HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-12-23 - Orange Coast Pilot* * * * • *
011111 CUil YOUR IDMITDWI llllY PAPll
WEDNESDAY . DECEMBER 23. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
• ' D ... yl'tletli.tf ......
LASHES OUT -State Sen.
John Schmitz h a s called
abortion s upp orte r s
··murderous marauders."
Schmitz flays abortion hackers
State senator calls foes "murderous marauders" in p'liblic statement
~ By DOUG WILUS
Al'l'elit6u1Wftllw
SACRAMENTO -State Sen.
J ohn Schmitz, a Republican
candidate for the U.S. Senate,
says abortion rights supporters
are "murderous marauders"
and "hard, Jewish and arguably
female."
In a public statell'ent released
Tuesday and lilied ·•Attack of
the Bulldykes." the Orange
County conservali ve from
Newport Beach singled out
feminist attorney Gloria Allred
as .. a slick butch lawyeress."
S he angrily r eplied that
Schmitz was a "disgusting and
sick and bigoted" legislator who
should resign from office or at
least be stripped of his state
Senate chairmanship.
It was a provocative public
comment even for the outspoken
Schmitz, who this fall said a
military coup was needed to
save the United States.
Schmitz, a John Birch Society
official, one-time congressman
and the American Independent
Party's 1972 presid ential
candidate, is one or eight
pe{sons seeking the Republican
nomination for the U.S. Senate
in next June's primary.
Schmitz has said repeatedly
that be expects lo win the U.S.
Senate nomination this time
because he is the only "true
conservative" in the race, and
he has steadily escalated nis
usually provocative style to set
himself apart from his seven
GOP foes .
In 1980, Schmitz finished third
behind tax-crusader Paul Gann
for the GOP nomination for the
U.S. Senate.
On Oct. 20, Schmitz said in a
KCET television interview in
Los Angeles t hat President
Reagan's attempts to set the
nation on a more conservative
course "might be the last
constitutional shot we have at
s aving the country" and that if
they fail "a good military coup"
might be "the best we can hope
for" to preserve the nation.
Schmitz has repeated and
defended those remarks since
then, adding that he "is proud to
ha ve had the moral energy to
have introduced this question
. . . . It is Something we as a
people must seriously ponder."
H is remarks Tuesday
conde mned witnes ses who
testified this month at public
hearings in Calexico, F resno.
San Diego and Los Angeles
against Sehmitz's SCA29, a state
~ constitution a l amendme nt
which, in effect, would make
abortion murder.
Schmitz is chairman of the
Senate Com mittee o n
Constitutional Amendments and
cha ired the hearings.
· ·. . . we were fraught upon by
lesbians and the murderous
marauders of the pro-abortion
encampment," Schmitz wrote,
describing the audience as "a
s ea of ha rd , Jewis h and
arguably female faces."
Ms . Allre d, who tossed a
chastity belt at Schmitz. in the
Los Angeles hearing, was the
only individual Schmitz named
in the statement.
She replied in a telephone
interview t h at Sc hm itz '
s tatement proves h e is
··anti ·Semitic and anti-feminist.
··His s tatements are so (See SCHMITZ, Page AZ)
TARGETED F e m inist
Gloria Allred is one of the
people who has taken the
barb of Schmitz' criticis ms.
Judge deals ERA body blows
Experts say
giant shark
bit surfboard
MONTEREY (AP> -A Great
White shark perhaps 20 reel long
and weighing two tons may have
killed a surfer , s a y marine
experts who examine d a
bloodstained, gnawed surfboard.
Toothmarks in the board and
on the 18-lnch chunk bitten out of
it definitely were the work of an
enormous great white, Dan
Miller of the state Department
of Fish and Game s aid Tuesday.
The creature might be the
largest great white e ver
r ecorded on the West Coast, he
s aid.
Meanwhile, s urfer Lewis
Boren, 25, was listed as missing
while blood on his board is
analyzed to determine whether
it's his, the Monterey County
Sheriffs Department said. Last
seen Saturday while surfing just
. north of Pebble Beach, he was
reported missing when he failed
to show up for work Monday. His
board and the fragment washed
ashore Sunday.
. ··All I can aay is that bJ1
::Surfboard was bitten . . . and
:Boren bas disappeared," said
:Miller . "It was definitely a
~bite shark, possibly the largest
so far on this coast -very, very
large."
The size of the bite taken out
of the surfboard was "very
impressive." he added.
"It's the largesl I've ever
seen."
He estimated its size wu at
least 181h feet, possibly' 20 feet,
long. The longest white shark
noted in West Coast waters was
an 181ia-foot creature caught off
Santa Barbara. ln other parts of
the world, white sharks up to 40
feet long have been reported.
Boren was described by his
friend Beryl Thomas as "a very
experienced surfer.
"We're not saying he's dead.
His body still hasn 't been
found."
But wary surfers stayed out of
the water on the south end of
Monterey Bay on Monday and
Tudday.
•'This is the lime to surf and
nobody feels like it," said
Thomas.
Swimmers had been warned of
the possibility of white shark
attacks at the end of October
following an increase in the
number of sea otters kUled by
<See SBA&ll, Pase AJ>
~izarre twre tops
Unus ual holiday song popular
. GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP>
~ Elmo and Patsy may not be
-household names, but their
-latest record, a Christmas IOOI.
;la taking Grand Rapids by
storm.
But forget poi1nancy or
tmages of UlOwflakea. Thll S..
not your usual holiday tune.
It's called "Grandma Got Ruo
'Over By A Reindeer.'• ancl
Jpokesmen at two Grand Raplida
:_radio ataUoos aay requ .. ts for lt
:are runainl aa mucb u 10 tilDa •
hl1ber U.. for uy C>tMr tuDI.
• "TbeN'I no doubt about it. it'• :Numero Uno," said Larry
.Pattoe operatJonl muaaw. at
• -WCUZ·All. Llk1wll• tor
-WZZR·FM , accordtnc to :Protram dlnttor JaJ Ille-....
· Twan1ed bJ tbe Saa
Pr.anclacct ·ba•td, ~, . .
,
husband-and-wife country duo
Elmo.and Patsy Shropshire, the
song includes these lines: '
· "Grandma got run over by a
reindeer, walking home from
our house Christmu Eve.
"You say there's no 1ucb t.binc
aa Santa, but u for me and
Grandpa, we believe.,..
Accordlns to tbe l1rlc1,
Grandma couumed a blt too
' much espos and lnalatad on
returnins home to cet ber
medication. Her bolts found ber
Cbrlatmu mornln1 • 'wltb boofDrlnta on her forehead aDd
lacrimbaatlnc Claus marq on
be• t.ck." "
SbropQln aald be and tall
wife produced the reeord, wbleb
WU wriUm bJ 8 frteM, llaDdJ
Broob.
< .. 10NG.Pa11AJ)
•
---. ----.... -it --
BIG HURT -Veterinarian Dr'. Dave Fagan
takes close look at mouth of "Hattie" prior to
starting tooth e xcavation. The ele phant is
Delly ..... ,_ ...... " •kMN ll..-..W
presently a resident at Lion Country Safari in
Irvine. 1
Toothache irorth f orge ~ting
Vets use crowbar to save elephant's role in parade
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of .. D ...... S ....
If Hallie is a bit grumpy th.ls
morning, the re's a good reason
for it.
You'd be a bit under the
weather too lf three dentists
used crowbars, hammer and
chisels to remove a five-pound
tooth from your mouth.
The 35-year-old Asian elephant
has been off her feed for the put
10 months, and her owners at
Cl rcus Vargas were a blt
concerned whel\ she shed 1,a>o
pounds.
A diet of bananas and bread
bulked her out to s.~ poundl -
but that'• ltilJ a far cry from the s. 700 pounds abe welshed before
her lop risht molar besan botbertns her.
And, since Rattle playa an
Important pan in next weett·a
Roae Perade In Pauden~1 doctors acned the tooth wowa
baH to be removed.
Rex Wllllama. wbo trauw all
the elephant.a for Clreu1 Varsu, called Or. Dave ra1aa, a
nterlHrr deatlat from Ian
Dle10, al!IDI wttll "'8 llutla R.
Dlnnes and Ronald Gutter, both
from Encino.
The three veterinarians met at
Lion Country Safari in Irvine
'She's
just a
gr oggy.'
healthy,
little
Tuesd~, where Circus Vargas
ls spendina the winter.
After adminLaterin1 7 CCs of a
drug described aa sort of a
''supermorphine," Hattie went
under shortly before 11 a.m.
said one drop of the
theUc ii enoup to
Glide r pilot dies
FREMONT (AP ) -A
3J·1•ar-old P'remont man wu Wied after hi• motorlaed haq
cllder llammed into the roof ol •n apartment complex and
bounced on • carport before
ladlnl ln a tree. •
Then, armed with a
car p e nt e r 's drill ,
s ledgehamme r , cr owbar and
chisel, and monitoring her
heartbeat on an EKG machine,
the trio removed a S~ pound
molar that was growing at an
angle, and ch.lseled orf a large
chunk 9f plaque from Hattie's
left top molar.
Arter the extraction, the vets
administered an antidote to the
anesthetic and Ht tUe stru,.led·
to her feet less than a minute
later.
"She's healthy, just a UWe
groggy," said Lion Co\lntry
Sahr! s pokes man Jamea
Heat.bfleld alter the 90·mlnute
s ursery.
Circus offlclala saJd tht old
elephant waa even able to eat a
llttle bay laal nl1ht.
And by January 11 1be ahould
be ready to join a doaea oeber
pacbyderma who wlll pull a
Iara• float alons the Paudma
parade route.
If ,ou've 10t your TV on New
Year'• Day, Hatt.I•'• lbe nett.
OM on the rllht. Tb1 ODI wtUl
only M$ teetta.
•
Ruling .
death
of bill?
BOISE, Idaho <AP> -~ federal judge today deliver
two severe blows to the Equ
Rights Amendment, rullnl lha
< l ) Congress lacked authority t.q
extend the d ea dline for
ratification and (2) five stateS
acted within their rights wheli
they rescinded approval.
H upheld after an expected
appeal, the long-awaited ruling
by U.S. District Judge Marion
Callis ter would effectively kill
the proposed 27th constitutional
amendment, which would
prohibit discrimination based on
sex.
Callister's ruling came on a
suit filed by Idaho and Arizona
and three Washington slate
legislators after Congress voted
in 1978 to m ove back the
deadline for ratification from
March 29, 1979, to June 30, 1982. ~
In Washington, D.C., Cath)l
Bonk, a spokeswoman for ~
Nation a l Organization ~o~
Women , a leading ER~
a dvocate, said: "Our lawyent
are here now. We will have nq
comment until we have had 11
chance to go over it.'• ,
Phyllis Schlafly, leader of the
Stop ERA organization, called
the move "a tremendous victory
for women."
"ll 's a great victory for
constitutional integrity ancl
fairness and government by raw
<See EU. Pase AJ> '
IRlllilaAIT IUTlfi
C l e ar tonight and
Thursday with local 1uaty 1
north to nortbeut winds
25 to 3S mpb below eoa1tal
canyooa. Hi&hs 88 lo 74. · •
Lows !A>'lltbt 48 to 55.
1111• TlllY i
Delpit• ~·· prondN•, l U oppeara CMC C"-n tOW
c ertohal11 be ao"'• tas incno•• tMU a.to Ma MW
bt.tdgd. ,._. A4.
11111
-~---
From PageA1 traffic
,,/ SCHMITZ. • •
'Black ice' makes New England driving ~rdous outraaeou1 that we are 1otna to
forward them lo the DemoeraUc
and Republican leaderablp or
the 1tate Senate and demand
that he b e r e move d fro l1l
c:bairln.a any committee of the
Lttislature," 1he added.
AP .......
DINOSAUR HUNTER -Herman Regusters. of South
Pasadena, points J.o the Lake Tele area of the Republic of
the Congo as he describes sightings of serpent-like creature
the size of two hippos rising from the waters of the lake. His
wife, Kia Van Dusen Regusters. right, joined him at the
new~ conference in Los Angeles Monday. <Story, Page AG>.
Food, medicine
short in Poland
BJ Tbe Aueclated Presa
Warsaw radio said today that
strikes were holding up
deliveries of coal in Poland and
that leaders of 2,000 striking
miners al two p i ts we re
"carelessly playing with human
life."
The 10 Common Markel
nations sent Premier Wojclecb
Jaruzelski a statement
denouncing the "grave violation
of human and civil rights of tbe
Polish people" implied in
reports from travelers. The
British announced the statement
in London.
Reports from travelers spoke
of chronic shortages of medicine
and of food for Christmas tables
in Poland 11 days after martial
law was imposed.
Warsaw radio, monitored in
London, announced today that
357 people were arrested for
curfew violations in Katowice. It
sald the standoff by workers
barricaded inside the Katowice
steel mill continued. The Soviet
news agency 'J'ua bas said the ~ steelworkers weTe threatening
to blow up the furnaces.
Broadcasts reported improved
productivity by factories "is
bein1 weakened by sickaess and
.absenteeism, which has been
~rowing in the past few days."
They said "the atmosphere
among factory workers is not
favorable everywhere . . . In
ipany factories the division
among the workforce which
emerged in conditions of
political struggle is beiag
overcome only with difficulty.••
Reliable report& from Warsaw
which bypMSed military censors
$~d Solidarity, suspended when
martial law was imposed Dee.
13, was distributing leaflets
calling for "passive resi1tance"
to '•an occupation by our own
army."
Solidarity members charged
with trying to organize strikes
and circulating leafl ets a nct
other violations of martial law.
The state-run Warsaw radio
said most Poles were obeying
martial law. But reports from
outside Poland on Tuesday
indicated thousands of Poles
were resisting the crackdown in
Gdansk and other reaions and
hundreds of prisoners were
being mistreated.
T he reports could not ~e
in<tepende ntl y co nfirme d .
Normal communications
facilities in Poland have been
cut and restrictions placed on
Western reporters there.
Warsaw radio reported that:
-1,026 miners at the
Ziemowit pit have now broken
the strike started eight days ago
despite "psychological terror" .
by about 100 strike organizers. It
said 1,000 miners remained
underground. Another l,OOO·plus
miners were still underground
at the Piast mine . Local
Communist Party orficials have
tried to convince them to
surrende r but their efforts
"remain fruitless because of a
group of adventurers who are
carelessly playing with human
life."
-''Certain disturbances in
the work rhythm in the mines"
and snowbound transport trains
c reated a 140,000·lon coal
s hortage in six provinces,
including Gdansk and Wroclaw.
It s aid livestock farmers were
be ing given prio rity ror
deliveries and ''the needs or
people who have no coal to heat
the ir homes must not be
forgotten either.'·
-Bulgaria, in a c r edit
arrangement that would not
have to be repaid until after
1983, was shipping in meal,
canned food, soap, toothpaste
and cigarettes.
From Page Al
By Tiie Allocla&ed Preu
A Midweal s torm dumped 7
tncbea of trafflc·snarllnf snow
on cities ln llllnol1 and M ch11an
today, wblJe "black ice" made
driving hai1rdou1 ln parts of
New England.
Al least three people have
been killed in weather·related
accidents ln the Midwest 11lnce
Tuesday and three school buses
have skidded orr the highway,
Injuring several students.
F orecasters said "weird ':
weather conditions spawned a
storm system in the Midwest
that produced the threat of a
tornado as well as snow.
Tornadoes generally occur
during spring and summer.
In the We s t , authorities
warned of avalanches after up to
$ feet of new snow buried parts
o f the Rocky Mountains on
Tuesday. •
Driving snow coming down at
the rate of 2 inches an hour left 5
From Page Al
SONG ...
"We wanted lo prove there
was a Santa Claus a nd ,
unfortunately, Grandma had to
take a little gas lo prove it,"
Shropshire said. "There was a
song that Merle Haggard had
out about his grandmother dying
at Chr istmas time and we
wanted to look at some other
grandmothers."
After Grandma is laid lo rest,
her family prepares for their
holiday dinner:
"Now the goose is on the table
and the pudding made of fig,
•·And the blue-a nd·silver
candles that would have just
matched the hair on Grandma's
wig." /
Shropshire, 35, said he and his
28·year-old wife call themselves
a "country music-comedy act"
and play'the nightclub circuit in
Northern California . He said the
record has been "a much bigger
hit on rock'n roll stations than
country."
Joe Gibson, president or the
Nashville distributing firm that
released the record, said the
reaction surprised him.
·'We sent it lo country-western
stations this year, but I had no
idea what we were dealing
with," Gibson said.
"If I would have known the
record was going to cause U\is
much stir, I would have tried to
get it into record shops, but it
was too late for this Christmas."
Girl dies
in car fall
A 2·year-old girl opened the
door t.o her back seat, fell out as
the car turned and was killed
Tuesday when the car's rear.Ure
ran over her, said Santa Ana
police.
Anna Lilla Galvan of Garden
Grove fell through the grasp of
a n a unt wbo was r iding
alongside her as the car turned
left from Harbor onto 17th Street
in Santa Ana at 4:35 p.m., said
police Sgt. Hugh Mooney.
The girl was taken to Fountain
Valley Community Hospital,
where she died.
Warsaw radio also reported
seme union miners planted
dynamite cbaraes at shafts and
that in Gdansk a police station
was attacked with gasollne
bombs .. I~ tlM nol say when the
incidents ~rted ; they were
reported bl a lis1inc of doeena of
ERA DEALT SETBACKS. • •
* * * Reagan talks
'onight at 6
WASHINGTON CAP >
fre1ident Rea1an, preparing to
·address the nation tonight oo the
1ituation ift Pbland, la wel&hlng
••an array of political ,
ctiplomaUc, security and
economic meaures •' th• United
$tales mlCht take against the
Warsaw 1overnment and the
$oviet Unkla.
. .Rea1an planned to confer witb
.JU1 national s~urity advtaen
today -the third meet1n1 in
lbree days -before maklna an
adcJreu from tbe Oval Otnee at e p.m. PST. Tbe speecb la to be
broadcast live by the three
JD•Jor television networb on
Chaaneta 2, 4 Miid '7.
, Wblte HMIM Cowlaelor Edwin
Meete m indicated that options
beln1 conttdend included steps
•1almt the Soriet Union. . .
·"' ~
instead of by demand of special
interest groups,'' she said in a
telephone interview from her
home in Alton, Ill.
The ERA requires approval by
38 states and no state has
ratified it since Indiana became
th e 35th to do so in 1977.
Callister wrote that Congress,
by a two-thirds vote of both
houses. can set a reasonable
time limit for states to act for
ratification to be effective.
··When this time is set, it is
binding on Congre11 and the
states and it cannot be changed
by Congress thereafter,·' the
judge wrote.
Callister's ruling today could
mean the death of the ERA since
Ute five states which rescinded
their ratification votes can no
lon1er be counted among the 35
states which bad voted t.o ratify.
He said Idaho. Tennessee,
Kentucky, South Dakota and
Nebraska effectively nullified
their prior raUfication of the
proposed con sti tution al
amendment and may not be
counted as ratifying stat.I.
CIH9"'1H edftftt.mtl 'T14.'142·MTI
All ottt.f ctep.rtrMnt• 142~3%1
MAIN°"1CE •wett ..., •. , C..M9M, CA. Mell...,_: a.1Mt,C:..U ..... C:A .....
'-"ltllt"" o,._ Ceelll ............ ~· ............................... ~ ....
"'""' .... --1119¥ • ,...,... ...... ..... ~ .......... ,..,,....._.
•
He also said the same would
be t rue for any other states
which properly certifi ed their
actions of rescission to the
Ge ner a l Services
Administration.
·'The basis for t he Idaho
legislators' claim of stand.int in
this ~ult is that as participants in
t he ratification process, their
individual votes in favor of
ratification for the seven-year
time period. or for the rescission
of the prior ratification, have
been debased by the actions of
the defendant (Congress) and a
suit of this nature is pro(ler to
vindicate their vote," Callister
wrote in bis 72-page decision.
The judge ruled that the five
states' voles for rescission were
every bit as much a part of
Congresa' amendment r i1hts
und er Arti c l e V o f the
Constitution as were their
original votes to ratify.
"The plaintiffs (these states)
have exercised their ri1bt to
participate In the amendment
process by voting in favor of
ratlflcation and al a subsequent lime votinc for rescission ol that
prior ratification," Callister
wrote.
He said lhal O,n1re11 hu no
power to determine "the vallcllty
or lnvalidlty of a properly
certlfled ratlftcation or
resciasion."
The prorosed 21t b con1Ututlona a m e ndment.,
passed by Con1ress ln 11'12,
reads in fUJl:
••£quality of rl1hts under the
law 1ball not be dented or
abrid1ed by the United States or
by any 1late on account ot MX.
Con1re11 lba11 have tile poww to
enforce, by appropriate
le1lllatl<!.r ~ provlaiona ol tldl
attlcle. TIU ameadmnt lba1l
take effect '"° 7ear1 aftar CM datt ol raaftcatlr'."
inches in Detroit and acrot1
southeut Mtch11an early today.
In lllinol1, where up to '1
inches of neW\snow wa1 oo the
ground and temperaturea bad
dropped into the teens, Jerry
Mc Kay, 24, of Danville was
kllled this morning when a Jeep
in which be was riding hit an icy
spot on Interstate 24. McKay
was struck by a snowptow blade
mounted on the Jeep when he
a nd another passenger were
thrown out of the vehicle.
Freezing raln caused
hazardous driving conditions ln
western and ce ntral
Massachusetts today, forcing a
number of schools to close.
Mark King, a spokesman for the
state Department of Public
Works, described the conclltions
as "black lee," clear ice on the
asp.hal t h ighway s whi c h
motorists don't notice until they
put on their brakes.
The road from Salt Lake City
to the Alla and Snowbird ski
resorts 20 miles away was
closed Tuesday by natural
avalanc h es and b y th e
man-made kind, set off to
prevent bigeer snowslldes .
"I'm sure a few people had
planes to catch," said Barbara
Altum ol Alta. "But I don't tblnk
they minded. l saw a lot of
amllet today."
Utah'• Salt Lake Valley tot up
lo 18 lncbes ol snow as the hilid
Wa1atch Mountains wrung
moisture from air that bad
pasaed over the Great Salt Lake.
More 1now WH predicted today.
An avalanche warolnlf was
l11ued ,for the northern Utah
mountains and snow-packed
r oad s urfaces melted and
ref rc.M in some areas of the
vaUey, cauaing more than 100
accidentl in Salt Lake and Davia
counties. Four Utah TraMit
Authority buses were involved in
accidents, said UT A spokesman
Rod Clifford.
Gusty winds and a snowfall of
up to 18 in ches made travel
difficuh in the Colorado
mountaJns, and icy roads in the
Denver area caused so many
fender-benders that authorities
told motorists Involved In
n o n -inj ur y a cciden ts to
exchange information and file
reports later.
Colorado's eastern plains got
the "first real storm of the
year," said National Weather
Se rvi ce forecaster Gary
Frandson. The snow was up to a
root deep.
Offices, businesses
close on holidays
The Christmas and New Year
holidays will result in aJtered
hours.at government offices and
som e businesses a long the
Orange Coast.
All City Halls will be closed
Friday for Christmas and tbe
foUowing Friday, New Year's
Day. In addition, Irvine City
Hall will be closed Thursday,
and Newport Beach Clty Hall
will only be open until noon
Thursday.
Newport City Hall will follow
the same schedule on Thursday,
Dec. 31, but Irvine City Hall will
be open regular hours on that
dal'.
l''ounlain Valley, which does
not h ave Friday r efuse
collection, will not have its
pickup schedule affected by the
holidays.
But homes in Newport Beach,
Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa,
Irvine and Laguna Beach that
normally receive refuse service
on Fridays will be picked up on
Saturday during the next two
weeks.
U .S. Post Offices will be
closed on Christmas Day and
New Year's Day. But regular
c ounter serv ice and mail
delivery is scheduled on the
Thursdays and Saturdays
immJ!diately before and after
the holidays.
Some area banks and savings
and loans are planning to close
early on Christmas Eve, but
schedules vary among the locaJ
offi ces.
S po kesmen tor both the
Democratic and Republican
leaders of the Senate said their
bosses were unavailable durin&
Chrlstmu week.
The only member of the
Constitutional Amendments
Co m ml ttee who could be
reached, Democratic vi ce
· c hai rma n Walle r Stiern of
Bake r sfield, said It was
Improper of Schmitz to issue his
statem e n t o n comm ittee
stationery. and added that he
personally did not approve ol
Schmitz' comments .
But Stiern said he did not want
to make further comment to
provoke a fight between himsell
and Schmitz in the press.
"John Schmitz is a candidate,
and he is trying to get press. I
gather he has succeeded this
time," Stiern added.
From Page A1
SHARK. • •
s harks . And officials warned
that the danger could increase
as the number or otters and
e lephant s e al s -a n other
favorite shark food -incre~.
drawing sharks to the area.
"It ls certainly not surprising
that a great white shark would
bite a surfboard, especially
when the sharks are increasini
in abundance on the Californ01
coastline," said John McCoskell,
director of San Francisco's
Steinhart Aquarium.
Seven previous shar k attacks
in local waters have beep
re ported since record-keeping
began in 1926. Only one was
fatal. Miller has documented 49
unprovoked attacks since 1926 in
California and Oregon, including
four fatalities.
Grades changed?
WA SHI NGTON IAP > -A
House panel s aid "the re is
absolutely no doubt that grades
were changed" on tests given
air traffic controller trainees at
th e Fed e ral Aviatio n
Administration Academy in
Oklahoma City.
WINTER SALE STARTS NOW
BIGGEST AND BEST SALE EVER
Regency Court By
ON SALE NOW
Al'W.....,_
FAN OF DADDY -Actor Kris Kristofferson lifts his
daughter Kasey after the Lasse Viren Finnish Invitational
running race in Los Angeles. It was his first race and he
placed 9lst or 250 runners.
Boston Pops maestro signed
"Star Wars" composer
Jobn W illiams, who
succeeded Art.bur Fiedler as
conductor of the Boston
Pops, says he has signed a
two-year contract with the
or chestra.
"My first two seasons with
the Boston Pops have been
periods of great musical
satisfaction for me," said
Williams, who took over
after Fielder's death two
West German Ch ancellor
Helmut Schmidt has made
his debut as a recording
artist.
years ago.
He is the 19th conductor of
the Boston Pops, which is
part of the Boston Symphony
Orchestra. The Pops became
world famous under the
direction of Fiedler, who was
conductor for 50 years.
In addition to ··star Wars."
Williams composed the
scores for "Jaws" and
"Close Encounters of the
Third Kind."
Hosnl Mubarak will make
his first visit to the United
States in February since
succeeding Anwar Sadat as
president of Egypt.
Tht f amlly of playwritbt,
l)'rlclat and Columb11
Univtralty alumnus Oscar
Hamm....W. II baa tlvtn Sl
mUUon to tht unlvtrally to
crtatt a Center for Thtater
Studt".
Columbia P rutdent
Miehe.I I. 8onm IMouncod
the alft which will be uaed to
enlarae the present Theater
Arts Olvlslon of the School of
Arts and rename It the Oscar
Hammerateln ll Center for
Theater Studles In the School
of Arts, he said.
Hammerstein, who died In
1960, collabor ated with
songwriter and f ellow
Columbia alumnus Rkbird
Rodeen on ''Oklahoma!,"
"South Pacific," "The King
and J.'' and ''The Sound of
Music."
Leonard Bernstein is to
compose a musical work
while a fellow-in·residence at
Indiana University's new
lostitute for Advanced Study.
Bernstein. who served as
music director of the New
York Philharmonic and
composed t}Je music for such
Broadway musicals as "West
Side Story," "Candide" and
"Wonderful Town, .. will start
his fellowship Jan. 11, the
university announced.
The institute will bring
together a group or scholars
and artists in a stimulating
environment.
-
Schmidt recorded Mozart's
"Concerto For Two Pianos"
with th e London
Philharmonic Orchestra for
char ity and told a British
Broadcasting Corp .
interviewer that he found the
experience ''thrilling.··
Th e White Hou se
announced that Mubarak will
come to Washington on Feb.
3. Mubarak last met with
P resident Reagan shortly
before Sadat's murder in
October, when Mubarak was
vice president.
NEW WORK -Leonard
Bernstein is working on a
new musical composition at
Indiana University where he
1s a fellow-in-residence.
Coastal
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We're Li~tening •••
What do you Ute 1bout lht Dally Pilot? What don'l you like?
Call the number below and your mesuge wllJ be recorded.
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The same :M·hour answertna MrVlee may be used to record let·
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calls. please.
Tell us what's on your mind.
842~086
' -~ ....
-.-:--~ .... ~----...,.----;,,· --~ ·-----
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, December 23. 1981 5
OC enrollment off' ..
Public school.attendance decreases 2.4% from 1989 .. 81
By GLENN 8COTI'
Of-D911yl'•S ....
Publlc achoo! enrollment ln
Orange County has dropped 2.4
percent from last year,
according to ttaures released by
t h e county Education
Department.
EnroJlment was down ubout I
percent last year.
The reduction in students from
klndergarten through high
school is even more magnlfied
along t he coast, where high
housing prices appea r
prohibitive for many young
families. Jn the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District, for
example, enrollment is 6.6
percent below last year's levels ,
aq:ording to the county
statistics.
The only districts near the
coast to grow this school year
are the Irvine Unified-School
District. reporting a 5.4 percent
increase, a nd Seal Beach
Elementary School District,
which had a 1.3 percent rise.
On Oct. 21, designated "State
l nformation Day ," school
district officials counted 343,171
students enrolled in the 29 public
districts in the county, plus the
county department 's own
special programs.
Last year, 351 ,653 students
were enrolled, or 8.482 more.
Meanwhile, private schools
reported a combined attendance
this year of 40,914 compared to
last year's 38.325.
A slowdown In new houalnc
construction and aeneral blih
prices apparently helped keep
enrollment rtgures low, even ln
the formerly fast-growing south
county. noted Reatta House.
The N-M
district has lost
enrollment faster
than .any other
unified district in
the county.
attendance technician for the
county department.
The Saddleback Unified
School District reported a
decline of 35 students this year
for an 0.2 percent reduction.
However. in Santa Ana, where a
large stock of old homes serves
low -income families. enrollment
is up this year by more than
1,200 students. or 3.8 percent.
A loss of enrollment is nothing
ne w for administrators in many
districts. The Newport-Mesa
average daily attendance bas
dropped 29.6 percent since 1973,
noted Jean Harmon, coordinator
of personnel services.
In that Ume apan, th• dlautcl
bas Iott evollment fut.tr thu
any oth~r unlned dlatrlcl ln the
county. hu closed llCbt achooll
and reduced lt1 atatf. tho aaid.
Newport-Meaa ·a •orollmen,t
decline, •he said, appears to bt
primarily economic In natu~
and tied to the cost of housln1.
Following is a breakdown ol
enrollment figures of achoo1
districts along the Orange Coaati.
Fountain Valley School
District. 1981: 7. 798. 1980: 8,308.
A 6.1 percent reduction ·
Huntington Beach City
(Elementary) School Dlstrlct.
1981 : 6,381. 1980: 6,852. A 6.9
percent loss. •
Huntington Beach Union Hlp
School District. 1981 : 19,12'.
1980 : 19 . 754 A 3. 2 perceit
decline. '
Irvine Unified School District.
1981: 15,438. 1980: 14,611 . A 5.4
percent gain.
Laguna Beach Unified School
District. 1981 : 2.586. l~· 2,699.
A 4.2 percent decline.
Newport·Mesa Unifi ed School
Dis trict: 1981 : 18 ,027. 1980:
19.296. A 6.6 percent reduction .
Ocean View Elementary
School District : 1981 : 10,450.
1980 : 11 .064. A 5 s percent
decline.
Seal Beach School District:
1981 · 757. 1980: 747 A 1.3 percent
gain.
West minster School District.
1981 : 7,999. 1980 · 8,242. A 2.9
percent reduction.
'Accidental' bid accepted
despite plea for withdrawal
A local construction company
was not permitted Tuesday to
withdraw a bid to complett>
sidewalk repairs even though a
company official told the Orange
County Board of Supervisors the
bid was accidentally submitted
and would cost hi s firm
"thousands of doll ars."
Despite the request, the
supervisors accepted the bid
from Damon Construction Co. lo
complete repairs to sidewalk..s.
curbs and gutters in Rossmoor,
an unincorporated area near
Seal Beach.
Damon bid $109.650 for the job.
which was $25,000 less than the
next lowest of the seven bids.
The company spokesman said
the b id s hould have been
$177.000
Although sympathetic to some
degree, board members said
they legaJly mus t accept the bid
because Damon didn't notify the
county In writing within five
days of the bid opening
Gary Gray of the county
Environmental Management
Agency said the company can
s till seek to get out of the
contract. but that such an action
probably would revolve around
legal efforts to recover a $10,965
bond -10 percent of the bid
total -that had been put up for
the work.
Gray said supervisors must
71,000 countians sign
victi01 rights petition
Supporters of a statewide
initiative drive for a "Victims'
Bill of Rights" say they have
collected more than 71 ,000
signatures of Orange County
residents.
The petitions were t urned in
Tuesday at the Orange County
Registrar of Voters Office in
Santa Ana by members of the
Citizens· Committee to Stop
Crime.
Phil M i l ler . aide to
Assemblyman Ross Johnson,
R -La Habra , said 660,000
signatures were collected
statewide and turned i n .
Johnson was com mi ttee
chairman i.n Orange County for
the petition drive.
The proponents needed 553,790
s ignatures to qualify the
initiative for the June 1982
ba ll ot. Miller said the
signatu res, which must be
verified by authorities. should
surpass that mark.
The initiative calls for
implementation of several
measures int ended to protect
victims of crime and provide
stiffer penalties agai nst
perpetrator s . Among the
measures are requirements to:
-Force convicted criminals
lb make financial restitution to
their victims.
-AJlocate funds to increase
security of public schools.
-Make public safety tht>
main concern in setting bail Co
criminal suspects.
hold the firm to its bid because
of the costs of re-advertising for
the work plus the value of the
added inconvenience of not
having the work done and
continuing Lo have deteriorating
sidewalks in the area
Since most of the company's
bond probably was put up by a
bonding company, that firm
may also be<.'ome involved jn
efforts to retrieve the money •if
the contract is enforced, the
company rails to meet its
obligatfons and the bond is thus
forfeited. Gray said.
ln other matters . ttie
supervisors took action Tuesday
on these issues:
THOUSAND STEPS BEACH:
A w a r de d B . D . W o m a cJ<
Construction Co. a contract to
reconstruct concrete stairway at
South Laguna beach for $89,.249.
FIRING RANGE: Agrei!d to
consider leasing federaJly owned
land adjacent to James ~·
Musick facilities for a firiru~
range for county sheriff's
deputies. Range could be shared
by deputies and Marines from
nearby El Toro Air Station.
A GRICULTU RAL PRE-
SERVES : Adopted s tate
government revisions easiqg
policies governing can cellation
of tax-saving preserves.
JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT:
C hose Aviation Planning
Associates of Cincinnati, Ohio to
pre pare feasibility s tudy and
rate and fee recommendaU09s
for financing majQT
improvements to the airport .
HARBOR PATROL: Accepted
a gift from Mr. and Mrs. OonalH
Estep of Irvine of a 14-f~t
Fiberglass boat, trailer and
motor for use by harbor patrol.
--~~~~WG~GG••c.a.,.u"laGil
fcorum 's Masterpiece Collection Gem
Talk
A HOLIDAY WISH
from WI to you
During the holiday season,
t hose or us who are merchants
In the community are usually at
our bus iest as we try to help
everyone get through shopping
chores and pick j ust the right
gifts for all or their loved ones,
·friends and associates. But I
hope none or us will be too buay
to stop and renttt on the season
and what it means, and to pass
along a few sincere words of
good will to those with whom
we come ln contact during this
busy time. All of us wlll do well,
too, to give some thou1ht to
those here and 1broad who are
not as fortunate 11 we are.
!!vcnta In Poland and in the
1Mlddle Eut a re reminders to
•all of us that charity and Cood
wlll are needed all over the
world more than ever before.
The 1Uta that we exchan1• are
an Important and personal way
1.of expreulnt lbe holiday •l>lrtt. ,
1But the spirit of tood wiU 1•
-even mol"e Important Wt wiah
you and yours a happy. and a
meanl"'1ul, hoUday ae,uon.
Fine Gold Ingots,
Weighings. 10.
Or 15 Grammes.
Electronic Quartz
$20Gold
Piece. Electronic
Quartz And
Water Resistant
. ..
J. C...JJ""'f'fu."1d j.wt1f.r~· '
M£MBeR AMERICAN GE'M SOCIETY
1123 NEWPORT BLVD COSTA MESA
35 YEAAl IN THE SAM! LOCATION
@ ·
BankAmenoerd-M..,.rQ, PH~I M-M1
------------:----------------· 8 Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, December 23, 1981
• U.S. reviews
' WASltINGTON CAP) -A
fedttal asency has known for
atarly 11 m o nths a bout a
po11lb&e safety problem with
electrical circuit breakers made
fbr bome use by an Exxon Corp.
subsidiary, but s till has not
derided on any action.
The Consumer Product Safety
Commissio n , which has
autll1ority to order recalls , is l~Htiaatinc a possible problem
with circuit breakers made by
Federal Pacifi c Elec tric
Company, agency spokesman
l,.ou Brott said.
The safety issue became
known after Federal P acific was
•c•ulred by Reliance Electric
C091peny, which s ubsequently
was ~tout by Exxon.
Brott, in an interview, said
there are "literally millions" of
the eil'cuit breakers, but that
only a small portion of them are
un4er suapkion.
secr et "makes it harder ror us to
be cooperative with reporters."
O n e d oc um e nt that is
available, however, is a lawsuit
filed by Reli ance In U.S. District
Court In Cleveland in which the
company a lleges it was the
victlm of a cover-up sche me
when it bought Federal Pacific.
UV Industries. which sold
Federal Pacific to Reliance, was
profitable "only as a result of
m a t e ria lly decepti ve and
improper practices employed in
m a nufacturin g, testing and
certification by Underwriters
La boratories, Inc .• " the suit
alleges.
Underwrite rs La boratories
tests electrical products and U
they are found to be safe allows
manufacturers to use "UL"
safety emblems.
Neither the commission nor a
Jleliance spokesman would s ay
wbat the safety proble m is.
Brott s a i d th e C P SC
investigation is expected to go
on fer some months.
R e l ian ce c h a r ged UV
Indus t r i es with fr a ud b y
overstating its worth before the
sa l e . Wi th ou t pro pe r
Unde rwrit e rs Labora t ories
certification of its product, UV
wasn't worth the $345 million
purchase price, Reliance said.
BACKS SOLIDARITY -Dennis Overst reet waves to
passers·by as helper bolds sign in a show of support for
Poland's Solidarit y. Overstreet has pulled Russian vodka
.,, ........
and caviar off shelves of his liquor store in Beverly Hills to
protest martial law in Poland. He has done the same in his
Palm Spr ings s hop.
Tax • budget • increases seen in Circuit bre akers are devices
tbat a-.tomatically shut off
electricity ii loads get too heavy,
prevellli.na damage to a home's
electrical syste m , or to a n
appliance. An electrical fire is
posai~le if a circuit breaker
malfunctions.
That suit, still pending, was
fil ed June 26, 1980. Reliance also
notified the federal agency of a
possible safety proble m with
c ircuit breake r s tha t ha d
a l re ad y b ee n m a d e, as
companies are required to do
when they lear n of pot ential
hazards to consumers. Income levy plan firm, but other measures expected to cut deficit
Documents filed with the
~gency ar e b e ing k e p t
confidential al the request of
lteliaace. CPSC attorney Eric
Stolle said an amendment
recently passed by Congress
dealing with k ee ping
company-supplied doc uments
In a terse press release issued
the same day the suit was filed,
R el i a n ce sa i d it "h as
determined that improper and
dece ptive practi ces we r e
e mployed for ma ny years to
secure UL approval for certain
of Fede r al Pacific's cir cuit
protective products."
BethleheDI tourist
business bemoaned
BETHLEHEM, Occupied
Wnt Baak (AP> -Pilgrims
from around the world visited
lite ..,. sites of B~thlehem on
Tuesday, but the mayor and
atlopkeepers complained that a
poor Christmas turnout was
expected in the birthplace or
Jesus.
Tourists of all faiths flowed
Into Manger Square and the
Church of the Nativity where
JarleU soldiers and film crews
were u much a part of the
scenery as the d e c orated
Christmas tree and holiday
pennanta.
Sec urity was tight, with
1oldlera manning rooftops and
patrellinc the streets in armored
vehicles to guard against
Pa~stinian guerrilla attacks.
Thousands of people were
ex•ected lo crowd into the
square '11lursday night to watch
mhlnigbt Mus projected onto a
screen by closed -c irc uit
camerM. Only about 400 people,
their ,,.aces reserved. wiU be
inside at the Mass celebrated by
tile Latin patriarch of
Jerusalem. Monsignor Giacomo
Giuseppe, B. Eltritti.
Elias Freij , Bethle h e m 's
Arab mayor, described tourism
aa "tbe cornerstone" or the
town 's e conomy . H e s aid
American unemployme nt, the
Polis h cns1s and "violence in
this part of the world" have cut
into Bethlehem pilgrimages.
Israel's Tourism Ministry
says fewer people are coming
for the holiday season than in
recent years , partly because
Isr ael has tightened its tourism
regulations to cut down on the
number of travelers who use
J ordan as a base. Jordan offers
less expensive package tours.
"The business is ver y bad,"
said Issa Badawi, who runs one
o r dozens of souvenir shops
bo rde rin g Ma n ger Square.
"There are no tourists," he said,
looking at a s tock of unsold
nativity scenes carved from
olive wood. Jn a normal year he
might have sold 20-30 of his most
expensive model at $350 but so
far this year he has sold only
two.
Agg r essive ha wkers were
stationed outside the Church of
the Nativity to peddle postcards
and trinkets, leaving a taste of
ove r -commercialis m with some pilgrims.
··Here it is a little more
commer c ia lized , isn 't it ? I
mean, you go to Jerusalem and
you d on 't see a n y sign o f
Christmas at all," said J a mes
H ogg of We llington , Ne w
Zealand.
WASHINGTON CAP) -When
President Reagan sajd no, wh at
he meant was maybe. For there
almost certainly will be some
tax increases built into his new
budget.
T hey won 't be called tax
increases, and they will not alter
his centerpiece, t hree-year
income tax reduction. But a
r evenue enhancement -the
a d m i n i s t r a t i o n ' s c h o s e n·
euphemism -is a tax increase
no matter how it is styled.
After Reagan said he had no
plan to increase taxes "in any
way," hls spokesmen produced
a swift clarification: He is firm
on t he big income tax cut, but
the re is room for other tax
measures to whittle at the hefty
budget defi cits now in prospect.
H undred-billion-doll ar deficit
forecasts are un n e r ving to
congressmen who h ave to go
before the voters next year. and
that has led to suggestions from
R e p u b lican s as w ell a s
De m ocrats t ha t t h e
adm ini str ation s h o uld do
some th ing to raise m or e
r even u e and r e d uce t h e
shortfall.
Reagan has said over and over
again that the right course is to
cur b spending, not to try to
balance the budget on the backs
of the taxpayers . He ar gued that
if the government ta kes in more
money, it will s pe nd m ore
money and the whole cycle will
be repeated.
··We sti c k with o ur t ax
program." the president told his
news conference last week. "We
go forward with the reduction of
tax rates. and I have no plans
for increasing ta xes in any
way."
Larry Speakes, tt.e deputy
White House p ress secreta ry,
checked with Reagan later then
said there probably will be some
tax proposals in the budget that .............. ._ ..... ~ ....... ~ ............ ~ ...... -~~~~ ... ~--~1 ·
Newport Surf and Sport .
Season's Greetings •
We hope you're having a wonderful Holiday Season
ToGC:elebrateCWh e're HaSvin
1
g A ~
1ant After ristrnas a e t
*STARTING*
''BEFORE'' CHRISTMAS
10% to 70% OFF OPEN
10·5
DECEMBER 24, 1981. JANUARY 10, 1982
. ·-WWEST PRICES OF 'I'HE YEAR
. on
~S, WOMEN'S, BOYS' CLOTHING,
. WET SUITS and ACCESSORIES·.
1116 IUWPOa'f BLVD. ._ ... llUI•
· nttoaf IUCB, C4 175·m4 , * • ILUNSTOU
Niil llllYSIS
goes to Congress in February.
Spea k es reite r a t e d the
a dministration 's position that
there would be no change in the
25 percent income lax cut that
began this year with a 5 percent
reduction. "But there are some
other proposals fl oating around
tha t we're going to have a look
at," he said.
The reason they are floating
aro un d i s t h a t th e
administration has been floating
them for weeks. Indeed, Reagan
himself proposed $22 bill ion in
revenue-raising measures Sept.
24, but never formally submitted
them to Congress.
Speakes said long ago that the
pres ident would consider "what
has become known as revenue
enhancement." Thal phrase was
coined in Reagan's Office or
Ma nagement a nd Budget. A
reven ue enhancement can't
en h.a nee revenues w ilhout
raising somebody's laxes. but 1t
sounds better.
Among the measures known to
be under administration review·
-Increases in the federal
excise taxes on ciga rettes,
liquor, beer and wine.
-Restrictions on the amount
of interest taxpayers can deduct
in figuring their income laxes.
-A cut an tax deductions for
employer-paid health insurance
premiums
-Tax withholdings on some
interest and dividend income.
A 5·cent-a-gallon increase
in the federal gasoline tax.
A tax on natural gas as part
or a package that would speed
the elimination of government
pri ce controls Re agan is
against that.
'"I 'm sayi ng that my
consideration or the decontrol of
natural gas is on d econtrol
only ... he said But Speakes
noted that Congress might insist
on a lax to accompany the lifting
or controls.
There are other options and
there is no fi rm word as to what
w i l l be in th e final
administration package.
But there wi ll be so me
reve nue measures the re In
English. they are called tax
increase~
Reagan family Christmas set
Relatives, friends to join president, first lady
W ASHI NGTON (A PJ -
President and Mrs. Reagan will
celebr ate Christmas at the
White House with two of their
children and the families of the
first lady's brother, Or. Richard
Davis. a nd lon gtim e fri end
Charles Wick. a spokesman
said.
Their dinner will include
turkey, turnips and monkey
bread.
Deput y press secretary Larry
Speakes said Ron Reagan, a
da ncer with the Joffrey II ballet
company in New York, and his
wife Doria would a rrive at the
White House today and actress
Patti Davis would come from
California on Christmas Eve.
Michael and Maureen Reagan,
the president's children by his
previous marriage to actress
Jane Wyman. will not be here
ror the holidays, Speakes said.
But Davis, his wire and two
children are expected, as are the
Wicks and five of their children
Wick, now the chairman of the
International Communications
Agen cy, he aded R eagan 's
inaugural committee
Assista nt press sec retary
Mar k Wein b erg s aid th e
R eagans haven 't decid ed
whether to open their presents
on Christmas Eve or Christmas
morning.
The menu for the 5:30 p.rn .
Chr istmas dinner includes roast
turkey , cran berry sauce .
chestnut stuffing, giblet gravy,
cand ied sweet potatoes wit h
marshmallows. yellow turnips,
gree n b ea n s. a f rozen
.. Christmas log .. with pistachio
filling, and monkey bread.
Monkey bread 1s an egg bread
rolled in butter and baked , then
broken apart and e aten in
pieces. The president prefers his
with Jam.
The Reagans traditionally
have purchased their monkey
bread from Sandy"s Bakery in
Santa Momca, Calif.. which this
year gave its recipe to the White
House chef, who is preparing the
old famil avorite from nour,
yeas t . eg r y milk , /
s hortening, s uga . s ail a nd :
waler
The Reagans are expected to
go to California shortl y after
Ch ristm as and s pend New
Year's. as usual. with the Walter
Annenbergs in Palm Springs.
c ..... Last Minute Gift Special Food ,roc.ason .......
Cuisinart
Sale
•xp•ded ffitd
hbe.ct
fowblod.1
List Price
DLC I OE •••••••••••••••• 130.00
DLC IE ••.•.•..•..•.••••• 185.00
DLC 71 ...••....••.....•• 260.00
Ow Price . ''·'' 'I JI.ft.
'114.tt
• Fiii GIFT WRAPPING •
• CHRISTMAS LIGHTS & TREE ST ANDS MOW IM STOCK •
,,..." ......... 12/21/11
Subject to Supply
on hand .... ,.
ALL STOUS O""
7 DAYSI
c._.._,..,...,. ... ~
Wnhlfftlt ................
CROWM••
ARDWARE--..,.,.
Wntdff Pln8 • 642.-llU 17th & Irvine, Newport Beach
C..1H .. Mw • '7WIOO 3107 ~.Coast Hwy.
llakr Y.._ c ..... • 644-11101614 San Migue l Dr .• Newport Beach
. t . . .
i ~ J
'
ROAD CLOSED -Crews were still trying to
clear a 150.yard stretch of Highway 101 in
northern Mendocino County that was blocked
·~-........ by a huge mudslide a few days ago. No date
for reopening was give n b y the state
transportation department
Chase a Reindeer
at Westcliff Plaza·
... the hoofprints on our sidewalk will lead you from store to store
as special w indow displays tell you the story of "Twas the Night
Before Christmas." It's a unique and special experience for the
whole family to sh are. Also enjoy merry carolers in Old English
costume who will entertain you in the plaza from 5 p.m . to 9 p.m .
December 14 through 18 and December 21 through 23.
ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICE
BANK OF AMERICA
CHARL ES BARR J EWELERS
C ROWN HARDWARE
DICK VERNON SPORTSWEAR
DR. LOU ELDER
optometrist
HAIR HANDLERS SALON
HALLI DAY'S MEN'S CLOTHING
HICKORY FARM S
specialty food Items
HUMPTY DUMPTY
children's clothing
JEAN DAHL
designer and better sportswear
LA GALLERIA
elegance In fashion
MARKET BASKET
M ES AMI ES TEENS
NANCY .DUNN ANTIQUES
NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS
PAPER UNLIMITED
cards and gifts
SAV-ON DRUGS
STOREKEEPER
traditional sportswear
VETA'S INTIMATE APPAREL
WESTCLIFF CLEANERS
WESTCLIFF CORNERS
gourmet ware and collect ibles
WES TC LI FF SHOES
X AVIER'S OF NEWPORT
fine flowers and gifts
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
Ope" Thursday nights till 9 p.m.
SPECIAL CHRISTMAS HOURS
Dec. 14 to 18 and 21 to 23 till 9 p .m .
Saturday, Dec. 19, 10-6
Most stores open Sunday, Dec. 20, 12-5
Christmas Eve, 10-5
Orange Coast DAILY PILOl/Wednesday, December 23, 1981 s
Bonin trial recesses
Jurors hear final arguments; deliberations due Monday
LOS ANGELES <AP> The
two ·monlh prosecution or
Freeway Kiiie r defendant
Wil liam Bonin ended with a
prosecutor imploring jurors lo
glve Bonin "what he has earned
-convictions in 12 murders of
younf men and boys."
Fo lowing final arguments
Tuesday, the case was recessed
Cor the Christmas holiday
Superior Court Judge William
Keene said he would instruct
jurors in the law 1rnd place lhe
case i n their hand s f or
deliberations next Monday.
The last words that the seven
men and fivl' women heard in
the case cumc from Deputy
Dl11 tric t Attorney Sterling
Norris, who urged them to find
the 34·year -old truck driver, a
twice parole d registered sex
oCCcnder. guilty on every count
an the grisly killings.
Norris angrily replied to
c laims by defense attorney
William Charvet that it was
unfair to -.how jurors bloody
photographs of the mutilated
bodies of v1ct1ms · · r d1dn 't put the blood and
~01 e on those photographs."
:.aid Norris "Mr Bonin did He
c aused that "
Ile uqied j urors lo not be
dlstracU'<I by Charvet 's attack
on spcc1Clc points of evidence us
possibly incons1stC'nt
"Thi s evi d c n t'e, thi s
overwhelming ('V1dem·e. agamst
this defendant hai> earned b1m
convictions an t hese brutal
deaths," he con duded "Givt·
him what he ha!> earned G1v1·
ham what he dcst•rvt·s "
Charvet rept'atcdly t·hallcngc<
lh<' c:rcd 1h1l1t y of th<
prosl'cutwn 's two star \\ llnesse•
both of wh<1m havl' IQs unde1
I 011
Free rides offered W:unks
CareCab will take tipsy celebrators home in LA area
LOS ANGELES <AP> The
CareCab, a free service to get
drunks home from bars or
restaurants during the holiday
season, began operation Mon<iay
and th~ operators expect lo do
more business this year becaust·
or stricter drunken driving laws
"Last year, we serviced quite
a few people, we're expecting
more this year," ::.aid Sonny
W a lk er , s poke s man f o r
CareUnit Hos pital, an alcohol
treatment facility, which pays
for the free cab service along
with United Independent Cab
Co. and lhe Yellow Cab Co
The ser vice operates until
Jan. 2 between 7 p.m . and 3 a.m
in most parts of Los Angeles.
i n cludi n g dow n town.
south·central Los Angeles, and
east and we.,t Hollywood It has
abo been ellpanded to th<' cities
of Orangt• and An<ilu:tm an<I
other 1rnrt-. of Or:..i11i;c <'ounly
Walker said h(· expt·1·ts mor•·
people who rcalile thc'r vt• h<.td
SOVl.et tuna loo much lo Jnnk lo c all thf' CareCab service this vea1
because of toug her drunke11
bo t tt d di 1vir.g l<JWS IMS'>t'c! i,, the stat• a s po e Leg1:-.latun· wh1d1 J!,IJ 1nt11 l'ffl'l'I
in Januar)
SAN U I E G 0 ( A P > lJncti•r tlll' 01 . .,., 1.1 .,.. "· .1 p<>rso11 American fis hermen say they"ve l'OnV ll'tl'rl of a rar~t offf-11.,1 faet·'>
seen a Soviet tuna boat in lht' a minimum of four r:la}'> an Jail
tropical Eas tern Pacific for the or thrt·e vNu~ 011 11rohat ion anct
first time. a po ... -.al1l1· !HI Ila ~ l1cc n s<·
In rece nt days. the pur~e n•stru•llon
seiner Ivan Borsov with a crew L 0 .., An f.! l' 1 I.'., po 11 cl'
of a bout 36 was spotted. but "our l><'partmt•nt p<.1trnl'> havr• he~n
people don "t see any r t al b<>efed up
competition at this point," said l'a11•Cob s1•1 v11·1· 1., a\.,11lablc·
AugustFel<>ndo ofthcAmencan at 21.1·2956411, cir 10 U1ang<'
Tunaboat A:-socia_t_io_n ______ Counly at 714 hJJ %X2
The Robinsons Gift
•
WRAP·AROUND METALLIC :
THE ULTIMATE BOOT
Crush them down Pull the1'1i up 10 it r
knee Their sotr metallic glow shine:-.
1hrougt1 Made for is exc1us1ve1y m
Italy, where the des1qn ot foo1weM -
as evidenced here-is considered an
art In 1aupe suede/bronze metallic
leather Or natural lustre leather/
bronze metallic leather
$165 each Robinson s
Desi gner Shoes. 158 To
order. call toll fr ee
1·800·523·7600.
• I
-----------
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Wtdntlday, Ototmbtr 23, 1911
Firemen
burned up· Dinosaur hunters tell of jungle trek, sightings
OLYMPIAiV/llh. <AP) -A ftrt DW'Decl at a Tbunton Oounty tire
1t1Uon for at ltut an
hour btfort four
volunteer flrtfl1ht1ra
who were aleeplna
lnalde were alerted by a
paasln1 state trooper ·I offtclala said.
The blue broke out In
the shop, at the other
end or the station from
the sleeping firefighters .. MISSION HALTED -
said Jack Munier, chief Balloonist Maxie
of the Thurston County Anderson said he and
Fire Protection District partner Don J d a
No. 9, near Oly~pia.. h a v e abandoned
The fl~efig.hter s plans to drift around moved their equipment outside the firehouse the _world due to a
and put out the blaze. le ak mg balloon .
LOI ANOILll <AP) -To ID openly 1ktpUoal audltnct of
rtPorttrl and camera crtwe, 1 loutb
Pa11dtna couple wbo rto.ntly returned from equatortal Alrtca havt
ln1l1tecl that a dlnotaur·llke cnaturt
exlall ln a remote Jun1le lakt.
Herman and Kla Recuatera
Tuesday described si1hUngs of a
"serpent-like" creature the "aue of
two hippos" rising from the waters of
Lake Tele in the Republic of the
Congo.
However. they brought no
substantiating photographs, tape
recordings or witnesses lo a packed
news conference at the Museum of
Science and Industry.
Bul the 48-year·old consulting
space engineer, who used to work ~t
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and his
34-year-old wife, a chiropractic
1tud1nt 11ld tftm of tbtirjS ll t b t l r tr l t n di ' to mo \l n t th t
bttn1 devtloptd and could uce thrtt·month expecltUon to LUt Tt lt,
ont l>botolraph of Mokelt mbt, utd tht only poulblt pbcM ol tht
aa th-t natfv11 call tbt btut. animal wu tun by Mr1. ~l\Utert
Tbt couple alto clalmtd to bave 1 on Nov.• from a 1mall boat lD LUt tape record.lQI of a trumpetlq i0Undl'P111 as to ao mtltrt from tbt
tbat ml1ht be tht animal. The)' aaJd' creatUH. Re1uattn Hld they want
the African offlclala and vUla1en to aee lf the picture came out before
who accompanied them would, If decldJn1 whether to release it. conta~ted. ln person, subatantiate Mra. ~l\lllen aaJd abe wu so
their s11t\Un1. atartled by the emer1ence of a
··we believe what we aaw," Mr•. "larce serpent·llke head and neck"
Re1usters said. from the water .that "it took me a
As reporters repeatedly uked why second to snap a picture u it Ct.be
their account should be accepted creature) descended."
witbout Jlard evidence, Re1uatere Aak~ how big was its head, Mn.
said "I think if we had the best Re1uslers eeatured with her hands
photograph in the world there would and said "a lltUe bluer" than a
still be people who wouldn't believe football. The neck, she said, was
it." about two feet thick, tapering to a
The couple, who said· they spent smaller head.
$40,000 of their money and some of The couple, who appeared in
txptdtuon 1blrt1 btarln&. lnal1nta
wt th a cartoon dlnoaaur, d11111Ut41d •
conttnUon by Unlvtnltr ot CblHIO btolo1t1t Roy lhcka , wbo alto rtctnUy returned from a dinolau.r
hunt ln the umt arH, tbat LU•
Tele wu only 1 ftw mettr1 d•P and
could not harbor such I creature.
Ma ck al could not be reached fOI'
immediate comment, but said earlier
ln the month that althou1h be bad not
aeen the reported Mokele Mbembe
himself, he was "more convinced
now than ever'' th al such a creature
does exist in the swa mpy
Ubangi.Congo basin of central
Africa.
Other members of the party on
other days reported seeing what
appeared to be the back or a hu1e.
dark-colored, sli ck-skinned animal in
the lake.
STORE HOURS:
..
Let our fresh flower hurricane lamp arrangement add its own
special glow to your festivities. But come In now to avoid the rush.
Opon ..uy da~P.~!f.Q.!:..~--. .., __
Innes
SHOES
"LOTUS"
Bronze or Pewter
"BREEZY"
Bronze
$32.99
"JAG "
Bronze
"ANGIE"
Bronze multi-colored
$42.00
Innes
SHOES
SOUTH COAST PLA ZA
WI HONOI MOST MAJOR CHDIT CAJtOS •
WED. 10-1 0, THUR. 9:30-6
SAT. 9-9 and SUN. 11-5
3333
SOUTH COAST
PLAZA
COSTA MESA
--c:;;
~-"4•2-----...... ~ -c ... • -0 ..
Cll
NOTH IN&
HElD BACK
~
SUNFLOWER AV.
ALL SALES
FINAL
NO REFUNDS OR
EXCHANGES
. -···
TO RETIRE
Michigan Gov
William Milliken
s ays he wi ll retire
from elective politics
a t the end of his term
1n January 1983. The
.. ~·
epublican officia l
ays he will promote
ich1gan
State ·' . ~yes 1iew .
~: loga11 .. ~;TU LSA. Okla CAP>
~ Tul sa radio
pcr!>onality and a state
nator bave mounte<i a
a m paign to get the ~)ogan "Oklahoma is
t)K" replaced on state au tu license t ags. 9 John Erling and Sen.
D on Cummins f ee l
Oklahoma is better than
Q K , so the slogan should ~eflect this, but that ·s
•bout a s far as
gr cement bet ween
•hem goes
: Ecich has his own idea
for a new slogan Erling If. all for •'Oklahoma
(.and or New Horizons.'' ~ "I don't know whether
J like that," Cummins
J aid
,.. lk favors "Heartland ~A merica" :> Thf' radio announcer ~;1ys Gov George Nigh
J., promoting ·'The
~unbelt State "
1 Erling has used his
f adio t al k show to
' ollect suggestions from
o;tenPrs. who came up
·1th such Je wels as
Land or 011 and Oral,"
t dcrring to evangelist
!. rdl Roberts .
Oklahoma, Hot as
C'll." "The Grapes of
!,t Jradise." "Tb e
11ountain State," "The lf oll Road State" and ~ From T eepees to
O~l'rS "
-: 0th(' r sugges tion s
~eluded "I'd Sooner Be
i n Oki e," · The Sooner
Ste Better.· · Home of ~ood 01 ' Boys," and
f.We're OK and You're
'ot
'Cummins isn't
pti rn1s l1c about getting
quick change· "You
calize that if I get this
n the Senate rtoor,
ere will be 48 senators
1th 48 different
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneedoy, December 23, 1981
Reagan OKs giving surplus cheese to the needy ~1r :an
Three million pounds of cheddar to be offered to California for distribution M ar ~e First Lt
WASHJNGTON <AP> -President
Reaaan hais signed a four-year. $11
billion farm blll and announced plans
to give to poor people some of the 5eo
mllllon pounds of surplus cheese that
h ave piled up in eovernment
warehouses.
Reagan approved givlne JO million
pounds of cheese to states that ask
for it. with the stat es distributing lt to
the needy through non-profit
organizations.
··At a time when American
families a re under increasing
financial pressure. their government
cannot sit by and watch millions of
pounds of food turn to waste,"
Reagan said Tuesday In a written
statement.
Agriculture Secretary John Block
said the farm bill Reagan signed
would provide a "safety net" for
farmers while tilting the nation's
farm system toward greater reliance
on market forces and less reliance on
government.
Consumer groups and some farm
groups have criticized the bill.
Consumer forces failed in Congress
to weaken milk and suaar support
programs that they said kept ~rices
needlessly high.
Farm Interest said price support
proarams for wheat, corn. cotton and
rice, while Increased, will remain
inadequate.
The bill narrowly passed the
House, 205-203, las t week after
winnlna wider approval by the
Senate earlier.
On the cheese s urplus, the White
House said California will become
t h e fi r st state in which
government-owned cheese will be
distributed. Officials said 3 million
pounds of c hedd ar cheese in
five.pound blocl<s will be offered to
the state on Monday
Cheese surpluiscs have
accumulated because formers get
more m oney by selling dairy
products to the government for
s upport prices thun they can get on
the open market.
·'More distribution s may be
necessary as we continue our drive to
root out waste in government and
make the best possible use of our
nation's resource!>," Reagan said.
Block said families getting food
stamps would not be penaJiied by
virtue of accepting free cheese from
charities
. •
Thomas E Savage, son
or Willard M . and
Elanor C. Savage or 512
Avocado Ave .. Corona
del Mar, was designated
a naval aviator
Presentation or the
"Wing s of Gold "
marked culmination of
18 months of flight
training at Pensacola,
Fla.
lie 1s a 1972 graduate
of Corona dcl Mar High
School, and a 1979
graduate of San Diego
State
,.,EN'S LEVI BELL
BOTT.OMS, BIG BELLS,
BOOT LEGS, 501s AND
CORDUROYS
SIZES 28-40
so•/o..,__1_1._88_
NO HOLDS
NO LAY AWAYS
NO DEALERS
DESIGNER JEANS
Entire
Inventory
Jordoche, Sasson. Bonjour, Sergio,
Volente, Chardon. Jesse Jeans,
lee. Levis and Many More MAJO
__ 23_·99
------1 STOCK
MEN'S AND BOYS'
JACKETS & SPORTCOATS
1/2 PRICE
lee• Levi's• Pacific Trail •
e Slope • Notional •OP• Sasson
Down and Poly-f illed
Dress and Sport Jackets
MEN'S & BOYS' SHIRTS
REDUCTIO
SALE.
WE NEED
TO MOVE
ME RC HAN·
OP AND GOLDEN
WAVE LONG
CORDUROY PANTS
MANY COLORS
BOYS 11.88
SIZES 20-26
MENS 13.88
SIZES 27-40
WE BELIEVE WE HAVE THE
Lowest
Prices in
Orange
County
log ans,·· Cu mmins • on
aid
angs eyed
LOS ANGELES (AP >
The City Council has
uted fund:. to hire 36
tre~t counselors to
ork in a collnty·run
rog ram com bating
;ing \'io le n ce The
'ouncil al lo ca t ed
1 81iO.i75 to the
i ommuruty Youth Gang
'crvices Project.
25th year i\nniversary
~: come see us at our
, new address
.~ .~
• FMMOS *Slla.E _,
441 OW Mewpori 11¥d.
Me.,_tlt«ll.CA
U1·77 o
50o/o OFF
long and Short Sleeve
OP •lightning Bolt, lee, Levis, Oxford,
Hang Ten. lancer, Kennington. Spire and Leh Bonk
MEN'S & BOYS' WALKING SHORTS
& SWIM TRUNKS
OPS, Golden Wave. Catch It, Laguna
90YS MINS
All 7 .88 SWIMTRUNKS 8.88
SIZES 20·26 SIZES
SALE STARTS
FRIDAY,
DEC~ 23
IOAMSHARPI
MEN'S PANTS
1/2 PRICE
21 . .a SHORTS 9.88 Movin' On J90ns • levl1 for Men• Tr im Cut, Full Cut --------------------1 • LN'-Fa•f1ift>"I •Painter Pants• YMCA Jeans•
SPECIAL GROUP OP LADllS'S • •Levi• Action Slacks• Oxford Pants
DESIGNER COnON PANTS And Many More
NOW 7.88 (ltEG. to $26)
LADlll'I & GIRLl'I KNICKERS
(COTIONS & CORDUIOY)
from 9.88 lltEG. TO '21.98
WOMIN'I AND G..U'I
Cotton •Knit • Nylon Wraporouitd
Corduroy I Hawal Ian
RIGTOflLSO
5.98
•O & TALL DIPAIDMINT Q.Oll4UT
I IHlllTI POii PAllTI
., AliL --ADIES' TOPS
1~·2 PRICE . ~
(UMITID sum y Of TIHNll IHOU AUO)
Basics and
IF THESE
PRICES CAN BE
BEAT ELSE·
WHERE, WE'LL
PAY YOU THE
DIFFERENCE IN
CASH! COW\m on M S ON THIS
IHalOtaE Offfa ON IMSPl.AY
IHTHI
VALID THRU CHRISTMAS
(ORIGINAL RECEIPT REQUIRED AS
PROOF OF PURCHASE)
--------------------------------
.48 Orange Cout OAILV PILOT/Wednesday, December 23. 1981
Bo/,sa Chica 's fate
now in state hands
The Or ange County Board of
Supervisors has outl ined the
future of the 1,600-acre Bolsa
C h ica area n ear Hunting ton
B each to include 5,700 homes. an
1,800-slip marina and a fiOO-acre
salt m arsh reserve for fish and
birds .
Also i n c lud e d in the
$179-mil11on proposal is a
600-foot -wide ocean c hannel
through Bolsa Chica state beach.
a navigable channe l connection
to adjacent Huntington Harbour:
and a 45-foot-high bridge over the
c hanne ls at P acifi c Coast
Hig hway and Wa rner Avenue
How all this would be funded is
still open to question.
Sign a l Landmark Inc . the
major landowner of the Bolsa
Chica, holding 1.100 acres, wants
to deve lop th e land. Signal
officials say they approve of the
county gui<:telines.
Supervisors say the proposal
is a compromise th at balances
d evelopment interes t s with
e nvironmental concerns
But th e devt!lopment
proposaJ in its p resent form may
neve r be realized because of
environmental regulations of the
California Coastal Act.
Biologists for the California
Department of Fis h and Game
recently identified most of the
l,300-acre Bolsa Chica lowland as
one of the few remaining wetland
habitats for fi s h a nd birds .
inc luding endangere d species .
Th e biologi s t s' r e p ort
ide ntifies 852 acres of function ing
but .. d egraded" wetlands
Another 400 acres is identifi ed as
"severely degraded" wetlands in
n eed of restoration.
The a rea is t ermed degraded
beca use it has been diked off
from ocean tides s ince the early
p art o f the century But the
report says it function~ because
a nnual rainfall r evives flora a ntl
fauna and provides a n atu ral
rood chain.
The severely degrad ed areas
inc lude dikes and roads built to
service oil operations in the area.
the report states.
More than 200 oil wet Is
operate in the Bolsa C hi ca
lowlands.
The s tate owns 327 acres of
Bo lsa Chica a nd in 1978, the s tate
Fis h and G a m e De partme nt
opened tide gates and resto red
200 acres to a natural wetland
habitat r eserve for fi s h a nd
birds. Another 127 acres is set for
restoration next year
lt i s t h is potentia l fo r
res toration of degraded wetlands
that ma y cause coa s t al
com miss ione r s to r eject the
county's con cept o r building
h om es in the lowland a rea.
Coastal commi ssio n ers
ultimately must approve or d eny
th e county pro posal. Officials of
th e Coastal Comm ission say the
present policy is to preserve and
restore re m aining wetla nds.
T hey note that in Southe rn
California about 90 percent of t he
wetland estuaries for fish and
coastal b r eed ing a nd nesting
grounds for s hore birds have
been destroyed
Coastal° Commission officia ls
have s tated in the pas t that this
m akes Bolsa Chica important as··
the largest remainin g wetlands in
Southern California.
The sup e r v i sor s· mixed
development a nd m a rs h
pr ese rvation proposal i s
sch eduled t o be sent to t he
Coastal Commission for review
and public hea ring early next
year
Tough talk can backfire
T h e t ongue -l as hin g
Me nachem Begin chose to deliver
to the United States during the
rece nt Golan Heights controversy
indicates he m ay h ave badly
misjudged the extent of his
support he re.
That there is great s upport
for Is rael goes without saying
But it is also true that the s upport
is not universal. And incidents
like this fue l the arguments of
those who question the wisdom of
our continued deep involvement
with the mercurial Mr. Begin.
It see m s ev id ent ha s
gove rnment's dec is ion to extend
Is r ael civil law to the Golan
Heights in a de facto a nnexation
was timed to tak e advantage of
the focus of wo rld attention on
t he crisis in P oland .
But s ince Is rae l a lread y
occupied the area, and thus was
in no imminent danger of attack
from that quarte r . there was
ve r y little to be gained from the
move at this time .
•
Not s urpri s in gly. t h e
U nited States s upported the U.N.
Security Counc i l resoluti on
demand ing that the action be
rever sed.
Thi s set o ff Beg1n ·s
tongue -l ashing, i n c lud i n g
refer e nces to anti-Semitis m in
th e U nited S t a l es . a nd the
s ubsequent decision of the ls r aeh
parliament to cancel its treaty of
s trategic cooperation with this
co unt ry . W a s hin g t o n ha d
d ec lared the a gree ment '"in
abeyance" pending examination
o f the Golan Heights maneuve r .
The whole a ff ai r was an
extreme example of overkill on
the part of the Begin governme nt
and one that. in the long run, can
do Is rael more harm than good.
Mr. Begin '~ a ntics m ay be
s hrugged o ff as diplomatic
gamesmans hip in the higher
levels in Wa shington. B ut he has
hurt his cause a nd his country
with a lot of eve r y da y
Americans.
Opinions expressed tn the space abOve are those of the Dally Pilot. Otner views ex·
pressed on tn1s page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment 1s 1nvit·
ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714)
642-4321.
L.M. Boyd I Science & youth
Average age or the scientists who
pieced together the secret patterns of
nuclear energy during World War ((
was 27. Those men and women a re
S easone d Citizen s n ow, or
approaching the retirement years, at
any rate. And a new generation or
youngsters is bringing along a new
generation of technology-computers.
You rarely see the middle aged or
older in computer shops. Average
age among the bit.s-and-bytes fol~ is
probably even lower than 27. You
show me a computer whiz and I'll
show you a disdainful boy with a
beard who talks funny.
Official language of Pakistan is
Urdu, and In the vernacular of that
tongue , the hus band of Great
Brllain's Queen Eliubelh, Prince
Pblllp, Is referred to as: "Fella
belong Mn. Queen."
Say a blonde divu into a
swim ming pool and comes out with
rreen balr. What can she do about
that? Advtsers differ. An Immediate
rlnae in fresh water Is m'a.l oft.en
preacr.ibed. But th e Soutb~rn
CaJlromia technique of Lbt day calls
ORANGE COAST
. Daily Pilat
~I-t~ N r ti llW '"' ti UO WW .. , _. , CMI• Mt.._ .,..,_ <Otrn~ lo lloe ·~ G..u _...CA f2ut e • I ._ __________ ----
for rubbing the hair with lemons
before jumping into the pool .
Research goes on.
Q. As a boy, the famous Indian
Sitting Bull was known as Jumping
Badger. What was Crazy Horse's
childhood name?
A. Curly.
·•Retirement at 6S is ridiculous."
said George &.urns. ·'When I was 65,
l still had pimples."
How do you account for the ract
that humorou.111 Mother's Day cards
don 't sell well at all but humorous
Father's Day tards do?
Q . Do cows have quadruplets?
Often?
A. No , not often. One in every
665,388 blrths,
Q. l contend that to be • good
driver you h.ave to have good hearing
to l ake notice or car horns. train
whistles, whatever.
A. Only ln theory. Deer driven u
a whole have fewer accidents than
normal drivers.
J'hornas P. Haley
Publisher
T9'oma• A. Mu,.,..lne
Editor
Barbara Krelbich
eoltorfal P•ve.·J:dltor
~
-· •i .. ·.
Christian TV 'quota' sought
:i ·: .. ·: .. ·: ·: .. ... ... ...
NEW YORK -"For several years
now R C A /NBC has practiced
discrimination against Christians,"
began a letter received on Nov. 17 by
Thornton Bradshaw, the chairman of
RCA, the giant corpQration which owns
the Nationa l Broadcasting Co .
"Methodically RCA/NBC has excluded
Christia n characters, c ult ure and
values from their programs."
It as a kind of letter that executives of
important corporations and even
newspaper columnists -receive fairly
regularly . Ofte n the language is
intemperate and the complaints -from
Christians or J ews or Italians or senior
citizens a re not signed.
THIS ONE WAS signed by the Rev.
Donald E. Wildmon, the chairman of
the Coalition for Beller Television. He
also s igned similar letters to ABC and
CBS.
"Whether or not this d iscrimination is
by design and intent I caMot at this
time say," wrote Wildmon, who was the
Moral Maj ority's point man o n
campaigns early this year against sex
and violence on network television.
"My personal opinion is that it is by
des ign, intentional.
"In order to correct this situation we
ex pect that c haracters in your
e ntertainment programs be represented
in proportion to the same mix as in our
society ...
"Unless we are given evidence by
Feb. 1, 198:!, that concrete steps have
b ee n take n to s l o p this ugl y
anti-Christian bigotry by RCA/NBC
against ChristJans, Christian values and
Christian culture in their programming
not only will we ask Christians,
the ir friends and all fair-minded people
not to purchase RCA/NBC products, but
~ ~--------------------~ ~~~ RICHARD RllVIS 1'i ,.
we will also ask them to refuse to
pu r~~ase the products or advertisers
THE CO ALITI ON f o r Be tt e r
Television threatened a boycott last
winter over the sex-and-violence issue .
The n, the Rev. Wildmon declared
victory from his church in Tupelo, Miss.
He called off that boycott after he said
he d e t ected a n improvem e nt in
prime-time moraH ty . Now he is raising
the ante: There must be quotas on
characters. ideas and values.
He obviously feels very strongly. He
not only accuses t he networks or
discrimination. but in the RCA letter
charges the company with seeking "to
ridi cu le . demean or belittle the
Christian faith.'·
"Christians have contributed to the
well-being of this country since 1t
began. They have helped build schools.
hospitals. homes of charity, and other
ins titutions of public good . . The
Ch ristian faith has healed the alcoholic.
r eh abilitated the criminal, rejoined the
broken home, helped the leen·age drug
addict find purpose and meaning in life
and undergirded the ethics uf tiustn esk
people But one would never know th1Jl
by watching RCA-NBC progrcsm~ .. ••
Wtld mon sees, in his three pa q~
letters, what amounts to a cultural wa~
"RCA/NBC program ming," he writ.,.~}
"can best be descrihed J~ !>Cl'Ul.i
supremac ist Secular ~uprcm .u·as
culture thinks itself above rtd1g1 u1.1s
man. considers those who c.trt-n·ltgao~
to be inferior creatures "
N BC's RF.PLY, !>ent on "\rJv 24 ,;
shorter a little long<:r than "°" p:i~
and 1t I'> not sweet The Ot!lwork 1.$.
r eady to fi ght this lime Vou offer ~
examples to back the!>e allegat10n• .~
wrote Raymond J T1moth~. pre..,arli.!
of the NBC Television Netwurk to tttil
Rev Wildmon ·w e con ... 1<lcr tile
charges intemperate and ~rnundlr·s•
and we re1ect them " ·:·
"The date 1s firm,· the Re' \\aid mun
said when I asked him Hut th.Jt \\ o~
about all he would Sa} W1•'\I" mJdc· ni)
public announcement aboul 1h1 :.ir11l._I
really don't want to sa} anvtt11nJ? rn<,~
a bout 1l right now ·
So. at seems there ,.., goin~ ''' Ill a
showdown this time lJnle'' 1 ertain
Amencan inst1tut1ons r an g1v1· "'adt'nt't
l o t hi s one man and 1.11 hc<l e\\•r
organizatJonal backmg he h.1.., 1h.1t they
are Chnsli an enough, he !\.1, •, ht• ~ ttl
mobilize the great Christian 1n.i11111t' to
try to destroy them f1nan r1all~
The plot is worse tha n lhe '''Jr' lln~
of most or the telc\'is1on o;hi.w .. th.i t c•n
any night, could offend alm11 .. 1 .i n)
Christian. Jew Moslem or inf1rl1 I
Give him a little time for Christinas
I hope it isn't too late. I've thought of
a whole new Christmas lis t of what l
want instead of what I originally asked
for. I realize I have enough things.
What I'm short of is time. I wish people
would give me that for Christmas.
Here's a partial list of what I'd like :
-A line-stander. I'd like to have
someone give me about 50 hours or time
dur ing which they'd stand in line for
m e. I'd use up eight or 10 hours of it in
fiv e -and 10-minute pieces at the
s upe rmarket counter. I could use
a nother 10 hours having the giver stand
in line for me at the bank, 10 or 15
minutes at a time.
-SOMEONE TO put my snow tires
on and take the m off again several
limes during the winter. I don't like to
have them on when there's no snow on
the roads and l never have the time to
put them on when I know it's going to
s now.
-I'd love to have a gift certifi cate
from someone volunteering to read
books for me. I don't want them to give
me a book. I want them to read the
books I already have.
-Right an.er Christmas I'd U.ke to
have someone who has the lime and the
nerve to exchange a couple of ill-fitting
gifts I'll certainly get. I hale laking the
time to exchange things so much that
sometimes l never get at it and a
ANDY ROOllY
perfectly good gift sits for years at the
bottom of a drawer, unused because it's
the wrong size.
-Would someone please tell me
they'll change my typewriter ribbon
whenever it needs it? It's a small gift'
because it only needs a new ribbon
about five times a year but il would
mak e one writ er very happy at
Christmas.
-IT WOULD be thoughtful of
someone who doesn't have a lot or
money to spend on a present for me if
they'd volunteer to come into the house
ever y night after we've gone lo bed and
make certain we've turned off all the
The evolution of our God
All this argument and controversy
about the evolution of man, and no
thought about the evolution of God.
Fundamentalists and mode rnists
disputing the origin of species, and no
SYlllY HARllS
~ I~~ ~
consideration of how our species has
changed its view or God since the
earliest limes.
In the beginning, in the first books of
the Old Testament, we find a vengeful
as well as a gracious 1od, a tribal 1od
exacting duty and devollun by ritual
and sacrifice.
Then, as the Bibi• proares;ses, we find
a str ance thing bappenJng. God himself
change&, In the eyes of lbo Israelites.
He became less feanome and more
compassionate; be expand from a
trlbal to a universal deUy: as men arew
In undentandlna, God trew In 1tature.
AT •~, be rejoiced tn lbe alayln1
of Israel'• enemies. But by the Ume of
the Babylonian Exl!e1 be wu already
depicted u a Cod wno wept that the
Ef)'l)tlana were drownln1 ln the Red
SU aft• tbe l1rullle1 had uf•IY
... ,.~ ... ., nvf"r He crlu, "Are the
Egyptians not my children too?"
<This may be found in Midr03h, the
earliest commentary on the Hebr ?W
Scriptures.)
And by the time we reach the great
prophet.a. such as Oeutero-lsaiah, man
has discovered a god who is far closer
to the precepts and parables of Rabbl
Jesus than most of us realize. Many of
J esus' sayings are direct quotations or
paraphrases of the Old Testament. for
he never considered himseU anything
but a plou.tiJew.
The evolution of God continued durin1
hi2' ministry, for he set about to reform
and expand and deepen the vision of a
loving and redemptive deity, placing
the spirit above the law1 that had come
to cnmp and rigidify the Old Guard
(undamentallst Jews of his day.
THE MINIST&Y or J H US WH a
further liberation from ritual for lt.s own
sake. <"Il is not what 1oes in10 a man ..
moulh that defiles him, bul what comn
out or lt." > Jt was an evolutJonary
breaklhrou&h ln men's conception ol the
creator and hls relation to us.
God 1 row1. 11 we trow, for be
renecta what we become; and when we
,row to lbe fullest, we wlll have the
ulleat 1od -not a cod of the
'haadalftentalhta, but • fod or
rundamenttls, a UJM, not a tub. •
lights and put the thermostJI down oo
the furnace I'm an such a hurr' tu ,get
to bed. 1 don't always thank of al
If that person wants to rt.><111~ make
the gift something specrnl hi' u t -.11~
co u I d co m e b a c k 1 n e ;.1 r h •· \ <' r 1
morning and turn the heat llfl .,n I '4
have a warm bathroom and pl1•r11~ ot
hot water for a long showe r •
On long trips and pa111cul,ffh fl)
the summer, I get sleepy dri vi ng ~·or
Christmas I'd like someone lo vulunteet
to go with me when I'm driving a lo ne
and t ake over when 1 start to nod on the
highway. 1 don't have tame to pull O\«!I"
and nap.
-SEVERAL FRIENDS arE' clever
with numbers and bookkeeping lnstea4
or giving me something r can wear o
play with. why don't they check all m~
bank accounts and all those pens1oc
funds I seem to be contributang 111 l
never take the lime I'd like to ma~r
sure the money is really there• 1
wouldn't mind if they checked all m~
cr edit card bills, too. to mak<' c;un· I ·co
not being cheated
In addition to someone to r1•ad
books for me, I wouldn't mind ha\ utJ
someone give me a few hours to i~
through the newspaper on days f doni
have time lo read it all myself l'd hi«•
a newspaper s ummary comparable ~'
the one the President gets, but with U\f
comics too. !
-As stocking presents, 1 ·J like tp
have someone do a lot of littl
incidental waiting for me Nothir1
m ajor. They could keep me from
getting irritated by sitting in my plact
at the table in the restaurant until lbl·
waiter comes to take my order . th•f
could wail in my car while the gas
station attendant fills lhe tank in the ca;
in the next aisle before coming back lp
me to collect his money; tht>y cc11.tld
wall those lnterminable minutes for rn··
during the long commercials an
middle of a football game on lelevlsio
I don't need a new necktie. Ir peo
want to really be nict to m~ l
Christmas, I hope they give me ti mt' ,
CllllY CUS
Moat be bard for 1 one·Umt movie d
TV i.tar to find out that all the pubHc>. s
not an 1tdorlna public
...
Morris 11 feisty, too
,, Cat star draws line at doing tricks
SEATTLE <AP) -Morris 11, lbe
succeaaor to that quinteaaenUally
tlolcky star of cat Cood commercials,
boasts the same feisty penonallty
and humble ort1ln1 aa hl a
predecessor, his trainer says.
Morris, who whirls tbrou1h
superm•rket promotions and
cocktail parties ror cat food buyers
on his business trips with trainer Bob
Martwick, was here to promote a
new tine of cat food.
keyboard, the big oran1e cal eyed a
newspaper photographer balefully
and refused to perform.
"I do train animals but nobody
trains a cat," Martwlck said.
Morris haa the run of the house at
Martwi~k's Cbica10 estate, eats once
a day aod sleeps "anywhere h' wants;• the trainer said.
The cat responded good-naturedly
to pats from reporters and editors at
a Seattle newspaper. But be drew lbe
line at tricks.
Tbe second Morris was discovered
in a New Eneland animal shelter two
years after the original Morris died
in July 1978 at the age pf 17,.
Obituaries in newspapers across lbe
country reported the passing of the
aloof feline. Placed at a video terminal
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All Fedco Stares ari open 11etydar 'tll 1Cbrlstmas
FEDCO
MEMBERSHIP DEPARTMENT STORES
FtDCO LA CIENEGA f213J 8j7·4487
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••
J
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/WednHday, December 23, 1981
A Complete Selection Of
Watches From $65.
Do Your Chr.istmas
Shopping Early For Best
Selection
UP014S
$79.50
KCA87
$95
KZ301S
$160
ND007
S135
AUTHORIZED
SERVICE
't AGENCY
UP012
$110
XZ114
$145
•
KP104
$135
NA002
S155
UEOllS
S65
UFOl4
S160
Sales 6 s.Mce
389 E. 17th St., H We1t~rt Square
Costa Mesa, (714) M2·Ml7
CAcNlal",.. aa
..
K0033
S130
UFOOS
$135
KD118S
$115
KS039
SIS
~·
-I
------~---------...-------..... -----"'• Orange Coaat DAILY PtLOT/Wedneaday, Dec.ember 23, 1981
arw......,.
'tips for holiday travekrs
Airport officials advise plan-ahead, allow for delays
By PAT DUNN oi-.o..., ..... .-
These are peak holiday travel days at
Los Angeles International Airport, and
airport officials are 11ugaeatin1 that
travelers plan ahead to avoid
unnecessary delays and irritation.
Clifton A. Moore , Department of
Airports general manager, says
travelers should allow at least two extra
hours for trafllc and long lines J n
terminal buildings. Ground traffic la
most congested from 7,to 9 a.m .• noon.to
2 p.m., and again from 7 to 9 p.m., when
the heaviest concentration of fliahts
occur.
Moore outlined the following tips to
uncomplicate hoJiday travel at LAX,
the third busiest airport in the world:
service from West Loa An1elea or Van
Nuys. Passengers can park in the
FlyAway lot for $1 ClS·day limit). Call
(213 ) 994-SSS4 or (213) 781-SSS4 for
information.
The West L.A. FlyAway serves LAX
from the terminal at 1401 S. Sepulveda
Blvd., wtiere two-hour courtesy parking
is available for those dropping off
FlyAway passengers. For information.
call (213) 477-4903.
RTD buses also serve LAX via
numerous routes in the Los An1eles
basin. Call (213) 626-4455 or (213)
973-1222 for information.
operated perimeter parking lots otrer
parking to airport users at varlou1
rates. Shuttle service also ls available
from these lots.
-Central area parking is advised for.
people who must drive to LAX to 3 or drop otr passenaers. Moore ad
using the central parkina Iota (50 cen •
an bour> rather than adding to curbside
congestion in front of airline t.ermlnal.s .
There also are metered parkina spaces
opposite Terminals 4 and 7 for 2S cenU.
per half hour to a maximum parking
time of one hour.
QUEEN AND MISS PIGGY -Rose Queen Kathryn Potthast of
P asadena laughs it up with Miss Piggy of Muppets fame at a float
in Temple City. The float is being readied for the Tournament. of.
Roses parade in Pasadena.
-Use one of tbe many bus services
connecting LAX with moat Southland
communities. For informatiQn about
Airport Service, phone 776-9210 in
Orange County and (213) 723-4(S36 ln Loa
Angeles. The company offers bus
service from Anaheim, Jtuena Park,
Laguna Hills/Mission Vlejo, Oranae
County Airport, Seal Beach and Long
Beach. Service also is providecl, from
downtown Los Angel es,
Hollywood/Universal City, Beverly
Hills. Wilshire, Pasadena, Arcadia,
Monrovia and San Marino.
-Off-airport free parklne,., also is
available. Two parking Iota are located
away from the central terminal area
and free tram service and parkina for
three hours is available. By allowing
lime, visitors who are dropping off
passengers can still say their aoodbyes
and yet avoid driving Into the airport's
centraJ terminal roadway system. Lot C
is at Sepulveda Blvd. and 96th Street
and the VSP Lot Is on lllth Street
between Aviation and La Cienega
Blvds.
-More Information is available by
dialing (213 ) A-1-R-P·O·R·T for a
recorded message providing phone
numbers of Southland bus llnes servlna
LAX and for information on LA"'
perimeter parking locations and rates.
Wh en those who drive approach the
airport on Century Blvd., they can tune
their car radios to 530 on the AM dial at
Aviation Boulevard for information on
parking and traffic conditio,u. The 530,
signal also Is available tO motorists
traveling on the San Diego Freeway
south of the Santa Monica Freeway
in~erchange.
Read all todays news everyday Daily Pilat .
in the
After the first three hours there is a
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Daily Pilat
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 23, 1981
CAVALCADE FOOD
82-3
84-5
There . are those whb
try their best . not to show
seasonal good cheer. See
Art Hoppe on Page 82.
0
0
Hershey school tries to make kids '·life sweeter·
Youths from broken homes
given feeling of stability, 'family'
HERSHEY, Pa. (AP) -The
words rang in the ears of the
victorious athlet es as they
boarded the return bus.
"We have lost.
1 •And we are sad,
''But at least we have
· "A Mom and Dad."
,The taunt struck home
because, indeed, none or the
students at the Milton Hershey
School was going back that night
to a Mom and Dad.
The heavy silence that hung
over the team after that remark
stayed with it a long time,
recalls Audrey DeMuth, a
longtime teacher who is
enrollment director at the
school. It even spread to other
students.
"They can and they did get
over it," she says. "They got
over it after they got back within
the caring fold of people."
To her. the incident was
another example of "what
m·akes this school special."
:·s~ial" is a word frequently
U$ed to describe the Milton
Hers hey School, a private,
tujtion-free boarding school for
children who lack care from one
or, both natural parents -the
children of divorces, of parents
who have run off, "social
011>hans" in the jargon.
~ts aim: "To show that a poor
kid doesn't have to end up on the
skids," says public information
director Virgil Alexander.
JAlthough school oUicials
concede they can't make life
penect for a child who has lost a
P4re nt, they try every day with
1,250 youngsters from 6 through
18.
In an age when publicly
fi'1anced programs are being
sl,shed, school president John
A~hele says the Milton-Hershey
SOhool is "fairly well off,A' about
'fl& well endowed as a top-quality p~ate school. It's supported by
a ·trust that owns most or the
K,rshey Foods Corp. and ita
wplth sets it apart from other
io¥ituUona for children.
"The overall thing about this
school is caring," she says.·
"Every youngster who colllff
here has had some trauma in his
or her life."
Students live comfortablx in
group homes that attempt to
create a feeling or stability in
rocky young lives.
"It's one big family," says
John Murrain, a senior. "There
may be things you don't like
about it, but it's one big family."
Helping to create Utat feeling
are couples like Doris· and John
Ebberts. He was a Baltimore
firefighter before they retir~
h ere 13 years ago to be
houseparents in one of the 95
group homes.
"We have a home, not a
house," says Mrs. Ebberts, 56, a
quiet-voiced wo man who
watches over her crew of
teen-aged boys with obvious
affection.
"If they need us in the evening
or any time of the day, we're
here. It's very rewarding, it
really is, to know that you can
help young people. And that's
what we wanted to do."
Like a home, chores are
required and youngsters receive
more discipline than they might
like. Students aren't allowed out
without permission and must be
in bed by 10 p.m. Violations
mean less time in town or less
time away from school in the
summer.
One Philadelphia youth chides
the school's early-to-bed,
early -to -rise and
worship-on-Sunday regimen.
·'There's people throwing
their morals on you when you've
already got your morals figured
out."
A teen-aged girl complains:
"This is a place where lots of
parents stick their kids when
they don't want them. Some of
them are tell in here to rot."
But most of a dozen or so
students inte ryie wed speak
warmly of the school -usually
citing the education and the
close friendships. •
"If you can take advantage of
what they have here, the
facilities are really good," says
Paul Carrico. 17, of Towson, Md.
"J have close friends here who
LEARNING -Students take part in an electrical workshop
at the Milton Hershey School. Over 4,000 inquiries are
are like brothers to me."
•'The education is excellent.
I've got about 20 periods a week
that I can d evote just to
computers," says Neal Woodard
Jr.. a 16-year-old from Front
Royal, Va.
Off campus, "you don't see the
guy you got into a fight with
yesterday. You see another
Milton Hershey boy," says Alvin
White, 18, referring to the light
bond among students.
They also say their material
n eed s are met very well,
particularly if you believe what
the kids from town say.
"They call us millionaires,"
White says. "We boast like
we're rich."
Thanks to the school 's
chocolate company holdings, the
children pay nothing for
yea r -rou nd hou sin g , a n
education, a wardrobe, medical
attention, a weekly allowance
and most of life's little
n ecessities : t ooth brush ,
toothpaste, a year-round pass to
Hersheypark amusement park.
There is so little opportunity
for the students to spend money.
in fact, that Alexander says
many amass thousands of
dollars in Social Security and
Veterans Administration
benefits.
He says that if a youth is
entitled to such payments
because a parent bas died, the
school asks that the money be
signed over. It is put into a
savings account, where it grows
and accumulates Interest until
the student turns 18.
When students graduate, the
school awards them $100 each, a
suitcase, and a new set of
c lothes. If a student is
college-bound -74 of 126 1980
graduates went on to higher
education -the school may lend
or grant tuition money. If a
youth 's aim is a trade, the
school helps find the first job.
The $100 bequest is a holdover
from the wishes of Milton
Hershey, the candymaker who
founded the school in 1909, soon
after he launched his chocolate
business here.
·According to a school
published biography, Hershey
bad led an unhappy and
financially insecure childhood
and wanted to spare other boys
the same fate.
•'These orphana are our boya,
whether we happen to be their
parents or not," Hershey once
said.
Henry Ford. Andrew Carnegie,
of other successful businessmen
of his day.
"He was smart enouah to
know what to do with his money,
to make it do the greatest good,"
Aichele says. "It's a legacy
whi c h wi ll probably go on
forever and ever."
One or Hershey's less popuJar
legacies to today's students is
bis notion that farm work builds
wholesome character.
For that reason, the Milton
Hershey School bas always had
a string of dairy barns, operated
and 'maintained by students.
Those on dairy duty are
awakened at 5:45 a.m. to traipse
out to the barn and milk the
cows.
"Ugh, the aroma," says a
giggling Diane Miller, a petite
16-year-old bemoanioa her rate.
"Most people wake up in the
morning to coffee."
The farm work also draws
teasing from the "townies" on
Friday nights, when the students
are aJlowed off-campus and into
received each year for the 100 available openings.
the nearby town of Hershey.
"They call us COWS -cows
and orphans," Diane says.
The "orphan" tag is unfair,
sa ys Elizabeth Gilliam of
Philadelphia. "We had parents
once. Most or us still do."
Most of the students still bad
residual psychological scars
from broken homes. But talking
about them is against an
unwritten code.
"If you dwell on the problems
you had, people r eally get
angry," says Carol Gilmore.
''They feel. hey, what are you
feeling so angry about? We've
all been through the same stuff.
And we're all in the same
place."
To qualify for the school,
children mu~t be r eceiving
iQadequate care at home from at
least one natural 1>arent, a term
concocted by the school to allow
it to take the c hild ren of .
divorced parents. They must be
from a family of limited income,
a decision left to the discretion
of the school ; be of good
character and behavior and
have no unusual disability.
Mrs. DeMuth says the school
annually re<:eives about 4,000
inquiries, interviews about 400
youngsters and accepts about
100 for admittance.
Blacks and girls used to be
barred because that was what
Hers hey directed. But the
school's later directors won
court permission to drop the rule
against blacks in the 1960s and
against girls in 1976. ·
Still, Milton Hershey's
presence is felt keenly. 36 years
after his death. The school's hub
is Founder's Hall, a towering
limestone edifice set in a broad
expense of ponds and manicured
lawns.
And on a pedestal in the
building's marble-lined rotunda,
Hershey is immortalized in a
bronze statue -his arm draped
benevolently over the shoulder
of a young boy. The inscription:
''His deeds are his monument;
his life is our inspiration."
Today , Hershey is
remembered with respect and
reverence, says Aichele, himself
a Milton Hershey graduate. He
says Henbey was wiser than
TOURING -William Dearden, head of
Hershey Foods Corp., leads a tour of U:ae
Milton Hershey School. Dearden attended the
school himself as a child.
·-Stricken tot may face hospital move
f
MODESTO (AP) -Everyone
admit.a UWe Deeana Cub la a
apeclal cue.
But what makes tbe
8-month-old babJ special may
"torce her to move • miles from
Modetto City Hotfltal -ber
bome for three moatu.
Mountlnl bOlpltal bUll ad
1oelal .-mee aancl.. could
force tbe bab111 pareat1,
Crtff•r.S ••• Jadr CHh of Oaklale, to trM.,.r lter to Cbll*-'•,.,.,.... .. Oaklud.
Deeana suffers from Infant
botuU.m. a rare and aometlme9
fatal dlleue tbat la carried by
:Cr•. Sbe wu peralylld Wben
... ftrlt bolpltallHd, ... la atwcbld to .. lllra&Gt.
Kw medlUI bWI total •,ooo,
ID( Ute ftpn cllmbf 8'*8& $l·s:· . But Cub'• '-'ftta u a ranna......., will
~-~ •. Tltt ltate a.11 ..... •1 a.etal
Ser•ten• braae.., •lf•tt• coven• lt• • elalld .. ,.
moved to the Oakland bospital
tbe ttearea~ state-approved
f aclllty for the c•re or crtt.Jeally
Ill cblldren.
But Mn. Cub bellevu her d= la recoverlnc ..U In II ... '1'l'IMN.,Mmedl.eal~to
11nc1 o.eam. '° -oa1-. JUlt
flDHclal NUcMa.'' -.AW • ''Tbete weald IMt 00 •u• •motlanal ....... ., .......
D•ua. O•r 1D1,...ac-~··~ .... -tale .. roebl .Uftllll
all wa UIJW&)' ...
Dr. Robert L. Nolan al tbe
at.ate alftce said, "We •mud lM hlp11& &evel of quality care
for our pe\leata. It tak• a
....... ..... to pull \Gl9tMr
all ... naourcel MC•IMJ to
treat ta.a~ ..... •• llMICal t1. aHtlaer o,U• ........... tfaallJmay . ........... ,. ....... ror Mw,-..... neurtt1
..... Qarlll ...... •aid tM 'l-'-' wW be.,.... . . '
--~---
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, December 23, 1981
-
•ANN LANDERS
•ART HOPPE
•HOROSCOPE
-
Why she's pro-choice
ON DISPLAY -The Solar Challenger, the
first solar-powered plane to fly the English
Channel from France to England, is being
displaye d at the Franklin Institute.
-~---Philadelphia. Checking the craft are pilot
Stephen Ptacek of Golden, Colo., and Janice
Brown, backup pilot, of Bakersfield.
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Roger's to add enchantment to your holiday decorating and entertaining.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Like "Wife of
a Physician," I. too. am the mother of a
child with Down's syndrome . I . agree
wholeheartedly that a special child can
enrich one's life.
My husband and I have devoted a
major part of our waking hours these past
12 years to making s ure our son has a full
and productive life. Our older children
have also made this commitment to their
brother.
Given the chance, we would choose to
have this beloved child again -just as he
is. We would also choose not to bring
another one like him into the world. Why?
·It ls not that we lack compassion. it is
simply a matter of ENERGY.
Thank you, Ann Landers, for s tanding
up for parents like us . We , too, are
pro-choice and grateful to you for having
the courage to speak in our behalf. -NO
NAME OR CITY PLEASE
DEAR N.N.: The maU on that subject
l1 stW coming la -and the pro-chokers
a.re stW outnumbering the pro-lifers 2-to· l.
Will wonders never cease?
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am writing
in resPonse to ·'Only His Mother.·· who
lamented that her son Jerome at 37 had
married a "very plain girl" who happened
to be a Ph.D. in economics. It seems the
girl can't cook, clean or sew, but she holds
down a "big job."
I wonder if Jerome 's mother would feel
the same way if her daughter married a
man who couldn't cook, clean or sew.
And what about Jerome? Did she
bother to leach him how to take care of
himself when he was growing up? If not.
why not? Where is it written that women
are supposed to do these things?
The Ph.D. with the big job sounds like
she is entitled to a little help from her
husband when she comes home at night.
She shouldn't have to check Jerome 's
shirts to see if any buttons are missing.
Why didn't you tell Mom to butt out " -
NO MORE MRS. SLAVE
DEAR NO MORE: I did, but you put it
more bluntly. Thanks -Mom needed an
extra clobbering, and you gave it to her.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: In reply to
"Pittsburgh Woe," who didn't gel anything
out of her therapy : May I tell her of my
experience?
I went lo three therapists before I
found someone I was comfortable with. It
doesn't have to b e an ex pe n sive
psychiatrist. Some of the local colleges
.
Allll Wl>flS
have mental health clinics that charn
modest fees -or are free. <Make sure it'5
a "medical teaching" school.)
My last shrink was GREAT. He made
me face facts I had kept hidden in the bac~
of my mind. At first I resented hia
unmasking me and denied my real feelings
a bout many things. I yelled al him, swore
and cried. I experienced every emotion
imagina ble during those 13 months. It
wasn't easy. Now I know who I am and
what I am. and I like myself for the first
time in my Life.
Please don't ever stop recommending
therapy. It saved m y life . -NEED
SUNSHI NE TO GROW IN CHICAGO
DEAR SUNSHINE: Many readers t.ell
me I'm copping out when I say "get
counseling," but you and I know the truth.
Thanks for the support.
How young is too young for. a child to ~am
. about sex? That's just one thing you'll find in
Ann Landers· new booklet , "How, What .and
When to Tell Your Child About Sex .. For your
copy 1,end 50 cents.along with.a Long, stamped.
self..aildressed envelope to Ann Landers. P.O
Box 11995. Chicago. Ill. 60011
Punch
"You know what I miss? Paper aJrptanes."
No escaping hOliday
Our upstairs neighbor, Mr. Crannich.
was trying out his ski boots the other night
by jumping off a cha ir for several hours.
Some might find this odd as he hasn't skied
for years.
But when I ran into him on the steps
the next morning, I didn't mention it. I just
told him cheerily that I was off to buy our
Christmas cards.
"Christmas carets!•· he cried , falling
into my trap. "I haven't sent out one of
those syrupy, c rassly comm e r c ial.
meaningless things in years. You have to
be a real idiot to s pend 20 cents to mail
som e stranger's printed sentiments to
somebody you hardly know who won't read
it anyway. Boy. what stupidity!"
"ONE MORE INSULT like tha t,
Crannich," I said. eyeing him coldly, "and
I'll invite you to our Christmas Sing-AJong ,
Hot Buttered Rum & Chocolate Yule Log
Party."
He blanched. "You ... You know my
secret?" he stammered.
"Yes, you are a seasonal alienator." I
said grimly. "There's no use denying it.
You made one little slip: that cruise you
took to the Lesser Antibes last January
during which you danced the n1ghts away
and actually appeared at the pool in your
bathing suit."
"I thought ... 1 hoped no one would
notice.••
"Not notice! There the rest of us were,
scrounging to pay our bills, eating nothing
but· grapefruit and lylng around with cold
compresses on our foreheads. How else
could YoU alone have survived the holidays
rich, rested and slender?''
CllANNICH GLANCED nervously this
way and that. "You've got me dead to
rights," he admitted. "But don't tell the
others. I Just couldn't take it any more.··
"What fot to you most?·" r asked.
"Well, might have survived the ~ual
fi1htin& downtown mobs to buy presenu,
the rauenin1. boring, partfe•, the
insufferable good spirits. But what drove
me to take desperate meau.... wa1 •
letter from my sister. Maude, sayina 1he,
her husband, Meachem. and their tbree
kids would love to spend Cbriatma1 wtth me."
AIT HOPPf
THE INNOCENT BYSTANDER
"That's when you turned to seasonal
a lienation?··
"Yes, I sent her a telegram saying:
·sorry, can't have Meachem in house.
Have developed ·severe allergy to gm
fumes'."
"Not bad," l conceded. "As I recall .
you had a very grouchy December.''
"DIDN'T YOU GET m y annual
year-end mimeographed newslette r in
which I bragged about being appointed
chairman of The ldi Amin Relief Fund? ..
''Yes, but when I reached the part
about your new hobby of coughing at
symphonies. I got mad and tore it up ...
"That's too bad . You missed my
interesting tips on how to meet people by
s moking ciga rs in elevators. taking up two
parking places with one car, and always
paying by check in the s upermarket
express lane." /
"As I recall. you had a very grouchy
December."
"That's right. I alienated people right
and left. I guess my greatest triumph
came when they gave the office Christmas
party while I was out to lunch."
·'That's a target for others to ahoot
for," I agreed.
"Well. thank you," he said. "But I
• have to be running along. Do you realize
there are only a few alienation hours
until Olristmas, you insensitive. bourgeois
Babbitt, you?"
I WATCHED HIM GO with somethinl
akin to admiration. Crannicb seemed to
have the makings of a first class eeuooal
alienator. But like many innovaton, be
went too far. · ·
He ran into my wife, Glynda. comtq
out of the beauty parlor, tipped hll hat ana
aaii. "My, you look just like Mar1aret
.Thatcher." •
Hell, believe me, ha&.h no f\lry like a
~un1er woman compared to Mara.et
Thatcher. Giving vent to a 'b~therto
unbelmownlt streak or VWJm, u~a. • even now flendlahly pla,_.. a SUrprtM
Ill Noc. l'Nt Cake 6 ....,_ Jail Gala
for Crannlch.
Poor Ctannich. But he'll lean."'No man
alive has •ver 1Ucceasf\llly escaPed from
DevU'a laland or Christ..... l
. ' ------~
"I found a shor tcut. but I wouldn't recommend it "
'
·!.' • HOIOSCOPf BY SIDNEY OMARA
'.Nirgo ties
.::strengthened
:: THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24
•. ARIES (March 21-April 19>. Spiritual
values come into s harp, clear focus
Family relationships are intensified ..
TAURUS (Apr i l 20-May 201'
Exc hanges o f resolutions and gifts are
featured. Socia l activity accelerates.
comparisons are made concerning budgets
and costs.
GEMINI <May 21 -June 20 >: Do more
•. listening than a sserting ; be receptive.
t I especially where details are concerned
1.-t CANCER (June 21-J uly 22>: You are
able to locate missing link. Emphasis on
chan~e. travel, variety and your unique
ability to piece t ogether bits o f
information. ti: !;: LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22>: Focus on
i:.domestic tranquility, entertainm ent.
• 1 : creativity and children. Lively discussions
~ o f gifts. s ales a nd purchases could
~"' dominate scenario.
r VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Emphasis
on emotional responses. spiritual values.
security and redefining of aspirations
Closer family ties result from exchange of
confidences and gift s. •
LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 22): Accent on
relatives, visits. responsibility, challenge
and expressions of love. Stronger spiritual
ties result from exchange of gifts. ideas
and hopes for future.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 >: You'll be
es p eciall y gratified b y gift which
r e presents expression of love. Lunar
e mphasis on ability to discern what is
important as co n trasted to m ere
'
1 frill-a nd-fluff. You s trike c h ord of
--universal appeal a nd gain enlightenment.
SAGITTARIUS <Nov 22-Dec 211
Breakthrough indicated ; indiffe rence is
replaced by e nthusiasm. hope. optimism
, and a revamping of spiritual values .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-J an. 19 >: Glow
1 of security and love dominates scenario
You gain access to privileged information.
you could b e p art of a clandestin e
•• 1 conferen ce a nd you 'll gain g reater
:. , understanding of holiday and its meaning
AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18 >. Holiday
,., spirit prevails. Exchange of gifts a nd ideas
" leads to lively discussions. expressions of
joy. Gemini, Sagittarius persons figure
prominently. Some of your fondest hopes.
; wishes will be realized. Emotional shells
,:.:will be shattered. . ,
t'• PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20 > You
change your mind about certai n
, : individuals . One who kept his distance as
· professional s uperior will display warmth.
.,1 understanding and express a ppreciation
ic for your efforts. Aquarius. Leo. Scorpio
,1, persons figure prominently.
ms 9 4 \ '
STAN DELAPl.ANE
AROUND THE WORLD
Warming up
to season
SAN FRANCISCO The n1~ht be mg
ch11lcd by December !'I winds, 1 :.tirred. up ti
hot buttered rum. It's a tonit· of' the season
It goes with 1inglc bl'll:-i and lighterl
windows.
1 ~ot out a s now Jacket 1 bou~ht 1t at
C hris tmas time in Kitzbuhe l , in the
Austrian Tr~·ol. a lot of years ago In fact
that JaC'ket 1s o ldl•r than man.\ pro
quarterbacks. and it ·s tah·n thl' ... amt·
beating.
Each winter. I think · I realh !->houlcl
rell re this coat · · But it's a familia·r I rit·nd
I feel warmer in that coat than in an
expcnsi\'e s heepskin to<1t I got onl,\ a f('''
years ago
:\bout th1 :.. time ol ~ea1 . m ~
g ra ndmoth<.•r put me in long wool1..·11
underwear. It was a C'om1cal gormt·nt :\II
bo~·s hated them . It had long arm ... and
legs A drop scat m the had.. It also madt·
~OU ltC'h.
CARTOONISTS GOT .\ LOT or mill..'ag1.:
out of the underwear It got a laugh on
sight. T he artist d1d n ·1 ha \'l' to derwnd on
the words in the balloon O\'l'I' the Pl'l'"on ·..,
heetd. The s et~gi ng drop s1..•at ... aid it all
Thev were made b\ th1..• \\'illtam ('artt•1
Co of lVietssachusctb 'A few ~·t:ar ... ago. on
the company's IOOth anni n •rs an . th1..•\
announced the~· \\'<.•n· dis('ont111u1~g lh:~l
horrid underwear. A little too late
'.':ipp~ nights Frns t .' ~tars punch
p 1 n holes of I i g ht l h l'O ugh l h l' h I at' k
Det·t.•mber s k\' T1ml' to l.i\ 11 all ha('k
)1as!'lage the hru1:-,e:.. ''1th 'ttt•.1m' hullt•n.•d
nog. topped with fragrant nutnw~
In Wi sconsin. thl• da1n -.tale. a hank
put u l'O\\ in the lohlH The•\ mllk1..·d hl·r dull~ s omething ·llkt· thl'~ did thl'
depos itors and s hl' g<i \'t• <·onlt•nteclly
~1 ilk and human kindn1..·s.., That \.\a.., tht·
Ch n st mas messetgt• 1 And t h1..• nol t'" '' t•nt
11ut Your ac·count 1.., O\'l'rdr.1wn
I WJ::~T DOWN TO tht.• \'illa ~t·
damper the other d a~· and pulled 11ut .1
small bundlt• Santa Claw, and lhl· la\ man
l'ome at the sam e time of the \'l'ar Tht•
banker mooed mournfulh wh(•n he• 't<J \\
me. for hl' knC'w wh~ I wa!-1. lhen·
Bankers give dbl'ontentt·dl~ • Tlw~
s mil1..• on the thrift~· clepos1tor 1 I do rm
bnsk month!~ bi lls through a C'it~ lt•apol
\'ic'e presidents for t'\ er~ o<·l·a-.1011 I kt•t•p
a s mall s lash m tht• \ 11lag(• 1ug lnr .1 qu1c·!-
gt.•t :I\\ il\'
It (loesn ·1 ha\'l' a l'O\\ hut 11 ha' .t
C'hl'l'I'~ l1rl'plac·e .\t th1' hol1d.1\ 't'a ... 011
lht·rc"s a Christma-. 11·1..·t· \\Ith \\lllkini.:
lights The b;rnkt•r !'I ll!-> behind .1 dc·..,k 111 tlw
lohh~ when• I ean set• h1 m
· Good morning. guo<l morn mg ' ·
lie doesn 't che" a tud I k ni bhll'-. 1111 a
~·ellO\\' penC'il It b sharp 1.:nough to J.!l\'l' an
in.il'C'tion Pipl'd·tn mu ... 11· pl i..I\'> Baeh ·,
Conterto 1n Priml' Rate
I HAVE SOME LO~G underwe ar I
bought for the snow C'OUntr~ You couldn't
get me on s kis at pi stol pmnt hut I Ilk(• lo
hang around the resorts
The m•w long un<ienn·ar 1s madt· tor
tocla~ ·:.. snow ()('nµlt> Sonw m1rad1..· f1hl'I'
makes 1t lighter and the~ -.a~ warml'I'
Someth111g 111 washing 1n!->l ruttwn:-that
-;a~·s it lets lhl' bod~· hreath1..· An~·" a~. 11 ·..,
classy s tuff I put it on Looked j.!1111d
enough to wear without an~ th mg O\ 1..•r 1t
The ehildren laughed Ilk<.• c·r;u~. hu1 J
nnl~· said qu1etl~·: "SHl 'T l 'P''
The~· d1cl tw<·aust• 1t \\JS 1·111-.t• to
l .h nst ma:-
.POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
\ WISH
THE' QUALITY
Of:' YOUR
PRODUCT
WERE
AS GOOD AS
TME Q.VAL.ITY OF
YOU~
AOVERTl51 NG .
;;eurns always on dais
Q : Wbea George Burns goes to a
gathering, ts be usually a quiet guest or Is
• he the life of the party?
-.e A: His pal, Jack Benny once put It this
•'way : "Wherever George sits it's
automatically the dais." Take the evening
~:·when the venerable young man took a
~:·current girlfriend to a bash at Toni and
t"..l Jan Murray's Jlouse. As ked by Bert Convy
whether he and Gracie, in the early days of
~ radio, were concerned about the ratings,
~ George simply replied, "No. In those days
,, 1 all or us were always in the Top 10. You sec
$I there were only eight shows!"
"1' ~1 Q: Doe• Roaald Rea1aa have a
jolle4 maktt at la1I beck ud call 1ueb ••
•J •••Y ol lala predeee110n ud'
'"' . A: F)'equelllly. But like most top·rlight
public people with a sharp Hnff of humor;.
PEISOllALITY Ge&Ae
BY MARILYN ANO HY GARDNER
the president has a mental file or witty
remarks which he plucks from his morgue
of memories that fit almost any occasion.
If lime p ermits, h e assigns h is
speechwriter, Landon Parvin. to cook up a
menu of witty but pertinent comments .
. S~ IJOUr que•tkms to Hy GordMr, "Glod
You Aakftt ThaJ ," in care of t~ Daal11 Pilot.
P.O. Boz 19620, lrvtM, Colt/. 92714. Maril~ and
Hy GardMr wm Onaton' o.t many qwsUoni o.t
they can tn tkir column, but (lic uolumt of moll
maktl pnsonol r~ita fmposlfblt .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, December 23, 1981
Delly .... ,.....,~ ..... O'.,_.
THE ICEMAN COMETH -Bob Mattipson worked for two months to create a 35-foot
(left ) a nd Carlos DeLeon, two cooks a t Jong ice sculpture of Santa a nd his reindeer.
Fairview Slate Hospital in Costa Mesa. unveiled Monday on the hospit al grounds
H
trucz. hand framzd mtarsia ..
mack of pum ~tland
wCXJl; ~n 9n:zat color.5
~ chooecz. from
knitt<z.d m q.J19la.nd Just
for us.
ell evailoblq.
with match-
ing oocke.
44 Fashion Island· Newport Beach · 714/644 -5070
1001 Westwood Blvd.· Westwood Village · 213/208-3273
ALE!
'Your Holiday Super Store of Games!
by fidelity
ANALYZER
r, UMllll~ to 1n1lyzt th OUll SAU PMC(I ,_ Doll'I to IO 291s
Ille. tl«I wttllout
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QMM. A grM1 gift Ideal
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, December 23, 1981
.Healthful mix
for holidays
Do you think of the
bollday SHson u all
push and pan ·
demonlum?
It doesn't have to be If
you start early. Now's a
rood Ume to make those
llttle glf\.s, snacks and
party treats. You can do
It all at one time by
making a batch or two
of delic ious Apricot
Munch.
Then let the holidays
come -you'll be ready.
It's nice to know that
while you're making this
"njbble " at home, it's
going to turn out as
nutritious as the kind
you buy at a health food
store -and just as good
tasting.
A lot of the goodness
comes from dried
apri cot s, full o f
nutrition.
They contain plenty of
vitamin A. plus vitamin
C and iron too. The
rec ipe calls for pure
n atural honey as the
sweetener, protein-rich
nuts and raisins for iron
and potassium.
airtight so everything
stays fresh.)
Apricot Munch is one
of the best things to take
along on family skl trips
and tours, loo.
It 's sa'li s fylng ,
enerty-giving, light and
portable -a ll
r e quirements for a
trail-side s nack.
While you're cooking
up s ome Apricot Munch,
set aside a fe w dried
apricots, as is, for your
own nibbling.
Six pounds of fresh
apricots went into one
pound of dried, making
th e m extremely
concentrated in flavor.
SAVORY APRICOT
NIBBLES
<Makes about 2"2
quarts)
6 tablespoons butter
or margarine
~ t eas p oo n
seasoned salt
~ teaspoon cur r y
powder
1 t e a s p o o n
Worcestershire sauce
3 cups assorted nuts
1 quar t poppe d
popcorn
Gingerbread cookies
What could delight u
child more oo ChnstmJ'
morning than to S"l' a
whimsical ginger ha t•111I
hoy or girl JWl'1>1ng CIUI or the lop or the
s tocking"
These < ; 1 n gt• r IH c d cl
lioys a nd Garis _arc
made with u bakang m1>.
which ell min ates th 1•
s t e 11 o I <.' r c a m 1 r1 g
shortening und su~ur
Dec-orated with
frosting or c andl e!-.,
I he s l' g 1 n g er hr t• a cl
people are sun: to mukc
even th e hol1dav
Scrooge smile. ·
(i lNGE RBtll';AO BOYS
ANDG IRI~
2 1 ~ cups l>ak111~ mix
1 :t l'UP :.ug<ar
l egg
14 cup light 11r durk
rnolasse~
1 l teaspoon ground
1·1nnaml)n
1, teaspoon ground
ginger
M 1x all angrccl1ents
until tloui,:h forms I work
\11th hund ' 1(
n<•t'l'!'.~arv 1 C'tn 1•r and
rl'frtg('l'<Jt<• al lt:asl I
hour
11 e a t u v l' n t o :11 5
deg re<·~ Holl dough 1"
ind\ thick on lightly
floured cloth·C'Overed
boar d . C ut with
gingerbread cutter or
other favorite cutler. If
cookies are to be hung,
make a hole in each 11.
anrh from top with end
of ph1slic straw. Place
ubout 2 anches apart on
lightly greased cookie
~h eet Bake unlit no
indentation r e mains
when touched. 8 to 10
minutes Immediately
re m ove from cookie
sheet; cool completely.
Decorate a s desired
Abo ut 2 dozen 5-inch
cookies
OA\LY:q·b•CLOSE~ SUN.• &4b·b115•PtUC.fS:t>ect3twiu. 31
I
+tAPPY -HOUD,..VS! we w\11 oo cioseo, Dec . t.S-Z6·Z7
Several cereals give
supe r crunch a nd taste.
a s w e l l a s added
nutrients .
2 cups thin pretiel
sticks
l~ cups < 11 ounce
box) dried a pricots,
coarsely diced
PARTY NIBBLES Dried apricots, nuts and raisins combine wi th
~-~-~jiJiNRS..55:
I t 's perfect with
drinks at your cockta il
parties, or along with
hors d 'oeuvres be fore
dinner.
F o r late night
snacking, serve along
with a holiday s t y le
apricot grog. A great
co mbo for m a k in g
tree-trimm ing pa rties
merrier, too.
For girt giving with a
personal touch, Apricot
Munch makes a great
give-away. especially as
a gift within a gift.
Fill a pretty glass jar
or canister or decorative
box with some. add a
• s prig of holly on the lid
and give with pride. (Be
s ure the contain er is
Place butter, s ail.
c urry powde r a nd
Worcestershire sauce in
shallow 3-quart baking
dish ; place in 250 degree
oven for about 5 minutes
or until butter is melted
Remove from oven. Stir
mix ture until blended.
Add r e m a in ing
ingredients. sltr until all
ingr edients are coated
with butter mixture.
Bake in 250-degree
oven for 20 minutes.
stirring o n ce Serve
mixture warm or cool
To store, refrigerate in
airtight con tainers
Allow mixture to come
to room temperature
cereal for tast y a nd nutritious party fare.
b e fore serving . For
extra crispness. warm
in 250-degree oven 10
about 10 minutes before
ser ving.
HOLIDAY
APRICOT CRUNCH
<Makes about 7 cups>
6 tablespoons butter
or margarine
1a cup honey
1 , teaspoon ground
nutmeg
114 teaspoon salt
\ 1? cups diced dried
apricots
2 cups O shaped
puffed oat cereal
2 cups wheat chex
cer eal
1 c up pecan halves
lor other nutsJ
1-i cup seedl ess
raisins
12 red glace
cherries, quartered
(optional 1
Place butter. honey,
nutmeg and sail 1n
3-quart shallow bakang
dish. place in 250 degree
ov<'n about 5 minutes or
until butter is melted.
S tir mi1<ture until
ble nded. Add remaining
ingredients , stir until all
ingrerlients are coated
with butter mixture.
Bake in 250-degree
oven 30 minutes. stirring
once Spread mixture on
large piece of foil : cool
: Eggnog flavors sea sonal dessert
During the holiday
season, a traditional
b ow l o r egg nog
sprinkled with nutmeg
warms many visitors.
Originally made with
ale (nog being the Old
Engli s h word for a
s trong ale 1. ea rl y
Am e ri ca n s ettler s
adapted this fa vorite
milk punch, fl avoring it
with more American
libations such as rum or
bourbon.
Now the rich. spicy
goodness of eggnog can
be captur e d i n a
delicious pie.
Creamy Eggnog Pie is
r e miniscen t o f an
i ce-cream pie but
withou t the fu ss o f
pr essing softe ned ice
cr eam into a pie crus t.
lnstead, the cream y
frozen filling is simply
made by mixing eggnog.
whipping cream . gelatin
a nd va nill a
ready lO ·Sp read
frosting. <
The mixture is then
poured into the crust.
and frozen. It's a frozen
delight th a t w ill
brighten any holiday
spirit
C R EAMY EGGNOG
PIE
Grah a m Cracker
Crust I below l
I e n ve l Qpe
unflavornd geldtin
11 i cups cold eggnog
I cu p chilled
whipping cream
l tub 116 5 ounces 1
vanilla ready to·spread
frosting
I tablt·-;poon rum
1 ; teaspoon ground
nutmeg
· Rak t' Graham
Cr acker Crust . cool.
Sprinkle gelatin on cold
eggnog 1n l ·qu ar l
saucepan to soften : heal
JUSt to boiling O\'Cr
medium heat. stirring
constantly Refrigerate
until complet ely cool
Beat whipping cream
and frosting in large
bowl on high spceti J
minutes: stir in eggnog
mixture and rum Pour
into crust . sprinkle with
nut mt·g. f'reev::· until
r1rm . about 8 hours
Freeze any remaining
pie 8 to 10 servings
GRAHAM CRACK E R ('Rl'ST
ll cat O\en lo 350
degrees Mi x 1a. c ups
grclham cracker crumbs
1 about 24 squares l. •.a
cup sugar and 12 cup
margarine or butter,
melted. an sm all bowl.
Press mixture against
bottom and s ide o f
ungr<'aSl'd pit• pl ate.
!Ox 11 2 inches Bake 15
m1nule:-.
Big Jim says •• •
• Watch for our January Opening
• Quality Meats and Delicatessen
Famous Since 1982
2ooo Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, Ca.
PIOil It 111Qt'll4fed, &EEF L.eOJV, mea.t~ -fff9
thoroughly and serve. If -~CK 11!!1'IBS STEW BEEF.. -:-a. desi r ed. store an JI'.. ..V
refrigerator in airtight '19.J. All '"UV 991
co nt ai n e r s . Allow ~ WIEN&~ Q
mixture to return to ~· "~····~"6.
r o o m l e m p e r a t u r e A'e~ SI· ce.cs, "J. hefore serving or warm c•L' I y
1n 250-degree oven 10 Leow f" ~ LIVER.. IQ, minu t es for ext r a ~
eirspness c•INDIODID CM.tcke~ 'JD¢
110TAPR1coT ~~-.,.n,.. FRYEll L&&S ... 7cs.
GROG "=t' WJl'7_ .,..,.. ~ • .l.41~ (Makes about 71 z cups) ~ 1 can 146 ounccsl ___________ _. 8•8~ BEEF
apricot nectar fl!ll-..---.ml!ll~-.. 'II ... l#.
Juic; tablespoons 1emon p"°Me l f,te~~ro~:EF Mov~A~LQ<6 iAf. ~150
11:t cups brandy ~ft 51'1 ,. •.• ~ .
Lemon s li ces 9. NO ft.ft>"'" '.I studded with whole -L ,,,,, t'vtKI' Ml -~
l'luves, for garnish .. __ ,.._.,...~ __ &$_ • .,. HALIBUT STEAK.if 18.
Pour apricot nectar, -:~~~~/.".:';i:':i' .. ~';rod~ iELEDT of'SN APPER '4 69 s im m er. Ladle into ~
mugs or punch cups; --:-'a
garnish each serving • • • llo>"D•
with a lemon shce. 1~~11119!1~~~~;;;~~~~~~~~~:!~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A
~---Better You------..
in '82
, a seminar for women who want to live life better
ponsored by:
DATE:
TIME:
PUCE :
Junior League of Newport Harbor
St . Andrews. Presbyterian Church
CareUnit Hospital of Orange
FRIDAY, JANUARY 22, 1982
.8:30 A.M . · 2:00 P .M .
ST . ANDREWS PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF NEWPORT
BEACH
The. Program
. 8: 30 Registration -Coffee. and P.cutries
9:00 P.at Allen, M.F.C.C. "Habit Restructuring"
( P.at AUen ba& a private practice that specwlizes fo he lpjng
people establish. a positive life sty Le)
10:00 Ed Careu. Ph.D. "Stress.and the Process of Coping"
(Ed CareL3 ii known for semjnars presented nationwide on
the phy1iowgical response to stress)
11 :00 Vicki Dilwn • Film · "Of I Your Duff"
(Vicki Dillon is the founder&. President of Body Accounting Inc.
which. auilti in weight reduction. and fitness devewpment)
12 :00 Lunch.ond fashions by Gimone's of Newport Beach
J :00 Film · "New Directions /or \''omen''
J: 15 Joieph. Purach, M .D .. "Alcohol, Drug&. and Teeoagers "
(Dr. Pvnch is known for hi3 work with V.l .P .'s & celebnt~s
who bave.alcohoLand drug problems.)
For More ln/onnaUon Phone 633-9~B2 , Ezteuion 11
FOR TICKETS, l'/LL OUT AND MAIL THIS COUPON BEFORE JANUARY 7, JN2
--------------------------------------------
A
Better You
j n ,'82
REGISTRATION FORM: P~• mclude IS 00 for 1och ret..-wUoft.°'°"9 •II Hl/tOlld~IHd
eompef ..... F'H blcb.dt• hmc11, lflnatvrt ~ J>'f"OilrGm moterlo!.
Nome ..... . . . ...............•...........•............ · ···· ••···········
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PltoM ..•••.....•.....••••.•.••••...•. , •..• , •••••••••.....•••.•...••••••••.•.......•.••.•..
mcW clwclc ~co CorwUNt Ho,,,uaJ o/ Oroftft.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, December 23, 1981 ..
Save on calories with no-hake pumpkin mousse;
8 y BARBAaA
GIBBONS
Euy·but·e leaant
d esaerts ba•ed on
seasonally popular
Ingredients are what's
D4'eded now. It also
helps If the dessert.a are
relatively calorle-light.
I have the perfect
answer : a no -bake
refrigerator pumpkin
mousse that's layer ed
with gingersnaps.
It's easy to whip up in
your blender. He re's
~ow :
P UMP KI N
G I NGE R SNAP
LAYERED MOUSSE
~ cup cold water
1 envelope plain
gelatin
1 cup boiling water
1 egg
l cup part-skim
ri cott a c h eese <or
uncreamed pot cheese)
l ~ cups cooked or
canned plain pumpkin.
4 tabl es poon s
easy -pou ring brown
sugar
3 tablespoons s ugar
l teaspoon vanilla
extract
'h teaspoon a pple
pie spice or cinnamon
i.4 teaspoon salt
4 ounces thln ginger
wafers
nnd nutmeg.
SUOAR REDU<.:EO
Substitute all or part of
th e !1 Uf'3r with
granulated low calorie
sweetener , the kind you
use spoon-for-spoon in
pla ce of sugar
Approx i mate l y 25
ca l o r ies l es~ p e r
serving.
Here's another idea, a
qu1ck·baking pumpkin
pi e made with less
s u"u.'t o keep thesug ar H'!r c uv11 fr es h 1 teaapoon pumpkin defrosted pieshell 1n on the bottom 1beU ot
substitute from breaking SLIM GOURMIJ nonrat milk p I e s p i c e ( o r quarters and transrer to the oven, clOletl 1.o tbt
d o w n a n d I o s i n g l i.4 cups cooked or quarter·teaspoon each: the lareer glass pie pan. heat source. Bake 20 to
s weetness, thlis pie is canned plain pumpkin allspice, nutmeg , Gently s tret c h the 22 minutes, only untJI
haked lnaglasspiepun <notpie fllllng > ginger,clove) pa s try with yo ur filling is se t and <m the bottom shelf of u prevent breakdown or s ta b I es p 0 a n s ~ teaspoon ground fingertips, up the sldea underside or the crust if
v1•ryhotoven. thecustard. Cr ee -p.ouring b r'O wn cinnamon or the pan, tom the light l y brow n ed .
The filling 1s made Q U I C K · B A K E sugar ~teaspoon salt larger glass pie pan. Remove from the oven
with fresh skim milk SOGAR-REDUCED 4 tab I esp o on s Preheat oven to 425 Combine rem-alnang immediate ly and cool on
anstcalJ of evapor a led PU MPKIN CUSTARD gr an u I ate d s uga r degrees. Spray a 9-lnch lngredJents in blender or a rack. Transfer to the
milk. PIE substitute (or equivalent glass pie pan with mixing bowl. hear or refrige rator. Serve
Cornstarch is added to 8 -inch si ngl e of12teaspoonssugar) cooking sp ray for blend smooth. Pour the c hill ed . Makes lO
he lp the filhnS{ thicken pieshell ,thawed 2 tabl es poon s no ·slick b a king . mixture into the servings, 135 calories
in h ig h ~~t_._u_n_d ___ ~~2 _eg_g~s~~~~~~c_o_rn_s_t_ar_c_h~~~~~-C~a_r_e_f _u_ll~y~f_o_l _d ~t h~e _..:..p_ie_s_he_l_l _P_l_a~ce~t-he__::p_a_n~e-a_c_h_.~~~~~~
01;1~:11;:~~~~~11 At Stater Bros. ·• You Always Save At Stater Bros. ·• You Always Save At Stater Bros. ·
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE. All STORES WILL BE OPEN THEIR REGUU.R HOURS ON NEW YEARS DAY start r he New rear py CM,~ eDll! With Stater Values
~~~~~~.:...___;=-~~~~~,
:Jdor1rloy Di11r11g '1liHl1
_A Q(lu,rnrl lnurl1
BEEF LARGE ENO
Rib Roast
BEEF
BLADE·CUT
Put cold wate r in
blender container and
sprinkle on gelatin. Wait i-·
LB $2.29
LB $1.99 SI79
1 minute until gelatin is
sort, then add boiling
water. Cover and blend
until gelatin granules
dissolve. While blender
runs. add the e gg
through the s mall
opening.
Uncover blender and u .. m, .-. T"'" uoz
add ricotta. Cover and SLICED llATS STATUI 1-l~Z blend until all graininess TlllEl FU.S
disapp ea r s . Add •11MOuAoou>lu 1•A
rem aining ingredients muss NAiii
except gi nger wlters •111110UA n-0nAlfw t
and blend smooth. SLICED UCOI M AM r.ucco To assemble dessert: llU IACOll
PATRICK CUDAHY
3L8 Canned
Ham
•5.99EA
LB s 1.89
L8 $2.99
1ur CHUC~ ROllD IOll ROASl
Ull CMUC~
7 •ROAST
Uf' CWUCC '°"EUN SHOtllU IOAST
Hf''°"lllN STEW IDT
lfOI TO O Ct:CO 22"' 'A I LW;ROtlOIEEF
... 11.29
LI 11.39
LI 11.89
l .11.99 l.11.89
LB
• LI 11,09
u 12.49
u 12,59
... 12.89 Ll79c
FRESH FROZEN
Butter·
ball
Turkey
10.20-LB AVERO E
79 LB
.._,_ ...............
SUC:~O TO OAIKR •Ll11.59 T1lm llUST
ALO "Ll49c ca.E SUI
L-N C..UIOAJI CHI .. ,. 11.19 •rEIEY JACI
SUCt:O TO OAOt:ll .. l.11.79 HASTIEU
lllC(O TO OAOt:ll
-.1.1 11.99 IOlO llAll Put a l ayer or t h e
mousse mixture in the
bottom or a loaf pan.
Top with a single layer
of ginger wafers, broken
up to fit. Add another
layer of mousse. then
more broken wafe rs.
'Continue adding layers
L.AUM SCUDDER a YAAIETIU
• · l>f"n'lousse and broken
wafers; t he top layer
,.should be mousse. Cover
<and chlll several hours
until set. Cut into thin
slices to serve. Makes 10
serv ings, 130 calories
each with r icotta I 110
calories each with pot
cheese).
WITH GRAHAM
.C RA C KERS -
.Substitute broken-to·fit
'ci nnamon graham
c ra ckers ror th e
·ging e r snaps . Omit
cinnamon ; s ubs titute
· three·quarters teaspoon
pumpkin pie spice, or
quarter-teaspoon each
ground ginger, c love ..
iPeanut
icookies
Peanuts are a holiday
'nut that adds flavor and
;cr unc h to coo kies,
"cakes. breads and other ~confectionery favorites.
~ The following recipe ~fo r holiday Pea nut
ECookies gives a new
• twist to the holida y ~classic -lhumbprints.
~ Each cookie is filled ~ with a healthy mixture ~ of peanuts and honey
~ and is a great addition to
any holiday party or
; gathering. The cookies
i• also make special gifts
wh e n p ac ked in
attractive tins or jars.
1 HOLIDAY
; PEANUT COOKI ES
I 'h c up butt er ,
softened
11, cup sugar
1 egg yolk
I 1 cup flour
· l teas poon grated
lemon rind
Confectioner's sugar
3 tablespoons honey
'h cup fine l y
chopped peanuts
Cream together butter
and sugar until light and nurry. Beat in egg yolk.
Blend in flour and lemon
rind until well mixed.
Chill dough 30 minutes.
f'orm into 18 I ·inc h
bal)s. Place l·inch apart
on ungreased baking
1 b e e t . M a k e· a
depression with wooden
spoon handle or index
flnaer in center of each
ball. Chlll until firm.
Bake In a 3SO-decree
oven for lS.17 minutes or
unlll very lightly
browned. Cool on rack.
Dull with confection·
era· auaar. Com blne
boney and c hopped
peanuts. Spoon lnto
depression In cookies.
U.S. NO. 1 D'ANJOU
LARGE FANCY SWEET
TllBERlllES
39eLB
'\ILL O• JUICE
LIMES
IWASHIHGTON) OOt.OUI OfLICIOUS APPLES .
All FLAVORS
SHASTA
COLA
z,L
KRAFT
I STATER BROS. ROLLS Bro~n U Serve.. 12-PK 49°
I SWISS
Kralt Singles .... 12.oz•I.76
I AMERICAN Kralt Slncles ... 12.oz •I.59
SLICED SWISS I Kralt Natural . ~oz •I.34
CHICKEN.ME.AT LOAF.MEXICAN.SALISBURY STEAK. I MOrtH8iiADilifte0;N
I CHICKEN.SHRIMP OR ME.AT/SHRIMP FROZEN JenosEgsRoll ... e.oz 99•r
I CHEESE,PEPPERONl,SAUSAGE OR COMBO FROZEN Jenos Pizza ........ REQPK••.29
• CHEESE FROZEN Oh Boy Pizza ........ 2a-oz •I.89
SHORTEN I NO
Crisco............ . .. 3'La •2.ss
7•Up . . .. ... ....... . 1-L39'
a.oz 34'
Plastic Wrap :;·:· t n .. ., 69'
Viva -.11s :'t'"J.~: ...• 1r
Plllters Peanuts -···· f .. ""~ '2.25 Drow_. ._.... .. .... ·~ :.., .. I K.c N\ Dia.II f'Vli' .. .;;;;~ •••• , •wN -
La Piu Flour I ,. .. s4.19
I STATER BROS.
CllESE FOOD !~::0
&DOUBLE ACTION
WCALGOlnt
7·lJP. . • Fn1t Cocktail =·· I ~it Jlice ;e...,.. t
BlacbMPas -... S.111lo ~M
l ·.llRSllYS
'i SYRUP CHOCO<AI(
,,Ol s1.15
.. 0159'
~°'17c
.. 01 '2.15
"Sl,29
•. ,, '2.39
Heiaz Pickles _.. ""' '1.icl
Vets Dot Food ::1r.!::: ..... 21
Rap Pizza •lck .r::r~ .. ..,gsc
Wllit1 Kill 0 .:1i=~· t ,..., '1.94
I ~=rm wm ·H·~ •OOl sl .97
KnsPmlms .... --KnsJelly ~ t ~~ . Tulals ·w: I
HI s1.25
.. .,, 5t
. •. .,, Sl.44
""' '1.75
Store ln UtbUy covered 1~~ co,taln.er. Makes l~
dof.en coc*.lea. ._ You Always Save 4t Stater Bros. • You Always Sove A t Stater Bros. , __
STA.TEA·~ ,.,,, OA MINI
MARSH·
MALLOWS
1•oz f
SMAU DELUXE FROZEN 7/1111,l.ll /
.n/ ;1.79 CELESTE
·Ml
11.29 PIZZA
"°' '3.98 •OZ
.... a.ts ;.::,."'!... ...o-• I .
TlllSWllt hi• Jlice ....,.. . .... 99'
Hunt-Wesson's
~oflm
SUNLIGHT OIL M s2.49
KETCHUP .. .,,57c
PRIMA SALSA ::.::::· .... ,sl.52
TOMATO PASlt _340
TOMATO SAUCE '°'2r WESSON OIL .°' s2.17
wt ACC£PT
~
FOOi STAMPS
Wt llC!>tNVE
IH[ RIGHT TO
LIMIT 011 llEFUSE
SALES TO
COMMERCIAL
DEALERS <>fl
WHOLESALERS
§;>• ... •ti-"' ~
~ ...... ~_-;:.beer wine U liquor
I •••
CUEYSCI
11.DCIOWIOlllOI
J&lscmH
I. YIPIA IW .... (\It_ U
JACllS mT CllAIPAm ............... 11• PAii. IWSOll •S ........ . .. U
I
SUCUllS 7 CIOWll ~·
...... ... ...
''" s1l21 .... sll.79 •IUll-SllE v.A .TA,
ClllSTIAll UO$. ~.:r"
, ... '1l71
.... SUI
. ... '12.41
SPRITli NOT AVAIL IN INDIO
You Always Save At Stater Bros.
;. i
j .
.,
___ ~ _ ··-_ --------.... ·-----,...-....... -............ ._ ....... -......... -..... ••a .. s.-s••••s•s•s•&••••••&IS••••••••-....... ____ _ •.. .. . ...
I
..
Why
chimney?
"DIA.a PAT DUNN: My ~ la jut old
ao11.-i to be la&erea&ed la SuU aa .. WI ~f'ia&-.u. Site'• uked 1ae wlllere 8aata'1
tied ud reladee~ came troa ... wily IM eo"n ..._ tM clllmaey to brt.q Ma llftl. ~qy.e-bows Uae aled ud reladeer are
fro• &lie No"' Pole, but I'm .._pe4 for aa
••••er alM>ut wily Ile comea dowa U1e
cllJ•9e7. Caa yoa tlad ea&! I'm Rre 1 lot of
otlter 1.oua11&.en woaJd be lateneted loo.
. L.J., Newport Beaclt
Sant.J's· sleigh and reindeer muat have
come from the North Pole since that's where
Santa lives. But, the first time anyone
lorned about this was when the "gift
giver's" transportation was told about in "A Vi~it From St. Nicholas, .. the famous poem
by Clement C. Moore. The belief that Santa
delivers h.is gifts to the h9me via the chimney
stems from an Qld Norse legend. The Norse
believed that the goddess Hertha would bring
· good luck to a home if she appeared in the
fireplace. lt'.s only natural that Santa would
:Cboose this method of entering homes to
bring locky (and good!) children their
Chrlstmas gilts.
Roly-po.ly St. Nick
·DEA• PAT DUNN: How did Suta Clau
let tlae repetatloe for behlg fat, ud cu yH
esplala tlae derivatloa of llJa aameT
· E.P., eon.a deJ Mar
. Author Washington Irving in. the 1809
"Knick~rbocker'.s History of New York," ia
bellev~ to be the first to describe St. Nick as
a jolly fellow wearing·a· broad-brimmed hat
and bug4' breeches and smoking a long pil)e.
Santa~s roly-poly image came tD full nower
in ·an 1837 painting by artist Robert Weir and,
in the 1880s. in a popular series of drawings
by cartoonist Thomas Nast.
A~ almost everyone knows. the mythical
"Santa" began life as a real person, St.
Nictiolas, a 'bishop in Asia Minor in the ~.
A kindly man who took presenta to the needy.
Nicholas came to be known as the patron
.saint of sailors. travelers, .bakers and
merchants, but especially of children. The
cu·stom of giving gifts to celebrate his feast
· day. Dec. 6, grew in Europe until Nicholas
• became. widely accepted as the gift-giver at
Christmas time. ·
Early Dutch settlers in New York
~ brought the custom with them, but Nicholas'
. Dutch .name, Sinterklaas, was bard to
pronounce and he became known as "Santy
Claus" and ''Santa Claus." according to the
World Book Encyclopedia-.
'Kid-vid' regulation out
DEAR PAT DUNN: Has the Federal
Trade Cornmisslon dropped Its efforts to
bring some regulation to commercials shown
on el1Udree's television slM>ws? I laavea't read
anytlllng aboat this for a loag Ume .
. : · .. . . · . R . E •• Newport Beacll
· · The FTC has ended its rulemaking
proceedings on th~ so-called "kid-vid" rule.
A'though an early 1981 staff report to the
commission supports the conclusion that
young ch.ildren place ·••indiscriminate trust''
in TV ads and don't unders~and advertising
. techniques, ·the only way to remedy the
situation would be to completely ban all
advertisements oriented to young children.
Such' a.ban, the staff re.port concludes. would
· ·not be.poss'ible.
Aft.er reviewfog the rulemaking record,
FTC has co n c luded that a m ajor
commitment of its resources would be
r equired to continue this procee<ling,
resources which would have to be diverted
.from other priorities with no guarantee or
resolution. OetaUll concerning this matter
~ppear on page 48710 of the Oct. 2 "Federal
Register." .
. Costs explained
DEAR READERS : A free boot let
explaining the provisions and effecta of lbe
Accelerated Cost Recovery System is now
available from the Newport Beach office or
Erns\ & Wh.inney, an accounting firm. The
booklet is designed to help indlvidual1 and
businesses discover how they can best take
a.dv11ntage of th~ new tax provisions in their
financial planning. Ernst & Wbinney tax
specialista al.so have developed general and
detaited reports on the .. system. To obtaiD the
booklet or additional information, write to
Ernst & Whinney, 400 MacArthur Blvd., Suite 800, Newport Beach 92660, or phone 851-1700.
··Got a problem., Then wnte to Pat
Dunn Pat will cut red tape. getting
the ·ans~s and action you need to
solve inequities m government and
business Mail y~r questions 10 Pat
Dunn. Al Your St'nnce. Orange Coast
Daily Pilot: P 0 . Box 1560. Costa Meao. CA 92626.
.·
THI CHURCH OF
ST. MATTHEW-IY·THl-SEA
· · (TTlditlonal Epl.eopal)
Invites you to celebrate •
ClllSTMAS EYE HOLY· EUCHARIST
with traditional music and carols
Dec.iul., 24, t p.-.
Community ·congregational Church
Mertz Hall
611 Heliotrope, Corona del Mar
~53~2201 ~Of Common Pr8Y« -1928)
Cbr:tst Lutheran Church . • !Missouri Synod!
760 Vtctori.-St'.i Cotta Mesa LOthar V. Tornow, rut« 631·1911
CHRISTMAS EVE
7:00 P.M. Chlld~n·1 Program & Servi«
11 :00 PM Candlelight Service
· CH-,tiSTMAS DAY ·
.101• A.II. -wanhif)'Servlc• ~•Y Sebool t Adult Bible Cla 9:30 A M
.... , Wor1hlp Strvl« a:" & l l :00 A.M
.... ,,. k h9ol -'48 .....
Th t "Early Rendezvous''
F'rnm ~ ~o (Cl ., 00 r m
Now TaJarig Re!ieruat1CJ11~ 1-'m Vew Yen1 ·s
3421 Via Lido. Newport Beach
Reservation s recommended 714/675·4904
----
BUTTONS AND BOWS
BOUTIQUE
PU CHllSTMAS SAU
500/o-IO-/o OFF
fy~~glll
•THI IOMAMTIC LOOIC
•IHICKMS-ALL COLORS
•JOGGING SUITS
•MS DANIEL
DISIGHU ,AMTS
·~ •MIMI SkllTS
•CORDUROY
W AUIMG SHORTS
•CORDUROY
T AILOUD JACKETS
•GOLD ACCENTED
IL OU SES
I 79D E. 17th ST.
COSTA MESA
645-6731
M-W & SAT. I 0.6 THUR.·FRI. I 0·9
Located In Von1 Shopping Cut~r
Mut To Colet.ash LHcfltt
'
Administration drops test
of prescribed. drug leaflets
WASHINGTON (AP) -T ... lltaaaa
admhutratioa •UI it la._. '° ac:uWt a plan to
force drua mulllaetunn to 11•• CODtumen
cautionary leaflets wbta tbtJ receht 10
commGD.11 pnac:ribed dn111.
HHltb and Humaa hrvlctt StcretarJ
Richard S. Seh"9lker tUI de Pood ...a Dru1
Admlnitttatioa will IWmallJ ................
lta plan for a thrM·Y..., ea,.n...t wt_. UM
so-called patient paclla1• ....._
The FDA bad aano•an• tbe trial la
September ._, durlftl tbe ... Jim! months of tbe
Carter adminlatraUon aft• aealint down an
earlier proposal to requ.lre tbe ttafleta for 175
prescription drua.
But even the pilot PNJra• drew -.eat9d
oppositioll from tbe dru1 lndulb'y. pllarmaeilta
and physicians wbo felt tbt WoelMlrw were eosUy.
burdenaome and ml•ht aemre ao-. pat1et1ta into
not takina the medicine.
with preac:riptiOl'll of the painkiller propoxypbene
(brand name Darvon>· clmetidlne <Ta1amet), an
ulcer dru1 ; cloflbrate (Atromld·S >, a
choleaterol-lowerln1 dru1: amplclllln. an antibiotic: and pbenytoin, d""I for epUeptlca.
No date bad been Mt for tbl other ftve drup,
benaodiuepinee (ttanqulliaen aueh u Valium);
dl1oxin, a heart medication; metboualen for akin
problema: thluides, a diuretic; and Bendectln, a
morntns:atcknesa dru1.
Schweiker!a predeceuor, Patricia Bania, In
announcln1 the pilot pro1ram in Septembe11 19801
said lt would coat $21 million and add up to 18 cents
to the COit of some preacrlptlona.
Schweiker, lo a joint atatement with Hayes,
said the health department "remalna committed
to the need for patients to have more information
about prescription drup." But they aald their
review of the pilot pro1ram "ahowed lt to have
slcnlflcant limitations and to impose unreasonable
constraints on the health care IYltfJm."
They said there are other, more cost-effective
ways to give consumers information.about drugs,
such u binders witb dru1 information kept on
public display la ptlarmacles.
•
T"
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/WednHday, December 23, 1981
'
Instead of mandatlna the dru1 leaneta,
Schweiker bu ol'Mred FDA Commillioner Arthur
Hull Hayes Jr. to set up a Committee on Patient
Education, "to aerve u a catalyst for private
sector initiatives in tbis 11rea," bis department
announced. .1'...
Schweiker suspended tbe pilot prorram soon
after be took office. Orilioally, the first lnlerta
were to have been tiatributed lut May ud July
Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals of Cincinnati
recently be1an voluntarily pl'Ovldine patient
inserts with BendecUa, and Eli Lilly provides
leaflets wttb D~on pr~riptiona.
BIG .TEST -An estimated 550 students take
final semester examination in economics at
Tufts University in Medford, M~ss. The exam
had to be co nducted in the school t
gymnasium. ~
Ex-Nazi
not a
• • citizen
SACRAMENTO (AP>
-A former SS captain
who admitted be once
served -., an adriaer to
Nui chieftain Adolf
Eichmann baa been
stripped ol b1a American
citiaenabip by a federal
court.
But the court allowed
the ailine Otto von
Bolachwln1, 72, who
suffers from an
incurable brain dlaeue,
to remalil in the United
States to receive
medical treatment at a
suburban Sacramento
nursing home.
U.S. District Court
Judge Miltoe Schwarts,
ruling to accept an
acreement bammer•d
out between federal
prosecutors and von
Bolachwing's attorney,
ordered the former Nazi
intellicence officer to
surrender b1a American
na.turaliaatton paperit
because he lied to
authorities when be
obtained U.S. citizenship
in 1959 in New York. If bis health improves,
Schwartz rule4, TOD
Bolscbw i nc may
become subject to
renewed federal
prosecution and face
deportation. Proaecuton
and def1nae attorney
Arthur W. Rutbenbeck
acknowledee• von
Bollcbwing'a lleattb was
U!llikely to improve.
Von Bolscbwinl was
not present ln the
courtroom whea
Schwart& anonounced
the decision, w~lcb
came in the wake of a
three -part civil
complaint filed la May
by the Department of
Justice to revoke bis
citizenship and deport
him.
The department's
Office of Special
Investieatlons, Ua•
American covemmeDt'•
agency which tracks
clown N 'azi war
criminals. claimed von
Bolschwing "devised
ways of dealing wltb the
Jews of Europe ,
including methods of
persecution" when he
worked as Eichmann's
asalatant.
Eichmann , the
dreaded chief of N11l
Germany's Jewhb
extermination procram,
vanished after Wort•
War II and waa
captured 15 yeara later
in Ar1entina by laraeU
aaenta. He wu put on
trial for war crimes ud
enc:uted in larHl.
In tbe court-appro.td
accord, von Bolsebwtq
re•eraed earlier public
atatementa and
admitted be bad been a
Naal Party member,
ud an otncer bl tile SI
aad Naal lntemaence
HrYlce. He llM ailo clalm ..
be worked for Amertcalf
~-..after World War 11,, a
elalm wlaleb went
uaan1wered ~Y tbe
aonrnJDeBt but wlllcla
recehed ln•lrect
aupport fr••
.... ,. .... , effortl ..
earlier proeeediap to
Mal teltimoay • tM
around• of naU•••l ........
•• tb• aar•••••t ·~··· ,....,, ... fe~•rl!I ao•erameat nf9Hd to ...nna or •••i Bol1clawlaa!1 ~--~ .......
, . • • ~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~' SAVE4&e SPECIAL I SPllCIALI SAVE30e
...
AQUA VELVA
1&811 1.69
ROSE MILK
SCORESBY
ICDJCll . ...,
.............. 11, ............ , .. ............ ~ ....... ,.. ............ ... ~~fJIJ/!£.Slii~ ...
AfTD--··· ... . .. uo 10.00
-·-u ..
SEAGRAM'S 7 ........ ,,,,,__ ......
nmY •mp1.: .• ·:ML 5.19
~SEAGRAM'S V.O.
CtJUlllll •i ij@it.•
:;L7.49
TANQUERAY -•ihll*·•
8.99
AMARETTO . .....
UQUIUI Cjii@l,:.a
5.99
SMIRNOFF
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••
--~--·------.._... ................... -~-... ---------• ... Or•nge Co•tt DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, December 23, 1981
' I I OUITID -The Air
I Force has relieved
Col. John Dramesi,
1 mu c h ·decorated
1 Vietnam war
.veteran , as
: commander or Pease
1 Air Force Base, I Newington, N.H. It
• did not say why. , ________________ _
I
I
I I
I 1.
I ' I I
$
• -~I , '
·llOllTBLT ~ t
INCLUDES:
Doctor viatt wtth established family practice
M.D., medlcetk>ns, personal diets.
No c.mr.cta. No HypnoeJs. No Self·
HJPH ..... No .,..,......,no, No a.Mwtor
llodlflce...-. No Electrtc Shocks.
JUST GOOD. SENSIBLE MEDICINE
. ANO YOUR. OEsaAEI
97 -2273 MAJOR MEDICAL CENTER
~'Community Church Congregational
I United Church of Christ
611 Heliotrope Ave. 644-7400
Corona del Mar, CA.
J
CHRISTMAS EVE
CANDLELIGHT
SERVICES
7:30 pm featuring .Chancel Choir. with
chi ld care for those to 4 yrs. of age.
11 pm Service featuring Helen Walton.
soloist. No child care.
Donald Kutz. Minister
Richard lrvlnghMinister of Education Patricia Murp y Lamb, Dir. of Music
Thousands flock to giveaway
Needy line up for $20,000 in new clothing
OMAHA , Ne b . <AP ) -
Thousands of people Jammed a
community center as God's
Missionary' Baptist Church
s ponsored a pre·Christmaa
giveaway or $20,000 worth or new
clothing.
The Rev. Thomas Rollerson
said cars were backed up for
nearly rive blocks from the
Adams Park Com munity
Center, and police blocked
tramc at several Intersections to
curtail the overflow or traffic.
Rollerson, who estimated the
crowd at 2,000 to 4,000 people,
said the giveaway was designed
to meet the needs or unemployed
and under-employed Omahans.
•·so many people have been
laidorrf it's pitUuJ," he said.
The church sponsored the
flveaway after receiving $10,000
rom an anonymous donor who
asked that the money be used to
buy clothln1 for those in need,
Rollerson sa1d.
The church was able to double
its money by purchasfo1 clothes
from Pancoast's Department
Store, where a half.price,
going-out-of-business sale is under way.
People began lining up at 9
a .m. Monday. Clothes were
given aw,y from noon to about
2:30 p.m.
Many people waited outside
for several hours, while 500 or
more stood in line inside. Fifteen
at a time were allowed into the
·gym to make their selections.
They had five minutes to chose
Crom a variet y of articles
including jeans, s hirts and
s hoes.
Many people walked away
empty-handed after deciding It
wasn't worth fighting the crowd.
"lt 'a chaos, people are not
cooperating," said Geri Young,
as s he a nd other family
members were leaving.
Rollerson said about $3,000
worth or clothes remained arter
the giveaway ended.
"It was colossal, a great
success," he said. "Praise the Lord."
The giveaway was shut down
after fire officials warned
Roll erson of the 72 -pe rson
capacity of the area where some
500 people were waiting, he said.
Remaining items were given
away Tuesday.
WORRIED -Kansas
Sen. Robert Dole is
concerned that his
radio comme ntary
show on 60 stations
may be in jeopardy iC
st ations don't sign up
more s po nsors to
make it proCitable.
ourcingheh handknit sw<LaLlt:s)
trUQ, characta.r of an art fbrm ...
\Ml. w. .e<Zan:hczd tha.
co~ indust-rnz.e of thz.
brit1~ 151~ to~ to
you a &lczcli1on of e\Ml.0Uz.r5
tho.twin biommphmz.nt
t.o onyb::rly'~ 'l)lordn:bz..
u.ocll s1Ml.atcz.r ird.ividuol ly
handknittJzd. fbr oddad
comfbrt end-durability
avo. i labl.cz. in rn<Z.ne or
worruz:n:e siz<z.s
44 F~hion Island ·Newport Beach • 714/ 644 -5070
1001 Westwood Blvd.• Westwood Village· 213/208-3Z13
t~~s
BENZ MOTORS CARBURETOR SHOP
JIM QJCK FORD
FASHION ISLAND MOTOR WORKS
HARBOR BLVD. OF CARS
HOWARD CHEVROLET
EAAL£ IKE IMPORTS
CHICK IVERSON
JOHNSON & SON LINCOLN MERCURY
L FD CHEVROlET ASSOCIATION (.
BIU MAXEY TOYOTA .
MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS
NE'fWORT DATSUN
FRANK PROTO LINCOLN MERCURY
ROBINS FORD
JIM SL.EMONS IMPORTS
FINANCIAL AMERICAN STATE BANK
BANK OF AMERICA
BANK OF NEWPORT BEAUMONT a COMPANY CAUFOANIA FEDERAL
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BENGAL TIGER
BLUE BEAT CAFE CHARLIE'S CHILE
DILLMAN'$
EL MATAOOR
EL RANCHITO HEMINGWAY'S
These advertisers have made it possible for 36 hours of continuous,
uninterrupted, holiday music ... beginning at 12 :00 noon on
December 24th until midnight, Christmas Day, December 25th.
THRIFT & LOAN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
SAVINGS & LOAN
SUNV.1:ST BANK
VALLEY FERERAL
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TERRY DELANEY'S
LA <l.JISINE OF NEWPORT
LITTLE JOE'S
MAXWELL'S BY THE SEA
BOBBY MroEE'S
CONGLOMERATION
ROYAL KHYBER
STUFT NOODLE
TALE OF THE WHALE
TEA & SYMPATHY
TRESAMIGOS
'"°"'Fash ion Island
Newport Beach
Special. programming on Christmas D~
'
•
(
DEP~STOUS
CLOTNMG • JEWB.RY
AT-EASE
BUFFUM$
E SENSUALS BARBARA K. JACKSON
CREATIVE JEWELERS
PAT MARLEY'S
NEWPORT SURF a SPORT
PAO AC JEWELRY ~WSJEWELERS
RAY>.1QND JEWELRY
RED BAI.LOON
STOREKEEPER
STUARD'S TRADITIONAL JEWELRY VAHID
\
SEAFOOD MARKET
IRVINE RANCH
FARMERS MARKET
ROBINSON'S FINE MEATS
SAN ANTONIO WINERY
G-BBAL UTAJL
BENCHLEY LUGGAGE
BEST PRODUCTS BLUE CHIP STAMPS
CAL'SCAMERA
CHRISTMAS CHRISTMAS
COAST MUSIC
CROWN HARDWARE
HARRIC'S MUSIC BOX
HENDERSON STEREO
• HOUSE OF BATTERIES LIDO Of COURSE '
MR. O'S
RUSSO'S SUNDANCER OF
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
VIDEO ONE
VIDEO STOP
WEBER'S VIDC:O WORLD
HOMIDICOR
flUDITUll • APPUANCIS A8CLUM8ER
AMUNG'S NURSER\'
ANTIQUES-* NAUTICAL
AN= OF THE WORLD BE CITY GALLERIES
BUO<'S ANTIQUE Q.OCKS CHANDLER'S AJRNITURE
CHAPMAN INTERIORS
DESIGN CO-ORDINATOR$
GLABMAN FURNITURE
HAMMOND ORGAN H0080N LIGHTING
ROGEA'S GARDENS
THOMAS ANTIQUES
TINTERIORS
HTING
~,.r~?& ""rMsa.uB NEWPORTERINN
PACIFIC Pl.AZ.A TRAVEL
SOUTH COAST PlAZA HOTEl
E!l':iFSION
OAILYfltlOT DIRWWEST IRYI T Y
f( A TV
KOC TV l~S LU8'CEY ~HE ~ TElfJIAOMPTEA
THE TULSA RIB CO.
THE WAREHOUSE
WHITE OAK
SH VICES
ADVANCED HEAL TH CENTER ANTHONY'S SHOE REPAIR
C.C. COLE PLUMBING COIT DRAPERY ClEANERS
COMPREHENSIVE CARE
DENTAL MARKETING
DOCTOR'S HOUSE
CALL SERVICE
EMERGENCY DOCTOR SERVICE
FASHION ClEANERS l=LO'M:RMAN
HEIMANN OPTICIANS IMMAO.JLATE MAINTENANCE
SERVICE
JOHN ARTHUR ENTERPRISES
LAURIE'S PLANT SERVICE
NEWPORT LIMOUSINE
NEWPORT OPTOMETRIC ONE HOUR COLOR PRINTS
O.C SERVICES
O.C. YMCA PARKER. HENDRIE,
OOUBLEDEE INSURANCE PROBLEM TAU< SHOP
RALEIGH HILLS
R08ERT SHANK 00.
SHARED LIVING
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
EDISON
STERLING OPTICAL
JAMES URQUHART Ill
ATTORNEY
CHRISTINE VAL.MY
WEIGHT PLACE
SHOl'FI• CIMTllS BALBOA ISLAND MERCHANTS
ASSOCIATION
FASHON ISLAND ~~=~~R~ LIDO MARINA VILLAGE
•
HILLS CENTER
LLAGE
PLAZA
. .
I ,
•
t
...
Dal y Pilat
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 23, 1081
COMICS C5
~-.... ....... ___ ... ,.,..._ .. ...__..._. __
Long Beach St .
'fouls up'
in San Diego. C3 . BUSINESS C6
TELEVISION C10
Monahan would like to forget UCLA
E x-Orange Coast wide receiver di dn't fit in with the Bruins' ground attack
• •
By JOHN SEVANO Stau bach at quarterback if be would college, "for a little more seasoning." was a barn-burner to begin with aa his °' .. .....,.......... choose UCLA. "It was my own mistake," said best time "on a good day" was 4.8 But
When Steve Monahan was a mere 10 ''I got a pretty good snow job to go Mon ahan. "I didn't explore all my even that speed, combined with his
years old, he and his family went to there," said Monahan. "They snowed options. 1 didn't even take"'any trips . All precise routes and glue-like hands.
Pasadena from Minneapolis to watch me, my folks, even (OCC Coach Dick) I wanted to do was go to UCLA." produced more than a few big gains
the University of Minnesota tangle with Tucker. Of course, if Monahan bad explored during his OCC days.
UCLA in the Rose Bowl. "They told me they weren't 1oing to the situation he would have known To no one's surprise. Monah.an almost
It was at that game, while lbe Bruins throw much, but when they did I would Pepper Rodger's wishbone attack left UCLA after his junior season, but
wer e beating tbe Gophers, that featured a limited passine game -and Rodgers was replaced by Dick Vermeil
Monahan reached a decision. that a highly-touted freshman by the and there was new hope.
"I'm going to go to UCLA," Monahan WOK/NG BA CK name of Norm Anderson was also in "We were going to go with a pro
remembered telling his sister. "That's ca.mp. offense with two wide receivers and two
the coUege I want to go lo." "I knew I was in trouble when they backs," Monahan recalled, "but all we
We ll, Monahan pursued his dream -be their receiver. Well, in my first year would put me in for run plays and put did was run the veer from that
and be finally made it, receiving a all they averaged was slx passes per him (Anderson) in for the passes," formation."
scholarship to attend the Bruin campus game -and I only got two of them." Monahan reflected. "After that I just Just because Monahan was unhappy,
in 1973. What transpired, however, That, naturally, didn't settle well with lost interest. I didn't care any more." though, didn't mean the Bruins were.
durin* the wide receiver's two-year Monahan, who left Orange Coast bavin1 Part of Monahan'a proble ms were Actually, they wer e very successful
tenure, easily turned his dream into a rewritten the record books. In fact, be is injuries, especially in the legs after the with their ground-oriented attack,
nightmare. still at the top of the charts in both UCLA coaching staff convinced him although they couldn't win the two
. "I made a bad mistake going to s ing le -se ason (830 yards on 43 upon his arrival that a S-0, 160-pound games they had to against USC.
UC LA," admitted Monahan the other receptions in 1971) and two-year (1,508 frame just wasn't big enough for the ··Plus, I was n ever much o r a
day. "U I bad to do it all over again I'd yards on 91 receptions, 1971-72 ) Pac-8. A program of protein and school-type. If I had gone somewhere
go to another school." receiving categories. weights thus added 25 more pounds, but else I would have had to red-shirt for
Sour grapes? Maybe . Bitterness? And, to take th~ UCLA scenario a bit it was all from the waist up; the legs one year and I didn't want lo do that."
Yes. But Monahan believes he bas a further. il was the Bruins who remained the same. "In m y junior year, we had better
right to be angry. As a highly touted approached Monahan after bis senior "I couldn't take t he weight," personnel than SC did," said Monahan.
wide receiver out of Orange Coast year at Marina High. They not only said Monahan remembered. "I ended up "But <USC Coach) John McKay bad
College, the sure-handed catcher was they were interested , they a ls o getting deep bruises ln my thighs and I defensed the wis hbone a million times ~p..:.r.:o.:m::1:.:· s:...:e:.:d:__:e::_:v:.:e:.:r:...:y:...:t:..:h:.:i.:n~g~b:.:u:.:t:__:.R:.:o~g~e:..:r:__ _ _:s.:.ug~g~e=s::ted=..::th=a::t...:M.::on=.:a=b=an=-a::.t::tend==:...::.a .:.j uni.::::~o::..r __ .:.,:lo:.:s~t -=all=-..::m::.:y::.....:.s=:.peed~:;..·_"...;N;__;_ot__;_th._a...;t_M__;_o_n_ab_a_n ___ <_Se_e STEVE, Page C2)
,
HAS REGRETS -Former
Orange Coast College wide
receiver Steve Monahan said
hi s two-year stint at UCLA
was a ··bad m istake."
No-care LakerS
blitz Blazers
Nixon leads running victory
PORTLAND (APJ -Norm
Nixon scored 27 points and three
other Lakers netted 20 points or
m ore Tuesday night as Los
Angeles trampled the Portland
Trail Blazers 124-110 in a
National Basketbe1ll Association
game .
.. We played as bad as we
can." said Blazer Calvin Natt.
"I wish we could wake up and
s tart all over again. This is
pitiful "
THE I.AKERS were up 33·26
at the end~of the first quarter,
and Portland never got closer
tha n four points after that. The
game was all but over after the
Lakers ran up 12 straight points
for a 105-88 lead early in the
final period.
Los Angeles ran 32 rast breaks
through the Blazers. getting 52
points on the run.
·'The Lakers played the kind
of game we planned to play,"
sai d P ortland coach Ja ck
Ramsay ... They ran the balJ at
us. They got lhe s hots and the
o ff ensi ve boards ; we got
turnovers. poor s hots and a few
r ebounds.
HI THERE -Don James. coach of the University of
Washington Huskies. puts the squeeze on Pluto's nose
DeltJ "" ...... .,..,....._
during visit to Disneyland Tuesday. Huskies will play
Iowa New Year's Day in the Rose Bowl.
"We didn't get m uch from
anybody tonight," he said.
Nixon led all scorers with 27
points followed by t eammates
Mike Cooper with 26, J amaal
Wil kes with 24 and Earvin
"Magic" Johnson with 2<>.
Rudolph buys the franchise
T hat's the name of this well-known Christmas story
Once upon a lime there was this reindeer
named Rudolph.
. Rudolph was a cool little dude who liked to get
it on and have a ball like any normaJ reindeer. The
thing was, though, Rudolph wasn't altogether
normaJ.
He bad a red nose. As a matter or fact, he bad
a very shiny nose and if you ever saw it, you
would even say it glows.
The other reindeer didn't dig red noses. They
were all the time jiving around and havin1 fun but
when Rudolph made the scene, they laughed and
called him names. They wouldn't let poor Rudolph
join in any reindeer games.
NOT BEING ABLE to join in any reindeer
games is no joke. They have swingin1 bashes.
· Anyway, where Rudolph lived there waa this
pappy guy named Santa Claus. Santa Claus wu a
groovy old 1ent who bad a bil round belly which
shook when be laughed like a big bowl of Jelly . It
bad to be Jelly 'cause jam don't shake like that.
Santa Claus had this thing for kida. He was
into making thtnes for them. He bad these Utt.le
dudes called elves helplnt him and all year they
made ~· for k.lda. TIMy'd make dolls and Un
soldiers and toy drums that went rum-te·tum-tum
and all sorta ~ thine•.
Once' a year, Ullte at Christmas time, Santa
Claus would put all this stun in a bag and put the
~a on his alel,i.. A 1lel1h la like an economy car
'wi thout wheels.
WITH ALL THE TOYS and goodies oa b1a
1Jel1h. Santa Clam would take otf and apllt and go
all over the place dellverinl l&utf to lddl. Nobody
.ver said why be wu into lbla but maybe tbat'a
the way the old IUl' rot b.ll joWes and, belldet, he
would slide don chimneys and that lan't easy to
flfure either.
Anyhow, the reuon tbe relncleer wer. around w aa tbat the.y pulled UM aleieb. · o.um, to '*» pull tbe llellb waa a blt deal.
It w u Ullte maktD1 tbe ftnt team at coll• or toinJ to the Sqper Bowl or ,.utn.a to 1ptnd an ennmc 1iM•n1 to 8owte I[. tell JC*•.
• Then were tome PnU1 1111 namet Oil tbe
r
SPORTS COLUMNIST
BUD
TUCKER
varsity, guys like Donner and Blit.zen and Dancer
and Prancer.
NATURALLY, llVDOLPH never dreamed or
making it. 1 mea.n, not with bis scarlet scbnozz and
aJI lf you ever told Rudolph be would one day help
puil the sleigh, he would have looked at you like
you bad been smoking something out or your own
backyard.
Now, one Christmas Eve it came up foegy.
Llke pea soup, man.
"We've had it, Baby," Santa Claus said. "No
way we can go out in this stuff."
Then the old guy spotted Rudolph 1ittin1 tn a
corner ditlinl oo the centerfold ln Penthouse.
Santa Claus boogied over to Rudolph and laid lbia on
him:
"Rudolph wiil> your nose eo brt1bt, won't you
gulde my aleilh tonJ&bt? 11
•'You're putll.ng me on," Rudolph aald.
"No jive, man," said Santa Claus. "I'm
coming at you 1trat1ht.' •
WEU... ONE THING led to another and, s ure
enou1h, Rudolph got right up tront and away they
went all over the place delJvering stuff to klda.
lt goes without aayint that when they got
back, Rudolph wu a very fat cat. In fact, he was a
beto and au the reindeer IOttd him and they
abouted out with alee:
"Rudolph the red·noted relndeer, you'll 10
down lD hJ1tory. 11
And everybody llnd happily ever anu
iD cludina Gene Autry wbo macle a pbonograpb
record and enou.-. money to buy a whole •table
f\llJ "'tr... ......... . ' ftat about 0t00l1 lt ex~ to mention the moral of tbe atory whteh la pntty obvloul
1'bv are &hlnp la Ulla wocid a lot worse tbu
a red DOH. (
011 flNQ ACOUAIN11D -Tracy Croder. a co-captaln
rrom the Uni veratty of Iowa. plants a ldu oa Rose Quttn
Katy Potthast d\Wtna ~e Hawkeyes' trip to DlsMyland
Tuesday. ,, . ' ,
Los Angeles was shortened
con siderably wit h center
Kareem Abdul-J a bbar sidelined
with a sprained ankle
"WE WERE relentless in our
running," said Laker Coach Pal
Riley. "especially since we were
at a size disadvantage. I am a
firm believer in the running
game. Our quickness can lake
care of us 80 to 90 percent of the
time."
He termed the road victory
without Kareem "lt confidence
builder. a very positive feeling
t hat will bri n g the team
together."
P o rtla nd cente r M ychal
Tho mpson s aid the Blazer
non-defense "was a nightmare
and we couldn't wake up.
"L.A. came in without a care
in the world, like there's no
tom orrow." Thompson said.
"Without Kareem, they were
just taking off on the run. Nixoo
and Cooper are so quick outside,
it made us susceptible to the
drive."
Jim Paxson led the Blazers
with 20 points. Portland got 18
points each from g uards Kelvin
Ransey and Darnell Valentine.
Los Angeles has a 21-7 record,
a nd the loss left Portland at
14-11.
T h e Lakers outr ebounde d
Portla nd 45-34, collec ting 20
offensive rebounds. Johnson led 1
rebounding with 10.
Rockies'
Rarn(p)age
tops Kings
DENVER <AP> -Getting
perhaps t heir best all-around
e ffort of the season . the
Colorado Rockies raced to a 4~
lead , then coasted to a 4
victory over the Los An1el
K ings in National Hocke
Leaeue action. ti Rob Ra ma1e scored a
and added an assist, and lfO
Glenn "Chico" Resch stopped
shots Tuesday night aa Color~
moved within seven point.a of
fourth-place Kinga la th
Smythe Oiviaion. Tbe two tea~
play agaln in Loa An1elef
tonight.
"I don't know how you pie
stars In a game like that. wi
everybody contributing," aai
Colorado Coach II araba
Johnston.
"When we were ma kl a
mistakes, lbere wu that
effort to cover up, especially
our end.
"That waa one of our best nr..
periods, if not THlt best, of till
year. We were doin1 lbe ricbt
paaa•, the t hort pa1te1, and
t tead.y forecbecklal."
Colorado'• 4-0 lead marked tbe
first Um• tbl• aeaeoa tbe
Roc:lltiet have led b.y more tbM
iwo I08lt ln a cam•.
Ram ... ptdted up a .....,...
pua from AaraD 8"*8 la tllie
slot and ftnd lt iDto U.. net fw
t.be Arlt '°81 at I :• ol U.. ftl"lll
pertk. The Kock* .-.... • a power pl~ nUctwu ........... llllil
(8ee KINOI, .... Cl) I
1 ~
•
----------------
.. a..._ ______ o_,.i..• __ c_oa_•t_o,.AIL v PILOT/Wedn.:.e~•d:.;•;.:.Y.:..· O:.•:.C;;;;-•;..;m..;;be;.;;...r .;;.23,;;.;·..;'~·~t ----------------------......,
Jones' streak propels 76ers Honors keep pouring in for Raff
•
Cald .. ll JoMt •~red 11 lt.ral&bt m Former Co rona del Mar HlCb Ell. points ln lJle fourth Clb•rter ln 2: SO, standout Eric Rart may be one of the • 9 t
and a seuon-hlah 30 overall lo tlve smalle11t defensive Unemen on the
the Pbiladelphla 78era • 112·105 Occidental CoUe1e team.
Estancia
victory over the New York Knkkl Tuetday ln Al S-9. 195 pounds . he mltbl, ror t.b1t
the N1Uonal Basketball A11oclatlon. Tbe matter, be tho smallett defenaive lineman ln on a roll substitute ce.nttr' started b1a at.rtoe when the the Southern C1dtrornla lntercoUe1iate AtbleUc
Kolcka took the leed for t.be flrll Um .. 1lnce the Conference.
first minute of play, M-83, with 10 minutes But, Ritff
-IJeft . . . Larry Bird scored
a seaaon-hlgh 36 points ,
lnclud1n1 a long jumper with
1: 20 remaining that gave
Boston the lead for 1ood. to
lilt the Celtics to a 120-116
w in over Cleveland .. ,
Herb Williama scored 26
points and Jolaaay -Davi•
added 20 as Indiana came
fro m behind to knock orr.
was r ecently selected as the
winner of the SaJem GOOdaJe
Award aa the outstandln1
defensive lineman of the 1981
Occidental squad. He also
won tbe award last year.
Eagles in finals ;OV tumbles
eement reached
between NBA, CBS
Fro•AP ..... tct.es
NEW YORK -The National m Basketball AaaoelaUon bas reached
aereemeot with CBS-TV on a
four-yew eoalract, wblch the leaiue calla the
motl h~raUve ln its history. JOMH Atlanta, 92-88 ... Kansas
Tbe new deal, a oJ>ounced Tuesday by
Commluioner Larry O'Brien, includes rights lo
t.be NBA All·Star Game, aelected regular season
sames, lbe playoffs and the championship game
beelnnlna with the 1182-83 season. Financial
detaila of tbe contract were not disclosed.
City. behind lle11le Kla1's 23 polnts and Mike
Woodaoa'• 21, opened a 16-poinl second-quarter
lead and posted a 106-101 triumph over
Milwaukee, lhe Bucks' second straight loss al
borne . . . Rookie Kelly Tr1pucka poured in 18
second-half points lo ra lly Detroit lo a 106-98
victory over Dallas . . . lllcky Sobers hit a
22-!oot jump shot with two seconds left to help
Chicago to a 92.90 win over Washington ...
Alex Eacllsla netted 30 points as Denver
defeated Houston, 121-109, snapping the
Rockets' !our-game winning streak .
· In addition, O'Brien aald, "There will be no
tape delays in our Championship Series and
three of lbe Mven 1am91 will be scheduled for
prime Ume viewing.··
CBS bas bad a contract with the NBA since
im. ' "Between this contract with CBS and
national network cable contracts currently
bei ng negotiated, NBA teams will be receiving
well -over $100 million in network television
rvenues durlnc the next four years . . .• "
O'Brien said In a statement.
Nordiques snap Canadian win streak
Jacques Richard scored the ~ winning goal al 5: 11 of the third ,
period Tuesday night as the Quebec
Quote of the day
••We 're not going to be the old,
'put-one-out-of-the-park, big-inning team,"
says George ~reuer, owner of the
New York Yankees . "It's not just the long
ball that puta them ln the seals anymore.
A running team is the toughest thing on an
opposing pitcher and it's exciting "
Nordiques won their third straight and ended
the Montreal Canadiens' winning streak at five
with a 5-2 victory. With the Nordiques leading
2-1. Richard swept a re bound into an empty net
a!ter Montreal goaltender Richard Sevlpy bad
made the initial stop oo a slapshol by Mariaa
Stastny . . . Hector Marlnl's first goal of the
season boosted the New York Islanders to a 5-2
win over Winnipeg, stretching the Islanders '
winning streak to five ga m es . ._. Al
MacAdam tallied on a power-play goal with less
than three minutes rema ining to give struggling
Minnesota a 4.4 tie with equally-t roubled
Vancouver. The North Stars bave one victory in
10 games while the Canucks had their winless
streak stretched to s ix . . . Garry Howatt
scored at 11 : 24 o! the third period to lift
Ha rtford past Detroit, 3-2 . . Toay Currie
fired in a pair of goals and St. Louis goal-
tender Mike LJu& turned aside 30 shots a s
the Blues pos ted a 3-2 triumph over
Buffalo . . . Boston left wing Wayne Caabmaa
has been assessed a four-game suspension for
throwing his stick a l an opposing player during
last Sunday's game against the Los Angeles
Ki ngs.
Whieldon honored by PCM
OC lrvine guard Randy m
Whieldon, wbo played a major role in
thr ee victories by the unbeaten
Anteaters last week, bas been selected as the
Pacific Coast Athletic Association's basketball
player of the week, the PCAA has announced .
Whieldon. a 6-!oot-5 senior from Anaheim,
bad 51 points in UC Irvine's three wins on the
week, raising the Anteaters' season record lo
9-0. On the season, Wbieldon is averaging 16.3
points per game and has made more than 70
percent of his field goal attempts.
From Page C1
STEVE MONAHAN. • •
and he knew how lo stop us.''
Anyway, the whole experience
was so distasteful that Monahan
dropped out of school shortly
a fter his senior season, got
married alMI went to work for
the Pacifie Telephone Company.
"I wanted to play pro ball,"
said Monahan, who played two
weeks for the California Sun
("Tb at wasn't -even football").
·'but every time I t.ried out the
only thing th·e scouts were
inte rested in was speed. I
always looked at myself u tbe
Fred Biletnikoft-type, but when
you're not drafted teams don't
want to waste their time on lhe
in-betweens.
"AU I wanted was a chance so
I couJd aay 1 had been there."
No bowl
for Seurer
LA WR&NCE, Kan. (AP>
Sterling quarterback Frank
Seurer ol Kaaeu will miu lhe
Hall of Fame Bowl Dec. 31
•&•inst lliasiuippi State
because of an Injury to his
throwing arm , Coach Don
Fambrough aaid Tuesday.
Seurer, a sophomore graduate
of Edison Hi•h. led Kansas lo an
8-3 record ln 1981, it.a best mark
since 1981, and ill first bowl
1ame ln 20 years.
"I Cot tbe finaJ news from our
doctors, and they advised us
that J"rank should not play,"
Fambrough said.
Seurer suffered a dislocated
ri&bt elbow Ill tbe final 1ame ol
the aeuc. "'8inll Mlaaourt. The
arm wu'la a nttfw tWG weeks,
but Fai*eap MN tlodors did
not feel a.ere bid aeen eoou&b
lime for h elbow to heal. •
··rm eorty tor hls sake, but
Steve Smltb will step in and do
lb• uaual ftne Job be always
ba1,', rambtoucb aahl. He ukl
Sml1', a leftlor, would be the
llarter 111ain1t lliululppl
Stale.
• 'Tbls abould come 11 no
aurprile because rve said all
alone that I bad to have 100
percent a11uranee from the c»cton to lake a cb1nce playin1
Frank," l'ambrouib aaJd.
That chance n ever came,
though, and playing at UCLA
certainly didn't help matters.
''People walk up to me today
and say, 'Hey, aren'l you the
s ame Steve Monahan who went
to UCLA?' and I tell them I
don't want to talk about it. I
didn't want to be reme mbered
ror a bad experience.
"When I was playing, I played
because it was fu.n and I liked
it," said Monahan. "All they did
at UCLA, though, was treat me
like a piece of meat. Their
attitude was , 'If you don't want
to do what we tell you, there are
20 other guys who will.' "
Surprisingly, if someone asked
Monahan's opinion of UCLA
today, be would suggest that
person consider UCLA.
"It's different now," Monahan
points out. "They mix il up and
throw the ball more. I would like
to go back there now."
Of course, that's impossible.
Monahan, now 28 a.'ld married,
must be content with just the
m emories -no matter bow
painful.
·'A II I know is I wouldn't want
to go through that again," he
said.
Dinghies
to compete
D i n ghy s ailor s from
throughout Southern California
are tlllling their craft for the
1982 E . E. Manning Series
scheduled JJD. 30-31 at Alamitos
Bay Yacht Club. Long Beach.
Tbe Manning Trophy is the
oldest dinghy sailing award In
Southern California, dating bact
to 1935 wh en the' Southern
California YachUag .As.sbclaUon
<SC YA > sp olt s ored a
development claas to promote
interclub racin1 In tJle Los
Angeles Harbor aN!a. A silver
medal replica or the 1Jnterthab
Dlngby W&,.'I awaroed as a
perpetual ch~mpionshlp trophy,
Tfie award wu woo several
years in a row by the late E. E.
Manning. When the lnterclub
Class became extinct, Mannine
dedlcaied the trophy to SCY A
for an open dinghy aeri" '" boats under L4 feet to be sailed
in January.
FIRED -New England
rootbaU coach Ron Erhardt.
who led the Patriots to their
worst record ever. was rired
as coach of the NFL team
Tuesday.
From Page C1
KINGS. • •
period. as Ramage drove a shot
from the right point, which
goalie Doug Keans slopped, but
Don Lever shot the rebound past
Keans for his 13th goal.
Brent Ashton's 10th goal gave
Colorado a 3-0 lead midway
through the second period.
Colorado's fourth goal came at
16: 19 or the second period when
J oel Quenneville scored on a
slap shot from just Inside the
blue line.
A minute later. Kings' right
wing Dave Taylor look a pau
from Steve Bozek, cut in front of
Resch and lifted the puck over
the goalie's right arm. It. wu
Taylor's 20lb goal and 58lb point
of the season.
Scott Gruhl, playing his first
game for Loa Angeles, tapped In
a rebound in the closing minutes
for the final score.
''We had to call up Scott GnahJ
tonight,·· said Kings' Coacb
Parker MacDonald. "He arrived
at $ p .m. He got out of the car
and into the team b"" and be
acorea a goal."
But GruhJ's play f'•• about 111
Jbc Donald bad to bras about.
horses," he said. "lt's juat that
we don't have enouib 1ur.
"Eric haa proven Mmaelf
as one of the top defensive
players in the SCIA," boaals
his coach, J erry Howell.
"Eri c h as done an ..,... outstanding job ror the team
ror the past two years ...
Only a junlor, Rarr Is expected to be a team
leader next year at the private. liberal arts
college ln Los Angeles. .. Jones files grievance against ownpr
Baltimore Colts quarterback II
Be rt Jones and his lawyer-agent
brother Bill, will file a grievance
against team owner Boben lnay because of a
contrac tural dis agreement, their le1al
consultant said. Roa Sllaplro, a lawyer and
cons ultant for several athletes, said the Jones
brothers aJl ege they met last year with Irsay
and worked out a contract, but when they later
approached the team owner about the
agreement, they allege be told them he bad no
contract with Jones, Shapiro said.
Television, radio
Following a re the top sports events on TV
tonight. Ratings a re: " " ./ ' excellent; ' ' ' worth watching; " ' fair; ./ forget It.
8 p.m ., Chennel 5 ./ ./ ./ ./
COLLEGE BASKETBALL: UCLA at LSU.
Announcers: Joe Buttitta and Bill Walton.
After bouncing DePaul from the undefeated
ranks at home Saturday, the Bruins take to the road at Louisiana State University tonight. The
Oruins, although ineligible for Post-season play,
are currently ranked 1Sth In the AP POii with a 4-2 record. UCLA Is under first-year head coach
Larry Farmer and has all five starters back from
last year. Mike Sanders, a probable All-American, and Kenny Fields lead the Bruin attack. The
Bruins lead the series. 3-0. •
RADrO Basketball -UCLA at LSU, S:OS p.m., KMPC ( 710); Spring Arbor College at Cal State
Fullerton, 7:30 p.m .. KWRM (1370); Richmond at USC , 8 p.m., KDAY (1 580). Hockey -Colorado at
KinQS, 7:20 p.m., KPRZ (1150).
Housecleaning
begins for Pats
• FOXBORO. Mass. (AP> -Ron Erhardt and
his assistant coaches were the first to go. But they
probably won't be the last as ~e New En~land
Patriots try to regroup after a disastrous National
Football League season. . Erhardt and bis eight-man staff were rared
Tuesday ln the wake or the team's 2·14 record, the
worst ln its history. New England shared lhe
poorest record in the NFL with Baltimore, to
whom the Pats lost twice.
Patriots' owner Billy Sullivan cited the team's
poor r ecord and t he loss of fans a nd ran
enthusiasm as key factors in bis decision to oust
Erbardl, whose contract was to expire In April.
Assistants Jim Ringo. Fritz Sburmur, Raymond
Berry, Rick Lantz. Bobby Grier, Babe Parilli,
Gino Cappelletti and Dick Roach also were
dismissed.
And Sullivan, who hired Erhardt after Chuck
Fairbanks went to the University of Colorado, said
there will be more departures.
A new coach is "absolutely not" enough to
bring back the crowds, Sullivan said.
"We've got to make some trades, dramatic
trades, not trades for cosmetic purposes)>ut tra~es
that will perceptibly help us," Sullivan said.
"We've got to draft very a11ressively and, if
necessary, make trades to get additional draft
choices.
Sullivan said some "rather radical changes"
are needed in the 45-man squad if the team hopes
to improve its fan appeal.
New England's home at• ance this season
was 414,561, the lowest since 1976.
NFL standings
(FINAL>
LAS VEGAS -With a victory thll evening,
the Estancia Hith basketball team could com~
home bie wiMert In Las Ve1aa this week.
The Eagles moved lnto the championship
game of the Bonanza Tournament Tuesday night
wilh a 54.37 win over Basic High Estancia will
play Hoover tonight In a matchup pittin1
unbeatens.
Despite the success, whlch lined tub squad's
record to 6·0. Estancia Coach Larry Sunderman
wasn't overjoyed.
"We played a pretty sloppy 1ame this
evening," he remarked. "It's hard to believe we
actually won by 17 points. We're going to have to
do a better job tomorrow (tonjghl)."
Estancia controlled the issue from start to
finish, outscoring its foe in each of t he four
quarters. Chris Maydole had 15 points and Randy
Tift added 13, but Sunderman credited Tift with a
fine defensive performance as well.
"He held their top scorer. who was avera1in1
22 points a game. to just seven points and none 1n
the second hair." he said.
In non-league action Tuesday:
Lakewood 52, Ocean View 47
LAKEWOOD -The Seahawks became tht
latest victim of the Lancers, who remained
unbeaten this season. Ocean View, meanwhile,
dropped to 8·4.
Lakewood pulle d out to a seven -point
advantage after one quarter and led by as many as
10 points (41 -31) late in the third before settling for
the five-point decision.
Jim Usevitch , the Seah a wks' leading
point-getter, also pulled down 12 rebounds. Shawn
Warner and Scott DeBrouwer each scored in
double figures with 12 and 10 points. respectively.
Ocean View returns to the court Jan. 6 with a
date at Inglewood.
Iowa rewarded
Thanks to a better performance in practice
Tuesday, Andre Tippett and the rest of his Iowa
teammates were a ble lo meet Mickey Mouse.
Iowa Coac h Hayden Fry was upset a t
Monday's opening practice In preparation for the
68lh Rose Bowl and ordered another workout that
afte rnoon. He aJso threatened to c~ncel the visit to
Disneyland if he was not satisfied with Tuesday
morning 's session. .
However, Fry said he found the workout to h1 s
liking, so the players were bused to the famous
amusement park. where they were greeted by a
lively band of Walt Disney char acters that
included Mickey Mouse. Donald Duck, Pluto and
Goofy.
Also on hand to meet the Hawkeyes on the
warm, sunny day were Rose Bowl queen Katy
Potthast and her court.
"We had an' excellent workout this morning,"
Fry said. "We had a lot of sweating and good
conditioning. I feel a lot better about our football
team today than I did yesterday.
"I Ullnk we've got their attention now. They
know we're out here number one to win the Rose
Bowl and number two to enjoy ourselves."
Fry said he would continue to evaluate each
workout and "make a decision whether to enjoy
the festivities or have another practice."
Anteaters unranked
Coach BiU Mulligan must be wonderin1 what
it's going to take to gel a UtUe respect !or bis UC
Irvine ba.altetball team.
Last week, with a 6-0 record, the Anteat~ra
were ranked 20th by UPI. This week, with a 9--0
ma rk, lhe Anteaters were nowhere to be seen on
the list .
UPI, which is selected by the nation's college
coaches, featured four new teams. in this week's
rankings. Houston, Kansas, North Carolilla State
and Ore1(in State we~ additions to lhls week's Top
20. AU those teams have al least one loss.
"I don't know what we have to do," saJd
All-America Kevin Magee. "We've won more
games than anybody else in the country and
nobody knows about us. Maybe if we lost six in a
row things would change." -------------------
JOHNSON & SON
Pr esents ...
NAnONAL CON FEil ENCE AMERICAN CONFERENCE Westen Dtvlalom
W LT PF PA Pc&.
San Fran. 13 3 0 357 2SO
Atlanta 7 9 0 426 355
Rama 6 10 0 303 351
~ew Orleans 4 12 0 207 378
Easten Dlvh._
Dallas 12 4 o 367 m
PbUadelpbia 10 6 0 368 221
NY Giants 9 7 0 295 25'7
Washincton 8 8 0 347 348
St. Louis 1 9 0 315 408
Cetdral Dl•laloe
Tampa Bay 9 7 0 315 Ja8
Detroit 8 8 o mm
Green Bay 8 8 o 324 an
Minnesota 7 9 om•
Chicago 6 10 0 253 331
C11f1-lee1 ..... .. ........., ... .
T .... 9"11l":tC:-::. 11 •.lft.I ._...c, ,, _.
._ Dle91• ~cc..._. u t t "'"'"
.813
.438
.375
.~
.750
.625
.583
.500 . .us
.5$3
.500
.500
.431
.375
Weatera Dlvlaloa
W LT PF PA Pct.
San Diego 10 6 0 478 390
Denver 10 6 0 321 289
Kansas City 9 7 0 343 290
Oaklucl 7 9 0 273 343
SeatUe 6 10 0 322 388
Eastern Dlvlsloa
Miami 11 4 1 345 275
NY Jets 10 s l 355 287
Buffalo 10 6 0 311 276
Baltimore 214 0 2S9 533
New Enaland 2 14 0 322 370
Central Dtvlaloa
Cincinnati 12 4 0 421 30'
Pltt.sburch 8 8 0 3545 297
Hout.on 7 9 0 281 35.5
Cleveland 5 11 0 276 375 ....... ~,
a-tc•C I -._........._V_Jm•.._..MCM<Wwll
CCMM9l•8'1ta.111.I
......... cwr-
N-Yn ~'9114--• WlllMr M iM ,rlMlleo C°""""' I et I ,,111.>
c we s· Soot-.. • .Hit. tt. ........... ,, .
~.Jat•et,._Ja<,M~ll .
.62S
.62S
.563 1
.438
.375 1
.7191
.6561
.625
.124.
.t24 '
.750
.500
.i3ft
.313
Pccc the "fueck"
NFL's
P1ck8 Of
The Week
PLAYOFFS
MATIOHAL
COMNllNCI .... , .......
OYer .....
~ ecru 111MC1 ..,.,.,. ...... .... ..... [., ....
New Parts Department Hours
Now Open 8:00 am -1:00 ·pm Saturdays
ti 0 H NS 0 N &SON
L I :\ C 0 L N M E R C R
1616 Barbor Boalnanl. Coeta Meaa (714) 540!&680
t
• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, December 23, 1981
Too much charity costs 49ers in San Diego
Tuz, Colorado hold off Las Vegas to win Re bet Roundup ; USF. avoids major upset. against visiting New Orleans
From AP dllpatcbe1
SAN DIEGO -San Ole&o St.ate scored 16 of 18
rree throws In the last 6 ;47 minutes of a
non-conference basketball game Tuesday night to
ecure a 92·84 victory over Lon& Beach State.
Junior forward Don Plummer led the scoring
with 23 points. Keith Smith added 20 points.
making L2 or 20 points in the last six minutes.
John ~arwood had 14 points and was 5 for 6 at
the free·throw line.
Craig Hodges led Long Beach with 29 points,
and center Dino Gregory followed with 16 points.
Gregory was the game's leading rebounder wilt:
15.
San Diego pulled ahead with its largest lead at
11: 47 of second half when it went to 67 -52.
Long Beach came to within five points with 43
seconds remaining al 87·82, but that was the
closest they got in the second half.
Color•do 85, Nev•d•·LH V99H 59
LAS VEGAS -Senior forward Jacques Tuz
scored 21 points and Colorado hit seven of eight
free throws in the last 1: 49 of play as the Buffaloes
took a 65-59 win over the University or Nevada·Las
Vegas to win the sixth annual Rebel Roundup.
The Buffaloes, 7·3, withstood a resurging
Rebel offensive attack which saw Nevada-Las
Vegas pull to within 54.53 with 2:35 remaining on a
bucket by 6-9 junior forward Sidney Green.
Tuz. a graduate of Corona del Mar High,
added a shot or his own to give the Buffaloes a
three-point lead and UNLV's Larry Anderson
missed two long jump shots before Colorado hit its
crucial free throws.
Anderson, a 6-6 junior forward. led all
scor ing with 26 and was named the tournament's
most valuable player.
Tuz and forward Vi nce Kelley were also
selected to represent Colorado, while Gary Mims·
of Stetson and Robert Tate of Idaho State rounded
out the aJJ-tourney selection.
UC Santa Barber• 72, U San Diego 57
SANTA BARBARA -Junior guard Michael
Russell scored a career-high 25 points to lead host
UC Santa Barbara to a convincing 72-57 victory
over the University of San Diego.
The Gauchos led 24-23 at halftime. But
s parked by Russell's 21 second·half points. the
Gauchos dominated the second half 48·34.
Teammate Mario Gaines scored 14 points as
Santa Barbara upped its record to 3·6. San Diego
was led by guard Rusty Whitmarsh with 17 points
while teammate Don Capener scored 12 points.
San Diego shot 47 percent from the floor. while
falling to 4.3 in the season.
USF 86, New Orleans 83
SAN FRANCISCO -Quintin Dailey's 12·foot
jump shot with 21h minutes left put seventh-ranked
San Francisco ahead to stay as the Dons defeated
New Orleans 86·83 in overtime.
The Privateers appeared headed for their
second major upset this season as they moved
ahead of USF in the second half. The team which
downed previous ly unbeaten Southwestern
Louisiana last week trailed USF 43-34 at halftime,
but jumped to a 46-43 lead in the second half.
With four minutes left in regulation lime, New
Orleans led 70-64.
Toledo 76, Arizona St. 67
TEMPE, Ariz. -Guard Dan Boyle scored a
game·high 23 points and Mitch Adamek added 20
more as the University or Toledo rallied from a
seven·point halftime deficit to beat Arizona State,
76·67.
Trailing 44 -37 at intermission , Toledo
employed a sticky zone defense to keep the Sun
Devils bogged down through much of the second
half.
The Rockets found themselves still behind
55-47 with 15 minutes to play. but reeled off eight
straiJ~ht points over a five-minute span. Ken
Basketball scores ·
College _,
San Ol-SI n, L-8eac!ISI M uc Sant• a..tMr• n, u. Sen Dle90 n
WHhinQIOtl St. n. _.., .... s•
USF ... Hew Drl .. M U (o4)
Callfornl• 77, Co111att 47
MarQUt'li. "· Slenlord O
Santa Clara '3. La s.tle 74
GOtllaQa U, W-r St. '3
Cal Poly (Sl.01 S3, UC Davis 41
H .. ••ll·Hlto 7S. Pee Ille 71
BYU·Hewall 18. -..... SI••• 74
llec:lllft
Toledo 1•. Arll'lll\a St •7
BYU ... c.t Poly C ~•l •S ~
Arkenws loJ, S MIHln l1191 SO
TuaslJ,Dr••S.
SNIU 11, Tuai Wftl•Y•n ,.
TCU ss. THH·San Anlonlo SI
TulH 'M, Florldll So<4thern 61 Pen ..... rlcen n. TUH Lut,,.rM .,
~
OeP..,190, Melne"
Ohio St. 61, Florida SI
llllneh 90. H. Oallo4a SI. •1
Noire o.ne 7S, V•IP<lral!IO 60
Seollll Dulle 10, Eas1 CMo41N SI
''°'ldll Sil.112. Soulll C.ro41,.. 11
Mampllls St. '°'· Brown .. Eval\lvlllen,Au~ll" Puy S.C
Ala·Blnnll'OfWlm IO, ClllCO SI. 60
VlrQlnl• Tech 75, MIHISllPC>I u
Ve Commonwe•llh 61 , Old
Dominion SS
MenNll 9', Ohio Wnleyan 11
L.°"9 It!-U 112. R-n Morr!\
" , E•tt Geor~ M. w. Kentucky 4S
VIII-• 121, P•ceM
Mllft118Uen 112, Harverd 11
lhrt_.n ... i.ICW S1
Holy CrOM to. Fordfllltn ff
p,.vldlnee 61, 00'9•1 50
De'(1911D,l-71 aostoft u. n, 1Mrr1m.c11 "
Cef!M<tklll M. ~th SS SI, Fr..:11 M, Y. '2, Hohlra 61 CoO
l'OUltNA*NTS ...........
Coff>r .. '5, UHL.V "(flnl)
!Mlle M, 10. Mltttoll60 CWrdl
Ht .. de·Rtno ti SI M•• y \ I• Wel'-~••nk
Cllrtll
Horth Teu SI 111, LOY
ol•·M•rymourtl IO:I ( ltllrdl
Community college
..c>M<Oft,EllENCE
Cltnis IS. DrM\OI CoAtl '3
C•mo PendlelOft IS. S.n Dleqo
Mesa 7'
C •nyon• n . Pl .. ce U
Sant• Motwc• ll. WMI I.A .,
Moori>ar~ S1. LA Harbor~ Eot LA 114 Sal'lla A,.. 101
High school TOUllNAMENTS ... ...ot,,...
""'"-Minion Vie Jo H , E-ranla '5
S•v•nn• SI. Troy ff
P•c•llca II. El TOfO,.
Bree-Olinda 11, FulltrtOtl S1
~QMttef11Mlt
Pomona 113, "'6qn011• 41
H unllllQ!on Beech u , Senor a S 1
' UtV ........... aa CM'"".,.,,.., Semlflult
Etl•ncla u. Bale CHende•tOrll JI Hoover •>. LV c:Noarral SI c-.1•-s.mll!Mh Las V9991 70, Matw 0.1 SI
Bon•"ta tlVl 10, Garey S7 _._
l•ke-s2. OcHn vi-•I
Compton 66. Servile SI
Women
COLLEGE
UCl"IMT-
l"Cllana 60, Pe_..olne st tflrtll
Ar Ilona IO. S.yM>r '' C third> UC Irvine 78, E Wathlt191on •4
lcon!IOl•letll
P•cllk IS, USIU 73 (M...,,Chl
HIGH SCHOOL c...-T--C~Se .... fllMI• Edl!IOn,.,C~ ..
MIHIOtl Viejo 60, HunllnotOtl lk~ll ., """' "--Seflll•--,oothlll U, lot AlemltH"
MarlnatO, El Twoo
~Semi•'-"
LIIUwood "9, -tmll'll.,. "
Loar• SJ, Tu.ti" 4'
You can hell) your newsl)llPtlf'
carrier collect at t1me1
convenient to vou bY h...-lng
your money ready 10 lh•
<:ar(tef won t l'l1ve to call beet<.
Becauee this young pereon 1s
In bu11neas for 1'11maell or
herMll. plHM b9 ready -and
watch that big alT'1lt 'M\lcti
MYt ''Thank You "
Epperson's Up-In of a missed 11hot tylna the score
at 55·55 with 11 : 10 left.
OePeul 90, M•lne 87
CHJCAGO -Junior center Terry Cummings
scored a season-high 27 polnts and Bernard
Randolph added tS to lead 13th-ranked DeP .. l to a
90·67 victory over Maine.
Cummings, who left the noor with 6:50 left,
also was a standout on defense u be and Randolph
held Maine's high-scoring Clay Pickering to eight
points. Pickering had been averaging 18 polnt.s a
game for the Black Beurs, who dropped their fifth
against one victorv.
Marquette 6& St•nford 65 STANFORb-Marquette's Mandy Johnson
scored the game's last points on a 10.foot jumper
with just under a minute to play and the Warriors
TURTLE
LIQUID
~WAX
CLEANS ANO SHINES I
HAltADA·S.mi·
automatic w /ffuth
mounting heod.
HX-10
19!!
SPIN-ON
OIL FILTERS
LF-16VP,~VP, 219 25VP,29VP
45VPand
111VP.
DOMESTIC
AIRFIL11RS
wlthitood a tr1anlic finish for a 66-65 vlctory over
Stanford.
Doug Marty of Stanford mined a 15·footer
with two seconds to go after each team missed the
front end or a one-and-on~ free throw opportunity
in the fmal minute.
Marquette. S.4, maae the first basket or the
night but then trailed· by as much as 11 points
before taking a 49·48 lead with 10:40 to play on a
20·footer by Marc Marotta.
Arkenua 83, So. MIHIHIPCM 54
PlNE BLUFF, Ark. -SCott Hastings scored
21 points to lead sixth.ranked Arkansas to a 63·54
victory over Southern Mississippi.
Darrell Walker was Arkansas' only other
double·figure scorer with 10 points. Joe Dawson
led the Golden Eagles with 18 points, while Curtis
DIGITAL CLOCK
LCD
~stport
oi.ploya hou,... min·
ut•' M<OnCh, dote &
doyofwffk.
•WCL·2
. 1449 ~~ EACH
40 PIECE
SOCKDSET
1/•r & 3/8" SAE/METRIC
#IOS41S
11~"11
usco • Set of 4
~thoetfof
two.....-fM
mott fl ....... , cef'L
3 99
EXCH
SIZES TO m MOST AMERICAN CARS & TRUCKS
t\~t_o Supply
HelJtlog HeiJu
MON-WED 9.9 TH~. 9-5 ete•O.••· SAT. 9~ SUN. 9.5 !"Uil~
Green had 12 and Edger Euoo, 10.
After a layup by Hastings in the firtl minute,
Southern Mississippi took a 8-2 lead oo a pair of
buckets by Dawson, a short jumper by Otten and
a 16·footer by Eason.
Nevad•·Reno 91 , St. M•ry'a 19 :
RENO, Nev. -Forward Keo Green acored at
points and grabbed 10 rebound• to le.,S
Nevada·Reno to the championablp of its own W~f
Pack Classic. 91-76 over St. Mary's.
North Texas State defeated wlnleO
Loyola-Marymount 112·103 in the consolation game
!artier Tuesday.
Green, who as the Callfomla junior colleife
scoring leader at Lassen JC a year ago, ended If>
with 47 points for the tournament and was name,!
co-most valuable player alon.i with Delonte Taylor
of North Texas State.
ANTI-FREEZE
AF552
4~A!
REMOVES RADIATOR
RUST #AS107
RO BERK
kASCO • 12 Volt
22FMF·60 31 sec AMP
24MF-60410CC AMP, 24FMF-60 44• 4 lOCC AMP, 42Mf-60 36SCC AM'.
71Mf ·60 390CC AMP DCM
74MF·60 410CC AMP
27MF-60 485CC AMP, 27FMF-60 4A88
485CC AMP, 73Mf·60 480CC AMP, TiicH"
llMITlD tO-OAY WAHANTY
l-'94 90 Doy W0<ron!y "" lo"9ry II ~ looMe ouvn ..... bo.,..., .... -hold 0 thotp . -..... -, • ..,,... r.ploce ~ .... ol
.......
l SOil Imperial e (a1a)MT .. IM1 ........ ,,....
24510 Alida ftlcwy. • tll .. 171 °' •• 1100 N. Tuttin • n1-=--
••• ll•1 10403Mognolia Aw.•~ •n .........
2604 S. Bristol St. e 7M-1GI ........
1302 E. 17th St.• HI 1111 .............
... -.........
r-------------
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oe~ember 23. 1981 '
4(_ > .
NIA fttTal .. ClC*l'tlaNCI
PedMcot. ... W L
11 1 ...
IS ' IC 10
14 II
• 11
..._Oh ..
Pct. •• ,,. -.. , ,
. .it • ·*)
·* "" K l 12111
.... An ... 0..Wer
"-lien
KallMtClty
Uteft .....
" •. '67 -IJ IJ .......
II t• .407 .....
10 IS .400 alll
10 IS * W. • tt m 11.,., aUTa ... Cle*Plae .. CI ....... .,....,.
~........ JI j ... 10. .... ,.... 12 1J
........... •1s .... ~ ,,.
~ot.--
17 I
IS II
12 u
II U
10 IS s 11
T_.f'I~
........,, .......... 1 ..
.._ ••• C ...... Mcl116 ........ ., .. , ...... .
Plll•••tde 111, -Yon Iii
It-City 106, MllW-.. 101
Clll< ... tt, W .... J ...... 90 .,..,....,..,o.i ... ..
.,,...,,... 111, ..__ 109
T ........ ~ N-.,._ .. _,,_y
K-CltyetC9WIMcl Oet...etato.n,,...
~SW..•1"'9eftl• Ut.-eitSNft)e
Sen Al!lllflloat S-D .....
---·'•' .... ·-I
.J1S -.m Ill'> ....,_
J11 ,.,., '" . .42J 61'>
-1 1'2 ,,....
Laktr1124, Trell Blaze,. 110
LM ~•us -J-20. w u-.. ,.,
·-•. ~r 21l, NI-. 11, R.ml>la t, M<Kan11e 0, ~-, .. , •. Jorde11 10. TtlUlla: S6 1M! 12A.
"aTUUllD -Natl 14, v.,-.,.,. I.
T...,._ 12, PUSOfl 20, R-II, Gross I,
VelefttlM II, Wa,,,,.ntlOn •. Ku,.,,.rt J,
LMftp 4, ~ o. Touts • l•t! ne. 1c-1rro-......
Let A....... >3 n JI JI -12•
l'wt .. nd >• JO JD ,. -110
Feu ... eu1 --Total '°"'' -1..01 ........ IS, "°'11 .... II. T«lwol -14att. A -it.-.. COLLE OE
.-CAA LHdera
SCOtllMO
0 ,0 n IP AVG
...... UClrvlflt • IOI " Jn l0.2 o,...,-.,.....,. IMcn su '° u tU no Wal*•, U OI PecKk 1 SI CS 147 21.0
..... Cal SI. Fulle""" t S2 SJ m 20.1
Mc .... ~.s..J-Sl 1 .. 21 "' 17.0 H'911ifts, Fl'WIOSI. 1 CS U llS t•.c
llnl,._, UC lrvlna ' .. 11 147 16.l
A'*"-',UC
SM .. ..,_. I » 14 IJO IU
......... L.Oftlleec:llSt .. ! U U n 10
~. lAfle lead\ St. I !I II llJ 14. I
OTMlaLIADllS a-.-.f111: M1t9H CUCll. tJ 1 hg..,
A-·-(UCSB>. u .o; McNeely (SJSI,
11.1. ~liltcl 0.1 Pt«--:""-IUCIJ.
71.t <1•1•1; --(UCO IO.I (-1; Mc~ IUCll M.7 U0.751. Free T-
~c--: .....,_. (UOPI, .... I 11•171;
..... CUOPI l5J Cl•tll. Hlelln• IFSUl.
.. , Cu.al.~. W-ICSP:I, 1.6 ~;
....._., CCMJLBI, U ; M<CM1hy IUCS81
4.t ; M<DINltl (UCll U .
TIAM l.IADaH
korlfte: 1. UC lrYlnt, M.7 h(I, 1 CSU
L.efll lleMh, 714. Oefolftw: I. F,._ S\MI,
•·• •• .. ; J. S.. J-St.a ... Sl.J. 0-r~ -J.
Cal t4ft ~ul-. .._O; 4 UC 1 ... 1ne, .. .l;
1. ctu ~ a..cn.1u . Scorll\O Mar'Qll\.. 1.
UC ''"""· + IJA; 2. F.-St.ale, + 11.t .s. ctu "-11e«11 •• 1.J. R~ a11er91,.,
1. DC trvlN, + 11.J; 2. 591> J-Sia .. ,+'-•·
l'r" Ti.-~= 1. Pa<lfk, n ..
Cl ... ISJI; 1. F'""9> St.ate, 70.J 17>-llMI.
, .... Goel P,.•·centetit (OffMWI I. UC .,,, ... '2.• <m~1'1; 1. Fr-Stai.. SIU
CIJl·m l.
1 .. ....
NAIA top 20
J. Oii ........ Ovtsti.n >.~,H.C.
._._,, .. L1"cotllll. T-. s. w 1ec:..w.-E .. c1a1re
'-AleiMfNSlllW
7. k_,.., sia. ..... a. ...,._ .a..stin, T111 ..
t.~.T-.
lt. •n-C011191 11.t .c .. ..,,_..,
11. .._..N_. Okie.
II. Cefttnl W_._,. ···"-·'""" IS. LI_..,., S.C
''· G.·lc:W.,woAcr-n 17. Xnler, Le.
ti. CNm!Nde, H-•11 lt.Hlll ..... ,Mkl\. a.St.T_,.,.,....,,H.Y
M ..
, .. I ,.,
t-1 lU
10.1 m ., ..
•l u. '-J ,.
H m
·~ 157 10·1 ...
/.I Ill
10.J "' .. J t7
lo.J ..
1•1 13
10.0 '5 .. , ..
.. I '2 .. , " 14-0 '°
COMMUNITV COLLEGE
Cttrue 75, Ofanee CoHt 13
CITIUt 'ell• 10, •an.er 12, -e-• M. N..,._.,... >,It .... t ......... 4 Tetal• 1' ..... ,.
OIA .... C04tT -...... , '1, auey I.
G ICfOl>ftfeldt I, Calf\o\111 1, TIMIMaa I,
Mar-111. T.C .. •: tt J.IJ u
Halftime: CHrw, CC>-2t.
Tolel ...... Cllrv• 17, °'-COHI , ...
HfOH SCHOOL
Ltk•wood 52, Oc••n View 47
OCIAN VllW -OeBrov ... r 10, Warner 12, Aftl~Ot 2, UMVllCh II, Carl'°" I.
J""'9 • TolAll• 14 l._U Cl
LAltlWOOD -Murpny IJ, Pop• •.
Corll•ll IJ, l ••r•n<• I I, Nl•ll•ll •
Wllllam'°" 1, Rowm.., 1 Dlaon 1 T0teh
u1-1ou.
k•••YOWrten
DtHn V,..., • 11 11 !0--.7
L.ai..•w-14 13 14 t -U
Total louh 0<•.., View IJ, Lauw-11,
Foul<td OU1 W•rna• (()( .. ,. View I
E1t1ncl1 54, B HIC (LV) 37 '
ISTANCIA -l<r•lu S, G•rclner 7,
M•Ydol• IS, Mkll-•• Tiii IJ, Pl11U11<1y J,
M<C•lllll •. l"or!Mln 1 lOlll•" ll~U SA
IASIC -CM• 5, Cr..,,_ 4, May•r !, O'Ne•I
1 HelntJ I, Newton c, Kline t, Newt°" 1,
Vlft.,al I. Totitli· 16S.ll JI. Sc-"' o..enen E\lancta IS u a 1._,.
B11lc • 13 s 10-JI
Tol•I toult Eslaftct• u , Bute ••.
TecnnlU I> G•rdner <E>lancl•I. 8 .. lc coach
COLLEGE WOMEN
UCI 71, E. W11hlngton 64
IAITllM WASMINOTO.. -Com•too I,
._ ... •. 14-12. v .. 11"'9r "· l.-tt,
ltarslellltr S, Massie 1. V-r l. Tol•l1. ,.
12·14 ...
UC llVINe -Hamill°" It, Aandell 4,
l -•• 22, 111uc ... -. •. lall•r J, Jon11_, !,
Sim-It, ~I J Tote" Jl tMa 11
Hall11ma. ,..II.
To'-1 loub: E.st.,.., WathlftO'°" 9', UC
INlll<I U .
HIGH SCHOOL WOMEN
MIHlon Vl•Jo 45. Htn. BHch 37
MIU!Otl VIEJO -Harn '· Mael'9-I, Roflrlo 10. Blum I. Smlll\ 10, C"ue>lk 1
TOCell: 17 IHI 45.
HUNTINGTON elACH -C.,r !,
Cordova 10, T-•. Meftdou e. BuOeh
t, Clln--rd2. Total• "S·Ul7 Sc-.,, o-.-n
Minion VleJo t It U 10---0
Hullllft9'0n I •Kii 10 U • t--11
Tol•I foul>: Minion Viejo 14, HunllnQlon
Baecl\11.
Edlaon 5!1, Cypre11 Q
•DISON -IC""*• S, H-6, Trepl 1, T .,. .... le, OenHtyer 1•, l lttMr 2, ucntrona
2. Mel11nanft •· Totab : U 1~16 St.
CYPl•SS -Hollmaft J, Elwood !,
Swens-S, J__, 10, T-11. Godtly 1.
Melldora 1 Totals 11 14·1' ..
Sc-"' o....-. Edl\Oft 11 9' 17 t -ff
Cyprus IJ II 11 •-49
Total touh Edb"" 1', Cyprus 1'; Foulod
owl DanH•Y" IEd llonl, Swenson
ICYC>AUl, T-ICyp19ul
Marin• &o. El Toro 42
MAllNA -Smellwood o. LOl\lf ••
Howard 19, An»lrong 6, Corbell U, Loy• •.
H.,n•ndu l . .llnclenon •. Btllamy O,
Alllm•n o. s.ncnei D. Totals JI •5 tO
11. TOIO -Earley 0, DeftfthOft O.
Me,....aly 0, Herrl• 0, Ir ... o •• .., .. , • •
-Giii I, 8el .. y O. HO~ Jt. Carla-J,
Tote IS. JO J4 o .
Sc-• ., Qloerten
Marlfta 11 II 10 1)--t()
El l oro 10 1 10 U--42
Total lout\ Marin.•. El Toro!
Los A11,,.oa
TUl$0AY'S llSULn ,.,. .. ....,...._,.,_. ........... ,
'""RACE. 400yarcn.
StrawvlftNtl IMltdwlll J ID 2,.0 2.20
l.a;ty S...... (Cenloal l.10 JM
Rem ~ IOWwr J.JO
Alto raced Jo,,_ Jay. S9or'llftil kip,
Quarter Mahal, $9ortlno Oe<ll, lllng Of
Kerry, TOCel P,.rlonnance
Time: 20.V. J2 EX ACTA 11-6) paid Ul.IO
S•COND RACtl. 4 ·-Ima 1.UClo:yColll (OelomOel 5.00 , ... uo
Plunder• l"la'11 (Frrt 14.40 S.00
You Knowwt1olM1tcne11> J.IO
Also raced: Bk . ...WMlel lar, lot> v .. "'°°"· ~. J IOWw J°""· Fwll TllT>e Cool, F.-VJ -.• Fk, .. p_..1e
Tim•· 20.'2
TNllD RACE. llO ya rds
G•l' Helh•e Too lertl 4 .0 J.00 UO
Thrlll of Victory 11..t<keyl l .20 J,.0
P190VG«>le (W¥CIJ 11 • .0 AllO ,_ "'11.o Sia, Fancy Son C°"'"".
Toppers lug, My Peper Cna s., OulO
S< rfffl, Pr...,.,..., Polky, Vote
Time. 11.11.
U lllACTA (Ml peld $1l . .O
'0VITH•ACE.400yann
Ca ll Me 8""w 18ercll U .0 7 10 !.00 w--.. Run (Wanll 1,00 4.61
Saini C_, ( Har11 c.e
Also raced Lii Ranc:ll Haftd, 11\dlan war
Dencer. I Tnlrlk I Cen, Cracker J«k lo•,
DIO• Rknn, Tlfty Be llMI. 119 Sllol A•y
lime; 20.AO u IXACTA c•n paid $111.40.
What colleges earn from
bowl game sales
19111
....... lad ~
I HI /H I
Ft'-I yaar
Nole Eeon team 119 .. $200,000 0< 37 S 119< cent ol groaa. ~., ,, g1-.
'-t_O.-._ --
""" IACtf.400ord1. El Ray Burne• (Hartl '40 J .o J . .O
Es Es Te ( l..aOeyl J.20 J .0
Klplys SM1lo ICMOolal 1.00
AllO recee1· Sir Fllrtlft Aroo.ncl, l •1-lo
P•PP•. Miu Euy TudOr. Anot.ner Allon
8"11. Fr-. Miu En~. Rl9'1t Pr-Time: 10:03.
12 11XACTA144) paid SIJ.IO .
SIXTH I ACI !'°Y'""''·
T lo Your Hal <T-tl wnt•ller Strip 1 Oittonm.1
Euy Bee IBardl
•IO l .40 J.00
J.00 J.JO ....
A"o rac•d HUIWlllt Ne•s. Su-n
T"°"9111, Aftdv Bu•. Beau s.t.reur, T •lo.• II
o" Home
Tim• VU
SEVENTH RACI. "° yara.
Heels Rock..-t <C,..•etl 11 ao 1' . .0 7.JO
Mia Dec-a C,.et.Ural JS.Ill I M
l ac1r Wl11• < Fry<Nvl t .20
Also recacl. Tiie AUNlll\ ltlnel, Jal Mist
Cr"-· Miu WranglH .Jfl. Belle OUJ, 0..
8rl9lll Chick, l aktt ~ 1.-.
Time· 11.1'
SJ EXACTA (•7> paid '110.IO
'2 PICI( SIX l/.7.._1-41 paid U ,JnM
wlln .. ...., •lnnlno lk -m <tl• nontsl U
Pin Sia ~OMOl•1lorl paid UJ . .O wltn I'°
w lftnlng lklle1> lllYt l\orWtl
llOHTH RACe. JlO yards.
1-ltlluel(TrMsurel IJIO 7 . .0 7.AO
Gone Go Ean t WardJ c,ao • oo ~ltefl' Jet I Peull,..1 • .0
AIM> r«eel Rec-um B«-J«-. Eay
lllalMU.,..., 1(-on KM!Mng On, S..rt King,
My Spicy "'-"· Flv"'9 PHMm , Wing II Time. 17.,,
tt IXACTA Ck > peld $14 .0
NINTH IACtf.JlOorCH
Fin•• Diie IH••ll 14 .0 6 00 • 00
DHtrl JOl<er IMllChelll c 10 l .IO
T lny Cry'1al <Treasure> u .ao
Also •«eel. HeY•d• Oil. Rocket" .. "
l-•-. GGllkaelavlclcoJ1, Mr Erv Twl1l. Cllkhlet, RatMcl A-11
Time: lt.».
$J IXACTA ( .. I paid 167 . .0
Alltn<Mnce· • ....
Hone ~!J standl119• ( Dec. 211
M<Carr°" Plncay
CorClero
~ ....
0.1-ua'l't
~ Mlt llo<e
A""1UU<WI
Vala-I
H•wley
Whllll .........
M<A11ally
Fr en-el ........
C.mpo
F Marllll
0.9-ls s .. ......,.
All-
J lllartlft
---'" ---US6 311 145 SI, ltl ...
1,47• 1" J7' 7,U7.5M
l,S71 "" U1 7,otll.fll
tiJ 1st tU 6,027.-
1,.111 2.u J1' s.m .-.
1,lS! Jl1 I.. s.m,1•
, ... 1'° JO S,,.7,.112
1.2» 1'5 ,.. s. '"·"" l,UI 1n II• s,1 ... •
l,l!il 106 1$1 4.ISl,152
TIAtM••• s_, __ __
170 71 "' u.-.-. ... ,. .. J,715,lft
S9f 111 101 2,9'2,QIU '°' ., 11 u•. * '°' .. '7 J,4SI ,0.1 IJ I Uc 114 2..lJt-"' ... 12.S .. 2.0Jt.OSC
171 ,. • l,'56,)ta
.. } 201 lff 1,711, ..
301 fl U 1,709.U c
Collt tret rtlUltl
LAOUllA eeACH MIN'S CLUe
C•t._s..~Wtc--1
L--T--: Fl'9flt A -I. lllel Ernail Sc~ (f!-1~1 -FrMk Ro.I
CU ·l,._..l. Flf9nt 8 -I J-Moir-
( .. · 11-611; FllQlll c 1 Wall Hye
t•to-MI; FllQIW D -I Wal'lll Smith
<"-J>-IOI; FllQhl E -t Elllott llftOft (t01·l2-1
Hfflh achool AU...IOU~ COAST 1.IAOUI
~T-~ lla<al~ -Oar> llan<ll (LetvM Hiii•>
J•O Kevnler-lc (Mlu lon Vlelol. Jenn
Nl<O•lcl (\..19Un8 Hlllsl; T•OIH -Jenn
M<Me'-(Mission Vlejol. CNl<ll Radman
IMIUI"" V .. Jo). c. ... nb RIO Olter111m
CCaplUr•ftO Va lley>. Tolly C.l•mbo,..
IMIUlon Viejo>. Canter -Eel VaM1uer co .... Hlllsl: QuarteflMCk Burt C•ll
CCet>lslr-Vitlleyl ; RUNllllQ IMKks -T°"y
lell CCac>l•lr.,.o Valley), K"'ln Beres (NllUI"" VleJol; !ticker -L.arry Scllr-
(MIUIOfl V .. Jol
Otleftll.,. Pl•~ Of tna Y•ar -TO<IY Bell
CCapht.-Valley! ,.,..,, ___
llnemeft -Ch•I• Ganaoe11 (Mluloft Vlelol. F-* S-•v• <c.l•lreno \/allay I,
ltoln Ki.tty IMfu lon Viejo). Eftd• eftd
llfttll•Cktr• -I rock Koren I Mouton
VleJol, GMroe 110 .. ,.t>eum ICapl~lr
V•ll•yl, Damon llerrvf\111 11..aouM Baec:l\I,
Miit• Holli• CMlulon Vlelt>I; Becki -Jttt
Holmes (Mlulon Vl•jO), Sam Ftncll
<Ceplltral\O Vallo>, Reggie Pendlt lOft
IC•plslrano Valley). D•t1 Dema rcnt
<Minion v•>o•
O.lentlw P1ay•r Of '"" Vt•• -Chr" Ga negen CMll<Slon Viejo>.
Player Of 1ne Yeer -Chril G•ll-n
(MIUIOI\ Vlelo>
*-T•-Oftw-Re<al¥en Scol1 _,.,. ICac>tstr-
Vallty J, K~I" M<Ottneft 11._... Baecl\I,
Tackl .. -Bretl OIMer !Laguna Hlll•I.
F-r•n-Jac<IP~• (Captst•ano V•lleyl
Guards -Rk k Gerard (Ceplslr-ValltYI,
Sharon -to.N Hlllsl. Center -Aoo
Ao .. C~ '1111\l Ouarle<IMO -8111
M<V1tar (UoQufta Hiii\). RUNllllO IMKlr.• -
Cll•rley Browft IMlulot1 Viejo), John
C•rroll (Mlulon Vle)OI, Mike AOC>lllO (Saft
Clemeftlal.
~T.-0.....
line,,,.,, ---C.-V IS.ft Cle-tl,
Bruce W•>MuP ll.•Oufta Beecn1. St•"• Wl11t•rletcl !Minton Vle jol. Eftds •ftd
LIMIMKken -0.w HaNls (0.M '1111•>,
Jell Ollft (Mlulon Vlelol . Maril lleww
ILaQufta Hiii$), Welt 0.C..Wt ICaplstr-
V•lltyl; l•<lu -Jah11 Weher IS." Cl•menle), Eel Tnllk ... IL•OUft• '1111\),
ltellll Carpe,.ler CMlu lon Vl•lo>. Jim
Wllllem-. (MIMlon V .. jo}.
O..p ••• fl1hlng N•WPOttT (Art's ......... , JO 41\0le<l
B l>•u. 11 mec•erel. I """ ''"'· 1 ~ t>au
DAMA WMAR~ 47 .....,lert l IMss I
-llo, 1'mecll81'el. •rock c.od
LONG elACH l .. lme11t Pieri It
•no••" 111 roo <OCI <°"""'' Wlllrtl 11 angler•. lJ calico l>.tn , II ,.,.d «>au . t
f\allllul, •rock 11111, .o mackerel
RIDONDO Tl_ .. ,. 1' IMrracuda, 2
llt19 COCI,. l>aH. ICO <o<ll Cod,,. IMrracuda,
ltcow coo.
Thta week'• trout plant•
11vea110. -,.,, .. R•M'"°''
UM 01100 OM<>1 Pond. Saft Vk'"w ............
SAN •llMAIDIMO -Glen Ht•" P-~lle.
KllN -Hart P-L..alle, Item Rlwt
(Borell ,._...,.. to o.mocret Dam. KA3
Powe......,.to1..e11a1..a.11a1
TULAll -It.,.,. Rl.,.r I Fain•-Dem lo
ltR) P---. J..._le Ir~ to
F•ln .. wOwnl.
NHL
CAMPelLLCO..,talNCI
··-"°" v lW>COll•I<
Ca11ary
Kl1t9t
Color-
MlftMwte
Cnk eto
SI L4"11•
WIMl1N9
Toronto
o.t...it
1""'99 DMt•
W L T 01' OA ....
tt I • -1.0 to I) I) I t>I UO J3
U 1$ T 1)1 IU JI
11 " , I,. t.. ,.
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l at Miami, l'ie.I
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Frailer encl George Siivey, lo 1nc1r •<OUllftO
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'upiervltor,etfe<Uv~M•r<f\,
SOCCI•
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NIEMPHIS AMEAICA14S -AMounce<I
tnat BOb Ryan •ftd Cnarlo S Kelley
pure na"d COf'ttrolllno ownu\l\lp ot "'"
trenc:n1 ..
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us DIVING 14amed load Smlln
ntcu11ve director Of IM nali°"•I go.,...n1n9 _, 01 •mo""' 411¥1"0
College basketball
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clallffled
Hs.C.11
'42·5611
*
WE'RE DYNAMITE
Presenting our Dynamite 50%
Discount on ALL Mexican Combo's.
(Enchilada's. Taco's. Tostada's and Tamale's) From 3.-6
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Brunch 10:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.
3300 W. Poclflc Coa1.f Hwy.
Newport hoc•, CA
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Rkll-etUSC
•k•et"-'cl"' Sprt,. ,,.,_at Cal scate Full.non
C .... •eitUSF
l'rMM St. et UC Davis
Mon~ St. et IV-II ---US I U llt At''-
14--et°"°'""" St.
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TOUINA.MINTS ,,.,...,_,
AM~ w llllf>olt"'" oi.1-..
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UCI wins;
Edison
gains finals
The UC Irvine women's
baskelbull ttium broke from a
halftime tic und breeied to a
78·64 victory over Eastern
W ashi ngton t o clai m the
consolation c hampionship of the
Anteaters' own tournament.
In moving its overall record to
4 8, UCI was led by Dorothy
Lewis who had 22 points and
nine rebounds, and Estancia
High product Vi cki Simpson who
added 19 points.
On the high school level,
uttenlion was focused on the
Cypr ess Tournament. In
Tuesday's action·
Edlaon 59, Cypress 48
The Chargers qualified for a
chance at the title by disposing
of host Cypress. Edison will
meet Mission Vie10 rn the 8
o 'clock championship lilt this
evening.
·• 1t wasn't one or our better
efforts but maybe 1t was
because the kids were a little
tired," said Edison Coach Dave
White of Tuesday's win
··Mis sion Viejo has some
really good outside shooting.
We're going to have to crash the
boards because rebounding may
be a key against them · ·
Tina Denlleyer and Kim
Tanabe each scored 14 points
while Lisa Houk gave the
Chargers a lift with eight
rebounds and seven ass ists
Edison is 6·1 .
MY 45, Htn. Beach 37
M iss1on V1 eJo s tayed un
defeated 18·01 while handing the
Oilers their third loss in seven
games .
Huntington Beach will play
Cypress for third place at 6
tonight. HB held a one point lead
al the half, "but we didn't gel
enough shots up in the second
half," ac cording to Oilers·
Coach Joanne Kellogg
.. They were playing pretty
good defense · ·
Marina 60, El Toro 42
The Vikings were scheduled to
pla y for fifth pla ce thi s
afternoon after putting away El
Toro
Senior center Yvette Howard
pulled down 20 rebounds to go
along with her 19 points . while
teammate Saody Corbett had 14
for Marina. 6·4
Townsend waived
l ~DI ANAPOl.IS I A P 1 -The
Indiana Pat'ers plat'ed guard
Raymond Townsend on waivers
Tuesday, a spokesman for the
National Rai.ketball Association
te am Setid
Townsend. who went t<> UCLA .
a \t•r:.igcd 2 7 points
FV YOUTH, 10,
RUNS TO TITLE
AMARLLLO, Texas Eddie
Lavelle. 10 of Fountain Valley,
captured the AAU US. Junior
Olympic national cross country
ch a mpionsh1p he re Saturday
and J ay Lightburne of Corona
del Mar finjs hed second.
Lavelle was timed in 11 :01.0
for the two .mile course with
Lightbume second in 11 . 24.0.
Both runners compete for the
Orange County Blue Angels track club.
OUTSTANDINC
VALUES!
./CHECK
THESE OUT!
5645
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by Bii Keane
"P J took the tags off all the boxes!"
BIG GEORGE by V1rg1I Partch (VIP) .
"This year I'm going to clean out the chimneys
before I go down them."
~.\R MADtKE by Brad Anderson DE~~IS THI: '9t:~ACt: Hank Ketchum
''Marmaduke! If I want your help wrapping
Christmas presents, I'll ask for it!"
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•NEXT TO POPCO<N. NOTH ING ~ELLS AS 6a:V
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by Harold Le Doux ,.--------
THE 8ARTENPER IN51~TED ON
:JEEINO HE!\: I (I CARO AND
t'Hf WENT~~l\:T OF BER j;;K'
HOW ABO UT
ANOT~EP. BUTTON
FOR POOKV
H£F\E?
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
NoT Yoo, DEAR--
I MEAN THf
OTffER ONE
Orange Coas1 DAILY PILOl/Wednesday, December 23 1981 Cl
PEANl'TS
I DON'T 6ELIE\E IT I
PROVE IT TO ME
---------.. ,
by Charles M Schulz
HE ATE T~EM
AL RE AC'~ -(I~ '',: }
SHOE
'll'AT INm'VIEW 'iO.I W
WITH illAT EXOTIC.~ w~ l'VRE. ~2'r' ~
t ................ '.
HEY---LOOK AT
THAT FLOOR
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by ~rn1e Bushmlller
AREN'T YOU ASHAMED OF
YOURSELF?
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by Gus Arriola
lh~'! h.;1~11 r
-1 ... • te /~.,,f c?\<!"'tJth '1.)
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b~ Tom Bat1u\..
~EVER 0J1')H A BAN()
DIREC. IQ? Nl(RRt) OWt')ltY A.'-
7&.JG [¥1(..., .'. I
BE.FGRE ..-~'"
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by Kevin Fagan
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by Lynn Johnston
t-\f. WA~T F\S
G~EMJS.
-'
,
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-
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, December 23, 1981
Tax changes detailed
Reduction in long-term capital gains benefits far-reaching
By LORJAN Pi."Tll'Y
Afte r considerable de bate and controversy,
lhe Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 was
passed by Congress and signed Into law by
President Reagan. The act contains massive tax
cuts for individuals and businesses. At the heart of
this far-reachlna leglslaUon Is the premise that
prior levels of taxation were a major Impediment
to economic progress. Tbe next several articles
wlU focus on the changes which most impact
Investors.
In reviewing the area of capital gains, three
things remain the same. The amount of time a
security or other asset must be
held lo establish a long-term
capital gain is still a year and a
day. Also, the so-called "2-Cor-l
rule" sWI stands . It takes S2 or
long -term capit al losses to
offset $1 of ordinary income,
and capital losses can only be
deducted against a m aximum
of $3,000 or ordinary income per
year. Finally, as in the past, 60
percent of net long-te rm capital ~nu
gains are excluded from taxable income. Forty
pe rcent of any long-term capital gain remains
subject to regula r income tax.
Now for the diffe rences between old and new
laws. Under the previous law. a maximum ta x
r ate ot 50 percent generally applied to earned
income -wages. bonuses, commissions, fees and
the like -but the maximum tax on investment
Uicome such as interest, dividends and short·lerm
capital eains could have ranged as high as 70
percent. Starting J an . 1, 1982, the top rate on
unearned income or investment income drops to 50
a·c 11111111
National Education Corp. of Newport Beach
has s igned an agreement in principle to acquire
Temporaries Inc. of Washington, D.C..:.
Last year, t he te mporary help company had
re venues in excess of $35 million, with 27 offi ces
around the country. No purchase pr ice was
d isclosed, but H . David Bright, National
Education's president, said under terms of the
agreement there will be no dilution in National
Education earnings per share. The acquisition is
expected to be completed early next year . •
The board of trustees of Wespac IDvestors
Trust of Tustin has voted to raise the monthly cash
distribution paid by the trust to sha reholders from
0.772 cents to 0.085 cents a share. This represents
an annualized rate of return of 10.2 percent, of
which approximately 85 percent is effectively
s heltered from c urrent ordinary taxation,
according to Marion H. Deckard, president of the
trus t. The in c r eased distri bution i s to
sh areholders of record on Dec. 28, 1981 and
payable on J an . 15. 1982. •
The board of directors and James Davia,
president and chief executive officer ot Huntington
Nation al Ba nk <in organization>. Huntington
Beach, has announced the bank has commenced
its initial offering of 350,000 shares or its common
stock. The price is $10 a share. Persons interested
in o btaining shares are asked to contact the
orgaruzational office at 840-1354 or send a letter
The AllJBnce to Save Energy nas prepared a
brochure mat contains 12 simple. inexpensive
measures ro take which can cur down your
hOme 911$f{l)' use Oy 25% That in tum
can cut down the amount ol money you "8Y
fOf hOme enetgy (For example Did you know
mar electncat outlets "lea/( heat' The orocnure
writ tell you how 10 prevent 11 and save )
The brOChure Wiii also t~t you about easy
things to do to Cll1mneys and flues. ro pipes
and aucts. to shower heads. to electncat out-
lets.. to washmg machines to doors and win-
dows. to watBf Nar8'S Do them all and cur
'fO(Jf ~y use by 25% The brochum
percent, so a ll income regardless of the source wlli
be taxed ut no more than 50 percent.
The lower maximum rate on unearned income
e h m In ates a big dislncenllve to lnvei tment
because Investors will no tonier be penallied to
the e xtent their Incomes are derived ' from
investment rather than employment.
In addition, it has the very positlve effect or
reducing the top tax rate on Iona-term capital
gains to 20 percent from 28 percent. The 20 percent
is arrived at because 40 percent of a loo•·term
capital gain is taxable at regular rates of no more
than 50 percent. Tha t may be a bullis h
development for growth stocks in particular and
all equities In general. Investors would be less
Inclined to remain locked into their investments
and more willing to take profits and shift into
other investments.
The magnitude of th e reduction in long-term
capitaJ gains taxes Is best demonstrated by an
example. Under the old law, if you were a top
bracket investor and had a net long-term capital
gain for the year of $50,000, you would have owed a
tax ot 28 percent or $14,000 on the gain. Now, under
the new law your tax drops to 20 percent of $50,000
or $10,000, a tax savings of $4,000.
So that investors would not be discouraged
from selling capital assets throughout 1981 and
missing potential ta x-s avings, the maximum 20
pe r cent rate on long-term capital gains has
applied to all sales and exchanges made after
June 9, 1981. Thus anyone selling stock between
June 9 and J an. 1, 1982 will pay a tax of no more
than 20 percent on long-term capital gains.
( Lorion Petry i8 an accoimt e:recuti~ at tM Smtta
Ana office of Merrill Lynch Pince, Fenner & Smith.)
request ing a n o ffe r in g circular and s tock
subscripUon application to Huntington National
Bank (in organization), P .0 Box 213<>; Huntington
Beach, 92647. •
For the year ended Sept. 30, 1981, San
Clemente -based Stang Hydrotllca lac. reported net
Income of $1 4 million on reve.nues of $27.8 million,
compared with net income of $1.3 million on
revenues of $23.3 million for the same period in
1980. Per share earnings amounted to $1.87 for
fi scal 1981 based upon a weighted average or
772.937 outstanding shares. Jn fiscal 1980 the
company earned $1.82 a s hare with 765,120 shares
outst anding.
•
Fluor Ocean Services Ltd. an London has oeen
a warded a contract by the Norwegian State Oil Co.
to provide services for a gas.gathering system to
be installed in the Norwegian sector of the North
Sea. Statoil will act as operator for the St.atpipe
group of oil companies. The project ts valued at
approximately '3 billion. Value of Fluor's services
is estimated to be in excess or StOO million .
Ce 1142-5171.
Put a few word•
to work for ou.
contains accurate d1t1grams and easy to
fOltow dlfections
Take our a<:Mce Send for our free orochure.
"The 25% Solution .. Ir can save you plenty
olmoney
TM AlllMC9 to Saw. fttfHf1
8or51'200, w .. Noglfon, D.C. 20031
~ese "*111me f04Jf e.'1UrQ)•·MWJg. ll'IMO)'·WWIQ l>IOC/lvre
NAME
CITY srArc
AHE ALLIANCI TO SAVE ENEflQY
• Ap#I(~~ '7tm ltlts ~ M'tdtneA~Counl:il
•
('
7 7 77922 7 7 7 S?s §SQQS a
onaumer-----
Prlce
Index
280•
275·
270·
s·
290•
Source: 0.pt. of Labor •
PRICES UP Chart depicts
0 .5 percent i ncrease i n
Consumer Price Index for
Novem ber com pared t o
mon t h ly increases f rom
December 1980.
European trade
barriers flayed
WAS HI NGT ON <AP>
Federal orficials have agreed to
i n vest igat e c h arges b y
California peach, pear and
r ais in growers that Europea n
trade barrie rs are disrupting
U.S. exports.
U.S. Trade Representative
William E . Brock told a Senate
s ubcommittee the Office of
Spe cial Trade has requested
cons ultation with officials of the
Eu ro p ea n Eco n o mi c
Community
OVER THE COUNTER
·MUTUAL FUND
Consumer prices
up 15.1% in OC • Consumer prices In populoua
O r a nae a nd Loa A n1el e11
counties rose by a sliaht 0.2
percent durlng Novem ber as the
intlatlon ra te continued t.o skid,
the Labor Department reported.
"It appears the Inflation rate
has slowed markedly," Fajth
HeinemaM, head or the Labor
Department's Bureau of La bor
Statistics office in Los Angeles,
said Tuesday. "The unfortunate
thing is that we are fairly well
into a recession, but that seems
t he p rice we have to pay to stop
lnClatlon."
For the 12 months. November
1980 to November 1981, t he
two-county Inflation rate stood
at 10.3 percent, s he said.
She ascribed the low monthly
l nfl 3tlOn rate largely to food
prices, which decreHed by 0.4
percent. and housing prlcet1,
which slipped by 0.2 percent
because home p ri ces a nd
mortguge rate11 dropped because
of the stagnating real es tate
market.
In Orange County, where
price11 are reported b1monLbly,
the Labor Department said t.he
Consumer Price Index rose by
2.4 percent In October and
November and 15 I percent for
lhe year.
Ms. Heinemann said the San
Otego area has not shown a
mod erating of housing costs .
a lthough rood prices dipped
slightly for the first time in
three years.
Overcharge claims
said exaggerated
WAS HI NGTON CAP > -
Although the government has
accused oil companies of billions
of dollars in overcharges, the
cases are being settled for about
15 cents on the dollar, an Energy
Department offi cial says.
Alleged amounts of pricing
vi o l a t io n s i n En e r gy
Depa rtment accusations against
oi l compa nies h ave been
"grossly inflated," according to
Rayburn HanzUk, head or the
d epart me n t 's Eco n omic
Regulatory Administration.
Some of that inflation, Hanzlik
said. came from government
audits which we re "not always
high quality. They didn't always
look al the right things."
The Energy Department has
NASO LISTINGS
accused t he 35 lar gest oil
companies of $14 ballion in
pricing violations s temming
from t he eight years t hat
domestic crude oil and rerined'
products we re under price
controls
Bu t d uring the past seven
y ears, Hanzlik sa id, t he
government has bee n agreeing
to out-of·courl s ettlem ent !'.
calling for about 15 percent of
the amount it alleged was
overcharged.
W h e n the audits were.
revie wed by governmen t
lawyers to dete rmine what
accusations could stand up in
court. the charges were reduced
substantially he said
,..,,.
8rn0
Ar.C<•PI Jelln vn Pnotron TUOl1 (Ofl\Plr Hlcote1 EmM wt
8"0el DIO<lk• HIT«h LlnCS.IHo Monaerm ProUnltd CHTc vn lfltrSy
AooH"" Ffnvrm wt Htll!'IEa H•r,,_e lnlr•lnd MtnStFn Aov..:Co
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·~
t.t New entry
for the racks
See If you con guess which ma•u.lne wou.ld be
likely to have the following articles:
The Secret of PlaclpU1&1a1 Clalldrea
Tbe Bet t Family Movlet ol ll8J
Meanest Man ID Mlqet Football
TIM-Tu-Potat Plan for College Ac~c•
How Muc.b TeloU.loD la Too Muell!
Fight Acne -and Wla
Secreu of Glvln1 aod ~ttU.1 More EmotlollaJ
Support
You know it's not Playboy Or Sporu JUustrated.
Or People. Or Cosmopolitan Or Esquire. You might
have guessed the Reader's Digest. It looks !Ute the
melange strved up by this pocketsize monthJy with a
U.S circulation or 18 million· solid, helpful, upbeat
stu!f
It's not but you're cl06e. All those articles have
appeared over the past four months in a new
magazine called Families. And Families is published
by the Readers Digest. It is, in fact, the first new
magazine published by the company since the Digest
itself made its debut nearly 60 years ago.
But if all these articles could have appeared in
the Digest, why start a new magatlne lo publish
them ? Wh at's different about Families' The Digest
people insist it is different.
First of aJI and there's no disputing this point
it's bigger, physically Families comes in the
standard 8"xll" format or other magaiines. This
makes it easier
on advertisers,
who don't have
to come up with
special sizes for
their ads
Secondly. the
arti cles an
Families are
MllTDI IOllDWITZ
geared toward the JOYS and problems of family J.ife,
whereas the Digest has a wider scope With Families.
the Digest is seeking to reach a younger audience.
people who are not so traditional. Here's the
difference in a nutshell . the Reader's Digest
might nm an article on how to have a good family
Chris tmas, but the December issue or Famllies
carried an articl~ on "Who Gets the Kads This
Christmas?" a guide for single parents and their
children
So Families will venture into areas the Digest
might be too timid to explore
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW VORKCAP) Fl,..1 Dow·J-•"'l' tor r-... Oo< 11 STOCtU °"911 Mtell Uw C.... Clll9 .10 Incl tn S3 111.11 •7 11 111 tt-I IC 10Tr<1 •n•IO -._Jl?JO t1'
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N£W YORK CAPI ~le\, l vn prtc•
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AMERICAN LEADERS
U~A~UJPP~~~ .. loll-lno llll '"°""' ti. "--vor11 ~loo Esctt•noe
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Oranoe Coatt DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, December 23. 1981
Smaller theaters maintain excellence over performing year
By TOM TITUS °' .. ..., .........
(TIU Cl the third m a ..,;,, ot ~w colum"'
r~ ttw vcar INI In tlwoln ol.ottg ,,.. Oronoe
Cooat.J
Parity In community theater. unlike the
National Football League, often is dlfflcult to
achieve alnce the lar1er and more establlabed
playhouses PoSsess the capabilities of mounUnc
more ambitious, elaborate productions than their
leaa-atnuent brethren.
Still, the smaller producing 1roups usually
come up with a "biggie" or two during the year,
and quite orten vault to the head of the class -a
point emphasized in 1980 when the San Clemente
Community Theater and
the Huntington Be ac h-,m--R-1-111-10---1. Playhous e s taged the
year's two best shows.
It's top 10 lime again -•-------
on the community front,
and this year's hit parade finds seven local
theaters included (compared to five in 1980). The
lrvine Community Theater hasn't made the li$t
since 1972, and won't so Iona as this columnist
retains a personal involvement.
In a year whic h produced more eligible
contenders than ever before (49 to last year's 47),
th e choices become keener and personal
appreciation orten is a deciding factor. Again,
there is a second 10 listed due to the quantity (and
quality) of the productions.
Without further ado, here are the top 10 shows
of 1981 from one critic's vantage point:
1. ''A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM,"
We stminster Community Theater, directed by Art
Winslow. A scintillating, sensoral staging of
Shakespeare's classic comedy with all technical
effects honed to perfection. Far and away the
cream of local community efforts.
Z. "THE HOT L BALTIMORE," Newport
Theater Arts Center, directed by Joan McGillls. A
superbly detailed "slice of life" comedy-drama
with the most effective ensemble s taging
imaginable. Rich in humanJty and immensely
believable.
3. "A LITTLE NIGHT MUSIC," Laguna
Moulton Playhouse, directed by Eileen Fishbach
and Douglas Rowe. Vocal excellence combined
with sophisticated staging in the year's most
m emorable musical.
4. 0 TEAHOUSE OF THE AUGUST MOON,"
Westminster Community Theater, directed by
Kent Johnson. An immaculate offering in all
respects, heightened by a superior stage ensemble
which overcame some difficult technical
COSUMHA
Cinema center
979 4141
STEVE MARTI N
in "Pennies
FROm Heaven"
starring
BERNADETTE PETERS
Iii! -l!tt. --............ ........ , .. ~ o...... --~
NOW PLAYING
El TORO MUlfTlllGTCMI IU~ GUiil
Saddleback cinema c..iedome
581 5880 848 0388 634 2553
challenaea.
5. "SHENANDOAH," Laguna Moulton
Playhouse, directed by Dou1las Rowe. A robuat
rendition or a "cut ot thousands" musical set In
Civil War Vlrtilnia. Its logistics alone were
staggering.
I . "A VIEW FROM THE aa1DGE," Mission
Viejo Playhouse. directed by Michael Blelitz.
Arthur Miller's taut, visceral drama of life on the
waterfront capsulized for a small stage and given
Increased power by its intimacy .
7 ... THE GREAT AMEllJCAN BACKSTAGE
MUS I CAL," Newpo rt Theater Arts Center,
directed by Eileen Flshbach. Energy was
abundant in this lighthearted spoof of Forties
musicals, one of the happiest events of the year
in community theater. • '
8. "ANOTHER PART OF THE FOREST,"
Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, directed by Pati
Tambellini. This "prequel" to "The LitUe Foxes"
is an ambitious, demanding play which received
splendid performances from a well-chosen cast.
I. "THE MIRACLE WORKER," Newport
Harbor Actors Theater, directed by Don Laffoon.
A touching, traumatic and true story, beautifuJly
depicted with the added authenticity of a real blind
girl playing ijelen Keller.
10. "MURDER IN THE MAGNOLIAS,"
Huntington Beach Playhouse, directed by John
Williams. A real "sleeper" in the top 10, this
double-edged satire of Tennessee Williams plays
was the year's funniest community theater show.
High marks for ingenuity and imagination.
Not far behind the pacesetters in realization of
production values were these shows, which made
up the second 10:
11. "Twelfth Night," Newport Harbor Actors
Theater, directed by Michael Lewis.
12. "Guys and Dolls," Huntington Beach
Playhouse, directed by Kent Johnson.
13. "Relatively Speaking," Laguna Moulton
Playhouse, directed by Eileen Fishbach.
14. "Grease," San Clemente Summer Theater,
directed by Bil Gekas.
15. "God 's Favorite," Newport Theater Arts
Center, directed by Kent Johnson.
16. "Separate Tables," Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse, directed by Pali Tambellini.
17. "Story Theater," Newport Harbor Actors
Theater , directed by Michael Lewis.
18. "Rashomon," Laguna Moulton Playhouse,
directed by Marthella Randall.
19. ''The Heir ess,'' Huntington Beach
Playhouse, directed by Phil de Barros.
20. "Wa it Until Dark," Mission Viejo
Playhouse, directed by Valerie Mcilroy.
UllMJ• COITA•U IUlllllllOft LA •NWIA
-°'"''"' &lwaro'\ C.-c.r.w wesa.ooa u ... Ida 011••"' tit NSO t1t ... , ~lOHOI ~119310
c:.IT&•U U. TIM .... l:.":"=::.I lfwri•llt-~.s-~ Or"'Otll..i
WELCOME TO THE GRAND OPENING
OF EDWARDS CINEMAS NEWEST ADDITION •••
ED1t' ~RDS SOUTH a»AST PIAZA TOWN (;INl'IZ CINEMAS • : IN CINEMA #2 •.. • • • • • • .. • • • .. • • • • .. .. • ... ... • ... • • • • • • • • • ... • • ... • ... • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Jt A \HAMtlUG t'.ll!•SMA"l l'llOOUCltOl'l•A ~IN SWA,,RO II(~
It CHEVY .,OiASE
• MOOERN PR08l.EMS • PAm D' AABANVIUE · MAlf'( KAV PlAC£ .. _ CO't'l1W&1MAv. '4U CMTlll • -IONiNEY ~Ol@NJ hecurove Ptodv<., ~s C KENNEY
f>rodvced by ALAN GREISMAN ond MICHAEL SHAMIEllG
.. Wl"•ll.., by KEN SHAPIRO & TOM SHEllOHMAN & AlfHUlt SEUEaS
Ot1e<'led by KlN SHAPI RO Mvtt< by DOMINIC FllONTllRt~ fllOI*-.... COU)ll •• Chulll• ~-· .. ·~ ............ ~ ...
IN.CINEMA #I •••
DAN
AYICROYD
Lock the doors ... here come the
NeigfiliQrs
A Comic-Nightmare
COLUMBIA PICTURES P~nt1
A JOHN G. AVILDSEN FILM OF
A ZANUCK/BROWN PRODUCTION
JOHN BELUSHI DAN AYKROYD
•NEtGHBORs•
c-.,.,,.,.CATHY MORIARTY KATHRYN WALKER
l .. cunwP,.,_,.fRVfNG PAUL LAZAR
°"'BERNIE BRrLLSTEIN M_.~ BILL CONTI ~yi..,LARRYCELBART
s...-4u,o..11w-~ THOMAS BERGER
""""-'""RICHARD D. ZANUCK°"" DAVID BROWN
CU•<i.d ~JOHN G~~~~~!'--·-·
OPENS C!BBISTMAS DAY!
edwards 801JTB COAST PLAZA
TOWN CENTER CINEMAS
ROYALTY -Clark Burs on and LaUonna
de Ba rros played the king and queen of the
fairies in .. A Mids ummer Night's Dream" at
t he Westminster Community Thl'al('t th•
top -r ated s how of 1981 in Orang•· 1 ·0.1-.1
community theater
........... ""' .......... <--····•u
..BEST PICTURE, BEST DIRECTOR •••
NOTllING COMES CLOSE."
-Jlllyron Jllleleel, LA READER
RED&IPGI At
12:30 4:30 8:30
No Eaonomv SIBtrv
No"-
~BFMlll HEAVEN IPGI 1:00 3:15 5:30
7:45 10:00
NEIGf90M IA)
12:00 2:00 4:00
6:00 B·OO 10:00 No P•~
AaSENCEOf' MAUCE IPGI 12· 15 2:455:15
7:45 10: 10
SHARICY"S MM:ltlNE IAI 12:30 3:00 5:30
8 :00 10:20
RAIOEM Of' ntE LOST ARK (PG) Al 12:00 2::1> 5:00 7::1> 9:56
No Economy SHtmg
John lkluthl
NEl811~1AI NIC9 l>fN"'t IRI
I BillMurr•y
ITR.UIRI Arthur IPG)
--=======:=-[ I Luit Valdez'
ZOOTaJtTIAI Boulevard Nifhts IAI
~" RA.IDEM Of' THE UST ARK IPGI a Tune a.nd1tt (,QI
MOVIE RATINGS
I JO • ) ·~
600 •8 •~·•0)0
GEORGE C. SCOTT
TIMOTHY HUTTON
TAPS l!Pl:!'!~~ •• "'•'t •I• • ,(ij
~----'~BUENA PARK ~ ORIVllN
l ....-9"'4.....,..w ••ll"Ott ·-.°". 82t 4070 '
& fOWAAOS
\'1 CINEMA Vl~JO .
.• .,,.o ..... ~ •'' .... ,I
4:Jl} '°"I
Chev'J has the ~ to make
this Holida'J Season the funniest ever!
A SHAMBERG GREI SMAN PRODUCTION· A KEN SHAP1RU 111 M
CHEVY CHASE ..
MODERN PROBLEMS
PATii D'ARBANVILLE·~RY KAY Pl.ACE BRIAN OOYlE·MUllRAY N(ll . Aflllll
-!DABNEY COt.fMANI E><ecuttve Producer OOUGLAS C KENNEY
Prod uced by ALAN GREISMAN and MICHAEL SHAMBERG
Writte n by KEN SHA PIRO & TOM SHEROHMAN & ARTHUR SELLERS
Directed bv KE N SHAPIRO MuslC by DO Ml"'IC FRONTIERE r-J-.
PO NIBTlll.-ma.mtt COLOR BV OElllXE<S>
---. • .., .,., ,._...., ... ," Cf .. h-'"• • • •
STAATS TOMORROW l
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/WednHday, December 23. 1981
Liberace grows up with Las Vegas
By aoe&•T •ACY __ .._ ....... ,...
LAS VEGAS, Nev. -ln l~ Buaay Slecel ran
lhla dual)' desert town and bad similar d•lPI on •
popular younc pianist at the Lut FronUer HoteJ.
Fate and a rival 1an1 Intervened to deliver
Liberace from an offer he didn't Ute but found
tou1h to retuse.
''I'm doing my show one nltht, back ln about
'41 and aa I'm walldn& tl\rouch the audience this
1uy grabs me by the arm and aays 'Hey, kid, J
want lo talk to you,' " Liberace recalled between
abows recenUy, bis patented grin creuln1 hla
face.
"I say, 'Hey, don't grab me,' Every lime I
come off this guy's grabbing me. After the show I
brushed tum off because 1 really didn't like It.''
Returning to bis room, Liberace called
security and asked them to take care of the
mysterious guest.
''Do you know who that is?,'' the security chief
replied. "That's Bugsy Siegel."
"Oh, geeze! ! ! " Liberace exclaimed.
Liberace placed a quick call to Maxine Lewis,
the entertainment director who had hired him. He
was told Siegel was waiting for him in the lobby.
"How do you mean that?" he replied.
A shaken Liberace walked to the lobby and
apologized to the powerful crime figure.
"That's all right, there are a lot or people who
don't know me," Siegel responded.
Siegel had just opened a posh new hotel-casino
called the Flamingo. It was everything the Last
.Frontier wasn't: waiters in tuxedos, ladies in
elegant gowns. The Last Frontier was cowboys
and Indians.
Siegel told Liberace he was Flaminio caliber
and called bis sal¥Y or Sl,500 a week peanuts.
Whil e being wi n e d and dined b y t h e
famous mob5ler Liberace grappled'for an out; he
was very happy al the Last Frontier. The hour
came 10 days later when Siegel was guMed down
in Beverly Hills, a victim of gang warfare.
Siegel wasn't Liberace's only identity
problem. He remembers another incident in the
early Last Frontier days.
.. Right over Uie audience was a little platform
where the light man climb5 up -very Mickey
Mouse, but it worked. This guy's sitting rig~l
under the lights at the rehearsal. He's got tennis
shoes on and looks like a stagehand so I go up and
start giving him my light cues.
·•'When I play a sort number give me blues,
pinks, magentas ,' 1 te ll him. 'When I play
something fast, bring up the lights and make it
JOHN BEWSHI
DANAYKROYO
Lock the doors ...
here come the
,~, l\Jeighbors
A Cornic-Nightm.an
DM.'f , ... 1:11,-, .. -.1-
.,,. .......
STILL STRONG -Liberace. who grew up
with the town of Las Vegas, is going strong at
62.
bright.' There wasn't much of a choice anyway.
"Ju.st then Maxine walks in and says, 'Oh,
didn't know you knew Howard Hughes!' '·
The two became fast friends.
''Every time be would see me be would say
·How are the lights?' • •
Identity problems dogged Liberace in those
early years. lo the late 1930s, at the age of 19, he
was to appear as a guest with the Chicago
Symphony but had a month's tour left with a
popular dance band. The two were not compaUble
in those days and the orchestra demanded that he
not use bis real name until after bis symphony
engagement.
Thus America's most popular pianist spent a
month touring the Midwest with a dance band,
saddled with the name Walter Busterkeys -the
product of some huckster's vivid imagination. The
name wouJd stick for some time, with the Liberace
billing follow ed by "The Former Walter
.. Buslerkeys."
ldenlilication is no problem today. At 62, he
commands $350,000 to $400 ,000 a week for
engagements in Las Vegas, Lake Tahoe and cities
across the country. He worked 36 weeks in 1981,
but is cutting back to 26 in 1982. Thal will include
16 weeks al the Las Vegas Hilton and Riviera in
his hometown. three weeks in Tahoe and the
remaining seven where he plans to "just kinda
pick my spots ...
I 11 t I'< t f ' I f 11 I .". ! 11 I
' •1,'t
.
MON. NITE -All SEATS •2.00
Two Italian Films
11Wif e"ll!tress ,.,
11How Funny
Can Sex Be",.,
. • I t~ . . l •• ' . • I... I '·" /1 '.
~
AU. llQt1S H:!IJIYID ' • •
• '"t..I::"' • ..
Ol7fllGfTO~IJ ~· n l'IUIAYJUNT l'ICTllllD
NOW PLAYING
°"'--···~ Newport llActi 644 0760
UWAMI
C:IMIUWUT
WestllWlster 891 3935
99 ........... c:ma ....
Mission Viljo 83HHO Or111g1 834·2553 ....... ~
Bru 990 4022 ... IY • ~ Wtsllnilstlr 891 ·3e93
.,PMilaACCe"IUPOlln9~8"~~·!!!!~~~~ ~·~..---.--~~~--......... ---....... ... --............. 1
ROLLOVER
GHOST
STORY
*BARGAIN MATINEES*
Monday thru Saturday
All Perform•nces before 5:00 PM
(Except Special Engagements and Holidays)
LA "'4o~A(JA "'4All Muooo 01 to1ec1on1
LA MIRADA WALK ·IN 994·2400
-C.~·-""'"* ''TA~I"-,-..,, .. .,.,...,.,_
'"""' ................ , .... "A8HNC£ M lllALIC«"" -···-·---
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALK ·IN ----· "SMAR KY .. MACHIN!!" "' --·-........... .,., ...... ,_
-c.~--~ "TAH"-·----•••
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WALK IN
F-oc\Jlly Al 0et Amo 213/6>4-9211
'"SUP£R FUZZ" -·~·-.,. "'SATURDAY TI4E 14111" ----
L.AGUNA
I --·----"AAIOUIS Of THE LOST ARK" .... ---·-.. -"NEIGHeOflS" "' ... t:a ........ te:M
-...-...
"$KARKEY'S MACfftNE" .,I •ut.••··"'-···
focull'f ol c ono .. wooo
213/531·9510
--·----"RAIDERS Of THE LOST UK" .... ., ...... ,._
\ . __ ..__ .. _ _,,
---··""-.. "*" ··auooY BUOOY" "' ,,___.. .............. ...
so. COAST WALk ·IN
South Coast H1woy
ot l<oodwoy
494-1514 --· "SHAIUCY"I MACHINE" "' __ ,,,,_ ... ,-..,,, ... ,,..-
..... '°'9a .... llWIX
"'ROLLOVOr 1111 _,,.._ _ .. , ____ ......
....... .._, o ... e 15 ~ ........ 6:00 ,,-.., , ..... -e~•5
IMPORTANT NOTICl! Ctut ORlN UNDER 12 JRU!
M11M1 , .. *""" Ill"' llKo 111 5 30. Sii s.. Moll 4 :30rlll
CN-'1 $OU11G • YOU!! Ml CNI MOIO IS 'IO\Jlll SrtNln
"' 110 .,. CN1 MOIO lllml Ollroo ACCOSOlll' POSITUI _....,Ill 1'1111-.E t•IU ~ -DI Oii All IWJC>
AN AHE I.._.
ANAHEIM DRIVl·IN
•••••OJ 91 Ol le mo" St
,, ............ Ml.4 .....
"'ABSENCE OF MAL.ICE"" CPGI -"'STIR CRAZY"' 1111
119·9150 Cllll " -
-.... -.---...... ---.---------,-· ...... ,id( ..... :utillcAr·~~-
··HfARTafEPS" IN! "BUOOY BUOOY'" "I
-"THE LAST ..mtEO COUPU ··THI .IEtK" llll IN A_,.ICA .. 1111
C:INt II $OUtOO C11tt f1 MlUllO
!u!"A ••O•
BUENA PARK 0111vf.IN
llncoln A•• Well OI '"°" 121-4070
81.. t ..._,A PAi.'l.
LINCOLN DRIVf IN
4, I• '.0 lo A
LA ~ABRA '"I'd '" '-•-•IMCll-............ 17MM2 -
•"""• r
-C.~·-~ ''TA~""' -"THE CANNONBAU. RUN" -
ne.-llo\a-lOlai.ne•ltU
"OHOIT ITI>ftY" 1111 -'"THE CHANOIEUNO" 1111 _, . ._...
"llHARKY'I MAC..NI" "' -.. THE GREAT SANTINI" -
------"HIA"'n.'"" ..
"TM1.-·· ..
Clllf ,. IOllllO ---·-A-""'*:J"I • flt
''CHL\~ DECTICTIW'' ...
ORANGE Olli\ I IN
Sonto AftO '....,
6 Stole C:ot1e99
551·7022 ......... "'"""""' MACll•' t11t -''THI_.,.....,,... .....
" MISSION (\J;ll\1 t N . .
--·-,---· .. ~-... -. ...,..,... ..• ---"&OOTIUIT"• -"1M1M ..
..... __ M6._
&':"" ..........
a •••__,S
l
Cle Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, December 23. 1981 ,.._____ .
\\lll'l ..,l>\'i
-EVBH-e:oo1e• ._... OHAM.le'S ANGELS
An H•convlct out lot r..,... 0119'Nladows eo..
i ·a budding tomanc9
TMA&UAE HUNT
TWSMUPPfTI
GUMt; Cleo Laine
• HAWAllAVf~
A wife takH evidence
appearing to llnk two mur·
<le<a In an anempt 10 trick
McGauan 1n10 ·~"'<t
• homicide cue tor wt11ch
,_ huaban<I was aonvlCI·
ad.
ISLAND CHRISTMAS -Actress/singer
Susan Anton is a mong guests on .. Jim
Nabors' Christmas in Ha waii " a t 8
tonight on KHJ C91.
8D IU81NE.88 REPORT
'1i) OtCK CAVETT
GUMt: Bishop Paul Moore
(R)
CJ) C8SHEWS t1Jl AllC NEWS
Q!NBCHEWS
0 MOVIE
"'11t 'h "A Challeng41 F0<
Robin Hood" ( 19681 Bame
Ingham, James Hayter
Robm Hood an<! his band
ot marry men M t out 10
dethrone a self-appointed
dictator who hllS setzed
~-lhesetll
t:a0 0 BUU.SEYE
ID WELCOME BACK,
KOTTER
Epstein helps Gabe and
Juti. move into a target
!.e_ar1mant
Ii) KCET HEWS8EA T
'1i) 8U81NESS REPORT
(J)Q!NEWS tIDJ BARNEY MILLER
Barney la reluctant to send
a young ollteef on the beat
wllh his seasoned squed 111' EMMET OTTER'S
JUG-BAND CHRISTMAS
Filly new Muppets are
1ntr0duced in a heart·
warming story about the
love between an otter
moth« and he< son
8:46 { Z) MOVIE
• • "Boardwalk ( 1979)
Ruth Gordon, LH Stras-
betg An Ol<I couple retuM
to leave the ne1ghb0<hood
they have spenl most ot
their trves In desptle urban
c11me an<I poor hv1ng c;on-
dltlona. 'PG'
7:00 1J CBS NEWS D N8CNEWS 8 HAPf'Y DAYS AGAIN D A8CNEWS 0 YOU ASKED FOR IT
ID M 'A'S'H
COi Pollet, Hawk•Y9. 8 J
Frank and Raoar get hope.
le$Sly 1011 on thetr way
beck from a medo<:.al meet· •no Q) JOKER'S WILD flil OVEREASY
Guest. jau s1nget Beny
Carte< O
'1i) MACNEIL / LEHRER
RfJ>Of'IT
(J) TIC TAC DOUGH
~ EHnRTAlNMEHT
TOHtGHT
Lawrence Welk dtscuMeS
hos plans tor the tuture
Q! THE MUPPETS
Guest Hal L1n<1en
(C'MOVIE
• •'h "Newsltonl Bill
Hunter. ChttS Haywooo
Two rival news companies
allempt to edge each
othef out 111 a racs t0< the
Australlen n-s V!ewets 1n
lhe 40's 'PG'
(OJ POU POSITIOH
Peul Newman 1s one ot me
stars of f'0<mula One rac-
ing wno are profiled 1n a
took at lhls dangerous an<I
a•hllat a ling 9'>0<t
(S) SPECTACULAR
EVENING IN CAIRO
Belly dance<s 1ugglefs and
dancing horses are among
the llCta In this evening of
entertainment featuring
Cethy LM Crosby with Jim
Perry and Fiona Gor<1on
CHANNEL LISTINGS
0 KNXl CCBSI 0
Q KNBC INBCI z
8 KTLA (ln<I) H
ID KABC CASO c
0 KFMB ICBS) • 0 KHJ TV (Incl J 11
Ii) t<CST (ABCI t
• t<TTll (Ind I s
G) t<COP TV I ln<I.) 0
• KCET <PBSI (I
• t<OCE I ops1
7:30 IJ 2 ON THE TOW..
Featured a singer who 1$
trying to break 1n10 tne
mu11c; buslne11, examine
Neurasthenia, where a
woman teeta a IOss ol 1den·
Illy. Melody explores the
croissant craze
0 Qt FA.Mil Y FWD 0 LAVERNE& SHIRLEY
&COMPANY
The gang lries to re1se
money to save F'rank s
annual Plu.a Bowl <!Inner
tor less fortunate men
D FANS
Take a look at the wort<! of
tans and th<! 1ri1n ior>e
between Iona and tonahcs:
feature<! ere onlervlews
with Rona Barrell w 1"1am
Shit,,... and OtM• New-
ton-John and reports on
John Hinkley, Jr ano
Davtd Chapman
0 MATCHGAME
G) M'A'S'H
Raoar's departure puts
Klinger and 8 J on the
dumps
Q) TIC TAC DOUGH
fli) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT all CAMERA IN THE
COURT
TV cameras ere In the Cah·
l0<noa Supreme COUf1 Our
mg lesllmony 1n a ra~
case The use ot a hypno-
llJed w11ness Is ques·
1100&<1 Legal spec11hst
w1111am Tllrnet dlsc:uues
lhe c;ese with both a1tor-
neys
P.M. MAGAZINE '19.J YOU ASKED FOR IT
Featured Tra. Cotcus"
and Japanese B1tds That
Fish
H HBOSNEAK
PREVIEW: JANUARY
Husban<l·en<l·W11e c;omocs
Je<ry Stiller and Anne
Meara 1ntroduc;e the mov-
1e1, special& and 1porls
events coming to Home
Bo• Ollice on January
8:00 I) MR. MEl'IUN
Zack uses magic to
omptess a beau11ru1 gtr I by
coniunng up 1tckets lo a
sotd-<>UI rock concert
0 QJ REAL PEOPLE
Featured the oation's olh·
c1a1 Sant• Claus, a IChool
for S9ntas a laclory w"ere
Santas ere mace. a wom.
an Who dresses as a
Christmas trff (R)
D COLI.EOE
BA8KET8AU.
Louisiana State"' UCt.A D ®J FAOSTYS
WINTER WONDERLAND
An1ma1e<1 Frosty tile
Snowman falls 1n love wot"
a cute 1111i. snowwoman
and asks hef to marry him
(R)Q 0 THE JIM NABORS
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
Guests Including Carol
Burnell and Susan Anion
1<>+n Jim Nabors 1n 11111 hot·
lday $peel&! from Hawaii
G) P.M. MAGAZJNE
A TV dlt8CIO< Who spec;1al-
1ZeS 1n food comme<CIBIS. a
sleep <11sorder that
obstructs breelhong. Linda
Hams has 1ravel-oroen1ec:t
Chris1mes g1111. Biii Hems
On TV
Z·TV
HBO
IC1~ma~I
IWO RI NY NY
IWlBSI
I ESPN)
IShowl1me1
Spotlight
I Cable New~ Network 1
MllE
NOW PLAYING
-..-Mu MA• MU ,LUA UA CUllMA Ot.,. 837 ·0340 Blea 529-5339 Wtsttlllnslaf 193 0546
...... l. JR.WAY JI D1itn.. UA CITI CM:MA
.....,.,, llMCll 873-8350 Wastmlnsltr HI ·MU Oranet 134·3911
l·=:.--:a:,':\,-,.::.":=:.:.::C "..., I .. ,~ACCPTD . . POllflolaM'llJDll
reviews the Chr11tmas
movies
(I) MOVIE
••• "Greel Ex~t•·
1100s" ( 1975) Michael vor11.
Sarah MUes BBM<I oo the
story by Charles Dickens.
A young boy's Ille is <IMPiy
onllueoceo by a cllan<:e
encounte< with an escape<!
prisoner
fli) A CHRISTMAS
SP£CIAL WITH LUCIANO
PAVAROTTI
The Metropoliltn Op<tre
star sings "Ave Maria " 'O
HOiy Night and Olhe<
Christmas clesSl<:s tr om
the Criurch of Notre Dame
1n Montreat (A)
Cl) LATIH PROflLE
.H MOVIE
• • ·~ "The Outsl<ler'
( 1978) Sterhng Hayden.
Craig Wasson A young
1deallst travels lo Norlhern
Ireland to 10111 the struggle
tor independence R'
0 COU.EOE
8ASKETBA1.L
Ro<:hmond vs USC
1$ MOVIE
• • • '. ·Being There"
(1979) Pete< Seiters. Mel·
vyo Oouglll3 A simple-
m1n<1e<1 m1ddle-aged man
wttose ooly knoWle<lge of
lhe out51de world ts
through telev1s1on. gains
treman<lous tame an<I
power by unw1111ngly con-
vincing tyc;oona and polllo·
c1an1 that he 1s a genius
·PG'
0 CIRCUS V£OAS
America's favorite clown.
Emmett Kelly Jr . hOsta
th11 evening ot circus
exC1temenl. comedy. lhrills
an<I entertainment 11pe<1
hve ol the Aladdin T"eatre
111 Las Vegas
8:30 IJ ([) Wl<RP IN
CINCINNATI
While dect<11no whether to
gtve the st•fl Chnslmas
bonuses, Arthur falls
asleep and IS tt1nsported
11\IO e Oreem wot1<1 popu-
lated by Cllrtllmas OllOS••
(A)
D GJ n4E
L£~HAUN8'
CHNSlMAS OOU>
A cabin boy IOat on an
uncharted lsl1nd ac;c;jden.
lllly frees e wicked ban·
Shae that wts out to steal
the t.pr111C:hauns pol of
Christmas gOl<I O
ID AU IN n4E FAMILY
The lmpi()OS Atellia IS con-
ve!led onto a devole<J
Ctvlsoan alter a c;tose
bruah w1lh death
all THEGIUUNI
CONCERTS
P11n1S1 Vl1d1m1r AShkena.zy
)otns lhe Los Angeles Phil-
harmonic under the otrec-
llon of Carlo Marla G1ullno
ror a program oeoicated to
JOhannes Brahms
l MOVIE
• • "The Cockllghter"
( t974) Warren Oates. Har·
ry Dean Stanton Alter a
m11or deleal. a Georgla
gamecock lraine• vo~ 10
remain sllent untll he •
regains the et1emp10nshlp
of hit sport 'R'
9:00 1J Cl) MOVIE
"The Ordeal Of e.11 Car·
oey · (Premiere) Ray Shir-
key, Ao<:hard Cr4H>na. The
trve story of paraplegic 8111
Catney's ~year court
battle to gain custody ot
hll two children is dram•·
tlzad D Q! THE FACTS Of'
LIFE
To av0td dating, Tootle
lnl/8nts an lmeginary bOy·
frlal\<I with wnom .,,. pre-
tends to correspond .
D QA) THEFALL GUY
Cott goes to Me111cO to
trecl< <Jown a n-'c while-
collar thief whO has llole<i
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE
Cl'" ... ~ c:tnfl'\Alla\ K
mlllloM In a oe>mpll1er
lrMld (A) l ~WUON ...,,.,..,,...
G""le, Enteibef1 Hur11-
~<dll'IClll, Lola r a1ena.
f\andj Oek•
• THIGU.INI
CONOeRTa
Pl~I Vladlmlt Aahbnuy
IOlne lhe LOI Anoa'M Phll•
harmonic und8t °'41 dll'llQ-
uon of Ca<lo Metia 01011111
tor • P<<>oram dedicated to
Jot\8nnea 8t llhm• cc~MOVW
•• "Ole LaU(lhlng" ( 1980)
Robby hoeon. Char,_
Outnlng, A N>ngWflUng cab
<1r1,,., •• llded by • emart
MOnlcay In proving hlmaell
lnnoc:.nl ot • murder
Char_. 'PO' ·
t:IO D Qt l.OVI.. 8IOHEY
Laurie r•iurna to New
York. bUI I• ··~ to' r..ume hat Illa with Sidney
becaUM Of hie meddling.
(R) •
C!)IN ~
AT THE WHITE HOUK
Beverly Sllla It joined by a
group of rlelng roung 11ng.
.,. lor a hOllday MUOn
cono.,t from the Eaat
Room of Iha White HOUM
(RI
9 MOW *. • "lnatde MOVH"
( 19801 John Savage, Oavl<I
Morse A newcomer 10 the
grQU9 of regulars at an
Oaklend bar may hOld the
key to making the barlan·
<1ar'1 cream or bec:omlng •
pro bubtbal player •
reahty 'PG'
10:00 D Qt OUINCV
A trucker who was hauling
danoe<ous toxic wutea to
ao illegal dumping 11te
diet. uomm HEWs D QA) DYNASTY
&i) CAMERA IN COURT
Court procedures ol the
Calllornl• Supreme Court
.,. dillCUasad
10 MOVIE
• • • "Coal Miner'•
Daughter" ( 1980) Stuy
Spacek. Tommy La•
Jones Baaed oo Lorelle
Lynn'• autobiography A
young girl trom • poor
tamlly tn rural Kentucl<y
marries • much olde< 10c;a1
boy whO engineers her rl ..
to stardom in the mull<:
1ndullfY 'PG'
(l )MOVIE
• • '" "Heavy Trame;"
( 19731 Animated Onec1ed
by Ralph Bakslu Tha
product of an unhappy llal·
1an-Jew1sh marroage. •
young man so.ks lt...,d·
Shop among lhe Puerto
Ricans and blacks In "Is
neighborhood ·R
10:15 ._SJ MOW
• • '" "Fear No Ev11"
11969~ LOUIS Jourdlfl, Lyn·
d• Dey George A man's
dark soul IS renected 1n an
antique mirror Whict1 his
llancH usee to commun1·
cate With him alter he dtn
1n an ac;c;ldent
10:30 Q) IHOEP£HOEHT
HETWOAI< NEWS m C08M08
'WhO Spuks For Earth?'
Dr Carl Sagan --together the major themM
of Iha setlel end offe<s
aome cautionary -nlflga
lbOul our lulure (R)O
(H'H808Nf.AK
PAfVIEW:JN«JAll('(
Husban<l·and·wlfe comlCS
Jerry Stiller en<I Anne
Meara introduce the mov-
141t, specials and IPOfl•
events coming to Horne
Bolt Olllca in Jaouary
11:00 ea a Cll GJ a
NEWS D SATURDAY NIOHT
H041t Buell Hanry D PAUlHOOAH
ID THE JEFf'EASOH8
Loulae suspects that
George's "Old Navy bud-
dy" Is really •woman
Q) BENNY HILL
A• host ot a qu11 "'°"".
Benny tries to preMnt a
t>eautllul blon<la with e hot-
1dey for two
fli) DICK CAVETT
Guest Blsnop Paul MOO<•
(R)
't MOVIE
• • ''i "Going In Style"
( 19791 George Burns. Art
Cetney Bored wHh 1m1ng
all day on a bench in Iha
petlt., three elde<ly genii•
men carefully plan a bank
heist 'PG
H) AEMEMKA WH£H •.
'TM Image Make<s" Dick
Cave11 reviews 200 yaera
or Am«lcan commarClef·
ism •• from lhe eat1y cofo.
ntal period through todey's
$54 bllliOn 11\dustry
11:1H ?IMOV1£
111 "Head" (198') The
Monk-. Vietor Mature A
rock group pr-I their
stytlad outlooil on the
IOcial problems of the
'60•.
11:IO 8 (I) WKAP IN
CIHCIHHATI
Arthur Cert1on Jr la
lt.l<1lled out of military
TUBE TOPPERS
KNBC G a nd KABC • 6 :00 -
Pre sident Reaaan wlll add resa the
nation conc e rnln g the m llltary
c r ackdown in Polan~. Ltve coverage.
KABC fl 8 : 00 "Frost y"s Winter
Wonder land." Frosty falls in love with
cute little snowmaid and asks her to
m arry him .
KCOP G) 8:00 "Great Expectations ."
Ch arles Dickens ' tale of a poor orptJan
boy and his benefactor .
KCET@ 8:00 "A Christmas Special
With Luciano Pavarotti." Metropolitan
Opera sta r sings Christmas classics.
KOCE 9 9:30 -"In Performance at the
White House." Beverly Sills headlines a
per formance of holiday favorites.
schOOI. and Mama Carlson
decl<las n 11 time lor him to
i.arn Iha radio bullneu
(R)
Q Q! THE 8E8T Of'
CARSON
Guatll Bruce Dern. Davi<!
Letterman. ~lh B~
(R) '
8 9 ABCNEWS
NIOHTUNE 1J KIT OF GAOUCHO
ID THE 000 COUPL.E
Q) 8ANf'ORD AHO 80H
ED KCET NEW88EAT
8!> CAPTIONED A8C
NEWS 0 JOAH RIVEA8
COMEDY HOUR
Thll evenlog ol unique
entertainment leaturaa
adult pu~•-Barclay
Shew an<I the Tropieana
Dar1Ci8'1
12:00 D 8HA NA NA
GUMI' Jay JOhnson D 9 LOV£90AT
An outapol<en prteSI end
!lilt orphans jOln me Cep-
laln tor a Chrlllmas crulM
and a husband II reunited
With hll wile alte< spending
three years in prison IR)
Q MOVIE
• • • • "How Green Wu
My Valley ' (194 tj Walter
P1<1geon, MaurHn O'Hara
A Welll'I mining lamlly
laoea personal en<I eco-
nom 1c problems whlle
plaonlog t0< Ille tuture m M«E OOUOl.A8
~II The AllOCiatlon
Gunll Judy N0<1on Tay·
1or. Jay Johnson. Bill
Evans
Q) A0<*1E8
fll IT'S EVEAYBOOY'S
8U8INE88
"Labor Ill HIStory'
·~ MOVIE ••Ioli "The Nu<le Bomb"
(1980) Don Adams. Sylvia
Kristel Se<lr•l agent MU ·
welt Smlll't laces his motl
dang•ou• •dvaraary In en
etellvillaln whO plans to
launch mowlel that WIN
dlarobe the enllre human
population. 'PG
(S)MOVIE •"'•'It "Gloria' 11980)
Gena Rowlands. John
A<lamea. A former gun
moll ~ the protec·
tor of an orphaned 6-yeat·
Old Puerto Rlean targeted
by the uncM<worl<I lor the
1nlormatlon he carries In •
balle<ed briefcase 'PG
12:06 IJ (J) MOW
• '"' "Grand Jury" (1977) Btuc. Davison. Leslie Nlef.
sen
12:15 (0) MOYIE • * * "ApocalypM Now"
( t979) Merion Brando
Mllf11n Sheen Directed by
Francis Ford Coppola An
lnlelllgenc:e aoeot embark•
oo a mlUIOn up ,.,... Into
11w1 Vletnamew jung141 to
find and kill • mysterious.
AWOL Army otliee< whO
hu folla<I ett prev10Vs
attempts et nts captUfa 'R
12:30 a a rOMOAAOW
Guea1s. Jeckie Robinson s
Widow Rachel: Larry DOiby.
the '"" black p4eye< in the
Americao League. oaM-
ball playen Biii M•<llock
and Dave P•tll.e<, 11etra11
Clc;efy Tyson (A)
D MOVIE • * '"' "The ChrlllmH Tree" (1969) W~llam HOi-
den Vlrna Usi A -•llhy
bulfnessman devotes a11 or
tus efforts to the happlnesa
of h11 <1y1ng son
Q MOVIE
• • 1.., "C•boBlanc;o'
I 19811 Charles Bronson,
Jason Robar<11 An e•ila<I
Nazi whO hu bought 011
the IOCal polk:e domlnltff
a amall Peruvian coastal •own during lhe 1940s 'R'
'Z,MOVIE
• • V. "The Formuto"
( 1980) Marlon Brando
Georgi! C Scou
1:00ID MOVIE
• • • "Hawa11' f 1966)
Julle Andrews Roc;har<I
Harris
Q) INDEPENDENT
NETWORK NEWS r~ MOVIE • • * • "Love And
Death" ( 1975) Woody
Allen Doane Keaton A
noteo coward 1n the Rus-
~an Army eventually mer-
roes his true love. who
draws him into a plOt
1nvolv1ng an allempt Of\ the
hie ol emperor Napoleon
'PG
1:10 8 MOVIE
• • • "Tlekle Me" (1965)
Elvia Presley, Julie Adams
A g1rl1' gym teechef reSISIS
romantic ovenurea lrom a
rodeo rt<ler until he helps
her l1nd burle<l trauore
~NEWS
1:30 Q) MOVIE
• • "Red Garters" ( 1954)
RoMrnary Clooney. Jack
Cetson A mlll'I finds IOve
While searching tor hts
brother'' killer
1:'5 (H I MOV\E
• • • • "Kramer Vs
Kramer (1979) Ouslln
Hoffman, Meryl Streep A
man batlles wtlh 1145 ex·
\Mia 10< custody of the+r
young son altar she walks
out on them 'PG
2:00 D ENTERTAINMENT
TOMGHT
Lawrence Wellt. oosc;u-
his plans for Iha future. IB NEWS
(S' UBER.ACE IN LAS
VEGAS
0 MOVE * * Coasl To CoHI'
(1980) Oyen Cannon, Rob-
ert Blake. A runaway
hou-lle •nd a set9PPY
trucker h1ullng cattle
COUI 10 COHI 1>9Come the
target of a wll<I crou·
country chase PG
2:151) NEWS
2:300 NEWS D MOVIE
• • "Slightly Scarlet"
( 1956) Rhonda f'lemlog,
John Payne.
'C)MOW •••'It "Tho•• Lipa.
Those Eyea" ( 19801 Frank
JOHN DARLING
;
I
l
0
0
0
0
'THIS -mee HERE IS
A REAL 6EAUTY.1
Lenoella. Glynn11 O'Con
nof A llaMboyanl ~
etock actOt. who dtattn•
ot l roadw•v atatdon1,
defandl .,, l~ant
at~atrvcti. prop boy at\CI
ptom.4ea hi• romane• wtth
a eN>tus glrl. 'R'
t:408 ..-wt
l".41 (%)MOVll
• •~ "Heavy T1at11c;'
( 1913) Animated OlrecteCI
by Ralph Bakthi The
produCI Ol 111'1 unhappy Ital·
tan.J•wl•h marriage, 1
young m.n SMlll Irland•
t/llp among the Puerto
All:ana and bleclla in hll
neighborhood 'R'
2:108 MOVIE * • * "A Dre•m For
Chtlatmu" ( 1973) Hett
Rnodff. llHh RiCharda
3;30 rs l THE WACKY WOAlO
Of JONATHAN WtNTEA8
0.-1 [)lc1t Martin
4:00ID MOVIE
• • '"' "Curly Top" ( 19351
Shirley T empla Rochelle
Hudaon
(SJ MOV\f
• • 'h "Scavenget Hunl"
( 1979) Rlchar<I Ban1am1n .
Jamee Coco When an
ecoentrle m1llione1te dies,
lhe cond111on1 of his will
a.end hit heirs on a w11<1
March tor 11ariou1 afllctea
on • scavenu-r 1111. the
winner being able to cl11m
trie decaueo·a tortune
'PG'
0 MOVIE • * "M ountain Men '
( 1980) Charlton HHton
Bt11n Keith Two fur
tr appara enjoy lhe free-
dom of the wt1<1emesa 1n
lhe 1u1 law years oef0<e
the enc•oachment of cMli·
zet1on 'R'
(Z)MOVIE
• • "The Cockhghler
( 1974) Wetren Oates. Har·
ry Dean Stanton
4:30 D STAR TREK
(Cl MOVIE
• • • "Somebody Up
There Likes Me" ( 1956)
Paul Newman Poet Angel•
Thur•day'•
Bayt i•fl' Mo.,ie•
-MORflNG-
1:00 ( S.) • • 111 "Penelope"
( 1966) Natalie Wood Ian
Bannan A neglected wile
<1ec1des to disguise herself
and rob her husband's
bank
0 • • • • Kramer vs
Kramer" ( 1979) Dustin
Hollman, Meryl Streep A
man ballles With his .,.
Wile tor custody of lhett
young son attet She walks
out on them PG
9:30 Q) * • · Spy Cha-s
( 1955) Huntz Hall Leo
Gorc;ey The Bo-y Boys
help a king lo protKI hos
power from enemy 59'8$
Who want to demrone him
10:00 (CJ • • 11t "The Haro Way·
( 19801 Palro<:t McGOQl\an
lee Van Cleel A h11e<I
asaassin has to make one
more hit before "e can
ret1r• R
$' • • '• Scavenger Hunt ( t979) Rlcharo Ben
jamtn James Coco When
an eccentnc m1ll1ona11e
<1185 llWI c;ond111ons Of hlS
w•ll send his heits on a w11<1
search for various er11cles
on a scavenger kst the
winner being able 10 cta1m
the decease<fs fortune
'PG'
0 • * • "lnSl<la Moves
(19801 John Savage Dav1<1
Morse A newcomer 10 the ,
group ol regulars at an
Oakland bar m1y hotd the
key lo malung the barten·
det 's dre•m of becoming •
pro baaketball playe< a
reality 'PG'
10:30 Q) • * The NlgM Rt<I·
ers" 119391 John Wayne.
Doreen McKay A cowhand
e•~ a croolt. c;le1m1ng
10 be a oesoenoant or a
famous don.
11:00 D • * "Brognty 01 The
Grand Canyon" 119671
Joseph Conan. Pat Con-
way
1 t:30 CC1 • • • 'A Pain In The
A f 1973) JacQues Brei
Lino Ventura Whtie an
uueelll oonotnlf•t• Oft
,. nt11t k lfllng. he .. rudely
lnlWf\IPled by a bumbling
r~ra of 1 men who la
anemt>•lnO to.1lclda ·PO·
12e«I e • • • "Doctor Oofll·
lie" CIM1) Rex Har"-!,
Samantha E.goar. A dOClor wno ~ anlftlale IMtna
10 cornmvnice1e wtth them
In SOO dltt•ent lltlimal 11111-
11,-r! * "The Mir~ 01
O\lr Le<ly 01 Fatima"
I tt&21 Qlfbatt Ro11nd.
trranll Sllvet• 9 •• •~ "G10t1a"
I 1980) Gena Rowlancsa.
John Adames A lormttr
gun mOll bee;-Ill• pro-
tector of an orphaned S-
Y.., ·Old Puerto Ric;an I at.
geted by Ille una-orl<I
tor Ill• 1nformatl0n he car·
,... lo I ba11Wad brle4·
case 'PG
1:00 f£) • • * • "Gigi" I 1958)
Maur~ Chevalier, LMlie
Caron A tomboy being
groomed by her aunt and
grandmother NII out on
her own to catch a men
(C *"' • "The Galherlng"
( t978) Ed Aaner. Maureen
Steplaloo Longtime d1YI•
siOns amoog member• ot
1he tamily of a dying man
come out 1n the open when
his grown Offapring galher
fof a tinet lamlly reunion $,••• p~·
( 1966) Natalia Wood, Ian
Bannan A neglected Wife
decldet to d1sgutM herMlt
aod rob he< huaban<l'a
bank
I Zl * • 11 Trie F0trnula"
( 19801 Marton Brando,
George C ScOlt While
1nvatlg811ng the murc:let of
a coll1111gue. a YOteran cop
uncovera a conaplracy
1nv()lv1ng the wpprestk>n
of a syntheto<: fuel formula
by the <><I companies 'R'
2:00 0 • • "Coast To Coast"
< 1980) Dyan Cannon. Rob-
ert Blake A 1un11wey
hOUMW1fe and e scrappy
trucker hauling c1111e
coas1 to coas1 become ttMI
target ot a w11<1 cross-
counlry chase 'PG'
3:00 H • • "• "Soowball
hprau ( 1972) Deao
Jones. Nancy Olson A
New York accouo11n1 tra·
vels _, to Ille Rock-In
.,, at1empt to m0<1ern1ze a
dolapodate<I 51(1 rnort he
inherited 'G ·
Z • • Message From
Space I 19781 Vo<: Morrow.
M1k10 Nania Space lleets
b&llle ror contrOI ol the
galaay 1n a world 01 111e
future PG
3:30 0 • • Susan Slept
Here" f 1954) o.ci. Powell
Oebb,. Raynolds
S • • "Young And Free
Eric Larson. I A
Stain When tr8Qe<ly t0<ces
• young bOy to f01n • wao-
on train 1n the rugged
west, he ,,_ts a young
to<11an g1ti and begins a
new Illa PG
a:OO 0 • • '> "Dot An<I Santa
Claus ( 19811 An1ma1eo
Chrlslmas trad1t1ons
around lhe world ate a1ge-
1oenced ov a young g1tl and
Santa as they search ror a
baby kangaroo that was
s.parate<J from its motile<
5:00 C • * * Ouo V1<11s
(195 I) Robert Taylor
Oeoorah Kerr A Roman
ettstoe<al gains N•o s d•S·
lavor When h<! fall• on love
with a Christian girl
H •a a '• The Black
Stallion· t 1979) Kelly
Reno. Mickey Aoooey
Alter lleong rescue<! lrom
lhe island oo whlCh they
were ShlpW<ecked lc>ge1h·
e1 a yourig boy and 11
horse become 1nvotved 1n
the race 01 lh&C8'1tury G
Z • • '> Somewt>ere In
Time · (19801 Chrlstopller
Reeve. Jane Seymour
ObsetM<I With the por1ra11
ol a 19th-century actress.
a mooern-dav New Y0<k
playwrlQhl uset hypnosis
10 travel bllCI< m time and
meet he< PG
5:30 0 * • • "The HldU·
ways" ( 1973) lngnd Berg·
man. JOhnny Doran Two
c;h1t<lren run away lrom
home end hide In New
York City's Me1ropofllan
Museum or Art. wt>e<• lhey
ere belrlal\<le<I by a sporll ·
ed recluse 'G
by Armstrong & Batiuk
ANO 0EST OF ALL, 'THERE'S PL.ENTY Of= ROOM FOR
DECORAllONS.1
The most ..otk fhlng
In their WOftd
WOlmotMty.
ROLWVER
.,OIUOl'f __ """--··---'R'-t~· ... ,~ ........ ~,,.,_.... ......... ~
f~· ~ 'A~•tt\1~ •
~
~
Newpe>rt's landmark restaurant since 1922
presents for your ple asure
Christmas Day Dinner
12 noon to 9 p.m.
ROAST YOU• TOM 1UUIY Fresh euocu .. ttt white end 'dattit me1t
gwnllhed with homettyle stuffing and
giblet OflVY.
U.°'LAMI Aoaettd ro perlectlon In our~"' 1nd ~ bV mint Jelly, 1 light gravy &drweelng •
f
-..:TllOl.B
H1W YOllt S1IAll
IOASTCIMTU
CUTPOnLotM
fAMOUS AaCHIS SWOID .. SH STIAI
QukHy Meted to lock In all tM Julcea and ~IY brolled H only ~ Arch91 knowa how.
All lheM _.ci11llv ..i.cted ent,.... .,.. oNer9d with yama or muMd p0tato and
PH • fl1lncllcue Ind 1 chotCe of eward winning watercreas aoup or 11l1d 1nd
rounded off wkh our lrrnlatlbte PUm!>kln pie.
We hllYe Pf'CMded good load Ind tlme-honortd warmth to""" genetttlona ol• <>ranoe eountt-.
2P e a:=
lloa alllYATIOMI CALL 641-7177
A ~YfUL CtmSTMAI TO YOU ML
;
"
'· I
II
·.
.
HJJSBAND HURT -
St~te Transportation
Director Adria na
Ghnturco's husband .
Jbhn Saltonstall, was
iJt j ur e d in a
c~nn ecti cut a u to
accident.
Adriana·
I spouse
injured
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-State Transportation
D•i r ec lo r A d r i a o a
GJanturco has canceled
a appearance at a Los
Angeles legislative
c +mmittee h e aring
b•c ause her hus band
w:as injured in a
Co nn ec ti cut auto
accident.
:Ms . Gianturco left
here Monday evening to
be with her hus band,
John Saltonstall. who
wis reported in guarded
co ndition at t h e
v :a I e · Ne w H a v e n
H.o s p i ta I w i l h
uodisclosed multiple i~uries.
' }. hospital s pokesman
s 4id Saltonstall, a n
a•orney and instructor au McGeorge School of
Law in Sacramento. was
a4mitted to the hospital
a!Jout 5 p.m. Monday.
JMs . Gianturco ha d
bte n s ubpoenaed to
a~ear ·at a hearing of t e Senate se l ect l 1 c mittee on Southern
C.!ifomia transportation
Ptoblems, he aded by
Stn. Paul Carpente r ,
OICypress. ~he had first refused
t~ attend because or a
p(evious commitment to
viJ>it her ill father on the
E'st Coast. •C arp e n te r , a
cl n didate fo r th e
D~mocratic U.S. Senate
nomination also sought
t>j Gov. Edmund Brown
J .• said he wou ld
s bedul e another
h aring in J anuary to
g ve Ms . Gianturco a
c an ce to r espond to
c 'ticism expected to be
I e led at her Tuesday.
'T h e committee is
piobing charges that ~s . Giant u r co
e dangered the safety of
torists by overruling
e gineers on the design
o a Mendocino County
highway bridge.
Schools i tp close
1i,os ANGELES (AP) ::i T he Los An geles
• Board of Education has
v•ted to close t h ree
u t d ere n rolled ele-
mentary schools where
mostly white s tudents
a~ enrolled. .
The board said that
the closures will take
e ffe c t Feb . 1 at
Anchor age Street School
near Marina del Rey,
aid Haynes Street and
f(lg hl a n de r R~a d
stbools in the Canoga ~rk area. A four th
s~ool will be closed in
J ne.
•All have fewer than
2 ·Stude nts, despite o pacities ror man y
ore . St ud ents
pl aced by th e
aures wlll attend
by •cbools.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, December 23, 1981 ••
Mei:-cury mining firm's history remains
But company out of the quicksilver business, merges with trucking outfit
tremendou.s losses. They were in a
ao-man's land as the prices fell ,"
New ldrla President Lester E.
Bradley recalled.
material handling systems. North America, producin1 enough
m e rcury to meet mo1t or the
country's tn1litary needs, Bradley
aays.
or the mines, sold thouaandl ol
acres of it.a land to Santa Clara
County for open apace parkland
and concentrated on lta rubber
and metal products.
WALNUT CREEK (AP) -
When times were &ood, New ldria
lhc., one or the nation's oldest and
moat profitable mercury-mining
concerns, sold its qulcksllver ror
S900 a flask and boasted Herbert
Hoover as company manager.
But times turned bad: the price ot a flask or mercury dropped to
SlOS -less than half of what it
cost to mine it -and the tiny
corporation's healthy profits gave
way to devastating debts.
So they balled out of the
mercury mining business and got
Into metal, wood and rubber
products.
B ut New 1-dria's history
r e mai n s, docum e nted in
century-old records now in lhe
Stan ford University library,
Bradley says.
T he company, named for a
merc u ry -m ining town i n
Yuaoslavia, was founded about 30
years after Europeans discovered
mercury in the United States.
south of San Jose. And for more
than 100 years, the New ldria
mines were the most productive in
"New ldria figured prominently
In the Civil War as a auppUer to
the Union Army," he said. Cons umers are moat famill,ar
By the 19505, the company had · w I t h t h e c o m P a n Y s
"The company was piling up
On Monday, the compan y
started by Slovenian immigrants
in 1853, lost its identity. merging
with Buckhorn Inc., a Columbus,
Ohio. company that operates a'
t ruck-leasing business and designs
branched out Into uranium, silver, ready-to-aasemble metal shelves
tungsten and gold-mining and bad that find their way into closet.a and
purchased an oil company.' garages for storage. The companr
But when the international a lso makes sh elves for retail
mercury market hit the skids 20 inventory storage in stores like
years later. New Idria pulled out K-Mart.
THEY CAN 'T· ASK. BUT I CAN .
Fairview is home to 1,301 resident cljents, all of whom are developmentally dis-
abled, and most of whom will spend their entire life in iust such a state-run
hospital. For most it will be difficult, if not impossible, to iom society as a person
capable of functioning on an independent basis because their minds will simply
never develop much beyond the capacity of a normal 5 or 6 year old child. The
world will have to look elsewhere for its new generation of doctors and lawyers
and politicos and pundits. This Fairview world is one of hard-earned basics; it's
sort of a slow-motion Future Shock in which the goal is always a compressed-
time-lear-ning experience -if it took a year to learn how to tie shoes they'll do it
next time, with the next client, in six months. It's a survival train ing ground that
teoches body functions like combing one's hair . or brushing one's teeth or button-
ing one's shirt, and it is done through patient repetition and praise and love. With
whatever personal limited capacities they have, the people who live at Fairview
work every day of their lives at becoming a better person; non-ambulatory clients
strive to become ambulatory, the ambulatory strive to become self-caring, and the
self-caring strive to learn socially acceptable behavior so that they might come out
into our world without being singled out, stared at, or ridiculed. Clients love to vis-
it restaurants, movies, amusement parks, etc.; they love to go shopping and to
engage in most other entertaining activities that you and I enjoy. But ifs that
non-mechanical qualification of "socially acceptable behavior" that determines the
success or failure of a client's visit to the world outside the hospital; his or her
ability to cope, to react , to interact, in social situations will determine t he cl ient's
acceptance in those situations. Of all the wonderful things accompl ished by the
professionally-trained staff at Fairview, and of all the good care afforded the
clients by our State's funding, there has always been a shortage of social areas in
which the final touches of education are accomplished. Inst itutional furniture, an
economic necessity, does little to provide a setting in which one might learn life's
social graces. There is no outside setting, no lawn with flowers, no meandering
path, no pork-like conversational areas where a client might learn amusement-
park or picnic-type behavior, where they might have outside classes, or where one
might visit with relatives or friends when they come to Fairview. That's the bad
news but the good news is that there's a half-acre site on the hospital grounds,
between Residences 21 , 22, 23, and 24, that's been set aside for just su ch a park.
It's to be called Enid Lathrop Park in honor of the lovely lady who ret ired from the
hospital just last year after serving 12 years as Volunteer Services Director. The
cost of that park will be approximately $25,000 and that's a .bargain ; aside from
that amount are many services and supplies that have already been donated or
volunteered by caring merchants and professional people throughout the Costa
Me&J and Newport Beach communities.
We're committing ourselves to $15,000 of that amount and the Volunteer:. Services
Office at Fairview believes they'll raise the rest through community contributions.
This puts them in a tough position, though, because, as a state institution, they
ore advised and authorized to accept but not actually solicit such contributions.
And being state-supported they cannot represent themselves as a charity; as a
matter of fact the hospital has always token great pride in "making do." In short,
they can't ask. But I can . The people at Fairview, in "making do," actually make
every dollar of your tax-deductible contribution worth more than o dollar; they
manage to enhance its value through merchant and professional service contribu-
tions. They're buildin~ a park that will be a social place, a learning place, a
classroom. Maybe you d like to get in on the ground floor, maybe you'd like to ac-
tually create the path which you'd like some youngster to follow, or maybe yoo' d
like to pave a yellow brick rood. Or maybe you 'd iust like to help someone who
works every day of their life to improve and to be acceptable by you. If so please
send a check to Program V, Fairview State Hospital, 2501 Harbor Boulevard, C:OSta
MesJJ, CA 92626.
VOLUNTEER SERVICES FOR PROGRAM V
FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPITAL
2501 HARBOR BOULEVARD
COST A MESA, CA 92626
@J~o~@J~OO . ,
44 fashion l~ancl. newport c...ter '4~5070
I 00 I wntwOOd lilTcl., westw~ •llclge 21 3.47~ 7727
j:
I
--Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/WednHday, deoember 23. 1981
DO WNHILL LOGGER A Bavari a n
'lumberjack pilots his traditional sledge.
laden with timber. down an icy Alpine
AP ....
s lo pe in Bavaria. Gravity-p owere d
sledging of logs is being replaced by
mechanized equipment.
Mi d life cris is at 25? PICTITIOUS eUMM•U
MMMITATSMaNT
Tl'I• lollowlnt ~raon 11 Hint
llltSIMU•: Burnout symptoms noted earlier AAA PLUMBING & HEATING,
S 11 Fvllerlon, Newport ••o<l'I, Co11Mnlio'1116>
l'ICT1'1WI 9UMM& ..
lllMllll ITATIMIMT
Tllo lellowl.,. ""'" It M ini llu.i-•1 THI cove RHT~UllANT, *1U1 C•••t Hltllwoy, hvtl'I l.•t11"•• c.11 ........ 91117
Donlet J "1111, 11'21 (Hat
Hleflwey, S-11 i...-. Collfttllle wn
Tllll ..,,, ..... II Conctuctocl by on INltvl4NOI 0.Vlf J. Pllb
' Tl'lll .... ...._. •• lllod wltlt tllt
C-ty CNf"ll of OrOfl .. (OllftlY 011
... Y .... Nrt4, ttll.
NOWla• a t(HMITT ..... " .. uw
-ClMtlM ...... y
,.,,_
PtCTtTIOUt 8\ltt ... M MAM111TAT11Ma•T
Tiie lellowlnt .. , .. ,, Is felf'l9 ...., ........
11 INllH LIHR, 11141 L't!WI &!not. """'"""°" he<ll, , ............... OollMI J. K-. 01411..-,-Mr .. t. H ..... lfltMll ... fl. CellterNo ,_..
Tlllt 11u11Mtt la e~ ... .., M
llMllMOMI.
Oel'llolJ Ken\11
Tll .. ~ •• fltM wltll ,.,.
C-ly Clertl el Or ..... c;_., °" 0.CtmMr ... ,., .,,..,,
l'ICT'fTICIUa IJUltM• .. lllAMatTAH ... NT
T lie fellewl"' ,.,_, ore fflnt
llullMU• C & S IL£ClltlC. 1• Po-0. CrlatOllel, Son Clomen&o, C.lll'Ofl'll• ... ,..,
Soneletl l!nle•IHIHt, Inc., e
Celllorl'llo cQrJOtOlllon, tJO P-o.
Crltl4*el, $911 Clomo"'•· C.lllernl• mtt Tiiis llutll'len It ,.,,-.Clot by o
Ur-o!Mfl ~ ........ ., ..... '"'· Cl'lotltt • Se11oe,.,
Pvllll.,.... Or ..... C.011 Oolly PllllC, Ptn"'°fll
OK ... ,U,a ,ltel,JM.•,ttlt ,..., Tf\11 .....,_•et llled with IM
Coun11 CIOfll of Ot•noe Cwnly on
Novemlle• », 1•1. P1,,._ .-........ c..ta.n •1CMAaD .t.. un•AV i------------l"lltlll .... ClrMtl C:.011 Oelly l'llOt,
Oec, 1, t. "· U , 1•1. SKl .. I
MOTIC•O .. TRUST••'HAL• .S.No.6111t4
SMI CORPORATION OS d11ly
eopelllted Trwl.M -r , ... fOllowlne
CIHcrl'*' -of trutl WILL SELL AT PUBLICATIOH TO THE
" ..... 1111 fl c:--..... c-.eer .. LA• __ ,.,._ ...... ·-~ ...0, c;... 92* "~ITlOUI auttM•U
PlltHl.....i Or ..... Coosl o.lly Pllol, lliAM& ITAT•M9•T o.c. 2. •. "· n, 1•1 s~1. !."'' fellewlnt por..., I• •••1' ...... ,,... .. : . PICTITIOUl8Ul.IN•U HIGHEST llOOER "011 CASH MAM9 STAT•M•MT I payable ol ti-of tOlt In 1ow1u1
Tl'le tollowll'lt per10t1 11 4'ol"t ,,_., of h UnltOCI Stelotl all rltM,
bvtlMH M : title •nd ,,,.., ... .,,,,.yeci lo - -PICTI TIOUI •USIN•••
OLIN W. JON ES CO .. 1UOI lleld by II under Mid o.OCI Of Tr11U '" NAM• STAT•M•MT ........ , ... l.MW, H .............. Btoell • .,,. pr_,,., ..... ,,,.,.., dolC•lbecl C..lllornl•f»D TRUSTOR JANIESK NICHOLS-T ... lollowl119 oeno41~ .,. dol"t
JU41tll L. Jor>et, 1•io1 Be1lonllne AltLEHE K. NICHOLS, l'lusboftcl ana -lneue.. • If PSITECH, ZMJ-J: Welnul -'"*" .. • L•no. Hunt1119ton Boocl'I, C•llfornla w • Tu•tln, ~A,...._ '1 ... 7 BENEFICIARY W G ROWE -..-• .._..
II F • PACE TECM~LOGY. INC., • Tf\11 buslMH It co-led by •n ecor-....,....Y • ,.., •• lntlr eo11rom1e coriior.i.lon. ,..,.c W11""4 l""l•IONOI. Ho. 11480 1 .. -1~1 ,. .. 1tl• of •-Juclllll L . .Jofws Ofll<lol Recorch In tl>e office of tl'le -'v•n.,., TUJtln, CA '1tl0.
Tlll1 ... .__, ••• flleo wlll'I tl'le Recotaer of OtonQe County; Hid Geed Tl'll• bu•lneu 11 cona11c1eo by • f t lb I I corporel!oft. Covnly Clorll ol Oranee Go..nty on 0 r1111 duet u 11\e ollow no PACE TECHNOLOGY. INC O.C.mbtr 7 1•1 pr-rty· • "1""' Lot .Ool lte<I Ho. HOO, In IM Clly Of ~=··L l(en ,
P111111-Orente Cool! Oolly Piiot. Costa Melo, County ol o ............ of Tl'llt ..... "'"" wos filed "''"' , ..
Oec. •. •• ».JO, 1•1 u1u1 Colllo•nlo. ••IMf Moptecoraea In Bo<* Covnty Clerk ot Or•n-Covnty on • 144, p~ M -4l, mlt«ll-s ,... Mops, In I,.. oHlce ol ,,,. County Nov. JO. "'1
Reco•cleroftoldcountv "11•~ Euepl ll'l•n•rom •fl Oii, ou, P11bll1Md Oronot COHI Oally Piiot,
mln•••I• •net olMr l'lydrocarllOn•. 1_0._c_1._•_._i._._u_._,._, ____ s_1.,.._ I PICTlTIOUS IWSIM•U
NAME STATEM•MT T II• followlnt person Is do Int
bullnouos: EXPERIENCEO TREE
SERVICE, »17 Elclen ,..,....,.,Ho B.
Cosio MolO, Colltornio t1U7
ArCl'I K. llnetHy, 1tl1 Elden
Aven .... No. B. c.o. ... Mew. Collfotnl•
'21627 Tllh Dutlnou 11 conctucleo by on
lndlYklllOI.
Arel\ K. LlncllOy Tl'll1 ~ _, fllecl wlll'I , ...
below • dt911'1 of 500 leot, wlll10111 ll'le
rl8 1 OI sur1oct onlry, •• reterveo In 1nilr11-of record
171 H llCborl, Cosio MAW, CA.
"I ll • ltnet -res• or commo"
d••IOl'l•llon Is snow" ebo••, no warrantylsolwnulolu complol•nest orco,,eclneMI "T,.._fl<lotyunoe•
wld 0-ol Trult, byrMtonof • br .. c:11
o• dol•Ull In ,,.. o1111.-11ont 1ec11rect
tl'ltreby, l>e••lolor• euc111eo •nG
clellvereo to 1r. vncte"'9neel • wrll•n Ooclorellon ol Oefo1111 -O.m-ror Sole, and wtllton l\01ke Of braocll 1ndol CCM1nly Clorll of Otonee County on elecllon toc ... se Ille undo,...,,.... to tell
O.C.mbef 7, 1•1. solclpr_,,ytoMtlsfyaoldobll"911oM,
l'1ntn And tt>erNlt., ll'le -~ C•UMcl Plltlll-Orenet CO.SI Oolly Piiot, 1alclnotkeofbrHCll•nGof•IKtlonlobe oec. t, I•, n. •. ••• Sl2HI Recor-AUOl<\I 11, 1tt1, es ln•lt Ho.
NS-16311
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
MAE D. HAPGOOD ANO
OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE
NO. A-111412.
To all he irs,
OUAUTY ~LY, It!.,. tt. HOlleNY, 5Mto Mo, Col...,.... '1'10I
OyOMo M<Cell, SU P..,lor .....
DIN. c,. .. M9w, Coll~l'lllo ...
Tllh lluslneu I• c-1.-b-1 • lndlYkKiel
O\t..-M<C:..11 I Tiiis , ... temofll w• lllocl Wiii\ "'9
Count., ciori. ot of Or-Coll..,
Novem-•.1•1. Pt1tM6 Publl"'*I 0r.,... Coast o.lly .,I..._
0o< 2. t, I•, 2J, 1•1_ S1"1'
f'ICTITIOUt eUllNRSJ
NAM• STATa~NT Tiie lollowlnt p.,1on I• dolno bu!olneuat
PENNY LANE IMPORTS, UU
-•• v.,oe Orlv• E .. t. "'-'· MA.
Cost a -· Gol lforl'lla t»• . Shltley H. Maclclen, USS .....
Verd• Dtlyt East. ""'· ,. .. C.0.IO Mew, C.MHornlo'216»
Tl\11 DuilMSI I• conctucteCI by Oft ll\dlvld11el.
SNrley ~ Mooaen
Tl\11 ,..,........,. w .. llloll with ....
Counly Cl•rlt ol 0r•"99 C-ly .,
Oe<emDor 7, 1tt1
P17J"' P11blllhed Or-Coo•I Oolly PllOC,
Oe< ..... u. JO. lttl »•~
"ICTITIOUS eUSINl!U
NAME ST-'Tl!MENT
BERKELEY (AP> -Career
bur n out and symptoms o r midlife
crisis apparently are occurring in
pro fession als as young as 25 years, a
University of California counselor
reports.
b asing career choices on factor s
othe r than personality, talents and
interests, Bee ry s aid.
Wllllom L. Oovla, Jr., S11
""'lortOfl. ....._, hod\, C..llfornlo I
f*3
210'.S In -UI.., peee 655, ol Solo Otll<lal Aecordt.
Said tole Wiii lie Mam, llvt WllNlut
cove,.•nt or werr•n•v. ••pre11 or
Implied, ...-•ding lllle, -Mulon, "'
encumbt-.es. to pey tl'le remalnlne
Pt'ln<IPOI sum Of I,.. notelsl M<ureo by
told Oeedol Trust, without lnt•r•ll es In
w ld note provided. eavenc:es. II any,
11nder tl'lt tottn$ Of sold OMd ol Tr11•t.
r .... cl'lorto• •net ••IM""' or 11\o T ruateo onaol I,.. tNSll creoteo by .. ,d
0.ecl of Tr<nl Sola Wle will be twld on
Monetev.Jonuorv•. 1tt20U :OO P M •• IM Cl!--Awn.a .mr#ft<e to ~ Civic Center 8ulldll\t , 300 Eul
Cl'lopmonAve,_,lnllltcllyofOrontt,
CA.
benef iciaries, c reditors
and c o n tingent c reditors of
Mae D . Hapgood and
person s who may be
otherwise interested in the
w ill and/or estate:
A petition has been filed
by M ars hall Hickson in the
Super ior Court of Orange
County reques t ing that
Mar s h all Hi ckson be
appointed a s persona l
repr ese nt at i ve to
admin ister the e s tate of
Mae D . Hapgood, Cost a
Mesa , C a . <u nde r the
I n d e p e n d e n t
Adminis t ration of Estate
Act). The petition is set tor
hearing in Dept . No. 3 at
700 Civic Center Drive
West, Santa Ana, Ca. 92701
o n January 6 , 1982 at 9: 30
The follO•lnt perW>n1 ate delf\I
buSlflOHH'
THE SILVER EJIPltESS. 1'°21
Bushard Slreet. Fo11n1eln Valley. Cellfornle tvOI
P sychologist Richard Beery o r UC
Berkeley's Counseling Center said h e
bas noted c areer d isconte nt in
relative ly young people -ages 2S to
35 -with increasing frequency in the
past decade.
The problem arises because young
people are becoming so concerned
about job security tha t t hey are
·'They are r eacting to many
s tude nts who graduated a few years
a h ead of them and who couldn't find
jobs," h e said . a dding that as a
result, many prof essionals a re
looking for "income. prestige and job
market demand."
The reve r se occurred in the 1960s
when emphasis w as placed on
personal interests and values, said
Beer y .
Tiiis lluslnots II c-..CIH by M lndlv141uol.
Wllll.,,. L. Oovll. Jr. Tl'lls ,........,. ... lllod wlttl tl'9
County Clerll of Oronte County °" O.Cem• u , 1'11 .
PIPlltl PlltHI,_ Or ..... Ceoll o.lly Plloe.
O.C 1•. U. lO, ltll, J ... •. 1'G ~I
N.-1" "ICTITIOUS eUllMIUJ
..,..._ JTAT•M•NT
T ... IOl-1119 petM>nl ore dol119
-ll>HS81: CA.AMIRA BUSINESS PARK
ASSOCIATES. JISI Al,,..oy .........
814t. G.J, Ca .. -.,. CA fHJl. ~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---! l·CARMIRA 8U$1NESS PARK llllH Nmcls ASSOCIATES. 31S1 Airway Aven .. ,
FIRPO
PATRICIA !PATT Y J
FIRPO, resident or Newport
Beach, Ca. Passed away o n
December 20, 1981 Survived
by her parents Mr. and M r s .
Frank Firpo or Fresno. Ca ..
brother Ric hard Firpo o f
Fresn o , Ca. and l sister
Eleanor Dickson o f Newport
Beach, Ca. The Ho ly Rosary
will be r ecited o n
Wednesday. December 23.
1981 al 7 :00 PM at
Whitehurst Funer al Chapel.
Fre sno, C a . Mass of
C hri s tian Burial will be
celebrated o n Thursday.
D ecember 2 4 , 1981 at
10:30AM at St J o hn 's
Cathedral. Fresno. Ca
Interment will be al St.
Pe ter's Cemete r y, Fresno.
Ca Memorial Mass wall be
on W ednesday. December
!3. 1981 al 8 :00AM a t St.
J ohn Vianney Catholic
Church, 314 M a rine Ave ..
B alboa I s l and . C a .
Whltehunt Funeral H o me,
Fl'esno directors
CONCANNON
BA RTHOLO M EW V .
CONCANNON. passed away
on D~ember 20. 1981. He
was a resident of Newport
Beach. Ca. Survived by h is
aon Thomas M. Concannon,
d aughter Elizabe th L .
Concannon. daughter-in-law
M r s . Fra nk Concannon.
rACIAC YllW
MIMOltALrAaK
Cenwtery Moriuar)'
Chapel-Cremato ry
3500 Pac1f1c View Drive
Newporl Beach
644-2700
McCOb«:ll MOlTU.UllS
Laquna Beach
49'-!MIS
Laquna Hills·
766-0933
San Juan Capistrano •9S-1ns
Bldt. G-.1, Cos .. Mew, CA t1ut.
2 ·1NTERAMERI C AN
OEVELOPMENT PARTNERSHIP,
JUI Al,..., •-. BlclQ. G·J, CM .. Mato, CA nt».
J ·WEROI N PAltKER ANO ASSOCIATES, O Co lllotl\IO CO'IHlrOtlon, JU1 Alrwoy AY91'1.,.,
81dQ. G-J, C.O. ... Mew, CA 916». Tiiis -•Mis IS COftdu<tecl by •
""'"" __....p. w.nlln P-.r & Anoe lo'"·
oc.IH<wnlac~llCI.,
E. ,._. w.Nln, Jr.
Tl'li. ..._ -fl ... .tUI tfllt C-1y ci-of OrM99 C-y °"'
No ... 20, "'1.
PtJMN
...... 1 ... Or ..... Cont Oelly Piiot.
Oec. 2, t, 1•. D, 1•1 SU7 .. I
'"'41111
ftlCTITIOUS eUMN•M ..... STATa .... NT
T,.. 1011 .. 1,.. per-• o•• 0.1"9
llusiMU•:
(o ) I NTE RAMERICA N
OEVCLOPMENT COMPANY: (b) THE I N TEAAMElllCAN
COMPANIES, JUI Al,_.y A-.
8"'9. <N. c.o.u Mew, c • ma. l ·I HTERAMEll lC AN OEVELOPMENT COMPANY, JUI
Alrwey ......... 8'411t. G.J, Co•I• Moto,CA'26a.
2 ·1NTERAMEAICAN CORPORATION, e Collfotnlo
corperotlol'I, JUI Airway Aven ....
BlclQ. <N. C.O.to "'°'°·CA ma.
l ·TREMBLIEY LIMITEO, t Colllornlo c ... _etMNI, JlSI ,.,,,.. • .,
,..,.,. ... , 8-G-S. Cos .. Mato, CA .,.,..
Tiii• buSINKS •• conclvctOCI by • llmlled ~,.""Ip.
Tr.,,.,.., Llmllltd
E. RvUell Wetdln, Jr.
Tiiis atotement w• fllod wltl'I UM COlll'llY Clerll of Orenoe Covnly on
..... 20. 1"1.
ftt1tcr•
P11bllsNd Or ..... Coott Oolly PllOt,
Oec. 2, t, ''• D , Htl SUMI
l'ICT1TIOUS eusnt•U MAM• STATaM•NT Tll• foflowlnt peraon 11 clol"t -1-•: PERSONAL PLANN ING
SERVICE, 2111 EldM St,...._ Apt, .U,
COi to Mole, Cellfonllo 92'» ,,._,, Pevl K ..... , 2117 IE..,,
$1 .... t. ,..,.. .,, c.i. ...... C:..11'°""9
'162'
Tlllt' -lfteas It conc1uet• by °"
lndhtlduol.
E.....,,P.K ......
Tillt lteterMf'lt -ftl... Wltl'I "" C04Hlty Clorlt of 0r.,... COIHllY Ofl .....,."'.,_JO. 1"1.
P11"Q
~,..., or.,... eo.11 Oolry ... ..,.,
Oec. !, t, 16. ti, 1'11 SJIMI
itCTITIOUI •UllMaa lllMllllSTATa ..... T
Tiie folltwl,,. per-Is Ml,,.
blltl-•: THIE LATEST THIHG, • Folr Orlvo, c.te Nine, c.1...,.1'11• 926!7
Kl,.,,..,.y """" ........ i. • ....,,.
.... Jt, c.to Mn-. Gel ....... UU7
Tl'llt llWl-S It C....,<MCI by o
llml ... ~
l(~yA. .. IM
Tiiis .....,... -ft ... wltll.,. C-ty Ci.rti et Or1Hl9e C-ly .,,
... ..,.. et •• ""
... CTITIOUI •USIN•H
~STATmMtlMT
Tl'I• followlnt ""°"' h clolnt
llWl!ftHIOI: CREATIVE COMPOSURE,
""2·A Volley Clt<I•. Munlll\tlon BMcl'I, Col-Ille ....
S.,,._ FortllflO, 1M2·A V•lley Clrclo, Hllflllfl(llOll Beoel'I, Colltornla
l164t Tiiis -'Mn 11 Conctu<IOCI lly an 1ndlYICk>ol.
s.montl\o Fortuno
ThoO Thi Htlton. 2544 Miro Mento,
Onie< lo, c.ittornla t11•1
Muoi Lom We•lbroo-. t 7'3 Hiblsc11• Stree t, Foul\lol" Va lley,
Calllornl• ft.JOI
Tl\I• bu•lneu II conclllct~ by -
eene••' pen"°""'P Tr-Tiil N•lton
-LomW~t-Thil ~t-1 wos lllocl wllll Iha
County Cieri. 01 Otenee Co11nty °" ?eomllef' 7, 1tt1
Tl'lls .._,.,,.,,. ••' flied wltll , ...
C-ty Clorll of Oranee Covnty on ......... _ io. ltll.
At I,.. II mt of ll'lt lnlllel Publlull.,of
tllls notl<e, tl'lt 1oe.1 amo1111t ol llW ,.11 ... , 11npeld ~lence ol tl\e obll9atlon1
Publl....., 0r.,... Cool! Oolly Piiot. M<urecl by Ille •bow cttt<rlbecl aeeo or
Oec. J, t, 14, Jl, 1•1 Sn..tl lnalonclttllrTWIM<Olh,e•Ptl'IM•,anet
1'17Jta
Publllhed Or-Cool! Oolly PllOt.
O.c. '· 1•. 23, lO, '"' SJS741
.. .-111
.. ICTITIOUS eus1N•U
NAM• STATllM•NT T ... lellowl"9 per-s ore dolnt
llvllness •: IOP BUCHANAN COMMERCE CENTRE, )UI Airway A-, •kit
G-J. CMC.e ...... Collfotnl• ••• IOP ....,_ Com.m.ru CMrtre.
tut Al,_ ·-· 81c1Q. G-l, c.si. MAM, CollfonlY t»a ll\leromerlcon Oovelopment
l'er1Mralllp, JUI Airway Aw" .... ..... o-a. ('aa-... CAllforN• t»»
Wenlln l'erlr.,. -AHOClotos, O C.llfo<l'll• <«11ontl0ft, JU1 Airway
Avo11110, 81119. G-J. Coste Muo, Col"9rnlo ...
Tiiis ~-· It c-ctocl lly a -•IPWtfter11'11p.
Wltnlln p-... & """"'· • Collfomla c.,_llCI.,
E. A-elww.lln, Jr.
Tl'lls l lilt-•• fllod wltl'I tlW
C-ty Clortl of Oronee County Oii
No ........... 20."'1.
..17Mr6
Publl,_ Or-Coosl Oolly PllOt,
OK. 2. 9, 1•. 2l, 1•1 SUMI
'"'41111
l'ICTITIOUJ auStMRJS
tlAMe STATIEM•NT
TIM ... ._,"11 --• ore dolnt _, ...... :
AIACENTER. nu Rodl'llll
.... -. f'..200, Cosio Mose, C..llfoml•
'2162'
1-Mor---I~ Com-Y. .. I Boyl-Aw,..., Loi Al\991 ...
Collfenlloto017
2-Jol'lft W. HomlllDl'I, 27U Oc-
IOlllWOf'd. CorGW del Mot. C..lllornla mu
~Byron M. T.,,..,tar, 900 VI• Lieto
Heird, Newport BMdl, C..llfoNll• '2t6J
4-.lel'I """'· • Mesa G..... lrYIM, Cell .. ,.... ft7 u
S-Ted W . .Jonft, No. S L•So""°
Piece, Sovtll ~. Collfornlo t:ll71
Tl'llS IMft!MSS Is COflclllCIOCI Dy e
.... rol~
Jolln W. Horn II Ian
Tiii• .--flloll wltl'I the
c-1., ci-of Ot•ttte C-IY on .............. ,. .....
1'17'116 P\111111/WCl Orenge Coosl Oolly PllOC,
o.c. 2, •. "· n. 1•1 5~.
.... ,.
l'tCTlTIOUSeUSIN•U
lfAMll STATWM•NT
TM lol-1119 ~-· .,.. cllelnt .,.,., __ :
IDP TRADE BUSINES$ PARK II,
llS1 Al.-...Y A-. Bk19. ~. C..te Mete, CA..._
HOP T ... oe •US1NES$ PA•K
II, JUI Alr.ey •-..... o.a. ~-...<:A..._
l ·INT••AMERICAN oavEt.OP-NT PA•TH••SHIP,
JISI AlnMy •-· 8Nf. G->, Cate ....... c... ...
a-w aROIN PARKE• ANO
ASSOCIATES, t Collfotftle
Cwper.Cleft. JUI Alrwey Aw-. ..... 04. Qlate Meu, CA tl6a.
Tllll Mlftftl 11 COfl0UC1ed tty e
llmltM ...,...INp.
....... tllor&Au« ......
• Cltlfwlllo ~-1 ...
E. ""'9tll WWOll'I, Jr,
Tllla ............ -lllod wltll Ille
c-•v c..,_ • °'.,... C.-y .,,, ...... Jt, "91.
P11WP7
..... , .... OrMtl Ceht Oelly ,., ....
eavencet1U22.•.$4 lodolffmlnetlW
-nlneblcl. voumoycell 111'! tn.-. A .M . -~~~~~~~~~~~-
IF YO U OBJECT to the "~c:!~~!~:.::::s Dale: Oe<omlltr I, ltll
SMI CORPORATIOH es .. ldTrv1teo granting of the petition, The follo•1,.9 parton " do1111
ByT.O Sorvl<eComoonr ...... BvClflGYS<llOonOver AssistAntSe<retory
OneCllY BIYCI , 'WKI o..,,..,CA'1 ...
71~
you s hould ,either appear bullnen •.:
t th h . d t t L 0 G I C A L S Y H E R G Y , 4 a e earing an s a e cooD1,..._, lr•lne, c..111.,,.,.,. •vis
your objection s or f i le C•ry Denn11St..-..•Co01>1Ht-.
written objections w ith the Irvine. c..111wn1omn
court before the hearing. ,,.,J,~',~,:::sineu 11 conct11<tec1 oy ..,
Pubjl-Or ..... Cooll Dolly PllOt, Your appearance may be eorv o s1 ....
i n pers on Or by you r Tl\11 ll_.,,...I wa Iii.cl with '"'° o.c.•.1•.u .1•1 UllMll attorney. County Cle"' ol Ot•"oe Counav ..,
I F Y 0 U A R E A o.ceml>Of 1' '"'
C R E D I T 0 R o r a Publlv.a 0r..,.. eo.11 Oo11:1=
contingent creditor o f the o.c. '· "· n. JO. 1tt1 sm .. 1 "':='::!::::."::' d eceased , you mus t file -----------
T,110 1011owln9 peraon 11 dolnt your claim with the court P9JC lll1C(
~~-;:CO NSTR UCT IO N or pres ent i t to the------------
COMP ANY. m o e1rc"' s1 ... 1. personal representative "~c:!~~!:::::::S
NowllO'tBeeo..eo111..,,.iotaw0 appointed by the c ourt Tl'I• 1e1._1"9 ""on•••• .. "-
c11r111op11ar A. Sto11on1, •ot within four months from Duslneuas: 8"'",,.11·c.o.1o M1to,C..i-..ie"'26 the date of firs t issuance "'2B. LTO., »2 F"""1 ,..,.....,, Tiii• lllnifwU Is <-..CIOCI by ... Suite n. P. 0 Bo• "· Lo-8Mci, 1Mtv1ctuo1. of letters as provided In c..111., .. 1.nw •
OwbS~ Section 700 of the Probate E Jomu M11ror. UJ Fore lt
Tlli. ---· ••• lllocl wllll Ille C ode of California. T h e Aven11•. Suitt 22, L•t11no Bue,. C-ty Clorll of Or•l'lte Counly on C•lllornlo '2JISI o.co-i., 1•1. t ime for filing claims will B•I.,. A. .. ,.,... 2111 we.r c-,1
"".,.. not expire prior to four Hiel'lwey, ,..._, e.ocl'I. c.111 ... ,...
Pvbll.,.,. Or.,.. coe1t 01111Y Piiot, month s fr om the date of .,.., • •
o.c __ . _1•_._n_._J0_._1•_•._J_..,_._•_. -"-''_s.i_• .. _1_, the hearing noticed above . 8 r1111 •· Perr" O• vo1opme,1 Com~ny, o oetWtll ~Ip. I..., PlllJC •TU YOU MAY EXAMINE M111111en •-. 1rv1ne, ee111orn&o
-----------•the file kept by the court. nw I
NOTICR 01' TllUJTRE'S IA.LI!
GTOHo OlOI
Re: J11ttMt
If you are interested in the .. ;;!:, ::=:::.:,,.~ conCIUctOd Dy!..
est a te. you may file a M2B, Ltd .. • e•n•r•1
request w ith the court to ~•ner"'411. B• GU AROIAH TRUST OEEO
SERVICES, e cotpor•tlol\ 01 d11ly -lni.ct T,.,.. .. ....., ll'le lollowfno
dlHC rlbecl Cle.cl of ltlllt WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE
HIGHEST BIOOEA FOR CASH •ALL RIGHT, TITLE ANO INTEREST
CONVEYEO TO A.NO NOW HELO BY
IT UNOEA Offd of T•usl In ll'le
Pt'-r1Y ...... Inell., OOICrlbecl
I I I ti f E. J•mttM.,,-or, Po,_ rece ve spec a no ce o Tiii• .._,,,...,. •• 111., wlt11 *
the inventory o f estate coun1y c1-ot Oto,... co""" "'
asset s and of the petitions, .. o....,..,..J0, 1•1 •
accounts and r e ports "37
described in Section 1200 Pvbll-0r.,,.. Coo•• o.uy. Pl " Oe< 2, •• "· u. lttl Of the California Probate
TRUSTOR: Jolt" W. Jullnor. on llflm•n'lecl ,,_
BENEFICIARY Mor9'1,.I Moyer,
... """' ... noci _,,_ Aecoraea O.cember 11. '"° u lns1r. No. 25711 In boot. IST7 P09t 11.S
of Oflklol R.-e in Ille offk • ot ,,..
Recoraor d 0r.,,.. c-y, seld -of 1r111t deac:r lb .. lht lollowlnt
..,_rty:
A pertlon of Lot U of N ... port
Meltl'lls. In Ille city ol COlto Mo .. , COlll'lty of Or.,., Stet• of Colllornla •
Code.
Marsha l l Hickson ,
Attorney at Law, 521
Arizona Avenue, Suite 317,
Santa Monica, CA 90401 ;
eel : (213) 394-3705
Publls~ Orange Coast
Dally Piiot, Dec. 16. 17, 23,
1981 5"34-81
os 110r mop recotded In ._ 4, Peoe -------------.,of MISCOl'-'t Mepos, In tl'le onlct N~I•
of llM c-v ~of told C-.tv. l'ICTrTIOUS aUSINRIS
Gotcrlbecl • IOllows: Bo91Mlr19 •I tl'le NAME STATl!MENT moat Norttwrly corMr of tolcl Lot 13, flle tollo•l"9 cierlOns •r• dolnt
belf'lt • """" In llW Soutllento•IY llM Duslneu os
of Or•• A-. OS 1'-" on tokl MAJll·BRISTOL PHARMACY,
...... tlWl<.o Seutll fO' !lest OIOf'lt Ille JO» S. BrlJIOI Avenue, Sull• C. Coste Nertl'IHttorty ~y Of sold Lot 1J, M•SO. Collforni• .,..
H S. SO feet to th• trve oolnt of Worner Bttslol Pf\ormocy, Inc .. e
be911'11'1lfte; -.Uc.,llr,.,ll'ltSouVI so• Ce lllotnl• corpo r•llon, I UU
Eo at e lont uld Hortlleu1erly Mowll'lorne Blvd., ~•w 111orne, bouf'lclery, tO ,.., lo • Point; tlleftc• C•lll.irnl• tenjO
IMltll «1' Wit9' 141.J7 fMt to • P9lnl; Womer 8'1Stol
ttle!lc• Hortll JO" WHt .0 IHI to • Phormoc y. 1 nc.
pelf'lt; ._. _,,. 40' liut l•t.S1 fMt Froa w. Wo-rmon, to, ... Ir•,.. ... of .,... .... 1,... Soc•etory
MAY BE ALSO KNOWN AS· 2~ Tl'llt Jlotemont -llloll wllh UM
Pet-. °"9to Mote. Cellfornlo COVl\ly Cf-of Orono-Covl\ty .,, "Ill o street ...,. .. , Of con11n0t• NOVembef lO. 1•1
dHl9,.otleP1 Is sl'lown obove, no ,.17....,
••••only 11 t hen •s lo II• PubHllWClor..,..coostOally PllllC,
cOfl'llM....._ w cor-IMl.ll.'' o.c. '· ••. U, lO, 1•1 ~Ml Tl'lo i.Mfldory ~ .. 1c1 OeOd of 1-------------Trust, -. ,_of• bt'eecl'I'" cttloutt lfl IM Mll..C'-MC-ll'le,.by,
...... ,.,..,. H K,,... Mel cttllvereci lo 1-------------llW...,. ...,., • Wfln... o.cierotlOfl
o1 Ootoun Mii ~tor s.1e. OflCI
••lllOfl Mllce of llr-ll •n4' Of •l«llOll .. c-... -tit"H,. ... , .....
........,., •• Mitlsfy ................. . .... ...,..,.. __ .,.,_.. <•-
rtCTITIOUJ aUSfNEJS
MAME STAT•MIElfT • The tollowlr19 perlOfls ere dol'4t
buMl\OUOS:
SUMMIT NUMB ER NINE, ., '
Fortst •-. $ull• tt. P. O. Boa '9· LOQUN !Modi, Colllonlla t2U2 '
E. Jemes M11•••. Portne•. JIJ
Forni Avenue. S11llo n . Loev•• e .. c11. eo111om1oms1 ;
Marold B•••I, Portnor . 11111
Bordeefl •-. lrvlne, K•,,,..111 K. K..._.,.,, ,._,,.,.., •U Town Center Orlw , Sul• lte, Cosio MoM, Golllornl• m•
JoM M. K-ln. Por._, > &u1't
:;:;, A-. Plwkeml"· How Jo•'fY
Alon J . Borton, Portnet. att Fordyce Roell, L.os Antel•t, c;..111orf11a
~ .
Steven H. Gllh, Portner, M Bayberry Rood, Prlncelon, H+" Jeraoy OIS40
Lovl• l.ftl\H, p.....,.,, 1• H ..
AOOCI, Pfweton. -.,_Y oes.o He,,,., A. Hiii, Jr., Portner. ~
Bayberry Rood. Princeton, N•
.,.~ ... -.. . .
Tl'll• IMl$lnets 11 conovcteci by:,.
OllM•tl pe'1ner11>!9 •
Swnmll N......., Nino,'•
Colllomlo _..rtNp I E.~Mwor,Par1Mr 1
Tl'lls ~ -111«1 wlltl ttlt Coullly Ct0f1l of Oto,... c-1., ... HOYM'tbet JD, ltll j
~ ....
P11bll•IMd Orone• CHll ::~y Pllet, Ooc:. 2. t, 1•. n , 1"1 t
P11tMI O.C. !, t, 1' SI."'' ~I
.... -Ice .. llreoell .... of •loc tlol'I ..
... ·~ Sotit~ 10, ••1 .. ....... Ne...., In ...... 1.,1! ..........
H#DOe L.AW..-MT. OUYI
Mon~ • Cemetery
Crem11orv
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Meta
$40-5554
...... 1 ... Or'Mtl c...t Oefly P*'t. I OH,2,t, lt.U. 1'tt Jlll•I of .... Qftklol R«-,
SAMII -wtll lie -· M •11'-t COVOl'IO"t et werrel'ltf, ··~II Of I ...... ~ ................ . _",,.__ ....... ., ... ~ ...
~l"'l,el ..,.. ., .. ,,..., ..........
tty M Mll 0..-.. T,_, wltll I,,._. • "' .... ,,...,,.,..., ~ """"· ll"4lff .. -"' ... 0..-.. ,,,..., IM1, C""'991 M\41 • ._ .. Ille fn.tt• ......... ,... .. (rMtocl _,,
te141 OW.. ff Trwt a.Ml Mle wlll lie
llettl .,, :M**•· J_.., u. *' llC I I: .. AM. ... tM ff'Mt 911tr-e .. Oller•••'"* OWll ientkft. ....... .. , ••• MeyfMr,°'911911, ~ ....,,
TM t .. ej _.... eif tM ......
MleftCO·-----..... .. .... ........., ................. ... ...,..., .............. .....
teltt,O ................. .. ............... ........., ..
D .... :....._~"" CMWIOt ... 'f'tlUP OHDlllMCU. •C4ijlU-..... ,.....
,.. ........... 0 ......
Df ..... CA-OM11'Mlttl ey ............ -.......... .............
llct ..........
CMlc.a. ,........cr..,c...o.11w.._ OM ......... ,... MMI
I
! ~ ~ .~
I
If r
I
10 steps toa
successful
garage sale
G••au• Hlot•. yard 111M. rummage ulH, •lrHI 11la• no mi ner W1>a1 you Utl 11\em 10. 10H oa Ille...,,,. -TURNING T>ilNGS YOO NO LONGER
NEED INTO C"SH When you gel hred of hgnhng )'OU< way 1nlo 1 cro"'°eo
•ll•C °' 9&•"119. or w~ you,._, a 1110• ut•1 cun, ne .. 1 i>e<• a.tel So
get into 11141 acl. ci.an out t,_ vnwan..o item•. ~ mai.a rno...y Ook\g 111
11 t fun. II• profitable. ind l0Uow1ng lheM 10 tltpa will make II 11mpte
1 Decide on dates.
Gf'G_!e
Sale
Look al • c:alendar and sel tile daies and times of you•
•
sate Weekenos art usually good but many succeulul
sales nave oeen htld 1n lhe-"•ng 1us1 •h•• worll.
Che<:i. 1ne weatner forecast "' the PllP81 ano watch tor
any 01he1 large even1 11\al may a11•ac1 po1en11a1 buye1s
away such as ta11s o• C0"1!lllln•ty events Have your
sale 1un el least two 01ys-some people may no1 oe
able to come on any single day
2 What to sell.
Every1h1ng1 That 11 eve<y1h1ng You naven 1 useo 1n 1"8
last yea• II an 11em nas anttQue value or 11 brano-naw
• or has unusual vaJ.,. be sure 10 asll a healthy pttce 101
•I Gel a pad ol paper ano seatcn Your whole houH
Look everywlle1e •no 1is1 81111fY11l1ng
.........,.., fhos 1s your main atoact•on ano your
oest source ot income Be sure to plate lurn1ture
wtie1e 1t can oe seen ltom the street Pnce
lu•n•tu•e tow enoug11 to oea1 auctions and ~ononand sales (chec:ll. 1ne ctass1heds for
comparisons~ but 111gh enough so You can come
oown a little when someone sl>Ows 1nie1es1 Rock1no cna11s cllesl 01 draweti tables and
chairs are all .,ery succes.sful at garage sales so
leature them on your ad
~ .. Smaller entoq~ 5/>0ula De groupeo ano -ept clOse at llano where you can walch ano tali.
about lhem Nostalgia •terr& ate vary papular -display 111em well
Cloflolat. Make su1e clOth•ng •I clean •nil m1•ll.
the pt1ce way Oown Put as many 1h1ngs as
POSS•ble on hangers Seoatale ll.10 s things by 1ge
01spley eoult ctothong oy M• end age g1oup Low
prices are e _.on clOthes Hcept lor unusual
items wlloch should be tagged wotn 1n
e~planahon (l•ke. h1n<H1mcro1de-eo flOwers
dress worn by Mee WMt~" ~n. These will setl t0< a fan price only 11
they wo1i. No one will take you• word lor 1t Hive
an ewtensoon co•d so they can bo letled or belier
yet, have radios playing, old TV teta tutned on
etc Mlllte su1e buyers unOerSllnd they are sold asoa
"-h. These usually go 1as1 OUI lleep 1nem out 01
011ec1 sunlight A gooo 1oea es 10 name You1 plants
be lore lhe sale (Spider Lady. Cousin Jasper Ma~o••I. ano w111e a hne °'two on 1118
name card about how to care for them
]
Write your ad.
Here is 1 suggested ad Garage Sall -detka,
Bentwood 1ock1ng chair tOyt, Infants' clOlhlng, 1922
• V1ctrol1 on or1g1n11 cabinet. ,.,..ny geogets. Iota or
unusual items roci. coflecllOf'I planta R1f1esnments 8
a m to 6 pm Saturday and Sunoay I 23• South
Anystreet Younown JIAt _, ol Main and 2nd
Use tn11 um pie ad H a guode. Be sure 10 t1fl unu1u1I
items Be as specohc as ~ble Give ooreclions of
needed Don't use 1bb<ev1ations -many people won t
bolnt• to deC•Phe• them. CAllTION Oon t adve111se anything you oon t ltllly ha"'I! E...-, item on the ad
must oe on hand at the start ol the sale
4 Where to advertise.
Place you1 ao where 1t '"'"" be -n by people wno live
1n the area -mos1 people 5'>ap ciose to horre The
• Daily Pilot •s read by 83.000 adults 1n Costa Mesa,
NewPOrl Beach. Laguna Beach, INOne. Huntington
Beach and Fountain Valley -guaranteeing you wide
oAposure And with the P•IOl. you ,. not paying for
waSte cnculation 1n los ""9eles or Anaheim Plan to
run Your ad 3 tomes or tn0te and stan 11 a tew d1ys
oelont 1118 sale so b1rga1n hunters can have plenty of
nouce
5 Make a sign.
To halp maKe your sale suc:oesstut. mall.a 1 rew signs
• ltom cardboard and lefter .,;th ll l!lll91c ma1kt1 "gooo
sign size ts 14 • 22'
6 PlacinCJ your si9'.
The "10rn1ng ot Ille sale, bu1 not bllore place yovr
11gns ea sure and add yow Clddreu and any
• directional arrows This should be dona aboul • hall
hour bel0te the sale swta Piece ,our sign Where n
can be seen t•om OOth S•deS al Ille street oy p1111ng
cars and peoes111ans CAL/TION Some town1 h1ve 11ws
that rtstl•CI 11'18 placement Ind du11t1on Of garage sale
signs Pie.Se checi. With )'OUf town~ planning
departmenr o• clerk
7 Markin9 prices.
Merk prlCIH wllere they can be_. clea1ly Office
• supply ato•es llave var0tus sizes ano colors of 1t1cke•s
that wotk well, or you can..-mulung tape However
you m11k tnem ,... ,...... ...... G11age 11111 are lo•
barg11n hunte•s R•men'CJer. WI•-you cant sell
you II 1'11¥9 10 d11g back 1n ,,.. nou .. and store again tor another vear
8 Servfn9 ~frest.inwnts.
th11 doean t have to cost much. Ind C:IHltt 1 l11endty
• 1tmospht11 11 also encou<age1 people to atay 1ong1r
and pe1haps buy more You oould eY9n charge for
oxpon11ve ll•ms like doouta, or the k1<t1 could go ,,., ~ness for tne day ..,.th a lemol\ao. atand
9 Di1play.
Make sure everything C3n be -n. Have cud Llbfaa or
•boards I.Nd et sne1Ye9 be-twO cl\alrw Don't c:auee P9Q91e to bend o-un-. you can t help IL Uae
one table u •desk""'*' you can -8¥8tyth1no 11'10
tall.t money UM only one calh box (tin cane or bax11
work fine) and mall.t 1utt __,. le appolnled
'ce:thltr'' 11 11111me1 Atrtnge bel0tehand for 1 friend wno ~" help anawe• OuettlOl'l1. rwflel 101 lun ch etc
IJ Check your nekJtbws attd
friNdS. •s.. If any want to join )'OUt l8lt 'l'l'llt wlll gt.,. )'Ou
IOINIOM to "'-UpellMI .... 111 Ind tnc-1n1ar .. t
In 10\M' ule H OCNn join yO<I. be -. 10 lnCIUOt 11111 In
yout .a (tumple • thr•l...,.,,1y Nie. ntlghoorllood
sala"I Oroup tale•••• I IOI more tun too
642-5678
llilJPlllt
DI W ley It~ C.Oa• M-. CA
Open N:30 Mot*Y """ '"°"Y. letuntay l<flOOn
'
2
Blood
drive
pushed
The R e d <:ross hu
p l anned s ever¥1
activities f o r tt s
Sa vc A·Llfe S und1ty on
D ec 27, plus numerous
activities 1n the two
weeks prior.
Save-A ·Lite S unday's
purpose is to e mphasize
the need tor blood
donations durin~ the
h o lidays, a R e d Cross
s p o k esman s aid He satd
t h e holida y settson
usually is a s low lime
for donations, though
the need ror blood does
not d eclin e
The Orange County
Community Bl oo d
Cen ter. 600 Parkcenter
Drive. Santa Ana, will
b e open from 9 a .m . to
1·30 p .m . on Save· A -Life
S unday In addition . two
communi t y
bloodmobiles will be
open from 10 a .m . t o
2 -30 p .m . a t the R ed
Cross Ser v ice Centers 1n
L agu na N i g u el and
W estminster
For hours or the blood
c enter from Dec 13
throug h N e w Y ear · s
Day, c ontact the R e d
Cross at 835·5381
Stude1its
• winners
M e mbers o f the
Oran ge Coast College
student .news paper
C oas t Report won five
awards at the Southern
Cal ifornia J ournalis m
Conferen ce at Pas adena
City College
R eporter Ingrid
DaSilva o f Costa M esa
won a second -place
m e d<tl for o n -the s pot
f eature writing. a nd
Brad Howe or Costa
M esa was awarded third
place 1n the s ports phot o
cat egory and fifth place
for an o n -the ·s pot n ew s
photo
Paul Martin of Costa
M esa placed fourth 1n
the f e ature phot o
categor y, and Greg
Curry of Santa Ana
earne d an honorable
m e ntion for editorial
cartoonjng
PVlllC MOYIE
l'tCTITtOUS IUStNESS
NAME STATEMEN~
The tottow•"O pe,,on 11. do•no
ouslneuo
FllGHTPATHS, U OO C•mPUt Orlv• Suite t~. NewPo•I Bu en
Calllor.,I• '1..0
Fr-eOtrl<ll 8 J.cOOU.. 1'1~ "II•
Vl\te Ortve, Newport 8••c PI Calllotnl• '1..0
Tiiis bUslnen ll conciuct•d by •n 11\dlvlouel
'B Jecobus
Thl1 \tatemt'ftt ••S 11~ with the
County Cr.r .. ot O•anQt County °"
O•ctmbfo< 11, '"' ~UMIC
Publl'111<1 Ora"llf Coe\I Deity Piiot.
Dec 13. 30 19'1 Jan • tJ 1'112Ull .. t
t'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS
MAML STATEMENT
Tht follo•ln9 p~r\on '' dolnQ bu''""'., UNIVERSAL AUTO BODY '
P"tHT, 1>:16 NtwPort BouttverCI (<Kia M• ... C•lllMnl• tUJ7 '
Mlch.,I David Gll•r•rdl, 2'131
NtnClln• "venue Perri•. (tllfotnt•
•u10
fnh butlnHs " c-..c1ec1 by an
l""lvldue l
MKheel DevlCI Gher•rcll
Tiii• \lflemtnl we> rllto with the
County Cl••" ot Orar>Qe County on OtetmDer 11, 1 .. 1
1'17-
PubllshlO OrM\Qe CM\\ Deily Piiot
Ott 13, lO, '"'·Jan •, tJ, l't2H91 .. I
l'ICTITIOUS BUSINEU
N-1 ST"TEMINT
t ht rollowlno Ptrton h ool"O o•nlntn•• ASSOCIATED BUIL DI NG
MA INT ENANCE CONTRACTOR!>
, ... , Mec"n""' Boui.,.ard, !>ulte JOO.
tr vine, C•llfornl• '11U
Bob leon4rCI VOIP<t, •o Lewi ..
11\'lne Celltor"'• '1111•
Tiiis builn•n Is c-ucttd by • ., 11\dlvldual
804> L-rCI Volpe Tlllt Jlat.,,_I wes lllto with the
County Cler~ ot Orenqe County on
O.<tmDer 21, '"' IJU...,
Put>lttNO Or..-oe , .... Delly Plio..
Ot t 23, 30, '"'· Jlf\ t. U, tttU~ .. l
~ICTITIOUS BU It NESS
MAME ST ATIMllHT
T lie lollowlllQ person ll Oolne
bu\lone"n
THI H06BY SHOP. U0 Ea•I 11111 Slrtal, COJI• ww, Catltorntt tUU
Homer SoarkS MCCl•ll•"· 1 lit EU•• Lene, NtWllOfl •••<II , Calllor"'•~ Tiii• ...,...,. .. h cOftltv<teo ..., an
tncllvld~I H ~ M<Ctetlan
fllll tll-1 Wft filed Wllll IM CouMY Clen. ot Ore"llf <.wntv .,,
Dt<tmlllr 11. 1'et .. ,,_
PUbll-Or""9f t oalt Dally Piiot,
0e< tJ, llD. '"' Jfllfl •• IJ, 1"2 SS.WI.
----------------
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, December 23. 1981 * ••
PVIUC •Ill MUC •nee 'l
SUl'BatOA COUa T 01' c;ALll'OaNl.1 N.....0. 'A .-le -Int wlll tM 11t1f .., IJICTITIOU1 M.llUllM
COUNTY 0' LOI ANOILIS t'ICTITIOUI BUllMeU J 1"2 I 1 MAMa tT•TIIM&NT
CAH NO "Utll NAM.a STATeMIMT ::•:-::ri:..;':'&:;...-.! A~. Tiit lollewl"O fMHOl'I It H llW
CtTATIOftl Tiie tot1owtn11 Pf<Nn• ••• oa1n9 Ohtrlct 1e1vc11ttn Ce nt••. 1ou1 bu•l!'9u .... ,. , .. u .. oao~·T ... ,..........,, ,,_ ... ,..,,., °"''"•" •• Yor1uo-"-· H...,.tf\llon .. 11<11, .uN ' .. v" .-.. ..... ,. c .. '811yaM(Mlrtl TP:LEiPHONE AM$WllllNO I•,,,,,,."" lllA, Tiii• Ytl CLl!ANEllS, '111 ..... ,.,, •tvd
IAaANOONMt!NTI IUlllE"V. ,.,, htt ""'"'"'·sent.a Ot_, ...... ,.,... .. , .... kel~,., N••llOrl BMOI, C:•llfetlll•~
t Ill[ AOO,.l!Ofool A"•· Callror"'• t1701 Llmlltd -N_IE,,..111\ .... _.... Rk l\OfCI H Sltw•rl. JIO VI• Qulio,
I ft '"• llill•lltt ol MA It ( l: SH.. GEORGe w SMIT M Enlefl>"IM•. ,,...,,,. IOf ,,,. ,..,..., w-.,... Ill' NtWllOrl &tech, Calll0<nl• '*'
ORl!NAE MATTHEWS • l•llftOf, • Inc tYlll«"'• j/0$/.0) (O<'llOfatton, tllt Huntlntten ••och Vnlen Hltfl Tiii• llutlNn ,, 'onclu<lecl ..., .,,
l>erte>f' """" "'°"ICI 119 oe<l•rtO "" 1'01 IE .. t 11111 $trttl, S."t• .,.,., kllOel Olftflcl." ln4MOual
lrOM tho CUJlody •nd control ol i..r Cet1torn1a t1101 ..... 11 ..... 0ref'9t Gaell Otlly ~llet, Alchttd H St-•rl
P•'•"'' T "" b<itlneu ,, ton4uelte •Y • Dt<. 1', 10, "· n, JJ, u. "· ,., UtMI Tl•I• •lete ..... 1 we• '"~ '"'"" IM To SYLVESTER CAAR (PoU IDI• , .... ,,.,.,Ion CO•.lllty ,,., .. et 0r.,,. c ... nty °"
•ll•oe<I netU!'al r•U..fl Wlltrubl)llo O •or 11 t W S"' 11111-------------Oeomw 2. "'' UMl.ftO•,,-teeH ptf-Cl.elmlftOIO 1 .. 1 .. p•l-. In< .-JC llTIC( ,,,,.,
... Ill• lalN• ... "'°""'' "' MIO ,.,,,,.., Kaltly L l'avlu•, ,.,_M• '-------------~ PuDllUWcl Or-eo.•t Oally PllOt, per.on ...... "'""'° ~trtlAfV ... Oe< '· ... u. IO. '"' S.J».11 By order of 1111• Cour1 yOU •ro Tnlt tl"-l wet ltted •1111 t"9 IJICTITIOUa •USIMIN hereby clttO .,.., •-'<•d to '4>••r (OMnty Clerk ., Or•nte tounlY ... ...,.. t TAT•MllNT ~·lo rt Ille JUClgt Pr .. 101no I• MOVtMlll< u, , .. , Tiie IOllowlno l>t'H" ,, dOI"'
Oepart""'"t U.1, R-.. 1 Jll ot Ille ft1.Sfl -lneHH' 1-------------
tDl)¥e tntllleCI COUtl loceteO al P11Dth-Or-Coest Qelty Pllel, A I l HE ME IS ENG IE a
Crlmlnal C.outh BtOo. 110 Wol O.c ll, JO, ltll, JMI •.ti, t"25S41.fl SERVICE. I~ E. lltll St'"'· No. HO.
Temple Lot "noete•, Ctlllornl• 'C>Oll i----Sant• Ane. c;a111ornle t1701
on February n, 19'1 el I 00 • m 01 -II' .Yll'( 110 ... tl Edwero Je,.~ln\, tSIJ
tl\al oo ,,,.,, •"Cl,,..,~ to'"°., cevw r-•-'"' D11mbt9<k Drive, _ti.....,., .. a<ll,
It .,,, YO.. 11... why U ICI per.o• Catlfor-rlla.,...
'"°"''d not be Ot<l•r•CI rttoe lrorn the STATEMIMT 0' Tllh bonl,,.•I " <-u<lecl by en
conttol of lie• IM'"'" .. core11no lo tne A9"NOONMeNT OIJ ln4lvld~~rt E Jtnkin• petition on Ille llettln Ull OIJ IJICTITIOUS .,..... Por f•llurt to •ll•nd y()u tnay 04 •ulfNEH NAMI Thi• .i....._t w•• r11 .. with '""
o .. m•C1Qulllyot•cont1niP1olcourt Tne 1011owtno f>erton• neve Covftfv Cletk ot °'Oft9t C"'n"""
You ••• hereby no11fled of Int •bendoneo tne uw ol tlle lkt1tlOt11 Deumb" "· '"' p1ov1tlons ot CMI c;-n 1 S wllJO ov1l11eu -
ptovlCle Ille ludgt 'nan tOvlu lf\t YACHTING CONSULf"NTS, Jiii Publl"'9d <>-•-Co"t Delly Piiot, minor ano me oerenb, II prtMnl, of Via Oporto. Newport B•ecn, .He lt.23,JO.l"'·J.., •.t"2
'"" rlqhl to hllve <oun•el prettnt. Tiie C•lllO•l'lle, 11"3 SolOl.tt
<ovrt m•Y tPC>Olnl covn .. 1 to ••PftMnt RoMfl 0 Hegln, tJ2 VltQl"t• 1--------------
tlle mln0< wnetn.• or not tlle mlno• It Pt•<•, Coal• Mew. Cat110<"'a tt.21
•bit ti) tlloro <ounMI, •na u tlley .,. Aobtrl Goroo" lier, Ill •
un•ble to allorCI coun .. 1, '""" et>001nt ""otnlnQsttr l•ne N•woort Bee<h, 1-------------
counMI to ••P" .. Mt ll'lt l>ftenh Ct lllornle
The l)ottltlon llleCI llereln I• lor lh• TM• lluil,,.n WH <Onclll<ttd by •
.>u•PoM of trHll'IQ Ille wbject <1111<1 tur OtMt•I patlne1"1hlp
pt•cement tor eOOOlton A-0 H90ln
D•ltd Otce,,,.,., tS 1 .. 1 f hl• •t•~t .., .. Iii.cl wltn u.e Jonn J Corcor•n Covnly Clerk ot Orenge Countr on
Count\' ere<~ Dte•mt>et 21 '"'
By R Kunlpo, O&Pufy
Je•ut H La.-, C-y C-MI M•rlh• e Weeltet, DtlHllY CavnlJ c-•• ,,. crimrna1 c_... 1vt1c11.,.
110 W.T ...... St.
LMB_l .. ,C• IOIU .,..,"' 4.,.,..., ,., ,_y •.
LM A-let 0 ... rtm..,I
olA-.V-Put>ll\heO 0-ange t oa\I D•lly Piiot
Ott 13. JO '"'· J•n •· IJ, 1'112 5~"•'
1'161UI
PuDll\htd Or•no Cout Oally
Pilot, Dec U. >o, I"'· Jen •. ll, 1"2 ·-.41
l'UIUC NOTICE
STATEMENT 01'
WITHDR"WAL l'ROM
l'"RTNERSHI,. Ol'ER"TtNG UNOEa l'ICTtTtOUS
IU,INIESS NAME
PVIUC MGTICE
Th• IOllOWlnQ t>efM>n ,, .. wlthdra•n
., • Qtntret pertn11 f rom •h•
P•r tner ui110 oo•r •ltno unoer t"• -------------•11c11tlOV\ llu\lntu ,,.,,,. Of CAPT"INS
l'ICTITIOUS I USINESS
HAMI ST"TEMINT
Th• tollowlnQ Pf'ftOI\\ •re do1n9
OU\llJeU et INTER,. .. r lO N"L
COMMERCl"L BROICEAAGE 1100
Quall Street Su•I• 10l Nt•PO•l BHCll, (alll.,,,,IA '1W0
lntern•llon•t. • Comm•r<•••
BrMer-oe com~v. tnc • C•tltornl•
coroorellOl'I 1100 OW•I Slrtet '>utlt
>Ol, Ntwpor1 BH<h C•lll0<,,1e ti...o
T '"' OuJU\e·u ., cond"< tea bY •
c.on>or•hon
lnttrNllon.I
CREW, 111'> Oln Str .. t, Newport
Buen. Celllornlet?lll
fl'I• llcllllous bullneu n•m•
d atenitnl '°'the-e>•,.1Mf\h1p wai tll.O
>n Mo S, t9'0 •n llW Count\' or OrMIQe
Full"--eeldrnsor ttM pe1-
•llhOr•w•n11 MICHEi.LE LOUISE
IFL"NO, 11th '6th Strt•I, N"'"P0<1
8H<ll. CalllO<nl• '1""3
SIQ,.•0 MlcPWllt L llt•nCI
t'IVUI
Publl\llOCI Or-(Ml! Delly Piiot,
Dtc U )(), 1 .. 1 JMI •. 13, 1"25•71 .. 1
PUil.iC NOTICE
t'ICTITIOUS IUllNllS
N-1 STATIMINT
Tlltt IOllO•lno PtrSO" ,, dol"Q bu>ln ... , ..
OECO GRAPt<, .00 Retnler Wey,
Catie M .... C•lllornle 92'21\
J.,.,., Roy Htrsll, t04 Relnltt
Wey, COlta -... Cellfornla •:i.:i.
Tnl• Du•lnen I• conouct.o by en lnellvlelu•t
J•rnt\ A HetSh
Thh lloll..,_1 ••s 111.0 wltfl Ille
County Cletk ot Or-County Dt<
11.1 .. 1
f'l182'3
Publlt.necl <>-enoe Coa>t Deity Piiot.
0e< ll, U , JO, 1 .. 1. Jlf\ • 19'2 Wl .. I
t'tCTITIDUS BUSINISS
'4-E STATEMENT
T II• tollowlnQ person " e101no
OUitneu .,
LARRY 5H"Y ENTERPRISFiS,
not Cll•nnel R041d. 8AlbcM, Calllornle
971>61
Lerry Sh.oy not Chtn,,.1 Ro.o,
Balboa, C•lilorn•• •i..t
rnos °"""""' 11 conouctect bY •" 1nCll•ICluAI
L•rrY'Sn•y
fn1t. st•t~t ""'•" tiled w ith tht Cou"h Cltr~ or Or•n11t County on
November 10. '"' l'HUM
PUbllJl'ot(I Or•nQo ,..,.,, Delly t>llol,
O..c 9, ll, 13. >O 1-.1 536>-t•
IJICTITIOUI •UtlMIH
NAM~ STATIMeNT
rne tollo..,lnQ pet>Oll h doing
b\islneu ..
OTC E~TERPAISES, 111 Wen
1/111 SlrHI, Coti. WH, C.tllor.,1e .,.,,
Rooef1 o Dvo.n. "•' ••,,.m• Plett, C.O.t• ~•. C..lllor"'e t:lllt3' Tiii\ bu•l,_l I) COtlClu<tell l>Y •n
lr>cll•ICl ... I
R_,O D_..
Tfth >lttement .... 111.0 "'"" Ille Co""'Y Clerk of Orenge Cou11ty 011
NOvtmber JO, '"' ,,,._
Pubho/Wcl Or-Coat! D•llY Piie!,
Otte 2 •. It , U 1 .. 1 5171•11
f'.ICTtTIOUS BUSINISS
NAME $TATEMENT
T ht to1to•tnQ ~'"°"' are doane
t>v'lneu •• !el THE PIZZA PLACE fb l
PIZZA PLACE. 1J) Suitt B, B•ket
St• .. I, CO.It Meu, C•lltornia •~it
S•mon WroCl•w•''· Jnt S
Syc •mort Stteet S •"le Ana C•tltorn<e '2101
l hit C>t.1"1net.s. o tonduc.•.o OY •n u'\dtvldu.al
SI,,_, WtO<leW .. Y
Thi' slat-I w•S lllt'CI with Ille County ,,.,. Ot o .... Qe County on
O.ombe• 1, , .. ,
1'111flt1
PMbll>hOCI Or•noe Coat! O•lly Piiot, O.c 9, te, 1l, JO, 1 .. 1 H?1 .. I
"IUC Melt(
NS.-86323
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
LOIS CAROL REGAS, aka
LOIS REGAS, aka LOIS
C . RE GAS AND OF
PE TIT IO N TO
ADM INISTER ESTATE
NO. A-111500.
To al! heirs ,
beneficiaries, creditors
and contingent creditors of
Lois Carol Regas. aka Lois • c.ommerc111
Brot.••-Coma.ny In<
C.,OI Ann 8rokoP1>
PrHi(ltnt
l'tcTtTious 1usrNEu PllUC •ta Regas. aka Lois C Regas
N-E STATEMENT and persons who may be
'"'' \tatefneinl -~ hied wl'lh trw Counh (I~'' ot Orenqo Covnl\' on
Hovemt.r JO, 1'81 ,.,,.'",
Publl5...., 0.-(M\I O•oly PllOI,
Ot< 2, • 1',1J, , .. , UM I t
"'IUC MOYIE
Ns-e.JJI
l'tCTITIOUS IUSINISS
NAME STATEMENT
The tollo•lnQ l>*'Wl'I\ •'* cso1no
IW•lnn ••s
THE M "RKETl,.G DEPARTMENT ,. Montpttllor
Nt•Potl lkech C•llfoml• 91-60
1(1nnt1" w Ao1C1 Inc •
C•tltotnla """°'•"°"· n Monlpelher Ntwoor1 8eoKh, Ce 111onr"" '16'0
Tnls Ov\lntu h <onducteo by •
corpo,•Uon
~lhW "OICI Inc:
K-111 w A91d, Pr.-10.nl
Tiii~ Slit-I w .. llleo •Ith Ille County (len of 0,._ Cou"IY on
Dt<tml>e< to, , .. , ,.,.,.,
Publl-Oren;e (Of~I D•lty Piiot,
Otc U, )(), 1 .. 1, J_, •,I], 1"25541"41
lho following porson\ ete doing NOTICE Of' TRUSTEE'S SALE Otherwise interes ted in the
ousinH•.. GTO No 0,10 wi II and or estate:
(Al WUTERN BOAT co .. 1352 Ae KHOURY A petition has b een filed g!:~:~~ .• o;;.: Huntington Buen, Gu" Ro' AN TR us T o EE D by Chris p Regas In the
Unon•llonel Cotp, • Calllornl• SERVICES A Corooretlon •• duty $
co•por•tion JJJH G•IP•ri Drive •Poo•nteci Tri.Iii~ ...-r uw 1011owlft0 uperior Court o f O range
HunllngtonBeecll C•illornll'2~ • Ot.crli.C!-otthatWILL SELLAT County reQuesting that
fh1$ bU.OnP\\ 1 .. , COllOu<l•d by • p u BL I c "u c TI 0 N T 0 T H E c h r i s p R e g a s b e <O•PO<fllon HIGHEST BIODER FOR CASH ' ' • t d ( u"'"•tlonei Corp •111111111. 1tt1e .,.., lntHHt cannye<1 to a P PO 1 n e as per son a
M ( 0115, Pru1aent 41nd now twld IP/ II under WICI Oe<td of r e p r e S e n t a t i V e t 0
Tho\ 51fl-I ,. .. ltlOCI .,1th tM Tnal '" tllo propetty t'lt•••n•llu administer the estate Of
O:our\ty> Cter .. Of Or•noe County Of\ deM:rlbtO Lois Carol Regas of Cost Dtetmbu 10 "" TRUSTOR S41"111 KllOury 41M C!I ,.,,, ... s.11., K11o<t•v Mesa, California (under
Pubh~ o..,. ,0 .. , D•llY Piiot. BENEFtCl"RY un11eo 1naus1r1u t h e I n d e p e n d e n t
o.c n JO 1t11,J.., • 11 t"25s.ocMt Group, Int • N .. ..s. CorPo••""" Administration of Estates A:e(orcs.d Dt-c.rno.r )1, 1tt0 .,
rtllUC NOTICE ""'' No ~·o:n 1n -,_..•II" 111 Ac t). The petition 1s set for
o1 0 111e1e1 Recor°''"~ otllc• ot ,,.. hearing in Dept No. J at
Rtco•<1e•al Or8ft9t Covnt.,u 1od""e1 700 Civic Center Drive
t'IC'TtT1ous1usrNEH of tru>t oucttbed th• 10110'"1"9 West, Santa Ana, Ca. 92701 NAME STATEMENT P"-rly fht tollowong Pf•M>n> ere doing LOI 14 ot Tr.ct •1.0 In Ille (lty ol On January 13, 1982 at 9.JO
bU\lntt•el (<Kl• ~ oK per -p recorCle<I In a .m .
B AR TELL MARINE 8"°'1fl,P~1tlf>rOUQh3l lt><luMw I F YOUOBJECTt th EL EC1 RONICS IHI Monrovle o! MIS<.tll_,,,,,_,., rKord•o! .. 10 O e • Covnty granting of the petition, ~~u•. ""•'*0011 Be41<h, C•llfornl• MAY BE "LSD KNOWN "s· e.o you should either appear
B•rtell (orp0r41Hon, • Cetll0<nl• Sono•• Rt»<I, ~ta Mtt•. Celllo,-,,I• at the hearing and State corporftlon tSn Moftro•I• Avt11ue. ( tf • '''"' .oor~'' or common N•woor18Nch,C•lltoml•~ ou111nat1on "•"own atioo "o your Objec t ions or f i le
rn11 ou"""" '' conouct..i oy • "'•r ranly 1• 111v•n •• to "' written ob1ections with the CorPorttlon compltltf't'\Ur correctnen) ' (0U(t before the hea • flCTtTIOUSIUSINISS BM1tl1 Cotpoutton Tiie -llelery un<Mt .. ,d DffC1 Of rmg.
N"""ESTATEMENT HeroldR-rQ Trusi,b1 , .. .,.,ot•11<tachoro.1 .. 11 Your appearance may be bU!l~:.::~IO•lng Ptl\On h ClolnO Prt-1 • In lllf OOllg.otlon• Se<Uttd tntreOy i n person Or by YOUr
VA\.ENTtNE'S G"LLERV •jll This ,, • ...,_, w .. llleel with I"* ::•.:;:::.·~~-=•=n ~~'.:!1: a ttorney.
James c1rc1t., v11141 Per,, Celltl)rnl• ~::.':~.~~ 1:1 °•-County _, of D•leult .no Oemeno for Se•• •no I F Y 0 U A R E A
.,,,., ,.171111 wr111..-not1ceotbreech•n00101ect10t1 1C R ED I T 0 R or a
JOfln B Lin .. •jll J•mH Cl.er. Publl'1lf<I Or'""9f (OHi (·elly Piiot, to uu~ ttw unot<\IQned to \ttl H id COntingent Creditor Of the
VIit • Pett1.C•lllorn1•., .. , Ou " n JO"" Jen• 1._, ~· P•oo••t• to •.ttlsty u..s 0011~11on1, dece S d 1 f 'I Thi• llu>lrwu I\ <on<Ju<l..S by on ' ' MIO U.rMtter lhP unMtligt'ICI ceuMCI Cl e , YOU mUS I e
•na•••Cl"1;,.,,, 8 L'"' PUIUC *HlC( woo nolK•ot bre<1C11-o1e1ec11on 10 your c laim with the court
T nls slat...-1 w•• ,,1..., •Ith 1,,. bt Rec0<0t0 Sel>lembtr 10· '"' " O r P re Se n I i t t o t h e
COilnly ,,.,_ ot O••nw covnty on 11~'~, :~o~~.~nR=d~012 oe;e personal representative
o..umbo'r "· "" ,.110.. "~c:;,,~~!:~!':::s s .. 10 wie w111 be meoo. t>ut .. ,,,_, appointed by the court
Tft I II I covtn•nt or ••tranh taPrH\ or Within fQU r months from PUt>llt.necl Or-(M<I O••ly Piiot, 1 t o owing per~ns a re Clo no lmptt.CS, reQ<OtdlnQ tlllt, PotSIHlon, or • •
0.t ll,7>,J0.1981,Jen • 1 .. 2 s.u..tl bus nones •nc:umbtM'CH to pey tho r•me1nl"11 the date Of ftr5t tSSUanCe l•I RAINTREE APARTMENTS ' f I tt 'd d ' IDI RA INTAEE LIMITED llHl Ptlncopel sum ot tt.. notel\I \e<ured 0 ~ erS as prOVI e tn "'IUC llOTIC( M•C"rthur 81•d. Suitt 440,. trvlne, by WICI o.ed"' Trust, with lnlt•l\t •• Sect ion 700 of the Probate
ce11101nl•'1m ~~d1;:1~:,.:'~:'~!:~i"!i';,•;.~: ~ode of Ca!tlornia The
flCTITIOUS IUSINESS JoM Ml""' 11Ul1 S.tr-. Vlllo t•n. c,,.rQe\ end ,.pen~\ ot Ille ttme for filing Claims Wtlf
N-E STATEMENT P••'0• C•111dornl1• .,b,,., • TrustM .,,., ot troe tru••• <, .. ,.., b• not expire prior to four Tho ro11ow1ng pe15on1 ••• dolnQ •v1 e m • ) ~• Tropt1, w 10 O"d Of Tru.t S.ICI ult will be f bu\lneues NtWPOr1 Bffch, California t1MO helO on W-y JtnUllt'r tJ l9'2 months rom the date Of
A a L E M • R 1 N E Monr<ltd Ra1se1<h, ... , Sur1crw•t, .i t1 oo AM . at,,..; 1r<r1t enlr•.;._• 10 the hearing notic ed above.
MAIN TE NANCE. m Htrbor •>lanCI Hunltngton IHa<ll, Celltornl• •l'Mt Gu•rCllMI Tnnt Oefel S...YICt\ touted YOU MAY EXAMINE
Otlvo. NtwPOrt Bta<ll C•lllo'"'• Tllo\ bu"M" '' conoucted by • •I ltoO E WY'•lr Or~ Cat11orn1• th f 'I k t b th rt ., .. 1 11m1t•d pe11,,.,.,,,P .,.., e 1 e e p y e cou .
Brien Lff L••trlc n, >00 South JOlll'IMJner Tht total amount ot tllt unpaid If YOU are interes ted in the
Bto•d•o Cosla Mtu. C•lltornla Thi> st•lfmtnt wa. llieel wllh ll>t bal•nce Of Ille OOll~llon wtut•O by estate, YOU may fife a •nn Cwnty Cler~ of Or•no-Covnty on w ld properly to bf so10. tOQttner with reQuest with the court to
Robert Oorwl<I Lt•trl< h, JOO Soult. Oectmott "· "" lnlt•Ht 1111 <hM~ ano tttlmettd . Broeo•ar. '°''• Mtu. C••llorn•• ,.,, ... cosh. ;,'*'-· eno :.Ovenc:ft. as"' receive s pecial notice of
t7U7 PllbhV.OOr•not CMSI Oelty Piiot. tlleClatehPr90f,1Sl9,7t7t1 lhe inventory Of estate Tr••• °"'',.." h con0vct1d by • o.c "· n .10, '"'·Jan•·,..,~· O•t• DK•ITil»r u . , .. , a ssets and of the petitions llml!IHI P11r1r~1511fp GU"ROl"N TRUST • R-r1 LtVtrlCh l'UIUC llOTIC( OEEO SEAV•CES a cc 0 u n t s and rep 0 rt s
This st•M"-' ... , "'l'CI .. 1111 ,,,. uorpor•tton ' described in Sec tion 1200
c ou,,1y Clerk of O'•"Qe county M NSMtn •swkl T,,m,.. o f the California Probate
O.ctmbtr 11 "" ,.,,.... r-tCTITIOUSIUSINESS ~~~~~air Code.
Publlw.cl Or~ (MS! O•llY PllOI. NAME STATEMENT Or..-ot. CA '1M6
O.t 73, JO, '"'·J"" •. tl, 1"1S.tMll t>u:~,:,.~l);~owl1111 perions ••• ClolnQ tltO 711-t•tO
r H f I N T E R A M E R I c A ,., ~~~a:.,~ R H•vo
C.OMPANIES llSI Airway A,,.n.,., • • • ,MllOtflln
Bulldlno G l '°'" Mt.. Cat11orn•• S.<ti:, •m., ot ttw
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING TO '1•U Clvlt Code-
Gary Leibowlt1, Esq.,
t.95 T.own Center Drive, Suite IOO, Costa Mesa, Ca.
92626; tel: (714) 540.0262
BE HELO BY THE ORANGE 1"1er•mtrot o1n CorPorellon, • PublllhldOr~C.o .. t Dally Piiot COUNT Y Pl.ANNING COMMISSION Calltorn!f corc>o••llon, ltst Altw•Y i;>ec 13. lll, t .. I, JlHI .•. l"2 ~i Publl-0•-Co .. 1 D•llY Piiot
0 N T HE L 0 CA L C 0 AST "L "venue, BlilldlnQ G J, C~I• Me••, 1 O.c n , U, 2', '"' U2s.tl
PROGR"M AN O GENEAAl PL"N Calllor,,141.,I~
"MENOMENT FOii THE BOlS• Tiii> bU.ine .. ,, condllcted llY •
(Ht(" SEGMENT OF THE NOAT H CO.Por•l-
CO"Sl Pl.ANNING UNIT OF THE lnW.,....rK #l(orporallon
ORANGE COUNTY LOCAL COAST'AI.. Catlo Vtrwile AIUOLUTICMI OIJTMI IM>AAOOIJ IOUCATIO..
PROGRAM (lCPlt ll 1111• 'U•l-t wal 111.0 will\ Ille IAYIMI UNllJllD K'MOOI. OtSTAICT
Notice Is 11tr-et1y Olwtn tllel Of\ County Cler~ of ()tenQt County on OAAMOI COUMTY, CALllJOAMIA
"'8fld•y, J-ry •. t"2, -o.a.,.. Nonmt>e< JO, 1'11 ~'·"" County ~lftoCommln~ •lit nold l'UWS WHEAE"5, TM Ir-vine C-y .... h tnta U"'llM kftOll Dl1ltlct
e 11 .. rlftQ to c-lde< modllk•llon• 10 PubthMd Or•llQ• Cout Dally nave mllt\lllly ln-toalM 1111 ... llbltlly et t 111 llN oMlf-1 --
Ille 1..0UI Coe,ltol PrOQfolm tor the Piiot, Dec I.•. t•. U, '"' S1»-fl Parctt 2 ot Parcel Map ,._.It Of Ille S.E.L I' S<llOol •lie -LOI "0 " If Trad
Bo"• CIM<• Segment ot tn• Norin 'IU, encl
Coau Pl-Int unit ot Ille o,.1199 "llJC •lli WHEAIE"S. tM Cit\' 81 lnttne n..i •-P•~•I "C" DI Tract 7119,
County Locet Cottier Pto;ram ., olMnwlw -•s Ille Ttlf\111 C..-r-. Ollflt.,.._ 18"" -~ H ....
•e<WttlM.., "'9 SoarO 81 5-tvl~ l'UBLIC MOTICI Sclllel .....
II their '-''no"" Dec_, ,., , .. , Th• u .. 11ee1 Sl•IH l>Mt•I Serv1<1 WHIEAEA$. TM tr vine Com_, -ottwed .. ·-tUllanfe, •t ""c..C
Tiit Local Cot"•' Praor..., Intl-• '"'""d' lo P"•P••• •ncl publl•n ar to,,,. Olllrlct, of IN 8Ptlf'O•lmmly t.1 ... ac,. ,._ "C" '°' ~hl-y
lano use tMfln •nd oolld•• wnlcll will E11•lronM1Mal ", .... ,,..,,, on llM \lo acreol llltS.E.L.I' ~II, and a mend ve,lous •temtnh of the prOPOSfO Ol!ol>Otll Oi rHI 11'-rlT WHIEAIE"5,5«tlen,._oftlleE~•C.W--teste-E1c ...... af
a.Mr et Pltll ..,.kllble to the CMll•I TM perut "''•Ifs > u ecro lecat.c RNt P-1'f. --118' •Ille..,,._·~.,.,.. •II<-_.,_..
Zone lncl.-.O""' "81 llmlttO 10"" ~ 8111\t Newpori BH<ll Mein Pot ....... ., prior IK1lell WI~ 21, 1•1 "" ------~., len4Usa-Clr<wlolttonE-..ts 0"1<t,M-1S..Ch.C•lllor"'•· ~""-.,, Sd••• .. _..,,. 1111 ... _.,_ '" «<.,._• .....
TM lt,.,tterr k-H IM ao1.. Tiie •bove an e\\m•nl wlll Ill *llefl ..... eUNIEMeitlelllC-.oM c II I c a s •• m. n I c 0" •• , Is 01 •vallat>M to all lflte,.\llMI ,,.,..,., ""' WHEAE"5, ,.... lllNI .,.,..., .. " "'"' Clellr'M'""' ~ It ,, -t.MltM •11t>rHlmetely t.ot acret roc.i" 1ft lnfo•m•tlon lllMM contect •1111 e<-kolly "IMle -81 ..,,.ftt le"" elllrlet te H<"-,.... .,.reM.
not'll•Wt\I Or ... CO\lllt'; flle prof-.;! .... ..., c~ -•II• Is tocat1e1 1oullltut e t tll• 0-81 ~ WHlllEA$, 1eellen JND fll tlle IE-ten C... ~ - -...... Hunt!~ Ha1t10r _....,.,_, -Reel E~ Dhrltleoo _ c • WI iat a1ve NMla tt•lnt IN time -plott al lflt ..... rt41 _.I<_...,. al wtll(ll
War111r "-· &elM c111<e Stet• u-.-.-,.....,~, I ttme llle ,......,ot--alw"-"i..c_,_...•M"'9H<IWNl9t~
•••<II •ftll .. Kiiie (OHi HIOll••Y '°".,,__ca .... J '"10
llOl'der on IN ___ , lltsldtflllat l•UI.,.... THEAll'<>f'I. 91 l't 111$0LVID THAT It'' lllt IMIM af lllt ...,._ af
clev•IO_._ Miii• , ....... "" tllt Publl\NCI 0r-. CM•I O•llY Pltel !fllettlen .. rec.i ...... ,...,, .. --~ ...... -Ill ......
"ortll .. \I -P'-IMttly otl'ln Ole n ,., '4Mt ttt<llafltil.af rM I ~ " a PWt1c "-""' ., .. ........., -1111 et wt , _ _.,,. .. , ~tlen on,,. • • ••ti1111J_.,u,1m
Hvntrn.,~-.. 11or0t"entl>t to lie......_ el !ti tf9V!., _,,. a4e<1 LAKQIO« MIDDLCl SCH~ •8
oovt11a .. t , ~ l911C( Lt!Mftlt-lnt111C1tvaftn.1111.c_,_.,_.0r .... ca11""'4e,
Tiii• "'-lflt C-lulOn -•Int •I IT l'Ul'1'HIR •UOLYID, ""' llW leu ... ery flf ttot haH et
wlll teod le re<en\ldnetlon llY t"8 t!ltu(otlon It twl'Mf _.... le IM*llll ""' ........ -• 9"41 f9r ...
IMrfll"-"t-'-P~t'ttOUSBUllMlta ..-............. _lftt lnllWDolly~M-.
'r ... llM<irle wlll ~·at t 10 1tAMe ITAT .... MT AYIS. GIT(MtEL, MAICAOICA, StCO\.I, -ITI.. IJLYNN
PICTtTIOUS•UllMIQ 11.lft., er H -lllettaltet a1 It T111 lallewl"-__ , are lfelfl't NOSI. NONI
MAMI STAT•MIMT llHSllllt and •Ill .. llatd In lllt l111Sll\tt•at· AISl!.NT• NONI
lilt folle•ll'lt pe1ten1 ate dolno Cem,,,tulen'• H .. rlnt A_,, In IN COSTA MES" MIAl\ORl"l STATIO,CALIPOANI" I
""lneu.. Otentt c;-w, Halt 6f Adml1115lr•llOll. HOS .. ITAI.. »t VIOtrlll S ..... I. C-. I "
B"CON'S At•POllT PHOTO, •Ut 10 Clvl< Celller "la1a, hftta AN, MIN. C .. lfiomlt ftUP COUNTY Of'~& I "•''M•~w.., ~~t.. Calll••nl• Inter•• ... H•lltt ••• Heett111ienllcft.Ac.,.o1t•C.... r,1Jl'9ICWM.~~1~• ....... •M!Ketltllf/I._ C•llltmtaftMO • ,,,,,1, ............ ,,......... • 0.1~ ..... ,...,., .. IM,,. Wltl , ...... u ....... 1t.-Dl9tr1Cl••Ora•1 .. c-..~.-.._,.,. .... h e.,,•• Air"" l"ttote IM • c;oM .. LIANCI!. WITH '"' '"""'st ..... WI~. o.i--.................... .--........ .,.., ........................ .... Callternll corPOretlen •ill ,;•, .. CALllJOANIA INVIRONMlNTAL 1•1 ... ,..att,....., ....... 111o,_..._. __ .,_Nl..,,ef~,t• .....
' QUALITYACT• Tiii• W.IMU I• cond11<tH llJ a ....-9"eUNMllllMOU$ ..... aletl~f/I .... ._.. ~~r.~:!:.!"· N••1141rt ... ell. I L.•<tl Coatlal ,.,.,,.,,,, .,.. <..,.,..,..,.,. IM 'WtTMca WH1i.10-. I lwlw ......... "'" 11.e -........ ,.
Tiii ..,.,_I ~led II I a111tatllr IHMlll ftalft CIOA ....... ltnlcei .... ~.lW'. 1 lllll 1 r a tt•ulrtlfttn1t flit1¥1f\I II '8<11811 ~lenC-lllen flrllle: .. M.~~lec,...,,,, '°'"'• 9acell'• Air-~ l8" Ht•.•. Ohr....., ta. el 9te ,.fttl< OW1ta L. It...,, ., .... ....., t1f a left ,....... ' Anwrc .. c:.ie, ..._._, 118 Ht ~ MlllPl\Wl, ..... r "'*"'o.aec~'::i~ •nflb"•" •14"-IMtft~ Tlllt ~ -nlM •ltll"" T.M!WI........,*"-' Tiit. .,....,,_. -11-'« l"9 ... CWoca ....,_, • .. C-tr Clef• 11 Or•• CatiMy .., a... o. °"""'· ~
Ceu11ly Cler\ .. Ot1119t C_I, tfl "lf'tll e.... ·--Iii ..... 0.tft'W ,~ "'' ........ MQll, ,..,,.., ~-W JI, 1"1 (lie tfl•~al llft .. 11 al 11111 ,.,_ ......... .......,
• ,.,,... ~~t _ 1.... ,.,,....,_. 0.-. C-.. o\11r ....._ .._..et -....... fll ....... f/I IMM ~ ~ C*1rtc
P!MtflM °""'9 c:.fl O.rlt ... let, ~ ..... Or .... ~ o.it. ...... Cle< 14. n,•, 1'11 Jllfl 4. ltlt ~c...tf ~ .. 0.C Jl.a.l•J • .11111.t,U, ... JAIMI Dec.tl,1"1 $$4Mt'. • M»ttl ........ 6f .... C:....Oelly.._Dlt.U .. ttll ...... '
2 a
~
t t, ...
I ,.
....
Mlo.lnttmenu )100 C.r Pool mo LttalN«ttff i.aoo ._., ..... Wl ,..,_. l.JlO s.n.ici ..... $400 Trnf'I• ~
smtCES s.r • ..,. o., ........ , ~
EMPLOYMENT l
PfEPAIATION
lithoolt lllllnttl>Oft ltQI Jo0W1otfd• 1on
llrlP Y.•ntect 1t1 • r "~ MOO AN DI SE
~ ...
~ lll>ll =:ti.'; lhltt•.U -~ ~ru•[.qU1pft10n1 --°"" -f'rtt IO''"' IOU ,.,.lWI" -C•••·s.~ -Horwt -~Good· -Jowdr) -LI•-• .-rs ........ ,., iOTI -·--lolbttll-11· ...... ... M.wcal lnstrvmtn\1 -Oflitt f'ltro • t:qwp -..... an ~·o..--s....,. .... ..._ -~Coodl -liMn."-Ml llar -~T..tioJtlP'l.St-. -..
BOATS l MAllNE
£DUl,MENT
C-al llllt lool>,lola1nt S.t\1(0 -llooultlarw<tqwp !lil30 llolU.Powtt i040 lloou.Rm Cb1111rr -lloouSad -eo.u.si.,.. 0..h -llMtUSpoM•Sl• -........... -TIAMSNITUION
A.inr•" tJJO C.mpon Sai. Rfftl ll:IO ll«tnt C•n 'IJIJ llolar t)da. s.-.... • llJt
lilot.ar H nu.Sai. II tot tllO ~..i.n.Tnul ,.,,
~.:~!e'!,ii.~ 9111)
t400
0...al
Al/TOMOBILE
tillV ~Cl.uto -llttrtellOD Vt h1tln ti>! ~ R1rt Rfid.t ~ t -•Dn•n -r,....u -v-!610 AIKolAuOJ1C '* •-•oa1fd WO
AUTIS, IMP1JITED
a-al 9101 AlhRo-• J'I~ Alllll '1117
4.....,Hui.1 f1Ut IJIW fill ~ J'llS '"' 'iH D•to1111 '11111
f'ttr1r1 rm r1o1 '111 -· rm
h su r fllll ,_ n1l
KN .. MGbll tlll 1..oMW'PIAI lml ... ,,,. J'IJI
lltrtt'dhlltnt '141
llC J'IQ llGI fll4 o,ot YI• , .... ,.. "'" """1'111 fl•
hntM mo ........ ml
U ll llo)rt wa ..... flSl
ii~. ,,..
"'1 J'1U :l v-. ..... "" llel ... tm
U.. tflt D1ll1 Pfloc
"PMl ~Jt" HtY"' .
•tdor1 Vwr
~bou .-.,.
..... tit. •• . .
1'he marketplace on the Orange Coast .642 -5678
M edzan income n/ !>ally Pilot families
exceeds $34,00<J a year. Your a.d reaches
the county's most affluent buying au·
dience
---~~~........... ~:!!.~.~ ....... ~.~~.~ ........ ~!:!.~.~ ....... ~ ~~.~.~~ ....... ! ~!!.~.~ ....... : ~!!!.~.~ ....... ~.~.~ ........ ~~!.~.~ ....... .
' GtMr-tl I 002 ....... I 002 Ge•rel I 00 ~...,... I 002 G...,... I 002 Ge•rtll I 002 Cotta Mtto I 024 t6a .,.rt IHc~ I 06t ~ ·•••••••·············•· ....................... ··················~···· .............................................• ···············:······· ....................... , .........•........••...
_._,..··ve~·ve-$>---....__. FIHDOM HOUSE HAllOl llDC'H ~ I\ ----0 -1 -bo-~ut~ • UHDA ISU HOMIS JHr 1ea1uaeyard :,r/JP.sz:!~ .. ~0:~1 ~ ae Prestige pool fa mily hom e Main e .<mnM&4I0'1G3,Aj_t l'llrr y a l 13'-'
B B ch channel view from beautiful tradition O.....WilRNM• ~YJ.A .644·!.125 ay & ea 4 bdrm, 5 bath. $1.495,000. Ir a sharp low main
lmance 4 Bdrm home VILLA IALIOA
Real Estate Wide lagoon vie w from s pet•tacula r with NStom spa & BBQ Vounuieople Pool your
\\'L ~I.l.Y !"J
TAYLOR CO.
HLJ\ l.TOHS -.111u · I ~HH
WHITHB
BUYING
or
SELLING
TWshYaw
DAILY PILOT
IOATMART
..wron IUCH DUPLIX
OWMB WIU FINANCE AT I lo/o
200' to beach. 4 Bedrooms. 2 baths in
upper: 2 Bedrooms in lower. Some
view of ocean. Firepl aces. Patios.
$279,500. Owner will carry 1st trust
deed of $230,000 al 13'/c No loan fee.
WESUY N. TA YLOlt CO,. REALTORS
211 1 S.J~Hlh Rood
MEWrOIT CEMTB, M.I. 644·4' I 0
Realtors, 675-6000
· architectural desinn 6 bdrm. 5 bath, 111trrl'!lls you. see this resources Ideal two " tuand new Sc i eel bedroom Villa for your
REAL ES TAT~ EXC~LLENCE SINCE 1949
COME WITH US ..• RANCHO SAN
JOAQUIN. Moat dttlrable locatloa. F-..... YP of Goff COWlt .. .,.....
bet. Two btclrow ...t dtw. bd _,., Mld-
cle ln el At11We tt..ci.g ..... SZIS,000
161 7 WlSTCUFf Dlt.. N.I. Ul-7JOO
CE
110111 BLlllfS ca.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
HORSE PROHltTY
Dramatic Home Approx. ~
Acres 4 BR Pool Spa
Remod eled Recently Park 8 Cars
+ R. V. G real Location -Can
Keep 3 Horses, Ma ybe More On
Your Own Property. Only S289,000.
·---~·· ......
75~9100
It 2 c cwpotl .........
Htwpcri C.,.ttr
playroo m . dark roo m & den Property fantasl1l' first home Ftesh as a
$1,350,000. hnanc1ng 1 Full price daily ()pens to flagstone
UDO 151.1 HOMES
Featured on Homes Tours lovely
traditional spacious. custom 3 bdrm, 3
bath home. new ly redecorat ed
$475,000.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus
lge recreation room & 2 patios Beam
ceilings. Xlnt value at $420,000.
CAINA TION COVE
Spectacular harbor view from 4 bdrm.
4 bath ba y front. 2 boat s lips
$2,0.S0,000.
WIST IAY AVE.
Remodeled. like new 3 bdrm . 3 bath
bayfront Slips fo r 2 lge lloat!I
$1,200,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
)-1 I Bo Y''d•· 0• ·~·· N B 6 7) 6161
S225.<m 751 3191 paoo Sl48,000 assuma
hie at 12'N. Least option
1s av ailable Price
S'l~.500
Jbdrm. SC Plaza
IMatArthur Village I
Assume 117 '8''1 loan. t Cote Realty
& Investment
640-5777
~Y 10', down Seller lo '"'!!!!!11~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!1~ carr) at 12r. J D 1-
~perty MJml 751·2787 1--------0 W N 1;: R ANX IOUS ' VILLAIALIOA
Handsome 4 bedroom Young people · Pool your
21, bath POOL home resources Ideal t wo
Forma 1 dining room bedroom Villa for your
family room . f1replal'e first home Fresh as a
N1cel) landscaped lot d a 1 s y 0 p e n s l o
feat ure~ s parkling nag.stone patio Sl48,000
POOL \er~ pn\ale a~su m able a t 12r.
locauon $199,000 Call Lease opllon 1s 3\ a1la
979-2390 bit' Pnce S24.9.~
TARBELL. REA LTORS t c ; u·
-MEWPOltT HGTS!!! ote Rea y
JBr. 28a home + duplex & Im estmenl
1JBr & 1ar1 owe 640-S777
12 1 • •-; B V CO . I N C 1~11111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1-!!!!!!!!! 64.S 2251 I""
SACRIFICE ! EAST SIDE 2 new luxury townhouse
PRICE REDUCTION condos 3 bdrms, J ba
Won't last at $145.500. I BELOW BU ILDER'S
3Br. 2 rar garage, lar~e I COST $1 35 ,000 ea
'SEU. idlt' items with a l'--------•I yd. 311 localed in Costa 675-4333 Dail) Pilot Cla\!>lht'd OCEAHFIOHT M es a s f 1 n e s l - --
Ad 1 RIOUCED! Ot'1ghlrnrhood Ca 11 j WATBtFIONT
I I SELLER WI Li. CAR HY I owner agt & !>ave J im I NEWPORT SHORES --I l:i;liiiiiiiii;;;;iiiii::~ ... --Davis 7!i9· 122J I I 00 ,
0
DOW.._. I balance al 12' , $195,000 4 bdrms. 212 baths. with
11 n down• Deluxt' rnrnl'r sand} beach &lo\elyb1g
Tiil-: Ill.I FFS 4B<lrm & ._ ...... ,... nuplex Could bf' '111gle patio Close 10 ocean.
JO\ '" t'rlook 1 n I! the family home ' $7 15 IMlO'
1
pools & tennis $250,000
pool rri <'l'd a I J u~l I NEW NEWPORT CONDOS lob>a lay Prop. --with super owner financ S29!1 .51111 I. II Ill'. Rffltor ~-~och 1040 mg
l)l>~11 Qitcallty a•d detalll119 JOit wottldw't •67S.7060 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-5200 17141 673·4400 b\ll • .. _ 3 car -r _ Hnrlty. Season l> Spe('1al No /~ t-A--t ~;i S I quallf)'lnR to make this I •7 o mllll'r<fl ·-~c °"' ·--------1 )'ours Fantastic pool .Ht "'9t..fofa ,..._..._...
360 -, ... of Ny -OCHIL Prlud c~2 LOT home finest arcll Ask· fro. SfH,000 to $439,000. High traffir rount mg Sllti,IW llkrll48 Cfl09
j PETE
' BARRETI ·.. REALTY 62 6X306 lot Ex1:.t1ni: lr"YiM 1044
t\luse on prnperl y Fl ex •••••••. •••• ••• , , , , , , • •'"!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!! 1blt' USl'S Owner will '"' SH at 209·211 & 21 5
lfltl St, off lc6oa It
WATERFRONT HOMES.INC
REAL CSTATl
s..lr• Rrnl.I• Pt<lP"l I\ M"'"'<i'nwn1
24.lb W Cou1 ti...,. 11~ M.a11"" Aw ~1 Bu en &Ibo. l.i..nd
6ll-140t '7Ut00
rnns1der rarryrn11 I'll
TD Askinl-( Sl99.SOO l:.J II
I 546-llSJ
~·HERITAGE
**DR~TIC
PRICE REDUCTION
Srngle fa mily detachl'd 3
Bdrm hoffil' m fabulous
Woodbridge Great --I terms ,l\allable Call
---no-.
YOllUMD OF (~i)llbodhrldqe
THE ltAIMI OW! I Ru lllJ
. • REALTORS
Sumiund)nur<;elr ~uh a 55 1 :woo
r:unbow Of l'Ulor from 192' Rarrann I'll" 1. If\ 111r J <1 nua ry t hrough
UDOIAYFIOMT
You will love this new
ell'I us1 \"e I 1st 1 n g 3
bedroom. 3 bath . Ex
~ellent terms Owner
financing. Sl,S00.000
QI ....... I c.a. ) For • Ad ill W-.'1 Wortd
December and ~ atc·h Sbdrm for sale by owner 11111!1!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!1" flowers bloom rver) Tunlerock Xlnt fin. ~ill
1 month from this 1m car!') paper Read) to!-·--------
marulat e J bl'droom mo\·e JOb transfer WFltfltUUY To P'oct row ed
ca1642-5678
Or a lot of cash?
Then call
classified Those
things taking up
space In your
home. Items you
haven't used in
ages, may be just
Whit someot1e
else needs.
So give us a
call .. It's easy to
use classified to
get your hands on
some cash.
19,!!f
PMM.0.1611
Selling anything with a
Daily Ptlot Classified Ad
IS a simplt matter .
·usl call 642·5678.
Pule 11 a.f) f;
675·5511 ,
-~-
VERSATI LE OIJ PLEX 1
1 Channing prO\'mrial on
a comer lot Can be a •
Bdrm + I Bdrm apt or a
2 Bdrm +guest apt ~ ~ Bdrm apt. Man) ~ay_
this properly can ht
lJSt'd, depending Oil your
~ Owner will r..1r~
lSt TD 1 AsklnR $350 14
C0U CW NEWPORT
REALTORS
U~ILC-tHwJ.
Cef'-del MM
6 75·5511
w. rw LHM 0at1°" I on this 4 Br 2 r~ Ra I
Sp yg l ass with '
breathtaking view~ Of
fered al 1649,SOO.
RCTaylorCo
.10 ()<)()()
Want Ad Help?
50' ltlGHT ON MAIM IAY! 70' pier
·head line accommodating large
yachts and a handsome SBR, 4'h
bath home w/fam. rm. & formal
din. rm. 24 hour security island.
$1,850,000 . Don a Chic hester
642-8235 (N47)
Only 2 Main Parts 1 lace-Stripe Tiiiie
OHl Y 2 MAIN PARTS• Suen•
m r sm1r1 f1sll1011. 10u c111't 11·
lord 110C to 1flord 11 Slit tcooped
neckline "P· tllt" Quilter and
lolll ~ And no 111is1 se1m
Punted P1ttern 9222 Hiii
Suts 10\t. 121;, IC". 16\;, IS~ 20\t Siu I'\; (bin! 37)
ta~ 2 S/8 Jltd$ 4S 111Ch
s.i suo "' .. ,.....
AM 50t t.w11'8ttnlll
......... S-'ID: lilMIM llMITIM ,.".,.,. o.,c. "2
I RES10£NTIAl l!EAl ESTATE SERVICES
SECOM) GRUTIST STOIY
Mlt TOLD
Brand new Cape Cod bayfront Pier
& slip. Glorious mas ter s uite
Spacious kitchen. Specta c ular
views. This won't happen again al
$995,000 with financing.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
home m t•lll' nf Corona Eves (7141851-0499 NO I AFRAI D
del Mar·s fmt•st areas I ~GEl'!_TS that 1f rmre people read
We guarantet• \OU 1m CUL OE SAC lhtj month's National
mediate :.au .. iaet11111 I * * · · Geographic relall\e to
$299.500 2 Bdrm. Woodbridge Newpon Harbor & 0 C
condo. F:xrellent as choice bayfront proper·
sumable Joans Near ty Wiii skyrocket Call
pools, schools. tennis. John Campbell for appl etc to see lhtS brand new
• $126,500 llSllng of fabulous bay.
ix-ean 11u estm home and \\\>\\Cf bridge you be the judge of this
67§.3411 Ru lllJ 1175.000 pnce which in· -m111!!1111-----•I eludes a large parcel of -~ 551·3000 land
Coroftoct.IMar 1022l 191@ Harrani » Pk"~·l"in• 1 ltOGBSRULTY
•••••••••••••••• •• • •• • • 2 Br ~ Ba patio home. 6 7§.2311
CDM DUPLEX r r p 1 c 2 c a r g a r -~--
REDUCED $70K!! "'opener .. low d~n By R £.AGENTS llurry·JUSI redured I Owner Karen E\•es •
' Won't last al $26.';,000 !>52-~. dys 842·8833 _ Sales slow? Mak e the
Try $2:5.000d~n Assumt' 1 PA ... ORAMIC rrosl for your efforts 13r, long term Finance f"ll 90'. 100.--, spht We of I unbel.Je\•abt) pmed and I VIEW I fer desk. copier. ML
I stru<'lurl'd to sell Jim l , computer. ans sen ·. ,.":""~-----~-------.. ..759 1221 I isn t lhe only outstand ' busy strttt amplr prkg. lt•.v & ffNN I ing feature }~u l?l'I -.-.1th l &more Slart Ne-.-. Year ~ II ~llPLENESS thts 4 bdrm. 2 ba Mar· off right' Call Dan
I Ta\'tsh m Turtle Rock Wallentine 5·7221
C L E 0 M U D l H C 0 A T C 0 U M p Higlllands l.a\·1shty up-1 !(raded, PRIVATE SPA ~ ---S U L P C 1 0 8 P M R U l 8 A A 0 4 HGOMIA IO<'aled on cul de sa<'
G A P R 0 H U Y I D E I A T U M NN · elegant I Br \'1r street <.'all toda)' for an1
V M 8 0 0 R 8 AL H H 8 H I A A tori a n partial vu.• <1ppo1ntment S38S.OOO Westcliff Realtors
R 0 E C G I G p T y c E y u y T ownr contral'lOr f1nan I t~xt•ept1onal f1nanrini: -----
E I R U C M T H I H G H V E l H avail _!;_75.000 beini: offered oet.-ltHI &tate
A A N T E I I 0 H A Y E E A E P
N D R V P C L L M S G T A R L S
Y E l A A E E E T U 0 E N U H N
P P, I N Y T 6 T I H Y L H M R l Y
0 L E H S E H l U R I T B 0 H S M
E I P M H Y D Y N T S L P 0 H E Y I E
V 0 A E R A S G A 0 A A E R l R R A A
R T L U A T U R 8 C M V U l E Y 0 R G
E I R N I C I N T H I I N 0 H R C M Y
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Sunny. li ght n-brqthl 'lt-4 1~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• and new on the marht f..ry OCEANFRONT Modular
With bn ck front. sine O'.l'l.S60() T> pe llome s. 24 hr
and re 11 r pat 1 o~ W J :secunty. i, m1 P\'l bch
hardwood parquet floor + f1~hmg pier Cedar
Ing throughout. X Int cottage l) pe. redwood
locallon ·less than tOO ~513 CAMPIJSDl·IRVINE deck. pool. 11uarded pares from Sl.000.000 le, adlts only No
homes Realist1c11lly •--le h 10_.1 9111.900 499-3816
pr1ced Bl S36S.OOO with ~ CK .. 8 h I C t
b. f . ••••••••••••••••••••••• eac oc. op1s rann t'um mallon. o assumR OCEANf'RONT Modular Sch . 8 x 40, -.-. add on ble and owmr fln11nrmi: T H h room ad ult park heat Call now ype omes. 24 r · · secunl>. •, m1 pvt heh ed pool. 1tame rm laun _ 644-721 1 + nshm1t pier Cedar dry , $1 58 s p r e nt , Cottage type, redwood S12.500 '96·0.171
, 1 • deck. pool. itua rded -rel .. I gate. adlt~ onl> No Pt+rty 1600
___ oMl....,._..IMlt_,I d<>ttS. &.900 499 3816 •••••••••••••••••••••••
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ColtaMtH
I OCEAN VIEW 2 Br 2 Ba IY OW Ckea n view 120 ft fron
deck. yarn. SC(' 11ate HEI lilRl' u~e of l'Jt1st1nf( flMK Ownrr I 630-9440. New <·ust bit 2 ~ t Y · bldj! of 4()()() sq ft or
642 81Q1 Fren<'h Normandy 3 llR buld 10.00011q rt Ownt>r
It den home Can br wi ll n rry Pr1tl'
i-pllt 1195.ooo.owc 371 1 nu.ooo 631 1300 . SHAIP IASTSIDE uux
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Owner will fln1nce to
q111hfled buyer W tit
located. aood lookin11 6
unlt.s + 4 tor 11arut t
1mp~ p1rk1n11 tklow 11
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St~'llort 673 6$18 Realtor
DOYBSHOHS
IXIC.MOMI
Med. At)'lt'('()Urt)'ard
Pool. J•ruiii Ovt'rlonb ~y. Call1xy Dr ,.~nrmal
dtn nn.2frplN S715.000
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........................ 1111-. ................................................... _._..._._ ______ ~~---
11 Coat DAILY PILOT/Wedn11day. December 23. 1981
••••f•a•u•••• ~~ ........... c.,..... C tiecton, Ci..wal 'G•••t H~ j..._u r ,....,, ...................... . r•~tll ~!1:'~:~~ ~~! .. ~":i111 ··;;N·~r1'Nisu0w00RiC°0 ···c~;·u;0•• .. ·······nEEs········ ·~;~;;;;;~~·~~·;~·,;· M·;;;;;·~~;·~·~·c::i;y· r0Ai0Nr£it~n:•:iis 'o;;J;~i;;;;J;;;~·;~o-(;~,:~r:,e~';:d~l::;. . '~
¥UI ~ ~am ~·11401 Remodehn&/OooD huna C-.tn.cffCNI Co Topl)(_'d/removt>d, i·lr11n G¥.rllae & Yd ('h•11n·ups (.1eim. quirk, ~ep~nd,a WORK 30 yr~ exp. inl rr:u:ib~1~'°f:~~3 Sttvlc~ 9g_~ ~ &1 P D _!tandy120 IZ60CdM Master Bldra Cual~ t!!...lawn renov 7Sl 3471! Freel!!lt S57 8271 ble Wedo1nys1icJob iext Ac:owitlrcelUn(I• -C1l .... rt'1Tr-c .... e. er If latls.+c;y r-.at-ah m -•6312004• DavtaP"l.!!.lln 847 $1116 ()ishwH her. d1¥punb, ....-n_..-;t's ALL you pl y ••••••••••••••••••••••• -,.... ~kt 9(u · ty, ruom additions G_,. Str"lic" a.UH Ur YOUI ACT c a k s t,J 8 J'AINTING tolleu & rautets, re TrC'tt/1hrubs expertly fora J.'or ell you need to know ••••••••••••••••••••••• .It'd Uirry Wendtll, ••••••••••••••••••••••• TODAY' Yatd/gar•gt' uatom ric ' tone. SPECIAL! Int /ext, paired or replared II pruntd. Free eat
JO day ad about bankruptcy. e11ll WeCareCrpt Cleaners 12131921 6$.CI T rre ·r r Imm In ll & cln·up, etc. l ton truck. Block. Conrrete. Stucco ,i...,wall. Li.!"' &45·9383 yn otwr Jtm 631 66M 675-9349
ln thc 7l•IW ·9162 Ste11mt'lea11 &upholll j213)944 1468 Removal at Ru3onable ~.8311993 t24 hrsl Rri1 Freeest.S49·9492 ~.L .'..:,;t r THI----•
DAJ•y ._ ........ M.. / Tn.k'kmountunll Dryw4 Prt<'t a Hauhni:. Odd JOHN'S BACK• R d AJITypes Maaonry INT/f.XTPAINTJNG ,........,M••J••llt ,..._nn.n"_ ,. -S::.1c. u•c• ~orti...auar __ 6453716 ....................... Jo b:i , Clea n ups for hauling J.:Hir~:nr Veryreu.llr,bonded. Llr'd Reta Frtt'Ht ....................... Prowork,all trffS.Call • .: sr."~t ••••••••••••••••••••••• Shampoo & steam <'le11n. DRYWALL TAPING 700.119!5, 673 9043 reas xludent w li;t· Bob548-76S0[$36·"°6 --~&46-l067u PllOPllTY nuw! ~.!4 h!L_
BOAT MAINTt:NANC1': Colur bn&htenen1, wbt Alltextures&ucousti<' ttc.ty.ft trurk . Th3nk you ,...... I'm Small M~ prl<'l'll MAHAGIMIWT T~S..k• DfUCDOITNTOl0W~ &HAULOUTS cr:iit.a 10 mu\ bleach. F'r~l'.:'..! _Kevin67S._9088 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~1976 __ ••••••••••••••••oo••••• are small! Cd • NB & Oran~e C4J lltell I:> yrs ••••••••••••••••••••••• St'rvlce& Rep1lr Hall, llv1dm rms SIS .. Dry Cli <;arpentry Mason!'} HAULJNC •ABC MOVING Exp . Irv. Exp'd Ron67J.6477 expenence Call for info TYPING
A* For S.... Schock Boats 671·20SO ;v~ room S'1 SO, ('OU<'h •••• ":•••••••••••••••••• Roortnll Plumbin& l'hnslmu Trees $IO pnll'. low rates QuJc·k. C I.. Mangun Painting and ratH. PROOfREAflNO h ~[c~aD111!.~ol'!, Coolpl. Yarht Maint & 10,odochr $.\ Guar ellm DRVWALL1AtOUSTIC Drywall · Stll{'t'O Tile I Frl't' ell! Kns 63.1 0953, <'llreful serv1~. S52·0410 Cust. work Lie lf362478 t6l..a I 12 Tr11nslat1n)l ngli• ' -.Rl y.=sao't"'a"tive'J Cleaning exp'd & reus pets r C11>t r0epair 14 yrs exp ~\Illy hr'd & f!emodel J B 646·9990 Ntrk 63l·OIWI STARVING COLLEGE Ins Fre.!.!!! 7~1·8281 t'r l'" c h • 6P1 ni1 h '" .. Cl k • 00 I yn exp o work · Gene-• --•-•"'9/1.,-r Rl'porta. Correapon· 642-'71,Htl2J .._.~S-71 24 hrit f!l}_'Self R_efs S31 ·0101 insu_r~~L .. ~·M49 Rep!:'~~a~~~:t1~:· Horwta.oftiMJ ~D~~T~~G ~aJ~~~f &'"~o:~~~t ....................... denre, m1nuscnpls, re !!!!!!ll!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I-_..... N0Steam1No Shampoo lltdrical • alit • Ra 640 Sl44 •••••••:•••·~···~··•••• Insured 641·1l42i Fr R f SS 7292 Custom but ld1n11 . re :swnes Ex~nenred, ar-ha illMtn ••••••••••••••••••••••• StainSpe('taUst Fast 1·•••••••••••••••••••••• -_1 _ HORSESHOE ING llot, WATCH US GROW I -tte!it e 5 _ _!· modelin11 . m11l111 , re rurute,reh1ble ...,.. GllWICK & SON <!ry Freel'st 839.1582 ELECTRICIAN pnced HOME IMPROVEMF.N:r cold, and <'Orrc•<'live -------~ pairs, hauling Sleve ••496-0.139•_• __
'""sourn'co••:;T•••••• Builders Since 1947 • -. --right free es11mu te on REPAIR, PLUM BIN(,, Pam Mc V 1 <' k r r . STARVING ACTORS ••••oo••••••••••••••••• 67J.8106 iwi.do Cla-'--
App.,AISALS""ERVICE Additions remodehn11 Steam Clean for t he lar.,e0or s1TU1llJ'obs heating,carpentry.elec, 646-6443 Graduate Move with us before HANCING •tot ROLL • ......_. · w .._,, n er Hohda)s' Best ates f ,_, · td Fr N b h • ........,......, ••••••••••••• • ••• •••••• All real eslate Respect Doors. windows. patio r or Lie 113!1fo621 1173·03$9 e. et' est o JO too Porterville llorseshoe· C r1slmu & we will ~lil.Y Also stripping ••••••••••••••••••••••• •RESIDENTIAL•
ed co. Local exp. Fast covers. Free est. Reas ~47~ g d a I es ' Ca 111 EIN1~ our Sper1all)' Sl!!BU. 645-2811 ~M I!'&. Sc_hool donate I. 10} to needy Free est &ou 645·93~ L..d C-11 KHo. CO:~ Avg I sty S30; 41vg 2str
semre. i68·2963 Lie. •310042 ~9·21i0 ----<.1ean. Qwrk • drpenda Hcrdwood Roon HoeMcltaMHJ eh~.1£.1.ir d..1.ins 573·o&3 UC. PAPER HANG ER Specializing in shake & ~ Chi:!_s~]·8388 __ _
MacHALI COHSTR. C...nt/CHC,.... ble We Do An)' Site Job' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• P~ Bonded & guar Nu iob shingle roots. Prof Window Cleanin& ..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Driveways, parking lot
re1>airs, sealcoaling
S&S Asphalt 631 ·4199 Uc.
ALI.STATE PAVING
Sealcoat1ng, Slriping.
Repairs. Comm /Res
I 11~362.645·8181
.. pittillg ••••••••••••••••••••••• Babysit, our CM homes. I yr&up,1nyt1me .
642-8482, 646.5759
Custom homes. fr am ••••••••••••••••••••••• •631 2004• HARDWOOD FLOORS Want a REALLY ('l.F:AN ••••••••••••••••••••••• too small or too large Free est.imate 642-8821 f)' I
ing, remod, frent·h Res1d Concrete , Also F.LECTRICIAN I Beautifully cleaned & HOUSE! Call Gingham Pine p1:untin~ by R1rherd Free est. Ton)'898·2728 REPAl u . ....,.R LESS -"""'Rest .qua serv.0941 ......._ k b h sport coons Lu.• 374067 .1r waxed Be rl'ally for the G I Fr t 645 •123 Sinor Lie· ns 13 yrs of ~--n.S r v ., _ae_ -675· uuuoo, s Y g ts & patio 8ob851·1!166ill47·70711 233l()!C·IO. Small Jobs. I hol ' . _!!:._ ~es-' ., --. . , 1 . . rtGlhrjWepoir Shingles. fl at. 30 yrs
rovers.848-3652 CONCRF.'l'EMASONRY ~'!'nl&_ree_airs 5485203 idfl)'S .832·4881 ROOIN'S CLEANING ~p~N B custo~r~IO ••••••••••••••••••••••• e_y>.f'ree est no-2725
ROBTSTEINBRONER, C . F d •de.._ Hm6tg Service alhoroughly 11 you -·-PLASTER PATClllNG Roof-g fast Senit'e' F'orClass1f1ed Ad
(!EN'LCONTRACTOR I p~~~mBl~kn& a~~~~·1·••• .. !'!:'1 .............
1
••••••••••••••••••••••• rleanhome S40·0llS7 C.to. ,.._ Restl.K'ros Int /ext 30 XJnt'°Refs. Free Est ACTION
Lie. 11399463 64S 6456 Lit' SJ6 SOil 536 9577 Garden Maintenant'e DUM p JOBS . WRRAINE'S SERVICE 25 yrs exp Lie 40~1 .r.rs. Neat. Paul.S4S·~77 494·9~ Call a
CUSfOMQUALITY -·--Rcs1d1Comm 1t ndu~ &cStt~llMK~\''"tf J3ob~ Home/Busi Rehabll! &ndcd. Ins Refs color Neatpatrhes&texlures -~0i1~,~~ Addi.tions ~Remodehng CONCRETE Clean·ups &TreeTnm a G4 ·I !fl Refsffrans. !1620510 1 l'xpen963·0011D1~k Frt.nt._ Hl·l~lt Tit 6425678 TotalServ1re. •00-rsqft• ~1!1_6~evl's 84G4947 J I NJo:ISON'SPAINTINCi E •••••••:••,•••••••~••••• frorn.Desiiinto f in. B k&Bi:k 90 1 Haul,deanup.ron1·rl'lt' MCllOllfl • • lnl i xtPlastenng TILEINSTALLF.D
M '!_C or 6i5· 27 Gardening Wonted 1 ren1>va l ()ump Tru<·k ••••••••••••••••••••••• Int ~.xt Res1d·Comm U>w Holiday Rates All Kinds. Guaranleed .__,....!!!!!!!_.__!!!!!I•
People who need peQPll' Mowing, i:<J1t1ng. raking. Qwrk St'rv 642 7638 I BRICKWORK Sma 11 Al·oost1t' re1hng~. ref Fr~~t~ _ 645·82.SR Reis. John 89J .l667 Have you read today's ~ should.ilways chct'k the s ,we~111n~ Frei.' HAULING&DUMr Jobs. Newvnrt <.:o~ta hr ,free l'!!t 83726!7 SELL idle items with 1 ----Classified Ads~ If not, -~ ~ Service Directory m the l'Hllnwtes t;4~ •1372 or JOBS. a~k for R.ind> Mt's a . In 101· Hefs t'lnd 11i•hat you wanl m Daily Pilot Classified Classl.l1ed Ads. your one· you're missing the best
l.k 11349892 770·6SS4 _ Jl.Al LY !_'I LOT__ &'5 5737_ 641 8427 ' 67~3175 Qally Pilot {:lass1fi~ stop shopping center. ~ar~ins in lOwn !
Olher Red Estate Other Red Estate H~ Uwfundshed Ho.ft Unfuntl1hed .Apartwnem Funtl1hltd Ap9i t~b ""*'"-Af'OI lw•h ""*'"-Apa lwh u.fln. ltow 4 000 ~;~;:~·,:.:;r;;:;: •::;&;;; ............ c·;;;;;:~ ...... ii"i4 ;;;;;;;h·;;.; .. ·3;·;;! ~;·~ ...... ;;·i4 ~::;:.;:.:;; .. ;;;· ~M;:0000ia·24 c.;~·;;;:;umoo•o ll6t ;;~~ .. r~0n°t~ .. 200:ty .. ;~;;,· ~for lall I 700 bchmige 210 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••··~ ••··~··•••••••••••••••• home in HB. pvt ba '
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• • CONDO 3Br 2•, Ba 111 Bal boa Island Walerfront CASA DE ORO Kmgs1te 3 Br ~ frplr & I Nf,W BREF.l> A PTS Spa('ious I Br. Garden p111 NEWPORT room l t'h1ld ok in re· Newport Beach. Big Ca· 3 br. 21)) ba, on fee land I ma a te r. 1J d r 'm 3 lk 2 Ba Yeurly rt>n \LLUTll ITIES PAIO beum re11ings $112.5 }rly I ~C1H with LOFT $4101 Apt Pool & rec All utils M turn lite housekeepin&
nyon Mt'LainadultCon blk to beach in NB. wbalronv dhl uarag~ talll75Mo1700347 1 ' • 640-5719&S361HI .. .,<·. rt'I' room . poo . paHlAdults.no,,..ts COUNTRYCLUI and ore bab)<ing ' ·' " -I · 1a1·u1z1 i:a' & watl'r ,.. SJS 1292 do, 2 BR. 2 BA, P0<>.1. ten ~.IXkleqwty. Sl8SO mo ~ ~l'r r11>tr. l'c.-ntr:il BhlfsCondo J Br up , 1 hr Comparl' before > ou Ila> \'u. 2 BR, 1 HA. 1?.ir. paid Adults, no pets 393 El Puena Mesa UVIMG _ -------
rus, sttured par.king & Qwner a ,760·0297 \lli:,Si50mo 2182 Maple down. 3 ba Kit r hl'n rent Custom debign l no pets, adult) SlioO mo Hamilton CM 645.4411 1959Mae,leAve_0ptS Bachelors, 1"2bedroom Newport Beach. Large,
othe r amen1lie~ COSTA ME SA M 1 r:t05 Ron 9795370 or nook Sl_;n>.644·2607 features Pool HBQ., wlt979637J ihm673·11276 . · · QUIET ADULTS over JS. apt.s&townhouses pnv furn stud10/effi·
dn.Owner/AgntB33·?890 Ave Trade for res1den t\1rl' <'le.in 2 Br I "·· I hs p rounded with plush 'I school~ No Pets $4~ litaut landscapin" No ""-lex. upsta·1rs 2 Br, 1 Room on Balboa Island
S2~.1Xkl. o we w/ 20 r BLDG. E. or Placentia I ~·20!6 Spar 3 BR 21, ha , Vt'r} t'ov'rd garage. ~ur Coro.act.tMor 112..t ~stside 281{, IUA. nr unfurn I Br from SJ~ flom_s.s:JetSIOOO 644 L900 r1enry ~mo ~290
uw c ean town e ool. JOI( 1 ••••••••• ••••••. •• •••••
1
" ..,..... llcw Pr.,+y 2000 ual and rarry papt'r, by F'enred yard. garage. g111g. et<' S7SO mo Al!\ landst'aping Adoll hv SfEP TO ()(.'EAN Most rm 1 t ~ LEEWARD APTS Ba. f11>lt'. garage Near S2SO +-ulil. 1201, Agale
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~2·4610 new carpet & paint 2S4 I ~ 1440 mg al its best :-..o pets J rharming in old t'oron:i., . 63 ·6 S!> 2000 f\J~rton, 63.!_<13'J7 Lido shopping area. $600 673-:Jli3.
INCOME ' Orange House "E .. Harbor VU homes, 4 HR. 11
1 Br furn from $465 2 Rr 2 Ra lrpk . IH'l'an • 2 Br Condu nr S (' Roomy 3 llr Townhouse Yl'ar lease Adults, no Room for rent to student
PROPEITt i._.. $525 + suurtt) 2 BA. ram rm Sl200 2Br furn fromSSSO \IH• rrom tlt•l·k .Pina. SA Pool. Spa. apt 111 qwd adult tom pets Must haH· ref's SUSmo Near OCC
••••••••••••••••••••••• 548 ms a\ a I I J a n I Ii I h 36.S W W1l:.on. ti~2 1971 Sin> mo (.'all Anthon} ft'IU115 $.Sii() Adult~. no plex Newly deeoratcd. 0 r I \ e b > 6 I 4 '• 631 SSIO
SPECIALIST .-.. ...... ~ Mesa \'erde. ~ br, pool. 64H 151 ;609312 L.og.aluch 3748 d3)S 64B757 l'\P~ & pi.'t.s f1reptare.enrlsd pallo & O~bhouse~\~e _494630J~ ~ ohh 4100
Sel . ••••••••••••••••••••••• new r11>t&pa1nt,garden i••••••••••••••••••••••• wknds6316630 I t>ll·l460or545·4Sll "ilra"l' Adulls onl" Oceanfront for W1nt0 r ........,M -f 3 19 llS & H ......... __ VI I B l r't f"t ,/ .. • •••••••••••••••••••••• ""' ron:i · un · llalaoal"-d 3106 poo l Sl'r\, S850 univr-ew EST SP~CTACULAK OCEAN ,2 r garden apt l vt Son)'.nopets SSSOMo Rentals Furnished &
Terms available to sull I·••••••••••••••••••••••• ~mo holllt!s 4 bdrm. 2 ha H.B.'s FIH & CITI I.lGHTS \'11-:w ' 11auo. i:ar laundry No 645-~.!_<'all btwn 9.5 30 unlum_ Brok_er 6i5·49_12_ SlAlAH MOTB. your needs Lo I l'ttl h 3 BR BR 2B fam room Gn•at l"'·.1 Spal\lih Estate LI\ 111Ji!' L'r I ....... I sml l'h1ld ok ••!IQ -Wkly rentals oow avail vey 1 e ome. . 13 • A. fam rm. Kids '"· u.. f 1 k 1 k < ome\'en room arl(e ,....~ ..., "---p-..1....& 312" NO FEE' Apt & Condo 2 BA d I i
I
0 tlOn Sll:?S mo Ol'dUtl u p:ir I c wr I • h 546 mo -._.... 0 SIOS & up Color TV j ,yar ,gar.seeps · K..Nopets Nosiol(les 64-16Ql!l round101t' Trrr.in•d 1 •r S63S 'mo .\nt ony l ••••••••••••••••••••••• rt.'lltals Villa Rentals Phones 10 room 22i4 nowtillJuneJ0.$895 mo $750 mo 1392 Gah~ay pool Sunkt•n i::is hb<i. da~Hall6.t25757.wknd~ 2 Hr .. gar $415 Nt>w OCEAMVIEW 6i_5 •912Broker Newporl Blvd CM 675-8842. 760-60116 . Lane 6441836. Big ("anyon adult Condo. 1 sparklini: rnunt.iin-. 6316630 I t'al"pl'ts. water paid 21i6 646-7445 96J.68.S7 3BR. 2BA. Fam rm Kids 2 BR. 2 BA. pool, tenn1~. spa 1.1 (I u !. r 1, 0 m ~ ZBR 2RA Condo St~ to 'E" Plarent1a 636 4120 !~~~l' ~~::lf. P1~~~t :::~ EASTBLUFF lb[· ~I. , ·------
oro.acMt M• 3122 OK..NopelS t\os1111:les ~er ured park1n1it ~kparJll' d1mni: Jrr.1 lkh F'rpk ~~nrt Gar ISPM Ile the f1rs1 O<'<'UJ•ant' q1J1etarea.s1njlea ut t&>A..UCE7
••••••••••••••••••••••• S77S rru t7!>4 lo11ia St $950 mo 833 71190 ur Wall.. 1n l'lo~t·t~ \du!~ Sl!OOmu 760 "290 12 UR. golf 1·our~t· v1e11i Onl> 4 units. 2 Br ~s ~ ITV'I &444757 1 Reas Weekly Rates 714 641 0763
2925 College A\'e
Costa Mesa. CA,
Upg raded 2 Br 2 Ba 644·1836 8S7 2tl26 homelike k1t<'hl'n & 2bdrm.2ba.viewoflla•.I nrw 1·pt S4SO mo Mk wfrplc & 2 Br 11i iden Ckean frt Li!.3 Br,2ba Kitrhenelles·Phones
w1yard. 1·arpon. so or 2 Br !llew C':lrpet, freshly Newport lle11:hts J l)r 1·.ibinelS Walk 10 Hunt Refni:. washer. dr}er 1 for 8111, 631 1266 Hum· for the best \lew, upper. 2 car gar, fpl. > r "Z" Channel Movies
POl no dogs $735 pr pamted. garage. > ard & f mly rm h rdwd rt r!> in., on ('enter gar S850 846-009li 1 ShJrp 1 BR. lots of wood S62S ·10 $675 Adt•lls. no I)' S 1200 mo ~ B Sandpiper. L967 Newport
ITl>lllcl gardener Avail patio~ mo 1984 "A' fl'lJk SRSO dnve b) ~IK I Rdrm fum.W S IBR. 1 Car Gar CdM I & wallpaper S38S mo pets O&)S 643 0212. "'2-~ Bl CoslaMesa645·9137
APPUVAWY
Ta Slttlter Near new 4-plex. 2
bdrm, 2 batb each unit
wilh fireplace. enrlosed
patio, garage. 9'<.C'k 1st.
Pos cash flow . Now
S159.SOO. Bill Grundy,
Rllr, 6'7>61.61
lhru July <negotiable I Anaht'1m St. Open datly j St Andr.!"'11 6-12 9666 I t New I y o H 0 r a 1 t' d Ask for Bill. 631 1266 Wknds 1161·6441 Step; lo the beach 2 & 3 Live on Npt Brh SOO/wlt 8eUy Kerr RJt 673-1181 S.S Adult9. no pels l\d Its Onl N p Br f11>les , yearl} Im· Pine Knot Motel 6302 W --ltGC4HYOH Ullhlies Free' u Y 11 ets. Barhelor '32.S mo Zl\64 2 BR 2 BA. dishwasher ma culate f6SO & 1775 PCH NB645-0440 lolJ!llwleodt 3141 t~i140fl ... och )2401 Gua rd gate comm SSOOMo 640.6736 wkd)s 1..a5alleC.llt no pets, nu carpets 1673-250'7 · ·-'----
..... z~:•••H•••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sper1ous 2 bdrm lam LAQl'l :TA llERMOSA 1 br-sundl'l.'k. on gar No 957·Z740aft 6 11\a1I Jen l'all Ro1ter ----Yearly. on the bearh,
......,zy ouse Lwc 2 Br z•, Ba Pool rm Deane Home Sl~t .,.. p k d L 1 "'lk ....... Avail Jan 11 ...... , 8.'17 l200 Q..iet 2 Br t Ba. garage. Hotel rooms, lutchenette CloseToBearh · · I 1"'11 ar 51 e n .• , ..-~ ..,.,. Pi\LM MESAAPTS -patio. pool Adults. no &both. S280up monthly (2131 S4G-J9S3 spa, lt'nn1s. serunl) I rm. W of Beaeh. 3 blks S ot ~-7DI 1561 Mt's:i Or 2 Rr I Ba enC'lsd ~aral?l' pets 5000 1801 "H" ISlh + $280 secunty deposit
gall' Walkto beal.'h arts I 6'10.&82 979·4191 Edinger CotfoMnct 3124 1 Br unfum S360 I Br & yard Lots of ~rass St 6427340 2306 w O<'eanfronl. N~leoch 3169 ~1398 J8dr.&fam11yroom.2 147-5441 ••••••••••••••••••••••• furnS400 2Rr unfurn S00033S62BlueL.ant<'m OCEANVl"'.Wd"luwo 2 Nev.po rt Bearh ••••••••••••••••••.• ••• • 5 Bl.ks to ore an Elegant 2 Ba. bit-ms. garage. \a • I NF:WL y on·o I{ S42S dullS onl> Call 49fi..33:S4 or 496·9230 ~. ~ ft' UDO ISLE charming 4 Br F'anuly Rm & Oen 1 <'ant RISO 3 Bdr 2 Ba , &.agii.oleedl l74t 8 • • 1 9-4 s.46·9t!60 n.. -• 8 8 Br 2 Ba deck, yard. sp-t154 __
lUMTSC.M.
Prire just reduced. near
new, call now
bdnn 21, bath lrg sun S8SO M Pl h t 2' dbl . bit $750 • l ••••••••••••••••••••••· I r gas pd, 1•n1· l(ar I j"'ean\•1ew 2 r 2 a con bri <' k r rp le . It a r ' VocaHoit R..tals 4250 ny patio. compietely UP· Ba c:d ~ rrp s. , I J "gCaroag,e,s ··IEn~LTY I Luxury studio. spa. T\'.: d/washer. pool ,\dulls 2 b Adu! do. w D pool, tennis. s F. c IJ R G A T F. •••••••••••••••••••••••
graded Sl700 V . . ar g ass. sun "' "' I maid serv1('1• vhon!';., 642.5073 i r, L~. no pets. new see gall'. encl gar. S600 S890 ITW) or lease opt OCEANFRONT 2 & 4 Br mo. ear det'k. dbl t'ar pn PROPEaTY MGRS . SllSwlt 4992227 -b dre sto'e refn~ enrl 6429712 ly. Bill Grund . 675·6161 garage. full} ma int I g\ I _ _ 2 Br I Ba Apt JlJtl-0. $475 979 400 · Adults. Sunset Bluff~ on Mail Winter Weekly
Want something xtra yard Adults.nopets In I 6?5-6173 ,Mewportleoch 3769 Newl.> decor Gas p<l • 2 Br. i\pl Near 0t·ean. Pu1l1r Ave l' M ~onyil}"_~}7873 __
special in a 2 Br qwre at 527 18th St 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• enrl J;!ar . pool. 1Jshwr Uenut I hr, r11 rpcts. view. r lean, balroo). t-630-9440,642·88<»1 Kailua.Kona.Hawaii Townhouse t'ompletely 960-633! On 2bd S69S iOC'EANFRONT2&4 Br Adult.56425073 dr:ipes. Quiet bldni:. )!aragl' i\\a1l now lwilhlargeloft&t•xtra Zuruts.eachsleeps •
TSL lnvstmnt.s 642· 1603
14 UNITS C.M. Eastside with pool.
owner anxious. great
financing at 10'1.-. rum~ S895jfo 760 9117 3 Br. 3 Ba rlose to bea<'h Newi:~teshore~ Jbd I A' ail Wmtl'r Week I\ 3 Br Townhou~•' ~1~ 4 911 fi7 8; 6 0 r filil-0252 dttk 759•041~ .. 759 1042 ~4!192 for brorh~
604 16lh St. S795 mo $700 Monthl) i;73 7873 Ne.,.ly decor ga, pd ·~°" leoch 3140 ...... Occ•ClltCY Palm Spnngs area <Mon· H-Utrfwllithltd SJ6.145J 3bd family $900 ..... •o ....... y CLUI em'I j(ar . pool , d~whr 2 Br Townhouse No pet s , ••••••••••••••••••••••• I S'fOO/mo 3 Br 2 Ba Apt. terey cri rondo 3 BR 2 -· bd VII S 200 -'"" '"" Adu!~ 642 5073 Malure adults onh I Br Adults I b 1 IMCOMIUMITS ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4BR.Ba&•2. Pool.tennis 3 · 'age I. Hach Apt <X:ean \'lt'W -• S42S ITW) 755 w ISth St on). 14J1Sta1rs. \1ew. a rony , Ba, furn "' alrium
TSL lnvstmnt.s 642-1603
ooexceptionallotrlose Gwrd 3202 &Playground K1dsOk Wat«f10ftfHo..1 Jantsl642·1802 Spac1ous2Br.1Ba $39S 646-9507 • nopets vaultedre1llngs.enclsd Golf. teon1s Daily,
to heart of Laguna ••••••••••••••••••••••• No pels S6i5 mo Rltyt..c. 631-1400 · -J Br. 1'1 Ba $4~ l.aun -960-2675 garage. bloc·k to hearh weekly & monthly rales
Vill14e. Two I Bdrms + 1--------• SJl-25455411-1905 _ <!Q' fa<·, pool S48 9SS4i 2bdrm. 1 •,~a. lrplr. l(ar. Pumtshed & Unfum I 2 3 Yearly 3\'ail i 14 ·SS8 ·8001
sleeping rm. A MUST WINT& llEHT >.LS Nr beach, 3bdrm. 2ba. Newpon fleut'h Villo ~Mo 2 Br 1 Ba Apt
1
. ~~~ Call llelen at Bdrm A pt s G .v m, !.SL M~ml fi42 1603 9 5Pr.t. ask for Ma_!!__
SEEi! YEAllYLEASES S7rl0 Gardener incl No Balboa I Br Iba tOSOsq Garage. washer dl')'t'r, -Jacum. Sauna pool. Yearly lease unrurn 21 :0-:0 Tahoe rondo. 4 Br. s ....,.. YliloC)lt l .E CGI ow Re.tail D-' ~962 8639. _ ft. top nr Tern hr \ u ldl bl.Ill tns Small l•h1ld Mail now I Br <'arpon. tennis· \ ol I e Y ba 11. bdrm 2 ba. blt1n s New l'Tlln to Northstar $450
4t7-1761 6 7S-l n I .. ,.. Spac 3br. Jba. sunderk. pm•;u·y S800 mo + sel' OK no pets Onl\ I vear I pool & laundf) Adults basketball, game room pamt carpet drapes wk Tom 8.Si 1668
h J .ton pp 972-1717 l_v _msg old Call for appt. llll pets 1415 + $265 dt>· I Hunt _lkh 846 ~19 l 18SO. Call l..mda or An. R~ ~ ... -4300
2310 Santa Ana Ave. dbl gar Nrbeac an. ~r TSLMGMT _ 642.1603 ~~.J31 W 19th. St jJ Br ('OOdoin HtngCont'I ~5~7060 •• ---•••••• to •• ~••••••••••••• Costa Mesa. 11 Units · 10 1. ~ 960 ~!8_ BI u ff Con d o I m ~'
2 Br. Townhouses + a 4 Spacious 3 BR . 3 BA. sun· marulate' 2BR. Wash ST'UNNING large I & 'I. --• P\'l palio w stor~l(I.' Eastbluff 2 Br :? Ra M F' roomates lo share Br. I~ Ba . Ranch deck,nrbearh.dblgar. WO Pndfl, Dbl Gar YEAA·llOONOFUN· Br.2 Ba Garden Apt 2 .Br I Ba Santa Ana shed & carport Kids i ftreplare. pool. po r(•h homtmCdM 1225 Isl/
House. Annual income of f S795 l 1960 5618 S6SO Mo. 646 4315 Social Ac1tv111es °' Pool 710 W 18lh St Condo near Sunflower & I OK, no pets $525 mo I w view S62S i20 It 14 lasl Call 760-8620 ........... w1·11 sail for 1055 ~ ~--reclOf . Frl!e Sunaay -Bnstol. patio No pets 7S2·2197, 8-S M 1F IN b f I I -
than 10 x gross. 25% lnilN 124• Walk lo be3ch Pool & Pa'~1~ec· ."Plu• m~,: ly decor 2 Br w /gar ...,...., P S P u ct New I hr rondo. sundeck. <'ar garage S500 Adulls roommate Ott 20th to _ _., ~ .. 2 br. den 2 ha home 8 h BAO TiiE VlCTORIAN New l'tUs tlld oce t ele 1 - -I elli' 2 r. I ba. I'll r . si: Help' Mother It. son need
-'--•~· •·t TD ~ • ~ · .,_,mo. ierra ..,gmt f"'I' ~ oar Ind~ rm · ·., uuwu. """ume "' · · •••••••••••••••• ••• •••• ten n 1 s p ri v S7 5 o I new <'11>ts & dr:ipe!I bit Co &4HJ24 ·,;I<'. pv. ,. · • ! • • no pet! 645 31164 shr condo home , Irv &Ownerwill rarry2nd .........__,_t-...o 3J06-1'wnhome.new3br,3ba '""·...,.,~rl 7_060_1 GAUT AlCAUTK* IM. pahn Adult6 Call ---whookups Nr be;;uh 2 8 2• B I"' MF non smkr 1275 TD . t --p k I , .. ""'" ..., tennrs •freelessoos $550 P/P 968 0122 an 6 r ' a enr su .. at attractive rae. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pauo. gar ar . poo , Bh4fst'ondo,3 br.2•,b:i. to•o &p1osh0pt •1 btwn~.~.6JS..4120 Pacific ---· garage. pool. frph• 'Hm 857-4976 , wk . Call Wolfinger Realty. Balboa Island Waterfront jar. Jr/S/mo. 833·905_7 _ 2 Heauh Clut>s•SauNI 667 ··c, V1ctona T-• "~ *'C.l\J ....... 64().<296 J 642_ .0077 _ 213/539-1394 new r11>t1p111nt, 1•ar ... ,_ "' _,., .. ., ,, . 3 Br. 2 Ba Yearly ren· New rondo. 2 BR, 2 £A gar. frplr. $980 mo • Hv<ltoma\sage • ti6S PARK ORI E CM 3& 2 Ba 2 blo<'ks 10 M ~tra1ght to share 2 Bd 2
Lah far S. 2 200 ta!. Jr/S. Mo. 7i0-0J47 _ Patio, Nr Park & Pool Wkdys 732·3383. eves & ~~~~;~no: Goll Bachelor and one bdrm i bearh. patio. SiOO mo I Ra apt N B S200 mo. Isl -•••••••••••••-•••••• eon.. def Mer 3222 Noa 5 67~-9640 e\'!!_ v.ilnd~ llEAUTIFUL APTS. apts All adults and no j J:_earl SiJ-3728 ..! last+ dep 646·0l_g___
HUNTJNGTOI N NBWEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR 2ba rondo w /2 rar udoSands3bdrm, 2ba, 2 Songles t & 1 Bao l~~!,i!ool. BBQ 11nd • t &78AP11.o lois I B;-1 Ba .Slepstobl.'al'h Shr 48R . 38A , w/2 Z.ZS' X 117' ~ ror· Duplex 3 Br 2ba. det'k gar S8251mo 975· 1262 or car gar. yrd. close to rooms • Furnoslled a-~.J~m . _ • o.,n .. 1inr•• 'B&Ch .....,, other.1 S22S + util Yrly
nerlOlh andOlive w/orn view Gar Deluxe 759-9386 bch. romm pool $850 &untu1n.Slle<l•Mut1 N 2 B · h • 000•& A,, ijoo"' ..,..,., Sl&0,000. (714l 98H017 ~f::,. rty S89S . i 11•, --~.~"'LS L v•no • No Pets • ewer r. wit Ra rage. • u•1llf"" O•••il·nq PROPF.RTV llOL:SE t_Balboa Isle> 675-6762 "'"'uu. """''"" Ve_a!:!L 542·36m Mo11e1sOpen Oa11y new carpel ' painl •Jo;10 8u<•4S•Oll• 642-:msG 642·1010 l'.Xean Vie..,. 2RR 2BA. t1~!!~ OHM, .. 400 home640-~~k 540·49811· 1Br.1 ba $65<1 EastbluH. 4bdrm. f:tm 9 to 6 Adults. no pets 1430 /mo !>« 1 Ci.ir1 3 Br. 2 Ba SteJ)6 lo bl'at'h gar uhl pd frplr yard.
--. .. 2 Br. I ba $700 nn, lrg yrd 645-5S77. S750/ITW) ulils in<"l<I fum 494·6176 __ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 blks to Bearh. Large 3 Br 11 ha S6SO 642 Sl61, 640..8107 Oakwood PROPERTY 110 ·sf· R f I Mobile Home, fixer 2SOOsqfthome,Jbdrm. 38r·2b•a '""""furn GerdenApertment1 Westside Costa Mesa. · 2 ms or S230mo uti tn·
.1 I ~ SSIO Lrg I BR full d I 6'\2-3850 "421010 rl . nr H B Mall. ~<Sstarpark.Pam 3ba.denfamrm,large LeRatSOrRJtyB33·8600 seAurit)' Amen'lties ..._po'1s.echH. upex.upstatrs,2 Br I W 847 ...... ftS SS()00.963·0307 dming. fireplace. pnv --' 880 lrv1ne•.,•6•ftl Ba.rentralheat,refngf' BalboalslandWatcrfront _estm ~a --
Dtat.h In Family. Forces patio. 2 <'ar enc: gar. Orangetree Condo. 2 631·5237 · 64S·6242• (71')645·1104 & slove, enclsd garage
31
... 3 Br 2 88 Yl'arly ren Balboa bearh 2 br apt.
Sale or this Beautiful 640-1484 Bdrms · on stream. 2.IJ-4J0.3l4S -Newpo'1 heel\ s. ~et & safe $4~/mo ......... oc" -~1_!'7Slmo 7i0·0347 low rent 1mmed orr.
Sp . h t H e in 28r f ·1 ~7S/mo Adults only _ 3 Br 2 Ba. or 2 Br. 2 Ba 1700 1&111 St •Do•" 11 1&1n1 548-$442, no.5629_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ... _ 3110 Guttans_t_~ref 67S 38S2
an&a ype om ·garage, 11>k. ull in Rec: f adl. SS 1-4196 , Den. Steps lo bearh, (71') 642.5113 -<kean V1e111.• Deluxe I & 2 _.. _
I.A QI.inti . Home has IP· eluded $750 mo Ca II 851-1311 (11>k ~/mo . th ad AllSIDI COMFORT Br. Apl.S. Nev.•ly derorat ••••••••••••• • •••• ••••• Roommate to shr N B.
prox 2700 SQ rt. + Jim DIVb 7~.-1-~l -._ .. _... PROPERTY HOUSE WI an l,a.rge !Br upstairs with ed. rt>fnge, dishwasht•r, l Br I Ba. adults sec: ('011 mobile home . quiet
Sepuate Guesl hse. -r--3241 OCE ...... FIO ... T under the cathedral reiltngs , disposal. heated pool. donrSo Coast Pia/II .irea . s200 1 mo Homes, swimming pool, Mela l224 •••••0 ••••••••• ••••••• S42·:.SO 642· IOIO ._" " poolside balcony, f11>lc. elevator, subter prkng Po o I . s pa . 10 m Me t 35ZJ. '213 1339-~
Ouw Tree, & Large .... , .................. EANF'RONT Modular Ce.da1 limn Dlx.2bdrm.2ba Avail 0 .1 p· <bhwshr&rarpon $475 ~&u call4948063 $42S mo M Hill W-S
Shade Trees are all Bdr nerutlve home Type Homes, 24 yr lkfullla!Md 3425 now 'Lii Jan 23. Month or 31 J llot rm 759-~100e_!~6i3 8189 tarl•
tMloeed by Blod:wall w/pool ' spa Family secu.rity. y, mi pvt bch ... •••••••••••••••••••• ~~S2·~--Specious barh with patio 1~.f!·rrovlew. central hl!at. 050 c--. 1•1•.000. Contact rm, ronnal dlnin~, 2\11 + fishing pier. ~du TOWNHOUSE d It GI.ft GUI.de -· Ad I .,_, ~-Ullfwlllhiw.ts""1N*dtMd3t00 ,._.., '" 811 "'-II t Ill ·"' ood en un ' "'"-£---£ Dp1 .-. im. u ts. no pets 1•1 •293 Ernaat EckhoH, Ex· . ..,.ce en con on. Coltaoe type, tniW uk 2BR 2BA d' _._. rr_, ...,..,..H " ~ " .,_,, ln I "'· •-0 I d d u e new. · '" ""·m. 3 bdrm, 2 ba, bit °""' aria. S49·Zt<t_7
• •••••••••••••••••••••• Easts1de. Cosla Mtsa
Garage. lh lhU
J7:>1mo 180 21st Sl
Days 646 .. 262 . t-:\•es ' Wknds 64S-9$43
-utor. t'/8·3892. eves •"""' r gu_.ner • deck. poo . guar e · 1 t b 1 '" 1 bra"' 2 blks to be•~h ~ pool 7Sl-31111 o di I N '"'· g pa 10• 1 cony lns. firepleri!. Monthly 2 br. n r SC PI a za, ,... · me74. servAire • .1 D r g1te, a ts on 'Y 0 A/C, frpl. sett clean 3 I M A th V .11 ocean view. S4SO • SH
Kallu1. Kon• Hawaii. ~ it. nva1 . er. dogs. From S77S mo . oven. drapes. Ser 11ate, oryearly64S-757 Call 642-567 If r ut '· age, t2126·2'7th. 12·4 1213 I
........, ·•mpla. ""·m ... udlo 30. 631116. pool, rlubh.~e. uuna, 2 Rrapt, sub·rent, BalM11 poo • spa. ennia rts. 3M-7936 rw .. ., r .. 0• Pl G 1IMllStfstll SSOO /mo Call Rob, coondo by ocean Ownr. OoletoSC au reen· L...-Mlpel 3252 Quid . nr F'wys 1870 No Bil Club Avail. now to '168·m . or rail Oave, 12 Br unfurn Victoria
K.11'91 $52-5684 eves, dys brook home. 3 BR. 2 BA. •oo•••••••••oo••••••••• TJ$.2.S80 751-0796 J l. 542.43~ _ Cttritt.el 9Sl-44218. Bnrh F'rplt, dtrkll,
IOal3 llv, dln. fem rm .. enc:. Extt 4br, 3b1. fam rm. 3 38R. 2~BA Newport II~ CAMYOM -ocean view. newly re
yard.2rargar. l850fmo rar gar. view. nr otean. Ternre C.Ondo. Highly Dellgtitful 2 bdrm, 2 be Acl-Vhor 2Br 1~'1.Ba.610 Joann St. rrodeled ~Imo . Coll
........ 2100 ~dep.9'2Carn1lion. $1300 974·3420. ,Uparaded with small ""Odo Putlall" furn !!01.~l.dren Pct OK <!a.JS499·~or4992348 l11•r11 14Ml.O -P ti St 0 1 w ' ""_,
-• .. •• .. ••••••••••••• J BR, l BA, ram room. Mlapert .... 3Ut b!11har "vlae1.her ~ I Stturity gate S8SO + St'( W l BR S360tmo. utll incl . 1 bf. ocean view. no kid~ ---S" ••••o••••••••••••••••• .. · n-.itomo.7s.9·ls&4 TSIDI orpets 2607Sol1n11Wy. ~-din. room. den. fp, 2 rer Dl')er Community pool, ---ldults, no pets, 383 W Call : 497 l4%
1All"Ul7 Condo a1r. "7$/mo .. lat + 1ec. 'IHI ILUffS S.una & Ju . No Peu. S. Cle•• 1776 Sm 2 Br. l Ba. Poolside Bay 548·9$16 _.i._ . ftaarho Mir•8t. 3 Br. 3 avail Jan lit Debbie h ec> Mo. No Lease Avail I ....................... ~:. La0 undry room. 1
Ba. Sl.20.000 •qui ty ~ Sl*lous 4 bdrm. 3 bat • J111 IJt 6311317 for llP·: (), tM ~ech. Lric 1 & 2 muu K, no pets C.U
Prdtr em I rom m 'I Cl Propfr\y 2 Br. 1 Ba. tm. home . New paint & •ntment. I Br Wkly Mo S2SO-S700 for appt btfore 1la aone.
Irvine. rent1l prop. houae in hlah lratfir ~ Move In reAady --Mlkc492-1720 ~>!• l. 6'2·1603
Newport. l.a11un a ~· ot Wat.Ide Coeta S1DI per month. gt, *f •••"""tit.cf WISTUDYlLU•E °"""j~'in.fl• M .. Ttrr1flc for Anti .. sseo. .. ..................... , .... tmmed. occupenry.
--q~ Shot>. Account1n1 ColhMIM J724 , ~ut Aduh only eompln. ._.,.,Br Irvin• tondo Cllk'e. La• Office, etc ·-M.ASS ....................... i ....................... Pool.al)I, l1undry room.
Ill .... equity FI P Xlnl =· Ttlll dis· ~' '37&/mo. Mature adult•. 1 .... ..._.. JI06 pallour decks. No peta.
-.-. CUaae for ? c..e Ing to tull. Ocean ' nJ1bl view· no'*'· Quiet ' H<'un 1 ....................... Garai• nall
---.. • sq. n U · 4bdnn. lam rm. 3 en attl Ntwport Blvd. 8 a I b o • I • I a n d Bech. SMO
Netti me casll
..
for C~ristmas •?
Sell your unneeded
Items with a low
cost ad under thl
Dally Pilot Gift Gulde
~ ltlda · Back cltdl•I th yard. ar . .-imo Evu: 14f.117J. Wtterfront. 3 81'. 2 Ba 1Br .... S4U
llr••u..to: Jlrl\li t.t•OJ•o &o .su2. Yearty rtntal. -75 Mo. 2Br,tn~• ,._.142·1n ,.., ..... Me ll~'l ~ _ 1t• lbd + F/R bomt ~ dtcot. 1 Br. dplx, Ca.lino.Gel. '!SLM MMUI Wit
,._., 8 1"1· MS.M UU. Ille ltttn1 •ltll 1 wtpool 2 patiol,J frpl. up. by J"· Qultt. _. .. ..,.
1111 .. .,,, • D9'IJ Piiot Cluiln-4 W. . UIOt• No No ~ -~=LU. mt ·~ ~o;._j,j:J1 la C .. I .. a M"91r ~? Mliliiiiliiillliilllililll .. llls•s .. smslil .... lllil ..... slillfl•a ...... n~s..-liili._.._s ..... ._....,.._ • ..,-...:.... ....... -...~~_:;.;._~
•••••••••••••••••••••••
SEAWIMD
VILLAGE G1ra11e 1n Cornn11 del
Mir SM mo
t7Q.0347
Stora11t Gar111c. Cost•
Men. 9x20 $SO/mo
M2 4907 wkdy!'. 9 !I
Offktl..W 44ff
New 1"2 bdrm lu•ury
ldult apts 1n 14 plant1 l
Bdrm from S490. 2 bdrm
from 1570. Townhouse
from t&40 + pools. t('n·
NS. w1terlalls. pon<b'
Gas f« coolt1na f, heat
1n« p11d. From San
Oitf!O Frwy drive North ••••••••••000"0••••••• on Hta<'h lo Md'adden , 1617 Weitrllff N tt Want lhtn West on Mcf'1ddN1 fln1n<'11l in~t iOOO. f
to Se.wind V11l1~<' bl floor Aj(ent~I *2
m•1m ~198 EXICUTIVI = ............ ~!~~ su~s \
~ 8t1C'h Motor Inn, ..., ... m No P1<'1rlr Cout PLAZA
Hwy. Laaunit tklat·h. ~luau"" olflre &"•<'t 0.lly. Wtf'llly. Kltrht>n •1 ...-1v1i11blt I.ow wlntt'r in Irvine'• bu,u l rates 414 m4 ~er! f:Uy ••rwy •r
Belbo1 Inn. llO • up
WMk.lf lllldltnnttlt.
~I~:.11$_.,•
WAMJ ACTION!
~ ..,.
<'91. Avail now! C.il
forc9"1lla
111:1_1;11 ·~·· ... ~ .. ... ..,.~ .. .
• ' , • Or AQt Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wldntld1y, December 23. 1981
•·
t I .-
f
•ye&.. IOJO ~ =..:. ....... ~~~~ ......... ~ ... !1,1.! '111 ~-•/ hn •• USO J• W..ted, 7 075 Http W•t.d 7100 W•ed 710 •P•OMc:IS• lltGrtorOffleo. 1~1q I\ P.,t1n•/ .......................................................................................... . .. ~.~~::! ..... ~!~! ··'-~~ ..... ?!.~! . ...................... '•
'"9lN1mftlH00 1q M•1VmieAno1 Lelt&,_.. Youn11 murii•d man
ft "°"'111s.iq n No ~41tl •••••••••••••••••••••• ....,c..,_, wouldllk~odd )ob.11 1'vr1 A r r e altve H uman R esources
lft.1 recu1lred AIJJ 'J11•c_. 510 Escorts & wkrnda l'11n do a Manaj.!er will have the opportunity to
An,onw IM 1111 Ou llAUTYSALON •••••••••••••••••••••• 1... \ilnt't> or h11ndyma11 e·tabll h It l d d 2'll' CaUAM uum •\Illy tqllipptd 3 •l• ll4 .,.,. 641 011W Jobi 972 ~ ('\l'b, ilbk s b a resu s or1 l'n e epurt
• & lion C'ulta1Mtu C.•/Ct.tck1 roro111 m ent a1ml'<l at mecltn~ t>mployees'
11TMSTlllT PGn\O Ml·MIM Allbp/MC/VI•• Youn~ murril'd miin nttoo~ Skills in merit t·ompcnsat1on,
COIT4MBA ......,.., • ...., 4500 would Ukr odd Job~ eve~ ~nef1ts, orgar111.ut1onal behavior and 2 Grl l"OOlftolfl~•Uilc1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEF.D CREDlT? & wk end11 Can do a comniunt(·at1on would be hl•lpful.
AIC. ~Y ol pf1t1C Ulll lZ!O 11q rt. F'tont Offkr Gt't Vls11 or Masttr l'ard variety of handym.i n Progressivt , dyna ml(' tomuany needs inti. Avall now Call I 11r11 l' r r 1 r d 0 0 r · with no r rtdll t:ht•tk J(>b6. 972-~2$ l'Vc!>. usk k " ~ra 675 8700 541$/n1o 1240 Logan GU/\HANTEl.W Wr1t1• ror Bill a la t'·l'ha rgc, humnn1stit leuder
llCErTIOHIST
F'ull lime ton f'r1
must llt' jH'r'\on1o1l>lt-. wl'll
!:roomed & l'OjO) ffit'l'l
In& public ffrquirt·'
llood •1>elhnl( & 111·11
mansh1 11 No 1)'111111:
phont.-c>111 pnfrrred,
rull company he11er1t~
/\ppty· Penny~aq·r. 1660
l'larent111 Ave , l' M
Share 2 ofc l\lltt' in pre A_vt (' M Oays $40 93.U, to OPL. 1'0 Box 4775, llow;ekeeper, exp'tl, xlnl Pleast-St.'nd rt>s umt> and salary re
lllCioua 1lrpon ere. 375 F.vt'S646 0681. I.Ill Vc8_u, Nv. 119106 rc.f1>. pref. lrvt> an Neat QUlrL•mt•nts to UCll'T ffY"ST
IQ. ft. For details l'llll G GIA.HD o-o..11uG s 0 b (' r. p I cal> a n I ' Box 1002 Assist with rel'eµtronri.t .... -. 1ve yourself 8' ni;"" I bl du t l l's T ~I> In" ------=-'-· -'''--ESCORTS pnsrllve, re la l' Loves D' I p·1 t , "
't;RVlrt: STATJON A1
n :NIMNT ,, T eH·n
tn~ & ~kncl' n1•o11 ap
Jlt'UIJllCI' & h11ncl-.r1t
11111 I\ Pl'h JI 2S1IO
N1·v.port UI l' M
T~OMSale1
lmmcdralt< opi·n1ni: fur"
full tlllll' fl'jCll'f Jd
rt.-prt-i.ent<illH' fur in111d1•
~alt'!> µos111on Mu~t lit•
.1s~ert1vt 1wr~o11 11 1111
past tclt•phunt ~·Jk~ t'll
Pl'flt'lll'l' I\ ppl~ 111
person, IGW l'lut't•ntra
Ave ,(.' M 800 sq. n. Mesa Verdi!. Christmas bonus .,,,.. •oao1u ••£ clultJnm Do dn ve Cati al y I 0 ( H w v M). f I I 1 n II . aru -sell unneeded .... ,_ "-aft ur cv1:, 631-2427 Costa Mesa, C<.1. 92626 gi·n~·ruJ off1t·l' CoucJ TYPIST /STAT · .,... 1 h Formerly l.1nda & <'Oll)pany bt·nl·r1ts & ucl ~·rnunnal {talt•mtn1'
.....,.4lfJ 1 ems Int e Vtrkl'5 811ck with thl' Need 11 l'hotograµher'' vancemcnl. C'ttll f11r lux rt•luro' & form~
.AYFRO ... T 4600 Daily Pilot best r ortfolws. Portrarl~ tklivcry j)C'rl\011 11:1rtl UJ)Pl Merrill f.vn c•h 'IYPt' 70 ~µrn IO kt'}
f"'lll ••••••••••••••••••••••• 669-0207 Anylor1ttion 1142!:1703 j tune 10 um lo 6 pm 23 LoanCOUftHfort Hdocat1on fr:uiktc• Non bmokt·r ~ul.ir\
Primeolfice.76().!IMO ngProf M Looking for Gt'ft Gu1'de F ~w_........ 7100 da ~eek 6420106 n aµ1dly fXPlllldtn.: 7520707 s1•••·nw111lh ('I'\ frrni "'~-M . rooming s•t t M or total reluollon with • -r ..,....., • . . , , . Mort.:a.:r Co reprtsenl ., 0 E •t L' uuv ~ eu, 250 sq rt 'u11 ron. on a prof massage Ste\l' ••••••••••••••••••••••• l>~UVl::R\ P~,f(S() lorj IOI( man; unxwu~ S & r. . " ' <.:oi.tu M~a l'Jll ('Jrul s\ite. Sl7S/mo, Utils 111· Fri 9A M to 6 PM Cal 642·5678 ~.&IS-1426 I earl) morn11111 Tr me~ 1.·~ Pcni.ion Funds & l111!11!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!11!!!!1_ ----lat 7~ HMO
cld. 179 W. 19th St ~·011)6_ Clftd ... fOf' 0 ACCOUMTING home. deliver} l\dlb on rnvalc inve&tori. bl'ek Sales Pan-Time WAITRt::SS~;~ """'> in
&n-81211. C h r I s t • o 1 General Agency needs I) l'.:cono l':tr ri·q No 1nl( l'>.pencnl't'd loan BUOY VISIT pl'n.oll El M.itador M11x
Cll\ce for Leue 1280 sq /1••est/ A.6-Vlaor IEAUTIFUL fast paced person to t'Oll(!{'ting or i.olil'llrni: al(t'fll~ with u following WJWASHINGTOM u·un Rt'l>l 1768 'le-.port
ft.Wilh.Bplrony Airport .... SEXYESCOITS handle pohr} ln\01l·1ni: $150 0lJ 0
1l'1 + hnnu' + Call Jrm or L1ncl11 & Lrncoln & llarrulton & Hhd (.'1\1
Schwinn Heh Cruiser.
custom 1932 boy• 2.f "
11111 )Ill' SIOO 673 3600
l\Jyi. &hw1nn 10 spd top
condtllctn S7~
li7$ ~SH
Ros' <irund Tour 11
f'rllmt sut 23 10 blark •
Whl 'l7 111 N"w ~o !it-II
s1~m~
IMl!clng Mtftrlab 1025 ..........••.•....••••..
HOW 25(/FT R1~lwood 2xG htil'k 1111(.
4 20· lon.i , al~o rrdwood .,
ft•n('tnl( lAJWt'!!I Jlfll't'
.:uar Jim or Kt'n
an~11nr, 646 9885
Camtros &
E .. pnnt 1030 ...•••...............•.
Cu mplt'll' dark room .
l'nlarger, 1•vcryth1ng
nt't'ded $45() (;40--8771
" ~'.\I Mone ('am<'ra.
l'rciJt'C'I ur Sc rl'cn
1-.drlur Spll1•f·r SIOO
~ 1753 Complex. •••••u•••••••••••••••• 630.0426 Raprd ad\ .rn.:ement & I: a 5 11 1 u w J 11 l' l' ~I WCY.i tAher peoplr you 11.111 St'e · · S19·3862 ..._.. ----rompan) paid benefits Wt'stm•.n~tl'f ~t un~ 1111 the money you l'Jn •------.--1 J:'Jmm SLli Koo1rn f'St ,
Cotta Mesa ·om ce With Oppan.ity SOOS c .. roo1 5150 For appointment tall mgton H(h area ti:l!I ~66 MECHANIC mak~ JS a Los \ngele . Word ,roceHlfHJ JUIO -. rnder & fhtih
"""'an view Re~ept1on ... •••••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••• H-.a1y I••£ Debbie. 549·8909 ext 31 ~ •L •SSIST Ma<·G regur Y11t"hti. Ti~~ cr I t ' d ;" I\eed i.k1lled oµerator 50mm &13Smm lenses ~~ , LOSING LEASE "" -llU"'l1"' "' • t6.11 Pl t l' M rcu awn l'J> '1111h ~Int l'umm.ind ul I' rl d h I area + 2 offices. 644 sq tmg business. sellrn~~i Co mmutin g r r o m OUTCALL -l'hlllleng1ng PO~lt 11111 aren '"· field rep Man} Pt'OJJlc gr.11nrn,1r for ma t11ng ~ 7~~16 arch u\l'd,
ft. Av11l immediately AU. sup' plies and fix-Norwalk area to Costa All Ma.ior Crf'dtt Card.' A.eds Rec.l•able & a\ a1lablt-lor L·~pl'r'd , Models, a<·t ors Jo'rl m on the pit c1rrul.it1011 Wrll trnn on Burrough~
fQSpermo.851-9000 turesmcludmg: Mesa. (213 1 864 -5468 6670767 A.eds Payable maturt'. energl'lu· .i'~'~ xtra~ Xlnt opp. Ol'W sales program l'Jrn i Rl'dJMron 1-· T noun tu Cah 8035
L 17MISTIEET Display cases, wailing before4p.m TWO GIRLS JqEEDED lanl Top puy for right r ;r c· l' ~ 1 > PI'~ rrore th~n S200 a lltek I II l''.\1 ffesurnc' to 111012 •••••••••••••••••••••••
3100 sq.ft. for lease room ch.airs. Beauty Handle all details 811sy girl 4 day~. non "mukl•r 213 ~ 7860 for workrng Jui.I a lell Sky Park Crrl'lt• lnrnc: l'FA K.rtte~. tup quahl)
Pl r SI b d d •y"' rt.-alestt l R.'.ll~ ..... RSES•IDES 1houneachdaY_s11:nrn11 •927 14 Attenl1un lllmalayans S'lOO&up enty o park ing 1., aon air ryers an Lo.t&Fowtd 5300 "'OC11ofClou ae Hl'couning ,...u "' up11ewT1mesSUbsrnµ i Bat ·. Siamei.e Sl25 & up
1 block lo Westcli rf hydraulic chairs. mlr· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Esrorts&Mod11ls offr ('e Refs required DRAFTERS Nt<t.•tfod needed for Pm tions in their tom · nara S-1.!18S87
Custom interior design rors. shelves and plants. 645·4798 24 hr Avail 'm med R C 1'ell'rnm mu 1111•11 t1c>ns Stuft 10 Conv llosµ1 tal ' munities. We pay houri) •--------1
Ready to mov4! in! Gorn -Also. make·up, shampoo \'1sa1M(' Taylor<'o. 640·9900 cni::ineennl( fr rrn nee<h. t'ert1f1l'll preft•rrcd Xln1 wage + 11.eneroui. i·om Mtrehmtditt P1>rsians Ii mu lllit le
· petitive rates, call Rob, andhairprodurts. FOUND 'OS Answenni: Senll'l' I' 1 drnfters t>Xperitt11c·l'1l rn bl't11!f1ti. wrth 1nsura111'e missions ir you have a ••••••••••••••••••••••• si75. 2 udull females. 6.11.aMIO Call631 -9754or ft Atlracllvt>, µror women i:raH•yarcl & r T en·s I Lero) Ink 1111 MylJr A111>ly 1~•\crl) Manor. neat appearance & ~J eu ~B99f.!i
Professional oUices for ~___!!ter6,898-6809 -ID( FR££ wish to meet men ai.:e shifts .1,a1I rw l'l<P., Gc101kl at11tuch· & hard J.lllV1l'tnnt1('M knark for talkrni: w11h ~ •••••••••• !?.~~ SIAMESEklTTEN
lease. l\eception ist . Selr Service Laundry M ~s.s seekrng lon1: term 11 <' l' l's s <ir Y l' a 11 ~·ur 11rs onl)' rr1·1·d upp Nul">llll: people talk to us about Vic·trola ,rntl J l(ed n· Fem S75 !157 0607
phone 1f1$wering. xerox,' Golden West &·Mc Fad-Call· relattonsh1p~ Respon i'l1Hll181, llH area !WE I I) I\ & 11 E11g1111w1111: LYM CHARGE th1~ gre<1t µ!lime op curd'> $1.()o(J 1,11noi:e:. "'--8040 secrtt.arial. -o to ••3• den. $65,000. 641·0763 • dents rncl descrrpllon. ASSISTANT MANi\<a:n 1 54Q.t6!4 11 7 r•·li"r. F~r, • Sat Portunrty Ca ll Mun frt. ii e pl 1 .. 1 ·•n .,_,. ...,, ~"' A 642-5671 .. ,.. °' 957236 J '1<' J .:~. "u .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm .. 831·5333, 30101 Town en! ocrupa lion. a gc. 1 n I 2 clays per Wt•ck rn adult I rul(hl~ t'orw .II llospt _· J, ext. !2<>1 hurder, 22K 1:11ltl. hand Kl'.:~:SHOND Pups AK('
Cent tr Dr. Lagun a MaMy to Loe. 5025 ~rt:Sts & t•ontac·I rnfo apartl'l'll•nl ht-at·h 1.m•a ELECTRON ICS t'Wf>Urt llcal'h area SANDWICH SHOP pwn1ed no~t:'r). ~cl ol t2 ('hamp l>trt' M F l'rl &
Niguel ...................... , Valuable item · found al rite PO Box JS!J. 213 ~ 1573 SALESPERSON Hnni: }tlllr i.rn1Je & JOm COUNTER KITC'HE~ St I.OJ 675 JS:Jjl , h u ,. I'\ 1 p 1 )
NIWP'OlT HACH
AlRPORT AREA
FUU suvict · from 90<
s/f. Campus Or Mullan
RWty S40-2960.
<lat.oai execuove orf1ce.
400 aq. ft. Pvt bath with
shower. Balboa Penrn
im. 6'2·4623
Bank of Amenha. Costa 25381G Ali cia Pkw\ ... l'jll \Ir SI • V-"--C-Ual ' · Expenenred elr1·1ro1111• ~ " uant I! hrs per da) l'eti.tJ l"htlds 1!1H'k11r., llillO 213 007 J345dft6pm _... ..,.... Mesa Write irs99 c lo _La_guna Hills. 92653 •~TIO ... : tl42 ~ -....._,Lo.ts "'' 'ICl"'O ,... l'llmponent salt•i.per~un M~a &IS·llOO Wicker Xlnl L'oncl. $175 ISIUH ·r-Lt' pup!> ,\I\(
Venture cap1talavailfor z.ulyPPiBolot, 3301560WC. Baty 5.rYices5360 Amb111ous boys and nel'ded for i•lt•l'lrunrc OPPORTUNITY Seneta11 P trmt· "'Jl HJ.rd Rix·k \laph s:lll S2$1landup l'd~honl> .... ~ .. o x os a ••••••••••••••••••••••• u1rl• It) 13 \'ear~ old to mfu rep l'Omp ·n' \'"r' • .., ""'2 38 .,,.., .,..,mess start up Also Mes CA92626 " ' ' ,.. u ' IN LAS VEGAS mg Minimal houkht'p ...,.,..,,.. b 9.,.,.,
do "'·-1 __!.____ **uEW• * ,.ork nnit or l~C) 1•\nn µll'dSJlll off11'l' l'om I k .,..,mess oans. equip " • ForC.........,.er in.i frltn)! 111111111: >rop leaf 11J tJh!l-& t:oldt·n Retne\er puJ"
-
..... ntleas_1n,e 1. ... 9863 Australian Shepherd. r···DISEsr• In") j ll l'ek uetl1n•' m·~~iun ba~ll> l'lt•J)t' ~.,...... " k L I h d I SJSO .... R-00);) I -"' "' ,. .. ... s•LESM•u .•On sm r <l'lnol I' I' arr~ i.: 1'0111 \Kl OUlSt.1nd111• mae.2yrs. tn colored. & ~· c· 1 nc~spaper subsrrrp rallforappt 7Ml!!l<l72Si "' "'" 75 «'K l 11 6Pl'"ll "-b " ~·.T-t weanng Hospital 11> ,,,assage .r,1n1 1......., I J ".,., ,,.1. -""'41••ret·.<1936116t "'-·T":7"'• ,,... ~ • 2819 ~· t111ns Tran)porlat1un _ r~r ~ 5035 631-UlJO """mng .-e11µor1 GR T SECRET••y \m O.ix lunu' jlJ ~15 l''hamp1on Lin~· '"' .,._ ----Bhd. Ne11port Rt•Jt•h <1nd rnnsta nt Jclult Errandj!rrl hle11f1 ~ork EA IA.SINS """ 1 h '-~ •••••••••••••••••••••••Lost l\eeshound dog 6730648 Open ll \~I wpen1swn µrCl\1tlt•d for Rl'dl 1-:~1Jt1· ti,· OATASYSTEMS forLheV1<'ePres1dt•n111f 'urct'IJin 11111'hl·r~s C.olden Retne\er l'uµ <Xc/d~ space. active SCIHltr M~ Co. I yr Black, white & 4AM M .i~tl'r \'i~a l\111310 5 JOP\I Jsk for 1t>lopt>r rn :'\ B P.irl 1, llinni: .i l>;ilJ l'rodul'l a :.rnall .Med1C'.il 1'11·1 li.Nn Sl20 OrrrntJI \ dM' pre~ J u~l Bc:aut iful
R.E. inves~. ofc: Nwpt All types of real estate g ray Fr 1 end I} _ _. \ndrt-a &12 4321 e\l lrflll• I 5 ~lun Fri \11"1 SJlt~rn;1 n Mu)t h.ni· 4 tron1r' ro nr Oc 1•J11 I Si5 631 5!1i!I Great PerwnJhtle!>'' \
lnvest Counse1ors, Paul 1 mvestmentssmce1949 REWARD.645-85117 ''"''" 5450 3.1.1 hJ1(' llrl!l'llll.ihlt· 1 .1r \r>. S\,li•m, S.ilt•' E" i:rrl ofrite -.11h lull ('11 l'lcl(k d11mlnl! s.>tMl Wjll \l o't \µpre C'r Jlt·cf orDoug,7S2-5111 I ~1 •• i........ --••••••••••••••••••••••• i.1s 1-.:1_• • \" k l>cndrts ''uahfi1.tllCll1,1 Spr1111: cl111k S:!Sll 11msl1TLJ\G1ft1499J901 -· ~ _..,.. L .. ost D.o. be r man F . F'l.Y f'RL:L:• J>jn ,\m ., -• p1•ra .. n1·1• " 'or rni: " 1"11 .,,,.!J 2ndTD1 Raven . El Toro-Lke for 1 <'O~;;>ns. 13 C'mrn' Auto 1;1a" Installer E>. G;·neral l..ibor lo.110-.lt'(lj?c•ol PJ!.1 l'om 1nl'lude rt•1·1•111 t•\µ1•1 I • "'" tllJl'hshund \!\(' fmlt· 70' SO.FT.
17tli & Newp o rt
644.am.
642-2f71 545-0611 Fores t area SSO lrlt'S Haw.Ill srn 1 1~nl·nt·e<l111All Pha)e~ j ,C:olf slora)!t• I' I mun1 1 Jl1011 ~,·nd a11dor-Ran1iat1cmJIJb1h l'hlld' rurkt•rs 111!1() I m1n1 . R 1\R~: Grt'at Rewar~ 171).19_2~ 6.'ll J6ffi 10 Ir~ llunllngton lfrh vm ati· t'ounl n ('I u ti ll1~umt'l1ill W1~t.'ma n I) If rnlereslt'tl r:il I J 111 111rker \ln1 c oncl SI 7:1 Chnstrro~ !(1f1' \ 1·r1 .. 1
MSadclNCtretE EARRatLsYM19tca. Found. female Golde~ _. & I 5:li fi561 MIN:>. !160 5827 r.111 1»4 540.1. '11 ;ioa m GREAT IA.SIN fi45 ~s ~r~~sx·k rn<i pit' S20 I ~.~~~~~t'~m oho l'a II
HptP ..... a· ,. ig1 Lab,young.MesaVerde m l1\l"fO~IOTl\'E l:klpmTu1•~SJI DATASYSTEMS 1t.ru-
Grp11nd ·floor off i r:e !st & 2nd. Trust Deeds area. ~61~~ atiOft IAUBl MOTORS llOL'S~:I\ u :1•En I0511Sl'E:'l/('Ell sti l lh * ~RET ARIES * 19.ll HcK'k.Jroll,1 Juk1· hl1x ~>OIJLE Whitt' lema It·
rnJDLing Newport Blvd. I OWNER-NON OWNER J;' d 2 Gld ·······················I .. IW I I r ' p l' r I t· n I' I' 11 Li\.') \'EG.\S l>1Caomonsnl dT7HOaSrl9S.l~.1()(),2()() li:.irh1·r t'ha1r~. pr JllO I :t "k, I tit' d I r 11 r All new interior '"\'I lthru4units ,oun I ·12. n Retr ~& . ' lJ:.µos1 inn, ti k I If ~E\ \l>i\1!9109 rnan111')1H1· !1711!117:? l'hmtm.i,, Al\l'. S381J opeo. beam ce1lrng w/ Peter Dobbs. Broker 10 rros M. 4 wht paws. t1µi•nfurthl•follo"'"I! lllllo•' t•t•pi•r f'lt'"' 1'1 or T70D1l't NRSIS.000 ·
k 11 h ood 760-6827 646 6016 lr\'ine area. blu Miiar l115fnlcHOft 7005 i * U d C i:rnll tni: 1111~1111''' ~:, Exp t'onsulla111 Our' Applianc.-s 80 I 0 759 1626
trusses, 8 Y g ts, w --. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Se ar 11ert1<.1· ll11u,1•'1•1•1111t" Tc'al p P ti I It ft~.._ n & t 944 559-5022 .. " ,.. PART TIME l.ii Re111clers Al:). ln1· •••••••••••••••••••••••• . ·u ooc t', 1~ .,... ... ay nng cp 5 ---SJI 90 WEEK Chnsl1<1n OMV & C t t 957 !llle~I lt,\R 1•01• ,\R L·,,\ I blurk ~I . 1\ KC houst• sqftA/Cheat.$1200mo Earn l6"? on Balboa Found. Female dog, Pre·!khool 320 E ll!th On rac li!lpm ExpJ11drng\11uth 40'.!()Birt•hfo:Sl 'ti.iEO~: , ' r ~. 642-3663 Island trust deeds O\'er g1den rlr w•blk fal't' \'1<' St Costa Mesa Spei·i<tl Clerk
1
11.iw.l'hl'JJt'r. l tl,1\ 11 .. 1•lo. 1111111"'''" i: f 1 rm h J~ Newport 833-8190 Pret' \l'PIJA='l'F St:ll \ H' E , hruken S200 154 &1!11
V.c.t · •-H bO C "'1 mu'l '"t'Jk L n"lr'h 111~·n111°, lur 3 5 •l1·Jrn Wt•b, II) uwd ,1p11lr.ir11 "' l'1•k"r Spao1el Puppr0 •. W •TElFlOuT OF 50'7<eqt.Dty Shortorlong I ona ex ar r " Program &165423 ·" ' " .. '• .. y. 1 ' ' -•-• A " • term.~minimum. 548·1f92__ , I F:xµer nt•t· Hour~ B!i I ~>1111 tr .. n,purt.111<111 11\Jll!111nl! m.1tun• 11t>11µlt· SECRET••iES nelrc·11tnc1 l!UM µur11brl'<I male•. 11 -.k,
ACE au• H_..a...·~· • ...._ People~·~ need r rople \ton lhru Pn S.iltin l:i4/I nw 111 rml I\ atl' Jmbrtruu., W -I appltJnll'' 51!1 31177 ,h11t.o. $11~ Wrll holJ for
lJI Newport Beach. ap· -__.. llUTT ~GREEN cash Th111 i. ~·hat the I h,L,t~l un e\pcr · INSURANCE 11._13 H ol<b t\cll 2 Sµm rlt~:to'~:;::.eorar~ J•rli~ llUY APPLIANCES 11m~t1T1Js !J60 Oi50
prox.2SOsqft S400mo 67S.21 6 forWHITEelephants DAILYPtLO'f l'allBenu ~ I 1"2 -'3211•\l J.13 \,kfor \'ICl\IHESTO\ Le; 95ihl33 AhC lnsh Selll'r l'ulJ
1.sUdUt Contact J ohn withaClassif1edAd SER\'IC,"~l~IRF:l;'f'llllY Ti!fil'ompJn) lknl'lih ~~~~::'.:~~t,,;1/1 :•::1~:' \11drt•J &ASSOCIATf.S I p1t1> !:>ho14 & Pet \\ail m-~, ~1725 . SeU idle items 642·561_ 8 Call642-S678 15 all abool I ~kalth 1lrot.il .11111 hfe merriJI lrm•" ,.1th ffiJJllr ~().(}iOO RERllGERATOR Shvb SI 25 111 S350
• · • • • • • • • • 0 p Ii l'u ~'t J l' l'<·nn1 Sl!l 'fi?? •• • • • •• • • • • • • • • ••••• • 1 ~~:~r:inn• pj1 • .11,1 '"'urJnt i· lir11kc:rJ)!l' ART TIME SECRETARY/EXEC. llrandne~' 531 ti2!>3 •-.,_~ firm in :\t'14 J•on 11\-.•l h \ l S T R \ I. I \ \ • 8 DAY WE EK s p E c I AL •I ~:a~~·:!~~~:·h~~l1~· '.:~ ~~ ~~:~r~\11::.i;:~~:·.~:ur~!.t.~ ~::.:n~~ht~;~~:~l~~::~t f~o~nd~; 0~·:1~~~b~:.; c:1l~fl~ 11~~ r~;\~~~~':.'~1 ~~·lj!~~~·~(!i l~~j~';,~a~I~
• a • thus1.t.,t11· i:ro-.rnl( 111r jppt r.ill tillll..ll ~5:.!~ "" "rnl'r' llourl} ll jJ!1' expansion ;\;pt B1 h or '4Jll'r &. 111• cl1' ~lup ~q l$.'l5
• pornllon • m1li•a11e llN1111re' J ftnan1·1al sen 111.'~ l1rrn µeru.1•r' St CMlO ur 111f1·r
• 8 Days • 3 Lines • 8 Dollars l.mtl~c •111t' .\1.11111 c•nJni 1' l.11 t!t' 11 Jl!Oll. \ an or Good t}·pm~. short ha111I •~ 1;15; llo.•Ji:lt VUllP' mJ It' 12
• 1>er..onnel ljh<lfl'r' &. ir 'mall 1111kup 11rth ~h1•ll 11 expr req ='on >-mok1·r I S1 u n al u rt• u Pr I" h I 11k-. ulii ~ .. hot-\I\('
• ~ rrj!at 111n ,\ µph rn II b 1 1 f ~Ol23bt 9 ? " " $L!'I olr ~j 14fi6 Its easy lo place your 8-0ay Week Classified by mall and 11 • '"'"on Jftli t'aminu cl1· t'()Wrl~J I II\ 10 rt IO lln .• frrezer Sl llll \1 3g11·
• $8 h d I T f r II ' I~ . .tnd J.i.?ood. ~.rr~1.ni: I t'hl•f flC'I' 'lll\t' \Int Sht•llll'' ~l\r shots
•.
costs1ust -t atsonlya olaraday1 oquallyforth1s :i k .-.lrl'Jdt7A.I ncurd t.1llfit~1:121 •SECRETARY 1.111111 11 ti 11,. s1511 hm;il1· •m11 ~11e ....
special ofler you must be a non-commercial user o ffering uni•oR CLERK \.'~for Po11 w1111.1m~ "' ~ ... R 1 * 1~5 s1o.s · 1 S3!ln '' 12 .. ks 5200 ..,... I 'a.st pac.,.. 11a c~t.itc· t>t2 1~21•
• merchandise fo r Sa le Up tO $800 per ad and the price must 111 111 Or_,. C_.ty t: ~;mt' 250 E tith ~I l'nnl111J! ()(f11•e Ot'\>cls -;h;1111 ,.,.II 1 IMnl! Frc"I lr1•1• u·1• . . .
•
be tn your ad The cost stays the s ame whether your ad •' r .. rnwra 11lalc•rnon.l ,., uri:anll.eO Cal if>llJ)ICI., m.tkt•r lrk1 Iii'" $:!ti!) (,fl nanl', ~ b ... n l'tr ~HARBOR Hl.\'D Li••in P.-non '"1.1nt \lcin fut•' Fri ~rth li?OOd S1•1•r1•(.trlJI .'>11111.'il~nr~lll 1411;, s1mf11r(.1111C'l ll11m1• needs eight days selling time or rust one e 1 COSTA MESA I .. s.11 w,11 1111rk \l'rt11 J I skills n f . 968·13111
• 17141979 ZSOO 111 l'art• for m.111 11t.l1 111 ll>mm ·rri 1 . m •r· I · t• nJ! ~rcl'>I fr,•1· ,1111 · · • · I 11tv•rli hJir Hd Ki '<'I t• ;f p\~T t a . rnncl $200 ~41i X!i t:l Free to You 8045
• Use one word 1 n each bOx About 4 w ords make one ti a 11 n • 11 er 11 i: h 1 646 111!1:1 I iv ei:i· pro Contart l'eiri:Y 833 2l!<1t1 ;..111 4"8!> •••••••••••••····· •••••
class1f1ed line of type Minimum ad IS 3 lines Please print • ~~·usc;~cpe;~ ~IOO "Nk , Il a\ e ~umelhlnj! I Ill; ;;~~~l'~~!~1~1::~.r~~~~t:·;,~e Grubb& Elh~ Refnj.! ~'rn~I frf'(', ""'k' I 1~ti:1:~~~~~i~l'~E~I~
• plainly • I on rlr h r~ JJN i 11 ant lu sell" l'ljs~1f1eo I \ppl\ 111 l>t:'rson 1660 I f!md SISO 511! li'.l I~ i•r '~Kl h ~ 559\~s:;et n • fa} ~a) uve 011 11 1 adsdo1t11ell&l~~lli7K :1'1;m•nt1.1 1\HC \., SEC'YCEXECI !'>-111-14115 i.:• 1' ·•
• child Balbc1J fi7.~ :!723 •1 ,.1 ..t -For rorporate orflrl' ol 1 lrtlOO \\.\TC II DOG • r------------------------------, Lo i In~ Ila h~' I( lt•r Dal y I 01 ··.. ................. hotel c hain Heu\\ Stm;;l';~r~~~IMHI Slw11hr~~ l~usk~ Male:
• I • nct:decl for !I mo nlcl I ·. phones. typrng. lrlrnl! <•a ac h1:J ,359
d ,...., ,...,13 or 54R 1~5
• bab) M f i :io 5 t '\I . . a m I n I s I r a I I I I.' Fumitwe 8050
• I &l2·6.'il2 : Ad t'' SI rt'S"Ons1bil11 i,·~ W.1~h1•r aleJn 1111rl..' • , : ver ism~ a es sh .. h d , l!CIOd $115 s11• 11s 1J 11r •••••••••••••••••••••••
• II • Ranking ~.'<JIN nc·"~p.q11·r '"'~·" '·'"''111.•r,1111 111 I ~~~~me ~~e Seur::;~1t· S.11! 4185 * * I BUY * * • HEW ACCOUNTS : hJn!lh• kt•' Jl'rnu11l!o l11r 11r.rni:1• 1'11.i,1 Senrres 1..td. ll!HIJ Sk' l>rwr tlr,1n 11nrk, 1?1MMI liootl u~td Furn1tur11 /,. I $ 1.00 •
1
Newnnrt BalbOaSa\rngs I : llarh 1'11111 Sul.rn rnn11n1,,1011 Jntl I Park C1rl'le. Su111· R Si5 \pphanrt's OR I ~111 • I -,... ''"t•i1t-n1 h1•rwh" 1:r11111h onpur1un1111·, lntne. 92il.t .111c·n1ro11 54118513 548 llK5 wllorSELl.for You
• has 1mmed1ate oµenrn11 : .. John Sanders •• •<t.T
• I 10.60 ror Jn expenenl't'd "\i·w : for IH.'r"m \\1th t',trt'l'r .11nh111111i-S.·ncl Kmmore '4 J\h Jn $1511 ~ EIS AUCTION
\ ,, 1 r11mnl1•1a• "''"'"'' '" \1 "" F .. ,.,1,.1 "" Fr1g1da1n• rt·fni: $1lM1 64• 0 686 833 9625
• I • 1 crount~ .. ounSl' or : Ho\ ISt.lO l''""' \li''il l'A ·r~'lilh '\o phiint' v-e ' • 13 20 Thrs rs a r halleogrO" • "'orClassifi~d \d GasBBQS'7!1 ~~"it.OX , • "· C'Jlls . µlt'J"' \n ~1111.il llpJlnl r ~ llUYFURMITURE • ~ ~-----1~-----+-----t------+------t posilron -.ilh d •,ernfrr t!Jml~ Fm~lu)t'I :. I AlllON lt..tri~ator u_., !J5i 81:13
• I 15.IO • opp1~,rt~n~:~ r u~ ~ l>a~l~-'~l~lot ~~~~I;~~ 2 cir \ut11 J I -.i1!J~ "\c~ $98 l.o' I • ORIF:NTED pcmrn ORA-NGE COAST DAILY PILOT AD VISOR 89• 3.190 1·~1•jh S8R Slct'Pl'r" e I Add S2.60 for each 1ddttlon1l llne for 8 time a ~'\Jll msurancl.' benefits • JJO w &AV ST . ·COSTA MESA. CA 92626 • I 642 56iH ·' · · $199 FA(IORY 95i 5itlll e I •• ~ur:~~ ~~r~~e~~~~~~~ :" ....... ~~.E.~~~~~~~~·A·r~~.''.~.r~~~~:~~ ...... .:: I I
1h~~~1·m·~.~dri1~~;~~~t11l "1-~~-~;R,~~~~·~~~a~t':~~~
• I Wlth exrvonenre Please • I hrrnlcr Sli!I 1115 <um ,.. 't'l nt>,er usc·tl . wnnh
• I Publish my ad for 8 days starting e ""1~15 Denny ransra '~'.~·a:~~.1:\~:~.1;1;1~~ ~~, '~~e~r~"~;·1 ~~~~h
I
I Classification • 714 G4S-6SOa ea " w $100646 ~K4'1 SW \'l\<;h onl) 5218 del
. • • NEWPORT IALIOA ~ 1 ~ r 11l1t r.1h~1111 rlt' lu~i· L ~u;1lh hmnc.• i5t i350 • I Name SAVINGS & LOAN { l ~ ) I )!a.~ dnrr 11~c·1I cml1 it Niii! ''"' box ~pnni; &
• 1' Ad. dre.ss •• Eg~1rvme/\\'e .N,_~,f 1· 1NTED) I ~~~~:~1-;11:~1~11;:!13:;:~. ~~11rc~~n~1·:,. r;~~e •
• xlnt rontl 13 !l l'u ft $200 I f>.12 1:11\ft wkc1.1y' dft Spm
I City Zip Phone • Bookkeeper 54.)3747 K~Si1tted • I • Gro-.mg mamd & ~en· llcyclft 80201 E\tr.1 (1rm uHd 2 mun • I Check or M.O. enclosed D • r('lated business rn ••••••••••••••••••••••• th.~ fll\Ortecl I ~l'IS cir
•
'
· Tustin has need for an 1932 Si-h -.rnn bPJl·h -c)!11,•r 'h<'t'l:. s:r.5 ('jll
I Charge my ad to: • erfment. h•llhl) or { ) ('fWM!r. mirror bl,1 1 k blforr II \M or Jfl i . PM
• ganited, resp person ( ~ ) n•cl Ptn ~trrµc• ~ t.in Or ll'j't' me~~.i.ct• anti f 0 ~ # E • E11p rn A R. Al P. ~ sc:alloJX! Must sJt' S2.\ll numht.·r~I J'ill'I .• I L .... xp. • payroll Non smoker 644 6296Jrt Spm
Good salary Please call &h-.1nn Crut~l'r Whitt• IEOROOM SET • · I O • * • 8J2.7ll0 Wulls 14 ht>J\ > clut \ 3 11t. walnut. dhlt• ~11e • I 1T Exp . -IUlGW Al.AIM 'N nms '100 5<16 5591 tw.rdhtl~~2 ~~
• L------------------------------• TICHHtCIAN ewspaper ~~:~~~~.l'~~·~11~u~;\r 1~111r <i1rl ~ \ hmtm.t' -· ..•. ·r~---····· WE 'LL PAY THE POSTAGE ········•·•··i • 6lt 34&17&o.3685 rrJmr .i1mn't nc11 • I llri·•m l Jn1111' tll·d I • CAIEB c • S 2 2 5 II 3 :l ti 'I 3 0 hlll)!le1 'pmcllt'<I hrith • : l ll ll l NO POSTAGE : • C>nOlTUMITY a rr1ers dys S436267t'H'!\ ~,:~~·~r~1l~t~·o~~·t:'t":::,1x • t NECESSARY : Al't' you look ing for s for routes Girl'~ 24' A1Uk 1 'lnl ,pnn11'. -.h1tt· t')eftot
•• i ",~~'~i0 g : ~~,"~~~;'~~'.;!! in Huntington Beach, :'w:~~~'!', ., .. 1 t*l'.~~~;;;~t;~{.~,.
i UNITED STATES l:> • wooldllketo talktoyou Founta·1n "alley & Newport Beach SlOO M1n1blkl· 3•1 h11 ,,, • ., 6405032. wknlls (·
• J go P r t' s s r o o m Y1 Sl2~ Ht>th hkr nt·~ fi40 I02!1 • .. . BUSINESS AEPL Y LABEL • Suprrviaor/Foreman, t>:i&6\34 L' 1, t :
• .Ii ~ l reqliresSycal'3WebOf· "1111(\llt' w t•u>rt>i.t ,
0 ""n CLASS P[llMll NO IJ COSTA MESA. (Allf0ANl4 )l • rset exper. Apply 1660 ~l)'ll JO gpet'd 01,1mpi11d ITIJllrt'~\ & ho~i.prtni:,. I
• ·P · Pl ti c 1 M 17 rnrh fnmie f65 IN'(l.Sll'Kl li7HW• !
_!! lllOSTAGE WU~ PAI()&-. AOORCSSH 8 • &£.en 8J ~S 1 ~ 4!)4 711111 l>m1nl( tahh• 'l'l. 1 hrna :
• ~ Oran{lt Co11t Dally Piiot I . CASHlll Led1rs' bike. 211" tounn11 t·lc"1" t. hulh-1 •
I • .. I ·1 ,., .. HOUSIWAll SALIS h~ed. hl(hl!l & l(l'O 7~ lf,j,11, : • . I I I • e I fUll or p/tlme Apply. • Good EnmillCJS CALL hkr ntw. •1 11.,,.c. S7~ Qur cn W111..,11c11 12:
•
1 Crown Hardwur. 1024 days. 7Sl-4lo.1. ~1"~11yo tlr h 11 ti
I lmne <Wat_cllfflNB • Super Tn·ps CIRCULATION rvn.~~ ... •Wl.'f\. t•a1 1oor . i • I DEPARTMENT '"':lt()(ft'r 675 !1640 A ~... 8011580 ' e :eocPrr1tta11~11r~. ~IT,• G f Pri I ··~ PHai ·~:;'' • .;J;•b,::;,,~'S:.:' "'""" "'· ,,.,., •• • I • H.-.. en~~. ,.pp)'. • rea lfS witiutc-Mr hlUC'k top. 4 i •• • 330 W. lay St l In pmon 1t, The Buch 8$7 ltl3an"r~m d11u1.1m $4t.OJ73 I
Co.ti u-1 Ca 1212• I • Houle Rataurant, 819 Scil-tnn St1n•r1y. I airls ~. I
• ..,.. , " v 1 • Sleepyy Hollow Lane, 6 " .. ....-ct1ol'l_a1, 1100. tables Be l boys l,akt oe"' • po SU-IUni szs
• I ach. 642·•321 ta or211130 144 ll2l& ' 1~ .. • ........................ ~ •:it:t~,ln t .. " Havt110tnt0ttn11 lo sell' s;dlhl•f~lwiU•D1U1 • g..l]ed ads do)l...!.tJL ~let Want Ada
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Orangt Cout DAILY PtLOT/Wedntlday, December 23, 1981 .,
•-..."••••••••••••• lllM• 11-JI
Alltel.,_,, tH ...... 1_,1 ltd ~ ._,,,w .W... UM4 -"8 I t '"'ala_........ tin it 11• IHI~ tO tltl..t.M.... 9140 •-H 7
u .................. teblt top, , ........ "•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••··~·· .-~ •VT•• •••••-•••••••••••• .... • ••• •••••••••••• 'Tl Moeobectn Mo .....i • d v s ...u..tlt t bt11ttlf11I, w...ed: lft Pool table lflH'CMclboal Dinn ' • ....,... 78 Do II an ac *·Ml·l~~-. Waler-.tcl SU. Hua. S• top, Id cond. Pay lillltt1ell Good Cond. UU. Olvoret. C111tom Jnt It ~ wantrobt wllh •1'911 Dulcimer IUO. CMl\,SU.csn _ .tm } .. ·1111. ~ £xt 4S Gal 0 111 T1a.nk
.•...........•........ . •......................••••.•................•••.•.••.••••.••..••. .,.._
~~ ............. !?.'. ~ ............ !?~7 !!1!'.~ ........... !?.~~ ~:;~ ..... ., .. !!::-'
G '7tAcur4 "" Toyota Ctlira OT, • ...11
llMlill doon, new l'Oftd MI 1 c • 4 l ·''I I . ._... -S.aGull blll'le. 3HP tU:•:!dtH/ Huvy D\I~ Shucks &
lwooi>, value MOO: now !D •.. .... II IOH ~ Shaft. X1nt Corid. Sc.. llrt t 150 ~per~ ~5~·11~;ny IUO. Call Guru : .... la • I --1 .Ma·31t1 ....... ,............... tr~ ..!.-• •-. ........ •••••••••••••• w'ftiAS!•s•Hi;;.'iit S!XTA.NT: P'relber&tr H~DA XR·7S new cond '7tl Chevrol.et Step Van viaU..ft -LOSIHO LEASE, quit· "100" dual control• Yacbtman wllb cue. Lw llwl ~ mi. S450 Needs Work. JUOO cb;;~':~:ara~~ptba~~= Ou bullM11,HIU111 out Newly rebuilt, us: Mint condition. $300. cull. Notk.~7364 __ '97·5929
chn, reuonable. Call AU. •~I ... and fix· lllrcm·Berry Pre-amp, 714~ Evet HOMDA Cl 350 A11fo1 W..ttd '5t0
*'1GI afUPM =Inc ...ui1: 1 • 17Hl 'ISl-1518 , ..... Pewtr t040 4 cyl, new battery •nd •••••••••••••••••••••••
cw"7.;"' n...1. He· .. board ror ay hcllftl • Bwaltlna lbann Iceman tlec •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• pipes. ixctllcnt co nd. WI MllD YOUI ~..,.. -room c a ra , eauty · IJ7S"''SKJP CK J15(). Russ 1n11 bed. BuutUul condl· Seton llalrdryera and awtar. '300. Peavey "' JA · 7s&-3872 GOOD USID CAI!
lion. PGQ, c.u na..... b)W~~~c <'haldri. mlr· :!'f.;..11!._ watt. 1150 Twl n 8 u:l I Vo Iv o '77Konda 3501 •<~ AnythlnR conaidcred:
•callt71"3C11 rort.-.vetan plant.a. _.,,.. ~·· M&t.na. er 100 hra, , .. il'awuai.190..,1195 19T7thruUMIO A.1ao k A fun electron it's, Clusb .. n11 .,. KM11 St Bdrm Set &.ilte, ·ma e-up. shampoo couat~c Guitar 340S rods, holders, outrl1· Greattrana "6-3410 ~ -... as · L and hait products. Takanune elertrir with · --· • sive amp, C.11&31·'7Mor UM OB0673-912S 1m. dial bait tanks &c i 4 Yamaha MX 100 .Table SlS0.144·71~ many xtr u Special Good('()ft(!IU 1250 · Jc
Altiqiae Sewln& Machine, after I ,_.,. Phaae Unear 400. Power Am. trtr rated 12 600 lbs. 841.-891~') · .
'500. 2 Re<'liners, lloeta. SEAIONll> rlREWOOD Amp. 1st '500. Great wlf, whl.a, 2 yra old. Boat HOND 1 Elec Rotissiere. sso. POa SALE. M veNd. Condi MYtt left 111 water. In A !75 #I ._ °'9p c..ty
s.4-7103 c.alll'.dl»all · eM4U,extxt.831.()621 xlnt cond. Must see. ~C 400084.Smi. $500 or 292.StlatbOrBlvd ·
Maftae Radio. "75. Iron ott..IW•aw & -('TJA}848•2887. '7'8H~A·~~:2SS COSTA MESA Antique white rradle, for
baby or as deco piece
Im. ISZ·3282
An&lqtte Bed End Htad· w ... 8015 Plfff FOi IOATS Gem• Low4400 . l board, s100. Huddle ---r.r.,.............. ._ · '53 l0::1· Mus
O.b,f760.144·5754 ExecuUvednlt.6U'. w/ I I .see. · · --
Atari 6 Ten Game Cart. l'lllkhlng credenza. Lst ' t ·a.w-..-nO ... S 78 Honda 90 Trlblke,
Reull Valiae, 9'21. Sell· takes both 831·92S4. --" never used. 47 m1 $700. · -n..1u Donate yOUr boat 842 7878 na.. :I . vooy 4 monlhl wood exec desk, new n...adllne n...a 31st --"-'='--'. =---6 ndn side chairs like "-11--d r i I b "'"' ""'""' Ka 90 ff d *"25 .... ·-4 • r . e c a . Call tolJ Ifft for info w • o roa ~ . new. for dining table STS W+':l M cllc\llalor. 111t. new 0r. Yamaha XS 500. 1975,
Large Rerl.lner chair.
vinyl, ucellent condi·
lion @ .fi46.S&56 AM .
~75.012.eorac~C!!!!_only. •--ra for t'"e fice supplies Sl·Sl25. r,._,,, 1-800/Slt-5909 E '625847-0'm
...... --... .... n fB.1497. -...,rate Account X· •<A H d l lloiMya sza "° ecUllve wants to lease ......, on •• new pain ' '"-II &..'It Seat i4o. <rnce Safe. Xlnt cond live-aboard Yacht with new IOI> end. lire5, batl.
Orea 1900. Beautifully Newpert Bl h T I '150 080. Bill 494-6801 ~ible purthase option 1974 · 960-8168
hand carved frame w/ Clult, '\::~~Y Me!~~ ev,•2494 in Npt Harbor Will T~ Travel 9170 beige uphl. Matchln& bership. • 613.D_l, ........_ 1017 Vacate May 15th to Oct .. ••••••••••••••••••••• set. Sl3.SO OBO Carolee ,_. ~ ISlh (1 r R · d ) 641·1340 days. 640-4910 137.54111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • eq ui re TIKTTRAILEI eves aft 6 PM fi Sttwity •eel window Perlect Christmas Girts. Wilbam Freeman. PO Uke new, .SACRlt'ICE ~=...:~""'-";;;____ guards. 125 ea. 2 Steel French Lops and Mini Dolt ~2 Santa Barbara. MUST SELL. 997-8679
KA.IMS securlt{ door guards 1.-0pi tBunnles) Evening 931111. (805) 9811·4«>4 --M~fiftenl dln'R t 962·1'83 ~·3673 Classic 13 ' Lapstrake Tl"tlers,Utilty tllO '" ... g se . with llOc $185 ea 75().S832 ' bo · i I ........... •••• ••• • •••• :C,.:r!t~~· = O~~~ Schwinn Little Chick Macaw,btue•,,old.4Y.~S ~:n~r:~fi~~$4:0~: M~rcyoodcle trailer, 3
Carolee 641·1340 da. Bicyclt, ltS. Rockwell old, tame, Cappy ' otrer 963-4147, 962-4812 · g rood. S350-
640-t910evafl6 18" table uw, 1!7$. w/c e.~9216 evs .;;~~9'132~::...· ---
Canoa Bellows• 100ma Amaz.m Pll'l'Ots, double Mio Senlc P.t Oak table w /4 chairs, tu s . 11 10 . 31 P ra. yellow head. 7 mos. old, 12' Glaspar. newly paint· & t, s BrownCUshions S350 rollerskatea. SS /ee. 2 unt a .. e d u 75 1 ea ed. includes dolhe. S700. AcctuOriH '400 -----'-'"'-"-27-'-50"'-·--· -1 cheltoCdr1wers. $10/ea. -.ol71 Jim~0'124 aftSpm. ... .................. ..
.,... S. IOI! 2.4" mractor telescope, OW\g Zebra Finches 110 ..... I•/ ATTINTIOH .. ••••••••••••••••••••• m. Child's acbool deek. pr. New bamboo cages ca.rt.r-tOSO MG 1 Families Garage Sale. l!O. S38-o.m after 5P111• rt:111. S49-75& ....................... o-.aRas
Sat ....... 12/19' 99 c bl Custom 42 It yacht. "~ • ..,..n 20.11 DOLLS onure. ue c rown Chrlsmas Parade , TONNEAUCOV~:ll
Do r 5 et L n • C · M ·' 400 doll col le ct io•. w/wrought iron cage. whale watching, parties. Fits MG's, ·71 . '81
751·4232. Moped, furn, 11·1225. Private Party. ?,!!~BO . Sell sep. «c. best r1tes646-4005_ .Never used, S'IS awlnl, toys & misc. 5S7-1271, 9am·7pm. _.4 "" ._.......... ~--90601 Mana 631-7797 Ive msg
tf1m .. 1td ~ 116! Ro l I t rlt I "'--a 1-0 --. -1"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ ya e ee. ypew er, _....,.... v..-•••••••••••••••••••••••'"" ••••••u••••••••••••••• IJ7S. Typewriter tbl. S1t. H•••••••-.••••••••••••• N e w R A B B I T 1 ·~ VW BUG SH ELL with COOIWA.11! New lr'Olling brd. SlS. ~ue Piano. sm UP· SAILBOARD factory 2 straight doors and
Stainless Steel. Water· Oirts' bite, $20. 645·3lt7 right. beaut rond ! direct only J649 comp. straight pan. Will sell I~. Gift. Brand New. •Bunkbeds. llllO: matchins Tuned. also stool J7SO. 646-89'll --1 complete or separate.
Still In the Box. "'1 OH.!' night staM 16. lamp 147·5672 Call67S.J017.
Si!25.NMt95 115: firl's 'is .. · brow.i S,irfbghodl IOt4 LIHMAMDIM .. Y 10' , --
Lennox China, Montclair. Cnaser,@i0.549·2520. .. ..................... '67S . 494·St92 .AtlltosferSale
Fu II aerv. c: ream & 8·xs· playhouse 19s. Ellercycle type, bvy duty Heron s a 1 Ibo a rd . •••••••••••••••••• ••••.
silver. edge $400. 491-4891 1 crib 125. rreeier' fl05: stationary. motomed. fiberglass. 56 sq !t sail. IMPOJlTANT
RefrlC $125, king water ,. o.'sBQ:@.144-8311. • lkenew.642·'1902. $295. ::· 963-4147, 96f'4812 R:f'J~~~1~o
bed SUll>. black & white Jobn Wayne Regular NEW SAIL BOARDS . ADVERTISERS lV@,842-7415 Membel"Uip. Best Of. •-,days, '98·9550: eves Sabot. sail. oars. Needs The price or items
......, I07G fer.m-M79 toll.J0,82'7·2SS4. Bill _ n.c. rusrn.J497 advertised by veh1rle
•••••• .. ••••••••••••••• '55 Pepsi Marhlae. Work· Eitercise bike. AMF. deBlers in lhe vehi cle Ladiu Bulova Watch. ing, w/drtnking foon· llmoet new. $.15. Call: Sabot. new paint. good rlassiried advert 1s1ng brand°"'· S'15. lain & Coin Box. DOG. Scott, &31·9254 cond. S3SO. columns does not in·
645-5015. 0!>.97J.CIB.t -4PM cuba gear S42S . 962·8068 cl udt ~ny a pplH•able
Ladies 18lt yellow gold ~ Women's wetsUlt. n Sm. Star New mast. sails. taxes. license. lransfer
Roi .... ., __ wat~b with ClliCom 300 Gatton Salt tin _.. .. 7 ..... -12 !North ) Harkin rigging rees. finance char)les.
.... w=> '" W 1 t er Aqua r 1 um -. _.,,.4 '.._._ evs Btautiful. 6'2·2384 recs for ajr pollution ron·
bracelet. As brand new Complete w/cabinet, W«smt·Primo shortjohn troldev1cecertHlcat1ons
$1800.857·1«5 filte.r System., UV w/aleeves.SSO.usedon· wtMDSUIFll or dealer documentary
Geoulne Columbian Sterilizer. Decoration • cd97.Sl92 Used, $350. 646-1089 preparation charges un
EMERALDS ! Your "911.. Must SM! t'l3-0131 SJllFBOARD6'1l" loth, Cl'-/ less otherwise spec1r1ed
choice, $20 per stone. M lronud Auaai . new. reg. .,_.;or-9070 ~the advertiser
64().-118118 Moped, SZ50: Apple JJ ... sac.$U0.5S3·1038 ....................... ~ 9510
C.... Computer, 12500. Dys: lll<tobecaoe Mirage f7S. Trade Lhe use of your slip •••••••••••••••••••••••
Beautiful lad i es 833-"'7;eves:S47-2003. ia>lbw&iseU75 for use or our 30' JEEPSCARSPICKUPS
diamuld ar gold watch. Oallfarewoed Ml·741Sfi42..7•15 sailboat. CaU l·79J.2461 from $35. Available at
$3,7SO OBO Carolee Delivered ProtiM Cyclone u com· dys. l-864-22'18eves local Gov't Auctions.
64.1-1340 da 840-4910 ev 644.o3S6 powld bow, xlnl cond. 20· fiberglass runabout For Directory <'a ll
all6. Saap oa top tool box Z.Clbl 5.644-8000 w/3S' N 8 mooring Su11>lusData Center BrMd new, cost IN$. $1UOO. <illi433-88e6 · 1 __ 4~.:_330-7800 __
s.r.ica tell .OBOS44·75ZI 9:.::llllwwl.IHS •••l2"'1'Beam upto42' 1 RllTMA.STHS
I I
Wc.-'11 Bur
Or Srll
Your Clc.-an
lmporl On
Con\iqnmc.-nt''
Call Our
Uu•d Cor
Manoqer
TODAY '''
81 I ·2040 49 S-4?•9
Se>ddlebac~ BMW
Minion V1e10
WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FOR USED CAIS
ALAMMAGMOM
PON1'1AC/SUIAIU 2480 Harti0r Blvd
COSTA MESA
54_t-4300 54t~l457
WEIUY
CLEAHCAIS
AND TRUCKS
COMM ELL
CHEVROLET
.'.>0111 .. rr .. r fl,, .1
11~'1\\H..,\
541>-1 200 .
HIGHIUYEI
Top dollars ror Sports
Cars. Bu)ls. Campers.
914's, Audi's
Ask for UtC MGR
JIMMAAIMO
VOLKSWAGEN
18711 Beach Blvd HUNTINGTON BEACH
842-2000
WEMHD
YOUl~OTIC
&•mSHCAIS
1~q
• Jtoo"w Coast Hw>
Newport Bearh
642·9"4-05
WANTED!
Late model Toyotas and
Vol vos Ca ll u s TODAY ! !1
Earle Ike
TOYOTA·YOUO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Girts 20 ia Schwinn Bike ............. ••••••••. •• length. 311 Edgewater I CQMSUMEI
E.;r.-.&" • wttralning Wheels, 145. LOSING LEA.SE. quit· 613-UM.3. IUYIMG & LEASING
' •rbie Orea• Houae ting business, selling out is.31' side Ue rental in SBYICE 1"~=.~·•
w If urn it u re. S 45 . ALL .suppll.es and fix· Newport Isle, S6·J7 /rt. All makes and models ,... •u-uoi...s•o..•u
z.2..0970 tlftl mcll.llll111g : 6'13-2968. Btlow any Fleet J'ri<'e
2 dr, s spd, air amttm . ma1~hu1e . s •Pd. SB US Pll!.Tt t '" vfl)cltan_. AM./r,.. lape, air, 40.ooo Wt1M1vea1oodatifdl°'9"" l75-35o&5 ml. Top tond. S4JOO, of N ! fl • us E o -45 I or'41·*4. ..._. t1JI '80 Toyota Creaalda, fret -S COMMHL
C._.f•llOlti ....................... llOOO equity, takt over
VllC1 ... am/hn stereo lape,
WllVR belce velour int , mett. 1)4~ 1200
IWllB•..., f!t 4/yr. Ju. Auto o/d ,
TH wa brn Ht .. landau roof.
bc11HHM 11'12 MAYll -. Oya: (7141S45·SS30 : 'T7 Mont Ca lo loadt4'W: MVI -' eves: m4>7U.5U6. air tuJJe r er' atereoi:~
HCl¥tArrindl ..,n a wm•-·11 Corolla dlx, auto, ' Gr,~13i.m1 •
A rew remaioln1 '81 ~~J wbolesale book 14900. 't4 Waioe &d runn1t1a"
Models " Oemo1 are . us sell for 700. 114·7765 body, intenor. lire~"'
stall ava.1l11ble ! We f<>I 'Uc.Ice .144-l.508 84•·112S '.t
specillllie in: Europeatl fi>U1 Runs ood. 11300 080 · delivery and rlawless "" DA. -~ ~71N E '71 CheyY 4 dr. MaUb.,..
pre-0wnedBMW 's ~ .... 1 • v Clau1c, V·I , auto ~ c~r r.; w:i=;, Qirolla 'It, 3dr, '9p, Xlnt trana .. rartory air, g~ ~c d -~ ~-~ ~~~~ t OtMI MlS•Sf.tiiaD ~lUI &42-3074 f1~113Sor642-WZ 1( Sales·Serv~tasing ,81 RX 7 GSI. 1 ., <NI V•w .. 111 9770 'IS Biscai1.ne, ata wgdn~> Z(MI W lst • • ree ~.-•••• .. ••• .. •••••••••••• 427·6 rr ,runa goo ,..._ Santa.Ana eq\Oty, talc~ over 4/Y_r. 'fl0.'65 vw left ar right /OBOW-7702__..IJ
1714) 835-31'11 lae. Lo mi, 5spd. air. door. '73 left door. SSO 1910 El Camino Co o..: Closed Sunday am/(m atereo t~pe. snrl' ~ch. WestMi •lfle whl q\iata. VS, auto, all th-t•
tonlUdo silver. ~urgun· n1D1 tor Super Beetle tras. Top. lo, '100 m 1 " n. Mott bcMt.t !1f lthr. Every acces. on . S.9'144 S'l.760. , ,
P.+ Of Y.., ~~ 545-SS30 • eves : '76 V'f/, oew clutch ne~ 548·2S86
IMW PwcMM Or · r.tial Ures. air, .ok m1. F.-ct
• ---~......1..1 It Mazda RX2. '72. Quiek, ltOOO. 080141111-3040 tt4tJJ
..,._ -Ii bl N E . •u••••••••••••••• ••• •• ,. Mc• ~ 1~1.1, re a e. ew ngine 75 '(W ltllWIM ''11 FORD LTD Landau~~
MIAll "'" Moving, $800 OBO ._ OrL...M MU a175 122.00. good condiUon Lo v.a. automatic trans '. -r ......., mi. 846-9051 air cond., pwr. steerlngr· • lyo.irPIMIM"-! ~Ina t740 Good Pancake motor for brakes' windows, til J.1J4J 52~ 333 ••••••••••••••••••••••• vw bus '450. You re· whl . sunroot. (U2001)
01AMCH COUMTY'S •Ml, prefer• rmve. 844-6307 sae. Theodore Robins~·
OLDEST medMtf'C.tdet ·~ VW Ba/·a. beat offer Dir . Harbor Blvd ~r
& to •MW Must sel 840·8709 or ~l~esa. &42-00lO or •
~9 .... 1 ..;:;846.=..:;9561=------I
Compare House of Im· Ill VW Bug, new enc &c '65 Mltst.Q
ports Direct lease and 60 paint, S2000 OBO. Looks a>O l)")J.
SaJes.St!rvice-Leasinc mos. sensible pymts great. · 7 9 f A I R M O N T ,. JO" CARVER D i 1 I 2 I 3 o r EVES, 631·2'53 FVnJRA. 4 cyl., 4 spd,
nr-. 1 c nf"'M"'C.m n AI 714/MERCEDES is 213 io SQBK. CLEAN. Nu trans., AM/FM stereo t
l'L.JLL:J'l•t. •• m ... .i; D1v1n or714/637·2333 radials, brakes. 2SK mi cau elle. sunroor ~
~~=~ 1972"-"-CEDES on nu motor /trans. 1388ZAH ) S4 S99 --AM /FM M t 11 Theodore Robins. Dir . 250 · us se ' Harbor Blvd .. Costa • SADDLHACI IMW
f'U.OWMB>
IMW'S
'702000, 4 drsedan,
blue !936SGJ I
'73 Bavaria, AT. Maroon,
atr, st. csst. (~SOI
'162002. FJord blu tblu.
loaded tser 4519 1
'79320I. Sepia brnrbrn.
alJ options. (Set 3468)
'19 J:n. Henna redlblrk.
all options (ser 995.t)
SADDLHACI IMW
131-2040 4tS.4t4t
• d d 700. Aaron. 842·~19. ... o or , se an ,, Meu 642-0010 or· brown/tan Becker I Bua. snrf. mags, best ~1 i\M/FM. power brakes. olfer over S:ZlOO 675-3271 -=.::o.=::.:------power steering, air con· ...;;aft=...:6 _______ '73 Pinto wagon, clean .
ditiorung. (lic.<mFZB> '75 VW BUG. in good con· dependable. St.350.
SADDLBACI IMW dition. MUST SELL! • 631·2991
131-2040 495.4949 BESTOFFER.997-8679 '79 LTD WAGON. V·S, , y aW>. trans .. air cond '·
I tt75 MBCB>ES dYo t772 pwr. steering ' brakes . ., 450SLC ••••••••••••••••••••••• AM/FM stereo. This rar1
1 vory with red leather #I VOLVO DlALH , , is priced right. mm'"
interior. has all possible CN ORANGE COUNTY . Sllllll. Theodore Robins,'"
opt ions and 15 in --Dir., Harbor Blvd .• ~
absolute mrnt condition. SALIS, SllVICE C4lsta Mesa. 642·0010 or,
thisisamustseerar!!! OV AMDLlillMGRY 540-32ll. •• SADDLHACI IMW ERS~Er.IVE '78 Ranrhero 43K ml
131-2040 495.4949 EXPERTS PB/PS cruise A IC gd cond. . 545·7752 uno Mercedes 280 SL
Conv and hardto p,
amtrm radio. new tires.
m.2060
UILEIU
VOL.YO 1986 Harbor Blvd.
'80 Futura. Silver. Moon
rod. Xlnt cond. Many
Xtru. '6500. 968.2750
'76 2002. Xlnt cond ! ong
owner. Have alJ papers
& recpts, AM/FM c:ass.
snrl. nu tires. st K mi .
must see' asku11 $7,200
675·5289 eves. 8«·9111 COSTA MESA
•4'-t303 $40.9467 wkd~. AM 1981 MB 300D. sunrool. champagne met .
Dal-. t720 casselte player. 6400 m1 UM4
Marart tt50 .......................
·74 Coucar. loaded. am full power. stereo. very
clean, S2 .200. 631-2991 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $23,500 after 5 891-6246. •••••••••••••••••••••••
f 210 2 dr. 9t·lS88 ---ttOI
1 06 31 1971 2:50C 2 dr, clean. red ••••••••••••••••••••••
w/blark leather 1:iterior. SAIL CHEVIOUT
• IS.000. Alire W 673-9201. "Chevy's got it all ...
t t.a.x ~ mo. 0 E.L. H548·3754_ __ roryou"!"
Cap. rost 14964. Res MG t742 '79 C~NARO Z28.
value 12481.92 . Total ••••••••••••••••••••••• loaded, 111cludlng T·top.
r.mts. $5409 12 Cost tUc317YDtl ) $7295. ease $406.69 lo take '19 CHEV MONZA 2+2.
Delivery Order Yours *•CLASSIC•* Air, auto., stereo, only
Today! '66 MG 16.000 miles. <serl98197l
•
Lots of$$$ hu gone into $4895.
this little baby .. New '80 PHOENIX CPE. 4
p a i n t • f' r o n t cyl ., auto .. air. only
I lires(wiresl. Starter, u.soo miles. (serl21227)
Generator. Regulator. 16195.
Rblt eng. Wiring. SAILC.-vlOLfT
2845Harbor81vll 'Throw·out Be aring. 90080.MAIN Costa Mesa Clutch, Battery . & S17S Laguna Beach
14 540-64 0 ~up 2 weeks ago 4'4-lll I 546-tt'7 ~._:_..:!'..#----Slill needs New rug ... A
'19TurboCapn RS. black
w/chamois int.. 33K. air.
stereo. sunrr. S5,600~·
SS7.a840, 548·9951, Jay
......... . tt5J . ..................... .
'16 Conv. Excellent cond Pony int Best oUe r.
~D>O
9'55
• •••••••••••••••••••••• '77 OMEGA. 6 cyl .. aulo
trans .. air co nd ..
AM/FM stereo. Gold "' terior. tan interior
OBIY113l !0071A) $2999
Theodore Robins, Dir .
Harbor Bl vd .. Costa
Mesa 642·0010 or
540-3211 • ____., real Sweetheart! S3000 .. di tt I 0 ~.....-Or Best otrer Please ••••••••••••••••••••••• Old Delta 88 Diesel: 4 dr CaJL.. 49&-4722 '14 Century. 5S.OOO miles. 19,000 mi. S300 dn-1298 •. Royal china. "Ven· DI.splay cases. waiting ..... Storep totO phnAFREETANKOF T
dome", ror 1, oven/OW roem chain. Beauty •••••-•• .. •••••••••••• GAS oa any new car we Gp Dollar
proof, good cOftd, $.15. Salon hairdryers and sell P~d .60 M,,_ .. I tr
MW773 hydraulic chairs. mir· ., SJOIAIE CAW.. NOW • •"' s ...._ ________ ron,abelveaandplants. 675-9l53NB83S-6636SA ForYourCar! completely restored 711eC)lllLhl
'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!{ a>0/080. im. Mareo. 848-3143
__ ....:846-:.::....:9~100:;::;·'----PWo tt5 7
•••••••••••••••••••••••
1• AllG Ile--"' Like new .. Beaulirul ! Excellent cond, full y POUBIOSEBOWL ,ma up,-ampoo Monthly boat & RV Mi-•/ JOHMSOM&SOM Must sarnfire. equip'd. 760·1523 or ~-endhairpnd11ets, storqe ror any size. 24 ~"i!::.1:..1 t520 1'--•M--r:I """""'""' • ..., ...... ., Call..._.,,.,,._._ h I ~ ~ ... ~ _85S-t000ut34_9 __ .;;"c.:.::...:'~='-------1 ... _.& ... , .__.oil _ .. .,,...,.,. r 1ecu rl ly . ree """"Harbor Bl\• ~~~~~~~~~I _..._ -· er. alter& ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......., ·--------'78 ~late wagon, loaded. t~eftldDp • launching ' wuh1ng Costa~esa_ $40.~ oodcond Sl500 Y<kK one-stnn ..........,;., center.l'!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!ll!!!!l!!!l!!!l!l!!!f Sllln Adwti prhiteaea. Newport PIETTIEST !79 280ZX. GL pkg. s spd. ATTIMTIOM g 644-6368. 644.0·134 "" "'"'W"''6 Glau floor cues, wall DI.mes. 1131 Back Bay 4S7 T-lllD Premium pnres m\$ sell. S7900. 642·2SIS MG for gift items To .. 1.,,. yu Norelco Mlcro·Wa ve . Or. Newport Beach. IHTOWM! pa1d roranyusedcar aft 3 0-...EIS .._ HIS , · "'°""' ' *''15.38u .............. ,or . office uo1l, etc. a.u-.10 1rore1gnordo~st1cl -· -------l "" i In this column call .-all 3. B/_..,..,W TV,,.,.,17S . Make ofhr. Take _....... IESTOffEI! "~ '7S 280Z. ~·ooo Needs TONNEAUCOVER ••••••••••••••••••••••• UK 1ngood cond1t1on ... 1 COMTIMPLATIMG 2·5678 and as!! for the Booale Board 130. Delivery In January. I~ Zl SeeUs First! TLC . Mon Fri 1 F1tsMG's.·11.·s1 1 a.4Vi W.87 Kl.RK.JEWELERS 2300 1714)645·1887 : wknds · 1 Never used . S7S CA.DILL.AC? • istmas "'. ISOf. ~ j · 11.tJor 81 Costa Mesta. T1 ; 1 rt._ 1213)594·9341 _ __ Maria 631· 7797 Ive msg Wt specialize in leases :_ __ _:.. __ ____::......:~r•-••••--• 56-MS •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• '78 ~. s spd. air. nu for the business ex·
Ladlei Antique UCT »1allo• rre1b water Alrcr9ft ti 10 lires, AM/FM rass. MGI 9744 eculive&cproressional
Gold Pendant Watch. aq11arium .w/wood l'Y...... . .. ••••••-•••••••••••• "-'91Seltdioll Rulll Perfect. Apprailed stand: '4t eq~. Hit Shne 1091 ,.....,. W..tM Pl9S. 7&0-J409_ ---••••••••••••••••••••••• OfM.w ltl2
at .._ Sac. 1200 080. including ttb. or -·••••••••••••••••••• '711'2lO loaded oc AP ltlO.OATSUM C .. ISTM•~ C ... C•••n
631471 belt offer. Call MT·-Btaulif\al Color TV .. 2 yr SOOhrs min Cali Paul or IOMG CAI --
Aiwa Fm Stereo tape re· ~~~f'~e dehvery · Jim. 714·7S2·2266 or ••a.A.SMC!!•* PICl-UP Transportation for your Mow .. Stock!
corder. CSJI (Walkman L~ State. Selling Serel Kenwood AM/FM 213.f29..5021 'H MG • Air. radio. chrome bum college son or daughter NA~R~ ~~5\i:~.~4~~· for new---~~\ Receiver . Jansson Cl!"fll'I, S./ t l.otJ °'MM has gone WllUY pers. EXCELLENT ~/:lr~ad1:· 22 mpg, 1' CADILLAC:: ~ -Speakers. Xlnt cond. W 120 into this little Baby... USED CARS It TR UC KS CONDITION. (8647) l2BOO 960-5996 ltoOOt1.u1 ... ~ llMl ------•-•IColor Portlble. SUS -Aft.erfi~ ....................... New Paint , Front COME IN OR TH IS WEEK . S amsTMAS CAI' Vacuum 125. 89t.h work ~ Camper Shell for "18& up tlres(Wires> Starter, CALL FOR SPECIAL ~ 9741 l"'1•' ""'"1 '>•l0'1IOO
Tramportatlon for .Your xla.MHSZS lltlcnftTY ~Camino. 11'15080 Generator, Regulator. FIHAPPIAISAL onlyS4M ._,_. -s Sony w~~ ... diagonal •itM&-35211•• Rblt enir, wiring, throw· Comu'er-n&LlUo SADDtSACI IMW ••••••••••••••••••••••• co11eetaoaord1ucbter. ,.,.. q U't: 1982 1972 Cadillac amtrm.
19 llGB QT, 22 MPG, screm '900. S48·11118 Camper shell for sm °"' beanng, Clutch. Bat· Ct-RYIOLET 13 l·Z040 4tS-4t4t S power. everything. runs
AM/Fii ndio. 1181 MARRANTZ pickup, $1.S0/080 lery & '1'15 Tune·up 2 1.8211 BEACH BLVD. fW 9725 ARE HERE•. d. . 642·3338 -..... Stereo w/Aa11. declt , .... ,.~naft3 weeks ago. Still needs HU'N'MNGTON BEACH I .., Eldo d -11\atlW H,loll ...l--......, New rug f\ r eal ••••••••••••••••••••••• Come in & drh•e the 4 ra o. l owner. -.=l&MM_:-(2}4-wlJ..,....,fOwa~ll, MetutlM .... 9140 SweetHeart! $3000 Or 147-6017 or Sciider 1971 Very good leading diesel! Availa 64,000 mi. $4000 or best ~diamond watda, M'OP'P :C, eom~-~~1cf' " ..................... Best Otrer. Please 549-3331 tonditiclft. 12100847·0279, ble for immediate de· dfer.&46-lll89 Cold $75. Fillchea Zit,.,.. and bt merry _,nc.-' "18Peu&ot M~Ped. CaJI.. .. a-4722 Student needs car. truck, dlN'1.JCZ2 Uvery! See why people C:--0 tt 17
psta.911AlrEve75'.-.-,, beeeut tomor· RCA J.t" colo9' TV. nke Bha.GoodCood.'350. priced aboOt S800: any '79 m Sfyder, blue. a re switching to ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• Al.Iii, like new, I eartc•. ., not be able oond. StOI. 541·3354 '390trysler, good engine, cond. please.Anytime mags, rol bar. stereo, ~tot! '9>CAMARO. fi ryl., auto.
Asteroids. Superman, kl no . IC-LSD. • Vapa Qlo, top shape. sound body, needs in· 846-51'12 . P.P.645-4649 IUCH IMPOITS trarw .. fact. air cond ..
'75 PINTO 3 door 4 cyl . 4 spd. trans Supe r eronomical transporta
lion Priced right too
(101370) (P500'1) S2S99
Theodore Robins. Di r .
Harbor Blvd . Costa
Mesa 642·0010 or
540-8211.
FOISALI n · Pinto hatchback
clean. 4 speed. new tires. luggage r a ck.good
transportation car Sl2CXl
080
S.Z 1570 JeH
631·7797 Maria --------'76 Pinto. auto. air
stereo. 8 track $1950
Priv Ply 675· 7667 eves
V6 Pinto Hatchback. Was
in wrerk Body and
frame damage All else OK V8 (47.000 ori~ mt l. new trans & r1d1ator.
pump, very good wbls &
IJres. no broken glass.
Interior good. Reds
avail A great deal for
mechanic or parts sales
Must sell all together. 1'700, make oCr Call
~aft 7:30p_m
·73 Pinto Wagon Nds 'Some Bodywocl Good
Gas M1 Depend:.ible
Best Offer 6&1·6627
evtS. Elias.
eCc. •total 7S2·Z51t t ,. • Kmwood tuntble a Scey MIO. tenor It paint ll.500. ltll AA T IM8 Dove Street map, 21,000 miles. blue
... I rec. w/lfQken, mat 173-35.34 080. 955-2187 .r._.. JOOO NEWPORT BEACH out.side, black' Inside. aell-•7141 ~--752-0900 (3'1YZI) CPS013l 16699· ..,Cllla ... • .. _................. L. ~~ B~~~ .. moped, '58 MGA Parked rar. 0.ampagne edition. All ---Theodore RobillJ, Dir .. Plf-• tt60
»1alloo fresh water 1Qyln1 World War II Sony VCR S 2000 I 111 • ll.whvnu. Nearly complete. $3'15 opt.lam, stlll under lac· P'wtcM t750 Harlx>r Blvd .• Costa ••••••••••••••••••••••• aqurlum w /wood Souvtein. Cash Paid. 1T2ml. newest model. '3IO 4M-7t'18 080 Bill 494-.6801 Eve. tory warranty A MUST ....................... Mesa . 642·0010 or l.973PlyrnouthWa11 Ver~ =-~llJ:t'.b:f!! ~!~~y~_:.:.t :i~ote , $Ut5. ~~.n!t-r!1~:; .::...." tSSO n.:~=-~~ n:~SEECAR ! ~~·!:1~·'d~~~~i: ~11 ttzorS:~ond 1750~.~~~5
bell.nti.C.U ... ............. rtp!.r,.~Sleva ....................... SADDl&ACllMW firm!48S-037t ~!!~ .................................. ..
.... au• Pqeot. M~Ptd. "19 Olerokee Chief. 4 apd, lll·Z040 495-494' ,, Ponche 914 2 o. Rblt • CHIVIOLIT '79 GRAND PR IX SJ
Enc•••t • ., wlO ....................... XlntCond. l)OO. many xtrul $4000/0130 ....._ ... 1rtt4 .._.. 9727 tfll, xlnt cond , $5900. MIW ltll v.a. •uto. tnn~. air betlllN ewitale till•( 5e,..mT titt67S.72115 873..all bm .............................................. Ml.Cl, 8Sl·9353. C'Orld . rull pwr . g trark.
ho• PalClllOH ,.. tHO Mii '707 YISITYOUI 1 t t7H MOMTICAILO Ult whl .. cNl~t 30,000 TU.1.•nn ............................................. "9.t.~•co"ilfT • L9f.o .. , mi. Black in ' Olll
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uo. ttans. Thia la the uon. '1700. Call ~.()661 HONDA •1 DEALER IN U.S.A. many otbu utru' ~ Robt11~. Dir . perfect work trurk. allerS:~m. .._ .... TBS ~! cm1. H.,bor Blvd . CoJ1to
a.ck I.his one out to-IMW t71J """ ~ OMLY$7'91 Meo u2 11010 or
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Harbor Blvd .. Co~t• tmlE SAU~ias!~VIC! r..i~~~ NEWPOJ\T BEACH Ptwindows. Jl tsut".
Mua. 642·0010 or MOW!!! OlMMOMI ClostDWNOAn HMIH ,..wtllllSOO 57311W
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'St Ford \>\ ton PU, TODAY IMC TIUCIS l9ID ROiia Royce Phan· Ne>. trans .. fact. 11lr. lrn . 11ir rc1n4f., vwr
camper •hell, S450. & H bar 11~ tom s. body by H J pwr. windows. AM/FM lltftfin•. br.~,'11 It win .U ~•ESA • Mulliner. Park Wud attrto a trk. rallre de?••. AM 1tM 11ttrr11
• 9170 140-t Ltd. Good coqd. thruoul. w~ll .. vlnyi roof t'Mll •• ""~·lib. rru111,, 1"••-•H•••••••••u••• '!z.!19.l~~ UCTf1U) OtU. •O.too rn1 ltl4XNl l .. Ima QllC 1 ton van. • MOWllTMITM ~'S7Sl,n«lat-haftd 'ltu Cue-...., Dir , ,.._., ..,.., Tlatodo,,.
bur'1I rec cu. whltt SANLmACI ~job -.hn lo ctn", nttda <'OlmtUn. lbrW 11~11 .. Coale lloWM. Olr • Harbor ._MU. IMW W Dall1 Piiot Htt ~. 731-a lltu 142.u10 or !!_v.!·,,· t~! If• a
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Orange Coast DAILY Pll.OT/Wedneaday, December 23. 1981
·New National Smoker StuQy:
•
Landmark smoker study provides new evidence supporting
MERITas proven taste alternatiVe to higher tar smoking:
· Just released -results of
rigorous new smoker
research conducted by
MERIT.
· The conclusion: In exten ...
sive tests comparing taste
and tar combined, MERIT
. is the clear choice over
eading higher tar brands.
MERIT Remains Unbeaten.
In impartial new tests
: pvhere brand identity was
r:oncealed, the overwhelm-
. ~ng majority of smokers
· lreported MERIT taste equal
o-or better than-leading
igher tar brands.
• 1j-Moreover, when tar levels
! : were revealed, 2 out of 3
I'
I ' .. I I
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
, That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
chose the MERIT combina ...
tion of low tar and good
taste.
MERITTuste Sparks Sw itch.
In the second part of
this extensive new study,
farmer l\igher tar smokers
report MERIT is an easy
switch, that they didn 't give
up taste in switching, and
that MERIT is the best-
tasting low tar they've
ever tried.
Year after year, in study
after study, MERIT
remains, unbeaten. The
proven taste alternative
to higher tar smoking-
is MERIT .
0 l'lllllp Monti lne. IM 1
Rag : B mg "t•:' 0.6 mg nicotine-Man : 7 mg "tar;' 0.6 mg
nicotlne-100's Rag : 9 mg "tar:' 0.7 mg nlcotine-100's Men:
10 mg "tar:· 0.8 mg nicotine av. per clgarene, FTC Repon Mar:e1
'
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..... s•2•slillliiim_.1 .. ._.._.__...._ ... p ~s ............... _... __ ~--~~---~~-
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i 1·
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t '
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IUICI CUil YOUR HOMITDWN llAllY PIPIR
WE DN~SDAY . DECEMBER 23. 1981 ORANGECOUNTY CALIFORNIA 25 CENlS
Schmitz attacks abortion rights advocates
By STEVE MITCHELL °' ... .,...., ..........
State Sen. John Schmitz said
be released a blis tering
statement assailing abortion
rights advocates as a means of
hitting back at what he termed a
"raw publicity stunt" by
feminist lawyer Gloria Allred.
The two-page statement, on
Senate Com mittee on
Constitutional Amendments
stationery, was tilled: "Senator
Schmitz and his Committee
S urvive the •Attack of the
Bulldykes '," and uses
derogatory terms referrtnc lo
Jews, lesbians and feminist
groups.
The letter. released to
Sacramento press
representative• Tuesday,
prompted Sen. David Roberti to
suggest be may seek Schmitz'
ouster as chairman of the
amendments committee next
week.
Look, Ma
no cords
When some automotive
technology students al Golden
West College ready their cars
for the road, the call isn't "fiU
'er up" but "plug 'er in."
In a class begun last spring on
the Huntington Beach campus,
about 30 students have been
learning how lo build electric
cars.
According to instruct.or David
Jarman, the project requires the
removal of a conventional car's
internal combustion engine.
Surplus aircraft starter motors
can then be installed, drawing
power from rechargeable
batteries.
Students can work on their
own cars or on the school's car.
In addition, a $17,000 Fiat Strada
"state-of-the-art" electric car
recently was donated to the
college for the students to use as
a model.
The drawback to electric cars,
Jarman said, is that they can
run only for a few hours between
charges and cannot match the
speed of gas-powered autos. But
be said students soon may try
building a hybrid car using an
auxiliary gasoline engine to
keep the batteries charged and
give the car an extra kick when
needed.
Deity~.._.., 1tic..... llelllllW
CHARGE! -John Martin,
Ken Krutz. David Jarman
and Victor Schisler s how off
Fiat 850, Lectric Lopard and
Aztec-7 on Volkswagen
chassis. At right. battery is
tested.
' Roberti beads the Senate rules
committee which appoln\.I aJM,t
removes committee chairmen.
The Corona del Mar lawmaker
said four recent hearings on
abortion were infested by •'a sea
of hard, Jewish and (arguably)
female faces," and termed the
fem in is.ls · ·murderous
marauders ol the pro-abortion
encampment."
The statement took on
feminist attorney Gloria Allred,
who tossed a chastity belt at
Schmitz during one of the
bearings.
He called her a ''slick, butch
I aw yeress" and said the
committee was greeted by
''pre-organized infestations of
imported lesbians from
anti-male and pro-abortion
queer groups in San Francisco
and other ce nters pf
decadence." '
The comments prompted a
response from Sen. Roberti,
whose office in Sacramento
Experts say giant shark bit surfboard .
~normous gr eat white may have ~lled surf er i n i ncident in Monterey
MONTEREY CAP> -A Great
White shark perhaps 20 feet 1001
and weighing two tons may have
killed a surfer, say marine
experts who .examined a
bloodstained, pawed surfboard.
Toothmarks in the board and on the ~inch chunk bltt.en out of
It definitely were the work ol u
enormous treat white, Dan
Miller of the state Department
of Flab and Game said Tuesday.
The creature mitht be the
lar1e1t 1reat while ever
,recorded on lbe West Coast, be
.•aid. .
: lleanwhlle, 1urfer Lewl1 :taoreo, M, WU lilted U m i ....
;wbile blood on bl1 board ta
=-aalyted to delermlne wbetber
1''• ...... tbe ·-~ eo.tJ lberttf'I l>epertmeat Hid. I.Mt
9"D Slturclay wblle '"""" Jmt
north of Pebble Beach, he was
reported mJsain1 when he failed
to show up for work Monday. Hla
board and lbe fragment washed
ashore Sunday.
''All l can say la that hia
He estimated Its sile was at
least 18'h feet, possibly 20 feet,
Iona. The lqest white shark
Dbted in West Coast waters was
an 18'h·foot .creature cau1ht off
Santa Barbara. Jn other parts of
'It was. . possibly t he largest so
far on this coast -very, very large.'
aurfboard wu bitten . . . ~
Boren baa dlaappeared, '' said
Mlller. "It waa definitely a
wbite llwt, pouibly tbe larseet
to far oa tbla cout -veey, very
lar•e." _
The alae ol the bite takm out
of the 1urfboard waa "Yery
hnprflllive," be added.
"It'• the lar111t I 've ever
• seen."
the world. white abarka up to .0
feet Ions have been reported.
Boren wu described by hla
friend Beryl Thomas aa "•very
experienced surfer.
"We're not 11ytn1 be'• dead.
Hla body atlll hasn't been
found."
But wary 1wfen atayed out of
tbe water on tbe south end of
Mont.erey Bay on Monday and
Tuesday.
•'Thia la tbe time to surf and
nobody feels like it," said
·T~mu. ·
Swimmers bad been warned of
·the posalbllll.Y of whlte shark
attack.a at the end of October
following an lnereaae in the
num~r of sea otters kllled by
sharks. And officials warned
tbat lbe dancer could increase as tbe number of otters and
elephant aeala -another
favorite shark food -lncreues,
drawlnc sbaru tot.be area.
"It la certainty not aurprlalnc
that a areat white lbark would
bite a aurfbOard, especially
when the sharks are lncreulnc
in abundance on the California
coaaWne," said Jobn McCoaker,
director of San Franet1co'1
Steinhart Aquarium • ..
released a statement today.
··sen. Schmitz' injection of
religion and sexual orientation
into his official statement is
s hocking and distressing," an
aide for Roberti said.
He said Roberti will bring up
the matter "of his continued
tenure on the committee at the
next regular meeting of the
Rules Committee Dec. 28.
"It is a shame Sen. Schmitz
allowed himself lo be provoked
into such an outrageous
response," Roberti said. "A
higher standard of behavior la
demanded of him."
When reached at home today,
Schmits defended bis stat.ement,
agreeing some of the words in
the printed release ··are verl'
descriptive." :
·'The reason I put out tb$
press release," he said, "wu ta
response to a raw publicity stunt
in completely poor taste in
which a so-called fe minist
(See SCHMJTZ, l'age A%)
Judge 's ruling
on ERA brings
mixed reaction
BOISE, Idaho (AP ) -A
federal judge today delivered
two severe blows to the Equal
Rights Amendment, ruling that
( 1 > Congress lacked authority lo
ex.tend the deadline for
ratification and C2> five states
acted within their rights when
they rescinded approval.
If upheld after an expected
appeal, the long-awaited ruling
by U.S. District Judge Marion
Callister would effectively kill
the proposed 27th constitutional
amendment , which would
prohibit discrimination based on
sex.
Callister's ruling came on a
suit fil ed by Idaho and Arizona
and three Was hington state
legislators after Congress voted
in 1978 to move back the
deadline for ratification from
March 29, 1979, to June 30, 1982.
In Washington, D.C .. Cathy
Bonk, a spokeswoman for, the
National Organization for
Women , a leadi ng ERA
advocate, said: "Our lawyers
are here now. We will have no
comment until we have had a
c hance lo go over it."
Phyllis Schlafly, leader of the
Stop ERA organization, called
the move ··a tremendous victory
for women."
··It's a great victory for
constitutional integrity and
fairness and government by law
instead of by demand of special
interest groups," she said in a
<See ERA, Page A.%)
Food, inedicine
short in Poland
By The Associated Press
Warsaw radio said today that
s trikes were holding up
deliveries of coal in Poland and
that' leaders of 2,000 striking
miners at two pits were
"carelessly playing with human
life."
The 10 Common Market
nations sent Pre'dl~r Wojciech
Jar u z e Is k i •fli t ate men t
denouncing the "fiave violation
of human and civil rights of the
Polish people" implied in
reports from travelers. The
British announced the statement
in London.
Reports from travelers spoke
of chronic shortages of medicine
and of food for Christmas tables
in Poland 11 days after martial
law was imposed.
Warsaw radio, monitored in
London, announced today that
357 people were arrested for
curfew violations in Katowice. It
said the standoff by worker•
barricaded inside tbe Katowice
steel mill continued. The Soviet
news agency Tass has said the
steelworkers were threatenins
to blow up the furnaces. I
Broadcasts reported improved
productivity by factories "is
being weakened by sickness and
absenteeis m, which has beed
growing in the past few days.''
They said "the atmosphere
among factory workers is not
favorable everywhere ... In
many factories the division
among the workforce which
emerged in c onditions of
<See POLAND, Page AZ>
Biz arre tune tops
Unusual holiday song popular
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. CAP)
-Elmo and Patsy may not be
household names. but their
latest record, a Christmas song,
is taking Grand Rapids by
s torm.
But forget poignancy or
images of snowflakes. This is
not your usual holiday tune.
It's called "Grandma Got Run
Over By A Reindeer." and
spokesmen at two Grand Rapids
radio stations say requests for it
are running as much as 10 times
highe r than for any other tune.
"There's no doubt about it, it's
Numero Uno," said Larry
Patton, operations manager at
WCUZ·AM . Likewise for
WZZR ·FM , according to
program director Jay Michaels.
Twanged b y the San
Franci sco·based ,
hus band-and-wife country duo
·Elmo and Patsy Shropshire, the
song includes these lines :
"Grandma got run over by a
reindeer, walking borne from
our house Christmas Eve.
"You say there's no such thing
as Santa, but as for me and
Grandpa, we believe."
According to the lyrics,
Grandma conaumed a blt too
much eggnog and lnall'-ed oa
returning home to 1•t ber
medication. Her hoeta found her
Christmas mornlnt "wlth
hoofprinta on her forehead and
incriminating Claus marks on
her back."
Shropshire sald be and bis
wife produced the record, wblcb
was written by a friend, Randy
Brooks.
"We wanted to prove there
waa a Santa Claua and,
unfortunately, Grandma bad to
take a little 1u to prove it."
Shropshire said. "There was a
song that Merle Haggard ha4
out about his grandmother dyinC
a t Christmastim e and we
wanted to look at some other
~randmothers."
I
After Grandma is laid to rest..
her family prepares for their
holiday dinner:
"Now the goose is on the table
and the pudding made of fig,
··And the blue-and-silver
candles that would have just
matched the hair on Grandma's
wig."
IRllGI, ClllT 1111111
C l ear tonight and
. Thursday with local gusty
north to northeast winds
25 lo 3S mpb below coastal
canyons. Highs 68 to 74.
Lows tonight 48 to SS.
llSIDITDUY
Service. Chriafmat ~"
Oftd 0011 are plaftud of
Orange Coolt churc#wa. For
schediM, '" Page 03.
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:U • • • ~ • Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT/Wednesday, December 23, i 981
Yule pleas sent Reagan to save death benefits
~.!~,llA·
Pre1lclesat llHllD wut be ncetvW1 tome IHt-m l•at•
CbrlatlaU ~ardl from widows
and chUdrtila ol U.S. Mnlcema
kllltd Ua ....... ol duty.
About JO womH a Dd tM!r
children ptMred In MIN1on
Viejo T•e1Clay to wrtte
me111 1•• oa tbe eard s
proteatta1 the cuta In SoeieJ
Security d eath benef its
sche•utM to take effect to
Au1ust t•.
. Benefit.I frola Soclal Seeurity
paid cllteetly to the children ol
deceased parents will be
terminated at ace 18 under the
.Rea1an admlnlstratJon 'a bud1et
cuttin1 plan approved b y
Con1ress.
Thia assistance c urrently
conllnuet unW the child ls 22, or
finishes bia or her education.
In add1Uoni monthly paymenta
to widows o servicemen ldlled
i n action who have not
remarried will end when their
children are 16, rather than the
current standard of 18.
Widows of military personnel
from Orange, San Diego, Los
An1Jt lea and Rlver11ide counUes
have formed an organlutlon
called Survivors of Sacrifice to
draw public: uttentlon to the
impending cuts
The cuts affect payments for
the support of all ch.i ldren who
lose parents. However, Sueanne
Lewis, who hosted Tuesday's
gathering, said such benefits are
particularly Important to
military families.
"It's part of the insurance that
a military man would depend
upon in case of his death,"
explained M~s. Lewis, whose
From Page Al
husband, Marine Lt. Col. Jultu.
"Mack" Lewis, WIS killed ftve
years a10 in a plane crash
during a flight at El Toro
Marine Base.
··You think of It as something
that is going to be there," she
added. The 49-year-old widow
sald she has three teen·aee
children who are dependine on
t h e assist a n ce for thei r
educations.
Los Angeles resident Johanna
Lundy said the cuts In Social
Security would greatly affect the
options her six children have in
I
choosln1 a career.
Mra. Lundy'• husband, an Air
Force major, was kllled on
Christmas Eve In 1970 whlle
flyln1 a search and rescue
mission over Laos.
''This is just very hard to
accept," she said, her voice
choking wlth emotion. "This
action la jeoparditlns my
children's careers."
She s&id her hu.sband, a career
officer, bad been promised the
Social Se(urlty benefits by the
government before he died, and
now that same government is
resclndln1 them. "'fhey didn't
so much as send a notice so we
would know about the cuts," sh.:
said.
The Survtvors of Sacrifice
have enlisted the help of Marina
del Rey resident J am es Jordan.
a certified public •ccountant,
who is volunteering. his time.
J ordan said he ls aeekin8
tax·exempt status for the group.
"Mv father wes killed io
: Korea," Jordan said. "Without
the be n e fits from Social
Security, I don't know how J
would h ave paid for my
education."
POLAND SHORT ON FOOD, MEDICINE. • •
Deity ......... ,....
LASHES OUT -State Sen.
John Schmitz has called
abortion s up por t ers
.. murderous marauders ...
From P5~ Al
T ARGET ED F e minist
Gloria Allred is one of the
p eople who has taken the
barb of Schmatz' criticisms .
SCHMITZ BLASTS FOES ...
leader <Mired} comes off wi~ a
diatribe aga&nat me peraonally
and throws a chastity belt at me
tneant for my wife.
•'In four days of hearinp, we
heard over 180 witnesses," he
said. "For three of lboM days
neither my aatf nor Dl)'Hll had
a lunch break.
·'Then the only thing that gets
in the news is the chastity belt
bit." he said.
"She's the one who called the
media, sbe's the one wbo puts on
the show, and she's tale one who
puts on tbe oontroveny.
·'I hit back and the m~ hits
me. I die't start th•• filtJt. All I
did was bold a meetiaa with
probably a record aumber of
witneseses, and suddenly I'm
From P~ge A1
the o ne that causes the
controversy.
"When I even the mark in my
own comeback , suddenly I
should be on the defensive?." he
asked.
Co n cern i n g R o b erti 's
comments about possibly
r emoving Schmitz rrom the
chairmanship, the loeal senator
said, "The Lord giveth and the
Lord taketh away. I've done
most everything else in politics.
I guess takin g away a
committee chairmanship would
just add to the laurels.'·
The four committee hearings
were conducted earlier this
month on Schmitz' proposed
constitutional amendment that
would d efine l ire at the
moment of conception.
ERA DEALT SETBACKS. • •
telepboo9 interview from ber
home in Allon, Ill.
The ERA ,..uiru approval by
38 states and no state bas
ratified it since Indiana ~came
the 3Sth to do so in 1971.
Call.isl« W1"0le that Congress,
by a t~irch vote of both
houses, can sel a re asonable
time lJllft for states to act for
ratifica&lolt to be effectl ve.
·"When this time is set, it ii
binding eo Congress and Ole
states and it cannot be chaaged
by CongreSl thereafter,'• the
judge wrote.
Callister's ruling today could
mean the death of the ERA since
-the five states which rescinded
their ratification votes can no
longer be counted among the 35
states which had voted to ratify.
He said Idaho, Tennessee,
Kentucky, South Dakota and
Nebraska effectively nullified
their prior ratification of the
pro posed con stitutional
amendment a nd may not be
counted as ratifying states.
He also said the same would
be true £or any other states
which properly cer tified their
actions of resciss ion to the
General Services
Administration.
·'The basis for the Idaho
political struggle is being
overcome only with difficulty."
Reliable reports from Warsaw
which bypassed military censors
said Solidarity, suspended when
martial law was imposed Dec.
13, was distributing leaflets
calling for "passive resistance"
to "an occupation by our own
army."
Warsaw radio also reported
some union miners planted
dynamite charges at shafts and
that in Gdansk a police station
was attacked with gasoline
bombs. It did not say when the
Incidents occurred; they were
reported in a listing of dozens of
Solid arity members charged
with trying to organize strikes
and circulating leaflets and
other violations of martial law.
The state-run Warsaw radio
said most Poles were obeying
martial law. But reports from
outside Poland on Tuesday
indicated thousands of Poles
were resisting the crackdown in
Gdansk and other regions and
hundreds of prisoners we re
being mistreated.
The r eports could not be
indepe ndently con firmed.
Girl dies
in car fall
A 2-year-0ld girl opened the
door to her back seat. fell out as
the car turned and was killed
Tuesday when the car's rear tire
ran over her, said Santa Ana .
police.
Anna Lilia Galvan of Garden
Grove fell through the grasp of
an a unt who was riding
:ilongside her as the car turned
left from Harbor onto 17th Street
in Santa Ana at 4:35 p.m .. said
police Sgt. Hugh Mooney.
The girl was taken to Fountain
Valley Community Hos pital.
where she died.
legislators' claim of standing in
this suit is that as participants in
the ratification process. their
individual votes in favor of
ratifi cation for the seven-year
time period, or for the rescission
of the prior ratification, have
been debased by the actions of
the defendant <Congress> and a
suit of this nature is proper to
vindicate their vote," Callister
wrote in his 72-page decision.
He said that Congress has no
power to determine "the validity
o r invalidity of a prope rly
certi fi e d ratifi cation o r
rescission "
1{no~ grandchildren benefit
Daughter! plan to disclaim their interests in estate
The 11·,... will el ~·· Berry F.,_m founder Wtuer
Knott ne•es thre e .. ~ts
children and t wo •f, bis
Jtandchildrlft M ben6isies
of his neatly '2 millioo estate,
Orance Ceuftty SU)leriw Court
~ocurnenes lDdicate.
B ut t he t h ree dau11lters
named ta KlloU's will plan to
disclaila Uletr interesta in the
estate and pass tM tnberttance
along. l•t.M41 to llaeir own
c hlld rn lolSo•in8 a Jan. 20
Superior Court probate bearinc. a family 1polleaman said.
~ The wUJ, filed this week in
Santa Aaa , stated tbal tbe
9 1 -year -o l • f o rm er
•h ar ec-ropeer's. estate was to 1<>
to three daQMets -Vlrginia
Knott Bell4er, Marton k noll
Mon t apert, and Toni Knoll
Olip h an t -a nd two
grandch.ildren. Ken and Steve
Knott, whose father is the senior
Knott's only son, Russell.
Ru ssell K n o tt , family
spolf.esman. asked to be left out
of h\s fa ther's will In the
mld-l!J60's. Cordelia Knoll, the
elder Knott's wife. died in April
1974.
The net effect of Knoll's will,
then. is that nine grandchildren
in all will share equally in the
estate.
Six o f th ose nine
grandchildren are active as
general partners in running the
Buena Park amusement park
that Knott and bis wife buut into
one of the nation's pre mier
tourist attractions.
Knott h.imself bad sold off h.is
CIHllfted 1dv9'tl1tn9 7141142·5171
All ottlet ctep.rtment. 142-4321
...
MAIN °"1CE
..... ley k , C... -... CA.
........ ! ... , ... , ......... ,"-...
int e r est in the amusement
facility to h.is grandchildren in
1974.
Known as Mr. Republican in
Orange County political circles,
Knott died on Dec. 3. The will
filed in superior court Monday
was dated Jan. 7, 196S.
Na med as co-executors were
his four children -Russell Virginia, Toni and Marion. Ali
four are active in the running of
the popular southern California
amusement park.
Richard J ohnson , finance
director for Knott' sBerry Farm.
sa id it is bel i e v e d t h at
inheritance taxes could t.ake as
much as $750,000 of the total $2
million estate.
J ohnson said the elder Knott
was a generous contributor to
various causes, political and
philanthropic, and that his
estate probably would have been
larger if it hadn't been for his
many donations over the years.
"He waa quJte generous and
he annually made contrlbuUons
to charities . . . hls history of
charitable contributions was
very lenlthy," Johnson saJd.
Knott bad Uved lo a mobile
home on the amusement park
grounds since 1974. Re had
suffered Parkinson's disease for
many years.
Two or Knott'• dau1hter1,
Vlr1lnia and Tonl, live In
Newport Beach. Hl1 third
dau1hter, Marlon, lives In
La1una Beach . A
1randdau1hter. Jana Hackett,
aJso lives ln Newport Beach .
t
Nor mal co mmuni catio n s
facilities in Poland have been
cut and restrictions placed on
Western reporters there.
Warsaw radio reported that:
-1,026 m ine r s at th e
Ziemowit pit have now broken
the strike started eight days ago
despite "psychological terror"
by about 100 strike organizers. It
said 1,000 miners remained
underground. Another 1,000-plus
m iners were still underground
at the P iast mine . Loc al
Communist Party officials have
tried to con vince them to
surr ~nder but their efforts
"remain fruitless because of a
group of adventurers who are
carelessly playing with human
life."
-"Certain disturbances in
the work rhythm in the mines"
and snowbound transport trains
c reated a 140 ,000-ton coal
s hortage in s ix provin~es.
mcludlng Gdansk and Wroclaw.
It said Uvestock farmers were
b e ing given priority for
deliveries a nd "the needs of
people who have no coal to heat
their homes must not b e
forgotten either.·'
-Bulgaria, in a c r edit
arrangement that would not
have to be repaid until after
1983, was shipping in meat,
canned food, soap, toothpaste
and cigarettes. Wars aw TV
r e por t e d a cargo plane of
powdered milk and soup and ··a
large quantity of medicines"
arrived from Czechos lovakia
and that meat shipments were
coming in from the Soviet Union
and Mongolia.
Danish R e d Cross and
Norwegian church workers
returning from delivering
medicines a nd other relief
supplies said they were told by
Polish aid workers and doctors
that there was an acute need fOt'
heart medicine, heating oil was
scarce and poor hygiene due to
soap shortages may cause a flu
epidemic.
E ast Ue rm a n y ·s pa n J'.
newspaper Neues Deutschlan ,
a pparentl y refe rrin g Lo
President Reagan's embargo on
food deliveries to Poland, said:
"Politicians publicly weep
crocodile tears about the right.5
o f arr es ted Poli s h
counterrevolutionaries. At the
same lime they coldly reverst
credits and food shipments for
children, women and workers 10
Poland." . ·
Reagan wept Tuesday wheo
he r ec eived e x -Poli s h
Amba ss ad o r Romuald
Spasowski, who has defected, at
the White House.
Reagan was scheduled to
deliver a natio nwide TV address
on Poland tonight at 6 p m. PST
Offices clnsing for holidays
The Christmas and New Year
holidays will result in altered
hours at government offices and
some bus inesses along t he
Orange Coast.
All City Halls will be closed
Friday for Christmas and the
following Friday, New Year's
Day. In addition, Irvine City
Hall will be closed-Thursday,
and Newport Beach City Hall
will only be open until noon
Thursday.
Newport City Hall will follow
the same schedule on Thursday,
Dec. 31, but Irvine City Hall will
be open regular hours on that
dal'.
t'ountain Valley, which does
not h ave Fr i da y refuse
collection, will not have its
pickup schedule affected by the
holidays.
But homes in Newport Beach.
Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa,
Irvine and Laguna Beach that
normaUy receive refuse service
on Fridays will be picked up on
Saturday during the next two
weeks
U.S. Post Offi ce s w1 II bf!
closed on Christmas Day and
New Year's Day But regular
counte r servic e and mail
delivery is scheduled on th~
Thur s days and S aturda ys
immediately before and after
the holidays.
Some area banks and savings
and loans are planning to close
early on Christmas Eve, but
schedules vary among the local
offices
WINTER SALE ST ARTS NOW
BIGGEST AND BEST SALE EVER
Regency Court By
ON SALE NOW
............
FAN OF DADDY -Actor Kris Kristofferson lifts his
daughter Kasey after the Lasse Viren Finnish Invitational
running race in Los Angeles. lt was his first race and he
placed 9ls t of 250 runners.
Boston Pops maestro signed
"Star Wars" composer
Jolla Wiiiiama , who
succeeded Artlaur Fiedler as
conductor or the Boston
Pops, says he has signed a
two-year contract with the
orchestra.
"My first two seasons with
the Bost.on Pops have been
periods of great musical
satisfaction for me.'' said
Willia ms, who took over
a fter Fielder's death two
West German Chancellor
Helmut Sclamldt has made
his debut as a recording
artist.
Schmidt recorded Moaart'•
"Concerto' For Two Pian06''
with the London
Philharmonic Orchestra for
charity and told a British
Broadcasting Co rp .
interviewer that be found the
experience "thrilling."
years ago.
He is the 19th conductor of
the Boston Pops, which is
part of the Boston Symphony
Orchestra. The Pops became
world famous under the
direction of Fiedler, who was
conductor for 50 years.
In addition to "Star Wars,"
Wi lliams composed the
scores for "Jaws" and
"Close Encounters of the
Third Kind."
Hosoi Mubarak will make
his first visit lo the United
Stales in February since
succeeding A..nwar Sadat as
president of Egypt.
The Wh ite Hou se
announced that Mubarak will
come to Washington on Feb.
3. Mubarak last met with
President Reagan shortly
before Sadat's murder in
October, when Mubarak was
vice president.
The family ol playwrt1bt,
lyrlcllt and Columbia
Unlverslt)' alumnu• 01car
H1mm1ntela II haa stven Sl
mllllon to t.ht unJvenlty to
crHte J Center for Tbeat.r
Studlt1.
Columbia Prealdent
Mlcltael I. Soven announced
the 111t whlch will be used to
enlar1e the present Theater
Arts Olvtslon of the School of
A rU an4 rename lt the Oscar
Rammensteln IJ Center for
Theater Studies ln the School
of Arts, he saJd.
Hammerstein, who dle.d Ln
1960, collaborated with
songwriter and fellow
Columbia alumnus Rlcla6nl '
Rodgers on "Oklahoma!,"
"South Pacific," "The King
and l, ·' and ''The Sound of
Music."
Leonard 8ern1tela is to
compose a musical work
while a fellow·in·residence at
Indiana University's new
Institute for Advanced Study.
Bernstein, who served as
music director of the New
York Philh armonic and
com posed the music for such
Broadway musicals as "West
Side Story," "Candide" and
"Wonderful Town," will start
his fellowship Jan. 11, the
university announced.
The institute will bring
together a group of scholars
and artists in a stimulating
environment.
NEW WORK -Leonard
Bernstein is working on a
new musical composition at
Indiana University where he
is a fellow-in-residence.
Gusty winds today
Coasta l
Extended
Jo recast
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callocl tht snow-tornado 1torm Colum-41 ,. ,79
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11nu1u•I wHlher WU cauHCI by O.tMol ..... ,. " unwt~Y warm, molll air trcwn O.lrolt n 2' .II
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What do you Uk• •bout tbe Dally Pilot~ What don't )'OU Uke!
Call the number btlow and your measaae will be recorded,
tran.uibed and d•llvered to U.. 1,ppropri1te editor
Tbe Hme 2'·bour ans....U., MrVice may be Uled to record let·
ten t6 &he edit.or on any topic. MaUtlox coetnbutors must Include
lbtlr name and telephone numbtr ror vertncatlon No clrculallon
calla. please.
Ttll u. whal'a on your mind.
642"6088
f
' I
I
........ ,----...---.... ---------........... --------~----------~--~-....,.;;"....,,..----~------~---~~------------.--------~ .•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, December 23. 1981 H/F
OC enrollment off
Public school.attendance decreases 2.4% from 1980,.81
By GLENDI 8C01T oi..,.0....,,....1...,
PubUc school enrollment In
Oran1e Cou.nty has dropped 2.4
pe r cent r rom last yea r ,
according to rlgures released by
the county Education
Department.
Enrollment was down about l
percent last year.
The reduction in students from
kindergarten through high
school is even more magnified
along the coast, where high
housing prices appear
prohibitive for many young
families. In the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District, for
example, enrollment ls 6.6
percent below last year's levels,
accordi n g to the county
statistics.
The only districts near the
coast to grow this school year
are the Irvine Unified School
District, reporting a 5.4 percent
increase, and Seal Beach
Elementary School District,
which had a 1.3 percent rise.
On Oct. 21, designated "State
Information Day,·· school
district officials counted 343,171
students enrolled in the 29 public
districts in the county, plus the
county department's own
special proerams.
Last year, 351 ,653 students
were enrolled, or 8,482 more.
Meanwhile, private schools
reported a combined attendance
this year of 40,914 compared to
last year 's 38,325.
A •lowdown ln new bOUlinl
construction and 1eneral blah
prices •Pf arenUy helped keep
enrollmen flaurea low, even in
the formerly faat·1rowin1 south
county, noted Reattu House,
The N -M
district has lost
enrollment /aster
than .any other
unified district in
the county.
attendance technician for the
county department.
The Saddleback Unified
School District reported a
decline of 35 students this year
for an 0.2 percent reduction.
However, In Santa Ana, where a
large stock of old homes serves
low-income families, enrollment
is up this year by more than
1,200 students, or 3.8 percent.
A loss of enrollment is nothing
ne w for administr ators in many
districts. The Newport-Mesa
average daily attendance has
dropped 29.6 percent since 1973,
noted Jean Harmon, coordinator
of personnel services.
In that Ume apan, lbt d.latri~t
hll loel enroUment futer then
an)' other untned dlat.rlct in t.be
county, bu clOHd el&bt 1cboilil
and reduced Its staff, ahe 1aid.
Newport-Mesa'• enrollment
decline, she aald, appears to ~
primarily econom lc in natute
and tied to the cost of boutlnl·
Following is a breakdown el
enrollment figures of achoo I
districts along the Oraoae Coa4l.
Fountain Valley Scboo1
District. 1981 : 7,798. UMIO : 8,308.
A 6.1 percent reduction.
Huntington Beach Cl\y
(Elementary> School Dlatriot.
1981 : 6,381. 1980 : 6,852. A ~9
percent loss. •
Huntington Beach Unio.o Hil.h
School District. 1981 : 19,lJt.
1980: 19,754. A 3.:! perc~fl
decline. 1 Irvine Unified School District.
1981 : 15,438. 1980 : 14,611. A S.•
percent gain.
Laguna Beach Unified School
District. 1981: 2,586. 1980: 2,899.
A 4.2 percent decline.
Newport-Mesa Unified Scbo91
District: 1981 : 18,027. 1980:
19,296. A 6.6 percent reduction. •
Ocean View Elementat.}'
School District; 1981 : 10,450.
1980 : 11 ,064 . A 5.5 perce1h
decline.
Seal Beach School Distrlcf:
1981 · 757. 1980: 747. A 1.3 perc~t
gain.
Westminster School District.
1981 : 7,999. 1980: 8,242. A 2.9
percent reduction.
'Accidental' bid accepted
despite pka for withdrawal
A local construction company
was not permitted Tuesday to
withdraw a bid to complete
sidewalk repairs even though a
company official told the Orange
County Board of Supervisors the
bid was accidentally s ubmitted
and would cost his firm
"thousands of dollars."
Despite the request, the
supervisors accepted the bid
from Damon Construction Co. to
complete repairs to sidewalks,
curbs and gutters in Rossmoor.
an unincorporated a rea near
Seal Beach.
Damon bid $109,650 for the job,
which was $25,000 less than the
next lowest of the seven bids.
The company spokesman saJd
the bid s hould have been
$177,000.
Although sympathetic to some
degree. board m embers said
t hey legally must accept the bid
because Damon didn't notify the
county in writing within five
days or the bid opening.
Gary Gray of the county
Environmental Management
Agency said the company can
s till seek to get out of the
contract, bul that such an action
probably would revolve around
legal efforts to recover a $10,965
bond -10 percent or the bid
total -that had been put up for
the work.
Gray said supervisors must
hold the firm to its bid because
of the costs of re-advertising for
the work plus the value of the
added inconvenience of not
hav ing the work done and
continuing to have deteriorating
sidewalks in the area.
Since most of the company's
bond probably was put up by a
bonding company, that firm
may also become involved In
efforts to retrieve the money if
the contract is enforced, tbe
company fails to meet its
obligations and the bond is thus
forfeited, Gray said.
In other mat t e r s, the
supervisors took action Tuesday
on these issues :
THOUSAND STEPS BEACH:
71,000 countians sign
victiin rights petition
Awarded B. D . Womack
Construction Co. a contract to
reconstruct concrete stairway at
South Laguna beach for $89,249.
FIRING RANGE: Agreed to
consider leasing federally owned
land adjacent to James A.
Mus ick facilities for a firiQfJ
range for county sheriff:s
deputies. Range could be shared
by deputies and Marines from
nearby El Toro Air Station.
Supporters of a statewide
initiative drive for a ''Victims'
Bill of Rights'' say they have
collected more than 71,000
signatures of Or a nge County
residents.
The petitions were turned in
Tuesday at the Orange County
Registrar of Voters Office in
Santa Ana by members of t.he
Citizens ' Committee to Stop
Crime.
Phi l Miller, aide to
Assemblyman Ross Johnson.
R -La Habra, said 660,000
signatures were collected
s tatewide a nd turned i n.
Johnson w as committee
chairman in Orange County for
the petition drive.
The proponents needed 553,790
Gem
Talk
A HOLIDAY WISH
from 1.11 to llOU
During the holiday seuon,
those of us who are merchants
in the community are usually at
our busiest aa we try to help
everyone get through s hopping
chores and pick just the right
gifts for all of thelr loved ones,
signatures to qualify the
Initiative for the June 1982
ballot . Mill ~r sa id th e
signatures, which must be
verified by authorities, should
s urpass that mark.
The initiative calls for
Imp lementalioo or several
measures intended to protect
victims of crime and provide
sti ff e r penalties against
perpetrators. Among the
measures are requirements to:
-Force convicted criminals
lo make financial restitution to
their victims.
-Allocate runds to increase
security of public schools.
-Make public safet y tht>
main concern In setting bail fo
criminal suspects.
AGRICULTURAL PRE·
SE RVES: Adopted s t ale
government revisions easing
policies governing cancellation
of lax-saving preserves.
JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT:
Chose Aviation Planning
Associates of Cincinnati, Ohio to
prepare feasibility study and
rate and fee recommendatiOtU
fo r financing major
improvements to the airport.
. HARBOR PATROL: Accepted
a gift from Mr and Mrs. Donald
Estep of Ir vine of a 14·foot
Fiberglass boat, tr ailer and
motor for use by harbor patrol.
Corum 's Masterpiece Collection
· friends and associates. But I
hope none of us wlll be too busy
to stop and renect on the seuoo
and what lt means, and to paaa
along a few sincere words of
&ood will to t.hoM with whom
we come In contact during this
busy time. AJI of ua wlll do ~11.
too, to ,ive some thouaht to
ltbo•e he..-and abroad who are
1nol aa fortunate at we are .
1Eveota In Poland and ln the
IMlddle East are reminders to
1111 or oa lhal cbartLY a.nd lood 1
lwm are needed an over the
world mon than ever before.
Tb• lifta that we ncbanie are an lmportant and penonal WI)'
Fine Gold Ingots,
Weighing 5, 10,
Or 15 Grammes.
Electronic Quartz
$20Gold
Piece, Electronic
Quartz And
Water Resistant
•.of exp,...1.q tbe boliday •Dint.
JBut tbe aplrit of fOOd wW ll
1 •ven more tmPortaD We wtab
you and yours a happy. and a
1 meum,tui, bollday seuon.
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIElV @
1823 NEWPORT BLVD COSTA MESA ~
35 VIARS IN THE IM'E LOCATION
B1nkAtntrtcard-MMt9r Oh PHOMl ~1
. .
H/F Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, December 23. 1981
Begin def eats no-confidence .{ .i
Victory shuns foes' criticism of prime minister's break with U.S.
-~-~ SPECIAL CHRISTMAS -Billy Eastburn, 10, gets a holiday
hug from mother DeLee after undergoing a successful
kidney transplant in Gaines ville, Fla. The youngste r had
aske d Santa Claus in a Gainesville mall for a new kidnev
because his oversized one failed to develop properl~ ·
JERUSALEM (AP > -Prim~
M inlster Mena che m Begin's
government defeated a
no-conf idence motion in
Parliament today over ll$
handling o f deterioratin g
U.S.·lsraeli relations. • •
The vote was 57-47 . Begin's
coalition plus the three·member,
right wing Te h iya
(Renaissance> Party and the
two-me mber, right-of-center
Telem faction opposed the
motion.
Supporting it were the Labor
Party, the f ou r -member
Com munist f action and the
centrist Shinui (Change ) Party,
which introduced the motion
before the Israeli Parliam~nt.
Sixteen deputies did not vote.
Begin, still recuperating from
a broken bone in his hip joint.
c ame to Parliament i n a
wheelchair to vote against the
motion.
Foreign Minist er Yitzhak
S hamir , de f ending the
government against the motion,
vowed that Israel would "guard
its freedom of aclion at all
costs" and "tailed U.S. punitive
mea s ures ror I s rael 's
annexation of the Golan Heights
''intolerable.'·
The two-man Shinui <Change)
Party ca lled for the vot e,
questioning Begin's verbal
attack on the United States. The
Reag a n admi ni stration
s uspended its recently signed
strategic cooperation agreement
with Israel to protest the J ewish
state's annexation last week of
the Syrian Golan Heights.
Shinui's Amnon Rubenstein,
introducing the no-confidence
motion today, accused Begin of
s weeping Israel between "the
heights of eternal ecstasy and
the abyss of despondency" in its
relationship with the United
States.
Begin controls 61 seats in the
120-member Knesset, Israel's
Parliament.
Labor Introduced t he last
no-confiden ce motion, which
criticiied Begin's signing of the
strategic cooperation agreement
as apparently sharpenin1
Israel's differences wltb the
Soviet U nion Into outrleht
confrontation. Be1ln narrowly
defeated that motion 57-53 Dec.
2.
Begin lashed out at the United
States on Sunday, accusing it of
trying to make Israel a "vassal
stale" or a "banana republic."
He said the United States, in
susp e nd ing the strategic
coope ration agreem e nt, had
virtually killed it. Is rael, he
said, had no need for the treaty.
··Israel has lived 3, 700 years
without it, and it will continue to
live another 3,700 years without
it, .. he said or the alliance.
Shinui said Begin's remarks
' could cause "immeasurable :
political and economic dal1Ulfe"~i
to Israel. 1
Suspension of the a1reement "!
was the latest ln what Beatn :
considered a series of 11i1ht.1t:
d ea lt the Jlraella bYti
W ashlngton. .•
He protested the alleaed ~
anti-Semitism that accompanied ~l
the Rea1an admtnlatratlon'•'t
hgbt for concresaional approval i
of the sale ol sophlatlcated radar :
planes to Saudi Arabia. lsrael ·:
opposed the sale.
Be gin also objected to ;
America's withholding several·;
war planes las t summer .
following Israel's bombings of :
Iraq's nuclear reactor in
Baghdad and a Palestine
Liberat ion Organiiation
headquarters in Beirut. ll was
the first time the United States
had stopped shipment to Israel
of planes already in the pipeline
for delivery
Disabled dad's c ustody battle replaye d
Happy ending story on TV has message for handicapped parents
LAS VEGAS (AP J -Bill
Carney is s pending this
Christmas with his sons -a
victory for the crippled Army
veteran w ho con vinced the
courts he was a fit father even if
he couldn't throw a football.
And he has a message for
other handicapped parents so
challenged:
"If you love 'em, if you really
care, don't give up.··
His story, "The Ordeal or Bill
Carney," win be broadcast in a
television special tonight on CBS
<Channel 2) at 9 o'clock
Carney says he has maxed
emotions about the program. He
says it portrays him a s
embittered by his injury, and he
doesn't think that·s true. He
says the show also failed Lo
m en ti o n hi s daughter ,
Jacqueline, who lives with his
ex.wife, despite his request that
she be mentioned
Carney's e x wife , Ell e n
Farnham of BuCfalo. N Y.,
reached by lelephone Tuesday
morning, refused comment on
the court case or the program.
This holiday will be very
diffe r ent from the last on e
Willie. 12, and Eddie, 10. spent
with their father in 1979. Al that
Lim e. they fa ce d a
court·imposed return to their
mother. Carney said he refused
to 5ee the boys off at the airport
because he couldn't bear it.
Carney took custody of the
boys informally after separating
from his wife. He says their
mother didn't want them.
He was injured Aug. 15, 1976
U.S. found dead • • • lll1ss1on a r1es
Gas inhalation eyed as cause of fatals in Bolivia
LA PAZ. Bolivia (AP) -Two
Mormon missionaries have been
round dead in a s mall village
near this Andean capital where
they lived, church officials said
here.
A mission spokesman told The
Associated Press the two may
have died from inhalation of
bottled cooking gas leaking into
their small house in Suriquina.
northwest of La Paz near the
edge of Lake Titicaca.
He said they had ruled out
unnatural causes for the deaths.
The two were Bruce Ward
Drennan, 19. Uk iah. Calif .. son
of Bishop and Mrs . Boyd G
Drennan, and Kevin Paul Bons.
20, West Point. N. Y .. son of Col.
and Mrs. Paul M. Bons, said
church spokesman J erry Cahill
in Salt Lake City.
Book banning
case to j udge
BANGOR, Maine (AP )
Wh ether the banning of a book
from a Maine high school is a
vio lati on of the First
Amendment or the rightful
exercise of a school board's
authority is up to the state's
newest federal judge to decide.
U.S. District Judge Conrad
Cyr, who becam e Maine's
second federal judge two months
ago , ended two day s o f
testimony Tuesday in a case
involving the banning of "365
Days." a book abou t the
Vietnam War, from WoodJand
Hi gh School in Baileyville. The
book contains l anguage
some parents and school board
members found objectionable.
The case was prompted by a
lawsuit riled by the Maine Civil
Liberties Union on behalf of
students and parents
Head Start plan
kept by Reagan
WAS HI NGTON <AP >
President Reagan, keeping a
promise to protect Project Head
Start under his so-called social
"s afety net," 1s rejecting a
proposal that supporters of the
popular pre·school program said
wa s aimed at killing it ,
administration sources say
Budg e t direc tor David
~an, according to reports several weeks ago, had
p sed putting the widely
s upported program into one of
the "block grants" to the states
over the next four years and
cutting its fi scal 1983 money Lo
$780 million
Reagan effigy
burned in Libya
BEIRUT. Lebanon CAP>
Thou s and s o f Libyan
d e m o n s trators c hanted
anti·American s l ogans and
burned President Reagan in
effi gy in Libya's Mediterranean
port city of Benghazi today,
Libya's state radio reported.
The broadcast. monitored in
Beirut, said the m a r c he rs
brandis h ed posters that
denounced Reagan for alleged
''terroristic provocation s"
against Co l M oa mmar
Khadafy, leader of the North
African Arab nation.
Labor secretary
seeks p rosecutor
WASHINGTON (AP> -Labor
Secr etary Raymond Donovan,
battered the past two weeks by
allegations that his former firm
bribed labor leaders. 1s askmg
for appoint ment of a special
prosecutor to put an end to the
matter.
Donova n told a press
conference Tuesday that former
union official Mario Montuoro
wa s a "damnable an d
contemptible liar".
Ties tightened
MIAMI <AP> -An agreement
promoting tighter cult ural ties
and a greater exchange of
information has been signed
between the governments of
Cuba and Nicaragua, Radio
Havana said Tuesday. r ....... """ .... ~~~ ... "'lil~ ........ ~..._9' ...... ~.~,.,.~Q1"'Q~---.... ~~'91!'1
I~ Newport S urf and Sport~
: .. Season's Greetings '8/:
We hope you 're having a wonderful Holiday Season 1
To Celebrate We're Having A
Giant After Christmas Sale
*STARTING*
''BEFORE'' CHRISTMAS
10% to 70% OFF OPEN
10·5
DECEMBER 2 4, 1981 ·JA NU ARY10, 1982
LOWEST PRICES OF THE YEAR
on
MEN'S, WOMEN'S, BOYS' CLOTHING,
. WET SUITS and ACCESSORIES _
llAINSTORE STOU 2
•
I
I
I
l
'
'
I
l
I
l
•
I
122' NEWPORT BLVD. 1A11•&111•oe»•
· nrPOa1" a&ACB, CA 875-7874 ,ff#* 201 \ti llAal1U A VE NUB
BALBOA ISLAND, CA 673·7826 ' ...... M.-e-..-'llt .. •-•.,..._,.. ..... ~1111_..-_.-_~_.,_,..._,._.,. __ ._ _ _.__~-~-.-...-rm.""'-•~-.--...,._.,._.,.,.___._._._,._.,._,-.._r-._,..,.,._...,._.,...t1-.1 'l ( .
~ when a jeep overturned while he
was o n A r my R eserve
ma n euvers at Camp Parks,
Calif., near Oakland. His sons
were staying with his parents in
Phoenix, during his 45-day Army
s tint.
While recovering at a Long
Beac h Naval h ospital, he
initiated divorce action. Then.
their mother asked for legal
custody and it was gra nted.
The divorce commissioner
who issued the Augus t 1977
ruling said a man "who couldn't
play football with his kids"
should not have custody of t hem .
ln a battle joined by legal aid
and handicap agencies, Camey
won his boys back in April 1981
at Los Angeles County Superior
Court in Compton.
The state Supreme Court had
sent the case back to the lower"
court after ruling Carney could
not be considered an unfit
parent because of his handicap.
The lower court then granted
Carney custody.
The landmark state Supreme
Court ruHng has been cited in
other cases, givi ng new hope to
handicapped parents who fear
their children being taken from
them.
"It's really from the heart up
that counts as a parent." Camey
s ays.
...............
HAPPY CLAN Bill Carney will be spending his first
Chris tmas in vear s with sons Eddie. 10, left. and Willie. 12. ·
a fter winning 'custody in landmark court decision.
Dead general claim said hoax;
ROME <AP) -Italian police
said a telephone call claiming
kidnapped U.S. Brig. Gen.
James Dozier's body would be
found was probably a hoax,
possibly an attempt by the Red
Brigades to heighten tension
over his disappearance.
On Tuesday. the Beirut office
of the Italian news agency ANSA
received an anonymous phone
call from someone who said
Oozier's body would be found in
an Italian village Tuesday night.
Italian police, who have
reported no clues in Doiier's
disappearance, said they took
the call seriously at first, but as
the night passed, they began to
s uspect it was a hoax.
"We don't believe the call,"
said an Italian police official
who asked not to be identified.
"It's probable that they're doing
this to distract the police."
Police said they arrested a
man they described as insane
who they believe called the
Trento office of ANSA and
dictated a message in German
about the kidna pping. Police
said they didn't t a ke the
message seriously. and the man
apparently had no connection
with the Beirut call.
In Verona, chur ch officials
celebrated a special Mass on
Tuesday to pray for Dozier. His
wife and two cruldren attended,
as did several NATO officials.
Oozier, 50, the highest-ranking.:
A m e r i c a n a t N A T 0:-
he adq ua rter s in the northerfl'.·
Jtalian city of Verona, was-•
kidnapped from his home last.
Thursday by armed men posing:
as plumbers. His wife, Judith<:
was bound and gagged. :· ..
The kidnappers have listed n~
demands, but have said he wil'
be tried by the Red Brigades. ·;
Italian and American officials'
said they will not negotiate wiUi
the terrorists if demands arfi
made. i
''There is no need lo call th&
American CIA Cor help in tryinl(
to liberate the imperialist
American pig," the caller said~
c ..... Last Minute Gift Special Food ProcHsort .......
Cuisinart
Sale
•1p•dldfeecl ....... ........
List Price
DLC I OE ••••••.••••••••• 130.00
DLC II ........•......... 18 5.00
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Ow Price
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CROW•••
ARDWARE---~i
Wn tclff Pane• 642.-l Ill 17th & Irvine, Newport Beach · ·
C.n11 .._.Mw •673-2100 3107.~. Coast Hwy.
ttww View c. ..... '44-1170 1614 San M iguel Or .• Newport Beach
\
FIRST THINGS FIRST -Owner Bob Luttrell
wades through waist-high water in front of
his saloon near the rain-swollen Sacramento
River as he and helpers salvage beer and
,. ..........
food from his establishment. Flood waters
from recent heavy rains in higher elevations
are now flooding lower downstream locations
in the Sacramento area.
State sues auto rental firm
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -The
state, filing a $2 million lawsuit,
says Dollar Rent-A-Car Systems
encourages custom er s to buy
w h at it mis r epresents as
collision damage insurance and
then makes customers pay for
damages anyway.
The suit, filed Tuesday by
Attorney General George
Deukmejian, accuses the Long
Beach-based firm of unfair
pra ct i ces and
misrepresentations. It asks for
ci vii penalties, restitution to
customers and an injunction
against continuing the practices
in question.
Hank Caruso, president of the
C'O m p a n y • d e o i e d l h e
accusations, althouih he aaid be
had not received the suit.
"There have not been any
misrepr esentations or unfair
practices and we are going to
defend our position," be said. "I
think it is a frivolous lawsuit and
an unwarranted lawsuit.··
Deukmejian says rental car
customers a re told that they
would be liable for only the first
S500 of damage, but that if they
pay a fee of usually $3 to $5 a
day for "coll ision damage
waiver" they would not be liable
for any damage.
In fact. Deukmejian alleged, if
the company's fra nc hisees
believe that the customer is
even partially responsible for
the damage, the customer is
threatened with a lawsuit for all
damages lo the car and even for
the franchisee's loss of use of the
car while it is being repaired.
The customer who doesn't pay
for ·•collision damage waiver"
is also threatened in case of
collision damage, Deukmejian
claimed.
He said the company claims
that the person paying for
"collision damage waiver" is
only protected if he is not even
partially at fault. lf he hasn't
paid for "collis ion damage
waiver" he is liable for up to
$500 if there is any damage or
an ything stolen from the car
even if he took careful steps to
avoid the damage or loss, and is
liable for the full amount if he is
in ~ny way at fault.
The complaint also alleges
th at the company violates a
recent California law prohibiting
unconscionable provisions in a
consumer contract.
ln addition to the company
and its chief executive officer,
Caruso, Deukmejian is suing
Do ll ar Re nt -A-C ar o f San
Francisco and other franchisees
not yet named.
Chase a Reindeer
at Westcllff Plaza·
... the hoofprints on our sidewalk will lead you from store to s~ore
as special window displays tell you the story of "Twas the Night
Before Christmas." lt's,a unique and special experience for the
whole family to share. Also enjoy mer ry carolers in Old English
costume who will entertain you in the plaza from 5 p.m . to 9 p.m.
December 14 through 18 and December 21 through 23.
ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICE
BAN K OF AM ERICA
CHARLES BA RR JEWELERS
CROWN HARDWARE
DICK VERNON SPORTSWEAR
OR. LOU ELDER
optometrist
HAIR HANDLERS SALON
HALLI DAY'S M EN'S CLOTHING
H ICKORY FARMS
specialty food Items
HUM PTY DUM PTY
child ren's clothino
JEAN DAHL
designer and better sportswear
LA GALLERIA
eleoance In fashion
MARKET BASKET
M ES AM IES TEENS
NANCY .DUNN ANTIQUES
NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS
PAPER UNLIM ITED
cards a nd gifts
SAV-ON DRUGS
STOREKEEPER
traditional sportsw ear
VETA'S INT IMATE A PPAREL .
WESTCLIFF CLEANERS
WESTCLI FF CORNERS
gourmet ware and collectlbles
WESTCLI FF SHOES
X AVIER'S OF NEWPORT
fine f lowers and gifts
WESTCUFF PLAZA
Open Thursday nights till 9 p.m .
SPE CIAL CHR ISTMAS HOURS
Dec. 14 to 18 and 21 to 23 tlll 9 p.m.
Saturday, Dec. 19, 10-6
Most store$ open Sunday, Dec . 20, 12-5
Christmas Eve, 10-5
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, December 23, 1981 H/F
Knievel loses lawsuit
Daredevil ordered to pay $12 .75 million in damages
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Mot orcycle daredevil Eve!
Knievel has been ordered to pay
$12.75 million in damages to a
former television executive he
inju r ed with a n aluminum
basebaU bat in a 1977 assault.
Santa Monica Superior Court
Judge Lawrence J . Rittenband
awarded the civil suit damages
to Sheldon Saltman. 50, former
vice pr es id en t of the
telecommunications division of
20th Century-Fox Studios, who
suffered a crushed left arm and
broken right wrist in the attack.
Christmas recess
for Bonin jurors
LOS ANGELES (A P )
Jurors in the Freeway Killer
trial were on Christmas break
today, knowing that on Monday
they would be back in court to rec~ive final instructions and
begin deliberating the rate of
defendant William Bonin.
Final arguments wound up
Tuesday with Deputy District
Attorney Sterling Norris, the
prosecutor , cappin g the
two-month proceeding by urging
jurors to give Bonin ''what he
has earned -convictions in 12
murders of young men and
boys."
He told jurors not to be
distracted by Charvet's charge
that some points of evidence
were inconsistent. "You have to
add it ail together, and it comes
out that this defendant is guilty
on all counts," said Norris.
Suit ch allenges
sex edu cation
SACRAMENTO CAP > -A
group of citizens from Santa
Clara, Santa Cruz and Monterey
counties has Wed suit to try to
block taxpayer funds for sex
education courses they say
advocate "f e mini sm,
masturbation, homosexuality
and abortion."
T h e s u it was fil ed in
Sacramento Superior Court by
the Palo Alto-based Women's
Committee for Responsible
Government and parents from
Santa Cruz and Monterey
against the state Office of
Family Planning , the
Department of Education, the
Department of Health Service
and t he state Board of
Education.
West ern Airlines
asks salary cu ts
LOS ANGELES <AP> -The
latest We s tern Airlines
belt-lightening move is an
appeal to its five unions for
wage concessions up to 22
percent and cuts in the number
of employees. according ~o union
officials.
West ern Airline s' new
chairman and chief executive
Neil Bergt. who has said "no
area of this company is sacred,"
from his cost-savings scrutiny,
approached the company's
employees in Seattle and San
Francisco Tuesday, union
representatives said. 1 Jim S hields, natlona
preisident of the Air Traoaport
Employees which represents
4 ,500 of Western's 8,000
unionized worke rs, said bis
union received a list of 25
proposals from Bergt.
He said Western proposed
sa l ary concessions of 22.2
percent. Thal includes a 12.5
percent wage cut a nd
pos tpone ment of a waee
increase of 7 percent set to take
effect Jan. 1 and a 2.7 percent
increase that would be effective
June 30.
Settles' family
s ues Signal Hill
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
family of Cai State Long Beach
athlete Ron Settles has filed a
$62 miUion wrongful death suit
against the city of Signal Hill.
alleging Settles' civil rights
were violated in his arrest and
death.
T he suit fi led Tuesday in
federal court names the city.
city manager. mayor. police
chief, two police officers and a
cadet
Settles, 21. a college football
player. died in a Signal Hill jail
cell June 2 after being stopped
for a t raffi c violation and
arres ted fo r investigation of
assault with a deadly weapon on
a police officer.
Police said he hung himsell
from a mattress cover in his
cell
The Robinsons Gift
WRAP.AROUND METALLIC:
THE ULTIMATE BOOT
Crush them down Pull them up to the
knee Their soft metallic glow shines
through. Made for us exclusively 1n
Italy, where the design of footwear-
as evidenced here~is considered an
art In taupe suede/bronze metallic
leather. Or natural lustre leather/
bronze metallic leather
$185 each Robinson's
Designer Shoes. 158 To
order. call toll·lree
1 ·800·523-7800.
Dally Pilat •
WEONESOAY1 DEC. 23, 1981 D
0
lllTllGTll BllCH I f 1111111 VllllY
CAVALCADE
FOOD
82-3
84
There . are those who
try their best not to show
seasonal good cheer. See
Art Hoppe on Page 8 2.
School
offices
to move
By PIUL SNEIDERMAN
Of .... Delly Nel IWf
Part of LeBard School will be
turned into a ne w dis trict
headquarters in the Huntington
' Beach City (elementary) School
' District.
,Trustees Brian Garland,
si.erry Barlow and Gary Nelson,
formed the majority last week in
resolving a de bate over the use
of LeBard.
The school was one of three
closed last spring because or
declining enrollment and limited
funds in the district.
Peterson School was leased to
Coastline College, and Clapp
School was leased to the Orange
County Department of
Education. But LeBard bas
remained vacant while the
trus tees debated various
o'-tions.
•The board last summer voted
3,2 against using the entire
s:C ho o l as a distri ct
headquarters. The board then
s0ught bids from outside parties
il\terested in leasing LeBard,
bpt rejected aU bids because of
ap administrative error.
·Superintendent Larry Kemper
s•bsequenUy proposed that only
ptrt of LeBard be used for a
d&trict headquarters, with the
rtmaining space to be leased to
an outside group.
:Three new board members
w.ere seated this month,
however, and the LeBard issue
WjlS raised again .
.In a memo to the board, the
s11perintendent outlined what be
views as the deficiencies of the
present district headquarters at
735 14th St.
'K e mp er noted that the
bDilding, which was once a
do m bin at ion
kindergarten-cafeteria, is more
tt'!an SO years old. Pupils cannot
be housed in it because the
building does not meet state
earthquake standards for
sdaools.
:Oth e r problems , the
superintendent said, include a
crack that runs from foundation
to roof, an obsolete telephone
s ystem, window casements
~yond repair, and a lack of
central heating.
,,Kemper estimated the cost of
rhiovating the existing district
btadquarters at $80,100.
By contrast, he estimates the d~trict can move its offices to
~Bard for just $6,000.
An additional cost is $43,000
for a new phone system, which
tlie district estimates will pay
fdt itself in about seven years.
The present headquarters
building is being considered as a
storage facility.
~During the Dec. 15 meeting,
three trustees voted in favor of
t~is proposal. Under this
ap-angement the district would
oecupy 20,000 sq. rt. of LeBard,
wllh 8,000 sq. n. available for
lease. •
.
Santa still young
Laguna St. Nick cit es 'rewards
~.,.1.2.,~~EDHAM
George Pletts of Laguna Beach estimates be has
gone through at least five sets of Santa Claus-style
chin whiskers s ince he first began acting as the jolly
North Pole resident in 1944.
Pletts, an Art Colony police officer for 31 years
who is now retired, said he has never tired of playing
Santa and wouldn't think of retiring from his second
profession.
For 37 years Pletts has been taking Christmas
orders from youngster s in the traditional Santa's
House in front of City Hall. And though the "wis h
lists" may have changed over the years, he says
children haven't.
"Kids have been electronically minded ," Pletts
said . "Most of them want video games and other
electronic toys now. ins tead of trains and dolls."
He said some of his most rewarding experiences.
have been when he played St. Nick at rest homes.
Pletts said many bed -ridden rest home residents
cry when he visits their rooms . "I think it reminds
them of their childhood and they're just so happy to
see Santa Claus .··
Several J e wish children have vis ited his red and
white house on the City Hall lawn this year. "Not
knowing what their faith was, I gave them my ho,
ho, ho and asked what they wanted for Christmas,"
he said.
"They then announced they were J ewish , and
asked if I would still come to their house." Pletts
s aid this usually gets a chuckle from the children 's
mothers . "I wish them a happy Hanukkah and s ay
Santa Claus loves a ll children," he said.
_,, .......... -'TIS THE SEASON TO STAR -George Pletts says he
wouldn't dream of r etiring as Santa Claus.
As ked what he wanted most for Christmas.
Pletts said. ··Peace and good will all over this earth.
That's all I really want."
Winners told
in Christmas
decorating
The Fountain Valley Chamber
of Commerce Women's Division
bas selected the local home and
business winners in the 1981
Christmas Decorating Contest.
J udging was by five Women's
Division members.
In the residential category.
the winners were: first place,
the Joe Finnell family, 16449
Shad bush St.; second place, the
Larry Brasher family, 16439
Shad bush St.; and third place,
the Paul Weaver family, 9840 La
Amapola Ave.
Commercial winners were:
first place, Frans Inter ior, 8878
Warner Ave.; second place,
Accent Florist, 9430 Warner
Ave.; and thlrd place, Pomona
First Federal Savings and Loan,
9029 Garfield Ave.
Specuu recognition also was
given to the Boys Club of
Fountain Valley, 9840 Talbert
Ave.
Contest winners will receive
their awards at the Mayor's
Breakfast, scheduled Jan. 27 at
Brewsters Restaurant.
Holocaust survivor
cited for victory
M e l Mermelstein , a
Huntington Beach businessman
and survivor of a Nazi death
camp, was honored Tuesday in
Los Angeles for challenging an
organization that claimed the
Holocaust was a myth.
As a result of Mermelstein's
s uit against the Institute of
Historical Review of Torrance, a
Sup erior Court judge took
judicial noti ce that the
Holocaust was fact.
The judges· legal ruling last
October i s believed
unprecedente d in American
courts.
Los Angeles City Council mem-.
be r s pre se nted Mer -
melstein with a re s ·
ol ution commending his efforts.
"By honoring me with this
resolution. they're also honoring
those who survived the furnaces
of Auschwitz·Birkenau and
Buchenwald, and those six
mi Ilion brethren who did not
make it," Mermelstein said.
·'That includes my mother and
two sisters whom I saw being
driven to gas chambers at
Auschwitz, .. he said . "They
were told they were being taken
to showers."
Me rmelstein. who was 17
when imprasoned at Auschwitz,
in Poland, says his father and
brother also died while Nazi
captives. He said they were
worked to death in mines in
Poland.
Mermelstein, who lives in
Long Beach, is a lecturer on the
Holocaust.
About two years ago, the
Institute of Historical Review
offered a public reward of
S50 ,000 to anyone who could
prove Jews were gassed in Nazi
prison camps.
Mermels tein s ay s that
officials of that organization
mailed him a letter issuing a
personal challenge.
M erm elstein says the
organization then failed to live
up to its offer and would not
review evidence he'd gathered.
Then last March, he filed a $6
million lawsuit against the
group claiming it had failed to
live up to its offer, had libeled
him in a newsletter and caused
him intentional e motional
distress.
The judges' recognition of the
Holocaust as fact was part of
that lawsuit's proceedin~s. The
HONORED M e l
M ermelstein. Nazi death
camp s urvivor. was honored
in Los Angeles.
damages portion of the lawsuit
is still pending.
"Anyone who besmirches the
name of those martyrs who died
is a coward," Mermelstein said.
"What could l do when they hit
me in the face with their lies, let
them run me into the ground? I
had to !ighl back."
Postal
• opening
eyed
Fountain Valley's new poet
office, which did not open in
time for the holiday mail rush u
planned, now is expected to open
in early January, U.S. Postal
Service officials say.
Earl Butcher , industrial
e ngineering manager for lhe
postal service's Santa Ana
Sectional Center, said postal
service real estate and building
officials are s lated to make
another inspection of the new
Fountain Valley facility
Monday.
If these officials accept the
facilities, the move to the new
site at 17227 Newhope St. will
take place Jan. 9, Butcher said.
The present Fountain Valley
post office, now located in a
leased building at 10201 Slater
Ave., would then be closed.
The new post office, which
cost $1.8 million for land
acquisition , design and
construction, will have easier'
access for motorist s, more
parking s paces and more
lock-boxes, postal officials say.
According lo Butcher, the
delays have been caused by the
need for additional work on the
electrical and air conditioning
systems in the new post office.
FJ/ director
of parks
resigns post
Gary Davis, Fountain Valley's
parks and recreation direetor,
has resigned to take a similar
post in Lancaster, Calif.
Davis was named Fountain
Valley recreation director in
1972 and took over the parks
division in 1977.
His resignation, which wag
presented to the city Tuesday. is
effective Jan. lS.
City Manager Howard
Stephens said he has begun
s tudying a possible
restructuring or the department
in conjunction with Davis'
departure.
He said bis recommendations
should be ready for presentation
to the City Council in two or
three weeks.
Before coming to Fountain
Val ley, Davis served as a
recreation supervisor with the
city of Huntington Beach.
He said he views his greatest
local achievement as overseeing
the planning and construction of
Fountain Valley's recreation
complex at Mile Square Park.
But Davis has drawn criticism
in recent months from at least
one councilman wbo bas
complained about the large
deficits associated with the
recreation center.
Tooth ext,raCtion
• . ~lephant-sized job
~ STEVE MITCHELL ot-.0..., ...........
If Hattie is a bit grumpy thls
ritorning, there's a good reason
ffr it.
<'You'd be a bit under the
-.,eather too if three dentists
u,ed crowbars. hammer and
cltisels to remove a five·pound
t~tb from your mouth.
"The 35-year-old Asian elephant
•s been off her feed for the past
! months, and her owners at
rcus Vargas were a bit
ncemed when she shed l ,S>O
pounds. ~A diet of bananas and bread
IAllked her out to 5,200 pounds -
{ 'She's
J us t a
groggy.'
I\
healthy,
l i ttl e
i t thal'a s\lJI a far cry from tbe
00 pounds sbe weighed before
r lop rl1ht molar began
tMberinc ber.
And, alnce Hattie plays an
portant part in next week's
ae Par ade in Pasadena,
ton a,,-eed the tooth would
ve to be removed.
Jln~aQll, w'bo tralnl all •l 1 for Circus VaJ'IU,
lie Dr . Dave Fa1an, a
ttrinary dentist rrom San
e10. aJ001 with v.U Martin R.
...... Md Rona.ad Gutter, both m.Dldno. I
The three veterinarians met at
Lion Country Safari in Irvine
Tuesday, where Circus Vargas
is spending the winter.
After administering 7 CCs of a
drug described as sort of a
"supt·rmorphine," Hattie went
under shortly before 11 a.m.
Doctors said one drop of the
potent anesthetic Is enough to
kill a man.
Then, armed with a
ca rp enter 's drill ,
sledgehammer, crowbar and
chisel. and monitoring her
heartbeat on an EKG machine,
the trio removed a 5.2 pound
molar that was growing al an
angle, and chiseled off a large
chunk of plaque from Hattie's
left top molar.
After the extraction, the vets
administered an antidote to tbe
anesthetic and Hattie strua&led
to her feet less than a minute
later.
"She's healthy, just a little
grouy," said Lion Country
Safari spokesman James
Heatbfield alter the 80-minute
sur1ery.
Clrcus ofticlala said the old
elephant was even able to eat a
lllUe hay lut nltht.
And by January 1, ahe should
be ready to Join a doaen other
pachyderms who will puJI a
lar1e Ooat alont the Pasadena
parade route.
If yOO've tot your T\t on New
Year's Day, HatUe'1 the svelte
oM on the rtlbt. The one with·
only seven teeth.
'ONLY WHIN I LAUGH' -Veterinarian Dr. Dave Faian
taJtes close look at lnlectectmolar of .. HatUe. •• an ilepbant
a
.., ....................
wln tel'ed at Uon Country Safari In lrvlde. Tbe tooth was
ex tr.acted .
(
•
. -~ -~·~·~~=---~_....._,.....,. ______ f!!!!191 ................................. ""1!!!!!!!11 .... lllml ............................... 1111
Orange Coa~ DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, December 23, 1981 C:7
NYSE
OU Of U ION\ IHCl.UOI fll&OIS 0" f Hl .... fO•• MIOWl(U l'&(IPIC l'eW 10\!0" DI f llOt f &NI> (.t .. C.1 .... loTt H O(•
IACM&NCH•&NO •tl"Olll aO I Y fMI "&'0 &"0 '""'"'' '~
.._, Ne w entry
for the racks
See If you can guess which magaiine would be
likely to have Lht: foUowlng articltt:
The Seuet uf Dl1clpllaJ.a1 ChUdrea
The BHt •'amlly M'ovlet ol 1181
Meafthl Maa la Mld1et Football
The Ten·Polal Plu for Colle1e AcceptHtt
flow Much Televlaloa II Too Muda?
flgbl Acne -and Win
Secrets of Glvlag aad Gfltlal More Emodotlal
Support
You know it's not Play boy. Or Sports Jllllltrated.
Or People Or Cos mopolitan. Or Esquire. You mlCbt
h ave guessed the Reader 's Digest. It looks like the
melange served up by this pocketsize monthly with a
U .S. ci rculation or 18 million: solid, helpful, upbeat
stuff
Jt'i. not but you're close. All those articles have
appeared over the past four months in a new
magazine called Families. And Families is published
by the Readers Digest. It is, in fact, the first new
magazine published by the company since the Digest
~itself made its debut nearly 60 years ago.
But if all these articles could have appeared in
the Digest, why start a new magaxine t.o publish
them '> What's dirferenl about FamWes? The Digest
people insist 1t is different.
First of all and there's no disputing Lhis paint
it's bigger. physically. Families comes in the
standard 8"xl t " format of other magazines. Trus
makes it easier ~ on advertisers,
who don't have I', ~
to come up with ~
special sizes for 4~ !' l h e 1 r a d !> _.. __ a.~ ...... ~..._ _____ _
;~cto1ncdll~ ~ t~~ MllTOI MllllWITZ
Fam ill es are
geared toward the joys and problems of family life,
whereas the Digest has a wider scope. WiLh Families,
the Digest is seeking to reach a younger audience,
people who ar f'! not so traditional. Here's the
diUerence in a nutshell : the Reader's Digest
might run an article on how to have a good family
Christmas. but the December issue of Families
carried an article on "Who Gets the Kids This
Christmas? · a guide for single parents and Lheir
children
So Families will venture into areas the Digest
might be loo timid to explore.
HEW VOAI( (API S..i.\ r ... , P<I<•
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ClnnG•• Et >4 7 •00 H" . '• ... p,., ..
Xero• Co ).17.000 -0.... Soutr..rn Co m .400 111.1o Son¥ Corp m 100 ,, ...
...
....
AMERICAN LEADERS
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--
------
•• H I P Orange Coast OAlt. V PILOT/Wednesday, december 23, 1981
DOWNHILL LOGGER A Bavarian
lumberjack pilots his traditional sledge.
laden with limber. down an icy Alpine
A .............
s l o p e in Bavaria Gravity-powered
s ledging of logs is being replaced by
mechanized equipment.
Midlife crisis at 25?
Burnout symptoms noted earlier
B E RKELEY <AP> -Career
burnout and symptoms of midlife
crisis apparently are occurring in
professionals as young as 25 years, a
University of California counselor
reports.
Psychologist Richard Beery or UC
Berkeley's Counseling Center said he
h as noted ca r eer discontent in
relatively young people -ages 25 to
35 -with increasing frequency in the
past decade.
The problem arises because young
people are becoming so concerned
a bout job security that they are
basing career choices on factors
other than personality. talents and
interests, Beery said.
"They are reacting to many
students who graduated a few years
ahead of them and who couldn't find
jobs." he said, adding that as a
result , many professionals are
looking for "income, prestige and job
market demand."
The reverse occurred in the 1960s
whe n e mphas is was placed on
personal interests and values, said
Beery
l'ICTITIOUS 8Ul'NIU
MAMIE STAT.MINT
f lie lollowl"V perto" It dol"O
llUslMu .. :
"IAA PLUMBING ll HEATING.
11 I Fvllerto,., H••Port Be ech,
C•lllor,.11 tM3
Wltll•m L O•vls , Jr . Sit
Fvtlol'1on, Hlwll0'1 &H<ll, Glllloml• ,,...,
This Duslneu b condYCled llY Ml
ll'MllYIOual.
Wlll .. m L. D•Ylt, Jr.
Thlt -I w•t llled wllll tM
Cou,.ty Cltrk Of Or•"IO Coo,,.ly on
Oeum-14.1•1.
1'1711t1
Pullllshtd OrenQI Coast Diiiy PllGI, 0.< 16, 23, JO, l•I. Jen. 6, ltl2 U.UI
N_I ..
FICTITIOUS 8UllNEU
NA¥E 5TATllMENT
Th• followlnQ per10"' U• dolnQ
bU\J,..u~
CARMIRA BUSINESS PARK
ASSOCIATES, JISI Alrw•y A,...,..,.,
Btdg. G·.J, emu Me". C"I 'u:z.. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---------~-~-----------~----! l·CARMIRA BUSINESS PARK
f'ICYI TIOUI 9USIN•ll
NAMa fTATIM•NT
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lfllt tie_,.. WI\ llltO wllh the
Cowflly Clorti 01 Or•"OI County on
Ot<emw ••. "" ,..,...,
PIC'TITIOUI 8 USINHI
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t.O•POl•llcln Sena.fl fnlerP<IMt lt>e
c 11er10 £ S end•"
l"vlMI"'*' Ort1191t GM1t Delly Pttot, PrttlOeflt 0t< 16, U, JO,, .. ,, Jen 6, l'C MOO.el Thlt llel-1 w•1 111.0 •1111 Ille (Oynty Cl•rk of Or•nQe <.ounty o" ~o ... mtte•JO, 1"1 "" ....
,.,CTITIOUS aw•• ..
It .. STAT .... lff
Tfl• toltow1"11 .,., ..... , •1• ~"41 -' .........
MAMMONO l'IAHO lllNTAL
COM,AHY, 111 I lftl\ it,_, ~
Mete,ClllNnlMt ~ J-Loo, 1•16 0. T.-
CWt1. 0 -e. Cellftmletl74t
.... 0.1.M, 16160... T-~
o .. -•. Col""""9 fl7• T flit ll11t l11e .. I• co,.fwct•-•r
c ""1INlld ~ wW.>
~J l.M Thlt .__ wet Iii.-with 11119
c-nly Cltrti tlf Ortnee C-y M
e>ecemw 14, 1•1. ..,,...
,....,.,....., Or ..... c.atl Dolly l"llet.
De<. "· n, •. 1•1, J M.•· 1t1t s.n1•1 -CMtlH ...... t y ..-ue--.c. ... 11 lllCNARD A 11.ATT•AY 1-------------
,.UDlltNO Of0!\9" Coesl Dally Piiot.
Ot<. l . t. 16, ~ 1 .. 1. S261 .. I
HOTICa Of' rRUITI l 'H AL•
T.S. Na.61151~
SM I CORPOR"lllON u OYIY
•-1,.IH fr .. 1 .. ..,.., Ille fOllOwlnQ
oe.crllled ""° OI tru>I WILL !>El.L AT PUBLICATION TO fHE
PICTITIOUS8USIHaH HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH
NAME ITATI MINT (p•y•bl• 11 II-of ••11 In lewful
Th• lottowt110 pertan h Clot no -Y Of Ille Unli..d Sletftl •II rlvl\I,
b;nl,.•n .. , 1111• •"" lnle<MI (Ofl ... Ytd lo ... d l\OW
GLEN W. JONES CO , 16201 11910 by It utlOtr MIO 0eH Of Tru;l I"
8•11•fllN Lene, Hu,.tlf\Oton lloe<h, Ille l>'Ollt1'1Y ller•INll•• oescrlDICI
Ctllforlllat'lMJ TRUSTOR JAMESK NICHOLSaM
Jvdltll L Jeflb, tt:tOI Belltnll,.. 4RLENE I( NICHOLS. l'tulblnd t"o
L•n•, Hu,.llnQtOI\ l!e•<ll, C•fllor,.le wllt n6·0 BENEFICIARY W G ROWE
71111 MJneu ll cot>du<led b• en llecor-Fff>#uary I, t'llO •• "''''
lllCll•ldu••· HO 114IO In -·~1 """" .. ,. ol
Judllll L Jone• 0 111Clt l RKoreb '" lhc Ofll<• of lhc
Tl!lt stet-I w .. fifed wltn ,,_ Ret.order Of Of'lnVll County, \f ld deed
County Clerk of oro .. oe County on of lru" d .. crllltl '"' IOllOWl"O pr-r!y
FtnM Loi 60 Of tre<I Ho "°°· '", ... City 01
PulllltNcl OrMQe CO.ti O•lly Piiot. CO•I• ""'""· C.-IY of Or.nve, ·~·· ol Otc. t "· u. :JO, !tit U14-tl C1lt1ornl•, •ii>•• M•P•tt<orota tn 8oolt ' 144, P•Vts 44 •M 0 , ml•t911antOU\
f'l('TITIOUS IUSIHEU
NAMI STATEM•NT
Tl•• tollowt110 per>on h dol"g
bv•lness •-'
EXPER I EN CED lAEE
!>ERVICE, 2'17 ElcMn A ......... No 8, Cos•• -· ~lllO<nl• ,,.,, Ar<ll I( Ll,.Osey, 1•11 EtOe"
Avt,.W. Ho. 8, Cosl• Mft&, C•lllor,.I•
'1UT
Tiiis llusl,.lt I• COfttlu<\ea Dy ...
IM lvlouat
Arcll K Llnctwy
Tiii• 1uiem.n1 ,._, llled with 1111
Cou,.ty Clerk of Orenoe Counly o"
O.cemOl-r 1. '"' Ftn .. 2
Pul>lllhlcl Or-Col'I O•lly Piiot,
Dec •. 1', 2J, JO. "" u1:..e1
l'ICTITIOUI IUS.IHIESS
NAMl 5TATIMf!NT
The IOllowl"O P•"O" " CIOl"O
!lo#$lllff• ..
CREATIVE COM POSURE,
ll ftt·A V•tl•y Clf<t•. Hul\ll,.oto"
&e.<11, C.lllornl• '1Mt
S.,,,_lle Fort._. '""·A Voll••
Ctrclo, HunttnQIOI\ l!eecll, C1tolornl1
1'2 ....
Thll llUSl,..u I\ <CWldu< led llV en
•l\dlvldll•I.
s.n-1,,. For1Y""
Tll1s JlalerneM WAS fifed *llh ll'f
Cou,.ly Cl•rl< 01 Oranoe County o"
Nov•m-JO. I'll
Fl7t .. I
Pulllllhlcl Or-to.st D•llf P110I,
0.C. 2 t , 1•. 23. '"' H1.wl
Meps In Ille olllct 01 llM Cou,.ty
Recora.roh•kl<ountv
E acep1 thortlrom all olt, QO.
mlnerll• •nd otner 11vorocu1>ons,
l>el-• 0.PI" ol SCIO 1 .. 1. wlt"°"'l lhc
rlolll Of wrlec• entrv, n re.,.rvea In
lnttrumenbof re<Ol'd
111 HUOMJn, COll• Mew. CA
~·ci t • '''"' •Odre-u or t_ommon d••l9n•tlon '' it\own ebov•. no
••"•"'Y tsol-.n ••lo t1Homp1e1e,.•n
orcorreclnH•I 'Tt>eDenell<leryuMtr
S41id OH<lol T ruSl, lly '"""°"OI • brt.c"
O• e1ei.u11 I" tllt OC>lloello"s secureo
lh•t•OY heretofor• •.1ec ut•C1 and
O.llvered to tne lilndenlQftt'd • •rlntn
0.Cl•rellon Of Otf•vlt •M Oem.,,d for
S•lt. •"O written l\Ollceof ll•H< f\anoo1
election to< ..... ll>e ut>der>IQM<! 1ow1t
Ulldpr-r1ytoMtlslysajOOOll1>41llOM. •"41 ,,..,,.,,., ,,.. u"""""""° uuwo
selO,.ottceotoree<llat>doltl1c1tot1to1>e
Record..O AUQU\I 17. '"'·••In"' No
2104} In -141 .. IMVt Ul, of !>•iO Offkl•I Rec0<di
S•od w it will 01 me~ OUI •"'"°"''
coven•nt or wi1rr•nty, e•prtn or
lmpfled. •09"rOtt111 Hiit, POSWUlon, ()I'
enc:umbranc•~. to ~Y the rema!nlAQ
prlACIP•I wm ol O,. nottlt l -urea by
w•d 0..0ot T'"''• w1lh0ut lntert\I •• 1n ulo not• prov1oeo. ~v•n<ei, 1f •no;,
under trw terms Of Wld ~of Tru\l,
fee\. ch.,erge, •nd eaSMn'e\ ot tf\•
f rvst• .,.., o11ne tr.nts< re•tea by ... a
0.-ecl OI Trust !>eod s•le ... 111t>e,.,.,00"
Mo"41•y,JanU411••. •~2•11 OOP M ••
Ille Cn•-Awnuo ent"1"u to Ill• Civic C•"'•' Bulldlno. JOO E .. t
Cl\eom•,.AwflUO'. '"'""<•lvo• 0•M91'. CA
Al Ill•""" of IN tnll••I publtcal!OI\ Of
lllls notk•. IN total •mo""I ol ""
unp••d b•l•n<~ of lhtJ ODhQ•tlo#\\
w curod llY '"" •OC>Ye oewrlt>eO oe..i of
tru\t •nc:lt:sUnwled<Mls~ t •P"'W'\, •nd
aC1v1n<ethU2,098 S4 To001t1m1ne1,.,.
ooen1,.011td,ypumuc•1t11i..,J1-
............... 1'--.. I ..
c-.-t•t uw
-_._ 81.., ·-.. _,a.NII, Ca. ttMI
PvDll-Or-c;,..,, O•lty Piiot,
Dec 1. t, i., n. , .. , 12 .. ei
l'ICTITIOU• IUSINISS
NAME STATEMENT
The to1tow1no person) •'• 00'"9
CIU>INHIS PSI TEC11. 210·C W•l""I Av•nut. r U\lln, CA 92680
P4CE TECHNOLOGY IN( •
C1lllor"11 corporetlO<I, 1M1 C Wei""'
Aven.,., fll\ll". CA 'li.80
lh" bu\ln~• I• conOYCI.., Cly •
cor11or111on
PACE lECHHOLOGY, INC
,_,.,.rel \. Kett
Conlrotl••
Thi• Sltte-nt wa• illto wllll IN
County Clen. 01 0<1"9" CouMy O"
Nov JO.'"' ,.7 ... 7
Pulllt>lwd Orenot C:O.ll Delly Ptlot,
Dec. l, q• ••. 23, IWI }IU,11
NS-86311
NOT ICE OF DEATH OF
MAE 0 . HAPGOOD AND
OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE
NO. A-111412.
To all hei r s ,
benef iciar ies, creditor s
and contingent cred i tors of
Ma e D . H apgood and
persons who may be
otherwise interested in the
will and/or estate
A petition has been filed
by Marshall Hick son 1n the
Superior Court ot Orange
County reQuesting tha t
M arshall H tekson be
appointed as personal
repr esen t ative to
administer the estate ot
M ae D. Hapgood, Costa
M e sa , Ca (under the
I n d e p e n d e n t
Adm1n1strat1on of Estate
Act ). The petition •!. set for
hearing in Dept. No. 3 at
700 Civic Center Dri ve
West, Santa Ana. Ca. 92701
on January 6, 1987 at 9:30
A.M
PICTITIOUI 8UllM•U
NIIMI STATeM•NT
Tiu lollowl"o P•flon h dol"t
1111.tl"ttl ll QUALITY ASSEMaLY, IOI..,_ So.
H•llMey, S..C• M l , Callforl\I• t~
DY•""• M<C•ll, SU P..,l•rlflO,
OIOS, Co.~ Mew. Collfor11le t »1'
Tllll llYll,...> I\ <onOV<led •v •ft lllOl•ldYll
°'""""M<Coll r111, 'i.1-1 wes 111ec1 with the
Cou,.ly Cltr~ •• 01 Oreftoe CG11111y
Hovem-JO, '"' ,.17 ....
P,.lllllhtcl Or-"91 C:.0.•t D•llY PllOI.
Ole. 1 ••• "· 2J, ... , SI""'
flCTITIOUS 8 USINIU
NAME 5T A TE ME NT
f he foltowlno pe"°" h dol"O
bu\.IMU•\
PENNY t..ANE IMPORTS, ISSS
M• .. Vtrde Orh• Ea•I. ACll. >tA,
Cos•• Mew, c..111"'"'• •:au•
SMrto H ~-"· HH Mew YtrOr Orlw Ell!, Apt ,.A, COlU
Mu•. ca111or,.l1 flU•
Tiiis llu'lnttJ I> COtldUCled Oy I"
lncuvlGu•I SlltrleyH _,,
Tftos .... ......,,, WI\ ltled with tlM
County Clerk ol Or•noe Cou"1y on
0.-umoer I,, .. ,
~'"'" PuDll\lwd Or-Co .. t 01lly Piiot, Dec q• 16, 2l, l0, 1 .. 1 SJI0.-1
NIUC 1111£
l'ICTt TIOUS I USIHllU
NA¥E STATEMENT
T "• touow1~ P•rto·n1 •r• 001n9 bu\lntU•s
THE SILVER EXPRESS. ll071
8u1"aro Stre•t. Foun•••n V•Hey, C•t1101n11 ttloe
TllO<I Thi NthOn, 1>44 Mira-··
0 .. 1.,10 CAl•lor,.t• •1161
Muo• L•m Wotbrook, 91U
Hllllscu' Stl'ett, Fou"l•I" llet1ov
Cattlor"le '1108
r"'' t>ut•Mss u conouc•td by • "*"''•' 0¥1,..,,. .. p T,_ Tf\1 H•f>On
MUOl Ulm WH lbrook
Thi\ >Ul-1 •a• lltea wllll Ill•
County Cltrk 01 Ore"Vo Cou,.ly °"
?ecembor I. 1"1
Ftntit
PYbll•lltO Or•ncJt c.oesi O•tty Piiot.
Dec ' 16 2J, l0. '"' U5/-tl
PllUC ~(
"ICTITIOUS 8 USINEU
NAME 5TATIMENT DlllH NDTICIS ASSOCIATES, JUI Alrw•y A....,ue,
Blclt G-l, emu MeM. CA '161'. ·-------------
D•t• Oe<.emller 1.1"1
~I CORPORATION
•'5\.IHSTru~t"'
I F YOU OBJECT to the
grant ing of the petition,
you should either appear
at the hearing and state
your objections or file
w ritten ob1ect1ons with the
court before the Maring.
Your appearance may be
1n p erson or by your
attorney.
Tne fo1towtn9 person ., ao1n g
Ou\1n•'" a\
MOl'l'TGQMERY may bt> made to the llarbor December 23. 1981 at
W I L L. I A M ,. F Area /\dull Day Care 11 ·00AM at llarbor Lawn
MUNTGOM ERY . passed Center. 420 W!!SI 19th St. Chapel ~rvices under the
awa' on Oeccmber22 1981 Costa Mesa. <.:a 92627 direction o r II ar bor
He ..;,•as a res1dl'nt of (~oron'a P 1 er ct' B r o I her s Be 11 Lawn-Mount Ohve Mortuary
del Mar, Ca lie t!> survived R roadway M or l u a r y of Costa Melia. 540·5554.
by his wife Dolly. daughters directors WI LK
Alison or Cypress. Ca and MARX MARILY. II WILK, age
Le s I 1 e II a~ den or HENRY MARX. resident 29, resident of Costa Mesa.
Washington and .sister Betty of An;iheim. Ca Passed <.:a Pussed a wa y' on
Mc i lvaine of Se:il Beach a\\a\' on Oecemtx-r 21 1981 December 21. 1981 Survived
Ca and 3 nieces and S lie is !>urv1ved b\ ht~ wife by her parents Chet and
nephews Mr Montgomery Regina. daughter· Margaret ll e~en ~ilk and hro!her
worked ror the Do" ney llershowitz and grandsons Julian <: Wilk all or losta
Unified School D1stnct for 32 Phil and Lawrence Services '.\1esa. C.t Arrangements
year s A prl\ate intt·rment will bt' held on Wednesday, are private
will be held at Pacific View
Memnr1:il Park. Newport
Beach l'a /\ memorial
serv1c-c will he held on
Monday, Ocecmber 28. 1981
at 7 OOPM at St Andrews
Presbytenan Church. 600 St
Andrews Road. Newport
Beach Ca In lit'u nf rtQwers
contributions ('an be made tu
the ,\mt>r tt•an Cancer
Sod Ny
Hi\l'F.R
LI I.L I AN F BAC 1-:R
resident of Costa !'tfesa. Ca
Passed away on December
20, 1981 at the age of 74 She
Is survived by her husband
Richard J Oauer of Costa
Mesa. Ca .. I son Richard J
Bauer of Sandy, L'tah and 4
Jt;randch1ldren Bunal at seiJ
·will be eonducted hy the
family on January 10. 1982
I n lieu or no"l'rs donations
·~Neptune Socie ty"'
CREMArtON IURIAL A't SEA
646-7431
Our ltterature tells Iha' 1 complete story ol our •soc1eiv
~11IO<1,.. POrtlofle
-.., 24 ~"· C•m.1 hr ~
r
DEATHS
ELSEWHERE
L INCOLN. Neb. I AP I
Edward F. Caner, 84, the
former Nebraska Supreme
Court Justice who served
on the 5th Military Tnbunal
1n the Nazi war crimes
trials in Nuremberg, died
Monday
LOS ANGELES !AP>
Allan Dwan, director of
.. He1d1 " and more than 400
motion pictures from the
days or silent films lo the
1960s. d ied Monday.
KANSAS CITY. Mo. I AP>
George E. Powell Sr .. 82.
f ormer president and
cha1nnan or Yellow f'rcighl
System and a longtime
eommunlty leader, died
Sunday
SAN FRANCISCO 1A P>
Selma H. Pralberg, 63. a
chtld·development expert
and award-winning author
(Or her book "The Magic
Years:· died Saturday
I ndiana Kentucky
Conference or the United
Church or Christ, including
203 churches and 62,000
rongrel(an~. died Friday.
MINNEAPOLIS IAPI
Elizabeth E. Heffelfinger,
81. once ;:i prominent figure
in Republican politics in
Minnesota. died Friday
N-Ut FICTITIOUS I USIHEU
NAME STATEMENT
T llt lollowlnQ "'"°"s ••• dol"~ bu••~·-c II J A~E SOH P ROPERTY
G R OUP , ClJ J A M ESO N
CONSTRUCTION; 131 J AMESON
INTERIORS. 141 HACIEHO'°' REAL TY, JUI Al,,.,1y A...,..,., BICIQ.
G-J, Cotta Mew, CA n61'.
THE J AMESON COMPANY, •
C•lllor,.I• corpor•llOll. JUI ACrwey
Ave,.ue, BIOtJ, <;.,J, C...i. Mew , CA .,.,.
This buJ.lneu ts <o,.ducted llY •
corpor•t~
l lltJemt-ComlM"Y
J911'9y o . p ....... ............. ,
Tllll st.tl-t wn llled with Ille
Cou,.ly Clerk ol Or•nve Cou,.ty o" HOY 20, 1 .. 1
2 ·I HT ER A M ER 1 C A N
DEVELOPMENT PARTH ERSHI~
JISI Al"".., "'-· BICIQ G-J. CMU
"'9M, CA '26»
l ·W EROI N P ARKER AHO
A SSO CIATES, • C•lllornl•
corpor•tlo,., JISI Alrwey Av•,.u•.
Blclt G-.J, Coll.I-· CA tt•2'
Thh tiu.J~' Is conducted llY •
llmlted 119,_ll>lp.
We<OI" Perke< ~ Auo< .. IH,
e C.lllorrW• COf11(1retlOI\
E. Ruswlt We<'dlfl, Jr
Tiiis ~ wft tlleo w1111 1,..
CollfllY CleNI of Ore119t Couftly 0"
NOY 10, 1'11
~11MJI
PulMI-Or-Cont O.lly Piiot,
Dt< l. •. "· n , "" nn-t1
NIUC el1a
N-IZJ
l'ICTITIOUS IUSIHESS
NA¥1E STATIMllNT
fhe followlnQ per>OM •r• dol"O
busl~Sti
C•I INTER AM ERICAH
DEVELOPMENT COMPANY: (bl
THE I H TER AM E R ICA N
COMPANIES, SUI Alrwo Aven ....
Blclt G-l, Coll.I MeM. CA n•2'
l ·I H TERA M ER IC AN
DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, lUI
"ll,.••Y Ave,.ue. Bldl G·l , Cosl•
MeM ,CA'1t:lt
2 ·1 N TERAMERICAH
CORPORAT ION,• C•lllor,.11
corporeuo,., JISI Airway A .. ,.u•,
Bldg G·l. emu-· CA n 62'
J.TREMBLEY LI M ITED. I
C•lllor,.I• tor-lltlen, JUI Airway
.,...,..,., BIOQ. G-J, Colla ~••, CA .,., ..
Thlt buSl,.HS It C0,.0Y<led llY •
llmlltd pw1,.r·shlp.
Tr«nOtf'l'Llmli.d E. ~<nMll Wtrdln, Jr_
This st.mt-I Wit llled with llM
Cou,.1y Clerk ot Or•nve Cou"'' o"
Nov 10.1 .. 1
~11M14
Pullllt/Wd OI'-C.OH I O•lly Piiot,
Dt<. ,, '· "· 2l, 1'11 ~U4-fl
l'ICTITIOUS 8;.fSINllH
HAMa STATeMe NT
flle tollowl"O per1on Is dolno
butlMUM'
PER SONAL PL A NN I N G
SERVICE, 2117 Elcltn SCreet, Apl. tS,
eosu MeM. C.llfot1'1• ~· E-ro p.,c l(vfpe, 1111 EkMrl
Slr .. 1. Ao!. 45, Colle Mes.. C•lltor"I• .,.,.
Thh lluslntM it C-led !IV eft
ll'dlvkluat.
E-rd P. Kulpa
Thlt '1411-1 w•s flied with Ille
Cou"'' Clerk of Or•nve Co•"''Y 011 Hovemw JO, 1"1.
f'17MQ
Pul>llllwd Ot'An9t C.0.11 Dally Pltot, o.c. t. •. "· n, , .. , n 1M1
rACIFfC YlfW
MtMO•IALrAJtr
Cemetery Mortuar,.
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1l1c View OrivP
Newoort Beach
644-2700
~176411 I
Publl-OrMIVt CoHI D•lly Pllol.
Dec 2, t, 16, ll. 1 .. 1 SJSS-tl
l'ICTITIOUI 8UllHEIS MAM• STATIMINr
Tiit lottowl"9 "''on It ffl"11
McCO.MK:X MOITUAlllU
LaQuna Beach
494-9415
SAN DI EGO t API -
Retired Vice Adm. Marion
E. Murphy , 82, former
commander or the Pacific
Fleet mine force and the
U S n aval ba s e at
Guantanamo Bay in Cuba,
died Sunday.
_____________ , .,., ......... :
f'ICTITIOUS8UllNHS THE LATEST THING, 11 Fe lr
LaQuna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
NAM• IT AT•MllHT Ot'lvt , COii.i MH._ CAINorn+e t2t27
Th• tottewlng pe rson It dot"t l(tm«lerty AM _..._, uoo Elden,
llUtlMU., lfO. 20, Olst• Mew, Ullton•M1 •m1
Cll COMPU~OTE SYSTEMS C2) Tlllt busl,..n It ,..,ducted lly 1
COM "U·SU AGE SYSTEMS U) Utl'llliHI PAf1ntrQllp.
FOURTH OIMEHSIOH (4) FOURTH l(lmOerly A. A.Al"s
OIMENSION SYSTl!MS CSI FOUllTH flllt .--1 -fll«I •1111 1M
DIMENSION COMl"UTEllS c•I •O C-ly Cltnl °' Oranee C.0-IY o ..
MICRO TECH In 40 SYSTEMS, 111.. Hov_ll., JO, 1 .. 1.
NS.•n t
l'ICTITIOUS 8USINUS
NAME STATEMINT
T"t IOllOW1"9 per>Oft' tre 001"0 °"'' ........ tOP BUCHANAN COMMERCE
CENTRE, JUI Alrw•Y A...,.ue, 8IOQ
G-l, Cotl• Mesa. Cllllor"'• t:.1' tOP 8'.cN,..,. Commerce Canlro,
JUI Alrw_,. A-, BIOQ G-3, Co1U
"'9M, C.atllor"'• '141'
I nt•r •m•rlc•n Oevetopm•nt
P•rt"e,.lllp, JUI AC,,..•y 4ve,.ow,
Bldg G.J, CO.I.I MH.A, Cllllor"I• •»Jt
WerOin P-er el'MI Auocleles. •
C•lllorfli• <«J>OfitCIOI\, Jl}I Al1wey
AveflY•. llldQ G·l, Co"• MOI•,
C1lllornl• ma
Tiiis buslneu •• cendu<1eo llY •
9ene••I 1>¥1,.n hlp.
W.rdl" P•rker ~ Anoo
• CalllorN1 CorpO<l llOI\
E Rut;wll werot,., J1
Thi• s\11-1 wet lllea wllll Ille
Cou,.ly Clerk of Dr•"OI County o"
Ho••mller 20, , .. , •
"""°' Pyllll-Or-Coast DAiiy PllOI,
Ot< 2. '· "· n. , .. , s2n .. 1
NS..IJJ ~ICTITIOUS IUSIHEU
NAMt! STATEMENT
Tiie lollowl"9 oe<M>n' ••• dol"O
OutlntUM
AIRCEH fER. H U R•dlll ll
AY•"Vf. f'.JOO, Cotle Mete. C•lllor,.I•
'1•2•
1 -·-tr•••est,,,_t ComP<111v. ... 8oylston Ave ...... LOS A"QllU,
C..lllor,.I• •11
2 Jolwl W H•mClton, 113' OcH"
Boulev•rd. Corone -Nier. Calllornl• mis
J By'°" loll T .,,,..,,.,. -VI• Liao Hord, H....._, l!eo<h, C.lltorni1 91 .. J
• Jon """'· • Mou Glen, lrvl,.., C•lllorl'ICA mt~
}-T Id W Jorie>, Ho S L•S..""•
Pl.Ce, Soulll UQUl\6, C•lllor,.11 "'"
This llusl"fts h co,.du<te<I llY •
Vtfter•I S>W1,.nhlp
JOIW'I W H..,lllOI\
Thlt Jlet.menl wn llled '""" IM COYl\IY Clerk Of 0r ... oe cou .. ty on
No•etl'll»r 24, ... ,
Fll'716
Put>lli.hed Orenoe Coast Deity PllOt,
O.<. 2. •. 1•. n. "" s,,._.,
Hs.411•
'ICTITIOUS 8USIHHS
...,.._ nAt•MllNT
TN fettowlnv e>e<IOftt •re dOl"O
b•l\lnest as: IOP TRAOE BUSINESS PARI( II,
IUI Al""41Y A-. 81d9 <r-3, Cott•
Mew ,CAm».
t-IOP TRAOE BUSINESS PAHK
II, JUI Al.._y Awnue. BIOO. G·J, Coll• ~. C"I .,.,.,
2·1 N TERAM(lll C AN
OEVELOPME"T PARTNERSHIP,
llSI Al......, A-. 81<19. G-). CMI• Meta, CA '»».
l ·WE R OIH PARKER "I N D
ASSOCIATES,• Ce llf or"I•
CorP9r•llon, JUI Alrw•Y A,..,..,.,
..... G·l, tale MMe, CA '1•1'
Thi• ll<itll\Ht I' COflCluCled llY • llmlled pal1nertNp,
WWdln "9rllor ll AJ-l•IH ,
• C..llfoffll• <~•""" E. Rus9911 WlrOI,., Jr
Tlllt sle ......... Wet ljled wllll lht
Co~"'IY Clffk Of 0.ellQt Couflly Oft
HOY 10, ""1
1'116417
PUl>ll-0rAfl9t (.OH t Delly Piiot,
ByT 0 S.rvlu Como~n,
·~·" ByCIMYSchOOnOver
At.Mstaint S.C.retar.,
0.-.Ctty Bl.O , w.-1 Or.,,.,.. c A 9?"611
11~
Pulljl'1WO Or-Co.sl D•oly Pilot
O.c ~.I•. 2l. !tit SU>-11
FICTITIOUS 8UitNEU
NA¥~ STATEMENT
T lie lollowl110 P•"o" " 001110
bU\frw-t' .,
CRS CO N ST~UCTIOH
COM PANY, S120 Birch Strttt.
Hr.por1 Beed>. C•llfo<,.t• •i..o
Cllrl stopller A SllPllt,.>, •OI
But kMll, CosU ~w. C•lll«ftl1 t1'1'
T hh -IMU " <Ol>dut led by I"
lndtvldU411.
Cttfls Sltpflen•
Tnls '""'.,,_' ·~ llled wllll lllt Cou"1t c .. ,.,. ol Of'll>9e Counly °"
O.c.mtte< u.1 .. 1
1'11'*
PullllSNO Orenoe Coe~• D•ll• Pilot, Dt< •••• 1l. l0. , .... JMt •• ,., ~21••
PUIUC •occ
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE
GTO Ho OlOI
Re Junnu GU AROIAH TRUST DEED
SE RV ICES, • corpor•tlo" •• duly
~,.,.., Tnntw ...-t!w lot-tno
du<rlbed -of 11.nl WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE
HIGHEST BIDOER FOR CASH 'ALL
RIGHT, TITLE AHO INTEREST
CONVEYEO TO AHO HOW HELO av
IT UHOER Deed ol Tru\I '" lftt
pr-r1Y l\tftlNlltr cleKrlt>eO TRUSTOR JoM W Jullfttr, .,.
unm•rri.dmen
BENEFICIARY Meroeret Mevtr
_,,, wnm•rrted woma.n
Recorded O.ctmt>er 17, "'0 ei
l"slr Ho. Wit In -13811 p190 110
Of Ofllcl•I Rec0<dl In ,,.,. Offt<e ol Ille
Recoroer of Or-(OUl\IY U IO -
OI trwst ducrllle' lhe IOllOwt"CI
property
A porlton ot LOI IJ Of Newpor1
H•IVl\h. I" llw <llv of Cone Mew
Co•"'IY Of Orenet St.ie OI C•lllornll
IF YOU AREA
C REDITOR or a
contingent creditor of the
deceased. you must file
your claim w ith the court
or prese nl i t t o the
personal repr esentative
appointed b y t he court
w 1thtn four months from
the dale or first issuance
of letters as provided in
Section 700 of the Probate
Code of Calif ornia. The
time for filing claims w ill
not expire prior to four
months from the date of
the heartng noticed above.
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the file kept by the court.
If you are interested 1n the
est ate, you may tile a
reQuest with t he court to
receive special not ice of
the inventory of esta te
assets and of the petitions.
accounts nnd reports
described in Section 1200
of the Caltforn1a Probate
Code.
M a r sh a ll H ick s on,
Atto rney at L a w , S21
Arizona Avenue. Suite 317,
Santa Monica, CA 90401 ;
tel: (213) 394-3705
Published Orange Coast
Daily Pilot, Dec. 16, 17, 73,
1981 5434.Sl
NIUC NOTICE
LOGICAL SY NERGY .•
(Ol>blt\lonP. lrvtM C..llfor1111 UJU
C••Y Denn•• St~ .• C-•"°"'· lrv1,... C..tolornla tt7tS
fhh bUll,..., h <ondu<ltO Oy Aft
tndtvtd\Wt
C..ryO Stfffl
t n1~ ~•t""4H'lt w~ t1lt0 wfth tht
County Ctero 01 OranQe Cou,.ty on
0.-crm~r 7, 19111
Fin ...
Pullto""° Or-C.0051 D•lly PtlOt,
Dtc •. t•. 23. lO, '"' SJU-tl
FICTITIOUS IUSIHEU
NAME STATEMENT
Tiit IOllowlnQ per>0n' .,. "°'"II
Ou•lnenn
MJB LTD . lll Forttl ....... ue.
Sullt 72, P 0 Bo• ft, lAOUN Bffch,
C•llforntt '1•S1
E J•mo MY••r. JJ1 Foru t
An .. ut. SYllt n L•oYn• Bte<ll,
C•ltlor-~SI
Bro.., A 8el'11\e, 2111 Wut Coe'I
HIQllWO , N...._-1 Beech. C•llloml1
91"3
BttQQ\ Pf'rt' Of'v•lopm •nt
Coml>I"• •-rel 1Mr~lp, 1-1
M1lllllf'n Av•ni.w1 lrYlne, C.IUor"I•
91114
T ll•S 1>Us1,,.u ts t onciuct..i by •
Vt ... , •• par\""n.lllp
M2B, I.Id , e Qt,.tr•I
oert,..r\l\lp. BY
E J ame\ Mur•r, P•r1nff'
fnfl tt•t•-nt was 1114!0 wllll '"" Coynty Cler• 01 O••"Vt Cov,.t• o" Noveml>e< JO. , .. ,
Fl7 ....
PubtlSl'IO Or-to.st D•lly Piiot,
Ott , • •• Jl, 1"1 S?U.el.
PUlllC Miila
H per map recorot<1 1,. 8oOll •. Peat -------------
9.J ol Ml!1<1tll•neous Me~. '" the OlllCP Of, ... Coul"lly Rocorc»r of WIO c-ty,
Cle!ICrlDICI a. loll~. IMQIMlnQ 11 llW
mo\I Nor!Nfly cor,,., of MIO Loi ll
"""'O • oolM I" tllt Soutlltuttrly llne
of Or•nge '11...,.ue, H shown OI\ w lo
m•p, t'-'Ke South 10' E .. 1 •loftV 11\t H0'1.,.IS1tfly -.,,. of w lo Loi ll
lU SO fol 10 Ille t rut point ot
111\)IM lnQ; Ulen<t COtlllnutnQ South IO'
Eell •lo"o u td Nortll•ulerty -.:!•,..,. to'"' lo• "°'"'· 11141f><• South 40• WHI 161.SI l"I lo 1 PO'"'.
llM,.<.e North IO WHI 60 IMI IO •
PO•nt. IMn<e Hor111.,. Eest ••2-S11NI
lo llM true polllt of beQIM l"O
MAY BE ALSO KNOWN AS lJ)
Pe•mff, emu Mew. c..t11or .. 1•
"(II • str"I eddrtu or commo"
dnlt ,.•!Con h shown •1>00. "0 wa rra ,.ly IS Qlve" ., to II\
comPle1-• or correct,..u> TN .,.....lcl¥y under Mid 0.0 et
Tr"''· lly '"'°"of• brtlCh or d4!11Ull
I" th• olMtoello"• secvrea tlMr•llv
HS. .. 1SI
FICTITtOUi I U"NESS
HA¥£ STATEMENT
1'11~
Publfl"N Or1"9f c:o.u Oetly Piiot.
0.-c • 16, 23. lO 1•1 SJ61 .. I
PUIUC till:£
Summit Hu-NllW, • C•lllo<,.1• Plrt,.rtNp
E J.mes MIM'•<. Pe.,,,..
Tiii' lie-.. ,.., flled with tM
County (!Orto: ol Ore119t County o"
HOYeml»r JO, t•I
""•lofore elOKuted -dellveroo to 1--------------""-Pvlllllll•d Or•no• Co•tl O•lly l'ICTITIOUS 8UStNaSS
NAME STATEMllHT Piiot, Otc. 2, t, t•. lJ, 1911 SibUP •
Tht followl"O P"'"°"' ere dolno -------------bUSIMn as
C R ~ R INC dO. H•ul-Aw•y
Cent•l~s. •us,.,,..,, OllPOUll, •k•
c R .. R Roc:y<ll"O. 11m West .... SUl"aRIOllCIOU•TOl'CAL.lf'OllNIA
TORONTO I AP t
Victor Kug ler . who h 11t
Anne Frank. her family
and four other Dutch Jews
from the Nazis during
World War II. died here
Monday
P•t"'etto etrci., fov,.let" \loll•Y, •11 ... 1 0e< ,, •. 16, n, 1•1 Ju.ti
1111 ...,.,.,..slQ!ned • ""'""" 0.Cle••llo" elf 0.1 ... 11 -o.m...o for s.... •M written -I<• ot D< .. cll at>d of •l.Cllon
to C.t.:M lllt unc»rsl~ to \Oii uld
P<oCl9rlY to Ullh ly ••IO ObllqetloM,
--•-.tiff ttw ...-tlQl'led <.eutotd
Mkt -k• of tlrff<t\ -Of t1ecu..,, to
lie Recorded S.pttml>er 10, 1"1 ••
'""'·Ho 1 .. tl,.llcll>k 1011-1'60. of M id Offklel RKord\
Avenu•. Sl.,IOI\, C•lltor,.11 ~ COUNTY Of' oaANOe
C R ~ R IM , I C•lllor,.lt lfl the Metler ol IN ,._.tca llOOI ..
HAJllOll LAWN-MT. OUYE
Mortuarv • Ce~tery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
540 5554
..... CIHOTHIU
I&&. HOAOWAY MOITUAIY
110 Broadway
Cost• Mesa
642·9tSO
IALTZ ... •HON
SMfTM A TVTHIU
WUTC ... CHAra 417 E 17th St
Cotta Mes.
9'8-0371
... C:l llOlMml
U4ITMI' MOITVAIY
S17 Maln 81
~ntinoton Buch
538-6538
LAS VEGAS, N~v. t APt
lames To&lno. 70 ,
co-roun der or Toti no· s
rroten ptua company. died
Monday.
i:etllorftl• n1-M 1 rte ffl A. F ar,.um , 11106
"•'"'•Ito Clrc ... F-••'" Ve ller, C1llfor"le 9l'IOI
Tlllt ...,..,,... It C-..Cleel ll'f an INllYldual.
Mlrlenl A. Fe,_..
Thlt ... .......,, •et 111941 wit h 1M
c,..,,.ly Cltrll elf Ofente COllM'f .,.
Ot omw 14, 1 .. 1.
1'1111ft
PullllJNcl 0rAf191 Ceett Dally l"li.c,
Ot<. 1•. u. JD, 1"1, J ..... ,.., Wll .. I NEW YOKK I AP I
Vaudevllle comedian
Dewey 11 Pl 1 111 e at " Markham, T7. bellt known for hls skit. "Here com~ i---..... 1CT-,-T10Ut--•vt1-.. -,-.. --
lhe Judge," died Sunday .. .,.. ITATllM ... , t ii. lol"""lf111 __ , .re H iiie
WOODSIDE CAP > -
MHritt L .......... 84, a
1tt \lctural cheml•t. died
Thursday. Hla scientific
work 11\\'0lved t.he theory of
ato m ic b ondtnt a nd r el• tlonabl p1 bet ween
b oncl ln1 •nd a t o m ic
arran~u
EAU ClAJRE. Will. <AP)
The ~. R•rTY WWla1n
Bredent, 84, conference
mlnl1ter lor 1' y .. ra ol Uie
..,.,,.. .....
L. .• ,. ASSOCtAr11, llJ H lllle<Arlflw ..,..,, M • .... lrvlM-. c.i...,...mo
......... ·-"· "Mt Wrfc""'· """""-" '-di, Cell'-"i• ... JefWI ,,._, tlD2 t.rr-, \lll&e "-·~'*' 0••1-L•"''· S it. Tre,.u, ".,...,, 9-1'1. Cit ....... '2Mt
Tflll ~ II C~tff Illy e .... r•~·-· .......
Tillt ............ -., .... """" .. CMflty 0tr11 • 0r..., c;-. • ~14.Hl1 .. ,,_
"'*II..,.. Or ... C:.... Oellf .. ...._ ~. ll, U, a, 1!111.JM ... , ... t.NJ~I
Putllltlled Orenet COH I Delly PllOI,
Otc. 2, '· i.. n. "" 1111-t1
.......
l':ICTITIOUI 9VMN•U .aM• STAftMeMT
Tiie IOl-1"9 "'Miit ere .... ,.,
111111-...
IHTEllAMElllCAN OllA"O E
CREEK l"ARTHEMlill", a Cellfltrlll•
Limited "••tnerllllfl, JUI Alrwey
•-...... G-J, C.le Mew, CA .,.,.
M NTERAMElllCA" •UILO«M
P A llT"IERSH ll", o O e11er•I
P•terttlltJ, Jiii Alrw•'r A-•• ._... 04, eo.ta,,..., CA--.
1 H<HtfH AM•RICAH HOUll"G.·
INC., e Co1"'9ntl• (°'"'etMft, J iii
Alr••r An-. ••-• C»S, C•U• Mtw,CAftt». J-1 N TI RAM • II I C AN
CO.,.OllATI Ol'f , e Ce11for11le
\:e,..rellell, )Ut Alrwn Aw1111t, a141e. 04, C.le MKa, CA"'-•
TllCt Ml-t It C~lM lty t ''"'I,.,.,..... ...... N-1111Mw'<•"-lfle.lllC, ,.,.,.w,..._
Tiii• ............. lllf! wltll tllol
<*tflty C:l«ll .. OtllNll c;...w, •11
..... "'1. ,,,...
"'*41 ... Onlllet ea... o.llY l"I .... ~. t, •. It. n. ,,.. SllMt
Seid Ml• wlll oe -· IMll •fir.out -------------1 cov•"•nt or ••rr•nt,, ••P'•'' or " .... ,.,. l'ICTIT10US aUllMIU
N~ITAT•NHT
Tiie fol-Int '9•Mflt e re OOlflQ
lllltlnettot:
IAl TH E I HT 511 ... MER ICA~
CO MPA"IES 1 8 1 H OR TH
AM E RICAN 8UILOl!lll CCI THE
IHTEllA.W!lllCA" COlll"'AHIES 101
IHTEllAMElllCAH a UtLOIEllS,
L TO., 11111 Alfwey A-. 91111111,., 04, c.ia-.., Celltomla ••llL
1-1111e r •"'•rtca" 9vllfera
Perl,.ertlll .. IUI Alrw•y Ave1111t,
.......... CM, C.le -... Callfornl• .,. ..
2-lllt••-rleafl C:.-•llot1, • c.11 .. cer,.,ett.,., a1s1 Aln1110
Awffl .. , lklCIMlllt 0.J, Catie M9ta,
CellWN• ....
)-~ Amlrk WI Hctonl,.,. IM., • C•ll"9r111• cw.-.. tto1. aul ,.1,..,
A'ftllllOt, ... ._.. O.l, C:..le Me ...
Cellliarllle ..
Tllh Ml-• h Cen411t<-h • fltM(el _,,.rtfllfl
Ille:, ..... .,,., ..... "-""·
ffwlltW.9-
Ttlk ...._... -llltd •ltfl Ille C.U.,ty , ....... Or-. ,_,, OI\ ..............
PllMPI
l"WIMI ... Or-. CM.ti 0.Cty "''°'· OM. I, t , Ml. U. 1•1 ,_.,,
lmOlled, rtoerdlf'O llllt. Pot .. ltlOll, or
•llcumllr...c:H, to pey llM ,...,.1,.1"11
p<l1><l.,.i _,, of \lie -•(t) •«Yr..i
llV MIO 0..0 OI T,...,.t. wllh lntt~I I>
'" t •ld noff 11'0¥1-, ld•ell<ft. II efly,
"""' Ille term• ... Mkl 0..0 Of Tru•I. fH I , cllerOH •llCI HPltflMl OI 1111
Tru.11 .. end • ttw ""'b <l'fflM "r Ml4 Oet4I al Tri/SI SalG Ule •Ill M
htld Oii ~y. J -ry U, ttl7
•I 11:00 A.M., •11111 lrt1"I ent•-• 10
Gue/GI., Tr\1'11 0..0 Sef•~. loutH
al 1 ... E. M<lytelr, Or .... , Cellfllrllle .,..,
Tiie IOl•I •1'114"1111 ot ,._. •"!>•1-N letlee of "'9 .......... _ .. -,
wld ~ te .. tald., '-"'-' wll.h """'"'· .... c-.... -.. 11..,. ... '"'I ........... ~ ....... nw ..... ,,.,..., ,, s1u1•·"· o., .. , ~, tJ, 1"1
OUAM>IAH TRUST O«&O M llVICH, •<Wllll'•• 11.-T ...... tlOD L~.,.0.loa 211
Orllfttt,CA .....
17Wl'1Mlt•
..... fl. ..... ,,...,.......
........ ._ttln
"9<1191!"t4'1 .....
Cl•llC....
~t.,_ Or11199 Coe•t Otlt'f ,.li.t. o.c.. u, a.Mii... ... ~l
coroor•llotl. 111'1 Wesl•'" A ........ ALVIN WILLIAM CATHEY for
Sle,.ton, C.lllorlllt ~ CNl\Oe OI ~.
T"I' llullMU h tonOv<l•d lly t CAI• NUMll• AllllU
torpor•llOll OaDS• TO$MOW CAuta •CHI
CR' R INC CNAMO• 0. NA.MS
Pelrt<la L•.,.s. Conll'Ollor ALVIN WILLIAM CATHlliY Ml•
Tiii• •let-n+ WH flled •1111 • llled • """" .. lfl 1111• -,., •fl
Cou,.ly Clerk of Or•"Vo Cou,.ty tf1 orfer •1-11111.,..ll_r10 <,,.ne-Ml
Hovembe<J0,1 .. 1 ... m. from "I LVIH WILLIAM
"17 .. 1 CATHEY lo AL.VIN Wit.LIAM
PulllllMd Or ... CoaSI O.lly Pli., llATTAH.
OK. t , t , I'll, 1 .. 1 Si.NI II'' hfftll'f-ecl IN1 t it -
-------------1ntetoled In the metlff efortM141 •oP••r 11e1or e 11111 cewrl '" OeflO•tln"" "6. > at 7tO CCttk '*"lier ------------0r1 ... Wtt\. Senta M-. (.al ............
f'ICTlT'IOUI IUllNIH J_,, 11, tom, al IO.•o•cttu. em ..
NAMI: STATaMINT enf tllen ...., ltwre "-<--.It ally
Tll• to11ow1,. Pfftefl• er• dolflt •~•Y flow , wt.y tale 11tlltten fet
D<l.tl-M CNnte ·-----.......... l"ACI I' IC WES 1 ER H AU TO 11 It Nr1t11r .,_ .. lfWtC e """" ..
l!!L.l:CflltCAL. JU"-H.....,.,, 81,,.., tfll• erftr .. tllO'W c-...... ......
Ht •l"Ort llHCll, Cllllor,.I• .,,.., 111 Ille 0.lly Pit«. a ,.. ... ,,, r ..
JoA-Riemer, JUI.'\ Ntw ... fltMr•I clrc.,...i...., .,...., ... lt1 W•
81 ..... , '"-' .. «~. Caflfor,.to t WJ <-'Y el IMll tM.e o ._.. fltr few
9111 _,...,, llt°" N""llOf' a1 ... ,, t~IW _., ......, ..... ..., ..
Ntw"'1 8e«h, (t llforl'lla ·~ .. kl 11tat•
1"11111111 Hert1t. IOU •••• ,... No. •• 0.ted ~ •• ""
Rl...nl•, CMltCM'llle tDOJ ~O H. l"RE .... I R
fhh MllWH h ~.,._,UM by • .-... .....
....., •• ...,"'"""· ~ o.rt )ONrfrt "'-c. O. NoL.\', ...
Tllll tleltmfftl -II ... •IUI Ille MM.ClOUllML't c-•v ,,.,, .. Of•t\09 c-"' 911 ............. .
Ot<t"IW1,1'11 ............. ~ ....
PU *1 C11Clm4'11 1"111111\"" OfMttll CO.al Ooll'r l>flet, ,..,..1111911 ()r.._ C...t o.11, ,.....,, OK.•. I .. U, JD, 1 .. 1 SllMI ~ 1, t, ,, ti. "'1 .,...,
I'
.l I I
Dally Pilat •
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 23, 1~ D
D
llllll 1111:1 /lllTI £1111 CAVALCADE
FOOD
82-3
84
There . are those whO
try their best not to show
seasonal good cheer. See
Art Hoppe on Page B2.
LB backs
road
clnsure
Members of Scboolpower have
received Laguna Beach City
Council endorsement to close
La1una Canyon Road in March
lo order to bold a 10 kilometer
race.
The group is sponsoring the 6.2
mile race to raise funds ror the
Laguna Beach Education
Foundation, and plans to bold
the run March 7 beginninl at t a.m.
And while council members
said they approved closing the
road for an hour or so, they said
they would have to contact
Caltrans officials to get that
state agency's approval.
In a letter to the couneil,
Schoolpower trustee David ,
Carter said the road closure
should not inconvenience more
than SO or so motorists on Ute
Sunday morning.
Panel seeks
artists for
banrwrs
T he Laguna Heacb Arts
Commission is seeking artists to
contribute designs for a
permanent banner collection to
celebrate the winter solstice.
Participants are asked to
prepare designs for both
horizontal and vertical format
banners of all -weathe r
materials.
Artists should present a
resume and a proposed color
s~heme to the Arts Commissioo
by March 31. Preliminary and
final selections will be sent to
the commission, sos Forest
Ave., Laguna Beach, Ca. ~1.
If you wish material returned,
include a self-addreued ,
stamped envelope.
LA honors
Niguel man's
34-year-work
T he Los Angeles Board of
Public Works recenUy honored
i n ceremonies at City Hall
Harold T . Harris of La1una
Niguel for more than 34 years ol
service with the department.
Harris, a senior civil engineer
and assistant engineer of design
in the Bureau of Engineerini.
retired to take a position with a
cable television firm.
Active in community affairs,
Har ris is chairman ·of the
Parents Assistance League ol
Orange County and a former
board member of the American
Public Works Association,
Southern California Chapter. He
is also a member of the Civic
~nter Speaker's Club.
Scholarships
on age nda
Members of the Laguna Beach
Fest ival of Arts scholarship
committee will outline
requirements for seniors to
o~tain scholarships at a meeting
J an. 6 at the bigh school.
Scholanbipe totalling "80,000 wlU be distributed to Laguna
Beach High School seniors at the
end of the year in the fields of
atta and cratta, photo1rapby,
dance, drama. music and
writing.
The meetin1 to diacuaa the •
uvards wiU be held from 11:30
to 1 p.m. in the career room at
tbe hllh school. Only Laiuna
Beach seniors are eligible for tfae scholarship competitioo.
'Story time'
at library
,Sto..,.Ume betlna Jan.S at the
Dana Niauel Lib rary, and
•llDUPI betln neat week for
J'OUnptef'I ... I to$.
Tbe winter aeu1on wtU be held
1'11Hday1 at 11: 30 a . m. or
I'ridaya at 10:30 a.m. at tbe
U.,ary.
Tb• •labt-weelll: aeulon CJ6oalttl ot atorJ rellCllq, _,.,
'9C•rpla11. puppeu, al•••• aft.a Md acUoe rfiymee.
Motbera of prucboolera
ould call t be library at
UtT for lnformatJon.
'ONLY WHEN I LAUGH' Veterinarian Dr. Dave Fagan
takes close look at infected molar or "Hattie, .. an elephant
0.11, Pt..,. ~-.1uc .. .-•~
wintered at Lion Country Safari in Irvine The tooth was
extracted
Tooth removal elepha~size operaJ,Wn
-crowbars, h a mmers, c hisel used in performance
By STEVE MITCHELL
OttMD..., ...... S ....
If Hattie is a bit grumpy this
morning, there's a good reason
for it.
You'd be a bit under t he
weather too if three dentJata
used crowbars, hammer and
chisels to remove a five-pound
tooth from your mouth.
The 35-year-old Asian elepba.nt
bas been off her feed for the put
10 months, and her ownen at
Circ us Vargas were a bit
concerned when she shed 1,800 pollnds. ·
A diet or bananas and bread
bulked her out to 5,200 pounds -
but that's st.Ill a far cry from the
6,700 pounds she weighed before
her top right molar began
bothering her.
And, since Hattie plays an
important part in next week 's
Rose Parade in Pasadena,
Arter admtnistering 7 CCs of a
drug described as sort of a
.. s upermorphtne," Hattie went
Since Hattie plays i m portant role
i n Rose Parade, tooth had to go .
doctors agreed the tooth would
have to be removed.
Rex Willi ams. who trains aU
the elephants for Circus Vargas,
ca lle~ Or. Dave Fagan, a
vetermary dentist from San
Diego, along with vets Marlin R.
Dinnes and Rona.Id Gutter, both
from Encino.
The three veterinarians met at
Lion Country Safari in Irvine
Tuesday, where Ci rcus Vargas
is spending the winter.
under shortly before 11 a.m.
Doctors said one drop of the
potent anestheti c is enough to
kill a man.
Th e n , ar l'h e d with a
ca rp enter 's drill ,
sledgehammer. crowbar and
chis el, and monitoring her
heartbeat on an EKG machine,
the trio removed a 5.2 pound
molar that was growing at an
angle, and chiseled off a large
Huntington man honored
Holocaust survivor won l egal challenge to history
Mel M er mel s t ei n . a
Huntington Beach businessman
and survivor of a Nazi death
camp, was honored Tuesday in
Los Angeles for chalJenging an
organization that claimed the
Holocaust was a myth.
As a result of Mermelstein's
suit against the Ins titute of
Historical Review or Torrance, a
Superior Court judge took
judicial notice that the
Holocaust was fact.
The judges' legal ruling last
October is b e li eve d
unprecedented in American
courts.
Los Angeles City Council mem·
ber s pr ese nt ed M er ·
m e l 1\ l e i n w i t h a r e s ·
olution commending bis efforts.
"By honoring me with this
resolution, they're also honoring
those who survived the furnaces
of Auachwitz·Birkenau and
Buchenwald, and those six
milliop brethren who did not
make lt," Mermelstein said.
·'That includes my mother and
two slaters whom I saw being
driven to gas chambers at
Auschwitz." he s aid. "They
were told they were being taken
to showers."
Mermels tein, who was 17
when imprisoned at Auschwitz,
in Poland, says his rather and
brother also died while Nazi
captives. He s aid they were
worked to death in mines in
Poland.
Mermelstein, who lives in
Long Beach, is a lecturer on the
Holocaust.
A bout two years ago, the
Institute of Historical Review
offered a public re ward or
$50,000 to anyone who could
prove Jews were gassed in Nazi
prison camps .
Mermelstein s ays that
offi cials of t hat organization
mailed him a letter issuing a
personal challenge.
Mermel s tein says the
organization then failed to live
up to its offer •nd would not review evidence he'd gathered.
Then last March, he filed a $6
million lawsuit against the
group claiming it had failed to
Uve up to its offer. had libeled
him in a newsletter and caused
him intentional e motional
distress.
The judges' recognition of the
Holocaust as fact was part of
that lawsuit's proceedinis. The
damages portion of the lawsuit
is stilJ pending.
·•Anyone who besmirches the
name of those martyrs who died
is a coward," Mermelstein said.
"What could I do when they bit
me in the race with their lies, let
them run me into the ground? I
had to right back."
The LOS Angeles City Council
resolution stated in pa rt that
Mermelstein was beinl honored
for "his determination and
courage on behalf or the millions
of people who died and suffered
at the bands of the Nazis 37
years ago.''
It continues: " (he > rose up
against the cruelty of a few,
sentencing their ignorant voices
to a resollnding silence, so that
chunk of plaque from Hattie's
left top molar.
After the extraction. the vets
administered an antidote to the
anesthetic and Hattie struggled
to her feel less than a minute
later.
"She's healthy, just a litUe
groggy," s aid Lion Country
S afari s pokes man James
Heathfield afte r the 80·minute
surgery.
Circus officials said the old
elephant was even able to eat a
little hay last night.
And by Jan. l , she should
be ready to join a dozen other
pachyderms who will pull a
large rt oat along the Pasadena
parade route.
If you've got your Tv on New
Year's Day , Hattie's the svelte
one on the right. The one with
only seven teeth.
HON O RED M e l
Mermelstein. Nazi death
camp survivor . was honored
in Los Angeles.
the true story of a people's
suffe r ing may never be
forgotten."
Inmates
program
proposed
Orange County Sheriff Brad
Gates says he'd like to tel
short-time inmates at the county
jail d oing som ething more
produc tive than watching
television.
But a plan advanced to the
Orange County Board of
Supervisors was withdrawn this
week in which those inmates
could be put to work on weekend
crews.
Gates said Tuesday his staff
members were rel ying on
gaining state funds set aside for
programs that k ee p law
offenders o ut o f penal
institutions. But with word that
those funds aren't available, the '
program wa s dropped
tern porarily.
He said an application for the
state funds will be resubmitted
early next year.
"Our intention was to try to
relieve jail overcrowding,"
Gates said, adding that tougher
new drunken·driving laws that
go into effect in January were
not an issue.
Jail administrators reported
this week that the l ,33l·inmate
capacity jaiJ has been operating
above that mark recently, with
s o m e inmates s l eeping on
mattresses on the concrete noor.
Under the so-called "Jail
Work Release Program,"
inm ates sentenced to six days or
less could be a s sign ed
supervised public service labor
to perform instead of jail time.
Gates said earlier this month the
jail had 235 inamtes who might
have qualified for the program,
thus freeing more space in the
jail for those sentenced to more
severe punishment.
If it is instituted, the program
could divert about 1,400 persons
a year from the facility, he said.
The program would cost about
$88,500 a year to administer, he
added.
HB outlines
mobile homes
• conve r sions
Huntington Beach City Council
members outlined a proposed
mobile home park conversion
ordinance Monday that would
require landlords to pay for the
full moving costs or displaced
tenants.
Council members have asked
that paper work be completed so
they can act on the matter in
February.
Hal Simmons, city planning
aide for mobile home parks,
says it costs between $1,000 and
$4,000 to relocate a mobile home.
Cost depends on bow large the '
coach is and how far it is being
taken, he said.
Several mobile home tenants
appealed lo City Coun cil
members Monday for speedy
enactment or a protective
conversion ordinance t hat
requires relocation of coaches
within city limits and total
reimhursement of moving COits.
City officials note, however.
that there are few mobile home
vacancies in all of Orange Co~nty~ and many tewer In
Huntlngton Beach.
City Council members
rejected a starr members'
recommendation Monday that
only low-inc&me tenanta receive
run relocation assistance from
landlords . The start
recommendation also su11eated
a m axim u m $750 m oving
subsidy for other tenanta. But
council members disagreed.
There are 3,384 mobile homes
in the city, including 1,089
coaches in five parks alone the
city's coastal area.
'Back off ol,d US<;' fight song of corut city resident,s
Coro~a del Mar batt~es un~versity's attempt to use vacant school building
ar STEVE llA&BLE -' ..............
Corona del Mar retlckmta say
Uley'U 1ue to block University of
Southern California from
movl n 1 Into a vacant
elementary school in their
nel1hborhood.
"No offense to USC. mind
you," explained Joe Stewart, a
Corona del Mar homeowner.
"but their plan la Just too
horrendous to think about."
ftoulblY eo raklenta met wtt.b
USC olnclall Monday tVeninl It
tbe vacant Corona del liar
.Elementary School ln aa
atiempt to settle the growing
dispute.
"Some or them,'' commented
James Maasey, a USC director,
"seemed less concerned about
how they can Live with us and
more concerned about how they
can get rid of us."
USC has leased the shut.down
ele mentary school for flve
years. The campus, startlnc
Jan. 14, la to be used as 1
1raduate school for bualneaa
admllliltraUon 1tude.ota.
The Corona del Mar campus
waa picked, USC officials 1aJd1 bec1uu several unnamea
Orange County firms proposed
that USC open a campus ln the
county.
Residents. worried about
tramc, parking and nolse from
evening classes, contend the
lease arrangement came u a
s urprise to them.
'·USC ls 'rying to be a iood
neiahbor, but ll'• a lltlle late for
that," aaJd Stewart. "We should
have been Involved ln the
planninl Of lhl1 from the at.art."
Newport Beach Councllman
Paw HummeJ, a Corona del MJr
resldct and USC fraduatt, Hid
a publle b.eartn1 lboald baft
been held before the lease wu
stgne.d.
City officials in Newport
aareed . They told the
Newport-Mesa Unified School
Dtstrtct. owners or the vacant
acb ool, that ll needed a
council-approved use permit.
Jn response to that ,...._Lt
'c: ho o l d tat rt ct tr u 1lee1
unanhnoualy voted to OYerrtde
the city, uslna a 1tate law tUt
allowa a ac:bool dlatrict to
exempt ltaelf from city lawt and
codes. Stewart 1ald the oolJ
allernallv• now left to tbe
neighborhood is to file a lawsuit
against use and the school
di1trict.
•'And we have to move
qulckly," he s aid, "real
quickly."
USC 1pokaman Mauey laid
the private unlvetalty l.11teedl to
move forward wtllt ltl plam.
.. We have a eommtt.m..t. we
bave lnYe1ted mooey ~
._. we really want to be tMre."
MUM)' Mid, addiq, "" allo want to reaolft tbe dlfrel'9Be• ..
H t Hid unl .. 1 a.e Hvl
otberw'8e, clua wW _..ea
JaLU.
-_-~ ......... ~--• • -i 11'
Orange C9a~ DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, December 23, 1981 ......... ____________ ,.... ----------------------------------------------------.,----------------------------------------------------
Why
chimney?
. O&All PAT DUNN: Illy dYW u jQ' old ~-'8 be a.1ereated la S.... Clau WI Cllrtliau. Sitt.'• aaked •e •lie,. Su&a'•
.tJM ud relodeer came. trom. ud ••Y lie
ee•et down &lie cMmaey &o brtll1 lala 1lfta.
Enr1-.e lm0w1 Ute ·sled ud ret.deer ·are
fN• llae No~ POie, but I'm atampecU0t u
••••er aboa• wllay Ile comet do•• tlae
ellJmMy. Caa jou flad 0tat! I'm •91'9 a lot of
odaer you,.ters would be lil~&oo.
· L . .1.,-Newpert Beaclla
.. Santa's sleigh and reindeer must have
come from the North P61e 1ince that'• where
·Santa Uves. But, the first time anyone
learned about this was when the •• em
giver:s" transportation was told about in "A
Visit From St. Nicholas," the famous poem
by ·Clement C. Moore . The belief that Santa
dellvers bis· gifts to the home vi(l the chimney
stems from an old Norse legend. The Norse
believed that the goddess Hertha wQuld' bring
good luck to a home if she appeared in the
fireplace. It's oniy natural that Santa would
choose this method' of entering homes to
brina lucky <and good!> children their
Christmas gifts.
Roly-poly St~ Nick
DEAR PAT DUNN: How did Santa Clau
1et. tbe reputation for belnC fat, and can you
esplaln tbe derivation of llil aame!
· E.P.; Corolla del Mar
· Author Washington Irving in the 1809
"Knickerbocker's History of New York," ls
believed to be.the first to describe St. Nick as
a jolly fellow wearing a broad·brimmed hat
. and huge breeches and smoking a long pipe.
Santa's roly-poly image came to .full flower
in an 18,17 painting by artist Robert Weir and,
in the 1860s, iil a popular series or drawings
by cartoonist Thomas Nast.
As almost everyone knows, the mythical "San~a" began life as a real person, St.
Nicholas, a 'bishop in Asia Minor in the 3005.
A kindly man who took presents to the needy,
Nichol~ came to be known u the patron
saint of sailors: l.t!...velers, bake rs and
merchants_, but especially of children. The
CWitom of giving gifts to celebrate his feast
day, Dec. 6, grew in Europe witil Njcholas
became widely accepted as the gilt.giver at
• Christmas time.
Early Dutch settlers ·in New York
brQugh~ the custom with them, but Nicholas'
Dutch name,· Sinte r·klaas, was hard to
.. 'pronounce and h.e became known as "Santy
Claus" and "Santa Claus," according to the
· Worl:d Book Encyclope<jia.
'~id-vid' regulation out
DEAR PAT DUNN : Ras the Federal
Trade Commissfon dropped Its. elfotts to
bring soni~ regulation to com~erc:laJs shown
Oil chlldrea's television shows? I haven't read
anytltlag about tbis for a long time.
H.£., Newport Beacla
The FTC has ended its rulemaking·
proceedings on the so·called "kid-vid" rule.
Although an early 1981 ·staff report to the
commission supports the· conclusion that
young children place .. indiscriminate trust"
in TV ads and don't understand advertising
techniques. the only way to remedy the
s it'uation would be to completef y ban all
advertisements oriented to young children.
Such a ban, the staff report concludes. would
not be PQSSible. .
After reviewing the rulemaklng record.
FTC has con c lud ed that a major
: ·commitment of its resources would be
req.utred to cont-\nue this proceeding,
· r~ources which. would have to be diverted
· · 1from other .priorities with no . guar~ntee of
resolution. Details concerning this matter
appeai:. ori· page 48710 of the Oct. 2 "Federal
Register."·
·. Cos.ts. explained
· D~R READERS:· A free booklet
.explaining the provisions and effects of the
Accelerated Cost Recovery System ls now
available from .the Newport Beach office of
Ernst·& Whioney,-an accounting firm. The
booklet is designed to help individuals and
businesses discover how t.hey can best take
ady-antage of the new lax provisions in t.heir
financial planning. Ernst & WhiMey tax
specialists also have developed general and
detailed reports on the system. To obtain the l book.let or additional information, write to I· Ernst &-Whinney, 400 MacArthur Blvd., Suite
1
800, Ne~rt Beach 92660, or phone 851-1700.
• • · "Got a problem" Then wnte to Pat ~l~, · .. f.1'iI""""" Dunn Pot u.>ill cut red tape. getting .. J. the MSWt'rS and. OCllOR you need to
solve 1nequ1t1es in govt'mmenl and
business Mail y<rur questions to Pat
lhmn. At Your Service. Orange Coast
Daily P1wl. P.O Bo:r 1560. Costa Me:KJ. CA 92626.
THI CHUICH OF
ST. MATTHEW-IY·THl-SIA
(Tradlllonat Eplecopel)
invites you to celebrate
CHISTMAS £VE HOLY EUCHARIST
with traditional music and carols
. b.c.cicA1r·24, t p.-.
·eommunity Congregational Church
Mertz Hall 611 Heliotrope, Coron._ ctel Mar
l'llllir.HZ.ZJOI
(&oak of Common PraY« -1~)
'.Cbript:Lutheran Church · CMl.asourt Syond1
760 Vtotorla St., Costa Me a
Lolhar V. 1'omow, J>utor -AMe
CHRISTMAS.EVE . ..
7;00 P.M. Chltdren't Pn>iratn & S<irvtce
• • Jt;l)O P,'I. -· Candlell•ht Service . .
CHRJSTMAS PAY
lO:IO /t.M. -Worshtp,servlce
9nill.,_SChool 6 Adult B\blt ct t •IO A.M .
• Woratrlp $ervice • t · tUc 11 ·oo AM
•I "4..iloof -S48.'8M
'
Tht .. Early Rendezvous"
F'mm S: ~o co 7:00 p m
Now Tala11g Reservat1011s For New Yea r's
3421 Via Lido. Newport Beach
Reservations recommended 714/675-4904
BUTTONS AND BOWS
BOUTIQUE
NI CHllSTMAS SAU
500/ .... 00/o Off h9?1!!1•
•lM IOMAMTIC LOOK
•KNICKERS--.ALL COLORS
•JOGGING SUITS
•YVES DA.Ml&.
DISIGNU PANTS
·~ •Mite SICllTS
•COIOUROY
WAU<IMG SHORTS
•Cottl>UROY
T AJLOREO JACKETS
•GOLD ACCENTED
ILOUSIS
I 79D E. 17th ST.
COSTA MESA
645-6731
M-W Ir SAT. I 0-6 THUR.°FRI. IO·'
Located In Von1 Shoppinq Center
Meat To Collllt•"' Co.A
•
\
...
'
111111
lallyPHlt •
WEDNESDAY, oec. 23, 1981
CAVALCADE FOOD 82-3
84 .
---~----
There . are those who
try their best . not to show
seasonal good cheer. See
Art Hoppe on P.age 82.
Shoplifters targeted
Officers on lookout for thieves during holiday-rush
BY I ODI CADENHEAD °' ............... Cbriltmu meana more than
department st.ores packed with
barrted tut-minute •boppers t.o
police officer Wayne RJedmann.
It means more shoplifters.
He is one of two Costa Mesa
offtcen aaigned to patrol South
Coast Plua all the year around.
About eleht more officers are
added during the holiday seaaoo.
They drive around in a beat·up
Chevy looking for wouJd·be car
thieves. Some, like officer
Rledmann and Tom Curtis,
patrol the mall on foot.
Others watch the Costa Mesa
shopping center from a parting
structure roof. And one
undercover officer covers the
sprawling parking lot on a
bicycle.
The Christmas season brings
more shoppers to the mall and
with them com e shoplifters
hoping to get more than a .good
bargain.
Every day about four are
ar'rested, said Riedmann.
Security officers place them
under citizen's arrest and lben
Rtedmann moves in to book
them either for petty theft
(under $200) or grand theft Cover $20()).
Few know that the penalty for
shoplifting bas increased, said
Riedmann. Grand theft la a
felony and carries $5,000 bail
a n a p e t t y t ·h e l t ·, a a
·misdemeanor with $1,000 bail.
Typically juveniles will try to
take cosmetics, earrln1a or
desiper Jeana, aald Rledmann.
But the typical shoplifter is a
Caucasian woman between 19
and 28 who will either stuff the
item in her bat or attempt to
"The ingenuity
of some of these
people is
s o mething to
see."
wear it out of the store, said
Riedmann. Some are quite able
to afford the merchandise.
A spokesman for South Coast
Plaza said it is impo.ssible to
co mput e bow much
merchandise is stolen every
year.
Riedmann esti'?la~es that
crooks walk away with
merchandise valued in the
millions of dollars from the mall
annually.
The more "professional"
shoplifters use bags with false
Holocaust survivor
cited for victory
Mel Mermelstein , a
Huntington Beach businessman
and survivor of a Nazi death
camp, was honored Tuesday in
Lo8 Angeles for challenging an
oreanization that claimed the
Holocaust was a myth.
As a result of Mermelstein's
s uit against the Institute of
Historical Review of Torrance, a
S11perior Court jud1e took
judicial notice that the
Holocaust was fact.
The judges' legal ruling last
October is believed
unprecedented in ,American
courts.
Los Angeles City Council mem·
ber s pre sen ted Mer ·
melst ei n with a res ·
olution commending his efforts.
"By honoring me with l!US
resolution, they're also hononng
those who survived the furnaces
of Auschwitz·Birkenau a~d
Buchenwald, and those six
million brethren who did not
make it," Mermelstein said.
"That includes my mother and
two sisters whom I saw being
driven to gas chambers at
Auschwitz," he said. "They
w•re told they were being taken
ta showers."
Mermelstein, who was 17
when imprisoned at Auschwitz,
in Poland, says bis father and
brother also died wliile Nui
~ captives. He said they were
worked to death in mines in
Poland.
Mermelstein, who lives in
Long Beach, is a lecturer on the
Holocaust.
About two years ago, the
Institute of Historical Review
offered a public reward of
$50,000 to anyone who could
prove Jews were gassed in Nazi
priton camps.
Me rmelstein says that
officials of that organization
mailed him a letter issuing a
personal challenge.
M ermel s t e in says t h e
organfaation then failed to live
up to Its offer and would not
review evidence he'd gathered.
Then last March, he filed a $6
million lawsuit against the
group claiming it had failed to
live up t.o its ofrer. had libeled
him in a newsletter and caused
him intentional e motional
distress.
The judges' recognition of the
Holocaust as fact was part of
that lawsuit's proceedinis. The
damages port.ion of the lawsuit
is still pending.
·•Anyone who besmirches the
name of those martyrs who died
is a coward," Mermelstein said.
"What could 1 do when they hit
me In the face with their lies, let
them run me into the ground? 1
bad. to ~gbt back."
Tooth e;draction
1 elephanbsized job •
-The three veterinarians met at Bw STEVE MITCHELL Lion Country Safari in Irvine Ol' ... o...,,...,.,...
If Hattie is a bit grumpy this
morning, there's a good reason
for it.
You'd be a bit under the
weather too if three dentists
uaed crowbars, hammer and
cllisels to remove a five·pound
tQOtb from your mouth.
The 35-year-old Asian elephant
bb been off her feed for the put
10 months, and her ownen at
C!rcu~. yargaa we.re a bil
healthy,
l ittl e
. 'She's
; us t .a
~roggy.'
•cernecl w,beo abe shed 1,800 '
PfUDdt. ~ diet ol bananu and bread ~ed bet' out to ~.300 pound& -Wt that'• .wt a far cey ft'Om tbe
1,too pcMmdl ahe welf1b'4 before
11•r top rl1bt mo ar' be&an Wlhertnc her. fAnCI, · alllee HatUe play1 an
J•portmt part in next wetk'•
~• Parade 111 Pasadena,
ton qned the tooth wOUld
II ve to be removed.
ea WUUama, wbo tralnl .aU •riaau for Clrcut V.,.!!, 11• Dr . Dave Fa&an a erloary, dentist from &.;
.... wttb .... llarUa •.
• -lloaald Oatter' bada ~
Tuesday, where Circus VarJ{as
is spending the winter.
Arter administering 7 CCs or a
dru1 described as sort or a
"supermorphine," Hattie went
under shortly before 11 a .m.
Doctors said one drop of the
potent anesthetic Is enough to
kill a man.
Then armed wllb a
c a r p e 'n t e r ' s d r i I 1 ,
sledgehammer, crowbar and
chisel and monllorine her beart~at on an EKG macbi.ne,
the trio removed a S.2 pound
molar that was growing at an
angle and chiseled off a large
chunk of plaque from Hattie's
left top molar.
After the extraction, the vets
administered an antidote to tbe
anealbetlc and Hattie stru~ed
to her feet less than a mmute
later. "She's healthy, jut a lltUe
irosfy," aald Lion Country
Sahrl spokesman James
Heatbfleld after the 80·mlnute
1ur1ery. Clrcua officials said the old
elepbut was even able to eat a
Uttle ba)' last niibt.
And bJ .Ju. l , ab• 1hould
be ready to joln a doaen other
pachyderms who will pull •
lar1e fl:oat along the Paaldena
parade route.
If ,ou've tot your T~ on N8"
Year'• O.y, Kattie'• lbe 1..&t.e ... -... not. Tbe .. wit.la OlllJ HveD teeth. ...
\
. .
bottoms that they s tuff w1tb
everything from diamonds to
perfume.
Some women attach clothes t.o
girdles equipped with specially
made hooks, said Riedmann.
·'The inJtenuity of some of
these people is somethine to
see," said Riedmann.
Last year be arrested a man
who m anaged to stuff a
complete suit inside bis socks.
Police found the pants and ves,t
in one sock and the pln·striped
jacket In the other.
But police involvement doesn't
stop with shoplifters. Once in a
while they get caUed to break up
a quarrel , especially over
parking spaces.
"The other day a girl g9t out
of her car to protect a spot,"
said officer Curtis. "And this
guy almost ran over her ."
But a lot of the offi cers' time
is spent just walking around the
mall smiling at shoppers and
deterring would·be shoplifters.
Oddly enough, It's the only
chance the community has to
see uniformed officers walking a
beat.
''This is a real community
relations job," said Rledmann.
··A lot of the time people are
asking us where the stores are,"
he said.
HONO R ED M el
Mermelstein, Nazi death
camp survivor. was honored
in Los Angeles. ,
The LOS Angeles City Council
resolution stated in part that
Mermelstein was being honored
for "his determination and
courage on behalf of the millloos
of people who died and suffered
at the hands of the Nazis 37
years ago."
It continues: "(he) rose up
against the cruelty of a few,
sentencing their ignorant voices
lo a resounding silence, so Uutt
the true story of a people's
s uff e ring may never be
forgotten."
WATCHFUL EYES Tom Curlis, a Costa
Mesa policeman. keeps watchful eye out for
shoplifting s uspects among throngs of people
.............................
at Costa Mesa's South Coast Plaza tihopprng
Center
CdM folk w o u ld k eep USC out
Residents eye suit to block move into vacant school
By STEVE MARBL~
OI IM o.Ny l'IMl Sl.tff
Corona del Mar residents say
they'll sue to block University of
Southern Califor nia from
m ov in g i nt o a vaca nt
elementary school in their
neighborhood.
"No offense to USC. mind
you ,·• explained Joe Stewart, a
Corona del Mar homeowner,
"but their plan is just too
horrendous to think about."
Roughly 60 residents met with
USC officials Monday evening at
the vacant Corona del Ma r
.El e m e ntary Sch ool in an
attempt to settle the growing
dispute.
"Some of them," commented
James Massey, a USC director,
··seemed less concerned about
how they can Live with us and
more concerned about how they
can gel rid or us."
USC has leased the s hutdown
elementary school for five
years. The campus, starting
Jan 14, is to be used as a
graduate school for ·business
administration students.
The Corona del Mar campus
was picked, USC officials said,
b ecause several unnamed
Orange County firms proposed
that USC open a campus in the
county.
Residents. worried about
traffic, parking and noise from
evening classes, contend the
lease arrangement came as a
surprise to them.
"USC is ·trying to be a good
neighbor, but it's a lillle late for
that,'' said Stewart. "We should
have been involved in the
planning or this from lhe start ...
Newport Beach Couacilman
Paul Hummel, a Corona del Mar
resident and USC graduate, said
a public hearing should have
Stewart said the only
l1llernative now left to the neighborhood is to file a lawsuit
against use and the school
district.
"No offense to USC, mind you,
but plan too horrendous to think
about."
been held before the lease was
signed. •
City officials in Ne wport
agreed . They told the
Newport·Mesa Unified School
District, owners of the vacant
sch ool , that it n ee ded a
council·approved use permit.
In response to that request,
sc hool dis trict trustees
unanimously voted to override
the "city, using a state law that
allows a school district to
exempt itself from city laws and
codes.
··And we have to move
quickly," he said, "real
quickly."
USC spoltesman Massey said
the private university Intends t.o
move forward with its plans.
"We have a commitment, we
have invested money already
and we really want to be there,"
Massey said, adding, ··we also
want to resolve the differences."
He said unless he hears
otherwise, class will begin on
Jan. 14.
UCI slat es symposium
A UC lrvine symposium on ~e
subject of work·related cancer 1s
scheduled Jan. 14·15 at the
Newporter Inn, the UCI Public
Informati on O ffi ce has
announced. A panel of nationally known
physicians and research,
scientists will discuas recent
developments in the detection of
"cancer huards in the workpl~ce
and methods for controlhn•
exposure to envir onmental
cancers.
The presence of
cancer·causing chemicals in the
workplace hu been receiving
increased public attention
pecause of reports of lung
cancer in ubestos worken and
liver cancer in polyvinyl
chloride worlrer.s.
For more information about
the ayinposiwn call 833-72'1.
~LY WHEN t ~·· -V~Dr. Dave I'~ . lakes cloee.look at lnfected molar or '1"8tt.le~t an e1-:ant
i ;;
J
Orange Coast Q~ILY PILOT/Wednesday, December 23. 1981
Yu{e pleas sent ~eagan to save death benefits
~ 'OllKN&BDllAM paid dlrectly to the chndren ol Aoaeles and Riveralde couoUn huaband, Marine Lt. Col. Jullua cbooatna •career. reaclndin1 them. "They didn't
.. ...,,.....,. deceued parents wlll be have formed an ora•nllatlon "Mack" Lewis, was kllltd ftve Mrs. Lundy'• butband, an Air 110 much u 1end a notice eo we
Pr11ldeot Reaaan wlll be terminated at aae 18 UQder the called Survivors of Sac~fice to years a1o in 1 plane crash Force major, waa killed on would know about the cuta," she
recel1'i., aome IHt·mlnute Reaian admlnlsLration'• budlet draw public attention to the durtnc a flllbl al El Toro Cbri1tma1 Eve ln 1970 wbUe said. .
Cbrlatanu ea.rda from widows l:uttlna plan approved by lmptndi"' cuts. Marl.De Base. flyln1 a aHrch and rescue The Survivors of Sacrtflce
and children of U.S. servicemen Congress. mlaalonover Laos. have enlisted lbe help of Marina tllled ln the line of duty. This assistance currently The cuts affect payments for "You lhink of it as something def Rey resident James Jordan. continues until tbe child ls 22, or the support of all children who that la 1oinc to be there," lhe "This Is Just very hard to a certlfied public accountant, Abo~t 30 women ,and their finishes his or her education. lose parents. However, Sueanne added. The 49.year-old widow accept," she sald, her voJce who la volunteering bis Ume.
chlldren gathered in Miaat~ In addition monthly payment.I Lewis, who hosted Tuesday's said 1be baa three leeo-a1e cboklq with emotl•. "Tbla J ordan uld be la aeektnc
Viejo Tuesday to write to widows of servicemen killed galhering,saidsuchbenefitsare children wbe> are dependial OD action la Jeopardhlnl my tax-exemptstatuaforthefroup.
mes,.-ies on the cards In action who have not parti.cularly Important to the assistance for tht!ir chUdren'acareen." ' "Mv father was kil ed in
protestlqg the cuts In Social remarried will end when their military families. educaUona. She 1Ald her husband, a career : Korea," Jordan said. "Without
Sec1,1rl\Y death benefit~ children are 16. rather than the "Il'spartoflhe lnsurancethal Los Angelet resident Johanna officer, bad been promlaed the the benefits from Socia l ach edul~d to takt effect in current standard of 18. a military man would d,e~ Lundy said the cuts ln Social Social Security benefits by the Security I don't know how I ~ugusn9'3. Wtdowsof•militaryperaonnel upon in case of his deatb,'1 SecuritywouldgreaUyaffecttbe 1ovemmentbeforehedied,and would 'bave paid for my
.Benefit.a f f()m SocW Security from Orange, San Dieao. Los e xplained Mr:s. Lewis, whose options her: slx children have in now that same. 1overnment ta education."
From Page A1
POLAND SHORT. • • Justice Department
drops Allen prt)be
o.ity ~!Mt S&att ~
LASHES OUT -State Sen.
John Schmitz bas ca lled
aborti o n s upp o rt e r s
"murderous m arauders."
From Page A1
TARGETED F e m i nist
Gloria Allred is one of the
people who has t aken the
barb of SC'hmil z' criticisms.
SCHMITZ B~TS FOES. • •
leader C Allred> comes off with a
diatribe against me personally
and throws a chastity belt at me
meant for my wife.
· "ln four days of hearings, we
heard over 180 witnesses," he
said. "For three of those days
neither my staff nor myself had
a lunch break.
"Then the only thing that gets
in the news is the chastity belt
bit," he said.
"She's the one who called the
media, she's the one who puts on
the show, and she's the one who
puts on ll\e controversy.
"I hit back and the media hits
me. I didn't start this fight. All J
did was hold a meeting with
probably a record number of
wil'le:ie~es, and suddenly I'm
From Page A1
the o n e that c au ses the
controversy.
"When 1 even the mark in my
own comeback , s uddenly I
should be on the defensive?," be
asked.
Co nc e rning Rob e rt i 's
c o m me n ts about possibly
re moving Schmitz from the
chairmanship, the local senator
said. "The Lord giveth and the
Lotd taketh away. I've done
most everything else in politics .
I g u ess taking away a
committee chairmanship would
just add to the laurels."
The four committee hearings
wer e conducted earlier this
m onth on Schmitz' proposed
constitutional amendment that
w o uld d e fine life al the
moment of conception.
ERA DEALT SE1:BACKS. • •
telephone interview from her
home in Alton, Ill.
The ERA requires approval by
38 states and no s tate has
ratified it since Indiana became
• the 35th to do so in 1977 .
Callister wrote that Congress.
by a two-thirds vote of both
houses, can set a reasonable
time limit for stales to act for
ratification lo be effective.
"'When this lime is set, it is
~inding on Congress and the
states and it cannot be changed
by Congress thereafter." the
judge wrote.
Callisler's ruling today could
mean the death of the ERA since
the five states which rescinded
l'tae ir ratification vote:; can no
longer be counted among the 35
states wh.ich had voted to ratify.
He said Idaho, Tennessee,
Kentucky. South Dakota and
Nebraska effectively nullified
their prior ratification of the
pro p osed constitutional
amendment and may not be
counted as ra tifying states.
He also s aid the same would
be true for any other states
which prope rly certifled their
ac tions of rescission to the
G e n e r a l Se rv ic e s
Administration .
·'The basis for the Idaho
political struggle is being
overcome only with difficulty."
Reliable reports from Warsaw
which bypassed military censors
said Solidarity, suspended when
martial law was imposed Dec.
13, was distributing leaflets
calling for .. passive resistance"
to ··an occupation by our own
army."
Warsaw radio .also reported
som e union miners planted
dynamite charges at shafts and
that in Gdansk a police station
was attacked with gasoline
born bs. It djd not say when the
incidents occurred; they were
reported in a Hsting of dozens of
Solidarity members charged
with trying lo organize strikes
and circulating leaflets and
other violations of martial Jaw.
The state-run Warsaw radio
said most Poles were obeying
martial law. But reports from
outs ide Poland on Tuesday
indicated thousands or Poles
were resisting the crackdown in
Gdansk and other regions and
hundreds of prisoners were
being mistreated.
The r eports could not be
i nd e pende ntl y confirme d .
Girl dies
in car fall
A 2-year-old girl opened the
door lo her back seat, fell out as
the car turned and was killed
Tuesday when the ~ar's rear tire
ran over her, said Santa Ana
police.
Anna Lilia Galvan of Garden
Grove fell through the grasp of
an aunt who was riding
:ilongside her as the car turned
left from Harbor onto 17th Street
in Santa Ana at 4:35 p.m .. said
police Sgt. Hugh Mooney.
The girl was taken to Fountain
Valley Community Hospital.
where she died. '
legislators' claim of standing in
this suit is that as participants in
the ratification process, their
individual votes in favor of
ratification for the seven-year
time period, or for the rescission
of the prior ratification; have
been debased by the actions of
the defendant <Congress) and a
suit of this nature is proper to
vindicate their vote,'' Callister
wrote in h.i s 72-page decision.
He said that Congress has no
power to determine "the validity
or invalidity of a properly
c e rtified ratification or
rescission.'·
Knott grandchildren benefit
Daughters plan to disclaim their interests in estate
Tbe 21-page will of Knoll's
Berry Farm founder Walter
Knott names three of his
children and two of his
grandchildren as beneficiaries
of his nearly $2 Qlillion estate,
Orange County Superior Court
documents •ndicate.
But the three daughters
oamed in K.oott's will plan to
disclaim their interests in the
estate and pass tht! inheritance
alone •n•lead to tbelr own cbildr~ followinc a Jan. 20 Su~r Court probate bearing,
~ family spokesman said.
The will, filed this week in
Santa Ana, stated that the
'1 -year -old former
:sharecn>pQer•s estate was to go
to three ~uahtera -Virginia
Knott Bender. Marion Knott
•
Mo nla pert, and Toni. Knoll
O liphant -and two
gr andch.ildren, Ken and Steve
Knoll, whose father is the senior
Knott's only son, Russell.
Russe ll Knott , family
spoll.esman, asked to be left out
of-h \s father's will ln the
mid·lOOO's. Cordelia Knott, the
etder Knoll's wife, died l.n April
19'1f.
Tbe net effect of Knoll's will,
then, ls that nine grandchlldren
in all will share equally in the
estate.
Six o f those nine
grandchildren are a c ti•e as
general partners In running the
Buena Park amusement park
that Knott and hls wife built into
one of the naUorJ's Jfremler
tourist attractions.
Knott himself had -.old orf his
O .. AN•COAST D1ily Pilat
CIHlffled adveftl.tng 7141142·5171
All other depertmenta 642-4321
MAIN OFFICE ut W•ft..., Jll., C9'4.1-. CA ................ ,... c:--...... CA. ..
Copyrltl'll "'' ~ .... C..R ""911Wntl ~y. ,.. ,...,...,_ 11...,..,.,., Nlt«let _w ..
W91'11MfNl'ICI ..,.... "'*' .. f~ "'"""" 9"(1el ~ .. ,...,,1111'_
interest in the amusement
facility t4) his grandchildren ln
1974 .
Known as Mr. 1Republican in'
Orange County political circles.
Knott died on Dec. 3. The wlll
filed in superior court Monday
was dated Jan. 7, 1965.
Na med as co-executors were
his four children -Russell
Virginia, Toni and Marion. AJi
four are active in the running of
the popular southern California
amusement park.
Richard Johnson, finance
director for Knoll'sBerry Farm,
said it is believed thJt
inheritance taxes could take as
much as $750,000 of the total $2
miUlon estate. .
Johnson said the elder Knott
was a genero~ contributor to
various causes. political and
pbllanlbropic, and that his
estate probably would bave been
larger LI it hadn't been for bls
many doMUona over the yean.
··He was quite 1tneroua and
be an.nually made contrlbutlcml
to cbarllla • . . his hlat.or)' ol
charitable contributions waa
very leftlt,by," Johnson aald.
Knott had Uved in a mobUe
bome on the amusement pert
arounda 1lnce 1974. He bad
suffered Parkinson's dl1tue '°" maoy YMnl.
· Two of Knott'• daufbtert,
Vir1lnta and Tonl, Hu In
Ne•stort Belch. Hla tblrd
dau,hter. Marlon. llvea la
Lafuna Beacb . A
1randdau1bter. Jana Hackel&,
al10 Uves In Newport Beach.
' I
Normal communications
facilities io Poland have been
cut and restrictions placed on
Western reporters there.
Warsaw radlo reported that:
-1,026 miners at the
Ziemowit pit have now broken
the strike started eight days ago
despite "psychological terror"
by about 100 strike oreanizera. It
said 1,000 miners remained
underground. Another 1,000-plua
miners were still andergiyund
at the Piast mine. Local
Communist Party officials have
tried to convince them to
s urr~nder but their efforts
"remain fruitless because of a
group of adventurers who are
carelessly playing with human
life."
-"Certain disturbances in
the work rhythm in the mines"
and snowbound transport trains
created a 140,000-ton coal
shortaee in six provin~es.
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
Jusllce Department today 1ave
presidential aide Richard V.
Allen a clean 'bill of health on the
two questions that remained
after it c'osed out its
lnveatiaation concerning bis
receipt of $1 ,000 from two
Japanese journalists.
Attorney General William
French Smith announced that be
found no need to appoint a
special prosecutor to investigate
Allen's acceptance of three gift
watches and of errors in the
financial disclosure form he
nted wbeo he became President
Reagan's national security
adviser.
Smith's decision appeared to
clear the way for Allen to
resume his post. He went on
paid leave while the
investigations were going on.
At the White House, deputy
press secretary Pete Houssel
said there would be no
immediate comment on whether
Allen would return to his job.
He said an internal White
House review of the allegations
was continuing.
"It will be conducted
expeditiously and thoroughly
no"'." be said.
About three weeks ago, the
Justice Department ruled that
there were no grounds for
appointing a special prosecutor
to look into the $1,000 Allen
received after arranging an
Inauguration Day interview
Offices cWsing for holidays
The Christmas and New Year
holidays will result in altered
hours at government offices and
some businesses aloag the
Orange Coast.
All City Halls will be closed
Friday for Christmas and the
following Friday, Ne'w Year's
Day. In addition, Irvine City
Hall will be closed· Thursday,
and Newport Beach City Hall
will only be open until noon
Thursday.
Newport City Hall will follow
the same schedule on Thursday,
Dec. 31, but Irvine City Hall will
be open regular hours on that
da1. .
l"ountain Valley, which does
not have Friday refuse
collection, will not have its
pickup schedule affected by the
holidays.
But homes in Newport Beach,
Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa,
Irvine and Laguna Beach that
normally receive refuse service
on Fridays will be picked up on
Saturday during the next two
weeks.
U .S. P ost Offices will be
closed on Christmas Day and
New Year's Day. But regular
counter service and mail
delivery is scheduled on the
Thursdays and Saturdays
immediately before and after
the holidays.
Some area banks and savings
and loans are planning to close
early on Christmas Eve, but
schedules vary among the local
offices.
WINTER SALE STARTS NOW
BIGGEST AND BEST SALE EVER
Regency Court By
ON SALE NOW
111111 1:1111
lllly Pllll •
WEDNESDAY. DEC. 23, 1981
CAVALCADE
FOOD 82-3
84
There . are those who
try their best . not to show
seasonal good cheer. See
Art Hoppe on Page 82.
0
D
Shoplifters targeted
Officers on lookout for thieves during holiday-rush
lly .JODI CADENHEAD °' .. ~ ......... Chriltmas means more than
department at.ores packed with
barl'ied Jut-minute shoppers to
police officer Wayne Riedmann.
It means more shoplifters.
He ls one of two Costa Mesa
officers assigned to patrol South
Coast Plua all the year around.
About eight more officers are
added during the holiday season.
They drive around in a beat-up
Chevy looking for would·be car
thieves. Some. like officer
Riedmann and Tom Curlis,
patrol the mall on root.
Others watch the Costa Mesa
shopping center from a parking
stru ct ure roor. And one
undercover officer covers the
sprawling parking lot on a
bicycle.
The Christmas season brings
more shoppers to the mall and
with them come s hoplirters
hoping to get more than a good
bargain.
Every day about four are
arrested, said Riedmann .
Securit~ ofricers place them
under citizen's arrest and then
Rtedmann moves in to book
them either for petty theft
C under $200 l or grand theft
(over $200).
Few know that the penalty for
shoplifting bas increased, said
Riedmann. Grand theft ls a
felony and carries $5,000 bail
a n a p e t t y t 'b e l t ·, s a
misdemeanor with $1,00() ball.
Typically juveniles will try to
take cosmetics, earrings or
designer jeans, said Riedrnann.
But the typical shoplifter is a
Caucasian woman between 19
and 28 who will either stuff the
item in her bag or attempt lo
''The ingenuity
of some of these
people is ·
something to
see."
wear it out of the store, said
Riedmann. Some are quite able
to afford the merchandise.
A spokesman for South Coast
Plaza said it is impossible to
compute how much
merchandise is stolen every
year.
Riedmann esti'Dates that
crooks walk away with
merchandise valued in the
millions of dollars from the mall
annually.
The more ''professional"
shoplifters use bags with false
Holocaust survivor
cited for victory
M e l Mermelstein , a
Huntington Beach businessman
and survivor of a Nazi death
camp, was honored Tuesday in
Los Angeles for challenging an
organization that claimed Uie
Holocaust was a myth.
As a result of Mermelstein's
suit against the Institute or
Historical Review of Torrance, a
Superior Court judge took
j ad icial notice that the
Holocaust was fact.
The judges' legal ruling last
October is believed
u nprecedented in American
courts.
Los Angeles City Council mem·
ber s presented M e r -
mel s tein with a re s ·
olution commending bis efforts.
"By honoring me with t!11s
resolution, they're also hononng
those who survived the furnaces
of Auschwitz-Birkenau and
Buchenwald, and tho~e six
million brethren who did not
make it," Mermelstein said.
•'Thal includes my mother and
two sisters whom I saw being
driven lo gas chambers at
Auschwitz," he said. "They
were told they were being taken
to showers."
Mermelstein, who was 17
when imprisoned at Auschwitz,
in Poland, says his father and
brother also died while Nazi
• captives. He s aid they we~e
worked to death in mines an
Poland.
Mermelstein, who lives in
Long Beach, is a lecturer on the
Holocaust.
About two years ago, the
Institute of Historical Review
offered a public reward of
$50,000 to anyone who could
prove Jews were gassed in Nazi
prison camps.
Mermelstein says that
officials of that organization
mailed him a letter issuing a
personal challenge.
Mermelstein says t h e
organization then failed to live
up lo its offer and would not
review evidence he'd gathered.
Then last March, he filed a $6
million lawsuit against the
group claiming it bad fai!ed to
live up to its offer, bad hbeled
him in a newsletter and caused
him intentional e m otional
distress. The judges· recognition of the
Holocaust as fact was part of
that lawsuit's proceedings. The
damages portion of the lawsuit
is still pending.
.. Anyone who besmirches the
name of those martyrs who died
is a coward," Mermelstein sai~.
"Whal could I do when they hit
me in the face with thelr lies, let
them run me into the ground? I
had to fight back."
Tooth ext,raction .
elephanJ,..sized job
lh STEvE MITCHELL 01 ... Delly .... , ....
'U Hattie is a bit grumpy this
morning, there's a good reason
for it.
You'd be a bit undet the
weather too if three dentista
uaed crowbars, hammer and
c1Usels lo remove a five-pound
't<!°-tb from your mouth.
The 35-year-old Asian elephant
h~s been off her feed for the past
10 months .. and her owners al
C!rcu~ yargas we!e a bit
• 'She's
j ust .a ,
healthy,
little
qroggy.'
ciftce.med when she shed l,SJO 1
ptU.Dda. ~ diet ol babanaa and bread
btlked her out to S.200 pounds -that •1 IW1 a far cry frqpa UM
pounda she welfhed Wore
top rl•bt mo ar be•an
ertqber. .•
nil, · 1lnce Hattie play1 aD
l portant part in nest Weels'I
H Parade lD Pauden~!. ton .,..... tbe tootb wowa
ve to be remOTed. •·~ wuuam.. ibo traim ..all • ......,ta for Circus v.,. •..
lledOf. Dan Fa•an11 a,
terlnary dent11t from ND
e10, Uoaa wttb Veta llutiD R.
...... -Rould Gutter, ....... froaf'l:nclaq.
The three veterinarians met at
Lion Country Safari In Irvine
Tuesday, where Circus Var~as
is spending the winter.
After administering 7 CCs of a
dru1 described as sort of a
"supermorphlne," Hattie went
under s hortly before 11 a.m .
Doctors said one drop of the
potent anesthetic is enough to
kill a man.
Then , armed with a
carpenter 's drill,
sled&ehammer, crowbar and
chisel, and monitoring her
heartbeat on an EKG machine,
the trio removed a S.2 pound
molar that was growinc at an
angle and chiseled off a large
chunk of plaque from Hattie's
left top molar.
After the extraction, the vets
administered an antidote to the
anesthetic and Hattie struggled
to her feet less than a minute
later. "She's healthy, just a UWe
aro&lf," said Lion Country
· Safari s pokesman James
·Heatbfleld after the 80-minute
IW'lel')'.
Clrcu offlclala aald t.be old
elephant waa even able to eat a
little bay lut nlpt.
And by Jan. 1, ab• abould
be rad)' lo join a doaen other
pachyderms •. bo will pull a
lar1e float aton1 the Pasadena
parade route. U ,au've aot your T~ oe Hew Year'• Oay, HaW•'• the sftlt.t.
OM Oii tbe rlaht. TM OM wi~
only HveD t.et.b.
I
.
bottoms that they stuff watb
everything from diamonds to
perfume.
Some women attach clothes to
girdles equipped with specially
made hooks, said Riedmann.
•'The in"enuily of some of these people is something to
see,'' said Riedmann.
Last year he arrested a man
who managed to stuff a
complete s uit Inside bis socks.
Police found the pants and vest
in one sock and the pin-striped
jacket in the other.
But police involvement doesn't
stop with shoplifters. Once in a
while they get called to break up
a quarrel, especially over
parking spaces.
"The other day a girl got out
of her car to protect a spot,"
said officer Curlis. "And this
guy almost ran over her."
But a lot of the officers' time
is spent just walking around the
mall smiling at shoppers and
deterring would·be shoplifters.
Oddly enough, it's the only
chance the community has to
see uniformed officers walking a
beat.
·'This is a real community
relations job." said Riedmann.
'·A lot of the time people are
asking us where the stores are,"
he said .
tjONORED -M el ~ermelstein. Nazi death
camp survivor. was honored
in Los An geles.
The Los Angeles City CowtcU
r esolution stated In part that
Mermelstein was being honored
for "his determination and
courage on behalf of tbe millions
of people who died and suffered
at the hands of the Nazis 37
years ago.''
It continues: "C he) rose up
against the cruelty of a few,
sentencing their ignorant voices
to a resowtding silence, so that
the true story of a people's
s uffering may never b e
forgotten ....
WATCHFUL EYES Tom Curtis, a Gosta
Mesa policeman. keeps watchful eye out for
s hoplifting sus pects a.r:nong throngs of people
. ....., ............ ~ .....
at Costa Mesa's South Coast Plaza Shopping
Center.
CdM folk would keep USC out
Residents eye suit to block move into vacant school
By STEVE MARBLt;
Of ... Dally ~li.c S\I"
Corona del Mar residents say
they'll sue to block University of -
South e rn Californ ia from
mo vi ng i nt o a vacant
ele m entary school in their
neighborhood .
"No offense to USC, mind
you ." explained Joe Stewart, a
Corona del Mar homeowner,
.. but their plan is jus t too.
horrendous to think about."
Roughly 60 residents met with
USC officials Monday evening at
the vacant Corona d el Mar
Elementa r y School in an
attempt to setUe the growmg
dispute.
"Some of them," commented
James Massey, a USC director,
··seemed less concerned about
how they can Ii ve with us and
more concerned about how they
can get rid of us.''
USC has leased the shutdown
e lementary school for five
years. The campus, starting
J an . 14. is to be used as a
graduate s chool for business
administration students.
The Co rona del Mar campus
was pi cked, use officials said,
because seve r a l unnamed
Orange County firms proposed
that USC open a campus in the
county.
R esidents . worri ed about
traffic, parking and noise from
evening classes, contend the
lease arrangement came as a
surprise lo them.
"USC is trying to be a good
neighbor. but it's a little late for
that," said Stewart. ··w e should
have been Involved in the
planning of this from the start."
Newport Beach Councilman
Paul Hummel, a Corona del Mar
resident and use graduate, said
a public hearing should have
Ste w a rt s aid the only
a lternative now left to the
neighborhood is to file a lawsujt
against USC and the school
district.
"No offense to USC, mind you,
but plan too horrendous to think
about."
been held before the lease was
signed.
City officials in Newport
agreed They t o ld the
Newport-Mesa Unified School
Oistri~t. owners of the vacant
sc hool , that it needed a
council.approved use permit. ·
In response to that request,
sc hool distri c t trustees
unanimously voted lo override
the city, using a stale law that
allows a school distric t to
exempt itself from city laws and
codes.
··And we have to move
quickly ," he said , "r eal
quickly."
USC spokesman Massey said
the private university intends w
move forward with its plans.
"We have a commitment, we
have invested money already
and we really want to be there," •
Massey said, adding, "we also
want to resolve the differences."
He said unless be hears
otherwise, class will begin on
Jan. 14.
UCI slat es symposium
A UC Irvine symposium on the
subject of work·related cancer is
scheduled Jan. 14·15 al the
Newporter Inn, the UCI Public
Information Office has
announced. A panel of nationally knoWll
physicians and research
scientists will discuss recent
developments in the detection of
cancer hazards in the workplace
and methods for controllln'
exposure to environmental
cancers.
The pre se nce of
cancer-causing chemicals ln the
workplace has been receiving
increased public attention
pecause of reports of hmg
cancer in asbestos workers and
Ii ver cancer in polyvinyl
chloride workers.
Fof more information about
the symposium call 833-724.t.
'ONLY WHIM I LAUGH' -Vel9rinari8D J>r. Dav~ takes close look at infected mblar of ••lf1rttte, .. en
~ ' t
I;
'·
11
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t t i
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---·-'"""--· ... ···--·· .... ·-_ ........ -·--· ~ ______ ..,.. ...
•
YOUR HDMITIWN DAllY PIPIR
W E 0 N l '::> 0 AV C 1 f < ! M lff H I J I ':Ill I OHANCif.COUNIV f.A , ' "~,,A 25 CENTS
Schmitz attacks abortion rights advocates
By STEVE MITCHELL ota.0..-,,... .....
State Sen. John Schmitz said
be r eleased a blistering
statement assailing abortion
rights advocates as a means of
bitting back at what be termed a
"raw publicity stunt" by
feminist lawyer Gloria Allred.
The two-page statement, on
Senate Committee on
Constitutional Amendments
stationery, was tilled: "Senator
Schmih: and hla Committee
Survive the 'Attack of tbe
Bulldykes '," and uaea
derogatory terms referring to
J e ws, lesbians and feminist
groups.
Tbe letter, released to
Sacramento press
representatives Tuesday,
prompted Sen. David Roberti to
suggest be may seek Schmitz'
ouster as chairman of the
amendments committee next
week.
~ok,Ma
no cords
When some automotive
technology students at Golden
West College ready their cars
for the road, the call isn't "fill
'er up" but "plug 'er in."
ln a class begun last spring OD
the Huntington Beach campus,
about 30 students have been
learning how to build electric
cars.
According to instructor David
Jarman, the project requires the
removal of a conventional car's
internal combustion engine.
Surplus aircraft starter motors
can then be installed, drawing
power from rechargeable
batteries.
Students can work on their
own cars or on the school's car.
In addition. a $17,000 Fiat Strada
"state-of-the-art" electric car
recently was donated to the
college for the students to use as
a model.
The drawback to electric cars,
Jarman said, is that they can
run only for a few hours between
charges and cannot match the
speed of gas-powered autos. But
he said students soon may try
building a hybrid car using an
auxiliary gasoline engine to
keep the batteries charged and
give the car an extra kick when
needed.
I' ..
DeMy ~ .... ~Illy ltldlMI " ..... -
CHARGE! -John Marlin.
Ken Krutz. David Jarman
a nd Victor Schisler s how off
Fiat 850. Lectric Lopard and
Aztec -7 on Vo l kswagen
chassis. At right. battery is
tested. '
Roberti heads the Senate rules
committee wbicb appolnla aDCj
removes committee chairmen.
Tbe-C.Orona del Mar lawmaker
said four recent hearings OD
abortion were infested by "a sea
of hard, Jewish and C arguably)
female faces," and termed the
feminist s "murderous
marauders of the pro-abortion
encampment.··
The statemen t took OD
feminist attorney Gloria Allred.
who tossed a chastity belt at
Schmitz during one of the
hearings. He called her a "slick. butch
lawyeress" and said the
committee was greeted by
"pre-organized infestations of
Imported lesbians from
anti-male and pro-abortion
queer groups in San Francisco
and other ce nter s of
decadence."
The comments prompted a
response from Sen. Roberti,
whose office in Sacramento
Experts say giant shark hit surfboard
Enormous great white may nave killed surfer in incident in Monterey
MONTEREY CAP) -A Great
White shark perhaps 20 feet lon&
and weighing two tons may have
killed a surfer, say marine
ex perts who · exam I oed a
bloodstained, gnawed surfboard.
north of Pebble Beach, be wu
reported misaln1 when be falled
to show up fo r work Monday. His
board and the fra1ment washed
ashore Sunday.
''All I can say ls that bia
He estimated its alie was at
least 18~ feet, possibly 20 feet,
1001. The longest white shark
noted in West Coast waters was
an 18~·foot creature cau1ht olf
Santa Barbara. In other part.a ol
Toothmarks in the board and
on the 18-lncb chunk bitten out of
It definitely were the work ol an
enormous great white, Dan
Miller of the state Department
of Fish and Game said Tuetday.
The creature mi1bt be the
'It was. .possibly the largest so
far on this coast -very, veriJ large.'
largest great wh ite ever-surfboard wu bitten ... and
recorded on the West Coast, be ~ Boren baa disappeared," aald
aaJd. • Miller. "It wa1 definitely a
wblle shark, possibly the lar1•t
IO far on-tbla t?OUt -very, very
larae."
Meanwhile, surfer Lewi•
Boren, 24, wu lilted u mlllln&
while blood on bil board 11
analyzed to~ whether It'• hls, the Monterey County
lherllrs Department said. Lut
seen Saturday while 1urflD1 jult
The size ol tbe bite tak• out
of tbe surfboard waa "Hr)'
lmfresalve," be added.
' It's the l1r1ett I've e.er
teen.''
the world, white lharkl up to .0
feet lone have been reported.
Boren wu desmbed by bl1
friend Beryl Tboma1 a1 "1 Ver)'
experienced surfer.
"We're not saytq be'• dud.
Hts body atlll baaa't bee• fCMand."
But wary surfers •~Jed • ol
the Wit« OD the IOUilt ftd of
Monterey Bay on Monday and
Tuesday.
"This is the time to surf and
nobody feels like it,·· said
·Thomas. ·
Swimmers had been warned or
the poulbilit.y or white shark
attacks at the end ol October
fo llowing an increase In the
nllmbtr of sea otten killed by
s harks. And officlals warned
tbat the dan•er could Increase
as the number of otters and
elephant seals -another
favorlte shark toqcl -increuea,
drawinc sbarkl totbe area.
"It is certainly not eurprillnl
that a ireat wblte ahark would
blte a surfboard, eapectally
wben the sbarb are lncru1lq
la abundance on \M Calilomla
toaalline," 1atd Joili McOosker,
dltector of San l'renclsco's
Sltlabart Aqtaarlam.
released a statement today.
"Sen. Schmitz' injection of
religion and sexual orientation
into his official statement is
shocking and distressing," an
aide for Roberti s aid.
He said Roberti will bring up
the matter "of his continued
tenure on the committee at the
next regular meeting of the
Rules Committee Dec. 28.
"It la a shame Sen. Schmitz
allowed himself to be provoked
into such an outrageous
response," Roberti said. "A
higher standard of behavior ii
demanded of him."
When reached at home today,
Schmitz defended his statement,
agreeing some of the word.a iD
the printed release "are vert
descriptive." '
·'The reason r put out lb'
press release," he said, "wu ia
response to a raw publicity stunt
in completely poor taste in
which a so-called feminist
CSee SCHMITZ, r a1e .U>
Judge's rulin~
on ERA bri
mixed reaction
BOISE, Idaho !AP > -A
federal judge today delivered
two severe blows to the Equal
Rights Amendment. ruling that
I 1) Congress lacked authority to
extend the deadline for
ratification and <2> five states
acted within their rights when
they rescinded approval.
If upheld after an expected
appeal, the long-awaited ruling
by U.S. District Judge Marion
Callister would effectively kill
the proposed 27th constitutional
amendment , whi ch would
prohibit discrimination based on
sex.
Callister's ruling came on a
suit filed by Idaho and Arizona
and three Wa shington state
legislators after Congress voted
in 1978 to move back the
deadline for ratification from
March 29, 1979, to June 30, 1982.
In Washington, D.C., Cathy
Bonk, a spokeswoman for the
National Organization for
Women, a leading ERA
advocate. said: "Our lawyers
are here now. We will have no
comment until we have had a
chance to go over it."
Phyllis Schlafly, leader of the
Stop ERA organization, called
the move "a tremendous victory
for women."
"It's a great victory for
constitutional integrity and
fairness and government by la~
instead of by demand of special
interest ~roups. · · she said in a
<See ERA, Page AZ>
Food, m.edicine
short in Poland
By The Associated Press
Warsaw radio said today that
strikes were holding up
deliveries of coal in Poland and
that leaders of 2,000 striking
m i n ers at two pits were
"carelessly playing with human
life."
The 10 Com mon Market
nations sent Premier Wojcie<:h
J a ruze l s ki a s tatement
denouncing the "grave violation
of human and civil rights of the
Polish people" implied in
reports from travelers . The
British announced the statement
in London.
Reports from travelers spoke
of chronic shortages of medicine
and of food for Christmas tables
in Poland 11 days after martial
law was imposed.
Warsaw radio, monitored in
London. announced today that
357 people were arrested for
curfew violations in Katowice. It
said the standoff by workert
barricaded inside the Kat.owict
steel mill continued. The Soviet
news agency Tass has said the
steelworkers were threatenin1
to blow up the furnaces.
Broadcasts reported improved
productivity by factories "is
being weakened by sickness an~
a bsenteeism, which has beea
II? rowing in the past few days.·~
They said "the atmosphere
among factory workers is not
favorable everywhere . . . In
many factories the division
among the workforce which
e m erged in conditions of
<See POLAND, Page.\%)
Bizarre tune tops
Unus ua l holiday song popular
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. CAP>
-Elmo and Patsy may not be
hou sehold names. but their
latest record, a Christmas song,
is taking Grand Rapids by
storm.
But forget poignancy or
images of snowflakes. This is
not your usual holiday tune.
lt's called "Grandma Got Run
Over By A Reindeer," and·
spokesmen at two Grand Rapids
radio stations say requests for it
are running as much as 10 times
higher than for any other tune.
"There's no doubt about it, it's
Nu mero Uno,·· said Larry
Patton, operations manager at
WCUZ -AM. Like w ise for
WZZR -FM , according to
program director Jay Michaels.
Twanged by the San
Franci sco -based ,
husband-and-wife country duo
·Elmo and Patsy Shropshire, the
song includes these lines:
"Grandma got run over by a
reindeer, walking home from
our house Christmas Eve.
"You say there's no such thing
as Santa, but as for m~ and
Grandpa, we believe."
According to the lyrics ,
Grandma consumed a bit too
much eggnog and ii'lsisted on
returning home to get her
medication. Her hosta found her
Christmas morning ''with
hoofprints on bet forehead· and
lncrlmioating Claus marks on
ber back.''
Shropshire said he and his
wife produced the record, wblch
waa written by a friend, Randy
Brooks.
''We wanted lo prove lbere
waa a Santa Chu• and ,
unfortunately. Grandma had to
ulte a UtUe gu to prove it,"
Shropshire said. "There was a
song that Merle Haggard haCI
out about his grandmother dymk
at Christmastime and we
wanted to look at some other
~randmothers."
New ju8t ice
BULLETIN
SACRAM ENTO <AP> -Gov.
E dm u nd Brow• Ir. Ola
afterllOOB appol•ted appellate
court l ..Utt Cru ae, ... u
tlle fl rat R lapaaic o• Ute
Callfol'1lla Sap~me Ceut.
IRllCI CUil WllTlll
C lear toni1bt a n d
Thursday with local 1u1ty
north to northeast winds
25 to 3S mph below coastal
canyons. Highs 61 to 74.
Lows tonight 48 to SS.
·11SIDI TllAY
Service. Cllri•lmo1 Eoe
and Da11 are plattHd aa
Orange Coale clM'c1'e1. For
schedule,'"~ l».
11111
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Orange eo.t OAJL Y PILOT/Wednuday, December 23, 1981 N . Cf
OFF 2.29
CLOSING 819.&7
~ •' New entry
for the racks
See lf you can guess which magazine would be
tikely to have the following articles:
Tbe Secret of Dl1clpllalag Clllldrea
Tiie Best Family Movies of 1181
Meanest Mu la Mldcet Feotball
Tiiie Tea-Point Plan for CoUege Acceptaace How Muell Televlsloa ii Too MucJa!
F1$bt Acne -ud Wla
Seerda ol Glvlag and Gettlag More EmoUoul
Support
You know It's not Playboy. Or Sports Illustrated.
Or People. Or Cosmopolitan. Or Esquire. You milht
have guessed the Reader's Digest. It looks like £be
melange served up by this pocket.size monthly with a
U.S. circulation or 18 million: solid, helpful, upbeat
sturr.
It's not -but you're close. All those articles have
appeared over the past four months in a oew
magazine called Families. And Families is published
by the Readers Digest. It is, in fact, the first new
magazine published by the company since the Di_aest
itself made its debut nearly 60 years ago.
But if all these articles could have appeared in
the Digest, why start a new magazine to publish
them'> What's diHerent about Families? The Ojpst
people insist it is different.
First or aJI -and there's no disputing this point
it's bigger. physically Families comes in the
standard 8"xll" format of other magazines. This
makes it easier
on advertisers.
who don't have
to come up with
s pecial sizes for
their ads
Secondly, the
articles ln
Families are llllll ••••Ill
geared toward the joys and problems of family life,
whereas the Digest has a wider scope. With Families,
the Digest is seeking to reach a younger audience,
people who are not so traditional. Here's the
difference in a nutshell: the Reader's Digest
might run an article on how to have a good Camily
Christmas , but the December issue of Families
carried an an.M:le on "Who Gets the Kids This
Christmas'>" a guide for single parents and their
children.
So Families will venture into areas the Digest
might be too tim.Jd to explore.
UPS AND DOWNS
GOLD QUOTATIONS .,, .. ,. ___ ......
Soi.<lecl..,....,, ~I< .. ...,:
LoMM: rnornl"9 llxl ... .-_.u. •C.,,
~,.,_,,.,,,.~ .. soeo
l'ar .. : ,._,6.S, tfl IO M
,,_._., .... 41. Off SO.f7.
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MOH' a "·-,.,.,.,, dellf Quo•I t.«IO.olO,,.tUO.
1...--1 (tflly cs.lly .-1 Ma.O ...
'°'° 1--.N! '°""' ..... ., ~1 ... 1e ... l! te2<l.1i1>tl.k
SYMBOLS