pocrat1cal ·'
Marine base
to Clemente? _Art in Tune with the Holiday,e
CA MP PENDLETON IAPl If Oceanside
conquers Camp Pendleton, it would become the
largest city in San Diego County, outside San
Diego, and make voting citizens or 40,000 Marines .
But San Clemente. an Orange County. also
looks enviously at the world's largest amphibious
military base
"There 's an awful lot or money that 1s going to
get shifted, .. says Ben Clay, San Diego County
director of intergovernmental public affairs
"We're going to sit down and bark and growl
and carry on over it." Clay said in an Interview.
While· Oceans ide city officials say San
Clemente may have some legitimate claims. Clay
said the mere suggestion ""gels me uptight "
Dana Whitson. director or special projects ID
Oceanside, said San Clemente would need special
state legislation ··to provide the services we can
provide because they're an another county "
Whit.son says. however, that ··oceanside as the
only agency that can legally annex the base. We're
l he only city contiguous to it "
A public bearing on annexation will be held
Dec. 9 by the Oceanside City Council, which may
decide then to amend the city plan and rezone -
"There 's an
money that is
shifted.''
awful lot of
' going to get
m oves whic h could precede approval or
annexation by the Local Agency Formation
Commission.
Although Oceanside has talked or annexing the
125.000 acres for years. the Navy only recently
c hanged its o ppos1l1 on to a pos1 t1 on or
non-opposition.
The belated annexation move by San Clemente
angers Oceanside orficials, who point to '"about
$2.5 million annually" in municipal services
provided Marines without any reimbursement in
taxes. San Clemente also has provided emergency
services such as police, firemen and paramedics
ror years without being reimbursed.
Special s tate legislation sought by San
Clemente would set up a community services
district for San Onofre that would be financed by a
tax on the plant.
There are millions or dollars annually in
property-tax reve nues at stal<e, plus SI 1 million in
state revenue from motor vehicle registrations.
gasoline taxes and cigarette taxes
The property taxes. which now go to San Diego
County, include Sl2.6 million generated last year
by the San Onofre nuclear power plant. located on
federal property a mile south of the Orange County
line but leased by Southern California Edison Co.
and San Diego Gas & Electric Co.
Any gain for Oceanside or San Clemente would
be San Diego County's loss.
And San Diego County. says Clay, as
financially strapped with sales taxes going down,
defaults on property taxes and the prospects of
less state money next year
Warning to pot
s01okers tested
JACKSON, Miss. <AP) -Researchers at the
University of Mississippi are testing a substance
from orange peels to determine if It can be used to
warn marijuana smokers if their pot has been
aprayed with the herbicide paraquat.
The new substance, referred to as DLDM, ls
an orange-peel extract mixed with sulphur. When
sprayed on tobacco or marijuana that has been
treated .with paraquat, then lighted, the substance
glvea off a foul odor.
Researcher~ have suggested that paraquat
ln1eau,d through smoking marijuana could cause
lung cancer. ·
· BullJozer 011 rampage
NAESTVED , Denm1tk (AP J -A
heavy-equipment operator stole a bulldozer,
smashed u vehicles and Uf~ one policeman in
the machine's shovel before he was overpowered
by other om cers, authorllUes said.
lllWJIUl.UlllD
l<INDf R ,..OLOlt ltlTS
FOR l'ilOS IN GIRL ' ODY L'1ND. INC.LUD~5 O'fSSt!T'rt!
""1'10Rlt!S OR !JON($!J (
MOP.l $ -'· 98
-~~-----' 0i:-~--·-----··. -·--------
23 GIFT CflfTlf IQfrf.5 GOOD
FOR ANY DOl..L'1R AMOUNT.
Christmastime Is drawing near.
That means back to the drawing board
for gilt ideas The adjustable 24x30"
Hirsh laminated table has a brown baked
enamel base Reg 44 95 $34.88. Fold-
ing chair in 3 colors Reg 12. 95 $10.88.
(Set of 4 Reg 54 95 $38.88.) Flex lamp
in 6 colors Reg 28 . 95 S 12.88.
All 3 Item • Reg. 86.85 $54.88.
Aaron Brothers Art Marts CIC
HUNTINGTON BEACH 7410 Edinger Ave. • Open Mon.·Frt. 10-1, S.t. a Sun. 10.e
COSTA MESA 1714 Newport ltvd •• Open Mon .. Frt. M, Sit. a sun. 10.e
EL TORO 24* Sw1rtz Or.• ~n Mon.·Frt. 10·9, Sit. 10·8, a sun. 11-8
Orange Coast OAJL Y PILOT /Friday. November 27. 1981
Drunks
all in
mind?
NEW YORK (AP> -
Research 1how1 that
people act In certain
stereotyped ways when
they think they are
drlnklna alcohol, even ir they are really con-
sum ln1 plain waler,
accordina to two experts on the psychological
effects or alcohol.
Th• CaM of th•
CLUMSY CURIC
or
His Cup
Runneth Oler
The Solution '
A quick trip to your
cleaning experts. We
hove highly trained
professionals who
specialize In g rime
prevention ..
Cose Closed
DOLL REPAIR Three Fountain Va llev Girl
Scouts won top prizes m annual Doti Fair
contest sponsored by Goodwill lndustl'ies or
Orange County. Girls repaired. cleane<J and ·
sewed new clothing for used dolls. which
were sold to raise money ror Goodwill. From
o.11,,.. .............
left are Jackie Vandagl'iff. 9. first place in
baby doll category : Jenny Colle~. 9. overall
winner crowned queen ol the Doll Fatr. and
Robin Gurney. 10. first plal·~ in child doll
categor y.
Dr. G. Alan Marlatt or
the University of
Washington and Or.
Damaris J . Rohsenow of
the University o f
Wisconsin, writing in the
De ce mber issue of
Psychology Today. said
··p syc h ological
processes have as much
-or more -to do with
some drinking behavior
than do t he physical
effects or alcohol."
Call 642-H71.
Put • few word•
to work for ou.
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
CLEANERS
Competitive Prices -Try Us First.
s25oo Camera Class V2 Price
Jnst For Giving Us A Try!
1--~~~~~~~~~~~
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. .
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THIS _ XMAS
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THIU MOHD A Y I 1-lM I. HUllYI
• 6Hr.YHSI~ •W.,..._I ..... • c.....1_,,
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COLOtlTIM AND
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WHILE
THEY
LAST
_,,,.
25" DI~ CllorTra 2000
• l•dom Acceu l1•ote
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• ColorTrall T .... Sys._
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~
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TWO SUPH GIFT
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l...a,ledroo•,ICltdlea wv ... &av· ..
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I'
•• Orange Co11t OAIL Y PILOT,f'rfdey, NOY9mblr 'rf, 1981
Landing fee boost
eases airpott cost
ft'or t ht! pust sevc1·a1 ytwrs.
Orange County go\'ernnwnt has
been succl'ss(ul m runnm~ .John
Way n e Airµort on a
pa) a s·you·go basi~ Thul means
revt>nues derived fl'om airport
opera lions art> ust.>d to offiH.·t lhl'
tounty·s cost ol o_ve1·ut1ng lhc
I U('lhty.
There arl' many sources ol
t't•\·enue. The county recel\ es a
port10n of the frl' pauJ b) every
person who park:, his <.'ar at the
airport parking lot 1l ret·e1ves
money from the o" ner::. ol
private planes who rent spact· m
the t 1e-down a rca . It rec·l'1' cs
rental income from thl' mrltnes.
l'ar rent al agencies and other
cont't.>ssionaires ope rat mg 111 the
airport ter minal
Another source ol rt•\ enuc is
so·called lane.ling fl't.'!'>, assessed
against the commercrnl Jet air
carriers that o perate from the
facll1tv :\1rCal. R.eµubl1C' Airline ~. Front1t•r A1rl1ncs.
\\'estt•rn Airlinl'S and Pat1fiC'
Southwest .\1rlmt•i. Each lime a
jet lands. tht• currier pays to tht>
cou nt' 50 ccnb lor Nlt'h 1.000
pouncls o f weight That h..is
a\'eraged to about S.575 per ll1ghl.
a<:cording to count~ figure~
ln total. the count y expected
to l'eccive about 8868.800 Crom
landina fees d urin g t h e current
l'iscal year But a recent anal~ i:.as
showed that the county's actual
cos t s att n buta bl e to the
c: o m m e r t i a I a i r c a l' r 1 c r
overataon~ \\.Ill be more than S2
m illion . T h ere are t•osts foa·
maintenance . security and
operation of t he specialized
au·porl crash, fire . rescue station
a station that demons trated its
partitular e ffct·tiveness last
February when an AirCal jetltnl•r .
crashed at the all'port.
Count) s uperv1i.ors have
al'lt•d to in('rcase the fee to Sl per
1.000 pounds a move that "ill
bnng in about Sl.7 mtll1 on
annually. a figure substantially
tlobcr lo the S2 million 1n cost~
the tounty mus t bear.
Clearly. the landing I ce
as~t·ssment needed to be
increased . While doubling the fee
might at firs t glance seem to bl> a
bit much. the fact is that on a per
passen ger bas is. t he fee will
amount to less than 70 cents per
person. Anp that seems a small
pri<.·e to puy for t he sernces
pro \'Id ed
Beware book burners
There 1s a fnghtenmg tn•nd
in AmeriC'a, thl' land ol freedom.
that 1s growmg stronger by lhl·
da~ Thal 1s the ut tcmpti..
sucn·ssful or nut. that the Moral
Majont~ and uther ~O·talll'd
pro moral organ1zatwns are
making to remo\t' from
avaalabtlit~ publis hed matt•n<.1b
they find o lle nsi\'C
In state after state. dl'l\'l'S
are under way. e ither throuJ;!h
leg 1::.lut1on or non-st atute mcani..
lO purg1;· bookshelves of matenub
t h e s l' g r o u p s p r o c I a 1 111
·pornographic.· · \lolent · 01
··harmful" in som e otht•r \\;.i~
using standards that t•l1t·11 stron~
differem:ei. ol 0µ1mon. to sa~ lht.'
least.
Example:-. ol this trend <'all
be luund lrom c·oa::.t to roast In
Lu s :\ngL•les Count~. un
ord1nanl'l' rl•qu1r1ng that
matenalb det'mL·d hJrmlul to
m in ors be scalt>d bdurl' pun:ha:-.L'
1s being challcngt·d m t·ourt
In \\'a~hmgton Count~. \'.i . a
lundamt•ntal1st prl·acher 1:-,
dett•rmtlll·cl to dear the total
I 1 bra r ~ o l matt• ri a I he l 1 n tb
offl'ni-1 \"l' I fl' has reported!~ had
the aud<.1t·1t' to <J:-.k lht• It bra nan
tor a list of reader~ ,.,·ho have
chct'ked out books ht• do<."'n I
llkL· This lb unconst1onable
\nd S('hoob through1~11t the
L".S are under s iege lrom
per::.ons or groups wanting of
lens 1vt•· books cleared out ol
:.chool ltbranes
\\' h at 1 s pa rt 1 c 11 I u r I ·'
astounding 1~ that many ol tlw
book:-. under attack are cla~i.1t·..,
thut long ha\'e been requ1rl·LI
rt•a1.hng in many high s<.'hool
lllcrature courses. · I lucklebetT\
Finn... 1984... ·The CutC'hcr 1i1
tht· Rw" to naml' a few
\\·t· abo must µ01nt out. as
man~ others havl'. that the Bible
('Untaini. numerous references to
i.cx and \'el'\ \'iolent e\'l'nls. Shall
1t be l'l'l1sori..•d too '
It i.eem~ to u~ the::.t.· censor~
ha \"l' lorgotten muc h ol "hat
Amenca stands for and for whu.'h
thousands of young peoplt> ha,·e
cited delendmg: The freedom to
rt•<Jll. \Hilt· and think what an
md i \ 1dual pleases
Tht• p arallel \\1lh the
book burn m g org1ci. ol I h tlc1· i.
~i.lll:-. and v.1th So\'lel Russia"i.
rigid control of its c1t1zeni. ii.
disturbing. but rcad al~ apparent..
\\ l' an.• firmh behind tht'
e llurti. ol libraria n~ . .iuthor~ and
otheri. l'Onl'l'l'lled with I rl'l'dom ol
lhuu~ht to fight oll lhl·
:-.el l appointed moralists. We
hupl' other Americans rcmcmbt•r
our nation's creed ot llbt.-rl\ <rnd
I reedom ol l'hOil'l' and I 1ght "11 h
thL•m
Wonde rf ul numbers g ame
Last month <.'ongrt:>~~ \'Otcd to
ra ise the federal dl·bt lt•\'l•I
be~ond the St tnllwn il'H·I
Theonzmg thal the aH·rage
person 1s m ·no way n1pablt• of
comprehending a trill1on ol
anything cnm l1g urmg 11 a~ .1
t h ousand billion a
m a l h c m a l 1 <.' a I I ' m 1 n cl t.' <l
magazine editor has· rounded uµ
some examples.
Jf you took a tnlhon dollar
bills and laid tliem end to l'nd.
the\' could c1rl'le the earth 3 803
tim.es or pave a r oad 1.24 m~les
wide aC'ross the United State~
If you spread them out. you
could CO\'er the state of Rhode
Islan d three bilb deep. or plaste r
t he m O\'er 2.2 million football
fields.
Stacked 111 a pile. the bills
would reach 67.742 m ales into
s pace. Alternative!~. you could
build 286, 174 stacks ai; high as the
E mpire State BuildinS!.
11 Congress just wanted to go
ahead and s pend a whole trillion.
1l would lake 70 years at S39
mill1on a da~ On the other hand .
a trillion would be e nough to give
ca<:h American S4.341. pay all
Sor1al Security benefits for eight
~ eari. and subs1d1ze the private
~e<.'tm"s payroll for a year.
.Just pn nting the bills. a t the
go\'crnme11t ·s present rate of S35
bat hon a ~ear. wou Id take 28. 6
~·ea ri.
The mathematical!\ minded
editor concluded that Congress is
operating in a sort of fantasv
land . He ma) be raght As
presidential budget ad\'lser
Oa\ id Stockman recently
admitted. "None of us really
understands what's going on with
all t hese number s ...
Least of all the bemused man
~n the street , whose tax money it
1s -or was.
L.M. Boyd/Speedy speakers
Most languages of the South Seas
permit the speaker to r.ronounce
about SO syllables per m nute. You
get some idea of how slow this is
when you know the typical American
delivers 220 syllables per minute
while the average Frenchman utters
350 syllables per minute. Some
scholars think you can judge the lire
pace of a people by how rast t hey
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
ta lk, and nothing ln the foregomg
suggests otherwise.
Police researchers now contend
alcohol figures one way or another in
83 percent of all arrests .
Your computer will tell you your
feet contain 25 percent of your body's
bones.
Thomas P. Haley
Publisher
Tllom.s A. Murpfllne
Editor
Barbara Krelbich
Editoria l P.• Ed itor
'
Army education eff Ort fails
WASHINGTON -Americans depend
for the common defense on troops who
are often undereducated, unmotivated
and incompetent. The Pentagon has
tried to cram a little learning into the
slow learners in the ranks but has
discovered that you can lead a dolt to
the classroom, but you ~an't make him
a cum laude
In desperation. the brass hats have
revised their training manuals down to
junior high school levels and have even
use d comic b oo k s to si m plif>
instructions. Millions have been spent
on elaborate educational programs to
raise the literacy levels of our
all-volunteer recruits .
The unhappy result has been less to
improve the soldiery than to waste the
taxpayers· money, thus producing two
scandals where there had been only
one. A Pentagon audit. intended for
official eyes onJy but seen by my
associate Lucette Lagn ado. tells the
story
IN A TYPICAL fi scal year, the
Pentagon spent $158 million on its
various educationa l programs Some
$60 million, ror example, was spent on
"bas ic skills education." Thes e
programs are supposed to give recruits
at l east a fiflh ·grade level of
competence in the Three R's -reading,
'riling and 'rithmetic.
Here are some highlights from the
Defense Audit Service's fi ndings.
The Army. which has the most
participants in the basic skills program
-about 80 percent or the total
enrollment also has the pooresl
record of achievement ··Many soldiers
Q
-JA-Cl-Al-D-IRS_D_I -~
who atte nded Army baste skills
education courses did not achieve an
Army·des1red goal of a Cifth-grade level
of proficiency," the Pentagon study
notes .
In the Army and Air Force
particularly . the costly education
program failed to help se rvice
personnel make any significant
progress, accordJng to the auditors In
one survey, almost half of those who
appeared to have benefited turned out.
when re·tested, to have retained nothing
of their supposed progress.
-WASTE WAS widespread Each
military insta ll ation ran its own
educational program. with the
predictable result that cost and
effectiveness varied enormously. At one
base. for example. the auditors found
that a private contractor had charged
$276,704 over a five-year period JUSt to
develop a syllabus, or outhne of the
program.
The cost to educate each recruit
varied from $7 to a l most $300.
depending on whether local public
:.thools or pravatl' 1nst1lut1ons were
used
Salaries paid by the Pentagon were
far above t he national average
Instructors were paid an average of $12
an hour. compared to a nationwide
average or S8 an hour for ad u It
l:'ducat1on courses ·costs for instructor
!)alaries and benefits could have been
reduced by about SI 2 million by
negotiating hourly 1nslructor rates
comparable to average state rates," the
auditors concluded.
In the t1me·honored bureaucratic
lrad1t1on . the P entagon had an
oversupply of administrative personnel
· · adm1n1strators. coordinators .
counselors and clerks .. In one
o utrageous case, the Pentagon
contractor had 15 administrators for 26
teachers, the auditors round
The Pentagon inves ted $42.5
m1llaon 1n lu1tion assistance for
advanced degrees Yet the auditors
round that the Army .. treated an
academic Cailure as a satisfactory
completion of the course " Altogether,
the Pentagon auditors found. $6.3
million was spent on tuition assistance
for personnel who flunked or dropped
out.
Why do we accentuate the negative?
While I was on vacation recently, two
or three a cquaintances mentioned a
particularly offensive letter about me
t h a t appe ared in m y hometo wn
newspaper during my absence. They all
said the same thing : "I was tempted to
write a strong letter of rebuttal -but
somehow I never got around to it."
Naturally.
Naturally, because if there is one
thing that has impressed me more than
anything else durin g my long tenure as
a columnist, it is the strength of the
"negative impulse" in the human race,
as compared with the relative weakness
of the positive impulse.
It is easy, even gratilying, to express
ourselves when we are angry, irritated,
defensive or frustrated. But it seems to
take much more psychic effort to
express ourselves when we are pleased,
comforted, confirmed or supported. We
will grumble about bad service at the
drop of a napkin, but take superior
service quite for granted.
ALMOST ALL mass movements are
protests "aeainst" something. M Bill
Nye (I think it was) remarked long ago,
you never see a mob rushing across
town to do a good deed. There is
something in us that respcmds to the
negative pole -just as evil seems to be
SYDllY HARRIS
the principle of action, while goodness
is too often allied with inertia.
It is not unusual to receive a postcard
saying, "I have read your column for 30
years and almost always enjoyed it . But
yest erd ay you said some thing so
outrageous that I cannot resl.st chiding
you about it ." It never occurs to lhem
that perhaps in those 30 years lht!y
ought to have been motivated to dash
orf a n affirmative card.
Many a wife knows she can prepare a
dozen delicious meals for her husband
with hardly a grunt of approbation, but
one below par is likely to evoke a
critical comment. Likewise, a child
may bring home decent grades for a
semester without a pat on the back. but
one poor score on an exam may elicit
some sharp comment Crom lhe parents.
V E T EVE RY ex p eriment b y
behavioral scien tis t s has s ho wn
conclusively t hat what the y c all
"positive reinforcement" is Car more
e ffective than negative. That is ,
approval and support for whal is done
right brings forth better efforts than
cr iticism or what is done wrong.
The best bridge players have always
known this -that praising your partner
improves bis game, while castigating
only makes him play worse. Part.nus
who bicker and blame and carp at each
other are bound to suffer in the scoring;
indeed, the best definition or a good
partnership is sympathy. a miability
and forgiveness.
Such relationships are rare, however,
an· any a rea or life, because quite
obviously we obtain more satisfacUoo
f r o m com p l a i n ing than f r om
complimenting. It seems odd that wbat
we most want from others we are most
reluctant to provide for them.
Don't overlook UNESCO's valuable wor k
To the Editor :
With reeard lo the controversy over
the U.N. Educational. Scientific and
Cultural Organization's proposed "new
world information order" (NWIO )
("Censorship in Disguise," editorial
Nov. 10), it should be noted that:
-The National News Council bu
found that U.S. press coverage of this
MAILBOX
issue "concentrated almost exclusively
on West.em worries about the UNESCO
initiative, with little presentation of
oppoalng viewpoints ... provided an
inad!!Quate• foundation 'for independent
judgment by Americans ... (and) set
a poor example for Tbtrd World
journalists''
-UNESCO r eaolutiona bave
recognized as etementl of the NWlO
"plurality of sources and dwmela of
inf ormatl~nl " and alao "freedom of
preaa and m1orm1tlon··
-Third World complaillta ot ne11Uve
report.iq by the Western medie (which
the Dally Pilot ac!knowledtes "to •
de1ree .•• ll &.rut") we.re voiced by
American joumalllu around the turn ot
t.be ·century about th• coveraae of t.he
U.S. by the European press (which
emphasized the Indian wars, lynchings,
etc.>
-The NWIO represenu but one
_aspect o! UNESCO's varied work, such
as the training of 64,000 teachers and
the construction of 92,000 schools in
le ast deve loped c ountries, the
s ponsorship and coo r dlnallon of
worldwide environmental, nuclear and
oceanographic research, and the rescue
and preservation of threatened cultural
monuments such as the temples of the
Nile Valley and the Acropolia of Athens.
JOHN W. OSBORN, JR.
President, Orance Co. Chap .•
United Nations Auoclatlon of the
U.S.A.
College f ee1
1'o lhe Editor:
Coast College District could avoid •
lot or future problems lf they would
work with the 1tale Legislature now
rather than resisting eltorts to lnstUuto
a ree structure for none11enUal clNH1 ..
The article ln the Nov. 19 laaue of tbe
Pilot conceming Coalt cl.. eutbackl
really w11n't necet.1ary.
The collese dlttrlet •artier, •lont
with lhe teachers' ·union, fou1bt the
attempts in the state Legislature to
institute a fee structure fo r t hose
classes which are not necessary to earn
a two.year or four-year degree al one of
lhe s tate colleges or uni versities.
Most "st ud en ts " taki ng the
non ·essential classes would be willing to
pay a fee for the class they are taking
because of the enrichment it adds lo
their lives. Probably what's golnt to
happen is that students wUI end up
having to pay fees for every ctaas that
they take because or the resistance of
the board and the teachers' unions .
JIM DeBOOM
Orange Coast OAJL Y PILOT/Friday, November 27, 1981
~ency Cupid for American-Mexican couples
ev DlmDRAH aauou• ....................
SANTA ANA -Matchmakin1 may seem an
ucbalc pracUce that went out with the horse and
bu1u, but ln Southern Callfomla Ul1J amorous
branch or buslneas ls belna rejuvenated to span
two countries.
lnlroductlons Unllmlt~. an enterprtae that
1tarled up here alx months ago, findt beautiful
women for lonely men. The fee "for the man It f150
tor the nrst year, r ncwable at $100 a year If the
riaht Utile lady doesn't come aJona. However, the
aroup bu put a special twlst into the c ustom or
matchmaking; they only match Mexican women
with American men.
At rirat glance, the business would seem to be a sophisticated and cleverly disguised way of
obtaining American citlaensbip for a lot of
Mexican women. But co-founder Shirley Stearns,
50, denies that that Is the uJterior motive or their
"club.''
When confronted with this possibility, Ms .
Steams repUed: "We don't set up marriages. we
set up Introductions.··
Nevertheless, the classified ads placed in local
newspapers make the reader a bit sus picious. The
'We don't set up mar-
riages, we set up introduc-
t . , ions ...
ads read: "Beautiful Mexican ladies seek mature
sincere gentlemen for marriage."
The procedure works this way, explained Ms.
Stearns. An American man pays the $750 fee and
then is given pictures and basic information from
which to chose five or s ix ladies he would hke to
meet. The introductions are set up 1n the
company's branch office in T ijua na with a
30-minute interview with each woman An
interpreter sits in on the conversation whether
they need it or not.
"We find that it works beautifully 1r we have
that third person there. The men and women are
asked to prepare a list of questions, whatever is
important to them, and have an opportunity to ask
the other person all their questions." Ms Stearns
said.
At the end of the interview, she said. they will
let the interpre t er know whether they ar e
interested in seeing that person.
"Usually on Saturday you go out to dinner as a
group, this eliminates lhe need for a chaperone.
because many or these girls adhere to the old
custom or requiring a chaperone ...
Acne treatment
readied /or 1982
NUTLEY, N.J. <APl A prescnpt1on acne
m edication for two serious. scarring forms of the
skin disorder may not be available until mid-1982
at the earliest, the drug's manufacturer says
Hofrman-LaRoche Inc. has applied to the
feder al Food and Drug Administration to sell the
treatment. Accutane It was developed to right
cystic acne and kerat1nization disorders.
Hoffman-LaRoc be apokeswoman Carolyn Glynn
s aid Wednesday.
·'There is excitement about the drug because
there is no previous treatment for these severe
forms of acne," she s aid
Solon raps Brown
record on aging
SACRAMENTO <AP t The chairman of the
state Assembly Committee on Agmg said that
Gov. Edmund Brown J r. has "the worst record of
any governor in the history or the state" on
concern for the aging.
Assembly man Gerald Felando. R-San Pedro.
this week criticized Brown 's comments made to
the California delegation to the Wh ite House
Conference on Aging
Brown on Tuesday charged the delegahon with
notifying the feder a l government "that we must
not turn our backs on the aged. the sick and the
poor. and that we will not turn our backs on 45
years of social and economic progress for the
elderly."
He also rapped the Reagan adm1rustr at1on on
a number of ooH cies he said hurt the elderlv.
-
Permanent Hair Removal
beauty. confidence.
convenience. comfort
Jane Lindstrom & Associates
B.ECTROL YSIS GROUP
120 Easl 18th. Costa Mesa
17 I 4J 645-7942
WE 9UIT!
All Baldfin Pianos Must Go
LOST • OUR· LEASE
UIH P-..-A.1111 ... U,ritW•
De•1--..C1mteu .. ......_
Yates M11sJc Co . .f asllillt lsland-64~9020
Most of these mtn, M1. Stnrna explalned1 are
ln the r late 30s and early 409 and bavt Deen
married bt!ore. Their rHIOnl tor retortln, to this
servlce ate numerous, but many or them lke the
idea or marryinai aa Mexican woman who 11 leas
liberated and aggresslve than her American
counterpart.
· 'Th~y all fantaslie about the Mexlcart woman
beln& the submlsalve, domestic wlfe," she 1ald,
addln& that the buslneu'1 customers a.rt not the
type to go out to sln&le ban and have dir!lculty
meeUna the kind ot woman they want to marry.
On the femaJe side, Ms. Stearns uld the
m ajorlty of the women who use thl5 service ace
between 25 and 35 years old and are looklnl for a
"good hus band.''
"They do reel that American men make better
husbands. They feel that American men are more
thougb(.fuJ , more considerate, and ln aeneral they
a re correct," she said.
CurrenUy, lntroduct1ons Unlimited la working
with 36 men and about 90 women. Since lts
lnUpUon, three marrtaaea have taken place and
three more 'are planned tor December. Ma.
Stearnt 1ald, addlnl that there have been no
complaJnt.s or demand for money returned.
That may be partly due to the tact that the
organlzatlon works with a psychologist.
·'The men are required to take a little teat and
then the peycbolo1l1t.s works up a prorue. Wtt are
99 percent SU{e of the men," she uld. In turn, tho women's references are checked,
althoueh they are not required to take a
paycholoalcal lest. Ma. Stearns, formerly an executive recruiter,
and her '4-year-old brother Sid, decided to 11tart
this amorous enterprise. last June due to Sid's
peraonal experience wlth the matchmaking
wlfe throu1h a marrla1e broker baaed in Mexicali,
Mexico.
"Ke <Sidi had an opportunity to meet six girls
. , He met so many lovely girls who would make
excellent wives that he felt there was a demand
for this." Ms . Stearns explained.
) Lots of surprises, savings & gift ideas.
BUYER Entettuin
mt.• n t e nt n~ pn:neu 1·
~ormun Ll•u t'. ll·ll.
u n d J e 1· r o I d
Pl'rl'n<·h1 0 h ave
bignccJ an agreement
101· the purchas~ ol
,\' l'll EmbuSh) Ptl'
lur,·~ Corp. f 1·om 1\\
<·u l'orp . l h(•y said.
Have fun shopping the Chrisbnas Collections of Pier 1.
Save
Round up a mount for
11 ,.31 : year-old cow-
boys and cowgirls at Pier
I This rattan rocking
horse sports a rich wal-
nut finish.
Santa's getting lots of
requests lor this wonder-
ful gift. Help him lasso
one. this weekend.
Rocking horse ]988 reg. 29.99 .....
19"Lx l3"W serving tray.
~t;J ~a: ... l"
20%
off reg. price
any single Item
~ ~mthi~rou
i'J.-pon •I any p&rtlc
\'..;. •1>3ling Pltr I ttorr • for 2~ olf lht reg·
ular purt h&&e pt'K't ol any
alngll' item of your t hoict'
Discount not appllcabll' to
ult lll'ITI$. C111~r must
pay •ny a&lu IM. Coupon vold whtrt prohibited.
Wed Of rtstricll'd by l•w limit one coupon ptr
custorMr.
Offff Sood 3 dllf' only1
fr'lday U1N Sunday,
l'lovtmber 27 ·2'. ftll.
... , ..
Ideal gift for any gounnet
3-picce G" wok set. reg. 9.99 .
Save
Cushion extra
Swing chair. Strong core
rattan basket.
reg . 49.99 ....... 39"
Golden rattan chests with 32x16x ts• & 36x20x20':
brass hardware. Store !~d':~~~thea or use as &1·1~: 79• & 99"
1
It isn't Christmas without
candlelight. Let Pier I
beautify your mantel and
table. Shop this weekend.
Choose any color
10" tapers JO $I reg. 29< . . . for
_J
Stumped for ideas? Our
54· tall king 1s an impres-
sive (but not expensive)
gift Shop today
Handwoven Ph ilippine
buri. Cushion extra
Economy king 2 988 reg 3999 ...
Wine glasses for holiday Limit 24 at our sale price.
parties. Raise them in a 11-oz. glass. 99""
toast. Great gift idea, too reg. I 79 " ea.
Sale prices good Friday thru Sunday.
The new •
collections
ANAHEIM -509 E . Katella Avenue, 772-2472
COSTA MESA -2110 Harbor Boulevard, 540-7337
MISSION VIEJO -308 Mission Viejo Mall, 495-6582
Orenge Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday. November 27, 1981
2300 HARBOR• COSTA · MESA
---111:: I
BAKER ST.
ADAMS AVE .
0 > _J
WI LSON ST CD
a: 0
VICTORIA ST.~
< :::c
0 0
HARBOR at WILSON
"THE CENTER OF THE HARBOR· AREA II
SAN DIEGo FW
!!!!!!!!!!!!j Y. --
FAIR DR
HARBOR -~CENTER
~ e,\..\JO · ~~o~' -~ Save gas. money and time! Shop at
llarbor Cf>t1tt-r for all your Christmas
gifts. You'll find a variety of stores within
easy walking distance. There's plenty of
free parking. Hurry in today!
Babe's Chili Dogs
Cal-Tex, Inc.
Chuck E. Cheese
Pizza Time 'Theatre
Cobbler's Bench
Columbia Savings
Crown Book Store
Costa Mesa Sewing Center
Crocker Bank
Dimension's In Fashions
Dr. Klein. Optometrist
Edwcrds Twin Cinemas
Entet prise Rent A Car
Executive World Travel
Glendale Federal Savin9s
Harbor Cleaners
Harbor Stylish
Holiday Health Spa
It's A Dilly
J.C. Penney
Jolly Roger
-
K & B Sportswecr
K.c.•s Hallmm k Shop
Kids Mart
Kirk's Jewelers
Mon Ami Bridals
Nick's Pina
Olympic Sales Co.
Richards Beauty College
SecLrity Pacific Bank
Shoe Hut
Tailor Shop
The Key Hut
The Male Man
Thrifty DnlCJ Store
Wallpapers to Go
Windsors Sports Shops
Winter Beauty Supply
Ralph's Market
Ripper Fantasy
4u For You
..
...
E
r=-
IRAIGE COAST
Diiiy Piiat
FRIDAY, NOV. 27, 1981
CA VALCADE
BUSINESS
82-3
86
.
Was Henry , Kissinger
the best secretary of state
we've had? See. Rage 88.
....
0
~
0
Afghan escapee tell.s of ravages by the Soviets
By Tbe Associated Press
Abdul Tawab Assifi, exiled
Afghan mln1ster or mines and
industry, says that In a two-day
escape from his native land by
bus, horse cart, truck, fool, raft
and donkey caravan he got a
first-hand view of the carnage in
Afghanistan's struggle with
Russia
Assifi, who settled m Garden
LB tots
attuned
• to lllUSIC
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Of Ille 0 .. 1, Pilot ~Yll
When the 4 year-olds in Irene
Bland's Thursday morning
music class become a bat f1gety,
they're told to make lake an
eagle and take a few runmng
swoops around the room "to get
their wiggles out."
But that's after each has had a
turn strumming a favorite tune
on the auloharp . with
classmates accompanying an
song.
Mrs. Bland calls her music
programs al the Laguna Beach
Community Center on Legion
Street "Workshops 1n Joyful
Experiences Through Music and Movement. ..
As the title suggests, the
classes are not ordinary dance
or mus ic classes. but a
combination or act1v1t1es
intended to Leach children to
express themselves through
music and under~tand it s
mechanics The workshops include a full
range of musical act1v1ties for
youngsters age 3 to 14. Mrs
Bland. who has been teaching in
Laguna Beach for 20 years,
previous l y taught USC 's
children's music program for 14
years. She is a graduate of the
Dalcroze School of Music an New
York City
.. E v~rythmg I do here has a
musical purpose." s he said.
"Musil: is taught through body
movement and intensive ear
traini'}g."
Children in the 4-year-old
Grove in late September
following last summer 's escape
from Afghanistan. said he saw
t h e maimed victi m s of
land-mine explosions who had
fled to neighboring Pakistan,
a nd he sa w the mine s
themselves.
"I am not a specialist and It ls
difficult to know about chemical
warfare and those things. But I
saw the 'toy' mines. This l can
verify with my own eyes," said
Assifi, a minister under
President Mohammad Daoud,
who wiis ousted in the bloody
pro-Soviet coup led by Nur
Mohammad Tarakl in April
1978. Taraki has since been
replaced in another pro-Soviet
coup that installed the current
leader, Babrak Karma!.
Imprisoned for two years after
the first coup, Aultl was
unaware of much that happened
in his country, but he said In an
interview this week that after
his release from prison he was
told of Soviet gas attacks. use of
poison and the random
scattering of small
anti-personnel mines. He said he
fled the country out of fear for
.,..., "'"',_.., ...... ~
Mike Vande Mark strums favorite tune on autoharp whale classmates sing. Instructor Irene Bland uses
cardboard tree and bear as visual aids in teaching mu.rical scale.
class seemed to especially enjoy
the Lamber Jack. a foot-high
101nted wooden figure which
appears to dance when a
springboard held under its feel
as vibrated.
To help teach the musical
scale. Mrs . Bland u ses a
cardboard bear and honey tree.
i\s the bear climbs higher into
the tree to reach the honey. t.he
patch of the song that tells the
story of the bear's quest, goes
higher.
But the hour-long session isn't
a ll s itting and listening.
A'ccording to Mrs. liland,
walking, running, skipping.
galloping and swinging to music
lead lo an understanding of note
valµes .
"'M y objective is lo find ways
to help children develop their
full potential," Mrs. Bland said.
·'They are pres ented with
opportunities to explore,
experiment and express
themselves through music and
movement."
Apparently she has struck a
responsive c hord 1n the
communjty. She said her classes
are booked years in advance and
there is a waHing list of parents
wishing to enroll their children.
Mrs. Bland limits enrollment
to 10 children in each session in
order to give each youngster
individual attention.
~~~~~~~~~~~_,.....,..,
Music class sits quietly (above) after students make like.an eagle (top photo) to "get the wiggle• out."
his Ille.
"T he donkey driver who took
us across the border told us how
he had set orr hundreds of these
mines, but I wasn't sure what to
believe," he said. "But then as
we were crossing the border 1
saw a little pile of sand with a
small piece of green plastic
sticking out. I asked the donkey
driver If this was one of the
mines and he said it was ...
When 1 got across the border in
Pakistan, I saw the victims or
this -women and children who
had Jost their feet."
But Ass iri , 49, seems less
concerned about the method of
Soviet killing than about the fact
that the Russians, who installed
a puppet regime m Kabul 1n
December 1979, are in his
country at all.
·'They are telhng the world
they made us free Free from
what? Our own rule?" he asks
During his overland escape to
Pakistan, he said he saw the
struggle of his country against
the Soviet occupation and found
has countrymen united an "total
unanimous hate " But he
assailed the United States as not
providing enough military and
economic aid
"The world thanks the
Russians have taken over. The
world has accepted Afghanistan
as a loss This is not true. We
are fighting." he said .. But 1t 1s
difficult because t he Soviet
Union LS a super power
"We can break 100 tanks, but
they send 200 more. We kill their
soldiers 1,000 of them and
they send 2,000 in. But who will
replace our freedom fighters 1f
they are killed" This 1s what the
Soviet Union is counting on." he
said
lie said what was needed most
to fight the Soviets were
weapons to fight the Soviet
helicopter gunships, as well as
medical supplies and anti-tank
weapons Most of the best rebel
arms have been captured from
the Ru ssians or from the
/.\' (.;1\RDE.\ GIWVJ-:
\b111/ .. \:.:-1111
Soviet led Afghan army
i\ssifi said his wild flight to
Pa kistan really wasn't that
difficult a trip, because the
Sovie~ control only the city of
Kabul and the main road.
"It doesn't take much to gel
out. You jus t need someone who
can walk t o the outside or
Kabul," A:.sifi said, adding he
certainly would have been killed
had he remained in Kabul.
lie said he timed has escape to
coincide with the melon season,
during which the freedom
fighters refrained from
disrupting road traffic
Ass1fi , now living with
relatives. considers himself
"fortunate" to have been sent to
1a1I About half of Daoud's
government was executed.
·'They were killing hundreds
every week A lot were taken out
of jail and never came back l
was wa1t1ng to be killed." he
said
Green light given
for Irvine center
The Irvine City Council has
issued orders for the city staff to
move ahead with proposals to
build a $19 7 million civic center
and a $2.7 million animal pound
In unanimous votes. th e
council told staff members lo
begin searching for an architect
for the proposed civic center and
to begin forming a non-profit
corporation to build the animal
pound.
The design contract alone for
the civtc center proposed for the
vicinity of Barranca Parkway
and J effrey Road wall be about
$1 2 million, said assistant
Irvi ne city manager Paul Brady
Jr.
The total cost for the civic
center is to be financed through
the sale of tax-Cree bonds issued
by a joint-power authority of
public agencies interested in
having offices in the center
Brady said the Irvine Unified
School District and the Irvine
Ranch Water District have each
expressed interest an
p artic1pal1ng 1n such an
authority
The council told the city staff
lo move ahead with forming a
non -profit corporation Lo finance
the proposed an1 mal pound
because no other public agencies
indicated interest m forming a
Joint-power authority for this
project
The non profit corporation
would issue tax-free bonds to
fund construction of the animal
pound which is to have from 100
to 150 an1 mal runs and be
located near the intersection or
Sand Canyon Avenue and Irvine
Center Drive
From 10 to 25 acres will be
needed for the civic center and
about 5 acres for the animal
pound
The council told the staff to
begin negotiating with t he Irvine
Co. for acquisition of land for
both facilities Such negotiations
should be completed by late
Januar y, the cou ncil
r,tco m mended.
Irvine Counci I man Larry
Agran said the Irvine Co. should
cut the price on the land or give
1t to the city as a gift because
both fac1lit1es would enhance the
Irvine Co.'s interests in Irvi ne
Footprints to stay
NB mayor's imprint on bridge
Contrary to rumor. Callrans
says it has no plans to sandblast
Newport Beach Mayor Jacki e
Heather's footprints ofC the new
Upper Newport Bay bridge.
"It's just a couple or high-heel
marks and some scratches,"
ex plains Ron Strungs, a
Caltrans official from Costa
Mesa.
"You wouldn't want to turn
the bridge into some kind of
Hollywood with footprints and
names but I don't think it's any
big deaJ."
Mayor Heather says she had
nothing to do with the footprints
even though they were made
with her shoes.
She says bridge work crews
borrowed a pair of high heels
from her house when she was on
a recent vacation and pressed
the prints lnt.o the sidewalk on
the east end of the span.
Tbey also carved her tnlUaJs
and the date into the cement.
••I think they wer e just
thankin~ me for beln& their big
rooter,' Mrs. Heather 1u1gesta,
polnllna out abe took tbe
workmen cookies and other
refreshments several time.a.
"l ldmlre them and l adml,..
the job they did," the mayor
says. "I got upset at the attitude
of the motorists who gave the
crews so much abuse "
Mayor Heather says several
workmen pointed out the prints
to her last September when the
bridge was dedicated.
But Al Sa line , projec t
manager on the bridge, says
he's not going to take any credit
for the footprints.
"Yeah 1 heard about it, but l
don't think we bad anything to
do with It," he said.
Mayor Heather says s he was
concerned that Caltrans wanted
to sandblast out her initials and
shoe prints. She thought the
stale might consider it graffiti.
"I don't consider it graffiti,"
responds Callran s official
Strungs, "but I just hope we
don't eel to a point where all ol.
the councilmen want to •iCa
their names on there."
..
He says politiciana,someUmes
have a tm•cy to want to put
lbeir namea ~ lhinl•· "But I don't think we'll
remove It," Strun1s adds,
"bec:aUle I doa't think anyone's
1oln1 td see lt."
t
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday. November 'D. 1981
•ANN LANDERS
•HOROSCOPE
•HY GARDNER
'
•
Hates tobacco smoke
flGHTING RATE HIKE Cus tomcl's attend 1 ht• Publu: Utilities Commission hearing 1n
os Angeles to try to convince the PUC
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DEAR ANN LANDERS: My pet bate ls
cigarette 1moke. I 'm becomins paranoid
on the subject. Will you please allow me to
let ort some steam?
Do you well.groomed, fastidious
women ever give a thought to bow you
s mell? You buy expensive perfumes, take
bubble baths, use deodorants, mouthwash
and a hair spray with exquisite scents and
then stink up everything with that first
cigarette.
It is disgusting to sit next to a smoker
in church, a movie, the theater, a meeting
or a meal. The smell of a smoke r 's clothes
1s enough to make me retch. Their cars
s tink something awful and the furniture
and draperies in their homes, ditto.
I cannot understand how parents who
claim to love their kids continue to smoke
in their presence. Not only is the smoke
damaging to yolll)g lungs but the implicit
message is, ''It's OK to do it."
I know you have played this song in
your column many times but once more
won't hurt. It just might get through to
those dummies that their lousy habit could
kill somebody they love. -NUTTY ON
THE SUBJECT
DEAR NOT SO NU'JTY: Every word
ol your letter makes seme. And now for a
rew facts from the National Cancer
Institute: ·
Lung cancer is the f aste1t growlng
cause ol death ln the United Stat.es. This
year 122,000 people wW get1'.and about
105,000 will die from It. U peop)e stopped
smoking cigarettes, 85 percent of all
primary lwig ca»cers would be eliminated.
Now back to the perfume and bubble
bath: Women and teen·age girls are the
ones who are hyping the death statistics.
They are the "new s mokers" who need to
understand the risks they are taking to
appear cool, "sophisticated" or whatever.
Your letter ls right OD, and I thank you ror
writing.
UE.\R ,\:\:"-LA:\DEHS ~I~ '>Oil l1n·..,
a nd works in another state. He shares a n
apartment with a man who works for the
same company. They decided to double l•P
because rentals a re scar ce and expensive.
Neither on e is gay. but several
members of our family have made snide
remarks because he is livin g with a man.
What is wrong with them, a nyway?
Women have always shared apartments to
save money and no one thinks a thing
about it. Why the. double standard? Whal
s hould I say to frie nds who make cutting
remark s? -IRRITATED I N
CHAMPAIGN
DEAR IRRITATED: Make no ncuses
or apologies. Remember -brilllut people
talk about Ideas mediocre people talk
a bout things <c lothing, jewelry, cars,
investments), and small·minded people
talk about other people.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I won't sleep
tonight if I don't respond to "Heading for
Spins terhood in Li,ncoln. Neb." She must
be kidding when she says Lincoln is loaded
q Allll l.ANOllS
with attractive men, but they are all
married and don't fool around.
I live in Lincoln and was divorced
recently. 1 have been propositioned by
lawyers, doctors, ins urance executives,
s tockbrokers and a clergyman -all
married.
Marned men in Lincoln run around
just like they do everywhere else. -THE
HO RSE'S MOUTH
DEAR MOUTH: My mall from Uacoln
supports your statement. lacldeatally,
s tate capitals, for some reason, are a bit
racier than other cities. Why, I don't kaow.
OEAR A~N LANOERS. Mv son lives
:.iback by the lelwr from .. Plcas.~d to Meet
You" and <.i mazed at your answer.
In my µart of the country a lady does
:"JOT shake hands. no r docs she stand when
a gentleman enters the room .
The r e is on t• excPption to the
ha nd·s haking rule When someone offers
hb or her hand. it must be assumed the
person does n 't know better. Such
ignoramuses belong in the same category
with lip·smackcrs and coffee blowers. The
lad~ sho uld respond \\1th a light clasp.
1 You t ailed 1t a .. dead fi sh · 1
I am 42 . ~o <lon ·1 label me an
out ·of·daH• clod lkmt•mber we mav be
thinking the !:>amc about \OU ~,·hen vou.hold
out \OUr hand l o u' A .TRUE SOL"fHER~ LADY
DEAR LAO\': I a lwaH stand when a
gentleman or distinc tion or advanced age
e nters a room, and I shake hands with both
men and women -no dead fi shes eithe r . If
that makes me a clod in your eyes, it
wouldn't exactly ruin ffi.\' da).
PVNCH v
Warm thoughts glow
HIDGEFIELO, Conn. 1AP1 T he
p1<.'lure rl'lca:,l'U by the White House
photogr apher ot the Pres ident and first
lad) d1mng on tra) s in lhe upstairs stud~
n•r entl~ redecorated under Mrs. Reagan's
supcrv1:-.1on presents a cozy fa mily sceoe.
:\anc\ has kicked off her shoes and has
her feel curled under her m a big comf y
l'htntz t'hall' T he leader of the Western
\\ur ld. t·asuall~ attired m slacks. cardigan.
opt'n·ncckcd shirt and \\hat a ppears to be
bedroom slippers. has ::.l'ltled down after a
hard day an thl' Oval Office lo the f1r::.t tall
hig hball or thl' evening.
From tht· angle the p1 ctun· Y.a~ taken.
I t an"t tell what the) arc facing on th<.'
opposite side of the room. but I hope it 1::. a
roaring firl' and not a T V screen
WATCHI NG T ELEVISION whtlt.•
eating 1s not good for the d igestion.
cspcciall~ ti the evening news ts on and the
network eorrespondents ar e doing their
·tandup ~ch t1 ks undc1· tht•1r ta,vonll' trel'
on the \\.hill' lloust• l<.1wn \\ atchm g talk
~hoY. pundit~ and poltt1<.·1an~ t·an bl• enm
rn orl' un::.ettlang lor lhl' ::.tom<1ch. Y. hill.'
tak rn~ TV cconom1t· t'X perL::. '' 1t)1 les:, than
a g r am of salt can be pos itively ulcerous.
Who can face s almon mousse after two
minutes of lrvmg R. Levine'!
No. a cheery fireside seems to me the
best way ror the first family to shut out th~
wmtry blas ts buffe ting the White House
these days . The licking flames and glowing
embers take the chill off friendships gone
wrong and adversaries new and old lurking
in lhe shadows.
In "The Sno w -Storm," Emers on
described the scene as Currier and Ives
might have eng raved it:
· · ... a ll f riends s hut o ut, t he
housemates sit
Around the radiant fireplace, e nclosed
In a tumultuous privacy of storm."
HERE AT HARDSCRIBBLE House,
my wife a nd I often dine on trays in front
of a crackling fire, isolating ourselves from
the icy blasts of querulous editors, carping
readers. beggmg press agents and dunning
bill collectors. We go through a cord of
HUGH MULLIGAN
MULLIGAN STEW
wood every c:o uple ul months and log m ore
time an front of the blal mg logs t han before
the carkhng txx1b tubt•
Only the m ost benign ghosts hover
over our hl•arth. Tht• fact·~ ol old friends
oil en ~male out at m e t rom the ember s. I
hear the11· laug hter an the crackle o f the
burning logs. Th~ burnished andirons are a
pros<:enium arch that frames the.stage for
in st ant replays of m y gladdest hours.
Som e llmcs in the burning coals l see
m yself <JS a n <.1ltar bo~ again. s pooning
incenst• into thl' thurible at midnight Mass
on thosl' happ1esl of Christmas Eves back
an St Patriek ·s Church m Long Island City.
~y
A phantom troop of :,oldiers is
mus tered out of the curling s moke. and I
am an infantr y recruit again. setting off on
a 20·m1le hike. the last st ep in basic
training. over the red c lay hills of Camp
Croft.SC .
~PRINGT IM E IN P A RIS. Cris p
f'ebruary along the Grand Canal in Venice.
A s ummer 's day in Rome. a nd a new pope
out on the balcony giving his blessing.
Sunset fires of evening lighting up the vast
s ky over the Mekong delta. I relive them
all in the dancing flames.
A spark jumps and crackles on the
hearth in front of the a ndirons, and it ·s
Father Gilmartin, t he second year high
school Latin tcaeher. s na pping his ringers
a nd calling on me to translate from Cicero.
old Marcus Tullius hlmsetr. Strange that
the passage should b~: ·· Nullus est locus
domestica scde jucundiur .. no place
mo re delights thiln one's own rircpluce.
A fireplace ls the only place in lhe
house where a family can be •looe
together, communln1 ln 1µence, drea~.
dozlne. drifting in the eomtonm1 warm
glow of bri1htest yesterdays.
910111
By PHIL INTER~ANOI
"Well, well, as the rates would have it ... .''
• HOIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
Capricorn:
Timing good
Saturday, November 28
ARJF.s (March 21-April 19}: You no
longer feel adrift; creative changes occur
and goal comes into sharp, clear focus.
Sense of communication is heightened, you
express feelings in graphic manner.
TAURUS <April 20-May 20): Family
·'situation" improves -long-range plans
are realistic. Virgo, Capricorn and another
Taurus play key roles .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Some
promises should be taken with proverbial
grain of sa lt. Individual who boasts may
actually be financially embarrassed.
CANCER (June 21-July 22 >: Your
negotiating position becomes stronger if
yo u are patie nt. Act accordingly .
Emphasis on contracts, cooperative
efforts, public response to your ideas
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>: Task which
had been delayed can now be completed.
Emphasis on bas ic chores, dependents,
pets. Long-dis tance communication
highlights chance to reach more people
who will respond to your needs.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Direct
approach enables you to get to heart of
matters. Your purpose becomes clear,
opportunities multiply and you'r e given
chance to act in independent, creative
manner.
LIBRA CSept. 23-0ct. 22>: Focus on
property, security and the end of family
dispute. You h ave rare opportunity lo
correct pasl mistakes, to start anew and to
build on a durable base.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Flurry of
social activity dominates scenario. Details
are temporarily pushed aside, you glimpse
picture as a whole. Intellectual curiosity
gain s full rein inquiries are made.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Questions arise concerning money, cash
flow, income potential. Restrictions can be
r emoved if you dis play knowledge,
patience and persistence.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Lunar
cycle at peak -judgment, intuition,
liming are on target. Purchase of apparel
could be important part of scenario. You'll
look better, feel better and be at right
place at crucial monmnt.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Family
member, who had been in semi-seclusion,
will emerge. Important for you to be
gregarious, open to suggestions and willing
to listen to both s ides of story.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Wish
comes true, but in surprising manner.
Emphasis on rewards based on promotion,
production and career activity.
AIT HOPPE
THE INNOCENT BYSTANDER
Doomsday jet
causes worry
Dear pn.•s 1tle nl . I , J oe S1kspak.
American, takt.> pen an hand to g rind an ax
or l wo. \'ou got to ~et rid or that there
.. Doomsday Plane · It m akes us citize ns
nervous .
l am down to Paddy's Plarc nursing a
Seven-high when I read in the paper how
you took your first ride in this Doomsday
Plane. whu:h sits a round Was hington ready
to whisk you up in the air for 72 hours in
l'ase ~·ou pus h the wrong button.
l see you said the experience wal>
\ l'l'Y encour aging· a nd having the plane
hand~ gives )OU "a sense of confidenc·e. ·
So 1 ask Paddy what he thinks of giving a
president a sense ol' confidenn· 1n case he
pus hes the wrong button.
"DON'T LISTEN tu thl' pres1de11l ,
J oe. says Padd). · 11e·s JUst trying tu
m a ke 1t sound like fun. Al'tually. the lust
thing he wants to do 1s fly ofl in that planc
with nuclear bombs exploding all over the
pluec. Uon t lorget. 11 only holds him a nd
9:1 other pl'Oplt:! and who s he going to lea \'C
behind·:··
"Stot'kman and Allen and lla1g lor
-.tarte1·s. :.uys I promptly. :'\o wonder ht•
figures 1t s ,·er) L'ncouraging. Then he
t·an t<.ikt.• his wife. Nanc)'. and. . ..
"No. h t.• ean l . J oe. That plant."s
.\ml·n<:a s t•ommand post And then.'·!:> 110
room alx>ard lor an uttraC.'lt\l' lad) and t\\O
hJ 1 rdrl'sst.·r~
·Just \o\hl'n tltt.·~· werl' getting the
\\ h1te I louse tugl·ther. tuo. · sa) s I. shaking
m) head But l guess hc·s got lo l<.ike thl'
t 1p top expt•rts who know e\ er) th mg the1 l'
1s tu kno\\ about runn111s.: the t'ountr)·
"YU \'UE SO," sa\'s P:.tdd'. but
\\ hll'h 9:1 \\'ashing ton columni::,ls I~ ht•
go111g to p1l'k • Anti l htm his I nencb WI II bt·
eulhng lll thert>, Hon It s )our old bt•sl
pal. :\I Bloom1ngtlulc. hen.' Hctsy and I
\\l'l'c wondering 1f )Ou·d like to get ;rn.1)
lur a le1s urel) weekend shooting pheasants
under glass at our ltttle h1deawa) m thl'
Lt.>sser Ant1bes. Wi thin six minutes·.·· ·so h e b rin gs along the
Bloomingdalt.•s. ·· says I
JOt'. )OU dun t kn1rn lht.• \\'us hmgton
M•<·1al sl'enc lie 111\ 1ted thl' Bloom1ngdules
and th(• Tut ties '' 111 nc\'er speak to lum
aga111
At least he gets h1msl•ll ol I lht•
g1 ound. sa) :-. I
"IT'S ~OT GOING to be any bed of
1 ost.•s up lhl·rc .. Jot.'. says Padel) ·You
t.'\ N been on a long 1 ltghl ·• The w hns gl'l
s topped up. the soap runs out. )OU seen tht•
mo\ 1e. t ht•n• s not t•nough pillows and
blankets to go arnund. and th1.· <hnne rs <.ill
taste like the lunC'ht.•s which all taste like
the breakfasts whtt'h all taste like botl t.•d
St) ruloam :\nd )OU ci..ln t sh.•t•µ bt'C'ause ol
the one big wo1T) on ) our mind
\\'hut s that'.' s<.1) s I.
'\\'ill there bl· <.sm·bodv lhcre to ml'l'l
\OU \\hen \'OU land" ;,n·s Padd\
· So. p1:e::,1tlent. I l1g.un• )OU. C'ould sell
this L>oomsda' Pl<.snt· to Lee lat·utt·a 01
somt'bod\' whti needs 1t L's l'tlllcns would
leel a lot.saler kntl\\lng ~ou and us wert' all
111 the same boat
In lht• l1nd. I got to agree \.\llh Padd~
,\ t'<.ipt<.1111 . Padd) sa~·s. oughl to go
do" n \\tlh h1~ plane
Truly Your:-..
J oe S1k::.p<.1k. Amencan
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
·MY ~ REAL DUTY
AY SOMETIMES SE
TO REFUSE TO DO
···---.. ICiltto--~·-H•_.,... ....
WHAT'
EVERYBODY ~AYS
15
f"\Y REAL DUTY.
'Di-Day' due • ID June
News of a Sort: In England the.) 're
referring to the June day Princess Diana
presents Prince Charles with a bambino as
"Di-Day."
That highl)' successful producer ol the
J a m es Bond blood-and· t hunder fll m s
1 whose name sounds like a vegetable
Cubby Hroccoli1. started out m N.Y. as a
manufacturer of coffins. So did his first
James Bond. Sean Connery. who once
donated a million dollars to a chanty m the
country of his b11th Scotland. lt proves
his word is as good as his Bond.
Q: How come Sidney Poitier retired'!
A . He didn't. He merely s witc hed from
acting to directing
When the popular Sugar Ray Leonard
wrested the welterweight title away from
Tommy Hearns in Vegas, he was invited to
visit President Reagan •. The president,
surrounded by reporters, a ked them "not
to ask us to go a rew rounds." (Seems to us
•
Pf ISONAllTY Q.&A.
BY MAR ILYN AND HY GARDN ER
he's too busy already going a few rounds
with Stockman, Allen , Haig and other
battlers in his s table!)
A Fort Pierce r eade r offe r s this
re flection on inflation: "When I stopped at
a gas station in Florida and told the
attendant I wanted S3.06 worlh or
unleaded, he s napped: 'You want It here Ol'
to go'?" Sounded like a Chine e restaurant
waiter:
Send your questions to Hy Gardner, "Glad
You Asked That ... an care of the Daily Pilot.
P.O. Boz 19620. l rviM, Calif. 92114. Maril11n and
lly Gardner will answer as many questions as
they can in their column. but tht volume of mail
makes personal replies impossible.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, November 27, 198~ -
STRUmNG STUFF A pair ol turkt'' f i;,,h
:-.trut in manne lashwn and µrobabl~ arl'
th ankful that thell' onl) par l1<.'1pat1on 111
Th<.inksgl\mg Da) fan• \\aS that thl'' \\l'll'
..............
p.11 t ol a d1-.plu~ .it the Seattle 1)quanum
l'lw f i-.h arl' nwmbt·r~ ul lht· M·o1·pm•nHl.H.'
t .11n 1 h
~ Aulo & Homeowntrs• ~ ,;,-~ Ouo1es By Pttone
FMMEJS INSURANCE
HOUP
S4a.SS54 w llS·l4l7
It 14 Hartlor ·Cotto ... HO
Holiday Gift
Art Show /Sale
Daily thru Dec 9
Huntington Center's
annual super exh1b1t
of arts and crafts
featuring 55 top
talented ar11sts From
this great 8fT8Y of unlqu• ongmals you'll find a
perfect gilt 10< everyone
Beach Blvd and '°5 Fwy
Children's
Puppet Show
II s the season to make
kids happy at Huntmgton
Center's Greal New Mall
Wllh the real Santa. carohng
and entertamment See the
Mitchell Marionettes 4 shows
daily every Thurs .. Fri .. Sat &
Sun hi Christmas
103J
Ftv1
a:
0 m a:
c(
J:
"" J: ....
"'" 0
"' Q z :::>
0
"' 0 w a:
&&I ...
"'
•ID' Fash ion Island
Newport Beach
'
SFA 's Semi-Annual Shoe
Clearance ... 20% to 30%
Off Original Prices!
• Save on a !>pec1a/ selection of
)Ome of the mo~t beautiful )hoes
in the world'
• An exquis11e collecuon of shoe!>
from our Designer Salon, our
Fenton Las!'-" Collection
and our 'SFAntast1c Shoe Salon
• There may have been
intermediate pnce reduct/om on
wme items pnor to this salP
• At Saks Fifth Avenue
-where we are all the
things you are
South Coast Plaza. 3333 Bristol Street. ( os1a Mesa
--~~~~~-·-}~~~~--« 1tHU111t11Ml l\:rror11uuecc
FIRST "RFORMANCE
Save $4.00 on a dynamite hairstyle! Shampoo,
Performance Qrt•, and Blow Dry (normally
'18.00) are yourt for only t 14.00 when you lntroduc• yourself aa a first-time customer with thlt coupon.
CiET YOUI DaUr PllFOIMAMCI
. FOR $4USS!
c.. ....
170I ..............
C-.MMe ~,.~ ........ ,
w-M.IM
W .M
':J
Orange Cout OAJLY PILOTIFrlc:t.y, November ZT. 1981
ArW.,.._
MATCHLESS L . R. Gardner or Win -
terhaven. Calif.. has carved a niche m the
Guinness Book of Records with his tiny crea·
lions. In his left hand are three plier joints
c'urved from a kitchen match. In his right
hand are 73 chain lmks from a fireplace
match.
Irvine health
panel forming
BY RICHARD GREEN o( ttoe o.11y r1i.t se.tt
l Irvine Mayor David Sills, at the urging of the
oihe r City Council members, bas agreed lo serve
a~ a founding member or a consortium designed lo
bµild a health care system for Irvine.
Also expected to serve are UCI Chancellor
Daniel G AJdnch Jr; George Hoag II, chairman ol
U1e board of Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport
8'.each ; Robert Lombatrdi, chancellor of SaddJe-
l:>'a ck Community College, and Dr. Arnold 0 .
Beckman of Beckman Instruments.
: Dave Baker , president or a citizens group
working for residents' representation ln health
c)lre pla nning, s uggested formation of the
cpnsortium in .a Nov . 23 letter he sent to Beckman,
Aldrich. Hoag, Lombardi and Sills, among others.
Representatives of the Greater Irvine
Industrial League and the Baker-led citizens
ltroup, People for an Irvine Community Hospital,
will also be. represented on the consortium board.
"The community should have as much control as possible in determining the nature or its own
tfealth care system," Baker, a former candidate
for Irvine City Council, said m the letter.
• Baker said the consortium will allow for public
ioirucipation in the health care planning effort.
• A number of hospital and beallb care ~ganizations have indicated interest in buiJdlng
hos pital facilities in Irvine. State and county
health planning officials will ultimately decide
which or the competing proposals moves forward.
Officials say the competition to build the first
t\ospital m Irvine is intense because the city is one
of the fastest growing of its size in the state and
!las an atnuent population.
Irvine Mayor David Sills. who agreed to serve
on the consortium Tuesday night, has said Irvine
I• the largest city in the state with no major
hospital withm its borders.
fDR THI RICORD
M IHIOlll CQMlllWIOTY
MOSrlTAL
Ck-• Mr end ~ JeHy Hool!, LtOVN
8e.c,., Olrf
Oc-.r• Mr end ""'-W•YM P.Cterloft Sen Clemente, 9lrf
Oc-.rlt
Mr •nd ~ p.,, Me1<elf, Sen JIMn
CHlstr-. 9'rl .._.,._,
Mr end M<-. O..Ws St-. South t..9 ...... 91r1
111-.....r4
Mr encl M rt Cherles L111fente
Uo""•N ...... Qlrt
#or end ~ Georoe R-•" Oen• Point. boy. -· Mr -~ CNrles Kollm-Jr
Sovift Leoi-, lloy.
Mr end Mrt Ooneld Oowe11,
C.Olstreno &Mch, olrt .............
Mr end MN ~ Ve91. OeM
Pofnl, boy, .......... ,,
Mr encl Mrl Wlllle m Hod91ll111,
lrvlne, 11oy
-ti
Mr end Mn. R_, Cell, Sen JIMn
Cepl1tr-. tioy
.. ITS.Ill MaDICAL
~inw•
~16
Mr encl Mn. -1...-Sinner. Irvine,
bov Oc-.r• M r encl Mn. 0.•ld K-. Celle
Mne.olrt ~-M r end _,,, Mk hMI h11ey, Int .....
olrt
Mt end Mn. Crel9 Colwell, Colle
Meu,0111.
touTMCOAIT
MaDICAL c••T••
Oc"91rll
Mr.-Mn.~W.Cremm,
So"lh Legune, girt.
~-Mr -Mn. ltay-Gii._.., L~-N..,..,bo.,,
~· Mr. -Mt~ K-1" A. Clarti,
OeM Point. girt.
M r . e nd Mrt. J emet L .
lh•llMrford, S.. J1111n ~·••-· boy.
_,
Mr. -Mn. Joe R. At-lrot>I,
Leo<IMN'-!.boy.
FOUNTAIN VALLaY
COMMUllllTY MOSrtTAL ~u
Mr end Mn. J -M«ton, C.te
MeU.Qlrf.
Ck .....
M r. end M••· Pevl Tftomp1011,
HVftll1191eft 8-tl, tlf'I . ..._,...,
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Bell,
HVfttfntlWt IN<". gin. Gii.Wt lAltalMrt, C.t. Mele, tfn . .......
Mr. •M Mn. Gr..-ry Furlone,
Wettnllft!IW, lilOf,
tM. e~ Mn. TllOft\elt w.Nef, C.18 Me .. ,.., • ........,.
Mr, erwl Mr•. WllOem k hmlllt, Hlllll~~tltl. Mr, eM Mr" &.Mfe11<a LeMey, ............... ""' Mt, ette Mt•. Oen"lt Hart, "•"' ..... . .,....... ..... ....... v ......
Metal cylinder found in Africa may be part of satellite
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP> -Kennedy
Space Cent.er en•lnffn are analyaln1 a charred .
metal cyUnder found In aout.hem Atrtca to eee if ll waa part of a Iott aatelllle.
The object, smaller than a human flat, w11
brou1ht to the United Statea by an American
mlaalooary who aald It seared t.reet and bruah
when It land&<!.
Space 11ency en1lneen Hid that lt Ulttly was
·•apace Junk," poe1lb1y from a decayed 11te1Ute
that dlatntearated In the atmoephere.
Emqry Pinkerton, 58, of Greer, S.C., a Baptllt
mlHlooary, brou1ht the object to the apace center.
Pinkerton aaJd naUve tribesmen, lo a country be
would not diacloee, brou1ht hlm the object. He aaid
lhe trlbeame told h1m they du1 ll up after
watchJna It streak from the aky.
Pinkerton aald be broupt It back because '"
believed It mJ1ht have been part ot the external
fuel tank from the apace 1butUe Columbia'• tint ml11lon In April.
But en1foeen 11Jd lbe metal bu a blab Iron
content, leadJna them to believe It la from a aatelllte, po11lbly, Soviet.
at~ristmas a!~ristmas
LTD Ed. Lttho "Heart of a Child"
OPEN HOUSE
.............. Ddoft ......... ~ ........ , ....... ...........
.............. d
TeddrleerlNe.
Conlpl1 .. cawtebowww
DHlt:. ... _.. -:== ,.... .
rettlll•ftd
comMerclel ....... ,.
-Meet The Artist -·
Sunday, December 6th 1-4 p.m.
~-c;#Cl,C,..~ ~~
"one of a kind a~• and ornamnt1"
See our showroom at:
372 North Coast Hwy. I ugwia Beach, CA
10:00 a.m .
(714) 494-2675 to 5: .m.
3034 E. Coast Hwy.
Corona del Mar
759-9116
year.
Wouldn't it be nice to have an
extra $3,000 next year so you
can t.ake that dream vacation
you've always wanted?
Well, it's possible.
Because that's how much you
could save in just one year by
riding the OCTD bus to work
each day.
Here's how: Most of us
think the main expense of
operating a car is the high
price of gasoline. But there
are many hidden costs that
quickly add up. Like depre-
ciation, maint.enance, insur-
ance, even parking charges.
In our area, that totals more
than $13 per day. And that's
for a car driven only 20 miles
round trip to work.
The bus cost.sjust 75¢
during morning and evening
rush hours and 60¢ at all
other times. And we offer the
option of either taking one of
our regular rout.es that cover
Orange County, or our
express rout.es specifically
planned around large
I
employment cent.ers. (Fare
on express rout.es is $1.50.)
Tu help make planning
your trip on the bus conve-
nient, we offer a free Ride
Guide, which most major em-
ployers have available, or you
can call OCTD at 636-RIDE
for a copy and a personalized
route schedule that fits your
specific transportation needs.
And, since 75% of the Orange
County population lives
within 3-blocks of a bus stop,
it's very convenient.
So take a ride to work on
the best bargain around town.
And have a vacation on us.
Cost of operating a car
.for one year.
Daily Round
trip miles
20
30
40
50
Standard
Car
$3896
$3999
$4304
Compact
Car
$3309
$3594
$4188
Source: Runzheimer and Company. Inc.
Costa are as of A~t 1, 1981.
636-RIDE
,
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, Novemb« 'ZT, 1981 ...
Hot tubs more than relnxation·"J -Latest fad luxurious , pleasant alternative to taking date to movie
LOS ANGELF.S CAPJ -The
end of a date uaed to mean
cocktails in front of a flre, but in
Souttiem California the end of a
romantic eventna these days
often ends In a bot tub.
Hot tubblnJ -the backyard
custom of soaklna in 100-dearee
bubbllna water -is becomin1
the latest thln1 on a date or
oulin1 with your spoun. The
Idea has been popularised by • number or establishments which
for SlO an hour per person, rent
out s ensuous bot tub rooms
complete with sauna, s howers.
hair dryers, tape decks, and ~
.. relaxation" beds.
A lot or steam is generated
behind lh~e doors; not all oC it
is coming from the water.
On a typi cal F r iday or
Saturday n ight at Hot Tub
Fever, the parking lot is packed
with cars as disparate as the
clusntele. Jaguars. Por fcbes,
and AJfa Romeos s tand next to
F o rd s. C h ev r ole t s a nd
Volkswagens.
Inside, a roaring fire lights up
the lobby where guests -mostly
couples sign In for an hour or
two of sybaritic bplendor
APWI...,._
Cl1JJ Cabral and Meekane ~\'ong. employees u/ ··· Jlot 'I'uh f't>uer
American vers1011 o/ Japanese bath house e111oy /ac1/1 tlt!s f°>t'Jurt'
paying customers arrive
Once the door to the private
hot tub room is shut. the rest of
the world is a thous and miles
away. Hot t ubbers can idle away
t h ei r tim e soa king in a
fi ve-foot-wide tub while lislenln
~f'IW• r....., 4itM1' •I 'fOUt 0oor
l(" .. l 4j,tc,;.• ,_M_..t 'r(JUll Att.t
COSTA ..... 641-1289
t utN_.91 ...
ltllSIOOO viuo495-0401
~c.-..c.,... ...
, .... °'"90 , ""' •• ··~ .. ....,. )
Photos With
Real Santa
Bring the little ones to Huntington c.enter's
Great New Mall lor
memories they'll never
forget with the Mitchell
Marionette Christmas
Shows and a visit with the
real Santa with the reel
beard Instant Santa
photos only S2.881
KARATE
SELF-DEFENSE
INTRODUCTORY COURSE
3 * PRIVATE LESSONS
* Gift Certificate *
Available
Private11essons are very im~r
tant to beginning students. We
feel that 1 private lesson Is
worth 3 or 4' hrs. of mass group 1
instruct.ion.
Learn self-defense from Cham·
Pion Black-Belt lnstruct~rs.
Bob and Barbara White have
been teaching Karate In
Orange County · for over 13
years to men, ~men and chil-
dren of all ages.
Get Into gOOd shaPe and learn
self-defense at the same time.
• SPECIAL Offll •Ott NOVIMllR·DIClMlll
2 PIOPLI fOtt TMI PllCI Of ONI.
BOB WHITE'S KARATE STUDIO
645-0337
Father doesn't live here anymore.
You make the difference.
VVlth the United. Way.
'When father left the family, he left behind insecurity and an
un~rtain future. A former loving family is now a collection of
Individuals. It's a sad story that's becoming more common everyday.
' The United Wey of Orange County North/South is helping to
keep families together by contributing to family counseling
cen~e~. in addition to more than 80 other organizations that help
to !weP people happier and businesses more productive.
'To do the job, we need the hetp of you and your business.
Th8 support we receive from major corporation• Just Isn't
enctugh. We need everyone to give their fair share. Yesterday's
do~ations helped to solve today's problems. And today's
contributions help make a brighter tomorrow for everyone:
lndlvlduals. families and businesses.
Give your share today. It's the United way.
·•-is Llnli•dWllll
of Or•nge County IOUlh
I .,, MetropolttM DrM
Sutt• 500,
O,.nge,CelUomla IMI
(714) 134-2252
Thanks to ,.,a, it won..
Forall ofa1.
.. ................. 0.., .... Sl:il an....._.o......
to taped mualc, loun1ln1 on a
rubber hammock 1lun1 over the
tub, playing backaammon on a
floatlna board or relaxing in the
aauna.
For Dedra, 19, and Mlauel, 21,
both students, It was their first
time at the place.
"I really enjoyed It," Dedra
aa Id. It was d i tre r e nt a nd
relaxlna."
Another couple, Sharon and
Wayne, both in their late 30s,
room which has the added
attract.loo or a fireplace, buUt-ln
color televi1lon set with remote
control and video tape m1chlne,
aelt·contalned bathroom with
bidet, and backdoor entrance for
celebrities who wlatj to 10
unnoticed
"We've had office parties in
the V.1.P. room," said owner
Steven Freedberg. who added
tha t he gets a lot or V.l .P .
business from the movie and
'Record time in a hot tub here ioos
12 hours, 40 minutes.'
came beeause 1t was something
out of the ordinary ··we usually go to t h e
movies." Sharon said.
But the weekend action is not
restricted to just dates. Hot
tu bbin~ is a great gift for any
occasion. One couple -looking
li k e two d r o wned r ats -
emerged from a hot tub room.
Jim Cook had just turned, 34 and
his wife Carole invited him to
Hot Tub Fever as a blrthday1
present
F o r t h e tru e h e d o n ist
interested in more than just
relaxation, there is the V.l.P.
record industry.
Freedber g , a 39-year -old
entrepreneur who used to be in
the packing business before
entering the tub business three
years a~o. says his average
customer is anywhere from 18 to
45 and stays between 1112 to two
hours.
.. Record time someone spent
1n a hot tub here was 12 hours
and 40 minutes." he said matter
of factly
lie added that business 1s
brisk on f'riday and Sat urday
from about 8 p.m. to 2 a .m . The
club is open until 6 a.m . on
weeke nds a nd until I e.m . ,
Sundays throu1h Thursdays.
Hot Tub Fever otrer• varloua
fruit Juices to Ila iue•tt, but 1 patrons can brlnt their dwn
m ore spirited refrethnlenta ti ·
they desire, Freedber1 H)'I. •
Hot Tub Fever Inc. wbJeb IJ
composed of Free'dber1 •nd '.
severaJ other partners, lnvetted .
SS00,000 to renovate what uaed
to be a Montessori pre-school.
"It takes an awful lot of •
capltaJ ," Freedber& exflalned. ;
He said the initla capltal
o u tlay has k e pt a lol qf
compeUUon out of the market "
for now, with the handful of
existing clubs located primarily
in No rthern and Southern
California.
Hot Tub F e ver's primary
com petitor in Loa Angeles lt Le·
Hot Tub Cl ub, a s maller
est a blis hme nt with only six '
rooms and a low·key setUna.
The build i n g Is wed1ed in
between a YMCA and a small ,
retail business. There is no lar1e
lobby wher e c us tom e rs cadl
wait, and patrons must make!
reservations specifying how lone
they plan to stay. ,
To owner Larry Davis. hot tut>
establi s h ments a re ··the,
A m e ri c an ve r sion or the
J a pa nese ba thho u'se." The
b ea rd e d 3 4 ·ye ar -old
entrep'l"eneur -who ot into tht
• 19.5 cu It no-frost refttger•tor • 6.68 cu h
freezer. o S1orf!S up to 8 lbs ice, •bout 210 cubes
• 4 ad1usiable gla-s sh .. ves. • Automlttc energy
saver svuem helps cul operatu-v cost. • Moist 'N
Frnh sealed h19h humidity
pin • Meat keeper w1 lu
• 17 2 cu.fl no frott 1elrtge,..tor • Ad1u1t•ble
iplll level 9h1n shelves • Low operll•"9 cost w11h
energy s.1ver switch tn normal po111ton. • 4. 73 cu.ft
freezer. • Equipped for optional automatic: ic:•
maker. • Keeps fr•h foods lo"'41r with Mo111 'N
Fresh 1Hled h19h·humid1ty
&d1ustable temperature Regulerly
control Sele Price
Model WWA1070
Ln• R.tJate s39990
• 4 c:yct ... retulerlcper· INnefll pr-, nlta
end M6tt~ick •Mini· ·-~vb. • Stand· wd....-dty,3epMch
• V•Wtle wettr 1-Vtl1
• 3 Mlhh'lntt l9mper· 1ture comblMtlorw
• Bleedl end flbrlc aoftener d...,._._
pan and Cool 'N Frnh Regulerly
lower·hum1d11y P•n Sale Price
LNa R.tnte
'"=' s5g99s ·
~':'s3991s
THESE ARK JUST A FEW <11 THE GREAT REBATE VAWES AT YOUR CE DEALDl MM
......................... p .... c. ••• -'-·
We Service
We Install
27 Years Expe(lence 1ppl1!!!!! , INC.
-fiha-yre It.., ......... ae•
Orange Cout DAil Y PILOT/Friday. November '1:11 1981
Business centers off er help for entrepreneurs
By JOHN C'VNNIFt' AJ....,.._Alwll'tM
NEW YOHK Did your friend~ snicker when
you n1dJou wunlcd to slltrt a bu.'llnes!i '' Old they
lauah un usk · with whul''" And then dismiss you
as a dreomcr who should be conctirned about hole.I·
lnte it job'!
advice, counsellnll. courses In record k''(lf)lng,
1u•cet1s to computer lime-sharing, Instructions on
d tivelop lni: u bu!llnesis plan, ass1stunl'e In
rollccUng overdue bills
Beginnina In 811ltimore In February, 1980,
S1rbau.ih has opened u total of 46 centers. the
latest one just three weeks ago In Rapid City. S D.
They are unique, he says The combination of
t.1ervlces that begin at the most primary level of
e ntrepreneurship, hu said. make them so
informution on Lax a('countlng. record·keepin1 and
cush flow anulysls. Wlth tM aid of computer pro·
gram11 the customer c1rn determine the advantag.,a
or one site over another. He can simulate varlou11
possibilities. JI~ can use computers on a time
It requ1rc11 a "SlHble finunl'tal and human
romm1tment" 11nid Slrl>uugh "I won't <;,1v t•very
one ill an A·onc super vcrson, but we re trv1nl( to
s tarr thut way," he satd. ·
11huring basis
Ill' may be Introduced to Plato, which I. the
Ile ls resigned, he said. lo losina 11ome of th.:
best s tarters to the companies they help succeed
name of a com~uter·based university of informa· r-:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•iiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii;:--tion begun by Control Data, the University of II ·
Nobody bul u would be entre1>rcnour know11
the lonclinl·ss of trylnM lo muke a go or ll with Just
un unproven le.lea, u pers<inal conviction and de·
ttrminallon. Even friend!> drop a w¥y, lest they be
asked lo invest.
For William Norris, president of Control Data
Corp., the experience isn't so far in the past he
rounded the comp~ny in 1957 that he could
forget. And thal in part explains Control Datu
Business Ccnteri..
And it is this combination that makes him con
fident that nobody need be turned away from one
of the cenlers. He Insists there
ill always help ror them and.
and a consequenl'e, business for
the centers.
llnols und the National Science Foundation The
would·be business person can take a SO·hour
course in "Building Your Own Business," with
financing for qualified persons by the SBA.
··If you get turned away at u Control Di:llu
Busines~ Center call me," said Eugene Sirbaugh.
president of the centers, a production of the parent
company and 1b wholly owned subs1d1ury, Com
mercial ~redit Co
··Most people who come to
the business centers need
money," s aid Sirbaugh, who
worked his way up through
Commercial Credit Co. The
centers can offer cash. Small
Bus 1ness Adrn.i nii.tration loan
guarantees, financing and
leasing
Marketing and management assistance la of
fered tor beginners and those already in business.
"If we feel you don't understand the business you
are in we may do a review," said Sirbaugh, adding
that such a review usually can determlne why a
s mall-business person Is having problems.
Consulting services an• offered. "Most small
bus inesses have no bus iness plan," he said. The
plan might be written jointly by customer and ad·
viser "There is a tremendous need for these
plans : we're determined that small business. like
bigger companies, have them."
From headquarter~ 1n Baltimore, Sirbaugh 1s
constructing a nauonw1dc network of offices lhat.
he claimi., can provide e n treprene urs and
small·busincss people with more services than
ever were available before
Name 11 f1nanl'1ng , insurance. leasing,
Vanous types of insurance are available So is
financial management in lhe form of advice and
Said Sirbaugh· "We're trying lo crute an en·
vironment where s mall-business people reel free
and comfortable, where they can say 'I'm not able
to do' or ·I need help' or ·1 want to start a
Second thoughts can be valid business'."
··small -business people are expert in one area
or two." he observes. "but they may not be able to
read a financial staternt""nt No one is expert in all
are.a?> But they s hould have a knowledge of the
whol~. Sirbaugh believes, and he feels they should
have access "to all the technical facilities that big
You ca n can cel contra ct within t hree busin ess days
LOS ANGELES 1AP1 The salesman JUSt k!ft
after convincing ) ou to buy a new whati.1z on the
easy installment plan. It doesn't seem like such u
good idea now. but you've already signed tht•
l'Onlract Can you ~et out of 1l "
Yei.. 1f you act promptl) Under California
law. you have three business days to cancel a
contract signed with a door to-door salesman and.
more important!). lhret' busmesi. da) s in which to
cancel any contra<:t in \\ h1l'h your home is used .is
collateral for a r red11 purrhase.
If the salesman doesn't tell you about your
nght to <"Cm cel, or 1f there 1s no notice on Lhe
contract and you never got the ··Notice of
Canccllat1on, ·· California law states that you can
cant·el within three bus iness days from the time
you learn of your right to cancel For practical
purposes, this means that you can cancel 1tlmost
anytime providing that the salesman ne\'Cr told
) ou about ~our nght~ in the first place
bus rness has automatically "
While all services are available al 46 sites, in·
formation and limited services are available at
another 104 offices. including instruction l'Ourses
at Control Data Learning Centers and Control
Data Instituti:s.
A question that inevitably arises is how the
business center~ can be staffed with personnel so
l'Ompetent they can provide s uch a vast variety of
The law requires that any door-to·door sale.,
contract t•onlain a notice. in large type. informing
you of your right lo cancel. In add1l10n , the
salesman 1s required lo give you a separate form
entitled ·Notice of Cancl'll<at1on · which ha., a full
explanation of )Our right to canl'el and the
procedure to follow This nolll'e must be m the
samt' languaJ.(c' as lhc ortJ.(inal contract
If you do l'hange your mind about the
pun·hase. all ;,ou have to do 1s sign the ··:-.iollce of
Cancellation" form, dale it and put it an the mail
within three bus iness days of the day you signed
the original contrac t' Be sure to send the notice b)
cert1rted mail, though, s o you'll have a receipt to
prove you mailed it within the required llmt'
Sundayi. and holidays are not counted as business
duyi.
cou.lCTOflS COflNfll
11.,t CCMM a ~,.,.,... Gold a ~•l•t<
11-IMt
Photos Wrth
Real Santa
Bnng the little ones
10 Huntington Center's
Great New Mall lor
memories they II never
forget tMth the Mitchell
Marionette Ctmstmas
Shows and a visit 1Mth the
real Santa wttti the real
beard Instant Santa
photos only $2 88!
KruoerrM'Mb
M4plt LNt•
~PH~ '° S.llve<~
Buy ~II
Ml! H Mll IS
Mll H MJIU UM IS Ut•H
S7lSO 00 SllOO.IO
-c:.. .. -11•1•90 t1WH•4UO
TAX-SHELTER
your income!
Holiday Gift
Art Show/Sale 1
Daily thru Dec 9 I
Huntington Cenler s
annual super exh1b1I
of arts and crafts
featuring 55 top
talented artists From
this great array ol un1Que
originals vou II find a
perfect gilt f~ everyone
Beach Blvd. and 4C5 Fwy
A unique business expense 1s available on a
hmtted basis tor Tax Shelter purposes
You must act now because the sooner you ac1 the
more income you can sheller
If you are 1n the 50"!o tax bracket here s how we
may be able to help you reduce the tax btte
Income in the 50""' bracket
Tax Payable
Spendable income
Stle*ffittej S2 0, 000 °" e 4 to I bah:
$20.000
10,000
10.000
Cost 5.000
Tax Payable n11
Spendable income S15.000
We can shelter any amount up to $600,000
For lull particulars at no obl1gatoon write or phone
us
C AHHOH IUSIHESS
SYSTEMS
Phone 651 -6425
4000 MacArthur Blvd . Suite 3000
Newport Beach. CA 92660
T~ Alll!ance to SavP Cflefgy /Iii\ l"f'PiJ'ed d
orocnure mat conta·n~ 1? \11••l)IP 1nl"Pf'"~" ..
me.lSIJIPS to /alle l\<lloCll C3'1 r ul d.. .. n your
home entJff}'( use O)' ?S ~ T 11.11 n tum
conrains accurare dt<19rams and easy 10
lr>ilow d11ecl10ns
Ta~e ou1 iKJvrce 5'¥ld lor ou1 1ree brOChl>ffl ,,,,..,5, Sc:NrlOfl 11cansaverouptenty
can cut 00-me afl'IOIJnt ot niorev .,oti IJ6Y
!or nome enerr;y (For e.amolP {)l(J you kr>aw
mat eiec1r!Cif/ outlets 1ea1o. neat The broet1urp
wot rei1 "'°" llOw to O'P'li'MI •I and save J ·
The brOChl.J(I! ,.,, 9'~ fp( )'('V tlbour ""1~\
tn.ngs 10 oo 10 cn1mneys ar>d r ut>S 10 t>DP~
and OUCI~ 10 $11()wpr l°lf'a<JS to el('(:ffl(.iJI ()IJ(
leis to .. aSll•ng mach>flf's ro ""'"\ .incl "'"' oows lo .. art>< ~rprs Do rl!f><I• a' iJn<1 cur
your Mf11QY use 0y ; .S "'ti Tfle Of O<.lVf'
ul •nonf'y
TM All~ IO S... En«gy
IJox 51200. W•lhlngton. O.C. 20037
. ,,, ......
1, ____ ___,),;.:'•:.;.i•[ ___ /o.;,O;;.___
ATHE ALLIANCE TO SAVE ENERGY
serv1l'es
All Tax-Free Certificates
are created equal.
We know it doesn't sound that way Not when you read
the ads and listen to the commercials. But it's true.
All Tax-Free Certi1icates are the same. Same interest
Same maximum tax benefits. Same insurance. Same
term. Same penalties tor early withdrawal.
But only Fidelity Federal adds
The Grand Award.
It's something extra . A complete package of free banking
services.
And it's your s when you open a Fidelity Federal Fully
Insured Tax-Free Certi1icate .
The Grand Award includes free 51/4 % Interest Check-
ing, with no minimum balance. and no service charges.
Plus a VISA Card with no annual or monthly fee. over-
d r a ft protection, dnd a $200 Check Guarantee Card for
qualifying cu stomers. Plus a lot more. All free.
So w h en you op en your Tax-Free Certificate, make
.sure you get something extra . The Grand Award.
Only at Fidelity Federal.
Fl UIYFE RM.
SAVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION Aa••t• oTer $1.7 bWJoa attong and owwtng.
OfticH to •• ,._ you througbout the state. la Southern CalltornJa ... Glendale •Azusa/Glendora • Bellllower •Beverly .
Htlls • Blg Bear Lake •Blue Jay ·Buena Park •Corona del Mar ·Costa Mesa •Culver City • Fullerton • Irvine •Laguna
Beach •Lake Forest • Long Beach East • Long Beach ·Newport Beach/Westcllll • North Hollywood • Northrldge •
Palm Desert •Placentia •San Pedro ·Santa Ana ·Seal Beach •Sherman Oaks •Stanton • Torranco •Van Nuys ·West
Hollywood • Opelllag 1oon In Atcadla. San Qabrlel and Laguna Billa.
----
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Frid y, November 27, 1981
'
,
•
United Way is more than just a fund drive. It's people giving, working, helping
... and that feels good!
... doing things for others all year long
i Whether it's a reassuring voice on a crisis hotline. research to fight catastrophic disease. or day care for working
mothers - - -we all need a hand sooner or later. It's nice to know someone is there when you need them.
Adopdo•
Children's Home Sooety of Cahfomla 542 1147
835 5551 Holy Family Services ........... ..
AJcoliiolN• ••d 0-9 Ab--
Alpha Cenler. Inc . .. . . . .. .. . . ... . .. 993 4400
Center for Cre•bve Altemanws b42 0 l77
Communlly Counsehng
Center .......... ..... .. . .. .. 831 -0616 493 7113
Cc.nciho ol Orange County . 547 1172<}
First Step Howe of Orange County . . .. . b31 qH()2
Family SeMce ASSOciatlon . .... .. 83X 7177
Gary Cen1er . 870 t>755
National Counctl oo Alcoholism .............. 835 '.lR.10
The Salvation Army ...................... : .. 778 5460
Sttaighl Talk Clinic . .. . . . .. 828 200CI
The Villa .. .. . .. .. .. . .. . . . . .. . ....... 558 9807 542 2732
YWCA Central Orange County . . . 633 4950
OalW ... Spo-·· AkH
Alpha Center. Inc . 993 4400
Child Guidance Center lr.c . 871 q264
Children's Home Soc1ery of Cahf~ .. . 542 1147
Chtldrens Hospital of Los Angeles 213 669 2 lOfl
Chtldrens Hosptal ·of Orange
County ... . .... . .. ....... 997 3000 [xi :141
Family Service Assoclatton . .
Gary Cenler .. . . .. . . .. .. . . . . .
Girts' Club of North Orange Counry
~"177
..... 870 b755
522 l1'>3
8.1'> '>'>SI HQly Family ~es .
Laguna Beach Free Clink
The People's Chmc
_. . 494 076 I '>4t> 171 '>
Pnde Developmenl Council Inc
YMCA Orange Coast ... .
YWCA Central Orange County
C9'UdC.re
• Amencan Cancer Society
542 l'IRI
54J 25211
642'~
6J.l 4Q5o
!For cancer V1Cbms and fam1hesl .
Children s Home Sociery of Cahfomlll
Conc1ho ol Or"nge Counrv
752 )o\O()(J
'>42 1147
547 072<}
S-12 i452
1>42 oOtiO
El Modena Commun11y Cen1er
flSH Harbor Are"
Good Neighbor Child Care
Center ..
Pnde Oevelopmen1 CoullCll Inc
The ~lvabon Army .
SeMCes !or the Bhnd Inc
YMCA Anaheim Family
YMCA ol Or"nge County
YMCA North Orange Countv
YMCA Orange .
YMCA Orange Coast .. .. . .
YWCA CentTal Orange County
YWCA North Orange County .
YWCA South Orange County
H;30 7 btl6 8JO t>'> 11
541 252>1
778 S460
5413154
b35 %2l
542 lSI I
R7Cl %22
o3J %22
642 9990
633 4950
.. 871 448.'i
.. 542 1577
Co••HH•9 for l•dhW••I•, fa•lll••· ••d
Gro•p•
Alpha Center Inc .. * Amencan Cancer Society * Arriencan He"rt ~bOn
•American Lung Association of Orange
County ....
* Amerkan Red Cross ....
Assessmeni ond Treatmenl Service
99.i 4400
752 KOO()
547 1001
835 S&t4
R35 53RI
Center . ":~ ....... . .......... . . 549 1814
Boy s Club of Buena Park . 522 7259
Boy's Club of the Harbor Area ............... 642 8.172
Boy's and Girl's Clubs of La Habra 213 694 1805
Boy s Ch.lb ol Tustin . . . . ~-5223 838 3054
*Catholic Community Agencies . .. . .. ....... 542 6 778
Center for Creative Alternatives . .. .. 642 ().177
Oilld Guldancce Center of Orange
County . .. .. . .. .. . .. .. .. . . .. . .. .. .. . . .. .. . 646 773J
Children's Home Soci.ty of Cahfom1" ... 542 1147
Cllnlca De Salud Menial ...... . .. . ...... 751 1060
Community Counseling
Center . .. .. . . . .. . .. . .. .. RJ J .()616 493· 7333
El Modena Community Center ............. 532 3452
Family Service Association ..... ... .. . .. 838 7377
Free Olnlc of Orange County . ... . . 956 I 900
Fr1endly Center. Inc ............................. 771 ·5300
Gary Center ........ .................. .... 870 6755
JewWI Family Service ............... .. .......... 537 4980
Laguna Beach Fr~e Cllnlc .......... .494.0761 546 3715
National Coundl on Akohollsm . . 83.s 3830
Orange County A.uoc:laJlon for Retarded
Citizens . ····-, ... .. 738 3972 ni. People ' Chnlc • .. .. .. . .. .. .. . .. 542 39fl I
• Rehab1hta1JOn Institute of <Xange Couniy b33 7400
The SalvatJon Army . . 778 5460
The SalvatJOn Anny Service Extension 8~ q l32
5"Mces for th« Bllnd. Inc. 541 3354
Speech and Language Development
Center ....... ...... . ... 821 3020
Strafeht Talk Clink
Trawlen Aid Soci«ty
YMCA · Orange ......
YMCA Or1nge C()o)SI
. W\ 2(XX)
YWCA North Orange Counry
...... 213 432 3485
.. . 633 9622
...... 642 9990
.. 871 4488
Em .... •l'Y Foo4 .... Lo48l ..
Alphe Center. file • • . • ... .. .. .. . • . . .. .. • ..... 993 4400
• American IUd Crou . . . 835 5381
• Cathollc Communlly AgetlClft . 542 6778
Commurnty Counseling Genier 831-0616 49:1 7333
EJ Modena Community <Anter 532 3452
ASH Ha.rbor Area .. .. . . . 642 6060
Friendly Center .. . 771 5300
Lutheran Social SeMcn IChnstian Temporary
Housing F11e1htyl ... . . . . . 534 6450
The SalvallOn Army .. 778 5460
The Salvat>on Army Setv1<e ExtenSIOn 898 93.12
Southwest Minonty Economic Development
Assoclall<>n
T ravtlen Aid ':>oclety
YMCA of 0111nge County
£.pioya••t Stmllc ..
547 4073
b36 417'\
542 J..'>11
• Arrterlc:on Cancer Society 752 860(1
Concilio ol Orange County 547 072'•
EJ Modena Community Center . . . 532 1452
• GoodWlll lndu~lnes ol Orange Counry . .. . 547 6301
Ora~ Counl\I Assocwmon
for Retarded Cuti.ens . .
Saddleback Community En1erpnSN~
Soulhwe~ Minonrv LconomlC
Developmen1 Assoc1atmn .
YWCA Central Orange County
YWCA Nonh Orange County
YWCA South Orange County
Youth Employmmt ~e
Haedlcepped Stmllc ..
• Arriencan Cancer Society * Amencon Lung Assoc1a110n
ol Orange County
Boy s Club ol Bueno Park .
Gcx>dwlll lndustr1e~ of Orange County
Pnde Development Counc~ Inc
Providence Speech and Hearing
738 .)972
. 837 72XO
.'>47 407.i
q.ti 4950
871 4488
542 J577
b42 0474
7'>2~1<1'
!US SHb4
522 725'·1
.547 o301
541 :l52H
Cente1 . . .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. . 639-499() 54J 4822
• Rehabibtanon lnst11ute of Orange County 633 7400
Saddleb<'lck Communiry En1erpmes . . &17 7280
SeMCes !or the Blind Inc . 541 3354
Speech and Langu&ge Development
Cenler ....... .
• Unlled Cerebral Palsy Association
of Or"nge County Inc
YMCA of Orange County . . .
YMCA North Orange Counry
Healt .. E4•c•do• * Arrierlc.an Cancer Socieiy . * Amer1can Heon Assoc1al>On
H21 3620
546 5760
542 351 I
879 %2:.!
752 860<J
547 3001
Thanks to you
• Am .. ncan l unq A~1< .Cldt1011
of Oranq.: ( 11un11,;
* AmPfl{iln H .. d l ""~
Anwn<dn ~ic.tal f ll'altl
Assoc111t1on
Buv ' lluh oJ PIM t>rllld
Be,., ' Club uf T u~tlll
CentP1 frn t reilll\•' Altern,,nv~
Children' I fmp11al ,,f
Oranqo-loun11.
Fr.i .. Chn1t •if Ordn•J<' (11unrv
Garv len1 .. i
Girl ~ Uub >t ':>dnld And
Laguna &1teh Fre~ Clime
Nat!onal Council on Ncohnll\m
Orlng« County Auocrabon
for Mental Health
.w, m s1 ~
'i2X Hl40
1UlxiH ilt'.4
l>'ll 0177
,,.,., \O!lll tx1 241
'l'.O Jlj(l(J
1<70 b75'.
'A'l 20'11
4'M 07nt '>46-'.\7tr.
XJ'> JXiO
Speech and ungu69" Ovwlopm .. nr
Center 821 Jt>.ltl
United Sld1e~ uf.,~vmg
Assooaoun •
YMCA of Orang\' Counll.
VMlA Nr.nh Orange Cnun111
YMCA Orang<>
YMCA < >rdnge C..oast
YWCA ( ;.>nnal Orange (.oun11.
YWCA "'onh Orange ( oUnl\I
YWCA '>uulh Ordnge (ountv
Ho•• Haeltlt Care
Vis1nng Nurse A'-"'JClano11
.,1 Oranq;-C <>Uni\
'do lSXI
'>42 i'ol I
X7<1 %U on <ltiU
Ml <1'}<111
1111 4qr,o
~71 44Wi
'1'1~ 1'177
Ho•pltale ••d Heeltlt CJl•lca
• Am;.>n• ,oin K ... d l 1• ''s
Bov' Cluh of Buena Park
Ct11klren' HO\pttaJ
uf L•" Anq.>l4>s
Ch1ldri>n~ I fosp11al of
0ror'9'° ( •Un i\,
l.11nc 1hn nt Or dnq. lounl\
El Mocf .. n,oi t .,mmunil\I l.11ntl'r
Fri'<' Chntc ol 01,,nq .. ( <>untv
Garv C11nu•r
Laguna &a..h Freto Chml'
Onhopa;.>d1< H"'l""'t
Pro111denc" ~Pl/l'C h dnd
Hl'onnq l l'nl;.>1
"< i'; '..SXI
~L:17l'1'I
.... ; \l)(Ml I >.I .l1 I
'>47 un•1
532 3452
<Y.>O 190! I
K70 075">
. .4'14 07ti I '140 3715
21\0 74213()0
1 •• 1.,.atto• ••d Ref•1•• Semc••
8<11. ' Cluh ut l't,oic ''"°" '>28·8140
&42-6778
S47 072<}
fl70·«>755
C,17 4')8()
• l.alhohc ( • 1mmun11y Ayennes .
Con< tho of Orang.> Counl\
Gal'\ (entl'r
JeWl\h f illOllV ~IVIU'
S.•lor Cld~•B• Service•
Abrazar R9J.~I
• Amencan l ancer '-nc1e1V 752 8600 * Amencan RPd (ros' . .... .. .. K35.S:J81
Boys Club of P1ac .. nna ">2fl-fl 140
Cenier lor l.reanvi-Al1err1<1nws b42 tH77
Conc1ho ol Orange Countv . 1)4 7 072<>
El Modena Communttv Ct>nrer 532 :wst
Family SeMce Assoc1anon . . .. .. ..... 838. 7377
FISI f Harbor Are1J ...... , .. ,,, ....... 642-6060
Fnendly Center Inc . . . 771 ·5300
Jev.11sh Family SeMce •... 5J7 4980
Laguna Bel)Ch Free Chnil .41)4 07bl 546-3715
n war.ks •••
UnltedV#ay
of Orange County N S
The People , Clinic
Ptfde Dewlopme111 Coun<1I Im
• R.-hab11uatlon ln\lllule ot
Orange ( •1unl\
Th ... !:>alvan1.111 Arm~
Tlw ..,alvan11n Armv ~l'IVIU' I ~1enw1n
'-oulh"'-""' M:nnnt1. Er m• •mt<
IJl'vo>lopnwnl A'""I"'""'
Volun111er Bu11Mu of l'\lonl
Oranqe l "uni\
YMCA Andhl'1m r am1l1.
YMCA "lonh Or .. nqe l oun11.
YMlA O!ange
YWCA C"ntral Ol'engo;i CounlV
VW< A Nonh Orange t ,,f:n11,
YWCA !>outh 0ra"9" Count\
Stmllcae for NUltery Pereo•••I ••41
Depead••ls
• Amencan Red Lr<Xs
Anaheim 'wMo•men s < l'rller
ln1erta11h ':ierviH•men \ lenr.•r
'>42 J~I
543 2528
1>n 7400
77R '>4b0
H<l8 93..12
'>47 4071
'>2b .J.'lOI
()35 %22
H79 9622
t>JJ.9622
633 4950
X7 I 4488
!>42 J'>77
K.15 SJHl
0.15 0540
4Q2 1814
Un11ed °'wlVI( I' Organll60•IO'
Inc tU~ll l<rl 862 0700
S«ntc-for T H••l••IAI
Communll\I Cnunwhrlfl
CPr1ler
Fl~H Hdrbor Arl'a r nl'ndly Center Int
Lbguna Beach ~ '"" ( l1n1
Thl' 5dlv1111nn Arm\
Xll tlt>lt>4QJ 7113
f>42 fJ06()
771 ~.100
44.l 11701 54«> .11 1s
Tiie ~lvanon l\rm1. 'wrv1c1· I ~htn\ron
Thi' ~lv.inun Arm\;
'>oulhW\>SI Menoni\ f c"nomtc I >l'velupm.-n1
A~s-x1a11011
Traveler\ Aid c.,,1< WI\
YMCA of ()r.,ny.• Count\
77fl 5460
'All 7AAO
X9K q U2
'>47 4073
b.30 41 73
'>42 .I'll I
* Aml'ncan Red Cro~ H35 5381 * Boy Scoub ol Amenc4 540 4990
Boy s Club of Buena 1'11rk 522 7259
Boy's Club of Cypre~ 527 2697
Boy' sClub of F ullenoo 525 8241
Boy s Club of 1h~ Harbor Ar\>it b42-K.372
B<>y s Club of uguna &ach 494 2535
Boys and Gui s Clubs ul u Hahra 213 694 1805
Boy s Club of Placenlla . 528.S 140
Boys Club of Senta Ana 543 7212
Boy s and Girl s Club of 1he -.nu1h Coast 492 0376
Boys Club of St11n1on 892 1097
Boy's Club of Tust>n 838 5223 8383054
Camp Fire Orange Counrv Council Inc 838-9991
Center for Creabve Ah11ma1Jvt'' 642-0377
El Modena Commun11y Cenh.>r 532-3452
Fnendly Center Inc . .. . 771-5300
• Girl Scout Council of Orange County . . 979 7900
Girl Scou1 Council · Spanish Trails .. . 632 2518
Girls Club of the Harbor Area ........... 642 7181
Girl's Club ol Laguna . . 494-7630
Girl's Club of North Otange Counry ..•. 522 3153
Gtrl's Club of Santa Ana .... .. ....... 549-2051
LO$ Alamitos Youth Center. Inc .. 827 9010
Orangf County Assoctabon for Retarded
Citizens . ......... ... . . .. . . .
The Salvation Army .
The Salvabon Army .. . . .. .. .
The Salvation Army SeMCe £.xtenst0n .
Services lor the Bbnd Inc , . . . • . .. ..
Southwest M1nonty Econom1e Development
A5soc:iabon .. . ....... ... .. ......
7383972
778-5460
546-7880
898.9332
541 3354
547.4073
Stan too A1hle1K. Oub . . .. . . .. . . .. •. .. . 543 9793
YMCA Anaheim Famllv .................... 635·9622
YMCA of <Xange County . 542 3511
YMCA North <Xonge County ................ 879-9622
YMCA Orel'IQI ....... . ..... .. .............. 633-9622
YMCA Orange Coasi ........ . ... ....... 642·9990
YWCA Cennal Orange County ............. 63.1-4950
YWCA North Or11nge County ............. 871-4488
YWCA South Orange Counry .. ......... 542.JS77
Youth Employment SerV1Ce .................. 642 0474
\lol_t.., • .,. ••
Voluntary Acbon Cenrer ... .. .. 95J-5757 SSS.-6772
Voluntttr Bureau of North
Orange County .•. .. ........... 526-3301
• Partnc:r A\"4X:1atc in lurid 1111\tnf 1n tl\l)inc'~ afld 1ndu\tty
Your Un11cd Wll) {lift ""'II \Uppurt the cffon, o( 1llil
¥(1.Cl'K y Oe\1-n~tl\IO\ pledged lu II pcult'l(t/IU..OCIMC ""
c~d11cd to,,.arJ, c:amp-111n pantclpahon arid will be
ll(knuwlcdacd by the dc~111ru11clf •acncy
-·
• -•
NEW YORK <AP>
A •llrvey of leadina
dlploCQallc historians by
American Herltag~
macuine ranks Henry
A. Klatlnger among the
natldn's 10 beat
•tcrel1trles of slate.
J o~n Fos ter Dulles
was rfnked among the
rive worst.
1 n1.} he s u r v e y •
pub~s hed i n th e
Dttember issue, John
~incy Adams was the at m o kl· u n a n i m o u s choic~ as the greatest of lhe na-ti o n 's 56 ktcr~ aries or s ta t e .
A'4ams negotiated the ~\lrchase of Florida
~~m Spain and helped ~orm ulale the Monroe P.octr~e.
•John Sherman ,
~ounger brother of Gen
!illiam Tec um seh
herraan, was judged
e worst. The magazine
Jtljd that at age 74 he
was a~ent-minded and
once forgot hi s
d epart m ent wa s
•onexlJlg Hawaii.
Da vid L . P o rter ,
as_&ociate professor of
lµstorr at William Penn
College, sent his s urvey
to SO historians and
m ore than h alf
responded.
The secretaries were
assessed solely on their
records in office. Among
suggested criteria were
!'·lh'e &ecretary's success
jo d efi n ing a n d
llChieving hjs diplomatic
soals. the political and
m oral leaders hip h e
exerted on fore ig n
affairs, the impact or his
c.f1Aons on the course of ~l:Perican his tory.·'
~!!hose rate d the 10 ~i. in order, were . '4"'~ ~r-Adams, secretary Of &tale from 1817 lo 1825
*aer :James Monroe.
,......_ Wiiliam H. Seward,
11·69, under Abraham
n coln and Andre w
hnson ~·; -Ha milt o n Fis h ,
1$69-77, under Ulysses S.
~ant.
• -Charles Eva n s
ll&bes, 1921 ·25, under
Warren G. Harding and
Colvin Coolidge.
! -George C .
... ralaaU, 1947-49, unde r
ffvry S. Truman
• ,..._. D ean Acheson.
IJ49·53, under Truman.
;. -Kissinger, 1973·77.
Q,Qder Richard M Nixon
ae>d Gerald R. Ford
•• -~anlel We bster. J..841-4~ under William
h e nry Harrison a nd
)obn Tyler. and 1850·52 uoaer Millard Fillmore
-'lbomas J errerson,
1790-93, under George
Washiqgton.
-Jehn Hay, 1898-1905.
UDder-W11liam McKinley
t1nd Theodore Roosevelt
.·Those rated the worst
we.re ;.
->r Sherman, 1897-98,
under McKinley
~-aobe rt Smith ,
1809-\J . under J ames
Madison
·-llihu Washburn, ~'869. J.Ulder Grant.
-.Dulles, 1953·59,
u n d •'r 0 w i g h l D
)Wse~wer.
• .._ Wllllam J ennings
Brya 1913-15, unde r
\toodtow WUson . ..
rdlllg to the fire
Church was not
Juat covered with
Orange Coast DAIL. Y PILOT/Friday. NO'lemb9r V , 1881
AMO.VG Hf:ST
Dean .·\dwson
HA.~ KED llJ(;fl
/lenry K1ss1t1yer
O,';E OF WOR ST
John f". Du lles
Warden innocen t in shoplift
ATLANTA <AP l /\ jury
round Atluntu Fed e rul
P~nltenll11ry Warden Jae k
Hanberry innotent or shoplifting
a St 10 huirbrush
Hanberry, who has been on
leave without puy pending the
trial 's outcome, faced a
maximum penalty or one year in
prlson and a $1 ,000 fine If
convicted.
Hanberry was arrested Sept
~7 at a Kroger supermarket 1n
Atlanta und charged with
stealing u hairbrush. He
testified that he had purchased
the brush at a Woolworth's store
In a nearby s hoppinl( mall.
removed it from Ila packag .
thrown taw uy the receipt and
then aon to Kroger to look ror
another brwsh.
llunbcrry said hr pull~d the
Woolworth brush out of ht:i
pooket to compart' 1t to the
Kroger brush
Defense attorney He rbert
Shafer , in hi s e l osi n K
argum ents, scoffed at the notion
tha l Ha nberry would have
risked the love of his family and
friends for "a lousy, stinking
hairbrush." ·
.. Al this Thanksgiving season
in the spirit oC Amerit>u, I
e ntreat you, release J•ck
llunbcrry from his Iona. dark
111cht.'' Sh11vcr saJd. "Reatort
has tattered honor und return
ht m to his h1mlly and ull the
rrit•nds who love him "
Aliso testifying was Allanta
police officer 0 .0 Hubbard.
who arrested Hanberry at the
Kroacr store. Hub~ard denied
that he had told Hanberry, "Oh
my Lord. I'm not going to lock
you up, warden, there·~ been a
mistake made."
Hanberry earlier testified that
Hubbard had mad e the
comment.
Tho\ od onlv effec11.,. ot Hughe' El Roncho
ond Hugh•• L•do
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Dilly Pilat
FRIDAY, NOV. 27, 1981
COM ICS C10
Sunset League basketball .
is just around the corner
and it figures to be
a heckuva race. See C3.
Wonien: Stay out of the locker rooms
If the players don't want them t here; t hen they shouldn't be there, it's that simple
I realize this column bm't going to make me
very popular with some remales <and maybe a few
males, too) But then l don't plan on running for
public office in the near future, so it shouldn't
matter. -
It seems everyone has liad an opinion -one
way or another -concerning the Rams' lockout or
the media last Sunday because a female reporter
threatened lo invade the players' privacy.
A suit was -even filed . by the female journalist
and her newspaper, to insure equity with her male
counterpart.
Al first, I decided to say nothing about the
issue, figuring it was s marter to jus t stay out of
the whole sticky mess. But then a few employees I
work with -female employees -thought I should
make a comment or two with their blessing
So, here goes.
First, let it be noted that without athletes,
there would be no need for sportswriters And.
contrary to how media and the fans portray them,
athletes are humans, not gods.
Therefo re. the athletes should be the ones who
set the rules and we, as journalists. should do our
best to abide by them. If they don't want female
journalists in vading their privacy then, damn 1t,
women should be barred from the locker room.
RAMS
JOHN
SEVANO
I don't care bow professional these women
are, I don't give a hoot IC they're justifiably doing
their job or just want a nash of excitement, they
do not belong in the locker room if the athletes
don't want them there Period.
I wouldn't dream of entering a women's locker
room under any conditions. Yes, I am a
professional and, yes. I have a JOb to do. But there
are limits and people can sometimes carry those
limits too far.
·'Sports reporting should be left to those who
have traditionally done a good job mainly men.
"Is it professional judgment, or 1s someone
trying to embark on a crusade'> There's no reason
at all for a woman to go into a men's locker room.
lf women want to see flest}, they can go to Chip ·N'
Dales.
"If men feel uncomfortable with a woman in
HOLD THAT LION Kansas City's Henry
Marshall tries to hold down De troit's fo'red
Scott in Thursday's National Football League
,., ........
action. The Lions roared to a 27 10 victory.
F or the story. see Page C4
Baseb a ll Hall of F aIDe
n e ar fo r Aaron, Robby
By WILL GRIMSLEY
Al' S~i.t Cenu•• eut
The names or Henry Aaron and Frank
Robinson will appear for the first time
on the ballot for the 1982 baseball Hall
of Fame and there is little question that
both shortly will have their own private
little niches in the museum at
Cooperstown. N.Y.
They could make it the first time out.
H not, neither can be long denied the
honor They have all the credentials.
The question is: Will ultimate induction
the game's highest honor -douse
the bitter r esentments that have
simmered in their chests?
In all of baseball, there has been no
one more outsp0ken in callin~ attention
Flames handle
Kings easily, 7-1
CALGARY, Alberta (AP> -Left
wing Kevin Lavallee scored a goal and
added two assists Thursday night,
leading the Calgary Flames to a 7-1
victory over the Los Angeles Kings in a
National Hockey League game.
Los Angeles right wing Dave Taylor
had his consecutive-game scoring string
snapped at 21 . The streak, which began
in the Kings' second game, was the
longest in the league in three seasons.
The victory, which extended the
Flames' unbeaten streak to five games
(4-0-1), moved Calgary into third place
in the Smythe Division.
The Flames have 19 pomt.s. one more
than the Kings, who now have lost tour
In a row and eight slrai1ht oo the road.
Los Angeles has been out.scored 31-9 in
its last four games.
to the inequities of the sport -the
establis hment's s light of the black
player who, after performing not only
adequately but often brilliantly on the
fi eld, has found the doors to the
manager's office or to an executive post
shut in his face
Ironically, Aaron and Robinson
are two blacks who managed to
crash the barrier. Aaron, baseball's
COMMENTARY
home run king, is vice president and
director of player personnel for the
Atlanta Braves. Robinson, MVP in both
leagues, with 586 home runs and a .294
batting average for 21 years. Is
manager of the San Francisco Giants,
having earlier been fired as field boss of
the Cleveland Indians, the first of bis
race lo hold such a position.
lnformed this week that he was now
on the ballot for the Hall or Fame,
Robinson was asked if the prospect or
this final honor would in any way
ameliorate his feelings about lack of
consideration given retired ball players.
"Why should it?" he said. "If
a nything, it only e mphasizes the
situation. Sur e , Hank and I have
e~eculive-type jobs. But give me some
others. None. Elston Howard had some
sort of front office job with the Yankees
before he died. I know of no one else.
"I think it's a shame that there are
not more black managers and front
office executives. What about Larey
Doby and Maury Wllls? You can name
a lot of others."
Aaron has been even more vttrioUc.
Once be said that no matter bow Mil
black baseball players perform, they
ultimately get "shafted." He added tbat
men who run baseball "want to look at
us as moneys."
the locker room! and she lnsist.s on being there, then she's lntrud ng unnecessarily wantc.'<1 to check out the difference between the
male and female body "
"When you think about it. the only rights you
have are the ones someone else allows you to have .
That's just a fact of life. Freedom doesn't
necessarily mean you're free. It costs a helluva
lot."
Later, he added:
.. Whal was even more embarrassing were the
women who were taking pictures. No, I'm not
kidding. They snapped pictures at our lockers, as
we went to the s howers. as we came out of the
showers. 1 wanted to take their cameras and shove
it right .. "
Th06e quotes, ladies, came Crom one of your
own kind. And, while you might not agree with
everything, or anythine. the person said, her basic
pre mise is hard to refute.
Since this is a ram1ly newspaper I won't rimsh
the remark
Shows great professionalism. though. Huh'! Yes, there are other sports franchises who
allow women into the locker room, but that's the
prerogative or the individual franchise.
• * •
ON A MORE heart-warming side, a surprise
b1 rthday party was he ld for San Francisco
line backer Jack Reynolds last Sunday.
Turn it around for a moment, ladies. If you
dominated the sports world, how would you feel
about guys talking to you while you shower and
dress? The former Ram . noted for the scowl on his
fa<.·e and lack of warmness in has attitude. melted
lake an ace cream cone as he was greeted by * * •
UNDER A COU RT ORDER, the S an
Francisco 49ers recently had to open their locker
room to women.
friends and family ,
Vince Ferragamo and his wife, Jodi, were
there. So were Eileen and Rach Saul , Mary and
Jim Youngblood and Ellen and Nolan Cromwell
Jack's biggest surprise, though, came in the
Said one player or the experience:
"It was a complete joke They we ren't in there
to do a )ob. They were in there to prove
something. What? I don't know. May be they
form of his own wife Pat who flew from the
(See SEVANO, Page CZ>
FV seeks revenge
Barons face rematch ; Marina tests Amat
By ROGER CARLSON
Of -Oelf'J ...... '"'" Marina High's Vikings and the
Barons of Fountain Valley. each
a step away from the CIF Big
Five Confe r ence football
semifinals, are hooked up in
rugged s kirmis hes with the
Angelus League's best tonight.
The Vikin gs, 10 ·1 and
th1rd·seeded an the eliminations
test the power of Bishop Amat's
9-2 Lancers at Westminster
High.
The Barons. 8·3 and the Sunset
League's No 3 entry behind
Mar ina, which wa s the
runner.up, battle unbeaten St
Paul, the Big Five's No. 4 seed.
at Orange Coast CollegP.
IUCKOF'F IN euh Instance ls
at 7: 30 and for Fountain Valley.
it's a chance for double pleasure
-a bid for the semis and a
chance to redeem itself after
losing to the Swordsmen in
non·league play, 21·3
Fountain Valley turned the
ball over six times against St
Paul ·s 11 ·0 Angelus League
champions earlter an the year,
with five inter ceptions and a
fumble.
The Barons will try again with
quarterback Matt Stevens and
his passing targets, Joel Seay
a nd Greg Bolin, primarily,
along with tailback Rod Emery
coming out of the backfield.
Stevens has completed 116 of
..., ... _ ....
249 for 1,977 yards and 9
touchdowns this year . Last
week's 30·6 pasting of Del Rey
Leag ue champion St. John
Bosco found Stevens s harp,
completing 13 of 21 for 250 yards,
3 TDs and no interceptions.
Emery, a first team All -Sunset
Leag ue running bac k . has
rushed for 1.271 yards on 203
carries for an average of 6.1
yards per carry and has scored
24 touchdowns
EMERY HA S sco red
touchdowns in every game this
year except when the Barons
lost <St Paul . Marina and
Edison>.
St. Paul counters with an
orreose built around quarterback
Alex Espinosa, receiver Andy
Stankiewic:r. and runner Xavier
Espinosa. a solid kicking game
a nd a traditi o nally tough .
reading Okie defense.
While it's the wade open
approach of Fountain Valley
against the usually conservatJve
look of St. Paul at OCC, it'll be
fin esse (Marina l against power
1 Bishop Amat> at Westminster.
The Vikings' veer offense
features the run pass threat of
quarterback Ken Laszlo, behind
what has been a surging front
line
LASZLO HAS completed 73 of
126 passes for 1,5 14 yards and 17
t ouc hdown s . He has been
intercepted only five times and
has a completion ratio of 58
per cent.
Whtie Marina averages only 11
pass attempts a game, Amat
goes to tht' air about 50 percent
less, opting to stack to its power
runrung oul of lhe wishbone.
A mat·s true strength is its
tackles <250 pound Don Hill and
6·4. 210-pound Ron Brown>.
Marana has allowed less than
seve n points a ga me 1n
compiling 1L'\ best ever mark
Irish i n danger
of los i n g s e ason
Notre Dame (5-5) meets Miami
MIAMI CAP> Three months
ago, the poss1b1hty that Notre
Dame would enter the last game
of its college football season
hoping to avoid its first losing
campaign in 18 years seemed
almost as remote as Christmas
coming in July.
But Coach Gerry Faust 's
Fighting Irish find themselves in
just that position heading into
today 's game agains t
ninth-ranked Miami at the
Orange Bowl.
"I really haven't presented it
to the team. When you think
On TV today
channel 7 at noon
about it, it's something you
really don't want to think too
much about. But it's something
that poses a threat," Faust said
of the prospect that the 5-S Irish
could finish with the school's
worst re cord since Hugh
Devore's 1963 team went 2-7.
Faust, whose team climbed
into the No . 1 ranking the second
week of the season, then lost
four of its next five games, said
he doesn't plan to confront his
players with a "threat" to win in
order to salvage a winning
season.
"I think they are aware of the
situation. I don't think I have to
bring it up," said Faust. "I don't
believe in negative type of
coachtns."
Miami, 8·2, is looking to
produce its second s traight
nine-v ictory c ampaign . The
Hurricanes, wbo s uffered
narrow road losses at Texas and
Mississippi State. cUmbed into
the Top 10 thls week fo.r the first
" time since 1968.
''ll took WI 2'At years to get
there and lt could take us about
2'At boura to drop out," said
third-year Coach Howard
SchneUentM!rger. "Reeard.leu of
their record, Notte Dame la one
of the nne1t football teams in
America.
anybody we've played," added
Schnellenberger, whose team is
barred from postseason play
this year because of NCAA
probation
Notre Dame has won three of
four games since a 14·7 loss to
Southern California. T he only
setback came last Saturday,
24 -21 at Penn State, a team
Miami beat l7-14 last month.
.. We had so me injury
problems early in the season,
but I thank we've p l ayed
excellent football the last five
games," said Faust.
Sophomore Blair Kiel, who
has completed 57 of 126 passes
for 846 yards and seven
touchdowns, will lead the Irish
agatnst a defense that has
yielded 121 yards per game on
the ground and 185 through the
air.•
Kiel's favorite target lat ely
has been freshman split end Joe
Howard, who has caught only 12
passes -three for TDs -but is
averaging 32.2 ya rds per
reception. Phil Carte r is the
workhorse on the -ground with
694 yards on 153 carries.
The Notre Dame secondary.
which has given up only an
average of 112 yards per game,
will be tested by Miami's Jim
Kelly, a 58 percent passer .
AI NGE TO SI GN
WI T H CELTICS?
BOSTOJ"i <AP> -Danny
Ainge is expected to si1n a
long-term contract before the
end or this week with the Botten
Celtics o f the National
Basketball Association, The
Boston Glo be reported
Thursday.
Ken Houston added two &oals for
Calgary, with Mel Brldsman. Denis
Cyr, P hll Runetl and Petka
Rautakallio also beating Kings goalie
Marlo Lessard.
Aaron translated bis sbarp words lnto
action lo January, 1910, when be
<See HALL OF FAME. Pace a) Ken Lo.do leadl Marina tonight against Buhqp Amat.
"l'~e reviewed fllms from
their last three eamea and \My
have be\ter personnel than
The newspaper aaid a
breakthrough tn oe1otJatlon1
came early lbls week wbtll
Alnge's father, Doo, moved lD to
assisi agent Robe.rt Quinney in
endJn)f a stalemate betwe.a the
Celtics and baseball's Toronto
Blue Jays.
t •
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i
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, November 'ZT, 1981
ost cool in the heat
costs coach 813,000
Fro• AP ••patella
CAaLS8AD -"I hope thta ~
doesn't tail me forever." aays Mel •II•
Galll, a football coach who swol'e at a
game official. Already lotlng his coo fOl' a
second has cost him a $13,000 raise.
' The aquat, powerfully built Galli. 36, was
hired at Carlsbad H11h School ln 1978 after his
•' football teams at Logan. Utah went undefeated
1 two years and won the state champlonshlp.
\ Carlsbad lost all nine games ln 1977 but won
, . the Avocado League championship lut year.
"' 'their first since the mld·l960s.
. After he applied this year for the new vice
principal 's job, though, Galli admits h is
preoccupation hurt his team. Archrlval
·Oceanside won, and Carlsbad was strug1ling
with smaller Jlamona in the homecomlne game
a weekend later. Ramona was ahead, 20·0.
Carlsbad closed to 20-lS with six minutes to
go, but then officials called three penalties
' / against Carlsbad. 1 ' With Carlsbad's last chance for the title
, , gone, Galli said in an interview this week, ··1
1 • went onto the field and yelled at the officials. I
was extremely upset.
1 "I lost my cool, but we all felt a lot of pride
and wanted to go out with both arms swinging,
'. so to speak, what with homecoming, our largest
crowd of the year. and everythin1," he said in
'''defense of the obscenity.
Quote of the day
Richard Glazer, agent for ClJff Stoud&,
seldom-used backup quarterback or the
Pittsburgh Steelers , after negotiating a
new lhree·year contract for his client:
"My opening argument was that Cliff kept
the dry-cle aning bill down on his
uniform."
Bear getting special treatment
South Central B II Telephone Co.
aot permlulon Tuesday to nil a special telephone faceplate
commemoratln1 Alabama Coach
Paul Pryao\'a record 3Utb vlctory.
Ell
PermlHlon to sell 2,000 ''Bear Bryant''
faceplate at $5 each came rrom the Publlc
Service Commission.
South Central Bell spokesman Tom
Somerville 1aJd the phone
wlll reaature a bust of Bryant
with hls isignature and the
magic number 31~ ln lhe
background.
Somervlllt1 sald the
phone also wlll have the date
of Bryant's rl.'cord 31Sth
career victory on It.
Brt1ant
·'Thal could be Nov. 28,
1981, but It muy not be," said
Som e rville, referring to
Alabuma's game this Saturday against cross
state rival Auburn. "Until lhat Is known. It
won't actuully be produced."
PSC staff member Jack Hornady said the
faceplates will cost South Central Bell $1 each
to produce. He said the special sale could net
the company $8,000
Bossy hits 1·ooth power play goal
Mike Bossy scored the lOOth "" power play goal or his five-year '
N alional Hockey League career and
Bryan Trottier -who had three goals ~
connected twice in a five-goal second period as
the New York Islanders routed the St. Louis
Blues 9-2 Thursday night ... Tim Kerr and
Brian Propp gave Philadelphia a commanding
lead, and the Flyers held on for a 3-1 victory
over Boston, sending the Bruins down to a third
consecutive defeat. Philadelphia goalie Pete
Peeters blocked 31 s hots, loslng a shutout bid on
a goal by Brad McCrlmmon with less than
se ven minutes remaining.
Clippers end Las Vegas gimmicks
SAN DIEGO -The San Diego m
Clippers, complying with an order or
the National Basketball Association,
say they won't work up any new promotions
with Las Vegas casinos.
The Clippers, however, apparently won a
concession allowing them to go ahead with
promotions already arranged in this season
wittl the Sands Hotel and Casino.
"I understan"d ... the sensitivity or the
issue," Clippers ge neral manager Ted Podleski
said in a letter to the NBA this week.
Rodriguez wins boxing title
France's Lllclea a"rtpu won • the European heavywel1ht boicln1
championship wlth a unanimous
l2·round decl.Jlon over Lah PeUpe "P11&era"
Rodrl1aea of Spain Thursday nltht ...
Olymplc star Veleoa Davldova led th Soviet
women t.o an overwhelmln1 victory In team
c ompetition IL the world 1ymnaatlc1
champlonahips. China waa a diltanl Hcond . .
l•perial Lua led ·rrom the 1tart and won the
$50,000 Colony Handicap 1t Hollywood Park by
three.quarters of 1t leneth over lllakllllia . . .
The COit ol insurint an • mlUlon, elfbt.year
contract la a major 1tumblln1 b ock In
ne10UalloM with holdout lllar41"1 'obaoa,
says Milwaukee Bucks Coach Doe Nelloll . .
John Ta&e, the former World Boxln1 Aaaoclatlon
heavyweight champion, tt1bta Cllud1 Garclaer
ln the mil.in event tonight at Knoxvllle .
Television, Radio
Following are the top sports events on Iv
tOday . Ratings are : • • •. excellent; ••• worth watching; • • fair, • forge t It
41» Noon,Channel7 ./ ./ ./
COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Notre Dame at
Miami, Fla.
Announcen: Ke ith Jackson, Frank Broyles
and Steve Davis.
The transition from hloh school has not been
easy for Notre Dame Coach Ge rry Faust who
faces the prospect of having the worst Irish record
since a 2-7 mark in 1963. Atter its 17-14 upset victory over No. 1 ranked Penn State <at that
time), Miami was riding high despite the fact It is
ineltgible for post-season bowl game action. The
Hurricanes have not beaten Notre Dame in the
last 12 meetings between the teams.
8 p.m., Channel 5 ./ ./ ./
COLLEGE BASKETBALL: BYU at UCLA
AnncMJncers: Joe Buttitta and 8111 Wa lton.
·1 he Bruins debut their 1981 -82 squad against
BYU, a loser by two points in it s opener to
Virginia last week. Coach Larry Farmer will have
Rod Foster, Michael Holton and Ralph Jackson In
the backcourt. Darren Daye, Cliff Pruitt and Mike
Saunders return up front and the addition of 7-foot
Stuart Gray gives the team added height. BY U is
without the services of Danny Ainge this season after reaching the NCAA regional hnals a year
ago.
RADIO
Basketball San Di ego at Lakers, I . 20 p.m.,
KLAC (570). BYU et UCLA, 8 p.m .. KM PC (710).
Loyola at USC, 8 p.m., K DAY t 1580>.
Greene getting
old 01agic hack
. Pittsburgh starting over
PlT'tSBURGH CAP> -To hear Joe Greene
tell it, the Plttaburah Steelers fumbled away tbei.r m•Mk 1fter bealln& the Rama ln Super Bowl XIV
In 1979
Now, he aays, tbe knack t.1 back.
"You don't know why it ten. the m11lc of the
PltL11burgh Steelers, or why it's comine back," the
vct~ran defeMlve tackle sald. "But the altitude Is
thtire now In the dressing room."
Ironically, the Rams will test the theory
Sunduy ut Three Rivers Stadium.
Since winning their fourth Super Bowl two
se•son11 ago, the Steelers have been only a 16-12
t e am But they've Just posted two critical
is uccessive vict.ories over Atlanta and Cleveland on
the road to give them a 1·S National Football
League record.
.. Everybody is trying to figure out what's
wrong with the Pittsburgh Steelers. Even the
Steelers don't know whether it's this or that.'•
Greene said.
·'You can talk about injuries, old age,
complacency. bad decisions, indecisions, ego trips
and the whole bit. But the Big A is attitude.
Attitude is a very fragile thing. When things go
wrong, the attitude is affected. You press and
press and struggle and struggle and pretty soon
it's gone. You don't know where it's gone.'' he
said
Greene says the last two victories had
something to do with getting it back.
··1 feel good about this team I tlon't know
where it's going, but I feel confident that the
Pitts burgh Steelers are going to show up for the
s howdo'A'O ..
Greene hasn't started since the Cincinnati
game when he suffered a knee injury. The knee is
healed now, but Greene has been sharing his
chores with Tom Beasley.
He accepts the role of a part-time player.
although he·s never been wild about the idea.
.. I can't be moping around. I'm not one to get
down and gripe about it. My lot isn't as important
as the lot of the team, .. he said.
From Page C1
SEVANO • • •
tate volleyball playoffs added
Baha mas where she's been the past two months
putting the fin al touches on their home.
Also. David Fishof, who represent.s Reynolds
and Ferragamo, sent Jack d singing telegra1n -
French ma id and all 11·ve never seen Reynolds
any more embarrassed!.
High will compete in San Diego for the rig ht to play in championships Anyway. by the middle of the party Reynolds
was reeling no pa rn ... and was still in shock
··1 don 't beheve 1t I JUSt don't believe it."' he
kept saying Som ething new has been added to the
Jifomia women's sports s cene this year.
It will be a state playoff in high school
lleyball with Irvine's Vaqueros eligible to
ticipate. Action gets under way al UC San
go next weekend (Dec. 4-S> in the Southern
lirornia championships with Irvine, the 4·A
nner, and Louis ville, the 3·A winner.
ticipating in the large schools division.
W\nnen ln the 2·A and l ·A -<Cajon and Rim of tlte World) will compete in the small schools
division. The winners in the two divisions will then
qualify for an invitation to the CIF state
c hampionships Saturday. Dec. l2 at Memorial
High in Newark. • • •
FOR THOSE WHO THINK beauty and sports
do not mix. don't tell them about University High's
~~)ly Plumer. Polly not only dominates the scene
in' women's cross country as well as the distance
races in track and field competition but she was
also selected as Homecoming Queen at Un1vers1ty
this year.
A pert blonde with a winning smile to go with
her winning form on the cinderpaths, Polly came
on strong in the tail end of the season to capture
lhe 4·A title from teammate Teresa Barrios .
Barrios, only a sophomore, has two more
years to gain the cross country crown as welJ as
top laurels· in the distance races. And don't bet
against her following in the footsteps of Plumer as
t;!uture Homecomfog Queen candidate. either • • •
a~ BUT WILL THEIR MINDS be on basketball?
~: The UCLA men's and women·s basketball
ms will travel to Rutgers and Notre Dame
ether, so says a U.CLA press release. Then it
s : "They will s tay in the same hotel and do
er things together_··
• • •
THE FIRST NCAA WOMEN'S volleyball
ional championship ever conducted will be held
UCLA's Pauley Pavilion Dec. 18·20 with the
iversily of Hawaii favored to win. Former
wport Harbor High coach Charlie Brande is an
istant coach for Hawaii and was on hand to
om PageC1
ALL OF FAME. • •
WOMEN'S SPORTS
HOWARD L.
HANDY
scout the CIF finals at Orange Coast last weekend.
Like most of his counterparts, Brande was
impressed with Irvine's Kim Oden ... She's the
most sought-after player in the country this year,"
Brande said and Arizona Stale Coach Dale
Flickinger concurred .
A number of torme r area standouts will be
competing at UCLA in t~e NCAA event. Linda
Robertson. now playing for the Bruins, was named
to the first team All-WCAA squad while Jeanne
Beauprey. also of the Bruins and a former Mission
Viejo High star. gained second team honors . .. .
OUT UC IRVINE WAY, Coach Dean Andrea
says his Anteaters will be inexperienced this
season
.. We have a lot of new faces with some real
good talent but we have to learn to play together,"
Andrea says of the UC I women's basketball team.
"Our timing is really off and we have to take
lime lo learn where the other players are going to
be . We do some sophisticated things and that all
takes time. too.··
Andrea will have Katherine Hamilton back
this season. She was the MVP in the SCAA last
season with a 16.0 scoring average and l2 rebounds
per game.
He is also high in his praise of Dorothy Lewis,
a 6-2 sophomore from Magnolia, Miss.; Vicki
Simpson, a 5·8 guard from Estancia High; and Sue
Randall. a 5-9 guard-forward from Edison. tr
Magnolia has a familiar ring, that's also where
Kevin Magee is from and Dorothy's brother is
married to Kevin's sister.
··We'll be quicker this year and will try to run
a bit more. We'll use a structured offense and a
man-to-man defense. We 've introduced them lo the
ubbed Commissioner Bottle
ho, refusing personally to
cept a Baseball Magazine
ard in recognition or his
ord-breaking 71Stb home run.
ndine a telegram, he chided
conunilaioner for his failure
attend the historic occasion on
rU 8, W74 when Babe Ruth's
reer retord was shattered and
"It should have been one of
the most pleasant times of my
life," Aaron said three years
ago. ''but It turned out to be the
most dreadful. I never opened
my mall for a year. I don't think
I could have gone another
m t>nth."
Amateur
surfers vie
in Newport
The first annual Jerry
Edwards Surfi n g
Championships, honoring the
president of the American Water
Skiin&. Aasodation, will be held
Sunday at 56th Street in Newport
Beach, beginning at 6:30 a.m.
bueball injustices.
''BQeball should Uve up to IU
pc>DJiblllUes," he said. "It's
ppoted to be the national
slime."
The feud was later patched up.
Aaron had reason for his temeu. He played 23 years,
tt1nl 1,171 bill (second only to
Cobb), batting .305 and
ndlns "J> wtth more 1ames, at
ti, RBf •1. sacrifice mes and
me runs (755) than anyone ln
tory. '
He pl-red ln the 1badow ol the r• co&orfUJ Willie Mays and
ver reeelved th~ national
poeve be deserved. His bld
Babe llulh'• record •H
arll.•41 by acrimony, a
quabble wltb the
mml11loner'1 office over etJler be could M beAd ou& or a
me ta order to blt bla '7Utb at
me 8ftd preuuret from the ,.,.,.....
Robinson was one or
baseball's toughest competitors,
the fint ever to win MVP in both
leagues. He was a strong bitter, a daring base runner and a man
of many skills. Only Aaron,
Ruth and Maya hit more home
runs.
He was the major league's
first black manager, Joinina
Cleveland ln 1975 and servma
2~ years before belng fired. An
outspoken pacesetter in the
J ackle l\oblnaon tradition, he
saw Wllb and Doby rouow as
man11en only ~get the sack.
"I can yeU my head off about
diacrlmin.Uon." be said. "Hank
Aaron can demonst.rate u he
dld lo New York. Lou Brock and
otbera may complain of
lnjustlc:es.
"They are Ute scattered BB
shot.a. People read about It and
fol'cet it."
But people never for1et what
Aaron and Roblnlon did on the
field.
\
Edwards, who lives in Texas,
where the surf is nearly as
heavily covered with surfers as
along the Califomia coastline,
has supported the American
Surfing AssocJation's drive for
eventual Olympic participation
for the sport since 1974.
Some of the -best amateur
surfers from Santa Cru1 to San
Diego wlll compete In the
contest-, including Oran1e Cout
s urfers Tom Cozad of Corona del
Mar. Henry Noppenbereer of
Fountain Valley, Bret Wlae o(
Huntinfton Beach and Ralph
Gray of Newport Beach.
Jud1• for tM event lncJude
Chris Campen of Fountaln
Valley, Felipe Lana of eo.ta
Men and Jeffrey Rockefeller of
Crvlne.
whole men's game and it's holdmg us bac k:·
Others Andrea mentions include Candy
Gomez. a sophomore ball-handler and Julie Baker.
a 5· 11 freshman from Burroughs High an Ridge
crest.
The Anteaters will play as an independent Ill
Division I of the NCAA this season • • •
DEFENDING STATE CJIAllPION Orange
Coast and dis trict rival Golden West have
qualified for the state women's volleyball
championships to be held at El Camino College
next weekend . OCC w on the South Coas t
Conference LiUe in a playoff with Cerritos after the
teams tied in regular·season play
Golden West. under Lou Ann Terheggen, won
the Southern California Conference title in
undefeated fas hion.
··rm pleased with the way our team came
through this year and it should be even stronge r
next season because we could have five or six
sta rters back,·· OCC Coach Jane Hilgendorf says.
• •
IRVI NE HIGH GET the women's basketball
season off lo a fl ying start next week with a
tournament to be held in the University and Irvine
gymnasiums
Umversity plays Laguna Beach at 6:45 in the
Trojan gy m Wednesday while Irvine faces
E s peranza at home at the same hour M ar1na 's
Vikings are also in the tournament that has 16
teams entered
NFL standings
Reynolds' Huntington Beach neighbors Bobby
and Dottie Atkins engineered the whole affair And
it certai nly couldn·t have ha ppened to a nicer guy. . . ..
NOW IT CAN BE TOLD Dept
J ust how close were the Ra ms to keeping
Reynolds ·>
Well , he had a verbal contract over the phone
.and five minutes later another person called to say
lhe whole thing was off.
'"fames will not be divulged to protect the
gui lty • • •
I KJDDINGL V TOLD Rich Saul at the party
(although l don 't think Saul knew I was kidding>
that Coach Ray Malavas1 had informed me of
Saul's intentions to play for another five years ..
·Five years'>" he ~xlaimed."' .. No way. not
me
This season has been rumored to be Saul's
last Of course. that has been an on-going rumor
for years now
Unfortunately. this lime it may be true, and
t h at 's loo bad During a year in which the
offens"'"' line has had trouble getting its act
together. Saul has always been there . You ask any
of hi s teammates who has been the Rams' best
player of 1981 and tl would almost be unanimous.
Talk about losses, Ferragamo, Reynolds. Bob
Brudzinski and Fred Dryer pale in comparison to
Saul"s influence on the team
If, and when, he does retire. he will surely be
m 1ssed and the Rams will surely feel 1t
************* ! JOHNSON & SON : •
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Western Division
NATION~CONFERENCE Presents ... • If
• It
Denver
Kansas City
San Diego
Oakland
·Seattle
W L T PF Pt\ Pd.
8 4 0 241 194 .667
8 S 0 313 251 .61S
7 5 0 370 312 .583 s 7 0 195 239 .417
4 8 0 209 289 .333
Central Division
Cincinnati 9 3 O ~ 224 .750
Pittsburgh 7 S 0 275 229 .583
Cleveland S 7 O 208 261 .417
Houston S 7 0 21Q 263 .417
Eastern Division
Miami
NY Jets
Buffalo
New England
Baltimore
7 4 1 27S 238 .62S
7 4 1 26S 244 .62S
7 s 0 2:r7 209 .583
2 10 0 257 277 .167
1 11 0 209 412 .083
Western Division
San Francisco 9 3 0 270 214 . 7SO
Atlanta 6 6 0 328 2S3 .500
Rams 5 7 0 268 271 .417
New Orleans 4 8 O 166 261 .333
Central Division
Minnesota 7 5 O 2*> 269 .583
Detroit 7 6 O 318 264 .S38
Tampa Bay 6 6 O 217 190 .SOO
Green Bay s T O 220 1.86 .417
Chicago 3 10 O 18S 285 .231
Eastern Division
Dallas
Philadelphia
NY Giants
St. Louis
Washington
10 3 0 299 241 ,788
9 3 0 297 172 .750
6 6 0 242 213 .soo
5 7 0 248 327 .417 s 7 0 250 294 .417
• If • • • • • • • If . .. • • • • • • • • • , ... the "Gr...tl ....
• If
: NFL11 :
• Picks of •
• TheW... • • • -tr SUHDAY • . ....... .
• o.er It
-tr H...to. it· • • « • • • • • • •• ••
,.... ..... ,
o•er ·-NewYorilG._.. .. .,.
S-~llCO
MOHDAY
.. .. .. • ... • ,.
t
··~···• ... ***********·~················· .... ........... . .....
Mimi
.. • •· • • • ... • /O LEASE
: . )tet.•i 'lclct. at 140/ LUXURY
: nAM • : EXTENDED THROUGH MOVEMIER
MIWHOUISf
• ..
1t .. • • • ..
• • • • • •1t••***
PARTS DEPARTMENT NOW
0,..1:00 &a to 1:00 PJit. SATUIDAYS • ················~····················~
)
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, November 'l7, 1981
Experienced Edison a force in basketball, too
• Chargers will be favored in Sunset, but don't count out Fountain Valley, Ocean View, HB or Marina
By ROGER CARLSON
Of .. DMlf P\i.t • ._..
Guess who enters the 1981-82 prep basketball
season wtth the ravorite's label?
As If the football team hasn't received enough
recognition. the basketball team picks up the
gauntlet with the campalan approaching next
week in non-league and tournament play before
league competlllon In January.
That's right Edison H1gh's Chargers are
considered the team to beat in the Sunset League
and may very well be Orange County's No. l.
It doesn't take a genius to figure out why, not
with 6-6 Richard Chang, a returning All-CIF 4·A
star ln the fold, along with 6-4 Rick DiBernardo
and three other returning starters.
Five returning starters from a team which
advanced to the CIF quarterfinals last season are
enough to give anyone the favorite's role, but it's
hardly overwhelming in this league, this season.
Fountain Valley's Barons have two returning
starters and another who would have been if he
was on any other team last season; Ocean View
returns a bundle, including 6-9112 Jim Usevitch;
Huntington Beach is solid from top to bottom: and
Marina is loaded with ta lent, keyed by 6·5 Rick
Smith.
A good line on a team is its schedule. For
instance, the prestigious San Dimas tournament,
which annually includes the top teams in Southern
California m its star-studded lineup. has for the
first lime ever two Sunset League entries -
Edison and Ocean View
Here's a look at each or the Sunset League's
teams:
Edison
Coach Barry Leigh has a dream lineup with
five returning starters and although the Chargers
are still smarting from their early elimination in
the football playoffs, it doesn't do much for Sunset
League basketball opponents.
That's because light end DiBernardo, who
packs 218 pounds on hi s 6-4 frame , and
quarterback Ken Major, a 6·4 senior, are on the
basketball floor all the sooner
Chang averaged 21 I points a game as a junior
and D1Bernardo averaged 18. l points, in addition
to 12 rebounds a game DiBernardo, one of the
s trongest rebounders in recent years along the
Orange Coast area . was also an all·league
performer.
Other returning starters include 6·4 Darren
Moore. 6-2 Mark Goudge and 6-2 Jeff Stephens.
Moore lS the quickest and the Chargers' best
defender, Goudge was an honorable mention
all-league player as a junior with a 13. l scoring
average and Stephens. the floor leader, led the
team in assistS
"We 've got a tough preseason. including
Inglewood and the San Dimas tournament," notes
Leigh. who has added Todd Zirbel as an assistant
coach.
"Zirbel's going to be a real plus for our team,"
says Leigh.
Others 10 the Chargers' stable include 6·4 Pete
Binaski , 6·4 Chris Fabian, 6·1 Tim Smith and 6·0
Tim Leavey, the son of former Coach Don Leavey
It's an all-senior squad.
Leigh says B10ask1 has the potential to start
and MaJor 1s a clutch performer. Smith is a good
defender and is the team·s third guard, while
Chana Di Bernardo
F~bian and Leavey lend depth to a great deal of
talent.
There is a lot of firepower in this outfit -but
the bottom line is the one-two punch of Chang and
Di Bernardo.
Huntington Beao6J
The Oilers of Coach Roy Miller had a
successful summer < 14 ·5> and with decent size,
including 6-6 Jim Lane, along with the customary
press and running features. are definite playoff
contenders.
Lane. 6·1 Billy Thompson, 5.9 guard Brad
Harker, 6-3 Bruce Ayres and 6·5 Dave Shackleford
are the probable stacters, but 6-2 Dan Mattox, 6-4
Darren Feenstra and 6·2 Keith Salaya are also
expected to see action.
"We have a well-rounded shooting team and
quickness in a three-guard offense." says Miller.
"] have a deep bench, all the way to the eighth
man."
Lane, a 205-pound senior, has improved vastly,
according to Miller. With strength inside and
shooting range to 18 feet, Lane carries the bulk of
offensive responsibility.
Thompson is a two-year starter who has
developed an outside shot to his game. A hustler,
this junior is the key to the Oilers' fast break.
Ayres can go inside with authority. handles
the ball well and shoots with distance, while
Shackleford. the starting post, is a good rebounder
and is deadly from lhe corner .
Harker is quick and aggressive, a strong
passer and can hurt the opposition frQm outside,
too. Harker and Thompson are the only juniors on
the squad.
Mattox is a tough defensive player, Feenstra's
best asset is his inside hustling and Salaya is a
threat from outside.
Others include 6·1 Adam Ruphnger, 6-1 Dan
Cerda, 6·3 Greg Klecker and 6·1 Terry Gibson.
Marina
Smith is the only returning starter for Coach
Steve Popovich, but the Vikes' ability to blend a
complete five-man attack gives them the edge
they need to deal with the likes of Edison,
Fountain Valley and Ocean View, and like
Huntington Beach. are considered definite playoff
contenders.
"We could have an outstanding season,·· says
Popovich, ''but we realize so can four OJ.her Sunset
League teams.
··w e'll run and play multiple defenses.
changing to a set type offense that will take
advantage or our individual players.
"You know you have a great league when
Going Out of ~usiness Sale
Oben11eyer, H.C.C .•
Roffe. Kffex, V eleda. ~=~~£:~ ... Up To Gerry, Colmar. Demetre,
and"'°"
80% and more
Everything MUST Go
:k~:: .... pwlftf in 3 Days T et111l1 equlptneftt
and ClothhMJ
Starting Fri., Nov. 27,
.........
527
5.00 .:~: S . N 28 ......... s-4 150.00 14'.tl
a.. •""HcJe"o.oo "·" Sc .. ~ H.. ZJS.00 .... , at ov '"° 20S.OO 7'.tl • ' 8 ' Litt lt0.00 H . ti
••• Lecht ....... I l .H ·4f.H s N 29 ...... 4.H · t .H
Mlll't&Ltldfttl•• 14.tt-24.tt un OY 11 am-5 p
w.•s&LedlHSfr.tcllr_. 14.H ·4f.tt ., • ' Me9'1&1.echtT-Htckl 2.H · 4.tt :':.l ~:n•• 4.H •lt.H l..+t: SxtOI 260.00 I Jt.tl sxto nuo 1 zt.tl
~~-· :::511 MARI
2700 ·w. 'Coast H)lf.
Newport Beach
VISA .and Mastercharge lcce~id
t
,,
•
other coaches are saying, ·eoy, am I glad I'm not
in your league.· "
Smith, a 6-5, 18S-p0under, averaged 13.0 points
and seven rebounds a game as a junior, while 6·4
Andy Klussman provides boards and scoring
punch.
Scott FiJipek, the only junior on the squad. will
operate at the point and could develop into one of
the league's best, according to his coach.
John Berry (6·1' and Mark Tandy (6·5 1 are
also big in the Vikings' plans. Berry was the
team ·~ fourth quard as a junior and Tandy is
developing an inside game wtth good rebounding
ability.
Others in the Viking stable: Greg Chom1k
<6·2 >, a hustler: J ohn Cassidy <6·01. with a
s hooting touch: and John Biel <6·2>. a New Mexico
transfer.
Also, 5·11 Randy Bague (depth at guard>; 5·11
Casey Barnes (more depth at guard l; 5-10 Jon
Price <quick 1 and 6-0 Steve Miller, another guard
candidate .
Popovich, who has had his s hare of one-point
games during hi s tour at Marina, predicts more of
the same
Fountain Valley
Jeff Hughes, a 6·3 returning all·league
s hooting star, heads a cast which includes 5· 11
Alan Villanueva and 6-4 Ken Harter , the Barons'
Come early!
Gates open
5:45PM
s uper·sub last year. but there 1s a great deal mo
to consider.
It starts with 6-6 Rolf Jacobs, a sophomor ,
considered a true prospect for the future.
"We 'll probably start slowly." says vetera
Coach Dave Brown ··But we hope to be good b
January. It's going to be a typical Sunset Leagu
· dogfight. ,
··our three return mg players are excellent an~
the Junior varsity was 18·3 last year. 1
"We have good overall size, but we're slo
mside. t
··A lot depends on Jacobs' recovery frori)
mononucleosis and how well he'll play on th~
vars ity level. I ··our guard play should be as good as we havl!
ever had. Hughes is a potential superstar if he ca
gel over summer leg injuries."
Hughes averaged 19.8 points a game in leag~ and was a first team all-league seleotion, whil
5· 11 Villanueva popped the nets at a 57 perce
rate
Harter gives you more than you should expe<f.
from a 6·4 frame. while the 6·6 Jacobs offers va4
potential, but is reahst1cally sllll on lhe mend frorf
~1x weeks with mono.
Others in the Barons' camp include 6·5 Ro
Whitehiar. the only Junior, and 6-8, 200-pound Joh
Eckweiler, a darkhorse candidate
Whileh1ar was the leadin~ JV player an
<See SUNSET, P age C6l
A FR.II Western Hat
wW be gtftn for
... ry pald a d mlsslon,
Saturday nlght,
NOYember 2&
-----·~----~----------·~------.................. ...........
Lions' 12th lilan .Monarchs
heips out aga~ lac~ expenence
Advice keeps Detroit hot, 27-10
By E D ZINTEL
O( .. o.lfy ........
r~'t Fred Scott haul$ in.a touchdown pou.at Gary Green defericU in vain in Thursday's octi:n~
~
PONTIAC, lllcb. <AP> -Tbe
D.trott Uona played with a 12th
man .,aln nnnday, oa.ly tb1t
tlme be WU Oil tbe 1idellnel -
gulcllni quarterback Eric Hipple
-lnatod of belq ille1aUY on
the fie&d blocklnl fOf' him.
Hipple , wbo threw two
touchdown puses ln the lJona'
27·10 NaUonal Football Leque
victory over the Kamu City
Cblefl ln a nationally televlsed
T hank11lvln1 Day 1ame.
credited bia predecessor. Gary
Danlelaon, fOf' one of the 1cores.
In a nationally televised 27-24
victory over the Dallu Cowboys
two weekl ago, came films
diacloaed the Lions were one
over tbe 11-man limit when a
laat·•econd winning field goal
was kicked.
DANIELSON, the Liona'
re1ular quarterback who baa
miaaed nine games while
recovert.ni from a dislocated left
wrlat, waa back on the sidelines
for Thursday's contest, allhou&h
he didn't play.
Durlnc the week. while
watching game films, Danielson
noticed a Oaw ln tbe Kanaaa City
defensive cove rage and
suuested a play to Hipple and
owboys were almost a turkey dinner
Bears were feasting, but reserve quarterback saves Dallas, 10-9
contributed two blg play1. down at the Dallas 2 for the Bean' only
"Glenn did just a great job," Landry touchdown. However, Ed "Too Tall"
said . "He was very tight in the first half J ones blocked the extra point attempt by
but settled down In the second half. He hit John Roveto, and that proved to be the
some good passes out there -u good as difference . as the Bears lost their 10th
tbe coaC!bel wblch he t.bouCbt
would 1uc:ceed.
Tbe opportunity came midway
1n the MCODd quarter and Hipple
threw a bomb over the Cblef1'
1eeonclary to Fred Scott fOf' •
TD.
• 'I owe much ol my IUCC .. to
Gary'1 help. and even tbou&h
he's lQJured, be bu helped the
team." Hipple aaid. "He let that
touchdown play up and tbe
coacbea aent it lo."
HIPPLE, WBO started the
season •• the Llona' No. 3
quarterback. bu 1uided l>eUott
to a S.2 record alnce taklnl over
two week1 after Danielson's
injury. The Uom had loet a pair
of games immediately after
Danielson's lnjury with Jeff
Komlo quarterbackine.
Hipple aot bls first atart ln •
Monday nlpt came aaainst the
Cbicaao Bean and baa been at
the controls ever since.
• 'Thlnp have gone great so
far.'' Hipple said. "It's a tribute
to our offense to take on a third
stringer and work ao well with
him. 1be whole thing has been
a team effort."
Detroit '1 a11reasi ve defense
contributed five sacks ror 40
yards ln losses and lntercepted a
pair of Kansas City passes,
while holdins the Chiefs'
high-powered offense to 245 net
yards.
The defeat dropped the Chiefs
Into second place in the Western
Division of the NFL's American
Conference with an 8-5 record,
half a game behind the Denver
Broncos. The Lions remain ln
second place in the NFC CentraJ
with a HI record, half a game
behind Minnesota.
Mater Del Hiab baaketball
coacb 8111 Alexander doesn't
mlH out on afternoon t.elevlak>n
1oap operu these day1, deapit.e
the fact b1J aftemoona are apent
In the 1chool'a aym, putUns bis
le• m through Ila preaeason
pacea.
Alexander has bis own vereion ot ·'The Young and the
ReaUese," with only four seniors
on the ll·man varsity regulars
roster.
··our kids are young but
hungry," Alexander says. "Due
to our inexperience, Servite and
Bishop Montgomery might get
the nod for a title in league
(Angelus) but we 'll be there
alao.
"Our strength Is our bench,
plus we're more talented at each
position over last year <when the
Mo narchs fini s hed third in
league with a 44 record, 9·14
overall >. We have better
shooting now. We're looking at a
CIF playoff berth."
Mate r Dei returns two
honorable mention'· all·league
pe rforme r s in guard Ron
Tarbell and forwa rd Chris
Jackson.
Al another forward spot is
Mall Be euws aert , only a
sophomore but who at 6-S is a
good rebounder.
The rest or the s tarting
rotation fills out with 6·6 junior
Gary Jaeger at center and S.S
junior John Cook at point guard.
Both saw some playing time last
year
Coghlan captures
5-mile road race
1 VlNG, Texaa (AP > -With Danny
W 'te in dress clothes on the sideline, the
D las Cowboys resorted to a seldom.used
b kup quarterback and a blocked extra
p t to beat lbe Chicago Bears on
Thanbg:lvtng Day.
"We'll be able lo swallow our turkey
tonight," said a relieved Dallas Coach
Tom Landry after Ron Springs' S.yard
touchdown run with 5:09 to play and
R,fael Septien's extra point gave Dallas a
anybody could hit.·· game against three victories.
Dallas survived a brilliant performance Walter Payton bad his best rushing day MANCHESTER, Conn. <AP >
by Chicago running back Walter Payton, of the year, gaining 179 yards on 38 carries HIPPLE, WHO completed 10 -Eamonn Coghlan, the world
who rushed for 179 yards on 38 carries. against the hard·presased Cowboys, now of 22 passes for 132 yards, bit indoor r ecord holder ror the
"Payton is the best back in football," 10·3 for the season. light end David Hill with a mile, led all the way Thursday
~National Football League victory.
Landry said. "He bas gr~t strength and 1 The Bears' final chance came in the last lO·yard touchdown strike in the in capturing the Manchester
great running ability. We just couldn't stop 31 seconds when Roveto's 49-yard field first quarter. 5·mile road race.
e victory over the 13-point underdog
rs moved Dallas a half game ahead or
him.'' goal attempt was wide right. The Bears Detroit's Eddie Murray kicked Coghlan. a !8-year-old native
Carano admitted: "I was nervous at the were given a chance when St.eve Wilson field goals of 3' and 46 yards and of Ireland now living in Rye.
adelphia in the National Conference
tern Division with a 10..3 record.
start. I started getting into the now of committed interference on the Dallas 40 on Lions' tailback Billy Sima closed N. Y . covered the distance i"
things in the fourth quarter." a fourth-down pass by Evans. out tbe scoring with a 4·yard run 21 : 37 , in finishing far ahead of
hit.e was knocked out of the game in
second period with bruised ribs.
tors said there was no apparent
lure.
A,fter James Jones retarned a punt 17 Chicago beat back one Cowboy attempt with 2:46 remaining in the the Providence College trio oC
yards to the Chicago 37, c•rano scrambled late in the fourth quarter when end Mike game. Ray Treacy. Mike O'Shea and
11 yards. then passed 15 Y,arda to Springs . Hartenstine batted away a Carano pass on Kansas City rookie Billy Brendan Quinn. each or whoni
After Tony Dorsett ran for 6 yards , fourth down at the Bears 2·yard line . Jackson scored on a 4·Yard run shared second place with times
My shoulder was cramping and I just
dn't go back in there," White said.
serve quarterback Glenn Carano took
as oo the aame.win.nin" drive and
Springs got tbe call for the game clincher. The Bears' touchdown drive covered 80 In the first quarter and Nick or 22: 26.
The Bears broke a 3.3 deadlock early in yards ln 16 plays with Payton cbewin1 up Lowery kicked a 33·yard field Sue Richardson. 18, of Canton.
the fourth quarter when quarter back much of the yardage. Payton went over goal ror the Chiefs ln the third Conn .. was the top women's
Vince Evana circled rllfll end,..--_oa __ tbird _____ .ooo __ y_ards __ f_o_r _the_a_lxt.b __ s_tr_aJ_gb_t_tim_' _e_. ___ q_u_a_rter __ . ----.,,---~-,-.,.---fi_n_is_h_e_r ._i_n_27_:_s_2·-.,----..,.,.....,.,.-,
onghorns top A&M
Brewer key to Texas' 21 -13 victory
LLEGE STATION, Texas (AP)
uarterback Robert Brewer and
Jde r~elver Herkie Walls agreed
_,alls "shifted gears" as be scored
~a JS.yard pass reception in Texas'
13 Southwest Conference victory '"° Texas A&M on Tbutsday. th ewer guided seventh·ranked
T as on a l·yard sneak, pitched out
l obn Walker on a 60·yard scoring
b and threw to Walls as Texas
ied with 21 points in the second
ter.
Iker, subbing for injured a tarter l "Jam" Jones, rushed 36 times for ~78 yards, including his loog run
Ob which Walls had a key downfield
r.fock.
e victory broke a two.game
es winning streak aga1nst Texas.
Longhorns Coach Fred Akers
, "It was necessary, and I'm
it's over.''
e SWC finale for the two teams
re a record Kyle Field crowd of
31 changed nothing in t he
conference championship race or
bowl picture.
Texas, 9-1-1, accepted an invitation
Saturday to play No. 4 Alabama in
the Cotton Bowl on Jan. 1. Texas
A&M , 6-5, meets Oklahoma State in
the Independ e n ce Bowl at
Shreveport, La .• Dec. 12.
"Herlde is a world class sprint.er
and I think he just shifted gears to
get lo the ball," Brewer said.
Walls agreed, saying, "I shilted
gears to get up to them, and wheh I
saw the ball I just went after it and it
was right there."
Texas A&M scored the only polnt.s
of the second half as reae~ve
quarterback John Elkins threw 6
ya rd s to Don Jones f or a
third-quarter touchdown. That SCi)re
was set up by Elkins' first college
pass completion -a 50-yarder to
Mike Whitewell.
Elkins enter ed the came after
Gary Kubiak reinjured his right
shoulder in the first half.
O.CTD will
plan your bus
'riJ!for
/·. -4-1 -
· · No matter where you want to go
in Orange.County, we'll make it easy for you to
get there on an OCTD bus. Just call us at
636-RIDE. We'll tell you the exact routes
and times. And if you need achedulea and
Ride Guides, we'll eend them free. So give ua a call. You'll find the bus is
your eaay·to-Wle ticket to work, school,
~iillll~~ ~ma and entlrtainment ln Oranp County.
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save 50( on admlaaton. One coupon I
per ticket only. Addlttonatcoupone I !'! available at Sunl•nd Skiers. · --~-------------
TIE IULLETll IOIRD
Prep basketball schedules
I di Mn
Dec l 5 Ill Vulcn<:lu tournament,
Dec 8 ut Inglewood. l>Cl'. IS 19 ul
San Dimas tournament. Der 23
Servile, Dec 2H :io ut Cal'l!on C1l\
Classic.
J•n. 2 at C0:tlu Mesu: Jun 6 Lo:.
Altos. Jan 13 Mar1nu• Jan IS
Ocean View•; Jan. 20 at Wt'stm1nster .
Jan. 22 at Huntington Beuch•. Jan 27
Fountain Valley•. Jan 29 al
Marina•
Feb. 3 Bl Oceun Vicw •. Feb s
Westminster-. Feb 10 Huntington
Beach•. Feb 12 at Fountain Valley•
All games at 7 30 unless noted°: All
home games on cumpus. •denotes Sum.et
Lea1ue game
'•u"t•ln Valley
Dec I 111 North H1vers1de 171 . Del'
8·11 Fountain Vallt!y Baron tournament,
Dec. 15 al Lakewood. Dec. 17 19 at
Fremont 1Sunnyvulc 1 tou1 nament. DN·
26·30 at Orunge Opt1m1:.t tournament
Jan. S Verbum Uc1 I at Compton
College•. 7 pm .. Jan. 6 La Quinta .
Jan 13 Huntington Beach•. Jan. 15
at Manna•. Jan. 20 al Orean View
Jan. 22 Westminster•. Jan 27 Ill
Edison: Jan 29 at Hunltn~ton Beach•
Feb 3 Manna• Fl.'b s Ocean
Vie~ : Feb 10 Ill Westminster. fo'eb. 12
Edison
All games ill 7 JO unle:.s noted. All
home ~ames on campus. denotes Sunset
League game
Huntlnwton .. ach
Dec 2·5 at !\lannJ \\'e:-1m1n:.ll'I'
tournament . Dec 9 at FountJ11~
Val IC\' BJron tournJmt-nt . L>cc 15
Gart>\'. Dec 16 Los Am1~0.'>. Ul'l' 21 :io
ul 'urca-Ohndd tournam••nt
Jan S at Mater Dt>1 . Jan 8 al
M1lltkan: Jan. 13 ut Fountain V;11lev .
Jan 15 -Westminster•. Jan 20 -·at
Manna . Jan 22 Ed1'>on . Jan 27
Oceun View '. Jan. 29 Fountain
Valier
Feb 3 at Weslmim.ter Fri> 5
Manna•. Feb 10 <it Edison . Feb 12
at Ocean View•.
All games at 7 Jo unle's noted All
home games on campu!>. denote~ Sunset
League game
.._rln•
Dec 2-5 Westminster Murina
tournament. Der 12 M 1s~wn Viejo.
Dec IS -Foothill. Dec 17 19 at Santa
~1ana tournament . Dec 26 :Ill at
Orange Opt1m1st tournament
Jan 6 Lake"ood Jan 8 Lonj.!
Beach Wilson . Jan 13 Jt Ed1~>n . JJn
15 FounLain Valle~. Jan 20
II uni ington Bt·urh Jan 22 JI Ort-Jn
Vie..-.•. Jan 27 Westmin~ter Jan 29
Edison·
Feb 3 at Fountain Valll'Y l'eb a
at Huntington Beach . Feb 10 Ocean
View•. Feb 12 at Westmin:.ter
All game:. al 7 JO unll•ss notefl. All
home &amei. 1Jn l'Jmpu:. dcnnu•, Sun·wl
League game
Ocean View
Dec 1·4 al PJc1f1 c Shores
tournament. Dec. 8 Mornmg.,1de. Dec
9·tl -at Fountain Valley loum11ment.
Dec IS-19 at San D1ma!> tournament
Der 22 dl Lakewood
Jan 6 at Inglewood. Jun 8
Verbum Dl.'1. Jan 13 at Westmsnstrr
Jan. 15 at Edison . Jan 20 FountJ1n
Valley•, Jan. 22 Manna .Ian 27 al
Hunt ington Be ach Jan 29
Westminster
Feb 3 Ed1Mn . Feb ~ i:ll Fountain
Valley•. Feb 10 at )lann;1 Feh 12
lluntmgton Beach
A II games al 7 Jo u n le:.:-nolt'<l. All
hOml' i:uml!'> on l'<llnPll" dl·nol\''> Sun'l'I,
League game
Wettmlnater
Dec 2 S Marina We:.lm1nster
tournament Dre 9 La Quinta Der 11
al Orange Dec· 15 17 at Anaheim
tournament. Dec 26·30 al ~an11ag•1
tournament
Jan 6 al Long Beach W1l~on. Jan 1:1
Ocean View . Jan IS lluntingloo
Beach•. Jan 20 Edison Jan 22 al
Fountain Valley . Jan 27 al M.mna
Jan 29 -at Ocean View•
Feb 3 Huntington Be:1ch Feb S
at Edison•. Feb 10 f'ountam \'alle)
Feb 12 Manna
All games at 7 JO unless nolt.-d. \II
home game<> on campus dl•notr-. SunSl'l
League game
Woodbridge
Dl'c I at l.1berl\' ('hns11an. 1 al
Newpnrt Chnsuan 1 Dec 1 al ~e" µon
Christian. Dt!c 8 12 Jl El Segundo
tournament. Der 17·19 at ~ewµor1
Christian tournaml'nl. Dec 29 al
Rancho Alamitos. l>el' 30 at Oak Park
17 pm I
Jan 6 at l.<i~una Bearh 171 Jan II
at Magnolia Jan IS al Brethren 111
p.m.1. Jan 18 at Capistrano Valle\
Christian (71 . Jan 23 al A\'alon 181
Jan 26 Marshall al Pasadena H1.:h
Jan 29 Vincent Memorial t7 pm 1
Jan. 30 Capistrano Valley Chnslian
Feb 2 at Sant1ai:o • 7 p m 1. Feb s
at Brethren 18 p m 1. f'eh 9 Marshall
All games at 7 30 unless noted. All
• home games on campus
J DAYS ONLY-MOY. 21-29
Don & Alicia Bullock's
GUii SlllW & SAU
G~S-Antlque & Modern. Knives, Swords. O rs. Custom Knives. Militaria. Wells Fargo
& ntern Memorabilia. HOURS: 9-6 SAT. 9-5
SU . ADM: S3.50 Adults. $2.00 Children 5·12.
U five Free.
ANAHRlll CONVENTION CENTER
Priient this ad 111 bo;c,H1ce /Or SOr off $3 50 Ticket.-
Prep ba3ketball !CMdules
Coron• del Mat
Uel' 2·5 ot Munn• tout numt'nt. Ot•1•
11 al Mhullon Vll•Jo. IL Del' 11\.18 •I
Tro} tou.ruumcnl
Jun 2 Corona dcl Mor Ml Lu Quinta.
Jun 6 Irvine•! Jlln ti at
S11ddlebaek•. J•n 13 Ml El Toro• Jan
IS Newµor1 Harbor. Jan :II> al
E1itunc111, Jun. 22 University;· Jan 27
ut Irvine•. Jun 29 ut Costu Mesa
fo'eb I Suddh:back . Feb 3 El
Toro•. Feb 5 ul Newport Harbor .
f'eb 10 Estunrla . Feb 12 at
LI n 1 versity
All games 111 7 30 unles:. noted . All
home games on l'ampus: •denotes Seu
Vtt•ll Leugue gaml'
Coate Me••
De r 9·12 <it San Clemente
tournament. UeC' 22 Capistrano Vall~y
at Saddlcbul·k Cullt>ge . Der. 26 30 al
Orunge Optlmi:st tournament
Jan 4 Ed1i.on . Jun 6 at
L'. ni ver:.1t.> . Jan 8 al Coronu del
Mar•; Jun 11 :'llewport llarbor Jan
13 E~tanC'la . J.Jn 15 at
Saddlebark . Jan. 20 at El Toro J.rn
22 Irvine . Jan 27 Unl\l'l':.11) . Jan
211 Corona del Mur
Feb I ut NewJX.11"1 llarbor'. f'eb 3
at Estancrn . Feb 5 Sadllll'bark . ,..eb ,
Ill El Toro• Feb 12 al lntnt'
1\ll game:. al 7 30 unless noted. All
home gam<'~ on t•a rnp11s. dcnotl'S S<-a
VtC\\ Ll'aJ)uc guml'
l1tancla
Del' IS al Laguna Be;H·h
tournament. Dec 12 Alumni. 7. Det·
21 23 al I.a:. Vegas Bonan1a
tournament; Uct·. 26 30 ul Oruni:c
Optimist toumament
Jan. ti at El Torn . Jan. 8 dl
Saddleback•: Jan 1\ lrvint'': J an 13
al Coslu Mes1&. Jan. IS Cn1vers1l\
Jan 20 Corona dcl Mar . JJn 22 at
N1•\\IJ-Ort llarbor .. Jan. 27 El Toro . .Jan 29 Saddll'l)Urk
Feh I at In me . F'eb 3 Co~ta
:\le:.d . Fl!b S ut lJn1\'t'rsity . Frb 10
al Corona dcl Mar : Feb 12
:\cwport Ha rbor
All g:•ml'l> at 7 30 unlf'.s:. noted. All ht1mt· gume.; on cam1rn,, denfJlt·~ ~a
\'11:" L••:1i.:11l' gJm1·
lrvlne
I} l' t: I 4 u l (i J r d 1: n G r o ' l'
1ou1 nament. Dl•t i I:! al SonorJ
tournament l>ec· II! at Lai.:una lkat·h
18 pm J. Der 28311 ut Can,on
tournament
Jan Ii Jl Corona dd ~la1 .. Jan H
L' n I\ cr:.1t~ Jan 11 al Estancia•. Jan
13 at Nev.port llarbor Jan IS El
Toio Jan 20 Saddkl>al'k Jan :?:!
at Costa Mt•su Jiln 27 Corona del
Mai . Jan 29 at L:nl\l'l'>ll\
F'eb I Est:mna . f't·b 3 ~e" J'4H1
llarhor . f'eb 5 al El Toro . Feb tu
at Saddleback ,..eb. 12 Coi.U1 M<'!.,1
\II "aml'!> al 7 30' unle~' netl't.1 All
homl' games on campu,. dt•Aotl'' ..,<'a
\'1"" Lca~Ul' jo!Utnto"
Newport Harbor
DeC' 1 San C. lrmenlt• Del· 7 11 :it
Santa Ana lligh tournament. De<' 16 al
Capistrano Valle ' l>t·r 2r. JO Jl Orani;e Optimist tourn:iment
,Jan Ii S..ddlebac·k Jan 8 El
Torn . Jan II at Co!ota Ml'!>.t Jan 13
In IO<' . Jan IS at Corona del Mar
Jan 20 at l.:nl\·er:,11\ . Jan 22
E~tJnc·1a Jan 27 dt SJddleb.1rk . Jan 29 at El Toro
rC'h I Costa Mesa . F'eh 3 at
In 111<' ,..l'I> 5 Corona rll'l ~tar . Feb
Ill L'n1Hr,1l.l Feb 12 al Estancia .
All 1-1amt•i-at 7 30 unll•ss noted: All
home game'! on t'.•mpu-, dt•note~ Sea
\'It'" f-t:dl:Ul' l!llnll'
University
Uec 1 S tournamt•nt .
l11ur11am1•n1
tournaml'nt
a l L ,1 I! u n a R e a l' h
[)(•(' 7·12 ,11 Sonors
UN· 2830 •• 1 Can\On
.l.tn ti Co:.ta Mesa .J.rn 8 ,,1
In int• Jan l I El Turn I Jn 13 ·
Sa<tdkb;ick J<lll 15 at i::.,1Jnn.1
Jan 211 :-.l·wprn I ll;irbo1 .. Jan 22 al
Corona dl.'I Mar . Jan 2i .ll t'n,ta
Mt!SJ . Jan 29 In inc
Feb I at El Toro . Fl•h 3 .11
Suddlebat'k Feb 10 at :'\l'" purl
llarbor•S f'eb 12 Corona dt•I M.11
All games at 7 311 unle~:. noted. All
home ~amcs on rampu~. cknoll'~ !'\('d
View LeagUl' game
Lagune Beech
Der I 5 Laguna Beach lournamrnl
Dre 7-l2 at Santa Ana toumamt•nt
Der 14 ;it Sant1 <1go 17 p m 1. Dec II!
Irvine c 8 p m 1 Der 211-30 al Villa
Park tourn.imenl
Jan S Elsinore 171. Jan 6
Woodbridgt· 17 1. Jan 8 San Clemente
Jan 13 al Lal'(una I ltlls . Jan 15 dl
Ca1>1strano Valley•. Jan 20 Dana
Hills . J i.in 22 Mlsswn Viejo• .. Jan 27
at San Clemente•: Jan 29 Lal(una lhll'i.
Peb 3 Cap1st~uno \'allev•. fo'eb ~'
at Dana 11111~·; Feb 10 · al M 1ss111n
V1cJO
All game~ at 7 30 unless noted. All
homr games on campus: •denotes South
Coast League game
21IO HAIBOI IL VO.
COSTA MESA
Deity "'""~ -Ddrren Moore 1 53 J. Rick DtBemard.o 1 shoot mg J and Jim Lane 1 52 J are key$ for Edison. II B.
From Page C3
SUNSET LEAGUE BASKETBAl,I, • • •
shoots well, Eckweiler must improve h13 speed
Lance Kubo operates from a 5·6 frame. but his
hustle and mental aspects will put him on the
playing floor
Others mtlude 5 11 Steve Burt. 6·0 Jim
Eckweiler, 6·4 John Kosty, 6·4 Dave Maurel and
6·2 sophomore Drew nrown. the latter lacking only
experience
Ocean View
The Seahawks make their entry into the
Sunset League after successful ventures in the
Empire League and 1t only makes the league
tougher
Usevitch. the 6·91~.i prospect. gives Coach Jim
Harns' crew obvious strength on the boards, while
Scoll Delirouwer, one of the better guards in
Orange County at 5· 11. puts muscle into the other
encl of the Seahawks ' game
We have a good mix of experience al crucial
positions," says Harns. "This isn't as powerful a
team as we've had in the past <there's no 6·8
Wayne Carlander, for mstan<'e J. but we should be
a fine shooting team. with good ballhandling and
passing.
Progress m team attitude and rebounding
wil I e nable us lo continue recent tradition."
Curci to file suit
LOUISVILLE. Ky ( APJ -Fran Curci says
that he probably will go to court to r~cover money
he stand'> lo lose from his radio and television
shows after being fired as football coach at
Kentucky
·'Certain promises were made that people are
con veniently forgetting," Curci said on his weekly
rad 10 show. "Curci 's Big Blue Line," on
Wednesday
"At the proper time, I can show that. That's
what s uits are all about, I guess. Certain things
were said There were handshake agreements and
J know what was said ... he said
He confirmed that he had r etained Lexington
lawyer Harry Mille r in connection with the case
Miller said he would file the suit after Curci
returns from a two-week vacation. But Curci said
onlv he would "probably" sue
NFL statistics
The other returntnf{ lettPrman for Harns 1s 6 3
Shawn We rner, last year's s1~th pla)er
Usevilch averaged 12 6 points a game in
league play as a junior. while De Brouwer chipped
in with seven points per game chis chtrf asset 1s
his ball handling and direction 1
Werner saw htUe acl1on untJI the third game
of league, then played on a fairly consistent basis
Here are Harris' <:om111ents on lhe b:tlanl"c of
his squad
Dimitri Antonopulos (6-3 Jr.>
all.around player 1"
"An excellent
Brian Berr) t 6-0. soph 1
guard."
..\ poised point
Jeff Buck 16 5 sr 1 · Could help in a big way
A nice shooter and aggressive ·
Bob Carlson ( 6·2. jr >
strong ...
Dave Carroll t 64, Jr 1
competitor
Steve Cotner < 6-IJ. sr 1
continued improvement ··
A great passer.
Extreme!) strong
Lould help with
Mark Guest (6-0, sr. • The fastest and most
physically talented player on the team ·
Mike Judge C&-4. Jr.1 -'A.Q e.xceJleot shooter
and leaper "
Dan Rupp C5·11. sr 1
support player '
Fred Williams 16-2, H >
Gar) Zumbo 15·11 sr 1
Westminster
Great attitude. a
J\ model person ·
I\ fine shooter ·
The Lions have a tough row lo hoe with onl)
one returning letterman and no he1gbt to speak of.
but others won't be taking Coach Jon Borchert
lightly, desp1ll.· the on paper disadvantage the
Lions appear lo be in
··We're very young. very small ... says
Borchert 'Both of our sophomores •Tom Down!>
and Jeff Eastin I will start for us
"We'll play good man defense a nd try to he
patient on offen!>C and Just hope for the best
Karl Grams 16-0 jr 1 1s the only letterman and
he saw only limited action ac; a sophomore
Downs is listed at 6-U and was the freshmdn
team's MVP. while Ea:.tm 1s a 6-3 front line
player
Others in the Lions' program tnclude 5 11 Gary
Blak('sly, 5-8 Eddie Nunes. 5·11 Mitul Patel, 6·0
Tom Downs. 5·11 Rudy Ond1cs. 6·0 Don Petka, 6-0
Tom Nicolai and fl 3 Stan Shrewsbury
OUTSTANDING
VALUES!
LEADING P°'"EllS l lEADING P'UNTlllS
MOrlon, o.n ... , ~~ ~1 v,~, A,'t, T:!
And4trson, C1n<lt1Mll ue U• ?,'IOI L 11 JI
F'ovtl, S.n 0-.. 2 U6 J>JD IM 21
0 V.nlle, 0.llH 311 1t• 2,J6' e 00 "
1-. NY -"h l.s7 tot J,l't Lil " MOnlaN, !Mo<\ Fr..-c1w:o l16 2:1<1 2,1>4 1 )4 t•
8t•dlhaW, Pll~Qh :1<12 117 2,6ff T 11 lO Zorn, SHIU• 372 m 2,.wt • 1$ 13 B•rlkw\k, AU_,ta •U n7 t,'19 I GI 17
J •worllll, Pht~pN• Ut "' 2,A2' 6 ti •• LEADING l'AU 11ec11va11s
Na. Ya A .... TD
Brown, Ml,,,.M>ta 10 Ml t.2 I
Win...,._, S... 0.... .. la 12.J t c .. rll, S.n f'rW><•KO .. .. IJ.• 2
S.n .. r, Mlnnetota .0 a> IJ,t 6
Lewi•, 8utt•IO ~ l,CD4 ti .J • AndrPWS, All_,ta SI UI t.• 2
Ulrqenl, S.•ltle M l40 IS 0 S
New10me, C--.M 121 I•• •
Lotion, Gr'Mfl 8•Y U ... 17.6 5 Jenkins, All.,ta 51 1.0<1 JO. I 11
Ron, CIMlnMtl n 101 t>.5 5
LIADING llUSNEllS
OorMll, Dall•\
C•m•ll.-ln
Sims, O..f"Oil
MOntoomery, P,,11-IP'll• Ander_,, SI Louis OellW\O, K.,.... Clly Andrews, All.,ta
Bro-. Mlnnttot• Tyler, II.,,,.
Ne. Ya A .... TO
20 t,2n 5. I • ,.. 1,1'5 • 0 , n• 1,1u so 10 21J 1,0S. s.o • l«J 1,040 u • too••.•> io. .., •• ) ,.,. ,_ .. ) , ........ .
IM. Yft. A..._
Mcln•lly, Cn><lnMll 5S 1,'1• Skl..,.ny, Detroit H >,JtO Jennlr11P, NY Gl411\ll 11 J, l«J
Guy, OHi-H J,ltS Co•. Cl_....., S. 1, ....
LEADING P'UNT llETUaNEllS
Na. Y ..
.......... -)$ ... a.-•. s...~ 1s m
J Fl-,Chl~ l3 en v1oor110, Mt.,.,,1 21 1n Nelm1, W•Slllngton l3 «JS LEAOtNG KICJ(OP'" lllTUlllllillS
Ne1nu, V...,.lnvton ~oacnu. Houston
t..•wrenu, S... Fr•t1el0<0
Tullls,.._ton
W•ller, Ml.,.,,1
LEADING SCOlllllS
k·lowery, K.,.,.., City
k·5-J>tlen. o.1i.s
It MuH•Y. Detroit
It Bre«h, Cln<lnMl1
k·Ltehy, NY""" l<-«kl<~
... y .. ,. -n .a. .. -,. •111
30 HS
JIM .MARINO
'.VOLKSWAGEN-ISUZU \
18711 llACH IL VD.
HUNTINGTON IEACH ~ 142·2000
IUHD HEW
IHI VW
DIESEL RAlllT
F~CTOAY STICKER . . $7670
DiSCOUNT
$675
SALE PRICE
'6995
(2983) (177663)
IUHD HEW
1911 ISUZU
4X4 rlCICUP
SALE PRICE
'7595 (1 ~62) (00889)
1981 vw VAHAGOH •• L ..
Blue/blue. 4 speed
trans. a air cond. Executive car In
lovely condition.
(033867)
SALE PRICE
ONLY
'10,995
-
MV, El Toro,
Capo Valley
play toriight
Second·r ound CIF footba ll
playotfs a.ctlon Is on lap tonl"ht
for Sea Vltiw League champion
El Toro &I'd Soulh Coast League
co·champions Mission Vitijo and
Capis trano Valley.
Kickoff is at 7:30 ln euch
ln•ta nce and each ls on the road.
El Toro's Chargtl r s, 7 .4
over1All , ta ngle with Ce ntury
League kJnaiptn Foothill < lO·U at
Tuslin Hlah in the Southern
Conference
Orange Coa9t DAILY PILOT/Friday, Novomber 27, 1981 CJ ')
This • 1s one week he'll never forget
Cypress College SID has jaw broken, then becomes a father for the first time
T ho mouthpiece ror the world o f
aporta &at Cypress Colle(et> t•n't open hi•
mouth. lt's wired shut.
Paul Mc Leod , s port• inform ation
director at the colle1e. has mlue<I tho
last three weeks ot work, and It will be
unother three weeks betore he'll return.
doctors predict.
Set-ms McLeod w•s taking part in a
c m pus intramural football game a rew
weeks back. playin8 on a combined
fuculty·s ta tf squa d . Re portedly, an
over.zealous line m an playina opposite
Mc Leod a threw a pun ch thDt s hattertld
McLeod's jaw.
COMMUNITY COLLEGES
CURT
SE EDEN
c11·curn11t ances or the e vening were bcary. w 11ay the least.
While all the other women who gave
birth that d0ty had their babies with
them, t hl' McLeods du.ln't have Chanda
yet
Conrerenct: passing depurlml'nt. 1s still
approaching stivcral iichool rt'('Ordis
Tucker , son of Couch Dick Tucker.
cun become the most i>roductive
fresh man in OCC history with 226 yards
lh ruugh the ail' Suturday against
Golden Weist He would then surpai>s
Alvrn White who threw for 1,483 y0trds
1n his freshman <·umpa1gn m 1971 w 1th 226 yards pui.sinft aMUlnst
Grossmont last week. Turker rnovt·d
from ninth tu fourth on the Ol'C
sancle·season passing llsl I n uddll1on,
only White and Dave Jcrunko ( 1979 >
huvc thrown more passes than Tuc·k1•r
in a single sea11on
the l·onlerenn·
The f'ulcons' suect:8s will hin&e on the
11lay of returner:. Ti m Kuyper, Kevin
llobb<.'mllefken and Huisly Cam pbell
Kuy1>cr. u 6·ti forward. avaregoed 16 3
polllt :1 t>t'r teumc Inst seaRon. • • • MF.ANWlllLE, EL CAMI NO 1:J
t•om.11dered the No I tt•am in Southern
Californw in a pre·stiason poll. although
the Wai r10rh were knocked ore by East
Loo; Angt:ll·:.. 49 41 in their opt.>ncr this
he;1:.lln
E l Camino won tht• st ate community
rollegc 1•ha1rwwn1>h1p las t year and
re<'e1vt'<l four fmst place volt·s 1n the
pre hCai.on poll I his sea1>on.
"' • •
M lsslon Viejo c 10-0· l l takes Its
defensive pride to Bolsa Grande
High where Rancho Alam1t-0s
a waits. hoping to avenge a 9.7
non·league loss to Mission Viejo
Also In a Central Confe rence
du el is Capis tra no Va lley's
Coug ars, who a re at Anaheim's
La P a lma Pa rk against the
Anaheim Colonists. Capo takes
an 8·2· 1 r ecord into the game
after a slow start with a young
team .
.. T his was o crucial gam e. They had
to keep u!> f r om win n in g lhe
champi onsh ip again," Mc Leod
m um bled ttbout the incident later
MCLEOD NEEDED a n operat ion on
h is jaw a nd he'll Cace addit ional
surgery when the wires are removed
from his mouth The incident was lhe
first or several in what turned out to be
a hectic week tor the S ID
Turn s out Chundi! had trouble
brralb1ng. and in fuc t , stoppe"d
breathing for a short lime before
doctor~ rt•vived her. McLeod says there
w<.1:i no brain damage. and everbody in
the household il> now healthy and happy
But , now Wh l'll M cLeod s ay ~
somethjng like. "C) pre!>~ 1s going tu
have a strong basketbull ptol(ram," It
(·om cs out. · Ripres:i tll av a ron~
husctbul pregam "
The Corona del Mar I llgh product has
now tossed 222 passes llc 'd huvc lo
I hrow the bull 58 time::. againllt G WC
Saturday l o lake the lead 1n that
<·a tc~or~ Hoth White .rnd .Je ranko
..ittC'mr>tNI ;no pas'-<'' • • •
S O UTH ('0 /\ST C ONFERE N CE
e xpt·rts have pt>g~1·<t Cerritos as the
team lo l>eut in th1 -. year':. basketball
\\ :irs
fo'ORMER SAODLE BACK toa ch and
t·u1 renl UC I rvmc hi.ii.kc! ball CoaC'h Bill
Mullti.:an ::.ays he went to a fast·break i
styll' •>ffcn:.l' in an all empt lo make the j
.. port more appc:.iltng on the community
c·ollc:~c l<.·vcl
Anaheim has compiled a 4.5 2
record.
On the day McLeod was released
from the hospital, his wife Ellen went
into labor with tht-1r fir st C'hild. Chanda
It was Halloween night , and tht•
• • •
0 R A N G E C 0 A ST C 0 I. l. I:: G E
quurterbark Clay Tucker. des1ntc hemg
I anked dcatf la~t Jn the South ('oast
The t-'aknns return l wo ::.tarters from
1 ~1:-;t vt•ur's learn wh1t•h finished w1lh a
21 H rct•ord .ind a second place finish in
"When I wa' 1·0:..1d11ng at Saddleback}
I'd lc><1k m the stand~ and <.,ee eight~
p1:oplc \\akh111g Lht· i.:ame, Mulltgan
re<· alls We ~1 arll·d lo ras t brl'uk a nd ~
fillt'd thl· h•>U!-C .. J I
Sports on TV
for weekend
Saturday's TV, radio
TELEVISION
9:30 a.m . 12J NFL TODAY A look at the
1982 college draft a nd an update on the teams
fight ing ror playoff berths Brent Musburger IS
host
to a .m 12J
Pittsburgh.
12:30 p m. (4 1
(;umbel.
NFL FOOTBALL Rams at
N t 'L '81 With Bryanl
1 p.m IC!I NFL FOOTBALL Atlanta at
Houston~ 141 NFL FOOTBl\LL Denver at San
Diego
4 p.m 171 COLLEGE FOOTBALL '81.
4 · 30 p m . '7 I GREATEST SPORTS
LEGENDS.
6 p.m <2> PRO FOOTBALL WRAP.
RADIO
Football Rams at Pittsburgh, 10 a m .
KMPC t7l0>. Oakland al Seattle, 1 pm . KNX
c 1070>. Denver at San Diego, I p.m 1KSDO 11130 1
Basketba ll Houston al Lakers. 6 50 p m
KLAC <570>
Sunday's TV, radio
TELEVISION
9 a.m 17 1 COLLEGE FOOTBALL Penn
State vs. Pittsburgh.
12:50 p m l71 COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Alabama v~ Auburn
1 p.m . 12> -COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Georgia at University of San Franc isco
2 p m 191 BOXING.
4 p.m 141 SPORTSWORLD f''ormer
world a nd Olympic champions take part in a
re peat showing of the world professional figure
skating cham pionships 1281 SOCCER M\DF.
IN GERMANY.
5 p.m 121 -NFL REVIEW AND PREVIEW.
8 p.m 191 COLLE GE BASKETBALL
LSU vs Nevada I La~ Vega~I Taped.
RADIO
Football R1vers1de at Saddleback. 7 JO
p.m .. KSBR 188 5 FM >
Basketball UC I r vtne at Ore gon. H 10 p m .
KWVE (108 FM 1. Pepperdme at UCLA, KMPC
C710l
llockey Vancouver at Kings . 6 50 pm .
KPRZ 11150>
Volleyball clinics
The Newport Beach Volleyball Club ha~
instituted a program of demon~trat1on-. rtf
volleyball technique~ and skills to be prc~<'nl<'O l<I
inte r ested m iddle and Junior h11-!h ~chnol s
throughout the count) accordin(! to head coach
J ack Houston
The club's top players. wh1 C'h include four
All ·Americans a nd fi ve members of the 1981
J unior National championship team. part1c1pate 1n
the one·hour i.essions.
During the session. Houston reviews prope1
funda mentals of passi n~. st·tt1ng, serving and
s piking
School personnel interested in scheduling a
session should contact the Newport Volleyball club
at 646-1196. T his is a non·profit program for remale
volleyball players between lhe ages or 11 and 19
Wf'Rf SM.All & tlQl.Y PfRSONAllZED
Our customers say we're pretty darn good
for Quality and On-time deltvery.
Should you talk to us?
1 lnJ~<'ll• /tfldN (50-300T)·Mould Dept
ACCEMT l'LASTICS IMC Full«i0tt CA
714-171-1717
---------------
1 1 ~
3 • ,.
steps to a
success ul
g~rage sa e.
l========r=n========:::l; -
Garage sales. yard sales. rummage sales. street sales ... no matter what
you call them. the idea is the same -TURNING THINGS YOU NO LONGER
NEED INTO CASH When you get tired of fighting your way into a crowded
attic or garage, or when you need a ltttle extra cash , have a garage sa~el So
get into the act. c lean out those unwanted items, and. make ~oney doing 1t!
It's fun, it's profitable, and following these 10 steps w ill make 1t simple.
1 Decide on dates.
Look at a calendar and set the dates and times of your
sale. Weekends are usually good, but many successful
• sales have been held 1n the evening, 1ust after work
Check the weather forecast in the paper. and watch for
any other large event that may attract potential buyers
away, such as fairs or community events. Have your
sale run at least two days -some people may not be
able to come on any single day
4 Where to advertise.
Place your ad where it will be seen by people who live
1n the area -most people shop close to home The
• Daily Pilot is read by 88.000 adults an Costa Mesa,
Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, Irvine. Huntington
Beach and Fountain Valley-guaranteeing you wide
l . What to sell.
Everything! That is. everything you haven·t used in the
last yea r. If an item has antique value. or is brand-new.
or has unusual value. be sure to ask a healthy price for
1t Get a pad of paper and search your whole house.
Look everywhere. and ltst everything.
Furniture. This 1s your main at1ract1on and your
best source of income. Be sure to place furnit ure
where 1t can be seen from the street Price
furniture low enough to beat auctions and
secondhand sales (check the class1f1eds for
comparisons). but high enough so you can come
dow n a ti ttle when someone shows interest.
RockinQ chairs chest of drawers. tables and
c hairs are all very successful at garage sales, so
feature them in your ad.
AntiqHs. Smaller antiques should be groupeel, and
kept close at hand where you can watch and talk
about them. Nostalgia items are very popular -
display them well
Clothln9. Make sure clothing is clean. and mark
the price way down Put as many things as
possible on hangers. Separate kid's things by age.
Display adult clothing by sex and age group. Lo w
prices are a must on clothes except for unusual
items. which should be tagged with an
explanation (like. "han(}.embro1dered flowers.
dress worn by Mae West~"
Appliances. These will sell for a fair price only 1f
they work. No one will take your word for 11. Have
an extension cord so they can be tested. or better
yet. have radios playing. old TV sets turned on
etc. Make sure buyers unaerstand they are sold
"as 1s".
Plants. Th ese usually go fast, but keep them out of
direct sunlight A good idea is to name your plants
before the sale (Spider Lady, Cousin Jasper ,
Maggie), and write a line or two o n the
name card about how to care for them.
3 Write · your ad.
Here is a suggested ad: "Garage Sale -desks,
exposure. And with the Pilot, you re not paying for
waste circulation In Los Angelw; or Anaheim Plan to
run your ad 3 times or more and start rt a few days
before the sale so bargain hunters can have plenty of
notice.
5 Make a sign.
To help make your sale successful. make a few signs
• from cardboard and letter with a magic marker A good
sign size is 14" x 22".
6 Placing your sign.
The morning of the sale. but not before. place your
signs. Be sure and add your address and any
• d1rect1onal arrow s. This should be done about a half
ho ur before the sale starts. Place your sign where at
can be seen from both sides of the street by passing
cars and pedestrians. CAUTION: Some towns have laws
that restrict the placement and duration of garage sale
signs Please check with your town's planning
department or clerk
1. Marking prices.
Mark p:-lces where they can be seen clearly. Office
supply stores have varo1us sizes and colors of stickers
• that work well. or you can use masking ta pe. However
you mark them. mah priCff low. Garage sales are for
bar~a1n hunters. Remember, whatever you can't sell
you II have to drag back 111 the house and store again
for another year.
8 Serving refreshments.
This doesn't have to cost much. and creates a friendly
• atmosphere. It also encourages people to stay longer
and perhaps buy more. You could even charge for
expe nsive items ltke d onuts, or the kids could go in
business for the day. With a lemonade stand.
9 Display.
Make sure everything can be seen. Have card tables or
• boards used as shelves between two chairs. Don't
cause people to bend over unless you can't help it. Use
one table as a desk where you can see everything and
I
II • • ~
~ • . . • • • , • • . • . • l • . •
!
' \ • . .
. • " I ., ,
• • , .
1
f . t
• I
I ~ .
.
t
I
I
I • Bentwood rocking c hair, toys, infants' c lothing, 1922
Victrola in original cabinet, many gadgets, lots of
unusual items. rock collection, plants. Refreshments, 8
a.m. to 6 p. m. Saturday and Sunday. 1234 South
Anystreet, Yourtown. Just west of Main an~ 2nd."
Use this sample ad as a guide. Be sure to list unusual
items. Be as specific as possible. Give directions If
needed. Don't use abbreviations-many people won't
bother to decipher them. CAUTION : Don't advertise
anything you don:t really have. Every item In the ad
must be on hand at the start of the sale.
take money. Use only one cash box (tin cans or boxes
work fine) and make sure someone is appointed
"cashier" at all times. Arrange beforehand for a friend
who can help answer questions, relief for lunch, etc.
Check your neicjllbors and
friends.
:~
ADO BIARRITZ
Equipped wlth all CadUlac power asalst
options, AM·FM stereo with cuaeUe, Vo1ue
Urea & Cadillac wlre wheel coven.
OBHE0l8). $}6,995
Codllloc Vol~ Prottttion St rvtCC Agtttnwml AoofJdbi,
Al C... ~ te,..... ,_ AM"'*'" Aw t'w a i.n-
[~11 .. : .'~ .. ra ll:ID TllAT ea.At CHI nnnt•
WIT1I eanmq Gii •ll'TI. . . . .. ..
Costa Mesa 1
2600 Harbor Blvd.
D (714) 540-1 860
r.
• 5" if any want to join your sale. Th is wi II give you , •
someone to ahare expenses with and increase Interest
In your ule. If others Join you, be aur• to Include thl• In 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 your ad (example: "three-family sale," "neighborhood llHJPl~~~~--~~··~-Grou-pu-~s·~~·'o~t~~~~~·~
330 W. Bay St., Costa Me ... CA.
Open 8-5:30 Monday thru Friday, Saturday 8-noon.
GOOD LUCK WITH YOUR CMllA• MLS
MAY IT 8E SUCC~SllFUL AND FUN/
.
NFL SUMMARIES
Uona 27, Chleta 10
"-WO......n IC•n .. •Clly
O.lroll
1 0 J 0 10
I 10 ) 1 JI
Hiii 10 IMIH from Hll>l)I• IMurroy D•I
8 Jeo'°" 4 run 11.owery •IO I
FG Nl<;rro ~
~1<111
KC
Del
Del 5'oll «> """ trom HtPOlt IM11t10
kic k>
KC
Otl
Del
A
FG l.OWKYJ3
FG M;;"•'f 44
Sim• 4 rvn IMurr•y klckl
1'.1lS 1 .... ¥_1 SUllUIU
RUSHING ICenw• C•1y D•l•MY 11·11,
Fuller ,.,., H.Onot S 1•. 8 JockM>ft • •
Otlroll, S1m1 10 ... V fMmp1Dn l·•O,
Bu•wr ~JI, Hipple ) 11. l Tnomp1Dn I y
Kane l ·S. K•"9 1 1. ~oll I minus 1
PASSING Kanw 1 Clly ICenney •+1·•
Fuller 10.11~ 1J1 Detroit, Hl111>I• 10.n-0-137
RECEIVING Kanwa> Clly Smllll HI.
Rome J.JJ, H<ldno1 11•. Dtt•n•y 1-11,
Murphy 1,12, Dix°" 1 II O.tro<I, Scoll J II
Cowboys 10, Be•rs 9 s.c ....... Oowr1•" Chlca90
Oallu
Ott FG 5oeprn"' •1
Cl'tl FG Roveto '3
0 J ) u
Chi e .. 11s 1 "'" lk10 l•lff'Cll
D•t Sc>rlnq• S run I S.pllon kl<• I
A •l.M
INIV...,..I si.111110
. ' I 10
AUSHINC. Chlct(IO, Po1on JI 1/9,
S111\ey. 1-41 E:••n> • 9 D•llH. Dorltll I 11.
5"rlnQ• ••• , ... no .... WNI• , .. Hiii I 3
PASSING Chlc•90, E'if•M • II I .0
Pa yton o. t+o D•ll••. C•rono • no 1J1 Wllll• l·I~, SprlnQSO.I 10
RECEIVING Chic-. B W1lh•m•, 111,
W•lls 1111, PaytOfl 1 • 0.11••. Hill 4 Ill, Ptorson , 1' Jotln'°" I 21 Dupree I 11
Springs I IS
College scores
SoUTH
Alcnmona 11. Pwn11 n
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GM<i.•• Setectl ....
OFFENSE
08 Jim MC~llOn I B'19'1<1m YOllOQI
118 Del RO<IQtn IUlanl. W•lttr Gofl•oon
IV.yomlnQI, Gory Allen IH•wa111. WR
Da n Pltltt 18r19nan. Young !, Jolt
Cr..mp1"" 1(.oloraoo Sl•ltl TE Ja,.,..,
Wflll•m• IV.yom1no1 . Ol Joe• C•m-11
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YounQI. T Sl•ve Cl••• tUtan1 LB Biii
Gompf CUlefll, Kyle W1ll1ngr..m 1Bt1QNM
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(Se" 01~ 51•1el, ~ Jol\nnv J•<'-' '"''' Forol, Tony Ated IUlalll, OE Jlmmlo
Carlt< IHe.,.a111
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
CIF Playoff altH
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WE .. •W.Y'S I.ATE •ESUl.U
l'U1TH •ACE ))0 yarCI\
J•Cltcl••n ITrN>urel .. '° 4i 00 • 00
C n ci.w J «• lieu I 8root.SI • 10 1 <O
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SIXTH llACE JSO yarcl\
~•bl•n I MllCIWflfJ ,J o0 t llU \ 00
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l••rhner tc.tdOt•I • tO
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Moon Cl>I<•• Time 11 14
SEllENTH ltACE UO yarc!\
Sn•~• k1e1 ~·• •C.re-r ~ 00 l tO J «>
I Tn1n9' I CM P~lint • 00 s uo
.t,11 Rovt•• t Lt•'""" 11 10
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f •tnC 11 l•
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l .,.tnn1n9 hC••b U1ve norwtt '' ?1ci.. ~··
C.0'1\Ul•tlOf'I p.110 \9' 6iO Witt\ 107 v..1ntUnQ
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Ann• Ho 11\trtl J 10 1 4'J
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8'""' tt•ft'Wdoti Tim• 19 10
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fl NlH llACE l!O .. ra\
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Hustling EH~ lC<e-ri 19 Ml 11 .0 • .0
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cnorl<>I~• Buo ITruw••I l .O
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U IE JIACT• I '.>•I IM'•CI •t 11 00
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l.tQ•t Btllt'. l•n .. LIK•r Bar. Sltp!Wn
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Tim• 11 •l
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M011nll"
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Time 1L27.
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w1111 ntne winning llci.ets lllv• llor•~> '2
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wlnntno lkke1S CIOur l\OrVsl
1 IOHTM ltACIE. 170 yaras.
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5-dY a.II I ROUQlll l.IO 110
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AllO receci· 51\eaky Me, Kneq11a, E•rne• ,.,.,0 .... I.Adv Good TirntS.
Tlmt ...
2
FACE TO FACE Penn's Chuck Nolan <left> stares into the faces of Richmond def<'nder!> M1k~ Moran <711 <.1nd Jay Brown during action Thursd<sy in college football.
NINrH •ACE l50Yotel\
S••P.., Sq...,e 1Treawre1 l IO ) .0 110
AnCllhtr Alton 81111 I Harli l IO , «>
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A•\o r•ltd l(etp On keep1n9 On
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rim• 111• '1 EJIA("IA I• 11 p.tlc! ... 6(1
llENl H llACE. lSOvard\
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U I XA,TA (~9) !Miid .. I IO
.t,tllnCIMWt' S.110
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f'IRST ltACE .,, IU<IOft9'
JeO I l\t &Hr COnl1•erosl 11 • • 00 '00
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t me I 11
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THI 110 RA,E. 61.o> lurlOflQ\
lilulr l:lri1 .. nnia 1l1P'lttr1I 1J 6(1 • 40 J tO
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Time 1 11
\I EXACT" \2·JI IM'IO Siil SO
l'OU llTH ltACE • l11tl""9'
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llmr 1 •1 LS
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wny Z•ntnt 1 P1nuyl l 00 2 IO
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Alto ra ea One For Morn•rtQ G•tteevn.
0.Cto.dly ,~, .. Prouoly w~ tiail Gf'•UY
Time I JI
SEVENTH RACIE "•mile on lurl
R•m 8 oldlyC();lly .. 1 1 IO 1 .0 1 «>
OH Mu•K•IBoyl Mc.HrQtl ) -0 3 Ml 1 tiO
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8th Bo•u. Aor•• Buttons T"e 819 T Tim• tSOltS
U E JIAC"IA 1•11 P<lld S10 SO 11-41 P>a•O $11 ~
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wllll • •imlnQ tiOf'I\ Ill• llorM•I U Pick
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w1n"l,,9 l1<kel\ 111 .. "°""'''
EIGHTH ltACE COIOfly H•n<l1<ap •
l11rlon9\
tmperl•l l.t11 I Plnuv1
M•1c111no 1ea11eur1
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310
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NINTH "ACE. 1 mflo My Flrtl ,, ... nd ( Aarnlert1121 IO • .0 l.IO
TM Mel1-IHowrtDfll 11 IO I IO
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Boll Ovtr, c;-9u1110
Time 1 M 1tS
U llXACTA 11101 paf<l Sl.OIO 00
Altenoeno -2• 1:i.
Co••t are• reaultt
LAOUN• llEACH MEN'S ClU8
C•I w11i.w1c11 Gell Cllltll
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FllQlll (tie) t. Sid Pearson, .. ,,_.I •nd
Eciwaro Foy, 10)..» '1
HERE ARE . 'TWO
~&~SONS N•V&.R TO HIT THE e>R\...L. e>~PfORt! PkOPLE RHEAO HAVE MOVEO . W&:\.-\-
OUT OF RANG£,
'THE
Oe>VIOU9 ONE IS "TO AVO\O INJUP.INQ ANVe>OOY.
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11 o~. s t•lll••~ R11'"" l 1H1\lop Cltm•nll 1• 11 P9nalloo r.,,,,,,..11 I.A,
J 09 Kor.O. I.A "'"JD<, l «>. Plell. Cal
m• 1or m•lt h, • tO, Reinhart~ C.•• S ~
1Core11. I.A. U l4, P9pl1n'"'' C•I 1' 1S
Tlllnl,.._ied
t C•toery, Houi1on • fl•l>'••••n,
Cll0111n•<c!I I 4'1 I Colgory, RllVleo•lllO S
tChoul,,.,O Ullr ... l•nl • 13 • C..lg.ory
Hou .. on s IS SS ,,,,,,.11... ICO<OO I.A.
m•)Or. 4 SI """""'.'· C•• m•1or • SI l twll I.A I IJ HOUiton I.ti • u HISiop
Ctl. I •I , 8ourQt1.,. Cal, 1> U . Ktll~ I.A. ,, 2'
SllOl l on -I I.CK •nQtrf Pl I II II 1'
C.•IQt<v It II .. lO
Gw11.. UM Anoe••• viwra Calg.ory
l •mtlln A 1.n.1
South Atr1c•n Open
lelJ-Wf'tl -··*-•-51 ..... Tom Gutllk_,. mt Rott Gfl>rlnQ, •l ._l
Slllomo Ghcklt•I" dfl HarOld !>olomo" 1 s,
1-6. Vlt•s GonlfaUh OCll Terry -· ~l.
• ), Anclr.w Patll-Cltl AndrtH M•-. •·l, •·4. Ste•• Oenlon d•I Sh•rwooct
St•wart. >-t ...... , Fr-• ~r Oet
L.o" "'-· 1-6. 2• ... , Billiet Melltrtm ""' o ..... Vl\Mr .. 1 s 1 ...
Indoor tourn•ment
C•t Milan, Italy I 1.-....,
Tomts Slnlc! OCll Gull..,.mo llllH, •> +-1.
•·•. CorradO Bareu11111 cl•I Jou 1.1111
Ctuc. U , .. l. 2-1 dela11t1, Iv.., Lendl OCll
Gene M•yar, ..... 6.J, •~. Jol\n M<Enroe OCll
Adrl•no p..,.n •. M . 6·7
W-'•~ ....... 51,..._.
K•lllY _.,..,.,, OCll I.or,.. Zleumen. •1.
.... lllr94nl• w-def AnnellM MUI .. ,. • 1.
~•. Yvonne VermMk def Elvyn 8arro1> .. .
~I. 4-2, R-Vus def Melrliu R11noc1t ... ,.
~,
Women·a tourn•ment
letS.,_y, A-allel
s.c.M•-si ....
Wenay Tu,_, del lllrQlnl• Auzlcl, •l.
._,; J•ne PYeyer OCll. 54.le Barker, M, •..S.
Andrea J-oer def 1Ca01y Jorden, ~>. 1.0,
default; Martin• ... v ralllova del S11«
S.lll>e,M .W TlllN"_s ......
Evonne GCICll~ OCll Marie PlnMr-.
1·6, •·1; Cllrlt E'Hrl 1.fe1yd <Ml. Nenty
YHrQln, ._,., ~l, 8etllne 811nQe del Pam
Sllrl•er, ~s ...... ,_.
"THE Less oe,vtoU& P.~ASON
\S TMA'T VOU
C~'T G\V~ A)(\MUM
CON ENTRAT•O TO A SHCY19 ·
\F 'IOU "'~EVEN R L..\TT\... t>'T CONSCIOUS THAT ~ ~HOULON'T fl'.liAL.L.V e>tt M\T"T\NQ. 50 6HOW
GOOO MAN~R~S f\1"40 Hlii\...P 'IOU SC fl'.la , e;,y WA\ I UNT•L THli F\&LO 16 CL.af:\f\.
NBA
WIEHEll" CON'E lll,.C.E
P•<•h< 0•••1fM
'-'Otll•na
L.i1llef"t
UolCMll ~t•h
w L Pct. c.a
• J 111 1
ti • Ill
I f> ~J4' I
t-'no41n1,. S.••tl• S•n D1'"il0
• I ,..I J
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• • •<;1
4 ) )4 > I
t1''"''°'' ,. •nws C•t~
II >W1,
4 ii 4 0 JI I
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L" '•" 1 11 ( I
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11 I
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lndl•n•
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I • • •
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~•n 01&90 •t Utwrt
w .. h•notOfl •• Bo\lon
Pf\11•0.ION• •t IM 1•r..-
N~V1J 'Yor" •t ,._...,.,.NS
•ll•n.._. •t Oetro.t
H •w Jtf'MY •t S.., Al'ltOt'lt(J
O•n ..,., •t K.•n~' C 1t 'f
volc!<H> ~lett el Mflw•111i.ff
Po' tl •nd •t Ut•h ''"'•90•1 ~ ... Hou•I"" "' ~an1•
COLLEGE sec 111. a_,•
.,, ....
.>l.> I
lJJ I
Ill I 1
•lo
•II
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100 I , .,. , .
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IE THA"''I' COll.EOt l'arr1nQ\Ofl •
H••• I ~eMAa!P 14. ~t~rt U . LJnctw•I I _,,,_,I H-11 W•IMJr J Total>,. n l1 IO
$0UTHUIN C.ALIFOANI" COll.ICif
Rob«rh 10, Pou1m~r A Mort~"\ien 1 Purr•\
)), AO<M U, A-t\ 10 WolM>n S Aeoc!lt • ~
t1tr\f 4 M~ I•, C.•i.n.n 11 lOt•I\ .a
I) 11 111
HOllll""' S((. )~)
rot•• •wh e.t"""' lO '.KC 78 ~ouwa o~t notW
Hlah achoo! weter polo 01'-CMAM~IO..SHIP , .. ...._,.1 ... 1
1.aw1-11,"'-'M•.-11
N••P00'1Her-• ) 0 4 It
l-Bu en w11-l > 1 • 11
Nt wPon H•,bOr \.COrlnq S..lv•torr~ S,
11owtll 4 IHN\tn J
L9 Wit'°" "'°'''°"' P•t•Qfl"° • EIOtr 1 R,..CI) 9ot1t.O I fl•I<,._, I
Clf ).A CHAMl'l~'HI P
ll1lla Pe"" tO Foo1n111 •
Cll' J·A C"AMPIO..SHIP
L• PW11l4'' Crespi•
All.·SOl.ITH COAU lE•GUIE
.-:1 .. 1t Te•rn
P•11I Groll l!oon Clunonl•I C~MVP, Jim
WySOl>AI. C!..tn (ltmt'lllll Martt Or-.10
( O•n• Hlllll. Scott Trotoer ( D•n• Hllftl.
Krlu OellOI• tC1111ntrano V•lltyl C~MVP
T ''' y (ronlln f L•Qun• ._.ill\il. Pre\Oft
R-rs I Ml\..on Voe1DI
S.C.....T....,
Et1< 811rke CS.n Cltmtnltl Dh1a vrOO\
IS•n CternenlOI, Jim Cr•nfore1 11.•Quna
Hlll\I Tim ICl1'Ql(0<1 IU14>l)t,.no Valityl
T 1m 8riltlwrl CCap1i1rano ll•lf•y I 8111
C•oob••no t L•O"'"• B••<"l V1n<•"t
vauello tM•H'°" V~/ol
Thurad•y'a Tr•n1•ctlon1
iASl8ALI.
"-le•~ CHICAGO WHITE SOIC Re·tlQned
Gordon l11nd 10 m•"•~ II\• £Gn.Ofll0n ,.__,, of Ille P«llk Coe•I 1.t-In
1"2 SIQllecl IC.., Sll,...slrl, pll<lllnQ <oac:"·
El'monton
HOCICEV
NlltleMIHeclley~
MINNESOTA NORTH STARS -Call.cl 111>
lllWI Mel~, de .... ..,,,.,.. tr°"' NI-• '•lit of ltle O!ot¥1o Junklr l.Nque, Ond RIWI
f'rl•ll, left WlllQ. lrom NHl\¥111• ot '"" Cenlr•I _., Lff9Ue.
llYASHINGTON CAPITAl.S -Trodeo Pal
Rlllbt•, ...-. to IM Ctlgary ,.,.,,,..
lor Rer.ov Holt, deleft...,...,., tnd 8oCI Gould.
r'9111 wino.
Rustlers,
Pirates
• • 1n action
U psi.art Golden West Collete
go e s for its lh1rd straiaht
victory, Orange CoHt tanflet
with ;mother d1ffl cult Southern
Cal Conference opponent, and
Saddlebuck traveli. to Merced
(Or tournament. play to highJlghl
tonight'11 community colleae
basketball action
G WC, 2 o and coming off a
s atis fying 83·60 vic tory over
rival Orange Coast, plays before
the home crowd for the first
ti m e this seai.on whe n the
Rus tler::. entertain LA Mission
17 30) OCC hosts LA Harbor at
lhe same time.
The GWC ran::. may have run
~ atchmg the 1981 ·82 edition of
the R11s t lcrs A~ai nst OCC,
Tru1ell Hatton poured in 22
points and Dann Howen added
21 as th<.' Hu::.llers ::.hot a n
1mprei.">1\e 53 percent from the
fil'ld
(;WC opened lhe st:a!>on with
another su. .. pnsw g victory as the
Hustler'i downed host Fulll.'rton,
6 6 5 ·1 I n t h a t g a m i: , t h e
Hustler!'! !'!lowed down the tempo
onc·e the\ h:id the lead ai:a1nst
the llurnd::. But a gainst OCC
1 ues<iay, they run. and ran and
ran.
OCC <'<ial·h Tandy Gillis.
rnt·an'>'htlt'. ha:. a -;our t aste in
hi., mouth aftl·r Tuesday's
(frll'at Tht: P1riit cs. "ho shot
Just 21i pl·r·t·t:nl from the fi eld 1n
lhe11 GO 59 O\ l'J time thriller
v1l'tor} ag...i insl H10 llondo a
"t't:k .igo, 1mprovt•d that mark
tCJ 40 1>ertcnt :.iJ;!ains t GWC, but
thl· ...iggrt''i'il\'1.•nl'">o; JUSt 'h asn't
there (iilll'> '.'>,Hd arte1 the
t OOlt!l>l
'Wt: JU~t let tht.•m come down
to do \\hat tht'\ wanted lo do,"
c;i11 1'i '>iild oi the Hu!-itlers
Wl' l"l' ~uing t•1 ha\e to play
lwttc1 ckft·n::.e ai•a1nst llarbor "
Saddll'l)ack \ enturi::s lo the
~1 creed 1 ournament the r1r">t of
Sl'Veral for the Guucho:. this
vcar and Coa<:h Hill Brummel's ~quad owns a l f) record thanks
to a 60 58 win ove1 Fullerton last
week
The Gaul'hos tangle with Long
Beach C'C in lh1:1r opening round
gamt> '~ p.m 1 v.hile Merced
and Moorpark .,quare off in the
other contest
Tht' t\\o IO'>l'r'i will battle
!)aturcla} al 'i µ m and the
"rnne1!> 'hill go for the tourney
lllle at~
Weekend
bike racing
at Knoll's
B 1n cle motocross racing
tontinues at Knott's Berr) Farm
1n Buena Park today through
Sunday with a pro purse of
SI0,000 being offered to victors
in Sundav s finale
One or°the top riders 111 bicycle
motocro:-.s 1!> Stu Thomsen, an
Orange County product from La
llabra who no" makes his home
1n Ri \'er!>1de
At 23. Thom!)en says he has
been racing bicycles all of hls
life and that he turned pro at 17
after racing other kids· in hjs
neighborhood in his formative
vears Ile 1s now rated one or the
top fi ve BMX racers in the rorld.
He has won 25 national races
this year. more than any oU;ier
BMX rarer
The monetary rewards can be
worth the wear and tear on the
body according lo Thomsen. He
estimates that the top BMX
racers can make as much as
$70,000 in a year
· 1t 's a safe s port bul tf I do
get hurt. it could cul my career
$hort The pro cir cuit is so
competitive that a minor injury
can put you way behind the
othe r racers."
He says he is usually burned
out after a weekend or racing
s uch as this one at Knott's Berry
Farm. He practices on his bike
<ind goes through a basic
exercise routine to prepare for
the motocross competition.
Race time is set for 9 a m.
both Saturday and Sunday with
the pro race final on Sunday
111-80 win
to Vanguards
Southern California College's
Vanguards tuned up for
Saturday night's invasion of
Fort Lewis Wednesday with its
first basketball victory of the
young season, stopping visitini
Bethany College. 111·80.
Rick Porras and Mike Roberts
led the winners with 23 and 20
points respectively, .while Mark
Roche added 13, Paul Hohmann
had 14, Mike Callahan 12 IDd
Rich Rogers 10 points.
Bethany haill~ from Sama
Cru1, fell ~ by 10 pomca tt
the ba.lf and were never ,...,.g, ta
conte{lU~.
The win up1 record to l·l.
The l'or\ Lewl1 Sat~ besim at 7:•.
-.OTl~e OP •t&LPllONatY
Al .-arVATa IAU ..........
Ill, ... ..._..., "9M!l ti IN I I.IN ..
(•fl~--.,,. c-it• .. Oranett"'
Ille 1111 .. ttt OI IN Ill* OI Off•MI llMC.m•v, o.c.-.
Htll<• •• 11troy 11~11 •htt th• ~will WH .. l'fl¥tt• '-"•
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... ._ "-"'· C.U..ty •• Of""19, $Ult OI Clllltornlt, all l ... rlOflt, llUt
tll4 lftWUI ti Ylo --•I t._ 1-------------tlflle 01 ...,, tll4ll au ti.. r1t111, 1111e
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tin.. Of -· In ~ to •II Liie <••t.till •••I Prt11trty, \llUt ltO In lht
WllMOtpW.-0 ., .. Of Ml\ .. Oll v .. 10,
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Jtttl(Ultrly dt ><rlMO H IOllOW\,
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--Ill 8-"41 l>aoet •I tnrou911 St, ln<llltl .. , Gt Ml~ll-> M•P\ 1n
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Ml..ion v .. io. G.i11°'"'•
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Of lht UnOed SI.ti•' on tontormt tlOt\ 01 ••I•. or ,..,. ,.,,. •"O O•l•ftc.•
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P'°"" y Ml iOIO ».ODO lo b9 cleP<Kilocl wllll bld
,.CTITIOUS eUSINlll NIIMI ITAllMINT
T ... IOl!Owln9 Pt•Mln• •r• OOlllQ
-llWU • MtiA l MA VIL AGENCY, J/tO
11••1H>t 81•0., P 0 . Bo~ 2lU, Gotlt Mt ... t •lll , ... ,. ltaS.
Wllll•h• LJOtl M<Clerv-.fll, 2 .. U
Qotlt Aw, Mlulon V .. jo, C',elll 91 .. 1.
Mll•l•I IOJ<f M4Clt m•n•. 2••U Oorll A .... MIUIGn Viejo, (.Alll '2 .. 1.
Lloyd• L" M<(Ollum, lt1• BOt
Vl•t. Orlw , ~la MeMI. c.ltl m »
J•tclutllnt Mtrl• M<Coflum, 2'24
8o.t v .... OflVt , Cott• MtH, C•llt
9,.U .
T hh OU~lntu I\ '°"""cteo by •
teMr•IPM..,,.,.,..P Wllll•1t1 Lyon McCltm..,t
Thll M•l-1 •M 11190 wllll Ii..
C.O\llllY Cltrk ol Of1n11t CO<lnly on
fl'1 I tlOUI •llllNaU
NAMl.ITAHMafllT
111• 1011ow111e P•• •On " 001n9 "" .. ""'"' !I" I; .... Aki.I <.OH• 1 tel.II. 1 I._.., /01M
'I Meyer, C....IA Mta~ c.A W•al
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I 111\ OwMl'WU I• ~-U<IM OY Aft 1na .. _1
Oetltet~o
Tllli \t••-• ••• lilttO w11n tne lovnty ll•rk 01 VIAii .. (.ounty on ,,o ......... .
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f'11.blhhocl U'Mlilf UMll U.lly .. 1101,
Nov_ 20, ti,"'*·•, 11, '"t WlJ.111
l'ICltttOU• •t.1•1 .. au
HNl!I• HA1'Ma"T In• IOllOw1n1 P•OUll ••••• ,,,
Du\IMU•I
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....... .-l..r ..... \.Ot•I IJ.,ly 1'1lot. "'°"· '°· l1.1JK, '· 11, l'jjll Wf/ ••
PICTtnout .,,.IHUI .......... " .. "' Tiie IOlltWlllt NftOll le dol119 -··-.. A. o. eon.• a COMl'ANY, 140
HtrltOfl St'"1, Or ..... CA ft ....
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1 Illa "*-It ,Oft4Net.., ay an
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Tiiis 11-1 "" lllad wlllt ""' CtVlllY C .. n. of 0r•"99 C-ty Oii .......... '"...., Pub11""41 °'""" co.at O.lly Piiot, Nov, •. U, JO, V , 1t•1 ., .... ,
Orange Cou t DAILY PILOT /Friday, No>1omber 'Z7, 1981
P-ICTITIWI MlllNIM
•AMI ITATIMINT
T lie f9lllhlllftt PfftOl'I\ erw dol119 llutlMU•
'OUll °' A ICINO, 1t 11J Oltff StrHf, l'-ttlll Ytlley, C•llfet11la .,,.
Johll l'l~utm, 1•nJ Ollw. SlrMt.
,_tt ln VelltY, C:tlllornl• t210I
l'eHICI• Plllullll, •• ,,., Ollv•
l ltt•I. l'-ltlll Vt lley, Ctlllt<'lllA .,,.
lll<llatt w. Holt ....... ••10l 01 ... ~1•111. '-'tlll Vtlley, Ct llltrnlt
'"" 1*'11ett .i..-Hottman, ••m
0 1•11 Mt\lllltln, l'°"llltlfl VelltY,
C.,llornlt ftl'Ot
Tlllt -IMH It COflduclef OY t tefWrellNfl#ltttlllp
Rl<htrO W. HotfmAfl
lhll tlAl-1 W.M llled with Vtf Co1111ty Cltrt. 01 Or ..... ,_.. Ori
H ... em-IJ.1 .. 1 ..., ...
PwllCI""" ~ ..... Cot•I 0•11• l"llOI
NOV. 11, 20, U, O., •t...1911 ~·f u .... T'I a •AIOAN
Al'TOltNaYI AT LAW
"" •lntMIUCINt•• DlllY. IUITI• IRVIHI, CAi.lil'OaNIA tJ1111-1U6
l'IC"flTIOUI eUSINl!SS
MAMI! STATIMl!NT
'II• tolltwl!tQ ""ona er• ootno
O•i>ltteu ••
PIC'l lllOV• 941\l•h•
"AM& ""'"Mt.lot I ne 101-1119 Del.Olla ••• ooon11 """" ..... AL~MIH COMl'AN' I. II.I lot
Nt•JOrt ''"'•' 1,1,, .. , )"ti• WO N•w"rl llMUt, c..11tor111• t~ Mlr•bO•l.,1 Alttall•, 11 .. 111111
t..omt IHI•• <.11r1111• Otl """· c,.e111orntt n.u
Malltmtn4MI lllt1• Altttllt, u h11n1
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Allt'OU AlttAIN t "-b.., Corone•t ,..,, c..ltto<ll•• ~
MOntllfflM4td lle1• AlwlAllt 11
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C.al110rlllt 'th4 .... ,.11 Alt llll• t Hot"ln1oun1 it
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f't,TlltOUS avStlof;U
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....
NOTICa 011 "I.Ill.IC
IAl.I 0, l'latotUl 'ltOf'a•TY
Ntll<e It llfrefly 9lvtfl INl llUIWAM
••.-<lien ••Of IN Clvll c.fe. 5'tlt el C•lllorfll• • ..,. llllllWI~ will w tt •I IMIDll< .... try c~ll""' lllCldlllt
on lllt 1t'f Mt Of Dec...,,.., '"'· •I a.,. •'CIOO "'""· .,. '"' ....... , .. . .. ...,. \tld ,....,,y .... """ ...... .
AllO •hlCfl •t• IOCtfef al l'v .it<
Stor•ee. inc.. JO.J ll'1ace11ll• Ava. In,,.
City ot C• .. Me .. , c;ounty ef Of...-.
St•t• ot C•'"°'"''· Ille ·~ eoad•, cN4tt1• w .,.._1 .,_,.,
0.Kf._be._ lnlllt"'tfltttol
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C•M t lltllon In I ... tv ... 1 ti \fllle.....,1
0.IW .. 11 MINMfO encl oOlla<Ottld i>etly
Dettd 1'111 20tn A 11111 d•r Of
No~efl•be<. '"' PUBLIC HOllAGE. INC
i...ndl0<0
P"Oll.,Wd O'-CMll Otoly Piiot
No• JO. 21 Ull •tlMI
i ictmovs 8USINl.U
N-E UATIMINT
,1CT1no1" •VSINIU
HAMl ITATUol•HT
TNI eu•tMaU: THI llll AL.
U fAtl CONN•CTIOM
1.0CAfa_DAT: *'11f-1 atv0
IN: N..-t .. ttll,CAn&.lt
11 "•"••v ••01•r•1110 1v THI ,OU.OWIMO
_.lll~ISI I THI CALIPOllNIA
RllAL tSTATI CONNllCTIOH, INC .•
e CelllO•lllt ,.,_tllort. NO Stvtll
I.I,.. Oall P.,._ f •llOr-. CA '7019
Tiii• 1111M11n• " <tnOU<totd •Y • (.,. ..... , ....
TMI GALll'OllNIA lllEAL
lltTATI CONNICTIOM, INC
P .. WllW.. Pfft'-"1
Tlllt at.ttmMt ... llled wllh -
Cou111y Cl•O tf Of•• c ... n1y .,. Nov f.1 .. 1
1'11tl0 l'i>OllVIH Or-C-1 DIMiy l'I~.
Nov 11. 10. 17, o.t. •. '"' .. ,..,
l'lc:TITIOUS •USINIEU
NAMI STATl!MINT
T ht lollowlng ""On• .,. 00111e
""''"'"" SOUTH C ROVE M0 8 1L E
E51ATES, '°"' WntmlMttr A ........ G••Of~ Gro,.., GtlllOrlllA t-.U
W J LtlthlorO, U tt ~tund
A••n ... MeN\otlt.tll a..<11. ~lllornle
'i01 ..
JOtl 1'""'91ta. 1UI 8•Ytl0t Drive,
N•wPOf'l Btt<ll, c.Jlf1>rn1e 916'0
Anthony "•..c.eti.. O•I M•rln• Cny 0,. .. , _,,.. 0.. lley Ct lllornl•
Bio• Or oil.,., 10 be on '""""' tnd Wiii M rtetiwcl ti IM t lO<.W.10 Olll(f
ti •ny ,,,.,... Aller IN '"" _,Ktllon· ntreof And ... tort OtlAt Of M ..
No• ,4, 1 .. 1 ---------------
fl(l I TIOV~ euSl .. lr.H
"'AMt 'lAlAM.lNl
• n• 101tow1no IM'tton 1• eou"t
OU\tMU••
NOAH'S ARK. l USt All<••
Ptrllwo. Min ion Vl•to, CA m u CLARENCE BANK& ... UJ S.n
Jll(lnlo Cir< ... f-t.ln v.i1n , CA Lu .. 11Nt .. IA• tl.t(.lk"
lOM .. AN• 1.1111 """ '-""'lt\111, W•h
lJ, ~•nta AN1 l..•hfOtfUtl l/J/Clt
Tne fotlo•tn9 pe1t0f'I• .,. ou1no OV••n• ,., •.t. N EWPO~l C H llORE N \.
'°1" W J LAltlllord
0.MO lNi. ttlh City ot Nuwmt.r, ... ,
R08ER1 HUNTER
AOmll\l\lr•IO< C 1 A
Of Int t>l•le of
~•tO 0H tloctrl\f ,OMTI! & WAalU"' ., . .._ .......
e ... n• Ptrk, C.• 'IOl>lO
Pvbll\heo 0rfn911 (..0 .. 1 D••ly Polot,
Ho• 27, 21, Ot< 4, "'' S201 II
N~
NOTICI OF 5ALE
OF llEAL PaOPl!RTY
AT PRIVATE SALE .... _
In lht S.C-t1or Court 01 Ille. Sitt• or
C•lolornlt. tor Ille (..oun1y 01 °"""OIO
111 Ille M.ttttr ol the E\IAI• ot G<rr•ro M<Callrey, Oe<,et MO
Nollet I• hereby 9"•" Intl tnt
-·'°~ •Ill Wll •I Prt•tte s.Je, to lll• hl9fWSt -~I blooer. \ullfetl
to contlrmtllon ol woo~'"'"°''°"''·
Oii or •lier "" Ith cwy ol Oeombtr 1 .. 1. Al Ille 01110 ol Fonlt ~ ..... ,,...,,
Attor11.,s •I Lt•. 1011 S1•111on
Avtnue, 0 20!>, 8-.. P•tk, C.O\lnly ol
Of•119t, St•I• ol CAll!orntA. •II tn.
r l gt\t , Ull• •nd 1ntere\t of ti••o
OK••MICI •t llle ,,,.,... of .... ,,, •no •II
ttle rl91\l, title tno 1n1e1n1 ""' '"" tsltlt o1 WHI IM<HWCI h<I> e<qulreQ
by oper•tlon of ltw or 01M-<w1w, oti..r
llltft °' in -'"°" lo tn•t or Moo Cle<H~. ti Ille II,,.. pl OHlll, on "'°
lo •II the OrtA•n rul P•OP<!•h
•lluettd 111 II• unlO<OrPOttleo •rt• 01
Mlu lon v i.io. County o1 Or•"OO. St••t
of c..111cw ... _.11, .. 1.r1v Otl<"-"
follo••. l~ol -" Uf\OIYiOocl -·NII
lllttrnl In Loi •• of Tr<1<1 No •..c> "
per m•P recordod in 8oOll 241. IMl9<I,
JO to""' MIKtll-. ~In '"" Otftce ot ln.f Co"nty Recoratr of
Oreno• C:O..nty • more commonly
known ••. 2.:111 C•mono AO.lant(>. MUtl°" VleJO, Ct11l0<n1t
l tfm\ Of Wit ca\h In l•wtul "'°"'"' ot Ille Vn1190 Sl•ln on conl1trMI-o< ••••t or P•r t t•11f\ •"d b•••n<t e ¥fdentt0 b~ not~ ,rc.vttHI t>y
Mort9•0• or I r .. u Duo on tn•
proper l'V to IOIO U .000 lo b9 1Mll0\114!CI
w1thbl0
&IOI or ott""' 10 11t 111 ••111119 •oo "'" be ... celveCI ...... AIO<t\910 01t1u •I
tnf II,,.. •lier lht llr'I publK•l•OI> lle••ot •ltd bttort Otte o4 ....
Oateo 1111\ ltlllNY ot toowm~r 1911
R08EAf HUNTER ........ lr-C.TA•
OI llW ftltl•"' wlo ~· f ..... --• ._,. ., ...... ••s...-•-.•• ••M Pn,CA•• Publl•lltcl Or-Cot•I u•oly Puo1, NO• JI, 28, De<.•, 1 .. 1 S11CMll
NOTICE OF D E A T H OF
NORMAN FREDERICK
SIMPSON AND O F
PETITION T O AD ·
MINISTER ESTATE N O
A-110678.
To a ll h eirs ,
beneiic aries, creditors a n d
cont l noent c r e d itors o f
Norman Fr e d e r ick
Si mpson a k a N orman F
Sim p son a k a N orman
S impson and persons who
m a y b e o t h 1• r w 1 s I:'
•nterested 1n the will
and or estate.
A petition h as been f iled
by M arilyn L. Sim pson ln
the Supe r ior Court of
Orange Coun ty reques ting
that Marilyn L. Simpson
be apPolnte d a s personal
repres enta tiv e t o ad-
minister the e s tate of
A p e tition fo r Community
P r operty determ ination
purs uant to s ection bSO ot
the P robate (.ode is ioinea .w i t h t h e p e t 1 t 1 o n t o
admin ister t he Est ate
The pet it ion 1s set f or
h earing in Dept. No 3 at,
700 Civic Center Drive.
VIiest, tn t he City ot S anta
A n a . C a I I I o r n 1 a o r,
Dec e m ber lb, 1981 at 9 · J<-
a .m.
IF YOU OBJ ECT t o the
granting of the petitio n .
you should e ither appea r
at the heari ng and state
your objectio n s o r file
written objec tions w i th t he
court before the hear1r19.
Your appear ance may be
In person o r by your a t-
torney. IF YOU A R E A
,17.1>2
Publl~ Or-Cotti O•lly Piiot, No• 21, Ot<. •.II ill, 1911 Sl .... I
l'ICTITIOUS •USIHIU
NAME. SlATEMl!NT
1 ne touow1no "''°"' are ootng
l>u~tnei' .,
II PROFl:SSIONAL PARALEGAL
SEA\llCES. INC ?I THE LEGAL.
H AFF, INC , dbt lHE LEGAL
ST AF F, JO C.r« ~en, 1rv111e, Ct lltorllit
'1114
KAlhleen L. ChtdleY. 20 (rOO t ll,
lt•lnt, CAhtOfn•• 91114. Y•onne P er-. l'lt w wu .....
S"ttl, • 02IO. Cotlt MAM, C.t hlornl• tJUI
Thi\ b<l~n•U It COllOllCltO by •
9•n•r•l~INP
"•-L.ClltOley
r n .. •Wl-1 was 111.., "'"" 111e Count r (.lert. o4 0••"99 C""'11Y on Oct ,. "'"' 1'11.i:M
PwDli\IWCI Or-(0 .. 1 OtllY Piiot,
Nov 11 De<. 4, II, II 1911 Sll0-81
l'IC'TITIOUI •uSINISS
N-1. STATIMINT
T"t following per1oft •I dol"Q
OU\lntt,s•i
AOUA<LEAN POOL SERVICE
CO . JOO! Reo Hiii Ori.,., BklO S, S..ltt
IOI, Coll• Mew. Calllornlt t»H
R-t Wolts.betOH UIOt 8Ayslcle
Oro ... Norw•lk ~lifOf'nia
Thh t>uslnou " cono..<ted by •" 1fldl•lduAI
RoOtf' WOii_,_
TlllS , .. ,_, •t\ lolect •1111 ti.
Count~ Clffll of OranQt C-ly Nov 12 , .. ,
,.17SUI
Pwbll\lled Or-Coa\I D••ly Piiot,
NOY IJ J0, 17 OK c, t .. I .,.I-ti
FICTITIOUS eu51NIU
NAME STATl.MINT
l h• lollow l119 P••IOfl 11 C1oln9
Dv•lneH " SOUTHWEST AIR BALA .. CE
COMPANY, ltllt --Ila S.1,..1,
Suite 1038·354, Hw111i"91on Buell.
Callto•nlt n..
SI..,,.., l.o\ltl '°""" 10101 O..ucer Lt ne, Hvnllft91on BM<ll, Ctlllorfll• ., ...
Tiii• b\11IM1a I• cofld..clttlOY an 1...,,,,.,_,
~l.o\ll•l'ltM Tiii• __ , ""' flle<I •1111 l"9
C®nty Clerk of Ofangr C.O..nty on
October n. '"' 1'114'91
PvDhSheo O'-GHi i 0.lly Piiot,
-IOv IJ JO. 11. 0oo< c l .. t _.,
H C I lllOVS •vs1 .. 1:u NAMl:$1All:Ml:"l
I ne IOUOWtfW) O'lr\On!t ., " OOtnQ
OU\tf'tf'\\ •-'
l> ~ ., ~t:tcvtlt: Lt:to •t;tc oh,
... wpotl blVO LO>t• -\f. <.A WIUI
U•n1tl Ltoyo M-1nc.e 2JOJ ~ b•H
-iJU An.tne1m l.•llf vi-... U••"" l 1;.,., lJU, t: boll -l JU
Ao•ht"•ITI. (.At1t ..,,...
t ht\ DU\t"'fl.' '' tOnOUtlf'G Uy • unu teo p.1rtner\>hl0
OM\tel L ~' tnc. e
I n1\ ~•1..,,-ient w•s flt to ••tP\ Ow
C..Ovf'lh l.ltfk OI V•f\911' \,.OWU'f Oft
t-tov 11 , .. ,
F 11'10
J;uofl~ied V'M"t9f t..o.it\t ll••t-. .... oot. "°' IU 11 IA< • 11 1 ... 1 l4JI •t
FICTITIOU5 •USINl.SS
N-1! STATEMENT
Tiit 1011owln9 pet\on I• Ooln9
butif\t!H •s
LEONARD HYOAAllCS, UH
P.,.ll N""'°" s m , ,...._.IM-.
CA t2'60 Leona rd Mlfl9010, U70 Ptn
NewPOrt • ?21, Nowoort 8tt<ll. CJ'
'11..0.
Tiiis bu\l~s I\ c-ltd by •11
lncllvotl\lel
'--"' Mlngolt f lllt '1tt-t ••• lllocl •Ith lht CCNnty Cten of 0.--ea..nty on Ott.
ti, "'' 1'111711
Publl"'°" Or-CoH I D•llY PllOI,
Nov.•· ll, JO, V , 1"1 ~I
PICTITIOUS •USIHIU
NAME. STATIMENT
Thi lot1owln9 Pef\on• •re doln9
bvslnft\ ff
THE CARBURETOR SHOP. 1'0
Rt nclOI Pfl A-. .. Colt. MeM. CA '2'16 Mic-I J. ~ Gtrcl• L Alley, UM
\elttA AllA .... eo. .. MeM, CA mn
Tnlt busln"s I\ condu(led by t
~,,.,., _tne,..,,lp
Graci• L lllley
Tlllt ... _,-•flied .. 1111 ti•
(CNllly Cieri< ol Oraf\91 UMM'llY on NO•
4,1 .. I
Nov •. U. JO. 11. !ti t
CREDITOR or a con t ·
ln gent creditor o f t he de·
ceased, you mus t file your '~c.;:,_~~!:~!':::~
claim w ith the court or 111t 1011ow•"V.D•••on " 001119
present It to the personal """,,. ... ,
represent ative ~ppolnted !>tA't~u~,t:~t:~.~~111~1 ~~1·,,,'!
by the court within four ~,,.,, ~ ..... 110 lo••• M•u
months from the date o f (.•to•orn•••i.JD
first Issuance of le tte rs as JoM <.rn•0•n Amo .. >l• (.•'"'"•
provided In Section 700 of ~~·· NewPOrt e .. cll, 1.e1o1orn1t
th• Probate C ode of 11111 b\I"'-' 1• conovc111<1 "• •"
California. The t ime for '""'"out1
flllno c laims will not ex-1111, t .. !::i''!:~~n ~:,".,.,,,. 1.,.
p fre prior tO four months l OUlllY lltr• 01 Oren91t LOlllllY on
from the date of the hear· "ov•m0tt 11. '"' Ing noticed above.
YOU MAY E X AMINE
the ffle kept by the court.
If you are Interested In the
estate, you may file a re·
quest with the c ourt to re·
celve special notice of the
Inventory of estate and of
the petitions, accounts and
rePorts desc r ibed In Sec:·
tlon 1200 .5 of the
0.llfornla Probate Code.
McGee & Paul, Inc.
1J01 Dove St. Suite 7SO
Newport Beach, c.. 92660
'714) 7S2·S454
Published Orange Coast
Dally Piiot, Nov. 26, 21,
Dec. 3 1981 S123-81
"~'"°"' •US.11111 MAMa STaT..-NT Tiit lollowt111 ,.,_ h otlfte
11Utl11t .. ••:
SHORli CONSTRUCTION, '"' ltllMft, luf• IA, "9Y'tt•lll Vtl...,, (A .,,.
Al lat•IMJ, Ult WI~ gf:-:
Hulll lt\otOft llff(ll, CA ""'
flll• llUll-II <~'W 11Y All
llllllllleuet. • Al ....... , ™• ......,,... -,.,. """ .. COIHllY Ci.r• of Of.,._ c.-ty Ml Nov,~. IWI.
t
Ak1 a. t HANll:: (,ALLl::Nlk!I, 100)1
l'ICTITIOU' avSllo•U Aotm\ Av•, H..nlln(llon M AC.II, LA
NAMf;S1All.MlNT YIM/
1 ne tOtl'>wtng A.•r~on •• dOtng Ml<"••f ¥¥ •Mt. hu t-•ul•rtno. 1>1111neu •• l.oita MAM. UI .,.-.
IMAt..k.S ..,1::!11. JOO Ulln•' ......... I n11 """""' .. (0110..ClltO o~ •n
..... I, NtwPO<t tMf<t<ll, <.A 111 .. J. 11101•10 ... 1
Hobert W•ll"m U Orn•ll ... .WO """<,..... w 1 .. Y (.-y LMlf, "H 1, Ne""lllllto'l!""'•..J.... lnll ... ,..,_, w .. 11190 •1111 tne
LA '12.tl -llLOURIY Ll•r• o• O••n<ie (.11 .. nly on
l llti ""~,..., •• '""""''tOO bY •n No• ''· 1"'1
lndl\•IOWI ,_11 .. 1.J
le. VOrMltft l'vbh"-0 Or-UIA" !Jt uy .. 1101
I n11 llllt-1 ••• tol ... wnn Ill• "'Ow 211 l /, IA<.•. t I, lilol llUJ0-11
<.ounty c..1er~ ot Or•n9f l.Ovnty -vn NOY 11, l'ltll
P.11 ....
Puo1-.rwo C...M\919 <..M\I U•••• """''°'· Nov. 10. JI, OK .•• 11, ,._., 'IOll ~·
l'ICTITIOUS eUSINlllS
NAMI! STATaMENT
T lie lot1owl119 per ton " C1oln9 !MltlMUt\
CA L.t FOAN I A Rt B&ON
SPECIALt5T, , ... De Arut Clt<lt,
Huntlf191on 8"<1\, C.lll0<nlt •1~•
OoNI R-., Sleltr. , ... 0. Ana•
Clt<le, H-lngton .. ACll. C.lolotnlt .,_
l rtls b•,.lnes• ll conouc locl by an
lndlVldu.I °""" It_, Sitler llllt stet-I wa llleCI wllll Ille c ... nty c .. , .. ot 0r•ft9C Co11111y on
FICTITIOU5 eU .. NE.1.$
NAMli STATEMeNT
f n• IOllOwln9 Per\Oll> Ar• 0011'1(1
bu•lnen"'
HOGAN ROY !>I l;PHEN~, Jltl ( Airport Loop, Cotta Mou,
C••Horlllt mi.
JAme\ 8 ~ -PtrtMH. t Ct lllorno• corPO••llon, J1'1 (
AltpOtl Loop, (,Oil• Mrt .. , C...ttfOf'lh•
U61•
l "''' ou>H''•'' ts. conou<••O t>y • CO<Pot•llOn
J •mu 8
a c..111or11ia """"'•tlorl 8 y PAN
J..oyO ~ Cllwf Fonen< .. I Offl<er
\ht\ \\,ILW~t w•\ titeo Wlrltf\ Ow
lu .. 111v llerk 01 Ounoa Co..nty on No•em!lw 12. '"' , llMU No••.,..oer '' 1911
F l711'J
P"bh\P..O Or-(_Of\! O*ly 1-olOt Publl\lled 0r-. COH I 0 .. 1, Piiot.
NO• I), 10. 17, DI< •. 1911 4917-tl
l'ICTITiout IUSINl!U
HAMii SlAUMENT
T lie followln9 per1<>n It ootn9
Du•IMNtl
PLACENTIA MOTEL, 1n W Seti!•
"e. Plt c.Mla, CA t1VO
Don.kl G. Co•. 1'11 8tac.11<omt»r
Dr , H11ntlfltton llHcll, CA ., ...
Tiii• ~ I• <-UClad by •II
lncll•ld ....
0-ICI G Co•
Tfth --wet 11190 •Ill\ .... County Cl-QI Or•llOt (OUlllY "" NO• • 1 .. 1
F1149SJ
Pvbll\lltld Or-CoH I o .. ,. P1101.
NO• •. IJ, 10, 11. 1 .. 1 •™-tt
ll'ICTift-l~NID NAMI! SlAHMUIT
Tiie lollow1n9 H•\On h oolno
-lnH\M
THE SUN~INE YOGURT A ICE
CREAM CO . 1" E 17111 St . CM .. ....... c"t2'27
AdrlM • N•varro, UOO NlwllOf'l llMcll CA t2WO. 1JnO.
Tllh buillltU 1$ (Ond..Clocl 0¥ .,.
lndl•ldual
Adrian R N .. a..,o
Tiiis , .. ...._. wtt 11190 •1111 ,,,.
Cou11ty Clerk of 0.•"90 '°""'• 011 Nov.4, 1•1
1'17-Publl,_ ~ ... c:. .. 1 o.i1, Piiot
Nov 6 U , JD, t7, 1•1 Htl-tl
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINIESS
NAMI( \TATIMl!NT
Tiit loflowt110 Pef\Ons a rt Cloln9
bOl\lnttt M G REAT AMElllCAN TRADE
COMP ANY, 7111 W O<e•fllront,
N1tWp0r1 S.6(11, CA ., .. l
K E N OC'1Efft, 2111 w
O<ttnlronl, N-1 S.<t<ll, C.A .,~
lllA RY BUSCH 11U N•,.C>O•I
81vd . N-1 Be<t<ll CJ' 91 .. l
This butlnttt is cond .. <lotd OY •
........ paortnff'thip
t<ENOCHETTI Tiii\ , .. ,_, Wtf .,,.., .... ,, lM
Covnty Clt•k of Or•noe County 011
No. 12. t•t Fl7Mlt
Pvbll-O'-Co.all Otlly Piiot,
Nov U, JO, 11, De< 4, 1911 •tt ... ,11
S1ATIMIENT0, AeANDONMIE NT
01' USI 01' l'ICTITIOUS
•USIMIUNAMIE
Tiit lollow l119 puso11\ II•"•
•balldoneO 0.. 11M of ltle Flctlllo..t
linlMS.lNAmt· O RAN GE COU N TY A UTO
TllAOEll It Orlllwood, trvlnt
C•lltoml• mu.
Tll• Ft<llllo"s Buslntu N•mt
rffwrl'CI 10 -••• 111..i In Or•11oe ,_,,on,,.,..,,
Kelln A Wkl-... O•lllw-lrvlM, C.tlforni. '211•
... ..,,..,. A. Wiii-... Otlll'#-.
lrYIM , CelNonll• .,11•.
l llls llulJtwss Wts Con<IY<ltcl Dy .,,
lltdl•ld ... I
KllUIR Wi.1-Tllls .....,_. wt\ llled wllll ....
NO• 11, 0.. f, II ti , 1 .. 1 1191-tl
l'IC,TITIOV~ •V$tNESS
.. AME. STATliMENT I'" 1ouo...,1n9 Qfllf\on '' 001ng
CN\~nieu .,
C!JSlt:R C'-EA,,.ING C.0, \IC/
P•u••rtno, -. lOJ C.o\t• Me, ..
(••ttornt• '7•1'
Grev f L009. HO " ....... ....
.. 101 , .... ~ Cthlornoa .,.~
Hus OUStnf'\' It COf'\O...C.tec! b~ 4r1
•r\01¥10~1
C.·-~ ~ l.OOP r ,," "•'""•tettl ... tu.a •••~ '"-• c.o .. nly Cl•n Of Oran~ l O..r\h on
No~tmMt J~ 1'11
Fl7'1l1
1'vbh"-Orat>90 (.ot\I DaJly Piiot
'""• 21 OK 4 II 1•, 1911 >14)-<ll
,.,,11T1ou• aviu.~u
toAMf; )lAU;M ... 1
1 "~ •ot10¥1P1ng o•r,on " ao1no
bU\I~~\, ...
NAJtr. ~AM ._,,,,,. Mlh i MAhltl\l:.I
, ... ~e\t t"lf'C ~tt .. t ~-"t• An.t
t..•lttor n1• "'11Ul
)-e\lf'\Q H*.,, H41it1, .tV t.•t "'"' • h ••l'tit ' \,4IUOtf\J• tf'll t4
l tu\ °"""'"""' ,, tonau<.tto o~ ." il'I011110U•I
~lQ"w.nH.tl'I
t nn u aternen1 .... tllfllO ••'" ow
l0<1n1, lltt' 01 Or•n90 LO\lnlt ()II
No• •• ,,., .. ,., __ lt.W,_ Mnk ft
.... , Otltu llloa llMI
''"" ....... C...1-Nla U l tl !Ml
h ttow ... "~"""'
.,_..,011\htCI Vf"MtO' t...O•\,t 1.J.-1h .,.1101,
'°'OY IU. 11. l.A< •. II 1'141 )UO fl
FICTITIOUS aus11111:n
NAMio SlAll.Ml:l•T
I"" tOHO•lng o .. r.,on I\ Oo•nQ
bu'1ne\~H
• MOkl,,AN 1'Nl l::kl-k1>1'~ ·~·
'¥1\t• t..rano•, frf1wpo r1 b••lf\
1.thlornta ~lMll
.JOlln J --· 00< 11•\IA C.r-hf'•PG"I ~Pt (.AIUOfn•• 9,MlfJ
I'"' °'1\11'19\S ,, Lonouc 1.-0 Oy •n
IMfYIOu.11
JOMJ Mota41n
I hi\ \lai.rntn1 ••S hlllO w 11n ,,._
<wount, 4...1•'" ot CJ.r•nQit '-Ounty on "O••m~( Ii, l'jftl
.. 11 ....
•·voll\hltCI f..r*'OI -.. .. o.ul LJ••l'r .,.,lot.
too• ltl, 11, Cle< 4, II, l'itll 1111 e l
,_ICl ll lOVS euStNl:U
NAME STAllk#lolliNl
t ne •ollow 1nQ otr,on '' ootnq
bu\tl'WHS I\
~1 .. 1: AHi lct .. IAl'), HJll L• Htrmow Aw-9 L.-Qwn.t h1tu•• <..•
•1•11
J•ck A 'Y•ltm4tn, 1YJ1 LA rt•rmou
A•e , L•guna "''-'· 1..A """
I Ill\ Dulofte\\ " °""' "'"""""' oy 1i0&e oroor ••tonl\•P.
J•O.. A llellmen
I Iii> \ltl-1 WM lol<d .. oth '"'
lOvnh (.lerk ot 1Jr•n0t LO""'' °" NO• If ,.,.,
flhlU
llub11ifleo I.Ir-1.....,\1 u•oly f'otol,
"'Ov JO, JI, IA<. 4, II, 1'1111 )1114 ••
L YNANE &ANI($, IUU S•n
Jte Into Clrtlt , Founttln Vtllt y, CA
frth bu.in .. s h 1.0lldv<l•d l>Y
onflvltlutl\ I~ i Wllol
CIAr-.a.tlh
l Vf"IW fHnk\
Th ia ttat.,.,...,.t •9' llled wltn U..
Co""'' Cler• Of Drano-c-ty on
No. 12, 1911 ""..,. PvPll\lled O'..,Ot Co.t" Dolly l'llot. Nov u . 20, II, Dec •. l'lll • .., ...
STATliMli"'T 01'
AaolUIDOHMENT 01' VH OF l'ICTlllOVS
HMVf 4..0tPOr•t•vn • L•lito,n1•
<.Otoetel10i\ •JU1 t•\I l.l'W\1n"'t '>u1t•
u. )4nl• Ant: '-•htutn•• '''"' l nu. l>M\11\f"\~ '' 1.. on av ti co bV ., t.Of P01t1t10(1
HMW ~Of(IC)f411Uft
t11HW v •• l+At1'•r ..,,n•ca.m
• ,,,, ~~lt't'f' .. t\l ¥t•\ t1lfil'Q WtU1 U'lltt
l.Ul.IHtt '-•• ,~ OI lif4ihQ(I \.UUfllJ cm \J( I " '"'
.,utu1 n.:-u Vf•f\QI' \."'"'' ''"''' r 11ot. ,._,UV Ju, I I UM 4, I' l"O' W\11 •I
aU"NEU NAME C•lllQr"4f 11 ....... 1 Water
1 ht 1011ow1n9 "~"On• h••• O...lttyClftl,..I ~·•
•Dt"Cl-0 tne .... of,.,. to(llllOv\ ~UAntll..-
0\ISlllH S,,_. ... , ........ A•-
OVAL.11 Y ASSl:Ml!lY. JO .. A S\lll•M
H•ll•Cl•Y. s.tlt• Allt, t olllorn•• tl/0) 111-•IOtP, CA fl_.,..
C.ENfi;R, 10UI l rP•H•. ~nl• All•
H••9"1t, Co-' '11/0/ ~l•nl•Y 0 Mon•on, 111 f•ll\
•••Ou• AtfWrlC4ln F,all\. to.no tl2t'
K•ttn M MOtltofl, Ill ~tll• A•lllvt,
Am., lt11n Ftllt. 10.no &n II
Tru t t>u,tM V• '' conouct•d bV
1no1w10u.tl\ tttu~ A 'A'lftl
SYni.y 0 --" ..... All MOnMln
')19nll4! belor• -thu I lfn o~y Of
Now•n1oer ~ '"'· Nol•rv Pu.Of•c 101 ld•f'to rewO-tnQ •" A.1n•t1c.-n F,au,
M•rllyn M J.C.'"°" •
'"" ........... " ...... , """' ••th '"" C.ounty t lerlo '" Or•noe '°""'' °"
No¥ h '"' F 11'1» P .. 1111.iwo 0r.,. l oeu Otoly P1101
NO• l/, l>oo< •. II, 1e 19111 }19' .. I
I ne lltllllOu> o ........ , na m• NOTICE OF PUeLIC HEARIN<. NOTICE 01'
ro1trreo to -t> .... t.l..O tn (>rjfl\IO ter Dl.l'AULT AND
co..nly on A"9 7'. t'lll Dr ~ W N-l!LICTION TO SILL
Home EArlll '>lt1•0'I• 01 Am<oto(• I PltO-Co .. l>rtot .... Proiecll IMll'OaTANT NOTICE
Inc , J016A H•ll•d•y. !>•nt• 4nt, Th• "'"""'9' ot w11\lt lrOo• llW IF YOUR Pl'IOPEl'ITV IS IN
Lt htornit HI~ P••Clmonl to.e ll••Clllll\(j P<OtP<I " FOllECLOSE BECJ'VSE \IOU AllE
ln1\ llUMllH• ..... ton<Ju<ll!O oy • P•f\•r>fly tO .. ••O Cly ...... on•• BEHIND IN YOUR PAYMENTS If
<orPorthOn Po11vt•nt Ott•nt 19e l:lohllntloon MAY BE SOLO oNITHOVT ANY
H0Ml: l:AHl11 S1A110..S Sy•l•n•-m1ll\\Ut<!by llw(.t 11totn1• COURT ACTION, 6ncl VO\I h•.,• ll\lt
Of AMl:FclCA INC R•ooontl Wtl•• u...111y C.orllrot b0tr11. let•I rlQllt to lltlftO yow •<~-• In
JM<w1 ~•yn<Mo• ~n•• Atw ~99-1Reooon•• bcMl•c:t• 00o0 ,._no by proylno •" of '°"' ""' ,.,.~, •• , t11..a w1tn l"'-Ou• to oe1••' tffi' en. prot•<t Ou\ P•'* O""' "'"'*"" sMu• oerrnlltect
Co""'• Cl••' of Or•"Ot l®nty °" NPOl:S P'ftmll ,_,tu bo om~nO"° 10 tO•h •lld t •P•llH\ "'llhon lllrU
Nov•mblrl• 1'41 I-tl(t•no tti• 1·10•,•t•oo <l ttl• '" monU'tt tromt,,,.cMt•o•recorU tkM°'ot
PuOl1111ad Or-(.Of\I D•ily l'olol ~Pltmr.r l IW2 1111\ NOllft lllll A,,_nl I\'' 010 00 f'o
NO• 11 0... • " II.,.... SI .. ill , ,,~ botro .... 11 .. lo ot>lf•r• Of ~·-•• '"' -Wiii '"''' ....
1ntotma\iO't to ~''~' •I m •rrwno1~ Uf\111 '°"" «eount t»<orniitt currem ---------------t"" ••\teatYhiM""'"'IUH•n)f'tH\•nd. Unt•ts •rrt• ob•1Q•t1on b11no PllUC "811( IOI '"•' pu1~. ¥WIH nold • 0-..ultt •or•c..IOMd uoon O.rmlh " lo"~'
---------------1IW.,1n9 •>IOllOw\ ~rooo I""' IWIVf tho I-I •~I lo''"" OA 11:: ,.,, ... ,.,. ,.,., forttelOOW1'9 ""'' Dy pe,1no , ... e111lr•
PtCTtnOUS IUSINIU llME. • llh m •tl'lo .. nt --by yo"' trtdltor
NAME.STATl.MENT Pl.ACE l•IJ C.ounl¥ l.l\•ll•Dco•, Wlllllll lllr• .-illll alte• IPW dtl• of
T "• '011owlr19 P•r\on ., oo•nq "°° M•in Strtt• w • .,., .iUt; i .. ,,11,,.",,. r•cord~Oon ot t1w1 doe:umf!f'lt. •"•'"
bu\6M-\l ., fnt•t ~\teG pi., ~n· •rt .n.,,. •1 tf'l I aatf' of rt<•diOQ ~.,., M...ot'I
EXPERT HAfrrfOY'-'AN. D North •tttno to t •Uft\\ ttvir v•f'•' uri 1,_ . ._ ro uno M ,,. ..-noun1 yo". mu\.I
Ot••t. S....t• AN. C..ll•orn•• '110J ,,,~ • r•l•t•'·V h.l tht "~~., ,....,,, I P•Y or to.,,.,. tot P•Y""'9f't to ttop
Ml<,...IG Wetf'.Q NOl'l"Of•v• O•ttf\4 ,q, ~"''°1.,..., u-ti1 1>,no lh•fnr.c:los,ur,..,'11'1tvourpt<llf»t1'f l'
~nt• Ana, C .. ltorni•'7rol prt'i• n'"""''" l'W'" •• , ,,, '"•-•<tov•'• fnt ""~ otf'Mt,. ree-on,
T"U .,.,,,,,..,, ,, COftOu'l.ci by •n .• t lh• t I • :tt; • • 6 .,f\, .. 1 I A i ""O'"O •qent tof'
fndl'lld ..... I ur•• ... ,. "" f . .. '"" • u , ¥.• • ' _, 1• Jn'\ A \t«1•HCW.
Macf\Mt W••' Hu •• '"' .. , 1 ... " tt / .,, ~ ,, ' L tv• Et Toro.
TMi " •• ..,,.,, ••• \ ftlflid With tn.-1n p oi l.it!I I \ M '
T Ill• Slrll.,,,.nl WA\ lilocl wllll IM
C°"nty Cltr' 01 Ottntt C°"nty on
NOV•m-•• 1 .. t
l'tUIJ.J
Pvbll\ftocl ()-""90 Cot\I O•lly Piiot,
"'O• I J, lO 11 0t< •. 1911 •t7' 11
lllVINI: •ANCH WAT E• 0 1na1c.T
"'OTIC·E OF l'llE.PAllATION Of NEGATIVE OE.c:LARATIONS
The-1t-.1rw H.tnc:.n vitatt<r Ou.ttlC.t *'
IH•P•HlnQ ,.~'*"" O.C.l•t•t1ons 101' tile f)tOt«ti O.\i<tltAO biwtoo# A Or~Jt
h tO.-t•'-t U.Cl.H.C1on '' ori •••• •t the
Cll\tttct OfU<.• '°' ... en pro1e<.t ..,o "
•Yd•••bte •or PUOhl lflt.PtC.f1on A
N•9<tt•v• U.C.••,•tion fOI' e-~i, Pl""IP<I
wtlt bot '""''oe'H tor •0P,-01it•I Of
01~0"•' t>Y tnt tto.ro ot Oue<-tOtt
Of tM 01\hK t •t .t ffffff1n.q to bt' fWIO
LHl'c•mDer 1. t91l •l & tA> P M 1 10 Ow
O•stn ct ()ft.<.f'. OOt l.ttm pu'\ Dr•v•.
l•••M CA
GtMr .. 09! .... I-..... ~ ... fer
1.0 llJ, "-Ii·
l lie prOfMI ton\1\1~ vi "" r111n wi. ot C.~ntt•I ODllQ•loon bono• or
1m0tov•rntnt Ot\trCl flito 101 •n.,n .,.,#> •vltO"tLa:I lty tht ~lf'<.hot'I m t9/•,
It\• •mount o f s •t• Dt•l"9
•PO(OOltf .. i.ty \1111.000 In. pUrl)OW
tot •n•<" llrOf\.Ch itrdtl ~ \.OflJ '' lo
•t< om Oh"' tn.t P1•n ol 'litor t.~ •or
1mo rov•m•nt O•\t'''' ~o 107' 41\
revh•d 1rt April 1'117 to O•tfotm
oi•nruno. oe~·O" "'quit• \1te\ tcw ..tno (""'''"''' , .. ,,.,., ·~·hh~\ '"'""'0" \Qll 1n ·~ to ,,. O.-•••oPnl...,t
Of'Cl\IOn\ ot fvtl\o(htll04WI •9f'M1t''·
SU( n ., tnr-(•t't' OI If ¥101' 1 n.
twneft( •• , 1e\ Of tM PfOI•' t .,~ ,,,.
cu11en\ o4 I.nit COt'n1YtU111t~ o ... ~., a....,.,_ ._ " .. ,.,
I O. tU ,0...E.
1 ne Ofote<l con"\h Cif ow ''""' ,., ..
of C,~n•r•I Obl•o•t•un bottd of
1mproV'tl'f~f Clntt11t1 ho "" •"•c.h ••• • •utncwueo O• ,,_ ~•eot hon •n ,.,_,,
tn,-•mo unt o t ,.,~ t>•tnQ
4Pi)f'O•Urti1tf'l'r \.) 100,000 11\,. C)Uc 00\if'
101 wnt<.h ooncn w 1u D• \010 1\ 10
•<~Ornolt"' tn. ~t•n (tt V.Oft.\ tot
lmprov~ment U1\tt1< t frfO 10J .,
ftvl\eO 1n A.0111 Ptl/ •o pr,tor,_1
pr~nruno CW~•Qn -.CQ'-'•'• • 1lf'\ •t>t .. no
County Cle"" of Or•neit C..ou"h on \ul•mllh·O 1 •• 1 ..
NoY•mbH n ,.., I \t~1'-b • ,.,,MJt "'1'1)n f I I ........
Put»t1lhed ()1t9 Co.i.t 0 •1ly F•tot • h• ,,_.,1., .. •
Nov u.10.n.o.c. 1tll ,.,,.,.fft t1I d Ou .. , .. ,,,. •' •' \ .... .,
t oft\ '°O" t.tn\.tf\i~t C<itO•l•I l•<•Ut1•\ tr'lffi•WO"'
'"" I .. , t\ t~ ti) 11\iw 04Pl~IQ4>m..,.I
Af "'•.,.1aN1\1U~ of tUfl'liGt(t1,~n•t •\fl"'fKt• \ujn ,., tnt C.•ty of 1tvlf\t!' ,,.,.
• L os,e Ot',,PUc.••r·~' 01 '"• O•OJ«t ,., .. ,,.
VO NO T <.1t1l•n\ot U.ton1m...,..\y
Gofler~I 09!,..t_ .. nt S~le ,.,
N ,,,., I 0 IH,Gr-.E .. ..
t.. ti p.1c1111ov' •uS1to1<\S / • -~~··1~M ... --. I··· .. 1 n~ •o•tvw1no P•, on ' t'-., ... ~ ~"'
bMWN\\~ I L.~E lNIRl:PflCloEVr. 114\ '1 N••port ttou•••MG ... d C.Ol.t.A M ,.Y I ., ... t
lalllor"'t 'l'lt)I
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Ct ll\orn1• on.11
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'lnd•UOl'I\ or L •n•t•I 0 0Ue•t1or1 '60'"h of
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• " "dt, I )01, Int' • l'H 0 u n t 0 f '.I' b. I" 0
....... '•lvf"~ APCHO•U'f,.tel~ t• OH.(Q.J r ..... pwr-oow-
• )• P•Of\ ff,, .-n1tn tiona\ .,,., Or wld , to
• ,. "'' t 1 "' omp1t\n tN Pl-'" '1t 'Aot•~ '""
•h ~· ., , UVl'f'nof'ftl 01.-.tr •t t No 10) .,
1· ";~nty 1,v.,ta m """'-"" '''• to wttorm " • .,,,..., t v• 1 ltl ~l(liill~ Ot•nn1nQ °*"'Cl" ..:QOit~ ,,,.,._, lt,,f •rtO
',,,,.,1• "' .. ,,.,,11'\entt "•• ton\fry( t <•P•l•t f«.t1•Ut· throvOf'I
,. "'' ··' • \'•" ""f'M<ft and '"'' 1n t~ to ow Of'.-rtO(rtnMt
lht\ \.t•tffr11tf'\l #ft h f/ICJ flllltU
l8"1\ly 1..1••• 01 vr•n1rt 1,.,..n1,
"'"' '._.. • • 1'(,_...~ ""'°' Av9'1\ol u . Ot<•ttorn, ol t\lt•SO•<hOt\41 "~"" •>
"'-----------" ~ t ,,-. P~oit )SO, ol ,,..d i.wt" •t ti\• C.dr n 1 If lf'lnt t ,,.
''" '9tr't r 0 ,.0 , t-&•l\..f
1
l,'-<•,.. ft"'-°'.,. 'to O•Ytn•nl of Pit•• ~r .. t1c1•ri..-' 41t ._,,. Pf"''".-1 ,,.,, '""
f ,,.," AND [Lf(TIOH TO \El.. 1\ff tm_, -O<(urreO, ltleoton. '411l•n• of Ille com••"""''
.. UOhWlfOCJt-\.ot\ll>trly ... IOI IMP'OllTA .. TfllOTICE 1··· ""•ll Otr t C.onoomtn•11m c; ... ,., '* ... , .... ._ ~ ... ,., ..,.o¥amc.-'' llflltt
No• lU.11 De<c 11.1 .. 1 )111 •1 IF 'l'OUR PllOPlllTY IS IN Auo<l•llOlldoeslw1'9bvflt<lto Mllor 10 .... G ..... E FORECLCXE 8ECAU\E V()U AllE Ct " st to l>t SOICI, tllo l•llOwi119 T11• pro111<1 con'"" of ltl• lollto 'flt
&E•HNO IN YOUR PAYMENTS tT d•\trl-•HI -ly lo U ll\ly IM or vrn<tal OOllQ•l•u~ llond\ 01 NIUC M011C( MA v BE SOl o WI rHOU r A.Ny "°''O-llon ,..,,,.~ • .,,_,. O•"r1Ct No llif> .,.,,, i.
COUAT A(TU)N •f'd 'fOll h••t-1~ f'.'AA(fl.. Un1t N'> l•co.n'\11t1no~ -•r•,.uttv.w lf'Ob•l,..,,..,l..ct10i1tn111t•
P."ltTIOU~ •VSINt.U
NAME U ATtMt"'l
ll'O•' right to twino rO"" •ce,ount 1n C.•r1•1n .,,. ..O.Ce'\ 4lftCI \Ur1.," ., l '' • . noun t u' '• '" o • 1 n 9
C)OC'Jld stand'rt9 II'( Pl'Yl"'O •U or yovr l i"O•n AnO d•><r1 bta 1n '"' 11c;i.,.ro•"'·llb~ly 'l.•l\000 '"'"e>wrcx;W
0•1t dw-HYmff'th plu\ ~tmltt•d C.Or\domt"•um Pl•n l Pl•n' fOf ''-" W"U·" Of.,.1'~4h w 1H O.• \.Oto 1 to
'"• t0Uow1no 04fM>n\ •'• Oo1no co•U •nd eap•n\t\ •tlh tn ,,.,,., P"••• I ot M•ll!>r<•. tttO•d•d or .... "'""''.ft ..... p,_.,, t.t -...Ofi..\ tor °'*~·neu M '"'°""''from,,. O.t• of f.-COl'd.tUOf' of M•rc t-JO •• ,. .,. ."'''"""'"''NL~ 02n ,. r ... '!'I,.,,, ,,. " t I NO tO. ., ~Ak "'l::!>I IHHll I '°'"" 1.UAN 1111\ Nollet Tlm .,._,,. "J"'1 /S f\ In &ook 1xi., P-ott 1'3 4tl ~ Ot I••• •II n AU',IU\I 19/t> lo 1>4!rlotnj "'~~l>C.. •Al 10 ... 1•01l L•ll• Ot •• of No·•-I .... "'° ,.111 IMrNw Otlorl•I R«O•d' o4 Dt•no• Co..ntv plonnonci. -{Ill• t<Q ..... "'"' '"' .,,.,
'°''•l• L~ "11h l •tt•OI"•• .. ,•\.I ""'Ot your •<Ount t»cOfftls cuoent C.•Ufetrnt.t to"''' 1..1< t t4'U•t•I •~ 111•••"' UHC..Vuf'I 8",,.~~~':"v~=°'~ ~N,, _!:' to~t~:::.'d 1uh:Onc;':,.,~.~~o : 0o~~:~, ,,:~~~!t~,4;', ':,';;:c:'.~ <\~,,!: ./:/ ,·,:~~7.°7u~.~ •:.~ h~ .. ":Ot':-,::• <..a11torn1a t?l 1) pedod,youf\f'+"tttwl99oflftgl\lfOltOO •fll •Ml IC> fU ot tJW re•I or00trt¥ I wch "' 11"\t ldy "'' 1 1 ~111t' ''' '"°' bV\inf>u 't.Of\Outt•a o, • f0f'.c.tosu11t °"''by payi"Q ttw tf\'"' 1nc1ua lno •tthovt llrnlt•t,on IF'lt (M,;,.,...,,,.,,~ ot en.,. µ 1 ,., ' ,.,,. tr-.
coroor•lfCW' •mou"t dem#\ded f)y '°"' Cff'Ct•tor c ommon •re•\ d•tl,..O '" '""I\'' r••·\~t"W tOl'•""otJ"'•'• >V V 1 ., ""I::!> I l "N wttllln llww "10mM all•• tl1f Otte ot Otcltttt-of (-1\ Condltie"' <>•"•"' a.. • .,,,..., ••.,. ~ .... tor
bA .. C.Ukt-I'-<.. ff(Otd•I-ol '"'' O.C:umenl ,.,,,,,, • ..., RUlr1cllorl• encl ......... Ion (If I 0 '°' c;,_ l
JOM ~ ltftf1itn. J• Vt<• o•tt of rKordlr"G appe.,., ,_,.....w, ••"""'enU t' Otc:,.retk:lft , ~"°" t ~, '-''Ott-<I (Oth•'-h ~ It•· •u \t ,,.1, .. ,.\fOl:t\t
I ht\ 't.al.,"ne•lt w•\ IH.O w1rn ,.._
(.Ounly l it•• Of lJU flQt lO..nly on "•••mbfor II •-•
To lino °"' Ille amoont yo.. m .. u on MuCh lll. lt1f ., •~~l•u,,,..,t No ol "'"."" CJbl•QOIO•W too nO\ 01
P4Y orto .,-r"'9fk>ro.ymenttotlOO 4t77JJl'l 8°'*1JD17 Peoest,9't MQ .of tmpr<1.,.,,.,....,.., 01•hKl"" l ""f "'-h•d'I '"'° fOfectoM.r'• OI' 11 '°"" P<OPtrty 1, Offkl•I Aeconll Of Of'..,. County. -•'" •uthet•lfO e ., ll11t • -< ''""' •~ 11fl&.
'" forectot.urt for •ny 01f'lief ,,.,ewt. Calitorftf• Oft Loi l Of TrKt No "" l,," •mo u" 1 o t '" ,. t>., 1 n 9
<on l•<t P CM Ae,altf "nd at~wnon a"'°"re<-Ofdtd lft e.. dQpro•1niatl'fy S../tl<J{X'(j ll'\•Pu•OOM C:.....tl & fl•-MtnA99,._t ti 2m• 81rtther Orl•t, 00, Pe9n 1 lo l , In( IU\I .. of 101 wn1tll _.,n\ .,111 II• '"'" I\ lO =:-=.~0,,.. E• Toro (tlolorn•• t1U O 111 •1 Ml\Cetl..-.s "'-· 1n Ow Olllce of .occ<n•po.•11 '"" P••r•" W<1••· 101
'4ttte M I ' .. 11•1 ,,.. 0•"9 C-. llecorOtr •mi-ro•~-n• O••" ll t. rO~ ,_
trYtM, ~ flJU ,,.. •t you "••• •n• Qu~sttoni yow Tht rttord "'91lM o ._,,...,., ot the ,,..v,'\#Q n AUQU\,1 '"'' ''J perform
t1H J UJ..»l2 \houtd con••< I • l•WYl't or the oro"r1r "'°"9 commonly •~n •• P••nn1n~. ot'\o!Of'\, •qu•r• ''''\ '°' 4n4 oovtrnm-nt•I tllt"<Y whlth mty ,,._,. 21131 Ct mpe n•I MIUIO" VotjO • On\lr"<I <tOll•• IKW•l1o\ thr®Qll
P'17U2/ 1,.wred Y""' '°"' Call~'"'• .,.. Vlctorl• •-I• end 1-l '" ·~ to tht .,._._...,,
1-uOh.,_ 0r.,. Loa\! utol., P110t. REME..-BER VOV MAii LOSE Cl1trlHA AOA"" "'"""'"'Of 1vrr>Cl•<l10tl•" •9l'n<,.\.
"'0• IO 11 I.A( • II.'"'' "°""'' LEGAL RIGHlS IF YOU 00 NOT D•l•d Ot•-·· '"' "'' h .. '"' (.itr o• , ... n. 1 "• T/\KEP~ONIPTAC TION MA LLOR CA CON DO MI NIUM CX'ft•l1c1.or1t•\ ot U1t 11ro1~t• ••• ,,.,.
NOTICE tS HEREBY GIVEN thtl B Cllerl•s...fonl ASSOCIATION <lllrtn\Olt,,.romm...,11~ •
P\lt\vt1.CIO A'11<11v11 Se<hon\1-s1AT£0F CAUFORNIA I CO•n•ttl <*l .... l..., -h ie ltr
---.. -.CT--ITI_OU_S_e_U_S_l_N_IE_S_S ___ -1 J of Ille Oe<ltttl•on• ot eo .. nenh , I U l.~,,!·~·,~!m"" o1 tllf '"'' ••lw
NAMIESTATIMINT Condition. tltd llHlrlCll..,,. recorded COUNTY OFORANGE I-01 Gtnrral Obl•Q•toon honO• ot
T iit followln9 HtlOll h doln9 i•Pt•m:t,~ 1':;. 1~~~n 1 8~" 1~~~ On D<~ U, !911, belo,. rv-., ti.. lmp,ove,,_,. CIO\lt .. I "'~ 10 '"'"<" °"''"'".. •o•i • •• t<O< ' u-rsl...,s • Nolary Putltk on -,..,, au1nor .. ., o., '"' .... """ '" ,.,. WESTPOflT ENlERPlllSES. 1,.,. 0••"99 eo..nty, Ctll!Or ..... ~"'11 of for H id SW•, oer-lly ·-••ltd I h •• m 0 u" I 0 I '•I, ... In 9
O•M Bklfts Wf'St, c_.,.,,_ llee<ll, 111:.,0,::~~.-~~n ~· PO:,Y ~:,71 o: C.l\arl• s.nlonl. known to mt to be .,ppro•1..-.1e1v \3,tlO,OOU 111e """'°"'
CA,,.,. H ' oc "" u o •W•lfnt -"'-'' ol ~ co1·po ... 11on lo• "''"'h bonO• wlll b• \OIO •• 10
I H id broach •ncl lltn w•• 11190 for llWll tucut..i Ille wlllltn lnJtr\lmtfll •ccomPll"' trw Pttn ol ""'on\ •or J amu 0 G-• n, Hila 0 •11• rtcord on Mt• 21 '"' 111 8ooll 1.cl1', known lo ,... to be Ille .,.,_ ....0 :;:;:• Wut, (ap1Jlr-IH<ll, CA PtOOt 91t, M lft$nm.nt No J1JeO, In t .. <vted IM wlllllll inUrumenl Of\ ~~~:::,v~~~:...::.::~"1~~. ~: ~:,•°'~'\
l hlt Ouolneu 1, CONluctect Dy .,, ~·:, O:u~1•:.:::c;.r,",' :.~ ":c"'"'"~': oent lf of Ill• CO•POr•tlon tlltre ln !llAMlno, OftlQn, oKqvire '"" '"'· •na. 11\0lvlclwl " curr ' n•m..0, end •-nowleCIOfd to mt lhtl con1trv( I <tPll•I laclllllh l~1ou911 J.,.•HD 0eoctw111 t ll••••or1. '"' ScrrtftO Wood• ivu1 t orpor•tlon tllKllttld ti.. wlll\111 1'11 In ,._i.e lo'"" ,,,..,.1_,,..,, C.O\lnty Cieri< of Of•n0t co .. 1111 °"
Nov J, 1 .. 1 ..,..,,
P,,bllthed O'aft9e Cotti Dally Piiot,
Tiiis tttt-• ·~ 11'-I wllll tllf Homao_. AH«ltllon OOff "'"by •llil•llMMI ~lo lh II'( By-Uon o•cl\lon• ol '""MhCllorw11 •9tnt•••. PUIUC MOOC( c ... 111¥ Cler• OI Or•noot G.untv Oii elt<t to Mii or ~w to lie told, tht or • ru olutton ol "' Boar d ol \uc11 •• lhe C.tty Of '' •1111 I II•
_______________ ,Nov .•. ,., ~~.~7·~:.~~~ .... _,,, '0 Oltt<tor• bl'n•llCl•r••• OI '"" P•01KI ... '"'
NO'I •• ti, JO, 27. 1"1 '7 ...... 1
FIC1 ITIOV• au51Nl:U N-••lATliMl: .. I
t Pt• followtnq Olt\Ons •'• 001n9
OU\.1,..11 •
Nl.W Wk.Sl .. Ak l .,~k!I, IU
Ntwport C..nltr Or., to•-1 IMecn, C.At2to.o h•• W ttt \fen1wr•'· I nc , e
C.t11lorn1• <OtPOftl-, It() Nt•IM>•I
lenttr Or • N-oo•t bHCh, LA 91..0
l h1' but1ne•• '' 'onouoeo by • llmotttl Pttlnfflil'llP
New~· .......... ft
t1rnhetdU''9't
Prwoent
111i. ttall.,.,...,. .. _. 11190 w11n tM C.ounlY u •o of ...,.,... Lo..ntv on
NOv.11. .....
PllUC ••
'IC'Tln0Uee11t1NHI N.t.Ma IT A nM«NT
Tiit ltllawtn9 ""°" It dol111
o..tlntH•.
GOL.DllN O,~RTUNITY, lOOS
W'HI •••-9-tlavtrf, Suitt '61. H--' llMcfl, c.tlllonU 9*J
l!tldlt ONll ..... llilCDa "'"°"f
"-· ......... c:.rlfoml•-JO Tl\11 Mlltftt 11 ctlld\K-by All
IMlvlflMI
l:Me.D.tl*M
Tllll ~ ... fl• wlMI ,,_
c:e11111r ei.ni oi OrtllOI c:ovnt' Oii
N.-Wlt..tt•t
f't' TITIOVS eu•tNlU
N-1: SlAllMl!Nl
,.,,... ' °"· WllNESSmyNlncl-offl<l•l'ffl clhHll\Ol llle tommunoty
P I ""' Pl PARCEL t Tl-.1 _.ilon Of Loi I 01 Cttlly Anlt Tll'IMllJ Otltd Nowmr.r 14. 1911
I h• f0Uow1no '"''"'°"' •'• bu\oln•t ' !It\
.. bl -......... CM.i Delly loC, Tr•CI No tlH, In Ill• c.o .. nl y ol ·---l'l«t e.11v 8 _,.,
oo1n9 .,ov •· 11, J0, 17, 1"1 •m-tl Ort n9t, •• llloWll on• ....., racorOtO _M9CA..._ at""9. htte m Se<rettrv
~AR 'nt~I tQVo I ol.S, ~4\IU C.•114'
IN It Plitla. L~ tooll•, (_A 'l'lOJ
~outhw••tefn b•n<otp. ant •
l•lttOf'nt• (Of'Pof' .. IOn. ,tOJtt bUt..lnttt
'-'"''" Or1vie. -JOO, lfVUW, LA ¥111)
'"'' l)v .. fte\\ ,, (Oftdut l•(I by •
COtPor•lllOft
s.a.it-Sltl n lit n<Ofll, I ft( J_.,:, (,t1llllll, Jr
v1ctP~hl<Mll
lno> •l•t..,_1 .,., 111ec1 w11n Ill•
C.ovnty llt•k 01 CJr'"9t 1..0..nly on
Nov 11.1 .. 1
'-•U&tl-... AIW .. YiMl.olw
tttl •""-' Gtfll• Ori" hl•t•• '"' .. • COl...,,..,170 !lit 17Ul U).MD
,.CTITIOUS •USINl!SI
MAMll n.-TaMIEMT
T II• followln9 Ptoon •• dOlllO
O..llllWn•: MONTAOI MOC>eLINO AGll!NCY,
olOOO M«A"""' Blvd • •50. N--1 Bttcll.CA.,_, "*" w. ,._., 11 .... ..., •woe. lrvlfW, CAt'l714-
l lllt llllllflftt k <Onfvct .. lly -
lllCllvkl\lel
R.W R-• Tlllt ti.a~ •At lllect wltll "'9
C°""IY Cltrll of Ot-C...,fllY t11
Nov •. 1tl1 ,.,...,
1'17ent ""blhltM 0r8"Clll C:O.st OallY Pltot, l'ullhifleo or.,,.. '4Mtl Ut1ly .. llol, NO\t, •. IJ, 20. 71, 1"1 .. 1141
..... 10, JJ, IA< •• II, 1911 )10/.lll !'·---------------
'" Booll >••. P•ou 10 •nd II 01 N-1 AMdt c. "* Put>ll\'-d OrllnQf' LO.UI tl•lly f'olOI,
Mlutlt_, M911• rt<Otd• ell u lo P111111.,..., 0'"9 C;..ti Delly Piiot NO• 11, '"'' ;.o..;'e.:=,.::, °'~~.:....:,~ ~ •o" •. 12. 211. 21, , .. , ... ~,·
BoOlt ""' P•O• »t ot 0111<1•1 RfCOrQ.
PARCEL 1: An undivided 1,.011
lnttrttt lt1 lllat -tloll ol Lot I ot Tract
No '10 11'1 llW County ol 0.0~, at -II Oft• map 1'9<0f-In 8oOll Mt, P ... l 10-II of MIKtlle-Mt!K
OI .. ,d Coulltv -•..O Otfltwd •• COntfl'IOll .,... Oft e Con-.lfllum Plan
'""'"' Ill 8ool< tt•.i. p..,_ .. Of OlflCl81 "-t•d•. Tiit rt<ONI .. ,,.., _,..,, ol IM
p,._rty -_,, ..,,.,.,,. ••
2.Stl C-r Cllll Olwrt. &I Tero.
C.llforJlllA _,. Stndrt IAe L.-.tlll. Al'f
R-lf J. LUIUMllk,
DAlEO "'°"""lltt I, 1 .. 1 Sarr-WOOCI• Hom_...,,
Br o-i. SMlfor-0
STATE OfCALIFOIOOAI , ..
COUNTY ()fl OltAHOll! I
0.. Htll. 2, 1 .. 1. MIOft -· Ott ""*~"--· t ....,, "'*IC Ill -lor wld ..... , __ .. ., ...,.9'.,
Ctwtlt ~ • .._ .. --.. Stcrtttry tf Ille torparatlell llltt
e•K.,._. lllf wltNll lfltl~, ·-le ......... "" '*""' ....,. _ .. , ..
tlle •llllln ,....,._, "' a.Mii ti ....
u rp•rttlafl tll•ttlll llAfl'ltf, t11•
t OlltWINetd lo fl'lt llltt 111(11
UrJtttllel\ tlltC\llM tlM wlllllll
IMlnllMl'tl ...-fll • I-IJ'"Wwt 9' t ,.....,..f/I ltt ... ,.f/I Dl~IOfl.
WtTNUlll'IYNIW9"19"1<MllMtl.
~ Mii TIMttly ~Nt•1am1
PullCI .... Or._ CM•I o.tty ,,IOI, NOv U ID, tJ, Dec. 4, t•ll ....... ,
O•OINAN.:~ No.tMJ
AN OllOI NANCE 01' THE CllY COUNCIL OF l HI:. Ctf Y OF IR\llNE,
AME NOINGOROINANC.£ NO. at• TO PROYIOli: FOR !HE APPOINT MEN I
0" THE 80ARO 0 1' OllllECTO RS 0' Tl1( IRlllNE INOVSlRIAL
OEVELOPME-NT AUTHORITY
WHEREAS, t11 <KCot.,.ll<e wllll 1"9 (AIOtorllia 1-.irtt l 0. ........... 1
FIM ll<lllO Act lllllt 10, comn..ac•no •1111 '-<llOn tUOO OI .... C.0--
Gocl• ol II• S4Alot• of G.illwnl•I tu.. "A.ti' 1. tflf City c-11 ,,...tea •n
lltdustrl.i Dt,,.foe>n-• A .. tllOtlly ltr 1neC.1tyo1 1rv1ne
WHEREAS. the City C-11 WltMi 10 .,_...,. • Boete OI 0.,_, tor
""" lllollustri.i Dt.,...__I Alll"°'lly, ,,.,_ INll llevo tne C-11 ...-w. • ,,,._, ...
NOW, THE Rl!FOlllE, Ille Cll'f C°""'1l-0<dA111 •• loltowt: s.,11an) ... Ofd!llAMt Ho •• , .... htr.W -.. ,_.,fol-
,,. City Gt\lftcil tNlll -•nt '"'"" ...., ......... WllD """ ....... u 1 ... &Mr• Of OtreotlOfl ot MICll 1,_ltot l 0.w'-'-t AUl!lttlly
AT1'1!$T
NaM y (. ltowl-
Cltr Cl_ di_
Cllytf trvlM
'1AT!i0,. GALlfOll"IA)
COUNfYOl'OllAHO• I
CllY Of 1111\llNIE I
O .. ldc. Siii• Mlt.,., ......
City of ,,.,, ....
I, "ANCY (. AOWUINO. City Cler" tt I.lie (.lty OI IN-, Hl It IY DO
CERtlf Y that flt ~90!119 Or~lllA~a .., .. ..--~ llt ow City
CtotllCll et tllf City Cl! trvlM et • r...A¥ -1111 -., IN t4lfl .. , el
...... mW. 1•1."' Ultt t(lflowlft&,... -· ..... AYl_S: J CX>UNCILMltltU&At· AllllllllY, VM-..ll-'-$111t
NOU: 2 COVNCIL..MEMlaf"' AOtM-C'HIOt ABS&HT COYNCl~l!MBIA&: .,._, ._,(. .........
ClfJC .... ., .. ,..,.,, ......
.. llbllW..OOr ..... C.oatl Dally PO~, ...... ,, ,., """'
~~ ---. --~---.--....... ..----~~---~----... ..--.2-----....... _ • . c11
I .
THE
fAMll.\'
c1act1
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
by 811 Keane
"Would you wake me up at six tomorrow?
That's when the cartoons start on TV." "Just In c111 the chill's too hot for you.''
'9.\RM.\Dt:IU·; by Brad Anderson
"Now I suppose you'd like the dip!"
Jl'DGE P .\RKER
l'M GOINGlO
&ET YOU OUT,
C':fARl=lfLO
ACROSS ,9 ' In -
t JlbboOm Fields'
S Gusti 53 Vast
9 LaliesN>Je 5' Metal
,, bperienoe SS ElltpM
15 Israeli dance 56 Dental
16 Bone cavities check•
t7 Au1ho< -57Gutter11te
Ambler 58 Hand toot
18 Awrove 5e For rent
19 Seat 2 words
20 Malle untidy 60 Mine outputs
22 Acts chintzy 6 t Wtngld
23 Declare
24 Move briskly DOWN
25 Keep guard 1 Get rid of
28 Of SJ>Mth 2 Equal Pref
32 Effigy 3 Rare -
33 T ffle ' ~i11111Ze
34 A·S money 5 Scoop
35 -LoulM 6 Hter1h toot
38 Slate 7 Epochal
. 37 SIMCUll • Aoutt
38 Summer tn 9 Luxuriating
Pllftt 10 Complett
39 Crowd 11 Eltmlnl
.OOeclat• ~
4' ~ 12 flm! yl9ld
'3 ~ YIPd 13 0u1cn ""'' 44 Ettl' bto1t1tt 2 1 °'VI lt!Out
46 WNttld 22 Piii
..... ,,... 24~
BUI I'D LIKE TO
DO IT WITHOUT
HURTING THE
WINDOW BLINP
BUT APPROACH
IT FROM A
l>IFF~T AN<5LE: ..
UNITED Featu1e Syndicate
Thursday's Puzzle Solved
5 . ' .. ~. l "0 MA
) " A I E fV i l
' c: I II .. f l l
I I 4 E II l' -10-
C I I I l llO 0
A 'H l ( Oil 0
" I D ... ,
• • • I T 111 1 l
' I IT I II II
I •• El
All I -o-
E I E I I I ' I I " ~ I •
I fl
E E I !
25 Stacl!td
29 VIOHn mltctf
27 s.ci ..
28~1~
29 Of pile.ti
30 Clloltf IC
31 Gambel
33CINYIS
JeAlron'•
btoctw
37011Ntlt
3181.....C
40 8edlllt
~ r r! :.?. t --H .. l l u
42 Argue
43 Sult
45 Centdlen
riwr
48 Optnif'IO
47 Elephtnt'I .. ,
48USSA ...
•tAi.tum
50Aot1tn
51 Ctltlt aound
52 ExlCIMCI ....... ..__..__..__~
54Zodlellgn
a
Hank Ketchum
by Jim Davis
IT'S TMIN65 LIKE H-U51MAT
LET VOU KNOW WMERE VOU
STAND IN Lll=E
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
... EVSR WONDER
WHAT SUE's 1HINKING
WHEN s~~ SEES )bu?
~~))
-..
£S§§51
PEANIJT8
STOP ~WIN6 OH
'(OUR PENCIL, SIR ..
TtMBl.EttEED8
AUN"f HU .. C'E WAN"'IS 'bU 10
HAVe 1li15 Piece OF
MINCE
PIJ:.
SHOE
NANCY---
YOU'VE
BEEN IN
THAT
TUB FOR
TWO
HOURS
Fl'NK\' •INKERB~AN
5TATE '5 LEFf END HIT "ffiE.
OOA~BACK ~ AND WA5 ~EN PICKED UP At-JO 'Tfi~
101M€ GroU~ PJ;CW£ OFT~E.
oo:EN51VE UNEJVIE>J !
WMI( ~OVl.0 IT
BOTHER ~.MARCIE ?
NO .•• IF l'rl ACCeP1' rr,
~E'P "TWISI rr-ro MMN
rM INm!:s~t' IN HER.
by Tom K. Ryan
HOW swsr OF '1:>t) NOT
-Tt> V//W1Ml!10 ,_ ! WMMOOT UIFTDveRS
I'M TRYING
SOMETHING
NE\./---
I 'M KNITTING YOU A
PRESENT THAT I
WANT TO BE A
REAL SURPRISE
c--·-~ ...
by Jeff MacNelly
by Tom Bat1uk
50 WE.'U.. HAVE OFFotm~
PENAL.11E.5 !
ROO&HlN& 1HE ~ ...
AND PA561N6 lHE ~~ !
I
i
! !
:t
i i
i l
I
!
11·'7
by Kevin Fagan
1'1hS IS AL~'f Lll(E: t!tlMb
001" Otol ~ QA'ft:
lllrf~ ~~Q-4 1
0 11-'11 --------
0
'T"HA1"' MeDICAL..
"fAeL..eAu HASN''f"
MOVeD FOR oveR
AN HOUR/
I HAVE~ ADMIT-
TrlERE 8 ONE \J'CR'/
GcOO 1fttt-G PBJOT rr
by George Lemont
Tits spider
planl u
Al tlrat glance, the t==:;iiiii
1pld•r plant <sometimes
called lhe airplane plant
be cause of its
appearance) reminds us
of a plush fountain of
leaves that radiates out
from the center of a
container in an arching
manner above and over
the sides of the pot. But
there Is more to this
plant as there are tong
stems that s hoot
outward and cascade
•below the main plant.
Unusual and graceful
in appearance , the
s pider plant
<C hloroph y tum
cosmosum ) is one of
those ·easy-to·care for
houseplants.
Not only does the
s pider plant give you
planllets to easily grow
new pla nts from by
placing them in soil or
water to root bot tiny
white flowers will also
appear along the stems
enhancing it~ beauty
even more.
To get the best results
with your spider plant,
keep the soil evenly
moist, not con~tantl y
saturated; place 1t in a
location that receives
good light; and feed it
o n a regular schedule
with diluted ltquid
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Friday, November 27, 1981 Cll
For the person who has it all
The OrnJthogalum ta a bulb flower that doe1
Just as well outdoors aa it will lndoora where,
depending on the apecie uJed, lt can take on
dramatic dimensions ln looks with its floppy
leaves and star·sbaped flowers colored white and
areen.
The Omithogalum umbellatum Ls known as
the Star of Bethlehem which wlll have 12 to 20
one·lnch nowers in a cluster atop a one.foot stem.
It can be left undisturbed in the 1arden for
years and will continually produce its own new
bulbs. Outside you can plant them In s un or Ught
shade and ln almost any soil.
Space the bulbs six lo eight lncheB apart
covering. them with two to three inches of soil If
they're about l 'h inches wide. But if you choose
the large three or four inch bulbs plant them to a
depth of four to six Inches.
As a houseplant, make sure they 1et at least
four hours or s unlight each day from a brightly lit
window and feed them monthly with any standard
houseplant fertillzer
The pregnant onion, Ornlthogalum caudatum,
is planted for its bulb and leaves but does have
small green and while flowers . Under ideal
conditions, the leaves can irow down t\ve feet and
Its large bulb grows on lop of the soil not in it
making it quite unui1ual to look at growing In pots
lo the home.
The light requirement for this plant is the
same as the Star or Bethlehem. Just be sure to
keep both them happy with water as they wlll lose
their leaves If they endure an extended ti me
without water
These bulbs make excelltmt pol plants and
therefore, a dirterenl and unusual gift to someone
who has .. everything." If you're interested be sure
and ask about lhe m the next lime you a re visiting
your nursery.
111111111
CHICllllT
BARE·ROOT ROSES
ARRIVING SOON ••.
• Sweet alyssum can be
:.eiv. n from seed over bulb
bed' and the) 'II bloom with the bulbs nexl :.pnng
• Cool SPason pcrt<nn1al vege1<1bles c•an be planted
no'' artichokes .
abparagubandrhubarb
• Spray rrull tree!> this
month to vrevent fungus
d1!.cusc and insert pests
... uch a" '>Cale • Ir \OU re pruning or
n·muving all plant matt•r1al
1nlt•elt·d w11h f1reblight in
the la~l year. b<' bure to
dt,tnlt·c·t '0111 11run1ng tools
afll'r each c·ut to not ~pread
11 further
' lit> :.Uf'l' 10 rel'd YOUr
annuals u' 1hev bN;ome
l''>l abhshl'<I ·
PRICES START AT '5.98 •••• LESS 150/e
()yer to YlrletlH
N0.1 OMO£
be~-,...
wUlerrt" before Chrtatm11.
LIVING CHRISTMAS TREES •••
A WISE INVESTMENTI
Properly tubbtd and cartd for, your
ltvlng "" may bt uMd year atteryear.
Select tarly ••• ChooH from:
ALEPPO PINES • STONE PINES
MONTEREY PINES
PRICED FROM 12.50 TO 79.00
fertilizer once a month .'ip1dt'r plu11t '·' 11w11111111 ,,, ht!ut1t !J
Planning brings colorful winter
When you live in C<lhfom1a, you a can
have a colorful winter. All 1t takes 1s a
little planning.
On the annual scene. you can rely on
fairy primroses. rceland poppies. violas
and pansies and even sweet alyssum They
cover those bare bulb bed!. with a blanket
of color until the spring blooming bulbs
burst into their own s how of color .
They can be potted up for spots or color
wherever you need and want the m You
can also plant them in and around
sh r~ to ~mpHm..,t evergreen
foliage.
There are also lovely shrubs that bloom
profusely from late O ct o ber into
February. There are the pink a nd red
Scotch heathers Give them an acid soil
Another bright spot 1s the flowering
maple This evergreen with maple·hke
leaves prod uce:. a profusion of fiery
orange to·red bell s h aped blooms
throughout the year m milder chmates of
our state To see the tender beauty or the
flowering maple m m1d·winter is always a
pleasure
Certainly no garden should be without
winter color from t'amell1as and azaleas.
There are cert.am varieties of these two
tiutl ...OJI bloom oil and on aJI winter long.
The ~t way lo choose them is Lo visit a
nursery and select yours from plants that
a re alread) m bloom
Australian fuchsia 1Correa pulchella>. It is
less known than man y of the olhet
rtowering shrubs bul well worth a place in
your garden.
It 1s <i s preadin g evergreen with
two.toned leaves deep green tops
gray.green undersides -and bell·shaped'
pink blooms that somewhat resemble lb~
fu chsia fl ower.
Then. too, there are various deciduous
shrubs which bloom later but still weU ill
advance of sp ring like the quinces,
magnoUas and dogwood. Check with your
member of the California Association or
Nurserymen. He will convince you that
flowers really do bloom in Cahrorma in the
dead of wtnter.
OAK BARRELS
lT' DEEP 24" DIA.
Sturdy, anracttvt wtl!Aty
halMNlrrtll. Great for
living Clutttmas trHll
Many ottler planter uHa.
Ha1lis\•~s
Nursery -Florist
2640 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
and a fair share of the s un.
An evergreen shrub that 1s valued for its
long \.\1n ter.rto"'er1ng habit 1s the liii~jlijjiiil~jijiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•!~s::-~-~-: .. -i --A .... -~-D-E-~-s--i·:::-... -=-.-----.::=====!=L=~,~_~D~~"~~D!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!• 5
garden shop
~ ) . r .
~
Merchandise Reduced
ALL SIZES OF STOCK
•VINES •FLOWERING
• SHRUBS • GROUND COVERS
• HEDGES • PEST CONTROLS
•POTTERY •FERTILIZERS
•REDWOOD •BOUGAINVILLEA
•JUNIPERS •STAR JASMINE
DELIVERY AVAILABLE ON
LARGE ORDERS
11622 WARNER AVE. FOUNTAIN VALLEY
Piiot Logbook -I ·1 p·1 .._ Candid commentarie1
exclusively in the II y I DI
LIVINQ
·.:CHRISTMAS TREES
Aleppo, Colo. Blue Spruce.
It. Stone. Norfolk. Mondell
over 200 to choose
Premium Grade
18" to 7 ft .
FROM $9 95
A Forest of Plants to CHEER
YOUR Home and Garden for
tbe CffO~l'DA'YS
m•ay uausu•l
v'rieties
1070 Newport Blvd. :
Costa Mesa
548-0137
M · F 8·5 Week End 9·5
Pansies & Violas
199-'I"
69!
Kello99's
Topper
J CL ft.bog
lecj. '5"
K ellogc]'s
Gromulch
2 cu. ft.
Reci. S4.39
A ...._ed l_.t~ ,.,.., .. --
O"d -· ,......, .... --_.... ............ c-,. -"'"'" -Ir. J • ...,,...ct.Jlfl"fldeo'°""""~ ,,_.,,.,.... ~ -~O'd--·_._t..i._.....,..,
.... ~~.,...._ ..... odo\ tioO #'t"WO
~·· tpO".,d ·~ Al.o • ., •• ,.h ......_. O"d-. c-~ Ql'CHW\
HOW 24 .._ c.•-l_ 2 0010 off noo ~ ...
"·"' < ~
j f \ ,
1,) . \ # . -. ' . . . . . , .......
~ ..... Mc.
~1 .... . " . .... ,. . . -'
IFree Dehveiy within.
5 male Radius
All ITEMS8UBJECT TO STOCI< ON HANO S.le ~ ttwouQh 12·H1 ~
Uold's Nursery and Landscape Co. Inc. _'y I VJS4• -202 S. Hewport 11¥d. Cat lay St.J o,.. Mot1.·Set. 1 ·•·to l :lo , ...
C~ta ~ .... CA 646-7441 s.. M ,. •.
FROM Fash ion Island
Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR'
l
§g as on 0
. • ..
a
I
l~~~~~~~~..--
2e· p 514) • 4 Panel Mirror
for Small Cars & Mini Trucks
3.5.(1.51 ') • 5 Panel Mirror
for Large & Intermediate
Size Cars & Trucks
• 1 o'~ MINK 11 ~.!'
I TOOLBOX
I
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INTER DYNAMICS
DIAL-A-PRESSURE
AIR COMPlllSSOR
12V Air
Compressor
with Gouge
Rugged Construdion &
Large Capacity. Has Tote
Trav with Socket Divider.
18" x 8" x 9•,
17~?
ftREPUMP
High Pressure. 30%
• more c~pocity.
• Standard Fittings for
tires, bikes, bolls &
inflatables. '
~11\1181•
Auto Supply
Wl'RI HILPINCI YOU DO n lllOHl'I
DAILY9·91
IAT. 9-61 JUN. 9·6
WI WILL• GOllD
111.tMmclMNG DAY
NOVIMBa 26, 1981
CASTROL GTX I
MOTOR OIL
lOW-40
OR
20W-50
LIMIT 24
H igh performance QUARTS
ALARM
ANES-compi. .. KJt
combfne1 a
HI/low
Evr~n
Polle•
Interceptor
hC ...... i¥-.--_ ----:1 E~:~
33~~ #RC33
STANT-
For most
' vehicles.
With 2
303
OFF
FLOOR MATS
I
I
I
I
TWIN
REAR
#64S1FC 6 ss I
PAIR I
RUBBER QUEEN
Deepcutpile TWIN ass Bf~~~~"o~d~lack, FRONT .•
Beig_e, or Red. #64SOFC _PAIR
MOTORCRAFT
OIL FILTER
Spin-on Oil
C -'":"\ Filter for most
• Ford Products J""" IJ''' ,.~ Long life
-. ~ ~ quality oil
filters. #Fl-1 A .
WINDSHIELD
WIPER
BLADES
I
.I
I
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24~? ·299
EA formulated for hotter motor oil specially 9 5 ~249
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#GEC-17
llAT1111Y TlllMlllAL
CONNECTORS
~
Two bolt solderless type.
Easy to install.
#6482681
Two brushes for terminal
& coble connectors.
-I
I
I !.~9EA Cleans dirt & corrosion.
.99eA
#6488738
I
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KASCO MAIN I ENANCE FREE
BAllERIES /E,==~~51 FOR MOST CARS & TRUCKS
22FMF-60 (315 CC AMPS} 37~,H
24MF-60 (41 0 CC AMPS)
24FMF-60 (410 CC AMPS)
I 60MOlml
12 VOLT
42MF-60 (365 CC AMPS) 44 ••
71 MF-60 (390 CC AMPS)
74MF-60 (41 0 CC AMPS) EXCH
~~~~F~i!g5c~c~~l 4ft88
73MF-60 (480 cc AMPS) T EXCH
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••
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••
•
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.~A CAS!A!\'~!!;~RS ~ FOR PASSENGERCARS ONLY
CHEVROLET -CHEVY II· CHEVELLE 1965-'67 2388
6 Cylinder 1 BBL Corburetors fXCH
CHEVROLET -CHEVY II· CHEVELlE 1965-'67 8 Cylinder 2BBL
Carburetors. FORD -FALCON-FAIRIANE· COMET-MAVERICK·
MONTEGO· MUSTANG· TORINO 1965-'72 6 Cylinder l BBL
Carburetors (bcept 240 Engine & 1971 -'72 with 250 Engine).
FORD -FALCON· FAIRIANE· COMET-MUSTANG 2 88
1964-'67 8 Cylinder 7BBL Carburetors (b cept 390 •
Engine) I EXCH
CHEVROLET -CHEVY II· CHEVEllE-CAMARO· NOVA 1968-'75
6 Cylinder 1 BBL Carbureton. FORD -FALCON-3288
FAIRIANE· COMET· MUSTANG 1968·'69 8 Cylinder
2BBL Corburetors. fXCH
FORD -FAlCON-FAIRIANE· COMET· MUSTANG· MONTEGO·
TORINO 1970-'72 8 Cylinder 2B8L Carburetao 351 ·400 Engine
(bcept 1971with400 Engine). CHEVROLET-3 4 88
CHEVY fl. CHEVELLE-CAMARO 1968 8 Cylinder
2B8L Carburetors EXCH
CHEVROLET -CHEVY II· CHEVEllE 1969-'73 2BBL Carbwetors
(Except 1971 350-400 Engine with Standard Tronsmission). FORD -
FAIRIANE· COMET· MUSTANG-MONTEGO-3888 TORlt-40 1970-'73 8 Cylinder 2B8L Corbureton with
302 Engine (bcept 1972 with Standard Transmission) EXCH
CHEVROLET -CHEVY 11-CHEVElLE· MONTE CARLO· 1966-'72
8 Cylinder QUAD Carburetors (bcept Corvette-Comaro with 327
Engine & 1966 with 283 Engine, & 1970 A/T with 396-,S-4 Engine I
FORD -FAIRlANE· FALCON· COMET· MUSTANG 1965-'69
8 C~nder 488L Carburetors (Except 429 Engine, S2!8
1965 with 289 Engine, 1966 with 352 Engine,
1969 with 390 Engine and Holley Cor~reton). EXCH
Anaheim
1280 N. Euclid
(S. of H~. 91 )
772-9840
Costa Mesa
1739 Superior Ave.
642-33~
•flullerton
141 E. Imperial
(714)738-6971
1 •Ana heim I 2340 W. Lincoln Av.
999-1 621
•fo untain Valley
9880 Worner Ave.
(71 4)964-6427
•Fullerton
2978 Yorba Linda
(71 4 )996-4780
EA hig ~er-revving a QT
engines. • e ~•••••••"'
GREASE FLARES GUN OLIN-
PRESSOL-15 Minute
Fusee
Flares.
#0715
~
.59EACH
WINDSHIELD
WASHER -MECHANICS
Pre mixed.
.. 1 Ready to use.
l Gallon
.99
~ #349M
PYLON-Sizes to fit
most cars & trucks.
Easy to replace,
natural rubber, steel
ribbed, replaces
original equipment .
1 .49
ONE COMPLETE BLADE
OR TWO REFILLS
CARBURETOR &
PARTS CLEANER =erryman
•~i:;;~;~~ •"·~m.. ENGINE F:Ertfd~=t,, II c~~~~ Maximum
1 .~ PRESTONE
'em out
clean.
~-;>#241M
S!!AL II Spray on performance
Hose off. & fuel , economy.
;~~~~;, 98 Ul1 12
,1•.... Helps .'tc:>p
tronsm1ss1on
seal leaks.
~-1 ~!. ··~ ·-. -~~=-=~ ~:::~::-16 oz. #833 WITH DIP 6ASKET
#AS255
FUEL PUMPS
MASTER -NEW, NOT REBU ILT
FOR MOST CHEVROLETS (Except CORVETTE) 8 Cylinder
1959-'77 (283-302-307-305-350 Engine ass
Except Early 1966 & Late 1967 CHEVELLE),
6 Cylinder 1963· '77 EA
FOR MOST FORDS 8 Cylinder 1966-'77 (289-302-351 Engine
Except Mustang Boss), 6 Cylinder 1966-'78
(Except V-.6).DODGE/PLYMOUTH 8 Cylinder 1 oaa
1964-'75 (318-361-383 Except EA
Hi-Performance)
SINGLE -Chevrolet 1962-'66 (Without
Metallic lining).
198~
DUAL -Chevrolet 1967-'74 (Equipped with Drum Brakes). Chevrolet 1973· '77 Equipped with Power & Disc Brakes (Except
Corvette Chevette, Mon1a, Vega). Ford with drvm brakes
1967-'72 (Except Pinto). Ford lTD, TorinoL. Fairlane, Elite!
Ronchero with Power & Disc Brakes 1973-'78 (txc. with 4 Whee
Disc & 1976 S/W with Hydro Boost}. Buick,
Oldsmobile, Pontiac 1967-'74 with Drum 1688 Brakes. Dodge, Plymouth 1967·'75 with
Orum Brakes. EXCH
KJll{ABlll
Auto Supply .
WE 'RE HELPING YOU DO n RIGHT • ==
HYDRAULIC
VALVE UFTIRS
HEAVY DUTY
BRAKESHOES ·
McQUAY ~ ~ NORRIS.-For
most FORD,
CHEVY,&
DODGE/
PLYMOUTH with
6 or 8 cylinder
(Except hi·
KASCO
For most
passenger cars.
Set of 4 for 2
wheels.
2pe3i
EA 3~!
DISC BRAKE PADS
•La Mirada
l 5081 Imperial
(213)947 -5641
•Mission V
24510 Alicia
951-917
KASCO -Made of highest
quality dry mix ingredients.
Suited to the severest road &
traffic
conditions .. For 5 1 9
most American
or Import cars.
Set for 2 SET wheels.
Orange
1100 N. i ustin
(Across from
Post Office n1.3000
•Riverside
. l 0403 Magnolia Av
(714 )359-3041
•Santa Ana
2604 S. Bristol St.
(one block S. of
Warner Ave.)
754-1432
•santa Ana
1302 E. 17th St.
953-6061 Bue na Park
5256 Beach Blvd.
(ot Malvern across
from K·Mart)
(714)994-1320 PRICES EFFEC11VE THROUGH WEDNESDAY, DE
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llllJPllat ~
'frld1y1 November27, 1981 Furniture is bought and sold ~ . every day with a classification
8050 ad.
I .... h.... Ho.wt For Wt ....... For Wt ......... For w. ...... ,., Wt ....... For w. HoltMIForWt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
' ' .. ........ I 002 ChMrtl I 002' Ge•rtl I 002 Gt•rel I OOJ G...,., t002 .... , .. 1002
••••••••••••• ·········~············· ...................••.•...•...........................•••........•••• ···········~··········· ..•....... .....................................
REAl lSTATC .\< ......... ~ ... """'* ... fQf '·~ t..~':7:'~"· t•"""'''' Leh Ct~Pf• ~==~:h ~-l •"''•lt ...................
tlll("MW "eptr\j ,......,,,..,,.,,h
l.obllltl.>lt M•tt Hft\f ltlr ,,,..
M~n Otur\ Mtw11 Ofa,ttu Pttiu ~"'~~~:~°' ...... r.,M\. t,,.1-.i.f
I ....
IWI
::: EQUAL HOUSING
:: OPPORTUNITY
Holl
:: ............ HGHu:
OPEN HOUSI SUNDAY l·S
6122 5"CKAID, H.1.
North of Sl1ttcr, West or Goldenwest.
Lovely Franciscan Fountain 4 BR. 2
Ba. family rm w/fpl c, lndry rm ,
garden kitchen, <'eram1c counter and
baths. 1900 sq.rt. on one lloor. Exec.
area near central park and library.
$175,000. Xlnt terms. Ask for Barbara
Bandoli or J oan McNally
COLONIAL REAL ESTATI ltl-2636
:: All re a l utete ad
:: v e r t 1 s e d I n t h 1 s
1\4• newspaper is subject lo
:: lhe Federal f'air ffollS·
:: Ing Act or 1968 which
1• makes ll 1llegal to ad ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!! ~:: vertise "any preference. -
11 li m1 t1t1on. or dis
<'rim1natlon based on
1E ~:~.e</~~~~on~?~~i~~:
:: or an intention lo make ,..,. any such prererence.
: .. hm1tat1on, or dis ,., cnminatlon ·•
""'
SI 12,000
CASH OUT! Newport B eac h
townhome. owner
desparate' Want.soul! 2
Bdrm. 2 bath, single
story A bargain' Call
DO\\'! 646. 7171
THE REAL
ESTATERS
ZONED DUPLEX
$117 500!
3 Bdr older ~ome on de
ep R 2 lot Excell rental or build out a duplex•
Name your terms' Low
dn payment OK1 Cull rast Buh Burdick . agt
759·1221
4 BEDROOM
$105,950 ••al Ut•• Ev"•,.c• ._,., tai.t• • ...... STEPS TO •£NrALS SEC u~
lJOO This newspaper will not
t"'i knowingly accept any =: advertising for real
:: estate wh1rh is tn viola -.. ti_on_Qflhela~ __ Cosl.i Mei.a bar~a111 ' 4
Bdrm. 2 bath With 20'. down payrnents al $999
per mo Interest t2i,•: ,....,.., f••••""' L ~ lliCH! ........ l•'-•""·-!: EIRORS: A&herttMn Obtainable loan or :~t!~~O: >"~'n ~~ sltCNlld check their ads $250,000 at 13-·1% ~ Let c...,..,.•m• • •1 .i<ll daflM Of9d _..... .,.. seller rarry back large ~== r~;· ~ ., . ·r-. 2nd on t.tus out.It anding
._ ... r... 1'-loJ ron IM..ctiahly. Tit. North Laguna Beach 4
A must see. call now
546-2313
W L~J J:Y ;-.;
TAYLOR CO.
HE A LTUH S ·,1111·t· l ~M B
FOR LEASE-SI 200 MO.
New listing. Big Cyn Townhome with
exeiting golf course view. Unfurn. El
Dorado Model with 3 bdrms, dining
rm & 21"2 baths. Pool. jacuzzi & tennis.
WISLEY N. TAnOI CO .. REALTORS
21 11 S• Jooquif1 Hilt Rood
NEWPORT CENTER. M.I. 644-491 O
OHEOFAKIND
Localed m Cogta Mesa
this 3 Bdrm home 1s
highly upgraded.
Amenitiel> include pool,
rustom spa. tn·law unit,
sauna. add·on ram1ly
room . remodeled
kitchen and more As·
)ume $115,000 tn loans
Asking Sl78.000
TRr\DITIO\,\l.
~ 75 .. 1111
ASSUM.AIU
11 l/•o/o LOAN
Anxious seller oHt'r)
best buy in Mesa Verde
J Bdrm + family dmtn~
room . 011 quiet cul d" M1t· with RV 3l'l'l'~5
$1 39.900 Owner ... 111
rarry 2nd
REALTORS
67J-JJ.l..'
LOAN ASSUMmOM: CDM ~lea with
9ood flftoftc*J. Eoct. _,. 3 bcfnw 2 both,
fo111lly rooftl. CloH to Htrythlng ot
S429,500.
COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS
2515 f.. Coast Hwy .. CCM"OH def Mor
675-5511
NO DOWN
or TRADE
CUSTOM
RANCH --OH..~ RHLTOR S
I
HoltMIForW. . Holtw1ForWt ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ...., .. IOOJ A ' • 1002 -·-·,_ • •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
LINDA ISi.i HOMIS
Prtislige pool family home. Ma in
cha nne l view from bea utiful
traditional. 4 bdrm, S bath home. Slip
, .. ,r 2 lar ge boats. $1,495,000.
Wide lagoon view from spec~ar ular
architectural design 6 bdrm, 5 bath,
playroom. dark room & den. Slip for 2
large boats. $1 ,350,000.
LIDO ISi.i 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 recreation room & 2 patios Beam
ceilings. Great for fam ily li ving
Excellent value at $420,000.
PEHIMSULA ,OIMT IEACHFROHT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge. from prime large lot, 4 bdrm.
3 bath custom h~me. 3700 sq. rt
featuring marine room . $1,385,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
)41 !loy\•d•· O"v•· N R bl', t.161 ~.';,,.l"f ~ DAILY PtLOT ClltmNI Bdrm rustom home ~=: ~::;-::., .. !"~ labllty for h fint Hear the surf and watch tmdil1 Rl./\l.T \'
63 1-7370 759-1616
PLUS separate guest
home with lenms t·ourt
and pool on IS a1·res has
been subd1' 1ded into -i lot~ 9', inl loan "~
\Umabl(· or trade for
homl• or lot m Newpurt
fll'ach or l.ugtmu full
prire $975,000
U11iqueUdo
la¥front HCNM ....:.··----...-----------L' n Ii e ( 1 e' a b I e 7 k r ..
lnve1ton Pride ON THE WATER Of Ownership 'lO ON. equity share. 1st 20•: down seller \\di
:::•, ao... "'~ incorrect lnsertlo• the waves break on the ,_ 11 .. ..,, ~ oMy beaeh from the large
'"'"'°" ..... 1. !i,., Large lot provides many
~':"..!~:':~.... " .. , · deck or master suite.
~~~:..';' ... "'ii;~· := uses Only S68S,OOO A ~.a'!.J ::z HottsH for Sak I must l-0see1
l,..._,,.J ltc-M•I t UJ 1 · • e •••et e e e • • e e e e • e e e e e
C 0 M duplex. So. or lime buyers. J bd · I ba · rarry II()'« l!;t at 12•, 1
PC II 3 Br 2 Ba·2 Br I only ss.t.00> prin onl) bdrm. 21'1 bathi. plu~
Ba Assumable loans I Call 6!1-400 Kathy a1'nl murh more• INCLL'Ul-:s 1-----111111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!119 owe pJper Seller WE NlfTI LAND' l:m.IXXI'
leasebat•k Br, exthangl' I ,.... · lo•oa lay Prop.
Agent. 714 644 9513
Colonial ~lyle hom1· "" the water with :i 11unch
hcut·h in front' F;,n
l:t\l1t' locauon' S1lUJlt·d 1 oil O\•erstled lot and nt':\I
to i:reenbelt frend1 door~ Ol>t'fl from tari:t•
h11ng roomtothe ... Jll't
(';in hl' bplit into 5 Hr
home 11nd a lar)!l' I 2 Hr
llrl\'ale unit O~ner "'II .t~Sl~l IO fm.tnC'IOg
equ1t) for h-Ome in CI>M We can no 1<>nger :irrord Rcalton
For :i ppt. call Nan I to mah paymenLR on 675 70
~".t ~ ... ,. ~:: Geeerol I 002
MiM' l~.t.b tl.AJ •••••• e •• •••••••••• •••• BUSINESS, INVCST LET'S T ALIC
MfNT, FINANCE ,... About Lh1s 4 Bdrm home Fryer. agl 7~ 1221 our 4 Bd 21, Bu Wt•st<'lirr 1,.111!!11!1*1!91!!11._ll6•0l!I•.--
' home. Askini: $249,000 1---I :::::::~:,:.:; ,.,. with one year home war :::::::~,:i· '!; ranly Won l last at 67S.l41 I =:t ~!:'.:. ~ Sl20.000 Owner will help l-~~!![11!!!!11!!!!!!••!!!!!!1 14"'1«•an rn, An wnh lhl' financing also
AllNOUllCCMENTS. l For a good conversation.
rtRSONAlS & call 979 ~o ~zl!.~!.' rouNo .~·: I: A LL STA TE
~.i, 'r'::.'.:; ~. REAL TORS -· .... 4«till Ci.ta.• ,.J Tt•"_.. ..'"'~ l SERVICES ADORAILE ~·~I AMD AffOl.DAILE "'t"''f l)trtt1(.l('
£MPLOYMENT &
rt£PAUTION ..,,,....,""''•U. J .............. ............... ,
MERCHANDISE
~ .. _.
4~1 ..... ( ......... :::~y.._.,,.1•h ( •INU.•• £q\il.t,'l•h.t , ... , ,_ ,, .... v .. , ....... .. r.11--, ......
I-Good• J, .. ,.,.,.
Uw"1ort ,,., ........ , "''" ... ....,, "''"'lfflMeOwl .... 1,.4 'l•n•ul tmtf'-..rwlh Ofhct n..r-4 u. .. 1t1 .....
=~?,~~~ ...,., .. ,_.,.
~Ort lll:na~rol fl•· ~:T.o.a,H1r1 \ortot1
BOATS & MAllN[
EQUIPMENT ._, .. ...... ,. ..... ...,.., ...
8u4..11M.,,...J'911•1 Bo.tt ..... f'f 1'cNtJ ftr-!'te ("ifln'• -.s.~ ., .. , q,,. IJorh
~r.:,:s-·
TIAllSPOITA TION
"'''"" ( •""Pin s.~ "" .... UH\ntf.an
-c,doo StOOIH\0
"-""' HM• ~'' ltt111i tr.u.n r,., .. ,
!:!~t!!.~·!··~.,h
AUTOMOBILE c.. ... ,.,
.\.lltlllf"' \.l•.01..-\
flf"f'IUhO. \f''t.u ir1' "'°""' • .,. -··1· ... .....,l>thO
""''' '\•• 4MOL#i6.11lll\ ""'* WtJHf'd AUTOS, IMPORHD
'••twu! '~" kii ... 11 , ... , .... ,. .... ,. •» ..
\• .. Clctw. '"'' O•t..11t11 >f'f'h rl >1•1 H1""1•
J4i:-.J111 J.111 .... fi
~., ........ ·" ' L.t--.. .,.,. ,.,,,...-. .......... ....
Wl.M ..... ,
t'•ftlr .!
11t"'U""''I P.w,,n..
Hm.wll at~1,M'l)tt
M•ttfif
........ r.,. ... . ,, .... _...,.,
\!'111\, ... ,, ..
\vh..t
AUTOS, llEW
AUTOS. USED
l1•"9f4I .... ......
, .. t.01 .. . ·"'•'• ,,... ......
t'-'''"°' tu"'rt \ f\NU,,..1\lfl
'Uf\f'th
t. Wfl•• . ...._,,.. ... , .. ...,..,
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"""'"" .. iNotlirthl'fJOt•
l'n"ff
l'h"":M'l" ,., .... l.f
"'-lr•hl/~ , ...
""•~Mt
I
A tastefully redecorated
:l Rdrm home With a one
• }tar old roof and R\'
• !>pal'e Seller may as!>1~t
U1 r1nancuig All this for
•• $126,000 Call no~.
• 11 979·S370 ~· 5 ALLSTATE
... REALTORS
Nice, Easy, Cozy!
7210
''· , ... • • Dr• r ~ tt1 "' I~ lh·~ purr,
:. ~ rP.11f'Vitbl~ QUiii' '··· fASY' 'iluJI P6•h o,et11on ~\
:·;: y<iu '"" fhrn •n lo 101111 ffowpr
; , Qu•I' 'J•· ~ n ''"'"~ 1nle<l1n
''" '"i o "''~' fun ,,n line, ro
: ~ '"'alP "!""" l'IC N'Ch o~• ..
I,
S2.00 IClf P¥~ paltl'fn Acll!
SO' Pach patlein lo• PGslm
... 1nn h3ndl n~ Send . ,to·
Ahtt 81ools
NHdlecreft Dept. 105
Dally Piiot
Bot 161, Old CIWfJ Sb., lie•
YoR, llY 10113. P11nt llame,
,. " Add rm, llp, Pattm llumbe1 ~;:'.. -1982 llttdlemft ~I.aloe; J
~ lrl't pafletns 1nS•dt 170 be\t
,.., 1x~h dolls quills '"°'''
;;:· ~"'' C1oche! lmb1odf• SI ~O
-AU CWT IOO«S. .SZ.00 ~
:. All .... llld Cltator-ldd 50t
IN '"" IOf Po111c• 111d handhn1. .;:ti 13S.Dolls I Clollttl Oil Parade = J.14-14 ~ abcl1111t Qlllt:s •·• Ill f ISIUOll Haftlt Qlfftrn1
..11 U2~11t0nllftab
131~. ~ Qii~ts -------•I l~d '11' [.ay TllMlen 12'-(-.,. Pmtnnrt Qwilts
Fer ·Ad Action
Cila
= 1aa11
7
1 H-fhnfly Cnfly no..trs
121.tlhw Sllow-Ofh
lll-CIOdlet •illl ~
117.US, Alt flf ~
llU. ...... llZ.fria .,....
l I J.[_, Alt flf ....,_ CttcMI
110.1' Jiffr .. ......... ..,... . l,, ...... ...
) ......... ...... =:;.,...,
SS
3 BDR NEWPORT
2-sty $189,000!
Lo" est pmed 3 llr 2 12
Ba condo 111 rumple"' r ... o q' wht lt>1 el enl'I
l:lrdl!e tul dt-'Jl'. pool
& lennh Lo" do"n o ... nl'r to ea rl\ balanrc
.Joiz tu bt>arh' ~tot11 .ited
'Ir take ad1;intilj!e ' Call
Bob Burd1d •. Jgt
759 t2:?1
EASTSIDE
CHARMER Super cute 3 Udrm 2
bath ~harmer on larj!e R·2 lot One or a kind for
onh $124 !150 Call
546 i313
THE REAL
ESTATS:RS
The NOW Coat!
MESA VERDE
BUCCOLA Exel'ulive built homl'
with double door enlr> .
leads into formal 1111n~
room form3I dining
room hul!e ram1h
room. 'tooe fireplat·1·.
1·ountr} k1Lrhen All
overlooks spertal'Ular
pool and spa. Elegant
master suite. 3 other
large bdrms. plus J den
with bu11lin boolH·a~e~ Trul) an e'Cerut1~e homt•
for only $299.000 o~ner
will help with finanrinJe
Call now, 546-2313
THE REAL
ESTATERS
NEWPORT GLEN
ONLY SI 36,900
/\ssome 911.200 at 12',
o~ ner will rarn· 2nd•
f'orm:il d1n1n)l
fircpla r e. welbar
Sparkhnl( pool and ~pa'
l"all Loday673·8S50
, fl4!sU
I DECORATOR
. COHD0-$85,000 O.,,r/'J~....&.L · rormer model rondo in
•
SIZES 8-10
i~ lff e...; ...... llf~-t ....
mint l·ond1l1on Ho~ts
I It'" s Of greenbelts and
sw1mm1ng pool. Owner
will c:irry ftnancinl( with
low down Call now.
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
114-631-6990
HARBOR VIEW
ONLY $235,000
Owner will carry large
2nd' Co1y country
kitchen. 3 large bdrms
Fabulous } ard features
bubbling spa. BBQ and
pal10 healer' Fee land
Call today. 67J.8.550
tt4SD
Sub"'it your oww tenM.
Derer pan of monthly
p:iyment on this charm
ing Balboa Island home
1111 Hcrdtsty, RJtr
675-21,6
from lht dtto squ11u1mhole I _ __
10 t~t w1ai>Pfd •a1st hefts the m> D<iebouf cuuar coal cowtllif you wanl B B
IOI no• sp11n1. a11y seaSOll F11h1 (]'{ & each
inllalion -5" 11 )'Ourself' Red !Estate
P11nted Pattern 9338 Misses DOVER SHOR~ •
S11es 8 10 12 U 16 18 20 Exreptlonally well bulll
S11e 12 (bust 3'l11kts ,.., JJlds and maintained four
5• inch fabr1t bedrooms. Stlmulallng
StM Sl.00 fir teell ~. view of Back Bay. moun M4 SO$ for ,... "'1tra lit taios and night Ughta postate •d lla1141irla, S.d le: Owner movll'!g north:
MARIAll MARTtll Hi & h I y moll val ed
Pattern Otpl, '42 $371,400 FEE
Oaltyflltot '31-7300 M.l.t
m w.st 11111 SL, lltw '°"' "' "======= 10011. Prillt llAlll(, AOOllSS. •
ZIP, Sill -mu llUllK•. MEWrOITHGTS
W0tk1n& "oman' look jl!IM\, be 10% down. Charmln11
Slllatl. dim fee ltSs-seu w•d· Cape Cod. 3 Bdrm *' 1 robt 111th O\lr N(W fAll WINIER pool t spa $220 000 PAnlRN CATAl.OC Coupo11 lot • ' 1
frft S2 ~tlft IAS1dt-f01ll
cl100ca' Send SI ~
MJ. CUil llOlS .. SUO •-US.II 11111114 Cledltl
~m:.~: =o.ih .., ........ -.. 5'
..., •~d c..lot-tdd 50t
urll lot llO'lllt Ud ~tftt
no
'
LET'S DEAL :\orm or •U.S.VETHANS
Kasey . o ... nr 11Jel FRFELISTUFllOMJ-;s
631 12ti6or~&t!r.2 World RE SS6 7i7?
WHY HAVE GAIDEH PARK
VILLA TOWHHOMES
IEEH SEWHG77?
This would be a \ery ~O<ld '>'Cekend
l o <' o m e a n d s t' c f o r
yourself .Low interest 30 yr
fixed rale loans is only µJrl of lht•
reason
MODELS ARE OPEN
I 0:30AM TIL DUSI<. . .
SI 34,950 to SI 52,950
547-2239
FAIRVIEW RD. AT AVOCADO, CM.
lfO
~~ "''' IJ " .,A ~ II
• • I S 11 ( '}~llO
._llGO
/ ,.tU6 ti
l, I/II II
;,~~~
,,.,~..,.t .. ....,.. ...
lf••f , ..... int' v •-r • , ......... ~ ... .,
"°""' :'I ..... ,,_ ...........
1'tft'r-c...-
)Q~ ~I
:.,"IVroJ
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·1~••()11.._, ........... "oe-v ... ..,.
t. n.o .. '".,_. .. _ .. , .. .., .. , .. .. ..,,_
• c,..., .... ,,....,.. ...... ..... _
s•.., ..... ........ ec .....
ID\J•nv-
. ' ....... .. ... .. ....... -, ...
'~"' ~ .....
" .. ·-· ...... ... ... _ ...... " . "'°"' .,._~ .......... ..... ..,..,
""' . ... ..... IJ.Deoot-o ( ~t~:.,
UH.A Mr n ,1,
0<' 11~¥1
' Jn,. Wllf
KO.,tO
OC' "Ct,~
NC)f "~ lA Jt.ll «).
""" 50 \1, lAGITI .Uf\I,
-''i • "I ,. r~ ,..., ... 1.
11nn 'II
C6Plt(.OtN
Of( 11 . .'
JA!tt ''"" ... ·~t ,
•OU.UM
..,o jtl ~
'II U ~
1J1no11:. ·""...!!~ "1Ctl '" ,. ,..,.., .. .. ,. . .,. .. J.Jl."4-t•;:'~ }7MUf (
CE
llDBIE ILllKS ca.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
PRIME IA YAOHT VIEW
Pier & Dock Quality 5 BR Home Jn
Desi rable Gated Comm Pv1 Bea<'h
Beautifully Up~raded Home Bu ilt
On Leasehold Land Which You Can
Purchase. W 10 Land. Home Has
Been Reduced To SY75.000
~Gl --.,, ... , .. ,,.
759-9100
U Corporate fllcno
Newpori Cent.r
RESIOENTIAL REAL ESTATE SEllVICES
CHilMIHGLY llMOOBB>
Small home with new kitchen. bath,
ba.y .windows & land scaping .
Refinished hardwood floors & even
a hot tub. Enjoy use or J>rivate·
gates to beaches. $315,000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
$99,900
Comfortalill' 3 Ur 11, Ba
great starter 111H•i;trnenl
"Ith h1~h J),Uffiahlt-loan
RCTaylorCo
D.M. Marshal Rltr
760-0135 552-7500
()4 (J <)<)()() Make your shopp1n~
eas1t-r by usuig the Dail>
1 Pilot Class1r1ed Acb
·~·':!'....,:., .... :_~. ::-
to.. IO forM l0tiit ~" woc:h
SllK & RNO' FOLLOW
C 8 P " R R A l C M T B l £ C C F £ S s E 1 0 II y £ R IF 0 l l 0 RI G H A l I
A S A C C 0 M P A N Y T D 0 H A K T W
E Y M N D 0 R E H l E H 0 B H S Z E U
C T 0 I E A M N A T B 11 R £ E E C S 0
0 U A E C Y G E V A 0 E T I C T E R H
C E B T l 0 V U A T T S H 0 W I Y D C
Y 0 I V I R R E T F A T P D E T P I 0
0 C l E E " 0 A A T T Y E N U L Q E E
E A T S H R I 0 II E Y E I H D U H I C
P T B E 11 0 G 0 T R C D R A D S A R R
M 0 R C R R H E A C R E T F U E E S E
0 T A 0 £ U S R U P E II A E R R S H I
P E D S M E 0 S 0 T 0 A H T E T L C S
A C N Y 0 R R A R X R II 0 R U P S R T
: ~ .
wwd, up, down«~. Find tldl Ind~ It in.~
" Olm ~y Anand .J
Hiid Come Aftlr Go Af11r <I
Obty ""'1ict l'lr1111t ~
Copy Ot.¥t A.ult
EIWUI lmitn Succ9"
T OlllClttll>w. H111110n1111 Mytlllal CfwtutW
EASTILUFF UHDH $200,000. We
are listing a special buy. Three
BR in the Lusk·Built area of the Eastblurr residences. Owner
wants a fast sale so YOU can pick up the year's best buy!
$1 97,000. Coby Ward 642-8235.
(K53)
WOODHIDGI WIHDSOI EST Ans
USALI. Situated on a private pre-mium sized lot, 3 BR1 2 BA single
level attached resioence has a
fam rm /laundry rm /see through
fplc /and. an assumable 30-year
fixed -rate loan. $181 ,500. Pat Terry 551-8700. (KS4 )
MIWPORT'S NEWEST IAYFIOMT
COMMUNITY 147' of bayfront.
2-story entry w/a step-down
living rm w/bay views & library
w/bath. Upstairs. the master
suite w/separate sitting rm &
fireplace. and another wing holds
2 more BRs &. ba~. Sl ,500,000
includlnj land. Larry Dyer
6'2·8235 ( \.11)
RA TES ARE DOWM • COME AMD SEE
• PEPPERTREE HEIGHTS I COXDOMINIV~IS
0pet'JfW fri/SClt/S... 12 till d11tk
2600 llock Santo Ana Au .• Costa Meso
Beaut1rul 2Br 212 baths & 2 Br 2 ba
homes From $129,500 lo $139.500
\'A Conv & non O\\ner rinan<'ing
plans Some starling as low as
12 5 8'.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
REALTY
546-5605 631-6194
Courtesy to lrolters
Climb
Aboard
our
Gift Train
and sell your
Handmade items.
It's so easy ..
Just call 642-5678 and
ask for your
Daily Pilot Christmas Ad-Visor
NEW CONDOS BY BEACH
OH block lo beoch. Contemporary,
drOn1otic or chitechn in 2 ~ + large
sunning deck. Financin9 fleaible.
$255,000. 631-I 400.
BALBOA ISLO. LOT 1-PLANS
Drive by 309 Sapphire Giid 'cotl for
detail1. Plo111 for sin9le fam. hom
approved & ready to builcl Sl45,000 .
WATERFRONT HOME . l"t
Rf Al I '-TAT£
NlnV. t .. nt lf,.
N"""'''' fit.,
631·1400
'~ ,, " 'i." Ma,·flit• A\t 1~+11 ... 1 ....
'7UtOO
• CORONA DR MAR •
Lovel v Plan 4 In JASM INE
CREEK L1ghl \'v. airy w all
amenities S:l89,<XXJ Fee'
• * PALERMO • • HARIOR VIEW HOME
Totally remodeled by craftsmen'
Featuring French doors. wooden
shutters. plank floors. used brick
& p oo l & spa FEE land
w/GREAT TERMS' 1
12 7 /1% RNAHCIHG
• JASMINE CREEIC •
Former model~ Hard to rind Plan
5 w/custom spa ! $349,000 FEE .
Lowest Pri<'e! ~
• • 100/o DOWH • •
ll11l% RMANCIMG AVAIL .
on this spacious ram1ly home
featuring 3br /den. family room &
formal dining w /3 car ~arage ~
Onl y $239,950. FEE
MEWPORT HACH OfffCt
2670 S• ~Drive
1714) 759-1501 1714) 752-7373
0
Orange Coat OAtLY PILOT/Friday, Novtmber27, 1981
SEAL BACK AT SEA M1ch<iel Herder . left,
and Steve J e ffrie s. resear c hers at
Wa shington Park Zoo in Portland. Ore .
relca:.l' Yaqu111a . a s1:ul. 111to :'\l'tarts Ba~ on
•~w1 ... .,...te
the state's coast Off1crnh. wt·rp fol'n.'d to
return seals to thl' :;ea bt•<·au:-.t' cil prohh.•n1.., ol
canng lor tht•m
Alcohol consumption • rises
Californian's 32 .2-gallon average tops nation
S ACRAMENTO <AP ! California cont..ains 10.4
percent of the nation's total
population. And while California
ranks fir.st in the nation in total
amount of alcoholic beverages
drunk, it ranks fourth in alcohol
tax revenue with $143 l million
-after Florida, Texas and New
York, in t hat order, the board
said .
B u t l h c 11 c r c a p 1 l a
consumption of ~parkhng w1nt'
was still small. 0 .32 gallons,
~o mpared to O 35 gallons for
sweet wane and 3 75 gallon~ for
dry wines.
Californians drank 5 percent
more alcoholic beverages last
year than the year before, and
far m ore than the national
average, the state reports.
The Board of Equalization,
which collected taxes on the 774
million gallons drunk in fiscal
1980·81, said th e average
cons umption of ever y man,
woman and c hild residing in
California was 32.2 gallons
California's taxes on alcoholic
beve rages are b e l ow tht!
national average
Beer consumptwn totaled fllll
mllhon ~allons. or 25 ·1 ~ullon!>
per person. a 5 pen•cnt ancrea~e.
COfllpared lo 23 87 gallons on tht'
national avt!ragc
That compares lo a national
average of just under 28 gallons
per person during the last period
for which those statistics are
available. the calenda r year
1979.
The board said' the gain of 5
percent in t he amount drunk
was twice the increase of the
previous fi scal year
Th e incr ease an w ine
consumption was even hi gher It
was 7 6 percent for dry wan e and
15.5 percent for sparkling wane.
w h ich. coupl e d with a 4 6
percent decrease for sweet wane .
yielded a 7 percent J(<.1 an O\ er all
Bul 25 4 gallon:. of bct•r works
out to a little lcs:o. than one
12 ounce bottle of beer per day
The drinking of d1sttl ll'll
spirits increused by only I 5
percent. but rl•at•hccl 2 39 gallons
per person, compar<'d to ,1
national average of I W
And California led b\' far th1·
national average t·onsuioµt1on nf
wine . 4 41 gulluns per per:.on
compared lo I 9ti thl· boJicl
s aid
The board 's stat1 s t1 c ian,
Richard West, said the national
average probably h as n 't
increased much since then.
Piil.iC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOU' aUSINESS
N.AME ST•TEMENT
l h• lollowl119 PtrM>n• •r• <10tn9
bu-.lne-$S •s
lA S1E.RRA1MAGNOLIA CENT ER,
JOff Pullm•n Screet , Co"• Mes., C•HCor .... m»
1 ne ROllH1 P W•r"unoion C.o A
C•lllorn1• C«Por•Uon, l090 Pullm.,.
Slrfft, Cmw Meu, C.•hCor11i• 9U:Z.
Hulton .,_,.1.. A C.•lltwnl•
CorPO<•llon ll:IO E lltll Slrffl, S...t•
An., C•lltarnl• '1101
Thi~ °"'•net\ h conduct•a bY • !>*Ae<•l~p
1 .. R-I P
Wa1m1nqt011 Co
Wiiii.,., J Plltman
S..re1MV
1 n" .i.tanwnc ••s "'"" won 1r-.
County C•••"-ot Or•n9<' County on
Nov 2•, 1'111 l'l7'71e
PuDllSl..i Orenve c.....i O•••Y P110I,
Nov 21, Dec • 11. 11, 1 .. 1 Slac..tl
NIUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS
N.AME STATEMENT
l h• followtnQ per,on I\ ootng
bu'lneuu
TRENCH<OAT FANTASIES, 17141
Cl•uOt Circle El T0<0, C•lolorn1•
'7UO
Ml<IHtl« E NIOrQo&n, US61 Cl•ucie
Cir< It, E.1 loro. C.olllorn•• 97•JO
T "'' _,nft, I' '°"""""° Dy •n ln01v1dwL
MK.l\t .. E.. Mo<Qo&n ""' st.--• ... , llleO '"'"' ,,,. C.ounty Cl.,... oC <><•<199 C.ount~ on
Nov. 1•, 1'111. ,.,.7JI
t n1S si.i-1 .... 11ieo •Ill\ ,,..
(OUl\IY Cl••-01 0••"9'1 (t><>nCv on
Nov 1•. 1'111 1'11•111
PuDl1'1WO Or-C:.CWO•I O•llY PllOI,
NOV 17 0ec '· 11. 11, 1'11 S 117.al
PUIUC NOTICE
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
T H 0 M A S
KALKBRENNER ANO
OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE
NO. A 111234.
To all heir s.
bener1c1aries, creditors
and continQE'nt c reditors of
Thomas Kalkbrenner and
persons who may be
otherwise interested 1n thr>
will and or estate
A petition has bt'en filed
by Jerry C Ayers 1n the
Superior Coort of Orange
County reQuesting that
Je rry C . Ay ers be
appointed as personal
------------------------·1 rep r esent a I 1 v e to DIATH 1mc1s administer the esta te ol
Thomas l<.alkbrenner
(under the lndepFnaent -----------------------1 Admin1strat1on or Estate5
McBE \TH
\LICE ~l ~kBEATll Jl:t'
88. re:.1dt•nt ol llunl 111gt11n
lh•.irh (.'a 'llll't' l\J:Hi
Pa.,'>t'd .i".i' on :\11H·mlw1
24. t91ll .11 Pac1t11·a 1111~µ11.11
M r s M l' B t' ,, t h '' ,1 " ,1
111l'mht.•1 of St'a..,1di: <:ha!Jll'I'
#259. Or tlt•t •II the Ea"li:l'll Star. \'I"\\" i\ux1han Po.,1
lJ 7 3 61! I h 1· \mt' r 1 l' :.in
,\uxlll:.in Lel(wn 1n:1:1 and \\'orltl \\Jr I Ban u(·k~ E
# :12t;O l\l'lm \'Cf mot hl'I or
.J T r a ,. 1 " ~1 <" B l' a t h .
ll un11ng1on Bea ch C.i
\'t•rnna Totllo 1\t·bt'1 '>olcl nt
'\;c\ada Cit'. Ca and \t,11\
1.(•t• Sm1lh or Rialto ta
.1l'ln 5 .:randrhddnm ;inti I
)?rt'al·~randch1ldren \bu
-.u 1 , "t'll h\ I hrnl hc1 llctht'1 t
\.\"1111.Jllanl or ll unt1n1nn11
Act). The petition 15 <,e l for
heanng 1n Dept No. 3 at
700 C1vte CentN Drive.
We5t, in the City ot Santa
Ana, California on Dec. l3
1981 at 9:30 A.M
BP,•th. Cu FunL•ral !ll'I'\ •<'1'' IF YOU OBJECT to the ~Ill he ,·ond uctt•cl 011 grant1ng of the pet1t1on, S;iturrla~. November 28. 19111 you shoold either appear
al 11 llOt~M at. ~1eru' al the hearing ana state
Brothen. Sm1lh" <.:huµt·I yo ur obiec.t ion!> or file
lnt1•rmcnt "111 lw m.ick JI wrillen obiect1ons with the
Wl''>t m1n::.tl'1 Ce~l'ler~ court before the hearing.
P11•1 ec Brnthcri, ~n~•!h ~ Your appearanc.c may be
Murtuaryd1rec·to1;, .>Jlili5.19 in person or by your
MOLLICA attorney
A"TllllN\' •TONY I IF YOU ARE A
r
rAClffC VllW
MIMOllAl rAJIC
Cen-etery Mortuary Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1'1c View 011ve
tllewDOrl Beach
644-2700
MOLLIC \ \nthon' "a' 'C R ED I 1 0 R o r a ~ born '.n lt.ily o~ A~l(u~t l!I• contingent cred'1tor of the
19011 an~ he cum~ 10 lht deceased you mu5t tile t:n1tl'~ States "~en .ht•. "u" your claim with the court 11 \t'afl\ vld lie mad~. hli. o r present i I to the
home in llunlln~ton R~ach per5onal repre5entalive
C.:J ror 42 \t':.tr-.. ror the pa..,1 appointed by the court I~ .' ean he has ltved in wihin four months from \h•,1 mrnstl'r wit h his will· the date of first 15iuance
l>onna. lie wu ... a .<·harter of letters as provideo in
mt?mber and Honor Gu.ardor Section 700 of the Probate
lhe Elks Lodge lluntml(ton Code of California The 81.'ach. Tony pa..,i.ed awa' on . ._CC>aMICll MOITUAlllS
LaQuna Beach
494·9415
:-;0 , ember 24. 19g1 Bci.'idei. time for f1lmg _c1a1ms will
Transit
system
approved
SAN JOSE f AJ'I ·\
21 mill'. hght rail 1rans1t
svstl•m that c·ould lun·
lhousancls of · ~i l1t·on
Valley' \\nrk<•rs orf
crowdL'<.l h1gh"ay:. \\i1s
apµr'o\'t•tl by lhc Santa
ClurJ <'ounty Board of
Supt•r\'J!>ors
T h c b o a r ti \ o 1 l' rl
unanimously to pursu1• c:1
<.' o m ti 1 11 1· cl I i J! h 1
rJll l"'<J>rl':,,sWJ\ prc>J<'l'l,
one of <>1x altcrnat1v<.•s.
and t o 1nvt•:o.t1gatc
<;ources of funding Jls
cost hus l><'c n t'sllmated
at S250 million to $400
million
Tht• s\slcm would
stretch from South San
J osc through downtown
San Jose' Santa C'l:ir;t
C1nd Sunn~vule. north to
the San Mateo < 'nunl'
hne through the lll'art vf
S ii 1 c on V a 11 (') . t h l'
n1cknamt• for ,JO art·a
suulh of San Fr:inc1sco
dotted w11 h t·lt•C'I ron1c-.
companit's
Bes ad<.• light-rail
vehicles. the system
would i nclu d e an
ex presswa)-. poss1 bly
with s pecial carpooling
lanes
San Jose. other South
Bay C'ommun1t1es and
st3le agencies also han•
a pproved thl' plan.
LaQuna Hills
768 0933
San Juan Caoostrano
4951776
hi:. wife hl· leaves 2 not expire prior to four
sll'P duul(htcr .... Fi ancl'!'. months _from the dale of
Seholle Belly ~k Carol the hearing noticed above. HB student Janik~la Terl'Sll L;·uns 2 YOU MAY EXAMINE
,.
HA.llOa LA W~M'T. OLIVE
Moriuary • Cen-etery
Crema1ory 1625 Gisler Ave
Cosla Mesa
540-5554
"8CI llOTHHS
llU llOADWAY
wonUAIY
l 10 Broadway
Costa Mesa
&42·9150 -IAlT% ... ~HOM
SMITH & TUTHILL
WISTCUff CHAf'fl 427 E 17th SI
Costa Mesa
846--9371
,_CIMOYM•S
SMfTHS' ...OltTVAA Y
827 Main St
~ntt~on 0.Kh
538-6539
step·sons · Roy Miears ~nd the file kepi by the court. •
8111 Miears. SH•ter Maq If you are interested •.n the .wins grant
Suntaluc1co. brother An gie estate, you may file a ... Mollica. nephew Arthur requ~st with .lhe court to Shelly M. Crist of
Molltca. t8 l(randchrldren rece1.ve special notice of Huntington Beach has
and 9 great.grandchildren the inventory of estate be e n awarded l h e
Services "111 be conducted assets ahd of the petitions, Western Shoe Associates
on Saturday, Nove mber 28. accounts and reports No l Scholarship.
1981 al 2 oo PM at Pierce described in Se~tion 1200 . .S
lit others Smiths' Chepl'l of the California Probate The award was m ade
with Or. Ivan Bell. of the Code.. b Y l h e Two I Te n
· f'1rsl Baptist Church of David S. Getty, Attorney National Foundation,
Laauna llills omc11f11ng at Law, 11S5 Civic Center begun b y footwear
lnterm011t private. Plt!rce Drive, West, Santa Ana, indu ~try m embers to
Brolhers Smiths' Mortuar) CA 9z701 t..<714> l36-6607.. help fellow workers Publlt/llO Ql'Ml9e ~st oau, P11o1, dlrcctors.536-M39. Nov.u,a.0ec ... 1 .. H~1 1 Miss Crist's m oth e r .
Sa ll y Cornelius. is
Cops' freebies nixed
BALTIMORE (AP-Police otflcers won't be
getting free food and drlnk rrom loc:al businesses
any more. Whai they gel they'll have to buv, and
tbey'IJ have to pay the full prlco, officiala ••Y·
In ruponae to allegations by local m erchanta
that olflcers accepted 1r1eala, beverage11, a nd
d'scouni. on merchaodlse, Police Commissioner
Frink Batta&Ua ordered u1 lmmedlate ball to the
practice.
e m p loyed by Kinney
Shoe.
Darn protest
SONORA (AP> -
Tuolomn e C ounty
supervisors ha ve
ortl~lolly protested
plans by San Francisco
to cons\rUcl more! dam.s
on th Tuolumne River.
2 I ii 1
Chaplain seeks opening Windmill
. . restored Rel1g1ous counselor told to check county
SAN Jo'RANCISCO
!AP> After a 43-year
hiatus , th newly
r estored O ld Dutch
Wlndmlll In Colden Gate
Park hat' been reopened.
By IOYCE L. Kt.:NNEDY
Du r Joyce: I am a member ol tlte
Slater1 or Mercy In AJbany and wlll
aoo n b e read y for full·tlme
employment as a chapJalo ln the
rle ld of chemical d_,pendeace. Can
you Ider me to sltH In my ata~
wbue I might flnd work'! -A.O.,
New York, N.Y.
Tbe county health departments in
your it.ale shouJd be good sources of
names of organitalions thal need the
ser vices you can provide. As a
chaplain 11crvinn drug addicts and
alcoholics, you <:an expect to be a
spiritual counselor for these personJ
and for members of their familie11.
God bless
'ro all readers, remember that
relig ious work offers far·reaching
opporltmitaes. fr-om m issionary work
1n foreign hint erla nd s to
a dmini st rative p os t s in
people packed cities here at home.
To name a few : In every faith,
followers o f varying talents
teachers, social workers, medical
u1des, physicia ns, n urses. business
e xperts and artists can pursue
vocations that enrich the lives of
Individuals who are impoverished
hoth spiritually and materially.
You already know that financial
t'Ompensalion for most religious
workt!rs is modest. The primary
reward e manates fro m being of
servu:e to others. a nd from having
the compa nionship of individuals you
work for and with.
lntercr1s lo, a Seattle-based
orga nization , o ffers a matching
service which gives Christian job
hunter:,, names or employers seeking
CAlllRB
peo pl e with partkular backaround11
and \nte rcst11. T he survlce alao
provides s u ch job 11pecltics as
locollon, duties and compensation
You c1tn contact lntercristo for
more lnJormation at the Center for
Chrisllan 'Work Opportunities, 19303
Fremont Ave· N , P 0 . Box 33487,
Seattle, Wash. 98133, or call t he
organizaho n '11 toll Cree number
800 426-1342.
For information about careers an
the J ewish faith. contact The Jewish
Theological Seminary of America.
3080 Broadway, New York , N . Y
10027, or the Hebrew Union College
which bas campuses in New York
City . Los Angeles and Cincinnati
A new book, .. Your Future in
Religious Work," by Steven Herrup,
is available for S7 postpaid from
Richards Rosen Press Inc., 29 E 21st
St .. New York. N. Y 10010. The book
discusses career opportunitiei:. for
clergy and lay r>ersons. lists schooli:.
offering religious training and names
o r ganization s th a t provid e
s~holarships and student a id.
READER SERVICE A l 6·page
booklet, "Church VocattOn.'1." discusses
opport111Uhes for Catholics interested m
rehg101A! occupations. To obtain a copy,
courtesy of the Nat ional Catholic
Vocational Council, enclose a 40·cent
~la mped , self.addressed. long white
envelope with your request to Joyce l...a1n
Kennedy at Boz 156(), Costa Mesa 92626.
Ask for ··catholic Religious Careers ..
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
MUTUAL FUND
• s
~ 1 I ' 10 11 I' 13 ,.
n •• II II " 101 ]() .a 11
'·'" n l.~ 2J .. ,.
S6 u )2.~11 «JO ,.
The COt$t of restoring
th· windmill was
$224 ,000, r aised In un
Independent rund drive.
More than 6,000 people
and organi i at1on s
contnbotl-d tu the effort
HB instructor
n ew chairman
Cla ude S. Lindquist or
Huntington Beach has
been named chairman
of the Department of
Ell't·tncal Engineering
at Cal State Long Beach.
L indquist graduated
from the Una versity or
Redlands and Stanford
Un iversity and received
has dortorate from
Orego n S tale
Uni\ ers1ty
,
R ecall fails
REDOING t AP >
The e ffort to recall
Sh asta Superior Court
Judge Joseph Redmon
ha s been officially
declared a failure
N•-BurtH C•roa.n o TuAMR• t
P•ti.• Wll!oOn Mar~ IV
US D\"" 01i.0n
Nt(•l 11 • 010At\O
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llW 1n1e..-tran•i.for" AAVMOND NO• JI. DK.'· II, ••. '"' Si••·•• f , PIUTCHAAD, 3241 Iowa Street,-------------Costa Mew. Cahfo<nle ,,.,.
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the tnltndlcl,lran"trM '' SPENCER ------------CHUNG, 121 Soulh Hope, Apl J)I, LOS N~
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1qulpm1nt anCI Ir-name ot '"" No. A ,.,...
<•rt•ln QlitrlbutorthlP ~nown u In 11\f ~""Court ot 11\<1 St•I• o
Country FrMCn. Cle1Cr11n<nv Freft<n Calltornta, lor '"*County of OranQr.
•nd 1• toureo at :1141 towe St•fft. In tlltl ~uer ot the Ell'1e ot G.r•ro
C°'t• Mew, Callforno• '12•1' McC.allrey, 0ecHMO
The bllllnes• Mmt ui.o t>y 11\<1 iald Not•<• ll l\ertt>y Qtnn 111et tnt
traMltror •I w lO toullon I• C.o..ntrv '"-"ignold wlll Miii •t Pnvtlt Sett, Fren<I•, C,lt 1Cn1n<l>y f'r-n to lht hlQhHt •nd !IHI t>-r. i11b1ect
Tn•I woo b\141l lr.,.sttr is lnlt~ to to <onllrrTWtlon of laid Super tor Cbvfl,
oe conwmrTWltd al 1"9 ollt<e ot Foru on or ••IM ""' "" day or Oe<embtr, lnterst•I• B..-~ of Calltorno•, JOtt ttlt, ti llW Olli<t OI Fonte & Warren,
H•rbor 6oulev•ro. co,t• Mt\•, Atcorney' •• L••, IOl t St•nton
Calllornla 916» on or elttr Dt<ember A•tnllf, •20e Bllff\6 Par~. Co..nty of
21. 1911 Oranot. Statt 01 Ct llforntt, all the
Trw n.,.,.. •nd .-.W\, Of tN Qlf(\On r1v,,t. uue •no 1nt•r•tt ot s••o
""'" wnom <1a1m~ nwy be llleo ,. .,.,,.,...., et '"" lime or o .. th anc1 •II
E.c.row °"'6t1"""''· """ 1ntersl•I• 11\<1 rtgM, lltle •no 1nteru1 tnat ,,... Ben~ ol Ca1ttorn1a, JOH Harbor tlltlt of wMI o.c .. ..o ,..., •<Cl""'°
Bo111e .. rd, '°''• M .. 1. Celolornla by -·•11on or t•• or OI~"''"'· other mu end IN l•st oay for lthng <1.a1ms '"•n or tn eddlllon 10 "''' of sa10
by tny <rtdllor ~" be De<emt>e• 11 Of<tH•O •I llW ,..,.. OI dHI/\ II\ •no
\tl 1 •"•<h '' uw DU .. nru o.y bittor• to •If ,,.._ <rrt•fn re•I proo•rty. the con,umm•Uon d•te 'P•tlf1to llh1•ted 1n uw Uf'\tM-OtPDf'•leo are• Of •bo•• Moolon v .. io C0<1nty of Or-. s .. tt
So t•r •i " known to \.a~o lt\1tfl0t'CI of C•t1r0tm•, CNrtteul•r•v dtscr1cea .,
T r•nsletee Wid 1n1'"'°"' l rM1S1er0t tottow\, to-wH
useo llW toHowlng -lllonet bllMneu An 11no1•te)11<1 one NII 1n1rreot In
Mm•' •nd .octrMWI wUhln l'l4' '"'t• Ai <onoomm1~ Corr\OflW'd ot
YH'' .... "'''"None. Par<el I. Unit No ,,, on lot 1 of
Dated No~r ••. !Mt 1 ract No 1230 C.O..nty of O.ange. Statt
Sr>enur (nu119 ol C•lllorn1.a. •s per map rKordeo In
• lnlende<l TrtMftrM Book l H , pagu JO ano 31 of
, Publlstwo <>r•noe CCMlll D•ll• Pt IOI, M•~•ll-• ~In ,,... olllt• ol 1111
NO• 11, 1'1111 S~ it (ounty AKoroer 01 WICI C.OUlllY al\G ••
PVIUC NOTICE
•nown ano aeflneo In tne Dtic1uat1on
ot A•'1rl<llon• Ht.llMt•ntng • Pl.an lor
ConoomlMum Owner•lllp lor Altso
VIII•• Condominium Al'4<t•llon "'o 1
NOTICE OF TllUSTEE'S SALE re<oroea tn 8ooll 1010, "-' 4S1 to
loan No. IOOIUl1 HS, '"''"''""· tnCI NOIK• of Addition t S No. 67142-4 ot hrr1torr l IN Conoom1n111m P1a11
FULL SERVICE INC n oul, nuetn) rt<OtOOCI '" 8-1011•, "-
•PPGlnteo TrustM ..,_,Ille tollowtng 'II oflk1a1 re<ords
0.Krtbeel -OI lru,1 Will SE:Ll P•r<•I J. A.n undl•IOCO 11•• lnle<fll
AT P U8 UC AUCltON lO lHE tn lot I of Tra<t No IUO Co-y Ol HIG~ESl BIDDE:A FO R CASH Orange, SI.alt ol C•llforn ... H per
I P•Y•bl• •• ltme ot sat• tn lt"'1111 m tp recorooo In 8ool! J?•, "-' lO
_, of me Un<lecl St•IHI •II ""''· •no lt of Ml•ullentOU\ -~ In llW
..... ano "''"""t (Of'l'ft'Yl'O IO""°"°"" Of•K• Of ,,. county re<Ot"dllr,. Of M•O
l\eld by it..-said 0..0 of T,.,., 1n county •"own ••o dettntd ••
the oroPHty twr•tn.t•r Otw.rtbeO Common Ar•• on tft• •bo•t
TRUSTOA 8E\tE:AlY MENOU, •n mtn110.-OK!tr•Uon Of AHlrlcllon•
""m•rt•H wom•n. •no CL.t.U OE. •no C.onoorruntvm P••n • more
lA.FlE A, an ..,,,,,.,,Ito mtn <ommonly --n •• ~" \11• N"'l
BENEFICIARY FVLlEAION Mtl>•onVteJO.(•ltlC>rM•
SAVINGS AND LOA"' ASS0CIA110N, hrms Of Wit <.a>h tn ltwlut money
• <orpor•tlon Ol 11\e Unltf'O Statu on <omirma11or1 01
At<or-J.,....ry XI, ltlt ts Im.Ir ute, or part <tsn and b•l•n<t
No. 1001• in -1:1911 paoe •Jll OI •••Oencta by note uc11rto by
Offklal Aec.orO\ '" IN olllu ol ,,. Mo rtg•oe or Trust Ono on '"e
AKorlktr OI Of-<:.oun1y ••"' a .. d property to >010 U .000 10 De OtPol•ltO. ot tru\t dtt(rll>t!~ tht tOllO•rlnQ WlthD•O
pr-rty Bod• or often to De In wro1t no ano
PARCEL I Loi 40 OI lrt<t NO /JOO, .... , lie re<••...O •• ,,... •torua10 OHIO
In'"' Ciry Of 1,.,1,..., Covnty ot Oranoo. at any lltN •tt•r '"" '"" Pllbfk•llon Sl•I• ot ca11tornl•. •• Pt• map nereot •no0t1ottoai.of wit
rtKordoo In -lit. p_, 11 10 U Dtlto '"" 191n Gay ot No•e m""r
ln<l11s1w, Mlw:•ll•"'°"~ Ma~,'" tl\e 1'111
OUl<e or ll'te county •t<oroer OI Htd A081:R1 HU ... lER
county Aomtn<\lrator CT A
EXCE:Pl THEREHlOM •II Oii, Oii olllletst•l•ol•••GOeuoent
rfg"U, mhwrah , m iner•• 1 •Ohh, fl~ .. & WMrl'n, Attornepto •t Uw
ntl11ra 1 go rlg nt& •no othtr _, Sl•-A-.....
hyarourbo<" by w~hoa•er name 811ttl\a P-. CA t06»
known tNI may De w11n1n or llf'Cler P11bMl'l!CI O.anoe to.st D•llY Pllol,
Wld land, IOQetf\er wlln llW PtrPtl11tl "'o• 11.1'. DK 4, 1\111 ll'"-11
rlg"t or drolling. ''""'ng, eaptorlnQ •no
ooerallng ,,..,...,, tnd slortnQ 1n and
removino the wm• trom u10 t•nd or
•nv other t....O, tn<.IUdlno ttv ''O"' 10
wlllpl10<k or Glrtttiontlly Ortll 4no NOTICE Of TAU5T££'S SAL£
mine from •-• O"'-< tnan woo l•no, I S No Sl791M
Oii or °"' -"'· ,....,..,. tno ,,..,., BIO.NEFICIAl MANAGEMENT
Into,""°""' or t<rou Ille"'°'"""' COAPOAA Tl()f; OF AME: RICA ••
ot UICI reno, t no to Dotlom •u<h Clutv •PC>Olntao T '""" Yn<Jer '"' Wh tpstO<ktd or olrect•onally ortlled tollow1119 dHCrtDeo-of tru~t Will
wells, tunnels -lNll\ ..,_, t ll<I SEll A.l Pu8LI(. AUCTION 10 !HE
beneath or l»Y-ll'te ••ltrtor ltmlll HIGHEST Bl DOER FOR CASH
ther.-of. MMi to rtctrltt. r•tl;N"l•I,, f'Q\UP, fSMY•ble " h,,,. of ult 'n l•wtul
mtinlatl\, rf9tlr, -pen ono -r•tt money ol ,,.. Vn<teo Sta1H) tll <tQlll
•"Y """ well> or m•nes, w11"°"1 ,,... 11111 and •nl•<HI <on~yeo to •no now
rlQl\I to a.Ill, mt,., store, .. PIO<• and l\elQ Oy II ...-, ..... 0..0 Of Tr11fl 1n
OPtr •I• '"'°""' 1111 surtac• 01 rro. tro. P•-1'1Y ,..rttn.itfr du<"beo
11pperSOOf"'of!MlllbOurl9te OI WtO IAUSTOR PETEA8 DAEW
ltna 4l 1nervtd by lne lr•tn• BENEFICIARY BENEFICIAL
Company ,. WtSI V!•g 1n1• FINA,.CE CO.OFGAADENGADVE
c orpor•t•0'1 tn detd t •torded Re<ora•o O.C.•mbfrir 1l. 1'11 .,
NO••mber "· 1'73 In -1(19" P•!le onstr No. lltM? tn -.,.., PtQP •ll•
S12. Offklal R«orO. of Olft<i.t AK.Md•'" tro. ott1u of ttw
PARCEL 1 A non .. <I~>• .. At<orO.r OIOrtnQt County HIO<IHCI
•PP"rten•nt t•itment tor tne ot tnnt dt\(r +bts ttie t ottow1n9
Pllroosu •' l4!t tor1~ tn end over 1111 pr-riy
land lktKrlbtd 1n A•ll<te v. ~tllon I lot •• OI lra<t No ?US .•• PU m •p
of thot <•rt••" Decltr•t•on ot rKordeo In -100 Paot• 1' 10 2>
C.oven•nts, C.ondi t lon' ind ln<tu~1ve o4 Ml\.Ctll•~s Map\,.,,
Ae.trl<lions, rt<orci..1 -• 10, t'71 In IM offl(t Of lhe to..nty recoroer ol
-"41, Page 311, Ofllt .. I RecorO>. ... d co11nty ona ., lmposeo by Nol tt• ot 2111 CorQAI• Dr , Calta Mu•, c.-.
C o v e n 1 n I " < on a 1 t 1 o n , • n a q161&
Rtitricttons. rf<Orded J•nuery Jt, "t If • ttrHt tlCIOren or <ommun
197J In -l~I. -JI, 0111<111 G~\IQnallon ls •hown tbo•e. n o
Record$. w •' r • n • y 1 ' g 1 ¥ • n 4 s 1 o Ha
4301 A•tMI St .. Irvin•. CA '111~ complel-!IS or <orrt<lntuf
"111 • street .OOreo or <ommon lht t»neft<lery unoer sa1a OeeCI ot
Ot1ton1t1on 11 tho-n •«>ov•, no lru•t by '"MOf\ of• t>r•.uh or oe••"tt
warr•nt\' IS g l•tn •• to t i\ ill '"' OC>CIQ.alton> st<urto tMreb~ comptetenns or '°' roc:1 .. u 1. heretotorr ... tKuteo ""° ae11 .. reo 10
lM -lk ••ry unoer said O..d ot the unoers.-t written Dec:laretton
Tr11st, by •NIOI' of• Dree<h or 0e1..,1t OI Default -Demeno for Salt, •no
In '"' obit gallons .. , ... ,.., thereby, wrllltn noct<e Ol brttc:h and 01 ete<llon
"9rtlofore necllffcl -O.llwereo to to ca11w IN unotrs'9nec1 to ..,u said
tM 11110«"9'*1 •written Dt<ttrallon property to wt11ly salo Obll9'11i0tl>,
of Dela ult -Demand tor S.•e. ano and '"""•after the ""°"'''ont<I u11seo
written notice of brea<" ano of etec.llon sa10 nott<e ot bret<n ana or ele<llon to
to <tUM IN ....i.n'9N0 10 Mii .alO bt AKor--"" s. 1'181 •• Instr
P•C>PertY to N ll•ly .. .., ObllQatlons, No ,~ tn -11'11 -... OI laid •no tllerNlter I/le -Slone<! u11wo 0 111<1•1 Record•
.. Id not kt of bnt<h ano OI tle<tlon 10 Said ..i. •Ill be ,,,..,., ti.it wotllOut
be AecorOtd Auoust ti, t•t at lnttr <ovenent o,. ••rt•f'lty, e .. pres1 or
No ?2ft7 In -t•l&S PtOt ""· of Implied, <tO«dlf'lll title, -Mnlon, or Said Oflki.t Rt<.orCll.. en<umbrann•. to pay ttw rem•m•no
Said s.lt will tit -· blll without Prln<IPtl SiUIT\ Of IM notetsl >ec11rtc1
covena nt or wtrr•nly, t•Pru• or by salo 0..0 of Tr11s1. wltn Interest•~
lmplieo. •av¥Cl•f'IO title,--"°"· Of In Hid note PfCWIOfcl, .., • .,., ••• 11 •lly,
t11<um1>ranc-. to Pt\' the remtlnlng IMOfr the term• Of saMI 0..0 01 Trust,
prlnclPtl tum of !he nottU) •«11reo lff•. '''"~' end upe,,. .. 01 ,,..
by N ICI o..11 ol Tr11.i, with lnltrest •• Trv"ff and ol me tr.,..ll <rt•led by
In said <Mitt Pf'O\lldllel, ac1•9n< .. , 11 eny, aela O..a Ol Tru.i Said ule wilt bt
-O.r Ille ,.,.ms of Mid DeedOf lrt1>t, ,..,d on Friday, Oeatmbtr ti, ""et
..... ,,..,, .. -HPtnH• or ,,.. , 00 P.M. •• Iha C ... pm•n AYtllllt
T111s1" -of Ille trusll createo by entran<t to,,. Cl•k Ctnter 81111c11no. .. ,er ~ "' '""'· Said .. ,. •Ill be JOo Eula..-A-. In'"" City helG on frlcley, DK-· ''· ..... , Of Or•noe. CA
J·OO P.M. at the Cl\tpman Avenue At the lime ot ,,.. lnltlal pllbll~•llOll
tft.lrOf>Ce to IN Cl•k Center eulldlno, ot thl• notice. lltt lotel atnOllllt of .,..
)00 EH i CNtpman A-.,,, tM City unp•ld b•l•nu ol Iha ObliO•lfOll
ol O••not. c.-.. MCUrtd DY I.tie •llllwe dHcrlbeCI deed OI
, A.I 1"9 ,..,... of IN lnlll•I lllllltl<atlon tr11st eno esllmateo <o$ta, ••POn .. s,
of thll llOllC'•, ,,.. lotal •-t 01 the and •d••nus Is 142,021.S~. To
unp•IO balAl'ICt of the obl!Qatlon IMltrmlN Ille opanlno bid, YOll <an
ltCurtd 11'1' I,.. .oow dek rlDotcl o..cr of cell I 714) .,1-0he. In.ill •no ffllmetecl tOfh, tXP«IM•, DAit · Nvwmller 1', ""
and •CIV•ll<O h '111,tO•.•• ro "6 N E f I c I A l cMltrmlnttllt~llQbld,youmoycall MANAGEMENT
1/14) •J1~ CORl'OfllATION OF
Data ...,_.,,., tt, "" NolalUCA f'ULL$£1'VICE INC .,Mid ff11jl .. ,
as NICI Tn.tlM, l!yT.O.tERVICE 8y T.D. SEllVICl COMPANY
CtlMPANY,-1 19"\t
I\' lMrla -.Cll, Iv Plltrkle ..._ fll-11.
ANl-.rit -...-... ~ 51(,....,-y
ON Cltv ---11-W..1, ON Cltt loutavert ""•st. o.-._,CA ._. or.,.., GA .....
ITMI ~ t7MI ~ ~bl,.,,.. Or-.a CM.i 0.11v PllOI ,.114111"*1 Or-. t.est o.11., Pl~ ..... "· °"' ... 11, "" $U1-e Now 11, DK.'· 11. "" JUI••
sass PSS SSS sen
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OrangtCoat OAJLV PILOT/Frld1Y. November 'l1 1881 • ~,.,Wt .......... w. ........ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ...... , ....•.•......... •••••••••••••••••••••• lt•rll llH la•r<ll 1001 ...... ,... ..... .... -=t."-•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
UMl..,UllH
IUCOMIAY
Bu t beach hvrn11 In
Nwpt 2 1tory home, now
11 duplex , Lat ft·2
bayfront lot Sl4S.OOO,
UllWl()Ul OOMf S
Rullora. 675 6000
DIAS'nC 4111.SIDIHOMI UDUC'nOMt 2 Br to. ot1"rJ.1116,000. WSI Of'T'ION °"° Sit/Sun 1... 1210 Prim• cul .... •c IOU• S.1¥1•• Ave. Btrult• Uoa. 110.000 OPtloa +
!U.rtMn ~•hoc nooo mo tak• lt. Patt ot
f1H171 no.m rentl.I appUn '° down C.... M... I 02~ paymtal one yur from
•••••••••• .... ••••••••• oae11loo. You t1n't
NIBOMHOUSI a Br. 1 81. lar&t yard
l!S.000 .... Ml.f7P, Act·
c.-.,a.-MOITM~
Lovely a tldrm, 2 ba. 2
aty CoVDtry French
boml OD l&t wooded lot.
Pl11bova1 6 fenced
yard ldul for kkta 6
peu . Won't Jut al sza.0001
•l~SU.000•
Owoa-ctt.ac15T
•1SOLUTELY ••••••••••••••••••••••
"' Lbtlos uptred, •n• HO MOHEY a1enta , .. , MZ.ooo. °''' DOWN! Bucb, edvh . P•l•
MIWPOITCIUT •~c.=.:u..: ........ ~=-
COteO PrlpCl'ty
Tate over plYlfttlltl ol •••••••••••••••••••••••
D400mo. HTA11SW Call S.rbaraCbamben, Wntaldt 111-1 propttty
Acept.m:DOO_ eo.u .... at.GOO 14 n
IY ow. llUO per '41 n PM-apUl·lt vt L fl0'1$ a\(), Ti· ,,._ L..•• d I 4IM Ue Int. &2Q!O, ut T37t. lAtme... IOIG in Newport Buch. 2308 Co.4-•--:row•.......,.,..,Ltg.w~i!w . ._ __ _
...... A -....................... CUil Dr u .. u.ue 2 bdrm .. ~~ .__ I 70G Bearh houae 28r Iba, otf "' -.,._ No Down I 2Br Pallo ~ ·i _.""'" It' wi I 3 Bdrm 2 bath, ftre:plare, ...................... home 1 ~ ba, l1t&e Uvln& ano ••••••••••••••••••••••• It. pr g, nler ronta
oeat •clean. Lat1t'lot. 0 Quallfylns. Pride of llO'K' din area. P1noT1mlc New SuPtr execuUvt ~ ,...,2~· ...,.,. __ _ V b t t t • · pool/sp1/11una Harbor 8 1y-Oct111 "O ndo . 3BR , 2•try lh St nl"• ....,.rm. nr try ea o erms.
1
owntrthlp everywhere. +. ' '"' ..,.. Sl3UOO. Pntutlc Sot Vial • ~ .. •faatt . ., .. r."""'·-· View. EllOUj)I apace to widen. Upa.rlded Xlnl buch, winter rental, I MC-* llr m! -.. -·.,.,.,. buJld. l'S0.000 MUST flnan. SOS/mo ind utll ey c • . w/pool. 1134.000, Bkr Mewport ..... 106t SEE! l'\.lo.SfOOO•! 639-5189.
141-71H .~~°' ....................... 4 5 l f7t-4111 Pvt-rt~Ml-7~U .__llfl_•__. .. -.. -ed--
YILU IAUOA By Owner. sBR, tam rm, H..._, I 042 STEPS TO llACH XW y.,._ Lo Da
Young people pool 2BA. rrptc. Ma • North ....................... FIE IYTHE SEA 3 bdrm, 2 ba ~sq ft
SpadOUJ new rondo& In
Gardeo Grove. no quall
fylna. Owner will sub
aldlzt mootbly payment
Minimum dwn 3bdrm.
3ba, sec. bldg 2 rar 1l
lchd llf W/OPDt
C11lSSHia>. ~03 11Ct s m.
your resources lde111 l lS9.000. Low interest lO' INt SI, OWC lal for 10 yn on S1200 mo. l lS,000 dn
two bedroom vrlla for lat. l30K dn. OWC 2nd at and olf water cOndo in lb I a 3 Bd r be 1 c b ....z.:.17:.:9_.,S00=.:83=1.:.54:.:.76=----your rirst home Fresh U~ .,_ brld uJ bar1aln Freshly re·,._ ______ _ RENTALS Vurly Wttkly.Wmter.
2.3.4. Bdrma
JACOIS REALTY
PROPEITY MGlS
11s a daisy ~n6 onto "6·2087,§42·9181 acl ce. lmmac Ile done Owner will con· 1" n 000 3 b d r m • 2 ~ b • 2 sider trades and notts 11 'h o/o ASSUMAILI a:=~t~!t1~'0a1111~·, •U.S.!fTllAMS firepl1ce1. 2 balroo1e1. Vaunt and move 1n LOAM
Lease option Is 11v11la Free list olHomtt beau f reenho111e WUI now Call Diana. •ct owe 2nd on this lovely ble Pru:e 1249.soo World R.E. w.m1 dow. 11ve-1-way al 631-lJM aparioua ruatom pool
• ,. OCEAN VlEW 2 Br. 2 81 '205.000. By owner 12131 home In Baycrnt, 3Br. IKCNM Property 20001---llu..z:_.......L..>1<._ t Cote Realty deck, yard. sec gate. 32f·l919 381 + 11 bonu• r m.
& Investment Sl&SK. 0~ l.Q0.68.34, "IH 1044 1.199.500.
"-A"5.777 842·8808. ..•••••••••••••••••••.. Open Sal/Sun 1-5
· '""" IASTSIDI Lowest Priced Single OCEAHFIOMT 2048Com.modon.a Rd
••••••••••••••••••••••• J206
MAKE AH OffU!
3 Income Propertru
Easlslde Co$ta Mesa
2()" down Owntr will
••••••••••••••••••••••• Balboa Island Waw'front
3 Br 2 Ba Yearly lease
11!..Q9 Mo. 770-0347. 3 bdrm. l\', ba, priced Fam.ily, ,3BR Home I~ IY 0un.111:• 548-1022 ENGLISH under market to sell lrv1ne . Xln,l frn """" TUDOR now Prinr only' SllS,990.Call Juhe, New c ust bll 2 sty, I•-------· elboa ,....._.. 3207
nrry •••••••••••••••••••••••
K·al.hy 631 -.;5A... agl 7S2·1411.833-0013 French Normandy 3 BR NO DN ar JUDE Charming home oo u --..,. ~ & den home Can be 91 lovely lrl't·llOed Slrt>et 1·2 WTSIDE Mew T ..... odl Hws apUt $89S.IXXI, owe 3711 c --R h fJ!! PROPERTY
MANA&EMEMT
SUMMEa • WIMTEI
YUILY • COMM'l
and. prl.de of ownership Charmin& older 3 Bdrm. SO down. 631·5737 A1t. Seaahore. 673 6578 MIJUm ClltC neighborhood 3 Rdrm. __,. F•roolr Ano NEI&5ER
large walk in <'l())el~. 2 brick fireplace. cove • ..,. **TAKE YOUR SPECIAL SAU PLUS separate guest
bath. sunny breakfast ~atio, la~ike.l y~rt· PICK Fee ground, walk lo home with tennis court
QJH ij i ll1J1J_I IC.
nuok. dom~ <'l.'11inu0 d oom or uru · n Y be h nJ 2 B and pcol on 1.5 a~re• ·has ,.~ S12•,000' Fantutic op· it' • super re. r ' ., living room, lots or portunlty!Call645--0303 Two of Woodbridees's home +bac.h. unit. Lrg been subdivided into 4
7 M 1141 1171'3
:!!Ii:, Cnll1·i:·· .\ 11·
('"'' J M l''J I \ BURR WHITE
REALTOR. IMC.
67>46l0
l'harm Only $104.!IOO tmeat products. Both are assum. loan. Priced to lots 9~ int loan as
646·7171 d e ta c h e d h 0 me a sell. Chuck Spiller. agt sumable or trade tor IY OWMEll
'IH~ ~~ ~I w/spac1ous &rounds and home or lot tn Newport •·Plex '21.200 Income. _I>-• n:. patios. 3 Br 2 8.1, l.tv rm. Beach or Laguna Pull 91,'1 loan on contract
'-;: din rm & heavy shake pnce S97S,IXXI 612 Calle Campana. San l.yfrallt
roofs HJ CH AS Agent. 714/6«·~13 Clemente 4200 sq ft Luxurious 2br. 2ba con-
1.iltoe ..._. 1006 ==-==~=~==--=--SUMABLELOANS ~500 714 ~S9CTI do Xtralrgbvrm ovtr •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• ·-~----•-llll hcl1 SIU 500 DOYEi or..-look mg bay Sec bldg ' ~ts I HillOlllDGE-l APPUYALLEY Underground parking ~~~:c"m=I ~~~!~~7 ~\\\1'\dbrldgt 1 Med~~e =rd UHDBMAllET r!ier~. ~b:th\~!~xuni~ ::~~~~:ia~~~:.
payment on Uus charm yurs at 14'!1.. See lhi.s 4 R•"'lllJ Pool. Jacuu1 Overloo&.s 3 Bdrm. 3 Ba. VIEW wrth fireplace. eorlosed s le p s 1 o bea c h . tng Balboa Island home I Bdrm plus den. North .... bay Galaxy Dr F'ormal tow~bome tn the pre patto. garage 93 • .-, l&l ll~ mo 642·~1 Ill H , IJtr Cos ta Mesa home ' 551 3000 din rm. 2frp}rs S715.000 slrgi~us pm ate rom Now $159.SOO Bill Grun
6 6 I Island kitchen. garage ! 1nt8arruu l'~ .... 1 .. 1nr Cee I munity With tennis ~Rltr 117~1 I api1trmoleodt lZ II
642 2Sl0/646-4848 rourt. pool! & spas Xlnt d ••••••• •••••••••••••••• lalaoeP-.. 1007 ~por~~k re~:n1e;d !!~e~ JB R.2"1 BA ~Walnut 1· -financing with large as No negaUve.19.IXXI own br . 111 ba . Crplc . bl n
•••••••••••••••••••••••' N J ff SlJS <XX> 10 .... , HOUS-~UDO sum able loan. Pnctd for 4 plex Pnnripals only d1j hwa sher stove dble conditioner. Priced right r e rey · • ig"'" _,, 1 , "•""' 000 John 646 7660 A.Jt t •-tr h pd Veil Q.. ti. with just 20% down_ See dn owe Ca.11548 3209 or •5 Br Sparush Vt Ila rmmoeu SI ea.~. --1111r • WI er "' as
f alb 751 4287 ••BrCountry"'r•nAh IOGEISUALTY C.M.4-IUX 1'lntartaduplexSS25 lst 2 bdrm. 2 ba + d•n 2 us or a penon s OW· • --~ r ~ ' •· I l 53•0 dep " 1-••"1151 •3 Br.Ao ........ r..,.,., 592 675-2311 $310.IXXI. xlnt ftn "' as + " fireplaces 2nd story u•I ~ PERFECT • """ ....,,, dulls nopets d k "•"000 •3Br 4-0x88'lotS435K 675-007i.1·Ji5 4t23 1117 14 1 661 0282 '2t3l ec . 2 car gar .....,,, Plan 4 in Turtle Rock 3 B -""'lot •• 8K 0 F' ' !153P364 • + r45,._ .-.I HA RBORRJDGEH ME MAKEUSANOF ER'4 G91!7178 · Campus View for only •3 Br under ronstrurtn WfnJ VlEW units. 2 years new In · It's a s~al M25.000 Sl98,SOO. Move nght in •3 Br SlOOK down·M25K 3 br .. 3 ba .. 3 car gar . CM prm only' Kathy Corotta dtl Mer 3222
3 br, 3 ba, remod Ltke Everything has already •4 Br40'lot$450K Cam. room,separatedtn agnt 631·~ ..................... ..
new. SS6·3&00 .. 673 "226 Owner An.xious! been done 4 bdrm. 2' 1 •2 Br with garage apt Ing room, avail now Doctors looking ror liml 3 br 215 Ins, 4 doors to
Corot1ecWM4r 1022 Sl2S,000 ba. Excellent location •3Brchanner S42SK Excellent terms' practice rn recreation ocean front Sl500r mo
S · _ _. · our UCI. park. pool and Wh atever your needs "'~.000 Owner760 197_7_ ar~a Dbl wt"" mobil• Gall Barbara 67J 3067_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• uper pnce n :uUcttOO on schools. Hi"h 115Sumahle ~--' UC ~ -4l4 llGOHIA lbis pretty 4 bedroom loans F'a~l urrow are. rail us. IAYSHOlllES M.I. sttup for Ch1ropract1r Beach LlVlnll large 3 Br
New elegllltt 4 Rr Vrc· College Park home. possible Printe community on <: 1 lot arross from 2 Ba urage, patro $850
t 0 ri1 n par ti a I \' u. Enrbanting din111g area, Nev. French Country nl'w shopping renter. 607 Ir 1s 634 1535 &
ownr1contrartor finan reining family room. home Beamed9 (ool Clear Lakl! Oaks, Ca 777 2233
av 11 TSOOO cracklinc fireplare ceil.Jngs Trulyru.stom $106.000 Term\, t:RA 3 BR I Ba So of Hv.)',
Nice 111e lot needs a ltl Elegant showplace Sherwood Properties fpk. yard S900 Andy, S25.000 DOWM tie tender loVlllg care Bright. SUM) j 7JJ7 459 6175 851 2269 wkdyi. 673 SS69 Lg assumable loans. A111ume loan at below
Remodeled 2 br . mce I market interest! Owner HEWPOIT Approx 3.&sOsq rt ,~e~ e\e~ -
patio, R·2 lot w plans I wilt help wrlh rinancinc 2-slory' S.bedroom. , z I 00 4 Br 2 Ba Children &
or u n • •. ust aee to 1pprec1ate Owner/A&tnt Call '7t ·2390 Walk to beach, enJOY FamLly room Two Comm1lndus uni\ MOO last. no deposit
f It S2.,, soo 1111 • , I CHSTCONDOS I 3baths.4firtplaces ••••••••••••••••••••••·1 pets OK ta'ill mo 1.st &
957 MG-1430 T~ ·~ pools, tenrus & the life of pnvate beacbe5on bay sq rt Bakl'rlF;arr\'lt'W 640-9166 _S29·962!i ~~ ~52~CAMPU5Dl·lll'JtWE Newporl Re ach 10 Manna Cluld~n·s area $395 mu Jn q 3 Bd .. den. 2•1 Ha. rrplr ..
IRVINE TRUCE 1------------these playpark 24-hour ~7·2011 dbl ~ar patio nurly FfXH STAITllHOME 1--------• •3BrO<'ean\uretrea1 guarded gate f~ ne ... ss7~ mo Patty Pnce reduced owe 11t i 3BR,hreplare,nearSo LUIUIYUYIHG •2Brm~lhome S798.000 Byo11mer COSTA MESA Nesbtl a(ts.599400 -I T.D al II'\: Exrell II CoutPlau .1129,900 Themostmcrediblebu) •3BronlySIOKdown l714J S43.-40023•HOOO_ 120Xt40'lot + )mlbu1hl :00.cv. 2 Br 2 8a S675 mo
I •3 Br •nd u n it rng Pr1 red Lo St>ll
I loc1tton Won 't last 67S.lnt today 10 Un1vers1ty ~ VIEW 1~ i ll'J , OrrhicJ ;-o;o peb GrecArll~.agt759·1221 Park An expanded assumable " 1245.000 Chuck Spiller ti.SI 9135
Chancellor Model v. ith s I •2 Br custom Plan I NEWPORT HG TS a t 631 l2fAi nrn t't"l'ln: bdrms ' 3 bath s •3BrocunVll!W Impressive 4 .R~rm Loh for Sc* 2200 Co1taMtta 322~ ~Will Derorated lJke a dream w numerous amenities ••••• !••••••••••••••••••••••• STORE with Italian tile. wood Owner will finance Call :·;~;;;•;;j;~·N~wpor1° 3 BR 2 Ba xlnt r.amtl)
I ( d t c h o f d nhrhd , Mesa \ erde shutters. Ooor to ceibng o r et a' s . u r1 Bear K or Con os. area Small fenred in
H--'--vt.........Hlat.. I~!~===~~~ bookcases. tract lighlln° Herbertsll, a,631·1266 omre or Ml'dm1I llld~ --... ......,. _. " I • pool S825 mo Da\td Ftnelocation,beautiful 3 &i more $70.000 1n 1 •~••-6410763_.Ag_ent 6463255 ...... 1 amort. 11ed loans. this ex ,•1 ~I. r. · M-·.Jat-, ~ .......... Bdrm 2 Bath w/f1m1 Y IO°t'o Dw.l°"oW ceptronal vaJueis pnced tr.1'~:0. _,ll••ort .. __...,. 2400 Eaststdt' 2 HR, I RA. I car room. New pl\L1h carpet Anxious owner will help t s t 7 s 0 0 0 WESTCUFf •!!!!!t___ • l(ar, fenced yd. pe~ &.
ing. 3 car garaae, lrg 30 O l.h' I 1 • I ••••••••••••••••••••••• kids O" ·~ ""r mo 38'1 yr assumable'" loan at nance II new Y r~ (71415S2 ~77 • Two bedrooms, 2 bath NEWPOIT SHOIES Pa Im Spnngs Cundo E 18th St·~ fu eves
12Yi% Low down pay· ~:Ot!a~a3~ ~~: WALK ER & LEER E condo. Large assumable Most de11rable I story 167 700 ' --
ment. Call 5'49·8755 or ly yard, a patio' brick ll!!l!!l!!!!!l!!!!l!!!!!!!l!ll!!!!!!!!!!!l!l!!!!I!!!~' loan w1lh low interest noor plan. 2 bdnns. den. Furn OnColJ Club Dr 15 Bdrm 3 Ra. nu rhoolrpt
6«·7220 BBQ. Full price $120,000 LOCJ9H IMdl I 041 rale Owner will carry 2 baths. xlnt cond ? 714 320 9544 . S68 .l l 131 paint. walk to sr s
751·3191 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2nd ll>ilh Sl8,IXXI down patios S 13 Ii 0 0 0 Bkr Mes-l.ll'I "1 ar. S950 mo
IFYOU C:::. '•{I {( T
'""t""' PH< )Pt.~ I 1£ ~ have a servire to offer or goods lo sell, place an ad
in lhe Daily Prlot 1----==-..;;o;;.;;==-
Clusified Section
Phone642-~
Class1f1ed Ad·Visor at
642·~8
TELL
MOR E
PEOP LE
ABOUT YOUR
SALE!
E
Signs are great to give
directions to your
garage sale but to let
people know you re
having a sale, you
should schedule an ad
to run rn the Classilred
secrron ot lhrs
newspaper! Ifs the best
way to tell people what
you·re selling. when and
how to gel to the sale.
Call today and let us
help you word your ad
DMLY PILOT
CLASSIRI ADS
HONE &42-5671
W ... T .. W•Tta Sl29.SOO Make an of Ownr'Aot 851-8300 j Bob Koopagt,75!!1221 " ao "'~ fer" ---'!..l..!.!b· -o.t of St• w d 2 bd I h EVD~E * ,. Sf.AVlfWbrOWHEI r,..rty 26001 )~5r~1 :~r Av~r:i 0e/i Sperl acular vll!ws. Cote Really I 1379.000 "R are B11r ••••••••••••••••••••••• 55~ mo t:.t & last ~
spuwirng 4 bdrm. J A. lnH'Slment Harbor 3 Br !possible 41 HAWAII tlep 54f! Oll3
baths. 2 frplc,, WET 640·S777 2'-" ba + ram rm. 2fpks II ave houSl'), rondos 2 RR I l:ia dplx ga r sml BAR. beamed ct1l.tng, Guarded gate tenrus, I r . I · · · ram . rm , lge kitchen, PoOI etc sl26 000 IS· ols or sa e o.r I''< fenred yard small child huge master suite Ex· · bl 10& ·~ 1 l change Rep!} l\relstn OK No pets $475 +dep
Pan&1 ve palro & pcol 0suma e • 5 l Realty. 26 Karnehe t . 195-I AMeyer 5493484 Lf.ASIOPTIOM v.ner may assis Kallua HT 96734 ... --area w rock rimmed Nearly 2000 sq ft of wi2nd Call for appl "t808)26Z 98 I fir I Ba. coz} E side. spa & wal er r a 11 640·82Z7 rnrl gar stove, ref rig. $359.000. customized featuru Rmc:lte&, Fww, no peu $410 mo Adlts
MlSSJON REALTY ~u~t~s 'aer::N;~~! p':1~~t:i'i l SEAY1EW Gro .. 1 27001 All L1rr1 ~1 "8400
494--0731 '" the gated community MODa HOME I••••••••••••••••••••••• t:: srde J Br ... den. pool AUCTIOtil or VILLA BALBOA Unobstructed v1ev. oil S79S mo Call Chnstma
S t D sth Naw prime I -ase Opt.Ion available ocean. Catalma & <'fl)' HORSI UNCH ~7 2183 a · er ~ ""' l.tghls Prol decorated Bd b ... 1 -Vll!W Laguna Beach for 1 year $249,500 Call 1 r 3bd · 2 5 arres, 3 rm 2 ""' Sp11msh stvle 3 br 212 ba estate Finanrmg a\'arl Wm Cole ror further 1n comp urn rms, home Large 1 Bdrm r ondo ·,., m1 rrom
M. b d 11775 ooo c II 2"'1ba · Cam rm. xlnt guesl how.e 20X20 tack ocean. att auto g:ir p ID. 1
1 R · ·A ~ formation. ftnan r1 ng. $475,000 room. 2 storage shed S ~9Smo ~~eves • 4~.~ y»n , I!· *Cote Really O wn e r 0
1 All t p1pe corrals w1lhwater, •br fam r~ RV' · & I I 1 I 4 > 3 4 • 2 9 1 7 • bar w 24X36 prpe corral · FlAJIAMD nvestmt>n l (714)340-3294. 6' chain bnk complet~ Easts1de S*X>63m~tssq
ORIGIHAUTY 640-5777 and rrouc-d fen ced ~~~u·ou m 1· 0~
Located on the popular $24,000 DOWN Sl86.SOO
No r t h End wi th llACHHOME 642-5200
breathtaking white IOo/oDOWH IECllATIYE
water views & crty night Outstanding 3 bdrm
lights. Designed for lo 121/JO/o IH'TBEST custom borne on fee
maintenance by James JO YWTBM land. Expanded master Lashley. the home Well louted Bluffs "C" •
futures beamed cerl Plan near the pool 4 suite with flreplare ..
PETE BARRETT .,. REALTY
3 hr pool Ml'!la North
S!IOo/mo S950 mnH•s you
'"_631 _69902f6i2·5497 _
Nr S C Plau Condo In So SA. 3 Br 1111 ba, dbl gar Patro. pels •ktdJ
QK $595 Agt~7_(l2'l2_
illgs, redwood arcenu ' bdrms , 3 baths. hte and mjnl llbrary Enjoy i-.11!!•••••111!!~ lots of tile. 3 bdrm, 3 c hee rful interior thou ocean breezesl"' Y~flrfvoh ~v~ls & w~ c!:l~,0~r~ $300,000 L.H ~:ci~r~a~~o~J:~~~ 1!!::::, 2100 ~:1!l 1~~k. "i::~. ;~r~
l b I I k 171 .. 1 673 .. 400 1229 S00 (Tl4>S62·"417 ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• Fireplace Child, Pets ress o eac eve ma ea " • ., WA.LK.ER •· LE~ R. E. b I S Hi Y ok ~ 645-2346 __ _ Uus the perfect cholre fltJl 62a.uu • I;< roo e e n& our ~
f lb --'-( u Property' Trade 1t with 0 yt-.... or e l •vwui(I am Y HARBOR iOIG lbe Great American * • c.-"""
$480,000. Tnde Co We have hun lBR. 2"'RA, frplc, sp1. WOMDllfUL.. ••••••••••••• .. ••••••.. S795 + SD Z2'3 Paclflt views, privacy ' qulet IY 0--dreds of Exchangeable "B" 106 CM S.8-847'
I "'-Properties 111 C1lifom11 can be fotmd in llus un . Totally redecorated. l Throughout Callfom11 _842 7743
1ue 3 bdrm, 3 balh ' A 0tv1~1on or bdrm. 1 ~ ba, pool, C•ll Now arp 4 8dnn pool home.
a m ily room home lldfbor ln\e~tment Co S122,SOO. Tenns: FHA. 61$..375.1 11100 lmmed. orcu~
Sellers may help with VA assume, 751-4221 --Cul·d ·s•c 3•90 Sit
finand na.MCS.000. ....... Ra fael 919·5370 o}
LUVITHICAI CMrry Lake Estates, 313 Oflttrlttl...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• S40·78..,1"'8M,J""'ud~y ___ _
al home • walk to the Newport Glen Court, ....................... HMMt .. 1111914 c br .• 2 bi • tam. din .. fp ,,
beach from thle 3 bdrm Npt. Bea. New • BR. 3 Meltlt "--•••e••••••n•••••••••u new paint. l.al & 11111
1 home tucked 1w1y on a BA, 3,200 1f, 15 K dn, ••· ,., ~ t I OG ~ 1.-.. JI 06 dep,, no ptts. S58·W? I
quiet atrect. Hardwood avm1 2 Yr 210 K l.al 11 ••••••••••••••••••tt••• ••••••••• .... ••11•••••• lmmar 3BR 2BA lrt
floors, derk, •bric~ U ,HS./mo. O.W.C. OCEANFRON T Larse4 Br3b1.l 1400mo. fe m rm wdrplt'. ~.
pallo wit.II mature rrut NCOnd •l JJ~ 2 Vt ~00 LAGUNA BC ff ntff l bllr to ba7 Bltina drpa bit.ins 2 cer aar
lreet. Great pottnllal .K. 8'2·0.S~ eU.57•5, from SZU OO. Mt • !(JD.f?Hl . • Avai't Dec i.t. S100/m •.
Owner will help with •15·000. Ill CO·OP mo.419-3811 ~........_... ll -YtlY.Mf=41MorNHl?I fin111cln1. sm.ooo. !/bln1, -... J4 ~ ........................ rm dvplex, oew "'PU·. •"""" ~ •o 'f:et atreet. 3 Br 2 Bl entlottd rd, ar, nic .~ ~ Oa BIJ' 2Br...... r P I c, b I 1 fc 1r d . 1.....,.:c.~~z.=u.....-
., .. fOOI WIUNMANCI U r ... ....... ardeur. I OOmo Part Or sno
' Super allup, COIOJ \. 28r .. .. .. .... .. .tOO Hr. do 6 kW. 1••a-........ rn. •tH'111Na. •Jibe l'fa.rBIJ'2Br .. '-'-._..ta_, a.tooctu.D ,• ........ .._.
~~~==~;;~;;~~~:::!1::==:!~17~1~41~4t~~=l~l7=7~!!]~(~)M.!! .. !!!.i!llL!!! ... i!!·!·!U!l!·l!411!!J.:~!!;~::::;::=:=:Jl.iMiiU!jtii~:::
f
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s
e1-•rdtl MwytoLo. 5025 Lost&,...... SJOO .. 1Ha1pw..-. 71M .... w..-. 7100 .... W..W 710< Wllllhd 7100 .... w..w 7100 Wllllhd 7100 ....... 4471 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ···.···················~ ,.,...... , .............................................. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ................................................................... .
••••••••••••••••••••••• V..._..e.plhll Lost 11·20. oranc• Tabby ••••••••• .. ••••••••••••, ounter help for dry HOUSECARE: Lady to ~ Part.time Receptioailt· HB Ccla'r.
11000 Sqft commental 1 .... L.-kitten. Behind Pomoa1 5d1ook&
1
IAITSn1IR clea.oer.IOQdbours.Ap-care. for elderly, DOG MOTHERS!! Perm, floep.,iucceptintaP119.
DUJlneu or warehouu I Ventu'!C!' ital Avail School CM MS-1680 ......... 7005 Perso11 needed to meet ply In person, s93S bedndd~ Woman. Lov· LJYe 10 for lady recover· Part·time. ~! 1J1 Office, for up recpt. lfea.y
SQr sqft. 2 car space. f B . P Start CASEY'S GOME! ....................... 6 /y r . old alrl a fter WarJKr, RB. ely Costa Mesa home In! from st.rob. 6 da on. In your Home. Phone re· pbonea. HB Coav f1a11>.
have ulll. MS-1184. 443 :fso d':'=ineas ~· 8 months old Male Now EnrolWoi. Cbri•· school, l:SSpm to •P· DISI= Own room & bath, ooo-1 a off. 3 bn olf during ception, Some Clerical, 11811 Florida St. Im Hamilton JD. C.M. 1 1 · G · t11n Pre.SCbool. 320 E. prox 2·~ everyday smoker eyes I& wkeixi... da $$0 da, rm Ii bd. Some Sales. µM~7·=15!!..._ ____ _
equ pment leas na . rey and y.ihtte. Tabby lBtb St Costa Mesa M · ·i 1 MUST BE ,...HT OI ...{!_13) 862·92&1 Co u Id ah are Job ___ ,:='1..,1~•=---"--------• Retail Store; choice loca· BM· cat Collar w/tag We S · "i p · 00· r · w 11 o other nurse . 1111
t1on by Newport OC'ean Mot'fllllS. Trwt love and min him ~· roeram · £!2!.._~li ~!'BL E · Exper. pm. Muat have lftcomeTH 646-8l83Nov2'7onlr. ,________ 1.1.IMYISTMBft'
froot. 800aq. ft. $750 mo. REWARD! ~·-c.«met>t.ary, ttf'a. A~ In penoo: Interviewer Ii preparer, -PAIT TIME Ell'll while you leara.
67S-4l&S.6'73-140l. D"4i 5035 da83.5-4700ut:W .... W_.... 7100 Woodbrld1e. Irvine. Calilonua 8 Motel, 1441 1ood opportUOlty. Mu.st Nunio1 H E R J T A G I
2400 sq rt 5 offices ail• ...................... ev67S.1970or ' ....................... Ref '1. Ple111 call Gi.t.lerAve.,C,M. be exper Costa Mesa LYM No~:~:.g:.=be INVESTMENT will
wort i ., W C l S ....... ~ Co. F d M BUt bl I •Dw-.-•-t SS2-0411 aft«5:10pm. DRIVERS WAHTED '42-0212 W B.S J.ll ·30 Coov. Hosp NB de,.....dable ...... avalla· teach you creative u piceP.I · UOI:. All typea al real est11te doun w_t w · g. ,.. ... ~'-"" · · · aru POI. attitude & ...-~ ....., flnancio•, 1031 Es·
•Ill, nr acen a • . -•· ....... n og 11·21 on Victoria St •-••ttST Eariy cnorniftcbomede-smalu needed xlol ble on call. Npt Bch "' d ~.Ample pllg, $1560 1t1vestm., ... .amct._. CM~-4\13 _.__, ll•~ry . L.A. TIMES. IMTlll06A.TOI: beaefits.Call :642~ Fashion Island aru. chances. investor •·
mo. Ownr/btr. 67~3568 Spec...... F o u n d : G I a as es . MIT~ Bad:IDI lrv111e &: Newport areas. MllD9 N 1 760-0501, 8:»U:30 Eelopment •~ma.
................ 4500 J;;11); K~REA. (Hall Glasses) 100 !At • ... u uanB S425 t m o. Jess : PAIT-TM. urs 0 « cd~ri~"::!~M
••••••••••••••••••••••• 642· 171 4 6 U Vic. East Bluff Newpe>rt S I et end and p. JOI MA.lllT SM-023S. SlOO/weekend and up. MUISIS A.JDI 'ls an UJ11&1ual oPt>CY tor
Coats Mesa. 1200 sq. rt. Wid b f Beach. About 1 week i'11 552R!1!fi· Army ,_..,._,.... Dy,oamlc: •ales poeitio!' Call S52·3173. Army E11per 'd , all shifts PleaWorti right person. CoOl\cte.
iodullrial space. T 6~ ~i:,00:: ~~ aao.6'M-IM_7 ____ beeserve. l'OU can Newpe>rtBalboaSavlnp with Petroloa, lac Uru· Reserve Be all you can ConY Hosp. Nwpt lkb Need people with script tial interview. Call
PIS/mo. 613-5340. ' r;edlt ~heck, DO pe~alty Lost Siamese seal pcllllt. . is aeekln1,a ~vre. weU ~':' ~ r~:\~ be. B~I your smile • Join sty le o~. persooahied Vi.Dee~
l700 aq. ft. Wa.rebou.w 111· Call Denison Auor M 11·22 Vic. Cy9ress ALL·ROUND OFFICE iroomed iDdivid~al wbo 1PP y. Call P Ans us Free mjr .. med .. den· h1odwr1tm1 for piece Ill•••••••
cludln&300sqft .. olfke. 673-1311 !ree .~•ne , Irvine PERSON · ( f t· loveswortma~lb~ e.Aadrnt#'i'U...w .. •b:.er L i'-' lal •life ins. Cati work at home. Send i..-------16151 Noyes. lrv111e. tn· -Pluto ~ · or u pie for Ille poa1tlon o( -_!!!!.·~---· If .Jl(J I 642.aot4. I sample. t.o 1811 W. Com· Restaur&Dl
qulre lhrosi Co next MKl!lf'll ..... MfQ. Lost 3 wks aso· Or111&e' reed medical dist. p rr Teller. Excellent Eam Christ.mu Money Newpo~ ctr Realbtau OFACI Meil/ monwealtb. Su Ile D s PIUCAM
door. 957·9266 or SINCEEARLYOO white IO!llhair M cat! in~~!frn!:a(_J'0·mU:; opportuftityforastable, Palollo1 ducks .pa~t Litigatjon Law Firm UIC.SIC"Y Fullerton CA 92833 in'. 11 ~~ r.1• St., al
6*11}44. lat & Znd. Trust Deeds YIC. M agnolla Ii In· backirou~d helpfu l responsible penon to time. Let the artist m Sttks exper'd Legal Stt f andin 1 fi elude return address MacArthur. trvtae, aGllt
huide I& OutskleSlora&e OWN,Eft,.NONOWNER d i an a palh. H, 8 . Cbaoce for advance: leam and dl.ve~ \a a you ariae. Eve:t Ii Sat. with &ood typlna, die· ~rl~~~ rm andpbonenumber 1ccept.i.D11pplH~~
for motor home llhnl4unlta Reward. Please call men t Sa I a r Y growlo1 aaaoc11t1on. SUO/br.lnterv1t"WsSat. tapbooe and SH skllls. I S com· IOTCHVll ~ t b'I & 1j PeterDobbl.Broker 962·7'811 f Santina or S 6 Lex· a .m . 9 ·11 at 19001 Sala &40-6!l&O P n . alary com· Plastics au omo I e sma 76M827 646-6016 . ne~./bene lla. Call periencepre(trred.P11d l Hamden Ill Garfield). ryopen. menaurate with exper. cin DISJ:IW~ERS
trailered boats. MS--4832. -SCIAMl£TS • begioning lJ..JMI betwn cll'fff apparel Please H.B. Leoel Secratwy Cal I Mr Si moods : ~· .. P'a.SON Day• nigbt tbiftuvail
A p / .l~nooo.ss.7517 call: I forNIJf1nn.m~ybe ln· 833·3622 Wearelootin&foranex· Apply in penoa Mao. ....._,~!•,••c 4 ANSWERS Answering Service.I Ms.DmnyPartala lSTIMA.TOI I tellicent &r motivated, perieoced.M/f'lor"*"· Frl,tAM~PM. PlittHt lr'IHlll/ Abduct VIiia graveyard lhlft avail.., (n4~ Me~banical Enrineer· exrellent skills, one to t.loo molclini producUoo. ....................... Lott.,.... Blaze -n..-. typing 35 wpm, Call: ..... = .... ·~ Ing de1ree or equl_valent two yrs. liUcation fl· PAIT Tiii( tJCo. raid. beallb, VI CI· Sal-• -
O..octwlty 500 ..... c..... 5100 "' "'" estabUahed cUentele m t.e with b·lit EYEJI~ opening only, 4:30-12·30. A A
....._, ....................... LABELS""" 631-0140 EOE "s·~ &~LO,.... w i t b P o s s I b I. e perience. Salary Com I ""' on holidays. 2nd sblf\ .... D •ILY r .a.y
•• ::fr ....................................... ~uy with a black eye. A./I~ I llOOlrvineAtt.,NB refinery piping. Meri· ~~~~'Mallie~ ~ Apply at: • Sl~S30/HRCOMM1 LOSING LEASE quit Mydatewdlwastoo e•-E.0 .E. M/F dian Conatruction , ---· Wearepres111Uylftk. Ol.A."4ilCOA.ST Euy·to·sell ucit1n•
tin b . aetlin · Ires~. but I was. JUSI F / . ~ La&uoa Nil\atl, 83l-8686 Locker ~ attendant 1 Ing adults with pleasant PUSTICS Cbrlstmu fifl puli: ALl ~'=~ ~·r.:, lootmg f()(' the des1grw1 . time. some account· BootkftPtl' Pvt Atbeuc club. Alter· I persooalities who would 8SOW lltbSt c M Part/lime or l'ull/tiae.
t In ludin LABELS " 1 0 I e 1 Pe r 1 e 0 c e P /lime full charge. 3 DIC. SIC'Y . ~-evening sblft, Moo· be Interested In worbo1 ·Mi.as.3' · Excellent opportulli\f ~ c g· · Found Sun Eve. 1• necessary. Must be days per week. Call Good ly~! stills. f'n N~at and }len0t'!1· an Sales Ii Promot.ion . . for coUegutudents. Mf. P •Y bcua. Wilting WestclaH Valla . NB. rnachane oriented. Xlnt Corl an e wkdys: 8 superior manner, hie Ab1bty to ~I with with Daily Pilot Carriers Pni·acbool Director, min. Lyon 760-U43, Sun. lW S~m ~ ~ids. Beaut~ beaut pale oranee tab· company ~eflta. Call 631·16$1. able lo wort efficaenUy people Ideal petition for 10 to 15 year s old E.C;E. 't 3 units ad-or wkdys. 100 ar ryers an by young cat Phone· BalboaManne.~9671 undertlmepressure At· rellredmillit.arjperson. Unlimited e . · mlmstrative.490~3. ~=~~----
bydraullc c~rs, mir· 714/323·2S59 011 12129. E.O E. M/F/H IOOl .... F/C tractive salary & jlJ~aakforaJ. a uilable t!r~:~~~ Printing SALES. PERSfr Cull• rora. shelves plants. 642·19"1 all lmmed. openin& wtlb in· btnefita for rig:ht person ...... .,.. persoo Hr s·30PM to Plateroom helper Mon 3 part-tame. v eo stbrt
Atao, make-up, shampoo F d Wb ' p Aasemblers-licht lo· teroational trademark Please call 979-3666 uk -8·30PM Mood tbr PM to approx 8 PM aales, exper prtferttiO.
and oal.r products. 0~~: e/bla~S:::rkinu~, dustrial Wllp. po1itloas licaaln1 firm in Laiuna for Kathx. ' _ t HOUSIC~ Friday. 'Some s?tunt.U Tues 1 :30 PM to approi Call .Lynn 642-1M4 for lit-~f~r~~ G 1ve yourself a Vic ~d 'Newport Bl~ n o w a v • I r a b 1 e · Bea~. Respoo. for •c· Hairdreuing assistant. I T 0 P 0 t e 0 t 11 ! L 0 s av ula biUty. For af>' 1 8 PM, no exp. nee. App-tervaew appt.
· Christmas bonus NB Call Pat67S-t9116 Woman/Ken. American COWltiol dept.. IDCI A/P. sal. plus tips pref A 0 I e 1 es T 1 me 5 I point men t r a I · ly: Peonyaaver, 1660 SALES ICI Cl!AM STOlf _ sell unneeded · · ·. Labor Co re· 8281 AIR. payroll, wur.ance, mature penoo, Pieuant ~ubscriben "~~ 8•1 642·4321 ask 'for Be~ Placentia A.Ye .. C.M. L.T. lodustnet Is .11• UftlJIDATIOH Found Biil Poodle mix. Mao~heater, Buena c&Sb mcmt ""l>OfUDC. atmoapbere Lag lkh oney doin& ll. As a I w IU • paneling their UlduatrW
""' items in the Fem. Skyline/Newport. Part. communication with 4'7·:m3 ult for Benni~ Sales Repreaent.aUv.e for 1 ams. 1 RECEPT fTY'IST sales force. We otfer :t::,eaeei~~~'t/e~i~~: Oai'lv Pi'fot 0 .C. Shelter89l-4351 Ass em biers. We will oulslde CPA firm. ~· Wl li m ~e Los . Anceles Times Active real est.au office guaranteed salary +-.
ul It Ii R 'J Lost : White Peman cat train .. Apply 1 AM , puter data proceastn.& Hairtt llat C1r~ul1Uoo Dtpartment bu opening (or a w~ll ceU. commiaaioo, &rOull :15 f635 su~ ~8 :::2 Gift G i'de vir Cress St. Laguna MacGrecorYachta. 16.11 exper. a atroai +.Send Y you 11 eamasuara.ntftd 'AfrnMI groomed, penonable in· insurance, abort houri . a ts. • U Beach. Missing Nov 21. Placentia. Colt.a Meta. rtswne wtth salary re· ~ your own.~ S~~ ws.1e + generous Com· 6-9pm. Expanding youth dlvldual. Must be exper 6AM·l2PM, 12PM.CtM eve!. Cal642 5678 Cal1494·7lll!O quirementa to : C . euecpace1n . m1u lo ns on the counseling firm baa w /typioc alulls 45 room foradvaoce~'
WANTED 1 experienced • . BA~YSITTER: Jtature. Brellllia. UcNJq Bolt, for Chuct.&n-2046 Subscriptions you seU. openings for J.5 lb tOwpm. Real estate ex· Call Mr SaQdsAH!•t
Travel Agent tbal would .ct oal for a Lost. Graby C._ockaBtae
1
1 lovmg, up. ptoldncabo, ~ P.O. Bo1 571. Dana Pt.. HAIDWA.11 Hours are from 4PM to out&olnf mature .-!';! per. desirable Call · like I.he opportunity to C II r I 1 t • 0 1 vt I o r c eh s. a care for 10 mo •)' Ill CA txa 9PM d11()' Tra.iJdng wiU ~""' Su 63 · II • · the _....._ owll a part of a new .. ..1yt._ Peninaula6'73-0Z81 my Irvine home FIT · · Reta II Salea, Laguna be P ded All lo mot vate ambitious un 1-0213 (orY1°':.~terin c•r, bem':':! "'!IP ,,..... tbru l2/14. S5l-m2. Cake Decorator waoled. Btacb. F\all Ume, part rovi · you l~lS yr olcb. Call 2·5pm. ~ .. ....,.,
•ttncy. Send resume to FOt}ND · Small blk & -· p/t nu bn .. will train. time cashier. Coast need Is a good •P· M2-4321, ext. 343. Ask for i to r~ck the many·~
Box 728, C/0 Daily Piiot. white dog, VIC of Crown Babysitter NB area ~l-4567 Hardware, 4'1-4403. pear an ce Ii an en-Andrea. I advertised for sale .. P.O. Box 1560, C.M. • _ _. & R~ 5100 Valley Pkwy & Golden Needed. Prefer in my tbuaiastic manner. It Classified. PP _., ,._ Lantern. Call : 831·3631 bome. 14 mo old. 'days CA.Stm Houeteeper, child c~re, you thlnk this position ===:..-----=
for Sale Full service ....................... toidentify a week . S40·9529 or Faablon llland retail live lo Prefer retired might be right for you,
print shop in rapidly Found . nr. 19th 6 67:Mm2 store. Expr pttf. ~ut ~f ·~ b~ home giYe us 1 call. 957·2361
srowin& Orange County Harbor Samoyed older advlllctmeot for nght am v ·room _.ex=-t 1=204~-----
locaUon.848-2987 fOlm ADS female.' bm lthr ~r. Ba.Jtkill.a pet'::. ~:Ueft: or ;:ct8*:1~· da "1·2244• Mechanic, 1olf cars. .......... Alf flEE Friendty.54M450. MEW ACCOUMTS ~i l'eCJ. c •o E or .. Sun u up., must ba•e own """-*'t 5015 L l B u N--rtllalboaSavln1s f m.'44Af!O. re. · · House&"IJtt, ~ mon tool1. Cood pay and vppea-·t o s r o vt n • w-r-only. Howeceleanmg & benefi ........... •••••••••••• f'..tl. Doberma_o. Jon&eara, no bu immediate ()llefti.Dg CAStm child care, Lag Bcb ta. Call eM-80119-4
Hard wortlngyoung man .,_ ' collar, Vic Sw\llower & for an uperienetd New HOUSIWAllSAUS area. Ul-8700 dys, MODRS/ISCOITS
teelrullmtpartnerln a 642-5'71 Bear 11·24. 546-8249 or Accounts Counselor. FlllJ or p/tlme. Apply: (Eva>. evet/wknds Attn Femalesonly NB property. 646-9872 J.49-0824 This i& a cbalJen&Jn& Crown Hardware, 1024 417 !!$3-WO b Shares in an Irvine Lost Great Dane/Lab Found 11·21 Grey Fem position wtt.b 1 terrific I We.tclitt NB.
'nriftU.oao.98000. ml1.Black.VicolCb1p-kitten. sht. haired (4 ~P.POPrt~n~ypfo{ El•-------&51-91~. man. In Orange. 494-7226 mo.) vie. Newland 6 ORI ENT ED" person. ClmtlCAl.
a
Whil t> you
Chrulmas shop you
ran ha ve an ud
runninf{ in lhe Daily
Pilot Clasi;Hleds
und have ANSWEK
AD take your calls
24 hrs a day. 1'he
Answer Ad (h•'lt
for a whole week Is
only SS.00 . Call
6•2·$678 & pll(f
that 1d now !
sos 9 oaa
Full lnlurance benefita Realeatate IYQdlcaUon 5350 • paid career apparel. Pl'O«tllal clert few NB
Salary commen.surate lovett nnn. Proceues UICUTIVI wtlb experience. Please new Invest. lnvolvln& * SWTI * call : bank depoaita • detal.led
24 hour ESCORTS Ma. Denny Parilla f0Uow-14p. DepeadabUlty 11~ 6 •ccuraq -~'· Com· tU-1122 MC MIWrorf ~A puttr ap. btlpt\IJ. Call:
OEDS·Would Love to SA.YMSILOAM 114/MMlA
Party wit.b you. Call Sue 1100 lnine An .. NB orDtbbi~~me. E.O.!. M/F Comm'I a-tl'I Wllll·
e d , dapeadable •
, raponslble. P&11 well . • ,....c,.,. sEu. ldle , ... with • [ r1u. ian. P1ume, Etcorhl Dally Piiot ,Clasallled f/tlme, aabltltutet. CaU
Uffrs Ul.0180 Ad. • • ~t.plft. DP!· .;;:=. Dally Pilat .................... ,,
I t
: . . Advertisilr Sales
Exper. '"WtlPIPe~-d'i.;~~ uletperaon lo
handle ~•Y accounts for Ora.ngt Coast
Daily Pillot. Salary. rommlulon and
ex«lien~ ti.nefiu. Growth o~un1t11t for ptrapn wilh Cltttt' ambiUlln., Stnd
~Dltte mume to Maril ~I PO
Box LSe01 Cotta II•• CA 11'll6211. No phooe
callt, ple11e. An Equal Op por·
; • tunlty Employer.
.
~ .
I
. .. . . . .
I ..
ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ~
• DW.IAY1T~comw.CA.-• · '. M ftl1A&. TY~· • ............................................. · .. .
sr6W~MTs
NE~ED
e.n *30-SSO per week.
Trips & Prial. Ctl ....
0 ulfllt .... I .
( t ____ <O=-> __ ) )
14NTBD . ( ( ___ <CS ___ ) )
Newspaper
Carriers tor routes
in Huotington Beach,
Fountain Valley & Newport Beach
CALL
CIRCULATION
DEPARTMENT
-~~-lf -Sal~ Repre.entaUve SICMTAIY
want Sec Wily! we are a E•cellent opportunity
NA1'10NAL Company 1_aJllU"-1.1!::.te!X.t.:.----f for blab powered lo ... Ith Jlt&kml Offlta ' divldual with top typlnl .. S • ... D-H .......... ' shorthand aldf\s Must W•rehouau . Jn the """" ""-~ If G._1101 • Industrial FARGO-lnC.lll be a.ureulve, se ·
Trade lnduatrlea. We Counter /kitchen aaat. starttr' able to aaaume 1...e~iLIC~=-----1
have an JM MEDIATE Study Job, 9:30am r es Pon a I b 111 t Y · openln1 for a Super 3·30pm, M·F. 16th & Congenial Newport
Salu Person to Ex · Superior, Cotta Mesa Beach commercial dus~ely Repmtnt our 631·3042. brokeraeeomce.
lloe of tools, Supplies & Seuonal Help p
I q •I p men t 1 n a n &IFT WIAPPllS Cont:;:.~llY:
e .. llabed territory. Start1n1 11/30. Days, I':======== B out of Oran1e evenings & weekends. lim e n t y . WI th o u t Apply In penoo: Crown SICUTAIY ~l&bt Travel Muat Hardware, 1614 San "DMl1o.11.-•TWVE b at u r e , En · u · I NB "" ""••-ttY Uillbatic\ Take Charge ... igue ' · · ASSIST AMT ln~idua Who Works For v. P. Irvine furn i-=:..::.......~------bea~ under minimum SECRETAIJES m f & . customer 1----"-" ...... "'""----Su!*'Vialon. In Return Work temporary Jobs service/order follow-up,
w"'.4' O f r e r : closetohome. drartln&/blueprint exp.,
• C..0 Mp ET IT IV£ VICKI HESTON type SO+ wpm, pbooes.
S ! LARY + com & ASSOCIATES calculator Send resume
mission. • expenses, • ~ to Classified ad '984,
cu allowance, •in· SECIETAIY l.l. P.O. Box 1560. Costa
aur.nce •~Ion plan. Secretarial position in Mesa, 92626~.
Jf vou are the person we i . N ,.._ 1 ~!!!!!!!!•1!!!!!1•!!!11•!!!!!!!~ .... looking for . Please ac live ewport ....,n err-
Cal1, Tinker Baumstark Riallor's office. Front Transmission builder J.t .c>w Loe Angeles Toll office position req~res Call 847·SS93 Days,
Bdrm set.a, dWn& room
tbl ll chn, hlde·a·bed.
PLUS LOTS MORE.
Going Into
Business?
"P r 't e N u m b e r good telephone voice, 9S3-2'1M Eves
1 ·1&0·372·6361 In· typing , SH & ap •••••••••••••••••••••• teniews beglll Nov 30th pearance. Real estate ~ HARBOR AREA
H»PY
THAMICSGIYIMG
SAVE SAVE SAVE
Aa required by lew,
new bualn••••• ualng a Flctltloua
Bualneu N.ntt muat
reglater th•t name
with the County Clerk.
Call the DAILY PILOT
LEGAL DEPARTMENT
lor IOfma •nd lurther
lnlormetton.
• B 1 . R E s U M E experience helpful but ••••••••••••••••••••••• APPLIANCESERVJCE RE i\JIRED EOE not essential. Prefer .......... 1005 We buy Wied appliances
local resident. For m· ••••••••••••••••••••••• -We sell recond., guar.
We honor BofA. MC,
Cashier's Checks &
Cuh. NO PERSONAL CHECKS PLEASE!
Food available. Items
subject t.o presa_lt._
MASTHS AUCTIOH 207S~ Newport Blvd CM
833.9625 646-8686
• SALIS tervlew calJ Mrs. Duhl. a· liances. ~g.3077
"bled. Woman pre· Wffley H. TawtorCo. WESTMINSTER 1 IUY APPUAMCES 'ferted, sales ol desirable Realtors 6"-4910 ABBEY Les 957-1133
product, not a cosmetic, SECIEf••y ANTIQUE MALL Ener&y efficient 17 CF U1tl up lo $10,000 per -117Sl Westminster Ave. year, p /T work lD O.C. lheailfnt GARDEN GROVE Frost Free Sears refng. &42-4321
E.xt. 332 a re a . Ca 11 Eves. Excellent benefits SS.-6UXI 8 mo old. MOO.
53p066. S4()..6300 5'5-1037 9100
9100 Aaltos. New 9100 Aaltos, Mew 9100 Aaltot, Hew 9100 1A.tdos. New 9100 ~~·.~:.':•••••••••••• Alltot,New
........................•.....•....•..•....... ·······················1······················· •
BRAND NEW 1982 TOYOTA
STARLET 3 DR. LlnBACK
• Equipment 1nc1ucies 5 ~ 1ransm1ss1on. AM·FM MPl( 11ereo radio tarPtl.O flOOt mats ~ t"m
• '" "nQll p.nstr•pes 1M wt1ee1 well mold•nos (576220) 1 only ia
CMl'I Pf'C.e 164.MOO ~ .... i."fl"M 4 ooc '" 1217 67
00wn ftf!MIU C"MV-~I& ... """"",,ti 04 l16'9t 0.'
l'llOflK"I on •wa..o ~ row of OIT""'I'-"'• -Mt~ s1 "'"' '''" 4"'°""'''"'~-.,...n
BRAND NEW
~· 1982 PICKUP
Eq¥1pmenl 1nc1ucies 4 speed tran1m1Staon. power I
dltf: brakH 2 2 lotet engine ind fully factory
eQUIPl>tO {026167) 1 only
BRAND NEW 1982
4x4 PICKUP
1-, Ton Standud Bed Deluxe Model Equ1pmtn1
includes 4 ~Pted 1r1Mm1ss1011 wHldow p1cka9e UfHI
mirrors & AAA FM IM'X Sltfeo r.cjao (0269~) 1 only
_,....,.
FllE USED CAI CEITEI
OUR HEW LOT-ACROSS THE STREET
FROM OUR HEW CAR SHOWROOM
~ .. 9'C-~ti C.M •.,_,i09' ,.... ..... ,, .. ~ ........ ~
.-Ott~""""°" A/11,(W
•tt o & ""u " "' •u ltOnOCO
1977 IUICI
lK 41. S /I C OUf'I 1>'1 hfo-.tftC .,~ """
....... "t & OoftlH '~
M C>Kb l M•lt I•" ('~ AM~fM 119fto l~ teo
'09 ,.., ... & mtwel (!.I~)
1977 TOYOTA
CllJCA
' cyf s ~ .,.,. .. ,
~ l)Wf OrtlliH ~
..... AM F\ot 11 ... eo '°'"""'
""· '""t.o o••n ' ~ reca ( •c••~• rOf'lrd;t"°"'' _,.,
YI .u!O l'1tM ...,.. • & or•••• h . ou• ... ,.
N/f,¥W ~ '°°' .... I ,_. CWllOm u t & int
POt1f'IOltl & t'ltUCh "'Ott' 148UAJI
I HO TOYOTA dlllc• um•ar
Autom1t1c ''•"• l lf COftdfllOf"HAO oowtt
....,.,,, powet O•te ,,. ....
ffilf9o tldlO Wlf'lyi lf'IWIOf
~="z ..:~~·,,:;:
1971 CADILLAC
llVIW
Full_ .. "'c tptol -w/pwt •tChfll•' A.,.._fM
S2 ..... ......,. ........
Cl•t rt ltalPttt ..... _ .. "~ ...,... .... __ _
.......
1977 CHIY•OU'f
MOMU HATCMIACI
4 t ,I '"'0 H '"'' 0-J .,..lif\f •u tOfld """'°"'
...... , CO-..•'t •"°Y CW' •o• nt•'••e• econo-.., ""OOf fttOlllllAI
lt7' DATW.C
1210
Cco"O"-t<tl " C.th"d•' •"•-"· • ·~••d .,.,..,...~ ""'"'a.1'0 ~ .. 1(1.0 !M...,.llf'lld""""..-
Swp•r t •t •U•o•• •1•1'PQWI
lt7t FO•D
J.t.11.MOtfT l DOOi
VI .tvlO w.,-.. '"'*"".,, °"'' ·~ 'Cltft"llft ~ ..-.0 <•M two IOIW CW...
11Jtt li1ll1c ",.,,left+"? ,,u
vinyl '00' 6 1'\wr'l't motf'1
11.s.lVPYI
1971 TOYOTA
COROUA ' c••INHf ·~.,.. S tiOllld "•"•~'•t•on •11 "°"° '-"""'9 , .. '° ,,,.,, jn ...ctOI..,. .. <61 ",~ -flC•
I HO CHIY•OUT
"IOMTI C~LO
Ya a111to ''-"' P•' .. __..,no ' ~.._.,. ~ ~ .... ,... "'''° ""• qteM hit '""" NC1<
wft1t• -~· '"'. ~ _,., (IAMrlt~t
' (J' w to .,.,,, pwr cMc
Ottlttt lh1C''' tUll
AM IM tl9'eo "M tW'!tld ~ cto1h inf rt<Nfl I •u H£WI (lffYAUI
1'79 DOO~I
Cot T HATCHIAat . ..,. ___ _
°'...,,. tlflltfli 19'11' """' ,...,.
tutltO f lttt 4 tptoeCI
lft t'l•flft1t••OA tttd •fl owtti.,,••no econo•t
MOdtl ••t~ 'O'lll' ..,.loeqt 1411WOS1
1'71 CHIY•OU'f
CAMAIO COUN
.... 1\110 ''"'' ·~ ~ cond •t•,•o llP9 1111
...... , 0-.f • ...,.."9 ...
'''" I ""O'•' Sotr•hftf o_,,,., ... , .,,,. ll••t•
_.,.!03•Ul.GI
..,.,...,..,, Rolewood bar S500, dak.
........ Ot•••r ~ ---------
credenu, awlvtl • aide
chairs. f!!tl250. m.qm
School DeUI: O\lld's $7.
Typist wooden szo.
Tablet•· (ZlJ) 174·1425
M1tchln1 1ofa ' lov· I eaeat browa • belie plaid w/11u1ahyde
trim, &ood cond. 9IO
541-IMS.
Oran 1 Coast DAILY PILOTifrlday. November27, tau
~~ .......... -..... ~-............... .....,.& ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
t71t
11N1rJ1 . '87 P 112 Cot. No l'Ult. c..,..,.... Xlnt Concf Blut/8111. ?S .-..MMtw Newtn,CbromtWhlt.
Jh11hell, beltolttr6nr ~l ~
pooc). CblK'k or Oary '71 Turbo T1r11. rtd. D•"'·lZll: evtt, wlu1dl nartd wbetlt, p.7•1. on·
b' e K ml, ml.Wt s.. to •P· SHA.Ir pr1rl1lt. S!5,000. c.., Ha... IJi leol.,_ ___ _
73 ,,_ MMtw 'f7 811 Poncbt. tlec •~·
M1A1leell bettolfer6ver roof. 5 apd. ~. ~t
"500. Chuck 0( Oary 2f(IL..ff!:OIO.$M
tH· 1281 da. m .4214 •71 ti I SC
--'--Browo metullic. A/C.
f1JI AM /VM, alldln, roof. Loather u1t1. mmac
.£!>nd 81}1473
bit 10,c• '756 •••••••••••••••••••••••
11 vw 'l'IUl. lmt'C
Uftkit,-«ofr . ....
11 v ........ , ... . ... , .......... . .. n,-. •ms°'
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,. YWJITTA •uc ... I! ·~ BeautlM wtdtf 1unrool. R 1.., ..._ • .. 2 door 5 apeed with oaly • ., -r-.. • aro 11 .ooo mllu Im · 230 • t'YI. y., ~°' matulate. UCPIW) J1IO(IUl"'ll.:;_,""-_._.. .. ""' .• c....,.,, JIMMAIM> fl8,
YOWW.4HN
1m 1 Btadl Blvd.
71YW
SCllOCCO Dynamite 1porta rlualt
4 •Pffd w/alr, 11.eteo
BronH /bell•· Sharp!
(IOFJUell Sl6tl
JIMMAllMO
YOLlSWA ...
11711 Btach Bh•d .
eo. ·s~ vw 1e1t 11 n111t doof. '73 It-Ct door. ISO each. W~m atyle whl rima for Super Be«lt ea. 9744
•••• ~ ... -.. .!!.2!
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I • ':t £coeomtcat 4 ryl.,,~il&f • tr•••.. aJr CG..t 1 tteo <lABIUOll. , .,
OMLYMttl ~
HOWAIO= .. Dovt/Qlaall ~
NEWPOAT llACll •I
suus,.sn,.
Wt bavt a •ood MlecUOI of NEW II USED Cbcvnil«tal
COMNtil
CHlYllUll T
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r \'
~·~ 1 2or . --
••••••••••••••••••••• ·12 Do41e Dm . ~Int
rand. Runt GrHt. 52X
orl1 mi. $11100 . Make Of-fer.
OR
NEW 1981
T-1000 H4TCHBACKS ·
.$ 995Down . AND
Cash ~~5Trade ONL y
Tax, UcettM & Documentary Fee
SALi l'llCI $4995.00 plw taa. lie. Ir Doc. FH . S995.00 Dow11 pl••
SlOO.•O tH, S 111.00 D.M.Y. ~ cllonfe nd $20 Doc-11tary ,_.fer• tot•I of Sl406.t6 Do-l'~llt Nd SI 19.83 per-•"'
fw 48 -th. S40' '·'4 Rll.ce c._.,.. AJ'.I . 18.4 1 •o. D.terr.d
,..,_...price $7158.80 °" .,,.-o•ed c~it.
MILEAGE
Use these numbers IOI' companson
Your mileage may vary depending on
dr1v1ng speed. trip length and
weather cond111ons Actual highway
mileage will probably be less
OR 5996 Down Plus
T •x, License & Documentary Fee
AND$15997 Olll y · ~E~MTH
SAL.I l'llCI S6''5.00 ,._ lu, lie. & Doc. Fff. $996.00 Dow11 ,i.1
$420.•o .... SI 22:00 D.M.V. licettM dlanJe Rd $20 Doc-llf9ry
'" fw • totel of SISSl.•O Do-l'~.t. co .. or trodo, Md
$15'.'7 ,-r-llffl fOf' 60 -"ii. SlH•.20 f•-• c"°"Je. AJ'.A.
20.JJ.,. •. Defetnd ,.,_... price $'5'8.20 °" eppnnd credit.
1
1
IANTTA•r:AHA::-111!!!1---r 'lhrY.
7
EXAMPLE:SER.#226230
PER
MONTH
Equipped with:
• 4 Cyl Engine
• 4 Speed Transmission
• Tinted Glass
• AM Rad io
• Cloth Bucket Seats
• White Sidewall Tires
• Heater
• Body Side Moldings
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY I
EXAMPLE: SER. #110916
CHO OSE FROM 2 DOOR COUPE OR 5 DOOR HATCHBACK
*SuggMt9d .....i1 orice_mey heve delller ln1talled ecceaeori•a: •. All CWa Sold On Approved Cr9dlt.
All cw. PIUI Tax ' Llc.n• ' Doc. F ... All C:.. Subject to Prior s.M.
Prices Good Thru Monday, NoV9mber 30, 1981
Equipped with:
• Factory Air Co nd
• Automatic Trans
• Power Steering
• Power Disc Brakes
• White Sidewall Tires
• Low Mileage
• Choice of 4 Cyl or 6 Cyl
• Front Wheel Dnve
• AM Radio
• Deluxe Wheel Covers
• Body Side Moldings
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY I