HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-12-28 - Orange Coast Pilot6
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ORANGI COAST -. YOUR HOMITDIN DlllY PIPll
• QN .t I lll1"'4 1 f I A. •HJHNIA 25 CENTS
'Ainerica's first test-tube baby born
NORFOLK. Va . <AP > -
America's first tes t-tube baby
was born here today, doctors at·
the Eastern Virginia Medical
School announced.
The 5-pound, 12·ounce girl,
delivered at Norfolk General
Hospital, was doing well , as was
her mother, according to Vern
Jon es a spokesm an for the
school which runs one of two in
vitro fertilization clinics in the
United States
.Food
Ex-Army
man loses
LSD suit
PIERRE, S.D. (AP) -An
ex-soldier who claimed Army
LSD experiments in 1957 turned
his life into a nightmare of
mentaJ illness is not entitled to
damages. a judge ruled today.
Thf' case -the first of its kind
in the nation to go lo trial -
cou ld set legal precede nts.
attorneys said during tri<.i of
Ca lvin Sweet's $3 9 million
damage suit in April.
U.S. Di strict Judge Donald
Porter ruled that Sweet, 43, of
Pi e r re . is not entitled to
compens ation from the U.S.
government.
The judge said that s ince
Sweet did not fil e his first claim
against the government until
1978, the action came too late to
fall within a two-year statute of
limitations.
Also, the judge said, a 1950
U.S. Supreme Court decision
known as the Feres Doctrine
gives the m ilitary immunity
from lawsujts such as Sweet's.
The Feres Doctrine s ays .
"Government is not hable .
for injuries to servicemen where
the inj uries arise out of or are in
the course of activity incident to
service."
·'Sweet failed to prove by a
predonderance of the evidence
that the failure of t he United
States to provide follow-up care
(to his alleged LSD exposure>
caused his present m e nta l
condition or aggravated a n
earlier mental condition," the
judge said.
Sweet a ll eged t h a t drug
experiments he participated in
at the Army Chemical Wa rfare
Laboratories at Edgewood
Ar senal in M aryland in
September 1957 brought on
steadily worsening menta l
illness.
He claimed the LSD-induced
mental illness left him unable to
work or function normally, and
led to his becoming an alcoholic
and to the break ·UP of his
marria~e.
Gas chamber
for rabbits
MUD LAKE, Idaho CAP)
Gas. instead of clubs. wiJI be
us ed to k il l jackrabbit:
Wednesday when farmers
conduct their fourth drive lo rid
lhe area or the crop-destroying
peats.
Farmers k i ll ed 30,000
Jackrabbit.II in the first three
roundupe, or which the latat
was Saturday. The killin11
prompted crtUclsm bf the Idaho
Rumane Society.
The chance lo method was a
concession to tbe humane
society. Farmers wilt berd
rabbits 1n trenches. wbtcb will
then be ~ with pluUc and
filled 'f'lth carbon dloskle.
The school did not announce
who the parents were, but Jones
said more details would be given
at a news confe r e nce this
afternoon.
The baby girl is the first born
in this country a fter being
con ceived through in vitr o
ferti hzation. a process used for
women whose Fallopian tubes
are missing o r irreparabl y
blocked.
In the process. an egg 1s
r emoved rrom the mother's
ova r y, fe rtilized with her
h u s band 's s perm in the
laboratory and implanted in the
mother 's uterus
The rest of the pregnancy then
takes a normal course.
The clinic. housed in Norfolk
Gene r a l Hospital, began
operating in February 1980. It
announced the achievement of
its first pregnanc¥ last spring
and said the expected birthdate
was Jan. 9 Since then, three
other pregnancies ha ve been
achieved at the Norfolk clinic .
In keeping with the clinic's
p o li cy, the names o f th e
pros pective parents have never
been announced.
Another in vitro fertilization
clinic has opened in Houston.
The clinic and the in vitro
process have been criticized ,
mainly by anti-abortion groups.
but successfully fought off all
•challenges to its establishment.
The world's first test-tube
ba by. Louise Brown, was born in
1978 al a clinic in Bourn,
England. operated by Ors.
P at rick Steptoe and Robe rt
Edwards.
Since then, several other such
babi es have been born in
England and Australia.
Ste ptoe. who helped develop
the in vitro procedure, said that
since then about 2Q percent of
a tte mpted conceptions have
resulted in pregnancy and that
the rate was improving. ~-
This month, the Ladies' Home
Journal carried an article about
the first American woman to
give birth to a test-tube baby.
The woman. who lives on tbe
West Coas t but was not
identified at her request, had
been treate d at the
Steptoe-Edw;\rds clinic.
• • cns1s worsens for Poles
-T--TOWED FROM THE SURFLINE Laguna Beach Marine
Safctv Director Bruce Baird wades into the surf as downed
Cessna 172 i s pulled by Jeep from the surfline at Main
Beach Park Tail l ater was torn away from fuselage during
salvage effort
Irvine teens
save m,a n, 60,
from blaze
Three Irvine youths were
credited Sunday with saving a
60-year-old man trapped by fire
up s t a irs in h is Oran g e
condominium
Omar Garcia, 18. Stephen
Brown. 19, and Robert Lizotte,
15, m anaged to knock down the
fire with water from garden
hoses and lead Bob Rosencranz
from tus townhouse home. said a
spokesman ror the Orange Fire
Department.
Rosencranz told investigators
he was awakened from a nap by
s moke and intense heat. His hair
was singed by the time he got
out. said Tom Groseclose. public
information officer.
"It was hot in there," he said.
The rescuers. visiting friends
a l the condominium complex,
said a dog's barking alerted
them to th e fir e , which
in vestigators said began after
ashes from a n ashtray were
e mptied in a paper sack.
The yo uths al so t o ld
investigators that they doused
• Garcia with water so he could
make his way up the smoky
stairway to Rosencrani. who by
that time was yelling for help.
The fire caused an estimated
$10,000 ln damages to contents
and another $10,000 to the
building, Groseclose said .
Train derailed
SMITHBORO. Ill. CAP>
Res i dents or this tiny
community beaan retumln1 to
their homes today after C?'eWI
capped le aking railroad
chemlcaJ cars that bad been
damaged ln a derailment. Four
of tbe 22 derailed cars, on an
eastbound Conrail traln,
contalned chemlcal1 and two ol
them be1an leakln1 alter the
accident.
Pilot ditches plane
off Laguna Beach
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of ti.. Daffy ~IMt SuH
A single-engine Cessna with
four per sons a board crashed
into the surfline off Laguna's
M a in Beach Sunday night .
slightly injuring one passenger.
em e rged from the overturned
plane and made it to shore under
their own power .
The plane, which left Lons
Beach Municipal Airport earlier
in the day for a pleasure flight to
San Diego, was pilot ed by
Ray mond Davison o f Long
Beach.
Officials at South Coas t
Medical Center s aid Janet
Balange r was treated for
injuries to her right ankle and
face, but was later released.
The pilot said he lost power as
he was returning to Long Beach
and was forced to ditch the
pl~ne about 25 yards offs hore.
The Cessna 172 apparently
surrered a power failure as it
passed over Laguna Beach,
according lo FAA spokesman AJ
Ruggeri. who is investigating
the Incident.
Laguna Beach Fire Capt.
His passengers, Brian and
Janet Balanger, and Michelle
Balanger. all of Lakewood,
Herb Jewell said the pilot
attempted lo land the plane on
the beach al Laguna, but
crashed offshore.
(See PLANE, PageZ>
Women 'ground~d'
Moslem leader cites driving risks
RIYADH. Saudi Arabia <AP> -A Moslem religious
lawmaker was quoted today as saying women should not
dri~e cars because that would mean "running the risk of
ralling into incalculable sins."
In an interview with the newspaper Al-Jazira, Sheik
Abdel-Aziz bin Baz was quoted as saying Islamic law
forbids women from driving.
He said allowing women to Qrive cars would be
"fraught with a lot of depravity, including being bare.raced,
being alone with strangers, and runni.ng the risk ol f amna
into incalculable sins ...
Sheik. Bln Baa_ is a rell~ous leader who interprets the
Koran, the sacred book of Moslema, who believe that it
contains the words of Allah dictated to the Prophet
Mohammed throu&h the Antel .Gabriel. The aheik'a fatwas~
or Koranic lnterpretations, are observed by the Saudis ana
supported by the rulln1 family u divine writa.
HJs statement on female drivinl was not worded u an
absolute law or fatwa, but obHrven said such • law could
.be f orthcomlnc. ..
• I
Man killed
in Huntington
3-c(lr crash
A 26-year-old man bas been
killed and two others injured in
a three-vehi cle collis ion at
Warner Avenue and Oak Street
in Huntington Beach.
-Timothy Dean Stuhl of Long
Beach was taken to Fountain
Valley Community Hospital with
multiple injuries suffered in the
Saturday night crash , police
said. He died at th e hospital,
police said.
A cco rding to traffi c
investigators, Stuhl was
westbound on Warner at 9 p.m.
when he s werved across the
center line and struck a van
driven by Rafael LeLeon Diu,
22. or Santa Ana.
The Diaz van then was struck
from behind by a pickup truck
driven by Monico B. Avalos, 28,
of Westminste r.
Police said driver Diaz and
one or hi s passengers ,
Guadelupe Diaz, 23, r.e:eived
treatment at area hospitals ror
minor injuries.
Official blasts
,tax hike propo8al
WASHINGTON <AP > -
Raising the payroll t.ax or usin1
1eneral lax revenue to baU out
the Social Security system
would mean "you can say
1oodbye" to the financially
ailin1 program, uys Social
Security Commissioner John
SvabG.
Even If the National
CommlQion on Social Security
Reform, which Prealdent
Rea1an created in the fall,
•recommends t.hoee aoluUom, the
admlnlatration will remain
OlJpoHd to lbem, Svabn aa,yt.
""
Martial
lalV in
3rd week
By Tbe Auedated Presa
Poland's martial law r"1me
began its third weelc in power by
cutting monthly meat and butter
rations for most Poles ud
predicting worse food sbortaca
in the new year.
Western reporters in Warsaw
said antibiotics and medical
s upplies also were in drasticallj
short supply. :
It was food shortaeea that
provoked the nationwide '1S In Poland 16 months aeo
s pawned Solidarity, the firs
union in tbe Soviet blo~
independent or governme;
control, and ration cuts lu
s ummer spurred a atrinc
Solidarity strikes. :
Lech WaJesa. leader of tM
now-banned Solidarity union,
was named Time ma1uine'1
man of the year for 198l'SundaJ
for standing out "not only u tbe
heart and aoul of Poland's battle
with a corrupt Communist
regime, but as an intematlaaal
symbol or the stru11le for
freedom and dignity."
Walesa has been held by tbe
government at an undisclosed,
location in Warsaw since shortly·
after martial law was lmpmed,
Dec. 13.
The latest cuts in the alreedJ
deplet~d Polish menu were
announced Sunday by Wanaw
Radio, which predicted that next.
year the situation "will be wone
than thi s because or
considerably lower importa and
lower poultry output."
The radio broadcast 1ave
figures which apparently;
referred to meat alone. It said
the martial law reelme wu.
trimming January's meatt
rations to 5.5 pounds a month tor:
most Poles. Children, preput;
women and the elderly and tbe~
-siclc will receive 8.8 pounds of~
(See POLAND, Pa1e AU '
BRiiia CIAIT 101111~
Some late niebt and
early momint low cloud.I,
otherwise fair throu1b
Tuesday. Continued cool
with highs of 62 lo II and
lows of 44 to 50.
111181 TllAY
' ' ' ! I t .
I
Tht botic• of tla• 1101 . ,
lndiuid1'0l R•Ur.Me•C
A CCO\lftft tlaof go '"'o
operot•on Jon . J or•
uploined on Page A1.
~ 11111 ..
I
I'
•••••• Or•nge Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 28, 1981
Avalanche. alert given; power cut near Seattle
1 n. Alleeta&ed PM..
Back·coualry travelers were
warned to beware of avalanches
ln the wlnd·wblpped Rocky
1Mountaloa today, wbile stonna
cul power to tbousanda of homes near Seattle and parts of
ClcbJ1an were buried under 14
ches of snow. Seven people
ere ldlled.
~~ "lt'a miserable up here," said
~lorado state Patrol dispatcher
llary Upton in Idaho Springs.
"U you don't have to travel up
here, it would be Jl real good
ldea to stay home."
A 24.year-old man, his fiance
and his brother were killed when
the)" tried to lancj their small
plane in 'J{ay. den, Colo., during
h eavy snow Sunday .
Snow-slickened roads were cited
as the cause or one fatal traffic
a ccident in Colorado, two In
Nebraska and one i n
W ashlngton.
Snow ln Mlchl1an fell tn a
band from Lansing to juat w•l
or Alpena, with central
Michigan's OraUot County hit
hardest.
The avalaocho daneer forced
the Colorado Civil Air Patrol to
suspend its search of the
Col leaiate Peaks near Buena
Vista, where they were trying to
locate e mergency aircraft
beacons belleved coming rrom
the area. No planes were
reported missing, however.
''The Avalanche Warnin&
Center In FOrt Collins told ua to
get our people out because of the
avalanche hazard," Civil Air
Patrol Maj. Richard Oakes said.
'
Search teams resumed their' ~ forts at dawn tOday, be sald.
The center said heavy
l}DOwfall and winds up to 80
mph were causing "a dangerous
avalanche situation along with
tbe possibility of avalanches
~;'Angel' identified
~in rescue of 7
MONf\OVIA (AP ) -The
mysterious ''angel" whose voice
led seven people to safety when
a Christmas Day fire broke out
in thei r house bas s t epped
forward and identified himself.
Lew Crain, a 60-year -old
newspaper carrier, confirmed
•,a.he was the man who helped
... .i..Frank Conti, his wife and their
11 ·five children fl ee from their
smoke-filled house.
"' Crain, a deliveryman for the
18 Los Angeles Herala Examiner,
I) J was on his route Friday when he
f1:!-aw flames shooting from the i,0bome i n this Los Angeles
suburb. .
br He jumped out of his truck and
111.spotted several children inside
the house.
tUl :~anta nabbed
~~in burglary
ai LOS ANGELES CAP) -A
'>Oman dressed in a Santa Claus
tu suit broke into a Reseda home.
Ju-struggled with a gun-toting
n.i woman who Uved there and then
bt ran out the front door into the
, L arms of the police, officers said.
Ill Joyce Price, 43, telephoned
police to say she heard her
ki~hen window being opened ana had grabbed her handgun
While she was talking, the man
~ntered her bedroom, officers
'said.
"He lunged at her, hitting her
arm," said omcer Fred Love.
The gun went off, he s aid,
"which fired one round into her
. mattress." C)'
')'Typhoon kills 28
~ MANILA. Philippines (AP> -0•'Typboon Lee's 103 mph winds ~$-swept through the Philippines.
( killing at least 28 people and
)eavi ng at least 100,000 g~ omeless, the Red Cross said.
'}j
·'They were trying to crawl
out the window," he said. "The
kids were crying. I told them to
be calm and they'll gel out all
right.''
Mrs. Conti s aid s he was
grappling with a window latch
when she heard Crain's voice
through the s moke.
"l was crying and screaming
and I couldn't find the lock," she
said "If I hadn't heard his voice
With Crain helping to open the
window and then waiting
outside, she was able to pass
four of the children to safety.
Al the time, said Conti, he was
only a foot away from his wife
but was unable lo see because of
the s moke.
He said that after he fetched
the last child he lost his way and
panicked.
"I was scared out of my mind.
Then I heard this voice say 'Is
anybody in there?· ·~
He followed the voice and
made it out.side safely with the
child.
Crain then quietly
dis appeared and finished his
route.
"He was a guar~Jan angel,"
said Conti's wife, Mary. "I'll
pray for this man.''
But Crain said anybody would
have stopped to do the same
thing. He lert the scene, he
added. because "the people
were safe .. .I didn't think it
was a big deal."
Anyway, be added, "I had to
get my papers delivered."
The Monrovia Fi r e
De partment asked that the
Contis' rescuer step forward so
he could be properly thanked by
the family and Crain did so after
reading a newspaper account.
The $7S,000 fire was believed
to have started after lights were
left on an untreated Christmas
tree which was not standing in
water.
hilting h11hways ..tong mountaJn paasea."
The storm, accompanied by
punishing winds, s wept into
Colorado Saturday. Some
mountain areus got 21 lnche of
snow overnight Saturday and
Sunda y, with 48 -hour
accumulations of more than 2
feet. Snow was still falling
today.
In Washington, about 4,000
people in s uburbs nortp and
northeast or Seattle lost power
after snow-laden tree limbs fell
on power lines. The storm also
snarled tnffic, keeping many
skiers from the slopes.
Eastbound lanes or Interstate
90, the state's main east-west
artery whlcb runs through the
Cascades, were closed twice
Saturday at 3 ,010 -foot
Snoqualmie Pass, troopers said.
When opened, they were choked
with traffic. Snowfall ·resumed
in the Cascades on Sunday mght.
Ski operators in the Caseede
Mountains said business was
less than they had expected
Saturday.
'•Normally the day after
Christmas 1s pretty heavy "said
Stan D e Bruter , general
manager or Ski Lifts Inc. "We
kne w something was wrong
because traffic wasn't as heavy
They"re just trickling in ··
From Page Al
PLANE. • •
·'The plane has a fixed
undercarriage and. when it hit
the water, 1t imm e diately
flipped upside down." Jewell
said.
Police, firemen, paramedlcs
and lifeguards arrived moments
after the 8:30 p.m . crash,
dispatching the wet occupants of
the plane to the hospital by
ambulance and paramedic van
Marine Safety Director Bruce
Baird waded out to the fu selage
and attached a rope to pull the
plane ashore.
A tow truck worked until 2
a.m . to remove the plane, which
was taken to Hunt"s Towing in
Laguna Canyon.
Court nixes
seating ban
TOLEDO, Ohio <AP> -A
state Jaw banning unreserved
sealing at rock concerts ,
enacted after a deadly stampede
at a performance in Cincinnati,
is unconstitutional, s ays the
Ohio Sixth District Court of
Appeals.
The court said the law unfairly
regulated the right of free
expression and was vague.
The 2·1 decision overturned a
ruling by Lucas County Common
Pleas Judge Ren<i Riley Jr., who
upheld the city of Toledo's
refusal to wa1vt: the ban on
··festival sealing·· al rock
concerts in the Toledo Sports
Are na.
IAVEI CHILDREN FROM BLAZE -Lew
Crain, a newspaper carrier, is shown w_ilh ~e
1ix children of Frank and Mary Conti he is
APW .........
credited with saving from a Christmas Day
fire at their Monrovia home.
~~~~~~~~~~~-'"""~
,....1-,.
1
-"l-Olly_c.;.op-,.s-
1
T
1
-
1
-,---c-,.-.. -~-,-dY-.-rt1-.1-ne-1-14_114_2--se-11 __ .,. Soviet flag
All ottMf depeftmenta 142-4S21 b ed • u s
MArN omCE urn in • • :.r::: ..... ':.':~u..-. CH IC AG 0 (AP ) -
Demons trators burned two
ColtffltM'"" 0r.,. OMtl ~·"""' ~. Sov1et n nd h · t d o1r1 ,.. -...,.... 111ut1HtllM, ""tene',,,...., w... ags a 0111 e a c n wri•--""""' ,,..., • ,~., .-... draped with a Polish flag as tens
t1M<'-1..-V"*'.,,....,.....,_. of thousands of people gathered
s.c_,<1.,.peue1111•ktet C"'•""f!'1<AllfMll•. to protest the lmpo1IUon of ~~1~ ~~1~r:=,~~ martial law in Poland and
"*""'Y. mourn those who have died
ti.• or,.. CN11 o.11y ":=. wtt11 ll'llktl • -\here. =-rn_~ .. :.:=-.or.:: ... Five Boy Scouts led the =~~~:='~~v=; .a.r otesteu lo the Polish ,,...,1M,~8'11C.11, c-.•._~ Consulate during Sunday's ::C'e;...".=:::,:-::r~..::=:;r....., 'clemonstratioo. Some Ut candles
... 0 .... 1 ... c;.ti,......~..._ and pelte d the di,tlomatlc
VOL . 74, NO. 312 mlsalon with bumLnc area, raw
e11• and red paint
( , ~
MASS FOR POLES Vienna·s Archbishop
Franz Cardinal Koenig celebrated mass fo:·
Polish "refugees in St. Stephe n's Cathedral.
.............
the main church of Austrian Catholics. Some
of the worshippers brought a Polis h flag
:.ilong to m ass on Sund~y.
R eagan due
• to sign
more bills
L OS A:-JGELES <A P >
President Reagan has nearly
com pleted work on the next
federal budget. and lhe State of
the Union speech -his next
major project is nearly a
month away. So today was a day
for checking up on his ranch.
The president left a foggy,
chilled capital Sunday for the
California sunshme and a week
of visiting with fam ily and
friends here and al the Palm
Springs est a te of publisher
Walter Annenberg
Re agan brought with him 36
bills passed at the end or the
con gress io nal s ession a nd
shortly after he arrived at his
hotel the White House press
office announced he had signed
three of them. Among those still
to be signed. probably Tuesday.
are the defense appropriations
bi l l , foreign ass i s tance
legislation. the Social Security
minimum benefi t and aid to
miners with black lung disease.
The president. on his sixth
v1s1t to his home state this year.
planned today Lo fl y by Marine
Corps helicopter to his ranch
near Santa Barbara. about 100
miles north of here. while his
wife . Nancy. remains behind for
the d ay
Blame levied
MATANE. Quebec <AP> -A
co nfu sed a bandon -sh ip
procedure, faulty fire hoses and
life boat cables and a leaky raft
all contn buted to the deaths of r
at least fou r s ailo r s in a
Christmas Day fire on an oil
tanker in the fri gid St. Lawrence
Ri ver. survivors say.
From Page Al
POLAND RATIONS CUT .•
meat per month. it said, and
manual workers will be exempt
from Ute cutbacks. The~roadcast did not say how
much butler rations would be
reduced. Most P oles were
restricted this year to about 8
ounces per month
Meat and butter rations were
cut off completely for farmers
with more than 1.2 acres of land,
the state ·run radio s aid,
presumably because farmers
have access to their own food
stocks.
The radio said the military
council ··appeals to individual
farmers and lo s tate and
cooperative farms to expedite
{food ) deliveries .''
Western corresponde nts in
Warsaw have said Poland 's
p r i v a t e r a r m e r s -_t h e
backbone of its food production
-have held back s hipments or
some foods lo protest martial
law.
The radio , m o nitored 1n
Western Europe. quoted a Home
Trade Ministry announcement
as saying extr a imports -
"especiaally from the Soviet
Union " -h e lp e d the
gove rnment meet December
r a tions but failed to secure
enough meal to cover ration
arrears.
The near b an krupt Polish
government lacks the money lo
pay for food imports.
In August, rations were cut for
a month from 7 7 pounds per
person to 6.6 pounds, but even
then supplies were still so scarce
that Poles had difficulty buying
the meat and butter to which
they were entitled
A Polish woman arriving in
Vienna told The Associated
Press that certain food suppHes
such as meat and eggs were
hard to get. .. but it is not so
t e rrible that p eopl e a r e
starving."
A London Times report from
Warsaw published Sunday said
r ecenl vis its to Wars aw
hospitals reve aled a tragic
shortage of medical supplies. It
said people were dying because
the government I acks hard
currency t o buy antibiotics,
because disposable syringes and
needles have to be used as many
as 100 times and because there
is not enough detergent to wash
bed linen
Normal communications have
been cut in Poland and Western
r eporters mus t fil e dispatches
through government censors.
Both official and unofficial
reports are difficult to verify.
U n censored di s patches
filtering out of Poland said Poles
are beginning to express their
opposition to martial law in
dozens of s mall ways . Many
Warsaw residents are wearing
Solidarity buttons on the inside
or their lapels, wh ile some
other~ boldly display union
stickers .
Graffiti comparing Poland's
ma r tial law c hie f , Gen .
Wojc1ech Jaruzelski, wilh the
late Nazi leader Adolf Hitler is
appearing in various parts of lhe
capital
Commute r train
kills tee n-ager
OA KLAND <APl -Coroner's
investigators have identified a
teen-ager who died after being
hit by a commuter trafrt as
17 -year-old William Lance
Weber of Shepherd, Texas .
Alameda authorities said
We ber was silting with his
elbows resting on his knees on a
1,004>-volt rail near Bay Area
Rapid Transit's west Oakland
station when he was hit by a
commuter train Sunday.
Newport Ski Company
Ski Rental Shop . . .
lots of ski 's are available for
your holiday ski trips.
---. Rent before you leave on your trip .. FOR~ ~e also take reservations!
RENT·· Our rental shop is located at
2500 West Coast Hwy., Newport
Beach, CA, 714-631-3144. (Old ad-
.dress). ~ ., .... 11 ,..... pnc.111: .....,.,. ... ....
2700 West Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach, CA
i(7j4) 631~280 '
Maddox past for sale
Flamboyant ex.governor h as trinkets on block
MARJETTA, Oa. <AP> -At
the helacht ot his political career ,
Lester Maddox had no problem
wlth name recognition. But the
former Georgia governor Is
having trouble now unloading
th o u sa nd s o r tri nk e t s
reminiscent of his segregationist
days.
Maddox, 66, has advertised to
try to drum up buyers for
c l ocks , T -shirts and o the r
souvenirs that stock e d his
Atlanta novelty shop during his
political heyday but have been
gathe ring dust in his home for
four years. He says the items
are worth $125,000, but he will
take $20,000 for the lot.
·'I'd get a lot more money -if
1 loaded them up and sold them
to some variety stores. But I just
don't have the time and don't
want to spend the time," says
lh e once -o u tspoke n
segregationi st who gained
national attention in the 1960s
for brandishing an ax handle as
he drove blacks away from his
Atlanta fried chic k e n
restaurant.
Maddox now deals in real
estate.
To give buyers a look at the
inventory left after he closed his
shop in 1977, Maddox is oCfering
a sample package for $35.
Included is a 17 -jewel wrist
watch bearing a likeness of
Maddox rid ing a bicycle
backward, a stunt he often
performed at the st atehouse.
The hour hand resembles a
chicken leg and the minute hand
SLOW SALES -Flamboyant
former Georgia Gov. Lester
Maddox is having proble ms
unload ing thousands of
political souvenirs.
is the s hape of an ax handle.
There are two 45 rpm records
and one album or Maddox
singing religious and patriotic
songs such as "God, F amily and
Country."
You also get a personalized
alarm clock, wall clock and four
Madd ox T -s h irts -two
emblazoned with "Phooey," a
word Maddox once used In a
widely publicized retort ut u
news conference.
Maddox says no one has
offered to buy the entire lot, but
be sayis he has sold •'several
hundred" of the samples since
he placed an advertisement in
the U .S . C h amber or
Commerce's Washington Report
in October.
"We've been shipping it out
pretty regular," he says. .
The advertisement Included a
money-back gu a r a ntee for
unsatisfied customers, but no
one bas sought a refund, he
says.
Maddox tried to auction the
mountain of novelties along with
othe r memorabilia to help
liquidate a $125,000 campaign
debt, which he paid last June
The novelties did not sell .
But Maddox contends hi s
souvenirs are still in demand.
"I had someone call up from
Ma r yland the other day who
bought a watch several years
ago and wanted to buy another
one," he says.
Maddox served as governor
from 1967 to 1971 and then as
lieutenant governor. In 1976, he
ran for preside nt under the
banner of the American
Independent Party, but drew
few votes.
Jn the late 1970s, he began a
nightclub act with a black man.
Bobby Lee Fears. a former
convict and dishwasher. But the
act ended, reportedly after the
pair had a foiling out
Study finds trash collectors
have high level of self-esteem
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. <AP l
-Ba rtenders and garbage
collectors enjoy considerable
se lf -est eem , des pite public
opinion polls that have shown a
lack or s tatus in their jobs,
according to a Pennsylvania
St ate University study.
"Social scientists frequently
ass ume that most persons
accept the general public's
opinions of their occupations
wh en they evalua t e
themselves." said Dr. Edward
J. Walsh. a sociology professor.
. But, Walsh said, "The study 1 suggests that notion is more
m yth than fact."
Along with Dr. Ma ry lee C.
Taylor, Walsh studied 961 men
from Philadelphia and several
Midwestern cities for a report to
be published in an upcoming
issue of the journal Sociology
and Social Research.
The men in the study worked
in occupations ranked in public
opinion polls . I n t he "low"
status were garbage collectors,
parks workers and bartenders.
The "middle" status included
barbers and mail carriers, and
in the "high" status were high
school teachers a nd college
professors.
The men were asked to rank
themselves in terms or their
general self-esteem, and lo look
at their opinfon of themselves m
terms of their occupataon .. their
family and their sociability.
Sociability was gauged by the
m e n 's opinion o r th ear own
convers ational t alents and
popularity with women
Tea c hers and co llege
professors scored highest in
overall se tr es t ee m . but
bartenders ranked higher than
ma ii carriers a nd barbers.
Walsh said.
Bartenders also s howed the
highes t rankings an th e
occupational and sociability
dimensions or self.esteem
High school teachers rated
themsel ves quite low an
occupational self esteem, Walsh
said
a while
Tempera tures ·-~
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Alb\iQ.W
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--------------------------
Orange Coast DAJL Y PILOT/Monday, December 21, 1981 8
DON'T FORGET ME -"Tina," pet of the
Larry Tilghmon family of Columbus. Ga .
s tavs close to her new friend. which arrived
at their home Chris tmas Eve. Finding that
,....,....
the new addition was getting all the attention,
Tina decided to make friends, stay c lose and
take a good snap at anyone ignoring her in
favor or her new pal •
Czechs recall 'spring'
Polish crisis evokes mem ory of 1968 Sov iet invasion
PRAGUE, Czechoslovak ia
(A P I The de cl aralion of
martial law in Poland two weeks
ago e vok es 13 -year-o ld
memories of Sovie t tanks
rumbling through this capital to
end the .. Pr<igue Spring" of
Czec hoslov<ikia's refor m
movement
Western diplomats and many
Czechoslovaks say that in the
years sinC'e the government-led
liberalization here was c rushed
by the War~aw Pact military
alliance in 1968. there has been
worsening stagnation and li ttle,
1r any. innovation.
Som e say the his tory of
Czechos lovakia the last
Soviet·bloc nation to experience
a major crackdown holds
un comfortable po rtents for
Poland
P o l a nd 's premie r , Gen .
Wojc1ech Jaruzels ki . put the
country under military authority
Dec 13 and sus pe nded the
ind e pe nd ent labor union
Solidarity Only Polish soldiers
are reported involved.
The new Prague communist
leadership -one of the most
conservative and pro-Soviet in
the Warsaw Pact military
alliance has pursued the
country's dissidents into prison,
exile or domestic t1m1dily
"It is as if you ran a film
ba c kward s." sa id a
Czechoslovak, contending that
his country s till is reeling
backward from 1968 toward a
strict<.'r. Stalinist line.
What the o utcome o f the
Polis h crackdown will be is not
yet clear
Prague 's experime nt with
reform was chiefly the work or
the Communist Party itself,
whose reforms then attracted
intellectual and popular s upport.
In Poland. by contrast. the
impetus for change came from
the workers communis m was
s upposed to serve. Intell ectuals,
some or them radicals. advised
and jockeyed for influence, but
Soli darit y was fir s t and
fore most the c reation of the
workers o f the Gdan s k
s hipyards an August 1980.
Solidarity's leader , Lech
Walesa. apparently has been put
under a form of house arrest but
not actually jailed . Walesa
officially as said still to be the
head of Solidarity, the only labor
union free of communist control
in t he Soviet bloc.
Czechos lovak leader a nd
former Co mmunist Party chief
Alexander Dubcek was never
formally imprisoned, although
he was detained during the early
days of the 1968 intervention.
Dubcek is now believed to be
earning a modest living as a
minor official in Bratislava.
Leading intellectuals were
asked to pledge an oath or
loyalty.
Some oppone n ts of
Czechoslovakia's new leaders
took on manual work, hoping to
buy time and s urvive unliJ the
crackdown passed. But it has
not passed.
"Nobody would have believed
that 13 years later, it would still
be on ." a Pra~ue resident said.
The communist leadership has
paid a high price for the creation
or what Heinrich Boll, a West
German .author and Nobel Prize
winner , r ecently called "a
cultural graveyard."
Party hardliners promoted a
generatton of young political
technocrats une quipped to
challenge those above them,
Western diplomatic analysts and
many Czechoslovaks claim.
Reform has been blocked and
the very term kept carefully out
or the official vocabulary.
The lack of innovation has
been psrticularly harmful to the
country's economy, which has
been slipping into steady decline
with the party as th e sole
a uthority of the government.
The faU in living standards is
e vident in orders to reduce
power in streetlights and cut
meat consumption by 10 percent
because or expensive feed grain
imports from the West, and
Prime Mini ste r Lu d omir
StroubaJ has warned things wiU
get worse.
Death dream nails
murder suspect
MIAMI <AP) -Two nights
before he was killed, fish market
owner Rafael Gonzales dreamed
or his own murder. He told
friends the next morning, and
those reports led to the arrest of
his alleged killer, police said.
He said he had been killed
while resisting a holdup by two
m en. one of them a former
employee nam ed R obert o
Alvarez.
Two days later , Gonzalez was
slain during a robbery.
Police gave this account:
Two men visited Gonzalez to
bu y s hrimp Dec . 20 . The
S4-year-old Gonzalez refused to
let the men into his store.
The men forced their way in
and shot Gonzalei several times
in t he face, head and arm. They
stole approximately $300 in cash
from a metaJ box.
The body was discovered
three days later. A s hocked
e mployee r e membered the
dream and told police.
"He said the victim told him
he dreamed that he was going to
be held up by Roberto Alvarez
... " Detective A ndy
Argos~gui said.
Police went to Alvarez's home
and talked to 9-is brother and
sister. Nvarez returned while
detectives w e re ther e . He
agreed to be photographed and
fingerprinted.
Crime lab tech n icians
matc hed prints on the meta,! box
to those taken from Alvarez and
a palm print on the victim's car
a lso was Alvarez'. police said.
Alva r ez a l so made a
st atement, police s aid . He is
being held without bond in Dade
Count y jail on c harges of
first-degree murder.
A second arrest had not been
reported.
tha. authantic clo.Eic ...
aemnle.es bruehW. ebztland.
~ l ~
·~,,;o
cz.edl l!PMZ.atcl.r if> :mMa al
a circUlar hand f\-alsYz.,
cna. at a time ,tsnd.
~ bru&lczd.h
oomtbrt am. a bzilczr
fit. CXYL c£ tbl. n iaz.6t
e'MZa~ )OU'l l <t4t
'M'Ult'.
20~~to
chooeci from.
----------...
s Orange Coa1t OAJLY PILOT/Monday, Oeoember 28. 1981
mffiTI~OO[~l
Reagan shaping government for business
WASHINGTON(AP>-Jntbe
tax code, ln the bureaucracy.
and riabJ there on hot do1 and
boloc.na labeh , Prealdent R••••ll ta faablontn1 a ~volut.ion 1D the 1ovemment's
relatlaelblp with bullneu.
Nol ~ Herbert Hoover bu
a pre1ldent made 10
lin1le-mlnded an effort to 1bape
fovemment to the advanta1e of
bu1lneu and Industry on tbe
theory that what bolsters
bu1lne91 bolat.era the economy ••a whole. Thia ii tbe Rea1an revohrt.lOQ;
an economlc and re1ulatory
pro1ram designed to boost
productlvlty, providing
American commerce with the
tools to duel with leaner, more
modern forelsn competition.
The impact, crltlca aay, is
l"ffuced protection of consumers
and greater risk to the
.1111 llllYlll
environment. But those critics
have their o..VO establishment to
defend: a lobby that has gained
power and inOuence through the
years of growing federal
involvement in the marketplace.
After decades in which federal
regulation became a fixture
across the economy, the Reagan
team is out to change old habits.
The president and his aides say
t hat the consumer will
ultimately benefit.
Reagan found a federal
establishment committed to the
thesis that people have to be
M eatpacken feared aboppen
would take one look at the label
and 1ag, 10 for yeara tbe
industry lobbied for 1omtthlna
less ominous IOWldln1.
Now it appears they au
makina their point. A final
decision la near and the
proposed new label llkely wtU
read "with mechanically
processed meat."
The American Meat Institute
figures the chante will be worth
a bout $513 million a year.
Weidenbaum cited USDA'a
decision as one that benefits
both business and consumers
because it "will lower the cost of
meat."
Ma&nified, the USDA move
defines the Reagan revolution.
The Occupational Salety and
Health Administration ls
charged with safeguardin1
Americans at work. Ila budget
was cut this · year from $209
million to $192.5 million; its
inspection staff was pared from
1, 700 to l,200.
During Re:igan's first eight
months in office, the number of
inspections dropped 19 percent,
serious citations were down 20
percent. Business is happy,
organit.ed labor is furious. The
complaint backlog has more
than doubled. ·
Along with such agency
decisions and regulatory shifts,
the Reagan tax program
Congress enacted was tailored
to help busines s raise
capitalization funds.
The corporate and business
income tax cut was made
retroactive to last Jan. l, while
.............
al10 have reduced acUvitle1 by
regulatory agencies.
At the Environmental
Protection Aaency ,
administrator Anne Oorauc'h
proposed a 1983 bud1et of 9'75
mlllion compared with $1.3
billlon for 1882. The a1eocy'1
relaxation of regulations drew
words of wam1n1 from industry.
Chemical Week, a trade
publication, editorialized:
"Normally, the sight of fl
regulatory agency in turmoll la
not calculated lo bring tears to.
industry's eyes. But an
ineffective Environmental
Protection Agency ia not what
the chemical industry needs. . .
"Without an effective EPA,
Industry's contribution to
rescinded a requirement for air
ba11 or automatic seat belts and
relaxed a standard for bumper
strenlth. Thocse and other cban1ea wUI
save bUUona, the adminiatratloa
estimates. Moet of tbat would
have shown up on the price
stickers of U.S.-made can. Now
the Insurance industry -
businessmen, too -forecuta
substantial added ~sta from
personal injuries and property
damage.
-The Justice Department
gave a cond.lUonaJ green li&ht to
a merger between CBS and
Fawcett Publications, a
marriage challenged by the
Carter administration as
lessening competition amon1
"The whole .atmosphere on
regulations is far less cops . and
robbers .and much more
pragmatic.''
pollution, which bas been
diminishing, is bound to grow
again. In the long run, the
American people will not stand
for that."
Throughout the bureaucracies,
the new policies are malting
their mark. For example:
-The Department of
Energy's Office of Special
Counsel, which audits the
nation's 34 largest oil refineries,
has collected more than $550
million in out -of -court
settlements in cases of
overpricing. Its budget was cut
from $70 million in 1981 to $35
million in 1982. Reagan wants to
halve it again in 1983.
paperback publishers.
-Earlier this month, the
Interior Department issued
regulations opening four
national recreation areas to
m lneral explora lion, and
revoked restrictions on motor
boat trips that private
companies operate through the
Grand Canyon.
-The EPA withheld proposed
regulations to Umit the use of
certain dangerous pesticides,
and called in industry
representatives to discuss
proposed standards. "We have
not issued any regulations," said
Jim Roelofs. assistant to the
direct.or or pesticide programs.
The Reagan tax progr.am
Congress enacted was tailored to
help business raise capitalization
funds.
protected from business by
federal regulators . His
administration holds that
business must be unfettered if
the economy is to thrive for the
good of the people.
the personal tax cuts took effect
Oct. 1. And there were dozens of
special provisions for business
as the administration sought to
make more money available for
investment, plant modernization
and hence, jobs.
KEEPING HIS VOW -President Reagan promised during
his 19M campaign that he would "take the punitive taxes
and regulations and remove them from the back of
industry," and his appointees have moved to do just that.
But government moves slowly.
-lo ua>. the FDA announced
a trial program to place in
packages of 10 commonly
prescribed drugs printed
information about proper use,
side effects and possible misuse.
The drug industry, doctors and
pharmacists protested. Last
week, administration officials
abendooed the plan.
Several regulations
formulated during the Carter
year s were ready for
implementation shortly after
Reagan took office. One, which
would have banned the use of
Toxapbene to control insects on
cotton, "w}W,eady to be signed
in January " according to
White House counselor Edwin
Meese JJI explained in an
interview : "It is not a
pro-business tilt, it is a pro-jobs
and pro-economic recovery till,
and you have to work through
bus iness. Business Is the way
you provide more jobs for
people."
Meese said Reagan's goal is to
create an economic climate that
would provide more jobs and an
expanded economy. "Whal we
wanted to do was get rid of
regulations that were strangling
individuals, business and labor
unions, and provide tax
reductions thJlt would be helpful
to business and individuals
both," be said.
The overall philosophy.
explains Murray Weidenbaum,
chairman or the president's
Council of Economic Advisers,
is to "reduce the burden of
government on the individual."
Reducing the burden on business
ls consistent with this, be said.
He said that is a pro-consumer
policy, for "things that reduce
the cost of production reduce the
coat to·consumers."
The process reaches
throughout the bureaucracy and
across the regulatory agencies.
Take the bologna case. for
example.
When meat scraps are
mechanically removed from a
carcass, they contain pulverized
bone. For years, Agriculture
Department officials have said
mechanically deboned meat was
aafe for human consumption.
But they insisted that it be
deacribed graphically on labels
u "tissue from ground bone."
Under one provision, such
large, healthy firms as IBM,
Metromedia, Inc., and General
Electric Credit Corp., qualify for
an unusual tax break. They can
buy the tax credits of leaa
profitable companies wblcb
can't use them to their own
advantage.
IBM bought credits from Ford
Motor Co.; Metromedia Inc.
paid $16 million to the New York
Metropolitan Transit Authority
for tax credits worth, in tbe fint
year alone, $7 million.
General Electric Credit paid
$3.4 million to The Associated
Press for tax depreciation and
investment tax credits on 973
pieces of equipment purchased
by the non -profit news
organization in 1981.
Ronald Reagan never made a
secret of bis desire to help
American business. During the
1980 campaign, he ridiculed
federal bureaucrats as
insensitive to the needs of
commerce.
One of tbe first economists to
estimate tbe cost of government
regulation was Weidenbaum. ln
1980, be said the price on
business, and, indirectly,
consumers, was $120 billion.
His appointment, and the
anti-regulatory views of such
other appointees as James D.
Hiller Ill, head of the Federal
Trade Commission, stand In
stark contrast to the Carter
years when consumer activtata
and environmen talists
dominated much of the
regulatory machinery.
Carter a oin lees were
criticized by industry and its
lobbyists for ignoring evidence
that foreign competitors enjoy
lower labor costs and, generally,
less regulation . The
campaigning Reagan stressed
that theme, saying U.S. industry
was belnt regulated out of the
ability to compete with foreign
producers, and that jobs were
nowing overseas as a result.
Day-to-day life in tbe agencies
reflects the change. Business is
getting a bearing in the highest
councils of government. The
ready access enjoyed by labor
and environmental and
consumer activists during
Democratic days is no more.
There were no top-level
discussions between AFL-CJO
officials and Labor Secretary
Ray Donovan between February
and December.
This month, Interior Secretary
James Watt told his staff he bas
stopped meeting with the paid
l eaders of national environmental groups and their
lobbyists because he feels they
distort his views and use such
meetings for their own political
purposes. Spokesman Douglas
Baldwin says Watt suggested
that bis staff do Ukewiae.
During the 1980 campaign,
Reagan vowed to "take the
punitive taxes and regulations
and remove them from the back
of Industry." His appointees
have moved to do just that, but
government moves slowly and
most policies remain under
review . most decisions
incomplete. Thus, while the goal
of the Reagan revolution is
clear, it will take time -years.
probably -to gauge ill impact.
Consumer and environmental
groups are unhappy about the
~
Diiiy Piiat
If you don't wanf
to drink
Classifieds
~~ ~11\rnacC<>i"ac ~T fl!\
bto..v1\· a\t · "· do"''·
( ..i\re•· \eC W\f\d ,S\CJ
ca••· e" \.0 fot 4 ,~.
a ctcoO '16 8' ~ r a n\ara \. 1\4-496 ~·
,,.Sold thru Piiot In
2 daya. Ran 1 week In .
L.A. Tim•• with no reaulta. ~
Very lmpre~aedl '' g~tI@&42-5678
ch•r1• It~-by phone
Prom louth U.guna a North County
Cllll 540-1.0 tofl.frH.
That's our·
business
MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Call 642-2734
~ . -. Alcoholism Recovery Services
301 Vfctorl• StrMt
Costa Men, CA 92627
· .. ~t:C!Vld. tor ~kare __
tilt toward business. They find
themselves on the defensive in
their lobbying of Congress, filing
lawsuits and holding symbolic
demonstrations.
While the administration
reviews and rewrites
government regulations, budget
cuts Reagan won from Congress
-The auto industry gave the
administration a list of 34
unwanted safety and pollution
regulations, saying they would
add to the price of U.S .
automobiles already beset by
the competition of Imported
cars . The Reagan team
Roe~of emains in limbo -neithe approved nor rejected.
"Th whole atmosphere on
regu ons is far less cops and
robbers and much more
pragmatic," says Alexander
Trowbridge, president of the
National Association of
Manufacturers.
•••• and "Row doeu 1ou.r
fard.en fPOW?
Whether it's about a simple shrub, a sophisticated
bed of flowers, or a ~asty selection of vegetables,
the Daily Pilot's garden page blossoms every Ffi-
day with handy hints and delightful features .
We'll give you tips on when to plant, when to
prune and when to pluck. Our writers also
brighten the garden section with interesting
features on local people who grow unusual plants
or achieve exceptU;rnal results.
Our crop of ·stories comes up new every Friday to
help you have more success and more enjoyment
with your growing. If your thumb i3 green, use it
to flip to the garden page In Friday's Daily Pilot.
Daily Pilat
642·4321
• (
t
_______________________
1
________________________________________________________ ....;.o~ra~n~g~e~C~o~as~t -o_A_1L_v_P_•L_o_r~1-M_o_nd~a~y~·~O~ec~e~m-b~e~r~2~e~.1~9~8-1 ________ s~~~";.;.a ~
~UffiU~· U
Beast breeds s_kepticism · i
Dinosaur hunter insists he saw 'extraordinary. animal'
PASADENA <AP > -Ao
American juat back from the
African bush s a i d be'a
diuppointed by news media
boatillty but lnslats he and his
party •'saw some extraordinary
animal at an isolated Junale lake.
"I don't know what we saw,"
said Herman Regusters, '8, of
South P asadena . "The
Con1olese called it a monster.
The press called it a dinosaur,
altbouah we never once called it
that (since his return last week).
As far as we're concerned, we
just saw some extraordinary
animal. There is no doubt in my mind."
He cooceded in an interview
this week, however, that except
for a still-undeveloped picture
that may not come out and a
static-filled tape recording, the
public has only his word and
that of his wife, Kia, 34, and
African officials that the
creature exists.
''Unless something develops in
the way of a picture, that's what
you have," he said. ''But I don't
really know what it would take
to convince peo ple . If we
produced a picture, people are
going to say it's a phony.''
Before leaving for the
expedition to the Congo Republic
last September, Regusters, an
aerospa ce engineer, said the
huge creatu r e had b een
described in native reports ror
centuries. And he said natives,
talking with earlier visitors, had
chosen as pictures of what they
caU "mokelembembe," pictures
of a dinosaur that has been
extinct for eo million years.
He said the animal was seen
several times in the water of
land-locked Lake Tele. "We saw
the neck of some sort of animal
on three or four occasio111," be
said . "And we saw a huae
portion of the back. We never
saw a tail and we never saw it
out of the waler."
He said the creature had a
"serpent-like neck that tapered
down to a bead. It did not have a
distinguishable head at all. The
skin appeared a very dark gray
in color with a slick surface like
wet elephant or hippopotamus
skin."
But Regusters said the back
was twice the size of a hippo and
there are no hippos in the area.
And, be added, "we're talking
about 16 feet or so of neck."
Reporters at a crowded news
co nference recently we re
skeptical about the Regusters.
•'The Congolese press and the
European press never once
showed us such rudeness," he
said. "But our response from the
man in the street bas been
marvelous. Maybe by being so
hostile, the press simply made
the public a little more believing
in us."
Regusters also said he's eager
to return to swampy Lake Tele
to continue the quest and a
French group has shown some
interest in a follow-up journey.
But be said he figures he'll need
six months to a year to recover
from two monlha tn the juniJe,
includina more than a moath at
the lake reachable only by a
five-mile hike. ·
The lake, be said, covers
about two square mUea and is
more than 200 feet deep in the
middle.
R e1ustera said the party,
which lnc luded several
ContoleM wildlife officials and a
game expert from Ghana,
primarily lived off wild game in
the uninhabited re1ion.
The tape recordin1 was
lndiatlnct at beat. U sounded
a bout like wind wbiatlina
lhrou1b an irri1ation pipe,
though Regusters s aid , •'the
natives Identified It as the roar
of this animal."
A sineJe photograph, which
Mrs. Regusters said she took
when the animal's neck rose
briefly from the water about 100
feel away from their boat about
noon on Nov. 28, was being
processed.
Regusters said the animal was
in deep shade and the cameras
may have been damaged by
continued exposure to moisture.
"The haste and the conditions
under which the one picture was
attempted and the condition of
our equipment leaves room for a
lot of doubt about anything
coming out of it," be said.
He said he 's looking for
specialists to analyze biological.
insect and water samples from
the lake "to see if there are
provable things in this area that
have not been seen before ."
Boating death trial recesses
Malibu man charged with drowning his wife, stepson
SANTA BARBARA CAP> -
Testimony was halted till Jan. 4
in the trial of a Malibu man
charged with drowning his wife
and st epson off Santa Cruz
I s land la s t January and
reporting it as a boating
accident.
Frederick G. Roehler, 38, a
marine consultant and former
Navy frogman, was returned to
the Santa Barbara county jail,
where he has been held without
bail since bis April 3 arrest.
Superior Court Judge John T.
Richard told the jurors that the
next witnesses will offer medical
t estim ony o n th e Jan. 2
drowning of Verna J o Johnson
R oehler, 36, and Douglas
Johnson , 8 . H e ca lled
Wednesday's recess a ''logical
cutoff point" in the presentation
of the prosecution's case against
Roehler.
Twenty witnesses were heard
during the first eight days of the
tr ial, testifying to the good
health and competent swimming
ability of the victims, the
defendant and the rescue effort
carr ied out the d ay of the
deaths.
District Attorney Stanley
Roden, prosecuting the case
himself, has said that medical
evidence will show that Mrs.
Roehler and the boy sustained
disabling blows lo the head
before they drowned. He said
R oe hler com mitted th e
"cold-blooded murders" to
collect on a $700,000 life
insurance poli cy o n Mrs .
Roehler.
Ho we ver , defense attorney
James Farley of Ventura says
the defense will also introduce
pat hological and t echnical
e vidence to s how the blows
occurred after drownin .
Dentist sent~nced ....
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A dentist convicted
of diverting cocaine from his practice to his own
use "is badly in need of counseling" and must
enter a drug treatment program as part of bis
sentence, a judge has ruled.
Roger Lee Palmer, 35, of Kelseyville, was
given a three-year s uspended sentence and fined
$2,000. U.S. District Judge William Schwarzer also
placed him on probation for five years.
The government alleged that from Jan. 5, 1977,
to April 15, 1980, Palmer obtained 29 ounces of
pharmaceutical-grade cocaine ostenaibly for use
in his practice, but instead used it himself.
SFA s Semi-Annual
Men s Event Sales
and Special
Purchases on
Furnishings
for Him.
• Pure cotton
turtlenecks-originally
19.50, now 15.90. S to XL.
• ,..lso, pmcord button·
downs-a special purchase
at 17.90 each. Polyester
and cotton. S to XL.
• And cotton
broadcloths-originally
'35: now 17.90. S to XL
• In Sportshirt Collections,
the Men's Store-where we
are <JI/ the things you are.
lntff!"nediatt' pttCt' f{'(JUCflOflS INY
hive been talcM "''°' 10 tfm sale
Nffdlepoint, bloddltt
CLASS •nd •-;;!'l;• · INt.'tRUCT10N ,4 t77
SAN CL.EMl:f'JTE CA
• 4lb A •ttudo Or l J f \'' .. 110
South Coast Pl•t._ JJJJ Bristol Strt!et. Cmt• Me..
I'll
1q
I Q
'"' '()J
m
9'\
I It
I · -119
arl
sb
oq
)"£
... ........,. ·ni
FAST FRIENDS The Coleman twins, Jack
at left and Chris. of San Diego, ce lebrated
their 92nd birthdays this week. President 9 1 Reagan sent them each a Christmas card. 'J& ,,
Twins friends for 93 years IT
.1 J
lu
Lookt-alike San Diego brothers have sel.dom lived. apart
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Chris
and Jack Coleman begin their
93rd year together today, fast
friends as always. Smee Dec. 23,
1889, it has been as if they were
one , in double.
But time is threatening lo
break up their game.
The twins were dressed alike
as babies in Bridgeport, Conn.
As teen-agers, "if Chris had a
date and couldn't show up , I'd
take nis place," recalls Jack,
adding with a twinkle
"We didn't go around trying to
fool people but they got fooled."
Their weight is still 130, their
height 5 foot 5 and the set of the
jaws, even the wrinkles, are
identical.
T he daily, eight mile walks
that kept them fit have fallen off
to a mile or two a day. Chris
regards himself in good shape,
but Jack's legs are starting to
bother him. died last year.
The only time they've been Together, they watch the
separated was right after World same shows on television -
War I when Chris went to going to bed after the 10 o'clock 1 Detroit to work in the tooling news and getting up al 7:30 in
department or General Motors. the mor ning -and together
Jack joined him a year later and they go every Sunday to St.
on their birthday in 1923 they J ohn's Roman Catholic Church.
moved together to San Diego ··We never considered not
The downtown U.S. Grant living together," said Chris.
Hotel hired them as desk clerks "We don 't argue. It's a ll
on d ifferent shifts. On ce, a so methi n g that can 't be tq
woman complained to owner explained." '1 Baron Long: "You ought to be "We vote Democrat, usually, JS
ashamed. You've got one man but once in a while we'll go ud
working the desk day and night Re publican," said J ack, who rlJ
without rest." admits a little regret he never os
In 1933, they left temporarily, m arried.
living in San Francisco and "When a girl was interested in M
Hollywood, wh ere they owned me, I guess l wasn't interested n 1
and managed the Mark Twain in her, and vice versa," said iq
Hotel fo r 15 yea r s . They Chris in a birthday interview. ns
operated the Commodore Hotel "Regret? I guess I do, but it's us
in downtown San Diego. Their just something that never ud
older sister csnd youn er brother happened," Jack said. 1 '< ~~~~~'"""--"~~~~~~~~~~-?q
Flannel Suitdressing
... Now on Sale at SFA!
• The one-button jacket,
originally '127, now 95. 90.
• Culottes, originally '82,
now61.90.
• Both in grey, camel or black wool
and polyester flannel.
•And the argyle-printed blouse
in grey, slate and tan polyester,
originally '64, now 46.90.
•All from a famous maker known for
impeccably tailored workmanship.
• For sizes 4 to 16 ...
•In "Better'' Sportswear Collec#ons
... where we are all the
things you are.
a
1')
'"" X9
.w
!t1
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I IJ
~,
OJ
od
oq
t1J
0 '.)
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'JC
X!t •
,
--__ . ____ _.,._..,.... ___________ _ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 28, 1981
Coun~y faces uphill
fight for 1 982 funtJ,s
An ongoing burden for lo<.·al
governments is the tendency of
s tate and federal legislators to
e nac t laws that mandate local
complia n ce with little or no
regard t o the cost of sul·h
compliance.
The laws may be needed. or
e ven we lcom e, but with both the
s t ate and federal government!->
trying to cut expenditures, the
burde n of imple m e nting thl'ir
mandates falls increasingly on
the counties.
The n ew s tate d ru nken
driving pena lties calling for mon,•
m a ndatory jail sentences. for
example. doubtless will a dd
inmat es to already overcrowded
county jails -at county expense.
And, in the e ffort to s ave
s tate money, there's alread\ talk
of r educing reimbursement to
co unti es implem enting
state-m andated social programs
No doubt the state 's Medi-Cal
program can use som e reforms,
but the s uggestion that counties
pick up extra medical <.'Osb for·
indigents is neither pC1lalabh' nor
practical.
In theor y, a ll new state.· luws
a r e s u bject to cos t anal ... !'il!'i
before passage, but s omehO\\ thl'i
does n 't seem to deter t h1•
lawmakers when the vote roll~
around.
Last \\e ek th(• cuurHy's paid
S att aml•nln lohhn..,I . Dl'nnis
Carpcntt·r. wurrH~<i th(• eounlv
Legisl:Hi\'l' Pl:mning C'omm1ttc·e
that c·ompl'l1lum fol' funcls will ht•
stiffer than l'\'l'r in tht· t•mer~m~
f.'conom1r ('lamall'
Mc>mbl't's of t ht• t'Ornm1llel'
a grl't'd that ttw t•ounty \\Ill ha\'(.'
t o l' a m I' a i g 11 d i I 1 g l' n t I ) l o
m :.tintam t urrl·nt lc v(•h:, of state
aid for mandated programs and
wtll haVl' lo !'il'(.'k bloc k g rants Of
:l\'ailabl<• funds to :.illnw more
flexibilitv rn lo<"al s pending
On tht.• fC'dl•ral ll•v1!1 . tht·
('Om m1tl<.•c rt.·c·omm<•ndcd t hut
lht· c·ount) a ~k lhl· fct.kral
goverrrn1cn1 to p<t~ ull C'Ost!'> for
res ettlement of r1{Ugt·l·~ for fi Vl'
vea rs aftl'l' thc·1r :1rri\ al. ins tead
of adh<.•1111g to lhl· pres c.•nt
thr<'c \'ear fund c·utoff
Tht• n ·f11 gt'l'' wt•rc• adm1llcc1
undl•r ft.•dl'ral p1Jlil'\ Thcn·fure,
wt.· l'N• I 1 t is 1 n a ppropri :Ht• lo
l'X JH•c·t lot·al gen t•rnme nts t o
:1 s ., ll m l l h I' r I 0 a n (' I a I
r (' !'> p () ll s I I> I I I I \ r f) /' I h (' i ,.
;11·nlltu1 a111111 . n·~:irdl t·...,., of hm\
lo n g 11 lakl·s 1 ltt·m to ht•t.•oml'
"'It s 11pp11rll11g
l nfortu nalt•I.'. 111 tht• <:u r n ·nt
bud gC't lnrnm111g t l1mal<'. it l•mk s
l1kt.· .111 uphill h.i 1t l1• for l'Olllll \
rt•p 1 l':-.1•nt,1l I\<'"
'Fascist' l abel bizarr e
Presid ent Reagan s eem:. to
have suffered another cpisodt.• of
his tendency toward occasion~illv
m a king bewilde r ing, uninfornwd
s tate m e nts . The l a t es t is hr s
judgment that Pres1d e n1
Franklin D. Roos e\'l'lt"s ~c"
Deal advisers W('re sympaltWlH'
toward fascism
Along l,o\.ilh th at
eyebrow-r a is ing a ssertion .
R e a g a n . i n a n 1 n t e r v 1 c ''
broa d cast Friday night o\ t•r
PBS, contended FDR saw thl'
New Deal reforms a s temporary
and would have tried lo r oll the m
back a fter World War 11 had ht.·
lived through his fourth lt.•rm
S u c h s tatement s <ir e.· a
bizarre judgment. They seem to
s h ow a depressin g la c k o f
understanding of Roosevell 's c>r~1
o n Reagan 's part, although ''l'
hope that is n "l the c ase
It 1s not the firs t t1 me RC'aga n
h a s link e d fa s ci s m wrth
Roosevelt"s policies In UJ76 hl'
said . "Fas c ism .. , as n .•al h th<'
basis of the New Deal · ·
rt is strange lo hear lht' luhc.·I
"fascism " draped around t h1·
New Deal. During th1.• 19:Ws.
conservatives of Reagan·s ~trq.>t.·
were turning purple over tht•
··soci al i s t " tendencic..•!> of
Roosevelt's programs, c all1ng
FDR a "traitor to his c la ss ··
T he New Deal wao; not. b\
an y s tretch o f the 1magin<1t1ori.
fascis m . or communism for that
matter . Both arc characterizt•d
by brutal s uppre ss ion o f
opposition and rigid control h~
•
I h t.' .., t ;.i I l • 11 f p o I 1 t 1 c ~ii a 11 d
l'l'onotnH' a ct" 11 '
!"h t• philn!'ioph~ lH1d1·1l~1ng
lht.· '\t•\\ l>t•a l \\ iJ!'i lht• llM' 11f
~o\ t.•r11m1•1H 1x1w<·r~ 111 n ·<>ton • to
h1•alth ,1 frPt' t•11t l'rpl'IM' -.~·stc•m
t hat ha<i ~l)n l' l<·rnhl\ :l\\r\
d 111 ing th1· 1!130:-. •
HtH>'-('\t•l t .... J l ll'l \\;.) .... 111
p r \.' .., l' n 1 • t h r o u g h 1 \.'111 r m .
A m ('l'H·a ·..., 1•1·on111ni<· ..,~ ">ll'rn. not
lo n•plat l' 11 "11 h a n\ of lht' .1s~ort 1•d 1~ms · f''l>H ·s t rtlll'S
ft •a I t'd
lloc1sc•\1 It .... 11n h d eu l1n g~
\\llh f.1sc·1-.m \\LI'-in lc.iding thl·
·\lli l'' in thl' fig ht of lht.•ir ll\'t•s
• 1g.im..,l a rt•g1ml' th..it lhreatl'l1 l'd
a ne \\ Da l k .\gt'!>
i\:-. for th1• d11 r11t·sl1e pro~ram
HcHi....t.•H·lt \UHtlcl han · pur,ut·d
h ad h!' 'i lll'\'1\ l'd bt•\ ond Worlct
War If th<tl l':tn uni\ .lit· a m:.1tll'r
11f ... pt'<·11h1t 11111 If tw "a ... pl.1nn111~
larg1· -.c·ah rul lh;wk..., 11f thc· '.\i(.'\\
Dt.•;J I. as H1•,1).!a11 h1 Ill'\1·s h1-.
.tC'tlllll'-Ill lh1• 1111!1 1!110.., 1hcl no l
po rt l' rHI "u !'11 <t I XII d 1• g re• c•
Lu r rw hou t 111 !Ht t ht.· .1d n l('att·d
an <•t•c1n11rn11· 1>111 111 r 1g h h.
l'Ull~l.S ll'Jll V. ttll II l:O-l1t•l1l'f I hat
gm f•rnmt•111 ..;h1111ld lw ll'-l'tl to
promoh · thl· gl·n1·1 ,11 \\l'lf:1r1•
l 'ons 1d1•1 tng t lw"I' I <Jtls '' 1·
wi"h that J>rc•...,idt•nl H1·~1~<.111 . \\ho
1 s ~1 n l' \ t r 1 • 111 l' I \ ~ 1 I I c• c1
commun11:C1 tor .ind 1s 11...,uall\
qu1c·k on hi:-. fl'l'l v.011t d lw mo r~·
r,11t·fu l \\1\11 h1..., µuhl 1t.·
statl'nWnls II d11t•:-. th\• 11ffrc•e of
lhl' prP-.1 dl"nl'\ a rtd • Ht..•ag an·..,
admm1slr ,1t1011 1t1J ,1.!11ocl lor him 10
\'Cl'h<ill' ..,hi•ol Im m lht• hip
Op1n1ons expressed 1n the space above are tho~e-ot lh( i..1d1I ~ PllOI Olner views e11 pressed on tr11s page are those of lhe1r author'> ano art 1st'> Rr,adt·r tom ment 1s rn1,1 1t
ed . Address The Daily Pilot, P 0 Box ISbO Costa M P<,d CA nb2b Phone l /14J
b42·4321. .
L.M. Boy d/C hampagne baths
You can absorb car bon dioxide
through your skin. And if you do, it
wiJI tend to lower both your pulse
rate and your blood pressure, giving
you a pleasant feeling. So say some
medicos. Those who bathe at the
fizzing mine ral s pas cite the
foregoing to explain their visits It
also may justify champagne baths
Those reportedly we r e hig hl y
popular among a few wealthy women
in bygone years.
Anybody planning to move lo the
suburbs might do well to remember
it tends to rain m o re on the
downwind side of a big city. Not
much more. But a bit.
Students of antiquity say that
hairless dog known as the Chihuahua
was bred by the Aztecs to be eaten by
the Aztecs.
Q. What do you caJJ the gait of a
t lx·leUed insect?
A. Now there you have me. Can
only report such • bu& always
aupporta ltaelf alternately on a
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
triangle of the fore and hind leg on
one side and the middle leg on the
other Fore leg pulls, middle leg
supports, hind leR pushes
Q What's the wood in toothpicks"!
A White birch. The makers use
logs about a foot In diameter. The
bark is stripped, then the wood is
cooked in hot water , sliced into
sheets, dried In ovens, c ut into cards
fed into dowel molders, tapered by
grinding wheels, and polished in
rotary drums.
It had not occurred to me in bygone
years that a fancy toilet seat might
make a good gift. But Sophia Loren
received such n present from her
husband Carlo Ponti once. It was
for m riltcd You say you might
e xpect that from show business
per11onalit1es' Yes, but Great
Britain's Prince Charles got one, too.
From his crcwmates io the Royal
Navy when he I~ active duty. Don•t
believe it WH form fitted. but it had
lbeir names printed alJ over It.
Thomas P. Haley
Publisher
Thomas A. Murphlne
Editor
Bar~ra Kraibich
Edltorial Pag Editor
-
.----s::----
Cuts hurt n11rsing homes
W 1\SIJI NGTON In its messianic
zeal lo ··get the government off our
bocks ... the Reagan administration's
allac k on federal regulation may have
gone too far in some areas. Eliminating
burdt'nsome paperwork is one thing:
endangering citizens who depend on the
federal government for protection is a
hors e of a different color.
One area where the admirustration's
enthusiasm for deregulation may have
gotten out of hand 1s the Health and
Human S e rvices Department's
s upervision of the nation's nurs ing
homes The elderly patients in nursing
hom es are particularly vulnerable to
physical and financial abuse
MANY NURS ING home operators
cleaned up their act after revelations in
the 1960s and 1970s that the industry had
put profit above compass ion or even
rnm mon decency toward their helpless
patients. The cleanup was largely the
re!>U It or actual or threatened action by
federal regulators . But the lucrative
nursin~ home industry 1s still in dire
nt>ed of policing
In New York State, for example,
evidence has been turned up that at
least 43 nursing homes are owned or
operated by fel ons, many of the m
("OnVl l'ted Of bilking the government On
Medicaid payments In Texas, state's
attorneys have indicted a n ursing
ho m e corporation , Autumn H ills
Convalescent Center Inc. of Houston,
for m urder by neglect and for fraud
an unprecedented prosecution.
In Connecticut, eight nursing home
operators and adm inistrators have been
arrested for defrauding Medicaid of
millions of dollars, The funds were
squandered on everything from shrim p
and filet mignon to the purchase of 17
G.
-J1-c1-1-10-11-sa-1 -~
X -rated movies that were charged off to
the taxpayer s as "pat i ent
entertainment "
Despite the evidence that nursing
homes are still badly in n~ of Uncle
Sam 's regulatory s upervision, the
President's Task f"orce for Regulatory
Relief is busy drawing up a little li st of
nursing ho m e regu l ations that
administration zealots feel will never be
missed. The regulations targeted for
extinction are spelled out in an internal
progress report s ubmitted October 16 to
Thomas G. Morford. the HHS official in
charge of nursing home s tandards.
T HE DOOMED regulations do not
deal specifically with the health and
safely of nursing home patients, but
there is no doubt that patient welfare
could be adversely arrected if the rules
were wiped off the books.
The task force has decided to abolish
require m e nts that nurs ing homes
furnrsh s t ale inspectors with
1nformat10n on their staffing levels. It
has also decided there's no need for
nursing homes to put in writing their
policies for control of communicable
dise ases and ror periodic health
exam1natwns their employees must
have under rurr ent regulations.
In addition. the task force apparently
thinks it 's not necessary to make
nurs ing home operators give their
p ers onne l training in control or
mfe<.'t1on. fire prevention and safety.
accident prevention and confidentiality
of patient information This is in spite of
the fact that experts on nursing home
rHorm have cited poor staff training as
a major catise of patient abuse.
Perhaps most important, the task
force's preliminary report suggests a
rollback of nursing hom e patients' right
to have a hand m selection of their own
treatme nt, and having patient
grievanct:s recorded , with federal
ins pe ctors monitoring the homes'
responses to the complaints.
Instead. the task force recommends
putting the burde n on the individual
patient .. to exercise his (or her > rights
as a patient · ·
Footnote An HHS official told my
associate Tony Capaccio that the task
forc e report mus t be approved by
several levels of decision makers before
it is accepted.
WHAT NEXT? Sen. John tietnz., Pa ..
will soon introduce a resolution to ste m
the rollback of n ursi ng home
regulation:.
'Look-alike' drugs a risky business
f Today·a column i.s by Mr Wattrs'
associate, Phd Jordan )
After the Legislature resumes its
curre nt session next month, state Sen.
Ed Davis will d ecide whe ther to
introduce a bill aimed, in effect, at
increasing consumer protection for
drug users.
· 1 s uppose ·super bennie' buyers
should not be defrauded," Davis, a
former Los Angeles chief of police,
laughed. but he was serious about the
threats on several levels -posed by
"look-alike," or phony, drugs.
T H E LOOK·ALIKES, manufactured
in the sam e s hapes and colors as
various "controlled" drugs as
amphetamines -known on the street
a s "speed" or "black beauties" -
actually contain large doses of cafrelne
and other drugs not banned by law.
They are available by mail and are sold
openly in a growing number of shops
around the state.
Attorney General Geo rge
Oeukmejian, a former legislator who is
now California's top law enforcement
officer, has already moved against
look-alike husUers on one front, seeking
a n i n junction against sa le o r
advertising of the drugs by four firms
involved in the morally questionable, if
at the moment still legal, business.
One of the firms Deukmejian m oved
against is located in Illinois; the other
three are located in Chico, Monterey
and San Diego. Davis knows of other
retailers operating in the Los Angeles
area.
"'These look-alikes aren't being
produced for the benefit or long distance
truck drivers." Davis o bserved,
IAll WATIRS
"because truc k drivers don't have to
buy phony drugs. Besides, they cost a
lot more than the same genereric thing
purchased at a drug store.
"MY SUSPICION is that they are
produced to allow just what is
happening -drug pushers pay more
than they a re worth for them, but the
pushers then sell them to users at much
higher prices yet to users who think
they are getting illegal drugs.''
But "The Chief" has still another
objection to the look-allkes.
"Undercover police officers around
the stale are making a lot of 'buys'
these days of what they think are real
illegal drugs," he exp lained. "Then
they send them to a laboratory for
analysis, find out they are phony drugs,
and there's no case against the pushers
that would stand up in court."
Davis laughs at that, but wryly. He
doesn't even smile when he discusses
the more serious dangers involved; the
look -a likes have cau s ed seve ral
reported deaths in other states. though
none so far in California.
PEOPLE RAVE overdosed .with
look-alikes trying Lo gel the "high" that
isn't in them. doctors have given lbe
wrong treatment to patients who
thought they had had the real thing but
actually had been us ing the phony
drugs .
And there is an ever-present danger a
user may think he has look-alikes and -
so overdose on what are actually illegal
drugs.
Some lime this month, Davis expects
to receive a report now being prepared
for him by the California Narcotics
Officers Association. "a thorough study
of the phony drug problem. I'll proceed
from there.
"If the problem can be handled with
existing laws. or administratively, I
always prefer not lo have another new
law ... Davis said, "but If one is needed,
I am prepared lo introduce it." ·
Petro-dollars prop up Khadafy regiine
So, that old devil, Moammar Khadafy
o f Libya, has hit squads sneaking
around with orders to shoot our
President.
Or course, Khadafy denies this, but
the While House says it haa proof
E ither way. I am opposed to
assassination as a tool of political policy
lilDllil MAIR
whether done by Me nacbem Becln
against the British; rundameotallst
mos lcms against Sadat: the CIA
ua!nst Castro; or , Khadafy •cal.Mt our
leaders
Vet. part or the fault ilea with our own
country tn lbat we bave let K.badaly
s helter ten-orlat.a for yean. We called
blm nuty n amu f or 1belterln1
International terrorlati a fter tbe ~••uchter of Jewlab at.bletea at the
Mun ich Olympics; the kklnai»Ptnl of
•
OPEC minis ters in Vienna; and, the
killing of the American ambaasador to
the Sudan.
Ironically. we most recently called
him dirty names for sheltering the
deposed butcher of Uganda, ldl Amin.
However. we have to be stone silent
about that since ldi Amin has moved to
the s helter and protection of t.he Saudl
Arabian government.
The reason that Khadafy can •Nord to
pay for all ot bis terrorlat activities ls
that be la not geUln1 his money from
UQHed Way. He la 1 e ttln1 lt in
pelro-dollan from Amerlc-" Bl1 Buck
Boya that run Mobil. Exxon ,
Occidental, Muathon and Conoco.
Now. after years of this Idiocy, the
Whlte House Is flnally putUn1 U\e
squeeze on the oll companiel to set
their o•ople out of Ltbya. Yet,
Waahlncton know• and IO do11
Kh~daly, tbat th11 will not put lbe
LlbJan all eaaplre out of coaunl .. lon
nor will il put t.bele mator U.S. oil
companlt1 oul of tbe Libyan oll
bu1lna1. Tbe)' wlU almpl.J eont.lnue
with QOll~American tffhnJel&De.
So, the petro.4oUan will ~tlnue to
prop up good old Colonel Khadafy and
his s upport of terrorist activities around
the world.
This is another example ol how the
multinational corporation's loyalty is lo
the bottom line and not to Its own
home land.
As Russian premier Nikita
Khrus hchev once observed a bout
American businessmen, "When we
come to hang you. you'll be bickerinl •
over wbo gets to sell us the rope."
Slllll Ill
No post..a.Ntmu Cloom for me -I
bld my cted.lt cardl lbla year!
SllARTY
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 28. 1981
Basics of mAs explained
By llHt Alloclated Preaa
MUUona ot Americana will aet
a New Year's 1ltt from the
1overnmtinl on J an. 1 -the
rl1ht to open a tax·aheltered
Indlvldual Retirement Account.
The Economl,c Recovery and
Tax Act ot 1981 made mllUooa of
r.eople ell1lble for IRAs and
ncreaaed the amount of money
they can invest free of current
taites. Here are some questions
and anwers about IRAs and bow
they work:
Q. Wltat Is an IRA?
A . It is an Indi vidual
Retirement Account. The money
you Invest and the interest it
earns are not subject to federal
income lax until you start
making withdrawals.
Q. Row long must I leave my
moaey on deposit?
A . You ca nn ot s tart
withdrawals jJJltil you are .59~.
U you withdraw the money
before that, you must pay an
Intern al Reve nu e Service
penalty equal to 10 percent of
tbe amount you take out. You
also may have to pay additional
penalties imposed by t he
ins titution with wh ich you
invested your money. Once lhe
money is withdrawn. it is
subject to income tax at the
regular rate.
Q . Why ls there so much
publlclty about IRAs all of ·•
sudden?
A. IRAs have been around
since llr75, but until now. people
wJ\o were covered by company
peoslon plans could not have
IRAs . As of Jan. 1, 1982, anyone
who earns income for work done
or aervices performed h
ell1tble. You cannot set up an
IRA, however , If your only
income Is from a pension, trom
interest , dividends or other
Investments.
Q . How mucb can I
contribute?
A. Starting Jun. 1, each
working individual can set aside
up to $2,000 a year. A married
collple with two wage earners
can invest up to $4,000, but the
money mus t be in separate
accounts and the contribution to
each account is limited to $2,000.
A married couple with one wage
earner can shelter up to $2,250 a
year in a plan known as a
"s pousal IRA." You can divide
the money between the spouses
in any way you choose as long as
neither spouse's investment tops
S2.000.
Q . What is the main advantage
of an UlA?
A. It lets you save for
r e tirement a nd trim your
c urrent tax bill. You will
eventuaJly have to pay taxes on
the money and the interest it
earns. but presumably you will
be in a lower bracket when you
start making withdrawals after
you retire. The exact tax rate
will depend on your Income and
on federal tax achedulea when
you make the withdrawals.
Q. How fut wUl Uae lftOIM!)'
plle up!
A. It depends on how much
you contribute, the Interest rate
and how o!ten Interest ls
compounded. The Dime Savln11
Bank of New York aaye lhat
someone who deposits $2,000 a
year and earns 12 percent.
compounded daily, wlll have
$41,497 after 10 years, $181,676
after 20 years, $655,207 alter 30
years and $2,254,822 after 40
years.
Q. Do I bave lo withdraw lite
money wbea I reacb StYaf
A. No. You can add to an
existing IRA or open a new
CDllUllR
one at any age up lO, but not
incl uding, the year you turn
70~. You must, however, start
making withdrawals by the end
of the year in which you turn
70"". And you must withdraw the
money at a rate fast enough to
empty lhe account by the time
you reach your normal life
expectancy.
Q. Who should open an IRA?
A. Financial planners say an
IRA is good for almost
everyone. You lf hould n ot , however, put money In an IRA
that you will need before you are
59"". An IRA generally Is not the
place to save for a house or (or
yo ur c hildr e n 's co llege
eduution.
Q . Do I bave to flll In extra
forms at tu time?
A . No. Simply enter the
amount you contributed on the
1()4() form and s ubtract 1t from
your gross income.
Q . II tbe money sheltered
from ata&e as well as federal
taxes! A. Some s tates have not
amended their laws to make
IRA contributions deductible,
but most ar& expected to do so
by the end of 1982.
Q. When can I open an IRA -
and when can I claim the
deduction?
A. Unless you were eligible
under the old rules -meaning
you were not covered by a
company retirement plan -you
can't open an IRA until after
Jan. 1. The tax deduction applies
to 1982 income ; you report it on
the return you fil e in 1983. You
can <Jpen an IRA for a given tax
year any lime up to the date that •
the return for that year is due
That means you can open an
IRA for 1982 any time up until
April 15, 1983.
Nert: Where to Put Your Money
r.iiiiiiiiii~Wiii~iiiiiir~~~~~~~~~~-
Job training aided
.............
TAKING A LOOK -Lut· Tirejacque. crew member of
1-'1 l·nt h ·' al·hl Kntt•r IX. g1vei-ma~t final inspection before
flt.·l'l 11.·u,·1.·~ .\uC'kla nd. :'\cw Z<.•aland. on next leg of the
Hound thl' World \'<J<0ht raC'<.'
NEW YORK (AP> -The Rockefeller Founda·
lion is concerned over possible damage to society
"if we ... fail to reach those whose lives bar
them from qualifying for existing opportunities,"
the foundation president says.
So lhe foundation announced a grants program
to train for jobs "the most disadvantaged mem·
bers of our society -single, minority women who
It .... THE
~~ They're 50.
are heads of households." .._
The trustees voted SI million, in addition to
$750,000 from regular budgets. for 1982 grants to
community groups to help them train these women
for private jobs, found ation president Richard W.
Lyman said.
...,.., ... .., "••"hftt ir,t l•< /tJ6-.a
, ... ,. ; , ..... c;,~ •' ¥°"'' OoOf
1C "" !>tou• N,..tf•-\1 Yl)Uf ~'••I
COSTA .. uM1·1289
1l:NN_ .....
MISSION v.uo495-Q.-o1
1#12 C•MMD c.....,."°
IS•" °'99111 ,,..,., el A"'l ~--..., t
Join
Stuart Anderson's
New Year's Eve They're opening IRA Plans.
Party.
Join us for dinner.
Join us for drinks.
Join us for both.
Laugh, dance, and chee r in the New Year
with lots of friendly people.
Free party favors and noisemakers in the lounge.
~ Q
BLACK ANGUS RESTAURANTS ..
FOUNTAIN VALLEY, SANTA ANA, GARDEN GROVE,
TORRANCE CERRITOS, LAKEWOOD, ANAHEIM
They'll cut their taxes by $1,760.
Assume both spouses work.
And that each contributes $2000
to his or her First Interstate IRA
Plan. And their com bined 1982
income is $50,000. They would
save $1760 on their '82 Federal
income tax . And under similar
conditions. continue saving
taxes as long as they con-
tribute to their IRA Plans.
tlw 11lll'rt.~°"l il earn s are free
111 FL·tkral mcnmt' laxes until
\llll :--t art withdrawing. Any-
time bet ween ages 59 lfz and
7011i. vou ran take out all or
pan o( you r money without pen-
ally. wht'n your lax bracket may
po~:-.i bl y he lower than it is now.
Very nice!
What's more, by age 65 -........................ .,._J
they would have accumulated a
total sum of over $213,000, assuming the present
interest rate prevails (13:Y,.% annuall y, compounded
daily). If they choose to contribute to their IRA
Plans until age 70. their nest egg would total
Other First Interstate extras:
\'OU r;in choose from fou r different i~weslment options. with minimum
deposits as low as $100. We do not
charge a fe~ for opening or main-
rnininf.( your IRA. And you and you r
spou ·e <\re t'ach insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation for up to $100,000.
ove r $455,000.
If you're a wage earner, single or married.
you're eligible for First lnterstate's IRA Plan ,
eve n if you're already covered by your company's
pension plan. Both your annu al contribution and
To get started on your tax cut, visit your
nearest First Interstate branch starting January
4th and open your IRA Plan .
OFtaftlfllt ..... Bank
-•O>t
1 1
.l
, f
••
... --.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 28, 1981
,.~ ........
Are you affected by the 'blaru?'
It's natural to feel letdown at this time of year
8Y Gt.'ORGE W. CORNELL .. ,. ......... ,...
NEW YORK (AP) -If a
letdown feeling hlt.s you these
days, It's not unusual. It's part
of the season's package with Its
load of emotions, gatherings,
memories, exhaustion and
strain.
The holiday ''blues." it's often
called, the "blahs ...
He says pressures of trying to
match ordinary human reality
to t h e blissful Image can
produce frustration and anger.
The process o rten s tarts
building up at Thanksgiving
time and l asts through
Christmas and the New Year's
festivities, specialists say,
from each other
Psychologist Tony Mullozri of
Iron River, Minn., near Duluth,
says even family reunions can
rekindle old childhood confiJcta
and hurts.
He e.1so says some people who
don't share in the spiritual basis
of Christmas often experience a
For many people, "it's a lime
of pain," says the Rev. T homas
Pike of Manhattan's Calvary.St.
George's Episocopal parish.
.. Feelings run high, depression
is common and expectations
The situation can be . a 'catalyst
for depression'
often don't com e close to m aking It a peri od of
fulfillment." anticipation, harried arranging,
He and other counselors say frequent disappointments a'nd
that whlle the season basicaJly ensuing melancholy.
signifies special joy and pea~. Suicides regularly increase,
common human distractions can m a k Ing December th e
loom larger than normally in perennially highest month for
contrast to the celebrated ideaJs. them totalllng about 3,000 in
The gap accents a sense of recent yeans, with another 30,000
inadequacy, the experts say, trying to kill themselves, usually
latent, sharpened g uilt about
that.
Psychiatrist John H. Brennan
of Boston advises people to scale
down their expectations about
the occasion and resist pressure
to overspend and do too much.
themselves, as psycholo1ical
probing has shown, thus bearing
out the old adage that "it 's the
thought that counts."
Counsellor Win Couchman
writes in Lhe cur rent fortnigbUy
ChrisUanity Today that there
are various "Grinches" that
become hurtful d istractions
from the real and bright heart ot
Christa ms.
A "Grinch " was th e
imaginary villain who stole
Christmas an a Dr. Seuss story.
FROO ANO FRIEND -Actress Brooke Shields and Kermit
th.e Frog, a character from television's "The Muppet
~how," get together on ABC-TV's ''Good Morning America''
m New York. We wonder if Brooke intends to turn Kermit
into a handsome prince with one kiss'!
bringing to the surface feelings out of lon eliness.
of guilt and anxiety. Such loneliness is seen as
The situation can be a being magnified both for young
"catalyst for depression, ... says and old in a culture in which
the Rev. David M. Moss, an famil y m ember s often are
Episcopal priest.psychologist. scattered and li ve far away
.. Somehow we feel guiJty if we
don't give children everything
they want," he says. "Yet
restraint never hurt a child .
Overindulged children are not
the happiest."
Mullozzi says c hildren
actually remember the mood of
love far more than the presents
Couchman cites Ule "time
Grinch" characterized · by
harried rus h to get things done,
the "secular Grinch" that blots
out the sacred meaning of the
occasion, the "spiritual Grinch "
that rejects the playful fun
involved and the "circumstance
Grinch" that lets incidental
problems plunge the occasion into self-pity
Pike advised facing "the pains
and disappointments honestly,"
while also examining openly and
viRorously "the implications of
Christ's birth in our lives."
Wontan
sues sex
tabloid
OAKLAND (A P > -A
Marin County woman
who complains she was
e motionally damaged
when a Berkeley sex
tabloid published two
nearly nude photographs
or her has filed suit in
Alam eda Supe ri or
Court.
Danita Dahlquist, who
say s her photographs
appeared without
authorization in October
and November issues of
the B erkeley
"Spectator " and
beneath an
advertisement for a
Hayward escort service,
is seeking $1 million in
punitive damages and
$500,000 i n general
damages from the two
businesses in the suit.
S h e said th e
newspaper obtained two
modeling photographs
that were n ever
in~ended for publication.
Lawyer George Zube
said discovery of the
pictur es "was a
trem endously
humiliating experience"
for his client.
"I would expect they
would h ave taken
greater care verifying
t ha t they bad
permissions to use the
photographs," Zube
said.
State job
record
r e ported
SACRAMENTO CAP>
-An annual state re-
port says Hispanics are
insufficiently represent·
ed in state civil service
jobs after 10 years of ef·
fort but, overall, minori-
ty groups are gaining.
The state Personnel
Board's study, also said
disabled persons failed
to m a ke civil service
gains last fiscal year,
remaining at 4.2 per·
cent. About 6.2 percent
of a ll em ployable
persons In California are
disabled.
Hispanics in stale gov-
e rnment e mployment
during the fiscal year
which ended June JO in·
creased to 9.6 percent,
compared with 9 percent
for the year before.
However, that figure
was sharply below the
13. 7 percent level of
Hispanic representation
in California's total
work force.
CGUaCTOWI c::ott•I a ....
. SEASONS
GREETINGS
------
IF YOU'RE
WOKING FORWARD To
SECURITY ToMORROW,
START SHELTERING
INCOME TODAY
The new Tax Shelter Retirement
Plans can be confusing. But at Security
Pacific Bank we were looking forward
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set up a plan that's right for you.
We created detailed guides on our
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other retirement plaf\S that help our
people help you tum your tax dollars
into retirement income.
There is no fee charged for
any of these plans.
To find out more about these new ·
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At the same time, Security Pacific
Bank will give ypu a free Retirement
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IRA
Individual Retirem ent Accounts
IRAs are now available to every
wage earner under 70~ years of age.
You can make a tax-deductible contri-
bution of up to $2.000 a year, or 100%
of earned income, whichever is less.
Working couples may be able to deduct
as much as $4,000 from gross income.
Security Pacific Bank's IRA plan
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Simplified Employee
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Other Security Pacific Tax Shelter
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looking. fur instance, Simplified
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Through a Simplified Employee
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Self-employed individuals and part-
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_____________ ....... __ ............. .
~ ........... Illy RkMrf IJ(-
WISH COMES TRUE -Fransie Geringer, 8, of South Africa. suffering
fr~m the aging disease progeria. met his idol Pinocchio on a day at
Disneyland. He also met three other victims during his park visit.
Diiiy Piiat
MONDAY, DEC. 28, 1991·
CAVALCADE 82·3
COMICS 84
TELEVISION 88
One politician, Malcolm
B.aldrige , wishes
bureaucrats would use
plain English. See Charles
McCabe's column, P.age
82 ..
OMly ............ lty (MrtH IUf'r
COUNTRY VOCALISTS -Kenny Rogers and Crystal Gayle performed
at the grand opening of Irvin e Meadows. the new outdoor
a mphitheater in Irvine.
0
D
Banner headlines of '81 replayed
AIRCAL JET CRASH-LANDS -On Feb. 17 an AirCal 737 jetliner.
carrying 109 passengers and crew members from San Jose, cras h-
landed at Orange County's John Wayne Airport, injuring 34 people.
Tower offi cials had instructed the pilot to abort the landing just
seconds before the plane slammed on its belly a nd then slid off the
............. .,CIWM~
DANctNG ON SPAN -Roser Morin urges I ell ow celebrants to sign
1croU commemorating dedication of newly expanded Upper Bay br:idg~ and Newport Beach's 75th anniversary of cityhood.
~,..... ...... ..,o_,A.....,....
runway, coming to a rest about 200 yards from the Ora nge County
Fire Depa rtment's s pecial airport cras h a nd rescue station.
Investigation has determined the crash was caused by pilot error and
litigation is pending.
...., .......... .,..., . ....._
MIDFLY CRISIS -Orange County was on the alert during the statewide
Mediterranean fruit fly crisis. Placentia sprayer was ready for
med!ly's less fearsome cousin, the Oriental fruit fly.
.,..., .............. •k ...........
BLESSINGS -T he Arc hbis hop of
Canterbury Robert A.K. Runcie visited St.
Anselm's Church in Garden Grove in May
during 3-week tour of the states.
Dallly ........... "'..., • ...._
REFLECTING -Angels· owner Gene Autry
watched practice resume in August after
last summer's baseball strike.
............ .,'--.....
STEADY WORK -Structural repair eostina
$1 million started on '8.9 million Hall ol
Administration in Santa Ana. Employees
were evacuated after 2-year-old bulldlna
was judged unsafe in event of earthquakes.
. -------------------------.. Orange Coa1t OAlLV PILOT/Monday, December 28, 1981
•ANN LANDERS
•CHARLES McCABE
•OR. STEINCROHN
•
Grateful for blessings
............
VIETNAM TOUR -Four American veterans,
who have returned Crom a six-day tour of
Vietnam, talk in front of the Hanoi war
museum. From left , Robert Muller (in
wheelchair), Tom Bird, John T erzano and
Mi c hael Harbert held discussions with
Vietnamese officials.
Pilot advertising
is good business
for Sherman Clay.
"Our ad in your recent tabloid
section pulled more business
than any single ad we have ever
run." . Marty C. Flinn,
Manage r, Sherman Clay,
South Coast Plaid.
PUBLIC NOTICE
ZONE CHANGE 81 -ZC-0060 : The City of Irvine, 17200
Jamboree Road, Irvine, California, has initiated a zone
change , 81 -ZC -0060, for the Irvine Industrial
Complex-West, generally bounded by the San Diego
Creek Channel to the east, Newport Freeway (55) to the
west, Barranca and Warner Avenues to the north, and
Campus Drive to the south. The sc ope of the proposed
zone change encompasses all properties within the
Irvine Industrial Complex-West, and in the
Main/Jamboree Planned Community, and covers
approximately 2500 acres. The nature of the proposed
zone change would redesignate all properties within
said area from their current zoning status to either of
th e following proposed de signation s : Retail ;
Retail /Office; Mixed Use; Residential; or Industrial.
The proposed redesignations would encompass c hanges
of use and development standards.
GENERAL PLAN AMENDMENT 12 : The City of
Irvine, 17200 Jamboree Road , Irvine, California, has
initiated a General Plan Amendment, GPA-12, for
above sa id Industrial Complex, in order to amend the
General Plan Land Use Element. The proposed
amendment would change the land use category from
General Industrial and Manufacturing and Research to
Business and Industrial.
CEQA STATUS: Pursuant to the California
Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) an environmental
impact report (EI R) has been required for the
proposed zone change and general plan amendment.
A public hearing will be held by the City of Irvine
Planning Commission on Thursday, January 7, 1982, at
7:30 p.m. in the City Council Chambers, located at 17200.
Jamboree Road, City of Irvine, California. The public
·wi 11 have the right to appear and be heard by the
'Planning Commission.
· Copies of the proPosed changes and a draft EI R will be
available for public review at the Community
Development Department, Civic Center Annex, 2801
Mc Gaw, I rvlne, California. For. further information call
75A·3'12 or 754-3873:~
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Every
morning something wonderful happens. I
open my eyes and I can see. I turn on the
radio to catch up with the news · of the
world -and I can hear. Then I get out of
bed, reach for my robe, stand on two
strong legs and start m[ day .
. What's the big dea , you might ask? It
probably sounds like nothing special to
most people, but I consider myself very
lucky. The gift of sight and sound and arms
and legs that work are taken for granted
by so m any, but not by me.
P eople complain a bout inflation,
pollution, political unrest in all parts of the
world, crime in the streets -the list is
endless. Of course, these are real problems
and they damage the quality of life. but I
wonder how many folks stop and think
what a blessing it is to be free of the
physical handicaps that millions of people
struggle with ever y day.
l don't know why l wrote this letter. I
suddenly felt the need to share what I feel
with the world. -APPRECIATIVE IN
WYANOOTIE. MICH.
DEAR APPRECIATIVE: I'm often
asked If I ever see m yself in my column.
The answer is yes -I saw myself again
today. Your letter could have been written
by me. It's as if you were reading my
mind. Thank you.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: l am seething
over your reply to "Inadequate Between
the Sheets ... Can't you see that poor
woman has been m ade to feel inadequate.
even t houg h s he may be perfectly
.. normal .. ?
During the past two ctecades the sexual
demands men have made on their wives
have become not only excessive but so
ANN WIDllS
perverted that ln the ·50s even prostitutes
would have told them to get lost. ·.
l was married to a wonderfur man. We
had a beautiful love life -note I say "love
life" because our sexual life was just that
-expressing affection and tenderness for
each other. I felt that my body was a
chalice and 1 offered it to him. Then he
died.
For six years I was busy raising
children. l wasn't interested in anything
else. Then I met a man l thought I loved.
But, my God. how marriage had changed!
It was n 't an act o f love -it was
gymnastics, ·an endurance contest and
debasement.
After two years l threw him out and
sought professional help because he h ad
convinced ·me l was s ick. I spent several
months in group therapy, read books and
papers by learned doctors and discovered I
was OK. HE was crazy. Now what do you
think? NOT THE SICK ONE AFTER
ALL
DEAR NOT: I have said repeatedly
that anything two people agree on lo the
bedroom is a ll right (and nobody's
business) so long as there is no violence. In
your sttond marriage there was no mutual
agreement. Your hus band insisted on
antics that made you feel degraded and
used. I didn't send you w the psychiatrist,
be did. But aren't you glad you went?
Feeling good about yourself is the ultimate
goal, and you made it.
Wanted: Plain English
SAN F RANCI SCO -Whether b y
accident or sinister design, most of my
ma le friends a re Republicans. I don't know
what I am, but sure ly it is not a
Republican. Though I once thought, with a
lot of Irish-Americans of my time ·and
place, that the only good Republican was a
dead one. l have developed serious doubts
about the Party of the Donkey under
Johnson and Carter.
Maybe I am a mugwump -·'one who
has his mug on one side of the fence, and
his wump on the other." More likely, I am
what I have always claimed. a political
agnostic. A show-me guy.
A constant cry from my Republican
friends <and they are friends) is : Why
don't you write something good about the
Republicans? I propose to do that and
raaght this minute.
I've got a bit of a ~rush on President
Reagan's Commerce Secretary Malcom
Baldtige, who in turn has a bit of a crush
on plain English and is making heroic
efforts to impose them on his underlings.
BALDRIGE WANTS THE people who
work for him to avoid all bur~aucratese
a nd write "halfway between Ernest
Hemingway and Zane Grey." This is an
especially good ideal for plain English,
especially Zane Grey. Grey did not have
Hemingway's genius for nuance in plain
English but you never had any doubt what
he was writing about -white hats and
black hats. The ordinary government
employee should prefer Grey. because they
CAN imitate him.
Early in the Reagan administration
Baldrige started a campaign to weed out
gobbledygook (a word coined by Maury
Maverick, the Texas congressmen, to
denote highfalutin• and meaningless
writing and s peaking > from h is
department. His ideal is active verbs, lean
sentences and a minimum or adjectives or
adverbs. This is good counsel for Mr.
Everyman. The natural writer can usually
control his adjectives or adverbs.
He felt so strong ly about all this that
he got himself a word processor that
flashes "Don't Use This Word !" on its
~ .. CHAllfS
~McCABE
screen when a Baldrige no-no turns up.
AN AIDE TO BALDRIGE
demonstrated to a reporter 43 words and
phrases the Commerce processor does not
like.
• I would hope: l would like to express
my appreciation: as I am .sure you know:
at the present time: best wishes.
• Bottom line. delighted. different than.
enclosed herewith, finalize. glad, great
majority, happy, hereinafter; hopefully,
however, image, input, institutionalize.
• Inte rface. it is my intention.
maximize, meanwhile, more importantly;
needless to say, new initiatives, ongoing,
or ient. parameter. personally reviewed.
• Prior to, prioritize. serious crisis,
share, subject matter, therein; to impact,
to optimize, untimely death. very much.
viable.
• I share your concern, contingent
upon , effectuated, in appropriate .
management regime. mutually beneficial.
responsive. specificity. thrust, utilize. ,
TIUS CERTAINLY COVERS most of
the ground, except for plain wordiness
itself. which is always possible even in
plain language. Wordiness serves th~ s ame
purpose as the words that a re called
bureaucratese, <which is a dandy one in
itself. J They serve ll keep the civil servant
in his job by concealing the fact that he
does middling to nothing to earn his pay.
Baldrige used to be a cowboy, and he
must have picked up his affection for short
a nd snappy words from this laconic milieu.
Another aide said that her boss sta rted his
campaign after "seeing the quality of stuff
coming across his desk." An example that
didn't pass was : "I'm pleased that m y
schedule wi ll permit my accepting ... "
How about "l will accept?" he suggested.
Consult your dentist
•
DEAR DOCl'OR: For many years I've
put up wttll ear aolses ud headaches.
Asptrln woulcla't help macll; 11etuaer would
visits to a few ear 1pedalbU who cou.Jd
find no reu. for tbe rlalilll ill my ean.
At Umea my neck alld al.omden would
be stiff. At al.pt, my wife teUa me I have
Uae habtt ol 1~1 my &eetil. No• It's
gettlq to tile polat tllat I'm ao teaae and
aervom It 11 l11terf erta1 with my work at
the office.
V1aally a blaad, lood·natared guy,
I've been labeled • craaky cue. 11 there
aaytldq elae you ca• Riies& tllat might
laelp? -MR. F .
DEAR MR. F.: We have been hearin&
more and more about ~ value of having a
dental cons ultation for, patlenta whose
headaches, ear noi.ae and othe.r discomforts
have not been helped after many
dla1DOltlc testa and tr~almeota.
In many lnatance1, aucb patients
' discovered that their trouble wu due to
abnormality In the temporo-mandibuJar
Joint Ctbe Jaw joint of the lower jaw
T JOUI HIAlJI
OR. PETER J. STEINCAO~
(mandible) in front of the ear.
In turn thi s might produce
mal-occlusion of the teeth. After a while
tbjs produces tension in the muscles
producing headache, ear noises and other
symptoms.
Whether this is the cause in your cue.
Mr. F., you wtll only discover after ba"Ytng
a dental consultation. If you do have
mal·occlusion, proper treatment ls likely to
help you.
Dr. Stdncrolm ~lcomt• QM,,.. from
rcodnl. ffe cannot °""1iHr aU ~., bMt
will mclucM thoat of ,...,., ...,.,..., . ... '"*'
column. s.d pr quclt'°"' to""" a CON o/
tlw ~ Pilof, P.O. Boz l!f#), COlfo Alna, CA
mH.
•
.f
~~-------------------_. ....... _.._ .................. a .. 22 ... 2 ............ ...........
IF' VOU MUST
LITTER.
STAY HOM£
WHERE IT WIU BE'
APPR£CIAITD !
PEISOllALITf Q.&A.
BY MARILYN ANO HY GARDNER
Carson wit
m~nghit
Q: We read where the Johnny Carson
show, after all these years, finally made its
debut on British television. And knowing
bow their humor is sometimes different
from ours, we wondered bow the critics
liked Job.nny. -Erle M., Jersey City, N.J.
A: We guess it's going to take a little
while for Carson's humor to grow on them.
··A moronic preference for s lapstick
rudery was evident,·· shrugged TV critic
Russell Davies of the Sunday Times of
London. ··Carson and Burt Reynolds piped
funny foam down each other's s uits .
Carson compounding the fe lony by
s mearing the bubbles widely over
Reynolds' leather-clad loins. Dom De Luise
and Carson hurled eggs."
Nevertheless, Davies says, Carson
may be worth watching. "He will brazen
out a stopped gag brilUantly. And if all else
fails, his suits, tailored by his own clothing
company, are a laugh in themselves. They
all look like boxes ... Last week's tuxedo
was so wide ... that Johnny appeared to
be standing behind an upright coffin •··
Q : How much money Micbelaogelo
asked for to sculpt his statue or David in
tbe year ISCH?
A: The multi-talented genius requested
the sum of six ducats ( $12> per month to
create his m asterpiece. (No. we don't know
how long it took him to work on it.)
Q : Is it true that former President
Jimmy Carter sometimes cooks for the
ramlly? U so, bow good a cook is he? -
Jerry C., St. Louis.
A: "I think he's a better cook than I
am," says Rosalynn. "but he won't agree."
Q: Is Sean Connery, ramous as tbe
original 007, really going to play the villain
In the next James Bond movie? -Melanie
W., Pittsburgh.
A : "No," insists hi s good friend.
current secret agent 007. Roger Moore.
"There's no way Sean will every play the
villain in a Bond film. I know him well and
I can say for certain it won't happen. But."'
quips Roger, "I wouldn't mind playing the
villain. You haven't so much dialogue to
learn." The next Bond movie, by the way,
will be titled "Octopussy."
Send your questions to Hy Gardner. "Glad
You Asked That,·· in care of the Doily Pilot,
P.O. Box 19620, Irvine. Calif 92714. Marilyn and
Hy Gardner will answer as many questions as
they can in their column. but the volume of mall
makes personal replies impossible
Good news
Tuesday, Dec. 29
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES <Marc h 21 -April 191 : Some
aspirations require a more practical base.
You get what you want. but methodology
will be revised.
TAURUS <Apri l 20·May 20 ):
Determination pays off; room is made at
top. you gain backing from one in position
of authority. Capricorn, Virgo and another
Taurus figure promine ntly .
GEMINI (Mar 21 -June 20 : Good
lun ar aspect coincides with lifting of
burden. wider recognition. opening lines of
communication.
CANCER (June 2l·July 22>: Make
Inquiries, express ideas. put forth original
proposal.
L'EO (July 23·Aug. 221: Permit others,
Including those who oppose you. to state
vjews and show their hands.
VIRGO C Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Som e-
dependents have good news to relate. As
result. you'll have less or a burden.
· UB&A <Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Romantic
involvement could become complicated
because of third person. Plant are revised,
ruture ls reviewed. Aquarius, Leo, Srorplo'
natives play prominent roles.
llMA IOMIECK
AT WIT'S ENO
Hanging up
on romance
Editor's Note Erma Bombeck 1s on
uacation Here is a repnnt o/ one u/ her must
requested columns.
A lot of mothers I know are downright
meddling when it comes to their children's
selection of a boyfriend or a girlfriend.
The~ want lo know how old, bow tall,
what their fat her does, where they live, the
scope of their education, what their plans
are for the future, and how they feel about
children.
I don't care about any of those things.
All I want to know is, "l s he or s he a local
call or a toll?"
I don't remember na mes or faces or
old flames. All I remember is their area
code. One of my sons once dated an area
code 513 for six months. It was marriage
by Ma Bell. I figured we were spending $35
a month to share s uch insights as:
"WHAT AKE YOU DOING?"
"Nothing, what are you doing?"
"l don't want lo interrupt you if you're
doing something."
··1 told yau I wasn't doing anything."
"You sure?"
"I'm sure."
"So, what's new?"
Another one of my kids showed an
interest in a lovely girl who lived just a few
miles from us . It was great. I didn't have
to worry a bout a deep involvement
because they were never off the phone.
He set his alarm to call her in the
morning. At night I used to go in and
re move the phone from his ear as he slept.
It was like hanging up an umbilical cord.
As soon as they left one another at school
in the afternoon they would s hout. "I'll call
you when I get home." I offered to feed
him intravenous ly.
THE SUGGESTION BY my husband to
put a timer by the phone with sand running
through was ridiculous. However . I did s lip
a calendar under his door and circle the
month.
Panic didn 'l set in until one day when I
was standing near and saw him dial "l."
"Who are you calling?" I asked.
"You know,·· he said. "The same
person I've been talking with for the last
month."
.. But I thought she was a local call."
··Don't worry," he said. "It only costs
about eight cents a minute.··
"BESIDES, TIDS ISN'T just some silly
kid infatuation. This is a person I
genuinely care for and want to spend the
rest of my life with. She's important to me.
She's special and there isn't anything I
wouldn't do ror her.''
"I'm glad to hear you say that," I said .
"because according to the phone bill you
owe us $36.eE; in long distance charges.··
I learned something that day. When
toll charges enter the room . . . love goes
right out the window.
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
fM I AIMf1" ·~ Alil ..,., ...........
0 •• °'<·900 ,,~,.. ,. N••• Sf#'d "'< M 0 ""'
COULD T MERE
£VER POSSIBLY
SE ANY'
CON~LICT
BETWEEN
MY'
PRIVATE INTERE:STS
AND
THE PlJ8LIC GOOD?
for Virgo
BY SIDNEY OMARA
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov . 21>: Focus on
rentals, l'ases, interest rates and
appraisals .
SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22 -Dec . 21 >:
Emphasis on dealings with relatives.
discussion of home Improvement, plans for
major purchase aimed at security and
beautifying surroundings.
CAPRICORN <Dec . 22-Jan. 19l :
Realistic approach to money is necessary.
You tend to attract those ~make big
promises but ~re financially rrassed
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20· b. 18): This
could be your power-play day! Cycle high,
focus on production, promotion, added
recognition and reward.
PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20 1: You
finish Important project, you excel during
special conference and gain admittance to
exclusive group. You're on brink of major
discovery or promotion. Individuals who
were tndlff erent will now show great
lnlerest.
.... --------
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 28, 1981 -···
...........
READY FOR PARADE -Blacks mith -9on
Crawford shoes Sultan, the only member of
the Sioux City, Iowa. Shrine White Horse
Patrol t o make a return trip to the
Tournament of Roses parade New Year 's
Day . The patrol paraded in Pasadena 20
years ago.
MOWOll.Y
5598
BIG 17.2 cu.ft.
REFRIGERATOR
FREEZER
• Keeps fresh foods longer with
Moist 'n Fresh sealed high-
humidity pan, and adjustable
control.
• And ... Cool 'n Fresh lower-
humidity pan.
• Sealed snack pack for un-
wrapped meats. cheese.
• Split level adjustable wire
shelves.
• Rolls out on wheels.
• 30%" wide, 04" high.
No Defrosting
Ever I
• K"ps fnsh foods longer
with Moist 'n Fmh
seeled high·humidlty
• Staled sneck ~eek for
unwrapped meats,
ch•st.
P-" and edJustablt
control.
• And .. Cool 'N Fresh
lowtr·humldity pan.
• Split ltvtl adju1table
wire 1hah11s.
• Rolls out on whMl1.
• 30%" wide, 64" high,
GET s5000 UPTO TIADl-
.. MOWt
' .~ Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 21, 1981 ,... ____ _
THE
fAMILl'
c1ac1:1
by Bi l Keane
"Bily gave it to me for Christmas. I don't think
it's a real diamond."
by Brad Anderson
"When the ground freezes, Marmaduke
gets desperate for places
to hide his bonesl"
J
81GGEORGE by \Jlrgll Partch (VIP)
"I hate Mondays."
PUNt:T8
TtM•LEWEED8
GORDO
Wild~
n4AT Ot.o,
TAITERED
--------·--·-·--
~ FUNDIN6 FOR
TMIS ME.~ WAS ~OEP f'I A 6CAHT
FROM OUR FAMILY
1lU: MMV P~IC1S INPIANS WIW-Jf
KNOWN AS"'TJiE: VANISHll\IG'AMERIC.Ai\r.
SLUGGO---
HAVE YOU
NOTICED
THATITs
RAINING?
• • I
I
I
I
I
by Tom K. Ryan
GOCW l..OR'7!
1HE'{'Rf
RECFUJl11NG-
MAGICIANS!
I
I • • I
I
I , . I
I 6 I • I •
.ll'DGE Pt\RKt:R by Harold Le Ooux >'1TcH#11<Eef
tT Dt['N'T TAKE THREE HO\.IRS TO EAT A
5ANDWICH ... ANO. FROM THE WA' THAT
' UNABLE TO GIRL 50UND£D IN THE eACK~UNO.
KCEPT oAM'!> THEY 5URE DIDN'T OfttNt< MILK WITH IT'
EXPLANATION THAT HE AND
LINDA MAY HAO
5TOPPEO FOR
A SANDWICH.
Af>f>EY HANGS
VP THE PHONE
AN6RlLY !
GARt'll:LD
12·2f)
® •. •• (i ·1 t r '
I'M PU'TilNC"I VOO
OH A OtET iOPAV,
. GARFIELP
WE1VE BEEN THROUGH
A l..OT TOGETHER,
HAVr:N1T W~, EMMA?
by Jim Davis
. ' .
J
Ft:NK l' 1'1NKt:R•t:AN
Wiaaiag wlcJi~lae
-UJINt~ R)R 1HE OOUM.;5-
I ~'«. '{() bO
io 'f~ ~N1'1S'f 1M~
Afft:.~. "''"-·
M-4 ~1'1~1' ~SAN
IM1'ERE.~1'11~(, Mf;f"°° ... ~t
U!itS S1'E.IW> ~S.
ONE 5HOUl.O BECOME
5U6Hrt..<1' 505PICJ005 OF
N¥.J WINE I FOR INSTANCE '
lJ.IAT ~ IN A ~ ffU!
by Kevin Fagan
tto,ltf ~t~f llQ~S
IUf.JONllllE-"' ~ ~ ~·1
~ "'5 m1c.t1~
5lu.AM1Mb.
-·
-,
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 28, 1981
s e s
oa
success u
ara e sa e.
Garage sales, yard sales, rummage sales, street sales ... no matter what
you call them, the id_ea is the same -TURNING THINGS YOU NO LONGER
NEED rNTO CASH. When you get tired of fighting your way into a crowded
attic or garage, or when you need a little extra cash, have a garage sale! So
get into the act, clean out those unwanted items, and make money doing it!
It's fun, it's profitable, and following these 10 steps will make it simple.
Decide on dates.
Look at a calendar and set the dates and times of your
II sale. Weekends are usually good, but many successful
sales have been held in the evening, just after work.
Check the weather forecast in the paper, and watch for
any other large event that may attract potential buyers
away, such as fairs or community events. Have your
sale run at least two days -some people may not be
able to come on any single day.
What to sell.
Everything! That is, everything you haven't used in the Ill last year. If-an item has antique value, or is brand-new,
or has unusual value, be sure to ask a healthy price for
it. Get a pad of paper and search your whole house.
Look everywhere, and list everything.
Furniture. This is your main attraction and your
best source of income. Be sure to place furniture
where it can be seen from the street. Price
· furniture low enough to beat auctions and
secondhand sales (check the classifieds for
compartsqns), but high enough so you can come
down a little when someone shows interest.
RockinQ chairs, chest of drawers, tables and
chairs are all very successful at garage sales, so
feature them in your ad.
Antiques. Smaller antiques should be grouped, and
kept close at hand where you can watch and talk
about them. Nostalgia items are very popular -
display them well.
Clothing. Make sure clothing is clean, and mark
the price way down. Put as many things as
possible on hangers. Separate kid's things by age.
Display adult clothing by sex and age group. Low
prices are a nnt on clothes except for unusual
items, wh ich should be tagged with an
explanation (like, "han~embroidered flowers,
dress worn by Mae West)."
Appliances. These will sell for a fair price only if
they work. No one w i II take your word for it. Have
an extension cord so they can be tested, or better
yet, have radios playing, old TV sets turned ori
etc. Make sure buyers understand they are sold
"as is".
Plants. These usually go fast, but keep them out of
direct sunlight. A good idea is to name your plants
before the sale (Spider Lady, Cousin Jasper,
Maggie), and write a line or two on the
name card about how to care for them.
Write YC?Ur ad.
·Here is a suggested ad: ''Garage Sale -desks, m Bentwood rocking chair, toys, infants' clothing, 1922
. Victrola in original cabinet, many gadgets, lots of
unusual items, rock collection, plants. Refreshments, 8
a.m. to 6 p .m. Saturday and Sunday. 1234 South
Anystreet, Yourtown. Just west of Main and 2nd."
Use this sample ad as a guide. Be sure to list unusual
items. Be as specific as possible. Give directions if
needed. Don 't use abbreviations-many people won't
bother to decipher them. CAUTION: Don't advertise
anything you don't really have. Every item in the ad
must be on hand at the start of the sale.
Where to advertise.
Place your ad where it will be seen by people who live
in the area -most people shop close to home. The m Daily Pilot is read by 88,000 adults in Costa Mesa,
Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, Irvine, Huntington
Beach and Fountain Valley -guaranteeing you wide
exposure. And with the Pilot, you're not paying for
waste circulation in Los Angeles or Anaheim. Plan to
run your ad 3 times or more, and start it a few days
before the sale so bargain hunters can have plenty of
notice.
Make a sign.
To help make your sale successful, make a few signs
• from cardboard and letter with a magic marker. A good
sign size is 14" x 22 ".
Placing your si9·n.
The morning of the sale, but not before, place your
II signs. Be sure and add your address and any
direct ional arrows. This should be done about a half
hour before the sale starts. Place your sign where it
can be seen from both sides of the street by passing
cars and pedestrians. CAUTION : Some towns have laws
that restrict the p lacement and duration of garage sale
signs. Please check with your town's planning
department or clerk.
Marking prices.
Mark prices where they can be seen clearly. Office
II supply stores have varoius sizes and colors of stickers
that work well, or you can use masking tape. However
· you mark them, make prices low. Garage sales are for
bargain hunters. Remember, whatever you can 't sell
you 'll have to drag back in the house and store again
for another year.
Serving refreshments.
This doesn't have to cost much, and create s a friendly II atmosphere. It also encourages people to stay longer
and perhaps buy more. You could even charge for
expensive items like donuts, or the kids could go in
business for the day, with a lemonade stand.
Display.
Make sure everything can be seen. Have card tables or II boards used as shelves between two chairs. Don't
cause people to bend over unless you can't help it. Use
one table as a desk where you can see everything and
take money. Use only one cash box (tin cans or boxes
work fine) and make sure someone is appointed
"cashier" at all times. Arrange beforehand for a friend
who can help answer questions, relief for lunch, etc.
Check your neiCJhbors and
friends.
mSee if any want to join your sale. This wi ll give you
someone to share expenses with and Increase interest
6 4 2. • 5 6 7 a· in your sale. If others join you, be sure to Include this in
your ad (example: "three-family sale," "neighborhood .Daily Pilat _____ .... sa1e·._·). Gr-oup s-ales-:rea-lot mor-e-fun,-too. -
I '
330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA. · GOOD LUCK WITH YOUR GARAGE SALE!
Open 8-5:~ Monday thru Friday, Saturday a-noon. MAY IT BE SUCCESSFUL AND FUN/
••
\
I
I
.. Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT/Monday, December 28, 1981
Doctor goes from pathology to the stage Billboard picks
top singles, LPs 8yTOM JORY ._ ..... ..._.,...
NEW YORK Jonathan MilJer earned hit
medical de.cree as a pathologist ln 1959. and
within two yeora was on the stage wlt.b Dudley
Moore, Peter Cook and Alan Bennett in the
satlrlcaJ revue .. Beyond the Fringe."
He con11iders himself on "extended
ubb aUcal." with an occasional -tbouah
certalnly pronounced -nod to hl1 chosen field, 81
with the brilliant 12-part series, ''The Body ln
Question.·' broadcast In 1979.
•·1t was kind of an accident, really, .. be says of
his turn to the theater and, ultimately, television.
''I'd done a bit ot acting at Cambridge, and had
established a reputation as a 'comic.·
"When 'Beyond the Fringe• was put to1ether. I
was ready," Miller says. "I'm-one of those who
considered medicine aa a field " rather
uncongenial al the time.''
That patient's loss may have been the TV
viewer's gain. for by 1965, Miller was prominent
before and behind the British Broadcasting Corp. 's
cameras, first with "Monitor," and later as
producer and director of fi lms like the acclaimed.
though controversial, BBC version of .. Alice in
Wonderland."
Miller eventually was assigned the third and
fourth seasons or Ule BBC's six-year series, "The
Shakespeare Plays," and his seventh production
so far , "Timon of Athens," will be broadcast by
most public TV stations Monday night at 8 EST.
The play, the 19th new adaptation in the
BBC-Time-Life Televis ion cycle , is one or
Shakespea re 's least-known. It stars Jonathan
Price as Timon, John Shrapnel as Alcibiades and
Diana Dors as T imandra.
"It is a hard play to do," says Miller, pleased
nonetheless with the opportunity to produce
"Timon." "It is a bare, extremely pessimistic
story with a strange, odd fe ature which is ~ p"articularly relevant to America.
~ "It is, in a sense, a metaphor for America ," he ~ says. "whose· passion to help, whose generosity.
;.~ often is overlooked by those who receive it.
:: ·'Timon is a man of almost unprincipled
generosity who is deeply offended when people are
.. . not able to show him the gratitude be feels he
~: deserves," the producer says. ~ Two more plays produced by Miller are r scheduled for broadcast in the current season. "A
~· Mids ummer Night's Dream" on April 19, and
:..': "Troilus and Cressida" later in the spring.
; Miller is directing "King Lear" for the firth
:: season.
• Miller has a reputation in the industry as a
: television producer, as distinguished from a
::. filmmaker who works in TV. .
.. .. . -
' .
..
·. . . . . ..
" • . •. :: ..
~-
. . .
~ ,.
•
Nobody leans on Sharky's Machine.
• \ ...... au • ..... f •SMAN "°°'""''°".A., .. S><A~•IO f ll ... CHEWOiASE
MODERN i>RosLEMs
PAnl OAR8ANV1l1E MARV KAY Pl.ACE 91·~00nt _,., ••u i:.un•
-(OAEINEY (CllEMANJ l>~v"•• P•odv<•• OOUClAS C KENNEY
Ptod11c.d by AlAN GREISMAN o..0 Mt(HAEl SHAM8UG
W.011e n by KlN SHAPIRO & TOM SHEROHMAN & ARIHUll SHlERS
O•tt<IK by KfN SHAPIRO Mu'•< by o0MtNI( FllONTtU E '°'°' '' orn.ou•
ONCE A DOCTOR - J onathan Miller is now
a stage director. He is currently working
on Shakespeare's ''The Taming of the
Shrew."
"There are certain things about television that
you don't find in movies or the theater," he says.
"It has the wonderful way about being intimate
and close."
With Shakespeare, he s ays, "You lose a
ce rtain rough immediacy that Shakespeare wrote
for the stage, but you can give the play this
fantastic intimacy, in that you can get so close to
the actors. You can hear them think aloud .
"Those very, very brief, quick moments in
Shakespeare, where the characters address the
audience, on the stage, the actor must step to the
front," Miller says . "In television, you can draw
the actor to the audience with the camera."
Miller, in 1973, turned rus attention to the
ope ra. and in June will direct Mozart's "Cosi Fan
Tlltte" in St. Louis.
"That was an accident. too." he says of his
start in opera. "Someone asked me to do it, and it
JOHN BEWSHI
DANAYKROYD
~
lrnpreased me very much. Then 1 1ot on to Mourt,
and my Interest beaan to escalat.e." ,
Though Miller, 48, may be more or the theater
'today than or the laboratory, he hu at least kept
up with developments ln medicine "I drifted out,"
he say1, "and 1 think I would do anythln-to get
back."
H~ is at work not on ll series of 15 interviews
with psychologist.'!. "There Is no thesis for the
series," he says, "because you can't possibly have
a thesis in modern psycholt>gy. I can't even
pretend to cover the eround.
"I'd quite Uke to do a whole series on the
history of evolution," Miller says "People seem to
be confused about what Darwin said, and I'd like
to aet the record s traight."
He says he is negotiating with the BBC now on
thut Idea.
Hollywood mulls
~oodfil~ fate
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Ins urance carriers
apparently are still balking at the desire of MGM
officials to scrap "Brainstorm," the nearly
completed $12 million film whose future was cast
in doubt last month by the death of its star, Natalie
Wood.
MGM s ays the three remaining d ays of
shooting on "Brainstorm" involved scenes crucial
to the movie thriller, and that "is now being
r e viewed by the underwriters," sa id Mike
McAllister of Bayly. Martin & Fay. the Insurance
brokerage firm handling the policy•
Officials at MGM and Un ited Artists. which
was to distribute the film , would only confirm they
had reached a decision. but would not specify what
it was.
"We have an opinion on it," said David
Begelman, former MGM production chief and pow
head of UA. "Now our insurance carrier has to
decide whether it can be finished "
About $10 million had already been expended
on the film. which was expected to cost about $12.5
million upon ~ompletion. McAllister said the film
was covered by a primary cast poH cy with Lloyd's
of London, which has a SS million limit, and an
additional policy with Pacific Indemnity Co., with
a $10 million limit.
Unnamed sources cited by the Los Angeles
Times said director Douglas Trumbull wanted to
save the film, even outHning for insurance carriers
a plan for comple ting it.
The followmg are Blllboard's hot record hlt1
for the week ending January 9 as they appear in
next week 's lssue of Billboard magazine.
HOT SINGLES
l "Physical" Ohv1a Newton-John, MCA
2 "Waiting for a Girl Like You" Foreigner,
Atlantic
3. "Let's Groove" Earth, Wind & Fire.
ARC Columbia
4. "l Can't Go for That'' Daryl Hall & John
Oates, RCA
S. "Young Turks" Rod Stewart, Warner Bros.
6. "Harden My Hea rt" Quarterflash. Gerten
7. "Leather and Lace" Stevie Nicks with Don
He nley, Modern Records
8. "Centerfold" J Geils Band, EMl·America
9. "Turn Your Love Around" George Benson,
Warner Bros.
10. "Trouble" Lindsey Buckingham, Asylum
11. "Yesterday's Songs " Neil Diamond,
Columbia
.12. "Comin' In and Out of Your Life" Barbra
Streisand, Columbia
13 "The Sweetest Thing" Juice Newton,
Capitol
14 . "Hooked on Classics" Royal Philharmonic
Orchestra, RCA
15 "Why Do Fools Fall an Love" Diana Ross,
RCA
16 "Cool Night" Paul Davis, Arista
17 . "Take My Heart" Kool & The Gang,
De· Lite
18 "Don't Stop Believin'" Journey, Columbia
19. "Someone Could Lose a Heart Tonight'
Edd ie Rabbitt. Elektra
20 "Wa iti ng on a Friend" Rolling Stones.
Rolling Stones
TOP LPs
1 "For Those About to Rock" AC·OC. Atlantic
2 "Ghost in the Machine" Police, A&M
3 "4" Foreigner , Atlantic
4 .. Escape" Journey , Columbia
5 "R ai s e " Earth , Wind & Fa re ,
ARC-Columbia
6 "Physical" Olivia Newton-J ohn, MCA
7 "Bella Donna " Stevie Nicks. Modern
Records
8 "Tattoo You" Rolling Stones, Rolling Stones
9 "Shake It Up" The Cars, Elektra
10 "Memories" Ba rbra Streisand, Columbia
11. "Toni ght I'm Yours" Rod Stewart, Warner
Bros
12 ··Freeze· F rame '' J Ge ils Band,
EM I-America
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FRID MEl.VYN
AST AIRE OOUGLAS
OOUGLAS JOHN FAIRBANKS. JR HOUSEMAN
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Qecember 28, 1981 * .,
-.
'Kiss' tries for substance • • • in music, and still spits blood
By Y AIU>ENA ARAll ._.._,,_,wr-.
LOS ANGELES f'unny how a few years tin
put lh10111 in a dlrferent perspective. Take the rock
band KJas, for example -remember when four
1rown men ln bluck loather jumpsulls, chains and
face·oblcurln& bl11ck-and·white makeup seemed
incredibly decadent and outraaeoua?
Not. that such exotic wear. and such stage
antics as guitarist Gene Simmons' snake·like,
ton1ue·fllcking and fa ke blood-s pitting, have
become the norm . but it does seem like there's a
bit more competition in the shock·rock field these
days.
The Plasmallcs' scantily-clad lead singer,
Wendy 0 . Willi ams. has already survived two
o-b scenlt y trial s stemming from h er
s uggestive-destructive performances; former
Black Sabbath member Ozzy Osbourne set a new
s tandard by biting off the head of a dove at a
record company marketing meeting.
..
A slew of young British rock stars has entered
the costume-makeup s weepstakes: Musically,
Adam and the Ants may be light years removed
from Kiss, but they are soulmates in their pirate,
garb, Indian warpaint and fantasy-showme n
approach.
In fact, with all the new groups and new music
abroad in the land since Kiss last toured more
than two years ago, there was something almos t
comforting about watching the band in action
during a recent taping of television's "Solid.Gold."
At least with Kiss you know what to expect.
Simmons still flic ks h is tongue, bassist Paul
Stanley still paints a huge black star around his
right eye. Simmons, Stanley and lead guitarist Ace
FrehJ ey still charge ma niacally around the stage.
and though the man at the drums is new -Eric
Carr took over from Peter Kriss almost two years
ago the entire picture is reassuring in its
familiarity, as is the heavy metal sound of the
music.
And though others may be venturing into Kiss'
artistic territor y. none has yet to scale the
commercial heights the New York quartet has
conquered since it formed in 1973: more t han 30
million albums sold worldwide. 11 platinum
albums (sales in excess of one million each>. in the
U.S. alone, and heaven knows how many T-shirts,
pos ters, dolls, lunchboxes and other merchandise.
Band members, we ll aware of their lofty
position in the mainstream rock fi rmament, don't
find comparisons between Kiss and newer bands
who haven't come close to tapping this mass
audience particularly a ppropriate.
"When they get to a certajn level, then we can
talk about similarities." says Simmons, whose
business acume n is highly regarded in music
industry circles.
Kenny Rogers inf ilm
BRASELTON, Ga. <AP> -Country.music
singer Kenny Roge rs will star in a feature-length
motion picture to be filmed in northeastern
Georgia beginning next month.
"Six Pack" will be s hot here, a nd in the town
of Buford, as well as m Atlanta. by 20th Century
Fox, which said shoot mg begins Jan. 12.
Lynn Foster, a spokeswoman for the film
division of the Georgia Department of Industry
and Trade, said flim crews expect to spend 10
weeks here creating tfie s tory of a down-and-out
auto racer who befriends six troubled orphans.
SIEVE MARTIN 1n "INNOVATI\/£. ··Pennies AUDACIOUS AND
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848 0388 634 2553
THE PORT THEATRE
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.Humor and
eroticism in a tender
and entertaining work!'
We're newly opened.
We're a classic saloon.
We're e fun menu
with a touch of gourmet.
We're nostalgia.
We're • sidewalk caf e.
We're a great place for holiday funl
Lunch ;rom I I :00 i .m. 800 0. Newport Center Dr.
Dinner from 5:00 p.m. Newport Buc:h
Clotled Sundaya ln '•ahton l"-nd
But, Simmons add , .. Anybody that tries lo do
~mylh1ng different visually has got my vote 11
somebody lhut's tryinlJ to give people something
else fo r their money. I mean, on one hand you've
got the records and the music, and then you've 1ot
lo fiaure out what else to do to be entertalnlnl(."
Why have some of the new theatrical rock acts
failed to reach large audiences? "I think being
outrageous for the sake of outra1e. doesn 't
necessarily mean success," Simmons replies.
"Just because you get on stage and kill a
hammerhead shark Is not going to make you.
Outrage wi th s ubstance has an appeal."
Speaking of substance, Kiss -despite its
enormous success -ha~ in the past been more or
less dismissed by critics as the kind of rock' band
that should be seen and not heard. As Simmons put
it, "The reviews have always been awkward."
But things may be different with the band's
newly released "Music From the Elder," Kiss 's
first concept LP. The songs all are based on a
Ki ss-created legend that sounds solnething like
"Star Wars" without lasers and spaceships : The
Elde r, a mythical group presence that has always
watched over mankind, trains a young orphan boy
to battle the forces of evil.
"Kiss fans are going to be surprised," says
Carr. "It's not what people expect from Kiss. But I
think if they're true fans -and Kiss Cans are very
loyal -they're going to like the album and they're
going to realize that Kiss hasn't deserted anyone.
"We've just advanced a nd decided to try
something different.·'
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~·11'\ll•t
C t .,.,.,,,I ·~ A ' I hA ..
~
;HOCK EFFECT Rock band Kiss. early
>ioneer s of modern-day shock rock. a re still
HEART
BEEPS ~
A UNIVERSAL PICfURE
0,..1 ;.l-ISAl•mm~ ...
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.. On a scale of 1 to 10, 'Taps'is a perfect 10."
-----C··~f·•Jlil1• l B' ri,, LL.,..,..M.:cu'
~GEORGE C. SCOTT
1 IMOTHY HUlTON
TAPS
•
visual JOkesters but they hope their ne~
album has "substance ..
•BARGAIN MATINEES •
Monday thru Saturday
All Performancta before 5:00 PM
(Ercept Sptelal Engagtmtnts and Holid1yal
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1 .. ncAn r .. o:':LCATRAZ"'.,.
tlH( "'°""°~---· --"RAIMRI Of' T .. LOST MC" -.... "POPSYI:" -c~ "sou.a ---·-·-"Nf~"llll -"CHEAP 0£CTICT1W" -
ORANGE DAIVI IN
•o~IO .... o 1...,
a tlO•• c 0Me9e
551·7022 --· "IHAl .. llY'l IMCttNI" 1111 -'ANY WHICH WAY YOU CAN"
... , AO, A1 •'""
MISSION OlllVE IN
0 .
••••• , •• , flt J
WARNER l'lllvl I ~
... _ -.... ol teec11-..
M1·Ht1
--·WA•-"A8MNCS Oii llllMJC•""' -p ''TMI CltlMA •• ....,... ...
.. Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 28. 1981
.---------.... F --a:---
lllP!Oli.cl ml!Monalre on . ..,, ........
MOYll TUBE TOPPERS _.,. petnfll«ll Nlll -
latlO" l"VH ll9ata 1111 ---.......... ..... -~·'°' UO CJ) IHOWT'IMl'I
Hill'' 11 ... ) Don ....., •• r.: !1:.1n1 Olaaa"
ltMO) MUii 6 •COMar, * • * "Tiie ti.o1ri0 MorM-
111-11" (1111) llloblr'I l'llO·
IOfd, JIM ,onda A Lal
V1911 OOWboy ltMll I 111
mllllon lhorOUOflbtld llC>tta
to uve tolm ''°"' Illa
uplollltlYI OWMtt 'PO'
KNXT 9 7:30 -"The Lather Over
Soaps." A behind-the-scenes look at
som e well-watched soap operas
HOU.YWOOO
•tOO CJ) MOVll
• • • ''TM Gath4wln0"
(1t71) l d "'-· M--
8tlC)leton l.OftOllMI dM-
PM Daltlall. A ltltlttl ""* PCJtl .. .,.. llfea¥e liftj.
11'1.tely IMcll to It~.
'll'O'
(%) e *'~"HI, a..onit"
10:00 8 (I) LOU GIWIT
A0111 ...,n1 •boul Oltty
polUlca lit91 hand when e
friend 01 hie rune for publlQ
ottio.. an<I .\rl Donovan
Q911 Into 1 tight with
111\0lher editor
KOC I!: 9 7:30 -"Ole 1''1edermaus" A
new producllon of J ohann Stra uss·
operetta is performed by the Vienna
St ate Opera.
llOna MIOl\O -~· Of the IM/llly 01 a dying man
COtt'I OUI In IM Ol*'I -'*'
1111 grown olfep0ng gath4w
IOr a fln411 larnlly reunion 9COMMUNtTV ~··sewt0
( 1170) AoMrt DI NNo,
Jlnnllet a.it A VIMNl'l'I
,,...,an '91utnt llOme to
Naw York City and
~ ln\loiv.cl In the pomoor '4l"Y lnclullty • ,..
\111 ,ll\' . .--EVBING--1
·~NE#· • • "The Wf9Clllng Cr..-"
( 1"81 o.An M1rtln, Elkl
Sommer Gec:r1t 1oen1
Mell Helm Maral'I" lor I tatoa quantity or QOld th•t
ml.Ill bl returned 10 "'"'"
1n11tn1110n11 torvency Ill~
KHJ 11 8:00 -"Crisis in the Horn of
Africa." Documentary on the more than
6 mi llion people who have been affected
by war and drought.
•:ao (C) MCMI * * * "A Pain In TIMt A " ( 191,) Jec:quw 81'el. Ltno
Venture Whlla an aeeaalln
conoentfllM on hll M•I
klHlng, he la ruo.ly Int.,·
rupteCI by • blimbll"G 11111-
iwe of e man whO II
attempting IUldde 'PG'
1• (.C) • * ._. ""°'41 Paradl• eo" ( tNe) Olna Lollotltlc;-
Oe. Alie Outnne11. A
~rendl lotNf\O attwnc>tt
to .,,.,.•~
11ytl In a hotel wllh 11'8
neighbor'• Wife UOID N1W1 OHAIUl'I MtQILa 9 GATOfl 90WL
Afkel\Me YI Norttl OefQll.
,,. (from JKl!tonlllle, Fl1 I
KTLA 0 s·oo -"Wuthertng Heights ''
A must-set! mm about s trange love in
pre-Victorian England. 4; .. (%) MOYIE * • 'lo "HI, MOMI" ( 1970)
Roblf'l DI Niro, .i.ntlllet
Salt A vi.inem ,,...,an
r11urn1 home to N-Y0tll
City end ~ lnvOIV«S
In the pornogrlC)hy lndua-
lry A'
Cl) * * *' "Penelope" ( 19") Netalil Wood, Ian
8-'ln A negMGlld wife
O.C:ldee to dtegulll lletaall
end rob h4w hWbanel'1
bank i. TMAIUM HUNT Ii THI """"""' O!Mtl: JMn StlC)leton.
• HAWAII l'M-0
• llll!Hal lll90ftl G DO< CAVSTT
OIMtt. Mllllmlltan ScMlt
(Pitt 1 ol 2)
CJ) cetNIWt
8HeCNIW9 0MOVie • * • • "Kremer V1
Kremer" ( 19791 OutUn
Hottrnen. Meryl Streep A
~ baltlll with 1111 H•
wile IOt c:urtody of thllf
young son 11111 the w1tk1
outonthlm 'PG'
CZl MOVIE
•••'A "Supermen"
( 1979) Chrlttophlf RMYI.
M ergol Kidder Mlld-
menneted report., Clerk
Kent dona hit r.o e1p1
and Ulll 1111 IUPlfl'IU~
po-• to thwlrl 1n arch
e•lmlnll'• plot to dlttroy
IM w .. 1 Cout with I
giant llt11\queke 'PO'
9:30 a BUU.IEYl ID I LOVE LUCY
Lucy Oleldll lo tmpr111 a
nearsighted glrlltllnd. tlD KCET NEWSllEAT
«I) -IHUI AEPOAT
CIJ IBNEWS (C)MOYJE
***"AP1lnlnTMA "
( t973) Jeeq .... Bret, Uno
Venturi. While an atalUln
eono911tral11 on hi• nel(I
kHllng, M II rudely Inter-
rupted by 1 bumbling 1111-
ure ol 1 m1n ...no It
11templlng IUlcldl 'PG'
1:00 8 C88 NEWS D NeCNEW8 0 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
8 YOU ASKED FOA CT
Fe1tured "Milking TM
Deadly Bleck Mamba" and
"Parrot tmpertoftators."
al ntE JU'FEMONS
Allan, IM "wtllt11haep" of
the WINI• family, returns
hOtnl (Plr1 1)
• JOKER'S WILD
fJi) OVlA EASY
"Education" GUiit Pearl
Biiiey IAIO
«I) MACNEii. / LEHRER
REPORT
Cl) TIC TAC DOUOH
(B THE MUPPETS
Guest: Chrillopher lang-
h1m.
(O'MOVlE * • 'Xll'adU" ( 1980) 011-
Yla Newton-John, a-
Ketly A yoong artist, I
heavenly muaa and a "'111-
mental mlllionalre 101n
loroes to open up a hUQ9
•Oller-disco pal11C41. 'PG'
7:30 t) TME L.ATMEA 0V£A
90AP8
Entartalnm1n1 reporter
Gary Franklin goe1
behlnd-1he-1oenes or
some ..,..1.watched soap
operu -"G-•I Hospi-
tal." "Guldtng Light" and
"Young And The Ret11Ma"
-l0t • dOle look •t th11
popular end prolilable
segment or -"Ow b\.I..,_.
U Q!FAMILYFEUD 8 LAVERNE 6 SHIRLEY
&COMPANY
THAT'S THE ONE -Mrs. Oleson sets out
to adopt a daughter and , when she meets
a foul-tempered hellion named Nancy.
she cries. "That's the one'' on "Little
House on the Prairie" at 8 tonight on
KNBC (4 1.
H•wkeyw 1utter1 a concus-
ston Wiien lie wreoka hll
)Mp and ii ••1CU9d by •
KorMn !amity who c:•nnot
undeira1and Eng.lllh
I T1C TA.C DOUGH
MACHEJL /LEHRER
MPORT
Qlj)QM.AT
PEIV'OAMAHCE8
"Ole Fleoetmau1" Fllme<I
In lhe city In wtllctl n was
creat.ci and wn.t'• II "
P<•Mnt.cl ltlnu1lly as part
or a N-Y11r'1 tr•dltlon, a
new production ol Johann
Strauu·a operetta 11 per-
formed by the Vienna
Sllte Oi>«a
(J) P.M. MAGAZINE
A prorne ol supposed
Howatd Hughe• heir Mel·
vln Dummar, a IOOk II
llluatrated romance
tablOldl. CID SNOW WHITE AND
THE SEVEN DWAAF'S:
UVEOHSTAQE
A 6llQI perl0tmance or
I he felry-tall etaaslC
leatur1ng ll•llh sets and
coatumea. Taped II New
York's Radio City Music
Hall. ~ SHOWTIME'S
HOUYWOOD
8:00 8 Cl) PAIVA.TE
8D6.IAMIH
Judy -.k1 Into Captain
Lewll' quartars ror a
coveted bath In Ille e1mp'11
only bllhlub. U 8 UTTU HOUSE OH
THE~
The Olesons teke 1n a girl
frOtn IM 0<phanage to
tlllte the plaoe or Nellie,
who has moved 10 New
Vortt (Part t)(AI 0
0 MOVIE ft•" "Wutherlng
Heights' \ 1939) L•urence
Ollvler Merle Oberon
8 CA1818 IN TME MOAN
OfAFAICA
Stan Mooneyhem and
Carot Lawrance host th11
documentary on Ille more
than sla mllllon people 1n
Africa whO hi•• l>ffn
alleeted by war end
drought and lhl rasullt of
IUCh 8Vfllltl
G) P.M. MAGAZINE
Meet Michael Richard. the
finest French pasty c:hef an
the wOtkl, a looll 81 llk.os-
trated r0tnanee llblOlds.
Linde H1trl• vlstt& Burgun-
dy, France. Chef Tell
mak811hl1h kebab
II) MOVIE
* • * "Snowbeast" ( 19771
Bo Svenson, Yvette Mlm-
leUX A lkl reso<t It llf<Ot·
lied by a hlll·hum&n, half.
beast k•lllr
fl3 GREAT
PERFORMANCES
or 1 New Year's tradition. a
new production ol Johann
Streusa's C>Plt•ll• 11 per-
form.a I>)' the Vlenn1
State Opera
(C'MOVll
• • 'A "Tiie Granllopper"
( 19701 Jac:quellne BlllMlt
Jim Brown A t>orld 19-
year-old girt goes to Las
Vegas to pul IOm4I aptee
lnlo hi< ra1hef 0tdlnary
Nie 'R'
JOHN CURRY'S
ICEOANCIHO
Olympic gold medel-
wlnner Peggy Fi.ming and
"Ice C&pades" 1tar JoJo
Starbuck join Curry f0< this
display or sUllng 1rt1stry
0MOVIE
• • "Sunday Lovers"
(1991) G-Wlkl«, R~
Moore. Four mlddt ... eged
men In love are followed es
troey pur1ue their amorous
adventures 'R'
1:30 8 Cl) TltE TWO Of' US
Nan '1 house 11 burglanzed
and BrentWOOd II eccuaad
ol t>etng Ille thief by Nan's
trouble-making nlKe
G) ALLINTHEFAMILY
George finds lllmulf In Ille
uncoml0r1abll position ol
11av1ng to be nice to
Archte
Z MOVIE
* * ·~ HI, Mom I (1970)
Robert De Niro, Jenn1rer
Salt A Vietnam veteran
returns home to New York
Coty and becomes involved
In the pornogrephy indus-
try 'R'
t:008(1) M•A•S•H
tn en ettort 10 rid the camp
of 111 post-Chrlttmss
blues, Colonel Potttt has
the olllce<a an<I enhsled
men trade pieces l0t 1
day
U QtMOVIE
*•a "From Htte To
E1etnlly" IP&rt 21 ( 19791
Netal1e Wood. Wiiiiam
Devane u THATS INCREDIBLE
Fe1ture<I Ille human tOt·
pe<IO, a btood that mey
rec>t&ee all blood types, •
iegteu -IQhtlllter. a can-
ine parachullat (Al
8 COLLEGE
BASKETBALL
HOiiday Claulc: Tourna-
ment" LU VIQH vs Loyo-
la
G) MERV GRIFFIN
Guests Wayf}G Newton,
Joan Rivers Arthur Murray
Dence< a
OJ) CRISIS Al.EAT:
AGONY IN EAST AFRICA
'11 MOVIE
• • • "The Rose 11111111
Bette Mldler. Aten Bate& A
droven rock singe< s Ille In
Ille last lene tead1 h8f 1rr&-
verslbly to dlsaater R'
(OJ EVEAYTHIHO OOE.S
Rick Podell llOllS th11 adult
• • • "tnvt11t1on To Tiie
Oanoe" ( 19117) Igor
You1keVUah, a-Kelly
Three Rlm1ky-Korukov
dAll<ll aequence• are P••·
Ml\190. "Clrcua" A c:Aown
1111• 10 hit dealh from a
tightrope, "Ring Around
The Ro1y" An annlvenary
glh c:haOQI• nand1 many
limes; "Slnbad The S811or"
A seaman uper1enc:e1
exciting adventurH
OJ) THE ROCKFOAD
fll£8
(C'MOVIE •"•'A "Last Tango In
Par11" ( 19731 Merton Bran-
do, Marl• Sc:lln1ldar.
Olroc1ed by Bernardo Ber·
lotuccl A middle-aged
m111 whOM unl11t'1ru1 wile
r-.11y c0tnml1ted 1Ulckle
and an uninhibited )'OUng
women meet and begin •
oomplicatad ell a tr
throughout wh•Ch they
remain nameless to aach
Olhl< 'R'
10;16 MOVIE * * * • · Kremer Vs
Kramer" ( t979) Dus11n
Hollman, Meryl Streep A
rnan battles w11h hi• ea-
wife IOt cullod~ ol lhe1r
young aon alter 1he walks
out on them 'PG'
10-.30 .., IHDEPEHOE.NT
NETWORK NEWS
fl3 SUIC«>E: TME LAST
AHORYACT
Cerol Cotter investtgates
Ille reasons ror the rising
Incidents OI aulclde In this
c:ounlry end Interviews
social senric.a profeatlon-
als and 1 un1vett1ly de1n
of studenra
(,')JO""' RIVEM
COMEDY HOUR
Tiiis evening ol unique
antertalnment fealures
adult puppeteer Barclay
Sn aw and Iha T rop;c;ana
Dancers
, 1:00 e u a Cl) ®J a
NEWS D SATURDAY NIGHT
Hott Mertln Sheen Guesr
DaVldBowll
ID THE JEFFEASOHS
An ontroduction puts Helen
and Louise 1 lrtendlhlp on
the tone
0) SANFORD AHO 80N
Two depulie• corne to
reposseu the furniture
when Fred delaul1s on tne
payments
fl3 DICK CAVETT
Guest Mu1mtlian SCheU
(Part 1 ol 21
11:30 I) (I) QUINCY
Ou1ney investigates the
dea1h ol a top.ranked
prlzef<ghle< (RI o a THE BEST OF
CARSON
Gu11111 Lau,.n Beoall,
David Ste1nt>etg, Euble
Blake, Frtendshtp (A)
0 NEWS 8 BEBT Of OROUCHO
G) D1AMON08 IH 'THE
8fCY
Th11 speoal Olell Wiii\ Ille
impact that IM atrplane
ha& made on people a rives
trYerywllere (Parts 1-21 e AOOt<IU
murder trial cre1IM h1voc
In Ille mA1rl1ge of 1 wom-
l n lawyer Ind ~ hua-
band. en awttant dlatrlct
at10tney
0HUGHIE
Jaton Aobard1 end Jack
Dodson at11 In thll one.act
play about two men trom
opf)Ollt• world• who Shire
the lonel1nt1u or the big
cny
11:46 (J I MOVIE * • "Oeatll Game ( 1977)
Sondra Locke, Seymour
CDSMM. Whtie 1115 wife I~
eway, a man lnvl1es two
ettrtellve 111n-age girts
Into his hOUaa l0t the night,
tater ditc0Y11lng lhat the
young beaut-are l>Om•·
cldat maOlaca A'
-Ml>NIGHT-
12.00 0 SHA NA NA
Guest Frank Gorst11n
IJ A.8CNEWS
NIGHTU NE 0 MOVIE
• ,,,.., "Creatures Ot The
Amazon" ( 19771 Doeu·
mentary The boh1111or ol
the varied and 1Aot1c anl·
mats tha1 1nllabll lhe Brar.I·
lien ra;n IOtlll 11 •••·
mined. f!> rrs EV£RY800Y'S
8USIN£S8
"Labor Union•
@) THE ROCKFORD
flLE.S
tO'MOVIE *"' It• 'Kramer Vs.
Kramer' ( 19791 Dustin
HoHman. MlfYI Stroep A
man balllet with h11 ek·
wife for cuttody or tllelr
young son 1He• &hi walks
out on tt>em 'PG'
12:30 U Q! TOMORROW
Guests Charley Prode,
Russ1•n 1uth0t Al11<aandr
S011hen1tsyn, part. 1 lor-
mer CIA heed Willl•m Col-
by (R) 0 MOVIE
'Trouble Al Solver Creel<
Gene Autry
1J MOVIE
• • "Strenoe HOl'tl4ICOIT>·
Ing" ( 19 7 4) Robert Culp,
Glen Campbell
ti) INDE9£NDENT
NETWONC NEWS C MOVIE • *'"' "Dresald To 1(111'
( 19801 llAlehael C11ne
Ang11 Otctonson POiice
search IOI tri. psychOtlc
murd111er who butchered a
sul>Urban housewife R'
12:40 I) (I) BANACEK
Banacek Is hor.0 Io lond a
lootball playe< who 11en-
1&hed lr0tn the playing lleld
111 front ot 1 11ad1um of
people (RI
1:00tl) MOVIE
• • '> 'Man In Tiie Mid·
Ole' ( 1964) Roberr
M1lchum. France Nuyen A
retpected lawyer j909ard-
1ze1 his c:llreer wnen he
tnes to plead insanity for
hta chent
@)NEWS
(,') BERHAOETTE
PETEAS IN CONC€RT
Barnadttt8 Pet.,I par-
fOtf!ll a v11i.ty Of tongs U
-11 It he< famou1 Nnena
d•nc•
M l CS.) PAT COl..UNS: THE
HIP HYPNOTIST
llOlunlMrl lrom the audl-
enca r11pond comle&lly to
hypno1t1 1ugge1t1ons
made to them by tht1
...,1er111n.,
MOVIE
• • • '" "The Kneck Ano How To Get It" ( 1995) Rita
Tulhinghem, Ray Brook1
A young man a11emp11 to
become popular with the
ladle• by lludying 1111 beat
friend'• method•
t.309 MOVIE
"Oh, Su1annal" (1939)
a-1wy
G) MIKE DOUOL.A8
Cohoat Dom DeLu111
Gunra· Erik Eltrlda, Jim
Stall0td, Pett Fountain,
Nellllle Brotl\ef1 & the Wlkl
Tclloupitoulas
IH)MOVIE
••'A "The 11A1rror
Crack'd" (111801 Ell:tabelh
Taylor Kim Novak Based
on a story by Ag11ha
Christle A atr1nge murde<
1nv<>1v1ng rtval HOllywOOd
11111 lak.s piece 1n "'
Englllh 11111. 'PG
2;00 0 ENT£A'TAINMENT
TONIGHT
An ln181'\11i1w with Tony
Orlando ·= I • "The Allie" ( 1979)
Cerr11 SnodQrlM. Ray MM·
land A llbrarlan live• In Ille
past w11h ,_ memorlet of
• love whO diMpP91fed
'R'
2:16 8 NEWS
($)JOHN CURRY'S
IC~NO
Olympic goto medal-
winner Peggy Fleming and
"Ice Capldet" star JoJo
Starb\.lck Jotn Curry for this
dtaptay or skating 1r11atry
2:30 UU NEWS
(Cl MOVIE
It • ·~ "Tiie Spiral Stair·
ca91" ( 1977) Jacqueline
Bisset Chrollopher
Plummer A beautiful deaf.
mute Is terrorized by a
mystertoua kllllr whO lurks
1n the Shadows surround-
ing an e!eQent mltlslon
'PG
2:468 MOVIE
• •\.Ir "Funel'al In S..lln"
( !967) Michael Caine.
OIClt Homotka A British
eg«it arranges tor a mock
funeral tn orde< to safety
Smuggle a Ru..,an delec-
IOt out of Berttn
,Z)MOVI£
* • '"' "Tho PHS8fl941<" ( 19751 Jeck Nicholson,
Merla Scl'lneldet A TV
newamltl on an A I rleln
eu1gnment replac•s e
IOOk-a-llke Wld MC&pa
onto a ,_ and dangerous
hie 'A'
3:16 )MOVIE • * "Hangar 19" ( 19901
Darren llACGalltn, Rober1
Veughn A-cNIB 11 a
Tewsda11'•
Da11il•~ Mo.,fe•
8:00 Cl *• "Slelp<ng Cl.r
Murder" ( 11168) Slmon41
S1gnora1. Y1111 Montano .
Ooc;upantr ol a treln com-
partmenl a11 tar09t1 ror
dallh at the handa ol a
deranged kllllt
ISJ •••"P~"
(111&8) Natali. WOOO, Ian
Bannen. A "'Qleclld wile
decldet 10 d1tgu1ae l>lfMlf
and rob he< hutb&nd'I
bank.
0 • • ·•coa11 ToCoatr"
l 1980) Oyen C11nnon. Rot>-
ert Bl1ke A runaway
houMw•I• and a scr11>9Y
trucker hauling cattll
COU I to C:OUI ~ lhe
llrge1 of a wild cross-
i;ountry chaN 'PG'
9:30. *'It "Blonde Oyn•
mite" ( 19491 eo_.,, Boys
A~ Jetgens Thi Boys
are kepi bUIY _, they
~panile an escort •gency
{CJ ** "Dte laugh1ng"
( 19801 Robby Benion,
Charles Durning A
aongwr1t1ng Clb driver iS
aided by a Mnart monkey
on P<OYlf'G hlmllll Innocent
or a murder ctoa1ge 'PG
10:00 1 SJ • • • '" "Being T11e<e"
( 111791 Peter-Setlera. Met·
vyn Douglas A s.mp1e-
m1nded middle-aged man.
whose only knowledge or
the outsode world is
through lel~llllon, gems
tremendous lame and
pow.. by unw.tungty eon-
111nclng tycoons and potlli-
c1en1 thet he Is 1 genius
'PG'
0 •••• "Krame<Va
Kramer" I 1979) Oull•n
Hottman, Meryl Stroep A
man battles with hll ••·
wile 10< custody ol '"*'
young .on altar •lie walks
out on them 'PG'
10-.30 ti) * 'R1dera Or Oetllny '
( 19331 JOl\n W•yne. Gabby
Hayes A government
agent troes to l>elP I group
ol ranctwtrs regain rhetr
water rlghll
11:00 8 * * "Three Bulllll F0t
A Long Gun" ( 1973) Bea... •
Brummell, Keoth \/en Der
Wat A pair ot 1trange<s
flQlll over-l\odden gold ahe<
battling Side by tide
11:30(C) **** Love And
DHtll" ( t9751 w oody
.t.llen, Diane Keeton A
nore<I coward In the Aus-
e11n Army eventullly mar-
,_ Ills true love, who
draws r.(m into • plot
1n>'OIY!ng .,, attempt on tlle
Ille or emperor Nepotaon
'PG'
1i;00 G) * *..., "TM Undet·
ground Man' ( 197~1 Pelet
Glaves, Jactc Klugman
., "TMM Thousand
t!IO (%) • * * * "IMdtet"
( 19e41 RlchWd 8ur1on.
Peret O'Tooll Ktno Henry
II of England CluMa with
IM Atc:hbllhe>p of c.tnter-
bul)' during 1111 12th oan-
tuiy ~-**'A "StarTrelll -
TM Motion Picture" ( 19791
WIHlem Shein«, Leonard
Nimoy TM fat"'* e<im·
mender ol Ille U.8 S
Entetptlaa •IUMmblM hit
old er-and 1111 off on a
mlaalon to find 1111 mye1er1-
ou1 _.., r~llbla ror
the deatructlOn ot numet·
OUI FldltatlOn atarlhlpe
'G'
3:00 (C) * * ·~ "Mltc:h Ot TM
WC>Odetl Soldi.t1" ( 19'41
Stll' LJurel Ottvet Hetdy
Two men rind tllemMIYla
In a lentesy world toy
lhOP fl:O * * * •·1n11<11 Mov11"
( 19901 John Sav •. DevtcS
MorM A newc:ornet to IM
ClfOUP Of <egulatl II It\
Oakland l>lr may hOMS tl'I
key lo making the berten·
di'' 1 dfeam of t>ec:ornlng a
pro basketball player a
reality 'PG'
S:IO 8 * • * ·~ "TM Lut'Cy
Men · ( 1952) Suun Hay-
w11d, Rober! Mltehlim A
cowboy does evetythlnQ to
tAcome a •Odeo 1111
[$} * • * "Cllrlatmll
Mountain" ( 19811 Slim
P1Cken1, Mark !\AIU. A
rough and laugh cowboy
detlYllS a ~ of love
and tt>e Chna1mu se>lf'lt 1n
Ille Old WIS1 'G'
4:00 CZJ • • • * "Kramer 111
Kramer" ( 1979) Du1lln
Hollman, Meryl Streep A
men balltes with Illa ••·
w.la IOt CUltody Of tl'lelr
young son •11• an. welka
OU1 on them 'PG'
4:30 C • • • • "Love And
Dea1h" ( 1975) Woody
Allen, Diane Keaton. A
not.O COWlfd In Ille Rut-
•••n Army -tuaHy m&t·
<Ill Ills tt'lil IOYI, whO
d••-him onto a plo1
1nvotv1ng an a1temp1 on tl'll
1111 01 emi>«Of Napoleon
'PG'
5:00 (Jl" * * "Tile Walet
Babin" ( 197111 Animation
and live action J-
llAaaon A courageou1
young boy ..... _.,
playful ~.,, eteetur.s
from the wrath or under·
w81er~MIS.
($ • • • "Nutcreotcet
F1n1esy" (19791 Anlmele<I
voic-.a of llAIC:helll L11.
Met1ua G•lbet1 and Ctor,._
lopher Lee A gtrt's IOYI
•n<I courlQI are r11ted
during her many adven-
tures while attempllng to
lleip a handsome aotdllr
und., the sc>efl Of I IWO-
headed mouM 'G'
5:46 l) "' • ·~ The 39 Stape '
\ 19791 JOhn Mill, DeYkl
Warnlt' A man blc:ornee
1111 qua1ry or bOlh tM
potloe end a MCret group
ol f0tlllgn agen11 c>parl flnQ
In England wMr1 I'll la
framed tot a '9tr11101f'I
murder 'PG'. D MATCHGAME
• M•A•S•H
"Ole Flldetmeus' Filmed
1n the city In which II was
cre1ted and wll«e II IS
P<._,led .nnualty u pat1 comedy game show -· contestents mutt lake ott
Ryker ls ln)ured by an ex-
ptlaone< out l0t revanoe fl3 KCE'T NEWMEAT
Ii) CAP'TIOH£D ABC
NEWS JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batluk
·CHANNEL LISTINGS
8 l<N)(T ICBSI
IJ l<NBC (NBCI
8 l(TLA (Ind.)
e l<ABC (ABCI
D KFMB (CBS>
0 KHJ-TV (Ind.I
e KCST IABCI
• KTTV (Ind I
'Ol On·TV
'I. Z·TV
IJtJ HBO
<C !Cinema.)
()) (WORI N Y., NY.
Gll IWTBSI
(() CESPN )
<f (Showtlme)
• Spotlight
their cloth81 II they 1ncor-
rec1ly answer a que11ion
that has been given them
9:30 I) Cl) HOUSE CALLS
A young tootball ptaye<
who needs 10 have 11 leg
amputeled rlluMS to hive
the surge<"y and threatens
to c0tnm1t su1c1de
()')MOVIE
@) ABCNEWS
NIGHTUNE CW MOVIE
• • ·~ • The Formula'
( 1980) Marlon Brando,
Geor~ C Scott White
1nves1iga11ng the murder of
e colleague. a veteran c:op
uncovers • consplr1cy
1n~ollllng the wpprnt1on
of a syntlletlc lull IOtmula
t>y the 0<1 c:ompanles 'A'
O'lSELF-8~
$)MOVIE
~YOU COM ING-
10 IHI: S TAFF NEW
YEAR5 E'VE PARTY, CANDY~
81 KCOP-TV I Ind.I
e ICCET (PBSI • !Cable News Ne1workl
••*'It 'The Men Who
Fell To Eanh" (111761 David
Bowte, Candy Clark A
rock '"' from an •hen
pllnet. on an interplane-
rary search for water fO<
hit people, t>eeome• "'
• • • •) "Adam's Rib"
( 19491 Spencer Trac;y,
G KOCE (PBSI Katharine Hepburn A
New TV programs failing
Cable television has become a greater alternative to the networks .
Bl FaED &OTHENBERG A T ........ WftW
NEW YORK -By either yardstick,
ratings or quality. the bulk of the
networks' new proeram6 have failed or
are failing.
Of tbe ~ pro1nms introduced by the
network.a tb1a fall, only aix are in the top
40, 11 compiled by lhe A.C. Nielsen Co.
la there any other profession that would
tolerate a 3> percent success rate?
FOR MUCH of the season, only four
1bows were tlnlrerln1 with 1ucce11.
ABC's ''Fall Guy" and NBC'a "Love,
Sidney" are ln the top ao : ABC'•
"Today's FBI" and NBC'a "F•ther
Murphy" are in the top 40.
But ln Ute nrst half of Dffember,
pnmieres ol "Bret Maverick" OD NBC
and "Falcon Crest" oa CBS cracked the
top 10. indic1Unc lbe public wtll tune lD
to new abowt when lt'a lnte....t.ed.
Even t.btouab CBS' new •bowl have ,.,... poort.v. a contJnu .... No. 1 on t.be
ttrenctb of ltl Sunday lll,i.t Uneup,
ladudlq · ·eo Ill nut .. " IDd Priday
lllpt, wtt.h "Dallaa," wbkb DOW but.Ida
an audMnce for "P'alC'Oll er.t." 1bt
top •howl lut year are bulcally the top
abow'a t.bU ,ear~
TO BS 9'JaB It t&kt1 t1me tW the ,ubU~ IO become deTOleea ol a ahow
and tM wrtten' at.rite did force the
MtWOt'b to •ua•r dtbat "'9odn, .._.nlftc tom• Of tbelr lmpact.. But
'
there are other reasons why this year·s
new programs are surrering.
Cable television, with ils well•known
theatrical movies and sports events,
has become a greater alternative lo the
commercial networks, making viewers
more selective 1bout acceptine what
ABC, CBS and NBC are offering.
The Ted Bates advertising. agency
conducted a survey for the first aix
weeks of the season .and found that 86
percent of the avera,e vlewin1
audience was watching the networks
compared to 88 percent last yeu, 1
sllppaee from the year before.
CABLE'S INROADS help explaln why
the network•' theatrtcal and TV movlea are not doing as well. Lall season,
ABC 's "Sunday Nl1ht Mov1e" ranked
17th. This aeuon, no network movie
nl1bl la In the top 25.
Tbere'e also a posslbllily that cable
baa picked up audJencea became the
networb bave reduced the Ylaual 8eJt
and violence Oil TV.
E1cept for "Dallas" and the other
prlme·Ume aoap opera1, sexual COfttat
la camoullued ln talk but rarely ahown
ln any explicit way. And the made·
for-TV moYit1 have not been overly
Hxu.at. ucept durhlc tbe key raUnfa
mu1urtnc moat.b ol Novft!lber.
Ta& NBTWO&K8 uy aubtle~
proarammtq repreaenll tbe mood ol
the country, not a response to the
Coalition for Better Television, which
threatened a sponsor boycott of highly
sexual programming.
' ABC's ''Three's Company," the third
most popular serles behind "Dallas"
. and "80 Minutes," is still the most
pandering show on TV, with it.a weekly
Jiggles and sexual hijinka. Michael
Ross. producer of "Three's Company,''
says the show hasn't been affected by
pre111ure 'lf'OUps :
"Not a bit. Do you know why ? 'Cause
we're a hit show. We do very well. We
do very well for lbe network. l 'm
thinking of the new abows comJn& on. I
think they wUJ be affected."
THE NETWORKS aJso said the slew
of new l a w-and-order proi rams
refl ected the country's conservative
shltl, but it appears they misread lbe
public because tJmost all c( them have
been dlsuten, locludine ABC's "Strike
Force," NBC'a ''McClain'• Law " and
"Shannon," yabked off CBS' Kbtdule
after aeveral weeu.
"ffUl Street Bluet,'' with etiht Emmy
A"'ardl baa been lilt exception, one of
tb.lrd-r8Led NBC'a few hlll.
Another allp.,.q propo1itioa la reality
pro1rammin1: NBC'• ·•Real ~I•"
and ABC'a '"?bal'• ln~ble" have
boUa dnipped in popularilJ.
If U. Mtworka a~ runNnc out ol fteau, at leut then'• no aboftace °' Uft])Opular prosr a nu. •
,-~~~~......;..~~-.
!HE STAFF NE.W
YEA«S EVE PARTY IS GIUrTE.A
ITION AROUND HE~E ...
CPB • ID trouble
By NORMAN BLACK
A-leM ~ Wrltw
WASHI NG T ON -Th e
Co rporati o n for Publ ic
Broadcasting, already reeling
from budget cuts approved earlier
this year, is now fa cing an
unexpected cut of more than 20
per cent in Its federal rinanclng
between fiscal 1983 and 1984.
The reductJon would not occur
until fiscal 1984 because CPB's
budget is set two years la
advance. Dul public broadcasters
c laim the very future of the
nation's non-commercial radio
and TV system is now at stake.
IN A RELATED development, a
s pe cial fe de r a l commiaalon
studying alternative fund-raialn1
methods for !ubllc broadcuUn&
has reporte that Its plan to
conduct a Hmllcd a~vertJ slng
experiment may not get off the
around.
The temporary commiulon
disclosed that un.lona representtnc
broadcast employees -from
dlrec:ton and u,tnee.ra to aotora
and mu1iclana -were not
prepared to w1ive certain
providon ot tWr conll'act.1 lb.at
would be nece11ar1 for tbe
propoad ti-month ••perlment.
T hose contracts g e nerally
specify lower wages and program
prices than In the ·commercial
broadcast industry.
While the details were not
spelled out. the public broadcast
wo rke r s app a r e ntly were
unwilling to work for the same
wages if the stations were going to
be generating additional income
from advertising revenue.
JOHN KAMP, a staff official
with the Federal Communications
Com mission who js assistin1 the
temporary commission, said the
panel had decided to give t.be
more than lwo dozen radio and TV
stations that expressed an interett
in the experiment until Jan. 4 to
reconsider their Po11Uon.
THE LATEST budget cul, unles•
rever11ed through adoptlo.n of a
regular approprlationa bUI next
a prln1, would reduc e CPB'a
federal backln1 rrom $137 mlllion
in fiscal 198.1 to S105.t mUUon ln
fiacal 1984. CPB had been counUnc
OD. $1~ million 1n fiscal llM.
Tbe latest budeet cut atema not
from any formal declalon bJ
Con1res1, but trom the proc..tun
I ol lowed tut week ln approvtnc a
fiscal 1182 cont.lnulnc rnolutioD to
keep the covemment runnlq.
. . . . .,
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 28. 1981 •
' DEA& PAT DUNN: I tiave a Mala• :l
••• t ud·colered c:arpet from a wOM bble. 1 IMUne UM la a weed ...a. caued by wa&er ......_ .... &M taW. ,..._ a .....
plHt. oe"J-iMW wt.at I cu ae to remove
U.e 1&ala? l'ft tried a&ala re .. ven le&d la atorea ... &MJ ._,t work.
A.C., Cena• del Mar
Spots h'om wood dyes and atalna from
hotloms of cba.i.r and table lep are often
difficult or impouible to remove, accordin1
to Bigelow Carpet Cleaning Inatitute. Check
with the dealer who sold the carpet to you, or
contact the manufacturer ror advice. A
professional carpet cleaner also may be able
to spot clean tbe stained area. "W~oe>Sh''
stain remover cream often works on dilficuU
carpet stains, according to several A YS
readen wbo previously offered UUs solution
to another reader. You may wish to try this
product, but pre-test your ca~pet . ror
colorfaatneaa first and follow d1rect1ons
carefully.
Ite018 awaited
DEAA PAT DVNN: I ordered $4%.lt
we rtla of me r c tiaa•lae from CoDHmer Bargain Corp. of Pleasan&ville, N.Y., last
Man• ZI. Tlatte weeks later I received oae
Item aed a form to ret.,.. s&.atial wlaeU!er I
wished to cancel tbe remalader ol tbe order
or wait aaodler two or tuee weeks fw-more
stock to come la. I •eckled &o wall, bet
tiavea't beard a word from tb1a compaDy
alace Uaea, even thoa1b I've wrtuea aeveral
ldlen el laqu:lry. J .S., Coate Mesa
The Westchester, N. Y., Belter Business
Bureau told A YS that Consumer Bargain
Corp. declared bankruptcy earlier this year.
T he B·BB advises you to file a claim for the
amount or money owed to you. Include
information on the ite ms ordered, their
prices and a copy of proof of payment. Send
tbese materials to: U.S. Bankruptcy Court,
199 Main St., White Plains,.N.Y. 10631 . Refer
to bankruptcy fil e No. ~·81B in any
cor respondence you send to the court.
• ~--1 FilI
"Got a problem? Thnl write to ~al
Dunn. Pal wiU cut rtd tape, getting
the answers and action you need to
.tolve inequilu• in government and
business. Mail your qu.e1tion.s to Pal
Dunn, At Your Seroice. Orange COO$t
Daily Pilot, P.O. Bor 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. As
many letter.t as possible will be answered, but phoned
inquiriea or letters not including the reader's full
name, address and business hours' phone numbeT
cannot be considered. This column appears daily er·
cept Sundays."
NEXT SEMESTER
WHY NOT TAKE A
25,000 MILE FIELD TRIP?
"You study everything.
the politics. the people,
and the religion.··
Join the 12,000 other college stu·
dents from over 500 colleges and
universities who hav e experienced
this fully accredited university pro-
gram. The spring '82 semester sai ls
on M arch 4th for the around the
world tour.
For More Information CaU (714) 771-6590
Semester At Sea
P.O. BoJl 1527t Orange, Celt. 92tel
As Heard On KEZY AM/FM, KWIZ AM/FM
Wildlife jobs limite d
Booklet offered on e nvironmental work
By JOYCE L. KENNEDY
Dear .Joyn: Ou ... la a.....,. 18
bl•ll lldiilOll ud ba aa Idea Ille ...W
like to punue ......... ,wit.la t.lile nu
aad came dep•rt•ee&. Could you
sin .. teMob ucl wlaat k18d ol •
future be would bavef
-L.A.P., Aaallilelm HUa.
Tell you son that happy hunting
won 't be in his pathway if he pursues
a career in the limited job market of
fisheries or wildlife conservation.
Because the outdoors is a favorite
occupational oasis for teenagers,
m any parents wUl be glad to know
about a n upd ate o f a book ,
"Opportunities in EovlronmentaJ
Careers" by Odom Fanning'.
By maU, it's a vailable in sof\cover
fo r $5.95 prepaid from National
T ex t book Co., 8259 Niles Center
Road, Skokie, Ill. 60077
* * • Dear Joyce: I am ID edacatloa ud
hope to find oul about worklDg
abroad but Dot &eachiag. Please don't
meatloa my city.
-Z.Z., Ob.lo
RISE (Register for International
Service in Education) is a new pilot
computer referral ser vice to link
international jobs in education with
educators, specialists. researchers
and consultants. Registration is $35
per year.
F or information, write to RISE,
CARI IRS
Institute of International Educauon,
809 United Nations Plaia1 New York,
N.Y. 010017. .
• • lit
Dear Joyce: I a m a senior ln hlg~
school aod latere11ted In a career la
railroad ing. I can not rind much
lnformaUon oo wbal type of college
cout iaet to take and where to take•
the m. I a m mostly Interested In
being a diesel engLDeer.
-W.G.H.', Nortbbrtdge, Mass.
* * * Locomotive engineer jobs usually
are filled by promoting enganeer
helpers according lo seniority rules.
Mos t e n g ineer s be lo ng to ~he
Bro t he rhood o f L oco m otive
Engineers, a union. The job does not
require a college education.
As k your school counselor or
librarian to show yo u a copy of the
Occupational Outlook Handbook .
L o ok in t h e section unde r
"Occupations in T r a nsportation
Activities" to see the type of job in
which you are most interested.
• • READER SERVICE : "200 Ways to
put your talent to work in the health
fi eld " is a valuable pamphl et. For a
free copy. sen d you r postcard
request to Joyce Lain Kennedy al
Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92626
FIND YOUR NAME
WIN 4 TICKETS WORTH S 18
SAT • .IAN. 2 du-. SUN • .IAN. 10
Hundreds of Sports
& Vocation Displays
RVs & Accessories •
Fishing Clinics •
Camptng • Travel
Film Festival • HOURS
2·10 pm Dally
Noon·10 ~m Sat
Noon..S pm Sun •
Daily Stage Show Featuring
IUUD WILLARD
The Boxing Kangaroo
•
NIMIDM COMVOOIOM CE.IHEI •
Fw Mo C .. 9'9-HOO
9 Winners In Today's Classifieds!
IT'S EASY! Find your name and address in today's
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........
SU~IE•toa cou•T
0' CALll'OaNIA COUNTY 01' OaANGIE 1• Clwk c;....., onw WHt ..... S-..AN,ca.nm
MAllalAGC OI'
PETITIONER: ICHOA PHONG
OOAH
RESPONOENl TRANG ¥Al
OOAH
SUMMONS !'AMIL Y LAW)
CASa NUMaCa 0.19Wa
NOT1c•1
y .. u.. .......... T1llt --y _ .................... _ .... llMr•...,....,..r..,...•.....,• ..., .............. ,, ........ -.
AVllOI
Utt•• Ila t i•• •••• .. •••· •t trt!NNI _.. ....... ,_,.a IN. ""'
a.-...Cla a -... Uf. ,....... -...,. ....... LN 18 ,...,_ .... _,....
II you ....,, ID --U. ..,,,k • ol WI 11norney In ""-.....,., • rou _.,. do '° P•omtl!IV to llWlt 'l'OWf' ,.,,,...,,.. or
ptelldlng, II eny, ..,.Y lllt tiled on llrne.
SI U1'9d -sotk llM •I contelo de
PllUC -~( PUBLIC MOTICC
'=======::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::========~i u" •bo9MIO .,. Ht• asunto, mi.rte : 1111cerlo tn m•dltlamenlt , de Hie
....... , •• .., r-111 0 •teoecloft. "
heV ato-, ,,._ -'69111•-• 1i.m pe
t lO lHE RESPONDENT·
Tne petlllar'ltr ,.., flied • pelltlon
conurnlno -..,.,,,_. II you tell
to Ille • ·-wllllln JO a.vs ol Ill•
0.le tNlt 11'111 ...,._ Is Mrwd on
yov, -r-...... 1 ....., ..... 1.red -
Ill• court rnay •nler • Ju09mtnl C010t11lnlftt1 lnlun<llW or Miier oreleM
concernl119 dl•lt lon ot P<o~rlY, _,., -1, child <Wlloclv. clltld
t-1, -y i..t, CCKlt, and WC,ll
otMr re11tt H M6Y bt grenltd by IN
co;,rl. Tiit garnlsnfft8nl ot ••ee•. 1a1:1119 of ,,......, or pr_,..y, « • ....,,
court -•ad orocMCll11t1• m•y ••w , .. .,11.
0 81ecl: ~ 11, 1'1111.
LE E A. &a AHCH,
CJef1l By: JEANNINE GATES,
°""'' YA .. OAOa LINTNaa
A Pta .. tah I L.rw CW,. ,.., .... ,,.......,._.m
..... ~CAtl*
Tel: cn•1 ... , . .., ~ulllltfled o ....... Coatl Dally
Piiot Dec. Ii, ,I, 2t, 1•1. Jen, 4,
1.i WJIMI
WANT ADS
WORK
WONDERS
WORLDWIDE
• PUIUC 11~£
675-1171
3295 Newport Boulevard
Newport Beach, Callfornla
on Peninsula AcroH J:rom Cit Hall
VISA'
rueuc MOnc~ ruwc •~£ NOTICE OF
TttUSTl!l'S SALE N~1 NOT ICE 0 ' TltU\TE E'\ SAL(
T « N .. H tU.l NOTICE OF TltUSTEE'S $ALE l.Nlt Ne ~111
S M t CORPORATION u duly T.S. Ne , .. T \He .. IM·t
P90lnttd TrustM unoer 1ne lollowlng On J M1u.trY •. t"7, fl 10 00 AM TRANS<OASf SERVICES, W C. at
tK<ibecl OffCI ot l•ust Will SELL RES I 0 E N T t Al ES C A 0 W duly aooo1"1Pd Tru•lft un<ltr tni
AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE CORPORATl()Oj •• dul• •OC101nlt<I tollowl1>9~rtl>e<J-Oftru'1 WIL!o
Ht G HE ST Bl ODER FOii CASH Tru\lee .-.,.., O•"-"' to Deed ot SELL Al PUBLIC AUCTION 10 THI!
ll>•Y•blt •I time ol \flt In l•wlul T<ulldMecl JuM I "11-te<o<decl HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CA">'i
oney ot '"* unlltcl St•tt•I tll 11gt1t, June 13, 1'11, .tt ln>t. No 17•}0 In boOk I oo•blr "' tome or .. ie in ltwlu(
title tnd lntf<~t conoyt<I to •lld now 1711), •II" 161$, ot Olll<••I Ae<o•O• In mon" ot lht Unott<I SltlHI •It 11g111,
10 by 11 under w•d OttCI ot T ""' 1n tne otllct of Ille County Rec:ordllt\ or tlllt •lld "''"'" con•tY.0 to •"" "°"'
ne pr~<1y nert•Nller """"-O••nte Countv. Sttlt ol Cttllo<nlf netd by 11 .,,_, WIO OttCI °' fru\I 1'1 T RUSTOR R C LE AllENWORTH t •t <uled by OOVGLAS E JON ES t'l<I Int proP<'•ly heteont lltr dH<<li..cl
tnunmt ttl<>dmt n RHETAR J0NES.IW\tl6nd6ndwllt f TAUS10R WARNERYOUNIS•n4
BENEFICIARY IRVING GEIER Will SELL Al PU8Lt( AUCTION I JOAN YOUNIS nu~nd-•1•• '
l\d(HARLOTTEL GEtER ~u\IMl\d TO HIGHEST BtOOEA FOR CASH 8ENEfl(tARY ALLSTATI!
nd wit•" tOinl 1.,....,1\ IPtYtblt t i ttrnt ot \61t In ltwfut SA V t NG S AND L 0 A N A SS~
Recorded Jutv 6 "'' •> 1n•tr No mono of INI Unlltd Sltt .. 1 •t '""IC 1 Al ION • C.•hfc><n1a <<><Po<tllon '
IS in -12141 oaQe 14 ot Olftclt l North front onlten<• of INI Count y RtcorOtd M4y tl, 1917 •> 1n'1r l'j::'.l
Record• In -othct ot tne Re<oroe• CourlhOuM' 100 Civic Cenltt Dnve 1)t'l'I "' ~ 111 .. -l10 of Oll•C';J f Or•nOt Counly '\4't0 OHd of tru't Wf'\l S.nl• Ar\li CA 97101 •II fiOf\I. Af(Of"d'\ 1n ltw Ofh<• of tfM Aec-or<k e\.Ct1~ IM IOHOwtf\Q pr~rty 111'• •nd 1ntttf"lt tonvt"yed to .nd now ot Ora"'94:" (°"""tv ""''o Ore"' Of Hu'-I
Thf' Norttw•sterty tl.2 07 lf"fH Of L.Ot twld by it undef W ld 0..0 Of fru\I in Cll"\C "btt"\ t~ tollo.._1nQ prQiPf'rty ,
I Nowpor1 Ht1t1nt• In th• City ol ttw property \1h .. lecl 1n wld C.ounty P•rc•t I
N•WlilPOtt BeA<n. Countv ot Or•noe •nd Still• Ot\C.t•btO •\ Tnal piot1'C)t\ ot ._,, t.3 o·f Nf'•PG'l
l•lt OI (•llfornl•. t\ Ptt m•o PARCEL I H .. 9nt\ tn ·~ City ot C.O\U ~ ...
recorded in Book•. P•o• l l , unttNo 11.1nUw C1tyottrv1ne.a) Cnuntvof()t,11nga St•ttolC•llforn••,
Mi,celteneoui MAP\, m the: oft I Cf at \,,ow n and of''< r 1 bit o In I h,. ,.. .. ,.nown on 6 m.t.p rt-co,..oeo ln bOO• 'j
tM County Af<Of'<Jef" of ,_.to (OUrJIY t ondom1n1um Plan r•corOtd on 04'0f' ll ~ M1\i(_rll•MOU\ Map\ .,, tnf
E • c, P 1 in g t n e r~ t, 0 m 1 he J•nwry n 1ft71 1ri ftoic*. 1203\ P~ oft•t• ol 1f'Vi' <.OUl'llY ,-e<orcMr of \•••
NOr-thwf'Stfrly 110 I Ml Al-wt E .c<.eOtlnQ UaO Of Ofhc. 1•t RKOrd\ OI M +d (ounty )r•nq~ (°""''llV O~ ribf'O .,, IOllOW\ ·~<•lrorn ·~ SoulhH>t•rl• )'lO FHt PARCEL 1 B~Q•nn•ng at .. point on 1nt 8 An unatv•6ed onf \e wenty tourtn nonrt •~\ttrl., fine o' ,,.,d lot .. 1300 MarQarf't Street. Newport ea<h t 1 7~• tnl«Ht •.S • t~nt in common \Ot.ttt'lw~\tt!'rl'( ?S 00 ff"i't trom '"·• mo'lll C •lllorn1• '2fl60 1n tht fef' inter••• in •nd to '"' nor-t'1trl y cornPr of w10 tot lhttn<.f , ft • s.trttt •GO'"\\ 0' commGf" (ommQf'I Arr• ot L.ot\ I and) ot Tr.ct "6tJltit-•1"t,.rh t)) 00 IMl ~'•lltl wit• 0•$1onat1on 1\ \no•n •OOtrt> no t w&rr•nty t\ Q•v•n ·• to i t\"°° •t. pef map rneo tn 8oo._ 11• 1ne-nortnt6\ter1, 11n• o 1-••d tot•
P•o e \ 31 10 31 lnclu\•Y" of tt\tf\C,. \outnwt\ltrlY 1l1 ii ffPI complet•rwu or C04"'t<1rlP\\> . M •.,•lt-\ ...... -... record• ot \••O o•r•llfl't •1tn tt'w nc><O'lwnterly hn~ ~ flle t>etwll<l••Y unnt< woo O""d ol ~ .._, Trust. b• rM iOf'\ of\ t>r"••ttt or Otf•uU County •• , wch term•• Oetu''119d 1n IM \iit10 lot tn.n<t nof'1"••~terty 4i
•n the ObllQ-tiltOn\ \e-cur.a irl'f'reov. Ar11CI• Mi•Ued 0Pi1mhon\ al '"t: ,,..,, P•r•t•rl """''"' ttw non~•\t•r•t "'"~totore t•.CU'tf'<t •no Of'Hwt re-d to °"''•r•11<Wl of COvtn•nb (.ona1oon\ I ltne 01 w10 tot tnt'n<• \OUthwP\tt'rlf th~ under'l.ione<I • writt•n Ot<1•r~o1on •nd R~itrtlt1oni rK0tOf'O on July ~ 1 c; O I,.. fl I o.,, 4 It .,' w 11 h t "t
ot D•l•ult ~ o.n"\•ncJ tor Salf •nd 1'16. In Boe* lll'.» P6Qe 193of Off•<••• northw•\t111rl• hM ot W•d lol tri~ntt
•flttennoc&c!f'olC>r~"-•l"dOl f'•Ktk>f'. Record\ of , •• o Coun ty tth.-hortriw~trrty 11000tHI "'•Ht l •U9'
to c•uw the undtr\.IQNKJ to se11 '4h.. Dt<l•r•tton ) • .-lO any •~Nlm~1"'l '"1t 1"0'"1,_.•\trrty llM Of '"''d lot to>
Qroperty to S.tU\ty s.aid oollg,at•O•'S of •nnta•t!Ofn tf\e"to po1n1 1n thtt nortnwe\t•rfv ltM ot ,..,o
•od thtre•tter ow un(lt'r\1Qned <•uwc.. PARCEL 3 iot ttu•nr., north~•\lfltlt' u g 09 1f'411
"'•td noh<• ot brt'•<f'I and ot tit< tion to E •s.ernentt\J ., \u<h t awmf'ntti> •IOl"lf' \olHJ notU'l'lllif'\t•rly luw 10 •"t
(•u\• t"'t' unoeoi~o lo ,..,11 1110 n •r• parhcul•rty ..el fOf'tn tn tht OO•nf ol t>t'9'""''"'9
proptrlY to Wtl\IV Wtd OOllQatlOn\, A<11Cte entttlfd E•wmtt1I• of ..... E XCEPl th(> 'oOultw•\ttrlV too'""
•nd thf'tNfte-r thf: undfir\iQJWd <•uwd Otte.l•r•llon unatr tht S•ct1on I tf'lfirtol
••la not1<e 01 bfucn •lld e•ec t•on to I><' Hu dlnql>I 1n """ A<11fit •ntltlt<I u P•rul 1 •
Re-c:ordeO Sieot~,. I). '"' • .., '"'" f o 11 o w \ • Sett It m • n t •no An ••'4'mt'f'll tOt 1nQf'KS •no eo,.,..
l'jo 11411 1n ~ uno IMIQll! 111 ot Enc•o•c,_,1 -com'"°" A<•• O•t• '"" nortne••t•••v to oo , ... , ot ,,,..
••ldOlf'tlat RKorO> Etwm.,.t \Outh .. e\t.,IY 11~ O' •ett o• "'" Seki .... wlll be ,,,.o •. but w•lllout PARCEL 4 nor1n .... 1.,1y H~ 00 ,...,, of IOI ~ ol
c ov•nant or w•rrtlity t •Dr•n or E11~FTHtnt<t.> ~ \UC." • ...,..,.,,.ntu> N~•t>Otl H••Qf\h 1n tt'Kt City o• (O\fa
tmo1i.o, ,.9 .,rdinll tltt• Po\W\\oO<I or I\ •re f16r1Kultrty WI forllt In I..,. Meu County ot Or•nt1t St•to q1
oncumb<M>Cft, to IMIY 1ne 1emt1n1nQ Art1cte ... 1111.a E.owmtflh ot the Ct htornlt t> ~· m•P rKO•OtO .,.
orinclpel sum of tl>t not• >Ku•ed br Oe<l•ttllotl of Co...,.n,., Conc11tto~ Doot. •. -ll or f,f1w:•ll•MOu• M•ot
<Wid Otf!d o4' Trllil, w tth inttrrst '' 1n and A•it(i<t•on\ , fl(Of~ on Jllnf' •. .n tf'le off•ct cM ow county r•corder ~t
ula note P<O•i(Nd Ml•tn<O, 11 •nv 191•, In 8GDlt tt76'. P-0 0 of Ott•ct•I H IO county
uncHr the 1 .. rm-s ot WHI ~ ot T '"''· Rttor0$ of ,.d County (the M•\1er-E ~CE Pt 1n.tt portion in< tudtct ·~•' <P'l•,.9'' •nd ••e>enW\ of th• ()Kt.,-•Uon ) ~ ~Y Aim.ndtnef'lh •1ttun \4110 P•rc~I t Tru;ltt ....., of fM lfu\I\ CtH.,d by or Anno•tlon\ llltreto under the ALSO EXCEPT ln•I p0rtlon lyt~
HIO OM<I oi lruJI Sa•d •••• """ bt tmu•I be aMdto ti ) ,...ddl1>9UI In •oulhwest~<ly or tn• nortllwe\lf•t# nlOld on T-y JAnUdr~ 19 1911 at •uch Article •nt1tltO n follow> ttO 00 IHI ot th• \OUthwe\te••• 111 f1
1 oo p m at UM '"•Dm•n •v•nu~ Owfte" RtQhh M1d Duhe\ U1•hlle\ ffft ot , .. d 101
ent,.nct to IN Civic C•nttr Bullalnq tnd C•l>I• T•l"'l"on ' Ut1l•l•t> tno ?01 OQllO !>t C~t• MIOW, CA '7•7'
300 EtUl c~ Avef\iH', 1n thf CUy caotr l•l•V•!.•on. Ut1l1t1es flf tt ,trttrt aoorHs or-common
otOr•noit C•llfOf"n•• "Support ano Srtttrm•n1 df'\•Qn•llon '' \nowri;n •bOvt nt>
A1thttirne ottt'tfm•tl•tpubhc1t10f'I E.ncro•cn~nt •"O 'Community ••''•ntv t\ C)lv en ., 10 II"
04 uui nocl<A', uw tot•• •MOUnl ot nw FaclllUn Easenwnt comptettl'lll'\\ Of corrf"<tneu1 ,,...
uno•ld b•ltno OI '"' ObllQt tlon PARCEL j 1>tnet1clery under Ull! Otto 1)1 ''"''
secured by tM 4'b0w• oeio<rtbeO ~ ot E.•wnwnu '°' 1norts\ 1no e9ren by rr~t._gt\ ot • t>n.te:h or "*tauu 1n trft
l<u\I •no Hlim•lttt co•h eapen\e• over '"°'°" oorllon• of Loh I tnd J of ob 11 ~on\ u c u ro a th.,• b ii
tnO td••nc•• " P O )11 t7 lo Tr•cl '17:l.,. ~mac> liltd In 8oolL ntr•lotO<'W •-u•tO •no 0011 .. u<1.,
d<'l•rrnlr.. tht _.,"'9 bid vou m .. )U P•llU ?9 to JI tnctu•IYO of tll• un0tr"9"f<I • "'"''*" Of<ttr•I•.., <•It tll41 fJI~ MIKtl..,_,. Mal>\ rec:oro• of \tld ol Otl•111t And C>Pm•nd for S.I• •ii
Oatt Oec:emoer ti. l'ltlt Counly, ~ •i P•rce•t s tnd •on w111t•n notice o• b<'N<ll t nd of eltctt""
SMl t --•tlefl E a ,.lb1I 'O" of lhtl '""'" 10 uu\4' In. uncltt\lonf<I to"°" i•td
a.11.-H!Trv1 ... , Suootement•rv O~c t a,-•tton of PfOOf'rh •o Wlt\h Ulld OOtt~tiont
ay T.O. S...Vk • (..,....,, ...-t Coven 1 n''. Con o ~ l •on' • "d and tt'f''t•tt,., tM' uno~rs.•Qne'd <•u~
CIMJ Sc-Yet, RHtrlctlom <Kot-on Jtnu•r• 17, HIO nottct of DrH<" •nd of eltct100 lo
AtllotMll'6<...Vrt 101, In Book t10Jt, PtV-IS7t ot bt RtCOf~d ~ltml><tr tO l'lllt 4\
OM Clly aw 1torf "'"'· Olflcltt Record> of Hid County •no 1n>tr No tl•ll •n -14114 -UU
~.ta . .,... •nv tm-1' 1,., .. 0 ot .. ,d Otltcotl AKO<ds.
171411»-11-The •lr•et eOO<en tnd otnt< S•ld Hie will bl! m-. t>ut w11no~t
Pvbll~twd Oft~ Coe>t O•lly Pilot, common 0.$1-llon 11 tny, or lh<t co••n tnt or wa11•ntv, uoreu or
Ot< 11, t'lll, J.,. 4, ti, 19') S~~t <t•I pr~rlV Ot>Cribt<I tbOVt II IMPllt<I, rfV6tdlnQ tllle, OOUtHIOI\ or
pufl)Or'ted to bt 10 P•rtt Vl1t1 tr••M. encurnbr~H, to ~., Uw rem11nu'4)
CAt11U Ot1nc1oa1 """'ol .... "°''") -u•t<I
Tiit -•IQMCI Tru\lff d•Klt lm• by woo 0..... of Trust. willl lnt~Ht t\ •"Y UabOUy for ..,. lncorre<tM\-' of 1n \a1C1 not• oro...lo.d, •dv•nces If an•
the \ltM I -H -otiwr common1und~r tht ,.,_ ol w ld OHO ol Tru.l
des..on•O°"', If""•· tMwn twr•1n ff'•\ c harQtl\ and ••PtnSe\ oi trt•
S.kl ~ wlll bt mtdt. bwt •111-1 I"'""' ana ot ""' l•v•I~ crNt.a or
coven•nt or warr.,.ty. e•pre\\ or \IUt OHd of Truiil s.i:o "•'• wllf IH'
1mplled, ~"9 tlli.. llO',,.,...,n, °" n~1a on Friday, Jenuary 11 "" ••
encumbfances. lnclVOlnt '"'· cnt•Ott ? 00 P M ti tne Cntomtn A•tnu~ Mid •• _. of Ille Tnmee eno ot ll>t ent••nu to IN Ctw!C Centor Bu1tc11np
1'1Hh crMttd by tlMI 0..0 ol Trvot lo :JOO Ent C.._,..,. AW!nut 1n ll'lt C•h
P'Y tlW <"'"611'1"9 pfin<lptl wm> ot ot Or~"9f CA 1
tllt notetsl >e<ur«I by sekl OM-d ot 1 Al th• time ol ll'lt 1n•t1•t put>hutton
Trull 10 •It U0,00000 with lnt_..t ,t th,. natlGI INI lot•I amount ot ""'
tl'lt<.on from July t, 1"1 el 10 ~ oer unoetd ~••no of In• obltg•llon
IOMum .. _,,,_'" UiO ft<ll•I•) olut \.CUttd ~the •bO ..... ""'"'btd OH<I ot
c<Kh end any td•eM:ei ot w.m ~ trull •nO ..st1mateo cosu. u~sn.
wlthinltrHl tnO ad••ncn,. 'tlOS.t •• To
Tne -lG16ry .-.. Id o.d ot delermtne ttw _,..., btCI you mu
Trull lltr•IOIOtt fHCulfd tnO cal• PIO •17-
...... ,.., to lrlt unde"'9n.O • wr1t•n1 Ottt Oec:t~r ti, , .. ,
Oeclerallon of llet•ull -Ot.....,O IOr TtM\ Cotti Str.1<0' In<
S.le, •lld • wrttten Not k t of o.teult •' q1d TnJSI""
tnd El«llOfl to $ell lhe ...-19"'<1 1 Strv1ctC-nv
ceuttd Hid Nollet ol o.fllVtt tl\O
Ele<llOll ID s.tl lo "" re<Ol'oed In IM
county wh•rt th• real O,.OPf'fl'f i'
tocat.O
O•lt DK-t t , .. ,
RH-.Clet E>ero• Corp
1K M id TNllM
Joellen E .......
Se<IWU<Y
ltft-IM IEK,_ C-,.
•Ne.Ttlllltill A .... MeM
S.11t1 AM , CA '1195
Publl51'1ed 0r"'10f C06•1 0611Y Pltol
De< 14, 11, 2', t .. t ~I
I ,.," ~Pffl>tro Ai.~ .taf't Sec.rrt•ry
0-(II• Bouln•ra Wt\!
Or""90(Attlt68
1110 IJ~:lll
Publl\htd °'""Ill' Coe•t O•lly PllOI
Oec 11 , .. ,,Jan 4, t't? S~t
PUIUC ~£
LEGAL NO"JICI
'40TICt!! IS HEREBY GIVEN IN I
tl>t lolt-"'9 """' ot t""'ICI or ,..,.., oroe>af'lv ,...,. i.e11 neld by tne Potlu
Oeptrlmenl of ,,.. City OI CO!I .. M.iw
IM a 119<lo0 In .. c-Of lli<Mtr t401
dey1
Rtd ••v 1 Bunn Ru lWIA a Kv<t• 8oy'1 "'-'"'*' Sd•wlntl 8 kyclt, 8tif'> Grev Unl•et• 8 k yc,., 80.,'1 Oreft99
M"rrev to 5C>O Bk~. eov-. lltw S••" tO SoO ,.-,.. $tllrlt a k yci.,
Boy'\ Rlld 8kycle F•-. 8oY '81jK~
Huffy I Sod llHc1>Crul1o9r 8 1cycte.
8oy'1 Reel Murr•y I $pd, Cruiser
lltcvcta, Bov's lltve 5'llwln1t Sjllltlre
Blcvcte, Boy's A.O llAurrev I spo
N10111trey 8 1c y(le, Bov • Yellow
Amerio Ano. 10 Spct, Bk Y'ti., • ..,.,
a lut J 5'14. StllWll\n 8tit<ftCYUl,.t
l lOcle, llov's Brown IO S.0 Heffy ll<Y<I•, Boy's ..... ,819(11 I •
"""' llMC IM<y<lt, loy't ......
8k ycla. 90'(s 11.0 kflwillll SOii",.
Bk r<ta. Girl'• 81ut $cl1Wlfttl J 5""' alocte, ..,,., I"-ScflwtM llM<ll
Crv!Mf 8k ycte, Girl'\ Yot-AW..
8k ycla .,. Rid Fr" s.trll .....,.,
&oy't snver Hl•nlkl Cu•lom ~n Blcyci., lloV'• Sii..., Selltm .. 10 kid 81cyc1•, toy'• Wllll• _.......,..,
Ward 10 5'ld 8k T'Clt
'40 T'ICE IS '-UltfMllt OIVUI t11M llM_r ..,..ert-~hll _,,,, ....... ~•llfllfl-
U) .. ,,. .......... "" Mflceftell ..
11111 Netitt, .. tint --•II "'4 111 lllt 111'\W, " ... oe -. er ln,W.
Cltv ol c;0&t• ...... Ill """"' c-U. 11-'Y 91*11 ........ .,.._ _ ...
•t •ll"'ttlflll ......... _ ... o .... ~, .. ,..,
II.I l'iUl1 CHllE,.~ l'Ol.tC• ~,...,. °'1111111 cone Oelly ~.
,,. t•t HINl
/
q
• 'Monday, December 28, 1981 -'Gospel star
headed home
NASHVILLE, THn. (AP) -Brock Speer, tbe
patrlarcb ol "tbe tll'lt famll)' of ppeJ muatc," LI
bome for lhe bolldaye.
SPMJ', whole neaUy combed, ety-1Uver balr·
tope off• briabt benlan face la awu from booie performinl 225 days a year. But in December, be.
take• two ween on to be with bll clOl•knit family
and honor h1I God wb08e m-.,e b• apreada
throulb muaic.
"\t'1 quite a family Ume for all of us," says
Speer, eo, a member of tbe G08pel llualc Hall of
l'.ame .. "lt'1 a apeclaJ Ume." · That's especially ao th1a
year, bec•Wle the Speer family
ia celebratin1 Its eoth year in
101pel music. Brock Speer's
puents be1an singing in 1921,
•nd he has been performing for
SS of bis 60 years. His parents
died about lS years a10.
The current Speer group in·
eludes four Speers and three
t.H• others. Tbe Speers are Brock,
hi1 wile, their SOil Brian and Brock's brother, Ben.
The seven travel by bus to Cive concerts in the
Speer style of Southern 1oepel music before
crowds ol 200 to 2,000 in auditoriums, churches and
colle1es.
Speer, a Nazarene, doesn't see any strong cor·
reJatioo between the popularity of gospel music
and the upsurge in the religious right through
sroups like the Moral Mjljority.
"Christian music was on the rise before the
Moral M~rily raised its bead," be says. "But the
Moral ~ty hasn't hurt us .
.. U I h•d to choose for or against the Moral
Majority, I'd be for. I'm trying to do what they
are, in a aenae. I'm trying to make the world a bet·
ter place to live. We're trying to accomplish the
same goal; but I'm not so politically involved."
The Oak Ridge Boys, now performing as a
flashy country music quartet, make up probably
the best-known group ever to come out of gospel
music. Speer says he admires them and their huge
bit of lbe past year, "Elvira."
"I follow their career with interest," be says
of .the Oak Ridge B9ys. "they are money·
motivated, and if so, they are doing the right
thing.
"I wish them well ; they were a great force in
&Olpel music. I baled to lose them -it weakened
our forces. But country m~ic bas gained because
of what they have accomplished. Quartet gospel
music is energy, and they have carried this energy
to country music.
"I enjoyed 'Elvira' and the bass part, 'Ooom
papa mou mou' was the stinger. ll seemed new to
the world, but we've been doing that in gospel
music for years."
Speer has made a financial sacrifice to remain
in gospel music rather than switch to the more
lucrative country music. But he says he has no
regrets.
"I probably could have gone into country
music and made more money. But our calling was
gospel music," be says.
"Singing thrills me. It excites me and eives
me a sense of satisfaction and worth. It gives me a
sense of something to do and a place to be. And as
a Ch~tian, it gives me a place to minister ."
A Different Wortet, A Special Place. ---.
CATALINA
Fearuring rhe finest in bakery surplu\ producl\, all
made without artificial ingredienr:. or prc,crva1ivc~. 1hc
Big Deal Store offeri. a varie1y of )nack cake\, chee~e
cakes. specially bread,, ca~es • ..alad dressing,, and our
famous line of cookicl> at bakery \urplus priCCl>.
The famous Big Deal
Chocolate' Chip Cookie
... rated number one in
LA by Los Angeles Maga·
zine for: "easy chcwabili·
ty,'l "large size." and
"lint~ing aood taste ...
Wc'tt conveniently .. E:
located in Costa
Mesa on Bristol
Street, directly
north of the Cor-
ona de! Mar
frttttay.
Our 11ore is freshly
stocked and
waitlni rot
you.
SMIRNOFF
VODKA SPECIALS
AO PRICES PREVAJL MONDAY me 28th THRU SA TURDAY. JAN 2nd
JIM BEAM WE HONOR YOUR CREDLT!
WHISKEY
IO PllOOF
Master Card
BRANDY & CHAMPAGNE
RICHELIEU
NAHUCMI
BRANDY . ....,
41,tjJj.•
75HL&•99 ·
E & J
BRANDY .,..,
\~11.99
ANDRE'
CHAMPAGNE
•DIY •Plll
• C:OU DUCI
41\ji;f.•
.
BEEFEATER
LONDC* DllTILLID
DRY QIN
MNOOF
.75~T 17.19
ANCIENT AGE
ITIWQHT KENTUCKY
80UR80N ....
.75LJ0.88
SEAGRAM'S 7
CltOWll8UNDD
WHISKEY .....
l.75Lrl1.99
PARTY FAVORS
NOISEMAKERS
• ....,., m1h n , ... lfJ .............. , .... .
•NllJ ... TV.,_
!!f!TllEl 39 , ... , .
PACUUD
CONFETTI
49c
OLD CROW :=:r'
80Ult80N WHllKIY .
• "°°:.11 LT 9.99
KESSLER
kllmlD
:::,n 1049 1.11 LT •
OLD SMUGGLER
a.Dm1:D ICOTCM ==y 1169 1.11 LT •
SCORESBY
llAlll kDIDID ICOTCH ==y 1049 1.11 LT •
CANADIAN CLUB
8LlmlD CM!..WM ==y 16 59 1.75 LT •
._.....,,...GILBEY'S
GIN
• "°°:.15 LT 9.87
SEAGRAM'S Y.0.
CAllADIM
:",::,y 15·99 1.75 LT •
I FOSTER CREEK
I TUIMT NUtl80ll
WHllKIY
Fi.15 LT 8.99
MACKllNOl'S aUIDD ICOTCH ::v 949 1.15 LT •
COUil YASYA
VODKA
IO ~.15 LT 6.99
&oU
BEER
12 oz.
CANS
12 PAI 3.69
UllEY "CITATION"
........._WINE GLASSES
....... Cr,lllll M•••• TW ........... , .. ...... , ..... ... ,......_ __ ...,. .............. ...
•H-. .. ""° a J .. •Ila ......
-------· .. ··'
Dally Pilat
Monday, December 28. 1981
SLIM GOURMET
OUT OF THE KITCHEN
SUPERMARKET SHOPPER
C2 cs
C7
, • : !
i .-----------.-0.-.-------------------------------ti " . . . . ... ., . ~ (. . ' ... -. . /.;· '·:. ; .:4;,.'~ : ~'c: •
Serve New Year's brunch : " .
to, a bunch . . . C4 : • • • ------------------------------------.---------------------------------------.... : • • • Toast ·the new year with chatnpagne
I • • • • • I
' • I • I
WELCOME 1982-Host a party t hat's fun for everyone with cha mpagne and easy-to-assemble hor s d'oeuvres.
Back to American basics
Historic cookbook rewritten for today's tastes
By MAAY JANE SCARCELLO Ot_.,.., ..... ._
Fannie Farmer probably was
a no-oonsense kind of woman. In
the 1890's, when most recipes
called f o l'" s uc h i n exact
measurements as a lump of
butter or a pinch of salt, she
wrote "The Boston Cooking
S c hool Cook Book '· with
standardized measurements as
we know them today.
The volume, later retitled
"The Fannie Farm e r
Cookbook," was a bible for
generations of women who
needed recipes for 1ood. basic
American cooking.
Revisions over the years took
the book from its ort1inal intent.
When convenience foods first hit
the market in the '30s and '40s,
many rec.ipes were changed to
call for canned, frozen and
packaged items.
But the spirit, if not the exact
recipes, of the original bas
returned in the latest revision by
Marion Cunningham.
"A silent revolution of the
American palate bas taken
place in the put 10 yean," lhe
says. "It affects bow we retard
and work with food . People want
real tastes, not aometbln1
artlficlal ....
Fannie Farmer would approve
of the tall, fortbri1ht woman
who apent '->ur yeara teatin1
redpe1 f« the boot.
"Good cooka atarl witb
eareflll.ly cboMn lqredienta IDd
actually cook them," abe 1a11.
.. Attention. to la1redlent1 11
vital. 'Ibey ahould be fr'elb, t.be
.ttnt '-va,llable and from nearby
sources We must be more
connected Lo the land, not to
processed products.
"Good food is good food,
whether it's a humble sandwich
or a n elegant dessert. I've eateq
some terri ble sandwic hes
because they had too much
filling and too little bread."
Mrs. Cunningham. a Laguna
Beach resident for several
years, n ow li ves with her
husband in Walnut Creek near
San Francisco and has studied
with food authority James
Bea rd, who recommended her
for the m assive cookbook
project.
·'I bad lo revise old recipes,
drop so me a nd add ne w,
re levant sections to the book,
because we're in another era
now." she says. "For Instance, I
eliminated a section on cocktails
but included a small guide to
wines and an essay on cheeses.
"It took lime to revamp the
book but keep the essence of the
Fannie Farmer feeling. Some of
the old recipes from 1898 -aucb
as steamed pudding -are juat
as wonderful today."
Now Mrs . <.:unningham ls
s aving ideas fo r the next'
revision and working on a
separate Fannie Farmer bakinC
book elated for publlcatioo ln
late 1983.
••Baking is sometbln1 that
happened wltb the campua
revolutions ln \he '601 and
effect.a conUnued into the ''JOI
and beyond," 1be HY•· "sales of
flour mill• and bread pans
lndlcat.e a terrific lnterest ln
leamlnt to bake thln11 younelf
' I
from scratch."
The book includes details on
different types of flours and
yeasts omitted from a more
general book for lack of space.
S he s wings lhro u gh the
Southland several times a year
as "Cook in Residence•· for
Broadway stores and will' return
in mid-February to teach yeast
breads.
Her most recent classes, on
h o l ida y r ecipes, included
several e lega nt d esserts,
"because I'm a believer in total
indulgence. Dessert. carts in
restaurants are a pleasure just
to look at."
Here. for the last holiday
festivities of the year. are her
recipes for Caramel Pean and
Panlsse Almond Tart. Don't
count calories until 1982.
CARAMEL PEARS
4 tablespoons butter
1 cup sugar
1 'h cups water
6 pears, peeled and cored
(try to buy with stems and
leaves on}
Whippe d cream or ice
cream
ln a pan lar1e enou1b to bold
six pears upri1ht, beat the
butter until melted. SUr in the
1u1ar and cook al bith heat. Stir
until the sugar la dlaaolved and
turns light brown in color. Add
the waler, aUr and return to
bolUn1.
Place the fruit in bollln1
ayrup. Cover and cook 8 to 10
mlnut,es unUJ pears are evenly
poached.
Lift t.be pears from the syrup
and place them on aervlnc di.ab.
·A silent revolution of
the American palate has
taken place in the past 10
years ... people want real
tastes, not som ething
artificial.·
-Marion Cunningham
Boll remaininl syrup at bllh
beat unt.11 reduced to about one
cup. Do not boll unW It foams
like candy syrup, just untU lt bu
thickened a blt. Spoon over
pears.
Se"9 with wblpped cream or
vanilla lee cream.
PAN118£ AL•ONO TA&T
(0. •• •llld tart)
PH&rJ: t cup nour
\'t cup bUtter
•
Greet the holidays with the resolution to be a relaxed
and happy host or hostess. Follow. for example. two easy
ways to simplify your cocktail parties .
First. as an alternative to a full bar. consider s~rving
just champagne. It's more festive than wi ne and less
expensive than s tocking a lot of liquor and mixers.
Off er plain c ha mpagne or champagne cocktails. No
need to mix champagne cocktails individually.
Second. serve cocktail nibbles that can be made
ahead and don't require complicated serving. Cranberry
ham pate is an easy to assemble s pread of ground
smoked ham embellished with cranberry raspberry
sauce. sour cream . curry powder. dry mustard and garlic
powde r.
Another do-ahead hors d'oeuvre that is lowe r in
calories. too. is mushrooms stuffed with chopped gelatin
flavored with cr anberry juice cocktail. pickled beets and
onions .
LOWER CALORIE CRANBERRY
STUFFED MUSHROOMS
t e nvelope unflavored gelatin
11 .t cups low calorie cranberry j uice cocktail
1 :1 cup low calorie Italian s a lad dressing
1 :! cup minced pickled beets
I tables poon minced onion
Salt
24 medium-s ize mushroom caps. s tem s removed
Capers. if desired
In a saucepan. s tir gelatin into 12 cup of the
cranberry juice cocktail. Stir over low heat until gelatin
is dissolved. Stir in remaining cranberry juice cocktail.
salad dressing. beets and onion. Season to taste with salt.
Pour into a bowl and chill until firm. When ready to
serve. mash gelatin until broken into s mall pieces. Spoon
gelatin into mus hroom caps. Serve s prinkled with capers
and serve at once or keep chilled until ready to serve.
Makes 6 servings of 4 mushrooms each.
Each s erving · 1 4 mushrooms 1 55 calories
CRANBERRY HAM PATE
2 cups ground s moked ham. about 1 pound
1 '.! cup mashed cranberry ras pberry sauce
1 ~cup sour cream
1 teas poon curry powder
1 2 teaspoon dry mus tard
1 ~ teaspoon garlic powder
1 2 cup melted butter or m a rgarine
In a bowl. mix ham. cranber ry raspberry sauce. sour
c ream. curry. mus tard. garlic and 1.t cup of the butte r or
margarine. Beat until well blended. Pack mixture into a
3-cup tureen or small crock. Pour remaining melted
butter over the top m aking a thin layer. Chill for several
hours or overnight. Serve spread on toast or crackers or
use to stuff raw vegetables such as celery slices.
mus hroom caps. green pepper strips, zucchini slices, etc .
Ma kes 3 cups
CRANBERRY BASE FOR
BLUSHING CHAMPAGNE COCKTAIL
t can Ill ounces> frozen concentrate for cr anberrv
1ut<:<.> cocktail. thawed and undiluted ·
Rind of I orange
Rind of I lemon
2 tablespoons s ugar
1 :.o cup brand~· o r orange liqueur
ke c11bes
Chilled champagne
In a large jar. mix cranberry juice cocktail. rinds.
s ug<1r . and br andy. Crush rinds in li quid and let stand in
rdrigera tor in a covere d jar for 1 week. Strain and pack
into a small I 1 '.!·Cup jar. When ready to s erve. place 2
tables poons into each g lass. Add 3 to 4 ice cubes and
gradually fill glass to the top with chilled champagne.
Fill glusses s lowl~· to prevent excessive foaming. Serves.
~.
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 or 2 tablespoom water
Preheat oven to 425 desreee.
~cupauaar
1 cup ilieed a1IDOlldl
2 dropa almond ut.ract
I •
l
I • l
i • • I
• ! I
I
Blend all insredient.a untll a baU
can be formed . (Tbe food
procellOI' does a lood job). TIM
dou1h will be very aoft_ With
your bands, pat and puab tbe
·dou1h to llne the tart pan.
Partially bake the sb.U about
seven minutes.
ftH•1: ~ cup heavy cream
1 teupooe Gr.ct llanMr
Combine C!ream ud ,...,. ta
small pan. Warm •Ul ~
baa dluol ••d aad loo•a
translucent. Add ti•• a&...e
extract IDd Gr&Dd llandlr _,
aur. Add ...... aild ,_ lllti
tbe abtll. Bak• ••UI caramel-eolored OD top, .._ •
1mlnute1. t
1
ff Orange Co•at DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 28, 1981
~at ~oliday calories with eggnog flavor
8yBA&BA&AOl890NI. part·lklm rlcotta cheese blender. SubaUtute 1ranulated Into lndlvlduaJ aervlo1 recipe u.tlnt rum; chill
l bate to be I party Pinc h of ground Cover and blend unW llll ~au11n 1u1ar substitute for lhe deaaert cups, II de1lred; just unU1 mixture bellnl
Po o Per . bu l lb• inutme1 aelatln 11 dluolved. • brown or while auaar; cblll until set. Makes to thicken. Spoon tome
cbeerleu newa about Optional : dlced With blender runnlna. ---------40 calories less per ei ght servln11 . 160 orthe mixture lnto a loaf 111001 11 that thil orani•· or other fresh add raw eu throu1h ' atrvlna. calories each. pan , add a layer of
cal1mltou1 concoction fruit landlh small opening and blend dishes (or eggno1 cup1 ). om it egg an<J ado 3 N Es s EL Ro o E BANANAaUM graham c rackers
contain• everythtn1 Sprlakte aelatln in until mixed. Add lee Garnish with oranges, additional tablespoons PUDDING -Follow the TRJFLEWJTH C broken t o f it, If you've been told lo b 1 en d er : add cubes and blend untU aeedless grapes, fresh ricotta. Approximately 5 preceding recipe u11n1 GllAHAMCaACKERS necessary>: add a layer
avoid. quarter CU" cold ter melted. Add salt, sugar, strawberries or olber ca Io r i e s 1es 1 per rum Instead of brandy, Eggno1 Mousse or mousse mixture and a ~1:e~~=[.Y1:J!1!,.: Sel aside ... Mean:blle: vanilla· and ricotta:· rriuhlt . if desired. Eat 1ervin1. l f desired . wh e n (preceding recipe) layer or sliced bananas.
eiia. cholesterol •an·1 combine brandy with cover and blend until aU wt a spoon. Makes six w 1 TH R U M -mixture beglna to set, t very ripe banane Add another layer of
calorl-. a r e m a i n i n g eralnlneas disappears servings, 120 calories Substitute dark rum ror stir ln 1 cup mixed diced 6 C I a r g e rec · m o u s s e . g rah am
..... three quarters cup cold and mixture ls liquid. each (mousse only>. the brandy· se b own dried fruit or 1 cup Langular) cinnamon gra-crackers, and a final
At nearly :SOO calories wale~ and heat to a Pour into a glass bowl E G G L E S S -s ugar (or ' g~anul~ted mixed dried1 fruit which namcrackers layer or mousse. Chill
-or more• cupful. rolling boil (to and sprinkle with Substitute equivalent brown sugar substitute) you have cut into tiny Optional: orange or until set. Makes 10
egpof (with booze) is evaporate alcopol nutmeg. Chill until set. llquldno.cholesterole11 forthesugar. pieces wltb a s harp plneapplegamish servings, 120 calories
one oftbe most anti-diet calories). Pour rnto Spoon i nto dessert substitute for egg ; or SUGAR FR EE -knife or scissors. Spoon Prepare the preceding each <without gamlab>. devastations eve r . ._;....;;.;..;...;....;...;;.~-'--~.;;..._-'-'-;..;...;..--------------------------------;..;;;...----------------;.;;....;;;.----------------............ ~'------------~--------------------------
ream.ed up.
: Calorie-wise, it's the
•holiday equivalent of the
Pina Colada (another
calorie and
cholesterol·laden drink
,that dieters should
;avoid).
: Now that I 've
'delivered such
Scroogflike news, let's
:restore some holiday
spi rit with
calorie-sparing desserts
'based on the flavor of
~ggnog. These cool and
;creamy desserts capture
t he taste ... without au
the fat and calories.
EGGNOG MOUSSJ
I 1 envelope plain
.gelatin
1 cup water, divided
1 egg
4 ice cubes
Pinch of salt
5 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon vaoiUa
l and one-half cups
Supper
for two
New Year's Eve is
hat special lime for
'Auld Lang Syne" and
'ell ·inlended
esolutions.
This year, instead of
oing to the same
rowded, noisy parties,
hy not celebrate
uielly al home with a
om antic dinner for two.
Midnight Supper for
wo, an elegantly easy
ish, can help ring out
e old and ring in the
pew in style.
l' Strips of steak and
ushrooms simmer in
ust minutes to tender
erfection in a
elicalely seasoned red
wine sauce. This savory
ixture then becomes
e filliag for deliciously
ifferent crepes, which
an easily be made
artier in the day if
., esired.
I
MIDNIGHT SUPPE&
: FOil TWO . I 2 tablespoons
butter or marganne·
: ~ c up sliced
ushrooms
1 envelope onion ~up .. • : 1"' teaspoons
:all·purpose flour
If.a cup water
1 teaspoon lemon
uice
•· l teaspoon
l\vorcestershire sauce
: 1 tablespoon finely
chopped parsley
·• "4 cup dry red
fWine
: Mi pound beer
:tenderloin or sirloin
'pteak cut into thin strips
; 6 Easy·Onion
repes•
.; In medium skillet,
~ell butter and cook
Mnuabrooms unW lender.
$tir in instant onion soup ~ix and nour blended
liirilb water, lemon juice,
!\Vorcestershire sauce
fDd parsley. Bring to a
~il : add wine and beef
fDd simmer, s tirring
Jrequeolly, unW beef is
*lmoat done, about f minld'es. ;, lleanwblle, preheat
~ven to 350 degrees. I! Top •tei-of crepes·
ltrttb beef mixture,
tes•nfilll "4 cup sauce.
~oU up and place in l~
,.uart oblonc baldnc
dllb; top wttb reserved
tauee. lake 5 mlautel
l>r unt.ll beated tbroqb. Mu• about a sentao.
~SA8Y·ONION · ca&Pa
In blender, eombfne ~ icur milk, l .... ~ eup al ·purpoH flour. 1 envelope onion
cup·a ·toup and 1
uaapoOA butter or
maria.rt..,. Proce11 at
blab 1peed QDtll
blended; daW ~ bour.
In omelet pm or amau
aklllati, add 2
ta ble1pooa1 eltilttd
batter, Wtlml pan to
allow batwr to eoHr
MUom of po. Cook
erepe~a181 ODH, 1 aw 1 woWHd;
r••••t to make
••l&Uloaal crepu. .... about. ens-.
I . ~"""'.._, __ .. ___ l_...,.._ ... __
LOWER PRICES OVERALL FOR ANOTHER YEAR/
rTUF·N·READY 79
TOWELS P~ 70 SF llOll .
rJENO'S 111 ~t!~~E Pl~.
f"CREAM
&~!ESE
LADY LEE
CHEESES
...... 109
....... 69
!TORTILLA 59 CHIPS ' =: ..::-· I Ot. hie
JYew Year
w
BONELESS .. 166 WHOLE HAM
W&tfr A<ldfO FUiiy COOk«I
ROASTING ... 69 CHICKEN
Fr~ Z&ekV F•ms
LADY LEE , .. 69 TURKEYS
Tom sett eistlng Frozen
18 22lt>s Grade A
LIL'BUTTERBALL 89 TURKEYS
Swift Gr~ A lD •
4 1 Los Frozen
GRADE A , .. 148 CAME HENS
rvwn R'Oztn 20 oz
BUTTERBALL ... 88 TURKEYS
Tom Grade A Ff'OZtr\
18·22lt>s
HOFFY
BACON
Slleed ,. .... 110
TOP SIRLOIN
STEAK
Booeltss 8ondeO 8ttf lain
.. 238
rMINUTE MAID 159
ORANGE JUICE
64 Oz Ctn
GRADEA 49 ~!Y!,~ CHICK~'i
BONELESS
HALF HAM
Wilt el" Added FuH COOlr«I
.. 179 '
!GRAPEFRUIT 79 ~3d~~~~1re 46 oz can•
Of Pink
CANNED
HAM
CU0311V Bir ·S, S Lil CMl 849
T·BONE
STEAK
8onoecl Bttf lotn
FRESH r ~=e;1G:y 179 MU~~~MS
COIO OUCk. Pink 7'50 Ml Btl 69 Of WNte
aoz
!COLD SEAL 669 Pico • VODKA FRESH
80Pfo0f 175ltf Btl BROCCOLI
!CHEESE LOO 199 WITH NUTS
KMIUN 1001 PllO
serve Hot <>' Cole!
~.49
.. 238 7·BONE 121 ~~~~K ROAST lD
LOOSE
CARROTS
Tops In Vitamin A
... 16
JUMBO
WALNUTS
HartW;, U S No 1
, . .:88
CRISP
CELERY
FUii R&vwed
EK0.29
PEANUTS
IN THE SHELL
Roat.o °'salted
i:. .. 179
.......................... _ ..................... _ .......... 4 ~'::::'.~r.:::"~~~-~
111ei.ger.ae
Lucky wit be open untl 7 P.M .
New Years Eve. Al stores wit
be dOSed New Yews Day.
Is the ktta '*II·
Wt fWHld# the ta,.., .U. o( any canned,
bottled or peekqld luftl to alw1ya N thl
i.... '*f. lwa .,._ wt lotNt tt. priClt of a
.....,.... ltrm to""-1 tnanufaaurer't
........... wt "'"'8dcally Nduoe the l&rpr
rilll, too.
~"-prfc-.
, ...... of I rtw wattly •peeiala, krOIMhe-
~ ... ,nd• '*' NdllCll,..., ownall
food WU.
/fo ti I lies or gflfUfdc:b.
lnMMt of,..,,.., atampe or pnrmlck• to
11traet cwtomcra, we ofrrr dlacount prlelna.
llllllriftl you • IOftt ovnall food bill aftd no
cotely fritlJ.
•••• .wMedla ....
~ty "->"an iM1N pricld below their
~y 4'llCIOUDt pricct 11 a raull o(
manlll11etutm' tlftlponry pr0tnotlonal
allowlftelft or uorptioul pvrchuct. You,.
flftd .... ..._.,of ley "-Y lttmt .wry time
you lllop.
• \ . ,
I
----~·. ---. ---
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 28, 1981 Cl
IRVINE RANCH FARMERS MARKETS
_________ 'tbl_WDe--11 0 F VALUES ..,_Edi_don_m _______ _
DEL I
Garlic & Herb
RONDEl.E CREESE
4
oz. $1.49
Domestic Large Eye
SWISS CREESE
$3.49 ib.
Gallo of San Francisco
Italian Style Bologna
MORTADELLA
$2.791b.
Imported French
DOUX DE MONTAGE
$4.491b.
Rich818sty
TURKEY SALAMI
$2.19 lb.
PROVISIONS
Sugar's Arizona
CHAMPAGNE
MUSTARD SAUCE
ARIZONA FIRE DIP
VEGETABLE DIP
8oz. Reg. $2.99 ~ 2. 69
l&oz.Reg.$4.99 4 49 •
Tbae delldous •uce. are made without alt or
aupr, and Craig Claibourne baa pral8ed the
dwnpecne mustard sauce aa one ol the IWt
lntere9ting mustard sauces to come along lo
yan. All three ol tbe9e dellgbtful sauces will
be avallable for you lo taste from 10 am to 7 pm,
~y and Thunday, Dec 30 and 31. Stop
In and try them!
Irvine Ranch
TORTILLA CHIPS
9oz.Reg.98C 77 ¢
Great with Sugar'• Arlzooa Fl.re Olp.
lWinlng
ENGUSB
BREAKFAST TEA
25 Rap Reg. $2.29 $1. 49
Puquini
EXPRFSSO COFFEE
I lb. Whole Bean Reg. $3.95 $ 3 • 59
GroundReg._$4.75 $4.29
There'• no better way to end an evening ol New
Year'• ceJebradng than with a cup ol e:xpreNO.
Becaute Puquln.1°1 b routed right In Loe
Aqele9. lt'a tre.ber. It'• a1ao the expresao med
lo finer-botela and restaurant.a.
VITAMINS
Chewable Cherry
VITAMINC
Sweetened Only with fruct:09e
90 'Dabe Reg. 85.49
180'1abe Reg. $11.49
$4.50
$8.95
Store Hours: JO am to 6 pm. ~ven Days
IRVINE STORE
PRODUCE
Sunkist's Sweetest
NAVEL ORANGES
-----3 Ibs. for } •
Large Zutano 4 for $1.00
AVOCADOS
Red or Green
CABBAGE
Long Green
CUCUMBERS
19¢ lb.
410r$1.()()
Fresh Crisp
BEAN SPROUTS
39¢ lb.
Irvine Ranch Dancy
TANGERINES
49¢ lb.
NATURAL FOODS
Arrowhead Mlll8
BISCUIT MIX
21b.Reg.$1.97 $1.49
Arrowhead Mills
WHOLEWHEAT
BREAD MIX
2 lb. Reg. $1.97 $1.49
Card1ni
SALAD DRFSSINGS
Italian. Lemon, Ume DUl $1 45 121/2oz.Reg.$1.89 •
Debole Hi-Protein
Bl-PROTEIN WHOLE
WHEAT RICE
12oz.Reg.$1.45 $1.09
Panda All Natural
Al.I. NATURAL
LICORICE&
RASPBERRY
CREWS
7 oz. Reg. $1.59 $1.19
•
Celestial
EMPEROR'S CHOICE
TEA
24 Bags Reg. $2.99 $2.25
Toasted
CORN NUTS
16 oz. Reg. $2.09 $1.59
CAROB COATED
Al.MONDS&
WALNUTS
$2.691b.
YOGURT COATED
RAISINS
Whole Wheat
FIG BARS
$2.691b.
$1.39 lb.
Where Tradition ia Country Freahnea. ..
TUSTIN STORE
MEATS
START YOUR NEW YEAR OFF RIGKT wrm AN IRVINE RANCH FAllMEltS
MARKETS AGED PRDlt IUB ROASI
TRI TIP ROAST
$2.981b.
'Lean
GROUND BEEF
$1.49 lb.
T1JRKEY BREAST
Marinated
KA.BOBS
SIDE OF BEEF
$1.59 lb.
$3.49 lb.
$1.29 lb.
BINDQUARTER
$1.69 lb.
10% OFF ANY STEAK BOX
$5.00 OFF ANY 50 lb. Pak
$10.00 OFF ANY 100 lb. Pak
SEAFOOD
WHOLE COOKED
LOBSTER
$5.98 lb.
LARGE COCKTAIL
SHRIMP
$9.981b.
FRESH SEA. BASS
$4.98 lb.
IL\UBIJT FILEl'S
$4.98 ib.
CAIAMARI
$2.98 lb.
BAKERY
Homemade Irvine Ranch
Farmers Marketa
Sesame-Poppy
EGG TWIST ROI.IS
Packageoll2 $'1.49
Homemade Irvine Ranch
Farmers Marketa
CRESCENT ROI.I-"
Pacbleol• r $1. 79
Limit~~
No Dealer Sales.
Ston H OUf'$,' 9 am 10 a pm. ~boys
14002 Myford Road At Santa Ana Freeway
838-2851
13152 Newport Avenue At Irvine Boulevar.d
838-9570
COSTA MESA/NEWPORT STORE
2651 Irvine Avenue South of Mesa Drive
631·4404
Stort Hours: 9 am to 8 pm. ~~n Days
I . ;.
I I
~--~-~~~--~----~--~~~~--~~--~~----------------.... .._.--....... --.......................................... ...
Orange Co .. t DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 281 1981
Fix New Year's brunch t
t • • -
\with elegant egg recipes . . .
A b r u a c la l I a BSA&NAllS IAUCB ~ t.eaapooo .. 1t
wOIMlerf\ally ecGDOmical • .._ 1 c.., ~ teupoon paprika .
wa1 to~ d~ I tablt9POODI tarrqon ID 1mall U\&cepan boUda1 MUOD, or white wine vtne1ar or over medium beat, eW El11 lD Wreath white wine briDI vlne1ar, onion,
• .... • wooderf\ll 2 teupoou chopped tarrap ana pepper to
eatrH for a bollday onion 1tmmerin1. Simmer
bnmela menu. 1 teaapoon dried until allDOlt all Uquid la
Witb tbla recipe, you t a r r a I o n I e a v e a , 1one. SUr in butter until
·e a n • et a I o u r · cruabed . melted. Set uide.
met-looltln1 dlab be· ~ teaapoonpepper Place remainint
fore your 1ueata even ~ cup butter in1redlenta tn small ti JOU bave no 1wrmet 1 4 e11 yolka mixiDI bowl or blender
bl e nded . Wh i le
coatlaulna to beat or
ble nd at low sp eed ,
1lowly add bot butter m I sture. Continue
beaUnt or bl~dlnl U8tU
thickened.
NOTE: If not usln1 shortly, cover and
refrt1er•te for up to
several days . ·Before
servln1. stir in amall
amount of bot water .
Refrl1erate any leftover
TASTY -Poac hed
eg es b eco m e a
b r unch item i n
circles of puff pastry
t o pp e d w l th
Bearnaise Sauce.
,,
cooldq experience. And 2~ tablespoons lemon container. Beat or cover
moet ol the cookln1 can juice and blend untll well bedoneatywrlebure. ,,...!..:~:__~~~~~~_;;;,,;=:......=.~;;_,;;.;;;...;..;..;..__..;..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ sauce. -.--·
The wreaths are
formed by dropping
dollops of euy-to-malte eream puff douah in a
circle. Make them in
advance and refri1erate
or Irene them.
Then bl e nd a
Quick -and · eas y
tarra1on-1pilted Bear-
aaiae Sauce and pop
it into the refri1erator. too. U you like, you can
nen poach the e11a tbe
Dl1ht before the brunch.
U ndercook them
11i1htly and noat tbem
in water In a sealed
container in the
retrt1erator. It will take
cmly about 30 seconds OT
10 to rebeat them in
almmerln1 water the
DHt IDOl"lllnl.
Once you assemble
and serve Poached EH•
in Wreath Puffs, you
need only sit back and
accept the compliments.
'OACBED EGGS IN
WaEATB PUFJ"S
8 ere!m-p:rwreatha
(recipe below>
2 pacltqes ( 10 ounces
each ) frozen chopped
broccoli
Bearnaise Sau c e (recipe below)
Oil
Water
8 eggs
Prepare Cream Puff
Wreatba. Set uide. Cook
' broccoli according to
pac1ta1e directions .
Drain and keep warm.
Prepare Bearnaise
Sauce. Set uide.
Lightly oil a large
saucepan. Add enough
water to fill 2 inches
deep. Briq to a boil.
Reduce beat to keep
water simmering. Break
e11•. ooe at a time, into
saucer, then slip each
•II into water, boldinl
dish close to water's
surface. Simmer 3 to s
minutes dependin& on
desired dooeneaa. When
done, lift •UIS out with
slotted spoon and drain.
Trim qes, ii desired.
Spoon about ~ cup of
the reserved broccoli
into center of each
wi'eatb. Top with 1 of the
poached eg1s. Spoon
about 2 tablespoons of
tbe rmerved Bearnaise
sauce over each egg.
Serve immediately.
caEA• PUFF
WSEATBS ' .... ,
1 cup water
~cup butter
1 cup all-pul'J)CMle flour
14 teupoon salt , . ..,
In medium saucepan
over medium beat,
brine water and butter
to rolliDI boil. Add nour
and salt, 1tirrin1
n1oroualy until mixture
forms a ball, 1 to 2
minutes. Remove from
beat. Beat in egp one at
a time. Cootinue beatin1
until smooth and a small
quantity of dough
mounds wbe-.. scooped
OD tbe end of a spoon.
For each riq, drop 12
1Jt1btly rounded
teaapoonfui of batter,
lltbtly touching each
other, in 3~-inch
diameter circle, o
UJllTeued baltinl aheet.
Bake in prebeated 400
de1reea. Oven until .,aden tirvwn. about 25
f.o IO miDutes. Cool on
we rack.
NOTE: Batter may be
refrt1erated, t11htly eonred. for 2 to 3 days.
Baked wreath puffs
•ay be made aneral
•11 abead. Wrap well
ad refrieerate or store
l• cool dry place. To
'~·.r.ac:e 1111 OD , ..... bUiDI •beet.
Bake ID preheated m
de1ree1 OT8D 7 to I
llllllutel.
Baked wreath puffs m aJ be froaen, well
wrapped, for lon1er
•tor•••· Bake in
pnbeated • de1ree1 ...................
...
theNewYe with ·
phs Double Coupons
. ·-
....... ~---......
Double Coupon
Presen1 lhlS coupon along with any one Manutaclurers·
·cenls off' coupon and get double the U'flnga when you purchue the Item Not lo Include ··retailer·· ... frH .. ot ··grocery
purchase ... coupons 01 e•ceed lhe value ot 1111 llem Eu;ludea
hquor, lobacco and fluld milk ptoducta
Limit One Item Per M.nufecturen• Coupon
and Limit 3 Double Coupon• per Cuttomer
Coupon Ett.ctlve Dec. 21 thru Dec. 31, 1111
Double Coupon
Preaen1 this coupon elong with 1ny one Manufactutera'
··cents ow· coupon and get double lhe H•lnga when you
purchase 1he item Not 10 include .. rtlalltt", "free .. 01 ··grocery
purcnase· , coupons or ••ceed 111e value ot 1ne 1tem Ewcludea
liquor 101>acco and fluid milk producl1
Limit One Item Per Manufecture,.· Coupon
1nd l imit 3 Double Coupon• per Cuatomer
Coupon Effective Dec. 21 thru Dec. 31, 1111
Double Coupon
Present lhlS coupon along w1tl1 1ny one Mll\ulaclurers'
"cenls olf"' coupon and gel c!Ooble lhe H•tngs when you purchase the Item Nol to Include "re1a1ler ..... ., .... or "grocery
purchase .. , coupons or t •Ceed lllt velue ol lht 11tm Excludes
l1quot. tot>ecco and fluld milk prooucls
Limit One Item Per Menufecturert' Coupon end Limit 3 Double Coupona per Cuatomer
Coupon Eftectlve Dec. 28 thru Dec. 31, 1981
All Ralphs Stores will be Open New Year's Day, Jan. 1, 1982 Check your local Ralphs Store for Holiday Hours
Riverside Brand-Frozen U S.O.A. Grade A GA'
Tom Turkey
Limit 1 per family while supplies last
19·21 lb. Avg. Wt.
Fresh & Natural Ory Champagne
Armour-Butter Basted
Boneless
Turkey
Limit 2 per customer while supplies last
59
Bar-S or Wilson
Boneless
Hall Ham
Limit 2 per customer whlle supplies last
78
Onion Diii, Cheese or Peak of the Season
Ralphs Jacques Bell Brand ·Ralphs Deli Large
Egg Nog Bonet Potato Chips Rye Bread Tangerines
87
More Super Holiday Values
Eastern Grain Fed Portt Leg-Shank Portion 1 o g
Fresh per Pork Roast lb.
USDA Choice-Large Meaty End
Beef
Rib Roast
Dakota Farms-Full Moon
Longhorn
Cheese
Chllted-From Florid•
R1lpbs·
Or1n1e Juice
Dellctoua
budsen
Crel• CbMSe
per
lb.
per
lb.
~gal.
ctn.
loz.
pkg.
199
309
159
.89
Prtcea effective De~ 21 thru Dec. 31, 1981
Regular or Nacho Cheese
Dorltos
Chips
Nancy's·Frozen·Lorralne
Spinach, Mushroom or
Quiche Hors
D'Oeuvres
12 oz. Cana-Regular or Diet
Seven
Up
Plneapple or Orange
R1lph1
I.herbal
12 oz.
bag
av. oz.
pkg.
6pack
~gal.
ctn.
159
279
179
143
Foll Pack
Alka Seltzer
Tablets
C-110-24 Exposure
Kod1color II
Fiim
Spice Tone
Zee
lap kins
Laro•
C1Hfoml1
Avocados
Fresh Cut·ROH Stem or
Mixed
Bouquets
box
of36
each
60 ct.
pkg.
each
bunch
149
197
.38
.29
299
_1 _ ~d ·(i.,,.11•1 bf ~ o..oc., Colftpeftr. All Rtghta Reterwect c.
...,..,.. ...... to IN'"tou• ..... "-' prlc9, Of ... , dete ptloJ
to lnltlel price Nductlon exclualwe of edvel11MCI °' ptOmOtlonat ,,... ..
~ lfitm. In tMt ad 8f't tM Nm9 Pficle Of lowef In ell ........... ....., .................. pricff .... ,~.,,~ We~ tN ~to 11m1t Of tefuM ..... to comfMfClal dHlen ~""-~~~n ., .......... .....
"---., _, ..
CISU llSA
"'*" locel oompetltton, coel lecton Of teolfaphtc loce11on.
I ., ..... , ....
•1 t l.IMA, ... ---.-.... , .... ,,.... IUCI _.., ..... am
-v· L
15411 S. Ill I ILi II. Ei¥19 nm .... ...,. .. ..,.
..,
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 28, 1981
,Family vetoes _Christm&s clean-up committee
BY MAaY JANE SCAaCJ:U.O ... ..., ........
AQ.YOM who thlnka the lllaytac repairman .
la the loneUest person In town .,...,. b• been in char~ot dlimantllna and puttlnl away the faml 'a hoUda decorat.I .
C drto w~ only a = weekl before were
houndlne you to dra1 the d\11\Y boxea out of
their ll·month realina place ln the farafe are
totally silent.
The same merry UtUe elves who cou.ldo 't
wait to fondle the china aocell. boxn ol Unael,
8·foot Santa Claus and ball a ton of fake
mistletoe disappear on myatertoua errands
when it's time to organize and put lt au away.
"That's no fun," announc. the older chUd
Ill II Tll llTClll
with the unerrtn1 accuracy and total dllsuat only a 1Aten·a1er can muate.r.
••All the needln on the tree ar. dry and
prtckly now. It burta my flnlen to taJle orl
lbe ornament.a," object the 1maller 1lblln11.
The very YOW\lell, who milht 1til1 be naive
and unspoiled enou1b to be talked Into tll_e Job,
l1n 'l mueb help.
Not oft.ly do lbey drop fratlle itema, but
they can't remove anythlnc above knee Jev~I.
A child who needs help wlth doorknobs can't
do much a bout the colored liehts 1trun1 around
the root eaves
llusbanda. or course. always mimage to find
Something lmportant to do at the offic e.
Wives sometimes try to outwalt other
ramlly member11, hopine they'll become ao
di11u11ted at tho pine needles pillne up on the
carpet that they'll orrer to help shovel it out.
Not a chance. As Mom crinees at the' sieht
or onc e-fest ive Ch rts t m as d ecorations
developing cobwebs and nyspecks, the rarnlly
remains oblivious.
Like pain thresholds. the tolerance ror
clutte r. disorder and downright filth varies
among individuals with some correlation to age.
Youn1 l)«!Ople, eapecially thoae under fl,
never noUce a fDC!H, and Ohe theory pr<>po9n
that teen·1t1ers actually prerer It
Face It, there'• no point ln playin1 a
martyred walUn1 aame with famlllea, becauae
they have tlme aod endurance on thelr aide.
Living rooma and dent which leave a
motht r sobblna hysterically in the comer have
a coty, lived-in look. accordio1 to the Addi.
SorneUmes, in desperation, you muat 1toop
to bribery ~ get help with puttin1 the holiday
mess out of slli(ht before .coing out of your mind.
If offspring are too old and wise to be fooled
into thinking the job is fraught with joy and
<See 'IO&dlea,' Pase C7.)
Party fare
made easy
Hospitality is u much
a part of the holidays as
the wreath on the door. ~·~···A HAPPY NEW YEAR STARTS-.....:· ~
From both lime and
budget standpoints, the
challenge is to find
economical dishes
requiring minimal
preparation, that are
still festive enough to
serve guests.
Cornish hens always
make a dramatic
presentation on the
dinner table, and they
can be served split to
stretch the budget.
An eaay, convenient
way to prepare them is
with an apricot glaze
atop long grain and wild
rice.
As they bake, the
flavorful juices from the
hens are absorbed into
the rice mix.
APaJCOT GLAZED
coaNJSH HEN AND
WILD RICE BAKE
3 larg e Rock
Cornish hens (about 1
pound each>
Salt and pepper
2 tablespoon s
vegetable oil
1 package (6
ounces) long grain and
wild rice
I.A cup chopped
walnuts
21/• cups boiling
water
I.A c up Jinely
chopped onion
'1!i cup apri c ot
preserves
Cut hens in half ;
sprinkle with salt and
pepper. Brown hens on
all sides in oil in large
s killet. Comb i ne
contents or ri ce and
seasoning packets with
walnuts in a 13 x 9-inch
bakiog dish. Stir in
boiling water and onion.
Add hens. Brush heos
with half of the
preserves. Cover baking
dish tighUy with foil and
bake al 350 degrees for
45 minutes . Remove foil.
Bru s h h e n s with
remaining preserves .
C ontinue baking
uncovered until hens are
tender and all liquid is
abs orbed , about S
minutes . Makes 6
servings.
WILDLY DEUCIOUS
<X)QAU VIN
IA cup Oour
1 teaspoon salt
'I• teaspoon pepper
1 large broiler-fryer
chicken, cut up
2 tablespoon s
vegetable oil
1 medium onion, cut
into 'A·ich wedges
~ pound mus h ·
rooms, sliced
% cup chicken broth
1 pa c kage (6
ounces) long grain aod
wild rice
\Iii cup dry white
wine
1 jar (2 ounces)
diced pimiento, drained
2 green onions with
tops, sliced
WITH VONJI LOWER PRICES
'l801 BTI-t'U18 500".t.lf'ICEll of\l E. TONIC Wl\TEll
Ll'llT'
139
l 20Z MlfB-6-PACK-UGHT O!I OAAt\
MO U'llT llEO Pll!CE 2 69
------------~~~~~--~~~--·~ .... ----------------------------~ ~TS
&;ei~ ...
~~~
lMIPlll"CNP "llM Spencer Stea~
B;:tC'h~,;~~ks
l 8 238
LB 238
LD 3 58
ID 169
~TAfA.L•r<O cgc;s~TOCCD> 178 i..eM Ground Beef' Z1HAl lll
~Ktr«).lfUllOTT~QJPIDl.£$!1£Vf. ) 98 uoneleu Rump ROllat Ill
uJ79 lllAI. "'<(<:1¥ '°"' Cl/T Corned Beel Bnsket
f?'~~ .. [A .59
1!_...clll',llJ!El\(111\'~l:D.llr:O 5l.US ] 29 ~eclMCon L.11
~1CU51.tSnLL *-· 249 H111N1'e Farms a.u~ 1.1
~~~OlC11~319 fl ~EUCAre&SEN a
t?'onac.cr.=&.u. .59
li:io"Y>.,~~ 299
\t:..'1b1 &::1tt.m 2 99
~ VONS BAKERY jJ fl GROCERIES ~ !( GROCERIES :0
~~0-Sl-~C ... ,H .59 V=~~n<Mnges .53 r.:.;swa~ .39
f>j>~· 85 .•l<.V'"" .,,..,...C~SU:ZD 59 R•Ol}t!f 'Wfll'ElUS l 33 Vons Sandwk:h Roll.s • Vons Plneapr le In Syrup • ~ng Cider
Wolid'a;'~~ke 359 V~PaperPlates } 39 J:is~:ld~Nog .83
~"""'"""°" . 7~ c;".;po.r;v.aJol« 113 ~~~~-.75 fl HOT B~RY ~ ~~~~e:;, .45 ~scromatoJutce .69
!:!'""•~00£"' French KOllS
LIQUOR
DO.._ ~~Oii 1.t•• w 1 n.c.d!Rum
499
}}99
]Q99
499
999
1969
1299
, lrYtfM
~:n ~~=I l 54 H~nr~ K;~p .61
.. 9'""-.111.n Slim Pl1Ce Salad Oil ) 85 \?;,~~ .65
} 76 ""~Mixed Nub 1 89
FILM, FIASH AND BA1TERIES
KODAK
COLOR
FllM 1 99~
CORD J 59 ~IA
10""511{$
ALL ¥0 ... ll&AmTSO.... PlllDAY .IM. I
NBWDAll'9 YIMTOeMI
]66
Combine flour. salt
and pepper. C oat
chicken with Hou r
mixture, reserving
remaining flour
mixture. Brown chicken
in oil in large skillet
over medium beat about
7 minutes on each side.
Remove from skillet.
Drain off all but 2
tableaeoons drippings.
Cook onion ln drippings
untll tender but not
brown. Add mushrooms,
chicken broth and
cblcken to skillet. Cover
and simmer 20 minutes
or until chicken is
tender. While chicken is
cookin1, prepare rice
accordinl to packace
dlrectiona. Remove
chlclre11 from alrlllet;
keep warm. Dlaaolve
reterved nour mixture
lD wine. Add to aklllet.
Heat until 1auce
bubbles. Cook over
medium beat, 1Urrin1
eooat.antly, untll m.llture
11 tblckned1 about S
mlnut.ta. Return chicken
\o akWet; 1tlr to coat
"Ith 1auce . Stir pimiento aad 1reea
oalon.1 into bot rice; Hr•• •Ith cbtckea.
.. ak• I lll'V'in ...
" .............. , Mn....,,~ ..... -=·" hlCI" A .. ftta 4730 8enenca "d.
, ......... ~-
H'llO 1111 .... 1 I,....,.
. Lapa ...
!41ol1 Mela '•l'kw•r & "°" -'
CMt1MH1 , .... ""' "'"'•fMI °'·-~· left .Nlft c.,..,.... :
lltf\ c..M,.. C_...,.ftCl& DelOtM1Po
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Iii
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 28, 1981
Coffeecake serves
unexpected visitors
Holiday entertalnlnc Bake cake u n t 11 or murgarine, softened
doesn't n.eesaarlly end wooden pick ln.1erted In v. teaspoon vanllla
with the 'Cbrlatmaa center comes out clean, •~ cups powdered
holldaya; lt can Jut well about 30 to 3S minutes . s ugar
loto the firat few weeks F r o st w I t h C r e a m I t a b I e s p o o n
of lbe oew year. Cheese Frosting, when Amaretto
Be prepared for those cooled. Refrigerate any I to 2 tablespoons
unexpected friends who remaining cake. milk
drop in by having Beat cream cheese,
B a o a n a. A l m o n d C R E A M C ff E ES E butter and vanllla until
Coffeecake on band. FROSl'ING s m o o t h . 8 e a t i n
Or make one Juat for 1 package ( 3 remaining Ingredients
the family to enjoy. ounces) cream cheese, until frosting is smooth
Deliciously moist, the softened a n d o f s pr eading
~ . ----------
00 BANANAS -
Moist coffeecake is
flavored with
ban an as lo serve
holiday guests .
cake has ao added plus 1 tablespoon butter consistency.
to please your taste buds ..-----------..
~~~~~i~;~~ LOWER PRICES OVERALL
1 cup sugar
~ cup shortening ~·~~~~~~ .. FOR THE HOLIDAY' banana (3 medium) II
~ ~~~:'::f=~~pose ALL STORES OPEN NEW YEARS DA y ~ . flour ~ ~,-
1 teaspoon baking ~-.....
powder
1 teaspoon baking
soda
~ teaspoon salt
Cream C he ese
Frosting
Heat oven to 35C
degrees. Grease meta:
pan, 13x9x2 inches. Beat
sugar. shortening, eggs
and vanilla in large bowl
on medium speed,
sc raping bowl
occasionally, 2 minutes.
Mix sour cream, banana
and Amaretto. Beat in
flour, baiting powder,
baking soda and sail,
alternating with sour
cream mixture, on low
speed. Spread batter in
pan.
Holiday
punch
Having a party during
the holiday season is one
of the best ways to get
into the spirit .
The anticipation of the
party and all the details
of getting ready fo r it
lend to the fun and
excitem ent of the
season.
When planning a
holiday party, there are
many ways lo minimize
costs . For example, you
might invite a friend or
neighbor to co·host the
party with you.
Or, you could invite
the guests to a BYFA
party, Bring Your
Favorite Appetize r .
Another very effective
cost trimmer is to serve
a punch, rather than
having an open bar.
Holiday Cheer Punch,
fo r example, stretches
one bottle of cold duck
into 30 servin gs by
co mbining it with
brewed tea, chilled fruit
p u nc h , and pink
lemonade concentrate.
An ice ring made of
r econstituted pi n k
lemonade will keep it
cold and serve as a
decorative touc h as
well.
ROUDA Y CHEER
PUNCH
2 cups boiling water
4 single-serve tea
bags
o/.t cup sugar
1 carton (64 ounces>
fruit punch
1 can (6 ounces)
frozen concentrate for
pink lemonade, thawed
and undiluted
~ cup curacao
1 bottle <5th > Cold
Duck, chilled
Pour boiling waler
over tea bags and let
st and 5 minutes .
Remove tea bags; add
the sugar and stir until
sugar dissolves. Stir ln
the fruit pun c h ,
lemonade concentrate
an~ curacao. Chill. Just
before serving pour the
punch mixture i nto
punch bowl and add the
cold duck. Keep cold
with lee ring made with
reconstituted pink
le monade. Makes 30
servings <about ~ cup
each>.
FOU& STAil PUNCH
1 can (48 ounces)
apple-cranberry drink,
cbllled
1~ cups or 1 can (12
ounce) oran1e drink,.
chllled ~ cup lemon Juice
from concentrate.
thawed
1 quart lemon lime
soda, chilled
Jn pun ch b o wl ,
com b t n·e t h e
apple-cranberry drink,
oran1• drink, and lemon
Juice. Qdll, Just befon aervlnf, add UM IOda.
Makel U 1uvln11
(about ~cup eaeh>.
Red·X Produce Prices
hftty m Limes ... 08
RIG Leal ffi Lettuce " . 59
Coac11tN1 v111er ffi White Grapefruit 5 ~ •. 99
l'l1111tum Biking • B! Idaho Potatoes 8 ~:. 1. 35
Discount Liquor Prices!
H P'lool • ili Scoresby Scotch 1~ 4.97 ml
n~ c'h~7t;-p;9;~' Or C~ Ouck 2.19 1$0
ml
Jtntymalel .79 ili Egg Nog QI tin
Red·X Grocery Prices
Cellnn .luwld .85 H! Bathroom Tissue 4 I .. ,~,
m Com.I .43 Cleanser U·Ol
tlft
Oowl!Y tlncludu JS Oii LtMll
Fabric Softener i'·Ol 1 98 blf •
Q91~ .43 m Niblets Corn 11-.,
CM
Discount Wine Prices!
'ff G31i0 wi~e ..... ~ ........ ~rs 2.99
'~ l1mbru1c1 l11nco O< llosalt . Riunite Wine
Sp11\H1 Or Tyrollt
~~Wine
~rs 4. 99
~rs 2 .19
9.e
-...eo. n .aOLL
LB.
Red·X Grocery Prices Red·X Meat Prices!
--1 ...... 1 .... ,_ "'•
ffi Mlfktt IMkll .79 Ctottll & PMled
lb 3. 98 Snack Chips 1 S-01 ~Small Shrimp Pkg
I ounce f 11Ktc 2.99 B! Sh~·; p Oto1ntd il+ Softener Sheets SO·CI 10-tl 4 39 pk9 ,_, .
ffi CtNllltt farmer GI ltw Cl! Jt111ymat0 .85 Itel Rouftd 8oneltu .. 1.98 Cottage Cheese ·~;:' fl! Sirloin Tip Roast
C-..1111 ... Of "''"""" 10.H .89 ... I l0tn a-ten
lb 2.48 ffi Mr . P's Pizza Pkt ~Top Sirloin Steak llOltft
Cost Cutters Save Up To ~0 °,., Red-X Meat Prices
~ teat c.nw Frt1tft .. 1.19 Mixed Nuts 11-w 2 49 ffi Leg-0-Lamb tan • x Cesl Cwlll< Paper Plates ':,c1 1.19 m P~~kch~p·;i··· " 1 . 39 °f. Cost Cwllel lltg Or 11i,p1a .79 Family l'Jck
lb . 79 Potato Chips 1-1n .. !H Frying Chicken Legs ..
u..
BUY ONE GET ONE
FREE!
VE ON , 0 2t THRU FRI .. JAH I.
-~~~~--~-----------------~~--------------------------------.-...
BJ MA&TIN 81.A)A.NE
''I know that some of your .readers worry that their refund reqests 'Wlll be
accidentally separated from their proofs of
purcbue when we open thelr letten.'' said
Bruce Pincheon, executive vice president of
Strat Mar Fulfillment Corp. "But there ls a
far greater chance for a problem if they
staple or tape their proofs to the refund form.
"When we separate them, the form may
tear across the address portion and become
unreadable. That's why my best advice to
your readers is not to attach the proofs to the
refund form. U they like, they can staple or
tape lbe proofs to a separate piece of paper
or cardboard."
Strat Mar is one of several dozen
fulfillment companies lbat process refund
and premium offers for manufacturers.
"We are now fulfilling 45 offers for piore
than two dozen companies," said Pincbeon.
"We have our own ZIP code and mail
addressed to any post-office bQx at Stratmar
Station, Bridgeport, Conn., 06650 comes to
us."
I asked whether refunders requesting
two offers with different Stratmar post-office
boxes could send them in the same outer
envelope to save postage.
"This will usually cause a delay in
fulfilling the request," be said. "The
employee who opens the mail for that
particular post-office box will put mail bound
for other boxes in a customer service file,
which is sorted and read at a later date."
I asked about cash-register tapes
required by many refund offers as one of the
proofs of purchase.
"Most of our clients will accept a portion
of the tape that shows the price of the item,"
Pincheon said. "The refunder should write
• m
the oame of the supermarket and &he date of
purchue at the top of the plece ol tape, and
the price should be circled."
Many refunders wonder 'fhetber a
com paoy that asks for the label from a
48·ounce jar wlll accept labels from two
24-ounce Jars h11tead. .
"Most companies are fairly lntlelllble
about tbe sue requirements f« their proof'
of purchase," Plncheon 1aJd. "U tbey uk for
a 48·ounce label, that la what they want. They
instruct us to reject retund requests that
include labels from other sizes.
"They don't want to face the possibllity
that a consumer will already bave one
24-ounce jar at home and will onJY have to
purchase one more in order to get the refund.
Or, that two friends wlll each purcbue
24-ounce jars and then combine thelr effort.a
to get lhe refund."
ln a future column, Pincheon will discuss
some of the problems that bis company
encounters, such as improper duplicate
refund requests. ·
SMAJlTSHOPPERAWAaD
The Smart Shopper Award coes to
Delores McPherson of Ravenna, Ohio.
"Refunding makes a lot of sense," she
says. "I bad a $1-<>ff coupon and a 'Buy One,
Get One Free' coupon for men's Sox Sense.
"So the hosiery that ii usually $2.09 la
pair cost me only $3.18 for three palra. I then
sent in the three front panels for a free palr
of Comfort Stride Panty Hose that was worth
$2.84. My savings totaled $5.93!"
Mrs. McPherson and other readers
whose smart shopping experiences appear in
this column receive a copy of my refundine
maeazlne, The National Supermarket
Shopper. Write to me in care of this
newspaper.
r------------~-------------------------~---, CUP 'N' FILE REFUNDS
MllttJlceous Food Products I FUe 9) Free Fruit Offer. Receive a S2 refund. Send
Clip out this file and keep It with similar · tbe required refund form and one Universal
cash-off coupons beverage refund offers Product Code symbol Crom each of the
with beverage coupons . for example. Start following: Nabisco Chips Ahoy Cookies.
collecting the needed proofs oC purchase Kraft Deluxe American Process Cheese
while looking for the required refund forms Slil'es. Swanson Chunk Chicken. Welch·s
at the supermarket. in newspapers and Grape Juil'e. Expires Jan. 31, 1982.
magazines. and when trading with friends ORTEGA ·n· Eggs Refund Offer.• Receive
Offers may not be available m all areas or a so.cent refund. two 25-cent coupons and the
the country Allow 10 weeks LO receive each ··Ortega Chiles and Salsa Recipe Booklet.··
refund. Send Ule required refund form, the word
The following refund offers are worth "eggs"' Crom a carton of one dozen eggs. the
$10.38. This week"s offers have a total value label from any can of Ortega Grttn Chiles
of $21.25 and the names of the three serving BETTY CROCKER·HORM EL. General suggestions ror a can or .rar or Ortega Green
Mills. Rel'eitle a coupon for a box of Betty CHile Salsa written 00 a piece of paper.
Crocker Potatoes or a SI refund. or both. For Expires March l , 1982.
the coupon. send tht> required rt>fund form PA TIO Refund Offer . Receive a SJ.25
and three complete box bottoms from any refund. Send tbe required refund form and
Betty Crocker Potatoes For the SI refund. the net·weight statements from any six PaUo
send the form and three proofs or purchase products. Expires Jan. 31, 1982.
Crom any Hormel Ham or Sausage Pallies. PROGRESSO Refund Offer. Receive five
For both, send the form and all or the above 20·cent coupons. Send the required refund
proofs Expires Feb 28. 1982 form and the Progresso mailing addresses
HERSHEY"S INSTANT Coupon Refund from any five Progresso products. Expires
OfCer 1981. Receive Sl in coupons. Send the May 31. 1982.
required refund form . the tracing or the boy R EADY · CRUST. EAGLE Free
from the rront panel or any Hershey·s Ready -Crust Offer Receive one
Instant can and the register receipt with the Ready.Qilst. Send the required refund form.
price circled. Expires March 31, 1982. two Universal Produ.code symbols from KNOX Peanut Butter ·n· Jelly Blox Offer. any Ready-Crust aod iversal Product
Receive a 50-l'ent refund. Send the required Code symbol from r Eagle Brand
refund form, one front label from any jam or Sweetened Condensed or your favorite
jelly. one label from any peanut-butter jar. brand ol ice cream. Expires Feb. 28, 1982.
one top panel from any Knox Unflavored Here la a refaad form to write for:
Gelatin and a register receipt with all of Dahy·L'e111 Offer, P .0 . Box UH,
these prices circled. Expires Dec. 31, 1983. M•tlttllo, Miu. 553U. T .. la SI rdud offer
NABISCO. KRAFT. SWANSON. WELCH"S expires J11De :It, 118%. L------------------------------------------
Make delicious appetizers·
for entertaining at home
During the holidays,
even those who say they
"never cook" often
become inspired by the
round of parties and
celebrations.
If you fall into that
category, and you're
starting to contemplate
home entertaining, don't
hesitate.
The secret is to board
successful recipes all
year long to avoid the
trap of poring over
cookbooks at the last
minute.
Some of the best of
these recipes save time
for holiday party-givers.
You'lf find dip; a
savory wafer to
accompany cocktails; a
bot meatball appetizer;
and a crunchy snack
mix.
Start with these ideas,
and you've got a nucleus
of partytime specialties.
The navor secret that
ties all these recipes
together is a favorite
one: grated parmesan
cheese.
Slnce it's kept on band
in your cabinet, it's
alwaJI available to add
ieat to your cooking,
from appetiaera to
salads.
PA8•E8AN PA&TY
DIP
2 cups dairy sour
cream
1 cup (t ounces)
abredded sbarp cheddar
cbeeM ~ cup (2 ounces)
1rat.ed ,.,....._ cbMt•
t crlaplJ cooked
baeoa allce., crumbled
~ cap .,.a oaloo
slleet
Combillll 80UI' cream
u4I dl11111; mix well.
SUr 1a .._ .... omoa.
Clllll. Oaralab wltllil
adtlldclMI sr-n ..... lf ......... Sine wtth
vegetable dippers or
chips.
Makes 2~ cups .
CRISPY APPETIZEll
WAFERS
~ cup (2 ounces)
grated parmesan cheese
~ cup margarine
2 tabl es poons
sesame seeds
2 tablespoons water
1 tea s poon
Worcestershire sauce
~cup flour
Thoroughly blend
cheese and margarine.
Stir in sesame seed,
waler and
Worcestershire sauce
Add flour ; mix well.
Shape into 1-incb balls.
Place on cookie sheet;
flatten with fork. Bake
at 375 degrees 10 to 12
minutes or until golden
brown.
Makes 2~ dozen. GERMAN
MEATBALL
APPETIZERS
1 lb. ground beef
~ cup soft bread
crumbs
'A cup (l~ ounces)
grated parmesan cheese
~ cup chopped
onion
legg
OU
1 ~ cup• I reen
pepper chunks
1 ~ cups celery
chunks
y, cup marsartne
'i4 cup Oour
l 12.ounce tao beer
~ cup (2 oun ces)
1rat.ed parmesan cheese
Combine meat ,
crumbe, ca.e... onloa
and •a; mlx h1blly.
Sbape Into -·inch
meatballl. Brown in oU ;
dr'aln.
Saute ve1eub•11 ln
mar1arta• unt1J
er,lap-tnder; blend ln
flour. Gradually add
beer: cook, 1Urrln1
I
'
c o ~ s t a•n t 1 y u n t i l
thickened . Stir in
cheese. Add meatballs;
simmer 5 minutes.
Makes approximately
5 cups.
PARMESAN C&VNCH
MIX
~ cup margarine,
melted
2 qts. popped com
2 cups small
pretzels
2 cups bite·size
crispy com squares
1 3-0Unce can chow
mein nood1es
'12 cup (2 ounces>
grated parmesan cheese
Pour margarine over
combined remaining
ingredients; mix lightly.
Spread on ungreased
15~ x 10~-inch jelly roll
pan . Bake at 250
degrees, 1 hour, stirring
occasionally.
Makes 11 cups.
V artatloo: Substitute 1
cup corn nuts for crispy
corn squares.
• .. 'Kitchen'
From Page CS
merriment, at least tempt them with goodies to
make it worth their while.
That doesn't tnean they won't gel into the
usual argument over who made wblch paper
'ngel in first grade and whose looks best, but
lood does give them somet.hinl else to do with
their mouths.
Make a pol of tea or coffee, put out a plate
of Lemon Squares, and rap tbetr little lmucklea
sharply with a plastic candy cane 11 they reach
for one without lirat helping put away
ornaments.
Next year make them 1t1n a cleao·up
contract before a baulln1 out a slqle piece of
holly before Ch!Utmu.
LEMON MU.UES
Crust:
1 cup noW'
\4 cup powdered su1ar
~ cup melted butter or marsartne,
Mix all to1etber and pre11 with nn1en to
make a layer evenly acrou tbe bottom of an
1-lncb square batlnl pan. Bake at -r for 20 minut• or uaUl lllbtly broWMCI. 1:
1 cup1ucar ·
2 tablespoou nour
~ t.eupoon ba.kin1 POwder ~ te.poon rr•ted lemon ri9d 2ecca , a tablespoons lemOD J~
lllx tbe dry l.Qfredlatl tosetber, add tbe
e111, and ba.d ID l•IDOD jtdee. Pov ..,...
partlally-MQd aw& u IOOll u Jt comet out of
the oven ..S Ntu:rn to bake for tnotlMr •
mlnat..
Coo& tboroQbly befon CUUU., lato fa&IJ
amaU lqUNI. Duit top llOtlJ wttb powdelld
.1u1ar. ti delirect _
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. December 28, 1981 CT
• • -·--·--COUPON --·-··-----entucky Fried Chicken.
on Kleenex~ Brand
paper towels.
ow ge t 20C off when you buy
t wo rolls of Kleenex· Brand paper
towels. It's a great deal on a great
towel from Kleenex.
~ 1•1 '' 0 ~·mh~ rh. < 1.,~ (. ••rr
Ring in the New\ear right.
Save 40¢ on Del Monte Quality.
~
f~tf' ----------SAVE40¢~-YOUBuYFOUR-~¢j
~ b 9 9l 't 't: O 00 .,2 DE.L MONTE8 PRODVCTS. ANY
I ON 4 I\ DEL _M,2NTESIZF~OORD~~ ON 4
I ----~V@ Al~• ~· ·~· i :
t ·1~~ I L1=J)C.~ 1 r •. !..!!IU.:, °"" I =r...--., : :~·ir&T~
I ON 4 STORE COUPON
L---------~----------
\ !! ii , •
4 OM 0 0 a
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 28, 1981
Brussels sprouts: Old remedy for drinking
•1 Ml'nll: KELLE• cab bate lo order t o What CIJd concern hlm USING HERBS caraway aeeda to aid Opt.lona.l: pinch ult One &lance at the pleaaealtln1. was the fact that digest.Ion. Arrange sprout.a on a
calendar prove• many N ebuch adnenar l. cabba1e would not 1row Brus.ea. Sprouts le Aloll tray; cover; chill. Blend
ho1teaae11 are plannln1 who ruled from 602 to lo wintertime, wben he Appetiser well the garlic, lemon
partlee at this time or 562 B.C., made h.l• city also enjOyed part.lea. were first known as E ; calcium, chloride, 40 to so bruaaels juice, ens. caraway.
tbt rear. But quite a few of Babylon lnto the most So, he ordered bis Brussel'a Odd Sprouts. Ir 0 n. mag n es I um I sprouts, quartered salt. Add oil a rew drops
wtl have a common luxurious city In ancient head gardener, Brussel, The dUficult-to-dlant n iacin, nitrogen , 6 la rge c l oves at a lime, beati ng
problem. hi1t.ory. He constructed to develop a winter health food probably pr otein, silicon, and garlic, Ri nsed or constantly. Whisk wine
A dear rrtend should the famous Hanging substitute. B russel prevented Inebriation by sodium. pressed through. Chill 4 or s
be Invited, but he drinks Gardens for his lavish ri n a II Y d l d so b Y fortirylng the body with So include bruasels 1 \.Al ta bl es poons hours, or overnight.
t oo mu c h , t h e n parties. crossing a number or a wealth of nutrients. s p r o u ls i n y o u r lemon juice Pour ribbons of sauce
mono po 1 lies th e Nebuchadnezzar did weeds with w i Id Brussels sprouts are appetizers in Puree de 3 whipped eu.yolks over sprouts or use as a
conversation. not concern himself with cabbage. rich in Vitamin. A, the Choux de Bruxelles or 1 cup light oil (or \.'.a dip.
He will surely hear drunkenn ess , o r Since the miniature Ene r gy Vitamin , asasidedish. cup ofollveoil) Puree de Cito•• d e
about the party and be hangovers, so long as he cabbages surprisingly chlorophyll, phosghorus, But regardless or how 2 tablespoons dry BrueUet
hurt lf be is not invited. bad his cabbage, which. grew up the outside or potassium, and sulphur; you prepare brussels white wine 2 c up s cooked
I cup coo ked
potatoes
\.Al tetlllpoon caraway
seed a
Melted butter
Mash toaether the
cooked sprouts, and
potatoes: stir throueh
car away. Serve covered
with butter. Serves 6.
Or bake 2 doze n
brussels sprouts In 'I.I
cup white wine, 2 pats
butter, 1 teaspoon
caraway covered with
provolone cheese for a
delicious side dish. What should you do? cured such ailments the plant's stem, they contain Vitamins B, C, sprouts, a lways add 1 teaspoon caraway brussessprouts You can invite him ,.--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'--~~~~~~-'--~~~~~~~~-=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
and perbaps avoid that
pro~em il you serve a
protective food. One
s uch rood is brussels
sprouts.
Willi am Langham
wrote in 1579, "ll thou
wouldest drinke much at
s upper, eat the raw
l eaves or brussels
sprouts in Vinegar
(wine ) before hand &
after supper too."
Nicholas Culpepper
·added in 1616, "Eaten
before meat, brussels
sprouts keeps one from
being drunk with too
much wine."
Many people believe
bru ssel s s prout s
originated in Brussels,
the capital of Belgium,
which was founded in
1831.
But Cbrysippus (c.
280-270 B.C. >. and other
Greeks wrote of them
prior to 200 8 .C.
At that lime th e
provinces which later
became Belgium were
simply wilderness.
So I believe the older
lege nds which claim
brussels sprouts were
d erived fr om wild
Party with
a punch
Holiday parties come
in all sizes and styles .
Whether you're planning
a sip-and-dip open house
or a multiple -course
feut, first impressions
are important.
To get your gathering
off to a splendid start,
choose several reliable
beverage and h o r s
d'oeuvre recipes that
can be made ahead.
That way you can
devote your time lo
greeting guests instead
of fussing with food.
Here are so m e
kitchen-tested recipes
guaranteed to convey
the season's warmest
wishes.
Each bu that dash or
difference which sets it
apart from the ordinary.
ROYAL CRIMSON
PUNCH
1 can (48 ounces)
cocktail vegetable ju.ice
2 cinnamon sticks
( 1 inch eacla)
6 whole cloves
1 tablespoon
chopped candied ginger
\4 cup packed brown
sugar
I/• cup lemon ju.ice
3 cups orange juice,
chilled
2 c ups pineapple
juice, chilled
1 '!.i cups vodka (op-
tional)
.. 1 bottle (28 ounces)
club soda, chilled
Orange, lemon and
lime slices
In saucepan, combine
cocktail vegetable ju.ice,
cinnamon, cloves and
ginger. Bring to boil;
reduce beat. Simmer 10
minutes. Add sugar and
lemon juice. Chill 6
hours or more. Strain.
Combine juice mixture
and remaining
lnsred ients. Garnish
with oranae, lemon and
lime slices. Makes about
15 c u ps , 15 to 20 servinp. .
Ice Rine : Omit
oranse, lemon and lime
slices. Partially fill
4-cup rin& mold with
water; arra.nae lemon,
lime, ora111e slices and
marucblno cherries in
bottom. Freese until firm. Fill mold with
water. Freese uatll
ftrm.
CL.All DIP VERDI:
1 cu Cl~ ounces)
co a d enaed cream o~
uparqullOUP
1 mp IOUI' cream
1 un' ( a&out II ~
OUDC91) mlDceCl cJamaJ drained
~ cup cboppe' lfMDmdoDI ~ cup flD•I
dlopped .,.._ pepper I
1 medium clove1 &artlc, m t Ced I
l tabl•poon 11 m ,..
h bowl, eombla lair•• 11.a.w.~ w(Ua auortecl ra .......... all••
-1 a1119.JA.IOJJ ....... L -
a 7
. ,
•
• • • ---=~~~~=~ .. OHM 'DL 1101 llM .. _YJaf_!VI
• • • • • .:.OPEN .NEW YEAR'S DAY
CHICS YtfllLOCAL IT ... '°!_ ...... -EW. YO-RK STRIP --
U S 0 A Cho1<e Seel loin Cut
NEW YORK STEAKS
U S.0 .A Choice 8e<tl 8onele11, loin Cut
JIM BRADY STEAKS
LS •• 99
LS 2 .89
BONILlll BllF
DIAMOND .llM ROAIT
LOIN
cur
&.8. 2.59
Oormon. l 5·o c
BLACKEYED PEAS
I liter Ant Vonet,., (Club Sodo 65c I
SCHWEPPES MIXERS
T~1h~'L'.A''ttl1PS0cho
6 1'J -Ol. Pllg
ROIARITA
COCKTAIL TACOI
.•9
.75
1.59
U.S.D.A. CH.OICE BEEF, 80NELESS ... LOIN CUT AV. WEIGHT 12· 16 LIS. WHOLE (IN A I AG)
LB. • U S 0 A Cl.ooce 8 .. 1, 8oneleu, lo•" (vi
NEW YORK STRIP.,. 11 •• ,,.,.
Fo,ter Form• Fre•h Chick•"
BEST OF FRYER
U S 0 A Choice Beef 8oneleu lo•" Cut ta 3 .99 FILET MIGNON STEAKS
El l!oncho
RANCH STYLE BACON l8 .89
l8 •• 99
l8 1.29
r-~-----------st1lli•llDt~((-~~~~------,
Fr .. h Woter. 8· 12 per lb. · Greot For 8roiling With N-York Steok
COLOSSAL SHRIMP l8 6.99
2·0l. Eo .. 6-Count FroHn ... "-'·--'""' ,...,. 1!01,,bow Avg 9·'16 Oz
HIAY 6 IAY UCAllGOYle>-2.89 FllllH Y80UY l 8 1.69
l8 2.89 Cocktoil Siie Fro&en/Oefro1ted Northern Cenltr Cut
COOKID ........ . . ll 3. 99 HALlllUT 1na•1
CHAMPAGNE
"-• ot 1.a or Tvb<
JACQUES
IONET
750-Ml.
CHIFFON 89
MARGARINE ..... ·•
.7
109 • 0... • L•Oi>t 17 '" Co••
6-PACK' I 99 PIPSl-COLA .... •
MJBCOFFEE I ~£~0~ 1.98
Fr~•h Eo•tern Whole 01 Shonk Holl
LEG OF PORK
Fre•h Eo~tern For l!oo•hng
BONELESS PORK LEGS
lS 1.39
l8 2. 19
BONILlll BllF
CHA TEAUBRIAN
TfNOU LOIN CUT
&.8. 3.99
1 lb Solted S11clt pkg
FLEISCHMANN'S MARGARINE
Bell B<ond, 9 5·01
CORN CHIPS ..
Solo 20 Count C0<kto1I • 18 Count H1ghboll
PLASTIC CUPS
.89
.89
.79
.79 Jllr r' "! 1. 801.Cup I 5 JA /. J
PHILADILPHIA "
son CRIAM CHllll
7-or 109 • 6 4-<I• o.4, lllC! 2j< OH
,,..,, ... , " 7)-12 s-o. ,.,.,.. .... aoc ... *-COLGATI I 24 TOOTHPAITI • .88
'2~01. 5ovf' Cr'°"' l 1<01 H*'>t•w No••oNtt MAR·KES T AQUITOS 2.53 TOTI NO'S PIZZA ............. I .JI
1711 ~ot ,,e-1'\Ch •.ad 6 or A•n
STOUFFER'S DELUXE PIZZA 2 .33 JENO'S PIZZA ROLLS
EFA or Gelove, l 2·01.
JHIRMACK SHAMPOO
36°1 Piu1 4 FrH
LASCCO HERRING FlllETS J.•9 SALAMI CHUB
16-<ia ..... _, ' 01 S.o s~
RICOTTA CHEESE I .J9 SHRIMP COCKT All .93
M'1C:lililiu1cH1 LORRAllll I • 99 ALKA SELTZER ..
90-Ct
FIREPLACE MATCHES ...
..2 .•9
... 1.59
.99 BUDDIG CHIPPID MIA Tl .
WAIHINGTON GOLDIN DILICIOUI
APPLES
. . . -
EXTRA
FANCY
FllESH
ll'lllACH .......................... 29ll.
c
ANJOU
PIARl ...............................• 3911.
TIMPURA
BATnll MIJl
UMf.YA.~ZfN BAMBOO
IHOOTI MOCHI
HIM!
12·0Z.
BOX .99 1$-0Z. I 19 l'ICG. e .69 l.S-OZ.
CAN
Hlme ... 2·01. "'•·
HON PORO MAKI....................... I • 11
MSG ... 16·01. loe
ASAHI A.JI .................................. 2.29
ICAtllOftlOt1 ... I Ool. COii
SOY SAUCE ................................ •.as
lCHa.llke~t
MfTSUKAN SU
a
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J F c .... 7-01. "'o
KINAKO ....... . ...... 69
Miyoko ... l•oa. "'•· 9 SHllT AKE . ..... . ........................ I .C
J.,.c .... 3>o•. """•·
TA!UKURI.......... . .................... I .Cl
ic.1~0 ... 1.0$•01. "'•·
KAMPYO ........................................ 19
..... . ..
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DlllJ Pilat ,
MONDAY, DEC. 28, 1981
CLASSIFIED 06
USC basketball team
reaches finals of
own tournament. D4 .
Eagles let this one slip away NFL playoff schedule
WILD CARD PLAYOFFS
<SUnday's games>
National Conference Pair of fumbled kicks help Giants oust def ending NFC champions NY Giants 27. Philadelphia 21
American Conference
Buffalo 31. NY Jets 27
CONFERENCE SEMIFINA~
<Saturday's games>
National Conference
Pllll..ADELPHIA <AP> -It was simply a
case of the New York Giants beating the
Philadelphia Eagles at their own game -running
the football and unrelenting defense.
The Giants . with the help of a pair of
first-period turnovers -two fumbled kick returns
-beat the Eagles 27·21 in a National Football
League wild card playoff game Sunday.
New York running back Leon Bright caught a
9-yard touchdown pass moments after ~agle
return specialist Wally Henry bobbled a kickoff
that rolled into the end zone where Mark Haynes
fell on it for a touchdown and a 20-0 Giant lead that
quieted a crowd of 71,611 at Veterans Stadium.
The Giants sandwiched those two touchdowns
around a scoring drive capped by a 10-yard pass
fro m quarterback Scott Brunner to wide re·
ceiver John Mistler.
.. We had a lot to prove out there today," said
free safety Beasley Reece, who recovered Henry's
first fumble. "Maybe people will realize now that
we are the team of the future.
"I'm absolutely ecstatic," Reece continued. "I
can't even contain myself. I can't wail to gel to the
phone to call my relatives. I've got to be one of the
happiest men in the world right now."
As the door lo the Giants' locker room swung
open. many players were singing, "California,
'1ere we come .''
The Giants now head for California to meet the
San Francisco 49e rs, the National Conference
Western Division champions, in a second-round
playoff game next Sunday.
The Eagles reduced the deficit to 20-7 in the
s econd quarter on a 15-yard pass from
quarterback Ron Jaworski to wide receiver Harold
Carmichael. It ended u 26-yard drive following a
pass inte rcepUon.
The Gi ants, however, took the ensuing kickoff.
and drove 62 yards in five plays for a touchdown
t h at gave them a 27 ·7 halftime edRe. Rob
Carpenter gained 40 yards on the ground and
Brunner completed the drive with a 22-yard
scoring strike to tight end Tom Mullady.
Tampa Bay al Dallas
American Conference
San Diego at Miami
The Eagles scored once in the third period on
a &.yard run by Wilbert Montgomery, and again in
the fourth on Montgomery's 1-yard dive. But that
was all they managed against the fierce Giant
defense.
(Sunday's games)
National Conference
NY Giants at San F rancisco
American Conference
Buffalo at Ci ncinnati
CONFEREN{'E CHAMPIONSHIPS
<Jan. 10 > "It's hard to give 3 team 13 points, especially
that kind of dcfens1 ve team, and then go ahead
and win," sa id Eagle Coach Dick Vermeil. whose Sl 'PER BOWL XJV
c Jan. 24)
<See GIANTS, Page 02>
·Buffalo spoils .
Jets' comeback
Bills' interception preserves win
NEW YO RK (AP J -The
Buffalo Bills, perhaps 10 seconds
a way from going nowhere but
home, are still traveling a road
that could lead to Pontiac,
Mich .. and the Silverdome.
R alph Wilson , the Bills'
owner. once wanted a National
Football League t e am 1n
Detroit, and though having the
Bills in suburban Pontiac for the
Super Bowl was not what he had
i n mind at lhe time. he is delighted at the possibility.
After watching as the Bills
held on by their fingernails for a
31-27 wi ld-card playoff victory
over the New York Jets Sunday.
Wilson crowed, "After all or
these years, it would be the
greatest thriJJ of my life to go to
Detroit ror the Super Bowl."
Wilson . in the 1950s, tried in
vain to buy a piece of t he Detroit
Lions but eventually settled for
ownership o f t he American
Football League's Bills.
The Bills are now a couple of
victories fro m getting l o
Pontiac. about a JO-minute drive
from the Motor Ci ty.
Next Sunday, they'll be in
Cincinnati to play the Bengals
tr they win there, they'll play in
Miam1 ·or San Diego, depending
o n wheth er the Do lphins or
Ch argers win next Saturday
And, then ...
of a Charles Romes fumble
return for a touchdown on the
opening kickoff and a pair or Joe
Fer guson -to-Frank Lewis
scoring passes.
But the Jets rallied to pull
within 11 points. And after Joe
Cribbs raced 45 yards with a
pitchoul ea r ly in the fo urth
quarter for a seemingly secure
31-13 lead, New York stormed
back ror two touchdowns and
was JUSt 11 ya rds and 10
seco nd s away fr o m an
inc redible comeback when free
safety Bill Simpson stepped in
front of a Richard Todd pass and
intercepted it two yards from
the goal line.
"I thought they would give up
after the run ... Cribbs s aid of his
touchdown. "Ever ybody fell
they would jusl quit. But they
fou ght back." ·
Ferguson. who completed 17 of
34 passes for 268 yards and was.
intercepted r o ur limes,
expressed simi lar feelings .
"Some people thought the game
was locked. I thought we had it
wr app ed up after Cribbs '
touchdown, but the Jets showed
a lot of class by coming back the
way they did ... Ferguson said.
"I started out great Che
completed L2 of 19 passes for 211
yards in t he fi r st half) and
finis hed like I was coming
through the back door."
SIX POINTS New York Giants' John Misller rolls into
the end zone after catching a Scott Brunner pass to score
second touchdown of first quarter in NFC playoff gam e
against Phil adelphia Giants broke in front 20-0. then hc•l<l
on for a 27·21 triumph.
The Bills were close lo closing
out all their options Sunday in
the Ame ri ca n F ootbal l
Conference wild-card r:natch:.ip
with lhe Jets.
They had built a 24-0 lead in
the second quarter with the help
Coach Chuck Knox of the Bills
called the game "typical of our
seas o n . We h a d a lot of
problems, a lot of mistakes. and
had t o overcome a lot of
obstacles to win."
McGee g e ts chance to shine
Lakers win their fifth straight game without Jabbar
By CURT SE EDEN
Of Ille Dally ""'°' S\aff INGLEWOOD Mike McGee was out . of
breath Sunday night and for good reason.
He played 25 minutes against the San Diego
Clippers at the Forum and he still had to face a
barrage of questions from curious reporters after
the Los Angeles Lakers r outed the Clippers,
139-117.
Reporters surrounding McGee? Thal only
seems to happen around UC Irvine these days .
IT WAS ONE Mike McGee -with a mere 79
minutes of playinK time this season in the Lakers'
first 29 games -who came off the bench and
Tonight was a real
confidence-bui lder for McGee .
-L•k•r Coech Pet Alley
sparked Los Ange les ' fifth straight victory without
the services of center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
McGee scored a personal NBA high 27 points
Sunday night, much to the delight of 14,951 fans.
including his mother. Mae, who traveled all the
way from Nebraska to see her son for the first
time in an NBA game.
It wasn't surprising that the Lakers won, nor
was it a s urprise that McGee finished the game
ahead of all scorers.
The 6·5 guard out of Michigan carried a 2.6
average into the game. but before the nl1bl was
over. be connected on 9 or 11 shot.a from the field
and added 9 of 12 free throws to lead another solid
performance by the Laker bench while Jabbar and
Mitch Kupchak watchet.I from the sidelines.
· Actually, most or the fans at the Forum bad
come to see Bob McAdoo, the Laker•'
newly-acquired backup center to Jabbar. But be
wasn't scheduled to complete a required physical
~nW this morning, which means be won't be In the
Laker lineup until al least Tuesday.
HE WASN'T MISSBD. Nor were Abdul
wbat'a·hi•·name or Mitch somebody or other. -"I've always been a scorer. lt'a just been a
ease of getting to play," McGee aaid afterward.
• McGee, like most or the Laker ru.nes, bu
been Jiven a chance when the Um• wu rt1ht and
responded admirably. But Sunday nl&bt be
overs hadowed some fin• play by Mark
Landsber1er, Kurt Rambls and Eddie Jordan off
.... bench.
"I was very pleased with McGee's showing.
He's showing the kind of player he is," Laker
Coach P at Riley noted . "He's a rookie and he
understands it will lake time to get to play.
-r.>night was a real confidence builder for McGee ...
McGee had sat quietly on the bench during the
past three Laker games, so it was a s urprise when
Riley put him in the game midway through the
first quarter . It was an even bigger s urprise when
he stayed in the game until the 9:00 mark of the
second period with the Lakers leading, 41 -28.
BUT, IT'S OBVIOUS Riley is making the right
m oves at the right time. He is now 15·3 since
laking over for Paul Westhead, and the Lakers
have won their last five in a row without Jabbar,
who is still nursing a strained tendon in his right
ankle.
Jabbar worked out with the team Saturday,
but eight days of inactivity had left the ankle
weak.
Against the C lippers, who surprisingly
defeated the Lakers the last three times they had
played them at the Forum, starters Jamaal Wilkes
and Magic Johnson responded with 23 and 21
points respectively, while Michael Cooper and
Norm Nixon chipped in 16 apiece.
But they had a nice suppportiog cast in
McGee, Jordan, Rambis and Landaberger.
Jordan finished the night with 17 points and
seven assists while Rambls hauled down 11
rebounds and' added five points in a solid 32
minutes of playing lime. Landsberger also
provided some board work with 12 rebounds and
eight points.
JORDAN, GENERALLY considered the
leader of the reserves when he's in the 1ame, says
he's looklng forward to playlng with McAdoo.
McAdoo, up unlil Thursday the property of the
New Jersey Nets, was acquired by the Lakera in
exchange tor a 1983 second-round draft pick and
cash.
"He's really 1oin1 to heJp. You know, we're
neiehbors," Jordan noted. "He (McAdoo> llves ln
Ramsey (New Jersey) and J live in Tenany.
They're only ftve minutes away.''
Jordan said be wasn't happy with bis 4-for·ll
shoot.lni performance atalnlt the CUppen, but
then, be doesn't pay close attenUon to 1tatl1Uc1.
"No. I don 't Jook at the stat.a too much. But I <See IAK£a8, Pal~> '
a ACK.eREAKEA Buffolo Bills' safety Bill Simpson
Clutches his interception as he runs lt back Sunday at
New York's Shea Stadium. The play thwarted a Jets'
drive in the waning seconds and helped preserve a 31-27
Butralo win.
Knox suggested that maybe
some of those obstacles were
wearing black-and-white striped
s hirts. He questioned a couple of
offic ials' calls againsL the
Buffalo defense in the closing
minutes.
B owl pra nk
never gets
off grou nd
PASADENA (AP) -Students
at the California Ins titute of
Technology are famous for their
elaborate pranks. but a device
aimed at sending a balloon aloft
in the middle of the Rose Bowl
game has been discovered and
disma ntled.
Bowl o fficials found the
e laborate he lium-h ydraulic
device Thursday and took it
apart. The balloon would have
trailed a banner depicting the
Ca lt ec h b eave r ma scot,
presumably at the New Year's
game between Washington and
Iowa.
"ll wouldn · t have worke<l
anyhow," s aid Rose Bowl
Manager Bill Wilson . "Ther1
was just too much helium: th'
·balloon blew off the end" of] slick to which it was attached
He said the gas leaked, too.
Wilson also noted that th
device would have blasted a bl
hole in the turf that tea
members cross to get to the
dressing room, possibly injurini
someone. l
Las t year, four Caltech
students were arrested on New
Year's Eve trying to bury I
similar device.
A different kind of Rose Bowl
stunt su~eeded tn 1911, when
student.a e<>einl as reporten tot
ca rd trlck plans for the
University of Wasb.i.DCton'a card
section. Aa a result of Uitlr
tamperlna. the Calt.eett bea..,.
and the untveralt1•1 aame
appeared backward• durla1
nationwide televtalon cov..-...
of the aame.
\
Orange Co11t DAIL V PILOT/Monday, December 28, 1981
76ers overrun by a Truck
Ltn "'l'ruc:IC'' KoblHOD ICOJ'ed m
a tJa nw hltth 2S points and combined
with Alvin Sc:ou for 1'7 In a pivotal
fourth period as tbe Pboenlx Suns
held ofr the Philadelphia 76ers, 99-96 Sunday
niaiht in the National Baskutball AaaoclaUon.
Scott c11mc orr the bench to acore six points ln a
1 :07 sp(tn of lbe fourth quarter to turn a 76-70
Phoenix deficit into a 78 76 lead. The victory
San Francisco fans
hold overnight vigil
From AP dispatches
500 fans spent most or the weekend in 4. >
broke a two l(am e losing
streak for the Suns. while
11nu µp i n g a lwo ga m e
winning s k ei n by
Phi ladtdp h ia It was
Phoenix's fifth s traight win
over the 76ers on its home
floor SldnPy Monc:rtef
poured 1n 28 points as three
Milwaukee players tol)ped
the 20-poant level in the
SAN FRANCISCO -More than [i]
the Candlestick Pa rk parking lot .
waiting to buy tickets to the San Francisco
49ers' first National Football League playoff
game since 1972.
•o••NSOH Bucks' t08·00 triumph over
Chicago. Milwaukee built a 19-point advuntage
(94 751 filter three minutes or lhe rourth quarter
before the Bulls were a ble to draw within six
points late in the contest But the Bucks reeled
off i.1x stra1~ht points to seal the Issue. fl was
Milwaukee's 12th victory in 15 home games.
while Chicago lost for the 13th time on the road
in 16 games
The "49er Faithful" began arriving at about
6 p.m . Saturday. They lined up in campers,
vans and tents, and not even a driving rain
discou raged them from continuing the
countdown for 9 a .m . today when 13,000
tickets go on sale for Sunday's game against the
New York Giants .
Tickets are $15 apiece, with a maximum of
four per person. Lat leur's goals spark Montreal
Insurance man Bob Ukena viewed the scene
happily as rain streamed down his chee ks
"I've been kind of nervous about when we
should start lining up," said Ukena, who was
accompanied by his two teen-age sons. "I told
them at work that l would be late Monday. They
understood This 1s all I've been thinking about
for months ."
Guy Lafle ur pumped 1n t wo ~
r1r:-t period goc.ils lo pace the '
Montreal Canad1ens to a 6 3 victory
ovN the Quebec Nordiques Sunday
night 1n the National Hockey League. L:tfleur
scored his two _goals less than 7'h minutes.
apart 1n the r1rst period as the Canadiens
padded a l ·O advantage . . Bernie Federko
blasted home a 15-foot shot midway in the fina l
Quote of the day
Ex·free agent pitcher Ron Guidry, when
asked why he choi.e to re-sign with the
New York Yankees instead of playing
closer to ltis Louisiana home with the
Houston Astros · "Nope . Houston was too
close to home That would mean too man)
free tickets."
period to lift St. Louis to an
, uphi ll 4 3 victory over
Chicago, the Black Hawks·
t hird straig ht loss at
home . . . Ron Duguay's
second of three goals for the
night. coming w ith 4 :06
remaining, helped the New
York Rangers c laim a 5.3
win over Pittsburgh in a
gam e which featured a brawl Valenzuela's wedding Tuesday LAFL1Eu11 resulting in 96 minutes in
NAVOJOA, Mexico Fernando II pl'naltll':-. llartford scored six goals in the
Valenzuela. last seasoon·s rookie
pitchi ng sensa ti o n for the Los
third pL·riod, rncluding th ree by right wing
Blainf' Stoughlon, to defeat Toronto, 7-3
Angeles Dodgers, will be married Tuesday to
Linda Burgos Ma tris, a teacher, family sources
confirmed Sunday.
Valenzuela, 21. left his northern Mexican
hometown Sunday en route to Merida, Yucatan.
where the church service will take place.
He lost his last game as a bache lor
Saturday night in the winter Mexican Pacific
League when his NavoJoa team was beaten by
Mexicali, 4·1. He pitched rive innings.
It was Valenzuela's first loss this season in
the winter league
~1ike t'ollgno scored one goal and assisted on
anolht.•r .is Buffalo trimmed Washington. 3·2,
µutt1ng Lhc Sabres on top in the Adams
DI\ hlnn Uetro1L lefl wrng John Ogrodnick
Hort:d from a goalmouth scramble with 19
se1.•onds_ remaining and netmider Bob Sauve on
lht: lwnch in favor of a sixth attacker as the Red
Wings escaped with a 2·2 tie against Winnipeg.
Ogrodn11.·k als o set up Mike Blaisdell for the
othN RL·d Wings' goal with a perfect drop pass
in the rinal period, while Dale Hawerc:huk and
Tim Trlmpe r scored early third-period goals 15
Sl'l'onds apart lo break up a scoreless match.
Smith not ordinary
All-American leads Arkansas
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. <AP1
-It's a case or like father. like
son -only better where Billy
Ray Smith Jr. of the University
of Arkansas' Billy Ray S miths is
concerned.
Billy Ray Smith Sr. was an
AH-Southwest Conference tackle
for Arkansas in the mid·l950s.
Junior -and he Is a junior. all
6·31h and 228 pounds of him -
has gone dad one better, making
The Associated Pr ess
All-American team.
"Having m y dad around really
helped me make the transition
from high school to m a j or
college football." says Billy Ray
Jr ., who will lea d the
Razorbacks against 11th-ranked
North Carolina t o ni g ht in
the Gator Bowl (Channel 7. 6
p.m .)
"He played at Arkansas and
with the Baltimore Colts a nd
knew his way around. The
summer before m y freshman
year ( came up to Arkansas (the
Smiths live in Plano. Texas> and
started learning the system It
helped to learn the ropes early."
Smith had no sooner learned
the ropes -as a freshman he
started as nose guard in the
season opener . then played 23
consecutive games at t ackle
when he had to learn them all
over again . The sc h e m e
introduced this season by Don
Verbum Dei's
Allen named
top player
Li n dsey , Arkans a s' new
d efensive coordinator. turned
Sm ith from a tac kle into a
roving end who is liable lo pop
up anywhere
"It will be difficult for an
opponent t6 neutralize him with
a formation or scheme." points
out head coach Lou Holtz
··Before, they could r un away
from him. Now, they have to
find ilim first fie has as much
ability as anyone l ve ever
coached. He is extremely
intelligent, is dura ble and plays
harder more c-onsislently than
anyone l 've ever seen He
chases the ball like he gets to
keep it if he catrhcs it."
Smith has fun no matter how
many times he has to learn a
new system.
··1 don't see any reason to play
football if you're not enjoying
yourself," be s ays. "I guess I'm
lucky because l really enjoy
football You really have to have
fun lo put up with the long, hard
grind you have lo go through to
be successful
· · 1 started playing football in
the second grade . At fi rst, l
wasn't a very good player. My
older brother. Kevin, was a
muc h bette r player. but he
didn't develop the way I did
whe n he was in high school. I
reall y didn't start developing
until the eighth or ninth grade."
And how Smith has developed.
··Bi ll y R ay cou ld p l ay
anywhe re in the country." says
Lindsey, who wa s USC 's
defens ive coordinator f<Jr five
ye ar s before co ming to
Arkans as.
Area teams
• 1n tourneys
The final salvo of tourn11 meni
basketball is on hand this week
with University and I rvine
involved in the Canyon Classic,
Laguna Beach at the Villa Park
tournament, Edison at the
Carson City Classic and the
con\lnuatioo of Lhe Brea-Olinda
tourney, which began a week
ago.
Here's this' week's first round
palrlnC1:
~~ c .. c..,. ...... , , .....
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IM~,,._ CMytll
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t-~"'-s.nllAN 4 4 ..... OMM ISM'"'.,. OHO"' i.._. ·-" ,,._y ........... ,,.. lil\el!lft!Mn
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• Jt-C.-Oty .... ·-
r\
LIKE FATHER
All -Ameri can Billy Ray
Smith Jr . whose Arkans as
Razorbac·ks pl a~· in t he·
Gator Bowl tonight. ..,aid h1~
fat her had a good influence
on him.
UCI hack
to work
MILWAUKEE -After a week
off to enjoy the holidays. the
unbeaten UC Irvine basketball
team <9-0) returns to the court
t onight 15 o 'clock) to race
Arizona Stale <5·31 in the first
round of the Milwauk~ Classic
her e
In t he second game of the
double-header, host M arqueltc
15 4 1 ·w i l l m ee t Eas tern
Ten nessee State (4·3) with the
winners advanc1og to Tuesday's
championship game 17 p.m .>
The UCI game can be heard
on KWVE (108-FMI.
Arizona State comes into the
contest having lost to Toledo last
week at home. The Sun Devils
return only one starter Crom last
year's club.
Thal one player, however, is
Lafayette Lever, who averaged
11.6 points last yea r as a
pla y m a klng g uard and is
a veragi ng 18.2 points this
season
Pirates, Gauchos
in tourney play
Co mmun ity co lleg e
lourna.mcnt.11 keep both Orange
Coast and Saddleback colleges
busy this week, wblle Golden
West continues Its lengLhy rest
after complllng an Impressive
12·2 ba.slretb•ll record. ,........ ......... ,_ ..... ""' .... ,......._S.0...~CC...1•111, ,....., ,...,, __ _
.-... ....
..... A ..... V ..... 'It. Of ... c..tt; 1."" .._._.,_, rl
ConMl .. ltft ,,.,._.._. 11•-•'1111. c11~11rec11 .. .-. .,,_.,....,., ....... ,
..... AMT .. --.. "'"' ..... " (OftMlellOll, , ... ,.,,
Tlll,Clt>l.W..,t•m Clwl~.e,m .._ ... , __ ... ,
c.-i ....... , • "'
CllMl1•IMI .... t 41 tn •
Attack hospitalizes tennis player
A 17-yeur-old te nnis pla)'er from •
the Bron~ wn recuperatlnt Sunday
Crom 11tab wound11 wblch doctors uid
could force them to amputate her n1hl lei
CaroJ U10&1no, a student of rormer Wlmbledon
cha mpion Vlr1l:nla Wade, had been scheduled to
fly to f<'lorida Su lurday to compete In a
tournament Llgotlno was attacked Tuesday u
sh~ returned from Christm as shopping In New
York by an unknown aesailanl ... Sweden's
h<>tkey !Jquud defeated previously unbeaten
Czeeho11lovakla 6·4 Sunday at Bloomington ,
Minn. In the llllf' World Junior cha mplonsntps .
The Swe(.! ah victory gave the Swedes and
Ci\:chs ide nlltal 3-1 records . . Brent
Rushf.aw und Jim Tyler, bolh of Saranac Lake,
N. Y ., brok~ an Olympic record Sunday on
Mount Van lloevenber g In Lake Placid and won
lbe NatlonaJ Two-man Bobsled championship.
The 1w1r piloted th eir sled down the one-mile
course in lhc times or 1 minute, 1.92 seconds and
1: 01.99 for a two.day combined total of 4: 08.93
over Cour runs . . Defending litllst Pakistan
faces a strong challenge from West Germany,
Holland and Olym pic champion India in the
15·day World Cup field hockey tournament,
which begins Tuesday in Bombay, India.
Television, radio
Following are the top sports events on TV
tonight. Ratings are. ' / ./ ' excellent: ' ' ' worth wa tching; ' ~ fair : / forget It.
e 6 p.m., Channel 7 .( .( .(
GATOR BOWL : Ar'kansas vs. North Carolina.
Announcers : Al Mic hae l s and Ara
Parseghian.
Arkansas finished the season with an 8-3
record and North Carolina was 9-J Billy Ray
Smith, a defensive lineman anll consensus
All-Amer'lcan~ leads the Razorback defense. He
must now zero In on running back Kelvin Bryant
who missed five games but picked up 1,015 yards
and scored 18 touchdowns. North Carolina Is
favored by 41/1 paints. Steve Green, a Marina High
graduate, is a junior offensive guard with the
Razorbac ks
[-) 9 p.m., Channel 9 I I I
COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Loyola vs
Nevada-Las Vegas.
Announce r s : Chi c k Hearn and Ra lph Readout.
An opening round game in the Las Vegas
Classic tournament between two teams that have
not done welt in the early 90ing. UC Irvine has
victories over both teams this season. Coach Jerry
Tarkanian's Runnin' Rebels have hit on hard
times and haven't lived up to earller e>cpectatioos.
Loyola, under Coach Ed GoorJlan, lost all five
starters for the current seasoo.
RADIO Football -Gator Bowl, North Carolina vs.
Arkansas, S 40 p.m ., KNX 11070).
Basketball UC Irvine vs. Arizona Slate In the Milwaukee Classlc, S p.m., KWVE ( 108 FM);
Cai State <Fullerton I vs. Wichita State in the
Rainbow Classic. Honolulu, 8.40 p.m , KWR M
( 1580), USC vs. Missouri; 9 p.m., KDAY ( 15801.
Mesa, Marina
• meet in tourney
An Ora nge Coast area matcbup between Costa
Mesa and Marina highlights seeond-round play in
the Ora11ge Optimist Invitational High School
basketball tournament today at Chapman College.
The Vikings and Mustangs will meet at 5: 10
with the winner ad vancing lo Tuesday's semifinal
round. Mari na won its first-round encounte r over
Dana Hills, 54-44. while Costa Mesa overturned
Santa Clara 47-43.
Another first-day winner was Newport Harbor,
68-60 over La Quinta The Sailors were scheduled
for an afternoon c las h with unbeaten powe r
Lakewood, whic h r o uted El Modena 75-33
Saturday.
Mater Dei earned a second·round assignment
against F'oothill at s· 50 this evening after the
Monarchs disp a tched Fountain Valley 64-50. The
Barons, meanwhile. were hoping lo stay alive in
the! con solation bra c ket when t hey played
Ha wthorne earlier today.
A victory by the Barons today would place
them in the consolation semifinals at l o'clock
Tuesday against the Chaffey-Estancia winner this
afterr'JOn
FromPage01
GIANfS WIN • • •
t eom lost a chance to rel um to the Super Bowl.
"Thal gave the m real lmpetua and conlldeace
a nd hurt u11 bocau11e we had to co totally away
from what we plunned to do -ru.n the ball." c
The usually unemotional New York Coach Ray
Perkins couldn 't conceal hl1 delight wlth tJ\e
Giants' rirst playoff erfort tn 18 years
"llow sweet il is," he said, stealing a llne from
comedian Jackie Gleason.
Ct1rpenter, the runn ing back acquired from
Houston In a trade after the season s tarted, led the
New York running game with 161 yards in 33
<'arries He said he had "great one-on-one blocking
up front.
"All I had to do wall pick which hole I want~.
I h:t<I ti lot to choose from. Those guys did a great
JOb
· · 1 wa:. getting t1rt>d late to the game, but my
enthusiasm kept me going," said Carpenter , who
called the gilme the gr eatest or his life .•
What made the effort by the Giants otrenslve
line even more o utstanding was that it came
against lhtJ NFL's lop-ranked defense.
The Giants were led by Brunner, the
second.year man who took over six weeks ago
when Phil Simms suffe red a separated shoulder.
··The Eagles have a good club, but lhe breaks
went our way today and we capitali%ed on them,"
said Orunner He completed nine or 14 passes for
{)6 yards, but three or them went for touchdowns.
Brunner looked ahead to Sunday's game with
the 49ers, the only team to beat the Giants since he
became quarterback. The 49ers beat New York in
San Francisco, 17-10.
··1t wi ll be a tough game. It was the las t time.
But we were right in the game until the end," he
said . ··This time we will do basically the same as
we did before and see how it works out."
The Eagles drove 80 yards in the final period
to pull within 27-21. They were helped by three
penalties before Montgomery scored from the one.
But the Giants ran out the final 2:51 on the
clock as Carpenter made two first downs.
J aworski completed 13 of 24 ror 154 yards. and
Montgomery ran for 65 yards on 15 carries.
The Giants, the worst offensive team In the
N FI.. gamed 275 yards to the Eagles' 226.
·-rm disappointed for my guys, but like I said
many Limes before, nothing good happens by
accide nt." Ver me ii said. "The things t hat
happened to us in the first quarter, it seems like
they hav(• l>cen happening to us the whole year,
and that".., why we didn't win more football
games
The Bart rolls
at Santa Anita
.Delahoussaye rides 1Dinner: ·l
ARCADIA <AP I -The Bart, a seasoned
5-year·old, scored a narrow victory in the feature
Sunday at Santa Anita.
The Bart he ld off lhe closing charge of Irish
Hearl to win the San Gabriel Ha ndicap by a nose
before a crowd or 33,980.
The Bart. ridden by Eddie Delahoussaye and
carrying high weight of 125 pounds, covered Santa
Anita's 1111. mile turf course in 1:48 and paid S3.60.
$3 a nd $2.60
Irish Heart, ridden by Chris McCarron and
carrying 115 pounds. finished second by a neck
over Forlion in the San Gabriel Handicap and paid
$6 a nd $.1.80. Second place was worth $15,000.
Forlion. ridden by Marco Castaneda and
carrying 114 pounds, was third by 211. lengths and
returned $3.40 to show.
Rusty Canyon finished fourth in the event for
3-year·olds and up, followed by Krassawitz,
Kareem and Red Crescent. If This Be So was
scratched.
Krassaw1lz led much of lbe way before fading
lo finish firth. Forlion took the lead briefly in the
stretch but was passed by the first two finisher.s.
T he Bart. a Kentucky-bred, got the lead some
70 ya r~ from Lhe finis h and beld on despite being
bumped near the wire
Delahoussaye also guided Rule the Market to
victory in the ninth r ace and was the only jockey
to record two victories on the day. Valenzuela had
three wins Saturday while Delahoussaye and
Sandy Hawley rode two winners apiece thal day.
T here was no racing today at Santa Anita, but
a s pecial program will be held on Tuesday, with
the first post at 12 30 p m Normally, racing runs
Wednesday through Sunday
Co.llege f ootbaU JOHNSON & SON
Presents ...
COLLEGE BOWL ROUNDUP
l~nce Bowl
(Dec. 11 .. S..u-1, t..1.1
t uat A&M l3, Olll ........ e SI 1'
Garden Stet• Bowl
10. u_.1._ •-.. "'·'·' f•~-11, Wlt<-N> JI
Holiday Bowl
(Doc ....... '*-1
8YU a , W••lllnoton SI •
Calffornle Bowl (Doc. It .... ,_,
Tolecte >1.1efl Jou SI JS
TenQ9rtn• Bowl
CDec. tf .. on-, "la.I
Ml.-..1 It, ~n MIUIUI,,.. 11
IN~eyGame
CDlc.U •t Mt tt lfTM4f,Aaa.t Blw 21, a.., t
Sun Bowl
(DK, a. .. II P••I
0-••11c>m• 1 .. •·1l ""· "°"''•" 11 ).11, , ......... ,.1_
Gator Bowl 1o.c .... , • .._,,. ... ,
"''-•"Mt I l ·J-0) "' Nortll Cerollne
19-J-O). awi-1 111 •pm
UIMrtY Bowl
10.C..•.t ........ 1
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l•JoOI. a.a-1tel 11A."1
Peach Bowl
(Doc. )I II Al&Mt.I w .. 1 v1r(Jlfll• 11-J.41 •• Florio. 11 4-01
CIYlnnell .. ,_,
Blu•bonnet Bowl
!Doc. U .. H-1 ... 1
UCLA 11-3·11 .. Mlcnio•n ll ·J 01
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Cotton Bowl
(J .... lllDalletl
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Aoae Bowl
IJM.l .. Pe.-...1
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Oran99 Bowl
C•. I M MleMI, "'• )
Htb•HllAI (9-1-0J "'' Cl•m•on "''°"°'· c,,...,.,, 'et S p.m
Sug•' Bowl 1•., .. -oree-1
Gtortle 19-1411 •t Pll1tbur9" 110 I 01.
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Eett-WHt Shrln• G•m•
IHll.tM Pl•A*I
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CJall.t• ........ I llHI ,. ...... ~ "' W•I l .11•'1en, c~
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S.nlof aow1 N-~twt-..... ,..........._
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1982
LINCOLN
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Orange Coast OAILY PILO.T/Monday, December 28, 1981
·Rose Bowl teams put forth different welcomes
Washington has been coopera(ive with the media, but so far Iowa's workouts have been closed to the press
l'rom AP dl1patd1ee •
PASADENA -The two football
coachff prepartnc their teams for the
Hlh Rose Bowl ue taking v astly
dJff trenl approaches re1ardlng access
lo practice.
The two·time, tlrst·team AU-America
selection has gained an average of 16.9
yurds every lime he has touched the
ball , well a head or the NCAA record
13.8-yard career avera1e by Nebraska's
Johnny Rogers .
not t alked to New Enaland and I'm not
Interes ted in talktn.r to anybody,''
Paterno said. "All I 'm Interested in is
hopefully having a good time out here
without a lot or people asking me about
New England.
., Touchdown CrosswordS " I
ACROSS Antwer To Lut WMIC't Puzzle Waahingto~ Coach Don James, whose
team ls wor king out at Rams Park in
Anah ei m , allows r e p o rters,
photographers and television camera
crews to attend the Huskies' sessions .
Hts only concern, James said, is
keeping out the "enemy."
R epo rte r s d on 'l find the s ame
we lcome mat extended during Iowa's
workouts at Citrus College in Azusa.
Coach Hayden Fry closes practice to
everyone except certain members of
the athletic departme nt staff. While
photos of Washington players practicing
have appeared in ne ws papers around
the nation, visitors at the Iowa practice
field are not even allowed to stand by
the stadium gate.
When the s ubject of r eporter s
attending practice was mentioned at a
news conference, James remarked,
"We let ours come in. We don't let the
enemy com e in."
Asked how he can tell the difference,
James cra cked, "The striping, I
guess."
J ames said a guard is posted at the
e ntrance to the practice field to check
the identification of r eporters. He said
reporters from Iowa are allowed io by
making arra ngem e nts through the
s ports information office.
Carter's size no concern
HOUSTON -Anthony Carter , at
5·11, 161 pounds, will be the small·
est m an on the fi e ld Thursday
when 16th-ranked Michigan meets No.
19 UCLA in the Bluebonnet Bowl, but
th at does n 't see m l o bothe r the
Wolve rine wide receiver .
Carter plays the land or the giants
a lmost every week a nd hasn't had a
size advantage since he played Peewee
League football in his native Riviera
Beach, Fla.
Carter Is within seven touchdown
catc;hes of breaking the NCAA record or
34 by Houston's Elmo Wri1ht.
Buckeyes shake up beck tleld 1,5 ShQwn, fam.d
Packere· 08
10 Famed FB Motley
12 Famed Paoker1'
FBJlm
1' OT Donovan'•
31 OB Clartl't
elgo-ofl
32 OE Ander1on'1 lnltlal1
33 Famed Chlefa ·
owner ln tlgne 35 The bench
"I suppose there has always been
som e concern about m y size but I block
that out of my mind when I go out on
the field," Carter said. "You just have
to get so much confide nce in your
ability that you don't think about being
s maller."
M EMPIUS, Tenn. -Bob Atha, Art
Schllchte r 's quart er ba c k ing
replacement for two aeasonB, likely will
start as an Ohio State flanker against
Navy In the Liberty Bowl Wednesday
night.
Earle Bruce. the Buckeyes' coach,
said af'ter a tea m workout Sunday he
would decide Monday whether to start
Atha rather than Cedric Anderson.
15 Score for PAT 38
16 Illegal-of hand• 39
17 Jim Otto's number 42
18 Off. llnemen o
Coech Phllllpt
Ctrdlnals' OB -Hart SB XV Champ
It all started in high school when
Carter's Peewee League peers started
outgrowing him.
"I was a little worried I wouldn't be
recruited because of my size so my high
school coach would put down 185 pounds
on the recruiting forms," Carter said.
"When I'd go to the campus to visit they
would be looking for some big guy."
Carter showed everyone how big his
talent was as a sophomore when he
caught 51 passes for 818 yards and a
school-record 14 touchdown passes last
season.
This season he added 44 catches for
825 yards. but o nly seven touchdown
catches. His reputation has made him a
marked man.
Anderson·, a 5·10, 172-p ound
sophomore from Apopka , Fla., missed
Sunday's practice after arriving late on
a fli ght from his home.
Atha, a S-11 , 180-pound senior from
Worthington, Ohio, caught only one pass
for four yards in the Buckeyes' 8-3·0
season ln 1981.
Me anwhile, Anderson ranked as the
Big Ten co-champions' No. 3 receiver
with 26 catches for 507 yards and four
touchdowns this fall.
Bruce said Atha will continue to
handle the kicko ffs.
20 Gridiron units 45
22 OB'• ml1cu1 47
23 Coach Paraeghlan
24 Off llnemen 48
25 Observe • 49 26 Famed Raidere· C
29 Famed lions' OB·P 50
DOW N
l Famed Gianta' E
"Red"-
2 OE Robustelll'11
lnlltals
3 -Grande
4 Famed Packera'HB
Canadeo
5 Superior phyeical
1peclmen1
Distractions worry Clemson coach 6 Soviet press
MIAMI -Clemson Coach Danny agency~
Ford said a key factor in Friday's ~ ~o~~~n·s lnltlals
Fiesta coaches react to rumors Orange Bowl matchup between his 9 Famed Steelers·
TEMPE, Ariz. -Penn Stale football top-ranked Tigers and No. 4 Nebraska owner
Coach Joe Paterno s aid he doesn't want could be how well Clemson deals with tO Famed Giants·
to a nswer any more questions about the the hoopla that goes with playing in a owner
vacant New England Patriots' job and major bowl game. 1t OB-Co1z1e
c losed his team's pre -Fies ta Bowl "Oh. there are distractions, and you t3 OB Tobin-
practice site Sunday for the second try to protect the players from them," 19 College football's
straight year. said Ford, who is holding closed 21 ~~ ~~:~ge's
Meanwhile. Univer s ity or Southern workouts in prepar ation for the annual sign-off
California Coach John Robinson has left New Year's night game. 22 Neighbor ol Syr
the Trojans' training sessions open to ··But you're always going to have 27 Yards for a first
the press and said speculation that he some at a bowl game -families, fans, down
may be in line for the Patriots' post so many places you have to go. Miami 28 Football month
"doesn't bother me... itself is a distr action We aren't tab) 37
Paterno wi n ced when asked lo fortunate enough -or \ unfortunate 29 Butkus and Hutt 38 30 Amateur•porte org.39 comment on the New England situation. enough -to com e from a big city.·· 33 Helsmao-wlnnlng 40 before the seventh-ranked Nitlany Although he stressed the need to block QB, 1964 41 Lions began training for F riday's game out dislracllons. Ford said none of them 3o4 Official. for short
Hit sharply
-In (listening) Olvlalon champ's playoff rewerd
Do-die R1m1' CB -Perry
"We-Family"
Famed Bears'RB
The Selmons (ab.)
Back-
-bounds (legalt Steelers' .. _ .. Joe
Greene
52 Famed coach 55 See 57 Acroas Neale's lnltlals 57,55 Famed Card1nal1'FB !i3 Famed Glants'HB 58 Bankrolls
43 Bengals' Riley,
Anderson, e g.
45 Oiiers' K Fritsch
46 Cowboys· WR
Pearson
49 Famed Chargers' T
Mix
5l One ol the Gabors
54 WR Rucker's lnslgne
56 Colts' LB Slmonlnl
Carter's s kills a nd reputation still are
growing, however , with a full season of
eligibility still re ma ining . against No. 8 USC. was great e nough to actuall y decide the 36 Famed OB
"Let me say once and for all -I hav,!e:..__!.g!.a!!m!!e:..:.. ______________ ....L._.:..w:..::•.:..:terl:.:..:..:..:le:.:.ld=-------------------F_or solution. s!e P~!!,e D~
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'tit .... ... •
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·t value $4060. 00 ~
,.._To. O.A.C./41 Mo . e .c 1982 CELEBRITY SEDAN C/L = ·~ ... .. ... ..
I. 522724 ~~~~1'.!fao~e~·9:c;~or~~~~· I
IJ2043. Initial value S10.582.00. end · of term value $5007 76: total pay·
ments S11.561 76. 1n1tial cash re-._ .. Mo. qulrements "414.87 ~
... ,.._Tu. O.A.C./41 Mo. MO CAP. UDUCTIOM ~ . ~ 't 1982 CAMARO BERLINffiA ~
LOADED! P S .. PB .. AT. AJC, q:
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$12,239.0 0 . cap reduction ...,.
u~ $500.00: end of term value w
l""l9o SS,507.16; total of payments ,_
$13,407.«: initial cash require· PhM Tu. 0 .A.C./41 Mo. ments S9n.28
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C24 c-.) of PEPSI
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lexcept Corvettes) are belnCJ sold
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J
Orange Cout DAIL, Y PILOT/Monday. December 28, 1981
AP ........
FALLEN KING -Edmonton defenseman Le
Fogolin sends Kings· left wing Steve Bozek
sprawling to the ice during game in
Edmonton Sunday. Oilers went on to crush
Kings. 10·3.
Oilers follow Gretzky's lead
Edmonton star on record pace in stopping Kings
EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) -
The way Wayne Gretzky had it
figured, it was just another 60
minutes in the National Hockey
League.
The 20-year-old centerman
s co red four goals, two
shorthanded, and added one
as sist in a mile s ton e
performance that sparked the
Edmonton Oilers to a 10·3
victory Sunday night over the
Los Angeles Kings.
The five points gave Gretzky
102 paints in just 38 games, the
From Page 01
LAKE RS • • •
do realize they're the life line of
a player," be said.
F o r the Laker s tarte rs,
however, their life line begins
With rest.
"I WAS HAPPY to be able to
give my starters a res t tonight,"
Riley said. "Johnson, Wilkes.
Cooper and Nixon have been
pl aying 40 minutes sin ce
Kareem got hurt. .
L.Altlla o••••Lll -Wllll A~
, .... ·---"'' fourtll .-,.,,. • ,_ • cent••. He .....,.., only 1' min.itff Mt h
Clippers...,...,,.._ . S.n Ole90 ,_ ..
of Ill _, perform well S-y nl9flt. T-
C.......,.. <MN off tM 11enc11 lo •<or• 20...,..
•ncl 9dd U ,_,,. . . Tl• CllH>en ,_ •
r•re fOOK~t P'•Y In ,,... fourtll QIH,_ -,_ louled HIM DMl6M In t .... Kl of mMlftQ
• lllrff'ilO!nt -••·
earliest any player in NHL
history bas picked up 100 points
in a season.
"Getting the 100 points was
something very nice and I'm
proud of that," Gretzky said
casually.
The goaJs gave him 45 and an
e xcellent ch ance t o break
Maurice Richard's record or 50
goals in SO games.
"I've still got five to go, that's
still a long way . . . I said the
last 10 were tough to get, but
five is even tougher to get."
The production increaaed bis
NHL totals to 403 points in 11'1
gam es, the quickest any player
·has ever achieved that.
Gretzky. the leading scorer in
the league last season, set some
high personal goals thla seuon
-50 goaJs and 100 points ln 40
games, 200 points in the season
and Phi l Esposito's
single-season scoring record ot
76 goals. He is ahead of his goals
on all counts to this point in the
season.
·'Tonight is a good indkation
of what he can do when he puts
his mind to it," said Edmonton
Coach Glen Sather. "He was
quick. he was anticipating well
and he was well rested ."
Before Gretzky finished his
first shift, he had bis 42nd goal
of the season, had narrowly
missed his 43rd and had the
Oilers off and fl ying.
College basketball
Tonight'• g•mH -C•t •I U. of S... Oie90
Mon'-llt UC S...t• Berber•
New Mtlllc.oSl •I FrettlOSt .... '" LOOl9 8Ndl St. 11t ldeh> St. HumlleldlSC ... ,...,..,_ (R-l
Sewtll
Geortle •t Geor?• l 1<11
Sltfle M Fl«lcM Soutnem M--M~U.
TeM.~el hnn ·Met11n
Mlftoecl
ColOt-et ClflClnNU
llllnolt $t. et DtP•ul Ouq-et Oe1rOlt
TOUaNAMllNTS
Mtt 1USl•Clnlk
UC tr ..... ws. Atl-St.
IE. T-ll.¥L Mef'QWfte a ...... Clatek
Wlclllte St. ft. C.i Stllte Fuller1on
Nor111 c-ollNI St. vs. Mk hi_.., St. ~O..k
Ari-... ....,._ St.
Ml~YLAlmy
,,...City I ............
Au•lln PH Y ... V-bill
Ale>ke·Anclloreve "'· Ornet .._.01-City Cl•Hlc
Bowllno Gr_,"' 1111no11 Toi-vs Y•i.
.......... ,C .. Mlt
oe1ewere¥LA~
M•lne vs. N-Hem1>911ro hlM ... 1
Houttonn.Pv..-W•~• F<lrest vs LSU llCAC _ ... , l'..Clvel
Ken~ vs. SC. Jolln't V llle.-1 vs. Inell_,.
H .. i..,c1e .. 1e
Mleml ..... THH A~M
Nev-.ut V-vs. loyot•M•try,,_I
~C-Cleuk
North C.,.011.,. vs. ....... St.
Sent e Cieri vs. TCU
N.1--yCltitk Air Force vs. Hetwnb
COf'nell vs. N. 1-• ..... ~
Soutfl ,.,..,.,.. vs. Grembllnt
AmerkMI U. vs. EHi ~,,..
"When Gretzky goes the way
he was going tonight, he gets the
whole lot of them going," said
Los Angeles Coach Parker
MacDonald. "They're a bunch of
kids who can really skate and
when be goes. they just follow in
behind."
T he Oilers led 3·0 after the
first period, but sat back in the
second, allowing Steve Bozek to
score two of his three goals to
pull the Kings to within one at
13:08.
Then Greti.ky took over again,
scoring a shorthanded goal at
15: 11 and the Oilers were
quickly t?ack in control.
"That waii the goal that killed
us," said MacDonald. "We
were coming back and had them
on lbe ropes a little bit."
An•wer to lod•~·· puule
OUTSTANDING
VALUES!
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~~----·· ..... _._.. " ... ~~=
Trojans triUillph J USC to meet Missouri for tourney title
Prom AP •P•tC!bet
LOS ANOELES -Guard Dwi1ht Aodenon
md forward Mo Williama combined for 53 poinU b Soul.hem California topped Mlch.i1u 77-G ln
firet·round play of the Holiday Basketball
Tournament at the Spocta Arena.
Mlalouri and Southern Cal wlU square off for
the champlonsh.ip tonight, foUowtns a thlrd·place
aame between Alabama -Birmingham a nd
Mlcht1an.
Anderson scored 27 points and Williams added
26 points and pulled down a team-leadln1 eight
rebounds as Southern Cal, 6-2, rallied to down
Michigan.
The Wolverines, who dropped to 1·6, led the
Trojans 38-35 at halftime. Southern Cal went ahead
to atay on a layup by Anderson with 13 :24
remaining to make it 51-49, but the game remained
close for several minutes.
Michigan trailed by only three points, 62-59,
after Willis Carter made a short jump shot with
6:29 remaining. But the Trojans outscored the
, Wolverines 15·4 the rest of the way. Anderson got
eight of the points for USC.
Guard Eric Turner paced Michigan with 17
points. Forwards Dean Hopson and Thad Garner
added 13 points apiece for the Wolverines. Garner
pulled down a game -high 11 rebounds and Hopson
grabbed 10 missed shots.
MIHourt 98, Ala.-Blrmlngham 80
LOS ANGELES -Guard Jon Sundvold scorect
22 points as ninth-ranked MissouM,exploded in the
final 8:30 or play for a convincing 98-80 victory
over 19th-ranked Alabama-Birmingham in the
opener of the Holiday Classic at the Sports Arena.
The Tigers advanced to tonight's title game
against use.
Missouri. 7·0, had a tough time with
Alabama-Birmingham, 6·3, for most or the game.
The Tigers held a slim 45-42 advantage at halftime
and it was just 71-67 with 8 i,.c, minutes to play .
Missouri then scored eight straight points, four
by Sundvold, to take a 12-point lead and the
Blazers didn't threaten after that. Tte Tigers
wound up scoring 27 of the game's final 40 points.
Guard Prince Bridges and forward Marvin
Mccrary added 20 points apiece for the Tigers.
Missouri center Steve Stipanovich had only six
points and seven rebounds before fouling out with
3:30 to play.
USF 87, Bradley 82
HONOLULU -Eric Booker sank two free
throws with no lime remaining as seventh-ranked
San Francisco scored fi ve points after play was
finished in defeating Bradley 87-82 in the opening
DUTLDDK'B2
Comin9
Thursday
What's the job outlook for next
year? Will the Orange Coast's
economy get better or worse -
and what effect will that have on
home prices. achool programs.
and city eeMoes? Find out_
Thuraday, Dec. 31 in "Outlook
'82," a review of 1981 advances
and a forecast of expected
growth in 1982. Look for thi6
special puH·out eection in your
Daily Pilot Thuf'lday. or call to
start home delivery.
....... ~ery .... 641-4121
game of the 18th annual Rainbow Cla111c.
Booker's first free throw ~ an la-all Ue
and 1ave the Dons their lotb cc.Meutiv• wia lb.II
season. Alter Booker's second free throw, Erie
Slaymaker converted three ol four tecludeal foul
free throws aa Braves' Coach Dick Veraae• waa
. assessed two technical foula at the ftnal bQlaer.
Bradley, behind Michael Anderson'• 21 polnll,
had buHt a 10·polnt lead, 81-71, with 3:20 to pla,y,
but Anderson's free throw with 1:35 was the only
other point the Braves couJd muster.
USF's Wallace Brant and Quintin Dailey bad
four points each In the last three minutes to hf. ,the Dons' rally. Dalley'a two free throws with 1:-!
seconds remaining knotted the score at fa.
Bradley point 1uard Wlllie Scott then brouiht
the ball upcourt but lost control of bis dribble at
the top of the key and Booker picked up the loose
ball and was fouled about 40 feet from the basket.
settin1t the staae for the winning free throws .
Portland 71, TeneHee 82 ~
PORTLAND. Ore. -Jose Slaughter scored
nine points in the final 10 minutes to lead Portland
to a 71-62 victory over Tennessee in the Far West
Classic.
The Pilots' come-from-behind victory set up
an all-Northwest seoilfinaJ tonight, startinC with
16th-ranked Oregon State playing unbeaten Idaho.
Por tland meets Oregon in the second semifinal
tonight.
The Pilots trailed by up lo 13 points in the first
half and by 38-26 at the intermission.
Portland outscored the Volunteers 12·2 during
·the first four minutes of the second hall to cut the
deficit to 40-38.
The Volunteers m aintained a slim lead until
Portland's Dave Flint made two free throws with
16:25 remaining to tie the score at 58-all.
Oregon 85, Wisconsin 82
PORTLAND. Ore. -David BrJ.DtJey scored
eight points in the final five minutes, including the
winning basket with 33 seconds remaining, to give
Oregon an 85·82 triumph over Wisconsin in a
first-round game at the Far West Classic.
Brantley drove inside and scored to give
Oregon an 83-82 lead with 33 seconds to go. After
Badger Carl Golston missed from 18 feel, John
Bailey fouled Brantley, who responded with two
free throws with 10 seconds remaining.
A key to Oregon's victory was holding Cory
Blackwell, who had a game-high 22 points,
scoreless in the final 14"" minutes.
The largest lead of the game was six points,
held by Wisconsin early in the first half. There
were 22 lead changes and eight lies before
Brantley's heroics.
OR lllWI TO IO RUT Cl.ASS OllA If/NET
The ecoranies a a Honey Baced Ham are such
that yoo get rnae meat fa ycu rrasy. More servros per pcx.n:1 Meat fhat's dwoys lean ard.
freed excess tat.
Ifs octi..dy less experisNe than <*nest anyttrQ In
the meat ca.flter a yo.s ~et. Ard.
becauSe Ifs pr&COOked. there's no stni<oge. E...en
aft8' the hem is gone, the bone makes a~
50.,p.
Evecy spiel slced Honey Baced Ham Is tlckc:ry
smoked. bol<ed 30 hcus and topped with a honey
ord spice i;jt:Jze ... a process you cOltt'l't ~e
h ycu own kitchen
The reslJt is a tct:J69 ret»( hcrn. Ready to be erfoved al OOy loro With eggs h the moITTrg ard ~ riglt. And as a snack a sondwic1'
~ o o.Jrav centefplece ex n yas Ulcil SXJI. o
Honey Baced Hern Is the perfect choice.
1 ·
NFL
Giants 27, EaglH 21
k-.llfOMrte" 10700 27
"""""~ 0 1 1 1 11 HYG -8rlQllt 'peu lrom Brun,,., (kick
t.ilffl
HYG -MIStl•r 10 ... H lrom 9,...,,,.,
CO.neloklckl
HYG -HeJMS re<O¥tt.0 lum.,.. 111 •ncl ~-( o-eo kick) Piii -CMmlc'-1 IS pen from Jewonlll
tFrenkllft kick)
NYG -Mui._., 22 "" rrom Br..,_,
CO.neloklckl
Piii -__..,,.,.,•run C Frank Ml\ kick I
Piil -Moflt90merY 1 r\lf\ Cfrenkll" kick)
A -71,611
HYO ..... ,. ,.._.,. Fll"lt-1'
Rut,,..,_ 4MSJ
Pnsino.,.,. n
Return yards 41
Pnses 9.41.1
IJ3
11
1).14-0
S.Ckl by ) ti ........ ~
F""'bl-~t 1-0
l"enalllK-y-S·~
TlrMol "--loft JI Cl'
,..,,.., S&atlttk1
RUSHING -lffw York, Cerpent., Jl.1'1,
Brunft•r .. 11. P•rry >·11 Phll•d•lphl•,
Mof\teomert IM 5, Ol1¥er ~12. J•worPI W.
C.tmpfleld 1-10.
PASSING -N•w York, Brunntr
9·14·1-U . Phl1ed•lphla, J aworslr.I
1).24-0-ls.I.
RECEIVING -N•w York. Ce rpent•r
4•U, Mi.II..,., 1·ll, Gra y l·U, Mlstl•r 1-10,
P•rklns 1·11, &rlotlt t·f, Philadelphia,
Carml<'-12-4. Montgomery l·J2, R. Smith
J.11, C. Smltt. 2·1•, Krapfl• 1·11, Ollv•r 1·7.
RlllMll l-4.
AFC WILD CARD
Billa 31 , Jet1 27
Sc.,..llfO-l'ters 17 1 0 1-l
0 10 ) 14-71
B ui-Rom•• 2•. IYml>I• r•lvrn tMlk .. MeYff lllckl
B11f-L•wls SO pe u from Far'Qv>on
IMlh ·Meyer kick!
B11I-FG Mll< .. Meye r tt
lul-L•wls 26 peu lrom Fer9Y1on
(Mlll .. Me\lllf' kick I
NYJ-5/luler JO PHI ,,.,... Todd (Leehy
lo.le kl
NYJ-FGL-yH
HHJ -FGuehy"
Bul-Crltlels4Srun CMlk-•ver alcal
NY J -B .• Jenes JO p ... lrom Todd (Leehy
kkkl
NHYJ -lon9 I n.n ILeel\y kick>
A-S1,*
T-MMhUc• ewt HYJ
First 4-IS tl
RllSNs -,.,.._ 2).'1 n .11
Pnslnevana tJO ,,.
I :::: ·-11-~ JI.JI~ '9ck• by j,,Jt , ..
I Pllflh 4-41 4-J:I
F""'blH -~I l.f ).1 ,..,,.mn -ver<11 , .. , .. u
Time of Poswulof\ 2': S. )0:04
IM1v-.1 $..Utek l RUSHING -Buffalo, Crlb!Sci~a>. LHkl
.. 12. Fe,_. 2·ml""' 4, N•• York, McHell
12.J1, L-t-ll, Todd2·11.
PASSING -BuffalO, Ferov.-17·J4-M.
N••Yort, T-n.s1-.m
RECEIVING -Buffalo, Lawis 1-1,.,
Crlltlls 4-64, LNU J n, Bremm•r t-11,
Bllller ,._Hew Yon, Oleftll119J -S2, S-r
._tt•. B. ~ ..... Geftney ...... Wallwr
).t•, Ian. .... 2~1. N-loll, Hertaer 1-4
' -(_ > .
NBA
WUTaRM COtf,lltlHCI
PKlfkDlvis*
W L ~l Ge
2) 1 .1•1
11 • U4 4
t• 10 •U S 1' II m SY>
1' U S71 • • to .131 u
-Dhll ...
11 ' .,. 13 14 ... 4Y, ,, " .,. .
10 17 :170 1V>
10 17 .370 1V> • n 11• ,,
I ASTERN COHfl'ERIHCI
A1*Mtk Dl•lllM
11 • 20 •
ll u
11 11
10 17
~et Div..._
1• •
11 12
UIS
11 11 ,, 11
•n _., .. ~
uMn tJt, San Dt.90 111
Mllw..._ IOI, ChlGAVO"
Pfloenl•tt, PNlMltpllle'6
T...._-10-.
lndl-tit N-Jenay Go,..., Stat• al Sealll•
T...UY't Gam ..
Utaflet ~
Mii•-• et tncllene
Det roll at W-1\lneton s.11 Dl990 at Sen Atlloto
"" v-etowuvo IC-Cltvat 0.lle
AU-•et-loll
aoAolletO......
1'1111 .... pNe et Gol-Stal•
111 1 .. l't .._. IV> .,, "" l70 II
704
U• ...,, .... •v. O J IY,
41• • 214 1)Y,
Laker• 139, Clippers 117
SAN DllGO Brooh •. Brnn1 U,
Whltah .. •H. Douol~ 10. P Smith t•, Taylor
6, Wiiey 12, Chambers 20, Wllllems t• J
Smith t, Broo-i 10 Totell 01 .. u 117
LOS ANGELES JohMon Ji, Will<ff JJ,
Brewer 4, C-r 1', Nl•on 1'. McG• 21,
Aambl• S. Jordan 11, land•t>eroer I.
Mc Kenne 2 Tote ts SS 19·0 111
Score lty Qllel1an
Sen Diego n JO U Jt-111
L01 An1191., 11 u 21 40 111
Tllree·Point -11 Douotn 2. Wllllems 2,
Taylor Foulacl out None. Tol•I fouls -
San Di-VO JI, Los Anoales 21 h <Mlcet -
San Dle90 CoeCl't Sii .. A 14,tSI
College w .. r
Haw•ll Htlo 11, R.Otends ..
E .. 1
!>ovlh FIOrlCM 47, ~Ion U 41
TOURNAMINTS
(fl'l"'R-1
Neltuy Ct•ulc
\J SC 11. M1chl941n u
Miuourl 'II. Ala.-BirmlftOll•m IO
fl'er west ct .. •k
Oreoon as. WIK OM Inn
Portland 11, TenMSlffU
Ra1-..c1euk
USF 87, BredltY 81
R let 49, Haw•ll I'
AllCel'-
W t 111no1s 1•. Ol<t•norn• II
lern•r 49, P•n Amerlc•n el 12 otl
How Top 20 fared
H-Ille TOCI 10 IH m• In Tiie Auoclaltt<I
Prtss'coll-~k•-llPOlllereellhllw-
1 Norlh C•rot1n• IM I bH I Kentvcky tHt.
1 Ktfttucky ( .. I, ..... IO Nor11\ Caroline ., ...
] Wlchft. Sl•I• 17-01 bHI Ot1ro111•-10.
• Vlr9lnt• (t-01 t>Hl BYU '1••all 11 ....
S M•"""°lf IS-1) tcl'll to t<anws St•la .,.,,,
6 Ark•nu t 11 01 t>••I Soutnern
Mlnltsi1>11i U.S4
1. S.n Fr•nclsco ( 10-01 but Now OrlHM
.. • .,, tOTI. llHI Coto••• •S-U IMt•I Br.aclt.y ., . .,
I l0Vo\v1llo 1 .. 21 IMl•I MoroM.acl Stftt
103-70, lost to O.P..,t IS-..
9 Mos_,,, (1~) C.at VOV"OHO,.n St•te
•1..0. but Al• Blrmlf\Ql\•m '9 IO
10 low• ! .. II didnol Pl•y
11 tndl..,. 1 .. 11 did nol Pin 11 AIAl»rNtl/~l1Mtal81sceyneU .. ]
1]. OeP ... I 11·11 beat M•lna '0-47 beM
Lou1Svllt• 7s..8. H T vtw (I 11 l>tat Flortd• !>outr>#•n .. _..
IS.UC LAI ~111MtallOUlll41na Sl•telJ. It
14. OregonSt•to t .. ll t>HI Pl1118·SI
11 Georoe10 .. n II 21 bul Wuttrn
K•ntucky 64-4S
II. HOU>lon II II did not plov
19 Al•.-81rmlngnarn 16 JI 1>u1 Cnteo
!il•lt I0..0, 1011 lo MIUOU" 9t·IO
7~ Villanova (/·11 l>t•I P•ce ,,,_..
Community college
TOURNAMENT
IP:ltll R ... 11411
S.11tf An• C ypn1n SI, Oxowra S2
Et C•m•no 4' Fullorton 0
Community college stet•
GOLDEN WEST llf.21
G -. A ....
" lll 170
I• HI 16.S
h 114 1] I
14 117 lU
t• 119 IS
11 St '1
• JI "
7 I • 0
s 17 J'
2 JO
Helton
Bowen
Kt no
01vl•
Jacobs Myles
Qyrham
Martino
Everhart
R•vl•
BredlO • ORANGE COAST 11-41
10
B•utty
G t<rolVlltlcll
Riiey
B•tdwtn
T t<rohllttlcll
Thom"'
M•rtiet
Celtloun
N•niOn
Mathieu
H•11en
Olrnltantt
G PO. A"9
IJ l .. 10 J
I] 1)7 10 s
1l 104 I 0
s 1' sa
17 •• s 1
I~ •: a
13 • ' • J
.,
11
11 • 2
] 2
10
I 6
0.1
01
Senta Anlt•
SUNDAY'S RESULTS
ttMel.....,yt.........,... .. mMll,..1
fl'IRST RACE. 4 lur'°"9'
Counselor C-Wy l!ilt>lll•I 41 IO IS Ml 11.00
Gerlleld County 1C;•1t1t•nol 8 '° s 40
Imma nent tnut ICa•tanadal 9.00
Also re<td Btrtoltnl, TYrn1no Wheel•,
P1rklnthedark, Tuisu , Supoor Star Vincent,
~tlllution, Jimmy San. Roi Sovl
Time 1·a. 21s
SE DOffD RACE. t'i> lvr!Of\q\
Fiiomena GelN IV•ten1uttal
4I0•40JOO
B..,w•vt Meldtn IH•rrlll 10 'I> S tO
Ledy Nosy ITorol • 10
Also rec.O Sou90h Sonnet Aoto Pttnceu
NIOetll. Comity, Gettta Gtorlovs Gren
Time 1 11 l/S
U DAILY DOUILE 112 JI paid ll9l 00
THIRD RACE.• •11rtonos
I'm FIShfonel)le IM<H•rv ... 1• 00 • 10 ] 10
Tert90 Oanc•r (H-lnl J IO tlO
Vl•lo I Ga tmano) l 40
Allo reced' Thrut, Oomltle, Jennie's
lme9e, My O.rll"IJ A11nle, Majestic Rll)Ol1o,
O.Ct-y Kate. Dell's SPOrt. Grenny Af\9,
Keona.
Time· 1.10 2/S
,DU RTH RACE. o"" mllt
Baroatn 8e1Cony tsi-rNtkerl /
910 SIO 4.00
IBotr•ll IV•,.,,, ... ••> IS.20 S.IO
\AtamoStrenoier !Caslaneclel 2.to Also rec1d Roe-wall. Company'
Chrleman, 0-Pr-rty, How N-Dow,
Catitaln Tuffy
Time: l:»lJS
Or~nge Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 28. 1981
SCOREBOARD
A.PW....,....
MOST WANTED Un i\'ers it v or
Washington head football coach · Don
James I left 1 ;rnd Universitv of Iowa's
Hayden Fry square off for a mock duel
Sunday at Knou·s Berry 1-·arm. The
coaches' teams go head-to-head in the
Rose Bowl in Pasadena Friday
fl'IP'TH llACE I I 16 mite\
t<an9r00Cour1 IS1emerl 9 'I>
Pierre l• Mont c V•ton1u.-1a1
Eoo T°'' l!>hotm"~'"
S40 JOO
•IO 4 10
J '° Aho r«ed Pt-Ur•• Sir OanCtf. E•rly
Sotller. Jimmy The Oop, Color Bearer.
Balle11 P0<kfl. 8vflalo Hart
Tome I "l /S
SSE XACTA 14 SI P•ld llioO ~
SIXTH RACE 6 lur!Of\q\
R•l•'s Sano I Torol •t <O 11.00 10.10
Am1oa l• G tM<.Herouel 10 60 6 10
Miss P•ru111•n CC•·til•Md41) 11 JO •tw r«eo As• Me How. ~d'f' SomrTWn.
Aslr•t Lu~"' 8•ht•\s•. J•n•h l<tnav.
Perr.cl Splr naoyr Or~•mer \ Hotld•Y
Ooon<t•r
Tom• I 097 S
SEVENTH RACE 4' > t"'IOf>O\
Arl•l0<t11iot IM<CMron1 • 00 l 40 , 'I>
Foyt•s Atk IS'-"'~ktrl I ioO • 00
St•lllnc llv• I 0.l•no.,..,ay•I l 20
A"o r•t•d O...nturn LUO. Lorn• Maled.
D•ntvn Tim, Sl>ffd Bus, Sero>.
Tim• 1 IS 7 S
U E XACTA II 81 P&ld l1'S 00
U fl'ICK SIX tJ.10 l • 1 II paid $1,IM.10
wltn 1•l w1nn1no t•c•u•h tfhtt horw 't '1
Pock Six con..otatlon p.old U• 60 with 1,1.S
w1nn1n9 tlck•h Ooyr tiorws)
EIGHT·H RACE t•, mtltt on lurl
TM &•rt 10el-U$WIYtl ] 60 J 00 1 j,O
lrl•h Heert IM<C•nonl 6 00 J IO
Fortlon t Cesteneclet l 40
Al1-0 r.aclfd Rust'f C.,,yon IC '•suwtU,
Kareem, R.O Crt1Cen1
Time I 41
NINTH RACE. 1 I ••ml .. \
Avie The Market
( 0.tehou•WYfl S 40 l 00 2.60
Oakland Estuary t Stt>iltfl
S.IO •.40'
'Trabltan IGutrr•I 4.I01
Al•o rated ~trulltn' Gfl>ro•, 011 Your
W•y, Malet PIK•. E.,lv Tomato••. Bolo
AO
Time t·4'7 J S
U EXACTA 16-11 P&ld U I SO
Attendano lJ,'90
Deep ... flehlng
HEWPOtltT IArt't La"411~) -7S.nglen.
24 bonito, 2S lend bH•, 111 macllutl, 1
h•llbvl, I black H a WU, 151 rO<k COCI
I Da••Y"• LA<lterl 10J anoi.n · ~ rock
cod. I bonito, 1' Hncl IMu . ' caltco NH, l6S
mac .. er•t
DANA -A.RF ., 1not.r• 10 ban, 361
bonito, 4SO mackerel, 112 r0<a cod
S A M D IEGO CH &M L111,.111,
,,_ .. -~· -14 a119len l c-cod, 2'0 roek COCI
SEAL eEACH. 1SJ _,.,. 400 rocll
cod.
NHL
CAMPeELLCOHfl'ERENCE
Smy ... DM.ie..
Edmon1on
Van<OYYef"
C•louy
Kl"'' Cotor.aclo
W LT Gil' GA "'9
,. • • nr 1.-~
tl 14 I 1:14 Ill J4
11 16 I IU 10 12
13 10 l IS? 1'1 tt
I 2l S '1 t1S 11
NenbOlvltlH
MlnM\Ol•
Cnlc•90
St louh
W1nnl1M9
Toronto
D•lrolt
1' 10 11 ISi 12' 1'
,. 17 ' 160 1'7 31 16 11 • 1:14 141 ,.
ll 11 • ,,. 166 ]4
10 16 9 IS3 , .. tt
10 n • 11s ue u WALES CONfl'ERENCE
Patrick Olvlsi...
NV tslandart 21 q
Phllad•lptlla 11 17
PlltsbyrOf\ IS IS
NY Re,.n 14 17
Wuh1119ton 10 lJ
Bulfelo
Montrt•I
Bolton o ... l>l!c
H•rtford
ANnlsDM1I°"
" 10 ••• 10 10
11 u
9 11
s -..y•,sc ..... Edmonton 10. I( ""9 J
Bult•to l, W•shlf\Qlon,
Heriford I. Torontol
NY Aenoien S, PllhllurOf\ J
Monlrt•I 6. ou.be< J
SI loul• •. Chlu90 l Detroit 2, Winnipeg 2
T°"'tlll'tGam~
Color-at Mtnn•nol•
Phtl.otlPhla at Ca19ary
T_..Y"•G•met
C hk e90 al Q\letlec
MOf\treel a t NY t\landers
'1erll0<d et SI Loult
Bo•lon•I VancO\lver
S IS2 110 '1
1 tll 12s ~
• 137 140 lit
s lu 1u l3 l 11 ,,. 13
t 14' llS ...
' 110 103 41 4 141 11] 4' s 11• 147 " 9 121 1S2 27
Ollere 10, King• 3 k .... .., "'9rtMt
l01 An11r1es
EdmOf\lon
""'Part ..
0 1 I -l
J 1 S-10
t Edmonton, GrallkY 47 (Hick\, Meuler>.
~i1~~n:~),E~~"f· E~~!:to~'. ~~=::y'°!1
(Anderson, C.alll(lhan). 19:£:1. Penalll•• -
Herdy, u>., s "· HIO•. EOm . 1·1•. Kelly, LA, IS IJ
s.c.M PerlM
4 L01 Anoetas. BoHll l• I Dionne. Teylor),
t :U . S LO\ Ar199t.t Bolek JS ITur-.11,
Dionne), 13 OI. • Edmonton, Gr•trlty u
(Colley, Kurrll, U 11 7 EdmontOf\, Kurrl
11 1c a1119...,., W•ln. 11 21 Pene111 ..
Jtnten, LA, 2: U; T •Ylor. LA, S 11, Cotfav,
Edm . s 11; ~ ... EOm., I) n
'
n.l .. Pff!M
I Edmonton, Anderson 15 IMtssltr,,
H aomanl. 11 ' Edmonton, Berry 1
IN•lhery, F090t1n1, J:Sl 10 Edmonton,
Hicks J (Huddy, GrotzkyJ, 1I.27 n Los
AnotlH, Bolek u I L-1•. T •ylorl, 11 ·so 1]
Edmonlon, t<urrl 1' tNelMry, F090lln),
IJ.Ol PeneillH Cellighen, Edm . S SI,
Turnt>ull, L.A, q U Hardy, LA. IJ SO.
Collty, Edm . U II Snots on _, LO\ Angtlts 9-U-JO
Edmonton 14 9 11 '1
Goallu Los Anootu. Loura
Edmonton, Fvllr A 17,490
NASL INDOOR
AMERICAN COH,EREHCE
C..-trel Dlvllle11
Tvtu
·c111caoo
Tempe Bey
W L l'Ct. Ge
• 1 .IOO ) 1 600
J • .,.
EHi.,,. Dlvllt... l ,
l ]
1 J
TorOf\to
Jaek....,vlllt
Montreal
Co""os 1 ]
PACIFIC COHFEltENCE
WHI.,,. Olvlsl°"
Porll•nd
San Jose
San 01090
l ]
J ]
1 4
Nor111wes1 Dl•lst...
EdmOlllon l 1
V ancouv•r l 2
SHtlla 4 J
Setvruy'• S<erH
'-""•90 I. Tampa Be y• ·
Jeclr.sonvllle s. Montre•I •
S-y't S<we
Por ti and a, San Jow S
T .... !IM't GamH
No 9e,..,.. sc-.ieo
T,..M.ay't Games
Jaosomrltl• at Cosm01
Chtu90 et Montreal
Sul11t at E-1on
,
600 --?SO
soo soo
200
600
600
S71
1
1
'"'
'"'
Pt•al NM -ilO_.,,; o-; ,.._,
-Md~. POWDa ... o ... -14 depth; , -;
~ ............ .
PU aeATDltY -24 depth; T new;
~ ....... ,...,.
... A.•TOOnl -,,..,..._ ..... ; • -;
ll«Me~.
ST. MARYS -Opet1i"9 IMMI ... --· SIU IMI llA .. L -°"9ftlfl9 PAMiftt·-.,_
ITIAMMAT -S>.,_..; •-:--.
pack .........
IUMLHMfT -JO"°""'; 3 -; ,........, PKk ... _.,,
t•t TAMARRCMll -n ...... ; 0 -· _., ......... _....
Ta&.LURID« -40dep0!; 4-; ....-.
VAIL -a4 °'"'°'; 4 -; POW*r, CNC-POWOer, powdw for back-...
WIMTllt PAR• -JS detlth; '°"' -; ' ...,..,,pacua ,...r.
MAaY JAM• -41 depth; t °"' new, ...,..,,packectPoW*f.
WO&.fl' CR•I• -0 deptll, 1 new,
_.,..,pect.edPoW*r
UTAN
A&.TA -llWtoul. 11-. _..,,
eaAVla MOUWTAIM -71 total. J-
eLUa MOUtfTAIM-c -
••• ,,. .. MUD -lA total, o-
••tONTON -'4tclUl,6 -.
Dl•R VALUY -CloMd
MT.NOU.Y -C-.
MOltOtC YAU.9Y -C-.
PAltll CITY -Sit total, 3 -·
PAltl( WIST-'ltCIUI, ·-· PA a LI Y'S IUMMIT -C-.
POWDla MOUMTAIM -7' total, I new.
IMOWeAllM -Qtot.t, 1•-·
SttOWeCRD -100tot.t, 11new.
IOLITUD4l -.. tocal, 32 -· IUMDANCa -c-
Auetr•ll•n Open
l••Me--1
Flr'91 ·-S....-t Gullltrmo Viles ci.1. Joe<hlm Nystrom,
.. 4. •-2. 1 ... H-Pllsttr cltl. LIOyd Bovr ....
J..6, 1 ..... J. 2-4 ... 1. Johan Krl•• del Orew
G lttln. 6·1. 1·S, 6·1, Merly De vit def
Jonathon Smlt1' ... ,. 1 ..... 1 •.... "'• Pnr
Renn.rt IMf Cre19 Moller, .. 2. •·2, U . 6-l John Ale1tander CMf Frlh B ........ 11\0, 1-4,
.... l •• •· •. 1-4, Cllll lAIChtr d•f Jofw>
Sadri, U .. 1 M , M . Jim 0.1-y CMf
Mell Mltcllell ..... J..6, .. J. 7-4, Syd Be lt def '
St••• Melsl•r, .. ,. M . 4-4, 1-4. Jim Gurfel"
dtl Way,_ PHCCM', .. ). 1 ... 6-3, Tr-na.
H09t1"1 dtl Scon McCain, 1.s. M , .. 1.
Urry Slelan1t1 dltl Wally Mawr, 4-4. M .
7 •. •·1. l·t. Cnerlle Fancvll del Chrl>
o Johnstone, J..6. 6-4, 6-l, •~
S.CeMR ..... Sl9'1n
Rod Frawi.v def Roscoe Tenner. l .. , 4-4,
.. •• 6·3, f>.J, Peter McNamara def Richard
Ltwl\, J.4, 4", 1·S. M . 6·2, Phll Oent IMf
Cherllt Fanc:utl. 1 ... ,_., 1-4, Kim Warwlca
del. Jim Gurfeln, 1·S ... ,. 1·S: Sltvt o.nton
del K•vln Curr.,,, .. 1, l-6, 6-J, .. 1. •·1. Tim
Mayoll• 0.f R-rt Ven'T Hof, 1 ...• .,, w .
Snlomo Gtlcllsleln def Jerome Poti.r ... ,.
..... 6 1 P"1 Oypn del R111sell Sim-. M . ....... ,
Flnl·R-Dewillft .•
Oevod Carter-P..,1 Kronk dtf BMIOl\9
Sluon Joe B•1ty, 6.J, •·'· '1•1nr G11ntharOl·M•rkvs Gunth•rdl d•f P•t
Cash Greo Wn11ecrou , •·•. •·'· Eddie Edwud• Cra lo Edwards d•I Tim
Mayotte 0..-IS Mevotte ..... 4•-4, •·l. K•vln
Currpn St•ve D•nton d•r John
Ja mes-Way,,. P .. coe, .. ,, ....
WMkend ttenaactlona
eASKITeALL
Hatlellel --.-11 A..clall.,.
NEW YORK KNICl<S -Actlvelltd TOby
Knloht. lorwerd. Ptecltd Holtlt Cocwtancl,
lor...ard, on lnj.....:t rewrw.
SAN ANTONIO SPURS -!ilOnt<I
Heyet, Cef!ter, to a 10-<l•Y ~ontract
FOOTMlL
Het!Mel F"4Nll 1.•-
NE W YORK JETS -Actlvatltd
J eoson, cornerlle<k
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES -Actlveted
Clevde H"""""°', lineman Ptec..i Ste.,.
Folsom, llQ!lt -· on 11.1 lnjYreG rnerw 11•1
Camel.Where a man belongs.
\
'
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your H11lth. 8 mg. "tlf". 0.8 mg. nicotine av.
ptr ciglrene by FTC method.
I
••
I
•• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Ceo-ember 28, 1 e&1
Ankl~ injury
break for QB
Bohannon timed it right
PASADENA CAP> -Senior Gordy Bohannon
who wut quarterback Iowa's football team against
WH hinlton ln the Rosu Bowl game New Year's
Day. Is proof that good things come to tho!le who
walt.
Bohannon sprained an ankle during preseason
workouts in 1980 and spent. u frustrating year as a
red-shirt, watching on the sidelines while others
called the signals.
But that injury mlly have been the biggest
break of Bohannon's athletic career. because he
was given another season at Iowa, a season that
turned out to be the Hawkeyes' best in two
decades.
"It was really hard s itting out last year with
Keith Chappelle playing," Bohannon said r~ferring to the wide receiver who accompanied
ham to Iowa from Glendale Junior College. "It was
really emotional ror me to sit out and watch him.
"I DRESSED for a couple or games on th~
sidelines and watched, and I told the coaches
'Thi.s Is too hard for me.· I almost went in a coupl~
of tames last year. But it all worked out for the
best. It was a lmost like it was meant to be."
Bohannon has another reason to reel grateful
about what has transpired at Iowa. He grew up
and played hjgh school football in South Pasadena
only five minutes from the Rose Bowl. '
But in all those years of living in the stadium's
shadow, Bohannon never attended a game there.
He had to travel 2,000 miles to Iowa to get that
opportunity.
"It's really strange. I'd never been to a Rose
Bo wl in my entire life until I went to Iowa."
Bohannon said. "The last two years, I saw Ohio
State and Michigan play That was the first time
1 'd ever been there.
"IN HIG H SCHOOL, we played in the
championship game, but I never really dreamed of
playing in the Rose Bowl back then . South
Pasadena is a small town and was never known
for . gr~at football talent. I didn't have any
aspirations or going to college, let alone playing
mayor college football.··
Bohannon became Iowa's No. 1 quarteroack af~er Pele Gales got hurt against UCLA during the
third game of the season. He directed the
Hawkeyes to a 64-0 victory over Northwestern the
following week and started ever y game after that
except one, a 24·7 loss to lllinoas.
f'or the year, he completed 72 of 142 passes for
999 yards and six touchdowns. Bohannon also was
the team's No 3 rusher. gaining 304 yards and
scoring twice ·
At .Gl~ndati:. Bohannon finished third among
the nation s Junior college passers. He was noticed
by Coach llaydcn f'ry. who was recruiting for his
first Iowa team and followed f'ry to Iowa City
taking Chappelle with him ·
.BOHANNON STARTED a couple of games
~urang the 1979 season and was battling for the top
JOb last year when he hurt his ankle Then when
the opportunity came this year , he seized it.
In lhe Rose Bowl. Bohannon's father Boothe
will be seeing his son for the first tim~ in tw~
years.
"Nobody picked him up out here," the older
Bohannon said "Iowa picked him up and the
people who didn't pick him up aren't going to the
Rose Bowl. J'm happy,"
Letdown feeling
for Sugar Bowl
NEW ORLEANS CAP)
This lime, they're
saying the Sugar Bowl
has "championship
implications" -quite a
comedown for a
postseason classic that
has showcased the No. 1
team in coll ege football
for the past three years.
Seco nd .ranked
Georgia , d e fending
champion, beaten only
by top-ranked Clemson.
me e t s lOth·ranked
P i lt s ~r g h o n N e w
Year 's Night
Pittsburgh's loss was
to Penn S tal e i n a
nationally televis ed
game played after bowl
invitati o n s were
announced . The loss
tumbl ed Pitts burgh
IALTIIHGHOM
SMITH & TUTHILL
WISTCUFF CHA,.El
427 E 171h St
Cos1a Mesa
6 46-9371
NICl llOTHHS
s..ITHS' MOITUAAY
627 Main SI
Hun11na1on &acn
536-6539
PAClftC YllW
MIMOllAL,AJ•
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel·Crematory
3500 Pacohc View Drive
NewPOrl Beach
6'4·2700
McCO.MICI( MOITUA•IH
l.eouna Beach
49'·9415
LaQuna Hills
783-0933
Sen JUW\ C.P•Slr&no
495-1176
MAnot LA~. 01.IYI
Mortu•rv • C.~terv Ctematory
1825 G .. I« Alie
Costa MtrU M0-5564 •
from No. I to No. 10 -a
prec1p1tous fall that left
Pitts burgh Coach Jackie
Sherrill a bit ba ffled.
• · 1 guess that proves
that if you're goi ng to
lose. lose early," he
said
Sugar Bowl
Committee m ember s
smiled through it ,
knowing t h a t the
realities are chancey
and that gamb le s
sometimes lose.
Mickey H o lm es.
executive director of the
Sugar Bowl, coined the
··cha mpi o n s hi p
implications " phrase,
pointing out that if
fourth-ranked Nebraska
beats Clemson in the
Orange B owl and
Georgia wins the Sugar
Bowl , the collegiate
football champion could
again come out of the
Louisiana Superdome.
He also points out that
the Sugar Bowl features
the attempt or a team
that gave up only 686
rushing yards all season
to slop lhe most prolific
!>O pho more rusher in
collegiat e football
history.
Georgia tailback
Herschel Walker. who
rushed for 1,616 yards in
leading his team lo t.he
national c hampionship
last year, has rolled up
1.891 this year
"There's no way you
can s top a Herschel
Walker. If you key on
him too much ,
<quarterback ) Buck
Belue will kill you with
the pass, .. said Pill
linebacker Sal Sunseri,
the fpirttual leader of
the Panther defense.
''You Just have to try
to s low him down a
lltlle. not let him ltust
the long one."
He said he feels the
effects of th Penn State
loas have been
wt •onm1 1ubrntt1ed.
m& llOAIWAY "I think everyone baa
1 :::!:'..,,!. 1haken oft lh1t deft.et
Cott• Meta , pretty 1ood, •• he aald.
842-9150 ' S u r e 1 I t w a • ~-------·,,~ devaat.atlnJ(. • ,
•
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
·T
c
L
A s
s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7· .
8
The rr;arketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642-56.78
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
t1PIDYwM.Cal
642-5678
llMSES FOi SALE ,,....,.,,,
tlllNl•l•M Ibo. Pr"1fh1tl• C'tpl\.,,,_ Jit;f'ft
l0ton• Ml M•' '"'"' "'" , ..... ~ ....
I I Toto t"""e.tft \ .u., Ht..N1"C\~ ~•ta luuw
i.. ........... h 1 ... -11~1. IA« .... ,, .... ,
,.,,~, .. ,.
~t:':.r.·
SoA , .. l\l •""''•"° SAM' Aa• ""' .... . ~i.. .... .
•MlfMA,lft
M•k-•\olt
IUL ESTATE
I At1••1t• fOt k.J• AP•Mmtnh fot ~.1, t~!!:~~"' l tmrrl•rl l.Oh lr) Ph
I Ol'll..,.m" Pr"P'lth f ..... 1 .. \lfn,~i. 0-..ad l fl.U '•I• ~fl\ to bt \f(htti ,,,._,,.,.,
l•>1na!Pttf0fh Lii• iot S.lf \l<*lollow lrl11'1io M-•~M.-1 ~'(~';';.., °"'ti "'ot• ,,.,. tlMWM fMm\ t;ro\ .. ~
M••t Uttt. f.\rfll.ittt:t llul C.1a1t "101.0
IOlllLS
Ho11nn "-'"'•Md ~""'"'""....., Hou\ft f'\un or l af ('~1Nul'U f'l.ttD r-.. ........ 1:.1 r ... -.., ...
To..-M>l.al °"""'""'"' °"'*• .. Lnl ""'' ,,.,. ""° ""'""' Apuflt,..tFlol 11-"-• ...,d
Hoid>llGttb c: ..... Holnt• Sw·m.wr lt'M.•h , ....... 11 .... i.
A.f'nlal\ 10 sa-.rt• c ...... , ... 11 ...
Ofllto llH>11I
Bua1°"" Rt'nttl l"°""r11l R .. 1111 ~!. ",~: IA • ntf'd
111111 oM IQlll
IOlll Illa
I ...
ID 1'11
ICU.
ICMO .....
I ...
tCllO ::: I 1119 ,.,.
tm 1• I .. 1• IM
lloO
\\I ~I I '1 \
TAYLOR CO
1\1-,\I l <Ji\:--·,11111 1!1 ll
OH llG CAMYOH M>ll COUISI
BIGANT ~VHSAJWS"~XCLUSIVl
Spec ta c ular De a ne Homes
"Versailles" located on lar~e r lot of
all Deane . Homes. Beautiful golf
co urse view! Professionally
landscaped yard w/mature trees in a
private park·like setting including a
lovely large pool and huge spa + an
allractive gazebo. Gated front
courtyard entry with fountain. Marble
f loo r i n fo y e r w it h g 11 l t e r i n g
chandelier. 4 Bdrms. den, formal
dining room & 4~2 baths. $950 000
including the land. '
WBllY M. TAYLOI CO .. llALTOlS
Jiii s.-...HMh lood
HEWPOIT CBnll. M.I. 644-4910
ledEstah ·~··••••••••••••••••••• •·PALH)tO * .. Totally remodeled by
-' craftsmen! Featuring
French doors. wooden
' shutters. plank floors.
, us«! brick &c pool & 1pa
FEE land w tgreat
lttml! ! Call 159 1501 or
752-7373
W.._.'1Notfct:
All real estate ad·
Walker & lee
Real fstate
IS9 I ~0 I
ver11 aed 1n this t-~~~~~~~
0...-Volty, Utalt
Skier's mansion. 4 BR,
brand new. $695 ,000.
78().1971
Dalebout
Bay &Beach
Real Estate
REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949 .
COMf WrTH US .•• TO MESA VERDI.
Neat fow bed. OOM hotM IKot.d oe .....
cllll • NC circle. 40' ~ htoted pool.
btliltllt 119 Md 1huffW boord court. H••
schools. S 185,000.
1617 WESTCLIFF DR.. H.I. 631·7300
LliSIOnlON
SI0.000.
Olarnung 3 BR Condo 2
stones, end unit. ponl &
spa Call Ruth or Ste' e
---=Sec::a=-Co' e
WEOUIT!
NO ON, eqwty share, Isl
lime beyers, 3 bd • I ba .
<Jnly S&t.000 pnn only
Call 631 400 Kathy a,!!lt
EN GUSH
TUDOR
C.M..CUTll F\Jll price S1 l.3,000 for lhl.s 3 Bdrm dollhouse
Hu new roof, copper
plumbing aod bathroom
tloor Amenities 111clude spa, 2 car garage. and
RV access Try 20K
down
FAST MOVE
Owner packing and will
finance this 4 Bdrm
Caita Mesa North home nus qwet cul de sac
home 1s loolung for a
family• Will l'Ons1dt>r
14'1 loan for 7 years with
20<;{-down' FU SS}
move fast buyers
Sl~.900. Call S4().11Sl
· -: '# HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
.....
Ml s.,.t •ocli I 06' •••••••••••••••••••••••
OCEAHFIOMT
IYOWHER New cusl bit 2 111y.
French Normandy 3 BR
' den home. Can be
split. 1195.ooo. owe. 3711
Seashore 673-6578
DOYEi SHOIES
EXEC.HOME
Med style courtyard
~.dlcut!I Overlooks bay alaxy Dr for ma I
din rm. 2 fl'l>ICS S69S,OOO
fee.
642, 2S 10 /646·4848
We can no Tonger aHord
LO make paymeni.~ on our 4 Bd 21'2 Ba W cJI l'llff
home Asking $249,000
LET'S DEAL. Norm or
Kasey. own r a ~t
631-1266 or 548·6492
Charming home on a
lovely tree·lmed stree1
and, pride of ownership
neighborhood 3 Bdrm,
large walk m closets, 2
bath, sunny break fa bt nook, domed ceilinged
hv1ng room. lots of
ch arm 0 n I y S l 04 • 900 I'!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
NEWPORT HllGHTS
3 Bdrm home . fireplace,
double garage. choice
OWHEI AHXIOUS
Beautiful, 1mmaC'ulalt-
rucely l1ndscaped 4 Br
home on cul de SH
Spacious rooms \'1ev. of
golf course from proper
ly Owner ass1Hed
financ111g. Only $139.SOO can now. 979.5370
~LLSTATE
REALTORS .
64&-7171
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
0 W N E R W I L L locauon Near Cliff and
C 0 NS I D E R C A R Broad $187 ,500.
RYJNG BALANCE with •--M eo-...a... •u... ruce s1u down' Ranch -1 c n.w, IUTT.
style Mesa Verde home "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!5!!!!41!!!!·!!!!7!!!!7!!!!J9~!!!!! ' boasts 3 bedrooms. 212 ~
I
baLN. dmmg room. re HAllOl IJDGI
lax111g family room. and 3000 sq ft l200K down
hearty fireplace &SK F/P, owner will
Fabulous dSSUITLlble VA c a r r y a t 1 3 '1
loan! 1229.500 Call for Owner A . 644-612:>
f1nanC'ln!l details ' 979.2390 SACRIFICE !
TARJ!ELL. REALTORS 2 new luxury townhouse condo6. 3 bdrms. 3 ba. II
110
" "eu~NESS, INVEST·
MENT, FINANCE I
~== = :::::~ed' =
newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Hous·
mg Act of 1968 which
makes 1t illegal to ad·
vert1Se "any preference.
lim11at1on, o r dts
cnm1nat1on based on
race. ·color, religion.
sex. or national on gio.
or an mtenllon to make
any such preference.
hm1tat1on. o r dis.
llYIME TRUCE OCEANFRO~T 1avY~~~:~~CE
Great family home on lEDUCEO. I(' l 3 BR B
EAST$1DE CONDO
L.cKaHoll Locotioft
VocClllf ••• -TEIMS
$117.500
BELOW BUILDER'S
COST Sl35,000 ea
675-4333
Mont) to I.AM.A Mil) F"E SELJ..ER WILL CARR\' .us om · 2 a c. romer locahon. 3 balance al 12,, 5195.000 bal'k) ard ba) , 1e,.. ..wPOIT CONDOS
Studio. 1&2 bdrms from
SJ.000 & up All ba\'e
good assumable loans
with low down pay
ments Pool, rec. room.
sub-parking. sauna & jacuzzi & some with
oeean views
.. _,.,,....... -
»«t.&•I" TO ' lGD
ANMOUNCEMENTS.
P£1SONALS &
LOST & FOUND
cnm111allon ..
::!nroo:iu!~~~elf~~l~~ down! Delu·n• t·orna o wne r f1nan t•1n2
room. patio for enter· duplex. Could l>e sinl?I<' I ~.OOO
la1nmenc Oversized. ramllyhome' S'145.000' I J~l()Ul 11()MfS
A.MouM'tmf'ftU ('., l'onl )IOI This newspaper will not
~ knowingly arcept any
u.11 advertising ror r eal :!: estate which 1s m v 1ola.
w.u uonoflhelaw __
Wed noor double garage lallool-~!!"op. Reaitors. 675"'6000 with buillin storage ond ~
'-"••I ~at1r•• lh1•ro..nc1 Proon.1b•
Sor-t1I flwt..• T,.Y•t·
workshop. Seller well as· •675-7060• CoroM def Mar 1022 sisl 'th rlnancm . ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~--· .............•••....... tW1ft90ft •och I 040
SERVICES
I '"'"" EM~OYMENT '
n£PAIATION
Y"-'•Oh ln~\rwlMH' J<*V.~'"'' ""'"•"4"" '44t MEICHAllDISE
''''""-~l•Nn
A.~1llCW'I t:,t;J~ )h1ttt•I•
C•lntft.'o • F.A1wtimrn1
t'•i• rlnt• t"Hto You h.tfru{W'f'
(iM't&t '-al•
ltorM"" .-lldG<.00• ,..,.. ... , ..
U"NOrll lh<lwltrf) W•v~u--~, 'lr.r4'11•~ """tf"d \i~.-J""'''""' .. "h Of'ttt t1it1n• tqu11> ..... =~·::~~~ 5pottwlf l.ood• Slorf' Rn.1.,,.,.11111 8•• ~·rad.o u • .-. ~n~i
BOATS & MARINE
EQUIPMENT
(,f."'""I An.th M••™ ~r .. 1n ~ \httM t.qu1p bh p,..,. .. ,
8ueu R•nt l°J\•rt•t no.i.s ... 1
Boob "''"' Do< h 11o ... ~ ..... Bo.t ... ,.,,,..,.
TIAllSPGRTATION
.Airrnf'I t_.m.,..,-,!r.ek R~ Oforil"Kl•n
bl•jil 1--------IUOlS: Ad•erllaen -..ct dwell tMlr ods 675-3411 ~f, daly -r.port ff"• "" ron '-diahly. Th '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
DAILY PtLOT °'.._' :~ I a.wlty for tlw fint :: 1.corr•ct iaHrtio1t :: -,. =:I = HolMaforW. . ..,.., I······················· :~ i GeMnit I 002
~ ' ...................... . ::: I PllV ACT ,LUS '°° With lht.5 4 Br. fenced m. =: pool home on a quiet rul ..,. I de sac in Easts1de Costa =: Mesa A beautiful back
~<111 yard, with rovered pal10 :!: & a ro1y f1replare 1n lhe
llv1ng room There's
rmre' Assumable loans and an anx 1ous seller
~ Only Sl69.900 Call
"'~ 9'79-5370
Of~poc1,j ~ J) 975.5511~~
BRAND NEW intenor
1
1
d 1h1s !Jlulfs "F." plan
has been redecorated I
and ra~led to suite the
most d1su1m1naltn1?
Like a ne"' ho me
1244.500
COLE OF NEWPORT REAL TORI
2115 L c-1 Hw,.
C•ronoMl Mo.
875·5511
: ALLSTATE 1-uu-,"-tery-.-.-
SpaclOUS custom 3 Br 2
REAL TORS Ba 111 presllgt Santa Ana
::: 13% area also includes I Br
guest quarters and
seller f10anc1ng with
OCEANFRONT
'.\EDUCEO!
SEU.ER WILL CARf{Y
balance at 12'. $195.000
down 1 Deluxe t·orner
duplex Could be smitlr
family home ' S145.000'
lalboo loy P'rop.
leattor
•675-7060.
ledllced SI 00,000
SPYGLASS
BY OWNER Ckean View S57S.OOO
6br 4'2 ba 4100 sq fl
SOtrrHPORT MOOF:L
OWNER FINANCING
tilGHLY UPGRAD~D
Offer expires Jan 31
25 Bode!(a Ba)
C~ll ~~'Tier 759 0737
~TSIDE
$119 500
Assumable ~oan at 10';
3 Bdrm Spa Call
&4.S-9161
• OPEN HOUSE
REALTY
/.'
4341EGONIA
New elegant 4 Br Vic
tor1an partial ''u.
ownr1rontrartor fmdn
a\'a1I. SS7~'!JC!
•••••••••••••••••••••••
TISTIIESEASON
TO GET a GREAT BUY
4 Bdrm. best aru. fan·
tasllc home Jus1 SlS.000
down Asking Sl25.900
CdM C.__r D11PIH _!!kr848-0i09 ___ !'.!!!!!~~~~~~!!!!!!
wrTHFIHANCIHG llf'YIM 1044 ------3 BR 2ba or 2+ guesl 1n ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wl"ll llAL1 T
oBdwner·s unit abo 2 * •OR•rTIC .YUJD rm rental cottai:e All IW that lf more people read
111 shafll cond. w 1.'Xrel PRICE REDUCTION Lh1s month 's Nauonal local ion Owner '>'Ill Geographic relative to
carry lge 2nd Tl> Rest Single ram1ly detached 3 Newport Harbor & O C
buy to town for onl~ Bdrm home to fabulous ct101ce bayfront proper·
$2!!0.000 WoodbridJ(e Great ty will skyrocket Call
Cott 644-7211 terms available Take Jom Dimpbell ror appt ~ advantage LO see this brand nev.
!±::±___ [~il"'>odhrldgc =~,~~:!"I::..'::,
I
-RealtlJ you be the iudge or th1.s t975.000 pnre which 1n CostoMfto IOJ4 :.51-3000 eludes a large parcel or
•••••••••••••••••••••••. lt:!'tRarrant J J'\~,.lr,iar land
!, OCEAN \'I EW 2 Br 2 Ba ~sale by owner IOGEIS IE.ALTY
deck. yard. ser 1iale Turtlerock Xlnt fin. will 675-2311
$18.SK Owner I 630 9440. ('al'T) paper Ready to 9'!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~
642·SIOI. mo v e l ob I r a n s re r r-lE. AGENTS RV ACCESS Great comer location 1n
Mesa del Mar 4 Bdrm.
family room . n e "'
kitchen applianres. lov
ely yard. Full price
S142.000 151·3191
Eves (1141851·0499. NO
AGENTS
2 Br 2 Ba patio home.
frplc. 2 ca r gar
w opener. lov. dwn B)
Owner Karen E\'l•s
~ ~· d s &12·8!33
Sales slow., Make the
rrost for your efforts
~'t 100'", spht. We or
fer desk. copier. Ml.
computer. ans sen.
busy slrttt. ample prkg.
& more Start New Year
oH right ' Call: Dan
Wallentme 7221 lklAtr l'J<la SrooUn·
Motor tlm• ~1f' M•M
Tr.I ...... , Trt\fl
::~ $17,000 DWH!
::: Believe 11 ! A fantai1llc ,1.., home with lar!(e hvmg
"Mm and family area Bnck
C:::. ':>fl ( ( T
1""' PROP£ HT If ~ great 1erms Unbeheva '!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~
bleat Just $200.000 ······••iiiiil PICTURE
PERFECT
Spacious 3 bdrm. 2·slory
Patio Home 10 the heart
of I>ffrfield Close to
park and pools Lois of
~grades and add1t1onal
counter and storage
s pHe Beau1ifully
paneled wall~ ra110 and
!~~t',!~·!·'~•rt'
t;•rwt•I
A~TOMOBILE
\ntaq~t -.:10.10
flttrt•llOft \'~hH !ft
Wl"' M1UC' Hud\ tWftHll>r1,h
Truitl.\ v ....
AulO lA01ftC 1'~W.t.ntl'd
fireplace . s unn y
::,t~: kitchen. 3 huge bdrms.
.:..•• 21'J baths. Great financ· ~: ing, Sl7.000 down 13~
..s.., 111lerest Cell for more
:;,:;• details. 646· 7171 ;tDl1
RCTaylorCo
1,411 ()•/00
GARAGE SALE ads 10
the Daily Pilot brtng
happy results To place
your drawing card,
~642·5678loday!
AUTOS, IMPORTED
t,""'r•l Atl• .. ......._o ,...,,
l'\w.lollHulf' ""'" l •Pf'I OU-'-"'' lhbun
h 'ff•'1 •••• U(IM•
J11'w" J,.A,•A
Ktrm•nn ('"'' 1..t111bclrl!llnl
M11ud1 ~"''1••·• flln1 !CO.. MGK
Opel p..nc,,,_. reuctot Pvru:M Rff'•vh M ltftO)O ~ ... , )Ii•• lbll WMN
fO)QO fm•msi4' VollU•tl .. V•h·o
AUTOS, MEW
•'llM f ;U
t7U 1111 '711
'l'l'N •l2:t
110 tm
Vl:N
Yl.ll VIM
tlJI ..,.
tl«I
'ITU ....
'716
IHI ..,.
me ""' tlllt mi = flU = 1110 m2
llllll -!ltlO
lltU "" .... -.., .. ----..., .... .. , ---.. , .. --"'~
U.ltlMI! a...... .... ,. ..... 111t .. u ·~to ,.opltf• ..a.ta11.-.. ... ,.. . ...,.. •• ~'-ii, •. 1allll To Ct IOUP ch 1 tlfltN • call tod•1
I I
LINDA ISLE LOVELY LARGE
'rotectfll by 9''HMry .ct ow tht
wattr wfth room for 3 ._. boob. A
"lhowcOM" lit t•try woy. 1.,-Moster
bchl + 4 "'°"· ForWMll1 dlltillcJ ""· • fOIRly,.. wfth promlioNI ... ,.. ...
•• dip pool .cl .,.. s 1,395,000.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
REAL ESTATE
s. .. ~· ..._,~Monter_.,.
2436 W C:O..t Hv.iy 315 Mt.-Aw
Ntwpor1 Otte!\ a.a-ltltnd
Hl-l4M '7Utto
l!E
llDlll ILlllS CD .
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
AXB UPPll
LAICH llDUCTIOH
Individual Home -Lrg s BR -Sep
Mslr Ste -Good f'lr Plan -View
City Lites -Great Neighborhood -
School, Park Close By -Fast
Escrow -Reduced To $232,500. A
"Joy OfNewport" Llstlng.
(i)
-~
IA YSfDE COVES
Private beach . ga t e guard
community Steps to Balboa
Island, 2 Br, 2 Ba condominium.
$359.000 Marily n Kershner
642·823S
RESIOEJllTIA! R£Al ESTATE SERVICES
HtG+t SIAS! HIGH IMCOMll
Low down! Low interest I On the
oceanfront. Super duplex in prime
location. Top rentals. Maximum tax
• write-offs & appreciation Potential.
H.igh leverage. Magnificent oc~an
views. An lnvestm ent you can
enjoy. $575,000. ·
IN N~WPOllTCENTEll
644-9060
i plan1ers and gener"US
patio C'O\'er Owner of
fenn~ 1erms to help you
purchase $155.000
IUCH COTT AGE
NEW LISTlNG!
Cozy Spanish collage
with fireplace. dining
room & 2 Bdrms Lowest
ftt pnce at the burh
Block to ocean. across
from park SlSS.000 &
owner v.•111 finance Ca II
Ann Ptters for details
642·5200
j PETE
' BARRETT ·.. REALTY
30 YW AXED RATE
13%% LOANS
GAlDtH 'AH YILLAGI: 2 & 3
Bdrm Townhomes -contain
every deluxe amenity you've
always wanted .. jacuizi. trash
c~mpactors , auto gar. drs.
m1c~wave and a New England
environment that will dai~le you .
Furnished models open daily
except Christmas and New
Year's day from 10:30 til cjusk. -
From $137,950. Fairview Rd at
Avocado, Colsta Mesa
tOQ,
Q(~~J~ JJN;l y;
541-D
1
,
Or~ Colet DAILY PfLOT/Monday, December 28, 1981
th111 r .... . " 11H' I .................................................................................................................................................................
Shampoolfatumtltan. DRYWAU.TAPINC Tree Tri mm lnc If TREES/SHRUBTRIM llCuonry our tp(!tialty c.t.P..... Drawdttarcdfromt tO d :itJIMTreePt1111laa•
FALL Color bri1htenera, wht All tututu" arouallr ~val at Reuonable Gara1d1 Yd Clt1n upa Cltan quirk, depend a ~ yn exp Ur 4~ 1 P1umbin1 Repair• Wi•llllllJttl&I Ludlu,.
Cfl1U · 10 mln bleach Free est Kev111 S'7~90lll Pritts. Haulina. Odd Free est. MH271 bit. Wedo any site Job' &nded Ins Refs Color _ft~Ht MUU42 I033 m 951,,_ SP£C1Al Hall. Uv/dln rms tu: ..,.....StrTlce1 Jobi , Clean ups . a.IAMUPYOUlACT •63H00h ex rt 963--0911 Dick Otshwa•h"· dlapo11l1, Gllbtrt'1Tredpff. ............. • • ;;i: ~is~~; c:irh ....................... 7S0.•5•573·111M3 TODAY ! Y1rdJ&•ra1e A.IJ'l)'PH Masonry PA I NT ER NE t: 0 s W1let1 ' taurete. rir Treet/1hrube u~rtly ~ 6J Per Dlf •WICI i, •;O•;.••• • r · u r. m E.M Dt''llJD & Check H...tw-cln ~. etr. 1 ton ltutk Vtl)' reaa. Uc, bonded WORK 30 yrs up. int paired ar repli.ced 11 pruned fl'tu ul
a•l'a •LL vou p ,, n.~1Ln Sln""' 1"•7 petodot Crpt repair. P I c It • I I n 11 I S 11 ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• -11-" ... h > a>b541MM0/"8 9906 /t'xt Al'OUSllC l.'4:1lln°~ vrsu r Jim 631 8686 675-IDd " ' ' .... 119 '"'" lS yrs up. Do work MTL/PCB tt'irvey Carpentry -Masonry ·"" · ..... "" rs ----• ~ --...;,,;,,;;-=;;;._ ____ _
for a AddJUoN . remodelin, my;seU. Ref1. 531·0101 Hardlaon. S4S·3701 Roolln1 . Plumbinfi JOHN'S BACK! Ready ~ ~!.~.f1in11n1 847 S186 ,...,.,..., ...... ,... ntl TUI PIOf'U
JO day ad Doon, wlndowa. pat o N Sl /N Sh D aJI St T for b1uJln1,. Effirient, n••••••••••••••••••••• I rn Sm11 II, lil y prices ••••••••••••••••••••••· ...... w ...... , all tr ........ Call In the covt'n. Fl"ffest Reas. 0 eam o ampoo lledric.. ryw • ucco · e 1 are 11m111l CdM NB It ..-.v .,... ~·
D"ILY u StalnSpeclaUst. Fast ••••••••••••••••••••••• Remodel, J .B.646-9990 reas. •tu ent w. &• •A-I MOVIM&• 1 E . R ' PIOPllTY now!lm..Q5..T72thra ,. c. 1131*2 54~217~ Q!y Fr t 839 1582 tr uck . Thank you , Top Quality. Special ~d. 006'.3·~77 MAMAGIMIMT
PILOT u_u.t. • • C.,.......ST•. St . Ceel es . f -· -h-El..ECTri"" RICIAN pnced HOME IMPROVEMENT '159·1i'16 cart In handline 2S yrs G.L. Mangun Pa1n\tni Orana" Co ar"a t• yn 1--------saVICI ~ "" " um ean or t e 11 .. t, tree eaUtTUtte on Ri!PAIR G Co 1 Cust work Ltr t352418 .... , ., ••IXPllT• * Cuetom homes, fr•m· Holidays! Best rates for l&r{IC!orsma11Job8 MAINTENANCE .HAULJN exp. mpet lm: rates Ins F'reetfii 731.8281 experienct C11ll for 1nro
DlllCTORY Ina. remod, Frtnch the big dates' cull Licll:ll662l 673•0359 heatmg,carpentry.elec, ChristmasTrees SIO Noovertime.730-1353_ -· ---· --~undratet. TUISllYICI DO ITNOW l doors, skyUahta & patio 646-4733 Electric our Specially. Ule. Ftee t'St. No Job too I F'ree~t. Kris 631·0953, •ABC MOVING Exp.. All Pamllng mt '450 ext tU.a llZ * •491-2120• * ._. Por 5-dre covers. 848·3652 C.-..t/Co.K;;.. Clean. Quick! depend•· small. 645·2811 Cl\tf. Nici 631·0865 prol., low rates QuJck, ~ Neat & complete ---* * * • * * *
Your D1ily Pilot CUSTOM QUALITY ....................... ble We Do Any Size Job! I bid all jobs, lge'/sml Ht •Mlt .. g cattful service 552·GUO 1'h~ est Rcrs. l!St-729.1_ ~~~?~~~ .... II!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
Service Directory Addltioru & Remodellnii TifOMPSON'S •631·2004• Quality, exper. lic'd, ••••••••••••••••••••••• STARVING COl.l.F.GF. P~ Custom bul I din a . re T--'--.,_1 __ Repmt'ntatlve Tcta1Serv1re. CONCRETE CONSTR Davel-1194·9798 Want aREALLV CLEAN STUDENTSMOVING ••••••••••••••••••••••• d I 1 JP-'JI_.....,._ '4~567e, Ht lZZ from Otslgn to Fin1ab Lie 11393383 642-84112 ELECTRICIAN LI c HOUSE' Call Ginghom CO Ll r 1Tl2t·436 HANGING $10/ROLL rro e ID&. main : re ••••••••••••••••••••••• Z3Jlc.l-C·l0. Small JOh5. twdwood Roon G"rl "" l .... •123 lft•u,r~-'. 641·"'"" Qu •·1 Al t p111r5, hauhn"' Steve " TY PING A ~· CONCRETE MASONRY M11nt,~1rs 54115203 ...................... , I , rreees ........ ., .... "" """ au y sos nppeng 873-8105 PROOFREADING ..... •••••••••••••••••••••• '"X'1f.:L Cu~tom Foundat1~ns. -HARDWOOD FLOORS ROBIN'S CLEANING WATCH US GROW ' F'reet.'l!t Scott 645 932.S loofiMJ Tr1nslatrng English, W..-PatJos. Block & Bnck Gcw ••g Beautifully cleaned & Servke-a thoroughly srARVINC ACTORS UC PAPt:R HANGER ...................... Frt n ch . Sp an i 11 h
Driveways, parking lot ,_._ ... ~ Lie 536·5013, S36·9S77 .. 0;;0 ;;•.•u•uuu waxed Be ready for the dean house. ~1).(1857 Move w 1 I h • s 1 n &nded & ~u11r No JOb REPAIRS FOR LESS Reports. Corrupon-
repaira. sulco11ling. Lie. •349892 770·6554 CONCRETE Resad?eo~~~r:~~: holidays ' 832·4881 LORRAINE'S SERVICE ~e:~~r &to we w~ll too small or too lnrge Shingles. nat 30 yrs dence, manusrnpu, rt· ~ Asphalt 63H 199 c.,...ear •60 per sq fh Clean-ups & Tree Tn m ~ Refffometr /Busa /R~~ 0 chi.Id. u r·3Y Ills ;7;~ F'ree est Ton..x f\911 27~ e~ f.:ree est 770 2725 sumea Exr~enced, ac
••••••••••••••••••••••• Bnck & Block. 67S·9027 840-l8l6; eves ll46·•!M? ••••••••••••••••••••••• s rans. · I I · PlolhrfltpoJr Roofing Fast Servire' Ntate, re a e,
AUSl'ATEPAVING F'lNEFINISHWORK eo.tr.don,GtMfol ----Haul,rleanup,conrrete W.•~ P~ ...................... , XlntRefs F'reeF.s l ••d6.o339••
Sealt'oaling, Striping. Re111>dehng/Ooors hung ••••••••••••••••••••••• TREES rerroval Dump TF'U(:k. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pl.ASTF.R PATCHING 494 ~ ........_ Ca..iltg
Repairs. Comm/Rts Randy720-1260CdM CAMAAHUMD Topped tremoved. rlean ckserv 642·7638 BRICKWORK . Smull 1"lnl!paint111gb9R1t·hard Resturcos lntiut 30 Tie-..................... ..
1311'1362.MS-8t8l <Arptt Stniu c..tn.ctto.. Co. lawn renov. 751 3476 DUMP JOBS )Obs, Newport. Coi.la I Stoor Lie. ins IJ yrs or tns Neal Pa~_545.2971 •••••••••••••••••••••• , •RESIDENTIAL•
WiJMttiMJ ....................... Master Bldrs. Custom GardeningWanted &Small MovingJobs Men, Irvine Refs hippylocalcustomers NeutpatC'hes&texturt's TILEINSTALLED AvglstyS30,avg2 sty
••0 •••••••••••••••••• WeCareCrptCleaners quality, room additions Mow111g, edging. raking. Ca llMIKE646·1.391 67S.317S _ ~ankyou 631·4410 freent. 893-1439 All Kinds Guaranteed .Chns~7-8388
Babysit, our CM homes, I Steam clean & uphols L..ac'd. Larry Wendell. s weep 1 n g Fr e e HAULING & OUM p SEU. Idle items wath a INT!EXT PAINTING -Int i Ext Plastenni: ~rs John 893 16!? Prof" Wmdow Clean111g.
yr&up, anytime. Tnick mount unit (213)921·6541 estunates. 645-4372 or JOB.5, ask for Randy, Daily Pilot Classified Lied Rers. F'ree est. Low Hollday Rates WANT ACTION? F'r~ est . qual serv. 642-84821646·5759 Work uar 645 3716 (213)944-1468 ~5737. 641-84%7 Ad. __ u 646·1067u F'reeest 645.8258 ClassafedAds642·S678 'l)·Rae 67S·O!Ml
....._ fw S. Uefunllsll.ct CIMda....._ .,. l••h u.fln. Apa lac•h u.fwa. .,......ts u.fwft. ApG111M11ts Uirfln. ............. u.twa. Apa INWtlh u.fwoa. ...................... ••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 1425 ••••••• ••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••• ,........ ••••••••••• ••••••••• •• •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••
Mt ,.tt .. ach 106 CorOMdtfM• 32Z2 U44 ....................... CorwcWMw lUJCotifaMtte 1124 CodaW.SO 3124 ...... OllS.och 384C ..... Oii ieach ll4C .. odt 1869
•••••••••••••• •••• ••• • •••••••••••••••• ••••• •• ••••••••••••• •• • ••• •••• TOWN'HOUSE end u t ••••••••••••••••••• •••• •••••••••••••• • • •• • • • 1 • ••••••••• •••• • •••• ••• • • •••••••••• • '1 •• • • • • • •• • ••••••••• •• •• ••• •• ••••• ••••••••••••• •••••••• • •
H R BOR ,Duplex 3 Br 2ba , deck Orangetree Condo. 2 Ukenew.2BR 2BA,;i~: SPECTACULAROCEAN Beaut. l llr. carpets. PALMMF.SAAPTS Funushed&Unlurn 1n Newtbr contlo,sundeck. p•DKNEWPORJ A RIDGE w/ornview.Gar Deluxe Bdrms on stream Ing 1 alio halcon &CJTVUGHTS VIEW . drapes, quiet bldng, 1561Mesa 0r Bd rm Apls Cym rll>k,pvtgar.lndryrm M =~· 2 BR . 2 BA property $895 7171, ~751mo. Adults only. AIC, gfr~I . selr cle!n From every room . large <213 > 498-67876 or I Br unrum $360 t Hr Jucum. Sauna. pool, v.· hook·ups Nr bearh COUNTRY CLUI ----~=.:..·000=·:..:::640.9605 Orchid. Work 540·4988. Rec fa c1L SSl·4196 oven drapes Sec gate I Br S&S/mo Anthony 597-0956 rum S400 2 Hr unrurn tl'nn1s, volll'yba ll. ~ P1P,9611 0122aft 6 UVIHG ho~ 640-9219 __ 851-1311 • · pool ,' rlubhse. sauna.' days call 642-5757, wknds Pacific $425 Adults only t'all basketb~ll. gamt' morn L.acJ-o leach 3141 Bachelors, 1&2 bedroom
°"9er RMI Estate 2Br garage r le ul1l 1n w db d E -Quiet nr Fwys S670 No ~J~_. _ ___ 9-4 546•9860 Hunt Bth 846 or.19 ••••••••••••••••••••••• a!JU & townhouses.
•::.:.:.::..•:_.::.:_•••••• •••• rl~ded. siso rpm~ Ca 1i H~~ r~R g ;, , B~ ?a~ 17s.2SllO 751 .0796 ,._~.._ u~-1124 =c TPAtn'OCRK 0•RAI DhE CM 2 br, Adults, no pets, new :I Br t'Olldo 1n Htn11 Coot l Ckean View Deluxe I & 2 From SSJ0.'1000 644· 1900 _.._. J o 7S9 t22 : ' · · -_...__ """' tiE ly dec stovetrern11.encl Pvt patio w :.lorage Br Apt.\ Newlydet·orat For S. 11 OC im av1s . t nn, d111 rm , frplr , patios, 2 bdrm, I ba. 2 car 1111r. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bachelor and one bdrm ..2_al10 S47S 979·4410 shed & t'arpon Kids ed rernge d1shv. asher Duplex , upsta1n 2 Br. 1
••••••••••••••••••••••• CostaW.SO 3224 la~e. Pool & Tennis w~her dryer book up 2Br.1BaApl a!JU. All adults and no · OK no pets ~25 mo di~posal heated pool' Ba. rrplc, garage. Near
OCEANFRONT Modular •••••••••••••••••••••• Prl\•1leges. SIOOO Mo Air cond Bit ms S550 , Newly deror Gas pd. pets. Pool. BBQ and O...Poiat 3126 752 2197.85 ,1 p ele\·ator,subter. prkng' Lidoshoppingarea S600 Type Homes. 24 hr 4 Bdr uerutive home 64G-ll27. 559-6188. OH1ce. ~-3322. encl gar. pool. dshwr. laundry room. ....................... I S850& u Call 494 8083 year lease Adults. no
security, ,,, ma pvt brh w/pool & spa Famil) 759-6S97 A~ts .?'2·5073 12 BR. 2 BA. d1shwai.her. -i> p..'lS Must have ref's
+ fashing pier Cedar rm. rormal dining, 2''2 L.acJ-oleoch 1241 "f hwlllhF.f'lllahed I J BrTownhouse RIESIDECOMFORT no 11r1s. nu rarpets. I~. \lev.. central heal. Driv e b Y 6 t 4 ~
cottage type, redwood Ba. Excellent cond1t1on. •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newly decor gas pd , Large lBr upstairs with a\•a1I Jan call Roger IT¥l 7 g~~eAve 494-6303.
deck, pool , guarded $1200 incl gardener & OCEANFRONT Modular• Costa Meso 3724 enrl gar . pool. dswhr cat hedra 1 re 111 n gs· 857 ralO Sl·4~3 SI.es-to the bearh 2 & 3
gate, ad Its only No pool service 7St-3191 or T> pe Homes. 24 yr •••••••••••••••• • ••••••1 Adults 642-5073 poolside balcony· frp k · 2 Br 1 Ba enclsd ~a rage • 1 4 l 81H,i. •oi~ t br apl, 2 blks lo beal·h. Br frpks. yearly Im .
. &,900 499 3816 MS-6445 Agt Avail Der security. •2 m1 pvt bch S3751rro Mature adu lts. Spa -2 B I Ba S395 dshwsht & r arport S475 & )arll Lots or gra~s • o.,•.wit, & 880 ocean view. $450 . See rmt'Ulate $650 & ms.
C-rclGll 30 + fishing pier Cedar ~pets Qwel & serure , 3 ;:~ .. Bar.1425 ·Laun ~acious bach with patio S5()() 33562 Blue Lantern • h ~ i:i, ~. t2 26 27th 12 4 1213 > 673-2507 fir rt1 160~CI06e toSCPlaza.Green Cottage type, redwood I 91 Newport 81 \d tir ... fac nnt11.548·9556 DISIT¥l Adults.nopels "963JS4 or496·923ll • ••ll< ""'•·' ~7936 OC-EAN--V-l_E_W-de-1-ux_e_Z .,., brook home J BR 2 BA deck. pool. ~ua r ded 64&-8373. '!:L!: ·.J'.:"'::: Ckeanview 2 Br 2 Ba ron • 0Q" B•"" & S"W· 2 Br -unrurn V1clona
••••••••••••••••••••••• bv, din, ram rm'. enc'. gate. adlls onl) No Newly decor I Br dplx. $9lG Mo 2 Br hi Bad. Apt 26SOHarla,S49·2447· do, Wtl), pool , tenm~ • ~< 1 G••n lkad1 Fr11lr. derks. Br 2 Ba deck, yard ,
--------•; yard.2cargar .SSSO/mo dogs From $775 mo sep by gar Quiel arage, was er/ ryer. I br, '' ba wlshwr. utils sec gate, end 1?ar.S600 ocean v1ev., nt'wl) re brick rrplr · gar • FOR SALE I $1500dep 992Carnalioo eJ-3816 Emplyd adult over 3S all butll·ms. Small child pd, $360. adult only, no tH2·9'772 rrodeled $750 mo Call SEC UR GATE
Shopping renler. 18.000 I 64(}..6140 l.otJ-a ...... -32SZ ~~· $330. 548 t02I ~~· ~~\f(~·a~~:Y 1 year ~: S:1~~milton. ~C. 2 Br Apt Near orcan. dJl_ri 499 5366 or 499 23~ =~Su~~e:e:~r~~~
sf with credit tenants 3 BR, I BA, lam room .•••••••••••••••••••••••~ le h 3740 TSLMGMT 642-1603 -view, clean, balcony, Non.hLaguna2bdrmapt l Pacd1c Ave C.M.
Pr i me c 0 r n er · din. room . den. fp . 2 car Exec. 4br. Jba, ram rm. 3 :::::::~!'!' •••• ~•••••••! ~--· ----2 !':; 11 b1a. '1~1 k , refnl(, garagt' Aval I now l SR. luxury Condo. Villa on lhe Ocean m HoabtlCda. 1-0)-9440, 642-8808. Anaheim. SI ,430,000 gar. '675/mo .. Isl + sec. t'ar gar. view. nr ocean , ,r .,..,., nc ·. u 1 s, no 1>,ets 66t 0252 Parifica, pool. Jat•uiz1. nyon In neat 4 unit !?· I with large tort & extra
Cash <No loanl Net In · avail Jan Isl Debbie SID>. 9'14·9'120. H.I. S FINEST ! r 443 Hamilton •A <: M OCEAN VIEW tennis. St· t u rity. n r Ldrv racilitte~. unit ha s deck. 7S9·0414, 7S9-1042.
come -s1so.ooo. / yr 540-0702 u!..-t-V'-jo 3267 Span~h Estate L1v1n11 ~ 64>71114 pnv drrk "'ail 2 I $2. Ground lease-60 Yrs: C t Property Z" Br 1 Ba. --ic Beautiful park-like sur 2 br , n r SC p I a za. From Dana Point most ocean,,_~ 536 0528 S 8 5 O mo C a I I i..dlate Occ.-cy
20 Yrs. flat Ca II . house 1n hi gh 1rafr1c ••;;0•M:,~·FOR•R•E•N•T•••• roundrngs Terraced MacArthur V1Hai:e. scenic bluff, like new ' Banlt or Ament'a Tru~l 714 752 5040. f9·5 I or S7001rm 3 Br. 2 Ba. Apt.
Owner/Broker. (714 ) area or Westside <.:osla CN pool. Sunken 11as hbq. pool, spa , lenn1& t'lb. Be the rinl onupant I rental 2 BR. I BA 4 plex 497 11152 LlP15lairs. view. balcony.
833-2Z37. Mesa. Ternrir ror Anti 3 & 4 Bdrms. S650-S67S sparkling rou11ta1ns S500 imo Ca ll Rob, Onlv 4 units. 2 Hr w encl front porch & a l l6'9 vaulted re1lings. enclsd
que Shop. Accounting Fenced Ya rd s & SP a c Io u s r oo m s 768-5600. or call Oave. w r11>lr & 2 Br w dt•n bu k s e rl' 1111r c• h Newport S.och garage, block to beach Office. Law om,·e. eH' garages. Kids & pets Separate d1n1ni: area 951~ llurry for the best Yll'W' SJOO rm 1S9 •1381 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Yearly
IRCWP'roperty 2000 Xlnt parkmg. Will dis welcome lslmo + dep Walk -in c losets . S625to 1675 Adults. no ' t-:i\STBl.l'Jo'Jo' lbr , pool, TSL~t fl.42·1603 ....................... 545-2000. A&ent. no ree_ homelike kitchen & 1 2 Br.11-i Ba 610 Joann St pets Da)s G43 021 2 Ha•e somethinit In ~l'll~ qwet area. ~mgle adult. --INCOME ~:r:;~rro~llsnqg 1~5~1~. Mlwportt.acll 326' cabmet.s Walk to Hunt 1 ~~.~~dreo Pet OK Wknds._!l,6441 Cla:.s1r1edadsdo1t v.ell 1 oopets SSOO mu 644·4767 Want Ada Call642-S678
PROPERTY e luding the \•ard •••••••••••••••••••••• mgtonCenter I •• • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••• S__.l"LIST ssoo1mo S48 ·54 42 I Bdrm rum.S48S Spacious I Br Garden , .-~ "' n~5629__ THE ILUFFS Apt Pool & rec All u111s • •
Select from J-19 units Terms available to su1l
your needs
714 641 0763
2925 College A 1 e
Costa Me:.a. CA,
APPLE VALLEY
Tu Slwhr Near new 4·plex 2
bdrm, 2 bath each unit
with fireplace. enclosed
patio. garage. 9'• 'l 1st.
Pos cash rlow Now
$159,500. Bill Grundy,
Rltr, 67>6161.
lUMl'TSC.M.
Pnce just reduced. near
new, rall now
TSL lnvstmnts 642· 1603
14 UHrTS C .M.
Eastside with pool,
owner anxious. great
rmancing at 10%
TSLlnvstmnta 642· 1603
CONDO.JBr. 2•2Ba. lg Spac1ous4bdrm.Jbath, Adults.nopets I paidEAldPuultsrt,n~rts • 8-DAY WEEK SPECIAL • ma s 1 e r b d r m . ram home New pa mt & Ut1h11es F'ree• e a ,1,e~a •
w/balcony. dbl garage carpel. Move '" read} I with an ad 19rillMapleA\•e AplS • wi,,.....er. r""lc, central s1200 per month Agt . LAQt:lNTA HERMO SA QU1ET ADULTS 0,er JS • 8 Days 3 li'leS 8 Dollars .,.... ·,.. 16211 Parkside Ln. I blk Under the unf I B r S32.S • vac, $750 mo 2182 Maple 64G-SS60. W of Beach. 3 blks S orl urn r rom • 1105 Ron 979 5310 or ___ , O .1 P'I Beaut landscaping No ' 11 s edSy to place your 8-0ay Week Class1f1ed by mall a nd 11 •
894-2086 Balboa Island Waterfront Edinge847_5441 I 31 J I Gt =·~fi!:'~~6~1 ~~s I •• costs 1ust $8 -thal sonly a dollar a day' To qualify for th is •
3BR. 2Bn. Fam rm. Kids 3 Br 2 Ba Yearly ren G"ft 6 'de S I If t be I ff OK. No pets No smgles. tal WIS Mo 110"0341 WlFFLETREE A PTS I UI Roomy 3 Br Townhoui.e pecia O er you mus a non-commerc1a user o ering
S775/rro. 1754 Iowa St Beaut 3bd + FIR home t BR rum . gym . ~auna .I apt'" qwel adult com • merchandis e lor sale up lo $800 per ad and lhe price must •
644.1836 w pool, 2 pahos,2 frpl, iacurn, volle) ball. plex Newly decoralcrl. be tn your ad The cost s tays the same whether your ad • West<'llrr. Sl200imo No basket ball & 1enn1s 678 rareplat'e. enrlsd patio & •
4 BR. pool. serv & grclnr ""'-"646-_2:!89 1146-0619 l Call 642·5 garage Adults only • needs e1ghl days selling t1fne or 1ust one • mrl $950 mo. St450 set" c ::: 1 __ le h 37 41 ... ~ ,_ _ Sorry. no pets ~50 Mo
de . 645·7<.is_ Bluffs Condo 3 Br up. I br .....,..... ac 11111 Aa 191 "" ~Dll call bt wn 9.5 3-0 • •
bdrm b down. 3 ba Kitchen ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ri a.-Use one word 1n each box About 4 words make one 2 ·I a, 2 car gar. 1..41xury studio, spa, TV. 1 Ch lnnGS Beautiful landscaped • washer dryer hook up nook . .1_1300, 644-2607 maid service. phones, garden apts Pool & Spa • c lassified line o f type M1n1mum ad IS 3 lines Please prinl WkAir~~3322.Bltin $550mo. Spar J BR 2'"2 ba. very SllSwk.499·2227 j A.cl-V"KOr, Covered park 1n1t ' • plainly •
,_. clean townhse Pool. jog. AduJ'· no ""IS I
MesaVerde4bdrm.2ba gmg, etr $750/mo . A~~~.~ ... ??.'.~ !BR...,, .,~ . '435 • r ----·--------------------------, • firepla<'e Large yd. Nr 544·1440 ----2 BR. I BA l500
Sch I s C h i Id r e n Harbor VU homes. 4 BR. OCEANf'RONT 2 & 4 Br WTSIDE .!§1.~ 18th, 642 0656 • I •
welt'o me S650 m o 2 BA. ram rm . Sl 200 Avail. Winter Weekly1 I • Monthly 673 7873 $415 2 Br. I Ba. Poolside • 968-'l'/48 a .. a 1 I J a n I 6 l h · · • All( Laundry room. I ~ I • F..uts1de. lg cor 2 BR 2 6#-4157.700.9312 OCEAN FIOHT child OK, no pets Call ewe&tfield •
gar, patio. kids pets ok Harbor View Dix. 2 bdrm. 2 ba Avail ror appt. before 11.S gone. FA.Mil y A"S. • I • ~. 499-4820 now 'ttl Jan 23. Month or TSL M nt 642· 1~ Sparkling dean large I S 1~00 o.. Poilit 322 ~~~.1>c:1Gr~~/1c!:: Wkl · 752-WESTLAKE VILLAGE apts for fam1hes w 1or 2 • I •
•••••••••••••••••••••• uon.Sll2Stmo Ot.-FrOlltDpit lmmed orcupancy children. Nr park Heat • I 10 al\ • Beaut.4Br 2ba.F1R. .OH~ ""· 3bd 2b bl paid.Nopets .vv ...,.........,., n•m rm. a. t Adult only complex 2 BR 2 BA SS"< • I • (rplc. gar. fnrd yard, fi r M thl p I I dry "" Newport Heights. 3 t>r. ins. a rep ace on y oo . spa. aun room . :118 W Wilson 631 S583 • '. 13 20 • Yitw 962-2194 fmly rm. hfdwd firs , or earl 645-7573 pall06 or decks No pets. ~ • ~V.., 3Z3 frplr. S850 dnve by 418 llGC"' ... YO... Garages avail Spartllng clean 2 Br l'• I
St •--'-642 """"'"' "'" " Baclt ""'" Ba $490 Fenced. ut 1ls • 15.IO • .... Estate ................ .... .. nuw.::W5, '"""" Delightful 2 bdrm. 2 ba ..,.,., aid. R f 2 II I it..~ ZIOO HOMEFORRENT llGC"' ... YO... condo Part11lly furn 1Br.S40S-S41S p enge sma • Ir-----...._ ____ ...._ ____ ,__ ____ '-----~ • ~__,.. 4 Bdrm S700. Fenced "'" " 2 Br S475·S485 childttn OK. no pets Add $2.60 for each addttloo1l lloe for 8 times ••••••••••••••••••••••• vard & garaae. Kids & Guard gale comm Secunty gate SllSO +-set' TSLMgmt. 645·8122 1960Wallare 642·490S • --..... Gs.. , " s · 2 bd 1r imtorro. 159.159• _, e I .....-"'" pets welcome 1st mo + pacious rm am NEW BREED APTS
Luxury Condo dep 54.S·2000. Agent, n<i rm Deane Home Sl2SO Balboa Bay Club. 2 BR 2 BACH with LOFT S4IO. mfe8ti8.AU • I •
Rancho Mirage. 3 Br, J te.i. tm.640-8582,979·4191 Ba.5 mo~a~ Frplc, rer room, pool. Af'AITMIMTS • I Publish my ad for 8 days starting •
Ba, $120,000 equity .......... Oltleach 324 Jacuzzi. gas & water Beautirul garden apts I
Prefer sml comm 'I •••••••••••••••••••••• 38dr.&ramily room.2 "' paid.Adults.nopets.393 Patios/decks Pool & • I C lass1f1cat1on • Irvine, rental prop. Lux 2 Br. 2"'1 Ba. Pool, Ba, bit-ins. garage, va· ~ tw,.... _Hamilloo,CM 645·4411. Sn•, heat poid Adults. • Newport. Laguna cant. saso. 3 Bdr 2 Ba. Ulrfwwl.a..d ..... • I N Owner/Bkr. spa. tennis, security dblgarage,blt-insS7SO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 2 Br. Condo nr S.C nopets. ame (710347.01~ gate. Walk to beach. arts J"COIS RE"LTY lcilloal"-d 3806 Plau, S.A. Pool, Spa, BACH S380 S385 • I ---------------------•
. . 962.1398, I "' ~ Tennis. sseo. Adults. no 'lBR S43S • Address 3br.2~ba,onreeland. t 4BR,Ba&•2 Pool.tennis PROPElnMGRS 0·:-r;•;•;••t;•ta·~·~; pets. 2BR1V.BA SSOS e I ------------------------•
bit to beath 1n NB. & Playground. Kids Ok. 675-6173 Waterfront. 3 Rr. 2 Ba. _64t·l400or646-4911. 2Z50Vanguard 540-9626 • 1
1
City Zip Phone • =~~6'f=lmo. No pets. $675 mo . Newport Bearh . Valla Yearly rental. '975 Mo. 2 B~ garden apt. Pvt
/a I • S3l·~~·l90S I Balboa. I Br Iba. IOSOsq Call771>-0047. patio, gar. l~undry. No mo. Ulil pd ' patio. • I Check or M .O enclosed 0 •
.... Nr bearh, 3bdr~.
1
2ba. n. cop nr. Terrific vu . ..._ ,.._.. lH7 f:~ml child ok. $450. quiet, adlts. 1 BR • I , •
....................... S750 Gardener me No privary. S800 mo + ser ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644-6951! • I Charge my ad to: •
..._.. .......... pets. 962-863t. . P.P. 972-1717 Iv ms Kinpiu 3 Br. w/trplr 41 Bachelor $325/mo. 2864 Oun 2 Sr. l Ba. laundry
HOM E FOR RENT beam c-'lin•" -vrly. Lasalle CM rar. No pets. S38S Mo I 0 -# • ....................... IJC'.I .,..~, ~21~" ns 211 BE h Pl e lifli'""' Exp
.. _ __.. l t 3 Bdrm S67S. Fenred WAruorfr-"-'-• 6t0-5719,S36-H4l. .,.,, ..... a · 18t . I L ·----• ~ put__. 16 Kidll & ....,. --~.. 1144-0'52 ••••••••••••••••••••••• :,::: w~i:!:;!'ei.st mo + Newly deroraled 3 Br Bay Vu, 2 BR, J BA. 11r, Wesulde Costa Mesa, · • I
UDO ISLE charming ' ,(-. ~2000 . Agent no 2ba 3 bedroom. 2 bath no pet.I, aduJtJ. lllOO/mo dplx, up1t.ain, 2Br, lBa. 2 Br w/gar. newly de· • I 0 # Exp • ~~~c!:!;i~~,/~;: 1e:· . ~:~~k!~~~~~epl~~~: wtoc~~nme ~~en~~~~~=.~ :;~.~~~~~ll:tr • . •
ll'*led. $1700 mo. Yur-Large 2 b r l lit b a Pier and 30' rioal. ~MT QWet & safe No kids or Callbetl-sPM.63&-4120 L------------------------------
&.Bi'LGnmd1,6'7S-'l8l townhouse End unit. SUOO/mo .. lst/lut and Yearly leue unfum. 2 pets. "50 mo. 5411·5«2, • r·--·-----WE 'LL P AY THE POSTAGE --------·-----•
Lullriou 2 Br, 2 BA garages~~;:: patio, Sansec~}Y Ann V111ghn =· 2r~~l~°Jra~:. 110-5629. ~? J~~~nl :pt~ • 11 r :, •
hoaw in 811 Canyon, .... ~ _, Ca l ... ~ ESidt . 2BR , Ne-P\:IOl 110W 18th Sl NO POSTAGE
btau&ifullyfscompletely ...... 1244 *C t"' R rt., Art mo. II Landa or Ctrpeta. Lndry. Patio. 1HE .VlcrORIAN. New-• I NCCCSSARV ' • f\inaWled for abort let ol ...................... 0 e ea.-.,. . . 67~7060 --Adlls. No Pet•. ssso. Iv .. _ : IF M allEO : • 4 lllDI. -/mo, l•t ' Twnhome. new 3 br, 3 ba, & Investment C...cW M• JIU _873-3800 v ~. 2 Br w/11ar.. e 1 " ,
P k l new crpta " drapes. bit· 111• IN TH[ 1t1t + aecwttx dtpotlt 6: • 1ar. ar • poo · .,.5771 ' ............. •••••••••• 2BR redecorated Duplu In., paUo. Adults. Call • ~ g • rtfa. req. 1-..... or at. mo.833·~7 TO OCEAN. Most unit w /slngle car bttweenl.5PM,63S-4l20 .2 LINtTEO STAT(S ,,
... New cmdo 2 BR 2 BA ct .. rmln• In old Corona, praae. SIM)O. S58·S001 llr1 "G" Victoria $470 • I BUSINESS REPLY LABEL • Palla, Nr 'p•ri. Pool. $510. Lrg 1 BR . full 2 Br. 2 Ba. frplc, ()(UD .• c • .. • ...._____..... ... ... Noa a815"964ftves security. Amultlu. view rro m dtck . ~ _ .J • > ,__u I lo . 831 ·5237 . 845·6242 • .-io1mo. C•ll Anthony Need ....,. ,,_., • l'I ,,.~, c1.•u11ti.11111' HO ,, co~u litlU • <a.L1,0AH1• ~ •
-.. ·-·•• .. ••••• llMTALS 213.al).314$ da)'I 4142,5757, eves & 11•• WAii .. .. ~~ ..... !?.~~ 1 er.1 ba p llarbor Vlew Monaco wkndl63t·SU>. fir C~ristnm lllfitl? • : POSTAGE w11.l ~E P-ICl 8¥ •OORCS.'\ll g ....
ldolbtandW11erfron1 :::~~ba :: nr.2ba,gardener,ne•28R,2BACondo.Stpsto • < Or1ng1Co11t01flyPllot 1 •
a Ir. 2 81 . Yearly ren, Ur,2IJI llOOfum e!itC,ll02S.M4-4721 1kb. Frplc. F.ncl Gar., Sell your unneeded . ,. 111•1y ,,., I t • ·Mo. J70.414l. IA RaW llltr W.llOO lLIJfFS. 3 bdrm, 3 ba, Adults. mo Teo.&290 1 Items with a low • ~
..,,.._ ,_ • no.1.1. for ll ram nn. Pvt 1pa. SJ .ooo 2 bdrm, 2 bl, •lew ot Bay, I cost Id under the • 0 e
..... beldl. 2 asr I •.a. Twtlerock. 4 B 111>846-ZIOO Ref , wuher, dryer, I p ~ft Gui.... • I
I•. tuu 1rl 1 . =~-:!!~ 1 Bl" 2 b• condo. Im· . ........ .~·J~Y 1.IOt"' .... =J e I Box 1560 e
""" 9 ... ut1 railtt maculate~ SIHO/mo. 2 blociJ tram-~ Al· I • I 330 W. 81y St. 1 •
JH1 :::_ood...:."~! • =~nty rt· =i*:· ~0• e I Co1t1 Me11, CA 12121 •·
. ~ NftllOIT HllORTS, I •u 1t•Ho apt H lf • I • __ ... ,_...,: ···i3:'·"'''~· ........ ~!!!!!!::=1! -..., . ·~-.,·····~···~·~········ l \ ~ I
.· .. Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, Oec:tmbtt 28, 1811 , ............. .._..,................. ..... 44H t..t&,._. IJOO WllllM 11M MllaW..tM 71 MllaWllill4 . 11M Ill Oitn A 1111 I ,_., .... ttv'..... •.. ...tttteett ttttt tttt eMtttttlHt• Utetetttt •4itfftHUtHtt tee eet U~etetttttteteteettt tt•t U t Ue ettHH\teU ~;;Tettttttettett• e ·-••eteeeeetetttttttt ........ tt•tttttteeeet ·--·••ttt e eeaH•• ----~ ......... , ... ,a.ta ..... 250 tq I\. ASSISTANT MANAGER Qlrleral Labor Wuhtr, clean, worlla LOSING LIASE. qutt· lf''UflKIPJA
lutbhllt 2 1 1 8 1iatt.atl5/mo.Ullllln· Jdlytpt_rwetklnadult Oou etor111t PIT . A creative Human Ruourcea 1ood Jt5. 541·8513, tinatulM:N,1tlll11out Tw la I cyJ Volvo
n I '1· •.: dd. nt w ltth. St FO• US ~rtmtnt. btach area private Country Club. Manafter wlll have the opportunity to ~ .ALL •~plin and nx. ....... UDdft' JIO a.n. =t•~. portn e1--. , ....... .,3 C.11· ····"'"'. 8.30am b h 1•• I l d d t"-'"<' uct1n1· full electriHllu n111b I ..--· -"' '""'_,,.. esta s a resu ~·or en e epart· l>r>itr. au . de•n. worka __ .,, • • · · ·-n14 "-• ... l8( fl(( -1 m Tun.Sat , Dtaplay cam. w11t1n1 rod.a, holden. outril· New -..... a .... 1 otrtce with "" · --~-ment aimed at meeting employees lood 95 MS·SSlS or room chain Beauty If"' dual bllt tank• ' 1 bt,1 bl. rrplc, '11 Ottlll vi.w Reception "-IL ATTIMTIOM: tlGH SCHOOL needs. Skills ln merit compensation, se~ Salon halrd,.Yen ind m1 ny atrH. Special :-sar::::: Adlllli, r~ + 1
2
1 °'1 lltt1dlt44 laq WI t AmbitloUI boy a and STUDIMTS benefits, oraanitational behavior and llqc:IK IOJO hydnulic cbair1, mlr· Am trlr r1ted lUOO Iba.
· ---· vi mme ate Y 64.5671 1ar1• l"U y•ara old, 10· '-·"·-ir •A'ar rompanv 8 ·"'·' d planu ,. .. ,_ 2 old Boat 2 I 2 ... 8 I d u1-.. .. ~ .. ..... ....... ""' , commun1·"at1"on would be helpful. .. ••••••••••••••••••••• l"Or'l.M~vain ............. ~,.. . r n I enc I r lrO. ~ -work O"M or two •v"'n "'""-!nus for •vpr'd ' R • G d T fl •••A .. h ,.... t ln 1ra11, pool, rrplc. l '"' "" ·-~.... .,.. p I d . d 0.1 ran our IUa',ma .. e·up,a ampoo nevtr ,.;n waer, /m>.&to.~. 1711SnHT Auatrallan Shepherd. 1n11 a week •ettin1 and unexpr telephone rogress ve, ynam1c co~~any nee s Frame size 23 In, black andhalrprocfl.l<'u. a:lnt cond. Muat aee
3 Br ---3100 aq ft. for lease. male, 2 yrs, lri·colorcd. new1p1per aubscrlp sollritorll Wt train a tuke·charge , hum antsll<' leader Whl Z7 In. New 12.SO. sell C..IJS31·9'754or {714J .. ·2117.
· 2 Ba. 2 blockl to Plenty of parkln1. \'J wearing Hospital 10 lions. Transportation Hourly t comm -+ Please send resume and salary re .7$1·~ 1f\er81818S1111 ......... ,
be1ch, patio. llSO/mo . block to Weatcliff. 6lMOOO •nd constant odult bonua. Works to a pm. · l t I LLOO~S a.iw to50 · m .3129 Ci.tom Interior d .... i1n. --su~rvision ~rovlded. Mon thru Fri and 9 to 3 quire men 8 O: , .. .., Mllttrf• IOH * A " · ..,. Lolt · Keeshound dou Ca 13 t • aop k Sa Pl Box 1002 •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• u · u .,. 'ft ........ ••••••••••••••• 8albol lalandW1terfront Rtld)'tomoveln!Com-· "' o,,: .as for pm l. ease call 11rt ruquepert0na '""'' Cuatom 42 ft yacht 3 Br. 2 ea. Yearly ren· pttltive rates, call Rob, I/yr. Black. white & Andree, 642 4321. ext. 4.~77(),91W?, 1.sk for Jim Dally Pilot NOW 25• /FT tor birthday, weddlnJ•. Chrh mu parade,
tal. 5/mo.770-0347_. -a1.-gray . Fr1~ndl y 343 01'0oll¥._____ Costa Me"u ''a.92626 Redwood 2X8 4ecklna, ll.Mlv.CaU645-644S whllewalchtna.p.rtles. -REWARD. 645-8587. Hous 1 S4 50 b 0 •"' 4.J)' Iona; alao redwood .Balloons Of Newport eu. beat ratesll48·4005 Af ...... ,...llled Qdtom executive office, Lost Doberman F . Auto Gius Installer. Ex· Ftr~ ~~~:allable. r., fencing. Loweit prict: Royal chin•. "Ven .._...._ ~.....
9060 •Ulfwlllal.cl 3900 :!/·S:~~·t~e~\~h "Raven", El Toto·Lke perieocedlnAll Phases. S48·971S $e(UJ1ty guar. J im or Ke n dome", for 8, oven/OW--.-
•• .. •••••• .. ••••••••••• Forest area I SO 40hrs H u .,, B h -1 '-•Tl.._u••o an lme 646·988S. p-'. dood "ond ............. •••••••••••••••
SE & W I n.>.842·4623. Rew d'770S924 · · un n.,.on c · Housedeaner, own llCEf'T/TYPIST ..,,_ • -rvu1 • ' ~ "' M D ar . . ~l. Afters. 960.5827 transp. Newport./ M1~-Aulat with ret•tptlonil!t For priv11le <'Ommuntty' c-... a 646-8773 WIMDSUllll VILL•GE HptP.-Mllo Lost : Dog. Wht rem Babysitter /light sloo Viejo area. SH6. duties Typlna LD&una lle11ch nrea. ~...... 10l014tc•••.. Used,@SO. &48-1089
"' Ground floor office coc k a po o J u a t hoUJekeeper, $1 00/wk , 63Hi000. (S SW p Ml. t 1I1 n g . R.ellclf •h1ft Wiii Iraan •••u•••••••••••••••••• Wmhd 1011 INh, .,./
New 1112 bdrm luxury frontlnc Newport Blvd. r.roomed. WestSeashore Mon-Fri 6·8/hrs per Houselteeperfor couple,2 general oU.ce Goorl ~II r~!. App't, Mon ,..,..110 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dedia t070
ldWt apU In 14 plans. l All new Interior incl Or. NB b(~n Orange da_y May have own days weekly Malure company benefits & all ~'!_...,..1157! Complete outfit, like Buylns World War II •••••••••••• .. • .. ••••••
lldnn from MIO, 2 bdrm <>pen beam ceiUng w / and River Jelly. Days child Balboa. 67S 2723 person. E}iglish speak-vancemenl Ca II ror Str y, 12 Spm Ty1nng, new NO. M ·699S SouYerura. Cuh P1id ~· ai~ tie rent1I In
ffrom $$70, Townhouae l1Waes.1kyli1hts, wood S.0·3500. eve/wknd Bo-Lke .. par Ing , own trans p appt M erril~ Lynch min bookkeeping, hi o•• IOO (Especially want Newport Isle, M·S7/ft rom S640 + pools, ten· putay nrinc Ir cpts. 944 fl4S.83U C-·~~ u1"" &"" ~7~ Relocation F r 11nk1e tng, billing. Non smkr -1 M Germen ReUe1l »1·4464 lm-211111. nit, waterfall!, ponds! IQ ft A/Cheat. $1200 mo. Lost CM 12·21 lg. blonde •vwuig man serv 752-0707 C M m.~ Complete photographic INh.-"-''-=-""u.-...._ ___ tO_ff_ l~Dal fporaicooltd. Finrgom" hSea''n· 8'7U&OS.642·3663 F. Setter mix, I yr, no ~.~alntedh busldne,ss an Home.W keedperL T E.OE M/F S-ERVJ-C,.STATION AT dkrm Z0.875-1405 w•...-.. _.,.. ----"'-"'..=.;;.;;;_ __ --1 lD, REWARD! 646·4739 ..... t as nee or 1111 ante . ong erm c. . """'-•••••••••••• .. ••••••••• Dieao Frwy drive North 2 offices + bathroom & Just bought dog rrom efficient, highly or Housekeeper Pm•ate TF.NDANT, PIT even· Dol)I 1040 11; .......... ~ Beach to Mcfadden storage. 3'1S fl S280/mo p 0 u n d r 0 r k 1 d 5 gamzed, resp person Home s 6 days a week REST.au• ... uy 111gs & wknds. neat llP· •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• ... ~ C r DRY STORAGE then West on Mcfadden 548-ll4.S 494...1803. Christmas Eitp In A R, A t p. uve·m Pvt Rm & Ba "" 9'An pearanct! & handwnl· KEESHOND Pups. AKC _.a .. u Htor
lo Seawind V1lla 0 e _a...__ payroll No k Prere En I h S k Wanted . managerial ing Apply at 2S90 Oiampsire. M/f' Pet& 53'-fllZ Monthly boat •-RV " -·--445 F ound G o Ide n n smo er r g 15 pu personnel for restaurant '"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I • (714)883-Sl98. •••••••••••••••••••••• o~-ever. M Under 1 Good salary Please C'all mg Ref ere Req Call ch rr h N rt 81. C M s how · Pvt Pl Y I' storage for any sate, 2A .,._ nan 8327300 •n S · I am (CO ee S op>. Ap 213/IB7 134Saft6pm ........ , _ _... h · t t "-4000 ""'""or Office. 1350 sq. rt yr. 4 whl paws. Irvine . t• swerrng ervice a ply with resume 16205 . ~ r sec u r I Y • re e ••• Mesa Verde Area .... _.,..,., •• ..,,. .......... ••M 557.2520 & l.Aoave Name TWX OPEIATOI SHIH TZU pups AKC IMt .ts IOI] launching &. washing ,._:~:••••••••••••••••• c.c 4123 """.NU. .-~,__,. &Phone NoSmokers Brookhurst (al Ed _,, d C h0 I ' ·-priv11e 0 es Newpor t
'-41 .... a Beacb Motor Inn, ~· Found M' . II bl TECHNICIAN -111ger), 2-Spm Tue~ Dec Good typist for TWX _..,an up. as on Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• " =y~oLa~~~i!icB;::~~ x;it s"':frloc.,on Balboa & whl. ~jl~~ 1~· ~!gse 631.J46S/760·368S ~~~:r~a:! aTne~~5e rn 29. ~thme. ~ill ~ra~n Ex· Ch . 6:11·~ 1 AKC 1;~i~=~. l:ae0~8 ~e~lve:y 8':""Ne~~~r~~~a~~~
Daily, Weekly, Kitchen .en .. a oot auto traf. Seaclirr CC 964 ·2068 C ••1~ Shelter ROOFERS·All types, 7 ce oppo w11 Y com ampion ane . amp, 80 watt, SI.SO ~10 .1 bl f1c to lh.e Balboa Ferry Hunt. Bch -U11 yrs exper needed Must pany benefits. Ca II Golden Retriever Pup· 846-7641 eva ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ava1 a e Low winter passes m front. Great OPPORTUNITY 642-4321 Elsa,556-:llSO pies. Just Beautiful! -'-'-'--'-'-=-~------= rata. '94-~ place for book store, art .___...._ 5350 be res~ & dependable Great Personalities !! A -.._ .. ~--LL-& li1 • .,a"rt«44-.-~ Are you looking for a 1o..1su• ... ...,CE Cal l Mi e ~·2 7222 ~ .. rw.....,,.... --·" -Balboa Inn. --& up shop, office, etc •"oo ••••••••••••••••••••••• " -" •"" U RGENTL~ NE Most Appr ecia t ed s-.a_..... 1015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,,, .., NE D company where you can Expenenre<I accounts Sal ED ...,..r--"' weekly. Kitchenneue, rro.67J.2&43,673-3930 E. CREDIT? build an excellen l assutant for com-es DE PEN ABLE Christmas Gift ' 499-3901 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Aircnlft ti l'O .....,a~f t 67S 8740 seo...,, Gel Visa or Master Card rut ' If PRO-SSIO..., •L PERSON h k AJCC I · h s ..,..,..., ron . · "55 ure. you are. we ""'rci·a111·nes wa'th muJor rs "" w o ran wor ns etler Pup· £.w,..1.1..• .. 0fflca ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. with no credit Check Id l'k l t lk t ..... TB.~-..ir. S •LES without SU""rv1s on r · Sh •-p A ·1 " m · • Workln& men. Comp. ~·•••••••••••••••••••• GUARANTEED Wrlle wou 1 e o a o you insurance brokerage R"""'""' A .. ~ 1 or pies. ow"' et va1 · LIKE NEW. Side arm Part.erW~ furn. All races welcome . J a rage for rent on lo DPL PO Box 4775 P r e s s r o o m firm in Newport Beach Proven oil closers only Texas oil com pony in Shots. S12S lo S3SO chairs, swivel chairs. 'T7 T210, loaded, OC AP
Jlmt. Beb. S36·8S44 Balboa Pe~ next, lo Fun Las Vegas, Nv 89106 · Supervisor I Foreman. Salary rommensurate Sl00.000 yrly polenllal Costa M~sa area We Slll-8722 side chairs. executive SOO hrs min. Call Paul or
u.&.&.. .._._..._.., "IOO 1.or\e OO~x20~., >. ruo -· reqwre5Syeo~Web0f with experience For Up to 253 comm piud tra1n. Write T P Dick. Beagle puppy. male. 12 desk (metal and wood). Jim. 714·7S2·2268 or ::::"::::"::! .... ~ .... rro67J.2943,673·3930 GIAHDOPENIMG fset exper Apply 1660 apptcall C714l644·SS22 wlekladsy QPul~~1hfiedNwwpnl1Be~nh Pres , Southwestern wlc.soldw/shots AKC secretary des k . 213-629·5021 Slot B C ir.ir,.OITS Placentia, Costa Mesa K I ..., • Petroleum. Box 789. Ft $125/ofr 847-1466 • credenzas tmetal and --------SVUllC MOT&. age or usiness I, ~ e n n e Pt' r s 0 n · location Maior ancen Worth, Tx 76101 · t~°!~/
.o.m • llOOsq ft. S380 incl utils. EXTIAOIDINAIE CASHIO weekdays. 7am 2pm -----~R Dane. F Fawn !Yr wood>. Call Steve or Lrn t I SO
1105 & up Color TV ~7~nu on II , Formerly Landa & HOUSIWAIESALES Hawauan vacataon,yrly personEIMatadorMex 968 48 . Wkly rentals now avail 443 H 'It D C M 494·548G live plans new car, WAITRESSES.Apply m ,....,, SlOOforGoodHome da t71417Sl·6271 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Phones in· room. 2274 Vicki's Ba ck with the f\Jll or p/lime Apply Landscape Mamlenance bonuses Ken Brown. acan Ra t 1768 Newport ·13 ,..... 1017 450 Honda. new paint.
Newport Blvd CM. Storaae·R V trailer best Crown Hardware. 1024 personnel. laborers & ir 673-4302. Blvd CM F.wlhwt IOSO ...................... , new top end. tires, ball ~7445 boat, C M S3S mo 669·0207 lrvine(We5lcl1H)N!!_ I r1ga11on Apply in ~ .. ~WICHSHOP -....................... YoungZebraFmcbes SIO 1974,$725.960-8168
Klrt:63).(l900 Cockta1I Wa1lress r rr& person 366 Camano de ~ WIWNCTOWORK' I BUY pr. New bamboo cages rtiln,TraY.t 9170
t&>APLACl7 ATochofClou Ptr.txpenenced Apply I Elltrellaal7AM COUNTER KITCHEN L I K Jo: C R EA T ** ** reas.549-7565 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ff:eas.Wee.klyRates lllillftsjlanst/ F.scorts&Models t Th Be h 8 hrs per day Costa ' REWARDS~ Good used F'llmllure & Conu re. blue crown
Kit,, ,c,benettes·Pbon.es -..-.:.. ., ... 79824 hr :'1A~~R a · e a6c9 U9t.10R CLEIK Mesa ~1100 Saal Chevrolet as looking A~hances--OR I will w/wrouoht iron cag... T9'TTUILll z Ch 1 M ~... ~ '~ estauranl, I I F tame 250 f. 17th S1 ror ou• w rr "' " Llke new. SACRIFICE .. anne ovies ,••••••••••••••••••••••• Visa 'MC Sleepy Hollow Lane c u SEClnA.IY > e 0 er an ex· sel or SELL for You Sl2S 080 Sell sep. Sanclp1per, 1967 Newport ....... La Bearh ~ cellent pay plan, Demo MASTEIS AUCTIOM MO-m3 MUST SELL 99'7-8619
Bl. C.OSta Mesa 645-9137 O.on.lti'f 5005 Models. llt'lors . F'al m ASSIST AMT and insurance benefits 64'-1616 llJ.t6l5 --Allflo Senk Psh
Uve on Npt B h $90/ k rr .... = ... & c-..._-tio Xlras Xlnl opp, new MANAGE« and are w1lhng to train I SporfilMJGoods 1094 & ·--~--t•oo c w ....................... ~· -· .. ~ " r a c e s.f I " p e s For busy design up ~ nghl person ror this I IUY FURNITURE ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""'Cft~ .. Pine Knot Motel 6302 W LOSING LEASE, quil· atioft mre· -r ' holslery "ompany an sales pos1t1on Call Fr .. d Proline Cy~lone II #OJ>m ••••••••••••••••••••••• NB64S·0440 . 1111° bus111ess. selhna out ••••••••••••••••••••••• 10 draft "uep .. n"'nis and 2_13-659·7860_ _ __ ' " ~ 957·8133 ' w • .._ _______ _ .. "' Sdiools & u Co51a Mesa Top skills or Ton) loday Lo find oul poWld bow, xlnl cond. ,.. Yearly. on the beach, I ~LL lnsupudpU,es and fix· lillstr'uetioa 1005 arch plans ror vanous p••T TIME reqwred. Must be an ag· mo re 4 94 I l 3 1 0 r 20 sofas New. S98 Lov »45 lbs, $75. 644-8000 ATTINT10M
Hotel rooms kitchenette ures d 111g· structures and supervise -gressive & well or S46-9967 eseats $88. Sleepers, MG & bath. $280° up monthly i Di.splay ca.ses. waning ••••••••••••••••••••••• actual construction &9pm Expanding youth garuzed individual Top -$199. FACTORY9S7-S708 S..., I......_., OWMHS
+ S280 security deposit. I room ch~ irs, Be a uty $31.90 WEEK. Christian S2SOO/mo Need B.A in rounse ling firm h 3 s pay for the r1ghl per~on NEVER USED: GI ass ... IOtS TONN EAU COVER
2306 W. Oceanfront, Salon ~a1rdryers and Pre-School. 320 E. 18th engineenng + 3)•rsex openings for 3.5 sharp Call642·8400. WordProc:•sailtcJ lop dinette S22S. sec ••••••••••••••••••••••• Flta MG's,'71·'81 Newp o rt Be a c h . hydraulic chairs, mlr-St. Costa Mesa. Spera al pr Take ad to any state outgoing ma1ure people Need skilled operator ti on a I so Ca S 4 5 o. LOSING LEASE, quit Never used, S7S
873-US4. rors, shelves and pla11ts. Program. 646-542.3 ___ employ ..... nl "fc an o c to motivate amb111ous SECRn AJl y with xlnt. command or r ting business, selling oul Also k h ""' ,. · so a1loveseat SJOO. Qn ALL 1-d r· Maria 631·7797 Ive msg Vocalioll R..t• 4250 . h ma e.up, s ampoo Help W..ted 7100 oor 019167-014. Ad pd IG-13 yr oltis Call 2-Spm for the Vice Pres1.den1 or I gram ml r rorma tting Bdrm ss.o. bunks $200. supp 1es an IX· and Cair11Products . .. ..................... for by employl'r 642 4321. ext 343 Ask for a sma II Medical elec Will tram on Burroughs Mattress/box spri'ngs·. lures 111clud111g · '
•••• .. ••••••••••••••0 • a 631·9754 or . Andrea Lron1cs Co nr Ocean 1 Redactron fo' '1' noon to Display cases, waiting OCEANFRONT 2 & 4 Br after6 1198-6809 Deli very person part girl office wilh full Co I s PM Pesumes to 18012 Twn $80. full S90. Qn room chairs. Be auty
Avail Winter. Weekly I ' ACCOUNTING lime 10 am 10 6 pm 2 J benef1ls Quahf1rat1ons I ~Y Park Cm· le, Irvine. $130. MORE!! 770.()9()1 Salon hairdryers and
Monlhly.673·7873 PAITMHWAMTED General Agency needs dayweek 642-0106 PARJ JIM£ anrlude recent l'xpcr 927 14 Alten11on Large Rerliner chair. hydraulic chairs. mir
Palm Spnngs area (Mon· Figure saJon. Outstand· fast .paced person to DIETARY SER\' Sal & Sun mornings rlc· and organizational a bill Barbara v111yl, excellent cond1· rors. shelves and plants
·~ VW BUG SHELL with
2 straight doors and straight pan. Will sell
complete or separate.
Call 67$-:.117
terey CCI condo 3 BR 2 ~~est°':'~u~~J~~~ ~~~ ::d~Z.:~~~·~~n1 SUPERVISOR
1
Lavenng the Daily Pilot 1y If interested r all Jill lloo l60. 646·5856 AM _ Also. make-up, shampoo
Ba, furn w/alriu . a desire lo be a wanner company paid benefits Needed for l'Onv hosp tocamers Hourly waj.!c 64.S-OWS ~ 6 Pecan side chairs hke j andbairproducts Wot for Salt
Golf, tennis Daily, 77~18or213/498·2060 For appointment call Ct-rt pref Xlnt salal) + mileage Requires u ----1••0••••••••••••••••••• new, fordinmg table S7S Call631-97S4or ••••••••••••••••••••••• weekly & monthly rates Debbi 549 8909 t 31 and beneflls and in 1
1
large wagon , an or 1 SECRn E ~ 1005 0 B 0 each. Cash only. arter6,898-6809 IMPORTANT
avail. 714 ·S58 ·8001 MocD'!!!Jri.Tnttt 5035 e. . ex surance and sack pay smallp1ckupw1thshell '\:onstT70~~~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-7Sl2or548-6900 ~Fhrt.-e'I NOTICETO
9-SPM, ask for Mark. -Apply Beverl> Mwnor. Req111res ability to lift ~o Diamond Bar $19.200 Am Oak Cuno cab. $47S Lazy.boy rocker rerhner Glass noor cases. wall READERS AND
No Tahoe condo. 4 Br. 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Acds ~•obW & 340 Vi<1ona. Cosla Mesa lbs and a good dn' mg T7o Dit1 NB s15.600 Porcelain p1tcher·wsh chair. gold velvel, SJS. uni!, olface unit. etc ADVERTISERS
min to Northstar S450 Sattttr ~Co. A~ds PcryobW Dn1iJ Store Cieri! I record Call 642·4321 Exp Consullant Ours bas1n Sl20 Onental \ ase Call: 673-4935 Make 0 r re r Tak e The price of items wt. Tom 857·1668 All types of real est ale TWO GIRLS NEED ED 1 yr mm uper Salary ~for QQn W1lh11m~ uz Reinders Agy. Inc S75 631 5979 I F-1. lo•t r • ....& Delivery in January advertised by vehicle uwestment.s since 1949 Handle all details Busy t h B .,._ ~ -... KIRK E S dealers an the vehicle ..... to Sh9-t 4300 real estate accounlanJ! commensuro e wu ex Pieties Mia.er .mi archu.t G4EOE Clock chiming S500 Wall Circa 1900 Beautifully J WELER 2300 classified advertising ••••••••••••••••••••••• S,.Cillliltgla per 10 6 30. 40 hrs ~-----Nt>WpOrt 8338190 f'ree 1 Sprang clock S2SO h··-.. ed ( Harbor Bl Costa Mesta, columns do•s not 1·n-M/F roomaies 10 share i.dTDa oHire Refs required Laguna JI alls Mr ·--. 63 ""' ca.rv rame W/ ~!MllS .. home in CdM S22S lst/ ,_021.,1 5115•0611 Avail immed. R C Drey fu s 7SIJ 3784 110m1xad emecoalmgs 1·~ beige uphl. Matching -elude any applicable lasL Call· 760-&620. _..,. .. Taylor Co. 640-9900 76().9353 • and sea I e nl s 15 37 SECln ARIES 19:11Rockarolla1uke·box . set $1350 080 Carolee lY, a.lo, taxes. license. transfer ~ Acth Mtca. --Monrovia NB Work temporary Jobs barber chairs. p1ano. I 64H340 days. 640-4910 tlfi, Shrff 1091 ftt1. finance charges,
Chan View. 281\ 28 A. SINCE EARLY i9!1\ AdMiclistraHn ELECTRONICS I Pnntmg close Lo home ma_n,y more 978-9172 eves aft 6 PM ___ ••••••••••••••••••••••• fees for air pollution con·
gar. ulll pd frplc. yard, lst &2nd. Trust Deeds Assistllllt S •us•ERSO... I Camera/plaleroom as VICKI HESTON 192.S Grebe Radio ICAIGES Beautiful Color TV . 2 yr lrOI device certifications
fwn.494-6176 OWNER·NONOWNER The Nation's leading "" r-"· s1stant Mon Tues Fri &ASSOCIATES Ball operated Perr Magnificent dining sel wrnty Free delivery or dealer documentary
13BR.1BA Hse 1 rm avail l lhn.i 4 unlls electronic distribulor re Expenenced clcctronit• Sal Wall work vertical 540.0400 rood. ~ Boatswain ·s Will seat IS. Must see to $148. 646-1786 preparatioo charges un-i Non-smkr. lrg yrrl. CM Peter Dobbs, Broker q u i r e 5 a n A rl t'Omponenl sa lespers~n com me rc1a I ca mer a whislle. sterhni: s1her • appreciate. $8500 OBO. Kenwood lurntble & Sony less otherwise specified ~3466 Eves 760-6827 646.6016 m1nistrat1ve Asmtanl needed for electronic Knowlege of PMT pro SECRETARY /EXEC. SIOO. 642·9840 ~ Carolee 64 1_1340 da, rec. w/speakers. must by lhe advertiser.
NB. Steps to Bch. Mlf tor o ur General mfg.repcompany Very cess helpful. cxpenenre Personnel/Adver11s1ni: sell t:!00.960·7841 Gtneral 9510
19•25 ~ shr lBR Apl Manager /Region al pl~asant oHace Com preferred, but will train Dept has opcnm1: per Appl.CM 8010 640-4910evaft6 _ •••••••••••••••••••••••
34lhSt. S2SO. 67S·I04l ~180rnd tlrus63t doenedBs.a0tbvoear Director Located at m1ss1on basis Please Apply an person. 1660 expansion Np! Brh , ··••HA•••R••B•O•R••A••R•E••A••••• Oak table w /4 chairs. loats & Mariwe a arr.. . .urras
"' 3170 Pullman Cosla callforappl 714-1194 7257 PlacenlaaAve (' M financial sen1ces firm Brown Cushioos SJSO ~,_lllt .-.ao•~ M/F toshr2BR.Laguna SO%equity.Shortorlong Mesa Mu st be a l ---· Goodtypmg,shorthand. APPUANCESERVICE 968-2750. ••••••••••••••••••••••• COMSUMB
Beach Hse. Must Be term.~ minimum. selfstarter and work an Exec sect admin. assa~l RECEPTIONIST expr req Non·smoker We buy used appliances I . IUY1NG & LIASIHG
Neat & Resp. $375 mo. .. ...... ~,IUtr dep.endently Va ried & --1,·dant in N4"""'rt Good telephone manner 640-0123btwn9·2. I Wesell recond .. guar Fo~.Sale .. ~ockta1!.1able. 0 SBVICE
+ ep. a 675-21 6 ulles. ome Payroll Centr. Long hrs, hard essential Bookkeeping ---top Gold base. Sl7S AJJ makes and models 1.st Ir Last D C II d S ~vm ..--,.v I a ances. 549·3077 ~ X 60 X "'• glass
tM-4427 and _Personnel work exp work & challenging for &typangexpenenrener •SECRET.ARY• 1 IUY APPLIANCES ; 642-~ Below any Pleet Price
..,._. desir_able Accurale someone unus ually LDtsof customerliaison Fast paced Realestate Les %]·8133,Speed Queen gold pl1aAFREETANKOF fwl.., 4350 ~-.ti/ spelling and lyp1ng bnghl & skilled, H this Ehle auto service fac Qrfice needs sharp. well Ref rig. $200. freezer matching v.•asher & gas GAS on any new car we
....................... Ptf'u11•1/ speeds or _60 to 70 WPM I isn't you. please call 9$J.!l062afl 3pm . organized Gal. 7Swpm . mi. Washer/Dryer SIJS j ,._tr S300 . 6 fl bar & 3 sell Garaae in Corona del Lott & foimld Math aptitude a mus! your s mart est. u n · th ood s 1 ... 7 CALL NOW Mar SSS Please call Hamilton challenged , un der IECB'TIONIST w1 g erretaraa ea D/WS100646 S848 matching arm chairs Sk 6'7$-9WNBSM.6636SA . ~:ro..7 •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• Electro Sales 641 -lllSO lo utilized fri end & tell Fu II t 1 me Mon Fri . skllls 1 yr 0jd Gibson de luxe S300 18226 M ayapple ates · Skis ·
._...... 5100 arrange for an In them aboul th•~ ad I ml.L'll be personable, well Contact Peggy 833·2900 gas dryer. used only 6 Way, Univ Park. Irvine sleds . snowm .,,..,,
Offlc. l..tal 440 lemew. Co m Pens at' on lo JtTOOmed & en1oy meet Grubb & Ellis rms $2001080 646 7363 SS2-6324 OiluiCs 9520
••••••••••••••••••••••• AN OHIO OIL CO otters 124.000 + benefits tr mg public Requires Refng, frost free. clean. Horws 1060 S II ed •••••••••••••••••••••••
EXECUTIVE high income, plUS "8Sh you'-lhe hASt, please good Spel ling & pen k e your us ---1st
b b ( ' '" "" mansh1p No typing, Sed for CM CPA Farm wor s good SI SO ••••••••••••••••••••••• .-.u; .. , SUITES onuses. ene llS 10 rt>plY In confidence to phone exp preferred. need person w/ good gen S48·8S13, S48"'48S r'tems r·n our '57 T·l•D ITllture person an Costa Mr. Charles. P 0 Rox HOISE FOi LlASE IH TOWN! lN Mesa area Regardless ~. CdM 92625 full company benefits office skill~. self slarter, SELL idle items with a I .nar·ly Pr' lot HalT AGE or experience. write G.S. Apply: ~ennysaver. 1660 good typing a must Daily Pilot Classified Owner would like to ffD IEST Offal
PL.Ali Read. Amencan Lubn· Placentia A\•e . c M 641-0125 Ad. lease his thoroughbred Gt'ft Gut'de <<mUKZ l ..,_ FfUMG CLERIC horse lo an experienced 1 1 ,,.,.,.. luxury office s~ace cants Co .. Box 696. rider. Long •~ s horl in Irvine 's busiest Daut-Oh' ~01 Electronic distributors "' lo center! Easy Frwy ac· ,..,... 10 needs mature person for tenn. Pvt party. Eves. Call 642·5o78 cess. Avail. now ! Clll G 1ve yourself ti Answering Service PIT filmg dept. Excellent op· Kathy 642-0565: Richard ' •d osii ...... _ 0 fordetails. Christmas bonus graveyard & PIT eves portunity & Com pany 968-8310. ""'
551•1231 611A 11230 shirts avail. no exp. benefits Call · Elsa, l <Q:> } 1'1!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!11!!!!!~ Chrf1hlto1 Ad-Yhor
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
2U(o0 HARBOR P.IVD
CO~TA M!~A Ml 0010 .. .,... -sell unneeded necessary Ca ti . ~ll80 ( ) JerwWy I070 · ·
•Dll.UXIOFFICES• Items in the 536-8881,HBarea.'EOE. • ..................... _____ -• Tndl tHO
.fl'om 1 room to 1400 sq. Daily Pilot assifiedAds 642·5678 Furniture Store needs llNTB
1
Genuine Col um bian llHih.W.W ........ •••••••••••••••
-
fl.Fromll.ISasq.n.No elling the most people ~rttimehelperfo~de· EMERALDS ! Your Ec,.i,..lllt 9030 '59 Ford .,., ton P U,
leaee r e,ul red. Adj. Gift Guide poas. Ible is important lo hv!ries and vs nous 1 choice. 120 per stone ••••••u•••••••••••••u camper shell, l4SO
AilllOrter nn. 2172 Du· Cal 642•5671 lhe success or any duties Approx 30·40 hrs 640-8lmCortt.r lJl758'CMheunsl~ea1t1 Dmgy ~ pllll.C..llAM.833·3223. garage sale. Make.sure pe~ w~k S4 hour In· ~y --~'-------
17THsnHT mdolllforo t ours is l is t e d in qwre an person Tues B•aut1ful ladles <71411M8·2987 -t571 · r · d h th s t d t 1931 { ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTAMISA C II r I • t"' • s lassi " ' P one ru a ur ay a ( ;;a;;;: ) ) diarmnd l gold watch SEXTANT Freiberger 197S GMC I ton van.
2orJroomofficesuites Ad-Visor 642-;i618. NewportBlvd CM I ~ 13.750 OBO Carole' Y~chtman with case. bul"llJ reg gas. white
A/C. pie,ity ol pr11t1. Util 1..., ______ _,1 64MS40 da 640-4910 ev Mint condition S300 Must sell.
Incl. Avail. now. C..U EXECUTIVE : • •IU. 714/S46-IBS2 Eves 11'18 GMC ~ ton van.
ltaJanomJcs 675-6100 SCUM-LETS I l( Miu I ·-aoao INh.Power to4o :W~ri1:r~~ a1u1t r.~j~t:r~·:fi~ :J!S!~~-SECRETARY 11ewspaper ~~~!Y~:,:~:~·=:~·t'. ··;i,~~~E5 .. ~~~t~~~,~
at.a.. Typed -bauble -c snwll tanks w cart & cut· Dudline Ott 31at ~· ~~-~l23eH Verde My W~K~~r BIG 8 CPA FIRM arr·1ers f ,,J t W!~~.~~=-~I --=C.~1--~~-'--'~-ee-~-r -ln_ro_
_.... riq::'like a "mrd:~~ or I OU es Tickets. 714-646·7343, Alum See Nym 9.9
IAYFRONT =~a~ Fiy~~ ~:~ LOCATm IN FASHION ISi.AND in Huntington Beach, ~·Happy New ™~:,;.~11; Gd cond
rrtmotn«. •"40. UP. Big 8 CPA firm located in f · Vi II & N B h ~ Pl _ ....... ···········; "i :~'P:s ~·:~1 :e~~t~~ / ountam a ey ewport eac
Ad ~~...... Typing 7~ wpm, shorthaod 100 ! YI ~s '' ~ wpm , capable or working
: Exper. M•tpaptr .. y HIHPtrson to 3 indepelldeoUy, weU or0 anized " handle h)' attMtfl fo•· Or•l\fe Ci011t · • e
-: .D•ill Pllol. l •lar1. coramlulon and . 1· and venatile. Competitive ~ excellln' botn&a. <itwtta opportunltiea st•"i .. « salary and excellent : lor ,.noe wt~ cantr ambft.ionl. Send , ....... '6 ! .,,_ • ...,. !'MUI-111 WIU'JI ,_.I p(\ benefits. · · ... U.. COltl M• CA. lml. No phoaer : ,u lla, ,1u1t. A• l•ual Oppor·l CM1 POI APPOINfMIMT
E ~-~~: -·--• 1714) 640.9200 f-. OiWial COAST DAILY '9LOT EXT. 247 ~. ••.r.:Jl~~.-.. IQW.~~ . .... ........ '........... . -----------,
1, I
I I
• Good Eamings
• Super Trips
• Cireat Prizes
• •
CALL
CIRCULATION
.Q.;f ARTMENT .Dlllr Piil.
842-4321
Prtmlum prktt
paid for any uatd car
(fcnip or domt1t1c l
In pod condition.
S.UaFinl'
I
WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FOIUSB>CAIS
ALAH MA•MOtil
PONTIAC/SUIAIU :M80Hart>or Blvd.
CQSTA MESA
54M300 549-1457
WEIUY
Q.EAHCAIS
AHDTIUCKS
COHHRL I
• CHEVROLET
I .... }\ i 1 1 rt.'' fti' 1
I ',...,I \ ,, ~' I
S4t>-1200 -----
Top DoHar
Pid For Your Car!
JOHMSOM & SOM
U.Co .. Herc.,.,
262111 Harbor Blvd".
Costa Mesa 540.5630
•
WANTED!
Llt.e m>de-1 Toyotas and
Vol •os Call u s
TODAY!!!
JOYOTA·YOUO ............. c ......... .
... ,.._tlOl w U0.'46'
ATLAS CHRYSLB.ft.YMOUTH
2929 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel 546-1934. 3 blocksl
south of San Diego Freeway off Hart>or Blvd Complete
1body shop. Sales. Service Ptirts Service Dept. open
Mondey thru Friday 7:30 A M. to 5·30 P.M. and 8 A.M to
5 P.M. on Saturday. • llACH IMPOlrTS
tM8 Dove Strfft. Newport Beach. Tel 752-0900. Call UI ,
we're the specialists f<>< Alfa Romeo. Peugeot. Saab &
Maaeretl.
THEODOIEIOllHSFOllD
Modern N ies, Mrvice, parts. body, painl & lire depts.
Competitive rates on leue & ~lly rentals. 2060 Herbor
~ .. Costa M"8. &42-0010 « 540-6211.
• JOHMSOM & SOM UMC<>t.H ..eCUIY
2828 Herbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-5630. 57 Years
of friendly famlly service -Orange County'• oldest Lin·
COin-Mercury dealership
SOUTH COAST DOME
2888 Harbor Blvd .. Costa MeM. Tel. 5"40-0330. RV service
1peelali1ta. ~.uttom ven con~
• HIWPOIT NOITS
3100 W. Coaat H l ghw1y, Neowport a .. oh, Tel.
842·940S/540-11&4. Tl'Ml Ferreri HeedQUltWfa. •
Orango C08$t DAILY PILOT/Monday, Oetember 28. 1981
MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES'
NEWPORT DATSUN
888 Dove Street, Newport Beech. Tel 83:J-,300 At the
trlengle of Jamboree. MacArthur & Bristol behind Vic·
tori• Station. Sales. Service. Leasing & Perts. Aeet dis-
counts to the public.
• MAIERS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-9100. Orange
County's Largest Cadillac dealer. Sales Service. Leas-
ing.
• DAVID J . PHILLIPS IUICl<.f'OMTIAC-MAZOA
Sales • Service • Leasing
'24888 Alicia Parllway
~una Hills 837-2400
• CHICIC IVEISOM r<>RSC ... AUDl0 VW
415 E. Coast Hwy .• Newpor1 Beech. 673-0900. The only
dealershlp In Orange County with these three great
CNqe under one roof! •
• ALAM MAGHOM POtn'IAC.SUIARU
2480 Harbor Blvd., Costa Meaa. Tttl. ~9--4300. Sales.
s.Mce. Leuing. :·Mr. Gooctwrench ..
0 HOUSI OFIMPO«TS
MHC .. 11941 , ... '-"k··~
11182 M1nchester Blvd .. Buena Park (on Santa Ana Freeway~ Take Beach Blvd offramp -sharp right on
Mw!chetter. ow. MEA·CEOES (213 or 714) 937·2333
G> •
IOI LONGPRE PONTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd., Westminster Tel 892-6651 Orange
County's oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Safes.
Service Pans
• UNIVERSITY HOMDA
2850 Harbor Blvd . Cos1a Mesa Tel 54(}-9640 1 Mile
South 405 Freeway Sales service. parts & leasing
• SAMTA AHA DATSUN
2001 E. 17th S1ree1, Sa.,la Ana Tel 558·78t 1 Your·
Original Ded1ca1ed Datsun Dealer.
0 MIRACLE MAZDA
We've moved• Our new location 1s 1425 Baker Street,
Coste Mesa Tel 545·3334 Slop by & vls11 our brand new
th<>wroom and see why we're the J1 Mazda dealer in
Southern California. Sales, Servtoe, Parts and Leasing .
ANAHEIM MAZDA
"o.ty o.c. ... 0..-
wltlt
Fne SrtW u. C.-tN
601 S Anaheim Blvd . Anaheim 956-1820. Just north ot
Santa Ane Frwy. on Aneheim Bwd. C.11 us llrsll
"WE A.RE HARD TO FIND-eUT WORTH ITI'
• SADDt.aAcac IMW 28•0~ Merguer1fe-Pil-Ny , Avery.P'kwy. exit
We offer what no lease compeny or benk can.
1. Ultra·modern service dept for 'lat class altllf' sale
tervlce, 2 Fac1ory auth. fec1llti• & bOdy ahop. 3
lllmlnallon of the middlemen -IMSlng dealer direct.
831·2040 495-4948
t
COST A MESA DATSUN
2845 Hart>or Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel 540-6410 Serving
Orange County lor 16 years 1 Mile So 405
SUNSET FORD, INC.
(Home of W1ll1e lhe Whale) 5440 Garden Grove Blvd
Westminster Tel 6~10
FRANK PROTO LINCOLN-MERCURY
Service and Parts Department always open 7 days a
we-. k 7 30 A M to 6.30 P M 84&-7739
• COMHILL C .. YIOUT
.2828 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Over 20 years serving
Orange County! Seles, teasing, service C.11 546·1200,
specie! parts hne: 546'9•00, body shop ltne, 7~"°'°°
• ROY CARVEi IOU.S IOYCl-IMW
15"0 Jemborff Road, Newport ee.ch ~
Servioe, Parts And Leasing
• DGM LIASIMG. IMC.
130 w 19th St., Costa M .. a 6"2·19'4 S.V. time. energy & fruatratlon Call us lor all of your
leMing M«St We i..se all makes and model• of cal"I, tr'UCka & van•
t
I
I •••
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 28. 1981
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& 2 SS JS
• ••• • • •• • • • . . ·~ ...... . .. v.. • • • • . . .. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
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U)f;tk ~mitt
~kd~,
alt of«(> at lk
9lJ~ pjJdd
~ OUlt wU/l/Jrted
lo ycu, OUlt ~
~ ~V~'/ffM~I-"
\..
. ........ ·--.......
• • • •
•
Daily Pilat
. ..
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....... l
llAIHil ClllT YOUR HlllTDlll IAllY Ml i
MONOAV Of C E.M BER 28. Pl81 ORANGE COUNTV . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
America's first test-tube baby born • in
NORFOLK, Va . (AP) -
America's first test-tube baby
was born here today, doctors at
the Eastern Vi rgini a Medical
School announced.
Elizabe th Jordan Carr, a
s-pound, 12-ounce firl delivered
at Norfolk Genera Hospital by
Caesarean section, was doing
we ll, according lo Vern Jones. a
s pokesman for the school, which
runs o ne o f two in vitro
fertilization clinics in the United
States.
The baby's parents are Roger
Carr , 30, and Judith Carr, ?.8, of
Westminster In north-central
Massachusetts, doctors said at a
hospital news CQ'1ference. Mrs.
Carr was said to be in good
condition also.
The baby was delivered at
7 :54 a.m. by Dr. Mason C.
Andrews , chalrmin o f the
department of obstetrics and
gynecology at the m edical
school.
''The babv . . is in good
condition. This is just a symbol
of the process and I think ·a very
happy one," Andrews 11ald.
He said there were nine people
on the delivery team.
The baby girl is the first born
in this country after being
conceived through In vltro1
fertilization, a process used for
women whose Fallopian tubes
a r e missing or irrepa rably
blocked.
In the process, an egg is
re m oved from t he mother's
ovar y, fertilized with her
hu sband 's spe rm i n t h e
laboratory and implanted in the
mother's uterus.
The real ol the pregnancy then
takes a normal course.
The clinic. housed ln Norfolk
General Hospital , began
operating in February ls..>. It
announced the achievement of
its first pregnancy last spring
and said the expe,ted blrthdate
was J an. 9. Sin~ then, three
other pregnancies have been
achieved at the Norfolk clinic.
In keeping with the clinJc·s
pollcy, the names of the
prospective parents have never
been announced.
Another In vitro fertilization
clinic has opened in Houston.
The clinic and the in vitro
process have been criticized,
mainly by anti-abortion groups,
but successfully fought orr all
challenges to its. establishment.
The world's first test-tube
baby, Louise Brown, was born in
1978 a t a clinic ln Boura-..
England. op erated by Ora. Pa trick Stoptoe and 'Rob4tlt
Edwards.
SI nee then. several "Other aueh
babies h a ve been born i6
En1land and AuatraUa.
Steptoe, who helped deveJGP
the in vitro procedure. said ~
since then about 20 percent ot
attempted conception s have, resulted in pregnancy aod that.
the rate was improving.
-Increased food shortages face Poles
Irvine
founde rs
honore d
Jndividuals who played key
roles in forming the City or
J r vine were honored in a
ceremony in City Hall today, the
10th anniversary of Irvine's
incorporation as a city.
Ma yor David S ills gave
commendations from the Irvine
City Council to City Attorney
Roger A. Grable, City Manager
William Woollett Jr and John
Burton, who served on the first
Irvine City Council.
Also given procl a mations
were incorporation proponents
Andrew Ma y, Gary Dalzell ,
B arr Fletc h er , E . Pa ul
Tonkovic'3.nd Toba Wheeler.
Thirty others' named in the
proclamation adopted by the
City Council on Dec. 15 were
unable to attend the ceremony
this morning.
Timothy L. Strader, Jerry
Choyke, Robert Forman, Bob
Hendricks, Dave Smith. J ohn
Dermody, Gene Paul, Carl
Morrison, Carl Kimbel and Pete
Peterson were cited in the
proclamation for helping form
the city.
Al so n amed in the
proclamation were Dick Kent,
Lowell Johnson, Betsy Cousins,
Fred Keller , Joe Ba ll , Ray
Hardy, Fred Fry, Al Keen, John ·
Pinches, Harry Shuptrine, Don
Buckler and Louis Franca villa.
Wi lli am M. F ischb ach ,
GabrieUe Pryor, E . Ray Quigley
Jr. and Henry H. Quigley Jr., all
on the firsClrvine City Council
were a lso nam e d on the
p roc lama ti on a long with
Norrisa B randt , Stephen
De Lapp, James E. Erickson and
H. Roger Howell.
Irvine was incorpor ated on
Dec. 28, 1971, following a public
election in which Irvine cityhood
was approved by a 2·1 majority
in a turnout of 70.5 percent of the
eligible voters.
It was one of the heaviest
votes in t h e hi stor y or
incorpor a tion e lecti ons in
Orange County. The tally was
4, 739 in favor o( city hood with
6, 719 voters registered a nd
eligible to cast ballots in the
election.
Atlanta tria l
~els und e r w ay
. ATLANTA (AP) -Wayne B.
"Williams was t aken l o the
'Fulton County Courthouse under
·)ieavy guard today to stand trial
'for two of the 28 murders of
1oung blacks that haunted this
southern capitaJ for almost two
years.
Jury selection began about
10: 15 a. m., more than an hour
after lbe scheduled start. Court
officia ls said the delay was
caused by the large number ol
!Teporten and spectators seeking
,admittance to the courtroom
~d t.be Ume required to screen
e first panel of 48 prospective
rors throue.h a metal detector .
Between 20 and 30 spectators
r e turned away from the
urtroom. which holds about
people.
Train derailed
SMITHBORO, Ill. CAP)
e sl denta or this tiny
mmunity beaan retumint to
el r homes today atur erews
appe d leak l n1 railroad
emlcal can that bad been
ama1edJn a derallmeat. l"our
the 22 •railed can. oo an
11tbound Conrail trai n ,
t.aiDed chemical• and two ol
em beau lta.kinl al\er lbe
celdalt.
l
,
... T91.!W .....
TOWED FROM THE SURFLINE -Laguna Beach Marine
Safety Director Bruce Baird wades into the surr as downed
Cessna 172 is pulled by Jeep from the surfline at Ma in
Beach Park. Tail later was tom away from fuselage during
salvage effort.
Irvin e t eens
save man, 60,
f ro m blaze
Three Irvine youths were
credited Sunday with saving a
60-year-old man trapped by fire
up stair s in h is Orange
condominium.
Omar Garci a. 18, Stephen
Brown. 19, and Robert Lizotte,
15. managed lo knock down the
fire with water from garden
hoses and lead Bob Rosencranz
fro m his townhouse home. said a
spokesman for the Orange Fire
Department.
Rosencranz told investigators
he was awakened from a nap by
smoke and intense heat. His hair
was singed by lhe lime he got
out, said Tom Groseclose, public
information officer
"It was hot in there." he said.
The rescuers, visiting friends
at the condominium complex,
said a dog's barking alerted
them to the f ire , which
investigators s aid began after
ashes from an ashtray were
emptied in a paper sack.
The youth s a l so t o ld
investigators that they doused
Garcia with water so he could
make his way up the s moky
stairway to Rosen cranz, who by
that time was yelling for help.
The fire caused an estimated
$10,000 in damages to contents
a nd another $1 0,000 lo t he
building, Groseclose said.
Pilot ditches plane
off Laguna Beach
By STt;V t; MITCHELL
Of -Delly ,._Steff
It takes more than a forced
landing in the oceap to excite
Long Beach pilot Raymond
Davison, who landed his Cessna
172 in the surf off Laguna Beach
Sunday night.
•'I knew it was going to
h ap p e n some day," th e
40-year-old pilot said of the
incident.
The red and whit e
sing le -engine Cessn a, with
Davison and three passengers
aboard, crash landed in about
three feet of water off Laguna's
Main Beach Park Sunday at
about 8:30 p.m.
<See PLANE, PageZ)
Newport cops nab
186 tipsy drivers
Newport Beach police have set
records ror drunke n driving
arrests this month and the city's
accident rate is down.
As of early today. Newport
patrolmen had m ade 186
drunken driving arrests. They
predicted that figure should top
200 by the end of New Year's
Eve.
While the city's drunken
driving figure has clim~ 77
p ercen t ove r last year 's
December figure, the accident
r ate has slipped 17 percent.
Traffic officer David Sens said
that's just what the police
department hoped would happen
wh en t his year's drunke n
dr iving crackd own began.
Newport has been putting two
squad cars on the streets nightly
to collar drunken drivers. On
New Year's Eve, there will be
six patrol cars on the drunken
dr iving patrol.
There has been one fatal auto
accident lhi.s month blamed on
alcohol. Sixteen of 27 fatal
accidents in the past three years
in Newport h ave involved
drunken drivers.
Police arrested nine persons
for driving under the influence
of alcohol Christmas Ff ve but
m ade only one drunken driving
arrest Christmas Day.
Five years ago when Newport
police started what is now an
annual drunken drivi ng
crackdown , there were 82
arrests in December.
Way ne memorial cost escalates
' Newport-commissioned art work ba~looning
By STt;VE MARBLE
oftMDMty ..... tUff
It was to be a modeat $17,SOO
bas relief or John Wayne with a
stagecoach and a couple of
horses in the for eground. At
least that was the plan back in
1979.
But two yea rs 'later, the
unfinished bronze piece has
doubled in size and price.
The city-commlaaioned art
work now tncludes a separate
6-foot·long ~tagecoach and six
salloplng horses.
The bronze piece, which la
belna finished al an £1 Mone..
foundry, now includes more than
just Wayne's lllrenesa. Andy
bevlne, another lat.e movie
cowboy, la drlvlA.1 the eoacb and
Jobn Carradine la atop the
coacft, lhot1un ill band~
And Newport otflol ala
.. Umac.. Lbat the C09t for all of 'UU. ball nelled to sas.500. 'be
artist. Chris Matson, says a
museum likely would pay more
than $1b0,000 for his creation.
"It's beauUful," says Matson.
a Wayne fan, a Newport resident
and western artist.
Still, nobody seems sure bow
''I don't thi nk
the money issue
is that impor tant11
or why t he m emorial to
N e wport'• moat r a moua resident, who died in June at im. became what It now ii.
It'• MOlber" fint·rate Newport
Be.clunyatery.
"Somewhere aloaa lhe llM -
and I'm not really tu.re where -
lhe acope on the project
c:.baaaed," e•plah1 Roa
Whitley, Newport'• p1rlla,
beaches and recreation director.
Whitley , who admits the
nearly-completed brass work ia
beautiful, says that back in 1979,
Matson was one ol several
artist.a who bid on the art project
for Wayne.
Mat.son's bid of $17,SOO wu
aceepted and a cilhen
committee that Included actor
Buddy Eblen waa set up to ateer
lbe project.
The Newport Harbor Jaycees,
'Whitley says, was designated as
the service group that would
raise the money to pay for the
proJttt.
But aa It now 1 tanda,
.accordlnc to Jaycee member
Bill Ll tllt lon. tbe tenlce
or1aniaalio11 baa raised only
lU,000.
MayW Jackie Heather aaya
ab.e now plana to ut the dt.Y to
(SM WAYNS, Pace Al>
2 killed
in lwliday
car crash es
West Orange County traffic
accidents claimed two lives
during the holiday weekend,
area police report.
In the fi rst incident, Glenn B.
Brannon, 65, of Westminster,
was crossing Beach Boulevard
o n foot a t 15th S treet in
Westminster Friday evening
when he was struck by an auto
driven by Susan Ann Dixon, 31,
or Newport Beach, police said.
Brannon was tr eated by
par amedics, the n taken to
Fountain Valley Community
Hospital, where he was dead on
arrival, Westminster police Lt.
David Wiggs said.
No cha rges have been filed m
the incident. Wi ggs said.
Al 9 p.m. Saturday night, a
26-year·old man was killed and
two others were injured in a
three-vehicle collision at Warner
Avenue and Oak Str eet i n
Huntington Beach, police said.
Timothy Dean Stuhl of Long
Beach was taken to Fountain
Va lley Community with multiple
injuries, police said. He died at
the hospital, police said.
Trame 1"11vcs11gai0h--said
Stuhl was westbound on Warner
when he swerved across the
center line and struck a van
driven by Rafael DeLeon Diaz,
22, of Santa Ana. The Diaz van
then was struck from behind by
a pickup driven by Monico B.
Avalos, 28, of Westminster,
police .said.
Officers said driver Diai and
one o f h is pa ss enge r s,
,Guad a lupe Diaz, 23 , were
treated at area hospitals for
minor injuries.
Gas chambe r
for rabbi ts
MUD LAKE, Idaho (AP) -
Oas, l.Mtead of clubs, wlU be
u sed t o k i ll Jackrabbilc
Wednesday whe n rarmera
conduct their fourth drive to rid
the area of the crop·destroyin1 pest.I.
Farmers kill ed 30,000
Jackrabbits 1n the fi rst three
roundup11, of which the latest
was Saturday. The kl1Un1s
prompted crltld•m by the Jdabo
Humane Society.
Tb.e chqe ln met.bod WN a
conctu lon to the bumaQe
aoclety. Farmers wUI berd
rabbits ln trencbea, whlcb wlU
then be to\lered with plastJc and ·nued with carbon dioxide.
)
Martial •
•• ' law in
3rd week
By Tiie A.uocla&ed PreH
Poland's martial law r~elme
began it.a third week in power bJ
cutting monthly meat aod butt.el'
r ations for most Poles and
predicting worse food short.aces
in the new year.
Western reporters in Warsaw
said antibioties and medical
supplies also were in drutically
short supply. 1
It was food shortages that
provoked the nationwide strikes
in Poland 16 months ago t.blf
spawned Solidarity, the fint
un ion in the Soviet blo~
independent of governmenJ
control, and ration cuts tui
summer spurred a string af
Solidarity strikes. 1 Lech Walesa , leader of the
now-banned Solidarity union,
was named Time ma1uine'a
man of the year for 1981 Sunday
for standing out "not only u the
heart and soul of Poland 's battle
with a corrupt Communist
regime, but as an internatioo.ai
sym bot of t he stru,gle for freedom and dignity.· (Photo,
Page A3)
Wales a has been held by ~
government at an undlscl~
location in Warsaw since s~
after martial law was im
Dec L3. I
The latest cuts in the alreadt
depleted Polis h menu wert
announced Sunday by Wars•'f
Radio, which predicted that next
year the situation ~'will be worsi
than thi s b ec au s e of
considerably lower imports ~
lower poultry output."
The radio broadcast cave
figures whi ch apparently
referred to meat alone. It said
the martial law r egime was
lri m ming J a nuary's meat
rations to 5.S pounds a montti toe
mos t Poles. Children\ prepanl
women and the elder y and the
sick will receive 8.8 pounds ol
meal per month, it said, and
manual workers wtll be exempt
from the cutbacks.
The broadcast did not say bow.
much butter rations would be..
r e duced .
Meat and butter rations were
cut off completely for farmers
with more than 1.2 acres ol land.
t he st al e-run radio said.
The radio said the military·
council "appeals to individual
farmer s and to s tate and
cooperative farms to expedite
(food ) deliveries ... " ·
Western correspondents lo;
Warsaw have s aid P oland's
pri va te farm e r s -the:
:b ackbone ont.s loocf procNctim:
.-have held back shipments al
some foods to protest martial
law.
'111111 CUil 1111111 !
Some late ni1bl and
early morning low clouds,
otherwise fair throu1b
Tuesday. Continued cool
with highs of 62 to 66 and
lows of '4 to 50.
111101 TlllY
The boric• o/ the ,. • ..,
lndfofdual lhttremet1l
Account• thot go ft1Co
qperorion Jtu I are
nplcUrwd on Paf1e A 7
lllli
• •
••••• Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT/Monday, December 28, 1981
i\Videspread stonns hit north, 7 people die
,.._A11nl1 .... Preu
Back.~ tr1vea.. w..
arned to beware ot evlllancbel.
lhe wlnd·whlpped Rocky
ounl.U. today, wblle 1torma
t power to thouaahdl ot homa
ear Seattle and parta of
lcbl1an were burled under 14
cbe1,_9f I DOW. Seven 04!iM>h' were kllled. ( ~oto. Pa1e A4)
••ft'• mlMrable up here," aaid
lorado State Patrol dl,.yateher
ary Upton 1n Idaho Sprincs.
If you don't have to tr1veJ up
l.ere, it would be a real lood
:W.a to atay home."
· A 24.year-old man, hi• ftanee
pd hla brother were kllled when
'they tried to land their 1ma1J
J>lane in Hayden, -Colo., durinc ·
heav¥ snow Sunday .
Snow.1Uckened roads were cited
11 the cause of one fatal traffic
accident lo Colorado, two in
Ne bra1ka and one in
Waahinatoo.
Snow lo MJchlsan fell in a
band from Lan.sine to Just west
..of Alpena. with ceniral
MlchJ1an·1 Gratiot County hit
barde1t.
, The avalanche dancer forced .
the Colorado ClvU Air Patrol to
1uapend its search or the
Collegiate Peaks near Buena
Vista, where they were trylng to
locate emergency aircraft
beacons believed coming from
the area.
"The Avalanche Warning
Center in Fort Collins told us to
1et our people out because of the
avalanche hazard," Civil Air
atrol M-.j. Richard Oakes said.
fJ WAYNE MEMORIAL -Welde r works on
!I.Newport· Beach city-commiss ioned bronze
bas relief of John Wayne with a stagecoach. a
cwi, Hiit ~., cune. surr
The piece was doubled in s ize and price s ince
it was started two years ago.
'}1 From Page A1 ~:Cyclist dies
~~of injuries
~rom crash
WAYNE MEMORIAL. • •
,,
n An El Toro motorcyclist who
~lost control or his bike on the
i Ortega Highway Christmas Day,
Usuccumbed to his injuries at
Mission Community Hospital
today. I
David F. Close, 45, or El Toro,
was pronounced dead at the
hospital this morning, three
days after his motorcycle failed
to neaoijate. a cur.ve on tbe
two·lane hiehway.
Ca lifornia Hi g hwa y
Patrolmen said Close was
.,westbound on the road, about 12
-miles east of the Santa Ana ~reeway when the acciderv
occurred.
"' The cyclist apparently went
'linto a curve at about SS mph
'whe n his brakes locked and ·~kidded off the roadway into an
embankment, a highway patrol
'$spokesman said.
I.: The spokesman said the
'Victim was not wearing a helmet
>at the time of the crash.
b
!Reagan due
1> • 1.to sign
!more bills
:f LOS ANGELES <AP > -1fresident Reagan has nearly
~ompleted work on the next
federal budget, and the State of
-\he Union speech -his next
tnajor project -is nearly a
:tnonth away. So today was a day
lor checking up on bis ranch. .
The president lert a foggy.
hilled capit.al Sunday for the
alifornia sunshine and a week·
f visiting with family and
·ends here and at the Palm
prlngs estate of publisher
alter Annenberg.
, Reagan brought with him 36
tlls passed at the end of the
ongressional session and
hort.ly after he arrived at his
otel tbe White House press
ice announced be had 1lgned
ee of them. Among those still.
be siped, probably T uesday,
re the defense appropriaUoos
111 . forelfn asailtance
fi1l.UOO, the Social Security
nimum benefit atad aid to
lners with black lung d11eue.
. ,
pay -0rr the project and then
organize fundraising efforts
Including a John Wayne film
festival to pay back the city.
She says she has no idea why
the project ballooned in P.rice
and size. But, she says, it will be ,
"beautiful."
Artist Matson, meanwhile,
says he bas received little help
or money Crom the committee
charged with overseeing the
project.
He says he's taken out two 18
per~eot loam again.st bli home
to finance the job. He aays
unless he pays back the loans by
Jan. 15, he'll lose bis house.
"But I love the Duke," Matson
says, adding, "and at an 18
percent interest rate, you know
I'd have to love the Duke."
And there's another hitch.
Although the bronze work is
expected to be completed next
m onth, city officials now say
they're not sure where to put it.
Originally, when the piece was
envisioned as a desk-size relier.
city officials agreed to attach it
to a wall outside the Newport
Theater Arts Center.
But the piece is too big for that
now.
Mayor Heather suggests it
could be displayed inside the
new lobby that's planned for the
theater. The trouble is, it could
be two years before that lobby is
built.
Matson says it's a miracle
he's gotten this far on his solid
bronze artwork. He means that
Uterally.
"I was so damn mad at the
city and how l wasn't getting
any money that I thought about
giving up for a while." he says.
He says he went down to the
beach with his wife one day to
m"ll over the situation. He says
that is when Duke gave him the
''sign."
•'I was sitting there and l
,luddenly had thia reeling that
\he Wild Goose C formerly
Wayne's boat) was going to
come down the channel, tum
around seven times and then
polnt at me."
Matson claims that's exactly
what happened.
"Here l was ready to give up
.and the Duke was telllng me to
tee this thing through."
Matson, a onetime aspiring mctvle actor who bad a dog
iamed "Duke.'' claims he's had a myatlcal relationship wlth
Wayne tor more t.ban 30 years.
• I
OIUNGl COAIT Dally Pilat ClaHlhd ... "9elftl 7141M2•M11
All OtMr ••""*'ti 142-4121
Thom• P, Hltey ~--o-a.......o..
Robert N. Weed ...........
Thoma A. Murphlne I..,
Mlchael P. Hwvey ...,..... .....
L. Kay 8d'lulb OIMlref~
~~Jr.
8ernltd Scftulrnen ~
Chat1• H. Looe ........ ..,
=~
l
He says when Wayne was
alive, the two of them were
always bumping into each other.
He says Wayne bas come to him
in dreams to give him advice.
Matson says it was his love for
Wayne that convinced him he
should expand the project and
add some of Wayne 's old
sidekicks like Devine and
Carradine to the brass piece.
That's went things started to
10 funny, Mat.son explains.
Matson contends he contacted
Walter Ziglar, chairman of the
Wayne committee, and outlined
the plan for expanding the piece
with the stagecoach and horses.
The artist says he'd worked
out a deal to hold down costs but
says he relayed his concern to
the committee that he wasn't
getting any money.
"By this time," Matson says,
"I'd used up all of my savings.
I'd turned down other jobs and
the price of everything was
going up almost daily."
Matson claims he was given
permission to expand the project
and was encouraged to take out
a personal loan to cover the cost.
He says he was informed that he
would be paid back later.
Ziglar . a c ity arts
commissioner , says he doesn't
want to comment.
"l really don't want to get
involved," Zigler says. "I was
only a representative on the
committee. I don't think the
money issue is that important."
Ziglar agrees with all the
others that the project "should
be very beautiful."
Beautiful or not. Matson says
unless he 's in for another
miracle, he'll be out of a house .
"But I've landed on my feet
before and I have a feeling that
will happen again," he suggests.
"I believe in miracles."
Anyway, he says. the
wouldn't let him down.
Santa nabbed
in burglary
LOS ANGELES (AP >
man dressed in a Santa Claus
suit broke into a Reseda home,
struggled with a gun-toting
woman who Uved there and then
ran out the front door Into the
arms or the police, officers said.
Joyce Price, 43, telephoned
police to say she heard her
kitchen window being opened
and had grabbed her handcun.
Wh ite she was talking, the man
entered her bedroom, officeni
laid.
"He lunged at her. hltUn1 her
arm," aaJd officer Fred Love .
The gun went off, he sald.
• ·wb.tcb ftred one round Into her
mattreu."
Typhoon·kills 28
( llAHILA, Phillpplnet CAP) -~hooa Lee's 103 mpb winda
wept tbroush the PhlUpplnll, Ulla, at leut 21 people and·
eav nc at least 100.000
omel..,, lbe Red Crola satd.
'
~ .. rch t.t1am1 rtsumed t.belr efforts at dawn today, be aald.
The cente r said heavy
snowfall and winds ue to 80
mpb were causln1 "a dan1eroua
avalanche situation alone with
the possibility of avalanches
bitting highways ...
I
The storm. accompanied by
punlshing winds. swept lnto
Colorado Saturday. Some
mountain areas got 21 inches of
snow overnight Saturday and
Sunday , with 48 -b o ur
accumula\lona of more than 2 feet. Snow was still fallln&
today.
Jn Washington, about 4,000
people In i Uburba north and
northeut of Seattle lost power alter snow-laden tree limbs fell
on power lines. The storm also
snarled trllfflc, keeping many
alders from the slopes.
Eastbound lanes of Interstate
90, the state's main east-west
artery which runs through the
Cascades, were closed twice
Saturday at 3,010 ·foot
~noquaJmie PaH, troopers 1aid.
When opened, they were choked
wltb traffic. Snowfall resumed
· 1n the Cucade1 on Sunday nJlht.
1 Ski operators in the Cucade
Mountains 11ld bu1lnes1 waa
leas than they had expected
Saturday.
, · · NormiAllY the day after Chriatmaa ls pretty heavy," said
.Stan De Bruter , 1eneral
manager of Ski 1t1ft.s Inc. "We
knew something was wron1
because traffic wasn't as heavy.
They're jwst trickling in.''
Judge rules against ex-soldier
Denied compensation in $3.9 million LSD lawsuit
PIERRE, S.D. (AP> -An
ex-soldier who claimed Army
LSD experiments in 1957 turned
his life into a nightmare of
mental illness is not entitled to
damages, a judge ruled today.
The case -the first of Its kind
in the nation lo go to trial -
could set legal precedents,
attorneys said during trial of
Calvin Sweet's $3.9 million
damage s uit in April.
U.S. District Judge Donald
Porter ruJed that Sweet. 43, of
Pierre, is not e ntitled to
compensation from the U.S.
government.
The judge said that since
Sweet did not file bis first claim
against the government until
1978, the action came too late to
fall within a two-year statute of
limitations.
Also, the judge said, a 1950
U.S. Supreme Court decision
known as the Feres Doctrine
gives the military immunity
from lawsuits such as Sweet's.
The Fe r es Doctrine s ays :
"Government is not liable ...
for Injuries to servicemen where
the injuries arise out of or are in
From PageA1
PLANE. • •
All four occupants of the tiny
plane emerged from the upside
down craft and made their way
safely to shore wbere they were
met by resCJJers .
Davison , and passengers
Brian and Janel Balanger, and
Michelle Balanger, were rushed
to South Coast Medical Center
following the crash.
Only Janet Balanger required
medical attention for an injured·
right ankle and some facial cuts.
A miracle?
"Naw, not really," Davison
said today from his Long Beach
apartment.
"We came down smooth as
s ilk." he s aid. "It was like
jumping off a bed and onto your
pillow."
Davison said he and the three
Balangers were returning to
Long Beach Municipal rurport
from a day-long pleasure flight
lo San Diego Sunday night.
He said he lost power when a
cable to a fuel mixture control
device on the carburetor broke.
·'It sputtered a couple of
limes. then I had no power at
all, .. the pilot recalled.
The plane was flying at about
2.000 reet and had just passed
over Laguna when the power
failure occurred, Davison said.
He said he started looking
below to find a place to land the
aircraft when he spotted the
sand at Main Beach Park
reflected off the lights on Coast
Highway.
··I spun around and headed for
it (the beach)," he said, "but I
just missed a couple of rock
outcroppings and decided I'd
better put the plane in the
water."
the course or activity incident to
service."
"Sweet failed to prove by a
predonderance of the evidence
that the failure of the United
Stales to provide follow.up care
C to his aJleged LSD exposure)
caused bis present mental
condition or aggravated an
earlier mental condition." the
judge said.
Sweet said he would appeal
the ruling "all the way to the
U.S. Supreme Court. because l
•believe I 've b een judged
unfairly ... The initial appeal will
'go to the 8th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals in St. Louis.
Sweet alleged that drug
experiments he participated in
at the Anny Chemical Warfare
Laboratories at Edgewood
Ar s enal in Maryland in
September 1957 brought on
s t eadily worsening mental
Illness.
He claimed the LSD-induced
mental illness left him unable to
work or function normally, and
led to his becoming an alcoholic
,and to the brea k-up of hi s
marriaJ!e.
Women 'ground~d'
Moslem leader cites driving risks
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia <API -A Moslem religious
lawmaker was quoted today as saying women should not
dri~e cars because that would mean "running the risk of
falling into incalculable sins." . .
In an interview with the newspaper Al -Jazira, Sheik
Abdel-Aziz bin Baz was quoted as s aying Islamic law
forbids women from driving.
He said allowing women to drive cars would be
·'fraught with a lot of de pravity , inclu~ng bein~ bare-fac~.
being alone with strangers. and runnmg the risk of fallmg
into incalculable sins."
Sheik Bin Baz is a religious leader who interprets the
Koran the sacred book of Moslems. who believe that it
contai'ns the .words of Allah dictated to the Prophet
Mohammed through the Angel Gabriel. The sheik's f~twas,
or Koranic interpretations, are observed by the Saudis and
supported by the ruling family as divine writs.
His statement on female driving was not worded as an
absolute law or fatwa, but observers said such a law could
be forthcoming.
'Angel' identified
in rescue of 7
MO~ROVJA CAP) -The
mysterious "angel" whose voice
led seven people to safety when
a Christmas Day fire broke out
in their house has stepped
forward and identified himself.
Lew Crain, a 60-year -old
ne wspaper carrier, confirmed
he was the man who helped
Frank Conti, his wife and their
five children flee from their
smoke-filled house.
Crain, a deliveryman for the
Los Angeles Herald Examiner.
wa1' on his route Friday when he
saw flames shooting from the
horn e in this Los Angeles
s uburb.
He jumped out of his truck and
spotted several children inside
the house.
•'They were trying to crawl
out the window, .. he said. "The
kids were crying. I told them to
be calm and they'll get out all
right... .
Mrs . Conti s aid she was
grappling with a window latch
when she heard Crain's voice
through the s moke.
··I was crying and screaming
and I couldn't find the lock," she
said. "If I hadn't heard his voice
With Crain helping to open the
window and then waiting
outside. she was able to pass
four of the children to safety.
At the time, said Conti, he was
only a foot away from his wife
but was unable to see because of
the smoke.
He said that after he fetched
the last child he lost his way and
panicked.
"I was scared out or my mind.
Then I heard this voice say 'ls
anybody in there?' "
He followed the voice and
made it outside safely with the
child.
Crain then quietly
disappeared and finished his
route.
"He was a guardian angel,''
said Conti's wife, Mary. ''I'll
pray for this man."
But Crajn said anybody would
have stopped to do the same
thing.
Newport Ski Company
Ski Re~tal Shop . . .
lots of ski 's are available for
your holiday ski trips.
· Rent before you leave on your trip .. FOR~ ·we also take reservations!
RENT ; Our rental shop is located at
2500 West Coast Hwy., Newport
Beach, CA, 714-631 -3144. (Old ad-
.dress) ...... es ... ,, ....... ,,... .. . I ...,,.,. ... .....
_.J . A• a . I 7
2700 West Coast Hwy.
I
Newport Beach, CA
(7.14) 631-3280
• • --~ ------·~ -.-L---~------_..,.__.,..,.....,...~.._.--... ~------------------........................................................................................................ 111
AP'W ..........
'M AN OF YEAR ' Time Magazine has named Lech
Walesa, Poland's Solidarity union leader, as its Man of
the Year for 1981 . The magazine said Walesa. among
other things, stood out a s an .. international symbol of
struggle for freedom and dignity ..
Hunts pay $1 million for land
The Hunt brothers of Texas
pa id $1 12 million for a
square mile or land in the
Borrego Desert of northeast
San Di ego County , an
attorney disclosed
The four parcels northeast
of Borrego Springs were
bought from an assortment
of owners by representatives
Actor Robert Wagner
thinks his wife. movie star
Natalie Wood, slipped and
drowned while trying to tie a
d inghy more securely lo the
couple's yacht. a newspaper
reported
Wagner told a friend that
he did not believe Miss Wood
was trying to leave their
yacht when s he slipped Nov
29 i nto the waters off
Catalina Island. according to
an article in the New York
Daily News .
The friend. whose identity
was not disclosed. said
Wagner was initiall y unable
to figure out what happened
that night, but eventually
of the Nelson Bunker Hunt
a nd William Herbe rt Hunt
Trust Estates in the name of
the Hunt Energy Corp. of
Dallas. s aid a spokesman in
t h e San Di e g o Cou nt y
recorder's oHice. Among the
sell ers were the DiG1orgio
Land Development Co. of
San Franc1l>cO and the Earl
Fruit Company
arr i ved a t the "onl y
possible · conclusion.
West German Chancellor
Helmut Schmidt is in Florida
for a three-week vacation
and a meeting with President
Reagan.
Schmidt arrived w1lh his
wife. H a nne lore , and
daug hter, Sus anne, 34 , at
Fort Myers. Fla. on their
way Lo Sanibel, a resort
is land off Florida'l> wes t
coal>t
The 21-year-old victim of
"'elephant man's disease"
who recently u nde rwent
extensive corrective s urgery
suys she rJ.'»lly didn't mind
apendlnJ( tht• hollduy1 In the
hos pital
l_,lu H., It false nume
adopted by the patient at the
Hospital of the University or
Penn sy lvania In
Ph iladclph1a , had large
d hsfigurirlJ,I tumors removed
trom her fuce in u pioneering
optrat1on Der 9. A fever
kept her m the hospital on
Chrbtma!> instead of at home
as doctors hud hoped.
Hos pital offici als s a id
Li s a 's face is s wollen.
d iscolored and aching, but
that m ess ages f rom
hundreds of wel l-wishers
llCtcd her spirits
A 12° year-old Georgia boy,
whose family sent him to the
So v i e t Unio n f or a
controversial treatment fo r a
degenerative eye disease, is
having another of his dreams
come true a vacation in
Southern California and a
trip to Disneyland.
"lie is really excited. He
jus t can't believe the whole
thing ." He l en Harris of
R e tinitis P1gmentosa
Jotcrnat1onal :.aid of the boy,
Todd Cantrell .
Mrs Harris. whose group
sponsored the trip through
donatwns. greeted Todd and
hi s pare nts Sunday al • ... os
An~e l e s lnternaliona l Airport and invited them to
dinner at her house
DREAM REAL T odd
C u n I r·p t I . 12 · y c ;..i r . o Id
Gcor,1!1<1 ho~ \\'hOs l' fa mil\
Sl'l11 him lo R us~1 a ro"r
11 l .it nwnt of c·~·<' disea:-.e.
I !' r1·a t1 -,1n ~ a nol h l·r
drea m flt• ,.., 111 Anaheim
for .i '1 ... 11 lo D1-..nt·~ land
C o n tinue d cool
.Coasta l
cloud1nei\ co.tt•I •r••s V•n•bl•
h•Oh c IOUdiniH\. w ith QU\ty w ind ' 1n
thf m ount••n\ tn co~nt•t .tre•s h•Qh\
SI to Mt LOW'\ 1n uprppr JO\ and 40\
Mount•1n hiO""-O to SS with iow \ "' ,Os
Fair tlw-OUQll Tuesday uuol tor T
some nlQM. and mornlf19 low CIOUds empe ra I u.res
Conlln...O coot with nlgns ol M> 10 6S
l-s In Ille 40\ Hunllnglon-Newoort low ••. MQll6S El,.whert, from Point Conootton
lo Ille ~•ken borc)er •nd °"' Ml
miles Lion• v•r.ablt! w1n0• 111rovgh tonlgllt Wosterly winos I 10 t $.
knoU lhls att~rnoon. Wf\t•rllf "''•" 1 to 3 leet. Felr tflrCIUQh lonlont .. <•ot
Partly clouOv on,.,. 'IOUthern w•l•rs ,
••ters
V.S. summary
A blh1•rd Oumprd snow on
Colorado, "'°"' sn.rt~o tr•lft< "' the
U •te of Wulllnglon •nd •notner
storm MOPOed U ln<M• ol snow 1n
MIClllgan.
Albanv
Albuque
Am•rlllo
Astlevlllt
A ti an la
Atl•nlc Ctv
8altlmort
Blrmlr19flm
8 1wnaro
80tP Bos Ion
Brown,vlle
8ullalo
Cl\arlstn SC
Ct1arl\111WV
ClleyenM
Clll<•QO
Cln<lnnatl
Cle vel•nd
Cotumt>us
0.l·F I Wlll
O.nver
HI Lo "'" ll ,, 10
•O ,. . , ..
" n
S2 J6
4S ]I O'l
4) ,. .0] ., ]1 u 3
" 11 O'l
J'I ,. 14
114 u
]7 31 .JO .. 0
S2 ,. 01 n • O'l
32 18 CM
JI 12
J6 11 OS
J'I ,. ..
10 00
21 10 OS
60~
,..,,,.,.,
luu]
l o•"' ~ ~:.:::..
U~o•f't\ 1tOh4"'0'• 0"tl"'4•4
a:mmJ ---===
Hew York "° HorfOI• •• Okla Cllv 61
Oman• ,.
Orlando 18
Phll•dl>flla .,
PM9nl• 66
Pltbburgfl ,.
P11•n0, Ma ,.
lS 30 Mernvlll•
J6 01 MOlllt•O
ll Need It\
1o 14 Oakland
•S t tO Pa\O Rot>les ti 06 RtO Bluff
43 Aeow_, City
2,. OS Sat r amf'nto
1l 11 Saltna\
s• .,
S6
1>1
S8 ..
S8 JO
H
S7 U s• ~
S6
U SJ
Some mounteln \llOb in Color•OO
rep0rted 20 in<f'1u of snow overn1Ql\t
with ~· accumulations ol well
over 2 fee1 Av•t•nche warnk\v\ •trt
posled Sunoey across the st•t•
0.S MOt~
O.lroll
lO n 72
JI ,. ,. Piia nd, Ore .,
Raold Cit¥ ,.
Reno •S
31 11 San O••?O
1\ San frAn<l\.Co
1, Santa 0art>ara
SS 41 01 It .,
.
Blowing snow 1n Coloraoo cau~
iwer 1ero vtslblllt~ ano thrff ~t•
were killed when • oi.,,. trHneG
near an •l,_1 A woman dled In
Wuhl"91on ol lnJurres suttortd In •
lrelllc K Cidenl on •CV roads
Trees t~lng unoer tllo we•ont ol
snow brok e p owe r line \ I n
Washlfl9ton, cultlng off •l~triclty 10
thous .. .os of oeoot•
5"°"' ellO -•"" over 1Ml1s of lllf Gre•t Le._e\ r•9•0f'l, Wt'Strrn New
Yor• •l•t••nd N•w Eng••no In the Mlowe.i, •now 1e11 on parts
ol Nebr•sl<• Str0fl9 wll'Cb b~ o.,.r IM Sierra
Neva.Us ol Calll0<nle •no •n IM•U of
northern Arlrona
In tM East, rain 1•11 on tne Aflanlic
Contal r~on.
Tempe<etU4'e• erouna ,.,. netton •t
mid-day Sunday r<•noed from a tow of
1 at Cut -. Mont., to • Moll ol 13
al Miami~ V•ro B•acll. Fl•
California
l"elr ll'lrougll T.....,•Y. but '°""'
nl9"1 and l'llOf'ftlng low Cl-lrHIU
Continued cOOI. l.ows In .o.. Hlgns 60
toH.
'Extended
.forecast
SOU THERN CALIFORNIA
COAST Al. AHO MOUNTAIN AREAS
-Some nlthl ano morning lo•
._._.... .... --.-. .... --
Oulutll ,. • 01
Et Paso .. ..
r: eirtwlnl" ·U ·l6
Hartforo l3 u J'I
Helen• u •• 01
Honotulu " .,
Houston " .,
lndn.tpli'l JI 1'
JackSnvlle 76 SI
l(ans City 3t ,. OJ
LH VtQa\ }1 )A
Little Roo " 00
Richmond .,
Salt Lake lS
Seettl• 40
St louh J6
St P·h,,_ 7]
St Ste Mari. lO
Sook4M n
Tul .. S2
Weslllntl" •• w 1c111i. ..
78 QI S 100 ton
11 ''1ftf"1dl
:IA i. U•1an
ll ,, e .. ,.,o,.,
n OS ~:~,.'!:ar
H •) Catallna
l1 OJ L MCI Bue"
)) Monrov14'
J'2 O.. N,.woort 8t•ch 11 Ont•r•o
60 le
'7 "° \1
66 S! ., lS
•l SS
" so 6S 46 u ..
6S ..
S• 40
S2 J6
LOYISYlllt 4) )1
Memo11i. Sl 0
CALIFOllNIA
B•kerslleio
Blythe s• " "
San 8•rn•rOH\O
San Jo\~
S•nl• An4'
S• •9 Ot
63 •t
Ml•m l 11 ,,
Mllwaukoe ,. 11
Mf>l\oSt P u • 01
HHllVlllo S2 ]I
Hew OrlHnS •1 17
Eure••
Fr-eino
L•n<•"'~' LOSA~les
T •"°"\/alley CANADA S2 •7 07
S6 JI
S6 J'I
'1 S7
.14
•• ,,
t " ,. n
1S ,,
' ,,
l6 ,.
)7 n
C1lgary
Edmonton
Mon,rt•I 011••• Regina
Toronto
VantOU¥ftr
w1nn1swo .. ·10
Le<ll .... Hu,,tlnglon Plf'
Sent• AN RI..., Jetty aotll SL~ 22nd SI.~ •.. .,.. ..
RoOplte, i....,,.
Slfff>Y HoflOW
Tl\alle·Br-J U... Cle....,,.. Pier
Trelelt<tt
T-J'• A"9/Ma1 . ,... • ,_. ,_.
1-1
J.J
J.J M 1
..... ...... , .. ,
Qmd Qmd gaed -••Ir lelr fair 9-
A ...... T•-· st ,. ,. ,.
i•
}t
}I
}I
S6
IT Str .. 11 1-.J goec1 S6
T...,_.._• lldH Hl9" 10 01 • m., 1.-S:H o.m ; Swell dlrKtlon
WHI
Reportln!I 999ncles. HB, JOlln 8•1111; NB, Lo9en L.oo ... y. La. Steve
.MCCormlelt; SC. Stew l.uNlr-.
We1re Li~tening •••
PAN AMEIUCAH
Acae>utco ..
B•rtMOO\ IS
B•rmuda 13
8 0901• •1
CurM •O ..
G11•0•l•J•r• 1•
Gu•detouoo 16
Tides
TOOAV
Stto110 low • SO o m $<tr ond n1Q11 ti Jlpm
TUl.SOAY
First low J S6• m l'lrU lllQll 10 01 •"' SOlConO 10., s Hom
What do you like about the Oally Pilot? What don't you like'
Call lhe number below Ind your message will be ruorded.
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,,
IS .. so ,. ..
71
642·.6086
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Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Monday. December 28, 1981 HIF
DON'T FORGET ME -"Tina," pet of the
Larr y Tilghmon family of Columbus. Ga .
stays close to her new friend. which arrived
at their homl· Christmas Eve. Finding that
AP .......
the new addition was getting all the attention,
Tina decided to make friends. stay close and
take a good s nap at anyone ignoring he r in
favor of her new pal.
f
Czechs recall 'spring'
Polish crisis evokes memor y of 1968 Soviet i nvasion
PHAGC E. Czechos lovakia
(AP ) The de claration of
martial law in Poland two weeks
a go e vok e:. 13 ye ar -old
m e m o ri es or Sov ie t tanks
rumbltng through this capital to
end the .. P rague Spring" of
Cze c h os lova k ia 's r e fo rm
movement
Western diplomats and many
Czechoslovak~ ~ay that in the
yea rs sine<' thl' govt>rnment-led
liberahzat1on here "'as crushed
by tht· Warsa"' Pact m ilitary
alliance 1n 1968. there has been
worsening stagnation and little,
1r any. 1nnovat1on
Som e s ay t he hi s tory of
CH•rhos lova k1a the las t
Sov1l't·bloc nation to experience
a m aJOr crat·kdown holds
uncomfort able po rtents for
Poland
P o la nd 's JHem1 <'r , Gen
Wojc1ech J a ruzels k1. put the
countr) under military authority
Dt'c 13 a nd :.us pended the
1nd l•p c n den t .labor unio n
Solidarity. Only Polish s oldiers
are rC'ported in volved
T ht• new Prague communist
leadership one of the most
con)o.ervat1 v<.• and pro-Soviet in
the Wa r sa w P a ct m i litary
alliance h:.is purs ued the
countr) ·l> d1s)o.1dl'nts into prison,
ex11l• or doml•sllc timidity.
··it 1s as if you ran a film
b at:k....,ar d :.,"' s aid a
Czechoslovak. contending that
his country ~t ill is reeling
backward from 1961! toward a
stricter. Stalini st line
Wh a t the outcome or the
Polish crackdo"' n "'ill be 1s not
yet cl<.•ar
Pri.lg ue 's expe rime nt with
reform was chwfl y the work of
the Communist P arty itse lf.
whose reforms then attracted
intellectual and popular support.
In Poland by contrast. the
impetus for change came from
the workers communis m was
supposed to serve. Intellectuals,
some of them radicals. advised
and JOCkeyc.-d for influence. but
So lidarit y was fir s t a nd
foremost the creation or the
w or k e r s of th e Gda n sk
shipyards in August 1980
Solida rity 's leader, Lech
Walesa. app1:1rently has been put
under a k>rm of house a rrest but
--·---...
not actually jailed. Walesa
officially is said still to be the
head of Solidarity, the onl y labor
union free of communist control
in the Soviet bloc.
Czechoslovak le ad e r and
former Communist Party chi ef
Alexander Dubcek was never
formally imprisoned. although
he was detained during the early
days or the 1968 intervention.
Dubcek is now believed to be
earning a modest living as a
minor offi cial m Bratis lava.
Leading intellectuals were
as ked to pledge an oath of
loyalty.
Some op p o nent s o f
Czechoslovakia's new leaders
took on manual work, hoping to
buy time and survive until the
crackdown passed. But it has
not passed.
"Nobody would have believed
that 13 years later. it would still
be on." a Prague resident said.
The communist leadership bas
paid a high price for the creation
of what Heinrich Boll, a West
German author and Nobel Prize
winner. recently called "a
culturaJ graveyard."
Party hardliners promoted a
generation of young political
technoc rats unequipped to
challenge those above them,
Western diplomatic analysts and
many Czechoslovaks claim.
Reform has been blocked and
the very term kept carefully out
of the oflicial vocabulary.
The lack of innovation has
been particularly harmful to the
country's economy. which has
been slipping into steady decline
with the party as the sole
authority of the government.
The fall in livi ng standards is
evident in orders to reduce
power in streetlights and cut
meat con!umption by 10 percent
because of expensive feed grain
imports from the West , and
Prime Minister Ludo mir
Stroubal has warned things will
get wors~.
Death dream nails
murder suspect
MI AMI <AP> -Two nights
before he was killed, fis h market
owner Rafael Gonzales dreamed
of his own murder. He told
friends the next morning, and
those reports led to the arrest of
his alleged killer , poli ce said.
He said he had been killed
while resisting a holdup by two
m en , one of them a former
e mpl oyee n amed Roberto
Al varez.
Two days later, Gonzalez was
slain during a robbery.
Police gave this account:
Two men visited Gonzalez to
buy s hrimp Dec . 20. The
54 -year-old Gonzalez refused lo
let the men into his store.
The men forced their way in
and shot Gonzalez several times
in the face. head and arm. They
stole approximately $300 in cash
from a metal box.
T he body was discovered
three days later. A s hocked
employee remembered the
dream and told police.
"He said the victim told him
he dreamed that he was going to
be held up by Roberto Alvarez
Det ec tiva And y
Argostegui said .
Police went to Alvarez's home
and talked to his brother and
sister. Alvarez returned while
detectives we r e there . He
agreed to be photographed and
fingerprinted.
C rim e l ab t echnic ians
matched prints on the metl\) box
to those taken from Alvarez and
a palm print on the victim's car
also was Alvarez'. police said.
Alvare z also made a
statement, police s aid. He is
being held without bond in Dade
County j ail o n charg es of
first·degree murder.
A second arrest had not been
reported.
thz. authantic classic .
S<ZlJJnl<iss brushQ.d. ehit1anci,
czach S'MldWr is TJ)dOO en
a circular band ft-emz.,
c::ncz. at a timz ,~
twioz. brusbz.d. fa"
cn:nfbrt ard 0 b:zilczr
f\ t . crtl-d thc2. n iaz.st,
6WIZ.6Uzr!> )'OUl 1 ~r
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44 Fa.hlon ltlond • Nft1POl1Beoc'1·714/644·5070
1001 Watwood Bluel.·~ Wloge • IJS/IOB-!1173
H/F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. December 28, 1981
Terrorists release
• communique on
abducted general
MILAN, Italy (AP> -Redl
Brigadee terrorists released a 1
lift .wrapped communique,
brandina kidnapped U.S. Brig.
Gen. James Dozier a "hero of
Amer ican massacres in
Vietnam" and saying he would
be intenocated about the NATO
forces under his command.
However, the terrorists set no
conditJons for the release of the
50·year·old general, who was
kidnapped 11 days ago from his
Verona apartment by four
gunmen posing as plumbers.
Breaking an eighl·day silence,
the Red Brigades communique,
found here Sunday, announced
plans for Oozier's "proletarian
trial."
I t a l so included a
black·and·white photograph
showing the general in front of a
banner bearing the five·pointed
star symbol of the leftist urban
guerrilla gang. A small dark
mark, possibly a bruise, was
visible under Dozier's left eye.
document were in a trash can ln
a downtown square. The brown
package, gift.wrapped with .a
yellow ribbon, also contained a
hefty Ideological statement.
The communique, stenciled on
the front and back of three
pages, did not make clear if
Dozier's "proletarian trial" had
started.
It listed figures on the
numbers of men and weapons
under the Verona NATO
command -information police
sources said was available to the
public -.and declared: "On the
use and function of this
apparatus, Dozier will have to
answer to the proletarian
international."
The H t!d Brigades
communique said of Dozier:
"This pig, this killer is a hero of
American massac r es in
Vietnam, where for his 'merits'
he earned various decorations."
Dozier fought in the armored
cavalry in Vietnam and won the
Silver Star.
-
Police said the photo appeared
to be authentic, but a spokesman
at Dozier's NATO command in
Verona withheld comment. "I
am waiting to see if it's a true
photograph," said Col. Luciano
Dalcheggio.
The communique attacked
American ··imperialism" and
hailed the birth or an
anti-nuclear missile movement
in Europe. Italy a nd other
countries in Western Europe
have seen large demonstrations
in recent months by groups
protesting American and Soviet
miss iles in Euro~e.
TRAFRC JAM 10 MILES LONG Motorists huddle against
cold as they wait out IO·mile traffic Jam caused by heavy
snow and accidents on Interstate 90 at Snoqualmie Pass
.. ~ . .,......_
near Seattle. The incident occurred Saturdav on the main
east-west artery in the state of Washington. The storm also
cut power in the Seattle area
Dozier appeared lo be holding
a sign, which was printed in
ltaJian and read in part: "The
c ris is or capitalism breeds
imperialistic war . On ly
anti·imperialist civil war can
bury war."
Fire cancels by luxury liner • cruise
An unidentified man called the
Italian news agency ANSA in
Milan on Sunday and said the
ph oto a n d Red Brigades
The communique came as
police continued their massive
sear ch for Dozier in northern
Italy.
Sinai house burned
• lfl: protest move
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -
Settlers in the northern Sinai
town of Yamit torched an empty
• house overnight to protest the
government's refusal to meet
their demands for compensation
for evacuating the area when it
is returned to Egypt ln April,
residents said today.
An earlier blaze Sunday in
another vacant house was
extinguished, the residents said.
The settlers said they started
fortifying the town with
sandbags, trenches. and barbed
wire barriers over the weekend
in case the government orders
its soldi ers t o clear the
settlements.
Robert Kennedy
marker stolen
WASHI NGTON CAP) -A
marble marke r and wooden
cross at Robert F. Kennedy's
gravesite at Arlington National Cemetery have been reported
stolen, the U.S. Park Police
said.
' Authorities· said the thieves
apparently scaled a stone wall
and a six.foot fence surrounding
the cemetery Sunday to get to
the gravesite where they dug out
t be s mall Vermont marble
tombstone and pulled up the
two-foot while wooden cross.
Guard arrested
in money the/ t
SCOTI'SDALE. Ariz. <AP)
A 29-year-old former Purolator
security guard was arrested
today in connection with the
$200,000 robbery of a Purolator
van in Scottsdale Oct. 10,
authorities said .
Capt. John Pratt of the
Scottsdale Police Department
sai d Daro Wa l lbur1 was
arrested at a north Phoenix
mo tel after Phoenix police
spotted a car believed to be the
one Wailburg was drivin1.
Less tension
urged of Korea
PANMUNJOM,•Korea CAP > -
The United Nations military
command today proposed that
North and South Korean and
U . N . f orces give prior
notification of major military
training exercises in order to
"reduce tension" on the divided
Korean Peninsula.
Reagan committee
escapes probe
WASHIN GTON <AP )
Despite recommendations of its
own lawyers and auditors. the
Federal Election Commission
will not investigate possible
legal violations by President
Reagan's campaign committee
nor force it to repay more than
$1 million to the Treasury, a
final audit report s hows.
Details of the long FEC audit
process, conducted in closed
meetings over the past year,•
were revealed in documents
obtained by The Associated
Press through the Freedom of
Information Act.
MlAMI (AP> -Nearly 2,000
passengers of the S.S. Norway
are back ashore in Miami today
after a fire hot enough to buckJe
steel plates raced through the
luxury liner's boiler room and
turned their vacation plans to
ashes .
Sunday's blaze forced the
owner. of the world 's largest
c rui se s hip , Norwegian
Caribbean Cruise Line, to cancel
the Norway's seven·day New
Year's cruise, a spokesman
said. The company will refund
Pilot missing
10 days
sought at sea
GOLDSBORO, N.C. <AP> -
Five airplanes, four helicopters
a nd a Coast Guard cutter
searched the murky Atlantic
wate rs off Cape Fear for a
fighter pilot missing since his
plane dove into the ocean on a
night light 10 days ago.
"We haven't given up hope
and we're going to put
everybody available out there
first thing today," Sgt. Gary
Foster. a s pokesman fro m
Seymour J ohnson Air Force
Base here. said today.
Foster said the search for 1st
Lt. Michael Mattson has been
hampered by poor visibility,
rainfall and high seas. It was
suspended at dusk Sunday, he
said.
A second crewman, Air Force
1st Lt. Thomas Tiller, was
rescued Thursday after six days
adrift in a one.person raft
without food or water.
Tiller said Saturday hisl reflexes took over after the
crash.
"We 're so thoroughly trained,
it was almost like an emergency
procedure simulation," he said.1
·'There was no emotion rightl
then. we just knew we had toi
go."
.... ._~
Diiiy Pilat
Classifieds--
If you don't wanf
to drink
~~·
'05 ferr~fl 3&~ ~~'rra1\\
\"'"'a Coil'ac · ~ f to\ broW"· a\r. ~to\\o'<llS ·
w\res . e\eC w\1\4 35\Cl
casS·COC'" \O fo~ 4 s\)(\ f!':.~taral~ \J~\4·496~ ~i~.-----... ~
,, Sold thru Piiot in
2 daya. Ran 1 week In
L.A. Time• with no reaulta. 1
Very lmpreaaedl '' g~tI@642-5678
charge It~-by phone
From South Laguna a North County
call 540-131G tolMrH.
-.
That's our
business
..
COSTA MESA
MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Call 642-2734
AtcohOlls·m ·Recovery Services
301 Victoria Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627 · Approved for Medicare
II • • *
·.
money to the 1,950 people
scheduJed for the trip and will
reimburse their airfare and give
them a discount on another
c ruise, the spokesman said
today.
NCL vice president Art Kane
estimated the loss to the cruise
line from the blaze would easily
· ·exC'eed a million dollars."
The fire, whiC'h broke out
shortly before noon a few feet
above the water line of the
1,035-foot luxury liner, heated
a1 r to more than 1 ,000 degrees,
Deputy Miami Fire Chief Dan
Fabyan said. The flames spewed
black smoke upward through the
crew's quarters, and thick, oily
smoke blew across Miami's
port.
Sweatsoaked firefighters from
the Norway's crew and nine
companies of Miami firefighters
in protective clothing fought the
blaze for nearly two hours
before extinguishing the flames.
"I can •t believe this. I'm just
heartsick." said Marlene
Brown. a Neptune, N.J .,
insurance agent scheduled for
the cruise. ''If it was going to
get stranded, why couldn't it get
stranded in the water by St.
Thomas instead of here?"
Kane said ins pectors from the
U .S . Coas t Guard a nd N o rwegian s hips -control
officials were expected to board
the Norway today to check the
ship ror seaworthiness. Even
after the fire was extinguished
Sunday. Kane said, heat in the
area was so intense it prevented
the inspectors from checking for
damage.
The Norway had been
scheduled to leave at 5 p.m.
Sunday for seven nights at sea
and stops at St. Thomas in the
Virgin Islands and al one of the
outer islands in the Bahamas.
Wh en the ship docked, it was
returning from a Christmas
cruise. and about 200 departing
passengers still aboard had Lo be
evacuated.
The New Ye ar ·s cruise
traditionally 1s one of the most
heavily booked of the year , Kane
said Singer Jack Jones had
been scheduled for the voyage.
•••• ant! ~ow t!oea four
1ard.en trow\>
Whether it's about a simple shrub, a sophisticated
bed of flowers, or a !asty selection of vegetables,
the Daily Pilot's garden page blossoms every Fri-
day with handy hints and delightful features .
We 'll give you tips on when to plant, when to
prune an4 when to pluck. Our writers also
brighten the garden section with interesting
features on Local people who grow unusual plants
ar achieve exceptional results.
Our crop of stories comes up new every Friday to
help you have more success and more enjoyment
with your growing. If your thumb is green, use it
to flip to the garden page in Friday's Daily Pilot.
l1ilyPilat
642-4321
Zoo accident
injures three
SAN DIEGO <AP) -Three visiton to the San
Dlego Zoo were slightly injured when part of an
elevated ramp at the koala exhibit collapsed.
olliciala said.
Zoo General Manager Clayton Swanson said
about 30 people were standing on the ramp
Saturday afternoon when a support timber gave
way. The ramp is elevated above the exhibit and
allows visitors to view the koalas from about 10
feet away.
Be said two children were injured. including a
girl who bit her lip, a boy who scratched hls chin
and a man who suffered a bruised knee. All were
treale<J and released at a nearby hospital.
Coroner:'s Of /ice probed
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Major mistakes and
employee thefts have disrupted crime
investigation conducted by the Los Angeles County
coroner's office, a newspaper has reported.
"If defense attorneys were cognizant of the
chain-of-evidence problems in this place, they
could probably beat 80 percent of their cases," an
unidentified coroner's investigator said m the
newspaper report.
The problems include inaccurate drug tests,
lost, mismanaged or stolen evidence, failure to
perform autopsies on disputed cases and
inadequate staff train~ng, the Los Angeles Tiroes
said Sunday in the first of a two-part series.
Cock/ ight raid nets 46
EL MONTE CAP > -Forty-six persons were
arrested during a raid on an alleged cockfight in
the backyard of an El Monte home, authorities
said.
The owner of the home, 42-year-old Fabian
Diaz, was booked Saturday for investigation of
holding a cockfight. a felony. Los Angeles County
sheriff's Deputy Ralph Martin said.
The other 38 adults and seven minors present
when deputies raided the home were cited for
being present at a cockfight, a misdemeanor
carrying maximum penalty of six months in
county jail and a $500 fine.
Martin said deputies confiscated 30 fighting
cocks. a fighting pen and a number of two-inch,
quarter moon-shaped razors attached to the legs of
cocks in fights.
Victim wanted in Taiwan
LOS ANGELES <AP) -The victim of one of
the largest burglaries in this city's history is being
sought in Taiwan for allegedly passing S20 million
in bad checks.
The Los Angeles Times reported Sunday that
Wellington P. Cheng, the Taiwanese businessman
whose posh Bel-Air home was burglarized of $4 .5
million worth of jewelry and art items, has been
charged in Taiwan with fraud for allegedly using
the bad checks to purchase jewelry and real
estate.
Taiwanese police have been trying
unsuccessfully to extradite Cheng for three years,
the article said. The 33-year-old Cheng reportedly
has permanent resident status in this country.
Rescue fails, diver dies
LONG BEACH <AP> -A diver who was
sucked into an oil tanker intake valve and trapped JS feet underwater for about half an hour died
despite the best efforts of rescue crews. authorities
said.
Long Beach Lifeguard Chief Richard Miller
said the accident occurred Saturday while the
diver, 21 -year -old Matthew Marmion, and his
partner were working on the hull of the tanker
Arco Alaska anchored about two miles offshore.
The pair were near an intake valve which
takes in water to cool the tanker's engine. Miller
said. Marmion was sucked up into the valve and
was unabl~ to get out.
7
SFA 's Semi-Annual
Men's Event: Sales
and Special
Purchases on
Furnishings
for Him.
• Pure cotton
turtlenecks -ongma/ly
19.50. now 15.90. S to XL.
•Also, pincord button-
downs -a special purchase
at 17. 90 each. Polyester
and cotton. S to XL.
•And cotton
broadcloths-originally
'35; now 17.90. S to XL.
• In Sportshirt Collections.
the Men's Store-where we
are all the things you are.
lnr~iare price ~uctions lnilY
hilw-bttfl taken"''°' 10 1h1s sa~
.~ ..........
WASHED UP -Unidentified members of the .. Keep It Clean· brigade
give themselves a good scrubbing as they march along Colorado
Blvcl .. in downtown Pasadena during the Cifth annual Doo Oah
Parade. A crowd of more than 4.000 packed the streets Sunday to
watch the festivities. an irreverent spoof of the city·s annual
Tournament of Roses P~rade he ld on New Year·s Day.
State officials view
retrililof Juan Corona
SACRAMENTO <AP) -State · bodies were found, said the retrial's
officials, grappli ng with the $3 total expenses .. might push $4
million cost of accused kiUer Juan million. but I don't think st will go
Corona's second trial. are trying to over that."
limit the amount the public can be The tost of preparing the retrial
charged for court expenses. now totals about $2.9 million, with
Corona. whose 1973 conviction for the bulk going for lawyers and
the murder or 25 farm workers was in ve s t i gators r or both the
later overturned. is scheduled to be prosecution and defense Attorneys'
retried this s pring in Alameda rees sn the case have averaged $50
County, where the trial was shifted per hour. paid by the state.
because of extensive publicity. Because Corona is indigent, his State Controller Kenneth Cory said be is developinJ( guidelines to limit de re n s e r e es are paid with
state-paid expenses in future major stat e-county funds . The state has
murder cases. paid all but about $300,000 of the
··in the retrial of Juan Corona we total, with Sutter County paying the
have found som e disturbing rest.
problems, created as much by the According to state auditors. the
lack of formal. clear-cut state cost included a $10,000 nine-day trip
regulations as anything else," Cory to London in December 1980 by three
said. according to S unday's editions attorneys, and a $2,400 trip to Mexico
or the Sacramento Bee. by three members of the prosecution
Corona 's conviction was team.
overturned i n 1978 by a state
appellate court, which ruled that Corona, a farm labor contractor,
Corona, now 47, failed to receive was convicted of the 1971 murders of
adequate representation from his the farm workers whose bodies were
trial lawyer. discovered in shallow graves along
William Hampton, a deputy county the Feather River near Yuba City.
auditor for Sutter County, wbe.;..r~e ....;t....;h_e __ a_b_o_ut_4-0_nu_· 1_e_s_n_o_rt_h_o_r_Sacra men to
~
..... ...,... beo'*9ng
CLASS •!'Mt ..........
IJtlit'UCTION ,49z4977
SAN =LEMEN TE CA
• 426 A•Pn•do o~ lo h .. rllo
-i
'Stardust' author J!
succumbs at 82 ~I
RANCHO MIRAGE <AP> -
Oscar-winning songwriter Hoagy
Carmichael, who made gentle
wryness h.i s trademark and turned
out perennial favorites such as
"Stardust" and "Georgia on My
Mind," i.s dead at age 82.
Carmichael, who also s ang and
acted, was rushed Sunday mom.Ing to
Eisenhower Memorial Center where
he died of a heart ailment Jn the
emerge ncy room , said hospital
spokeswoman Helen Eckert.
Carmichael's body is being shipped
back to hjs birthplace, Bloomington,
Ind., said Dick Jensen of the Palm
Springs Mortuary. Jensen said the
funeral was set tentatively for Jan. 4.
Carmichael was interested in
music as a youth. but became a
lawyer for job security. He dabbled
in composing, however, and soon
turned to it full time.
.. Stardust." his first hit, was a
romantic, dreamy song that violated
the rules of popular songwriting at
the time -it ran 64 bars when most
publishers ins isted 32 was the limit.
He aflopted a bittersweet or
down-home, folksy tone in later
composition, whi ch had more of the
Deep So uth in them than
Carmichael's native lndiar)a.
Many -such as "Lazybones,"
"Small Fry," .. Rockin' Chair" and
· · 1 n the Cool, Cool, Cool of the
Evening,·· an Academy Award
winner reflected his characteristic
wryness.
He played the role of a cool piano
player sn "To Have and Have Not," a
film that starred Humphrey Bogart
and Lauren Bacall . He also played in
a variety or other films and television
s hows.
One night early an his career he
was having dinner with Don
Redman , musical director of
McKinney's Cotton Pickers, when he
was asked about his activities. He
pulled out a new instrumental work
with no words, only the title.
··stardust."
"I wasn't sure what st meant. but st
JUSt seemed like a nice title," he said
later
The first recording of "Stardust"
was made by Redman in October
1928 at a fairly fast tempo. But it
didn't become popular until Isham
Jones' New York dance orchestra
recorded it. featuring Victor Young's
violin. Mitchell Parish added lyrics.
Louis Armstrong and Bing Crosby
recorded st. and the song was on its
way
.
'·
I
18 1
8 d x
",/
•d
}}
11
il
DEAD AT 82 -Songwriter Hoagy iq
Carmichael died Sunday of a 11 ·I
heart ailment in Rancho Mirage. d
Ii!
Carmichael sang with Armstrong .d
in "Rocking Chair" in 1929, one of ia
the first ruts by an interracial vocal !; team. ·11
11
It was n·t until 1951, however, that
he landed an Academy Award. "In •JI
h ;h t e Cool. Cool, Cool of the Evening"
was in the film "Here Comes the /
Groom.·· Johnny Mercer wrote the lyrics.
In his later years. when he was
known for being tanned and dapper, n
he said songwriting kept him young. ; I
When he turned 70, he said, "I 'm too ,·l
busy following the m elodies in my 1 i
heart to feel it." : ;.
:J
In 1936, Carmichael married Ruth
M'einardi and they had two sons, •l
Hoagy Bix and Randy. Both s urvive ll
him. q
His wife obtained a divorce in 1956,
testifying her husband had been
"cold and indifferent" to her for .•
three years . Carmichael married a
second ts me in 1977 to Wa nda
McKay. who also survives him.
LA layoffs coming
LOS ANGELES CAP> -There will ·~
be unplanned layoffs in city govern-:-J
ment at the beginning of the year due Hi
to city budget constraints, officials 1:4
have .announced. Mayor Bradley cit-.iJ
ed lower than expected revenues and •?
higher than expected costs. -:1 ,.,
R
• '1
>l
rH
I I
'"
\
Flannel Suitdressing ,,
iT1
:·) ... Now on Sale at SFA!
• The one-button jacket,
originally '127, now 95.90.
• Culottes, originally '82,
now 61.90.
• Both in grey, camel or black wool
and polyester flannel.
• And the argyle-printed blouse
in grey, slate and tan polyester,
originally '64, now 46.90.
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___ ____, ___________________ ~·------~·------11111!111!1~------................ _ •
Orange Cout DAI LY PILOT/Monday, December 28, 1981 H /F ••
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OllOTAT1CM11• 1111cw o1 UAOU Ollt T"MI .... •Oil, MIOllrUT •.11ic1,1c ,.w. I OUON, OITIOIT UIO CI N(llO!ATI noc• l lLCMANOU 41110 lll'OITIO ty Tiii llAIO ANO INITINIT ~·' ;;;
Social Security
revolt coming?
Unleas Coneress settles down and aer\oualy
tackles t.he problems or our Social Security ayatem -.
and aoon -a revolution among the younger workers
who contribute to the benefit.a of the retired is
lnt>vltable.
This Is the blunt view or a man wbo in the 1970t
was the top "number cruncher " at the vast
Baltimore-based Social Security Adminislrallon,
which now pays some $140 billion tn benerlta to
nearly 40 million or us.
In ract, A. Haeworlh Robertson, SSA's chlef
actuary from 1975 to 1978, fttls so strongJy about It
that he has tiUed his 376-page statiatica-packed book,
"The Coming
Revolution in ~ S o c i a I
Sec ur ity "
( $ 1 1 9 5 . ------~=> ..... ~, ~e~~~!:,;. ~~>ss. SYllll PDRJIR ,, ,
Li g h t
reading it is
not. It is crammed with charts, tables, graphs and
mathematical projections befitting hia background as
a Phi Beta Kappa math major with a master's
degree in actuarial science.
It's no news that Social Security is now in the
red. And the bottom line. Robertson contends. ls that
unless things are changed, the situation will get
worse
Future benefits, the author argues, will gradually
become so burdensome in the future <as the ratio of
older workers to younger ones rises, forcing younger
people to pay mor.r that we, as a nation. will at some
point in the next 25 to 30 years refuse to pay the price.
Better revisions now than revolution later
For 1981, Social Security taxes for workers and
their employers totaled $3,641 for those earning the
maximum Social Security tax income of $29,700. Half
paid by employees, half by employers.
On Jan. 1, 1982, these maximums are scheduled
to climb to 6. 7 percent or earnings up to $32, lOO -a
$4,302 total. split between employees and employers.
By 1985. as the law stands, the tax rate could be 7.05
percent on earnings up to $42,600 -a possible $6,007
total for employee a nd company. These are
maximums, of course.
It hasn't always been this way. Payments during
the l~s are slated to be almost triple all the
payments during the entire previous 44 years or the
program.
From 1937. when Social Seeurity taxes were first
imposed. until 1950, each worker paid a maximum of
$30 a nnually. just l percent of the first $3,000 or S60 a
year. Midcentury brought the first r ise to $45
annually, to SS4 m 1954.
Then the increases came faster and became
sharper until they hit $825 in 1975 and $1 ,820 each
this year. ,
The explanations fall into four major categories:
inflation was soaring; the number of Social Security
recipients was rising; the number of "contributors"
was not keeping pace with the increased number of
beneficiaries, and benefits were being constantly
added to the system.
Meanwhile, we were not funding our own benefits
on a true actuarial basis. simply paying for the
benefits of others. Had we been funding the program
in advance, too, our payments would have been fi ve
times as high.
The "crisis" in Social Security is our own fault. It
lies in our willingness to believe that we could pay a
few hundred dollars a..l}'ear for 25 lo 30 years and
then get back several thousand dollars a year for 15
to 20 years. E ven the m iracles of compound interest
couldn't have done that.
Using figures running from 1937 to 1979,
Robertson calculates max.imum payments by any
worker, doubled by employer's contributions and at a
yield of 21f.i percent over inflation for each year at
$55,520.
In contrast , he figures maximum benefits for a
single male retiring at 65 at a value of $11,800; for a
couple retiring at 65, at a value of $143,100 ; and with
two children, 16 and 18, who continued as full-time
students unW 22. $158,800. The difference: $103.280.
Gold metals quotations
Gold
..
By The Associated Preas
Selected world gold prices today·
Paris: $405.55, off $1.10.
Frankfurt: $403.99. off $0.04.
Zurich: Late fixing $393.00, bid up $10. $396.00 as ked.
Handy & Harman: (only daily quote) $396.00.
Engelhard: (only daily quote) $394.75 .
Engelhard: (o\llY daily quote> fabricated $414 49,
NE YORK <AP> -Spot nonferrous metal pric~
1 loday:
CoPper 79~·81 cents a pound, U.S. destinations.
Lead 34.34 cents a pound.
Zlnc 42--« cents a pound, delivered.
Tin 57.832.3 Metals Week composite lb.
Aluminum 76·77 cents a pound, U.S.
Mercury $41.S.OO per flask.
Plathuun $384.50 troy oz., N. Y.
Handy & Harman. S7 .980 per lroy ounce.
~'----
' Orange Cout OAJLY PtLOT/Monday, December 28, 1981 ••
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OUOfAflCNlll INCl.UA fllAOU 011 , ........ YO••. lllllOWHT, lt~(l •lc. , ••• •onoN. oU•OIY ANO CINCllOIAfl nocw •xcMAN•U AMO •lf'OlllflO • ., , ... NA•O AllO IMUINlf Dow Jbne8 Final
OFF 3.04
CLOSING 170.34
Social Security
revolt coming?
U nJess Con1ress settles down and seriously
tackles the problems of our Social Security system -.
and soon -a revolution amonc the youn1er workers
who contribute to the benefit.t of t.be retired is
inevitable.
Tbls is the blunt view of a man who in the 1970&
was the top "number cruncher" at the vaat
Baltimore·based Social Security Administration,
which DOW pays some $140 billion in benefits to
nearly 40 million of us.
In fa ct, A. Haeworth Robertson, SSA's cbJef
actu ary from 1975 lo 1978, feels so atron1ty about It
t.bat he baa tiUed his 3'76·page statistics.packed boot, ''The Coming
Revolution in ~ Social
Security " --a~ ($1 7 .9S , _
~~~~. ~~)ss. 11t111 P11111 <=-z
LI g ht --reading it is
not. It ls crammed wit.b charts, tables, IJ'apbs and
mathematical projections befitting bis background as
a Phi Beta Kappa mat.b major with a master's
degree in actuarial science.
It's DO news that Social Security is now in· the
red. And the bottom line, Robertson coot.ends, is that
unless things are changed, the situation will get
worse.
Future benefits, tbe author argues, wiU gradually
become so burdensome in the future (as the ratio of
older workers to younger ones rises, forcing younger
people to pay more) that we, as a natioo, will at some
point in the next 2S to 30 years refuse to pay the price.
Better revisions now than revolution later.
For 1981, Social Security taxes for workers and
their employers totaled $3,641 for those earning the
maximum Social Security tax income or $29,700. Half
paid by employees, half by employers.
On Jan. 1, 1982, these maximums are scheduled
to climb to 6.7 percent of earnings up to $32,100 -a
$4,302 total, split between employees and employers.
By 1985, as the law stands, the tax rate tould be 7.0S
percent on earnings up to $42,600 -a possible $6,007
total for employee and company. These are
maximums, of course.
It hasn't always been this way. Payments during
th e 19805 are slated to be almost triple all the
payments during the entire previous 44 years of the
program.
From 1937, when Social Security taxes were first
imposed, until 1950, each worker paid a maximum of
.$30 annuall ust l rcent of the first 000
··-------------------------r----------------------~ STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEJDERS
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THE
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFllD
SIC TI OH 11 Che
PEOPLE'S
METALS
c., ... , 1•-..11 c•n11 • ooOno, U.S.
' CIHtlNllons.
Pct Up U
UP 7.A
L•M 12-M c,eftU • POUllCI UM .,_..,_•pound, O.llve .. <I
Tiil 17.m> -.i.1s w .. 1r. c-lte lb . ... ..,._ 1._n Ce<!IHI -nd, H. Y.
~t.415.00perfl•sll,
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SILVER
'
~= ii GOLD QUOTATIONS ~g ::: 1 ay Tiie ,,._ ..... "'"9
Up S.6 I S.l"ledwortdQOld prkei 100.y: Up U Up U
Up S.I Up U Up U
Up 4.S Up U UP 4.A
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• .....,., (eftt' o.lly q-1 U'M 7S
·~: (only Clelly q-1 l•l>rlc-M14.4'.
SYMBOLS .
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