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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-12-29 - Orange Coast Pilot~an's e¥J>eriment
doesn't Work as .UCI
suffers first, defeat
<See Sports, Pace cu
DUNGI COAST
TUESDAY. DECEMBER 29. 1981
·-----------------~ __ ._...,._ ---
on
(See story below)
• * * • * •
YOUR HDllTDWI llltY~PAPfR
OA ANGf: C OUN r "f C Al If ORNlA 25 CENTS
'Justice takes strange twist for doctor
SAN JOSE CAP > -A
physician who was attacked and
robbed by two men allegedly
hired by his estr anged wife must
pay her $1,500 a month because
s he has no other means of
support, a judge has ruled.
"I guess I'd better stick to
medicine because I sure don 't
un derstand the judicial
system," Dr. Dudley 0 . Scott
Jr. 's lawyer quoted him as
saying Monday when the ruling
was issued.
The lawyer. Willian Dubbin.
said he was considering aJl
appeal.
Scott. 46, was ordered by
Santa Clara County Superior
Judge Read Ambler to make
temporary support payments
beginning J a n . 1 until his
divorce from Lidija Scott is
final.
Mrs . Scott. 45, faces trial Feb.
1 on a charge of soliciting the
commission or a felony. She had
asked for $10,000 in temporary
support for herself and their two
children.
The judge, while calling Mrs.
Scot t 's a ll eged c onduct
"outrageous." said she has no
other means of support since she
was a homemaker for much or
,the couple's 22-year marriage.
Under California law, marital
fault is not a factor in setting
support. Ambler added.
Dubbin s aid that "from a
layman's point of view, I think
it's unfair It doesn't make
sense ..
.. But the Jud ge did the best he
could ... with the existing
statutes and prior cases . . The
judge was confronted wath a
situation that to my knowledge
has not arisen in California
before," he said
Mrs Scott allegedly went to a
San Jose bar where she met a
man who agreed lo arrange a
•contract assault for $1 ,500 ,
according to police.
Scott had been separated from
his wife when he was attacked
and robbed in his office parking
lot Oct 26. He escaped serious
injury
Upset that her husband's
inJu ri es "we re not sever e
enough,·· Mrs. Scott refused to
pay the assailants, police said.
One man then telephoned Scott
and offered to name the source
of the contract.
The man led Scott and police
to another man who alle&edJJ
set up the contract. That mu
made a tape-recorded lelepbcme
call to a woman whose voice
Scott identified as that of bb
wife. police said.
A 24-year-old man also waa
charged an the case, but no
charges were filed against the
informers
U.S. food aid tO Poles blasted
Schmitz
loses
chair • SACRAMENTO CAP> -State
Sen . Joh n Sc hmitz , a n
arch-conservative from Corona
del Mar who delights in
outraging liberal colleagues, has
been stripped of a committee
chairmanship for religious and
sexual slurs against supporters
of abortion rights.
After Democrats on the Senate
Rules Committee t ook the
extraordinary action in a closed
door hearing Monday, Schmitz
said be didn't regret anything he
bad said.
"They will rue the day they
SCHMfTZ STAA TEGY
ANAL VZED -Page A3
did this because they just turned
m e l oose from three
time-consuming j obs to
campaign for U.S. Senate,"
Schmitz said in an interviwew.
Besides his chairmanship of
the Senate Constitutional
,Amendments Committee, the
'Republican Schmitz was aJso
'removed as vice chairman of the
Senate Industrial Relations
Committee and as Senate
del egate to the s tate
Commission on the Status of
Women.
He said bis only "crime " was
."to use the word 'Jewish' in a
.,ress release." and he has no
:apologies.
· He was referring to a news
release last week in which be
a aid be had looked out on "a sea
of hard, Jewish and (arguably>
female faces" of abortion-rights
~upporters at a bearing.
Schmitz, a John Birch Society
member who was the American
Independent Pa.rt,y candidate for
president in 1972, takes the role
of a conservative 1adfly,
teemingly relishinl the storm.a
bls remarks cause.
. He questioned the loyalty and
aexuaJ habits of the late Martin
Luther King in one Senate
debate, and more recently said
aa a U.S. Senate candidate that
(See SCHMITZ, Pase AU
ADMONISHED -Sen. John
Schmitz has found that
critical remarks of a week
ago have proven costly.
Marine guilty
in death of
teen skater
El Toro Marine Robert Keith
Martin has been found guilty of
vehicular manslaughter for an
April 11 incldent in which his
van struc k and killed a
lS·year·old girl roller skating
along an EJ Toro street.
The Orange County Superior
Court jury also said Martin was
guilty of driving under the
influence of alcohol. The jury,
which deliberated about four
hours Monday, found Martin not
guilty of hit-and-run driving in
relation to the incident.
· Caryn Dilorto, a roller abler
and an honor student al El Toro
Hilb School, died at the scene of
the accident al A venida da La
Carlota.
Her mother, Barbara Horton,
who sat through the
five-week-lon1 trial, eaid she
boj>es publicity from tbe tttaJ
•will affeCt pubUc drlvln1 habits.
(See GVILTY, Pa1e AJ)
* * * Reagan
to block
Russ sale
By Tbe A.asoclated Press
President Reagan, moving to
punish the Soviet Union for the
military crackdown in Poland.
will block the sale of equipment
for a pipeline that would carry
natural gas from Siberia to
Western Europe, well ·placed
admini s tration and
congressional officials say.
After revi e wing
recomm e ndatio n s by a
high-level task force , Reagan
also decided to halt exports of
high technology to the Soviet
Union. including computers. and
suspend maritime rights under
which Soviet ships use U.S. ports
and aviation rights under which
Soviet airliners operate within
U.S. boundaries.
An aide who asked not to be
id e ntifi e d desc ribe d the
program being purs ued by
Reagan a s ·'tighte ning the
screws." It marks the first step
taken by the administration
against the Soviet s. who m
Reagan blame s fo r the
imposition of m artial law in
Poland.
A source in Washington, who
said congressional leaders were
being briefed on the economic
sanctions today. confirmed the
substance of the administration
report.
Reagan. spending a week·long
holiday in Ca lifo rn ia , was
expected to announ ce the
decisions this a fternoon alter
receiving the recommendations
Monday of the administration's
Special Situation Group.
The group met 2.., hours
Monday while Reagan was on
his way by helicopter to an
afternoon of manual labor at his
ranch about 100 miles north of
here. The recommendations
were relayed by telephone by
Vice President George Bush,
Edwin M eese Ill , the
presidential counselor, and
Adm. James Nance. acting
national security adviser.
The president will confer later
ln the week with Secretary of
(See POLAND, Page AZ>
.~ ........
MOTHER WORRIES Colette Marquis shows photos of
daughters Micki. left. and Krist en whom she claims are
stranded with her former husband John H arrison on
Palmyra Atoll in the P acific Ocran
Sailor may save
~hipwrecked family
LOS ANGELES <AP) -A
Canadian man a nd his two
d•ughters, living on raw fish
ind coconuts for three weeks
after their shipwreck on a South
Pacific atoll, may find a private
yachtsman offering the rescue
1overn{1lent offi cial won't
arrange.
U.S. Coast Guard officials said
• man bas saile d from
Christmas Island to retrieve
John Harrison , a 39-year-old
industrial designer from
Vancouver, and daughters
Mickl, 3>, and Kristen, 13, from
Palmyra At.oU, about 990 miles
southwest bf Honolulu.
; "The man, known to us only
•s Larry. has left Christmas
Island 500 miles south of
Palmyra on his yacht Friendly
aod couJd be with them within 24
hours," Coast Guard Chief Bob
Baeten s aid in Honolulu on
Monday.
"It's up to them to decide
whether they want to accept but
I don't think it will be a difficult
decision after being stuck there
for three weeks."
The Harrisons were sailin1
their 40 -fool trimaran
"Sisyphus" to Australia when a
typhoon hit Dec. 8. The $200 ooo
craft was dismasted by 40-toot
waves.
. A Coast Guard rescue plane
aw ·their nares and dropped
oup fuel for the trimaran to
ate eo miles to the atoll. Two
ya alter it wrecked on a reef
beH, island caretaker Ray
drum spotted the craft and
elped Harrison contact
il'elati•es via short wave radio.
Refugee
• assist
urged
BADGASI'EIM, Au.atria CAP)
-Chancellor Bruno Kreiaky hu
criticized a U.S. offer of food aid
to Polish refugees in Austria,
saying Washington should
instead offer to let more Poles
emigrate to the United States.
. "We have enough flour, sucar
-and rice," Kreisky said in aa
interview published today in
Vienna's Die Presse newspaper,
•'The Americans should take
more refugees instead."
The c hancellor's commenu
foll owed President Rea1an'1
offer last week to send food to
Austria to help the country C!8"'
for ,the estimated 50,000 Poles
who have fled their country' la
recent months . Many are ~
in refugee camps and private
1uesl houses at government
expense.
~ Most hope to emigrate to ~ustralia, Canada or the United
Stales. However , they have been
delayed because those coun&riel
say they already have fllled'
immigration quotas. '
Kreisky was interviewed in.
thi s mountainous ski resort
south of Salzburg, where be bu
been spending the Christmu
holidays .. But be declined to
make predictions about the
future of Poland. where U..
communis t government
declared martial law Dec. 13.
· ·'We must realize what
happens in the political realm ill
Poland does not happen atainlt \
the will or the Soviet Union."
Kreisky was quoted as saY'lnl.
Austrian officials in Vt~
have complained for moaU.
they were not receiv_in& IMIP.
from other Western countriel a.
coping with the fiood ol retua-
th at have arrived in 1tudll1
increasing numbers throulbout the year.
rllllll CUil IURS-
Low clouds earl1
Wednesday mornin&,
Huntington trio guilty on 79 counts Tbe Siaypbua' former owner,
ucio Marampon of Victoria,
d boat repairers an planniq n., to the atoll to make the
Eherwise variable bl&b
oudiness. Lowa t.oal&bt
alOlll cout, '2 inland.
Highs Wednesday 12 at
beaches, 87 inland.
llllDI TDIAY Sentences could exceed 200 years for kidnap, rape, robbery of 4 women
:-. Tbr•• men accused of
t=:•pplq, rap&nc and robblD& 81111===== fouac1 lultJ ol 11 countl MoedQ
lD Oraa1e County Superior
Co.rt.
. ft• dl!P ... retuned to
Oraa ... 00uat1 Jail to await ...._..., .....
Or~• Coaat1 D•••t7 • latlft,l Attor•e1 alelaard
step-brothers
II, ... 1'ol9lrt ol DDwM}', ,..
~----
1••n •.. Eacb waa found 1ullty
Monda7 of one count of
llldaapptq for robbert1, two
eouata o1 kldnapplnc, tllree cou.ata ol robbery 11 eOUlltl ol
fordb&e npe, ~ 1' couat1 ol toirdlll tbe womeo to commit
uotbereaad.
Tb• th(rd defendant, John
11, allO ot l>ow.e,. ....
f 1ullt1 of 11 Hau1l on .
Toobey sald .Krom w.a1
aceued ol parUel,..... ta ..aJ
••• of tbe tbree lael•••ta
considered by the jury.
The flrat two incldent1
occurred lut February.
In the ftnt, Toohey aaid, two
men olhnd a ride t.o a woman
wbOH cu-bad broken down lD
LoqBMcb.
ID tla• aecond Incident, a kantialtGD Beech woman wboM
autb Md brollen down OD Paciftc
Coast e1g::a1 accepted .. wrre two men ID a
plcnptnc:k.
Ill b9da baddmq, Toob~ said, MM •a-..,.tat•tow ~aa7oa aoar lrea, raped
repeatedly al knlfepoint and
~bbed.
' In tbe third lncldeot, which
occurred last June, two
H ·year-old Hunlin&ton Beach
&1rls bitchhlkin1 on Pacific
Ooaat Hli!tway accepted a ride
from three men In a 1lmllar
truck.
' Toohey. 11Jd the teen-a1er1 ••r• abdUct..s IDcl taken J.O tbe
tame ..-.i loeetiolt ud wen ,.,..,.......,. n..· tiareedefendanta were
an 1111• lD JalJ b7 Run~ .... pake.
I\
'I
aft seaworthy. Marampon
Id H1rrilon 1tlll owea him .ooo OD t.be trimaran, whleb
~:=.11'urtaon•s former
wlfe and the 1lrl1' mother,
lchelle Colette Jamea,
mplalned Monday that "at
11 polnt, there la DO reacue
ml11lon that ii beln1
or1anlled," by U.S. or Canadlan
official11.
"We had been informed
several limn tbat there would
be from the Coaat Guard lo
Honolulu and tMa I s-lie
1ovef'ft8Mfttl beHme bt1"0lwd,"
Mr1. James. 31. sald.
(8" ATOIL. P ... AJ)
1'"-dlftfnll por1 ii MC a
optnfng oa hdfvid••I
ll•UrenM1d Acco•ttl ht,
'nllltn, --.,., to acort tt. ,..
Pt,.;. ..u.
11111
,(i I=
I: r :: ;Ir
... &.-. ·--•
I '
~· • • • • • • Orange CoHt DAILY fltLOTfTuesday, December 29. 1981
SYMBOL OF SUPPORT Rep. Don Ritte r .
R-Pa .. lights a candle on the podium at a
Congressional panel studying Poland and its
A~ .........
new military governmen~. President ~eag3:n
had asked Americans to hght candles m their
wi ndows to show support for Polish people.
From PageA1
POLAND STRATEGY READIED. • •
State AJexander Haig in Palm
Springs. deputy White House
press secretary Larry Speakes
said. Haig was speaking in San
Francisco today
Although Reaga n's aides have
said he would consult with the
Western allies about any steps
taken 1n connection with the
developments in Poland, those
likely to be announced today
could be pursued without allied
cooperation.
Meanwhile. defiant Polis h
workers arc producing
automobile parts that don't fit
together •nd engaging in other
acts of industrial s abotage.
according to uncensored reports
reaching the West
But P o land 's military
government claims work is
returning to normal as the last
s trikes against martial law are
dropped.
Warsaw Radio quoted the
Ministry of Minin~ and Industry
as saying 939 miners at the Piast
m int.• in S1les1a would return to
work today aft(•r ending their
13 day occupation t he last
lan~c ·sca l e protest agains t
martial law
T he radio ... aid today that 12
··rin gleaders o r the protest
action have been arrested by the
military pro!>ecutor·s office ..
Thi· arrest!> came despite earlier
government hroadcasts assuring
then· would be no reprisals 1f the
miners qui t the prote s t
voluntanl)
Earlier. offi cial Polish media
reports said the 2,300 miners
who abandoned their strike last
week al the nearby Ziemow1l
Newport firm gets
charge amended
By KEITll~VBER o.lty ..... ._.. ._
The state Department of Real
Estate bas filed an amended
accusation against American
Home Mortgage Corp., at the
same lime dropping charges it
bad filed earlier tbis year
Those c h arges , fil ed in
October, included allegations of
fraud. misappropriation or
diversion ol investor funds for
its own henefit, commingling
,trust funds wilh its own money.
misrepresentati o n and
,conspiracy to deceive investors.
T he amended a c cus ation
states that the Newport Beach
mortgage firm advanced funds
to borrowe rs from its tr ust
accounts against a line or credit,
'thereby reducing the balance in
ltbe accounts lo an amount which
lwas less than the aggregate
liability of American Home.
l The company admits it did use
'
this funding procedure. The
amended accusation alleges that
1this procedure constitut ed
negligence and a failure to
.exercise reasonable supervision
1o v e r th e a c t i v i t y of
, sa~espenons.
Aa a result, the Department of
Real Estate has revoked
American Home's license rights.
'ttiougb the company can
1 continue to do business .under a
restricted real estate broker
: license. n.. restrictions. which
ahould •impair tbe company's
~bility -. di l>usiness, warn the
fcomp~YNJ16m.t:
icks continue
ATLANTA (AP ) 1·Q•e1Uonlng of prospective
11uron for the murder trial or l Wayne B. Williams resumed
1 today with defense lawyers
1 ~Ulina oo racial prejudice and
1 e pu&lielty stirred up by a I triDI 0( 28 killincs around
1AUu~ ~·,,
Tne intenuonat making 01
false, misleading or deceptive
statements, written or oral, to
the public. the press or clients
regarding the nature of the
investigations. audits. findings,
conclusions or actions taken by
the department in connection
with the allegations:
-Violating provis ions of
California real es tate law.
-The company must submit
a quarterly trust fund position
s tatement to the Real Estate
·Dep artment co ntaining
comple t e accou nt and
transaction information A
similar decis ion was handed
down to American Home office•
Mary Katherine Zvonek, who
was also named in the
accusations.
A s pok esma n for the
Department of Real E state
declined to comment on the
t:harges and the decision.
"What happened was this."
explained company President
J ohn G. Rinaldo.
··We had loans <totaling
$300,000) that we were going to
give borrowers on April 1 On
March 31. we rr.conciled our
check register , even though we
knew the checks weren't going
to go out until the following day.
We contacted our bank that it
was possible we might need a
line of credit to cover the loans.
which it turned out we didn't
need .
·'That started and ended the
whole thing."
Rinaldo said the matter, now
resolved, affected not only1
busines but the psychological
well-being of his family.
''The effect on our Investors
was minimal, but t he human
factor was jus t terrible,"
Rinaldo said.
··People just didn 'l understand
that we weren't charged with
something criminal. People
thought we stole money. It
affected my wife and children.
:·fCtds would come up to my
chtldren and ask if I was in jail.
It was terrible.
"I'm just glad It's over."
ORANOIE COASf
D.aily Pilat
Cla11lfled advertising 714'842·5611
All other departments 142-4321
Thomas P. H81ey ~-a.le-,.. Olllcs
Rober1 N. W9ed ,.,.......
Thom• A Murpt11ne
f-
MlchHI P Hervey ,_._.... °""""'
l. Kay Scholtz Dw...rfl~
Kenndt N. Godd8tO Jr c-....
L...,
.Ch
~:...~
•
MAIN OFflCE
QO Wttl a.,, SI . Cotta ~M. CA Mall -loll 1WO, C•I• ~M, C4. fttat
COllY<ltM 1 .. 1 Ortn90 tMll PV!Mltlllnt ~.
No ,,.wt tlorlet. lll11t•rol .... S, tdltOflol m4ltter., Mo
v•r11M"*IU ~eill m.y M r~N """'*" tt'Klol _..,tu_ Of,..,,.,-·
'
coal mane res umed digging
Monday, and that full product~on
resumed at the Hula Katowice
steelworks -where security
forces had routed protesters.
Thl· Britis h Broadcasting
Corp . in a report from Warsaw,
said. "The military are said to
havl' effectively secured the
country "
But British newspapers s aid
todav that thousands of workers ha v~ been fired for refusing to
r es 1 gn (rom tho. s uspended
indepen d e nt labor union
Solidarity
Uncensored reports reaching
the t;nited States from sources
in Warsaw on Monday night
painted a picture of defiance in
Poland. under martial law since
Dec. 13.
From Page A1
SCHMITZ. • •
a military coup might b·e neecie<i
if President Reagan's policies
are thwarted by Congress.
But the state m e nts that
brought retaliation from Senate
leaders came in Schmitz's role
as chairman of the
Con s titutional Ame ndments
Committee. a panel created by
the Senate thjs year
Schmitz recently held
committee hearings around the
state on his SCA29, a state
cons titutional amendment to
ban abortions.
Last week he issued a news
release on committee letterhead
saying he had survived t he
"attack of the bulldykes" in
those hearings.
He s aid the committee had
fa ce d "pre -organize d
infestations of imported lesbians
from anti-male and pro.abortion
queer groups in San Francisco
and othe r ce nt e r s o f
decadence ..
In Los Angeles. Sc hmitz
wrote. he looked out on "a sea of
hard, Jewis h and <arguably>
female faces ...
He called his oppon e nts
"murderous marauders." and
s ingled o ut feminist lawye r
Gloria Allred of Los Angeles as
a "slick butch lawyeress "
Ms Allred had a n gered
Schmitz by dumping a chastity
bell on hjs table as a purported
gift for his wife. a regular
adversary of hers on a Los
Angeles television show
Senate President Pro Tern
David Roberti, D·Los Angeles.
announced the actions against
Schmitz after a lhree·hour Rules
Committee hearing that Schmitz
did not attend.
.. Anti-Semitism has no place
in the state Senate," Roberti
said. He said Schmitz's "sexual
stereotyping of a n e ntire
audience is offensive,'' as was
bis attack on Ms. Allred.
Roberti said the votes were 3·0
to re move Schmitz as chairman
of t h e Co n stit utional
Amendments Committee and
de legate lo the Commission on
the Status of Women, and 3·1 t o
dump him as vice chairman of
the Industrial Relations
Committee.
The votes agains t Schmitz
w ere cast by Democrats
Robe r ti, Nicholas Petris 'of
Oakland and Barry Keene of
Mendocino.
The only Republican present,
Ray Johnson of Chico, refused. to
vole against Schmitz, though
R oberti quoted Johnson as
saying Schmitz "had abused hla
poalUon."
Rus8 flag burned
NASHVILLE, Tenn. <AP) -.
Sevenl former Mabanl cilhens
were part of 1 crowd of IO
demonstrators that burned a
Soviet fl a1 on the second
annlveraary or the Soviet
Uruon'a lnvuion of Aflhan.lat.an.
•
-------------
Firearms ban upheld
Sale, possession outlawed in Chicago suburb
CHICAGO (AP) -A fedtraJ
Judae tod•y upheld the rl1ht of a
suburban vlllaae to ban the safe
and IJ')SSesslon ot handauns. U .$. District Judge Bernard
Decker said tbo Morton Grove
ordinance is vaJld and does not
Infringe upon the individual
rights provided by the Jlllnols
and United States constitutions.
A ltorneys for o ne or the
1roups or citizens opposing the
ordinance said they wlll appeal
the ruling.
Martin Ashman, Morton
Grove village attorney, called
Decker's ruling .. a landmark
decision."
The village board voled 4·2
June 8 to ban the sale and
possession or handguns by
Morton Grove's 24 ,000 residents.
The ordinance, a mong the most
• stringent enacted ln the United
States, was immediately
c h a llenged in court as an
in fr ing e m e nt on th e
constitutional right lo bear
arms.
Jn a 35-page decision, Decker
said, "reasonable people can. in
good conscience, oppose what
Morton Grove has done, while
From Page A1
GUILTY. • •
.. It w~ senseless slaughter,''
s he said. Deputy District Attorney Mike
Maguire said he was happy with
the conviction, which could send
Martin to prison for as long as
three years and eight months.
He added that the not guilty
verdict on the hit-and-run count
was understandable because
Martin did check the scene
momentarily after the 10c1denl,
a nd drove o nl y anothe r
quarter·mile down t he road
before stopping.
'"He didn't fulfi ll the legal
requirem~nts . . .but 1 t~ink the
jury was JUSt1f1ed 10 r.nd1~~ him
not guilty on that count. saJd
Maguire.
equally reasonable people can
fuUy aupport this ordln~nct "
He Hid the Morton Grove
trustees "mu1t have been awaru
of the deep·seated conviction or
a number of ill citizens that they
shou ld be permitted to retain
handguns ror the protection or
peraon and property.
•'The t rustees concfuded ,
however, that the public interest
outweighed the c la imed
p e r sonal interest of th e
opponents of this legislation. The
ultimate settlement of this
troublesome political question
must be returned to the citizens
o f Morton Grove where it
properly belongs rather than in
the court.''
Decker also said his ruling
lifted a stay blocking
enforcement of the handgun
ordinance.
After the decision. Ashman
told reporters. "maybe if other
communities implement s uch
ordinances around the country.
From Page Al
there could be a lot or American
lives save<! "
Mike Null, an attorney for
some of the opponents, said, "I
think lbe law is unconsUtutionaJ.
J think it should have been held
that way by the jud1e. In the
m eantime, Morton Grove is
going to divest its citizens or
guns "
Null said he will appeal to the
federal appeals court and
expects the case ultimately to be
1dec1ded by the U S Supreme
~ourt. ;;
• D~cier said the ordinance
does not violate the U.S .
Constitution's guarantee of a
citizen'• right to bear arms. He
also ult It falls within the state
.constitution's provision granting
the right lo have guns except
where government is exercising
its police powers -the state's
obligation lo protect the general
health and welfare of its people.
ATOLL INCIDENT. • • • Coast Guard planes can't land
on the atoll's World War JI
airstrip and will not get involved
unless life 1s threate ned, she
said The Canad1un government.
m eantime. 1s balking a l ci
rescue's pncetag.
~ Officials 1n Ottawa scuttled a
'mission planned last week by
the Ca nadian Cons ul in San
Francisco when they learned 1l
would coi.t bet ween S7 .000 and
$12,500. she i,a1d
.. They !th (' Ca n adian
gove rnment1 ha ve a C'ertiun
budget that they allow each year
for rescues of Canadian c1l1zen!>
from an y type ''' danger in an)
part of the world. said ~rs
Janes.
"However. they tell U!> that
this I rescue m1c;'>H1n 1 would ea1
up one-twe lfth or the entire
budget a nd that 1s too much
Basically what tl bo1b down to I'>
that they would like the U.S.
government to pay for half or it ..
Canadian officials also ruled a
boat rescue too costly at 21 days
for the round trip. but Mrs
Jam es l>a 1d Kris t en is too
frighll·ncd to get in another
boat Although "no l)ne is in any
physica l dange r " d espite
!>leep1ng tn the open. ··they are
ver~ traumatized, · she said
Mr., J ame'> sa id she doesn't
have th!· mnney to hire a private
plane 111 n·sC'u<: the trio, and the
governmt·nt!> haven t accepted
Harri~on.., pledge to pay for 1l
once h1·.., oH the 1l>land
I n f or tunat e ly the
g11\ 1·rnments felt that this
1fl<arr1'on., word1 wasn 't going
to ht· a<lequale and wanted
s1Jml.'one outside 1 the atoll> to
put uµ tht• bond.·· s he said
CRASH KILLS TWO Two were killed a nd 23
iniured after brakes on ski chair iift at Val
Venosta. Italy, s ki resort failed. sending
Arw...,....
s kiers hurtling intc) <i ·talion at the bottom of
the lift. Portion. of c hair lies un g round after
Monda~· mishap.
nus WATERFORD CLASSIC
IS OURS AWNE.
Ught a crystal fire with our "Tiffany style .. crystal
lamp by Waterford. Blown and cut entirely by han~
in Ireland, It's ours exclusively. Approximately
22" high. $950.
§LAVICK'S
F1M JMill«'I Since 1917
Where the best surprises begm.
F~ ltllnel (714) 844·1380 • ~ 8-h ,.. c;r.w Loi~. Sii'\ Dlilgo. La~
. '
AP ......
BEACH STROLL West German Chancellor Helmut
Sch midt and his wife, Hannelor e. walk along the beach on
Sanibel Is land in Florida. Schimdt, his wife. and
daughter. Susanne. will vacation in Florida until Januar\'
4, when they will m ake an unofficial ''isit to Washington.
D.C
Phillips d e nies rumors
of rift with Princess A nne
Despite reports that he was
having an affair, Capt. Mark
Phillips says he and his wire,
Pr incess Anne, are "close
enough " that they never
doubted one another .
Phillips, 33, married lo the
only daughter o r Queen
Ellubetb II, denied in an
interview published Monday
A million-dollar deal for a
biogr aphy or slain ex-Beatie
J ohn Len non by Albe r t
Go ldm an, a uth o r o f a
controversial biogr aphy or
E lvis Presley, h as fallen
t h rough, The New York
Times reported.
The agreement collapsed
because or a disagreement
between Goldman's agent,
J ohn Hawkins, and Avon
Books over whether Avon
could publish the paperback
that his marriage was on the
rocks, as news paper reports
said.
Some r eports c l ai med
Phillips developed a close
r elationship with Aagela
Rippon, 36, the first fem ale
news reader for the Britis h
Broadcasting Corp. She was
writing a book about horses
with Phillips.
version before a British
edition comes out, the Times
said.
An agr eement among
Avon. William Morrow & Co.
and Hawkins called ror an
advance of about $1 million,
but a contract was not
signed.
"Elvis." Goldman's
scathin g biography o f
Presley. angered many ot
the late singer's fans.
'l'luf C•••to' of t he ~l• •9'~ Brtttn bl1ot a fter Wit•• A•trlcan
t1l1vl1hlea'1 Ardaft Bunker
wu paUeraed aaya he '•
rellrin1 bis character for IO()d.
The reuoo: with Brttaln'a
ConMrvatlve PA(ty in power,
~e H~, Ute lt be1l~ln1 to
•mltate art.
"He Just lln't ·runny any
more -aot w&tb Prlme Mlniater Mar,ant Tlta&claer
in office," says author
lollHy 8pet.W, 58.
Spet1bt brought Alf
Garnett -the vul1ar, anary
workinf ·Class bloke from
London s East End -to
British television in the '80s
with the Independent
Television show ·'Till Death
Do Us Part."
Sen. Naacy L a a d o a
K aa1ebeua was mailed an
unusual holiday greeting by
Willia• Gtbbou, the trustee
overseeing bankruptcy
proceedings of t he Rock
Island Railroad.
Al a recent hearing, Mrs.
Ka sse baum , a Kans as
R epublican, e xpressed
frustration over Gibbon s'
apparent reluctance to sell
portions of Rock Island track
so other c arriers can
continue service on the line,
which goes through her stale.
•'There are limes one
would like to fashion a dart
board with his picture," the
sen ator said.
Gibbons saw the com ment
In a newspaper a.nd sent hor
a l e tter, e nclosing his
photogren.
"[· SUlfeSl Ulat you atrix it
t o your dart board and
practice," Gibbons wrote.
"Who knows? You may even
bec ome proficient. Best
wis h es for a pleasant
holiday."
A computer programmer
is crusading lo make s ure
her father is remembered ror
crealin·g Rudo1ph the
R ed-Nosed Reindeer , a
Christmas fantasy set to
music which has sold more
than 140 million records.
"I 'm Rudolph 's older
siste r," said Barbara Lewi.I
of San Francisco, adding that
the deer with the lighlbulb
nose -an ugly duckling with
antlers who became Santa's
indispensable helper -was
conceived by her father, the
late Robert L. May.
Mrs . Lewis wants her
fath e r to receive proper
credit for twaneing
generations of heartstrings
with the creation initially
intended as a promotion for
Mo ntgomer y Wa rd. where
May worked as an ad man.
Fair weather on tap
Coastal·
Mostly 110111 vetlable w inds
tllrouOfl toniof>I uce9' wffterw a to
t4 llnoh ltlls eftetnoon. wutetty
s-11 I to 2 feet. Fair t11'°"911 toctey
witfl •etla!IM hlQlll c-. tncr..slno
clo\id• tonlQM.
v.s.
California
L..i9M teill ..... -• ... cllo • San J -IC"'9s CMIYOfl llM ..,,
10flf9111 -a Chenca of "-n 0¥ff
the re ma lncMt of Ille state by
Wecllftftdey. S-leWI be-J ...
and 4_ .._.In IN~ Aftd <...,ttel
"'°""\alM to MO feel lfl ttle -.ltl.
Ex tended , .... ~ summary forecast ..........
~· -lell -muc11 of the inm n --...•..... , .. n ~S).'·· .... ()lllo end mld·Mlululppl velleys, Som• 1110111 end mornlno low .... ~d.a: ••stern ,..,u of ttw central Plelns cioudlnns in Ille coH tel erees. ~ ,.
end pem of Wa$111"91on, wftll lle••Y Varl•b .. tW9f\ cklud,nit.1.1 with ou,ih '"•••" 1•••1••9'• Outw41e4 NAflONAI WIA U U I VICI
-ln c..,tr .. tlllnoiton-y. winds In the mournalM In coettal lllDm ---s:a •••• ,. hlohS ill. ... 6lb ~ In ... MOAA U S 0••• •f (••••tt:!
In , ... -·· Sll'9s t>eOen CIHrtno _, --40L -••in lllQM 0 efter _.._ llonns that dumpecl to SS w ith tow. ts lo lS El Paso u • s...oi..., .. up to 2 IHI ol snow acron Ille FelrbenU ·II ·• Sen Frefl SS Aoci.lu, bloct.tno 111011ways end Hertfotd • 2S Se•ftl• • tflutllno clown ~I resorts Tem pera tures Helene II ... St L..OOllS J2
StttlnoOeld, 111 , 901 s 1nc11es 01 ' Honolulu IO u SIP·T-,.
-Monday In Ille lourtll winier HO•tSIOf'I 70 61 St Ste-le • storm In two -ks. and up lo S NATION llldn--1~ M " Spellene 2S
ln<lles of "'°"" creeled hererdOUs Ml L..e Je<llt.11•11• u ,. Tuite 11
drl•lno c~ltlons lrom soutllern Albany 3' 21 JUMAU 12 07 Wellllr>91n 4i
Ml<llloen .c"'" _.111ern 1111no1s •nd AllHHllH' .. 20 Kens City 21 13 Wl<hlte 2'
1nc11 .... 1nn0hlo Atnetlllo .. ,. L..es Ve98S SS 11 C.A&.1..c)tl NI A AMIM>teQt 01 ·•2 L..lttle Reck " ,, "' A winter storm warnlno wet In 6 ,,...11 .. 4J J2 '-""' ..... .. ,. AtlPleV1lley u effect _.,.Y lo< ,,_. ol centre! Atlenla ... 1' L..eulsvllle 4S J2 .... .,~'""' ,.
llllnols. Tr .. elers advisories were Atlenlc (ty u " Memphis ,, a .. mow M IHU.0 lo< ftOrtl>ern llllnols. nortt>ern Baltimore 44 ,. Mi.1111 11 _n •"""'°"' M lnctlene. central --.ttwm '--8 1tmlnolW'fl ,. ,, Mllw~ 2S ., .•.. ., SJ Mlclli9MI. -1IMm Ofllo •"" wesllm lllsmatck 03 ·II Mt>t•St.P II to .I.._ SS l"ef!MYl•8ftle. wftll uP le 4 eddltleMI 8o1M ll ti Nl tllvllle ,. .. . ..,_ .,
Inc .... of---· llMton )4 JI NewOt-., " ClllY« City M llelft lfld _,. c-lllued -Ille llr-nsvlle u 61 ..... v-.. n ~llrftl st state Of WHN,..,, with some llea•Y 8ufl•lo :i. J t Norf9111 JI ,. ,,_ SS
-In -soutllHltern pert ol Ille ClwlrlstnSC Sl 4S Ollie City «I • UIOIUIW M state. c:1'1¥htn WI/ SS 11 OmaM ,. IO L..8ftl 9Ndl M L..lelll snow fell In tlle northern CIMy....,. tl °' ~, ..... • ., L•A,...._ .. PlllM lfMI ecl'OM ~Maine. Chic-2' ta ........... u " .......... .. P'oe Mel •wte prevallect •IOftO ttw CIMl-1 J1 24 f'hoenl,. .. 41 Mt,Wll-S7 "Gulf, mid-encl lOlllller'n Atlentlc Clevelend )4 " Pl~ «I u ........ .,
CNtl, with scettet9CI .-ers •ftd ce11im-• • "'I lftcl. ,,,. » n ....-111M<ll " tlMHlde~ -AllberN end Del-Ft -SI • Ptt-.~ .. 11 ()ell~ • _...,.,, Mlsalsl""" Deft vet ,, • ll~Cll'Y 20 n OM«lo '2 tcy •Ir wtueCI over Ille north Des -IS M ,._ 0 14 Pel"'~ .,
central pett of the netlo" with Detroit ,. 1A It I< llftlolld 47 • p~ '2 ~ ~ •-tet"O frOft> Dulutfl °' CM S.ltL..ellt JJ 17 p_ ....... ff Monten• to M nnesoll, wltl'I • == • f'Mfllifle ,.... " 1J __...... .,.. •I ,. ........ -.
•
CMV S1 ey Uftlretlt, P'Of1 M,en.. Fie., !IN ..... tS 1t1 ••,.,...,. OK. • wttll .. -., .... SU I f IE Pm ... ,.,_, ft .,.. a. ... e o..tn. u. .. ..., •rec-... .....,....,. • "· .... , ... 1 .,
Tefft..,._. 81'~ tM 111tlleft at ...... .. 2 P·"'· I.ST ....... ,...... t lie-,_ . ,
t. .. P<t-*-u et Wlllllllaft, N.0., tt Ille M .. l"WI 7 ~ • --~· n ..
"'"' IW9Y. --i.rec•tt In.,. 1-1 ... .... .......... ............ u
Greet I.AMI -· "" ._., Otlle tefttaCna St Vetley 11111 Ntw It....-. with -9MCll ... -PW """' ..... ..,
'"'-" In "" -1Nnl ..,. ~al l11ma 2 , II I t ... ........ ..
lttc.11'811 M
ltecl!IM --~ Rein SMU -.Ke I I II I I w T-..v-.., q
..... ,. -lwecetl "' Mt1Mf'll .. ....,, 2 • " I • w
Clffter1)48 .... Ille ~ ~"le Sen oi.etC--.Cy 2 ' tJ t , w ,_..,... n ,...,.,_ .,
,C,..e "'--· °"1._ tor """"'*Y' Uttle Cl\lllOe. vu-71
._.. V• J . . We re Li~enlng •••
What do you like about the Daily Pilot! Rat ..,..l JOQ I.lb ?
Call the nu mber below and JOUr m...;. wW be Ncol'dld,
-~t£=-· ............. ·:r= ..,.,.... .......
transcribed and delivered to the a ......... -.,. '
The same 2'-hour an1w.n., ~may ..... to _. Mt·
tera t6 the editor on ADJ ..._ • ....._ ~ •• ._.. ...
their· name and telephoftt numw for .~. Mo dmd.O.
callt, Dlease. • · T~ us what'• on your mind.
SJ ..
J:I • u
" ,.
JI n ..
L..e
24 • 41 ,.
24 »
41 • 44 u ,. • to ..
J7
J1 u .., ,.
42 q • • «I
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41
S3 .. .. ..
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-
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOTffueaday. December 29. 1981 s
EYES HAVE IT lchic1 lshigam1. a Japanes e
a m ateur photographl'r. took this st riking
st udy in contrast and cntl'red 1t in :.i Tokyo
.~ . ...,....
photograph~· contest The contrast makes
onl~· the c~·(·s ,,f the girl und cut stand out
Creation
• science
ruling due
LITTLE ROCK, Ark < API -
A federal judge is expected Lo
wait until arter New Year's Day
t o issue his r uling o n the
constitutionality of Arkansas'
creatio n -sc ience law . his
secretary said.
Shirley Bowling. secretary to
U.S . District Judge William
Overton . s a id Mo nday he
worked over the Chris tmas
holidays on his ruling but didn't
finish it. She said Overton began
he arin g a th ree-d ay trial
Monday on redistricting, and it
would be Jan. 4 or later before a
creationism ruJing is issued
Overton has been wading
through hundreds or pages of
testimony and exhibits from a
nine·day t rial that attr acted
national attention Wh e n the
trial ended earlier this month.
Overton said he hoped to have a
ruling before the end of the year
The 1981 slate law, called the
Ba l a n ced Treatment for
C r ea t ion -Scie n ce and
Evolution-Science. says public
schools that teach evolution
mu st t each creat i o n .
Evolutionis t s hold that life
developed slow ly through
millions of years. Creationists
generally believe that ltfe was
created s udd enly a f ew
thousands years ago
If upheld by the court. the law
would take effect m September
Overton has said the sole issue is
the law's constitutionality. not
the validity of the Bible or the
theory or evolution.
The American Ci vil Liberties
Union filed suit against the law
in May, saying it was vague and
represented the establishment of
religion by the government.
Arkansas Attorney General
Steve Clark defended the law in
court. He drew some criticism
from the Creation-Science Legal
De fense Fund and religious
funda m entalists such as the
Rev. Jerry Falwell or Moral
Majority, who said he did not
lake advantage or the defense
fund.
The t reasurer of t he legal
defense fund said Sunday his
group has raised more than
$50,000 in do nations s ince
forming eight months ago
Ex-PO W's
due special
car plates
SACRAMENTO (A P >
Beginn ing Jan. l , former
prisoners o( war in California
will be eligible for s pecial
a u tomobile license plates,
featurlng the initials "POW"
'followed by four dtglts.
Tbe plates, which will coi>t $25
lnltialty and $10 annually to
renew, will only be issued to
thoae who have "proof ... of
for mer POW status." said Gary
Nilhlt.o ol the stale Department
ot Motor Vehicles.
Nlabito, who serves as the
.department's rellstraUon chief1 ·Hid Pf'OCeeds from the sale °'
t he plates will 10 to a state
e n vironmental fund . He
estimated Utat from the lut
t bree wara up to 10,000
Callfomians may be eH1tble for
the plates.
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL
0 1 the O•lly Pilol Si.ff
Wh~· i~ s tate Sen .John Schmitz so hradllr'\l' hungr~ '
There·s one rl'ason and one n ·ason onl~ Schmitz.
Corona del Mar n.•!-t icknt. Manne Corps Rrsrr\'e colonel.
.John RirC'h So<'ict~ membt·r . \\ants to t·aµture the
Rl·puhlican nominat10n for lhl· L S SL·nat<' ~t·:.it nov. held
b~ S 1 lla~ak<rna .
SC' h mi t z 1 s a mo n g s t•,. t· n t· 11 n tend c r s for the
Rc>publlcan nomination :\ little mon• than 14 percent of
th l' \Ott.' \\11Uld tak • tht• nomin<1t1on
Schmitz bt•lie,·<.·s th at 1f t•\·ennnt•
n.•m <11ns in the running. his t•ad~'l' of
hard nire nght v. ing<.'r!-t ''ill put him
O\'<•r thl' top lie pomts. at('Uratcl~. It>
the fact he garnl'red 20 pt:ret·nt of the
Repuhlit:.in vote \\ hl·n he snug ht the
Sen:.tll' nomination l \\O 'l'ars ;.igo
SCHMITZ WANTS 10 do betll'r this
t1m~ around To that e nd . ht· ha!>
unleashed broadside t.1ftt>r hroads1dt' scMOEME"'-
Whe n several Republican part> leader s dismissed
his candidacy. Schmitz rcl<.'a!-ted a thrct'-page s tatement
entitled "The Attack of the Plutoeral1<· Pupp<.'te<•rs ·· He
termed them "agmg bourgeois oligarchs ...
In an inlcr vi(•w wi th a :'\'ewport Reach newspaper
and a subsequent intcrviev. v. 1th a Los Angeles telcvi~ion
station. Schmitz suggested a militar~ coup might be in
order s hould President Reagan's economic poliC'ies fall.
Most recently. he latx.>lcd feminists who obJeet ed to
h1~ proposed a nti-abortion state const 1tution amendment
stand as ·n111ld\'kc.s" ;rnd saHl tht' prolt1!-tt<.·1·s at a h<'aring
reµres('nted .. ;1 sea of hard .. J(•wish anti 1 a rguably I
fem a It' fun•s ..
BECAliSE Ht-: has t•hosen to trearl a s no political
figun· has dared to. Sdimitz has drawn massin' media
CO\<.' 1·age
Ills nanw has hl'en bounct>d thrnughuut thl' state.
from Eun•ka to Encinit as. Imm Downey to Death \'alley
Tht• s t:Jtl'ments have built n:.ime id entification and have
kt thl· h;ir<l-con• right wing('rs knm' that he is their guy
;ind 1n th(• running .
On<.' wnndcrs how much fart her 11 can go Members of
hi s part~ c on sid<'r Schmitz an cmbarrassm r nt
Democrat:-<lcsp1s e. nay. detest. him
Bother Schmitz'' Not in the least. says Bra d Evans.
who "ields the pen for much or Sc·hmit1' campaign
matrrwl
"SCHMITZ LOOKS <i t this thing I the Senate
campaign > as a craps hoot a beerhall challenge.'' said
Evans. Schmitz 's strat egist. during an inte rview in
September at the Torch Club. a bar across the s treet
from the Sacramento bus s tation.
But for the time being. Schmitz does not a ppear to be
riding high. despite an ything he or Evans might say.
The Senate Rules Committee stripped Schmitz of the
chairmanship of the Senate Committee on Constitutional
Amendments The committee also took away his vice
c hairma ns hip on the Senate Industrial Re lations
Committee and booted him from the Commission on the
Status of Wom en.
State Sen. Alan Sieroty, who represents a heavily
J ewish district in Lo Angeles, wants Schmitz out of the
Senate. Period
The combined Sunday edition of the San Francisco
Chronicle und Examiner contained an editorial urgin&
the Senate to censure Schmitz.
Will Schmitz weather the current storm and be
successful in his candidacy? Eva ns think so. Why?
"Because he comes right out. He cuts through all the
bul l. You don't get all the bull, the unending deluge of
bull. When people vote for hlm. they know exacll wbal.
they're votinR for ..
s Ora"ge Coast DAILY PILOTfTuesday, December 29, 1981
.. ..
Tris-ban hill passes
Sleepwear manufacturer s may now sue for losses
APW .........
WAS HINGTON <AP> -
Former Members of Congress
have their own club now, duly
recognized by Congress. That
would not seem to be a topic of
g reat interest to the people who
make children's pajamas.
But it is.
It could be worth about $50
million to them .
That's because the Senate
amended a bill recognizing the
organizatio n called Former
Members of Congress lo tack on
a long-disputed measure that
would let s l ee pwear
m a nufa c tu rers s ue the
government for what they lost
whe n the che mical Tris was
banned.
The Tris bill had passed the
Senate three limes before, but
the only time the House also
approved it, former President
Carter vetoed the measure.
I l was introduced again this
year. languished in the House,
and finally was revived by Sen.
Stro m Thurmond, R-S.C., in a
h ectic session j ust be fore
Congress adjourned until 1982.
Fl!llfflUIATM>N METHOD -Dr Howard W
Jones Jr. explains the vitro fe rtilization
proc~ during a news conference at Norfolk
General Hos pital in Norfolk. Va .. Mondav.
Jones announced the birth of Elizabeth Car=r.
Amenca·s first tesllube babv. More than 20
s uc h babies hav<.• been born ·in England and
Australia Mrs . Carr. 28. had had three
abnormal prc~nanc1es which nccl•ss1t a led thl'
re moval of hN Fallopian tubt•s
The measure stems from a
Tris ban imposed b y the
Con s umer Product Safely
Commission April 8, 1977. Tris is
a c hildren 's fir e -r elardenl
chemical that had been used to
treat children's sleepwear in
order to co mpl y with
government reg u l a t ions on
fl ammability
Rundown shack replaced by home
200 Arizonans contribute ai d to farm l aborer's f am ily in yule effort
GUADELUPE, Ariz. <AP> -
When John and Josephine Rivas
discovered their home of 13
years had vanished, Mrs. Rivas
cried for joy.
Gone was their rundown ,
one-room. 10-by· lO·fool shack. In
its platt stood a 24·by-24-b>t,
two-bedreom fr ame home
painted beige and brown.
T h e s hack , with s plintered
walls and a tar·papered roof,
la c ked runnin g wate r .
electrit'ily and heal. The new
home h ad all three a nd air
conditioning lo boot. along with
six silver-dollar eucalyptus trees
outside where only dust had
fl ourished.
"This new home will change
our lives a lot." Ri vas. a
47-yeai·-old farm labore r, said
when the couple returned "At
last, we have something lo take
care of , to come home to
More seeking
'personal aid
ANN ARBOR. Mich. I AP> -
The per centage of Americans
seeking professional help for
peuonal proble111s has nearly
doubled in the past two decades.
according lo University of
Michigan researchers
A report from the university's
Institute for Socia l Research
attr ibutes t h e i n c r e ase to
greater availability and r educed
co!tl c:lf such he lp, as well as
wider pu blic acceptance or
professional mental he alth
treatment
"The stigma has decreased,"
t h e r esea rchers said in a
recently published book. "tven
people who do not personally
expect lo consult a mer\lal
health professional themselves
see that a s a r e a sonable
alternative for persons facing an
unmanageable cnsis ...
Before. we had no plac(;' to sleep.
cook, stretch a round Now , after
working 10 or 12 hours 1n the
fi elds. I can come home to a hot
shower There's nolhrng like a
hot shower when you re s weaty
and dustv ..
More °than 200 Phoenix area
businesses and individuals
con t ributed ti me. l abor .
materials and monev T he home
was furnished. complete with a
Chris tmas tree and dozens or
gifts . through Salvataon Army
donations.
.. I owe all of them thanks:·
Mrs Rivas said. wiping the
t ears fr om her c h eek
"Someday, if I ever Rel rich. I
want to help them. too "
Ken Arrand. a partner in AMA
Development Inc , a Phoenix
contr actrng firm, coordinated
the construction of the home.
which he says 1s worth $34,000
He got the idea to build 1t from a
story that appeared Dec 9 as
part of a series the Arizona
Re public runs 1n con1unct1on
with its Chris tmas fund
lie said he received m ore than
300 call s from people interested
tn contributing to the house
It look JUSl a few minutes for
Brother lvo Toned of Our Lady
of Guadelupe Church, to level
the shack with h1!> backhoe. and
cockroaches scur ried from the
dust) pile that once v. as their
home as the cracked boards
collapsed.
"I r s a disgrace lhc.1l anyone
should have lo live in a place
like this," he said .. M y work is
with the youngsters in this
community. 1 think if you can
give them a sense of identity. of
self-respect. then they will never
put up with living in shacks like
this ...
While their homl' wa!> being
replaced, the Rivascs and four
of their children .John Jr .. 13.
Bobby, 11 . Jose. 9; and Maria, 7
s pent the holiday free of
charge at a Scottsdale motel
Daughter Carol, 16, and her
.
3 month old son. Gilbert. staved
lwh1nd with Josephine's mother,
\\ho 11 ves next door
II \\asn't cle:.ir how Ri vas. who
I'• paid a mrn1mum wage and
receives food s tamps, will pay
for upkeep of the new home. but
the SI .235 water hookup charge
was taken care of through
donat ions
Catastrophe force
urged by Proxmire
WASlllNGTON I AP l Sen.
William Proxmire, D-W1s .. says
the· United Stales should lake the
lead in de velo ping an
international force to deal with
the artt.'rmath of a nuclear
explo::.1on
"It is grueso me l o
contl'mplate. but the truth is the
tntNnational C"ommunity is not
prl•pared to respond to a nuclear
catastropht' ... Proxmire said in
a nt'\\S release Monday.
'(;1vcn the poss1b1ll ly that a
nuclear explosion will occur
soml•v.hcre. so m eti m e . the
indu~tnalizcd nations should be
p rc·par1ng today f or the
com plleate<I procl'Ss of clean-up,
mc<11cal care c.1nd humanitarian
ass1::.t a nee ...
Al·cus1ng the R eaga n
administration or "half-hearted
attempts to llm1l the spread of
nuclear v..eapons. ·· Proxmire
~aid the l'.nitcd Stat es should
convent' a n international
t•tinftorcncc on proliferation ~
Tht• confert•nt'l'. h e s aid.
s h o u I d 1 ck n I 1 f y r e s l r i c le d
products and create an
1nt t'rnat1 o nal c;ys tem o f
enforcement
'The grcalt'Sl threat to
mankind is rc•ady access to
nuc lear weapon~ technology,
and the United Stales simply is
not doing enough to slop it,··
Proxmire said
11 l' said I ntcrnat1ona I Atomic
Energy Agency safeguards are
inadequate to pre v e nt the
clandestine transfer of nuclear
t echnology a nd s hould be
overhauled.
The United Slates s hould "gel
tough" with allies who he said
are quietly s hipping nuclear
technology lo in t e r ested
countries. Proxmire said.
"Switz e rland a nd West
Ge rman y are he l ping
Argentina... he said. "Italy is
helping Iraq. And countless
s mall s h ipments of c ritical
technology are occurring from
France. Switzerland. It aly and
West Germany which, in total.
r e present a he m orrhage o f
nuclear technology ..
The Reagan adm1n1 slration.
meanwhile. should withhold
s hipments of advanced tactical
aircraft lo Pakistan until it is
assured that Pakistan will not
develop a nu c le ar bomb.
P roxmire said
Project sh e lved
LAS VEGAS, Nev t APl
The Golden Nugget's plans for a
2,800· room Strip resort have
been shelved because the pro·
ject would have cost about $100
million more than was planned,
a s pokesman said. Golden Nug-
get chairman Steve Wynn s aid
the bottom line on the Victoria
Bay project was about $400
million
OCTDwill
plan your bus
We•re newty opened.
We're • cluslc saloon.
We're •fun menu
with 1 touch of gourmet.
We're nostalgia.
We•re a sidewalk caf e.
We're a grut place for hollday funl
I ~--:::,';;~ Yw'1 Eve I
J,Mftdl floOffl 11 rOO u n. IOO D. ,._port Center Or.
..., fr'CMft SIOO p.m. "--1*1 leech a...&...,. In Fnl\lon ll&and
trij?for
0 -=-
No matter where you want to go
in Orange County, we'll make it easy for you to
get there on an OCTD bus. Just call us at
636-RIDE. We'll tell you the exact routes
and times. And if you need schedules and
Ride Guides, we'll send. them free.
&give us a call. You'll find the bus is
your easy-to-use ticket to work, school,
--~=k:;~~ shopping and entertainment in ~ Orange County.
636-lllDE-==:.-,,
11• AlllYlll enactment m 1978, but Carter
vetoed it o n grounds the
government 11houldn't have to
pay off for lmposjng regulations
Those requirem ents were first he called fully justlCied .
imposed in 1971, but four years '·The government could be
later, researchers came up with placed in the position in the
evide nce that the c he mical future of having to pay industry
might be a cancer risk. each time new information
So It was banned by another arises which s hows that a
d · d product used to meet regulatory regulation an the tn ustry was s tandards is hazardous," he f o r ced to r e purcha se Tris -treated s leepwear il said . "This would be wrong.
already had sold. Producers and retailers have a
The textile and s leepwear bas ic responsibility fo r insuring
people complained they had run the safety of the consumer goods
f t f f d 1 1 · they market." ' a ou o one e era regu at1on But Cart.er Is gone, and the while lrying to meet another one -and got stuck with the bill for Republican adminis tration is both determined lo curb the federal
Thurmond s aid they were regulatory process Thurmond,
right in complaining that they now chairman of the Judiciary
h a d b een wronged a nd Committee in a Republican
introduced the legisla tion. He Senate, argued that the Tris bill
said the American Apparel is iJ proper remedy for an ill
M a nufactur e r s Association inflictc.>d by federa l regulators.
figured the toss came to about , . The D e P a rt m e n t o f
$50.1 mHlion that the apparel Com m e rce on the one hand
makers should be able to sue lo required the industry to use a gel back. chemical like Tris 1n sleepwear
und when, an good faith. the
The bill woul d let the industry did so. the Consumer
companies go lo court to make Product Safety Commission
their C'laims. The U.S. Court of ban n e d th e Tris -tr eat e d
Claims would hear their cases sleepwear." he said when the
•and determine whether they Scmalc approved the bill e arlier
should recover and how much. thii:. year ··T his is JUSl one
"T his legis lation is not a I f I f I f bailout:· Thurmond s aid when examp e 0 ayer 0 regu a ion being placed upon layer of the Senate passed it June 18 and regulation ..
sent it lo the House for a fourth That was six months ago. He
time d idn't repeat the arguments Saying the measure got .. s tuck when he brought it up again
in the H ouse J udiciary Dec l fi !fr didn't have to . the
Com mattee, .. Thurmond revived measure passed with no debate
11 again JUSl before Congress and no dissent
quit for the year by amending So nov. the till(;' of the bill 1s a
the F orme r M embe r s of mouthful
Congre~s bill ·A bill to recognize the
Since that bill origin ated m the organization known as Former
llouse. the Senate amendment M cm bers of Congress and to
sends 1l back to the !louse for µrovid e for the payment of
fin a l action a fter Co n gress lo~ses incurred as a result of the
reconvenes ban on the use of the chemical
The Tris bill cam_c_c_·l_o_se_s_t_l_o ___ T_n:.;;;.!> ____ _
-
APWI,.._
HEAVY SECURITY Wavm· Wilham~. center. 1s hea\'ih·
guarded as he leaves Putton Count~· .Jail 1n Atlanta for the
first da~· of his trial on Monda~ \\'llltam:-. 1s r har,ged in the
deaths of two young Atlanta black~
----------~
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GREETINGS FROM IRS Pos tal clerk
Sterling Bennion sorts through thousands of
income tax packets b~ing sent to California
.............
residents b~· the regional Internal Revenue
Service processing eenter in Fresno
Refugees seeking free tuition
Five Asians ask classification. as legal residents
SAN FRANCISCO <A P 1 -
Five Asian refugees seeking
tuition-free education at state
college has asked a state Court
of Appeal to order them
class ified as legal residents or
California
Th e refugees want a
preliminary injun c tion
blocking enforcement or a state
Education Code section which
bans refugees from free tuition
al state colleges and universities
until they have obtained a green
card from the Immigration and
Naturalization Service.
They have filed suit in San
Francisco Superior Court lo
have the law declared invalid
Superior Court Judge Ira Brown
on Nov. 16 denied the inJunction
sought by the refugees.
Citizens and aliens who have
green cards are e ligible for
resident tuition afte r ltving in
California for a year Resident
stud ents pay no tuition for
attending the state's colleges
and universities.
The plaintiffs. along with the
Center for Southeast As ian
Refugee Settlement and Pamela
Von Wiegand as taxpayers,
brought the action Aug . 27
against a group of stale and
community college officials
The refugees said they have
lawfully lived in the state more
than one year and are attending
or would be attending the
schools except for the law,
which they claim violates their
rights of equal protecllon and
due process.
Thev want the Education Code
sec.lion de c lared
unconstitutional
Refugees now have lo pay
nonresident tuition of $94 .50 per
unit or $1 ,417 for a full 15 units to
attend a school li k e San
Francisco State University.
Blind boy aided
by actor's gift
BEVERLY HILLS !AP> Actor Charlton
Heston gave a sophisticated night vision device
Monday lo a 12·year·old Georgia boy who suffers
Crom blinding retinitis pigmentosa
Todd Cantrell beamed and his parents. Betty
and Kyle Cantrell of Dalton, Ga., looked on as the
boy was given the device. which has long lenses
like a telescope.
Heston said the device, designed by Litton
Industries, is similar to a night sniper's scope used
by American soldiers in Vietnam.
"It is interesting how a tool or war can become
a panacea for disease." said Heston. who has just
completed filming of "Mother Lode," a Western
which Heston also directed.
Heston. national honorary chairman of the
Retinitis Pigmentosa Foundation for the past eight
years, said he took a coffee break from cutting the
film to make the presentation.
"A cutting room is a dark place, and it gives
you some idea or what it's like to have retinitis
pigmentosa," Heston s aid.
Actor David Doyle, who starred as Bosley on
the ABC·TV series "Charlie's Angels," also gave
the boy a pair of Corning sunglasses lo filter out
rays that, according to one theory, promote the
degenerative disease. Visits to Disneyland and
Universal Studios are planned for today and the
family plans to head back lo Georgia on
Wednesday. Mayor Tom Bradley also s poke to the
gathering al the Beverly Wilshire Hotel and gave a
proclamation from the city to the fifth grader. who
returned from Russia a week before Christmas
after undergoing a series of injections designed to
stop the degeneration or the retina of his eyes.
"It is important that further work be done on
retinitis pigmentosa," Bradley said, noting that
Todd's t rip to Russia helped to focus wor.td
attention on lbe disease.
"We can use this courageous effort to further
education about what has to be done," Bradley
said. Todd's mother insists the vision in his right
eye is improving, although American s peci alists in
retinitis pigmentosa are skeptical about the Soviet
treatment. The therapy is reported to consist of Injections
of ribonucleic acid, but it has been variously
described in medical literature as coming from
yeast or as being synlheslied.
"I think It's worthless," said Dr. Alan Laties.
a specialist In the disease at the Universit y of
Pennsylvania, although he noted that the Soviets
"don't claim that they've got any great panacea -
they isay they're trying something."
Dr . E liot Berson , who d irect s the
Berman-Gund Laboratory for the Study of Retinal
Degenerations at the Massachusetts Eye and Ear
Infirmary, said he has e xamined seven patient!
before and after they visited the Helmholtz
Institute ln Moscow.
"We found no beneficial effect," he eald .
"Three of the patients we've evaluated have
contlnued to progress <worsened> despite the
t rial "
The pct1t1on says many
refugee:. l'annot aHord to pay
the tuition and are forced lo
f orego higher education .
Further. 1t said. inability to go
to college prevents them ftom
successfull > resettling and
gaining eco nomic
sclf·sucr1c1cncy and forces some
to depend upon welfare
It s<Jid that the law 1s
discriminatory and that there is
no compelling slate interest for
such d1scr1 minat1on
Defendants include Glenn S.
Dumke as Chancellor of the
California State n1vcrs ity and
Colleges System. the system's
trustees , the board of governors
of Cal1forn 1a Community
Colleges . President Paul
Romberg of San Francisco Stale
University . President James
Wyatt or Skyline College and the
San Mateo County Community
College District trustees.
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTuesday, December 29, 1981 5
From riches to denim
Brink's robbery suspect 'lived the good life'
By the Auocla&ed Pre••
f'or 15 months, Investigators
say, George Bosque lived the
good life : lobste r and
champagne, Mercedes-Benz
cars and Lear jets, $400·8·day
hotel suites.
But when the 26-year-old
Miami an was arrested in
November for the second·largest
cash robbery in U.S. history, he
had only $100 left in his pocket.
Bosque, who headed the FBl's
most wanted list for 15 months,
faces trial J an. 18 for the August
1980 robbery of $1 .85 million
from a Brink 's armored truck in
San Francisco.
During the months he was at
I arge, investigators say, Bosque
posed as "J .R . Lewis," a
mysterious millionaire who
rubbed elbows with jet-setters
and politicians at rich
r estaurants, nightclubs and
hotels from New York to
Denver.
J . R. Lewis, the investigators
say. was also a philanthropist
who doled out tens of thousands
of dollars to help needy people
or make political contributions.
But now, from behind bars in
his San Francisco cell, Bosque
says he is glad he is no longer
J .R. Lewis.
· · 1 · m very relieved about a lot
of things," he told The Miami
Herald in an interview published
Monday. ''You get lo the point
where you hurl so much inside.
And you're at odds with yourself
as to what you're doing with
your life -and what you've
done -that you want to end it."
Living as J .R. Lewis taught
him that m oney ··buys vou
Settlement
reached
MERCED (AP > -Merced
Union High School district
tru s tees have reached a
settlement with Superintendent
Robert Maxwell on the last two
years of his contract
Max well a nnounced Dec 2
that he would resign effective
next June. Trustees issued a
statement which said ttley have
reached an agreement which
"forms the basis for Maxwell's
resignation."
Max well will be paid the
salary of a prin<.'ipal for the
1982·83 and 1983-84 school years.
•
BEHIND BARS George
Bosque says he 1s ··relieved
about a lot of things" since
he is no longer living the
role of ··J . R . Lewis ...
noth1n~." Bosque said.
· · 1 have found out that 1( you
have your health and someone
to love, you have everything."
B os qu e had a good
upbringing a striN family, a
private Catholic elementary
school and <J military academy
For his ll•adership ab1ht1es.
the you ng M1amian was
recommended for West Point by
a retired Army general He wa:.
recommended to Oude County's
police department as a young
man of "sterling charact.tlr"
But ror 11 monlh!'J before the
Brink's robbery , he suffered
from epileptic lak e seizures .
Nobody knew, except his lover,
and that destroyed their
relationship
After dropping out of the
Miami policy academy, Bosque
moved to Washington, then to
San Francisco.
In August 1976, he became a
police patrol "s pecial ," a
uniformed oCCicer who provides
additional protection to
businesses. To make ends meet,
he look a part·t1me job as an
armored truc k driver with Brink's . His growing health
problems and the isolation he
fell as a homosexual ahenated
him from hi s family and friends,
he now say!>
On Aug. 14 . 1980, Bosque a11d
h is partner went lo San
Francisco airport to pick up
more than $8 million in cash
shi pped to the mainland by
Hawaiian banks
Accordinit to the FBI, Bosque
tricked his partner into getting
out of the truck and s ped off with
the money San Francisco police
say Bosque then commandeered
<' woman·::. car at gunpoint, and
took two sacks loaded w1lh
money
Busque lived as J .R. Lewis so
opcnl) that he even took some
people to court. filing civil suits,
that he won. said his lawyer ,
Steve Perlson.
But the openness was h1 :.
undoing. A "friend" turm•d him
1n to collect the $50.000 reward
for his capture
Lawsuit answered
SACRAMENTO 1AP1 -thorium-coated mantles for the
An s werin g a $300 million Coleman lanterns are unsafe
laws uit. the Cole man Co. has and have caused cancer and
denied that thorium treated birth defects He asked the court
mantles for 1ts outdoor lanterns lO order the firm lo use warning
cause cancer labels and pay S.:JOO million to all
The outdoor t'Quipment firm m antic purchaser:. That i!. the
asked in its document filed amount or the-firm 's 1980 worldwide :.ales Monday in U S. Di strict Court M <Jntles arc white knit !.leeves that a JUry trial be hdd. No trial d 1 k k ui.e 1 e ..., 1c s on camping date has h<>_sm s et lanterns fueled b) white gas
Walter Wagner. who llvt'S in Thorium 1s a radioactive
Walnut Creek and is a health element u.'ied also in electronic
phy:.1c1st for the Veterans equipment and as a nuclear fuel
A d m 1 n i s l r a t 1 on 1 n Sa n The mantles are treated with
Francisco. filed the suit Nov 9 thorium lo makt' them burn with
H l' c I a 1 m e d t h a t l h e ~right . white light __ _
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South Ca1sr P"za.. lllJ Briuol Street Costa M~~ Monday throu1h Fri<hy from 10 am to 9:JO PITt
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•
-------
Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT!Tuuday. December 29, 1981
Marine copter base
/acing new dilemma
~ is the case with so many
other growth issues artect lng
Orange County, a compromise is
needed in the conmct now arising'
between Irvine Company
developers and the Marines of
the Tustin military helicopter
base.
As is a lso the case with those
conflicts. one side is going to
have to give a little more than
the other in the compromise.
In this case, it's the Irvine
Company that will have to be the
most accommodating both
because it is the side with the
options here and because it is the
right thing to do.
The Marines are on the horns
of a dilemma: The land under the
last major flight route into and
out of the base that does not have
a large amount of development
under it C and the n oise
complainls that come with such
development1 is now slated for
residential development by the
Irvine Company.
Developments have grown up
under five other major flight
routes. and the predictable
p atte rn of noise complaints
followed. The result is that the
last remaining uncluttered route.
known as the Browning Route.
now accommodates about 80
percent of all flights into and out
of the base. Marine pilots simply
stopped usmg the other routes
because o f th e v o lume o f
complaints that even legitimate
uses generated.
Ma rine officials sa y that
res idential development under
the Browning Route will leave
the m no place to rty that wi ll not
a rouse t he wrath of nearby
res idents . It will be a public
relations disaster for them that
could jeopardize the entire Tustin
ope ration. they say. and they
have repeatedly told the Irvine
Company as much.
The Marines proposed a band
of industria l /commercial
development under the route that
would ease the problem, but they
say Irvine Company officials told
them such plans would cost $42
million to implement and that the
price is too high. Irvine Company
spokesmen also say that
development of' that type is
contrary to the general plans of
the cities of Tustin and Irvine for
that area.
Admitte dl y the b ase has
little to o ffe r in exctfang e
for a compromise . Th e
establishment of other flight
routes is a virtual impossibility
because of development around
the base and the fact that a ny
new routes would have difficulty
passing the required six-year
probationary period
So the Irvine Company -
perhaps with some help from the
cities of Tustin and Irvine -will
have lo respond. He lping the
Marines. who a fter all have been
here a good deal longer than
mos t of those living around them.
would be a good way for the
company to demonstrate that its
interests lie in helping build a
cohesive community. and not JUSt
building up the land it owns.
The two cities can help by
relaxing their general plans for
the area to aJlow some kind or
development that would be more
compatible with preservation or
the Browning Route.
As for the Ma rines. they
s hould continue searching for
something of value that can be
exc h a n ged for s uch com·
promises.
Fortunately. the planned
development will take place over
the next three to 10 years. so
there is time to work out a
solution before the problem takes
on a pressing immediacy. All
sides should get to work on that
solution now.
Fee hike untimely
We note in passing that fees
c harged by Oran ge Count y
government for building permits
will soon be increased b y 12
percent.
The hi g h er f ees were
approved by the county Board of
Supervisors last week as a means
for making up a de fi cit in the
s upposedly self-s upporting
building and s afety operation.
The increase is expected to raise
$317.000 by the end of the fi scal
• year.
In theor y. the county
operation pays its own way by
taking in enough in permit fees to
cover its operation and salaries
of its administrators. inspectors
a nd the like. However. because
i nte r est rates are hig h a nd
construction activity is low. there
aren't enough fees coming in to
meet expenses
Along with highe r fees. some
of the workers in the division are
b e ing r eassigned to other
pos itions <1 nd other cost-cutting
measures a ls o arc planned.
ad m inislrators say.
It see m s unfo rtunate ,
however , that at a time when the
construction industry 1s already
so crippled by economic factors
it should be.required to carry yet
another burd e n IC th e
government service is designed
to meet the d e mand in the
private sector. perhaps a second
look should be given to ways of•
making th at servi ce m ore-
flexibl e.
'Ticket speedup working
An initial report on the
effectiveness of a pilot program
designed to s peed the handling of
traffic tickets indicates it is
working well.
The program was launched
in October in Sacramento and
Yolo counties and will continue
until July 1984, when the
Legislature will decide whether
to expand it to the entire state.
To date. l ,500 people have
~en 'heir tickets to Traffic
Adjudication Boards in the two
counties. There their cases are
heard by civil service hearing
officers. half of whom are
non-lawyers. Drivers dissatisfied
with the outcome still may
appeal their convktions in court.
But so far, 85 percent or those
who pleaded" iftmceftt and lost
their Cuel•~Vt .-icl OM, found
tbe proc..; t.bo1 ~ with
33 per~ of *-who loat in
court
•
The initial survey indicates
the experimental program saves
both time and money. It takes 24
days to process a tick e t .
compared to 42 days in court:
drivers spend an average of five
minutes waiting for a hearing,
compared to 41 minutes in court;
and the cost of processing a
ticket has averaged $12
compared to $18 in court.
There have bee n a few
hitches. notably an objection
from police that o ptional
"summary" hearings which let
drivers defend their cases
without the police officer in
attendance are unfair. These
probably will be abolished.
But on the whole, the
program is promising and
apparently could do a great deal
to help clear up backlogs or
minor court cases.
Opinions bprMMd In tM "*'above ere thOtt. of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex-
pressed on this pa~ are thotie ot their authors and attlsts. Reader comrt\en1 Is lnvlt·
ed. Addreu Tht Dally Piiot. P.O. Boll 1$60. Costa Mes., CA 9262•. Phone (7U)
... 2 ... 321 .
ORANGE COAST
llilJPilat
,,_...........,., ............. .... • c-. ....... ~-'91':0¥0 . u .... ,.-.,c;...--._CA--. .. ~
Thomas P. H•l•Y
Pub II sher
T...._. A._,.,.., ..
Editor
8•rNr• Kretltkll
Edltorl•I P-oe Editor .
'Tut P~RTY SAYS ·m :·'
Guatemala terrorism grows
W ASIUNGTON -While the Reagan
administration has trained its Central
American rhetorical artillery on the
violence in El Salvador, little has been
said about an even worse situation in
neighboring Guatemala.
The killings and repression in that
unbap,y country have reached the
proportions of a blood bath in recent
months. And while it is al least
arguable that the ruling junta in El
Salvador is oot directly responsible ror
the terrorism that is tearing the country
apart, no such case can be made for the
right-wing regime of Maj. Gen. Romeo
Fernando Lucas Garcia in Guatemala.
IMPARTIAL GROU PS such as
Amnesty International and the
Organization of American States have
asserted that the violence in Guatemala
can be traced directly to the highest
level of the government. As Amnesty
International concluded recently. "the
selection of targets for detention and
murder, and the deployment of official
if extra legal operations can be
pinpointed . . . to secret offices . . .
under the direct control of the president
of the Republic.'·
Reports of atrocities -suc h as
destruction of entire villages by
government t roops -have caused
serious concern among members of
both parties in Congress. The
Guatemalan government, as one source
told my associate Lucette Lagnado, has
bee n "killing 10,000 to get 10
Communists."
What bothers the lawmakers is
evidence that the administration is
planning lo send a modest amount of
military aid to Lucas Carcia -about $2
million worth of helicopter spare parts.
Under the Arms Export Control Act,
military aid amounting to less than S7
G.
-J1-c1-11-1-11-1a-1 -~
million can be dis patched without
congressional approval; all that's
necessary is for the administration to
notify Congress after the fact.
This has led some members of
Congress -both Republicans and
Democrats -to suspect that the White
House will delay its declsion on the
Guatemalan arms package until
Congress adjourns for the holidays.
This would avoid any Immediate outcry
from Capitol Hill if the administration's
decision is to go ahead with the sale.
Co ngress io nal s ources r e po r t
that State Department officials have
secretly visited key legislators in the
House and Senate to test their reactions
to the proposed military aid. Among
those who have reportedly been called
on are Sens. Charles Percy. R-111..
chairman of the Foreign Relations
Committee. and Edward Zorinsky ,
D·Neb .. ranking minority member of
the Latin American subcommittet!;
Reps Mic hael Barnes , D·Md .,
chairman of the House Inter-American
Affairs s ubcommittee, and Stephen
Solan, D-N. Y
According to Capitol Hill sources, the
State Department emissaries have met
almost universal negative responses in
their visits to Congress. But at lea.st
some of the legis lators got the
impression that the administration was
not deterred by their objections.
Zorinsky, a vocal critic of the
Guatemalan regime, hopes to prevent
an end run around Congress during the
holiday recess. He has insisted that -
whatever the actual amount involved -
any military aid to Guatemala s hould
have the concurrence of Congress. in
advance.
ZORINSKY'S CONCERN prompted
Percy to promise on the Senate floor
that "I wi ll request that tbe State
Department consult with the (Foreign
Relations> Committee prior to any and
every increment of military assistance,
including private sales, to Guatemala."
Percy also promised to oppose any
such assistance until lhe committee has
had a chance to review the proposals.
Zorinsky later wrote a private "Dear
Chuck" letter to Percy, pointedly
reminding h1m of his pledge. And Reps.
Barnes and Solan have introduced
legislation designed to prohibit military
sales to the Guatemalan dictatorship.
State may spur methanol fuel use
(Today's column is by Mr. Wat.:rs'
. auociate. Phil Jordan)
Many Americans first learned of
methanol's potential as a vehicle fuel
earlier this year when "60 Minutes"
featured the activities of a California
firm, Future Fuels of America.
The Sacramento-based FFA converts
"Detroit" vehicles to methanol use, and
is going into the methanol station c as
opposed to gasoline station> business,
with one already in operation in
Sepulveda, more of an anticipated chain
of 40 or so due to open early next year.
GIVEN THE amount of lime "60
Minutes" spent in Sacramento on the
story, it's too bad the producers didn't
visit the state capitol, across the street
from FFA's offices, and the California
Energy Commission offices in the same
capital city.
The t.elevision producers and, through
them, the American people could have
learned the State of California has plans
to go into the methanol business in a big
way, perhaps as well as force some of
the state's vehicle fleet owners to use
the fuel as a substitute for high-priced
imported petroleum fuels.
Substitution of methanol for gasoline
in California's vehicles would go a long
way toward solving the slate's smog
problems, but its introduction in a big
way is held up by a "chicken and e~1f'
problem. because supplies of methanol
fu el are n't assured, American auto
manufacturers won't produce cars that
can run on it as they come from the
factory; because there aren't enough
c ars that can burn it, there is no
I -•• -l-11__.Tl ....... RS--~
incentive for methanol producers to
turn it out in the quantities that would
make it price ·competitive with
gasoline.
And price 1s an important factor -
since methanol has only half the heat
potential of gasoline, it must sell for
half lhe price of the rival fuel to deliver
the same dollar-for·dollar mileage.
Two influential Californians. state
Sen. Dan Boatwright, D·Concord, and
CEC Chairman Russell L. "Rusty"
Schweickart, the Apollo IX civilian
astronaut. have come up with a pair of
plans they hope will brea k the impasse,
he lp speed the availability of both
methanol fuel and vehicles to run on il.
Boatwright is s tudying possible
legislation lo require California state
and local government vehicle neets to
convert to methanol use within the next
f e w yea r s, with privatel y
owned trans portation fleets perhaps to
be included as well.
Sc hweickart proposes an additional
ste p, use of the s tate's purchasing
power to cut costs through volume
buying. He would have California
acting as a super-car dealer, buying
methanol-burning vehicles not onJy for
this state but for all those interested -
local governments and private fleet
operators here and in other states and.
1f they are interested, even other states.
CHUCK STONE, FFA president, says
this would get Detroit into methanol
vehicle manufacturing but end his
firm's conversion business: that, Stone
says, would be a small price for him to
pay for the success of methanol as a
gasoline substitute .
For one thing, Stone predicts, mass
production of engines designed to bum
methanol will enable that fuel to deliver
some 90 pe r cent of the power of
gasoline. •
For another. FFA has plans to go i,nto
large-scale methanol production by
1985 , turning California's agricultural
and forest wastes into vehicle fuel at a
number of small plants around the
state. The pump price, he predicts, will
be no more than 75 cents -in today's
dollars and the OPEC nations can
sell their petroleum elsewhere.
Grown children can accept parents' faults
A reader In f1orida wants to know, as
others have also inquired. "Why don't
you write aboul your children any
more?" Simply because my children
are now grown-up people -my "baby''
is a sophomore at Harvard -and you
IYllO 111111
Insult their d lfntly If you keep on
writing about them beyond a certain
11e.
INDEED, when they reach that certain
age, they tre probably more competent
to write about their parenta than tb9
other way around. Our vision ii blurred
by noRa.11la: we have a bard Ume
separatln1 what they btve become
from what they were u little chlJclren.
In fact. OW' riew ot them wlU be
colored foreftl' by U.O.. early yun.
Tbey, bownu. bet-la to '" U.etr
parenll m a IOCDeWhal dllf ..-tllbt. Ju.at u loYlJ\llJ. we ma7 hope, but
more realistically; more critically, but
also more compassionately.
They see that we are not as great
as they thought, but not as awful and
unreasonable, either ; they begin to
unders tand our excesses, our
deflclenciH, and, most of all, lhe fact
that our s tandards and altitudes were
1htped by our limes, as much as theirs
have been.
Parents who want their children to
love them as uncritically as when they
were lllUe are really, whether they
know It or not, yearnJng to ~rd thelr
children's development as independent
adulta
T his fall. m)' younger dauehter
selected and edited flve years ol my
columns, for a new book to be published
ln the aprtna. She wu object.Ive about
them u I could never be -~jecUac
some, quesllonln1 olhera. su.,estlne
cban1a ln a rew. And almost always
rlaht.
WITH THE pa11lon1te honut,y of
youth ( wbkb unfortU111tely teoda to
desert us u we 1et older), she can '"
far more cJtarlJ lnt.o me than l lnto her.
She la aUlJ sro•lnt and chanslnl Htto
the person she will eventually bffome;
her father h as become nearly
everything he ls going to be, stuck with
himself ln most esaentlala.
It ls lnslructlve to write about our
children when they are younc; ll ls an
Impertinence when they reach the time
of departure. We may know more about
the world, but they know more about u.s.
and lf we are unW'llllng to listen, It ls
our loss as much 11 theirs.
ltmY•
u alcobOI bu become such 1 10Clal
problem, why don't tbeJ Jut atop
makln• lht stuff' <Th•t'll be UMdQI)
FRlSClO B&LL&
~ ==:5-:----.................. , ,..._..~ ..... I ..... ,_. """. ... ..... ,.., ~
j ,
APWIN•te
SCORPION QUEEN R1111 Su tomu. sell ck sC'rihed "()Ut'l'n of lht•
Scorpions." 1s coH•rt•d \\1th hunclrt.>ds of thl· poisonous little
creatures du ring a n·c·t•nt stunt to n 11 sl' mom·~ for I ndotu.•s ia
Mothers Oay in Semarang bland of .J a\·a Sht• "as not stung ---1
'111 pl.11 I'~ OU!
W.1111 \fl
('all
642-5678
Avocados go I
to the dogs !----
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, December 29, 1981
WOmen pick 10
watchable men • LOS ANGELES <AP) -One is a rootball
player, one is a boxer, one is a singer and many
are actors But all of them are sexy and talented,
says Suzy Mallery, president of Man Watchers Inc.
and orginator or its annual list of the "Te n Most
Watchable Men "
This year's list is dominated by actors, with
James Garner and Tom Selleck making the grade
for the second consecutive year.
"We think all me n are 'watchable," Ms.
M alle ry sa id. "But these 10 are special. They're
handsome, sexy. appealing and. importantly, they
are all ver y talented , too What more could a man
wa tcher ask?" ·
Also on this year's list are college football star
Marcus Allen . actor Stuart Damon of TV's
"Ge ner al llosp1tal, .. actor Richard Dreyfuss.
singer Andy Gibb, TV s portscaster Frank Gifford,
actor Gregory Harris on of the TV series "Trapper
John M.D .. " a ctor Paul Newman and former
heavyweight boxing c hampion Ken Norton.
This year Ms Malle ry m ade the final
selections based on a Man Watchers questionnaire
on the perfect man of the 1980s as well as her own
opinions.
Ms. M<.illery i.tartcd the list in 1976. The group,
which s ays it has 5,000 members, passes out Man
Watchers cardi. to any man considered worthy.
The quest1onna1re was sent to the organization's
members
Lawyer test changed
WASHI NGTON CAP1 The nation's law
schools ha ve unveiled a revised admission test
tha t scraps ques tions on English syntax and
geom etry in favor of puzzlers about logic and
reasoning
The new Law School Admission Test will be of·
fercd for the firs t time 1n June. The last test under
the old format will be given Feb. 20
The Law School Admission Council also is dis·
carding the 200·10·800 score scale used since the
lest 's inception m 1948 and re P,lacing it with a con·
dcnsed IU·lo·50 scale
TOPS LIST
James Garner
STAR, TOO
Marcus Allen
JOINS LIST
Richard Dreyfuaa
• L1m1 ted.Seat ing
American Legion on the Bay
215 15th St., Newport Beach
For Reservations Call 6 73-5070
ESCONDIDO (J\P1 J\ year ago, avocados
were being sold for $1 a piece Thi:;, year . a bumper
crop has forced the price down to 15 et·nl:;, and the
growers' partial solution for lhe embarrassment of
riches is selling the dark green delicacy as pe t
food.
Warning · The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
The Californi:J Avocado Commission says the
rich fruit could be used as noun shmR supplement
for dog or cat diets, and vetennanans agree
avocado oil is great fo r dogs· coats .
What's more. dogs :.cem to enJOY avocados.
which humans use. among other things, fo r
guacamole dip .
.. , have several avocado addict!> as patients ...
s ays Dr. E.A. Adkins, a veterinarian ... These dogs
all h ave s hiny coats -and they're uniformly fat "
Dr. Henry Van Wyk. who:.e vetcnnanan office
in Valley Center 1s s urrounded by avocado groves.
s ays some of his canine patie nts eat three to four
avocados a day . The re are about 350 calorie:;, man
average size avoc<.1do.
Alan Myers. executive vice president of the
California Avocado Commission. said that when he
lived in Vista. he had a dog which picked up ripe
avocados that fell _fro m the trees and "he JUSt bit
'em in half and scooped 'em out with his tongue
Acknowledging his grower financed promotion
group is "always looking for new users," Myers
sa id news r e l eases m ay go o ut soo n
recommending <.ivoca dos as an occasiona l side
dish lo store bought dog or cal food
Adkins said dogs li ving around avocado groves
generally are overweight They grow clever. too.
he s aid. with some pic king avocados when they're
still rock hard and burying them until they're
hungrier and the fruit is ripe
A muzzle is the only cure for such grove dogs.
s aid Adkins. although he con:;,1ders avocado meals
fine "m moderation "
"We gel a lot of dogs who arc hooked on
avocados ... said Dr Daniel C1Jtlm. a vetennanan
in Vista.
He believes cats eat them as \.\Cll . although
generally not 10 view of humans.
Van Wyk knows of dogs who have accidentally
s wallowed the a vocado pits. res ul ting 1n an
obstruction. but says ... Most of my patients seem
to be pretty smart they s hell 'em a nd leave the
pit. ..
Goats. however . will even eat the leaves,
which are poisonous. Van Wyk warns
Gil Henry. owner of the Henry Avocado Co ,
lets his sleek black Labrador retriever munch
from the packing bins because "animals really
love avocados and. of course, they'r e nutritious."
And Henry is n't worried about Bowser's
weight. adding · "Animals know when to stop
eating." _______ __J
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•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT{Tueaday, December 29, 1981
Competitiow 'fierce·' in bid for IRA accounts
LINING UP • Thl' Individual Retirement Account is
appealing to people f rom all walks of life but deciding
where lo open such acC'ounts isn't always easy
Shooting range eyed
SONORA <AP) A shooting range that would be the
second largest of its kind in the nation is being planned in
the Red Hills area west of Sonora in Tuolumne county.
A non-profit group, Red Hill Sportsmen Association
Inc .. hus been founded by nine sportsmen to develop the
shooting center . It represents gun clubs in San Joaquin.
Stanislaus. Merced and Tuolumne counties
The chairman. Thomas Rinehart of Tuolumne County.
said the group hopes to get the county to buy 1,140 acres
from the Bureau of Land Management and lease the
ac rea~c to the gun Aroup.
@fC\ido
By Tbe A..111odat.ed PttH
Opening an Individual
Rell rement Account Is easy.
Deciding where to open It isn't.
The competltloo for the
billions ot dollars which wUI be
deposited in the new accounts is
fierce. You can open an IRA at
any financial lnsUtuUon. Simply
make a deposit and sign 1
trustee or custodial agreement
ldentlrytng the account as an
IRA. The institution whl-ch acts
as the manager of your account
will give you aJI the necessary
forms.
Here are some questions and
answers about lbe major types
of Investments available:
Q. Wbat do you meaa by a
flaanclal luUtutlon?
A. A bank, a thrrrt lnstitution
like a mutual savings bank or a
savings and loan association, a
credit union, a brokerage house,
a mutual fund or an insurance
company.
Q. What bappeDB to lbe money
once I deposit it?
A . Thal depends on the
institution. Banks, thrifts and
credit unions generally will ·
inve st your money in a
certificate of deposit or a
regular "Savings account. 1l will
earn whatever the usual interest
rate is on the type of Investment
you select.
Federal regulators also have
authorized banks, thrifts and
credit unions to offer a new type
()f certificate· for I RA accounts
only. There ls no Umlt on the
amount of Interest which can be
paid so the new investment ls
often called a "wild·card"
certirlcate. The interest rate
may be fixed for the entire term
of the certificate or It may
fluctuate up and down. The
wild·card certificates orfered by
banks and thrifts have a
minimum maturity or 18
month8; there ls no mlnlmu_m
term for credit unions .
Q. What are tome of my o&lller
optlou?
A. The blg brokerage houses
are offering two basic types of
IRAs -the self.directed
account and the professionally
managed one. A selC·direcled
arcount allows you to control
ClllUMIR
your investment, buying and selli~ filocks and bonds, reaJ
estate, etc. The money in a
professionaJly managed account
goes into a pa ckage of
preselected investments.
A typical package would
include a money-market fund
and several types or stocks
funds and bond funds. Mutual
fund groups like the Fidelity
Corp. of Boston and T. Rowe
Price of Baltimore have similar
Investment packages called
"mutual-fund families."
Q . Wbat d o Insurance
companies seU?
A . insurance co1D panl11
provide Individual Retirement
Annulllet which 1uar1ntee you a
certain amowit of Income every
year after you retire. The
payout per $1 ,000 Invested la
ba se d on averaee life
expectancies and the yield on
the investments purchased with
your premium money.
Q . What are some of Ute
advantages and dlaadvaata•es
or tbe different ty pea of
account.?
A. All IRAs at banks, thrifts
and credit unions are insured by
the federal government for up to
$100.000 each. JRAs at other
financial institutions are not
insured, but you may be able to
earn a higher yield and you have
more flexibility since you
usually can switch your money
from one investment to another
with a telephone call . If you
have an IRA linked lo a savings·
certificate, there will be a
penalty if you want to move your
m oney into something else
before the certificate reaches
m aturity.
You should shop around to ftnd
the best interest rate. Ask how
o ft en i nt eres t will be
• compounded. A slightly lower
rate. compounded daily, may be
better than a higher rate,
compounded annually.
Q. How much does lt cost to
open an IRA?
A It varies from institution to
lutltut.ton. Tho bank•. t.ktfta
and credit• unloM have tbe
lowest fen; you m•r not have to
pay anythinf at al to o~ an
IRA. Wlth. Hlr·dJrected lllA at
a brokerage house. you wUl have
lo pay a ree to open the account
-probably $30 or leas, plus
annual maintenance charaea ol
up to $15() and commlsaiona on
sales or purcha1e1 .
Profeaaionally managed
accounts at brokerage houses
and IRAs at mutual fund groups
generally have lower fees.
Q. A.re lltere aay llmlta at all
on the types or 1Dve11&meau for
IRAs? '
A. Yes. Starting in January.
you caMot invest in what are
(Second of two arttclH)
known as "collectibles" -gold
or silver, coins, stamps, art, etc.
If you have an e,clsting IRA
invested in collectibles you can
keep it but you cannot add lo it.
NOTE: You should not use an
IRA for something which
already has a tax exempUoo or
deferment. It does not make
sense, for example. to put your
IRA investment into a tax-free
All Savers Certificate or
tax-exempt municipal bonds.
Next M ore Rules and
Regulations
Serving you fine cuisine and superb
wines, now also features a FULL
COCKTAIL BAR. Make your
reservations for New Year's Eve and
we are open New Year 's Day.
They're 39.
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With a Hickory Farms··pafty tray,
you don't have to lift a finger
until it's time to eat.
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640-6030
WESTCUFF PLAZA
17th & lnlM, M.wport hoch
642-0972
---------
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WIN 4 TICKETS WORTH $18
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Hundreds of Sports
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RVs & Accessories •
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film Festival • HOURS:
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Noon-tO pm Set.
Noon.a pm Sun. •
Dall= ~;.urlng
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MIMIJICMDIT9mTD • 'w .... C41ffMHI
9 Winners In Today's Oa11ifledsl
IT'S EASY! Find your name and address In today's
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They're opening IRA Plans.
They could be millionaires before they're 65.
Assume both spouses work.
And that each contributes $2000
to his or her Firs t Interstate
IRA Plan. And that the present
inte rest rate prevails (13~%
annually, compounded daily).
By age 65, their accounts
should total $1,079,718.68.
Very nice!
Anytime between ages
59 V2 and 701/z. you can
take out all or part of
your money without
penalty, when your tax
bracket may possibly be
lower than it is now.
And there's more. Any
couple under age 70V2,
with a combined income in ::~~~:---...... _j 1982 of $50,000, would save $~?60
on their '82 Federal income tax. And under
similar conditions, continue saving taxes as long
Other First Interstate ex-
tras: you can choose from four
different investment options,
with minimum deposits as low as
$100. We. do not charge a fee for
opening or maintaining your
IRA . And you and your spouse
as they contribute to their IRA Plans.
If you're a wage earner, single or mar-
ried, you 're eligible for First Interstate 's IRA
Plan, even if you 're already covered by your
company's pension plan. Both your annual
contribution and the interest it earns are free
of Federal taxes until you start withdrawing.
I
are each insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation for up to $100,000.
Th get started on your first million, visit
your nearest First Interstate branch starting
January 4th and open your IRA Plan.
Q,..,, t111 ..... Bank .
•
\
Peanut man
landmark to
Cleve landers
CLEVELAND <AP > -The time-wQrn face and hunched
form of the old man leaning against the downtown library
are as much a landmark to downtown Clevelanders as the
Terminal Tower and the monuments on Public Square.
Sol Spivak, the ··Peanut Man," pulls up the lapels of his
overcoat against the December wind as hundreds of office
workers hustle by on their lunch hour.
Spivak, 74 . doesn't talk much. least of a ll about himself.
But he wi ll chat for a moment if spoken to. especially to
r~gular customers who s top by to spend a quarte r on a bag
of peanuts. .
Dr. Robert Berris. an optometrist whose office is across
the s treet from the libr a ry, says Spivak has been selling his
wares on that particular corner for at leas t 15 years. and
probably longer.
"Every body likes him." says Marge Stockdale.
manager of the Davis Bakery Shop ... A lot of people stop in
to buy him a cup or coffee or a donut and tell us to give it to
him when he comes in next "
Most of the time. though, he just leans against the gray
stone buildings a long Superior Avenue. eithe r in front of the
library or across the street in front of the bakery. his basket
of peanuts in his lap.
He is always there. rain or shine, in s ummer·s heat and
when Lake Erie's winter winds whip through the city.
-
Daily Pilat
TU ESOAY, DEC. 29, 1981
CAVALCADE
STOCKS
l"ELEVISION
82-3
BS
88
Erm.a Bombeck has her
own set of tips regarding
the winter fireplace. See 82.
0
D
.............
'BIG BUSINESS' -A businessman in Cleveland makes purchase of bag of peanuts from Sol Spivak, known for years in the
Ohio city a s the .. peanut man ." Other Clevelanders hurry by on their lunch break . c;
~
Hogs give ~
Florida
• • city pain 11
•t
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. <AP>~
F eral hogs -those orneri
beasts that tear up state ~ -are n 't cooperating wit
Florida's pilot roundu
program.
"We're not satisfied with the
number or hogs we're catchln1,"
says James Cook, chief or park
operations for the Department
of Natural Resources.
Apparently. wild hogs prefer·
to eat acorns rather than the
corn used as bait in an
experimental hog.removal
campaign at Lake Kissimmee
State Park, in central Florida.
''We've had a pleoUluJ •corfl
crop , so the hogs aren't as e-..
trapped," said Cook. J
Park rangers don't like fer
hogs because they root thr'Olll!b
picnic areas, nature trails
road shoulders. In addition,
prolific porkers compete r
food with native creatures s
as deer, turkeys, squirrela
wood ducks.
And if that's not enough, fer
hogs also prey upon snakes and
salamanders, according to
anti-hog memo from the Fl ·
Division or Rec reation a
Parks.
PEANUT PEDDLER -Sol Spivak, his face
creased from cold winters. has been peddling
peanuts nearly everyday for the past 15
years. He is a common sight in Cleveland but
little is known about him.
DAY'S END His day·s work finis he d. Spivak packs his
peanut baskets and crosses the street t old hotel he calls
home.
Since the offensive began
late October, volunteer hunte
and staffers at Lake Kissim
park have spent more than l ,
hours catching and trans ·
some 40 wild pigs , says .
Cha rlie Matthews . asslsta
park superintendent
... TllADI -Spivak'• wriMled hand holds only meav. or
hl1 llvellhood, a bag of peanuts. He sells them in the sheJI
for a quarter per bag.
Toll booth job opportunity
C9llector likes chance for new friendships
NEWARK, N.J . (AP> -They
s tand all day, inhaling car
fumes and running the risk or
getting cursed at, thrown al or
even spit at.
They work in s mall booths
that are hot In the summer,
without air conditioning, and
cold in the winter, because the
windows are always open. They
are not allowed to read when
work gets slow, and sound from
the radios they are allowed to
play often is drowned out by
en1lnes or anrry motorista.
They are the toll collectors on
the New Jersey Turnpike. And
for those who think they have
one of the worst and most bortn1
Jobs in the atate, turnpike
otficlals recommend a talk with
Richard Scott.
Scott ls a veteran toll collector
who says the Job always Is
tolerable and often fasclnatih1.
"Believe it or not, you can
make a lot of friends in this kind
or work.'' says Scott, •2. "There
are a lot ol thln11 to keep your
Interest up, mOltly the people.
The only Ume it 1et.1 borin1 la
when there la no tramc, maybe
on one of the real late·n11ht
•hlfta."
Scott 11)'1 he stumbled lnto
tbe Job when be Col out ol the
Air Force, tblnkln1 he would be
a tolJ collector until be found
work as an airline mechanic.
He started at t he bluest
crossroads on the turnpike,
Interchange 18E, with 24 lanes
at the Uncoln Ttumel. He says
he "handled" as many as 1,800
cars in one eight-hour shift. And
he "loved" it.
"People are fascinating," he
says . '"Ibis job involves meeting
the public, not Just cars and
trucks."
And although the encounters
don't permit much time for
con versallon, Scott says the
collectors learn to make the
m<>1t ot them.
"Some of the youn1er IUYS
make quite a few dates wblle
they're on the 'ob," be says.
"You 1et to call some ol the
people by name alter awhile,"
he adds. "And sometimes they'll
say, 'What lane arei you in•
tomorrow?' and make a point ol
comlnc throu,b where you're
aoln1 to be. t'• the start ol
friendship."
Scott lnallts the friendly motoriltl and ~llectol'l ve in
the maJorttJ, but ad.mtb tbere
are 1ome wbo are Juat too
1rumpy to laat as coUecten, Ud
that ther. an IOID• motGrlltl
wbo can ruin •Yea the beat dQ.
.............. pnttJ lood
arlQllMllll, Mt nner •1 ftlbta
between driven and con~ ...
says Scott, a lifelong resident of
Jersey City. "But I have seen
some truck drivers finish up
something that started on the
road by jumping out near the
booth and start going at it."
He also says he bas seen
"different degrees or nudity,"
scores of drunks, ci1arette and
dope smugglers •·with the stuff
banging out of the trunk," and
even a chimpanzee one driver
put in charge of handling the toll
transaction.
Any trouble can be remedied
by a quick caJl lo the state
pollce, whose officers always
are nearby -a well-known fact
which has helped protect the toll
collectors from robberies.
Scott says other probl•ms,
such as beinl cursed at and even
spit at by angry motorista, can
~ handled best If you Just "yes ···-"·" 1~ow a 1upervl1or t r ainin1
collectors ln a new aystem for
recordin1 transactions, Scott
uy1 he 1eta the feeliA1 m<>1t ol
th• mort than eoo collecton ....
bappy wtU. the Joba that at.art at
SS.• an hour and 10 up to a top
houri)' w.,. ol '8.'71 after four
yean.
. Altlloueb they mllht not all M
aa clMery u seett. be ..,, tbeJ.
could be.
The hunters are members
the Florida Wildlife Federa
or the Hog Hunters Assoc:ia
They offered to help remo
feral hogs from parks so
an i m a Is could be buote
elsewhere.
At Lake Kissimmee par
about half the hogs have
caught with hunt doss and
r est h a ve b een trapped.
Matthews said.
One hog, a 3l>O·pound boar tblll
couldn 'l be trapped or caud&1
with dogs, was shot. Parlr
Superlntendenf Dave Randall·
told The Lakeland Ledger tba
the meat was donated to •
nearby convaJescent center. .
Most of th~ beuta -21 ...,..
and 20 pl1leta -.... ~ave beei
moved to a wildlife m.-n•lemeit
area near Avon Park, w.._..
they can be bunted. :
When wild bot• are caupt al
the park, they're put ID a ~
pen wblle alflcultu:re Ina
check for p11udo-rable1
brucellosis. :i
wild boan. Dlaeued bop
Randall "1S It's DOt 1 obtain blood aamplea from
been sold to a alaulbteno.e
Bartow for a few .,....._
pound, COot 1ay1.
"If you know nact11 bow W
prepare a bol. It doeu't ......
if lt'I cliaeuect," Coot Hid. •
Next month, parll ollldall II
Tallahutee plan to IWcl1,......
ol tile lAh IOMbnm• Pl'Qleet
and determl•• wbet••t votuea.r bot ...................
Hilt into otber pub.
If park ... ...,. e•llllli that .... ......,.._ ......
llow, ea.,. ID6IM 1111p111 ..., methoda of remGHI.
-~
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tue1day. December 29, 1981
• •ANN LANDERS
•ERMA BOMBECK
•HY GARDNER
',. ..........
TOUGH SLEDDING With barely a ground
cover of snow Allison Hall. 10, of Morganton.
N .C .. found it difficult pulling her friend
Ashley Mc Falls on a birthday ride last week.
*"
* * 96"1,
1j ---\\o\\lO~\o.-\ -----I -----
! $[99;::·;~99=.1$7.49F;
o.. Good IOI Ihm pittts of ~Y golden blown I Good loi -poetn ol ~cy. eotdtn llnlwn I R....,. lllls QIUllOft tor • Carry Pld..... g
:> Ktllludy fned Chicken pju\ s'"91e semng: I h nfijt'Y fued Chicken wrth IOlll rolls. a I wiCh lrllet11 pttUI ol iutCJ. goldtll llfo"" (3 8 ol cole slaw mas/led potatoes and gruy hKgt colt slaw. a l11ge mashed polalots h nlijdy fried Clltcten llftlil two offers z
I and a roll Luml two alters per purthas' 1nd 1 med111m grawy lumt two olfeis pt• ptrpurchtse CouponooodonlylotcOmlh· 1 Coupon good only lor cornbm111on whrle/ I pu1ch1st Coupon good only IOI COlllbtnltJOtl I n1tion wllit1/d11t otdtts Custo!Nr P•Y1
dltk orders Cus1ome1 pay~ 111 •oohtabl' wh1lt/d11\ Oldets Customer PfY11ll 1ppl1 1ll apphc1bl1 salts 111
I 11lu tu I cable sites tu I Oflt• t •OVH Jan~, 10 t98? I
Olltr f•P ,~, ,.• •••·• ·u • .~ ltt ~·II'•• J• u~'' • tQo/ Pncts may ••IJ ti Pfl1te1p1ttng loutions • I Pr11:n may w11y 11 p1111c1pet1ng locations I Coupon good 011IY 1n Sovlhern C1llf0<111a I '~ Coupon good only rn Southern Cah101n11
• • ---·--COUPON __ .. ______ _
entucky Fried Chicken .
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What blood tests tell
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Someone very
close to me had a child out of wedlock. Tbe
man she has been aoing with for three
years claims the child is not his. .
"Mary" is very upset over this for two
reasons. First, she desperately needs
financial help to raise this child. Second.
the rat is trying to make her out to be loose
morally by suggesting that she ran around
with other men when they were supposed
to be engaged.
I heard recently there are blood tests
that can determine, for sure, whether a
man is the father of a child. Please find out
for me if this is true. lf so, what are these
tests like and where can they be made? -
SEEKER OF TRUTH IN BAKERSFIELD
DEAR SEEKER : Accordlag to Dr.
Park S. Gerald, clalef of tile Cllalcal
Genetics Division of Clalldren's lloapltal
and professor of pe41latric1 at Harvard
Medical School, blood tests are available to
determine II certala laherUed f actora are
present la the blood of a chlld ud pareats.
If a child possesses a blood fact.or Uaat ls
NOT present la eltlaer pardat, lt ls almost
certala that one or both "pareats" are not
the biological pareats of the cblld.
Dr. Gerald says U la m11cla more
dlf flcult to prove the reverse. If some very
rare blood factors are fomcl la the f atller
and those same blood factors are preaeat
in the cblld's blood, It la UKELY U.at tile
Individual ls the parent. Thia method,
however, is not ABSOLUTE proof of
parentage. Any physlctan can arrange for
a blood test.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A while back
you printed a letter about people who steal
things from hotels like bath mats. pictures
a nd bedspread s and consider them
.. souvenirs."
That letter was discussed at lunch in
the office cafeteria this morning. Suddenly
1 felt my face get hot. I knew I was
blushing and excused myself for fear my
red face might be interpreted as a sign of
guilt.
l have never stolen a thing in my life.
'
and don't understand why I reacted as I
did. ~
This sort of thing bas happened to me
before. Can you explain why a person who
is perfectly innocent should react like
that? -F ALSE SYMPTOMS IN
LEXINGTON
DEAR LEX: Blushing· does not
aec:;l,!~lly mean you are guilty of som . It ls just a sip that you are
aac...tortaMe. For example, If tbe subject
u.ader discussion is extramarital sex·, you
may blus h because the topic ls
embarrasslag to you even though you are
aot guilty of cheating on your spouse. Get
lt?
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Several
months ago our son married a lovely young
woman whom we had met only once. We
don't know her very well. but we like her
very much and feel that our son has made
a wonderful choice.
Should we ask her nol to call us .. Mr .
and Mrs. Smith," or wait until she decides
on her own t o choose a more personal title"
-VIRGINIA QUANDARY
DEAR VIRGINIA: "Mr. and Mrs .
Smith" sounds pretty stuffy. Suggest that
she caU you Mother and Dad Smith or by
your first names. If she lapses back Into
Mr and Mrs., don't be too unhappy. Vou
should bear what some people call their
ba·laws. ·
Planning a wedding? What'• right? Wlaat'a
wong? AM LaltdeTI' complddy new "Tlw Britk's
Gukk" 1Dill reHeve Wol'' cm.ridJI. To recrioe o COPlf,
•end a doUGT, pliu a lottg, wlf-«Jdreiml, lfomp«l
noe• f ll cntl po$tageJ to Ann Landers, P.O. Boz
ll995, C1d.coQo, Ill 60611 .
Fired up for ~ter
Editor·s Note: Erma Bombeck is on
vacation. Here is a reprint of one of her most
requested columm.
This winter. a lot of you people out
there are going to be using your fireplace a
lot. As some of you may or may not have
already discovered. there is an art to
starting a fire.
Here are some observations that might
prove helpful.
Do not count on a careless smoker lo
start your fire. There is never a careless
smoker around when you need one. I've
seen them on television a million times and
so have you. The s moker who simply flips
a cigarette butt into a field and seconds
la ter ~.000 acres of forest are ablaze. All
it would take to start your fire ls one
careless cigarette. but it'll never happen.
OLD NEWSPAPERS NEVE& burn.
You can feed your fire 50 to 60 pounds of
,newspapers that are taking up space in
your garage, but they won't burn. The only
paper that will catch on at all is the one
just delivered which no one has read and
which still has a rubber band on it.
Cereal boxes , milk cartons and
cracker boxes are excellent fire starters.
but you lose momentum when you have to
stop and wait until the kids eat up their
contents.
Everyone in lhe room watching you
struggle to build the fire will know that
your wood is unseasoned but you. The
builder of the fire is always the last to
know. Half ·or the people in the room
•
llMA IOMIKI
AT WIT'S ENO
watching you struggle to build the fire will
know that you are giving the fire too much
oxygen. thus creating a draft and blowing
it out.
The other half of the people in the
room watching you struggle to build the
fire will know that you are not giving it
enough oxygen. thus smothering it and
blowing it out.
DO NOT BE PROUD WHEN members
of the family offer old rulers. yardsticks.
shoe supports. wooden hangers. birdhouses
and Popsicle sticks. Every little bit of
kindling helps.
Do not assault people who say they
installed a gas conversion burner for under
$14, use the prepared logs at the store for
98 cents, or who sit a round all summer
having the kids roll logs out of old
newspaper that burn for 30 hours .
Never spurn the help of an 8-year-old
Scout who once built a fire out of wet wood
by rubbing two Boy Scout leaders togethe r.
Never go to bed on a fireplace of
darkened ashes. The moment you turn
your back and say. "It's too late for a fire
anyw&¥." flames will leap out toward the
screen, wood will crackl e and pop and
you'll have smoking embers for l hree days .
Young for romance
Q. AayUalac to *'e talk tlaa\ Jolla
Travolta ••d Brooke S•lel•• were
seriously coulderlag marrta1e!
-LC., St. Louie
A: No. Their romance never reached a
fever pitch. "We're very fond of each
other," Travolta says. "Al)d I dated her a
lot during the summer. But." adds the Idol
of the teeny·boppers, "there's quite a bit of
a ge difference between ws." <Gosh, we
Mover thought of that. Of COW'le, he's aJI -of
27 and she's only 16! >
Q: TIMre uve beft feeleft rr.. u ..
to time ._,. tM yean te .. If Walter
Cr111d&e ..... M...,.. Ii I =fw
p•blk omee. Lma rea•,.. u A •'•
moat t..-ed &elevlalea ... ..., •a• lte
ever really ..... pelMlet.., ~!
-0.arlle a.,.....,-~, N.I .
A: · • mual adml1, ·' uJd Candle IOIDe
years back. "I've seen myeelf u aemator.
J see It ln a very romantic way, JouaUnc
ror Justice and that IOlt ol tldal. an tlM
ftoor ol the Senate. But I don't lmow bow
effedlve I'd be ln the polltleal lnftlbtia1.
And l think we for1et bow bard puMJc
tervAda work.''
"Wben you see them ha aetloe lD
•'
PllSOIAlln Q.&A.
BY MARILYN ANO HY GARDNER
Washington, you appreciate that they work
awfully hard, long and tough hours. It
must al.so be the most frustrating job in the
worldj spinning wheels as they do so much
of the time. I really wouldn't want to
undertake au of that," said the veteran
newsman.
"hr less would I ever want to be
president. Even if I were temperamentally
s uited for the job, which I'm not, I wouldn't
re1ard mytelf as qualified -except
perhaps by load Intentions."
l'or Our Jote ol the Week <from Henny
Y.ouVt>: .::I bave a very fine doclof~ 1l
JOU e 't afford the OP:'fatlon. he toucbes Uj)tbeX·r~!'' -
•
--------
-------......
'9Y PHI'=. INTERLANOI of Laguna.Beach .. ... .
• t N9t itching
'I to return
"I don't ltke to diaa,ree with the admlnistraUon
but a trickle won't do It for me. I need more
RJGJrr, PUNSTERS, the ne w Moscone
convention center s tarted from sc r~atc h
with t he 7000-strong derm a tologist s·
con vention. who are leaving town with a
r ash of comments . Says a skin doc
from Ne w York · ··Everybody in San
Fr~pcisco is really nice. Wanted you to
~now. l expected to find nothing but
ba r barians. but this is a verv ci vilized
p lace" ... Not so pleased : MaJor Ricardo
M . .Mondojana. M.D .. of the Wa lter Reed
Med Center Derma tology Service. At 2 : 15
p, fYl .. he was arr ested at Stockton and
like a downpour:• · •
T JOUI . HfAl Tll
OR. PETER J: STEINCROHN
Headaches
migraine?
DEAR DOCrOR: Is it possible I may
be suffering from ml*raine? I get
headaches as often as three to rour times a
week. I thought migraine attacked only
once or twice a year.
-MR.F.
DEAR MR . F .: Dura tio n a n d
frequency of migr aine headaches vary. In
some patients the headaches last only a
day ; in others days ot longer. But in
seve re cases some pa tients have these
headaches three or four times weekly. At
le ast 10 million Americans suffe r. from
migraine -m ore wom en than men.
Reason for the onset or headache is not
always kno wn . But some , commo n
preci pitating factors are stf'ess. smoking .
drinking a nd allergic reactions . Better
leave the diagnos is and t reatment to your
doctor, Mr . F .
DEAR DO CTOR : d · llra,w that
depression Is now ~ .. g .. rea~ed as a
serious medJcal problem. I bave a dear
friend who ls terribly depressed, although
stlll ln ber 30s.
She seemingly has everxtb ~Jto IJve
for: a loving husband, t~ a an.a ~tile ~eY.t!'lfr'I •ver ae<f. ~aa't ,.,.._dbly "ndetUand wby su an
apparenUy fortunate woman sbouM leel so
low. -MRS. T. ' -'
DEAR MRS. T .: The whe res a nd
why for s of d epression a re not a lways
e a s ily disco v ered . Is it a simple
d epression? A phase of manic-depression
disease, unipolar or bipala r t ype? It's
impo rta nt t o dis t inguish between a
neurotic a nd psychotic depression.
T reatment will depend upan diagnosis :
p sych ot h e r a p y , t r ea tm e n t w i th
antidepressants s uc h as tricyclics. lithium
carbonate in the m anic depres.sive lorm of
illness and conside ra tion of the need for
e 1 e ctr o con v u l s i v e t h e r a p y. ( s h oc k
treatment>.
I hope your frie nd is being treated
medically inste ad of hoping she'll pull out
of it in time. The earlier the treatme nt the
less the suffer ing and complications.
Especially if 4 the re's a history of similar
depressions in he r immediate family.
Dr. Steincrohn welcomes questions from
readers. He cannot aMWer all individually but
will include those of general i nterest in this
column. Send your que3tions to him in care of
the Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa
92626 .
· Geary', pat~searched . handcuffed. thrown
in~o a P,a dpy wagon and taken to Central
Station. where ~ was held for an hour and
". 1~ h~lf., ~s c~in;ie : ~a lking ag_ainst a r ed lj~~{, wh!CO. ,he claim s. he didn't notict•
bec;aµ~e 1t was obscured by construction
work al the Neim a n·Marcus s ite lie
doesn·t care if he ever comes back.
Ah yes. it's a whole new wo rld . At lht•
opening of All an Allman's Computcrland
' store tn Burlingame this month. the winnt'I"
1
of. a dpiwiJt_g was picked at random by an
$1.800 0Sb6q1e computer that was itselr t he
, priie. lt th'ep announced. in its s~·nthesi zecl
vok e. the ntttne of its new owner. Herbert
W. 'Huebner of Burlingame.
!• '
YOU NEVF.R KNOW where.you"ll pi('k
u p a scoop · Arian na St assinopoulos.
attracti ve young a uthor of the r(•cent
best-seller on Maria Callas. was at the
Wash Sq. Barngrill the other night being
fawned over bv Sandv Walker . Bob Bell.
Cla ude Rouas and Bill.llamilton . She I~
c 1,1rrently at work on a biog of Picasso, she
announced . whereupon Ha milton. who had
lunched recently with Paloma Picasso. told
Arianna something she hadn't discovered
··Picasso. the original beach bum. couldn"t
swim ' ·11e faked it.· P aloma told him.
'fl ailing his arms around as he hopµc•d
along in shallow water on one foot · · ·
,.t NOW THEN: Cudd led up in a booth at
lL"Et9.ile : A Far Eastern milliona ire and a
1 buxd'tn t>f\Jhetle wtw was formerly the
nde of · ttie butler in a note d Nob
H ill e 94.a hl is hm e nt. T he wond e rs of
mode rn surger y have turned this chap
into a fairly comely number . . Heartfelt
pl"ea from a lad in love : ··Who's t he
gor_neous brunette who zi ps around in a
br1gtit blue Fiat t hat says ·Lam borghini·
on its side and a lwa~·s has opera music
bla s\ing "?" My mother Next question
MISCASTING or the vear: Laid·ba('k
Kris Krist offerson as a· wheeler·dealc r
financier in ··Rollover."· and J ane Fonda
as a richbitch widow. If you don·t belie\'t'
she is really j ust plain Jane . ask Claude
St olle r . t he Be rkelev arc hitect who
d esigned her Workout fitness salon in
M aide n La n c here. Before t hei r firs t
m eeting in his offi ce. he got a phone call
··ffi . this is J ane."· she ~aid Tm at the·
BART st<.it ion in Bt•rkcle,· which bus do I ~ake lo get to your offi ce:, ..
P r· SHOTS
BY 'ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
THANK GOD
FOR
MAKING
REALITY,
AND FOR G IVIN G US
M E ANS OF
E $CAPiNG F ROM IT.
1
Aries _g~~s ~.~~~ts
BySYDNEYOMARJtM • l ~ c ' ~~.--------
Wednesday Dec. 30
~RIES <March 2l ·April .19>.: You gain
valuable ins ights conce=nin upcoming
year. Someone coofjde9' . · n\i~ d ata.
You'll feel more secure as r It:
llOIOSCOPE av SIDNEY OMARA
TAURUS <Aptil 20·May 20) · P eople " rally to your cause -you can set policy, a r.e right for dec}aration of love . Emphasis
set .pace and. .do ple.n.ly U>-maka.....w ishes on pleasure princ iple. variety. creative.
beco me realities. Long.range plans come e;Q d ea','ors. s i gnific a nt c h a nges and
lrito focus. · 1 ctiildfen.
GEMINI <May 21-JW\e 20): New start
enables you to mak~ career adva nce.
Superior is impressed ," mh~es '\cnown
intention to r eward initi~tive. f
SAGITTARIUS C Nov. 22 Dec. 21 l ·
Decisions can be m ade r egar ding property.
·· home: securtty 1 and the improvem ent of
b a s ic t ec h n i q u e s . s erv ices .
CANCER (J u n e 2 1 ·J~l y 2 2 >:
Communications related to.famUt affairs ... CAPRICORN-< Oet?, 22·J an. 19) · Some
dominate scenarid. ';JfiPfi8$iS1 on t r avel. ~atives.fnay appear heavy·handed key
LEO <July 23-Auc. 22>: Dop,'t t ake too. 'la •to be versatile . flexible and· to displa y
muc h for 1ranted whete m o ney is senn of Otaess, humor.
concerned. People wbo claim to be experts • ,,,~11 ,, ' • • •
may actua lly be rank amateurs. 1MtUARltJS (Ian . 20·Feb. 18>: Obtai n
1 h int by stud~ing'Cuprlcorn message. Focus
VlaGO <Aug. 23·Sept. 22>: Details on investments , income potential. locating
unravel ln conbeciton 'wHh 'l e gal ·lost 4trticltS1'a nd ~ompleting longst anding
m a neuvers, put;lfct r ~llaitorl$ a nd 1n1Rifnmenl. · • 1
1et·te>1ether wlth those whose view~ may « • · 1 ' no\. coincide l"ltb your o~n . rl PUCES <Feb. t9•March 2C)): Vitality . 11et.urns, you m a ke ne w sta r ts. new
UBllA <Sept. Zl·Oct. 22 1: Surprise Is ~oni.ots and you get to heart of m atters.
due -u.e you aideid in PQl are ready to , 1cntn7 11 on urgel, circumstances turn in
111 •favor~ -'"'it tt-"8~ P ~outtne task your avor and your Judgment proves lliiftma a 1ll'IJ«W tof 1' ~1. cOl'tect .. Aries •• Leo. Aqua riut per sons
evo.PIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 2U : ~dltloos fl1 ure promlnently .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTuesday, December 29, 1981
ARMS FULL Carl and Loretta Pa rker need
both of their arms to hold their new a rrivals .
T ht· quac.frupft•l!-t . weighin g bl't WC'c•n -t pounds
·~ .'""""" 7 ounces and 5 pounds 3 ounces. were born
last Tuesday at Fort Worth's Harris Hospital.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
....... ff-4~•
1'22 HAlllO• ILVO.
COSTA.MESA -541·1156
Do you have the Credentials for a
Ken and Bob Company Listenership?
Are you a trend setter
in your neighborhood?
Do you have leadership
potential?
Are you an optimist
who believes "Everyth ing
is going to be OK?"
Do you want to be
informed, involved ,
entertained?
If you answered yes to all,
D yes
D yes
D yes
D yes
or most, or any, or if you didn't
bother to answer these questions,
then you may be ready for a
Ken and Bob Company Listenership
1n your area on
KUC TALKRADIO 79~
~ ~.07'
To be Considered
Yes I want to apply for a Listenership
in the Ken and Bob Company,
5-9 am , Monday through Friday on
KUC TAI.KRUii() 79 0
Fill out coupon and return to:
KABC T ALKRADIO 79
Adams Post Off ice, P.O. Box 78079
Los Angeles, California 90016
Name
I
I
I • I
I
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I
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;M • OrangeCoalt DAILY PILOT/Tuelday. December 29, 1911
rn rn~orn~~~·
A'F&T proposal aid
.on distance calls
• 'I
W ASRl.NO'l'ON (AP> -The
A merle_Jn T•l ephone 6
Tele1rapft Co. baa a propoeal tbat means tome lon1·dlatance
caU.rt C!OUld 11ve money when
they "reach out and touch
reomeone."
lenl\b. Undw the new plan, lt won't
make any difference when ~
call la dialed. If It 1pan1 two rate
periods, both ratH will be
applied. Thu• the bill tor a
15-minute call that betln• at 4:55
p .m . wtll have a flve·minute
charge at the hl&her daytime
rate and 10 minutes al the tower
evening rate.
Newport financial firm. names president
T b e plan , flied with the
Fed eral Communications
Co mmJuion, calla for precise
billing ol long-distance based on
each rate period durlnt a call. If tbe FCC approves, AT&T wants
to make the switch Aprtl 1.
It la a major departure from
Bell'a tradition or billing an
Interstate lont·distance call
aolely on the basis ot when il
befina.
AT6T bu three long-distance
rate periods. Between 8 a.m.
a nd 5 p.m ., the com pany
cbar1es the standard rate. From
5 p.m. to 11 p.m., the rates drop
35 percent, and they fall 60
percent on weekends and
weekdays between 11 p.m. and 8
a .m.
In computing the cost of a call,
AT&T now measures the length
and the rate period in which the
call was initialed. So an
interstate call someone dials at
7 : SS a . m . is billed al the
*cheapest rate, no matter bow
long it lasts. Conversely. a call
at 4: SS p. m. is billed at the
highest rate r egardless of
COU.SCTOlt'S COit••• ..... ,...,
.... C .... Qlll.JI MtwrCL S7." • .,. 5ell ~~·-Mil.• M ii.• ~Hiit .. u. ...,..,. ""Sii-.... ~= 11':: --=.::.: .....
The new plan is expected to
cost AT&T an estimated $3
million In revenue lo 1982, AT&T
spokesman Pie Wagner said, not
including the cost or aearing up
for the change.
Wagner said the proposal
resulted from an FCC rulinl tbia
year that made it possible for
AT&T customers to shirt! or
resell their phone service.
Many hotels. for example, are
expected to ex plore the
possibility of allowing guests to
place long-distance phone calls
on their WATS line and levying
their own fee.
"We're afraid that if we don't
do this. now that resale and
sharing is permitted, resellers
could encourage customers to
place a call 'just before the rate
period changed and keep the line
to their switchboard i n a
particular city open throughout
tbe d ay a t the lower rate,''
Wagner 'said.
Gerald E. Hortoa has bffn
named president of Newport
Beach-based Western Paclfic
Financial Corp., a wholly owned
mortgage banking subsidiary ol
Shearaon/ American Expresa.
Horton, who Ii ves in Ml salon
Viejo, had been executive vice
president and secretary since
1974.
* Robert L. Hobba bas been
named se n ior vice
president/finance and
administration and Robert II. Cartla vice president/research
and development engineerinc ol
Irvine-based Shiley lnc. Hobbs
lives in Irvine. • Felicia M. Nlcaalo has been
promoted to operations officer in
the cor porate banking
de partment at Union Bank's
headquarters banking office.
She lives in Fountain Valley. At
Union's Bank South Orange
County regional office, Irvine resident Carole A~ McKlue7
was promoted to vice
president /operations
administration department;
Kenneth M. Flacber of Irvine
promoted to assistant vice
presid~nl in the priority banking
1rs NOT YET TOO LATE!
FOR INDIVIDUALS AND /OR CORPORATIONS
EXCELLENT TAX SHELTERED INVESTMENTS!
Time Share Condo -6:1 Write Off
1981 Invest $2900 can get $17 ,000 deduction
')A ~:LEME~TE: CA
·-=~'"A•'"' do Or la f ,.,.,..110
• Record Master l ease -~: 1 -No notes
Beatles or Frank Sinatra or Blood, Sweat & Tears or? 1981 Invest
$41 ,000 can get $31,000 deduction + $100,000 ITC. Other Top Name
Artists availat:>le at lesser tease cost. 1981 Invest $10,750 can get $9000
deduction + $17,500 ITC.
~THE
JUUU.'S
P\.o.elNO•l!IA TiftG -·--.... St l•< 111M : ' f>•1v<A ,...,.s,,..,, •'.°"'Door
tC.-SIOfe .,_.,n1 '"°"Ate.ti
COSTA ... 641·1289 IUI...__
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Personal Appointments Available -Sun .• Mon.,Tues. 9-6
Call Daltan. Haynes. & V•ce llC. 7141141·37&1 lnile
Brokers, Financial Advisors call too.
FIXED RATE MORTGAGES
Fully Amortized
Second Trust Deeds
CALL (71.4) 7 54-1801
..
For Current Rates
Ask For:
JEN NI FER HEBNER
Loan Operations ManCICJer ® ·--LENOER
1700 ADAMS AVE.
COSTA MESA
Haitage Banrorp
Boanl Of Directors
announced on
December 16, 1981
a 2 for I stock split ,
effective to
shareholders of record
January 16, 1982
aDd~ble
~1~1982.
department, and A•• Marte
Sllaw ol M!aaion Viejo advanced
to assatant vice president ln the
operations. department. • Robert D. Deaa of Laguna
Niguel has been elected a senior
vice president of Wells Fargo
Bank. He ls senior credit officer ot the bank's commercial
banking group. Davld D.
HaUaday has joined the bank as
assistant vice president and
trust officer, personal services
division, Newport Beach District
trust office. Halladay is a
member or the Newport Estate
Planning Council.
* Jean Gemayel of Newport
Beach has been appointed
assistant to the president of
Trend Motor Imports Inc. of
Newport Beach.
* Jules Rosenblatt of El Toro
OVER THE COUNTER
MUTUAL FUND
has been elected a direct.or ol
the Aasociat.ion of Independent
Colleges and Scboola. Roeenblatt
Is president of Newport
Beach-based National Education
Corp.
* Kenneth J . Verae•so of
M is s \o n V i e j o h as been
appointed a district manager ol
First American Title Insurance
Co., Santa Ana . Previously,
Vernengo was ow ner -manager
or Sun Graphics Advertising Co.,
Costa Mes a.
• James Gavin has been
promoted to senior vice
president and senior credit
officer on the corporate staff at
American Stale Bank, Newport
Beach.
* • Jack Wireman, formerly vice
president/engineering at Tire
NASO LISTINGS
Equipment Dlviaion, baa been
promoted to vice
presiden.t/en1ineerin1 for
Scientific DrUllnc International,
an AMF d lvialon located in
Irvine. '
* Pete Crate has been promoted
to direct.or of product marll::etine
for Irvine-baaed Printronix
Inc .'s "P-series" and "MVP"
models or matrix impact line
printers.
* Linda Gudka, mana1er of
Lloyds Bank California's South
Coast office,· has been promoted
io vice president.
• Dou1Jas A. S&oae bas been
appointed branch manager of
the Wes t Coast of Newport
Beach-based Ronstan Marine
Inc . He lives in Huntineton
Beach.
DOMtS
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuelday. December 29, 1981 ..
OMPO ITE TRAN ACTIONS
ltlW IOHON, OITI Olf AlllD COICcllliMATI tTOCll
,,,..
31~. u • ~ i.; -· ~ n~ ,,. RB1nd 24'> RCA »"-RCApf
1'"7 + Y> RCA pl ill'>• \lo RCA pf 1Pf, lolo RCA pf
!Pot• I<. RLC 1A\o ., ...
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IM Ull I I -., f!d ~ 7 JIS ,...._ ~~ ·..u • ... 11111+ ":u :.IO : .t ~ tETel U• J 20 ~ -
E pl ·1 ·• 11lc0~J Pac 2 1 1u ~· Ry 4 1 1' fJ + m., .. fAO • 2 10Yt-Vl\Ce 1 ... • l1 wt -11..-IM I 61• IO -lloy .CM• IM HYl-m~kpltl!le • I 1: : -: ...
A lrt 12 I .. ~-9"1 I I IO I 111 11 -wFllll • 1 11 t•lllo. •'"°"' .• • ,. 1~IG•• 1.11 t l6 ll4-
w1E'11r 11 .• IJ 14 II ..... wtPS I.JO 1 ti 12fto• rift AO I ill I~
IPll Jf 11' 21~ • 5"f'ry l.t'J 1 SIJ U~
$t>rf "11.l 1.M 12 I ~ •
Sclt.terO 1.14 7 1167 27 '• ~ I.» 14 J1D JJ~.
11•1111• .11111 1 40 i4M-ll~~. : l 14j Hv.+ ~ ldMot 1 t U ...... SIOllCI U.40 I 7S. 42 -StOllld UO ll»'I Sllllo .... i\O()()ft , .., s .. ·~IP.c:Cp .10 1 lllO 10\lo • '°""" .,.. • u IJ~ . ~W~ .11 I '°' 1~rett 11 11' ..... MS. 1.1.. •• IO WY.• fCll 1.» : ., tt -~I ·~~ I ,, 1~" .
$trl8cp .n I J ,.._
SterlOQ I ti IJS n11o. ~l:."w"': • ::: lei •11: i~ ~ ....
StOllVC 1.41 t 107 JO •I SlkVC pl I d'° I ll> ..
StMW 11 .0. 1 m -~$10ftCft I M I 11 '""'· ... StopSftp t,J1 • • 221'> .... SIOf'TK 11 7j0 Hllo-ll.Of'9r .n" JOI 27\'t-
i.. s::.i::.:' ~ ! : m:.: 5'>11PrG UO • '1 JO ~ St.tlle lr • .JJ 2'l 201 I~ S..ftlk ft I 1 UO 11"7,
SullCll • 41 S 10 U... . m1o ...
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• • mreVIew
It. wu an actJon-packed year ln t.M bualneu
world. Here were aome or the top stories or 1181:
-Standard OU of Ohio, nuah wlt.h A.lukan crude
oil, put $1.8 billion on the table to scoop up Kennecott.
t.he nation's lareest. copper producer.
-Du Pont. already No. 1 In the chemical
Indus try, emerged victorious In a three-way battle
for Conoco, the nation's ninth larceat o~I company. It
was the biggest takeover in U.S. busanea history:
$7.5 billion. Seagram, one of the ruonerupe.L. dJdn't
come out too badly: lt now OWN 20 percent' of Du
Pont, the seventh lar1esl company in Amertca.
Mobil, the other runnerup, then pursued MaraUlOO
Oil and got. into a shouUna match with U.S. St.eel,
which has finally tired of the steel business.
-General Foods got out or the rast·food buaineas
by selllng off it.a Burger Chef chain but went into t.he
packaged wiener and bologna business by acquirinC
Oscar Mayer ror $460 million.
-Prudential Insurance, world's tar1eat
Insurance company. bought Bache, one of the
oat.ion's largest stockbrokers. ,
-Nol to be outmaneuve.red. American Express
bought another large stockbroker, Shearson Loeb
Rhoades.
-And also not be left at the cub register. Sears.
Roebuck t>ought still another large stockbroker, Dean
Witter Reynolds.
-Merrill Lynch and E.F . Hutton didn't sell out
lo anyone. .
-Nabisco, the cookie and cracker maker, Joined
forces with
Standard
Brands, a food
and liquor
purveyor, to
create a new lllJll co mpany ,
Nabisco
Brands . It's
ranked fourth in the food industry.
-In 1976, when Roy Ash, former head of Litton
Industries and former top Nixon and Ford aide, took
over the company formerly known as
Addressograph ·Mulligraph -it 's now AM
International -he mov~ the headquarters from
Cleveland to Los Angeles, where he happens to live.
In 1981, Ash was ousted, and a Chicagoan, Richard B.
Black, took command of the company loslng a lot or
money . So now AM lntemational's headquarters
have been moved again -to Chicago or course.
Also moving across the country from Los
Angeles, where he bad been president of Atlantic
RichfieJd, was Thorton Bradshaw, who look over as
lhe new chief at RCA in New York. One of the fll'St to
leave after Bradshaw's arrival was NBC chief Fred
Silverman, who, having held the top program spot at
all three networks, now had no place to go.
WHAT STOCKS DID
HEW YORIC (API 0.C. 2' P,..v.
TooNy -~ Ad,,en<ed ,.,
Oe<ll...., tOS •II UMllenood "' .. ToCel 1-, ... '"' New ltltM ., 11 Hew lo~ 1t " AMERICAN LEADERS
GOLD COINS
Pel. U11 11.0 U• U VII U
Ufl 6.7
U• '-' Up l.S Up 6.4
Up U Up 6.1 Up S.1 Up U
Up S.S Up U
Up U VP U Up S.J
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g:; tt
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METALS ..... y
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Al-'-' 11>n c-~· .......s. N.Y
Mettwf Mll0.00 "' f ·-· .... .._.. S.0.CID troy 01 .• N. Y
SILVER _..y
New Yori! tl,22, -l cenlS-
GOLD QUOTATIONS......,
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... \ Orange Co11t OA.ILY PILOTtrUHday. December 29, 198i
'Roots' star visits Africa
~eVar Burton says trip was 'emotio1'al
experience'. and not what he expected
BY JERRV BUCK
AJlT ... Y .... Wmtf
I LOS ANGELES -LeVar Burton, who played
th~ young warrior Kun ta Kinte in ABC's "Roots,"
r6ceoUy made his flrst trip to Africa on behalf of a
famine relief a&ency.
Borton, with Dick Van Patten, Patty Duke
AJlin and the Rev. Ellwood Keiser of Paulist
ProducUons, traveled to Muritanla. Kenya and
Djibouti on behalf of the Catholic Relief Service.
"It was such an emotional experience in that
we saw a Lot or suffering," said Burton. "I had
never seen poverty like that on any level. 1 felt,
why should people have to live like this? I kept
hoping to see the Africa or my visions or the way I
had supposed Africa should be.
"Mauritania, where we started. was desert
and no! what I expected. Djibouti was on the coast
and not what I expected. Not until we got lo Kenya
did I see any signs of tri bat life," the actor said.
"So the big lesson I learned is that Africa is a big
place. There are a lot of different languages, a lot
of different cultures."
Burton starred in the record·setting ABC
miniseries. based on Alex Haley's book, nearly
four years ago. He played the young warrior taken
captive and brou~ht to America as a slave.
The group was accompanied by Jack Perkins
Jlnrl lln NBC camer a crew. and the visit was
recounted in a segment on "NBC Magazine."
NOW PLAYING
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Newport Beach 673 8350 Westm1ns111 893 0546 Ananeom 879 9850
•ACADEl"Y MEMBERS YOUt C&IO w1U MJmtl yoo ancl yoo• gun 110 any P9fl0tmanca Monday T~u•S<lly at Ina theatres 1nooca1eo abo••
A lf.\llVEru AL PICTU RE c ..-""" ""t~AA m m , .. ~.,.
REISIPGI At
12:30 4:30 8:30
NoE~~ No~
~IESFRml HEAYB(PGI 1:003:155:30 7:45 10:00
I NEIGlllDMIRI
12:00 2:00 4:00
6:00 8 :00 10:00
No P1un
c::::==::::=::> I AISF'K'EOF MALICE (PG)
12:15 2:45 5:15 7:4510:10
~
SIHARKY"S llACHtNE IR I
12.:JOJ:OO S:•e.• 10:• llO ICOllOlfY _,.,....
RAIDEM OF THE LOST ARK (PGI At 12:002::1>5:007::1>~ ,..'°""
Timothy Hulton TAPSIPGl
Cannonb1ll Run (PGI
I' C~~seon
,..,._BIS IPGI
Nine To Five f PGI
I Lu•s Valdu'
ZOOT SUIT IA I 8oulev1rd N19ht1 (RI
c====::::ait..
RAIDEM OF THE
LOST ARit fPGI & Time Bend1ts IPGI
Walt 01sney'1
CINDERELLA (GI &
Sw1sa Family
Robinson IGI
Tt\• most 9l"Otk: thing 1
In flMtlr wortd
WQSmoMy.
ROLWVRR
Another comera crew took film for the travelers to
uae on TV talk shows.
Mrs. Astln was on NBC's "Today" show and
planned to aepear on several local talk 11howts
around the country. Van Patten was on "The John
Davidson Show." Kieser visited three talk shows
In New York and was scheduled to be on "The
Merv Grifnn Show" in January.
Kieser, who is the producer of "lnsieht," said
the purpose of the visit was to "inform the
American people of the problem and hopefully to
mobilize support for its solution."
Immediately arter his first trip. B\arton
returned to Africa again. this time for a ran trip
down the Zambezi River in Zimbabwe and Zambia
for "American Sportsman "
On his first trip, he said many people thought
he was an African until he spoke. "They responded
to Patty," he said. "They thought she was a doctor
or a nun. I don't think they could really figure out
what I was. In Kenya l spent 20 minutes trying to
explain to a young man that I didn't know what
tribe I came from."
Concerning the famine, Burton said: "I think
a lot of Americans don't know this goes on That
there are mothers who don't know if their children
will live or die. In Turkana in Kenya, 40 percent of
the children contracting measles die. About 10,000
have died of starvation there in the last 18 months.
A dollar in relief aid feeds a child for a week."
NOW PLAYING .
EDWARDS ltEWl'DRT
Newpbrt Beach 644 0760
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M1SSIOl1 Vll!IO 830 6990 Orange 634 ?553
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ClllEMA WIST
West1111nste< 891 3935
llle<i 990 402? NI-WAY lt DltlYE·lll
WtStm111~tet 891 3693
110 PAULI ACCPTlO fOll IK" OOOAODHlfl
JOHN BELUSHI
DANAYKROYD
Neiglfurs
A Com.lc-N~tmatt 1111
OAIU l:JO, J!JO, l :JO, 1:JO
t :IO AT SAOCM IMC« ._a W..EIACl PWA
T~°i:Lo ,:., 581-5880
STEVE MARTIN "Pennies
' FROm Heaven"00
. )
I
GEORGE C. SCOTT
TIMOTHY HUPrON
TAPS
1' .-A''l-i • >'ii .,.,.,, ~~OQv. 0 f• ,,. _,,., ....... ~ QO ~ '"" CHEVY CHASE
NOOfRN PRoBLEMS
PAn l DARBANVlllE·MARY KAY PlACE """" • • • " •• ,.. ·~" ,.•11• -[DABNEYC~] t •1t'v'"e ~•odvre• DOUC.l AS C KlNNEY
Ptodvced bv Al AN (,~[1$MAN O'ld 11/"( ><Ah SMAM8(11C.
W<>Hen bv ~£N ~MAPlllr) & TOM SHE RO HMAll & ARTHUR SH lEllS
OAIU 1:00, 1:16
5:45, 1·15, 10-• '"°'
edwards CINEMA WEST
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edwards SWOI COAST PLAZA
~:s;::.-· 546-2711
ROLLOVER
GHOST
STORY
C:O-ttn' AT IAllCll UACK
"IMIOOY, llUOOY"
OAll\' 1:41 .... 1:11
..... 10:41 AT av. llALL
• l
Orange Coaat DAIL V PILOTfruesday, December 291 1981
'Roots' star visits Africa
LeVar Burton says trip was 'emotio1'al
experience'. and not what he expected
~1~=~CK ...... .
LOS ANGELES -LeVar Burton, who played
the younri warrior Kunla Kiote in ABC's "Roots," r~cently made his first trip to Africa on behalf of a
famine relief agency.
Burton, with Dick Van Patten, Patty Duke
A'tin and the Rev. Ellwood Keiser of P aullst
t'toductlons, traveled to Muritania. Kenya and
Djibouti on behalf of the Catholic Relier Service.
"It was such an e motional experience in that
we saw a lot or surrering," said Burton. "I had
never seen poverty like that on any level. I felt,
why should people have to live like this? l kept
hoping to see t he Africa of my visions or the way I
had supposed Africa should be.
"Mauritania, where we started. was desert
and no.t what 1 expected. Djibouti was on the coast
aod not what I expected. Not until we got to Kenya
did I see any signs of tribal life," the actor said.
·'So the big lesson l learned is that Africa is a big
place. There are a lot of different languages. a lot
of different cultures."
Burton starred in the record-setting ABC
miniseries, based on Alex Haley's book, nearly
four years ago. He played the young warrior taken
captive and brou~ht to America as a slave.
The group was accompanied by Jack Perkins
ftnfl fi n NBC. cam era c rew, and the visit was
recounted in a segment on "NBC Magazine."
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RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK (PG) At
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Timothy Hulton
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Nine To f •ve IPGI
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RAID£RI OF THE LOST ARit IPGI Iii T11ne lbnd111 IPGI
Walt D11ney's CINDERELLA IGI &
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Ori'!'•·1n1 Open 6:30
NIGHTLY
Under 12FREEUnleuNottld
T~ most ero1k: fhin9
In dwlr world wosmon.y.
Another camera crew took mm for the travelers to
use on TV talk shows.
Mrs. Astin was on NBC's "Today" show and
planned to a,ppear on several local talk shows
around the country. Van Patten was on "The John
Davidson Show." Kieser visited three talk shows
in New York and was scheduled to be on "The
Merv Grifnn Show" in January.
Kieser, who Is the producer of "Insight." said
the purpose of the visit was to "inform the
American people or the problem and hoperully to
mobilize support ror Its solution."
Immediate ly after his rlrsl trip. Burton
returned to Africa again, this time for a raft trip
down the Zambezi River in Zimbabwe and Zambia
for ·•American Sportsman."
On his first tr ip. he said many people thought
he was an African until he s poke. "They responded
to Pally," he said. "They thought she was a doctor
or a nun. I don't think they could really figure out
what I was. In Kenya I s pent 20 minutes tr ying to
explain to a young m an that I didn't know what
tribe I came from.''
Concerning the Carnine. Burton said : "1 think
a lot of Americans don't know this goes on. That
there are mothers who don't know if their children
will live or die. In Turkana in Kenya. 40 percent of
the children contracting m easles die. About 10,000
have died of s tarvation there in the las t 18 months.
A dollar in relief aid reeds a child for a week ."
NOW PLAYING .
EOWAllOS ltEWf'OllT
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JOHN BEWSHI
DAN AYKROYD
Ne@mqrs
A Comk-N~tmatt t"l DAILY l:JO, 3:JO, l:JO, 7:JO
t:JO AT IADOlOAal
"Pennies
' FROm Heaven" 00
~hasthe , .....
thB Holid-v S.uon ·
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PAnl DARBANVllLE MARY KAY Pt.ACE .,. ••· · • 1 ..v<••• •lh• ""''I•
-DABNEY COLEMAN) be'"'" l'•vduC\" OOUCL AS ( l<(NN£Y
Produced b• Al AN (,II( •WAN and ~I ( HAf SHAM8fA0
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DAILY 1 :00, :t!1$
5.41, I: I I, 10,JO tl'OI
edwanls CINEMA WEST .:-=, 891-3935
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~:s:~:..-· 545-2711
ROLLOVER
C:O.fflT AT IA"Ol lllAC«
"IMIODY, MIDDY"
DAIU 1:ll0, 3:1', 1<•, e:to
10:3D AT HUNTIMGTOM
ednds HUNTINGTON -CH--·~· 11311 AT&ul ...0-U
DAILY 1:10, )!JO, 1:50, 1<1l 10oJO AT IAOOI HI.QI
GHOST
STORY
FRID MELVYN AST AIRE IX>UGlAS
l)()UOLAS JOHN FAJRRANK~ JR HOUSEMAN
DAILY 1:JO, 1·41,1. ... , l:U 18'•AT~
edwards NEWPORT ~:-::,~.~:.. 144-17511 -·--
OAILV 1:u.•·oo.e:~ t:•, 10:41 AT M.'I. MALL
" Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTuelday. December 29. 1981 •
DireCtor defends film 'Absence of ·Malice' I ..
•
a., llOB ,,.MAS
·•11111 ..........
l " HOLL YWOOO -Hb lbe preu ovtr·reacwel ia erttJeiam ol how ntw1papen are portrayed ln
-.... current movie, "Abaence ol Malice!"
Sydney Pollack lhlnkl ao, but tben, he'a the director ol the Paul Newman-Sally Field fUm .
Somewhat dued by the inJUal blull from preu
erlUea be nota bapplly that ot.ben are "comlnt
out "ii the elotet" ln defenae of "AbHnce of
i!_•llce." He cited ftvorable articlea and ,..vmmenta by Nat Heatoff, Earl Caldwell, Jeff
Greenfleid and Nlck Tlmmhch.
"Absence of Malice" concern. a 34-year-old
Miami reporter -Mlsa Field -who is duped by
an ortanized crime lnvestlsator into prinlint a
atory that an innocent man -Newman -waa a
aU1ped ln the disappearance of a labor leader. The
reporter then writes an alibi story that cauaea the
man's friend -Melinda Dillon -to commit
auJcide.
Thia reviewer found fault that < 1) lbe reporter
would not reach the accused man for a comment
before the story was prJnted; (2) that she printed
the alibi story without the woman's conaent,
knowlnt the demage it would cause, (3) that the
newapaper refused to retract even when the
reporter's stories were found to be based on
tainted information.
"Everything she printed was true -or I
should say 'accurate,' " says Pollack in defense.
"It was based on the evidence that she had
...._thered. It just happened that she was being used
by an unscrupulous government official Thal has
*BARGAIN MATINBBS *
Mond1y tllru S1turd1y
All Perf0fmance1 before 5:00 PM
(~ .... (ftp ......... HtllDys).
l A a.,t1g',A[ A ........ M11000 0 1 10 .. crona
LA MIRADA WAlk IN 994-2400 _ .. _. ___
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SOUTH WALi( IN
·----I -~·----·"CMAAtOT• Of'....... ... I "•UDOY 9UDDY'' ...
• ,,..____ I ·-~----
1 -5011;~ J
494-1514 ---· "IHAMY'I lllACttl•" 1111 . --""-
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--· ''flllOOPM .... DW'""' -"M•TOl'fW""' __ '" __ __ ........... -. ._ICAN ,_ M.CATMZ'"
C..·AIOllliO..__ __ ......__._ ....
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...,.._,..., •*-c-.. 111·7012
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u ....
IN 'MAUC!' -Paul Newman <left > i s
directed in 'Absence of Malice' by Sydney
Pollack.
certainly bappeoed before."
ln fact, be claimed that all of t.be plot point.a of
"Absence of Malice" had been tboroushly
researched and found to have occurred at various
newspapen throutbout the country. He admitted
that for dramatic purposea, the bappeainp were
combined in the misdeeds ol a aiqle reporter .
Because ol the research, Pollack didn't anticipate
the reaction.
''I wu almply doin1 the picture •• dram~1 never tbln!dn1 about what the preu reactloa wuaa
be," aald tbe lndlana·bom director.
"When I ftnt showed the picture to the prtll, I
discovered they fell offended, vlctlmiaed and
boltUe. I never thou1ht 1 was makln1 an aoti-preu
movie. I wanted to make a rum wltbout any
villains at all. I don 'l like to do vUJalU. Aa Paul
eaya at the end of the film: everyone lD lbla room
ls amart, everyone lhou1bt be wu doin1 the rtabt
thlnf. ...
'My tb.lnklnc was that the power and the
•ttumortnd
eroddlmlnaeender-
tnd .......... worit~
...... Mlolln. HEW 'taK TIMES
BJW • ---lo~---·-UNI~ ~---~--
reapooalbWty of the preu la too often taken for ======
1ranted. Tbe preu la the lar1est unre1ulated body
affectina American Ufe. JI any move were made to
re1ulate tbe press, I would be flrat on the
, : ...
., •I barricades to fight lt. But J do think that press
reaponalbWty la worth taklnt a look at. r------------------------STEVE----MARTIN~~-~-----1 . .
"I have asked media people lf they would be
aa incenaed lf 'Abeence of Malice' had been about
poUUciana or cops or business executives. Their answer ls no."
Pollack said the casting or Sally Field was
crucial to "Absence of Malice:" "If I had cast a
youn1 Bette Davia, someone who was tou1b and
bard, the picture wouldn 'l have been as effective.
It bad to be someone with Sally's innocence and
sincerity to allow hersell to be used."
Still on the defensive, Pollack concluded:
"The press ia the conscience of America. I
believe in it. I ended 'T hree Days of the Condor'
with Robert Redford standing in front of The New
York Times, ready lo reveal secrets or CIA
corruption."
"INNOJATM.
AUDACIOUS AND
MAGICAL
EVERYTHING A
MOVIE OUGHT
TO BE."
Pono~ "'8C "'
NOW PLAYING
COITA MlU ll TOIM) -n•T• IEACll OUIM Cinema Cente1 Saddleback ~ Clliedome
979 4141 581 5880 848 0388 6JU SS3
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0r-.eoaat DAILY PfLOT/Tuetday, December 29, 1111
M01·· HIWI ' OHAMa'e ANGIL.I ,..... .. HUNT
T'HmMUl'Nn
OuMt: Cheryl L.od.
.......................
• lfl'n*dW.W.....-. I . ..., .......
~ .. ,.,.,.....
a.now .. ~. IAe
~ ,..,.,... "°"' & "°'" .,,
eoowalM ........
., ..... ~ Of TIMI Jun.
............ of""' ...
.._. avbzttDn .., Ill
tN ....... of C..nl
~ .......... Q
• Tt9 OOWT'IMI
OOWW't
"~Ill r1on: TM lelelld
Time '°'tot" C:.,teln
..... COUllMu ~ ..
-...,.,. Ole lllMOfY,
lnllebltanta and ne!Wel
eclenot of C:11p,,.,to11
leltnd, • _., atoll off ""
OOtlt of Mmoo.(1111)
Cl) T'HmWAOCY WOM.o fW.aoNATHNf .. ,_
au-1: Rober'1 FUlet. ,.
..... 9 TOO Cl.OM flOR w • HAWAII AY5.o
MoOetrr.tt goee aft« •
...... who IWIU'der.cl
flw women, IMIMQ Mell
_..,. • blotlde wig with
tMlt f-pletlly made
i ...... WORT
oeoKCAWTT
GUMt: MaxJmltlen Schell.
(PW'l 2 of 21
OH NOi -Chachi makes an appointment
with the doctor his mother is dating
unaware that the man is a gynecologist,
on "Happy Days" at 8 tonight over
KABC (7 ). Scott Baio is Chachi and
E llen Travolta guest stars as h is
mother.
Mul1'I ~ ttlal ....
(c).:;·I">
**'Al "HcMI Pwadleo"
( 111MI Olne Lolobf1olde.
Alec OW-. A F'9nClll
lotherlo a ttempt• to
.,.,.,. • ~ ttyllt
In • hotel wltl'I hll nalgh-
bot'• wlte.
~== §NKNIM
(C)WOV-. * *'~ "Newslronl" Biii
Hunter, Ovla Heywood.
Two rlvel ,_ compenlM
'"empt to edge NCh
other out In• rece far 1111
Auetrlllien ,_. ,,.._. In
the '409. 'PG' .llNW>ETTI
N'TEN .. OONCP'T
Bemadelte Pet.... per.
fonna • veriety of llOll09 M --.. '* l8mOUa banana dence. -=-. 8UUMYE • ILOWWC:V
Luc:y extenda an Invitation
lo the dence by throwing
-herMll Ill Van Johneotl.
• ICCET..-AT
• ••IEll8AEPORT (l)QINEWS
9 MANEY MtlilA
A de1perat• citizen
•"'-'-to blow 111mM11
and the precinct M!y high.
(8)MCME * ''Roller Boogie" ( t979)
Linda BIAW. Jim Bray. A
talented end '1d' rnu*8I
atudenl aet• out to win a
roller lltlllng boogie con-
leat before' r-.imlng he<
mullcal lludlea. 'PG'
(l)WOMING
Berry Boetwlek, Eiieen
Brennan and Ja,,_ Taytot
-among Ille many atvs
IMl\Ked In lhla ~.
be-' on hundrecn of
lnleMewl conducted by
joumal .. I I 11,1111<>< Sluds
Terkel.
7:00 9 <*NEWS 8 .CHEWS
• HAPPY DAVI ACWN
~ .. lorcad lnlo 1 box·
Ing me1et1 with 1 toolbalt
bruleer OYW lhe 1ttec1lona
ol • pnitty glt1.
8 MCNEWS G YOU ASKED FOR IT
FMtuted· "T~ Roclt ....
In Japan" end "Ne. Mr. Ametic:a ..
• ntE JEFRMOH8
Allan, lhe "wNte ihea9" of
Ille Wllll1 farnll)'. retume
llama. (PW'! 2)
• JOt<IR'8 WILD
• OY8'fA8Y au.t: Maxine Sullivan (R)
iD MACNEIL/ LEHRER
fEl'ORT
Cl) TIC T /IC, DOUGH 9 INTPTAIHMEHT
TOHIQHT
An Interview with Debbie
Reynold&. a,,. MUPPET'S
~: MeUssa M~ ..... cm THE WAY IT WAS
"11157 • '58 NBA Cham-
plonlNps; Boeton Ceff tca
Va. SI. Louil Hawkll" 0 TIN FOR ntE T1Tl.E
A IOoll bed! .. lalcen II Ille
~I Ian beal IMma whO
will compete In the NFL
pleyoffa to detennlna ltlll
)'Mt'• Super Bowt c;ont-
lanta.
7:$0 8 2 ON THE TOWN
F••lured: Ill• RlghlOUI
Btolhw• lalk about Old
tlmea. a reunion and Ille
lutwe; a look at a group
111•1 helpe mother• cope
with chUdren'a bad h1blla:
1 ""-who cen10t1 I*"
IOtWIMnd llcenae pialM
I QI FAMll. Y ~UO
LAVEWE & SHIN.EV
&COMPANY
When Lenny and Squlggy
OIMc>PMt, Ille Qlrla Ir-
them lo 1 dtcua.
8 ~ONL..A
Fealured· vlall San Farnan·
do V1tley Juveritle Hatt;
offbeat cartc>otllst Gahan wu.on Cl MATCH GAME
• M•A•&•H
Frenk decldea to maka
money by auctioning oft
Ille came> garbege wNle
H11Wk9Y9'• love Ille IUl16tS
·~••llack. I TIC T /IC, DOUGH
MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
ll9 NEWS
Cl) P.M. MAOAlJHE
A sc:hool IOf nannlea 1n
Engl1nd, • proleulonat
lnYenlor
([I YOU ASKS> FOR IT
Featured· "Miiking The
Oeaclly Black M1tnb1" Ind
"P1rrot ltnperaonatora "
~NBA M8KET'8AU.
Los Ar1Q11et Lai.eta ...,
Ullll Jau
(Z)MO\llE * * * * "Beckel" ( 11164)
RtcherO Burton. Pater
O'Toole King Henry II ol
England cl..,_ wllh Ille
Areht>i.hop of Can1«J>ury
~Ille 12111 century too. Cl) 8fMON & 8IMOH
A.J and Rlcll -hired lo
ln\IMtlgal• the OMth of an
animal trainer who wu
klHed by. llon. D at LITTLE HOU8E a..
TMEPMIM
Mrs Ole 1on'1 newly
aOopled dlUghlW Mtl OUI
to become the Slit of 1111
achoo4 tnllvaJ. (P•rt 2) (R)
~MOYIE
• • • "l onely Are The
Br•ve" t 111&21 KJOt Oouo·
tu . Watler Matlhau. A
"-111 and Illa PoeM try to
Ira<* dOwn I cowboy who
neaped from Jail and
tlHded for the rnountaJna. 8 9 HAPPY DAYS
D IHllOEaW
This r91iglow P<ogtam.
relallng to Ille GMlte of
mlltlona in Chine lat re41G-
lo<J1 freedom. cMlcflbea 1
cruMde 10 garn. tunda to
purchue blblas for d~lfl
bullon 10 Ct1t1sllanl In Chi-
na. ID P.M. MAGAZJNE
A achoo4 for nann1et In
England. • P<ofaalonal
Inventor. Chef Tall Pf•
CHANNEL LISTINGS
8 KNXT <CBS> 0 On TV
fl) KNBC (N0 Cl l Z·TV
8 KTLA (Incl I .. HBO
• KABC (ABC> e <C1nem,H)
Q KFM B <CBSI ' (WO RI NY N Y
f) ICHJ ·TV (Ind I 11) !WTBS>
G KCS T <ABC> t IESPN)
• KTTV llnd > $ I Showtorne I
e KCO P· TV !Ind I " Spall10lll
1• KCET (PBS> • !Cable New\ Networ-)
8> ICOCE IPBS>
parea tlUuc:inl: PIWll Nel·
eon on ""1-mlnut• tu
deductlona.
• caDMTETHI
CHILDMN
Hugh Dawna hOlll Ihle
en11r1..,_,1 ~ with
gueata Ed A.,_, Denny
Kaya. Jo hnny Mathia,
s.ti• end Crotts. and
David Hartman held to
benefit UNICEF.
• THE COUITUU
OOY88IY
"Cllpperton· The llland
Time Forgot" Capllln
JacqUM CoulleMI and Ilia
et-explore the hlttOty,
tnhebl11n11 and naturat
actenc• ot Cllpperto n
llland. a c:otal atOll oft the
COMI of Meidco. (R)
ll1) N(Yl/A
"Anatomy Of A Volcano"
An lnternatlonet tewn of
geolOQllta lludiM Mt. SI
He6af\I In an efl0t1 to
uncover <*IM which wlll
Md 10 more ICCUl'ate s>r•
dlctlona of erupllOn• In the
Mure. (R)O
(C)MOYIE * * "Sleaplng Car Mur·
der" ( 1966) Simona SIQ-
nor el. YvH Montlnd.
Occupenla of 1 train com-
partment are tatgeta for
death 11 the hands of 1
detenged killer
<l)aaAME
John B~ .,_ you
lhinga lltaoget 11\an tr\lth.
latget '""' .... and unlet
thin anything you'va --· OMOVIE * * "Thi Altic" ( 1979)
C:..na Snodl)r-. Ray MI-
iand. A libratlen 11-In Iha
paal with'* rnamoriea of
• love who ~·
'R'
l:t08(11 LAWMl6
ltM..EY
~"' and ~ help
l..viy end Squ6ggy i.unctl
theW talent eoancy. (A)O
• AU. .. nta fM&.Y
Alf\lldy~,_._
Atc:Ne Into llgr*'O kif
coetty ~ lldlrlg 10
~._..__
®~
• • • ''The ~ Mern.d
Col4* In ""*1ce" ( ,..,) a.oroe Segal. Natalie
WOOd. A Mpplly rnwrted
c:ouplll beglll IO wonder
haw hllCIPllY "*'*' tl'9lf really .... ..,., eeelng .. of
thelf ftlandl' manlagea
and U(> In lhe dlYot'oa coun 'R'
~TltON
A comedian llOe'I end four
comic cont•tanll who
compall 1geln1t ona
another •• teatured In 1hle
UllCalllOl ed comady Gll'nl
sllOw.
t:OO 8 Cl) MOVIE
"Incident At Creatrldge"
(Pr..,.,e) Ellean 8-lnan.
Pernell Roberts. A _,
~ IOt and wine
alectlon .. lherttf In a
Ctuude aoairiat the pollll-
cal comiptlon of • wnell
WMWntown. Da!MOYIE • * * "From Here To
Elamlty" (Part 3) ( 111711)
Natllli. Wood, Wtllt1m
Devane. •a ntME'a COt/W'Nf't
LMTy t• • wtllt• lie about
Jaell'1 to... Nia that ..._
Jade lutloue end T em
ambarr~. (R)O
• a.JJMN: n4I
WON.D'S MOST fA8ULOU9~
DMl'l~~the
(D)MOv. ** "lOCIPf"*" (1M1)
Albef't Finney, Merlin
~. T ane1on 1>u11c1e to 1
ahatteffng dllMx ~
tfll ~ of a gang
wtlo -plilnnlne to -c.ne an elabotat• bank
robbery from the -•
below Ille atNlll of ~
don. 'PG'
(l)MCWll * * * 141 "Being There" (111711) Peter Sellen, ...._
vyn OouglM.. A ~
minded, mlddl• aged men.
wtloM only ~ of
Ill• OUtl ld• world II
ttvougfl ~. ,..,..
lr.,,,.ndou1 feme and
~ by unwittingly con-
W1dng t)'COOtll end polltio-
c:iana that lie la • genlw.
'PG' 10:001•••• .-we (II HNt1' TO HMT
The Het)l lllt• off on • lkt tnp to va1 ....,.. ""'Y...,,,
llWrl -of their tr1andl mey be plannlng to murder
1'111 wife on the llopel. (RI
·~ * *'~ "Stardust ~
riM" ( 1980) Woody Allen.
CNrtotte Rampling. A euc;...
ceulul "Olredat ,_ •
per-aonal crllll .. he ,.,..
to malt• eome major d«J..
lllOtll In Illa Ille. 'PG'
(Z)MOW
••• 'Al "The Knack Ntd
How To Get"" (1N5) Nia
TuaNlig!Wn. R.y 8'ooU.
A young man attempta to
~ popMt w41h the
ladlM by atudylng hll be91
friend'• method8. tO:"®..,~
~.JN#AJNrf
~QOfftlca .,.,.,., s..., end Anna ...... ~ .. -... ~ MCI eportl
--OOllllllO to Homa .,. OlllCe ... .-..y. -•x••w ..,.,.. ....
·U-lM .......
"GfwgoryP9dc" eoov ...
........ Lofda Of The .Nn-
........... of tlle dMllc
M.,.n ct.• ..... ..., In
the ....... of Centtel
~-.......... Q tt••••<1>aa ....
·M~Y.-.r
Hoet: "-d 11111 I nen.
o.-t: AMdy Newmen. •co.• .. ~
"ECAC Holiday Feat ......
~·· • THI--~· EIENSICOt919jS
" Napolecwl and Llncc*I
can do "· Oeorge .,..._
he can too.
• IAM'OM> NtlJ 80N
Fred buya helf OWi......,
of • profeaalonal """"' .
who Clln't llQht.
• DOCCAVETT
Oueat: Mulmlllan Schell.
( Pll't 2 of 2)
®MOVIE * * * ~ "The Ctlina Syn-drome" ( 19711) Jec:it Lem·
mon. J-Fonda, Mtdlell
OoUQIH. An •mbltlOUI
1"9vlalon repot19' per-
auldu 1 coneclence-
ltndten ~ ecr 8'd
her In her effofte to bNell
a mejor lltOty on en 9Cd-
d9rlt at • llUdMr ~ Ii
plant. 'PG' tt=-e (J) NCAA
MIGlMU.
Mwytend at UClA
81BTONl8HT
Hoat: JC>Mny .car.on .•
Incident' heads for series
NEW YORK -CBS' movie "Incident Al
eatridee" tonight ls the perfect prototype for a
ture series. It lakes a star from the CBS stable,
ta her in an unconventional 9ituatJon and then
ekes it all fluffy and ente.rt.ainin1, altboulb not
1ood tbat it will bold up to too much scruUny.
• •bow a.in at 9 p.m . OD KNXT (2).
But lt doesn't have to. U it happens, it'll only
a netwon series. as.. arennan la the star and, lookinl at the
y turwa ber "Private Be!Uamln" ta ta.kins, abe's
dy fGr a new weekly vehicle. Tbe unusual
uatiall 11 that Ma. Brennan moves to Creatrid1e,
o., md becomes sheriff of tbe town that II to
Mil'l"llllnt It ,ives clean air a bad Dame.
111. Brennan h aympatbetle In Ua•
beUevable role of the do-1ooder wbo aweepe up e of Ulla ratty town's dirt, bat not __,b to
pede fllbare story U.ea.
TodaJ'i series have become too Callfomla·
Nfl'lf York-oriented, aJIYWQ. What' network
nMCll la a modem drama ln WJomlDI. nen II
morie WU Rimed ln Utah and anJ Ml't• II) tiM abot ln Hollywood.
Sara Davit and her buabud arrlH ID ' J•t In Ume. to be nm olf tbe road by "'11 wt.o bave t«cbed ane oft.be town'• three
........ parlon.
Sara calla tbe police and ftre department, and
fiber ol Crwtridl• II N8dib' apparent wbeD old._. atroUe ou& el* ear IDd ..._ a
cm • tbe pound. lo muda f~aw and
Ti. MD tMaadle &Ml -l&ra'1 ._.of oecww ID U.. dJMr. Two r 1 lll1et mJMn •
..rough up an elderly couple becauae tbey wouJcln't
&Ive up their seats. Tbla ia aome touP town. and It
[£urns out that the look-the-other·w~ ma7or,
1beriff and mob auy, who owm one of tbe rlnl
massage parlors, are all in coboota lOletber.
Sara baa bad enough. Sbe deddee to run for
aberiff. Reaidency requirement.a and aucb bulc
lawman details aa familiarity with IUDI
apparently don't matter. Sara says abe'a a sooct
administrator, and ahe deserves to wear a wblte
bat, Wted radically to the left: She even suaeeta
Ltbat maybe they stve m .. .,_ in the muaaae
parlor.
The town's major newspaper, alto on the take,
endorses tbe current dO·DotblDI aberUf.
Fortunately, tbJ.111 a two-...,.,.. towD, and the
small, atruulinl newapaper F• tbe tnllla.
Sara wlnl aad bu to deal wttb Mnral rtttralf
deputJe1. One wean b1a wdform lbl.rta opm to the
oneJ. Another le\I IMD·.,.. .,_. a.d MdUtCM tbem.
Sara weedl out tbe t.rMb and oNerl • ....,.
parlors Olff .,lllDKI to ber clePIU•· Ille U11iB 1eta
'9lOH 1DGMJ from I.be~ bJ ...... oat
tbat bll penau1 .....-• ....... tlMm ber
111epartmmt•1 IMdot ........ tlae ,.,.el el ....
deputiet and ffeD leM111 llOw to lboat a .. la OH
easy leaeoa.
It all leads to a recall-.. wb6da tlae m.,_ "•··but not before ........ ber ·~ a1alnst t.boM l"e9p0alible fer tbe m.-.. pvlor
lln . "l Juet mat IM bea;• Sara Wll Mr
auppOl'tera.
Sure, in a "'1el aboQt a WOIDU llMIUf. CMcll
, local lllt1np tar pa.rtlwlan. TIM -*WOl'k wW M .cu.
UBE" TOPPERS
fXTLK e 8:00 -••Lonely are the 18rave.' • Penetratln1 atudy of ·• rebellloua cowboy e.capinc from Jail
and punued by a posse.
~HJ e 8: 00 -"Inside China." A
crusade to gather f undl to purchase
Blblea for distribution in China is
described. ~KCOP • 8 :00 -•'Celebrate the
, Chlldren." Special to benefll UNICEF is
hosted by Hugh Downs. Ed As ner,
·Johnny Mathis and Danny Kaye are
among guests. ·
%NXT 9 9 :00 -"Incid ent at
Crestridge.' · Movie premiere. A wom an
runs for sheriff in a small Western town.
. See story below.
Ouela; ,,_ St.wt,
p.._1ert1ut11. e9 MCHIWI ~
• IMMONOI .. THm
llCY
Thie epeoiel ct.-wfftl the "'"'*' that the -~ hM rMde on~·._
_,wtlele.(P..U~)
-~ A vtitaran polloe ofllcer la
lltled ttytng to iw-t a
ro«lbary and Denko la
blamed by the men·a pert·
ner.
I !COIT ...,._,.T
CAl'nONID NIC
NIWI
(C)MOllll **"Ole laughing" (IMO)
Robby Beneon, CherlM
Duming. A -lgWl'ltlng cab
dtNer la aided by • _,
mot*~ In ptOlllng hlmMlf
~I of e mutdet
dlarge. 'PO' • cm wov-.
• • "Emmanualla ti: Thi
Jor9 Of A Woman" ( 1975)
SyMa Krlatel, Umberto
Oralnl. A ~lful Mduc-
tr-IMng wlt1I lier riu..
band In the Fat Eallt lnlll-
etea a ~woman lnto
her coterie of pleuure ......
t 1M (I) WOMlllG
8any Boetwlcil, Eiieen
Brennen and "-T8)'1<>t
ere among the many .......
IMlured In lhll epadal,
baaed on hundfedl of
lnteMewl c:ondoc1ed by
'jouma11at I author Siuda
Teru&.
CZlMOllll **°" "HI. Moml" (1970)
RoMrt 0. Nlto, Jannl1-
Salt. A Vietnam ¥elar1111
ratunw home to New Yortl
City and becotnM ~
In Ille pomogrlfliry lndul-
lry. 'A'
-MllDff-
tHO. IHA MA NA au.t: Connie s--.. • 9 FNITMY lllAND
A"*'~b9c*ln
time to the lulty 09y9 of
Ille 1 ltto oentury. and • gin
,..._ the '-'1fytng night
of her ll'IOUllF'I dMtt\. (R)
• CONrall DftMV
HIAl.TH--
"How S... la Our FOOd?" ."'°"" *. ..l.agiand °' The Sea • WOl/t'' ( t975) ~ C:O... "°" 8artler'8 Bad\. 8-1 on • llOty by Jam London.
A Wl1tar la kldNpped by
the CA1W of I .... hunllng
aNp and made first mate
by tha 1hlp'1 llery·
temper9d ~'PG' tJ::IO. al TOMOMOW
~ .,.....,.., Peter
Allen; "'-"" author Jl.lell.
eandr ~. pll't 2
IMCMI **'4 ''T ... Of TerTor"
( tM2) ~ Price. Pwler
LorN. nw.. alor1M by
Edgal' Alan Poe: • lllldow-
... "'91 wllll lntNdiM on
1111 ~ mantegr. a
dr\lnUrd -brtdtl and
rn«i. to put an end 10 1111
..... lllfalr; • _..
-1iypnoe1a to ~ • OOIMOU' .__ ....
and dlillll. ..... w
NllWOMNIM t•• MCW9 ....... "The luety ...., ..
(tK2) S-Hayward,
,..,._. Mltdlum. A oow-
bOy doea -ttNng 10
DeoolM •rodeo llM.
• MOY-. ** "StanlleV" (1972) Alea
Aooco, awte AoCllr'9on. A
tlltlelnall• ~ •
Vletn.tm wteran'1 per-.
el WMIPOf'I of r~
.... mankind.
t:OI CID MOY-. ** * "lnllde MO¥M "
(tMOI~ Savage, O.wtc!
Mo<JA -to lhe
gtoup of ~ at an
Oakland .,., fMy hOld the
key to making Iha ber1en.
det"•~Cllf~•
pro l!Metball ~ •
...itty. 'PG'
1:10 • M0\111
• • • "The Vltgln ~
dlera" (11170) Lynn
Re0gra¥1, NIOef Petricl&. A
Ql'OUC> of Miwally "81'4
Britllh rectulte learn the
flCte of .... and -when
they -eent to beml In
Mateyllla. t:tl!= * ·~ "The Worfllng Glttl" n-glt'8 llnd no job 100
herd to handle end w111 cSo
anything IOt manly. 'R'
(Z)YOYll
•• "o..ttl G.M" ( 1977)
Soncln lodte, 8eynM>Ut
c-el. wtllle 1111 wife II
way, • man lmlltM two
•"racti.... ~ glt'8
Into hie ,_ kif Iha nlgllt.
later dleco-:ng thet the
young bewllea -llofN. cldal maolace. 'A'
I t:aol .-we . ..-EDOIGl..M
Cohoet: Dorn 0.l.ulM.
au.ta: Bobbie Genlty.
Rhonda Batea, "'911 Haley,
J9ll a.tier. Mike tlllng .
(C)MOVIS
**~ ··.....,,on1'' 8111
Hunter, Ctwi9 Heywood.
Two r1vW -compllllal allempl 10 edge each °"* out In • ,_ lat .,.
AulCr...., -,,......,,. In
the '40a. 'PG' .YOYll * • 'h "The Formut1"
( 1980) Matton 8'ando,
Oeorga c. Scott. WNle
""'-tigetlng Iha murder of
• coleegiue •• ......,.,, cop
unco,,.,a • con19ltacy
lnvoMng Iha ~...,.,
of • eiyntllettc "* formula
by the ol compenlea. 'A' t:G>8 INTEMM .. IT
TOMCIHT
An lnteMaw wlttl Debbie
~ l:Oll:. * ..... ~ ..... (11161)
Cary Onnt, Ingrid &erg-
men. A rictl Amertcan and
• Eurc:ipaM --,.. In ~ ""'°'91 lie dMne to
be martted. t:ao·= * * ~ "CurM Of The
JOHN DARLING
0
UndeM'' ( ,..., ftto AMI-................... _ ................. ,,...,.......theW• • "°"" •• "~ Ar.d AM· low" (tN7) Mt111N loon,
--COogln. .........
l:AI CI) CHAN.IS~
"TlleP~•·
... CJl)HeO~
llM'MW.JNIAJNrf
Hu•ll•ldoend ... oon*'8
.,.,.,., 811Met Ind Anna
~ lnVOdYoe Ult -
... ~ and. IPO"ll
_,, coming to Home
Boa ()fb In Jat'NM'f. Cl)~TltON
A comedian hOet and IOUf
comlC con••tant• """° 001t1pe1e egetn•t one
lllOther -llNtured In Ihle
-eel OOIMdy ra-anow.
,_(J)MOYW ** ** "l(ramet Va
IC.I-" ( 1979) Dualln
Hoffman. Meryl Streap. A
man ba"lel with his 8X•
...... fat cuatody of their
young Ion afler ..... walk•
out on them. 'PG'
l:IO(C)MOYE
• * * • "l ove And
Death" (11175) Woody
Allen, Dllna KMIM
(8)81&PINGou'f:THE
DaOl Tl QN)W UIJ
Thia ~ to the popular
apeclal "Who Ate The
~ Atld Where Diel
The y Get 19 Kldl7"
updal• the llOty of the
8lllraot0inaty family which
now lnCludM 20 ~
~ ChlWSran
Cl) ntE OLDEN DAVI COAT
A young girl learn• IO bel·
ler 9'1P'eclal• '"' aprlt of
Clvt1trnu aner lhll la
tl'lftlPOtled beca In time tr.'..=" blue coat.
• • • • "Ordlnery P-.
pie" ( 1980) Mary Tyler
MoOta, Donald Sut""1end
4:00 I:::: TfllB(
• • • • ··Ju11u1 c-··
( 1953) Marton Br1ndo,
.i-Mason
4:10. MOYE • • * · • Y eHowne ck ..
(11155) Un McCarthy. St•
phen Counla'gh
4:I0(8)MCME * * * ''The Lael Married CQ41P1a In America'' ( 1980}
Georg• Segal. N1tall1
Wood.
Wed11e•dat1'•
Dat11i~e M_o!'le•
-MORl•tG-
HIO CC) * * "The lady Van-..,_ .. (1979) Elliott Gould,
Cvt>llf Sheph«d. An Inno-
cent man and a rie.itilut
--awec>t Into 1 OMOly aeplonage C.apet
aboard 1 Europa1n ••P'"' train !raveling
thtough Pt••ar Nazj Ger·
many. 'PG' .,_ • * * "Bluea ewtera"
( 1950) 8-y Boys. Craig
St-a. One of the Boys
~.11ng1ng ......
Uon ... r.ul1 of • lonall-
tactomy
tO:OO Cll •••• "AeMKrec-
llon" ( 1980) Etten Burstyn,
Sam Shepard. Alter 1 neat
lllal auto accident, • wom-
an llnda that .,,. haa the
abHl1y to heal otherw but ,.
petMCUled becauM Of hit
refuaal to Clalm • divine 1nnuanc.. 'PG'
tO:IO • * ~ "Sagectueh Trail"
( 1833) John Wtyne. Nancy
Shubert. A oowboy un)ull·
ty lmprlaoned for mUtder
eacapea to llunl down Ille
,.., ~ and ll'OWI 1111
-~--'°" ••• "Snowball
Expreu" (11172) DHn
Jonea. Nancy Ollon. A
Haw Yorfl accountant Ira·
V'lla -1 to the Rock..._ In
•
"'~'°"'*""''*'• •.-rrart 1111 r.eort N
~·o· oa•**"~A._. _...~bl" 11 ... , °""' Alldr .......... ,.,..
IAMI. A~_. 1
11•••P•P•r pubtlefter
•'-"'PC to dllllrow Die
toeurllQy of olroutl'ttt .. u.i
~' (C) .......... , ..
lla yer" (1Ht) Jeoll
Paienot, Jofwt Teny, An
~ youl'f -.... ... aldof•Mnd of
..non to..,.,.'* ...
uncle, the -'Orct wflO
klllad 1111 f--and .. hOldtrlg .,, aooe. IOt ,_
-"· 12:00 ••• ••fhe lnc:redlble
R«*y Mouneelll Aaoe''
(1977) Qwtl Connelly, F0t·
r• TUCMr. In~ ettempl
to .-.. the town of It. Jo,
Ml-.wi. tM town tattwa eponaor • ,,_,,. llunl
tecelo~. . ..... ~.._..,
Ctlallce" (1966) P• ,._..
man. Virginia fool¥. A
young 0r.-....,,. ...
L.aal &lpper cftalloe.
<Z>**** "Kr-Va. Kr-" ( 1979) Ou•tln
Hoffman. Meryl SVMP. A
man bat1Jee With Illa •·
...... IOt cuetoOy of ...,
young Ion ..,., .........
out on them. 'PO'
12:80 •• * "Legend Of Thi
8M Wollf'' (1975) OU*
eonr-t. Barbata 8edl.
8aead on a IC<Ny by Jedi
London. A -<•er le kJd.
nlC>Ped by Ille Cl-of I
-I hunting Miit> and
"'*'-flret mate by the
ship.. fiery-tempered CllP-
laln. 'PG'
1:00 CC) 'h "Steel" ( 1980) Laa
Major•. Jennltet o· ..... A
beautiful woman la......,.
ed by • tough COtlMNCdoll ,_ In running ..
oomplny .,,. Inherit• .,..,
her father'• euapldoue,
"accldeMW" oeath. 'PG'
(I) * * * "Forbidden Planet" (195e) Welter Pido
geon, AttM Franaa. 11.ed
on Shakeapeere'a ''The
Tempeat " An outer ~
,,,...,,, ii ~ to
loc:llte a ptof-wfMI hM
'-' IMnO tor • number of
~onadla~l~of
the lutura.
2:00 CH)*• "llanadu" (tOIOI
OIMe NewtOft..John, 0.-
Kelt)I. A young artllC. a
heavanty -and • ltnl.1-mental m itllonalre Join
forcel to open 141 a tuge
roller~ pelace 'PG' .., ··~"Rough <Alt" (1980).,..,,, ~. i.-
tey·Anne Down. A 8tttllfl
eoc:iaMt• ....... "' ln1eml-Uonel jeW thief out • at
retirement to help her Ilea!
$30,000,000 In dlamoncll.
'PG' ~ (%) **'Al "The 39 Stec-"
( 1978) John ....... D.wld
Warner. A man ~
I.he quarry of botll the
police and • MCr.i G'OUC>
of lorelgn agenll operllllng
In England wMn lie la
frwned for a asranoer'•
mlKder. 'PG'
1:30 G • • * "Afl(lell In The
Ou11tetd" (1951) Peul
OougtH. Janet Leigh.
Ce!Mllal torcea ....-the
Ptttat>utgll F'tf atea on en
unusual winning llttMk
(I) • * ~ "The Cat From I
Outer ~" ( 1979) Kart I
Berry. Sandy Duncan. An
e •tra1err11trlel tomcat
crull lend• on-'"· ·o·
4:00 .., • * "Hangar 18"
( 1980) o.rran Mc:Gavin.
Robert Vaughn ~
ers at a aacrat 00-.-1
lnalllllllon ln-llgat• the
~ of ... , ...... auci..
den oaetructoon 'PO'
CZ) ••• "The Uttil
Prince" ( 1974) Rk:hatd
Kltey. G-Wl!Olt An air·
tine pllot •trancled In the
daaerl e ncounter• a
strange lltt1a boy fl'om •
dl1t1nt pt1ne1 wllo ta
~tor Ille~ of
hlau~
.. CC) •• "Hawtt The
Steyer" (111811 J,ack
P•ance, John Tarry.
by Armstrong & Batluk
l ~v LOVE ¥1!l~~WP~:;;;hrau; I ~INGWTH r------., ~~
I ~FJt:!:i
~
NOWPLAYlNO
celTI ...
Edward's~ S40.7U4
ceau .....
Ellwlnfs Cinema Center 97f..414 t
a.~
&lwlld's ~ ~I ·steo --w.... 530-4401 -°""" .... 137.0340 1------1
·un PICTURE, BEST DIRECTOR
OPTlmYUll •••
NOTHING COllDS CLOSE.'*
-111,.._ ,._ .... , LA lll!ADD
Nobody leans on Sharky's Machine .
IC'.' I '"''~A
~?.1rll
..
'
Daily Pilat '
TUESDAY, OEC. 29, 1981
LEGALS
CLASSIFIED
C6
C7
Wichita St.
almost shocked
·by Titans. C2 .
Anteaters get licked ~y ASU
Special to the DaUy PUot
MILWA U KEE -Coach Bill
Mulli1an·s grand experiment proved to
be a fatal disaster here in the openina
round of the Milwaukee Classic Monday
night.
Mulligan's experiment centered
around 6·8 p ow er forward Ben'
McDonald. Tiie UC Irvine coach was
hopine McDonald would be able to
handle the duties at point guard.
Well, the experiment lasted exactly
five minutes, but that was enough to
help the Arizona State Sun Devils band
the Anteaters their first Joss of the
season, an 88·73 decision be fore
approximately 4,500 fans.
The defeat placed the Anteaters, 9·1,
into tonight's (5 o'clock > consolation
game against East Tennessee State, 3-4, a 96·84 loser to host Marquette.
Tonight's contest can be heard on
KWVE, FM·l08.
McDonald, a sophomore, never could
get into the now or his new position as
he turned the ball over four times in the
first five minutes.
The Sun Devils. 5·3. subsequently
built a 15 ·8 lead that was rarely
threatened.
"So far it hasn't worked," said a
disgusted Mulligan after the game of
the experiment. "I'm going to have to
re·evaluate what we're going to do
McDonald doesn't seem to have enough
confidence to play the position yet."
McDonald wasn't the Ant.eaters' only
problem, however. ASU, with a sagging
3·2 zone defense, held All·America
Kevin Magee to a season·low 16 points.
He went Into the game with a 30.2
average.
ll was Mulligan's anticipation or such
an occurrence which prompted ham to
try the experiment.
'·People are going to pack us all year
like that," explained Mulligan. "We're
going to see a ll types of (sagging)
defenses throughout the season." • McDonald and Rainer Wulf cut the gap
to 59·50. By moving McDonald to the point,
Mulligan was counting on h is
sophomore connecting on a few outside
shots which would relax the zone and
force it to come out. But that never
happened Monday nigbl a.a the open
shots were missed or not taken at all.
The Sun Devils, who essentially
played. the game with rive players (a
sixth came in during the last two
minutes>. got 22 points apiece from
Warren Everett and Paul Williams, and
21 each from Lafayette Lever and Walt
Stone.
The Anteaters were trailing 76·68
when Magee fouled out with 2:47 left to
play. UCI got as close as 78·73 with 1: 18
rem aining before the Sun Devils
outscored their opponent. 12·2, down the
stretch, including eight free throws.
"We played well between th e
lO·minute and 5·minute mark or the
second half, but then we let it go
again," said Mulligan. "They <the Sun
Devils) have some good athJ etes and
they were well prepared."
UC Irvine was l ed by R a ndy
Whieldon's 19 points. Magee had 13
rebounds to go with his 16 points.
The Sun Devils extended their lead to
35·22 late in the first half before settling
for a 42·32 advantage at halftlme.
The Sun Devils, who came into the
game shooting 45 percent as a team.
connected on 35 of 57 shots for a 61
percent showing, their best mark of the
season. NOT PLEASED Co(jth Alli
Mulligan W<t!-> not p(('l.ISl'U
\\1th tht• "a' hi~ Antcakr!-. pla~t·cl :\t11i1da~ night 1n
~1 1 I\\ ;H1k(•t·
ASU then increased its margin to
57 .44 before baskets by WhieJdon,
UCJ, on the other hand, shot only SI
perce2t (33 of 64). The Anteaters came
in wiUI a 62 percent figure.
Mesa gets a • tip
Strayer reveals how to beat Marina
By cuaT SEEDEN
Of ... D.itJ..._.S_
Costa Mesa Hlgh basketball coach Tim Parsel
says he doesn't punish a player who fails to show
up for a practice. Instead, he rewards those who
do show up.
So, when starting center John Strayer missed
a shoot around because of a s hort. excused
Christmas vacation. he found himself on the bench
when the Mustangs tangled with Marina Monday
night in the second round or the Orange Optimist
basketball Invitational.
STRAYER WASN'T ON the bench too long,
however. In fact he was on the court three minutes
into the game. He was also on the court in the final
14 seconds when he tipped in the winning basket
and added a free throw on the same play to give
the Mustangs a 52·50 victory over the Vikings at
Chapman College.
"He just missed a little practice time," noted
Parsel afte r the contest. "He wasn't being
punished. I just like to reward the guys who do
make tt to practice. They're all good kids,
though."
Strayer was pretty good Tuesday night. So
we re teammates Ke n Bardsley and Dave
Palm blade, among others.
PALMBIADE PUMPED home a game·high
17 points, Bardlsey added 12 a nd Strayer
converted bis clutch tip to send the Mustangs into
the championship semifinals of the 17th annual
tournament tonight (6) against a tough Lakewood
squad.
And the Mustangs have to be just a little bit
surprised they're still in the running for the
tourney championship.
Marina held a 50-49 lead with 40 seconds
remaining and the Vikings had the ball, yet they
couldn't boJd off the stubborn Mustangs.
thought we threw some good shots up there, but 1t
was just one of those things."
Palmblade, a 6·2 Ju nior, pumped home 11 of
his 17 points in the first half as the Mustangs held
a precarious 29·27 advantage
Manna forged ahead early in the third quarter
behind four points by 6·0 point guard Scott Filipek.
In other Orange tournament action.
Mater Del 60, Foothill 45
Coach Bill Alexander's Monarchs didn't let the
high.scoring duo of Rich Thomas and Brian
Bailard scare them off. and the result was a ticket
into tonight's championship semifinal game with
Orange (8J.
Thomas was held to 24 points by the
Monarchs, while Bailard, who scored 50 points in
his last outing, managed just seven Monday night
for the Knights
"We pretty much dominated them on the
boards tonight," admitted Alexander. "I think that
really made the difference."
Fountain Valley 68, Hawthorne 62
All·league guard Jeff Hughes. who missed the
Barons· opening round defeat to Mater Oei,
recovered from the flu and responded with a
game-high 26 points in a consolation bracket
game.
Fountain Valley held a 36-32 halftime
advantage and expanded that margin to 50·45
after three periods The Barons also survived the
hot shooting of Hawthrone's senior guard Marvin
Epps who scored 23 points.
Estancia 57, Chaffey 51
The Eagles bounced back after suffering their
only defeat of the season Saturday <a S0-47 setback
to Servite>. as a tno of Eagles hit in double figures.
COVERED -Valencia High guard Brad
Xavier looks for a place to go as he is ·
closely defended by University's Yong Choi
during first round action of the Canyon
o.11, .............. ~ICM'Y
Classic basketball tournament Monday
night. University advanced to the second
round with a 59.44 victory over the Tigers
For story. see page C3.
Even when Costa Mesa's Jim Pelichowski
missed a short jump shot and the Vikings took
possession with 28 seconds remaining, Marina still
couldn't pull out a victory.
"WE JUST THREW the ball away twice."
conceded Marina Coach Steve Popovich. "I
Senior guard Jeff Gardner led Estancia with
17 points. forward Randy Tift chipped in 14 and
Chris Ma ydole added 10 The win improved
Estancia's record to 8·1.
Lakewood 67, Newport Harbor 57
The high.fl ying Lancers outscored the Sailors
20·8 in the second quarter and then held off a lat~
<See MUSTANGS, Page C3)
Razorbacks fall shor t • m fog
N orth Carolina holds on for Gator Bowl win
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. <APJ
-Shrouded in obscurity by a
dense fog and a potent North
Carolina offense in the second
half. Arkansas appeared ready
to hand the llth·ranked Tar
Heels an easy Gator Bowl
victory.
But the Razorbacks. led by
eternal optimist Lou Holtz,
s t aged a fourt h ·quarter
comeback and forced the North
Carolina defense to come up
with the key plays in a 31·27
victory.
"I'm sure a lot of people
thought the game was over early
in the fourth quarter, but I never
felt tbat way," Holtz said. "We
managed to recover an onside
kick and then .eot a lift from a
co•ple ol big pua plays.•·
Junior tailback Kelvin Bryant
rushed (or 148 yards on 27
carries and one touchdown,
while freshman Ethan Horton,
switched from quarterback to
tatlbact when Bryant and
backup Tyrone Anlh01'Y were
hurt in mld-seuon, ran for 14'
yard• and two scores on 27
carries.
Comblned with a l ·yard sneak'
by quarterback Rod Elkins,
North Carolina ran up a 31·10
lead with 7:29 left, enough to
bav~ s~nt some o f tbe
Raiorback faithful out into a
night so thick with fog that the
publlc addreaa anoounur
1u11eated that the offlclaJI
woufd 1wltcb rrom whistles to
fo1boma.
J;le\ wit.h Ute. aid of penalties
,and pa1111 by freshman
F-erbact Brad Taylor.
marched bac~ down
and te0rM with s~• n•alnllla oa a l·1ard nm bl 'Jeule Clark. A two.point
convers ion pass closed the
Razorback deficit to 31·18.
Bruce Lahay's ons ide kick
was recovered by Ed Jackson
and the Razorbacks parlayed
the strategy into a 7-yard
scoring pass from Taylor to
D arryl M aso ~ with 2 .44
remaining. Suddenly, the rout
was a contest at 31 ·25
"I was a little nervous."
Brya nt said, fearing that his
game·high performance would
come in a losing effort. "I'm
just glad the defense came
throufo?h in the clutch."
1# .......
WIODINO Bel.LS -Los A•lel~ Dod1ers pitchfftg sensation Fem ando -.iemuela Is saown wlth his flance.
Liada BUC'IOS, 19, sltOl1f alt~ .b• ttrrived • Merida.
Medco Monday. Valenzuela, t~alional LMctae's ty
Young and flookle of ~ \'nt, m arry th~ school
teacher today.
I
I
Artists' Berry h i ll • A l l-C IF lS
Senior receives All-CIF first team laurels
By ROGER CAR~N LB Adam Whitam, Claremont 6·2 190 Sr Of .. D..., ...... S_ LB Jimmy Baion. Rubidoux 6·3 215 Sr. Damon Berryhill. a one·man wrecking crew DB Robert Wolf. Rosemead 5·10 165 Sr at Laguna Beach High School, bas been chosen OB Billy Hart, Victor Va lley 6·1 170 Sr. for the AH ·CIF Division HI football team by the DB Jerome Tyler. Rubidoux 6·1 175 Sr First Interstate Bank foundation board. DB Vince Lopez. La Quinta 6·1 170 Sr. The 5·10, 190·pound senior, who was the key DB Mark Hodges, Arlington 5·11 158 Sr ingredient to the Artists' team as a running p Jerry Sepulveda, Schurr 5 11 175 Sr. back and linebacker, was named to the second
team defense as a linebacket.
Player of the year laurels go to Arlington Second Team Offense High's Ralph Wilson, an offensive lineman who
paved the way toward a 13·1 season. TE Dan Blanck, Laguna Hills 6·0 200 Sr.
Three players from Mission Viejo High's WR Mark Real, Montebello 5.9 155 Sr.
CIF Central Confe rence champions earned WR -George Thomas. Indio 5·10 150 Sr .
spots on the team, in addition to two Capistrano T Dave Cullity. La Serna 6·8 230 Sr .
Valley and one Laguna Hills athlete. T -Ted Haus, South Hills 6·1 210 Sr .
First team honors went to Mission Viejo's T -Scott Smith, Ganesha 6-3 220 Sr .
defensive tackle, Chris Gahagan, and tight end G -Augie Vega, Rubidoux 6·1 210 Sr .
Jack Kazmierowicz. c -Don Mitchell. Bellflower 6·1 210 Sr.
All-CIF Dlvldea 111 B John Carroll. Mi ssion Viejo 5.9 160 Sr.
FlntTeam oneue B -Tony Bell, Capistrano Valley5·10 180 Sr .
PM. Player, sellool Ht. Wt. Yr. B -Doug Stevens. Nogales 6·1 1T5 Sr.
TE-Jack Kazmierowica, MV 6-1 185 Sr. B -Kitrick Taylor. Pomona 6-0 170 Sr.
WR-Cornelius Reddick, Pius X 6-0 170 Sr. B Ricky Calhoun. North (Riv.) 5.S 176 Sr .
WR-Jan Cespedes. St, Genevieve 6-0 170 Jr. B -Frank Ortiz, Pius X 5.9 165 Sr .
T -Chris Bakke, Brea·OUnda 6·3 215 Sr. K -Dan Hilscher. St. Bernard 5.9 150 Sr.
T -Bruce Parka, Chaffey 6·6 260 Sr. .
G -Ralph WUson, Arlington 8·1 210 Sr.
G -Dan Sauter, Damien 8-3 240 Sr. Second Team Defense c -Greg MlchalJki, Norco 6·2 175 Sr. DL-Bela Lestar, Apple Valley 6·5 210 Sr. B -Al Walls. lndJo 5·10 160 Sr. DL-Joe Trajillo, Arlington 6·1 205 Jr. B -Brian Mullen, Ganesha 5·10 170 Jr. DL-Steve Holiday , Artesia 6·2 195 Sr. B -Sean Sterle, St. Genevieve 5·11 160 Jr . DL-Mike Hurley, Ran Alamitos 6-2 228 Sr. B -Allan J ackson, Rubidoux 5-11 185 Sr. DL-Ron Paulsen, Artesia 6·5 23.5 Sr . B -Tony McCord, Bellfiower 6·1 195 Sr. LB-Damoe BerryhUI, Lag Beaclll 5-11 ... Sr . B -Paul Jones, Claremont 5·11 1as Sr. LB-BUI Cudney, San Dimas 5·11 180 Sr. K -Max Zendejas, Don Luro 5·11 175 Sr. LB-Earl Betancourt, Rosemead 5-10 175 Sr. F.,... Tea• Defaee LB-Ken Kettler, Indio 5.9 155 Sr.
DL-nm O'Kfffe, St. Bernard 6·1 230 s,. LB-Thad Jefferson, Ontario 5·11 190 Sr.
DL-Art Cbavea, Schurr 6~2 180 Sr. DB-Martin Nolan, Los Amigos 5·10 165 Sr.
DL-Cb.r\1 Gaba1en, Miaslon Viejo W 230 Sr. DB-Jeff Mahlstede, Santa Ft 6-0 170 Sr.
DL-Steve Garten, Valencia 64 240 Sr. DB-Mucus Gloa1ow. San Dlmq 6·1 1as Sr .
DL-Jlm McC\a.Uoqb, Htmel 6_. 245 Sr. DB-Chris Stevena. Claremont S·ll 1as Sr.
t~Gerald Tat_.m, Ganelba 5·~ 1as fr: 0 Joe Martinea, Arroyo 5.9 150 Sr .
B-Nmt Kumpbreya, R'&al Ou 6·1 180 p -Jeff Wells, Claremont 6.0 200 Sr.
LB-Oeof_. Rosenb.um, ap Val 5-11 180 Sr. Player or the Veu: Wiison (Arllnaton).
\.
l
Fan hopes to erase
a bitter memory
From AP clls patcbes
HOUSTON Construction [i]
worker Preston Riley has a llllle c. t
more al stake in the playoffs than
most San Francisco 49ers fans -he's looking
tor a lilUe vicarious revenge
Riley. 34, who played three seasons as a
wide receiver with the 49ers in the early 70's,
left a piece of his heart in San Francisco when
he muffed an onside kick in a 1972 playoff game
with the Dallas Cowboys.
"The ball was on the g.-ound, s pinning
toward me, and I thought l had it in my hands,"
Riley said. "But it hit my shoulder pad . . . and
by the time I realized what had happened,
Dallas players we re all around the ball.
"After the game, I don't reme.mber what I
Bid. It was probably as bad as I've ever felt in
my life."
The Cowboys took advantage of that break
lo s core the winning touchdown.
Quote of the day
T ampa Ray Buccaa.e_ers ...head coach
John McKay : "Last week. on my TV talk
s how. l s aid to some fan. ·You don't know
foot ball from a banana.· The next day I
got a crate of bananas sent to m e. Next
wee k I'm going to tell som eone he doesn't
know football from a Mercedes."
Sikma's jumper wins it for Seattle
Center J ack Slkma's baseline m
jumper with 30 seconds left broke a
tie game and helped lift Seattle past
Golden State, 104-100, to highlight NBA action
Monday night. The victory was Seattle's ninth
straight at home, one s hy of the club record set
in 1979-80. Sikma and teammate Gus WUllams
s hared game scoring honors with 26 points each.
World Free led the Warriors with 25 points ...
Elsewhere, George Johnson led a fourth-quarter
rally with 11 points to lead Indiana to a 103·95
win over New Jersey . . Boston forward Larry
Bird, whose totals showed 59 pomts and 22
rebounds in two Celtic victories last week, was
named the NBA P layer of the Week.
Starr receives two-year .pact
GREEN BAY, Wis Co11ch [i]
Bart Storr. whose 0 reen Bay •• t
Packers won 111x or their last elaht
National Footbftll Lea1&ue iiames this seuon.
wu!.i given a new two.year contract Monday,
ending speculation that he m ight be fired
Judl(e Robert J . Parlns. the P11ckers' chlt'f
executive olflcer, uid the club's seven-member
executive committee unanJmously decided on
the new pact at'ter carefully weighing both
failures and the rece nt successes of Starr's
reglmf'.
The Packers flnished the 1981 season 8·8 as
the result or the second-half turnaround afte r a
2·6 start 'They missed the NFL playotrs by a
game when they lost 28·3 to the New York J ets
in the regular-season finale Dec. 20. Starr's
record in seven years as couch is 39·65·2.
l Propp propels Flyers past Calgary
Left wing Brian Propp scored ~
three goals while Ken Unesman and '
Behn Wiison each added a pair to
powe r Philade lphia to a 7·4 victory over
Calgary to hi~hlight NHL action Monday night
. . In the only other game played, Minnesota
overcame a two-goal deficit on third-period
goals by Brad Maxwell and Al MacAdam lo tie
visiting Colorado, 4·4 ... Wayne Gretzky, the
center for Edmonton who appears ready lo
make a shambles or the NHL scoring records,
was na med the NHL Player of the Week. It was
the second week in a row and the fourth time
that Gretzky has won the award. ln the Oilers'
last two games he has scored five goals and had
four assists.
Blue Jays get Powell from Twins
The Toronto Blue Jays acquired •
outfielder llosken Powell from the
M 1nnt•sota Tw i n s Mo n da y cind
shipped minor lea gue pitcher Paul Mirabella to
the Chicago Cubs . To get Powell , the Blue Jays
agreed to give the Twins a player to be named
later . In the Mirabella trade, the Blue Jays will
receive a player to be named later A touch
or Lhc flu has slowed-aown Heisman Trophy
winner Marcus Allen during USC's first few
practit•t• sessions for the Fiesta llowl.
Television. radio
TV: Basket ball St John's U.S. Villanova
in the ECAC Holiday fest ival, taped at Madison
Sc1ua n • Gardt•n in New York. II pm . Channel
9. M:.iryland v!> CCI.A. taped at l..os Angele!>,
11 30 p m . Channel 2.
RADIO: UC Irvine vs. East Te nnessee Stale
at Milwaukee Classic, S p.m , KWVE (108 FM>.
Maryland at UCLA, 8:30 p.m., KMPC '710). Cal
State c F'ullerton 1 vs North Carolin<i St an the
R ainbm' Cla,s1t', 4 30 p m .. KWH'M t 15801
Utah at LakL•r .... 7 20pm.Kl.AC15701
HB, Vikings, Mesa win
Chargers, Eagles suffer one-point losses in girls basketball
There's a definite Sunset League fl avor to the
semifinals of the Marina High girls basketball
tournament as Huntington Beach and hos t Marina
both notched victories Monday night. Only Edison
railed to make it a complete s weep as the
Chargers lost a narrow decision to Foothill.
Costa Mesa. meanwhile. advanced to the
s econd round o r the Estancia tournament,
although the host Eagles s uffered a tough
overtime loss to Pius X.
Here's what lrappened.
Huntl~on Beech 42, lrvlne 35
Seruor Tammy Buckels scored 16 points and
teammate Betty Mendoza added eight points and
13 rebounds as t he Oilers used a second quarter
spurt to down the Va queros
After a s low s tart which saw both teams
score only seven first-quarter points. the Oilers
outscored their opponent, 18-8, during the next
e ight-minute stanza to grab the lead for good.
.. Both teams played rather poorly an the first
half," admitted Huntington Beach Coach Joanne
Kellogg. "We played better in the second.
"We couldn't get much going after that
although we won."
Irvine was led by Kim Oden's 16 points.
Huntington Beach will meet Foothill in one of
the semifinal games (6 p.m. l at Marina High.
' Merine 51 , Ocean Vie· J8
The host Vikings ". participate in the other
semifinal contes t against Fountain Valley <7:45
p.m .) thanks to s ome fine play from senior center
Yvette Howard and a tenacious defense which
a llowed the Seahawks only one point in the second
quarter.
H oward scored a game-high 18 points and
grabbed 10 rebounds as the Vikings turned a
six-point first quarter deficit into a seven-point
halftime advantage.
Teammate Sandy Corbett, a junior guard.
added 14 points, while Arlene Anderson had only
t wo points. but contributed 11 rebounds.
Foothill 44. Edison 43
The Chargers. 7-3, let a lS·point first quarter
lead slip away as the Knights avenged a 17-point
dereat handed to them by Edjson last week.
"We started out strong, but we kinda relaxed a
little and they came out strong in the second half,"
summed up losing Coach Dave White. "Foothlll
outplayed us in the second half. They deserved it."
Edison, whic h still led by 13 at the ball. was
outscored 28·14 during the final two quarters of
play.
Foothill, 7·2. was led by Ann Dean's 21 points.
Pruitt to leave UCLA
l"OS ANGELES (AP) -UCLA Coach Larry
Farmer announced Mondoy tbat junior forward
Cliff Pruitt had left the Bruins' basketball team
"for personal reasons."
tn making the announcement, Farmer said
Pruht'• leaving "was not as 1 result of any
personality confiict, but rather tbe forward's bellef
that hll career would be enhanced by a transfer to
anoLbu school.·• Pna1U. a 8-1, t8C).poundt r, started tbe final 11
11me1 ol the 1980-31 season. White playln1 ln 27
camn a year ago. be averaaed 8.9 polnu and 4.2
re,bounda.
Tbe year before, 11 a freshman, Pruitt
averqed 1.2 point. and 3.0 rebounds while playinc
lD 31 came1 fOT lbe Bruins. . Pruitt wu lneUclble for the lint four 11mes of
U..e year and didn't pl11 ln UCtA's mo.t recent
ouUD1. aa 81-1e victory over Louisiana State al th~
Ne,r Orleal Supe.rdome lut Wednesctay DilJlt.
The Chargers got 20 points from senior Tina
Oen II eyer
Costa Mesa 48, Rowland 42
The Mustangs hammered Rowland on the
boards to post their fourth win in rive outings
Senior Nor a Seager had 13 points and 20
rebounds , Angie ·Garc ia, Shelly Neal ar.d Nance
Lux all ha uled in 10 rebounds each
Over a ll. Costa Mesa out-r e bounded its
opponent. 66·28.
Plus X SS, Estancia 53
T he Eagles couldn't hang on to a nine-point
fou rth quarter le ad as Yvette Perrodin scored 10 of
her game-high 19 poi nts to tie the game at 49-all in
regula tion
The Eagles, 4·2. had a chance to win the game
with nine seconds remaining but couldn't get a
s hot off.
In overt ime. P ius X Jumped out to a quick
four-point lead before Estancia closed the gap in
the final seconds . Again, the Eagles had a chance
to score in the waning moments as Pius X missed
the front end of a one-plus-one with six seconds to
play. but they couldn't gel a good shot at the
ba s ket.
Debbie Hughes led the Eagles with 18 points.
while teammate Amy Hathcoc~ added 16
Basketball scores
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TOUlllNAMIENTS "'"'"-S-UAN
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~Del s:a. 0... .,1111 .. ....... "'"' .... , .... ...,. .... .,.._«I ,. ...... .._.tac••
•
Near-shocking outcome
Wichita St . barely survives Cal St . Fullerton scare
•'rom AP dlspatc:heit
HONOLULU Tony Martin converted rour
The Ben,aals made 62 percenl ot tht.l.r field
aoal utlempt.s compared to only l'7 for UM 4ten.
rrce throws ln the Clnal 24 seconds to prHerve No.
2 ranked Wichita Slate's lead as the Shockera
de fealtl<i Cal State Fullerton, 70·67, in an openlna
round game or the 18th annual Rainbow Classic
Monduy night.
North CuoHne se, Penn St. 50
SANTA CLARA -Center Sam Perklna bit two
free throws In the last 11ix secondl lo five the
top-ranked North Carolina Tar Heeb a bard ro~1hl
56·50 overtime victory over PeM Slate In Ult Cable
Car Classic. The ll~htly regarded but touah Titans 1ave the
undef eat ed S hocke r s a scare be fore being
subdued The undefe ated Tar Heela, led by hl&h·scorer
Perkins with 23 points and six rebounds, held off 1
strong defe ns ive e ffort by Penn State and
outscored the Lions 8·2 in overt.lme.
With Tony Ma rtin, Aubrey Sherrod and
Antoine Carr each scoring six points, the Shockers
fo rged a 32·26 halftime le11d and increased It to 14
points after five minutes or the second half. Penn State, bringing North Carolina as near to
defeat as the Tar Hefti!, have been lhJe seuoo, was
led by Mike Edelman with 10 points. Ctnter Mike
Lane had four points and nine rebounds.
But the Titans failed to fold and behind the
::.coring erforts or Ricky Mixon, who had 20 points,
anti Leon Wood a nd Tony Neal who had 18 points
each. Fullerton pulled lo within two points on a
Mixon Jumper with I :52 remaining
The Lions' Cr<1 i1it Hurrie scored a 12·foot
baseline jumper with seven seconds remainln1 In
regulation time to knot the score at 48.
Mluourl 65, USC 58
LOS ANGELES Center Steve Stipanovicb Montana 64, UC Santa Barbera 61 scored IS pomts and grabbed eight rebounds,
ll•ciding a ba l<i nced Missouri attack as the
seventh r anke d Tige rs downed host Southern
California 65·58 in the championship game of the
Winston Tire lloliday Tournament.
SANTA BARBARA -Forward Derrick Pope
scored 26 points and grabbed nine rebounds,
le ading Montana to a 6"·61 non-conference victory
over UC Santa Barbara.
Pope, a 6·7 junior. made 11 of his 13 field 1oal '
atte mpts as the GriziHes raised their record to 6-5. Guard J on Sundvold , who was selected as the
tournament's m ost valuable player, added 14
points and had six rebounds for the Tigers, who
raised their record to 8·0.
Guard Doug Selvig added 12 points for
Montana , making six or his seven field goal
atte mpts The Grizzlies made a season-high 66.0
pe rcent of their rtoor shots . Forward Ricky Fra zier. who was ejected from
the game with fi ve seconds remaining in the first
half for throwan~ a punch at one of the Trojans,
added 12 points for Missouri. f
Center Richard Anderson paced UCSB, which
fell to 3·7, with 19 points and seven rebounds.
Forward Wayne Davis and guard Michael Russell
added 17 and 14 points. respectively , for the
Gauchos.
Fresno St. 48, New Mexico St. 41
FRESNO Fresno State hit seven of 11 free
throws in the final 1 42 Monday to defeat New
Mexico State, 48-41, in a non-conference game. VIiianova 63, Indiana 59
NEW YORK Aaron Howard hH a jumper to Bobby Da vis had 15 points, 13 of them in the
second half. and Rod Higgins added 11 points and
seven rebounds for Fresno J aime Pena's 13 points
were high for the Aggies.
snap a 59·59 tie, and .Ste wart Granger polished off
V1llanova's stunning upset with a slam dunk as the
Wild cats defeated 11th-ranked Indiana. 63·59, in
the firs t round of the E CAC Holiday Festival. The game wa.s tied seven times and the lead
changC'!I hand:. l'l~ht times but the Bulldogs'
tight-fisted defense allowed the Aggies only two
points in lhe fi na l three minutes as the free throws
gave Fresno a winning m a rgin.
Villanova, 19th·ranked nationally, will meet
St. J ohn's tonight for the tournament title. St.
J ohn's edged Ka ns as 76-75 in the opening game.
Afte r Howard's j ump shot broke the tie,
Villa nova chewed up m ore than l lh minutes with a
delayed, four-corne r s pread offense. But the
Wildcats nearly let it s lip away with poor foul
shooting
Idaho St. 79, Long Beach St. 72
POCATELLO, ldaho -Senior guard Robert
Tate hit his first nine shots of the game en route to
a 29 point performance as he led Idaho State to a
79 72 non-conference victory over Long Beach
State.
Tht· "111 wai. ISL:':. eighth an 10 games, giving
tht.• OC'n~<ils of the Big Sky conference their best
start since 1974. whe n they were 7·2 in their first
nt nc outings.
.John Pinone. Gary McLain and Granger each
missed the first shot of one-and-0ne rree throws
down the ~tretch. and Indiana had a final chance
to tie with 15 seconds left.
Lon2 Beach State of the PCAA dropped to 2·6.
An aµpare nt game-tying basket by Steve
Bouchie was n ullified, however, when ofricials
ruled that Indiana guard Randy Wittman had
stl'!pped on the e nd line before passing to Bouchie.
WINNERS Har r ~ L t'1gh
1abon·•. 111 Ed1:-.on High s
h n ' s l l' a m J rHI .J o a 1111 t •
Kl'ilnf.!).! ot till' lluntinglon
lk ~· C' h g 1 r I:-. :-. q 11 .1 cl . '' t· n ·
1>01 h w1 nrwr~ '.\loncl a~
Chargers win, but
LB, Gauchos lose
Edison High didn't need any
ru c k w h e n t h e C h a r g e r
bas k etball team crossed the
border into Nevada Monday, but
Saddleback College could use a
little luck thes e days.
The Chargers routed host
Carson City 74-48 Monday night
in the first round or the Carson
City Classic and will now tangle
with Reed High tonight at 8·30.
Meanwhile, on the community
college front, Saddlebac k. hurt
by the absence of two key
starters, was routed by Santa
Monica CC 83·66 in first -round
action of the Santa Ana Holiday
Tournament.
In another high school game,
La~una Beach was stopped by
Notre Dame or Sherman 03.ks
70·60 in the first round or the
Villa Park Tournament.
At C ar son C ity , Ri c k
DiBernardo scored 21 points and
added nine rebounds, and Mark
Goudge c hipped in with 20 points
as the Chargers had little
difficult with an outclassed
Carson City squad.
Tim Smith scored just three
points for the Chargers, but be
dished off 10 assis ts, while Chris
Millard cam~ off the bench to
score 14 points
The Chargers Jumped out to a
44 · 16 halftime advantage and it
was clear sailing the rest of the
way
In a no the r hi g h s chool
tourna m e nt game, Laguna
Bea c h High s aw its overall
record drop to 6·5 after t he
Artists were handed a setback
by Notre Dame.
Ne il Riddell pumped home 35
points for the Artists. but the
rest of his te ammates could
muster j us t 15 points. 10 coming
from 6·2 forward Rudy Dvorak.
The Artists were down by just
three points early in the fourth
q uarte r , but the Knights
connected on 10 of 14 free t hrows
in that period to put lhe game
out of reach
College football JOHNSON & SON
Presents ...
COLLEGE BOWL ROUNDUP
Independence Bowl
IOK. lht Mlnve,.rt, u I
Garden State Bowl
IDK U •l IEHI 111-w•. Iii J I
Holldey Bowl ( o.c 11 .. s.i 0'-1
8 YU • WetNl>Qlon !>I lt
California Bowl
I OM. 1' .. ,,_,
Toled011, S.n Jo.. SC lS
Tangerine Bowl
COM. tf•OoteMe. "IA.I
M is-I tt , So<ll-n MIU IMIPOi II
Bl11 ... 0tey Game
(Of(, tUI MMltee-r)', Ale.I 81v•21,Garyt
Sun Bowl
tOec. It ft II "••I 0 11 l•llOIN .0, Hou~ton IA
Gator Bowl
fOK .• ,.JK-•lli.I Hortll (MOllM ll Ar~an"' 17
Uberty Bowl 1o.c ................. ,
Ohio State t•l·OI vs. Nevy (7·J II.
,...,,.. .. '' .. j ......
tt.11 of ,.,,,. Bowl
(0.C. J1 .............. 111, Me.I
Mh slnl"I Sl•I• '1·•., ... 1t ......
t•Ml,o-ttet lla.m
Peach Bowl
(OM JI .. AtlMt.I
Wot Vlr91nt• ••Ml ., FIOrtO.I 17 ~I.
CIWlnntl t .i ._,,
Btu.bonnet Bowl
(OK.Jt•H-•1 UCL .. 11 >II Yl Ml<lllQ•n II ) 01
Cll•nn•t • '' Sp m
Cotton Bowl
IJM.t•Oellttl
Alebeme ( .. I II ¥1. Teut (t.t ti, CIWI,,,...
Z•I ti •.m.
~eta Bowl
(JM.' .. "-"4•1 use tf.2.01,,, "-M s1.1e 1 .. 1.01, c1w1,,,..1
••I 1o·aoe.m
RoM80wl (_, .. ,.....,..,
10.,a ll·l •Ol ••· ~eSllll\Olon I' t.01,
,,,.,,,..,, .. t P m.
Oran• 8owt 1.-. t .. Ml-i, Pie.I
H•brHlle 1 .. 1.0) "'· Ci.mtOft lllM>,
CMMet4et Sp m
Sugarlowt (JM,, ...... ~,
Georola '"'"°' "' l'ltttlKI..., 110-1-01. c,,.,,...,, .. Spm.
EHt·WHI Shrine Oeme (,,_t .... ll .. All&I
(Ht Alt·•'-",,_ ~I All•\!..-&, CM .....
1•1-
Hula lowt ,,,.,, .. __.,
£Ht All-41en ,,_ W.it All·tl-a.-, ........ .
Pete the "Greek'~
NFL's
Pic.k8 Of
The Week
SATUIDAY
Mall aa .. C •f .. ettee w.. ....
,~..,
~c fww• ...... .... =•v .,.. ..... .....
M.Y .......
'•n4i=• C1 hrw•
CIK ...... .... .....
New Parts J)epartment Hour
Now Open 8:00 am • 1:00 pm Saturdays
JOHNSON&SON
L 1 ~ L N
2626 Harbor BouJ~~a.rd.
M E R C U
oat.a Meaa (714) 54().;6630
R y
-
r.----------------------------
NBA
WUTERN COH .. EllENCE l'aclfl( DM,i..,
LMlfft S.allla
Golci.n Sl•I•
Porll•M p.....,,,,~
S.l\DI-
W L '°<l. u ' ,., 01
,, • "'' J•, 1• II SU Sir,
16 ll S9l S' I • IS
16 11 Sii
6 20 '31
Mle,....1 01•1> ....
S.l\Anlonlo
O.nv•r
Ho11n011
K•nsatClly
Ulal\ o.11u
11 ' •S.0 u ,. ... • ..
,, 16 •2~ •
tO II JIO I •• tO 11 )10 , ....
6 u ,,. 11
£ASTERN CONl'ftENCE
AU..,llC: Dl•ltlofl Bos Ion
PllllaMlphia
New York
WHl\11\Qlon
New Jeney
)t ,,.
10 6 169 ,, .. ,, ... , ,,,., IJ 11 ....
11 tS O J
10 11 lSI c ... tral Dl•ltlon
Mllwauloee
IMl•na
Del roll
Atlanta
Cllluoo Clevel•lld
1q •
16 I]
IS
tS
11
11
tJ
11
" • _.,.,k_
lll<ll•na 103, N•w JerH• •s
S.atu• Hl4, Golden Stale 100
Tenl9"''' GA<ftft Ulall •1 l.Mltn
MllweukM otl lna>•"a
Detroit •t Wa>hlnoton ~" Dle90•1 ~n Antoni()
N•w York •1 Cn1c-
Kensa~C11y al Dalla•
All•nla al Hov\lon
8oslol\ •I ~•tr
Pllll•dell>'lf• at Got~n Sl<11e
704
SSl • ._... &'fa
0 ) 11,
•14 I
)'U I]'>
COLLEGE
Arizona St. 88, UCI 73
UC lllVINI Tllornton 4, Wulf 14
M•OH 14. M<Donaio 10. W111e1oon " 8arltey2,JOIW>son6. Fulle'1 IOI•" )JI 11 I].
ARIZONA STATE Slone 21. Everttt n
l.ever 71, Wiiiiams 12 HOlltO.ty l De1nu O
Total• »• .. n•
Halltlme· Ari10N S1a1t, '1 31
Totel fouls UC 1rv1,,. 10 Arllona Slale
14; l'ouleO out M•~•• IUC tr••nel Tecllnlca ls. M•Off IUC lrvlftt) SION'
I Ar Iron• Sletel
AP top 20
Tnt ToP r....,.,. 1Hm\ on Th~ A•W>C••llHI
Pr .. , ColltOt b<>•'tlball poll w1111 flrst-OI~~ VOff'\ In P•rtnU'lif'~~ W41\0tt \
recoro ancl tolal "'""''
1 NorlllCMol1nal50J
2 Wlc1llU1 SI 111
l lllrgl11141
4 KMluCky s Ar,anW$' 1)
6. S•n F ranets<O
1 M 1uourt
I De PM11 '· '"""-. 10 lo• .. 11 lnOIMW
12. Al•b.tma
U Tul ..
1•. LOV1'vlll•
IS. Ort90nSI
16 UCLA
11 Georgetown DC
II Houjlon
19. V1l1anov•
20 Norlll Carolina SI
6-0 I.OH
10 ...
1 0 •SI
6 1 °' 1-0 I ..
100 ns
I 0 ...
1 t ~
S t S50
6 1 UI
o 1 SOI
'0 4'J
I I .. ,
'' m 6 t )l.J s 1 361 8, ,..
11 IU
I t 101
I 0 SI
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Santa Monica 83, Saddleback 66
SANTA MC*ICA Can I , Gerrwn 6,
HOOOff 11, J.c,_, 4. Wa.-. 20, WM•tle l.
RICll IS, w-. Totals. JO 2H6 ll
SADDLEBACK Ground 1 OutQ~• •
Hiii 20, Reio 14, FU!IC ....... w 1snl'!W$01 ••
11..0 S, Doyle• Total• 76 1-.216t
Halltlme: Sant• Moniu, '.ll·lO
To••I t~\. S,.nla MOl\t(d tff S~le-Ga<•
I', Fouled 0111 GrounO IS•OOl•bacltl,
Gerren tS.111a Monica>. Jachon 1Sanl•
Monie •I; Tecllnl<•I• SadOlt.,.ck bencll
From Page C1
HIGH SCHOOL
Uni St, Valene!• 44
UNIVlallTY Ratclltf• 2. M•Y•r> 10, C~ I, llouw 1' )lolr9f1 4, Own U Ttlla1'
hi US'
VAl.INCIA J•n .... 1. Cllambert •
Xa•l•r It, H...,y •, l(ri...r J, l\ti.ill•• J'. ~rby 4 TOlal• 1'6 1H4 w ... .,.o.. .....
UnlYtr>ll'I' 1J 14 I• ,._,.
Valtn<I• 6 6 I• ,._..
tolal l'ou1' Uniw•r\lly I•. Valen( la 10
CypreH 511, lrvlne 37
IMVINI Ake" 10, JOl\I\\ 6, NNI J. u,,.,, •. CM••r •. eui.r •. &•0•0•1(11 t T ol•I• 11 1 It l1
CYl'lllU AIYl11ar !, S<ll11t~r 4,
Smltllw• •. Field> •. ,...,,"° t R-r• ••
G•lloway 1, Tllbbo 4, Mofr•I >. 5,....,_, ~.
Hartnon2 lotal> UU}Jj9
S<-bY0...m l"t
lrvlnt • • • 11 ,,
C YPrtU 11 14 14 lt-M
To1a1 "°"'' 1rv1ne to, C'l'Prt'-> 11, l'oui.ct 0..1 Aker~ C lrvl11t1
Notre Dame 60, lag. Beach 50
NOTal DAMI -Erick_, 1, J•Oton 10,
Morrow t, Suppa It, T •m1>er9 12, Ol•on 1,
Gorham t, Ill•-10 l(ordek 4, TroulOlte s To1•" n ,._,,"°
LAGUNA IEACH RklOell JS, 5'IOt1 J,
Dvorak 10, Wlklrue> o. Fortune 1. Hot>lfl 0,
McGralllO, MAN>O TOlals. 111 11 SO
Seen by °"9""" Noire oa.... I] IS 11 11....0
Lavun• 8HCll " lj 11 ll-so
T 01•1 lovl• Noire Da"'4t II, Lavuna tit.ell
II. t Kllnlcal IOVI S"°'1 c L•euna 8•acn1
Edison 74, Ceraon City 48
E DISOH Slepnen, 10. Gou09e t 1, Smlllt
3, Luvey S. Dl811naroo >t, Milla rd 14,
BlnHlllO, Fabl•nO Tot•I• lll IS 14
CARSOtl CITY Oooleo 2. S.va1111 Grat
o 8utlt'r • JO'"''°'' l p,,.,1.-v n Berfte,
10, Dlelllell t tOl•I•,, ....
Sc-by °"""•"' EO•>on 7J 11 1' U 14
c .,,on City 10 • 1l 1'--41
Tot•• foul• Ealson ll, '"""' City IS
Foutt>tJ oul 0dtnf''\ t(tH\On cuv•
Trchn11 Jt •uuh Fdb1ftn tCar~on (1tyt
Costa Mesa 52, Marina SO MAllllNA Filipek 10 Berry ti ~Ill\
1• l(lu•SINM\ 4. Cl•Om1' It Tolal\ lO t0-11
)0
CO STA MES A Baro•••• "·
P•lt< nows~llO P•lmblacM II. Str•v•r •. Rt>Mbar~r . G Flt•a o. J FltlO 0 Total•
111 I H
$cort llY O....rta"
M•r1n• 1l 14 ti 12 SO
C0'1• Mew .. IS 12 11-S1
I 0111 fOVI\ Marti\• •. C<KI• M•sa "
Sanla Clara 63, Dana Hills 47
SANTA CL.\RA Tnoma • 27.
Cv1j4nov1<1t 0 800 1'. rorrn S, Maqellann
• OrJP\u!t • ~"'• • P•rlli\ • H•r1 l. LautMc rwr o lot••• 2• 1\.11 •l
DANA Hll.LS AtntroP I S14PlttOll I .
Rr.orer l Sw•rht>auQh tO, P1vtov1cri •,
Sct\wtnc" 11 ~.,,., t Ve;rbe<9'. 1 Tot•I' t•
9 11 .,
kort by OW rte"
Santi <:11r1 tO 11 It 1' 63
D•llA H 11" ~ 9 9 1l ... 1
Tol•r tout\ ~nta C••r• U O•n• Hiit\ 1'
Ft. Valley 68, Hawthorne 62
"AWTHO•NE Ccxw 6, H•ne• 10. El>O\
ll. Bu9\by S Brao•oro 7 H•rr•~ 11. Paoan •
TOl61\ 1610146'
FOUNTAIN VALLEY Ko.iy '· li•rter
,. J•<ob\ • V111•n~"'" 10 Huohe\ 1•.
Wh•l•n•1r 8 8rown 7. Kubo ) Tot•I\ 18
IJ 16 61
Sore llf OU.Ort•" Hawtnorno 14 11 tJ 11 -67
Fovnt•tn v.11~.,. ti 11 I• 11 .e
1 ol•' tou•t. t-i•wthorne l•, Fount•tn
v.11,., ,.. Fou .... cJ Out Coo• l H•wlhof'MJ,
'"4uqru1·~ t Fount•1n V•llP'¥J
Estancia 57, Chaffey 51
C"Al'll'EY l'orl It Htlbert t1 .AO.mo
14 l ~mllh 4, S.nOQul" •, Co• • C•rlc n 1
Tol•I• 1l S'6 SI
ESTANCIA l(ral\• o, G.,Ontr 11.
MOOOlt 10 MIOl•lld I . Tiit 14. M<C.11111 7
Tolal\ ,. 15-11 SI
$<.,. by °"""•" (nallt y 16 16 10 t SI
Eilene•• 11 I• I ,. 57
Tol•I lovl• CNll•Y It E\~ncl• 9
Lakewood 67. Newport 57
fllEWPOllT HAll8011 Ball 75. S.•Qtr l
Llnu •· P•llet1er t. folk o S.tby • Br•ncll I
Tol•I> H 1110SI
LA I( E WOOD Murpny 1J Po" J
Corbitt ti B.,,., I), Ntel>en u . w 1111am_,
~ O'Or1rn l Tolal• 7~ ti 7H I
$cert"' Ouar1•" N~"P0'1 Harbor 14 t 11 11 H
I a'•wood 10 10 10 II •1 Tolel loul• Newl>Or1 Harbor t~. Lehwooo
11
MUSTANGS TOP VIKINGS e
Meler Oel eo, Foothlll 45
llOOT"ll.l. ll•ll•rO I, 011ltha< •. CiOf• J, L.u \, ~IYW••lt l , ,.....,.,., J4 lol•I• IS uno
M ATI• D&I Coe-1 h fOtll H
JeOMn I, 0..-.-rt U. J .... r I , l'tr•lll•
I I ltkMf O, Sou .. t, Ma9>1llana\ t No ... 111
0, M..,11"-' 0 Total' H 111060
k-bYO.""" feot"111 11 10 11 U A)
Atleltr D•I 14 .. t) I>-60
To1tl IOU1• 'OOlllOI .. M•ltt 0.1 JO
HIGH SCHOOL WOMEN Huntington Beach 42, Irvine 35
t•VINI Sl•Hll\All S MO<\ .. 4, 00.n 16,
Pr11el1 J, Tf.,,,mell 4. !Sower I. , ''"" O. RolllniOfl 0 Tot•1' 14 HI,,
HUNTINOTOH l l ACH Ca tt 6 C-•
4, M•ndOt• e. lluO.tl• 16, Cllnll.el\bearO •·
Coroo .. o Town"""' o Total\ ,. , '' 41
le-.. , °"•"•" lrvll\e I 9 t U U
H11nt11\@lon Bta<ll I 11 • 11 41
Tolal '°"'' lrYCM It HUl\t111111on 8ta(ll " Cott• MeH 48. Rowland 42
ROWLAND O•rl•l'I' It, Gon1,lt> U,
Chaney•. 5<0110 1, Brook• •, IC ••PP o, P1yne 1, Stnlll\ 0 Tolal• 116 11 •1
COSTA MCM L.,• I, L•m•• I, NHI 0
s.av•• IJ, G•r<la ), Arm•ncJ•rlr •• M(Al-o. lll•l1t~r9111 10 Tol•I• 11 6 1S 41. S<..-...., 0..•r1•n
Rowla""' 11 10 tO 10 41 C~la MeMI 14 10 14 10 -411
Tot'1 foul\ Rowlaoo 11, Co>I• Mew 1) icoo~~~d~~I Sc 0110 t RowlanOI, Stao-r
Plus X 55, Estancia 53
"IUS X l(u•lw 10 P•r1'.er 9 Ptrrootn
1'. Dully 6, Wtngen • Foo1nC1,..l•r ) 1 ot•I\
11 lt-11 S>
l.STANCIA lbu\111 4, Ca•penler S,
V•lcMr O. ~IOll-I. ~CMllllan O. Scol•• O
CllrlUman 1 H•lhcoo 1' t-tuone\ 11
lot al• n 9·1H3
$<-by°"'"""" Plu> X 4 I) 9 21 4 U
E•t•nc•• 1• 11 10 11 • "
lole l I0\11\ P1u> X t•. Etlancta H. Foule<I
ou1 Hollano C E\l•ncl•l. Mac Miiiian
IE>ttn<lal, Kuslle (Plu• XI
Foothill 44, Edl1on 43
l'OOT"ll.l. B•IOdeau 9, Ow••, 0.Atl
11, Doanll• 2 J Owr t Tolal• " 10 H 44
EDISON M.ru&>lla •. TrtOI • Tana~ 9
0.nHeyer 20, Bitt,..r • UchuorK> J t ot111I\
11 1 l •l
ScwebyO....rltr>
FOOllt•ll • 11 11 9 44
EdlM>n 19 10 10 • -4J
Toltl lovl\ Foolhlll S, EOl\Gn ti Fovle<I
®t M. •UOI<• I Edl•onl
Marina 51 , Ocean View 38
OCEAN VIEW Webb 11 C,1116. Stm•t..8,
W"11~1.CllaW') lol•I\ 16• tS'.11
MA• INA Sm•llwoOO 1 Lontd 17
HO•••O 11. W bell 14 LO'l't • .A~rM>n 2
Arm"ron(IO Total> 1) SI SI
Scare llV O...rton
Ocun \/1tw 1~ 1 11 tO •
M•ttn• 9 14 18 10 )t
•
fot•I foul\-Oce•n Vutw 10 M•tin• u
GATOR BOWL
N Carolina 31 , Arkansas 27 score by o ... ,,.,,
Ar111:anw\
Nor lh Caro1tno15 ' J 0 11 2•
J I I• I JI
UNC FG 8 <1rw"' JI
A t • HOUOW;ty .f) O•\'\ trom
11.•llO,IC•I
UN( 8rv4lnt t run f Httyf'l\..,.•t "1
Ar~ FG L•MV 11
UNC tio11on' run •H•YP'\ •t<kl
U N( e-1 .. 1n\ t run (H•Vtt\.,.c•q
UNC. Hor1on f run f Hil'YI'\ • tt Id
At i-. t.t•r-J run •l'"'" Ott\\
l•'flOJ I
l•Om
Ark ~\On W PA\\ ftom r-..,tor (Ldhd'f'
••OI
Ar~ w••tv f Nn,.,n l ..ttohn• oun1 ... , H•Y~
aetiber••••v r~ CNt 01 ,.NJ tOf'W"t
A 11,00'I
... ~ UNC
f .rst Gown' ,. 1t Ru\ht'\·<;MO\ JR 89 '5 ltl
P •\\tnc) Y.,.Q\, )01 SJ
Atturn v..trch )6 • p .. , ... , 14 ~I ' 1'-0 s • .-. by I I> I ti
Punh ~ )(> .... ,
FutnblH-to\1 , t J'
PtnAlft•,,.Y•tO\ l •• 1-S\
T 1m"' ot P~~uton l• s. Hiit
1.W1Yi41owl Slatl\llC.
R USHING Ar•"n\a\ (t•" 10 -40
TolOPrt S 21 Af'\Otrwr, 1 ti North (Mol1A.1t
Bry•,.121141, HO<I"" 7/ , ..
PA'>SING Ark .. M.lS lawlor U ~I J07
Norlll C•rOllNI. e i.in, 1 11-0 ~J
R(CEIVING A••<tn\<O\ Ano-'"'" ~8~
Hollowway .. 111 NOtln (drolm111 8••4'nt) 14
q •< "'" dson > u
•
Newport s urge l o advance to tonig ht 's
cha mpionship semifinal contest with Costa Mesa.
Santa Clara 63, Dana Hiiis 47
Down 40·22 after two quarters, the Sailors
managed to outscore the Lancers 17-10 in the t hird
quarter behind junior fo rward Byron Ball's hot
shooting.
The Dolphins Just couldn't rind the basket in
their consolation bracket contest with Santa Clara
Ball fin ished the night with 25 points
Dana llills was held to just six points in the
firs t quarte r and could m uster only JS at halrlime.
Santa Clara, meanwhile. received 22 points from
g uard Don Thomas and 16 from 6-10 center Roger
Bock as the Saints moved out to a 49·24 lead after
three periods.
The defeat dropped the Tars' record to 4·3 on
the young season.
College basketball
Tonight's games .. ,,
Meryl-•I UCL.A
P•clll< •t waslllnot011
S.•111e Palll< •t SlallforO 5"111
1n01 ..... se at E. ICenhKl<Y
Noire 0..... at IC".)luOy
1110.·Pur-al Nlcliolh SI
Ml-.W•fl
Wuhlf191ot> SI. 11 Otuo SI
Sewl-14
Pr•trleVlewalW Ttu\SI
AnOflO SI. al UTE P
Eui
SI. Pei er'> at Vermonl
USIU •tUtk•
TOURNAMENTS ,,,,,...,_,
~C .. Hk
M••"'•" vs. New Me•lco
Pel\11 "' F-orlll\am ••-tff C .. JJI<
flll"f .. •"' Uletl
Georeetowll ••· Columbl•
IE-wlll• Hel ... J Clan le
£. 1 lllnol• ¥\ Murray SI
Eval\tvlllev,, T-MM Tech
o. .. , .....
r ... , t9(fl"' J ak-.vlllt
8o•IOtl Coll-"'· Vlr9lnla Tt<ri
Rk hmoftd Ttme•-Dh••-" Tewrney
Jam,.s M4td1\0n "' Va Commonw@11l,,
Vircun1.t IJ\ R•ctwl'lond
C-llClll Mut ... 1 Ci.ul<
South F'IOl'•oa ¥\ La ~ttt-
(onnttt. tu.ut v\ St Bon~ven•ure
Albr14!111 l11wllall.,..I
l •ll•cin •\ 0.rlmo<Jln
M10dlPl>Ur"'r •• AlbrlQlll
1nclu•1•1•1 Nellon•I CIU tl<
Ma\~acnuc.c-lh Y\ NOfO'lwe\tetn
Provtdfnc.• vs N•vy
DaytOft lnvllall..,.1
N C Chdrlolle v> Flodd<I SI
t•o,\t•d v\ Davton
Pac""-'., Clauk
'"corr• SI Y\ N In•> St
SE LOUl\1Ana v\ NE L®lll•n•
~OA C .. u l<
S•n J~t SI •• <ion••CIA
SI Fren<I\ N V •• E MonMNI
CHrilleClaul<
Ftor•OA v\ T•mol•
801or •• SM D1~ SI
lr9'1 OUllt Ciani<
Ouk••\ 0.-vlO.On
A11t>Vm "' Wiiiiam " Marv
OtlotrT.-""'""' f"ln•I• of P1ll\Dury M11\I( City, 81.0.·Gtau
CllY, Bhl Holl~•. Mllw•u'"· 5110., Bowl,
ECAC HOlkMty liOl><Mv. c.blt Ctr. All C..11-,
F-a r Wn t N Iowa liOllaay, Senior 80wl,
Semlltnal• ol l\•l,,bOw
OUTSTANDINC
VALUES!
/CHECK
THESE OUT!
5645
FACTORY RBA Tl
OMAUYW
DIESEL PICKUPS
(t•t t Of«. YI
U.4.MPU:
1911 YW
DIES& PICKUP J..X.
I Jruity ~-" '""" ..... .., preQ 5 ~,,..,,.,,_.,
(31$31(<Jrf1 lOI
l .. """" --Our 0.tcOu'll -11811 . .._.. -114$. Sal• f'rlOO ~ -5525
FACTOllY IHATI
OMAUYW
DllS& CARS
(1181 t <W..Yl
IXAMf'U:
ltll YW
Dllsa IAlllT L
,.,.. ...--. ..... -.... 4 ..,._,_, .,,
~~.:~=~
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfruosday, December 29, 1981 cs
Lo• Alamlto1
MONDAY'' •U ULU
1'1tl .. ,......... ·---t"'I , 1 RIT a AC•. 3SO yatd>
RtQ\lt\h Jet Cf'lorHI • IO , "° , 60
Porten! IW••Ol J.. 160
l<lletma ILA<kt~I J 40
AIW rat.cl. llurnaooc t.o rroub•• M•n,
f urn To Go. 111u1no Rewaro. L1dy Reca""1
A Win Sunny Ooo. Too MOfwQan
llm• 1e n
U EJIACTA IS•I o.tlO 0 1 00
SECOND RACE 400 •••d•
Hemp 8 .. 18.,01 11.IO 11 00 6 00
Hook.a 0Ho I 81evln•I 4 10 ) 60
11 .. 1 Cl•Uy ( ROUCjfll > 60
Also rac:eo Golorttl>. E .. y Cllrhll..,,
COOyl P°'9, Tiie 8UQ1"r, I( IPl'I' \/Ille, Butnlr19
Sun\Mne, lrt.,.14H:IV\lf\•n
'""" 10 ..
THl•D llACli. -YftO\
OuH••• I 81001<\I • 10 J oo 1 40 lfa dO• Bt A (Mrger I Ptlkonlonl , lO > 00
Cllareer lo AM IH••tl t 60
Aho rM.0 A Slle<ky Mee ... A E•eteh
Renevr•<le. 8 EHY A11w11 Ann Aul>y\ AnO
Rl<lle> Kan Be R10 .AnQtl F .. 1, Aoll On
Rocky A <ouplecl 8 COUl>ltKI
rime lP ..
U E XACTA C1 I I PAIO ~? 60
l'OURTH RACI.. 400y•rd\
Arrow (Mreer 1Cru091 I 6 00 3 AO J AO
)onaoo-.1Tttawre1 7 20 , ..
l •O t o Go I l.ackevl • .o
Aho racecl My EH• ~-. Al•lflrnt,
Ktrry fe DHIMn Hom• Covnlry Pl\ICM,
Ounrov1n S4>ec••I L-1 Bui>
tom• 10)1
U EXACTA (~ IJ paid \10 lO
l'1 l'TH RACE 3IO yatd\
A Ttet\f'()r RtbfHarl) •ltO )00 1 . .0
EwtReb lLatUyJ S lO 300
DU\IW\ Duo!wn1»r9 IM11cllt>111 4 10
•••o raceo A DuPllC•I~ Tahofl. l lny
I r1p, P.t9A11\ Prtde Oan<e,. Gllo>I, Ll!tle
8a1a1e Go 1<1p10 A•l>•t~. 81v Lt•vue
O•n<•r
Time 1109
U E XACTA f1 II iMIO '16 00
SIXT" RACE 3S0ver0>
A P•u Em Boy ITre•>u••I 9 .0 • 00 14'0
Or•tlllA0.1rJ J 40 1 IO
~1111tn 5,. I 0.IOM.,.J 4 10
41\0 r.ced A Go• ti•\ Sh•''· P~r1e<t
Mark, Go.r P•\t, T® Inten t A tOYpf.O
l 1me 11 OJ
SEVENTH RACE lSOv•rO•
lOOm Dfo<,(IUrOJ •60 JltO 140
Rou110-Jel 10orn11'9.,.,l 11 oo •IO Sumpln 8rown tTre-a,.._,,., l IO
.t.IM> ract<J IHI Your W•ll•I, WoulO•I Oft
Se>•fttre, Suri !u>l•\h M •O••nd A•b•t
Slr•lOhl Fl""' Au
l•m• 1e 10
U EXACTA 1 .. IJ PAICl1/17 .ii
U ,.IC• SIJI 11 7 • 1 1 61 p,o1a U,. IO wlltt
S1 w1nn1no1«,•h 111ve 110<.,.>I U Pt" S••
co ... ol•lion iw•a \11 40 .... ~ 171 wlnnlno
t•c t.f't\ ctour hotW \I
E tGHT" RACE 150 Y••O•
l•'•FtvrloolM1l•"""1 •ioo 1•10 100
J•I Ful I B.traJ S IO • 00
(n.,rro \ Roc:~t-1 1..,.•n • 1 .0
Al\O f.Ctd A 8ri\I~ Rover A 01Qlt•I,
A\\Uff'd To Win Pt•¥ Tuff 8am•OOO Roc.k
On Bull A couple<!
I om• II OS
U E XACTA (I •I IM•O l lll 00
NINTH RACE ])Oy•rO\
(l~vu Poll<V f8rOohJ 4 IO I 00 4 4(1
Mii (111( l(rHOtrl 11 00 1100
l 0Ht4! 8o (Trf'•\Yff'I t .t()
Al\.O r«-•d J~t.t>lun lt•h•n Pr~tlf'f,
Ir"" llOOt"' loo ltch l,1001 SttO* (OUf"tWt,
Mrl\ M t" Qoo.4' T d' Hf•M T •1nllur
Tom• ti ll
U E XACTA 1111 pa•d ... 40
Att~nddrKf' ) 'nJ
NHL _,.,k .....
Mlnnnot• • Cotorado 4
Phll-lpNa 1 C•'O•ry 4
T ........ ,o-.
c ri1u90a1 QI*,,..(
Monlrt•l •1 NY 1 ••• ,,.,.,.
Hartforo at SI l oul\
80\ton at V#IC.ouv•r
Hlah IChOOIBOCCer
HV .. T!NOloN ICACH TOU•NAMaNT """·-Hu1111noton Be.ch 1 Ar•11•I• O
H11n l1n111on 8 t A\11 uor1r.9 \wll lo.,
V••Qu•r
O<Nn v .. w 1. 8vtw(,r•not 0
D<U I\ View 0<o<ll\O Durbin •. Mulla lly t.
frOU\tAkl•
00.t ".,... ·M•rl11a 1, T 11tll" 0
Maler 0.1 • 8ellf1ooA1t• O
Bell <i•ro.n• 1, (.y-" 1
Founl•ln V•lltv 1, FOUllllll O
k• Oulnle 1, E\l•n<•• O •oranve o Alom""Y o
'l.tu ll-0 WO\tm1n•ltr 0
·s.ooleba(lo. 0. SI Paul 0
Kalello7, Valtn<lt O
<ia•Hft O•oY• > St Jonn 11o ... o 1
£1 Oor.00 I l A11U"A Hiii> 0
• Ml"lon VltlO 0. C..•ltr 0
C•Ol'1t•t1U V-ll•v 2 '>ervllo 1
IC•nntelv l . NOt"w•I., 1
s.c-111 ...... 1<1•• ..... '-"•"•' HunllnQlon B•acll l Et Dor-1
HunllnQIOll Be.ch "°''"II Hut 1 latlltr Oc••n v ..... , M t\\.oft VMl'IO 0
Oce•n Vww \Cor•nq frov"•"*' "•''"" Ollter><ore•
·M•rlnoO Maler De•O
• F'o..nta1n Va lley l BCMw C.••nd• 1
L• Ou1n1• I Oranoo: 0
LeUllnQl!r l . s .. oa•elM<k 0
• 1(•1•11a 0 G•rClen C.rO•• 0
ICtn,..ov 1 (a1H\lranova1100
Sac-• ..,,,., lconMlll .. ~I
l u\lln J, 8ellt1ower 0
Foo111111 I Cv1><en O
E1ot•n<la • •ttm•nv 2
SI p..,1 • We\lmon\1•• o v alenci.. 1 SI Jann 80" o 1
L •oun• Hiit\) Att•\I• I
G al\• 4 801..,c,r.,.-o
S.f•ll• 1 Norw•i. 0
• f e•m •Ov•n< P\ hy vu hH• ul mnrt;
e>en•ll• lo.1<11.>
•
Australlan Open
l•I_,_,.,..,
ThlrtlR..,,,..S"'9M•
GullltnnoVlluOef L•rryStt1•nk1,6 1 ... 1
t. •. • .. HM\11. Pf1\lH d•t t<f •n\ Stmont.)On
•·1, •·O, 4 1, Jol'tn Aleunaer Clef Tl>ltrrv
l ul•~ . ....,., • t .,_, Ct1lf Letcrwr def ''"' 0.1•11ey 7•. I• 4 4 l-6, 6.. P•ul IC rono
O•I Ptttr Rennen, 1.f>,. I 6·]
Orange Bowl championships
l•IMl...,11
BOYS'" OIYISION s1.., ... ,,,...,,,
stOberto Ar~ho • •rqipnt•ndJ Oftf Rf'"1ltO
Joaqulf'I t8ra1111 • l. • t
GIRL..S '"DIVISION s1,...., .. ,,,..,
P "'rtn y B•tQ t M 1 .. nll~ Ot"f H•n•
Fu"•'"o"• <C1Kh0\lov•._1a • 4 1 t. l
Monday's transaclions
IASE8ALL
Arn«IUll l.e .. ue
TORONTO BLUE JAYS .A(QUottO
HO\"•" Poweu, outfl•ld,., trorn the-
M1ruw\Ot• t win' tor • DltlY•' to Of ,...."'"'
••••,-St-nt P MJI Mir•Delld p1te-h.-r, to 1rw
Ch1ca90 Cub\ tor" player 10 bit' n•rnt>d lettr
HahoMIL•-
Sl\N F RANCISCO GIANTS AnnOvnceo
r•tirt-m•nt ot Frank 8t>r9on1t, ''•"'""~
s.ecret~ryi
l'OOT8ALL
N•-1 FootlNll L ......
G REE N BAY PACKE RS Sig n.a 8~'1
St•rr, h•.id<o.<.'1, to• two.ve•r <ontr•tt
HOC.KEY
N•l-1 HoOo L ......
COLORADO ROCK I ES Calll'O UD Rio
LtF~rr1ert, OO'JI'-Iron• fC>tt w ort" of trwi c ... 1ra1 Hockey L•-
COLLEGE
ELO N COLL E GE Announcoo
re.lonallon OI Jtnv Toll.,y l\UO •oollMll
coach
KE NtUCl<Y Name<1Jonn Dtvhn. Jtrry
Ef,•m•n. J•tl.e ._.•Hum Tttrrv Stro(k •nO
Roo snarpteu ••<1>1<1n1 10011Ml1 coau"''
AetainH 8111 Gt•w• d\\•\tant tootN lt
<o•ch
Guess
who won?
-Uni
Hy RICHARD DUNN
Of-Dally l'tMCS\9H
The Uruversaty High TroJans,
:11rn rkc!d by the play of Brad
(iuess, blew out V81encia in the
f1 r:<t half, then had to hold on to
overcome a late comeback by
the Tigers lo win, 59·44, in first
round act11m or the Canyon
ha~k ctball tournament Monday
night at Canyon lligh School.
In othl·r action, Irvine had
s hooting vroblems and never
ca me C'IOSl' an its 59-37 loss to
Cyprl'ss The Vaqueros. who
scored only 12 points in the first
half. shot a dismal 29 percent
from the n()f)r
Herc's what happened :
Uni 59, Valencle 44
Guess was the main man for
the TroJans as he poured in 25
points and blocked 10 shots The
G 7 sen10r had n o tro ubl e
i.h11ol1n g over lhc Valencia
defense Guess had seven or his
blocked shots in the first hair, in
whlth lhe Tigers scored only 12
po1nh
Tht· turnovers were even in
tht• ~:.ime 15 apiece, but good
d<.·fensc hy Guess a nd Ron
HatC'l1ffe. llhree steals1 was the
dt'<.01d1ng fa c·tor
"Ddt•ns1vely we were great, ,
t•s11l•<·1ally 1n· the first hair."
Trojan Co<Jch Jdf Cunningham
':.i1d W(' shut the m down real
good . hut we t·ame out in the
'iecontl h Jtr "'1th a lack of
llll<.'n'>ll\ c; r;.11g lt1111se 17 points. made
l'tght of 11 shots from lhe noor,
with most ,,r them coming from
10 feet and hevond
Rrad Xavi'er was the high
scorl·r for the Tigers as he
fHIUf'Cd In 19 J}OlnlS
The win improves the Trojans
record lt> 5 :J as they will now
fact.> Los Amigos tonight 18 ·001
1n the semifinals
Cypress 59, Irvine 37
Dav<.' Rogers was the bi g story
for the C'entunons a s he scored
l fi points ..ind µulled down 18
rt•bounds t•1 lead Cypress to a
dt•t• 1 s1 n· "'in 11vcr Irvine
Thl' Va4u<.•rns attempted 11
free thro1A.s. but tould only sink
one Tht•1r µour outs ide shooting
prnv<'d to br the diffe r en ce
Ho l><.·rl Akers v.as the onl y
hri,ght spot for t he Vaqueros as
he c,con'<l 111 points. followed by
John naxll'r's 9
I rvin<' did grab 37 rebounds,
but mo..,t of lhosc were off its
ow n missed shols
· Wt-thrcv. up a lot or shots,
and were too intimidated to go
up stron~ on the boards," Irvine
<:oaeh Al Jl ernng said . "We
hu s tlt>d and tried to run things,
but we w ere p h ysica lly
over-matched · ·
Hog(•r<; was a one man gang as
hC' als(I blocked s ix shots He
scort•d l 7 of his points in the first
half
COLLEGE
BASKETBALL DUTLDDK'82
UC Irvine vs.
MILWAUKEE CLASSIC
TONIGHT
5:00 p.m.
K-WAVE FM-108
Presented By: Anheuser·Busch, Toyoto, Republic
Insurance Brokers, Tiny Noylor's, Irvine Conditioning
ond Injury Center
.., __ An Engleb...cht Company ~roduction __ _.
~J
Daily Piiat
Classifieds
~~ ·r.~ f\'1'!~11 :111~ '~~~n1n\
I l11 t1' (11\!,f\l\C t.\ f ti\
"''"'"' t11f. \nl\nW!< "I 1 \'~' c\l!f ~ tc\ l!l\(J ......... \0 "0 ..,,,<\ ~ ~ . •\ (\)fl" "~ & \ • .Ant\
'I' '" ra' ~9l'i vvv-~
,,.Sold thru Piiot In
2 days. Ran 1 week In
L.A. Times with no re•utt1.
Very lmpre11edt ,,
~~~1 @ 642-5678
charge It ~-by phone
From South Laguna & North County
call 540·1~0 toll-free.
Coming
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. school programs.
and city services? Find out _
Thursday, Dec. 31 in "Outtook
'82 ... a review of 1981 advances
and a forecast of expected
growth in 1982. Look for this
special pull-out section in your
Daily Pilot Thursday, or call to
start home delivery.
tRVINE
NEWPORT BEACH
cosTJ\ MESA
Ll\GUNA BEACH
HUNTINGTON BEACH
rouNT J\IN Vl\LLE Y
OUTL00K'82
... , ... . . ,, .......... -
laiJJPilat .
,.,. ......... ..., ••• 642-4121
_,
I . ~ . ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTuesday, Decembet 29. 1981
THE
t't\MIL''
flRCl'S
by 811 Keane
"Why don't we hafta write thank yov letters to
Santa Claus?"
Jl.\RJl.\Dl.Kt: by Brad Anderson
"Whew! For a minute I was afraid she
wanted to exchange HIM!"
Jl'D6E P.\RKER
G\Rt·n :1.o
(JAR~IELP ! VOO C.AN'T
EAT THAT CANDV.
IT'S TOO FATTENINC:t
ACROSS 49 In the dlree-UNITED FMturt Syndicate
1 Poll• lland non of Monday'• Puzzle Solved
5 SpouM 53 8«1in hit:
9 Arcn.lc 2 wordl
14 French river 57 Meeker
15Slept1111• -58 Actor Greene
18 AuttM>f Loos 59 Elevator men F.+'f~
11 zeue · • e 1 Atrlcen lend
belOWd 82 EmllMt';
18 ~ e3 UndreeMd
~ 64Ptrlodt
11 rowen 15 Abylllnlen
20 0. alnt '. wife COin•
" .i. ee BlrrlCUd•
22 Mull 87 El«ltrtc un1t1 ~~· 2 .. Aemlllrl Moft:
2 won11 DOWN
2t A"'IY I Europeena
27 W..wn llllt 2 Kin of lln't
2t v~ city 3 Allan nation
30 AocOunt 4 Prepertd C'ubl 45 AMdjulta
a3 Ullfll btfofeflllld 21 Dlwllon• 41 ~
37 "lnnnt 5 Son ot. Scot. 30 Aomafl dr.. Plant
31 •• e Comic !Ono 31 Eoo on '' Erect: • Pllt 7 -pole 32 Dull one 2 wetdt
40 ._ I~ S3 Allowance 50 Low· 11
41 Qrlfted: Her. I~ 34 N1¥1d1 dty 51 °"9enfr
41 Pondlf 10 F1Mrtrll 36 Inns" Pf9f 52 w-.
44 o..ty 1 t ..... 0t< M Hoe_,: Lew 53 Tel II
46 ....., •• bird 121.At It..... 37 Ice: 54 Theet• bolt
BIG GEORGE by Vlrg1I Partch (VIP)
''I've got a splitting headache. and my feet are
killing me."
Hank Ketchum
by Harold le Doux
Y()U'l::f TREATIN(J ME LIK£ l'M l\N
'°'LCOHOLIC ~ 50METHIN'' l'M
NOT! l JU~T HAD A L-ITTLE
DRINK AN' I FEEL TEMll.">Lf'
by Jim Davis
~ow MANV C.ALOR1Ee,
C.AN rr ~AVE FO~
59 CENTS?
...... .. ..... , 2""'8 55 Practtc. _____ _...
47 o..-.• 2t ,_ 40 ~ H Border ._ .. .,.,.._..,wtwt eo~
P&\Nl:TS
YOO LEFT VOOR CLOSET
LIG~H ON ALL NIGHT ...
Tl' M BLE" EEDS
SHOE
SLUGGO 15
PAINTING HIS
BEDROOM
TODAY
GORDO
l 1M
OfJL'l
001~
~flE:.E
~ .. oo::~,
1'0
!11 •1" E>l~Tf
1--1
-mJl.16~1'
i caJLO ~
1'1"!
/J.-19
by Charles M Schulz
,, YOU'LL CARE WHEN
It V00 6ET VP SOME
MOfCNIN6 AND CAN'T f STAAT YOUR CLOSET
I
-_...::::::::.--
WHAT'S 1HE. BESI 'THING
OtJ YOUR MENO ?
DID HE CHOOSE
A RESTFUL
COLOR?
ANY COLOR IS
RESTFUL TO
SLUGGO
1!> rr NN W~!
M\./ WOf<JJ/
WAAT'OI.>
~ cAJ.J ro 10 A ~ llJ~5 PA-le. 15 LJNP~
AeLE:f
~~-....;.;;....;....;:iii-.-...-.-~'1-1
by Tom K Ryan
by Jeff MacNelly
by Gus Arriola
Fl'~K l ' "INIU::R BE" N by Tom Bat1uk
w1 •• i .. wltlo~l•e
-WN£5 FOR 'THE HOUOOCJ5-
CJNCltJNATI ft~EBALL 1qia1-
A OELEPTIVB..Cy) ENCAANTING
OOME5TIC WINE 1J.4Ar 15
51JR~151N&l4 IN£XPEN51VE .
fOll BETTER OR ro• •••Mt:
IHE.'{RE. GOI~ o ·
AWfl'{ FOK Tu>O I •
WHO.E W~EKS. 0
ff /5N'T UNTIL t.,.Ct.l'VE HAD
IHE. Ft~T DRINK 1HAI c,tx)
~LL(( Bt61N iO ~ ~
Ii!
by Kevin Fagan
f
'
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTuesday, December 29, 1981 Ca
• '
Latest Research Results Conclusive:
· E]{tensive smoker survey proves MERIT taste
key to switch from fiigher . tar brands.
The botto m line : taste.
Tha t's the result of the
la test wave of research with
· smo ke rs who have switched
from highe r tar cigarettes to
· MERIT.
·MERIT Takes Taste Honors.
N ationwide survey reveals
over 903 of MERIT smokers
: who switched from higher tar
: are glad they did. In fact ,
' 1 : 943 don 't even mis s their
! former brands . I Further Evidence: 9 o ut of
1 10 former higher tar smokers
report M·ERIT an easy switch,
that they did f\'t give up tast e
in switching, and that MERIT
is the best ... tasting lo w tar
they've ever tried .
Warning : The Surgeon General Ha~ Determined
1 That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
MERIT Beats
Toughest Competitors.
Further, exten sive unmarked
pack tests confirm that MERIT
delivers a winning combina--
tion of taste qnd low tar when
compared with higher tar
leaders.
Confirmed: The overwhelm-
ing majority of sn1okers reported
MERIT taste equal to-or better
than-leading higher tar qrands.
Confirmed: When tar levels
were revealed, 2 out of 3 chose
the MERIT combination of low
tar and good taste.
Year after year, in study after
study, MERIT rernains unbeaten.
The proven taste alternative to
higher tar smoking-is MERIT.
0 ''""' Monti Jne.. 1911
Reg: 8 mg "tar:· 0.6 mg.nicotine-Man: 7 mg "tar:· 0.6 mg
nicotina-100's Reg: 9 mg "tar:' 0.7 mg nicotine-HXl's M111:
10 mg ·'ta(.· 0.8 mg nicotine av. per cigerane. FTC Ripon Mw:e1 .
. MERIT MERIT Menthol
Filter
•
j ,
f
' .
____ ,...._.....
Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. Oec:ember 29, Ua~1
1 HALL OF FAME -M r-; Ralph I Marion i De
Palmc.i. \\ldo\\ of tht• late racing driver
; who liH·s in Cost,1 :Vtesa, accepts a plaque
·· from .John \\' H11r~ess. De Palma was
recently enshrined in the Racing Hall of
Fame in Flemington F airgrounds. New
.Jersey
. ,
De Palma:
I One o f the greats
Record holding. auto racer inducted into Hall of F.ame
t<.1tµll I)(• [',!Ima was one of the most revered
; and rN•l>t.'<:tf•d .rnt11mobtlc nu~ing drivers of his
tim e 11wlud111i: H..irnl'\ <Hdf1 eld and the fo rmer
lnd1anap1ihs chJm1l1o n 11915 1 was recently
. h o n o r t' 11 b v I h t· tl.1 c 1 n g II a II of Fa m e a t
, Fl1•minJ,!lon Va1rground~ 1n New Jersey.
from 1008 lhrough 1926 and ls the only driver to
race 27 consecutive years .
In 1919 he drove a Packard car at a speed of
149.87 miles per hour. The air speed record at that
tim e was 126 mph, making De Palma the fastest
man on earth or in the sky.
• J o hn \\' 011rg1•ss director a nd manager of the He still holds records for four bill climb races
including one to Mt. Wilson from Pasadena in 1924,
a race that is no longer contested.
, Briggs <"unningham automotive museum pre
1 sented fw !'alma ..., "1clow, Manon. of Costa Mesa
· wllh a pl,1ri111 t•mbJ .. •natic of his enshrinement In 1980, De Palma still held the record for the
mos t laps leading the Indy 500, 613. Active drivers
Al Unser and A. J . Foyt were both less than 100
laps behind hjm at the time.
Ac c ordmg 10 1 hL· record:>. De Palma won 2,557
trace!> out of 2.~9 he entered He won 36 100-mile
. champwnship racec; 10 all parts of the country
:OllTH NOTICfS
rm "· 111rn '111 • 11111 .... \li\ T1IH'\l,flfll(\lll , ........ 111
ill t ,.,1.1 :\h•,,1 l " l',1•.•l'd
:J\\,I\ "II D•-<•1111111 •. ,, l'IXI
c;11, 1• ur ' 1 • d II\ h1·1
h11:-h 11111 l\h I ...,, I\ IC t ,\ tll
b ,. h 1· I ti "n \l 11 n 11 .1 '
P1·nntl1•·1!X 1~1>-J.111 1.111>111
l a\\ n '\l r111no 1al l'h ,1p1•I
Scn·wC's 1111d1·r th• <1111•1I11111 t>f liar l1t11 L.1"11 \l11unl llhq·
J.1 ortu;11' <•I (",, la \l•·sa
s m-s:;~1
\01.t-.R
· lH\'l!Sli \ \Ull'\ \DI.EH
r esident ol \\1 ·~tm111' .. tt·r <':r
Pas,rrl a'~·" 1111 ll1•1·1·mh1 1
j\!4. l!ml lk IS 'u1\1H•!I I)\ )us ~"" J ;I\ ,.l,tf'I., ~·tort nc(.
J{enard .11111 ,\11111 U111 1w1t.
brnt~l·r-. l.0111~. l lan' a111I
0 a' 111 \If I 1· 1 ! ; r ;1' " ... u t t· > l' r \ 11' t' li \\ I' I I' h I• I ti 11 ll
Sunll,o' p, trnlu r •, 1•111t
)I 11 tlll \ '1 .it ll :irl1n1
ULT? IHGHOH
SMITH & TUTHllL
WHTCLlfF CHA,fl
•U i: 17th ~1
Coslll M .. ..,,,
l>4h <H7 I
rllEICIE H OTHH S
SMITHS' MOUUAU
627 Main St
HuntmQ1on S.•>1<.li
!'>36-65.Yl
,.4Clf.fC VIEW
MIMOllAl l"Al IC
"O"m!llf',.,. Mor lu.Jl'V
Chal)1!1·Crematorv 3500 Pac11tc Voew 01 1w
NewPOrt Beach
6«·:>700
McCObetCIC MOITU.UllES
LMtuna BeaC/I
494.941~
laquna H11t5
768·0933
' San Juan Capsslrano
•95 1776
HA.HOil LAWl'6-MT, OUVI
Mo rv • Cemet'"' Ctttre IOl'f
16"S G11ter """ Costa M•ta
5405~
rtaet•On41H
llU..0.4~WAT
MOITUAIY 'to Bro.tet...,•v CO 18 Mf'•a
M2·9t50
l .. "'" \l1111n1 Oll\P \l•·mun,il '>l'r\ 11·1•,, \\l'rt' hc•l d on
!';11 I. !'-1•1 \il• 1111dt'1 th1· \111nr1a\ l>N·l·ml>cr 28. 1981
<l11•1 t1 11n or 11 .i rhur al 11 311;\\I a t llrllc rcst
l.J\\11 :\lount llll\L' Mort11an M c m n r 1 a 1 P u r k ,
ol I ,,,1;1 .\l<''J 5411 55~l-I Bake rs f1C'ld . l'a Scn·1C'CS
(' \~·rnR undc•r the• d1re<'l~>n of ll~1ltz
H• •~E C.\:"TtlH rc·"'l1•nt Rer~c·ron Sm 1th & T uthill
11 I t; .1rd1• n (;rove <:a We~tclifT Chapel Mortuary
J•oi.., •·ti ,1\\,1\ 1111 ll1·cc•mbc•r of Co:-.lJ .\k:-.~1 646·9371
:!5 l!JKI She· Ii. :o.llr\'l\'Ccl b\ S('lll.EV
h 1· 1 d 11ui:hte1 Ma rte I tn.c· CODY SCllLEY. resident
t '11nt1.1l'l .rl'lo of Garden of Santa Ana. Ca. P assed
\.111\ '" <·a Final 1n\crmt'nl a" ay oo Dec-ember 24 . 1981.
s1nH·1·'"'lllx•hl•ldatlhc llc is :o.u r v1ved by his
f ;r m i I ,. p Io 1 <• t 0 I ti parent:. Paul and Carolynne.
~1 ont t'fwrc Ccmctl·ry. LonR brot ht'n. Aaron and Byron
hi.mil ~<'\\ Ynrk Serv1ecs SC'hlcy Graveside services
u11tlt•r the d1rl'<'t1o n of will bc held on T uesday .
Jldtlior 1.JY.n .\1ounl Oll\·c OeC'emlx'r 29. 1981 al Holy
.\1111 \uan <11 Costa Mesa Scpukhcr Cemetery with
SW !l5S4 M sgr Daniel Brennan or St.
GO~ZAl.1-:S Jo hn the Bap\is t Catholic
t (; \ RCll\ 1 \IA YRA Rlt'O Church orrlC'latlng. Services
G<>'Z \LES resident of under the direction o ( Baltz
4'J nta Ana. CJ l'.~sed ~1" a) Bergeron·Sm1lh & Tuthill
on llt•rcmber 25. 19!\I Sht• J' Wl'slcllff Chapel Mortuary
-.11 1' "1•11 h~ hi•r pa rt•nt!'> of <.:ost;1 Ml'sa 646·9371.
<; ,1 n 1 1 •II.! o ~• n cl Ca r m " n UTT
c;;i111.1 (;r.t\l'~ldl M'r\IC'l'' :\l.\X t:l>DY UTT. passed
rm \lumlil\ l>t•i·t•mhl·r .!I! 3\\ a.' on f)(>ccmber 27. 1981
l'lMI al :1 •-•!':\! llarhor I.a\\ n an 'lt''' purl Heach. Ca . He is
:\lc1n1111al Park Y.1lh Rt'\ snr\'i\l'<l II\ h1!> '"fe. Bonnie
F.11tw1 l{<1fdt•I l.ul'v<1n11 of.J<'an l'tt , a da UR hte r
S t .l11.1c·h1m·, C<1lhol11·
V1rg1n1a Stockton or Laguna
Hills. Ca .. and a son, Dr
Roge1 L Utt or Chicago.
l llino1s. Also he leaves 4
grandrhildren and his s ister.
M r s D L Dars ie o r
Glendale, Ca Mr Uu was
associated with the law firm
o f Gibso n . Dunn and
Crutcher for mo"re than ~
yeari. and was a retired
partn(•r at the time of his
death lie was a Trustee or
the Los Angeles County Law
l.ibrarv from 1947 to 1956
and took an active part In
plannm.: the present library
bu1ld1ng H e was past
president of Town Hall ol
California and Friends of
Claremont Colleges and of
Sout h ern C alifo rnia
Pr es b y terian Ho m es.
Private graveside s~rvices
will be held at Forest Lawn,
Glendale with Klerer a nd
Eyenck Mortuary in chuge.
To friends wis hing to make
memorial contributions. the
family s uggest s gifts to
Hoag Memorial tmpital or
St Andrew's Presbyterian
Chur<'h in Newport Beach
Chu1d1 0Hit'1:ll111J.! Senk<''
u 1\tl c r l h c• 1111 e 1· t 1 on o f
ll.11 hur LaY.n Mount Oii\'<'
Mortuury of Costa ~h-sa
5·1fl·f>55'1
JEl.l.IS
ltt'Tll,;-.r J ELi.iS, ag<' 87.
re 1denl of Ohta Mesa. Ca
Pas'>l'd <A"a) on Ottember
Redskins' g a m ble
co uld b e co s tly
25. Hl81 She ";1!> a resident
of Orange t°l)Unty for 60
~ eur~ Sun 1vC'd by h er
h11-;hand Uav11I. 3 St!lters
Ell1.1 1.e"l' of Yakima .
\\ J~h1111t t nn . Mui lcl
MnntllOtnvry of lluntmgtun
B1·.1ch. Cu usl ll GN>qliu
llur\'t'.) or Pa lmdale. Ca She wu!l a mem ber of the Ffrst United Me thodist
Chur~h of Cos\.3 Mesa, Ca
Uur1al hy Ncpt."ne Society
JONF.S
ANNA MAI-.: JONES.
rei.ltknt of Col!ta M~. Ca ror the past 7 years a nd
rts•dml ot 8nkersneld area
for 30_yc3n1, Pas cd aw•r on 0 ccmhcr 23, J:l81 Sbo Ill
sur1> lved tiy Mt di.uahtcr
8 1ll1c Mccurdy or Co ti.
.M t•,11 , ('a . filers ldna
E zell of Wllmlnaton. Co .
GrorAla Gland~r110,. of
N •wixwt Beach, C• • M.iic
Kfl'H·:11 ~h of ll unll n&t nn
uth 1 C'tt i nd Ruby
•t11nC'hard of Stthla Ana. <;.1 brother'.\ W")'n e
Walk n." d Lc>ft1 ~arh. Cu antt Jo <' W&t 1t ln$ o r
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Waabln1ton
Redskins' gamble to allow Joe Tbelamann to play
out his opt.ion may cost the team more tban Just
the mooey It needed to sign him ln September.
In the final year of his current contract,
Theismann will become a free agent on Feb. 1,
free to negotiate with any team in the National
Football League.
"l want to continue playtnc in Wuhbllton but
my first love is football. I want to play focilball, U
not here, then somewhere elae," Tbel1mann said
Friday.
"1\ may have been a mlatake not sipln1 Joe
al lhe beelnnhJI or the year,'' Redlkinl General
Manaaer Jlobby Beatbard said. "But we •anted to
see what kind or year he would have befon alp.ln1
blm to lbOtbeT contract.''
Entertnt bi.J ei1htb year In Wublaston.
Tbeismann .and the itedlkinl failed to COIM to
term• on a new contract prtor to the ltart of UM
1981 Ma.on. At the Redlkina' lnalltenc., ta1b
were 1u.spended pendln1 lM conclutklD of tM
current campaip.
IW aa h )nalon an d 6
~-.:..;,;,---------· prandcbil~rvn Or•v Ide
W\th one 11me remaJnlna lD Ute rqular
season, Thei1mann la Just II yafda ally of
btcomln« only the tblrd ca••rt•r•aek la
Wuhin1ton lllatory (Norm Saud ucl SoanJ
Juraenaen are the otben) to Uarow tor 1,000 Jardl
lo a •lncle teNOG.
NU-
MOTIC• Of' UL.I Ofl GM.UT•llM.
av ncu••• "u" UOH •.MIU.•it c/9 .._.,TeM(lwl~ ..... _A_
~111 llNdt,CAf'llMT
i
.. IOH••• TAJC.-OUTCOlt~llATION •tt•cM~A-LM ........ CA-NO~ICS II H•lllaY 01\llN 11\M .. .,.,.,.., .._,.._ ....... •Ill M .... .. .. .. -=·•I . "*k _.... .... ...._ •1 11• ....... J--.i "'"' ..... Ill.. .. o. .... M. llfMeNll. '"'·· .. ..._, CeAW Ot .... lulte 1111 ..._.,. IMcll, CellflenWa ..... ~•Illa S.Cwity ..,.__.
...., ._, 1*" ••· 1m. lfl ..wc11 ... w•st1••• .. _... .... __... ,..-ty. eM .._ I . Mlllw i. ..._. • .....,, ..i....., ..... Ill -.WC ....., ........ ..-...
Tiie~ .......... Ml fefttlM"a ..... "A", .._,....,,...._ Tiie ..... lllltct*"-~ .... y .. ,......_ ............ •S.CIMll ....
IM CM ...... c-roetc.11, .. ~---fll•,.._.,,._.....,...
.... , ... el Wt1' flW -,_A.-..... I,._ .... <ll6t9M IA ...
-at 11 ..... Ill Nlflll,,_1el1.tM .......... ..,_, .......... -1. ta ..
.._.., ...... et ......... ,1 ... 11 .. -• .,.., .................... w .....
-af 11 ......... e(ClllNlle ... CM& el -..... '111 1 • 111 aM tot l.tM ,..,_, fW en...,...., .. ,. .... _. fW ·~· -.., f'l*k MKtiM _.1c...., • ._. .... ...., .... lflc-liafttllef9w191.
OAT£0~1WI. 1'91.
MltON "AIAHTI -JUDV A. P'AZAHTI • .......... ..,.... .
a.,1 OAVIDM.ZIMaattOl'F,lllW-Ny .a "-t Gatllar Ori.,., lwlla ltt ......,, IMctl, CellfOnlle HMt
(714)llMM:I
........... 0r-.. C-1 Delly ....... 09<;. "· '"'
"1-•aaTA«aOUT
U.HI
IT•M
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10HLY
IOHLY
I IONLY
U IOHLY
,.
t7 I LOT
II 1 OHL 'I'
It 1 OHLY
10
21
U 1 0HlY
1t 1 ONLY
:It I OfilLY
Jl IOHLY
S2 IOHLY
U IOHLY
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J$ IOffLY
'1 IOHLY
KM•DVUl"A"
OHCal"1'1C*
ICALa MOSTUIO: CtWllllClftMDclel ..... ,.-.T
111911 column ,.1a1torm type , ae111'"" wllll
ISO.IHUC ""'"'etwre c-nM4ed ...... aN
NII Marlfte "'"'-....,...... wl .. • c...-lt'r"' • Ill. I ~Ill. l'lflltMil In .irt resKteM wflnll .. peiM,
l'11rnllftM wllll -(I) 11 .. vy duty ~ ....._ 9e111l-4 wttfl ...,.. W Mavy *it'\' c..-n. twl.,.. . ., ....
AOOINO MM*INa: VlcW MMtl a 1a-2$4 wllll eH 11M>derd ec-.a1 rw11l-lly meowfec:-.
l'IL• CAalNaT: Cola Model •SO..»-L. -(ll drewer legel style ftle wllll locll •lld •II lteftMnl
accH--. es lwnltlwd &y m-fecturer.
PLOOlt IAl'a: Olellold Model • llJtJ Nullle comper.,,_ wlttl ~ "E" raclftt_ Ulllt wlUI ll•Y
c11e,... <~loll. unll lnstetlad .. -~ 1ry -ral contrector
WAt.lt·l .. /llaACK·IN •aA1o••ATott: Elt49rt
c11llom pr•f•brlcelad M<tl~I walll·MI c-.
Appro•lmelely 7'0" • t'O" • t'O" 111911 (..,.._dim.I cooler lO .. f~ lftelell.cl ., ulltlflt _,...,
tletl. Walls ~-wl9' 1telf\WM t.i ..... AH
fromlnt el -lll.J11 cool., Mle<t • 1 -.in •IN dollolet nr .,_r1y _.,. a11c1 lltaced eN1 ..,
fremlno ........., '-> lie mols111ra ret111afL '-ler
cevered wllll prlmo oomo1tlc menllfecl..,. .MO
....,._ mll flnWI '""'° omllcKMcl al11mlftum metal llonclecl ~ preuure lo molclacl DOIYllY'---4 ....,IY wltll • "K" feet« of .n at 75 ft. ........ 11.11 ,.. 11'11<11. •lld ly119 $C .......... 11 ... rtec" _,.., wltr. atwnlftum H ellove. EJ(twlar
well sllrleca llwll wlll be lclleont lo .............. 11 fltllsf'lecl """ 14" trllckMH metlN ,.,... ......-
lrealOd ID be mo111we '"111e111 wllll .,, -owd
t'rpa p_tl.,.. Cooler t11n1l111ect wllll -I II fhdlt ,.._... swllcll -pllot 11(11'11 ,.............,,_
swllell -......_, to l11terlor well &Ide only lot
"9ctrkel C-1""' lry otllffs. Llelll ........ .-tllell
lie Klllert< -!Woof lloM flatllr9 -"'911 lie ,,,...nlH by ffedrlei.tl. 80• lo lie fwnt.-wlltl-( 11 H <f'I "EHac" CDflltNClecl JO" a 71" •• ,._, ....
welk·ln Ooor. wllfl 1111.,IOt elld emri« flnflll ttf .-
1t11cco •-alumlnum ~to lnwlelloll
wllll epoav ~ ... Door 9e1lllppect -Oelron
cem 1111 hlnon. 11ll·closln9. cllrom• l'l•l•d m .. Mllc comtM<Clel I.,... ~et, e ........, _.,
cllrome plated br1u --loct.l"f -..tee. 0... t I) "Ellec" 20" 1 •O" M>lld r1acf'l·ln door
furnl\f'lecl wllh 1lumln11m coved ba .. ...., dlel
llltrmomeltr. Full P41rlmtl•r clos11re _, lo
celllno .
INCLUDED IN ITEM •12
WAt.lt·IN c:oot..a• MtaLVlltG: E.....-. , ........
metal c-..tl.....,.... Miid alwmln...m -Yffte twe (2)
M<llons. One (II teellon 6'0" a U" wlcl9, IOow (41
tier "'Of'I. o.. 111 1eeuon 6'0" a 1r· •'*· iwo 1a..
111911 m--o .. r d\IOan *•"' pan. 1.-1ec1 u per plan.
CMIClt• .. OUI .... ,..., £111tr's CYI_, metal
conslrucllon, slu e11d sll•P• •• per pla11. AH<o••me1e1y S'6" ..,,. • ,, .. wlcle • r · -.:..
Construdacl 'A'lll\ bKll eM llfl -1Pleltl wllfl rolled "9et Oii ,..,,. end fr• <OllStfllCled of 16 oe<191
...va11lted lnml wlltl -plkllecl ,., *el"""' 111
l\eevy dllty .,, .. Olf•tecl clnln. L.efl -of ..WI __ ........... ,11'1_,le __ _ , ... , ....
f'OaTAIM.a .. AN ltAClt: CCHICKEHl -EISler'I
c1111om matM t.llde cer1 for 11" x 2'" --Eecft sllde '-> ...... 14'' tone ...... _.,. .._,.. lllcle ID
pttYtlll pen from Slldlftt °"'· Mowltecl on S" I 19tn IMevyduly.wivelc•~rs
Walk·ln cOOl~-•nci-'" ''""' • u
lluclt·ln cooler -Incl-In Item •IS.
P'OltTAaLE MOT ~LATa: Wells _, •H·J:I
_, pleta, ~. llS voH. F11rnl1Nd .... ~
p1119 ...., e11 ,._..., ec:uuerlet. .,. ,........ by
me...,fac't-
WOltlt TAat.e: El1'9r'ICY1lom""'t••~1on.
sire end Mape es par plan. A_..111mataly t'O" """
II ?'0" dNll. Mouftttd .. pipe I... Wllfl NfliWy
M J111llllle ..... F11mlshecl wltf'I -I 11 M -
91lve11lred u-rlf'llll Uftll Siied le Ill -·
reecll-ln Ooor es flld~ "" ...-. ,,.....,._ •"" ..... ,
llaACM·IN l'llaaza•: Traul-._.clel Mall9I
•GLT 2'1111 H UT wllf'l I• --cen--.... a11tometk defros1 • ....., .. ,,... .. ,Y ,. CWlk '-l
FurftllNd .,.,. enodlnd ai-.111-...........
-and Nell, ----•"""'-.__ ---(II rlfMMNtllfntH _ __,M ..... _
Cll r19"tllandlll"9M1,_,..ln_•..,.., .... ..._ Wlf<IOlllll ,.,. I Ht type 111119". ,,....,,._ ..... 6"
IM•Y'r duly 190' -II• 161 ,,,,_ p1...i _,wire
JNIYH. D /1•1..0.
CA .. OP'a .. Ett: ECllunCI •2 _,.,. ""_. ,_
-11111 *"IC• H lllCfft1lecl on Elsler's ot-.
POT 11,.lt: Ellttr's cwstom motel=ll•11.
a,,.,011-ly 4'0" loflo I l't" wld9, C wtlfl
two 121 1r' a 1r• 1 ,,.. dMo slnkt wllfl
•ever •etMs ...., •-m 1r · a 1r· e1ta1--.
Enll.-. unit c .... truclecl In a<<onleftc• - _ ..
-lfk at'°"', "*""" on tllllulat 1.,... .... wltll
wnlterv •!MIUilll• '"'· Fllnll111ect wltf'I llack -llf111e11c1 -.,...,,_." lndluteci °"pl-.
IHaLI' WITH P'OT MOOltl: Elater's CllJtom _ .. ,
COllSl,.llCIJOll, atlllfOKlmolely 4'0" IOftO I 1'0" wide,
COll~nlCted of II ....... l'rP9 J02 stain .... SIMI. Well m-*d .-e sink es llldiCllecl Oii ~ ,,.,_
rail at -..,...... wtlfl slelnlHs 11M1 ooe "°'*t _ _.on 4" ~....,.....,..to -f le,.,,.,._
(II llllltrM ~I. Shelf lnlf•led encl -led ID .. n
11 ...........
11 .. K WAt.L l'UMtUfO: l:ltltr's c ....... ,,_...
co11t1rwctr.n, -oalrnet.ly 4'0'' ...... Fl•sfllll9
INll M ~ frWft -of 111111 '-1•111 .. -, Mcie of pol ...... (1"'91 #JI), flellll"I C..tNCtfdttf
:tO tavte 11Mnlfts ••• alW ••led to ,,.,., ...., _.
1 ...... Mnn -"*Pal llftll
.. A .. O ftta• •XTl .. eUllM•tt: Kidde llMdel
• SA•CS, div cllemlca1 wllll mou11t1111 llrecMt,
fMWllacl •-EllMr's plOll.
TIM• CLOClt ANO c.t.•o MOt.0111: L.etllem
Model • us ....... iNfl9I, ..... ._, ............
111 ti•-u .... Mowftled -lllllelled .. flW I
.. ILOT
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ITATaMaMT 01' WITMOaAWAL
l'llOM
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UNHll
ll'ICTtnOUS ltUM .. IU NAM•
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pa•llleflfllll' -.ar•llllt w-r Ille
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-----
-----------------------"" ... -
Orange Caul DAILY PILOT/Tuelday, December 29, 1981
-• ...----------------ir--------------~1'-·-------------1 PIU Illa P1U 11111 Ill.I .. .. ~H~-----------~.-------------------------~------------~1---------~--------------------------~--OTIC• O" D•ATH 01' ""taOflHWlll'UAu ll'tenWW.• llll<'Ytnounut1 .. • 111cnvwww-.e•w commi•lioned MARIAN (. HALL AND .._. • ..._ ... TWnP ...._ITATUl .. T MAMllYAT9111 .. T ' UMelTA.,....,.,
0 ,. .. I! T I T I 0 H T 0 OH JAMU.UV ''· ..... t11• ...::.. ... .:-.. --.,. ..... , ............ ~ .,. ..... ,.. fell-I .. ·'"-......
ADMINISTIR IESTATI! A.All. CAL.llllOltltlA I.ANO TITL.• tOATMAlt/OUUCHl 10 .......... ; ......... , Na~._. ........
No ,.,,,,....,. COMlllAMY, .. ...,...,.....f,,.._ "ltOllleltTt ... ae INr9' A-lt fL.IAIL.I M~HAHCI L.IWll CL.IANlltl, _. lefi • ~ ~· llMllf llM...,.... "0.. lit ft1.C Wte I 1,..,.;.~ft1t4 • "*"ANV, •LI , Ot-.., Ml-• Awiwe, ..._...... .._,.,
T o • I I ht I r s , e-11tMtrMA1t•OJ1tt.t ..... J1t., 1t10.ui c IOATMAN *"' ca...... c.iiw• It. Ula,, eoa ol llr. _.
Mrs. Robert T. Ull7 ol
.201 DutmouLb Pia~.
Co1ta Meta, a.u bMa
com m111loaed . UJ»OD
1raduadcD from om~ Candidate Scbool d
Newport. R.I.
bentflcl•rles, creditors :n~':t.':'N~=~.':':'o~ =-.:;;,~:_-.'11111. •· 1;.1 .... .c ... ~:::1~11::r:.~~:l:!;,';~9 ~~ .... ~·,~~-;:,~,....
and contlngtntcredllor$Of OIPINIO llNlllllT, ·.et aAV II'. OlMICHllO 0141•( •-1~.0.....Q..... Tllltt......... .. ..
M • r I 1 n C . Ha t I • n d a-tlclrt. -.. ..., """ '"'·.,. .,._,,.., "-· irvi .... Cellftf'1tl• a-..uw • .,....., 1..c. .,,........_ persons who may be _... • ,...,_,,... -.. '*'"· Oo\v1oc.,a1111tv, ICMIMIT-....._
otherwise Interested Int .... ,,_u,tt11 ... 0Mc1e1a_. ..... Tiii• ._._ 11 c...-ctH •'I', .........,.. TMt .......... -..._..,.. .. , ..... le. .. tM Cllollllf .. _.......,., .. ~ TNt ......,_ -lllM el .. ._ '~ Ow1i .. ..._ ,_ .. Wiil •nd/orestet.: 0r.,... ~' ..... ;~c";,;;,... _..,..,,..,...._ c-•• c1er11 .. °'.,. CewMy "'~"·'.;,,---n
A ,,.tltlon NI bffn filed WILL. MU. Af f'Uk&C AUCTION TJllt !!":"'..j-=-:.: wttfl ... Ot<fflllllt I. "'1. 111""9
by Charles H, H•ll In the ~.:::~:::= ;::,~0 c-ev c._ .. 0r.,. c_, ... · ''"* ~~~':,"' 0r.,.. ewe Olifly ........
Superior Court of Orenge CMIC'lt c..-.. • 1-. " .... "' '*· 14• 1"'· P'111t11t11M Of'llfl .. CNtl oeu, · · ' "· ""·,,.. • .... ..,.,
Countr re~estln~ th•t llllOM _,. UIMIM~ •U IN :a':.: .... ·'!.!..-I( I. 0 A"" a .. 1 ... O.C.Jt.1Wl,J ... S, IJ, tt, _.,. -
C h I THt Loe8't' Oft CAUroltltlA 1.Al'IO ·-1'11 W'MI ~ .. ,_ •res • Ha be T1TL.1 C:OMPA111v '"' .. oarH Ar1r1111111'--c.r.-.... ~-------------appointed as r•rsonal MAIM S'T•••T SAIJITA ANA ..... IC • .-........... I -· -. rlCTl710UIMll'MIM
repre sent a Iv t to CALlflO'llNIA "10i · ......,.._..,CA,... ""'" ,._ ,.""" •~tTATl•MT
d I IM M Ill tllM !Ille Mf ~ 0r..,.. C..M o.11, ftlM4 -------------------Tll• lellewlllt ..,...,, irt fel"t • m nlster the est•t• of .... '~ "'"-119 ...... 11 Dec, 1'. t•t,J ... J, 11, It, tta .... i tTATIMUfT OP' WITHOltAWA&. ... ., ...... ;
M•rlan C.' Hall (under ~ .. ~ ... et Trvt1 1" t11• rAOM TAAVIL 01s10"'· usu
A lt70 •raduat• of
Coata II•• Hip !;eboOll
and a 11'74 sradu•&. .. f! UC Irvine, be joined Ulll
'Nny in March.
th 1 Ind e pend t n t s. • .:.U...,.., . ..,. c-.tv..,. r.x 191a """T••UM1P 0P•••T1•• ~A-.TW1t111,ce1......,.e
Administration of Est•tes All ._. _.. ,_ ,.._.... 111 1111 u•oH lllH-u)Y«" 11rc11uT10N, •NC .. ..... "'~ c-.. Or PIC1'tnout 9'.lllNlll ........ • Ce llf•t11le cer•eretl .... 1UU Act). The petition Is set for citv ., ......,. 9Mdl ~ ..,....... 111i<'!'mout au11•H• T ... ........,.. ,_,_ ,_ .,.__ 1t11111et Q . i....-N~. Cat...,,... hearing In Dept. No. 3 at ,.._,; • f •• NAMe ITATllMNT ......... el 11er111er lrem Ille ft61) 700 Civic Center Drive, PA1tce1.1: "" te11ew1110 ,.,.o,. h ••'"' ,.,tnen111, ._.,.11,., 11nftr 111e T1111 w.1-I• tet1dlll(tff 1tY e
W t I t .. ~ Cl s '" ",,... 1111 I Celldtm ....._"; lklll._ INlllletl MIN., R.C.H .... ,.,~et!Gft.
NW6in
NOTIC. 01' D•ATH OIP'
LOIS CAROL ... OAS au LOii ... OAS, ak1 £.011
C . REGAS AND 011
PETITION TO
ADMINISTER l!ITATa
NO. A-111•.
A es 'c"11f'"" tv of ant• Ultll Ho. M ( .. !.u:H") "= ..KllHLtltlNTEllNATIONAL,601 ~u *· 1'111 Slr .. t, (Olll ...... ,., • ..._llecreetlefl,111(, na, a qrnla on Jan. 20, "'"",,. ~1111_ ,ie., '~" ... '-• ,..,. °"""· "'"" J.I!, Ntw,.... c.i1'°'111eta.27. W11111mc . ..,.,.., 1982 at 9;30 a .m . "~111t.t1'' ftt•lw ~I .. Tree! 9-C",C..~ Tiie llctlllo111 ll11tlllUt 11eme ,.,._,,. IF YOU OBJECT to the Mo.ttM1''l.C-'1'.,0rt11t1J,Sl•ef • .._.I!. IC!ellter, tot l'-l>•rll ttetitlMflt..,.,.,._...,.,,111M Tll•• ....,._. -m.-w1111111e
ti Celllemle , .. "llllM''I rec.,... .,. twt11e, klM •• • .......,.., kec". c.. . .,. Mey t, "11111 IM C-y Of Or ..... c_,, Ci.rt " Ofe1191 (.Nftty .,, gran rlQ Of ~he petition, Jlllf It, tt1't, et~ N•. tf6te, ftMol fyll N1me •1111 A .. rfft .. the Oe<lf'IW ... IWI.
you sh<>Old either appear "' ._ ,.._ , .... 16 ..,eutfl m. Tiii• IMIMtl 1, •OftdlKlect .., .,. ...,..,,'MIMt_.,.., ""• at the hearing and state 1M11111w, ., Ofl•c1e1 ••·-., .... , .... ......, ._. Cre'9 w1111en11, ., .. £. ~1-0r.,.. Qni Detty f'ltt4.
Your ob1·ections or ftle °'.,...'-,,wMct1,......na111.1e ,...,,,1(......, "•-AldNno, .....,....,, ce•._..• e>e<.e.u .tt.Jt,"" SMMt
ltt lflel .._,. fetcri-... Tract lfe. Tillt .....,_ -lllell •1111 Ifie '*1 To all heirs·,
beneficiaries, crtdlto(I
and contingent creditors 6'
Lois Carol Regas, aka Lois
Regas, aka Lois c. Rtois
and persons who may-._
otherwise Interested In the
wlll and or estate;
wr en Objections w ith the ttH'1. ,_.. 111 .._ .... ,._ , '-" ctet11 .. Or•~ c ...... 1y ... '" R-lf c. w1111tm1 ..X 1111( court before the hearing. 1111011911 • et Ml"•"•-• M•o-, ~-u. '"" T111t ••~ •• ll1ect o.. •. '"' , _________________ _ y ..CIM'OUIUlfOrtlltlJC-'t flt1'11U Wl"'IMOr .... c..untyClerll. our appearance may be """CIL2: . f'wllllllwll er..,.. c .. tt oe11y ""°' 111tt1ai llllCTITIOUt•Ulf••M In person or by your A11 ...,..,...,oettt,_,.,.11111.,._, 0et..J'l,1•1.J.,,,s,12.1t.1t12u21 .. 1 P~lllltdOr111goeo.a10.11yP11o1 .. ..,....,ATUlllWT
attorney. '" .... t• .. °"""-Arw• .. __ ~. 1, u.12. "· 1111 ~; Tll• 1e11ew111e ,.,..., 11 .. 1"'
I F Y 0 U ARE A elllld9flftNen""PI•: NU 1111( ..,.._.,,
CR E 0 IT 0 R 0 r a £XC£11'T •II tll, t•• •"II l'OTllANOM*IM"°".!:i= . "ydrourllen -.toft<fl lltftMlll • NU 1111( Go«Mrf Mfwl. Unit 0, H A petition has been flied
by Chris P. Regas In fhe
Superior Court of Crane.
County requesting that
Ch ri s P . Regas b•
appointed as personal
re p resent at I v e t'O
administer the estate of
Lois Carol Regas of Coslp
Mesa, California (under
the Independent.
Administration of Est•tH
Act). The petition Is set for'
hearing In Dept. No. 3 e1
700 Civic Center Orlv•
West, Santa Ana, Ca. 92'70t
oo January.13, 1982 at 9:30
a.m .
contingent creditor of the .. ,,, .. ,. ,_. ,,.,, ""wr1ece., lll1CTrTtOUJ•uM••11 1M<11, Cll...,_.,.., deceased, you must file .. 1c11-e1111 .. r1t111.,....., __ .., •AMeSTAT..._ .. , 111e111 o. oeereei .... 1uu ... 500f9"f Tiie lelleWlltf --••rt .. 1,.. PICTITIOUtauMMla __. .. .,. ~. ~ a..cti, your claim with the court tell~ ..... :::."'::'~~~:' ..... : 11wMtut: u111uT•T•M.,.T ce1...,..t21M1
0 r present It t 0 th t c-....v • .,. ............ -. Ill I... sovu•1~ SAILS, w w. ,_ ....!.'!:.::•,••lltO Hr Mii ,, cltlltt Tiii• ......... It ~'" ..., ..
p ersonal representative a... •«.ordtll lfl ._ '*· P ... • s~1~':J"+~~~· •i.c.. uooc, fro .. •ta s-. c1rc11. lllfly ..... ~o ~
appointed· by the court .. ~'~~~;-· -. sov111e1Gl'I SA1Ls, • c.1110N11e c~~·~~r-. •• """' T"1e _...-.,. -"*' •"" "" within four months from An uc1us1w •i.M -_"""' 10 <.,,...ellon, \ONO Boetman A....,.ue, c1rc11, Cotte MtM, c.. "'*' c-ty cten. of 0r..,.. c-t'f "' the date of first Issuance .,.. t11e ..._,,,A,........_ .. ,. stM•,CA..... '"'' ........., 11 c~ -. .,. DKemw 11• 1"'·
Of letters as provided In ., IN ,.., • llel119 ~I to"" c.::!:e~""' It <Ollducl .. Illy e 1""".._.~ II • .,_ ,.,,,.,
P'l*IMlcl Or .... c.elf o.lly ,.,..,
DK. IS, tt. "· ltl'I. Jlfl. S, t• Wlt .. I Section 700 of the Probate ~~itcEu. ...,......,._.., 1..c. T1111 ......_. -111e11 w1111 ..
Code of California. The "" '*""'"" rlgllC -,_,.. ...._c. 0.-.111. c_.., Cllft .. °'.,.. c-. .,. Ille ,,_, SolC.e ..... .__ \'lee~ DKlfftW !1, Hit. -ti> -time for filing Claims Wiii llM .. ---tecl., Tiiie ~ -tll4d wltll W. Pl,_. ..._ ._,~ U. ll4M" ,_.,.. 5"<• No. ~tt1. ,..,.. ..... Or ,_ ....._. 1111 --------------not explr~ prior to four Tll• stru t ••llreu and et11er c_,, Clef'll of °'""' c-ty ... .,.. -.-• -'\. ,..
months from the date of '°"'"'°" ,. .. .,......,, 11 "''I'· of ,,. o.. t4• ttet. o.c. n. "· "''· J•. s, "· •• n .. ,
the hearing noticed above r .. i properly fetcrllled •!Ion 1• "*!ltA.I 0r.,... coe11 oeu~'= Ml 1111(
YOU MAY EXAMINE :"~".°'':'E111w•~::_~0::vA 't=E OM.tt,ttl'l,J.,,.J, n ,tt, 1912 ,_., .------------
the file kept by the court. CA1.1F011N1A . • If you are interested In the THE UNOERSIGNro TltUSTE£ 015Cl.AIM$ AHV l.IAllllTV FOlt estate, you may file a INCORlll.CT INFORMA TION PICTITiout•USt••u request with the cour1 to l'URNISHEO NAMe ITATUU!NT
receive special notice of THAT ..to Ml• It medl wlt11ou1 T111 te11ow1119 p1rso" 1t '''"' the/inventory of estate <-..-"' • .,,_, r_.it• ui1e. ~ ... , ---or ell<-llM ... or e•... AMIAICAN OPPOltTUNITY assets and of the petitions, lftwreDtuty o11111e. P\ltLISHllM '95 .,,_, A.,..."'
accounts and reports THE lof•• _, 01 1,. -Id s..1ieF,ir...,...,.ve11ey,cAn,ae. · described in Section 1200 s balenu of .... otlll91tloM ,__ JAM IS w A IN w RIGHT
of the California Probat'e "'1"' ectvan< .. , ...., Htlmeteo , ... FLANAGAN. 1122 Nimrod Drive, •lld .. ...,,_, It t.M,to).14. H1111llf\9t11n 8Mcll, CA '2M7.
Code. 1HAT "•ti<• ol l>ruc" ot ••If Tiii• 1D111if1H1 •• ,_,.., by 4111 H u r w I t z R e m e r o1>11ee11on '"" •'-<11oft t• .. 11 ,...1 ll\Cltv1c1 .... 1.
MacDonald ' & Mude: :.~~·:~:S.~':"~':.9: Tiiis ;.--=..:. ~ ,.11,,.,..
Attorney at Law, 660 0111c1e1 ..__ '" 1i. ottl<• .. 1,. ic-"'' C!ef11 of o..,. c°"'"'' °" Newport Center Drive c-1, 1te<-r o1 0r.,. County, IDt<-u .1wi.
S U I t e 1 SSS, N t WP Ort ~~~":"',; C9l\dllctl"' .... . Pv1>11-0r..,.. coe.i oe11~'= Beach,CA92'60. CALIFORNIA I.ANO TI TLE bee.it 1WI J .... It lt.1"2 SJl:Ml l"\iMllllM OrMte C-0.11, Piiot, COMPANV ' ' ' ' Dec. tt, JO. ltll, JM. S, 1912 ut7 .. t .. UNl\ll!'RSAl CITY PLAZA
UHl\ll!'RSAl.CITV, CA tltOI ATTN: FORIClOSURE OEPT. Tll: IJU) no.t100 llllCTITIOUS aUSINllM
Oeteo: Otc:enll>tr I•."" NAMa STAT•MllNT ly: Cellloml• Lallf Tht lollo•lng persoft It •01119 Tll9c:..m,...y _.,..UH' lyGlnnll\lt..._.... PERSONAi. AET l11£MENT
F_..._Offlur MANAGEMENT, -Wtsteriy Pl.C.,
P'vl>lllllld Or .... Coe~ Dally Pllol s..lll 100, N-1 .. ~. C.. 92660
Otc. n, 2t, "'1, J.,,. s. 1w1 \'42-tl lrya" Ro.,.rt w1111amt, ou
rJ,....Ol\I ~. G..-•1 Mat. Ce. tttlS T"ls 111111'*1 It C-..Ci.11 Dy en llldlvl<k;el, .. , ...
PICTITIOUI 9'.lllNUI MMleSTAT .... MT
Tiit foliewllle ,_,...,,ere fo1ftt ....,_ .. :
ALL MASONS HEATING A AIR CONDITIONI NG, tt7 l rHdwey .
C..MeM,Cll ......... "'27
P'eter Merte1t P•lly Jr .. 1•1 ar .. fw1y, C:.to Mew, C•llt•rftle nm Tiiie ..._, It <-..clM 11Y Mt ..... IY'-. ,._M. ... HyJr.
Thlt -w" lllecl wlltl" IN c-ty Cltf1i .. ~ .... C:-y .,. Otc•m-II. IWI.
Fl111J7
l'vl>llttllllll Or-.. CMS! Deity Pltee, o.. u .12. Jt. ~. J ... s. 1t12 SMM1
P1CT1nous auStN•u-
NAMm ITATllM•NT Tiie tollowlftt P••IOll It ......
llwlMttet: ORl\llNG FOR DISTANCE, IWl-0 Adami.. Calle MeM, Cellfor"'• .,...
l . H. 5'e<lelllft, IWl-0 Ada,..., c.osu ~ Cl&llfoml• .-. Tlllt lllal...U Is <Ol\dlllc1ell Dy ... INll•I_..
L.orM L Hen Tiiis ......_. we1 1114d wlll\ IN
c-t• c11111 ot Ora1191 Cou"'' °" Otcemw •. ttlt.
Pl11ft'1
l'ICTITIOUI MISINHA NAllM STATeMllNT
Tllo fOllOWlllt IHl"On Is dOlllt
l>llSIMHet: COltlNTHIAN CLASSIC$ VIDEO,
121n G.....,. Grew 8"'4., s..1w •. G•r0.11 ~. Ce!Hornl• ttMJ
11~1 J. PHrlOI\, Jlt JICkMn
Slrffl, Setita AM. Celllomle tt701 Tlllt -1""1 II <ondll<tell 11y ...,
..... 1 ... 1-1. ·-J . .....,_ Tllll .U...,_ -llled wllll u. Covftly Cieri! of Ora11119 Coilftly 111 No--····· PODM P111>1I""° Orenge C.0.SI O.lly Plle4. O,C. I, IS, 22, Jt, 1Wt SUMI
P1CT1nous •USIN•U ~STATIEM•ffT TIM lolleWlftt P•r&ol\ h d ..... ............. :
Nl!WPOllT GAS • WASH, *2' W P1clfl c Co.ttt Hltllwey, N••IHl•I llffc II, Cel ......... t2MO
Jem.-A. FerOOQUff, 1110 H. lll•ce11t1a A•tn111, F11ll1rlo11, Calltorfti•~ Tiiis l>utinftt It Conll<Kted Dy .,. ,,,..,¥._. .
J1n1-A. Fer ...... Tlllt .....,_ -filed wltll U. Covn ly Cleni of OrMtO Co..tnly °" DKem!aw4, ttlt.
111111• l'utllllllell Or ..... Coest 0•11' PllOt, DK. I , IJ, 2t, Jt. tt11 ,.....,
NOTIC• TOCReOl~llS OP MIUC Tlt.-..W•A
C11cL 1111-6• u.c.c.1
8ryM R. Wllllamt Tiii& Slai.n-t W9$ tlllao wltll Ula
CHiiiy Clerk of Ora119t C_,,1, °" l'ul>ll.-0r"'ll CO.st O.tll, Piiot., t-----------------
Notice ls'-'"'"',.,,..., 10 creollor1 of
IM e ltllifl ,,_ trlfl-.rOI ... , a Dulk tr~ It -. te be mecle ...,
0.C. I, IS, tt. Jt, ltll u..11
Otcem-lA, 1"'1. ---------------1'11ttS1 ~1111111-Or-Coell Oelly Pllol DK n. 1'11, J ... S, It, It, tm Wl,_.I personal •roptrty "eretnelter 1--------------dncrlMcl.
Tl\t --l>lltlftfft -n• of l ... Intended lre11 ... r01 .,., HUNG t----------------SUP llM. 211S "'""'°'1 Blvd .. Cotito
MeN.Ce.ftW. TM IOUIUOI\ In Celllornle of !tie clllel uec1111 .... oltlce or prl11<lpe1 lll111lnut olll<• ol I"• lnl•ftllell
lrtMl•ror b : ..,,. .. ...,,.. All otll., ll11tl11Hs "emes e11c1 ........ , ..... Illy Ille 1 .. , ......
trMSltror w~ -.,..,. lnl Pelt
H fer H kllOwn lo Ille lnten .. d lrlftllff'Mwe' N-.
Tl'le neme -11111111\tsl -•t DI IN lit...., Ir ......... 11: SUN GUN
LEE, 117S -..ornitvcl., CotU -· Ce. '2'21.
Tllet ... -"' ,.... ...... , ..... '°IS det<rl-Ill 91nerel •t: • .., stet*' 1>11sl111n .,.. h l1<1te4 el: 21rs
NewPO<t 8""'·· coa .. Mete. Ce. ttw.
TIM lluslneu.....,. -Illy -Mid tr.t111feror el Mid locellon Is. KEN'S AUTO REPAIR
Tllel selcl lllulll tr ....... ls lnteftdtll '9
N conwmmeted •I rh• ottlce of: 1.ANTA AHA £SCllOW, 116 S. Me111
SI., s.ftto "-· Cefffoml• tt1tt, eit .,
.... r J-v u.1•. Tlllt lllllk l•lftsftr Is tYllltcl lo c.tllorllla u ... 1 .. m Commerclel c-
!«11on tlOlo.
Tiie --ec1c1reM of W. ""°" wllll •llam clel-mey be llled I• SANTA AHA £SCllOW, 116 S. Me111
$4., S.llto ..... c.. '"''· _ ... ....
... , for """' ,....,, by -< .... lb 111•11 ... J_, •. '"'· wlll<ll 11 , ... ~-dly lllolOre Ult (OftWmmellOI\ dete spec Iliad .....
D•tod o.c.mller 11, 1'11
5'.tflGWll Lee I....,_ Tr_ .. , ..
SMUAM•ec .... ,. ............ ..... A-. Ca..,,.,
....... 0r-.. c.tll 0.-, , .... DK. Jt, 1tlt
PICTITIOUS MlllNllS "AMI STATIIMSNT
s-..1
Tiie lollowlnt peno11 It clolnt
lllilslMties: LAUltl!TTE P'llOOUC TS, 14'1
•• ., Sl., Suite '· c .... llllWM, Ce. .. ,.
Lorttte MOtrl-....... tt. ten (l~A ..... C-. ...... c. ....
'fllll ~ It c.-.C ... Dy .,. ............
~Morrb ........ tt Tll14 _.....,.. WM fl .... wltll ...
c-tr c-of °'.,,.. c-1, ... o.c-w• 1•1.
Mlllll A IOll COUltT OP CM.fNtl•tA
COUtfTY OP llllOllTtl 1t• V •a..ca---....... c.-......, PL.AINTtff': ltOS IT A e NICOLAIDES Dll'ENOAMT: lt09£1tT C. LfWIS, JA .. eNI OOll:S I ._,.......
\I, lftCIW ...
MIWMllll
CAM NUMll9A , ...
NOTtal 'I'• ..... .,._ --. 'ftl _...., ........... _ ....... ................. _,..... ...................... _. ...... ,, .,... """ . -"" ~ .... .n.n.ey "' ... .......,, .,... ._... ..
M ,,..,._.,Y .. "''' -wrln.111--------------,.._, 11.,,. _., .. , ....... .._.
AYllOI 111111 ..... tt" t 11 . ................ ..,~tH.
11• 111141'-ie I -· ... Ull. ,...... ........... Lee .. ................
SI u .... --. Mlklter •I <.,.•lo ..
WO ....... II\ .... -Ill, -rle 11ec.,1e l1tmedletem•"le, ,. •lie _,,, w,......... tKrlto, 11 .... ....... ,...._rtlthtr ... e t....,.. t. TO THI. Oll'EltOA#T: A clYll
,_,lllllC -. ...... fli.4 ., t ... ............ __ .,.,... ... .. ................ _ ....... ....
·-~..._..,,_ .. _....
... .,...,n11 ....... t_,e ..... ,....... ... ~~-
l'ICTITIOUI aUllNH.S
Mt.Ma STAT&MaHT Th• lollowlng "r'e" 11 c1ol111
1111111,...•n: GWS LIMITED, ls.2 Myr1 .. No.
J, T11ttln, Celltomll ftleO
George Wllllem ~. ti.t Myrtle Mo. l. Tlllll11, CellfOrnle tHaO Tlllt lllfttMU II C9nduetlcl llY ell
, .... 1 ... 1-1. 0-.. w. Soul_,,,
Tiiis ~ w• llltd wlitl ._
c-nty Cleft of Or-C-ty Oft
Oe<•m-•· 11111 "'~ PuflllsMll 0r"'9t C.0.tl Oelly PllM,
DK. I, U, t2. Jt, ltl'I »Jt.11
••• .,... ........... 1 .. -.... ~--
...... 1«< ..... ........,.., .... W. c:ewt 1---~----------y eMH. ,...,_ ........ """" tllt ....................... ~.
Wlll<tl ~ ........ lit.....,..._,, .. ............ _.,., .... ~.,.,
•Iller rell•f •••11etle• '" Ill• ,........,..
OATl.0: "-Y t._ mot .. ,,...A.~. ow.
.. teNt M. ScM.11. o.,..ty
MLAlltO, MAlll9aL v, ••Tl•••• a MOM
&r1 I Ml alC.W.W .... ..............
P.O .... • ........ ~ ...
T•hC-•NM ......... Or.., (MM o.lly ,. ....
Ole.. II. I\ ""· -'-9. S. U, 1t02 UIMI
rtCTtnou1auM•111 tlMMITA,.. .. NT
~'°' .. ~"to --· ...... ,,.
ALL HAS0MS HEATING A Allt CO HO ITIONING, tt 7 lrH .. 1y, c.e ..... C...........tllW "•t•r _, .. ,. ll'elly Jr .. 1•1
lrN-••Y, CMtl MoM, Cell ..... le
ttdf
Tlllt --.. la ~ .... ..., 111
·1 ...........
~M....,lyJr. Tiiie ...,._. -lllef wltll .. c-ty CllR .. OfMtt C-. "'
OK-w ti,'"'·
lllKTIT10UI IUllN ..
NAMe STATIMIMT
T"• fellewl11t HrM1t It clol1tt bflltlfteuM: Tltl<ITY Cl.EANIMG HllVICli,
1•1 Mvl.......e •••• .. s.. m . 1:1 T-.~--ltklwNA. ar_,, 2•1 Mu~ = .. s.. "'· e1 T-. ce111.,.,,.
Tlllt ....... 11 <...-WC .... tty 111 1 ............ . ltldllrf A ... ...
Tltk ......_ -ft .... •"" ._ c-•• c . ..,. " o.-.,... ~ .. DK_.....,11,"'1.
"""" ,..,.., ... Or ..... c.... Ollly ..... DK. U, 12. Jt, \'91, JM. S, t• J.llr1 .. I
llllCTIT10Ut llUMNaa MAM9 ITATUletn' Tiit l1lleel1te HrM41 It .. ,.,, ...,_ .. ,
COllN£A PL.AU, l TO., ltttt Sleter A-. S111te 111, l'-Wllt v.....,.~.,,.
TIHW A. 5-, t0tt1 M-.. Wtt IU .......... V .... y. Get ........ ..,..
Tlll•......_ltc--.11y.,. -··~. T ... 5-..........
Tlllt ......_ -........ ._ c-ty Cllft .. Or ..... ~ .., ~''·'"'
IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition,
you should either •PPMr
at the hearing and staW.
your objections or flit
written objections with the
court before the hearing.
Your appearance may be
Jn person or by yoir
attorney.
IF YOU ARI: A
CREDITOR or.
contingent creditor of tM
deceased, you must flle
your claim with the court
or present It to the
personal re presentative
appointed by the court
within four months from
the date of first Issuance
of letters as provided In
Section 700 of the Probat•
Code of California. The
time for filing claim s wltt
not expire prior to four
months from ~ date of
the hearing noticed above.
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the file kept by the couH.
If you are interested In the
estate1 you may file a
request with the court to
receive special notice o'
the inventory of estate
assets and of the petitions,
accounts and repol'ts
descr ibed in Section 1200
of the Califomla Probate
Code .
G~ry Leibowitz, Esq.,
HS T.own Center Drive,
Suite •· C.U Meu, C'fh '2626; 'ft: (714) S4CM262
""*~ Or-.. CMtl 0..ly ....
Oe<. u , n. "· "" JJIMt
llllCTIT10UI ......... NMllll ITATUlellfT Tiie ..,_.... __ ,ere ..... _. __ :
MAl.COl.M A OALV I.AW tlENTEA ASSO(IATlh, f7m L.11• ·--Suite-· ......... ""'°· c.. . ,...,
Tlltm•• II. Melulm, HH MKA.-9Ml, ..._.., .. _, C&. -..., .
c. 0. °""· ... ~ ........... ... • ..-t1111c11.ee.~ 01-.,,N.~,4-~ .. .............. e..o. CA. -.a Alc ... rcl It ........ !7JIS L.11• AlfMlel, 5'lllle-. ..-Ylljo, C&. ....
o-N W. Gii-. mes Ult 11........,s... •• ....-v ..... ca. ,,..,
fllla .......... It <-~ W I 19Mrel_... ..... c.o.o..y Tlllt......__lltell_..._
C-ty Clltll .. °'Mte ~ .,. o.cemw n. ""· ",.. ........... Or ... c.-Delff ..... Otc. n. ,.._~.JM. s. 11. .--.....
ll'ICftW .. I 1• ..._ITA,..,... Tiie lettowt ... ,.,_ 11 ...... ........... :
Tat llWT1lltHt-•t W. 91 ....... c....-..~
T-. ...... k~. -.... .--.c:--...~ ...,
Tiii• ........ _......,_ .......... .,... ..... 11, ... ., ™' ........ -:. .... c:-ty ~ .. 0.-.. ~,. ~--· ......... Or-..c......,~ o.t.ll:A. ... ,-.. ..... -....
lo
Orange Co11t DAIL. V PIL.OT/Tu11d1y, Oeotmber 29, 1M1
.
The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 64 2-5678
UMQUI ..
OLOC ..
R·2, .s· lot. South of hicll .. y. 3 BR, Senst·
tional t.t.nns. $it00,000.
U~IOOf t1()Mf l
Balton. 875.eooi
NEW BUSINESSMEN
ContKt the DAILY 'llO.,.. for
Information rt91rdln1 tt.e
OMftcY rt_ ................. .
Pldtloul •• , ......... .
MHlltDT.m
mE
IBDlll ILlllS CD.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
M1W WOOOlllDGI LISTING • Exceptional 3 BR Choice Corner
Lot. Grt Location. Beautiful Area
Nr Park. Comm Pool. Mstr BR Ste
W /Mirrored Wardrobes. Select
Landscaping. $172,000.
(!) ·--..... ,.~··
AESIOENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERYICO
OM1HllAY
The most exclusive condominium
building on the bay is where this
lovely 2 BR. 2 Ba. Condo ls located.
You have your own private sauna· and the use of a pool, spa and recreation area. Within steps of the finest designer 1bops, restaurants
and markets. $598,500.
llllC & RNlt AN HONOR
S C 0 E B E Z A C I R R 0 0 W P X N R
A E P 0 0 C J X H A E U Y E X l 0 K 0
G 0 K R M I W A R J Z V Z 0 W I C E A
H J A A K l S A C E I I X B T P P R R
J W l W T 0 C T k K R R 0 A A A S W T
A I W E R S l R I P P H R Y l l W A A
H A K R 0 A P l l N M 0 R N A M E N T
0 C E X P Y A E J P C Z T U J l E M I
0 S A W H 0 B J E E R T M C A S P C W
R K R Y Y 0 I C 0 ~ H E I U I E M l 0
N H R ZH SIC ROOKESE
Y P R 0 E 0 J P S Y E W l H A l A N
0 T H 0 R R T P G L 0 R Y A T R U R
C E M I N P A N S N T W E R E P 0 S H
R T T R I 0 E N C 0 T R I A T I W 0 A
...... ""· i-i Of dlllDNllY. ,;:: end bok ,, 1n: ..
I' Glory Dlltlnctioft ~ .,
Cl'adk ~t T•y " ,.,,. ~-'*" t "-d O...eloft I.Mel ~ NoW ,.,.. lltcaf
Tomorrow: Wit
.... ....
M edkln mcome o/ D<JjlM Pilot /omUw1 ·
ezceedi 134 ,000 a 11ear. Your ad r1cu:lw1
the county'! mo!t alfl~t bu~no au·
dience
/Jn NIGEL
UAIL[Y Ii.
ASSOCIATES
FUUOCUHVU
U r 2ba. S.C C)Clh.
Euc •""9 szn.ooo
675-1 771 1--1 ASSUMEAITD l!l91_11111!_
HIAVINOMUOO
You'll lovetbil 1parlou1
ly remodeled 3 bdrm ~ on thit extra wide
lot Sunny p1t10 ' jacuul. Only 107. down
OWC!! $50.000 under IP
pralsal
Ji ''"'
a.tFf HA VB4 YU Easy romrort. ramil~
h\'mg on qwet Kings
Road Unobstructed
\'1ew of bay and ocean 4
&inns. ram1l) room &
d1n1ng room N1ct'
enclosed swimming pool
and spa orrered at
l'J00.000. including land
642-5200
j PETE
' BARRETT ··. REALTY
I 90.000 at only 12'1 in
terest. There's plenty or
country charm in this neWly de<.<orated 4 Bdrm
home located on a quiet
street in Mesa del Mar
Btlterhurry! 751·3191
C::. C.,( I I ( T
Mt scport •octt I 069 °"'9' lNI &tat. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -t"' P~~( H'I HT I~<,
*** U Gredi._
118 Via Lorca
Newport Beach
You are the winner or
four fttt tickets <SIS 00)
value to the
Sports. Y ocatkNI
-'lYSltow
ANAHEIM
NEWUSTIMG!
Spac~ 4 Br wlbonus
room & OCEAN VU .
c'tm POOL. SPi\ &
I Gazebo. Beauttrul home
with many nice up
grades Only $429.000
Patrick Tenore, agt
758·1221
c~~~!!0~10 i OCEAMFROMT
To claim tickets. rall '1 IY OWMEI
6'2·5678. ext. 272 New cust bit 2 st).
Tickets must be claimed fhncb Normandy 3 BR
by January 8, 1982 & den home Can be * * * split. -95.000. owe 3711
0 W N E R W I L L Seashott. 673~78
CONS! DER CAR DO¥a SHOH S
RYING BALANCE with EXEC. HOME
nice size down! Ranrh Med. stylerourtyard.
style Mesa Verde home Pool, jacun1 Overlooks
bouts 3 bedrooms, 2\'f bay Cala•y Or Formal
baths. dining room . re· din rm. 2fl'l>ks. 1695.000
luing family room. and fee.
hearty f ire p I ace. 642·~10/&46·4848 Fabulous assumable VA
loan! $229,500 Call for ---..... ~~~I financing details! MIWPOIT HllGHTS m.ao 3 Bdrm borne, flrepl1 ce.
TARBELL, REALTORS double garage, choice
location. Near Cliff and $10,000 DOWN, $1900 mo. n--... 187 LN\ ocean vu. 3 BR 2i,, ba ......... • . .-..
condo. 213-582·41M .., ~ lbtr.
owt•WILL SACllACI ! ~ new l~ll.ry townhouse
c.cndol. ) bdrms, 3 ba
BELOW BUILDER ·s
COST. $135 ,000 ea
m-4313
...WCI AT I 2% WWI 15._., down for 10
yean. 3 Bdrm, 2 bath.
areal condition with
n111 extras. AtC.
WIMfw ..... ~
!ncloMd patio, corner -~~~~---1 lot wfth RV acceu. Aak· Wl'llllALLY Inc $117,500. For an •P· ANAIO
pointmenl to 1ee, call that tf mort people read •us1 lhls month'• Na t1on11
! • HEHITAGE Gqraphk relative to
Newport Harbor • 0 C ~ce ba.yrront proper
1 ..... l!!!!ll!!!!•!t ly. wtll •Yl'O(ht. Call 1-:: Jcim Campbell ror appt
to tee thia brand new
tilt.ln1 of '•'*lout bay·
Ol'tWI vu ntm home and
~[Al lOR!-i
~ 11t ta. judc• °' Ulla Im.GOO prite •'6dl ta·
C .... I lifll pattel of .....
--. 1a1m11ALn
111\1 l,"' •MJll!I 6n;.aJI I
frln za:;.,Wll1 .. Ad ... ?
11 00 . .....•...............•
OCEANFRONT Modular
Type Homes, 24 hr
security, 17 mt pvt bl'h
+ fishing pier Cedar
cottage type. red wood
deck. pool. guarded
gate. adlts onl> ~o
169.900 _ 499·38!L
-..rrop.r+y 2000 •••••••••••••••••••••••
INCOME
PROPERn
SPECIALIST
Select rrom 3·19 units
Terms available to suit
your needs
jX!
NEI&5ER · QJI J Q tlH
1
\2 II C ·
7 1~ ~I Hifll
2925 l'Olll'i:t' ,\\I'
('u~I i.l \lt•'u l' \,
APPLE YAWY
TaSWht' Near new 4 plex 2
bdrm, 2 balh each un11
with rireplace. enclosed
patio, garage 9a. ,., 1st
Pos cash flow Now
$159.~ Bill Grund).
Rltr, 675-6181.
l UMITSC.M. Pnce jl&Sl rHIK'td, nor
new.call now
TSL lnvstmnt~ 642· 1603
14UMTSC.M.
Euts\de with pool .
owner anxious , •rut
flnancuia at 10"' ~.1'!.v~t!'lnll 642-1603
19&8SIH,MO
Locattd m Costa M fH
lWID 2 8drm 2 Bl IAlllt•
art ire•t rmtalJ Tbty
haw patlo5 • «ar•a" Allumt l5k ltt loan and owcw.
'•
,
L1
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTrruesday. December 29, t981
... -.F----11 :k¥cr M.l ••••••••••••••.••••••••
fi'or all you ne~ lo know SPECIAL •bout bunkrupll·y. r .. 11 tl 67 Pt D m iws1112 Th;t'a ALL ~OU !1y Wa..n
ror.
30day 1d
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DAILY
PtlOT
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DlllCTOIY DO IT NOW • ..... s....
Your D11ly Pilot
Service D1rtctory
C.,..Senke Qrywtl ~5-nlcet ..... Mll.y ,.._. · M "J
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• We <Are C.:rpl Clean1m1 DRYWAU. ACOUSTIC r r 't Tr 1 m nll n i; & llAUUNG ' OUM p \tuonry our spec11lty C.t.. ,~ l>ra111.clt1red from SIU
Stum clean Ir \.lphol11 H yruxp ~\Illy h(''d a. ~roov11I •t Reasonublt JOAS. uk for Randy, c.iean. quick. ~e1>t1nd1· ~ yrs exp Lie. 4ol94 i ""'Plumb111M~.~e::21~33 Trurk mount unit lnlured S32 5549 Prices. H11uhng. Odd _ _!41 84Z7 ble Wedo any me Job! Bonded Ina Reis Color rieet'St Wor~&uar 6453'716 ~Senlc -Jobs. fll'an up~ TREESISHRUBTRIM __ •63120CM• _ ~ rtll631»1l0ick Ot.~hwuher. d1spoi1;11\
mpoo & steam clun ~;:::::? ••••••• ~•••••• 7&0911~.6'139043 Gange,YdCleun ups AllTy~11 M11onry lNTJlo:XTPAINTINCi 101le1~ & C11u1·r1~. rt' ~rpl~ b~l~t~t'r~i.,.~~t f: M Oe111in &t Check ~· ftee est. 557 ml Very rt1u. lk. bonded. u c'd ~f11 Free cat p111rt'<l fl replaced 11
Hall. liv /dln rms sis. p. ck• it in g I s H ••••••••••••••••••••••• a.IAHUPYOUIACT BobS41176$0/S36·9906 ••6461087 •• Yl'i!,llptr J1m631666ti
ava room S'1 ~. couch MTl..t PCB Harvey Carpentry Muonry TODAY ' y di ~ I'm Smail M~ pnrl'~ llropertyM••i••at .,0 hr .. G _HardJ.son._545·3701 Rootln~ · PlumbinK · ar aarage .._ • ..., I C •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• •• • c "" uar. ehm Drywall Stucco Tile cln-up, etc. 1 ton trut•k ••••••••••••••••••••••• are smal ' 'd . NB & rtoPllTY
pet odor Crpt repair lldrtc.. fterrodel J B 646·9990 .63U9'J3~hrs> •ABC MOVING Exp . Irv Exp'd Ron673 IW77 uu..u.Gir..1 ... 1111 . ..ty
IS yrs exp. Do work ••••••••••••••••••••••• --~ ----JOH.N'S 8 ''K R d prol .. low rates. Qwck. G L M J> t ..-n,.. V"U""O
-m ...... ell Ref 531 0101 f:l.ECJ'RICIAN pn"-.. General Ma111111m1tu•e . A.... ! 0 Y careful service. SS2·0410 angun ain .~nl( Orimjie Co. arta IS > r:.
1.-''"" Repairs & Decoralin" for hauling. Efficient, ------Cust. work Lt1• #362478 l'Kpenrm•1• C11ll for info )tear.1 Clean for the right. rree est1matr on * •li11.! R!}'.640.St44 reas Stlldent w lge •A-I MOVING• Im f)'ffl!!il 7:SI 8281 1rndrat~
Holidays ! Best rates for lar~oramallJobs llOtiEIMPROVEMI::NT trurk Thank you . Top Quality Special t\11 Pa111ting int $4~ rxl 9634 112
the big diites• C'all l..lc~I 673~9 . 7~1976 cArein handllng.25yrs t;.50 Neal & l.'omplell' ~733 Elet'lnc our Specialty Repatr·Maintenaore j HA-ULING exp Co11111etit1vt rates Freeeiit Rt'fs 1151 7292 .._~/l.,a'r
~ r,.. s.r.a . .................. 1 •..
• tllpe,, Trft Pna.ai11. ~rcial Ludtcape
tSrrv icn 115 7'&38tl
G1Jbfrf1 Ttec Spet
Trcn11hrubf uputl)'
pruned P'rtt ut
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THE T1H PIO'U
l'ro work, 11U tree• C.11
now' lm-<637 M hrs
••DPllT•• TUISBVICI
••4tJ..Z220•• ••••••• Reprtttnt1tive
'4.t.5671, elf JU C..-llt/CO..Cr.t. ~ean. Quick ' del)tnda ~:;i·~~:· ~~~p;::itr~o c nrutmasTrees SIO Noovertune.73013,13 _~.,.n.g •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• e We Do An) Site Job• ,JOb 'too small 64S 21111 l''teeest Kns631 09S3, STARVlNGCOLLEGE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'ustom building. I" !~~~••••~•••
THOMPSON'S -*_631 2004• I CM N1ck6Jl-<M6S STUDEN. TS MOVING HANGING SIO/ftoLL ITl)dellnll. mi11n1 . rt TYPING CONCRE.'Tt.:CONSTR 1£L.E<.:TRIC'I AN L.lr -CO Lie l!T124 436 Qualll Al 1 pu1r~. h.1uhnic Slt•H' ~c #ll3:113 642._11482 233l~·C 10 Smull Jobs I b1dallJobs. lge/ll'!'I Ito •KM .. , IMured. &41·8427 Free~ Sc:l~~~f~g 1>738100 ' rROOFREAOINO CONCRETE Mall\l&rep.11rs 548S203 Qu11hty.eitpt'r,hcd ••••••••••••••••••••••• WATCHUSGROW' .-loofing T1anslatlng EnalJJh.
~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Driveways. parking lot
rep11rs, sealroating.
S&S Asphalt 631-4199
Uc -----AUSTATE PAVING
Sealcoating, Stripine.
Rep:11rs Comm /Res •lt'T_:J62~8_1 __
*~persq ft• 1 -·~ Davt-l-B94·9~8 W~S~~i~~vG7;g~z~ STARVING ACTORS_ ~~~~E:u~~NJ;,FJ~b ....................... r~~;:r~~ .. CSo~:,~~~~
Bnck&Bl<>s_k 675·9027 ....................... ~dwoodAoon Gtrl.Freeesl &45-5123 Move with us 1n too small or 100 large REPAIRSF"OIU,,.:ss
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di:nC'e. manuscripts, re
eo..tn.don, Gtltffol Garden Muintenann~ ••••••••••••··~··•••••• ---December & we wtll Free est To"1_S98 2728 Shingle~ flat 30 > '' ~umes Ex~nenced, at' u•••••••••••••••••••••J Resld,CQmm Indus HARDWOOD• LOORS ROBlN'SCLEANING donate I toy lo a needy ---exp. Free est 770.212.ri rurale. reliable
CANAAN LAND Cir an ups & Tree Trim ReautlCufly cleanrd & Service-a thoroughly child. l..lc'd. ins. 673-0853 ,._.., fltpcdr Roofing fast Ser' m" • •496-0339• •
C:O.Strwctioll Co. I ll40-ISIS . l'\l'S 1146 4947 waxed ~ rudy for the clean house S40 ~7 -,.••••••••••••••••••••• XI R f " Master Bldrs Custom i-~Udays 8324881 lLORRAINE'SSERVICE '~ PLA.STERPATt'HIN<.; nl es f!'tt>e ~1 WlndowC .....
quality. room addiuons TREES Horre /8w11. 1Reh11ble ••••••••••••••••••••• •• Reslurcos Int /cxl 30 .j9-l 9S82 1 ·•••••••••••••••••• •••'
uc'd Larry Wendell. Topped irelTl)ved. dean ~ Re/sffrans 962 OSl.Q. F\ne painl111g by Richard I_rs. Neat Pa!'I ~ 2977 na. •R~IDENTIAL•
(213)921 6541 tp, lawn rl'llO\ 7Sl 3476 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sinor. Lie. lllS l3 yrs oC Neat palrhes & textures ••••••••••••••••••••••• /\~g I sty SJO; av& 2 SI)
llbysitt9c) ••••••••••••••••••••••
9.abys1t. our CM homes. 1
yr & up, anytune • •t>t~ .r.1u ••
Ccwptt Seni,e 1213 l!M4 1468 Haul, cleanup. l'onerele ........., happy local customers. "'"ett. 193•14 39 TIU: INST t\1,1,t;I) 1 SIS f'hns 957-8388
"-wal----Gardenini: Wante<1 relTl)val. llump 'fruck ••••••••••••••••••••••• T.!!_ank ou. 631·441Q_ All Kinds Guaranlet'd 1 Pmf Window Cleanml( _642 8482, 646·Slli__
~w Yr's Eve. newborns
only, by RN. Corona del
Mar Npt Bch. 673·6887
·••••·••·····•···•··•·· NoSh•am -.:u Shampoo
""J Mowmg edgin~ rakin.: _ ~ck serv ~1_:7638 SRICKWORK Sma II PA I NT ER NEEDS lnl!Ext Pla5ter1n~ Refs John ~93 llilii ~rt.'t!l':>l ,qual serv •••••••••••••••• •• ••• •• ' · f' ' Low llohday R ale~ T R 67S-494 I
Stam Siit•11;111,1 Fast ~ f-'rt-..· nl llJ9· l~2
DRYWALL. TAPING 5 wee P 1 n i: r (I l' I DUMP JOBS Jobs. Newport. Costa WORK 30 yrs exp, int SELL ttlll' item~ with ;1 ~ ae ·
Alllextures&taoousllc estimates 645 4372 or &SmallMov1ngJobs Mesa. Irvine Rers 1ext.Acous11cce1hngs Fr~esl 6458258 Oatly Pilot Clai.,1f1t••t ' WANTACTION?
Free est. Kevin 67s-9088 OO·S737..: 1 Call~t~1': ~1!:~91 !7~3j~ __ Davis Painlln..l_ 847 S186 W,!l!!.~ds ~l! 642 S678 Ad q~1fed Ads 6'2·5678
Housn Unfurnished Ho.Ms u.mr..i,._td Hoe.Ml Uttf11mished Apartintnh fv"'ir.htd • Apaf tMttts u..fwa. Apat IMt1th ......_ Apartlnenta u.fwL .,..._..., Uwfum. VacatiOll l ... tih 4250. ;:;~;;,;; ............. ~;~~::: ....... i;·;~ ;:;:·i;;.:·;· .. ·3~;; ;;:;;;;:::; .. ·;;~~IL:;:c:;;:;.··· .. 3;41 ~~·~::;··;·;;; ~·;;;~ ........ 3ii.4 ;;;,;;;;; ........ ;~;·, ;;:;;,+·i;;i. ... 0ii6i oc~r·R0Ni·2·&·:·9;·
£....,.._ 2IOO •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••I••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••i Avail Wtnter. Weekly .... ....._,... I d TV • * * Monthly 673-7873 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Clean 1 llH ~: .• ~b 1Je ll•n Cozy Housl' Lovdy Wl'sld1rr 3 llr 2 I.la I .UXUI') SIU 10. ~"a . . DIJt I 2B b r I 2 Br Hi Ba 610 Joann St <Xeanrn~w 2 Br 2 Ba ron v L H
"SPllNGS" Rm l'atm &. sinall Yrd l'loseto !leach I horn> + sml oHtt·t· Rlfl maid Sl'n·1t·e. pholll'!>. ~ r 2 a. rJl '"no No childnm Pet OK do. W o. j.IOOI tennis · CMMMI PalmSpnngs area (Mon
Luxury Condo ~Im• l!J~· i;.i5 6266 12l31S40 ~~-)ard $1075 1 .. 11. tiill!! or
1
SttSwk 499 2221 f.':ia:<' incl Jll ulil s:n.2626___ St't gale. encl ~ar. $600 ~llwitipn'.!r11vn'U':~~ terey CC) condo 3 BR 2 Ran E !I-I 'Mi 6312177 "'*---6429772 "' Ila. furn w/atrillm t·ho Mirage. 3 Br. J _,es,'-(C, Lagi.aNig.I 32521. . ·--r-rtlHch 376' ~Mffa 3124 Roomy 3 Br Townhouse You are the Wllllll'' ul Golf. tennis Dally Ba . $120,000 equity Elegant ''l'll d>ntln. 3 nR ••••••••••••••••••••••• tl.tffhaven 11it•lll\' tfe1•or ••••••••••••••••••••••• apt 111 qwel adult com 2 Br Apt Near ot·ean four free tickeh tSll! 001 Pref er sm I rom m 'I 2•, ba 1 "11111 Si95 mo Exe1: 4br, 3ha. Carn rm J 2Rr Iba. l>Jl 111, l'at in OCt::ANFRONT 2 & 4 Br ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ex Newly de<'orated. view, cl1•an bJ kuny. 1 alue lo lht' v.eekly & monthly rates
Ir t I klt('h.on1·ln•J1 nm~., i\\l~tl Wint"r WuoLly NIM11LYDECOR g \ I .1vail 714 ·S58 ·8001 vine , ren a prop 213 592 11111 tar gar. 11l'w, nr •>t·l'an , .. ~"" "" ~ ~ ''" u "'" pd 1 ireplace enclsd patio & a rage 1 1 at now c.-.... Vocation PM k r M k Newpo rt. Laguna SlJOO_ .9743-120 nopets fi.424!1:11 Monthly 6737873 I or. gas . enc gar · fi610252 ..,,..... •• , llS J as or ar ·
1t.-._ .... _ c d · --diwasher pool "dulls garage /\dulls only Clltd lY Show ' T hoe do c B • Owner Bkr. 1.,.l;;U5••1""" O~ o MissiollY!.jo 3267 St-:A\'IEW. I h1 21• ba . Want someth1ni: xlra 642-~3 · " Sc>rey. no pets ~50 Mo l ~o..ltodi 384(1 NAllEIM '0 a Nconhsl ~
1714)347.0108 2."'r111 ! ":' prgar ••••••••••••••••••••••• +r rm.bes10(can1•1ew . ~pe r1al in a 2 Br ----~llllrallbtwn9S3Q :::'..':':: ••••••••••••••• t'ONVENTIO~ nun lo ort u . ~mi -..ll4 1"'1 I HOMt:S POR RENT pool tenni~ ~ei· Sl.1.400 Townhouse. ('Ompletely Newl2 B~·:.:a "t . d I Beautiful landsC'aped I Lotrge 3 h<lrm 2 halh Cf.NTF.R Jan 2 Ill "k Tom8S7·l66S ledafs • <.:fl'Jll t l11h111 duplex 3 &~ Bdrms S650-S07S I !2131 430-362!1 fum'$89S Mo 7609117 encl ~are~~l '~\P .
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gardenaplS Pool&Spa rrpk. l':tlio i!.trJl!l' To rlaim til'kt'l!\ i;ill Furn Rental Indian
••••••••••••••••••••••• lXrStpk1111 ~Utl'l $350 F rnt'l'd \ards &13Br2 Ba or :!Hr 21:1a IA1.IOAl.4TCUll \dlts64i.scn3· ~ v.r Covered park1ni: XJnt'67S91J2 642511711 ext 2il \\dLsSandpiperVillas
Ha.nfwWshed , :-;op..•t,~114~1.I l(arages Kid!' & pels Uen ('ommtq>ool S795 Bah A (.)(' 'u -Adults.nopels f'unn~ht'<l &Unrurn 12 :1 1 1'tt·ke~mu~t '>:"1:1.11m1 1I 640-_SS48 ___ _
•••••••••••••••••••••••12br2•;h.1111nd11 11l'W. welrome lstmo +dt•p PROPf.R'l:Y lloUS~; J~lsl~l~;n view 3BrTownhou~l' 1 tBR $43S lidrm i\pl!> (;)m h)Janual)lll~l\2 l'afm[)('sert.2Br.ava1I
Htwporl ltoch 3169 xJnt ~'ill l'Jt John 5'\.5-2000 Agl'ol. no rer 642 3850 fi42 1010 ' -· Newly deror gas I'd . 2 UR I BA ..,~2 ~~ Jai·uui SaunJ. pool * * * "'k or mo $600 mo Xlnt •••••••••••••••• ••••• •• L" i11!1f1 .111 '"'"'' -3 B 2 Ra· 2 R 2 B· encl gar ,,. .. ,, dswhr I 161 E 18th '" """" IU! 714 673 8821 UDO ISLE charming 4 .,.... '~" Ntwportltoclt 3269 r or r a ·,..,. • · lt'n111 ~. \ollt·~h.tll. Ea~11Jlurr 2 Hr 2 ll.1 -· ----
bdrm 211 bath lrg sun 0.0 Point 3226 ....................... Den Slt>IJ!( tu ht•J t'h. ~dull~ 642 5073 1~1skethall. 11.am1• room r1n•µl:u•t• pool. "11rd1 Meeelttey CC
ny pait0. compietely up ....................... WXU.YIAYFRONT ''f.'~o~~n'.J~~ llOUSF Spac1ous2 Br. I Ra $395 M'estfield llunt lkh 11460619 "'""' S62.S ;201111 il'almSpnngsl 2bdrm
graded $1700 mo Year tBeaut I Br .!. ha, f' R. 3 Br 2 Ba with boat shµ 6'1.2 ~I -. 2• 10·10 3 Br. 11' Ba $425 L;iun -13 Ur t•ondo in lllng <:ont I 3 Ur 2 Ba 1'tel)!> tu hf'.11·h .'! ba l-omp furn Rent or ~II Grundy. 67S.6161 I Criik. gar lnrd > ard, A I a ii now Ma n) ti4 I <!.11' rac . pool S48 9~ . F~LY APTS. l'l'I palln \lo ~toral(l! mo Int ut1ls 1nd<1 ,l'fl fi7S.0~ -
Luxunous 2 Br~TB A I ~1~ S72.'i 'lit:! 2t!l4 amt:nit1es SJSOO Mo ~iums ~Mo 2 Ur. I Ra Apt I Sparkling clean largt' !>hed & l'arl'orl Kid' l'ROPEllTY llOl 'SF IHOIAN WEUS
home m Big Canyon. j£--a...i.. Val'-y 3234 !!_roker6~4912 1 Unfwwslted 3425 Garage. washer d11er. apt.s for ramihes v. 1or2 OK. no pt'ls SS2S mu t.'2 :115(1 M2 u1111 ~-· "" II mull s II h Id I duldren Nr park lleat 7S2 2197.11 s M ,.. COMDO beaullfully & completely ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~······················· a ·lnS ma (' I d N t Balbou blantf WJll'rlronl r le d furn1Shed for short let of HOM r r< 1n I! F::-ZT THE ILUFFS OWNl!Ot:s~. l·n'1 u111t , YEAR· ROUND FUN OK. no pets Only 1 vrar pat 0 pe s ss25 -. 3 Br 2 Ha ''t'Jrl~ Mt 2 Bi 3 Ba um. w n
4 mo~ $3000/mo . 1st & 4 Bdrm S";tMI Fenl'ed Spac1ou.~ 4 bdrm. 3 bwlh. like new 2RR 2Bi\ din """·'' "' '"11°e• "' old Call ror appl i:~.2:1~n 631 ·S583 tal Wi5 rro ;10 0:11; v. k I\ mo Ow 0 et last I ~ecuritydeposit& )ard & ~.HJ~I Kid~ & ram home Nev. pamt& 1111(" I~ µutan halrnn) .................. ulltl.1~ TSLMGMT 642 1603 'llwpl II"'~ 2 br mc11u11 ~•IJHIU
rers req. 759 0664 or ...,.,. '41•ltu11~ 1.-1 mo + ca""'l Mo1e m read\ j ' <.: drrµI '"1.·lr dean Ii•'"' 11 • l•Rth • S1'.INNING lar0 e t & 2 Sparlclmg l'lean 2 Br 1 '• "' Re.et~ to u~ 4300 ,,_..., ~ " ·r . 0 I I I ,., ... I ... S4"" F' d ut I• adult~. nu l)t'IS, ss.~o "''' ~ .--... 700.9100 dt.>p ~5 !IOI \grnt. no $1200 per month Agt. Vl'rt, raPt·~ t•t' Ra l'. I 11 ,,., • '" ""'" Br. 2 Ba C.ard{'n A1>1 n:.i "" ent•r • '~ Ultl.· inrl 1,. ..... 1•1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---ree 64().5560 j.IOOI, l'lubh~t· 'auna. GREAT RECREATION Pool 710 w 18th St I p.ud Refni:e 2 \ma II • I & .. BA P, •• ApO\ • .... .. "'... ,, F roomates lO Sharl!
-Q\Jll'l nr "'"" $6711 o r,.," • 1 •·•'I""'''" • rh1ldren OK. no pet~ ..... '• ~ "K• I Hr. )l'.Hf) n·nlal '"°I" 11111111. m CdM $225 tsl Homes~ ~on ~och 3240 I pt>lS ns 2SKIJ i~I Iii!}!, I '\. p!t ~''" • • TIH. VICTORIA. New l960Wallare 642 4!l05 \ •• -lu ltt•h 1;,,raj!l' p.11 klllf 1 .. ,1 l'all 760-8620 •• .. ••••••••••••• ••• ••• ........ , ••• ••• • • •••. •• Balboa Island°" alerlront JB 2 1 N . I H"d"' r 1u11s •5au11d ly de<'Or 2 Br w l(ar . • ·• l• • • .. . s440 mi ljlJ 39511 lalioa lslallcl 3206 Lux 2 Br ! Ua Pool 3 Br 2 Ba Yearly rl'n ' r 11111 • V.lll ft>rr;u•i• • 11v<1•om•"••9t • new crpls & drapl'S, hit 1 • 1uQ • "" • 1
••••••••••••••••••••••• spa. 11,1111 ,ecunty tal S97S Mo no.~7 <.:oo<Jo ll11?hh up1:ru1h·d s .. mm.11g , r.u11 iru.. pallo Adulb Call m4!Sti8.AIJ ~ I Pmmsul.i I Br 111.1 ·'"'
Balboa Island Waterfront i:ah• Wallo. tu 111•.st•h afl5 -" sma 11 PJl 111 3tO\ e · I 1' ••011 H~ngp betwttn 1-SPM. 636 4120 I l'llf pd Yt•arl) S.l25 111"
3 Br 2 Ba. Yearly ren SPYGLASS d1shwashl·r. v. :"her & , BEAUTIFUL APTS 667 "G" v111ona $470 APARTMIHTS b751&12 ~~5 Mo. 770.0347 !162 13:~ ()('ean & ntj?hl Vll'W . dner Community POOi. I s'""'"~ I & J Aeo l:Wau11ru1 garden apls l Balhoa ftJ\ Cluh '.! rm 4BR. 0.1 & • l'ool. lennis 4bdrm. ram rm. 3 car sauna & Ja e :\o pets •uvm• • rurn••htll USTSIDE Patios del'ks Pool & I rm to m.i lo nlt'mht·r· BayCront pier &t Cloat, for & PIJ~j.!r11u111I Kids Ok gar S2200 mo E11es t650Jtm. No le~t' Avail f. u .. 1111,,.Yt«J •AOu11 $415 2 Br l Ba Poob1de Spa. heat po1<1 J\c1ults. $~_ &lO ~
sunning. beach. 2 Br 2 No P• t> ShiS mo 7~00C!I Jan 1 liJJ.131i for appl l•••ng •Nu Pe11o • Apt. l..aundry room l no pets 1 RR. luxul)· Condo Villa
Ba • S 1 4 0 0 Y r 1 Y 531·~1!'> \.IX 1'•1~ Bluffs Coodo J Br up, 1 br .J!l~ ~'~?~'' 00"" oa"v child OK. no pet~ Ca ll SAl'H s:IKO $:111~' f't1t•1h1·:a. pool JJ1•u111 3 bdrwl, 2 ba
2J.!'478·3S77 Nr bl'at·h. llnlrm 2ba. down. 3 ba Kitc h en l..marl Condos ror appt beforr its gonr I BR $435 ll'nn1s 't'l Ufl l) n I l>plx 2 bllwks tn h1-.11 h
lai)oo PtMHtila )207 S750 r.Jr>I• w1 int·I No nook $1300. 644 2607 Pool and ~llJ 111 ultl ! Oakwood TSL Mgnt 642 1603 I 2 BR 11 dJA ssos 1)(•ean. ~ S:lli 052X rauo S700 mo •173 :ti!>'
•••••••••••• ••••••••••• peb !Jli~ Mt>:r.• Spac 3 BR 211 ba 1 t'ry Corona del M :ir t hrlrm. 1 Garden Apartment• 1 2250 Van~uard ~40 9626 .. e 1 r Hunt 1 n .: t 111 n ..,_.,.nh F11mished
New twnhome 2 BR. 2 ba * • * rlean townhse P~I. JOI: Ckean vie"' 1\ho 2 unJ 3
1
. Newport Buch H WESTLAKE VILLAGE llarboor 211H s.szs or Uftfw1iisMd 3900
2 car. lg patio. decks M~ .. M1n' rf gmg, etc S750 mo Ai..'1 bdnn 673l2'il ti ~ 680 ••,M• •'''" lmmed occupancy C.1ean2Br 1 Ra laund11 x~ 1:1611 1·•••••••••••••••••••••• S850 VteW499·48~ .. ~.1440 iT _._ (7 14164S 1104 Adult only complex far No !)('ls $3115 Mo I S E AW f ..i 0 2\t!I, .11l,1e1• C ~...:.. -I ~W H1wport811chS. Pool.spa, laundry room , 27 1 B ~; .l6lh l'I Spa1· 2,Rr Iha kttb.uk 1""11
CoroftodtlMar 3222 cu~l.1~ll·"1 llarborVUhomes.4 RR. Uieflrnishtd 35251 •"00•61hSI. ......... pal1osordeclcs No pels 1"404S2 P.alm .:.ir $4U5 1 .~111 VILLAGE ••••••••••••••••••••••• You an• lhl' winner or 2 RA. fam rm . $1200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• (71 41642·5113 Garages avail Kel'bllll :\r llt•.i1 h I
2Br. l!Jrage, frplc. util in four rn••· 111 l.••ts !SIS 001 a' a 1 I J an l Ii th IE ONE OF I Ba rh S360 2 Rr w ~ar S415 Nt•wl) Slatt•r 962 3113'i Nf•w 1&2 bdrm hmm
eluded $750 mo Call value lo lh(• ~-4157 7~·9312 THE LUCKY FEW I I Br. $4-05 S41 5 del.'oralt>tl new apts .• • --•-och 38481 adult apt~ in 11 plan' I Jim Davis 759·1221 Spori V ati 1 t 2176 Pl ta --r---Adrm rrom $190. :! bdrm s, oc °" Newnnrt lle1"hls J hr Rent in ro,1.1 M1•'a !> ,.._ Fr 0 2 Br S47S S41l5 "' r IX aren 1· · ••••••••••••••••••••••• IC'I 1 1 BR h th -.,,, .. ~._ Oflf px L' I rrom $570 Tov. nhnt"'' c.oegan omew1 edRVShow fml) rm. hrdwd Cfrs . Nt::WF.ST 11.1te1I 20 FUm Jbdrm :!bd hit TSl.Mgmt 64S8122 1 ~· Ot't'an\'wv. Oetux1•1&2 fmmS640 + poul.,. i,·n
spectarularbay&ocean ,\:\\11~.1.\I Crpk. Sl:ISO. dnve bv 41H ,Townhomt' \tLl.,\(j ~; ms. r1rrphwr Monthlv NEWBREF:DAl'TS Callbetl S!'M 6364120 I Br Apti. N1•wl)d1·<·ora1 ms. waterfalls l)(>n'1,'
view 2nd BR o\•er cu:-;q''TI0:'-1 Sti\ndl'{'ws.642-9666 COM~1llNl1' 2&31\r Ol')l'arl~&15 i!'l7J · BACH lBR w I.OFT We~lstdl' (osla Mesa. l'\l.refn.:e.d1shv.asht>r C..isfor t'ookint.:&.h i'.•l
gar. avail 1mmed n:i'TEH Jan 2 10 -21, Ha 1600 lllOlh•1 fl uf from s350 f'rpk . rH dpb. u1'5lJ1rs. 21\r I Ra
1
d1spo~JI. hl'aled pn11I 1 in.: p.iiJ From SJ 11 year L~. 11800 833·2623 To rlaim 1 , kf'lc;. rail llG CANYON pure tuxur~ lidrai:r~. llG CANYON room . pool. iai·urn. gas I U!nlral heal. reCnl( & l.'le1ator suhter prknl( Diego Frw~ dnn• :>.onh ~e,s.67S·l250 __ 642 Sf.ill ,.,I 27 2 Guard gate comm hydrn tul!l> 1n masll'r , Delti:htfol 2 bdrm, 2 ba &waterpaid Adults. no ~tovr. enl'losed ga rage S850&uv Call4!H 11()113 on Bearh lO Mr~'o•ltft·n
Costa Mna 1224 Tickl'h mu't h1· C'la1med Spacious 2 bdrm ram sulle. CormJ I ti in in lo! tondo Part1all) Curn pet.s 393 Ham1l1on. t'M ' Quiet & saCt> No kuls w I BR. 'it•v. 'rnlraf ht•at lht'fl Wrst on Md'm1d1•1
by JanuJI'\ l! 141t! rm Deane llome Sl~O rooms '4 01111 burnmi: ~unl) gate RISO + ser 6454411 I petS S4SO mo ~ S-442. ss.511rro to Seav.1nd \ill.ii:,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Bdr executive home
w/pool & spa Family
rm. rormal dining. 21:
Ba. Excellent condition
$1200 mcl. gardener &
pool service. 7Sl·3191 or
5'\.5-644S Agt. Avail Dec
30
* • * rm 640-8S82 979 9 C1replace!>, in1c ro waH' rm to rro 759 tS!l4 I 2 8--C d S r TI0.5629 49•1 !13114 rn411193 5l!IK
llOM L ,., II !If.NT -. ·41_.l_ ' o11en~. renc·t·d p<111os & Balbo Ha t'I I 2 BR 2 • r .on o nr fo'S Ide 2 B R. New I B f . • r. r l ' 3 Bdr. &t famil) room. 2 yard<; Pmutc• del(ant a ) u J. Plaza. SA Pqol, Spa. •• 2 r un urn Yll·tor1a ROOIM 4000 3 Bdrm ~ .. ~ Fenced Ba. bit IJIS. garage. va ll\tnll onl~ l~ m 1nutl.'~ Ra .6 rm lea~l'. Tennis SS80 Adult~ no Carpets Lndi;'. P1t10 Beach f'rplC' derks '
yard & i:..r JI!•· Kids & cant Sl:ISO. from Fashion lslancl, i 640 960S I pets . ~~~No Pets $5SO j O<'ean \ll'W, n~Wf) ,r;. I ~~~·;;;;·::t~h Mt:;;r·~;,: •
pet:. wekornc· b l mo t JACOBS REALTY nunult>s lo S 1· Plu1a or 4 Rr 2Ba Steps to beach 64H460~r6-46 4911 _ -mxleled S7~ mo <.:all 985 No l'arthl' l"o·1q
'~-r-M Newpori Bhd & so or PROPERTYllO Sf: pal.lo. gar, laundry No unit w1s1ngle car Northl.aguna2bdrmapl Omiy, Wrekly. ll.11<h1·n
dep ~~:!<~lit \,:ent. no PRO•ERTY GRS OCA1rport .lusl t•aslof S850 . 2 Br garden apt Pvt 2BR rederorated Ouplext da15_~536Sor 499 2J<111 I' Hv.~. La~unJ Hc .i;·i1
3 BR 3 R.1 lpl1 1len. sun 615-617 3 San 1>1ego f'rw~ StJrt I ~ ~ _ 642 101!1_ ........ 1 sml t•hild ok $450, .&_era e. · 559-5001 oo tht' Ot·ran m Hoat (';i al'B1lable Lov. v. rnlc•r Close to SC Plaza Green d k "I bl · .... ~ ec . du 1;.ir • tns. Newport Beach . Villa mg al SIOOO " month S46-9950 AVAIL NOW! nyon In neat 4 unit hid~
1
ra~es 494 S294 ~~1~";!~3 ~~'.2 ::c· O/W K1<1r. (... pets OK Balboa I Rr Iba 1050 sq 631 S439. 24i3 OrJn~e ~!Its Bachelor $325/mo. 2864 Large 1 Br carport pool Ldl') far1ht11.'~. unit has Balboa Inn S90 & up
yard. 2 car gar .. $850/mo ~ 960 :ifitK rt. loP nr Ternr1c vu /\\e ·Costa Mt•s.i ~fw 11illltd Lasalle CM Ir laundry Adults. no pnv deck Ava ti ~ 1 112 weekly K1ll'henn1•11 ,.
SlSOOdep. 992Carnat1on 4 bdrm lu"11huuse l'• pnvacy $800 mo + sN· l•___._..nts f11mlshed ••••••••••••••••••••••• 957-Z740aft6 pets. S41S + S26Sdepos1t S 8 SO m 0 ( a 1 11 oc·eanrronl 6i5117~11
b I I t d Pp97217l71
'
.....,...,,,_ .......... _I_..__. 3106 931 W "'"St 92 7141S2 5040, 1!!51 nr , 64<H>l40 a.enc 11J 111 ~ecuri y ~p . \msg •••••••••••••••••••••··--PALMM~AAPTS .1 ........ ~·04 __ e718S2 ,Working men C'omp
3 BR. 1 BA. ram room . SO m i 9'!H·'>t9 lalloe lllaltd 3706 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1561 M 0 2 Br. 2 Bl. newer apt air. -, J furn All race~ welr1>in1·
f Ht •• t'--+on • • * j••••••••••••••• •••••••• 8 a 1 b 0 a 1 5 1 a n d 1 B r mes!..,1· t Br garage Adults, no ""ls 1 bdrm. Ot•can "11•v. · 2 llunt lkh 53611544
gar.ll75/mo,.lst +sec ~ 3242 244 Costa MesaSt $650.U.•_.., Yearly rental S97S Mo. fums.oc>.2 Br unfum .64S-4837 St 1upp1•r l IZ lJ I l'roless1onal m.i ll'
CM.ired or working rlean
111.111. 5S ~ yrs, to shr 3
lir 2 ba apt. C M . for
111.tht ma int as part rent
.I() 2245
JllR IBA Hse l rm avail
\m ~mkr, lrg yrd CM
6-IS 3466 Eves
"\ Step. to Bch, M F 1:1 25 10 shr JBR Apt
~lh St SZSO_ 67S· 1041
~ Fto,hr2BR. Laguna
llt•Jl'h Ilse Must Be
\1·.i1 & Resp. S37S mo
l~t & La~t + Dep Ca II
I!~ -$ol27 ---
ft•m shr 2 br apt. nr
II('( r M Rers Im
11wll1alel) S2SO 1n rl
ut1b s.io 3233 ext 288 lll1rothy1 ___ _
H•••mmJle wanted. open
rmnrled to shr rurn 3 br
hc~e. spa. view. Laii
'\1g . S350 Rll·s-4!9_
\1 f J BR Balbo J
1'1•ninsula F\Jm. Must be
lll"P 57:-,.5262 eves. S2SO
• I I Utll
Wanlt•d re ma le room
mall' to share 3 bdrm. J
ba rondo in Newport Bea~h $295 + ulll Con
tact Lou or Randy 8-5 at
1714 I S23·~90. art er 5
I ii 4 I 64S·422JI
'Ill Oreanrront S23S mo
Ma1ure resp rema le non
'n¥>ker S48-1667
l1ti.1ingu1s hed itentle
man. references. former
tPa C'her s hare your
homeC M orH B Eves
&i2·60lll
din. room. den. p. 2 car _., JoM G•s Waterfront 3 Br 2 Ra r. un. u · -'· · .. ~ bills Bearh 271 I.a lln"' I
avail Jan 1st Debbie •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• Costa Mesa 1 !II lia) rront I bdrm gar
1
ca11 n0-0347 . "25 Adult.s only Call • 2 Br. 1 Bl Mesa Verde ~7936 arternuon. 1.,.(.,. remale wirum I~ room
540--0702 SHAAE IM PROFtT You are lhe winner of apt, \'lew. patio. park ------9-4. S46-9860. upper. No children or --I with ba & k1trh 1H 11 ~
C-1 Property 2 Br. 1 Ba L.ease lu~111'\ 2 Or 2 Ba four Cree tirkcts <Sl8 001 1ng · From J 1111 15 lai)ooP.-.Mlla 3107 Beaut 1 br. carpets. ~ . 833-8974 M.wport ltoch 3169 l.ol'el\· Nrwporl homo· for "" 4350 =eor'~~i~~de'C:~:~ ~a~io s~~~;'~~o frs~~ va1ue1olhe ~~ ~6~ s s 11 s o r K;;;;;j·0;·:;,·,~i;·&· 1~~r,s·.:t:~s~'t":; 2p:[;~~~noho~e1.1lroeo~. ··p·~;;·N··EW····PO···R·T···· ~~r~~1d~1,~~1Jr~.\ ;;·;;;~;·~~ .. c~;~~~ .. ;l:i
·r· r A Sports. YoccrtiOft ---· I beam ce1hngs $82S yrly _, ~ "'" I rro. u11l 1nrl'tl Slllll d1••1 ~lar ~ mo Mesa Tem1c or nt1 re~atetl40L'ft8 .ctlVShow lai)ooPfMiwla 3707 64().57l9&S36l441 ~-adults only $475 COUMTIYCLUI 760-84'42 ' noOJ.47 que Shop. Accounting lnilw 3244 ANAHEIM ••••••••••••••••••••••• &v-BR B '•Hk m.S425,63!.2177 -U -J -
OH1ce. Law Office. etc "ONVENTION I mom apt. S300 Y u. 2 · 1 A. gar. T-• ·~ ~~ .. 1ous garden apt. 2 YING Room & Ra Prt'st11:111u> Office................ 4400 Xln ....,,_ Wiii d' ••••••••••••••••••••••• \.. no n.wc adult.& $600 /mo ...,, ... ,. ..,,,.~ Rachelors l&.2 bedroo d .....,,... l para.mg is· TwnhoJTW• nrv.:Jhr,J IH1. CENTERJan 210 V S-517!__ w1tm6.37t;hms73.8276 Br.l"t Ba.1tarage'.qu1et ·· m ad resswpoof.Jlll' h'll ••••••••••••••••• ... •••• cuss relB)dellng to suit palio. f.!at Park. pool. To rla1m 11ckets, call ,._._ ""-----6& PARK ORI ECM Easlstde. adults. no apts&townhouses rus SJOO 644 7667 1617 Westcurr N B Want
Approx 900 sq ft . ex ·ac w;:; mo tm 90S7 642 5678. ext 27 2 ......,. ... ~ 3724 OCUNFIONT Bachelor and one bdrm ,.....,_$4_7S.642·046l f'toms;»StOOO ~4 1900 ~-u ........ L. 4100 financial inst 7000s r
eluding the yard . Tlrkets must bel.'la1mc>d ••••••••••••••••••••••• Yearly lease unrum 2 apt.s All idults and no C""'"'. Dlc>leJ1, upstairs 2 Ar. I nuRU,~ ls!_O~.A ent541·S032
SSOO /mo . 548 ·S442. New condo. 2 UR. 2 BA byJanuary8, t982 S37S/mo Mature adult~. bdrm. 2 Ra. bltns New pets Pool. RBQ and USTSIDE Bo. Crplc. garage Nl'ar •••••••••••••••••••••••
170.5629. Palm. Nr f'11rk. I< Pool. * * • no pets. Quiet & ~ecure. paint . cag:it -dra~s la room. 1 bdrm. pool, ldi;·. bal. Udo shopping area SOOO SUWIC MOTEL EXECUTIVE
C-OND0·3Br. 2' .. Ba . lg Noagts Gi5 964tieves 1991 Newpllrl Blvd _,, II L' d cpts, drps Stove, (no yrar lease Adults, no Wkly rrntal& now i'l\a1I SUmS
,.. SSIO Lr0 I RR. Cull 646-8373 '!"""rt Amo.67~7060'" a or '* '* * "I S105 & C I T\ m 1 s t e r b d r m . RENTALS security" Amenitie•. -----'"-~ ___ c.ee..-. M. W.'1,lly av11I Wtr, gas pd. SJ'IS pets Must have ref's up our IN w/bekony, dbl garage 1 B 1 b S650 ~ Newly decor I Br. dplx. 1~ E 18th Dr i v e by 6 1 4 •2 Phones in mom 2274 tBITAGE -/nnner. rrpl", "entral r, a ..,00 63 1 5237, 64S 6242. sep by gur Quiel 4! 1 Br, yrly. w/garage. 611LidoPark Dr 7A 64.H7~ ClubhouseA\•e 4916303 Newport Bhd CM
.. -r· .. .. 2 Br. Iba :.;,CJ\ 213 4.J0.31•5 d steps lo beach $425 Newport Beach 1 · 1'1461...s_ PU1A ~ vac, $750 mo. 2182 Maple 3 Br. I'• ba """"' ------Emplyd 3 ult over 3S 64S-Wi2 You are the winner or LAm.v COlldot NO PEE' Apt & Condo New luxury office .,ace
1105. Ron 979·S370 or 3Br.2ba $900furn HarborView Monaco ~ $330 ~-1021 ----rourrreeti(kets 1$18.00) Pool ind sp11. Ill old rentals. Villa Rental~ MBA PLACE? 1n Irvine 's bu•ltSI
flN·DIS Le Ra1~or Rily R33.s600 3 br. 2 ba. gardener. new ~Oft •ach 37 40 ~ 2~~~c~1~m r•::in value to the Corona del Mar 1 bdrm. 6'15-4912 ~roker Reas Wttkly Rllles t~ter! Elsy Ftwy-a1:
3Bll 2BA. Fam rm. Kids Orangetrt'I' Co ndo 2 ~$l02.5 1144·4728 ••••••••••••••••••••••• v ii 6'15--0124 c--a.. Vecatfo. Ocean view AIJo 2 and 3 Oceanfront Cor Winter Kitcht'neucs Phones cess Avail. now! Call
OK. No pets. No singles Bdrms on sl rum BLUFFS 3 bdrm. 3 ba. H.l.'s FINEST a 1 ~iv Sltow bdnn. 673 m t ll·S Rentals Furnished & "Z" Channel Mo\ 1<':. for details.
ms1mo. 1754 Iowa St. SS7Slmo Ac1ults only fam rm. Pvt spa. Sl.000 Spanish ~late Uvin1t ' ear.a dtl Mer 1122 ANAHEIM F.ast.slde 3 Br 2 Ba frplr, un!um Broker 675'912 Sandpi!>fr, 1967 Newport 551·12J I 64M210
644-1836 Rec. f:\ril s~1 -4 i96. rroS44-Z!OO Beaullful park like sur ••••••••••••••••••••••• CONVENTION libntw ~. FASTBLUFF lbr . pool, RI ~~ta Mesa 645 9137 •Dl&.UXIOMCtl•
2 Br New carpet. ftffhly 8511311 Br 2 ba condo Im roundin1u Terraced STEP TO OCEAN Most CENTER Jin. 2 10 PROPERTY HOUSE QI.let aru. single adult. IJve on Npl Brh S90 wk if
painted. 11r11e. yard & Wood brt d 11~ Est a I e maculate s12001mo . pool. Sunken iias bbq. ~h:~2inlai.nf~c~o~~::~ To claim tkltets. cell 642-3850 542.1010 no ~/mo.1144 4767 Pinc Knot Motel 6302 W ~~ ~ !0~4 a.i ~\
petio eoc>Jmo. 19M "/\" Homr 4RH. 2• 18A. tam 1st/last & security re sparkling rountains view r r 0 m deck 642 5678, ext 27 2. --p-.1...& ll2" Steps to the be;ch 2 &3 PCH, NB&cs.-0440 lease required .• AdJ
S&..Open da1ly nn.d.lnrm.frplc.p1t1os. qlired640-Sn7 Spacious r oo ms II h 1'ctetsmustbecla1med --•Brr I I I Yearly. on the bearh. A l lake. Pool Ir Tennis EWPORT HEIGHTS. 3 Separate dinm11 area. IBOO/rm. Ca Ant ony by Janu1ry 8 1982 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . rp rs, year y, m Hotel rooms. k1tchcneth• irporter nn. 2111 Ou·
·=·serv •grdnr Priv1leg1·~ SIOOO Mo. BRIBa,fplc ,liteyard. Walk 1n r loHts. ~542·~· evu ' **'* 20:R;,;1:.An~is~warapa~ct!'. :_~te 9650 ' ms. &bath S280upmonthh ~t.CallAM .m..m.1
S .,.,.. l!Mll327 ~6188 -a"'1220 bomtllke k1t Ch~n Ir 6.'ll· P ~ "'"' + SZllO S«Unl" dt'pos1t 17TH_..._ Incl mo. 1....., sec -'""-~ k -BR _..._....,.__ -cabmet.s Wolk to llunl 1SPECTACULAR OCEAN MISIDICOMFOIT avail J an. call Roirer OCEAN VIF.W deluxe 2 2306 W Occ'anfront. .,._, ~79 Beaut Turtleroc 4 Broad more Sr11v1tw 2 tnitonCenter , lCJTY LIGHTS VIEW Lar' lBr upst.airs with 8S7·t.3l0 __ Br. 2 Ba deck, yard. N twp 0 r 1 14 ear h COSTA~~
Ni..... dun 2 Br I B• 3ba.3car113r 2100sqrt. story. 4 Br. 3 Ba. view l ed r ..... I"'" rvroom la DA t d I Ill 2Br 1 D a lsd brick frplc . 11ar . i or:troom otrlttr,...u ;;ced yard. 1ara&c. Gardrllt'r 111\11 11uoc pd Sl700/mo. 4 Br 21~ Ba 1 rm· um._,,, l's~ a fmo. Anlh~~y ~ ~ r:al~~y. r':-:1~: 6 yard.,. C: ol s;;::ae Sf.CU R G A T E IJ3-4l~ AFC. i>ltnly ol P\'ta. \Jt1I
_.. u rpet 6 p1l.nt. No Need qua 11 ty rtntrr story 11400/rno Guard Adult.a. no pets I dayscall 64H757. wltnds dlhwshr 'urport 147$ liOO. 33$42 Blue Lantern I lllO/mo or leallt opt e.tt ..._ 4150 Ul<'I Avail now. ell( lllU 25440ran1e. House wt&ood refs Rate & ~·w. pool 6 tf'nni~. Im Utilitits Free' 1 e:ll.-.>. _ mo. 498-m4or498-92.10 Adult.s. Sunset Blurrs on •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• RtaJonocnica ""'100
r'E"' 1$25 +security tcrmlnt ot 752-57~ me~~e avall1blllty •2BR.2BACondo. Stpe lo Sl*loulblchwithpatlo P1clflr Ave C M Sptdal Ca~ lor sper11I sha~2olt .~lt-,;;,..
MJ.ZT1I ytmelttd lZ41 ~ ~QUINTAHt:RMOSA • Bd1. fti>lc. Encl Gar $9$1111.Adults.nopet.s. l.Ql.).N40,'42·81109 ddtrty ladiu Plusant MiOouialtportarV,111
..,.__ Vtrde 4 Br. 2 Bl ....................... Br z 81 Beautiful 16211 Pam1de Ln. 1 blk I mo7~ a.'!OHarl• 54t-2447. OCUM VtlW I with larct Iott. Htra ho~ atrnoaphert by tq I\, ror dllallr"t11l -h'· ocra..UFRONT Mod I d b w o( 0-h blk s t I I . From Dana Polnl rnosl dedt. 758 0414 75t·IOU dedicated aerlatri(' 151.Qa b k . Ira yard, '"IC ... """', u ar ( 0 n near a y . ucac • 3 5 0 Zbdnn 2 b1 view o( Bay l br, ~ bl w /ahwrLutila ~ bhtf, Uh new! .:..;J -nurae m 1058 n $ --=-------
c•n•re• ••lcome. ~~~~O:~~·P!t~h ::~n~>. Avail. now rdinae,r,,,7.5441 : Refri '. • .• ~b!!.:,dryer: pd.13!.t~llh.,oci11.,11C •the rlnt oc~'*fl•nt ! t ... 10u:eary ~' • or ':..ICI· ft .... ~·"*
h · C#d "' · _._ IJN. -rumulon, • Oftly 4 uni ta, 2 Br '100/"" 3 Br. 2 Ra . Apt. --.... '' + na "' pier ar 11.JQU've never pieced• WIFFLETREF.APl'S C.M.9'5-1111 .-...... • 2 Br widen. up1taln , view. bel<-0111, -41H Wl-Clll CcllUp type, redwood a.illld ld,you're In Smell 1tlldlo apt near , .. .-.......... llin ........ _ ........... ••••••••• dttll, pool. auuded IMlllMloritJ!'TrJ ltoece l BR f\lro .• om. uuna, Bttldl. •mo. I br. l bt. trple, rtfrta ...,, forlbt belt vltw' .... _ ~ 11. en~ ~ ltaeb, 2 8R 2 Bl. ~~=:.==~""":".'':"I= adlta onlJ. No ••llawquh:klY JOU j1cunl, volle1 bill. 1'75-12$7 .. Ind uoJa. no pet.a. D to Im. Adiah.a, no ~·block to beech. on cwl 1 bit to beh
_.:rom STU mo . •l rtnlt1. Pflont =ball ' lennl1. 0..uledAdl MZ·M'll :.::.mlttoa IA, C.111. =.:.. 0111 tO·OIU. TiiJl;mt. .a.• =..u. ft\O nt 1111 '
°''"91 Coaat DAIL V PILOTffueaday, December 29. 1981
•••••••••••••••••••••• 710 ....,w.w , .... ....................... ,., ,.,, ... , .... , ... ,... ,.,.,,,., .......... ~ .... ~,... ••• !!:U:("TRONIC'S School s and
Instruction
This variety of fine schools
could Introduce
Sc .................. 6riect.y SALESr EISON ~.JlpenenC'ed elect ronlr
Nmponl'nl sllll'~puaon
n<"rdt•d for l'll'<'I ronr<' ml.: r1•µ 1·11mpunv Vt'ry
1Jll.'d\1t10l of11t'r Com
ml\Mun hi"" Pltast
l'Ull lor upµt 7l4 894 7~7
..... 0. ....
2721 Sin t:uc H Ln
ec.ta Meta
you to a ne w tomorrow Call 642-5678 You att-the winner of rour frtt llrket.t 1S18 00)
v a hae to I.ht Louise Griffi"'
Ext. 311 ~·--...tlV•• ANAH EIM
CONVENTION f'nantt 111rl. hlt' ufr work
for ltt-JI ~.,t.1te de CENTER Ja.n 2· 10
* ATIOOION WRITERS!! * SCHOOL FOR
I AS IC OFRCE SklllS
Clouts fonnir19
to lw9fn January 11
WORD PROCESSING
SCHOOL
l ••arn How lo u:,c
IBM OS6 I!. 01splaywr1ter
Xerox 860
,1PAGE SCHOOL
~OF COSTA MESA I velo11N 111 II l'urt
lure I ~ Mon Jo'ri Must
hd' c dt·µt•ndJ bit' r llr
ti'IH725
To claim tickets, call
642·S678 , U l . 272
TlckeU must be claimed
by January a, 1982 ••• I Ex1'l' :>l.'l'l Jd111111 u:.s1st.
I & rnnf1cl!inl 1n "lt•"port MIK ..... lh Growtn Wllh Honor-72nd Year ·-•• (l•ntr Lon.: hr, hJrd LeedPotiffoe
8eg1n111n.: 1;, l'l:I> ~h•11 lh;111d
Shorthand llru'h up" It 111", 111111111
T) ptng Ill'\ 1"'"'
Call
(714) 556-6604
AGE 2 THRU GRADE 8 ~· ENROLLMENT NOW IN PROGRESS
"'""" & , hJlll.'11.:1111: fur Laser mfa fi rm seeks ""n•·on•· 111n1,u.d ly machinists for pro ·
hnl!ht & \k1ll1•ol Ir th" totype/ IJghl production.
llOIA> lol r, .. lh1• ~ h•1·tl<•llll I do Iii 11111
f1l1111: RUil''
Condensed Tratrunt ~ lssistJ!a
Doys • htnln9s • Satwdcrys
UR~ MORE MONEY
.~ REASONABLE RA TES
·., 1 NON SECTARIAN
"" t '"" ph'd'l' t all Mui s yrs exper 1n pre·
1 11 u r 'm ,, r1, 't u 11 l'ISIOO ma ch111111g using
, h .1II 1• 111: 1· cl u n cl ,. r I nulling machine, lithe,
utal111 .. 1 fr11:11cl & tt•ll • gnnder, etc POflRY
ACTION
JOURNALISM
•lllllMIKIAl A1'19TIOI m·.A.t, •SMAUCUl9 -1· •IOCIU ~ ':
•SIO«f1.ol'lll.O TWI °'(N
'"IVATI SWMI l'OOt ..,,,II THIU
th1·111 :11111111 1 hi\ .td We are a division of
t'omp111,Jl1on t o Johnson &Johnson and
5:'1 ouo , ti1·11drh If as such offer an ex· Coll for Clan Schedult
17141 6 41-0678
3400 lnine A•t.,
Stt 207 H.B.
B1•r 0me a Word Processing Spec1al1st
Excellent Career Oppor1unt11es
•NOT WllCMU -4UU Y ACC:ttomO SAT \oU'f•• 1h1• ho•\I plt'asc rellenl benefit packaae.
494-1003·
V'tOPI Pfl{l('f SSING ANO INfOAMA T ION
'l'Sl"M"
t lO AM TO
Int vouonon follllly t 30 r M
n·1>I> 111 1 1111l1d1•11t'l' lo Ca 11 or a p p I Y a l ~tr l h.trlt'!> l' o BoA Laakmann Eltctro Op· ~.CdM !126~ tics Inc. 330S2 Callt
A\•1ador, San Juan t 271 Gl a.HEYRE U 57 *
UGUHA HACH 92651
t?J:! '> l 811.,11.1 S~•IH 1t~ (ir1h1 Anu Ca ')2107
4 Ue .1•' 'I •••<U"f "~ •• t,,,.,, ......... a.. AUHGCLERK Capistrano <Off Aero
Pue~_ (714) 493.6624
I "-iMss Mori~s. Tniit ~.~.~~~ ••••• ~~~~ •••••••• ...... 4450 Opportunity 5005' Dt~s so I' ~~!.~.~~ ...... ~:.~~ ~.~~·~ ..... ~!.~~ ··~············ •...•••.....••.......•........................ Costa Mesa. 250 sq fl or O(f1C\\ 1350 sq rt \II' r tit HI 'Ill I ho I 11
r\. t~ , r Ir~ 11lut •t\
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'of.I\, J•N ,.1•1k 111 ,1d1Jll I' T <!XJ>t•nl'n< o·ol \pJ1h
.111Jnn11.•n1, b1•;11·h Jrt'.1 I rn1i.:r~unal. Thi· llt•J•h
H .. 11 r11n11· J1Mnbutor!>' ra~'\b trlillUrl' Jlt'r\110 for
f1hnt.: do•pl E \C'l'lll'lll oµ
µorlunrl• & ('omµan)
hr1wf1h (.;ill ~;hJ
MAID Part/lime Experienre
preferred N.B 642·3030
st.Dte Sl7S rro Ut1ls 111 Mesa Verde Area • • • ~i 3>lllO Manager /C le r k
Hallmark cards & girls. -~t-8928_ 11~ W l~th St S4Hi;i Ar.id Marrow
--Xlnl shop loc. on Bu lbou »19 Nestnll
~.Jfll l• ' 11 11.1 I I
r,l.11111 trll'•I "''"d, 11
~I t'CIUll' 'ih11f.,ll••
tt•rm ~,i1tt 111 n1 .r1 Acds Rttt ivable & 21:J 5'12 157:1 l.luuw lfr~t.1ur;111t Ii l!I h.ot1 Man,iger
Sli·t·µ\ lfollu" I ,1111 \1.mdt:(•r Fo<ld ~l.'n It'<'
e.!P· pref. 640-7373
Models. actors, Film
xlras. Xlnt opp. new
races / t ypes
Costa Mesa orllre w1lh Pen., all root & auto lrar Laguna Bcat•h
ocean \'iew Hecepl1on fir to lhe Balboa Ferry You are the w111nt'r 1,f
area -t-2 offices 644 sq passes rn rronl Great lour fr<'\' tu·kets 1$11111111
fl Avail immediately place for book store. art vulut'lothc
S425 ~r ~1 9000 shop, orrice. elr S600 Sports, Vacation
E. I 7ftt STIED 11'11 673-2943· 673.3930 and RV Show
3100 sq rt for lease $loregt 4550 ANAHEIM
Plent y of parking 1'2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CON\'F.NTION
blol'k lo Wtstcl1fr arage for r e nt on CENTER JJn 2 lit
Custom tnlenor design Balboa Pen next to F'un To rla1m lll kt'I' 1·Jll
Ready to rrove rn1 Com Z.one 001.,·x20121. $150 6H 56711 , •·'Ct 27:.'
pell11ve tates. call Rob. ~3 29:'.1.3, 673·3930_ 1't('ket!> rnusl tit' 1·la1rnt'1I
631 EB9ll _ Storage or Business C 1.
1
by Janual) 8. t982
Custom executl\e orfil·e. llOOsq rt .$3801nrl uttls • • •
400 ~q fl Pvt bath "'ith 443 Hamilton al), \ M f'ARTHER WANTED
shower Balboa Penm ~-7184 I r' S300rro 642 4623 -1gure salon Oul~IJrttl
---IMsiMt /I t/ mg opportuml\ ~rnJ II Hpt Ptttinsllla c.._•..: ft'l'H IO\t'Slllll'nl needl·il .11111
G r ound floo r offH' • ,..._,..e I a desire lu ht-a '"111r11 r
t '••····················· i7062lll ?IJ 9 . . fronting Newport Blvd ~ 1 or~ 4 II .!1•·11
All new inter ior 1nrl I ~ 5005 Mort-s. Tru$t
open beam rt1hng w I ~ "'-?~ 5035 I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~
ln.isses. skyhghls. ~00< LOSING LEASE quit •••••••••••••••••••••••
parllay nnng & i·pts 944 ting business sell0111g out Satffer Mt C ...q rt A C heal Sl200 mo · CJ. o.
BiU Horduty, RJtr
675-2866
* • * ~Y Hoffrn.>n
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Sport\, Vacatiun
and RV Show
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673-fi600 &42 3663 r AU. supplies and hx All type~ or real l.''l.1lt
tlll'b tncluchng lfl\ est men~ ,incl~ 1~ 1•1 •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ u 1 '.. .,
2 orfll't'!> + bathroom & Otspla) l'ast•s, wa11 rni: Specialiliftg ht I 1tl ,,, ···~· I \I Lost & Fow!d S300 c;t.orage. 375 fl S280 mo I room chairs. Beaul) 2ftdTD ~-334.5, 494 3803 Salon ha1rd ryt'rs and s ·····•········ ········
-HEWPOIT hydrauhr chairs. m1r 642-21 7 1 545-061 1
,.......,1 ... SU' .. rors. shelves and plants
1
Moditttf Rab MfCJ.
ICl"'I " """" i\Jso, make·up, shampoo Sl:'oll't' EARLY 1910 !)par1ous exerutn I' • or and hair produrt:. '. · • . hces arross from C 1l' C 11631 97S4 0 l.sl & 2nd 1'ru5t l>t•C1b
Hall \II sen 1tes II\ a1la ~er6 89s ~ OWNER "ON (IW\ 1' II
ble, ·opuonal' F'rom 225 , -• · -I lhru 4 unit' sq fl up al n ·asonablr No n<'ed to travl'I ;ill over Peler l>ohh, llrokl•r
-1 'N 1 • to~11 lo look for j!;iragi: 7!1().6827 "'" 1~ 1 renta s o _ ease rl' sales •ou'll find them
quired Call6133002 nght here rn t'IJ~.,1r1ed ;\lakt• \our 'h"l'I""~
FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
Call:
042 ~ ~ 78
HJ\t: ~umethrnl! 10 M' I' o p aCl' your g.traj?I.' ra.\lt'r, >~ U\lllj.\ '' "'' Dail •• l'il••I • , ",1111 ,1. I T I I t th 11 I h nl ""·' '"" "'.i 1
( ·1a,~1f1ed ad~ dri 11 well sale ad, rall 642 5678 Prlot_ l_la~s1(1t'<I A11' ••••••••••••••••••••••••• '
8-DA Y WEEK SPECI AL
•• •
8 Days 3 Lines • 8 Oollars
II~ easy to place your 8-Day Week Classtf1ed by m<.11! rlll. I
osts 1ust $8 -thats only a dollar a day' To QuJI Iv I , "
special offer you must be a non-commercial u~•'' d•1 1
merchandise for salP up to $800 per ad and tt1f> ,,.
be 1n your ad The cost stays the same wht-1r1 ·
needs eight days selling time or JUSI one
Use one word 1n each box About 4
class1 f1ed line of type Minimum ad is 3
plainly
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GRAND OPEl'41NG
ESC ORTS
OORAORD INARE
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669-0207
A Touch of Clou
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~ lt·1·tro Salt·' 1;.c 1 11150 tu IURGUJl ALARM
;,r1.1ni:t· lur "" in TECHHICIAH
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CAREER
OPPORTUNITY
\p• 'uu look 1111· for ·'
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Dftivery O,..rs
\pl'h an 1wr,1111 Wt·ll
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HOOSEWARE SALES
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<f.>i.1:! \1111 Juru :'-It·µ 6 9pm. Expanding youth 1110,. rounselrng firm has
operung.s ror 3-S sharp Full 1•1 I' ·1 • 11u11h·~ & rn outgoing mature people
'"' fur hu""''·'~ or )Our I lo rrolivale ambitious
""" IA~ ,,1 \m"J) dist J().IJ yr ol<b Call 2·Spm
1r.11n' '"U for su111·r oµµ 642-43:21, ext 343. Ask for I 'h11111 .,:-,; 'll(of. Andrea.
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HIGH SCHOOL
STUDa.TS
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.ind 1111"'lH tl'll'phunt-
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HOSTESS
1;111,(u 1.11 ~ Hu\:>ldt'
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HOST /HOSTESS \,~.,.1•·•1 .!i •l.1'' p1•r "'•·ek .
PAIT TIME
Sat & Sun mornings de·
livering the Daily Pi lot
to raniers Hourly wage
+ rruteage Reqwres a
large wagon, van or
small pickup with shell
R.eqwres ability lo hfl 40
lbs and a good dnv1ng
rerord Ca II 642·432 l
Ask for Don W1lhams_. _
Plant Serv1<.'e Looking for
Person 1n Southern
Orange County With
Some Experience 10
have work subcootrati
Pd lo th'm Approx
SlO 00 ~r -~ S022
P'lastk1Mlnr
t.o rrux ~1~e~oal1ngs
and s'alents 1537
~oorovia ~ B__ _
Pnntmg
Dtnfol • • • n 1111•, \ I' I' I, , n
,, · 1•·r.1•n .loll\ R11i:1·r ~00
Camera plateroom as
s1stant Mon.Tues Frr
Sa t Will work vertical
l'Ommercral camera
Knowlege or P MT pro
l'e\S helprul, expenenre
preferred. bul w1ll lrarn
Apply tn person. 1660
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IECEPTIOHIST
Full time Mon .f'r1 .
must IX' personable. well
i:roomed & en1oy meet 1n~ poblrr Require<
i.tood spelhng & pen
manship No typing.
phone exp pref erred
full company benerus
Apply: Pennysaver. 1660
P1£1£_1?11tla Ave ,C.M
DISPATCHER
f or <'r,1111• & l1urk1111
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IHSUUHCE
IECEPT /TYPIST
Assist wilh rereption1s1
duties T y ping
ISS WP M l, f iling .
~eneral orrice Good
company IX'nef1ts & ad
'ancement. Ca II lor
appt Merrill Lynrh
Relocation Frankie
152 cncn
f:O.E M/f
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IHSURAHCE Restaurant Wait ress. days and night s l.urns(•tl mar1111• un-George's Camelot
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 15.80 J
• • • • • • • • • • • • • \It ---------' 7fo(J.~3.'>.1 ch·N nlt•r Fr JM'r \' ac-ht I 67J.32.33
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I • Job. Want~. 7 075 • Address -1 • ...................... . e City Zip Ph one I e • I e Check or M.O. enclosed D I • • 1• Cha rge my ad to: 1 e
• -E1p I e • o~ # '• e 0. # Exp I I . ~. • L------------------------------• r········· WE'LL PAY THE POSTAGE ·-------·----: e
"'t( If ':-!>AH I
• : 1r Milll < 0 : •
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Cindy ICtck
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EXECUTIVE
SECRETAR Y
BIG 8 CPA FIRM
LOCATED IN FASHION ISLAND
Big 8 CPA firm located in
Fashion Island is seeking a
profess io nal secretary .
Typing 75 wpm. s horthand 100
wpm , capable of working
independently. well orga nized
and versatile Competiti ve
~l(.lrting salary and excellent
hcnefils.
CAU. FOR APPOINY'MENT
(714) 640-9200
EXT.247
EOUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
• :, I I NO P()C,T A1,f :, ••
• I IN TH[ • ! 0 : i BUS INESS REPL y LABEL ~ """'
0
""" ; r::~~~T~;J! Daily Pilat . . . . .. . . I .... ;
• uJ ,,AST Cl•S~PEAMIT !fO•l(OSTAM[SloC.L1FOll11jl & CLERK I; .
• g .. • I nw Joi!\ Roger Inc halt : Advertisine Sales I
.?! POSTAGE Wll.~ l:U PAO 8~ AQOR(<;.c;(t o • 110 \ I' dt'nrul PfNllOn : 1:wt•1 llt'~Wllllt'r tlt\~11) ,,,ll''l>l''""' ln
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f B 1ic&I\ • TheJolly R011r rlnr "alts , pll'll'lt' An t:qu ul Oµµor
• I 01 ~ • 17042GHl!llk Av ' • I~!.~ t:rnp1~r!r
• 1 330 W. 81y St. l~inr S48 0331 ~ . . • 1
1 Co1t1 Mt11, CA 92628 : •• ll•~t you rod today's ,: ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT
I I Clualfil'd Alb? If not. " 330 w BAV ST •• COSTA MISA, CA. tMM :
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\V4NTED
C (----c-(::>-,--) )
ROOFERS All types. 7
yrs exper needed. Must
bl' resp & dependable
Ca ll Mtke, 642·-'-'7222=---
Newspaper
Carriers tor routes
in Huntington Beach,
Fountain Valley & Newport Beach
•
•
Good E.amin9s
Super Trips
• Great Prizes
CALL
CI RCULATION
QEPARTMENT
llailJl'llt·
642 ... 321 .... • • • -you 'rt mtsaina lhe btll ·" lll'llOVALO,JllOlllUNtfY[Mll\.O•lll • ~ ·······-·~····-··~··········~····~b~1r£a~ln1~t.ntoMl~!=tl!!i·i.:-~--:ii;·;;;· .. :=·":::··::;:··~:::·•::::··:::···:::~"=:'':::''·=·"=·..:.-~======:i=:=========d
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,_
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTueld1y, O.Cembtt 29, ttet
~--)I W.W 7111 INI t•11tm1• IMO._,. ttlO ._.., UICI ~W..W HM ~ ... 1.W ~ ... .,._ ~.._. .,. . ........ , ....................................................................................................................................................................................... .. ~ creathe Humaa esources =~~.~r,::~~ *•AU.OOHS t ._• *,!-. WAIOMSAUI J•a..L• .._ tJJt... ,, .. ,.._.. .. ff41 ·= wW bave dlie OHOrtunitv to •Iii o •. '.:.' • t Y . ~~ .. •ift "'1E ... ~st·•• .•,o.,!,.ONGTra Ldts11 A, N_.8 -r. _. _fi ... 2 •• 1•1••2••11•••••••• *·:.:d.~Tiiioi·;;.. • .. .. ••••••••••••
Illa a NIWtl-orinted dep~rt· · ... ~• ra. -~1\::1'· "~t':MHi ev~;),1uon:vallaabl:'.'i Pill V9ft. •Nee w/ne•
ment aimed at .....O.S employees' .;:JU .~=·~~.c, •JtowO!N!!J!Or! You are tbe winner ot must aee llc . .SOZBW forVourClr f 106 1· n.•mJ 100.'ftO.
nteda. SkUla .. llWtt t'GmJ>HHlion, ~-10111 cblu "Vu rowtrtetk ll:m <n8.00l 1755. JOtltSOMISOM ,_.. f7 beaeftt.a, or1anl11t&onal behavior 1nd doim''. '°' 1, 0,..1°" vaJ.-t.otbe '1'9 CAPRlCE WA GON, l.9c• ... "8'Y • com•unicat' Id ••Ploe Llael AllC "°"· .-.. Noel s,.ta. Yee..._ loaded. btautlhll dark a Harbor Blvd: + w . • mo. 0.1.L. o-.-.. . IOft WOU bt helpful. Ooldlll R.triever hr· ...,m-• '3S mlY Aow brwn wllh saddle In· a.ta lltM S40-~ Cap. Cott NM4. RH.
• ,.,.,_s1ve. dynamic COfnpany needs pl11. J1a1t luutlru 1 ANAH~IM terior Only~ mllcs. v1lut '2411.IZ. Total
a lake-charge, human•tic leader. Grtll hnoo1Utlt1! 1 A WANTBD. •°'• Bowl CONVENTION 1«.l277CXS. Premium price1 pmta. ~Ot u . Coat Ple.e send resume IQd ulary re· Moat Appreciated Tlclleta. 7H ·l41·7U3 Cf!NTERJtn 210 '1J lllAUBU WAGON. paidlora01 11Mdcar luae S4ot.• to tallf qui.Nmenls to: a.riltm11Qlft! ••1 ~· H.,,1 Ne• 1'o claim tickets, call extra nice mld·1lu (fOftilnordolllealid DlliYlry. Order Youn ~ ttH na~ .-C lri1b Setter Pup-eerl '42·5818 . ext . 272 1~aaonU. ~w•FllKth.~~2f· lnloodcood1Uot1. Today.! .· -··••••••••••• ~ -'*-· Show ft Pd Avail. ATAIJ • lO Oame1. 1170. T1cketa must ~claimed IOOS. ""'" · ......... "See Us Flntl •t D£AUR 111 U $ • 1'C...ar Daily pjlof Shota. IU5 to USO. A1UorDouc. byJanuary8.1982 WLC .. YIOUT " • ·"· llA.KIOl'PER
Costa Mesa, Ca~92Q6 a1.m:z MO-SlOOorltO-IMI * • * 900So Coast Hwy ~ m .INJ ~~!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!li!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Bt11le puppy, male, 12 Weld. eqlip. one IOcu. ft. ~.W .._1 ~guna Bea~.9967 i4 eo.w. loeded. air, ... $old W/ ahots, AKC OIY eyl S71 10 cu ft Ml poweor, atereo. nry J'l'llSS!S Appiy ln /olr.84M4al attt.~1: m6oee.0cu' tolO w.,u/ .. ~"'lr#CIM~ .Ql-Zltl
PIOl'ISSIOMA&. ..... !I Matador Mn· GRl>aM F. Pawn. AKC. ft. "8 . Pratetile tank 'm5a·et;.·.;;:toi~;;··1 ClilMICt 9520 ~~~~ I' t "52 Ta .. IOMISA&.IS klnlllllt.17•Newport lYr.SlOOorGoodHome · Muat ull. ....................... ---------1 -.f.•••••••••••••• ::.:. ~rt~*::e:tt~: •vaW~ • ,.._ F 968-139 Oaltem 300 Oalloc> Salt tm) 8411·2987 PUTTllST llttut wl\itt wllll ~d W C.v. lacellent r1"/'d.
U to IS" ~m. paid ,.,._51~ .. "" ox Terrier pupe, 4 Water Aquarl um , SEXTANT: Freiberger 'S7T-lllD ....._, Silvfl' Shadow ,_, l•t. Seit o er .
• Qu.aliried •rite-In run ti•. espenenc~ m»nU., AKC. l300ea. Complete w /cabinet, Yacbtman with use IMTOWM! WI IUY G.OGOml. l'UOO .
. ~ Nwpt Bell only,~. apply in (714)SZl-OZM filler system : UV Mint condll1on $300 llSTOFfltt! USEDCARSltTRUCKS "4·*7 ttH
klcaUon. Major lttcen· pet'IOn, Jolly 1loger. 400 to Y• I045 ~U:u'st~~t~:.:. 714~ Ev!s __ 005lTKZJ COME IN OR r.,.._ •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ~:Ji~~na : neiw car, S. ~Hwy ., Laguna •••••d•••ho .. ••••••••••••• M lelh.Power 9040 CALLFOR iic;lic~ .. 0;.••1i(t;;;;~ ~r:t'=d~ 4J:e
..,, vacat on, yrly o g me . Lab mix •56 o..-11111 ..... -e. Wor ... ••••• .. ••.••••••••••• .. • FE APPIAISAL _., · A c .. •1•3 =~·· Ken lrown, WIUJNGTOWOllK• P'C>Pits, 2 fem , 5 mos ,_ • ~W d-':~ • 11'7624 SKlPJACK Connitr·DeUllo -mi, / • sttrfi)/ 111>. • ~ .. • .,,.,._ L I ., I! "' R E .A T 634-7034, U4·76S4 Cindy u•J I , ...... , roan· T I c~UT eus, muat sell, 8/0 'IO Cutlaa. Like New. " v . _ t.ain • Coln Boi. $300 w n 6 c y I Vo Iv o nullllv 2'140or966-9131 Lo PB PS .1.. SANDWICH SHOP ltftAJU~1 IOH OBO.m.G131.9·4PM ~·under 200 hrs. l.8211BEACHBLVD. lnYMc. llli. · ·•
OOUNTER/KITCHEN Sail ~t is loolung .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Bea· .. it··' 7 .. Bl f ru I elertronlcs, flush · HUNTINGTON 8EACH Y•...-'770 WiMowl. 640-7797
111 ftryou!Weoffer antx· -ui. ue ox rods. holders. outrig u7.1.-7 '76DATSUN710WAGON •• .. ••••••••••••• .. ••••..... 9957
n per day. Costa cdlmt PllY plan, Demo * * I BUY * * Scarf. Like New Only cers. dual bait tanks ' Tndis 9560 -•-or 4 cyl., automatir trana.: ·eo.·~ VW left ' ncbt •••-·•-•••••••••••• ...... uoo and lnsuran« benefits Good used Furniture ' 714.QS-7279 many xtru. Special •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• s4t.JJJI fa ctory air cond door, '73 left door S50
SICllTMY and are wilUn& to tram Appliancn--OR 1 will t.o.e lllH•• Am. trlr rated 12.500 lbs, '59 Ford 1• ton PU, POISCHES AM/FM stereo, lucgag~ earb. West.em style whl ASllSTAMT I.he ncht person ror this sell or SELL for You Helium Bouquets de-W/6 wbls. 2 yn1 old. Boat camper shell. $450 WANTED rack. (841SEU) (~lAI rims for Swper Beetle
MAMAaa. ... ,.W.. Call Fred MASTBS AUCTION livered. Perfect for never len in water. In 496-0523 12599 Theodore Robins. ta. 5419744
..._ -or'nllytclday tof1ndout 646 161 ... 13,,_.625 every Occasion. Great xlnt rond. Must see •75 Datsun P U Run) Dir . Harbor Blvd., 15VWBUG.111good con· •urbuaydeslcnup-190r •f4·1131 o r •• ~ • (714)848-2887 s c:aita Mesa.642-00lOor dihon.MUSTSELL'.! holltery company hi ' I 1UY•-..-• 1orNewYean! great. ome dentb ec.ta 11... Top sit Illa rv""' •vii 873-4419 TAX DfDUC TIOMS I 00, 0 0 O m 1 . SI 7 SO , 540-82_!_1. BfSJ' OF'FEll. 1187-8'79
requi...S. If.Ult be in 11. Les 957-8133 MIK•••-Donate your t:.oat 847 ~-_ ~i.V:.'~..'.!~ ~'nn '78 8210. xtra rlean, gotta VW bus encine, dual port.
creulve" well Or· Wn ....... Mlc) 2010fas New .•. Lov· W..ted IOI Deadlinel>ee31st '81FORDFL50P/U 302 Set it ! $4000 Dys lllllO.
laabed Individual. Top N~ skilled operator eseats $88. Sleepers, ••••••••••••••••••••••! Calllollfrttror1nro VS. Auto. Trans ' 0 D . Student needj sml gd 7S2.-8200,evs~·9S81 644-6307 __ _ e-f fortlle richt person. with lllnt. rommand or $199. FACfORY 957-5708 Buying World war II l·ll00/592·5909__ PS. PB. Ing whl base, trans car IBO(f'.$1000 '75 8210. New Ene. tra. fdYe 9772
CallSO.IMOO. gram
1
... r formatting. KING INNERSPRING Souvenirs. Cash Paid. * * * dual tanks. slide win· 646-6218,673-0048 Good Cond. 12100 OBO ...................... .. ----••y WtltrtinonBurroughs EXTRAFIRMmattress t Espedally want -----Lo-e dOw.stepbumper.AM. -497-4$15 #lvOLYOD••LH ._,_ Rldadron. f/f t r~ n-ti ,_...._ • Radial tires. 18K m1 I • -fort.he Vitt President ol noon o set, never used, worth ~ ... n nc ct) SSl-4464 17121 Hagut Ln ST Alllot., ... orted 71 2llO Z. ,,awleu Auto, lNOllANGE COUNTY!
a • II .. edi I I a PM Res11me1 to: 18012 &.10. $IC. IMS del. Never lluntin" ... n-h ~6w<ner MXU s ELL I ••••••••••••••••••••••• air. stereo. 9)0 ma ca e ec Sky p~ Circle. Irvine, ~ queen sz. worth e•oo """ac ... oo ( 483001 PP trcnlca Co nr Ocean. 1 927U. Attefttlon : Pl9 cash only .,18 del WANT9 You are the winner or ~1286 AHaa-o 9705 63Hltl SAUS.•YtclE &lr1 office with full Co Batbsr • ·... · I 'I .. •-four free ticlitts ($18.00> ~Chev ,., ton pirk up •••••••••••••••••••••••Alt t721 £Nn LIA!.ING &enefita. Quallfic1llons a. U~uallyhome,754-7350 .;c,•7~ valuet.ot.he Lone bed S950 Will MIWIUSID ........................ ovm~EIJVl:RY
iadllde: recent uper N ER USED: Glass U6-fl ~ fecatiolt th ALFAIOMIEOll ltlt FtAT EXPERTS
mdorpniution1labili-MtrcDc 8 t top dinette $225. sec· 132 ...tlYSfllow orJ_;_;;, in r ampn Orange .County 's oldest l SPIDll2000
ty. Jr illlerated call Jill •••• -................ t 1r~1a I s 0 ( ·~· 5QO . ANAHEIM I & leading dealership. Champagne edition. All IAIU m ~ .w..,.. too so a oveseat . n ~ • CONVENTION Y-9570 8 er o r e yo u buy ...... ions, stilJ under raft · Yot.YO ... _ Bdrm ~. bunks 1200. th ... 10131 CENTER Jan 2 10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• anyw .... ~ ""' & s ...,.... ' l966Harbor Blvd SICllTAIY •••• .. •••••••••• Mattress1box . g · --'78 GMC S RfER v N ,,..,,. wme'" ee tor)' warranty. A MUST .
1 L W Twn spnn s. •••••••••••-•••••••••• To claim tickets rail i\ us .&LheGTV625 &the SEEll995 C06TAMf:SA .::,,_A YER Good ... • $80. fu,,11 S90. Qn Ibanez Iceman tier 1 642-5678. ext '212 vs. automallr Iran~. Sp1derVeloce1 • ... ..... 9l03S4At467 -...., req1.1red, but not l*rt lew n:i>. MORE. 770.0901 guitar, $300. Peavey Tickets must be rla1med power td1sc· I brakes. I . A MUST SEE CAR ' ....,. "" leaal upr. Mr. Myers: lla01 EurUd Ave. Large Recliner chair. amp. 80 watt, Sl SO by January 8 1982 • lugh-back bucket seats. BEACH IMPORTS SADOLEIACI IMW lff4 Y•• IJ2S
-.10 1 Garden Grove vmyl, ucellent condi· •MS-7641 evs I * ; • ra&Sed whJte leuer tire!t 848 °7svz ~90rtt0t. N.B lll-2040 49$.4949 Good trans. N~s wort --------i' You are ':he wmner or LIOD . &t6·~ ~ Vibraphone, 3 spds 3 OC· 1 -. -----& mags. rustom paint. • .._. OB096S-9140 •SICllT••llES• four fl'ft Ucktts ISIS.001 6 Pecan sidt chairs like laves gd cood .ou:,.1b 1 14 Alum Sea Nym 9 91 rarpet paneling, port I l911& Harbor Blvd., C M. '727 · ----< ComtT7om 200 valuetothe new for dming table $50 5J6.91173Randy..,..., 5 · Evin. w/trlr Gd cond holes & more tlM421891 631 -7170 ..................... ..
""·-nd Ba .h9 208 s,.ts,. YecllHOll O B'o eafth Cash only GIBSON ' -. 700-3815 I P 4 8 7 2 T I S s 4 9 9 IMW 9712 VISIT YOUI ~•~••••••••••• .,.......,, r... • •IY ._.__ · · ~ · · a.ea Paul Stan--Theodore Robins. Dir . T70Diet.NBSlS,80I . •m•uE-IMw 6_46-7512 or548-6900 dard. mint! Brown ~/ llarbor Bl\d . Co,ta ••••••••••••••••••••••• OIAMGECOAST AlllC 9ttl
Exp.CoasultantOars I ~tu~~ . L.-.-.1..1-., _ _. w/darlt trim, SOS -.......-9050 Mesa 642 0010 o r IH2MODRS HO ..... D"' ... •••••••••••••••••••• llilleindersAfy Inc I ~110N ~-••--w/rase 559.58211 •••••••••••••••••••••• 540-S21l 1""111 A 63 Rambler Classic 41121>8itth&t'MEOE. j ER Jan. 2-10 Circa 1900. Beautifully 1 Custom 42 rt yarht ---· I HBE HEADQUAITEIS Wagon. VS, gd cond.
Newportf133.8l90/Free To claim tickets. call hand carved frame w l Office,..,....•& Chri s mas Parade . 1975 GMC I ton \Jll. MOW!!! TODAY!!! Orig owner saoo
642-5678, ext 212. beige uphl Matching r.p1,...t IOHI wt.lewatch111g panies bums reg lo(as white I for the best deals in 1._.IVEISITT -.~
Tidleu must be rla1med set. $1350 OBO Carolee ••••••••••••••••••••••• etc:. best rates646 ~ · Must seU Southern Califom1a ~ ............ SICllTAllES by lanuary&.1982 641·1340 days. 640-4910 * '* '* I 1978 GMC '' ton van. ComeSeeUs Today• SALES &SERVICE -9910
Wort temporary 1·obs * * * evesalt6PM ..... W 906 white. xlnt rond Must """-LM'llllLE ••-••••••••••••••••••• . --"'--ceU.. •••••••••••••••••••••• sell. <1141848·2987 I $' -...--74MdApole clole~"f:moN Am. OU _cano rab, 1475. IAl6ES 184.S Monrovia Ave. I WIMOSUIHI 14" Dod -v-A 1 HOMIA va. air. new brakes. Por~l11n p1tr her-wsh Magnirirtnt dining set Costa Mesa Uled . 646·I089 ML c gt' ~nt A~o f"M.o GiMC TIUCIS bresC!IOO. Ml-645-4
at ASSOCIATES 'bum $120 Onental vase WiU seat 18. Must see to You are the w111ner or -l2700 ~f~7; · I 28SOHar~ Blvd. ----
540-<MOO $75.631-5979 appreciate. S1500 OBO. four free tickets ($18.00 J ... Slips/ --5•DDL£l•,.t1 COSTA MESA Ceclloc ttl5 SICllTAIYJUIEC. Clock·rluming ssoo. Wall Carolee 641 ·1340 da. value wthe Docks 9070 ~ w~ 9590 I "" ""'-" 540..9640 -•••••••••••••••••••••••
Persocuiel/Advtrtislng Spring clock $250 641>-49l0evaft 6 Spotts. Yec.ticNt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMW COMT'B4PUTIM6 Dept ..... opuia& per 113l·Sf'19 Oak table w 14 chairs, ... IV 5Mw BOAT SUPS ·~R ~ENT WE NEB> YOUI 28402 Marguerite Pkwy 79 ACCOID CADILLAC? I N 8 .. ..__ ,.,,~.. AN•u .. Npt 8CH. 20 25 30 M1Ss1on Viejo 2 dr, 5 spd, air am/fm. ., .._,,:ali
eql&DI on • Pl Co. • Rectaroll• tuke-box. .."""""-''1ons. S3SO. CONVnnEI. 35'~ 9.5 PM · · GOOD USID CAI! Avery pkwy off 1·5 very clean. 675-3545 "' "~' ·u ia leases ftnanclal serYices firm. barber r h1irs. piano, 968-2750 ENTION -----Anything consider<>d . lll-2040 495-4949 -for the business tx·
Good lypiQc, shorthand, many ftDrt. 971-9172 For·SaJe, corktall ta bit. CENTER Jan. 2·10
1
...... ~ 9090 l!r17lhru 1980 ...,_ t7Jt tNivd prolessional. :i::t.::'z~moker. ~UIS~~;:::~~~! ~~ ~a~·: U~~ ~!~~~:~e~~i2E~ ,.···;·;~;~·~~···· ~ &c~Sundays ·:c·~:~~;.~~=· ~tT
•SICllTAIY• whiltle, alerting ~ilver Lge solid mahoga ny b)'Januai!·~912
1 Monthly boat & RV • k . , rood New ti~. brakes. M.w .. Stod!
Fllt paced Realestate 00.642-9840 d~sk. Nds rerin $100. -: storage for any Sile. 24 I I s.mo 642•7614 Pau!._ NABER~ Clfi~Dteds shafl), well Antique_Titrany Lamp 75~-l~aft 5orwknds Fw:Ma..offict 1 hr se.c urlly , fre e 111 i..or-.cc-ty tc.-(i;We 9714
orpniaed Gal. 75wpm . W1rm, ISO() Twin utr• long mil· UKE NEW. Side arm I launching at washing 2925 Harbor Bhd . c:ADILl.,A .>
with &ood Secretarial 9'5-lBGl/548·6390 tress. box springs and c~a1rs, swivel rbalrs. I privileges. Newport COSTA MESA l'llr'llB ·-l<i<XH1."••• tll\,t
lllills. Appia~" IO IO btd rrames. $75. 833-1661 side chairs, executive Dunes. 1131 Bark Bay 97 """'
ContKt Pecgy: W-Z!llO ·•-••••••••••••••••• n--s. 1055 desk (mrLal and wood >. Dr Newport Beach. • TM
u ••• ..,,8 ...... "'A -..,. s t r re t 1 r y d e 1 It . , ~10 Grubb" Ellis nftftov n.nc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rredenzas (m. et1l ind ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I: APPUANCESERVICE F\1!11· Hsthld rtems " wood I. Call Steve or Lm· ".:
Security ~~~~g_'~~~~~s ~~~~~r 9AM. da (1141751m1 Tr I ,, .. ...
6ATISUAID appliwes. 549.3077 Pwts 1017 ...................... .
For privale community , .. .., ... -1 ...... CES Hone I060 ......... •••••••••••••• Airawft 91 l 0 La.cu111 Beach area: _, ,,.,..,...,""" ••••••••••••••••••••••• YOWll Zebra Finches $10 .. •••••••••••••••••••••
Relief ahift w·u t . Les 957-8133 pr. New bamboo cages ........ W..t.d
Call ror App'1t. ~~~: Refrig. 1200. Freezer HOISIFOI LIASIE reas. 549-7S6S _ '771'210. loaded, oc: AP
Thun 4M-8S71 SDI. Washer/Dryer $135 Owner would Uke lo Conure blue crown SOOhrs m111. Call Paul or , · · ea. D/W$100646-5848 lease bis thoroucbbred . · h · JI 11• 7c2 2266 Sec y, U.5pm. Typing, -. horse to an experienred wtwroug t iron rage. m. ... ,, . or
min. boc*keeplng, fil· 1 yr old G1blon de-luxe rider Long at short $125 OBO . Sell sep. 213-629·5Cl21 inc, billing,--Non-smkr. gu dryer, uaed only 6 term.· Pvt party. Eves. ~ Mllwcydes/
C.11. 751-s.m. rms. S200/0BOS46·7363 Kathy 642-~; Richard "-I er,-lffO Scoahn ti SO
Service St1tioo Allen· Rdrig, frost r~. dean. 968-3310. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• dlat. f\.lll Time. Days. works cood . SlSO . An.tique Sm ypri&ht 450 Honda. new paint,
ExperieD(ed.968-6505 541-&'13,548-4485 11 ••otdGooodsl0'5 P11no. Bent Co nd ! new top end. tires. batt
SERVICE STATION AT Washer clean works Tuned Stool. $750. 11174, 17~. 960-8168
TENDANT. P/limt. A~ cood. '195 _ 5'8·8513. ••••••~;:.;;~·•••••• 8C7-5672 . . i2 350 Lo Mi -Xlnt Cond
ply SbtU Slllioo 17th " Sfl"* Stainless Steel Water· Ran rlass1r 7 Au.stnan I SOOO. lrVine, NB. , cas, clean. wons less. Gift . Bra~d New Grand Beaut. butttmut 631-1093
SWtt.heNewYear right! pod. as. 548·15l3 or Still in Box .• ., orr. S225. . reas. ll42·99ll8,MH960 TNllen, y,..... ti 70
Pay otr bills with money 548-4415 • •848-6995• • •••••• .. •••••••••••. •••
tromyour-own P/f bust· ftidce. Grttn Side by ..., 1070 SMALL UPRIGHT TINTnAILH
neu. Comp. train inc tide. . Good Cond. •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• PlANO. CONSOLE Ulte new, SACRIFICE prov.,foraept.SS7·5675 "lSl Ge nuine Columbia n Model. with bench. MUSTSELL.997·8679
I EMER ALDS y Tuned & In good condi· Sfl • 11• CM 020 ! 0 u r tion. 1799. Call 675·0898 ~ S.-.lce, P.ts We need fu.IJ time clerks ................. ...... ~ S20 per stone eves' weekends. I Acceuerit1 9400
to work in o ur *** -••••••••••••••••••••
Sp1rfllt._. ao94l-------1 atockroom. Prete r or· M. Lenk Corfler
. 1ani1ed aelC starters .r ln1et Isle Or. Be a u ti f u I I ad I es
who· tll)oy paperwotll. c.otou dti Mar diamond It cold watch. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ATTBilTIOM
eootrolflng parts dis· You ~ tbe winntr of $3.750 080 Carolee
trituicm. Shipping/ re-four free tickets ($11.001 &41-1340 da 640-4910 ev
Proline Cyclone JI com· W.
pound bow. xlnt cond. OWMBS
ceivln&-Minimum 2·3 valueLOthe ...;:;aft~6._..... ____ _ »45 lb6, f7S. 144.SOOO TONNEAU COVER ma MG's, ·11 '81
Nevtt uaed. S75
llariaGl·Tm Ive msg
ynprelerredd-. · · , ~ ,...... 0.119-a•lfh a ... ._. ltaf•Mf,l"I We att a 1v1s1on o .... S..w S.'!lim"ril!il.a .lciDloo 6 Jobnaoo and --AJIAllELll ricitt 107t ..................... ..
u aucb orter an fJ· COMYINTION •••• .. •••••-•••••••••• LOSING LEASE, quit·
etleat benefit packace. ctNft!R Jan. 2-10 *•RIIS** line bwiness, selling out Smd ~me• or apply To ca.ta ticket.I, rail Save Sl.000 or more on ALL supplies and fl•·
a&: Lukmann Electro H2·H18, ut. 272. Flnef\lrs showninyour llnslndlading: o,tia Inc. 3311152 C.lle 'ndllts .-t be claimed own home by Darrell Display cases. wa ilin&
A•lador. Su Jun t.,Jl8lllllrJl.lll2 Sal.Widen. 84MOl7. C.11 room cbairs, Beauty
'IS VW BUG SHELL with
2 straight doors and
stnl&ht pan. Will sell romplett or separate
Call 675-3017.
Caplatrano. (off Aero • • * 5PIUor App·t SaJOC'I hairdryer• and P\lerto) , hydraulic chairs. mlr· ..._ fw S.
tOEllJr tH 1 Cll'aiHI Tour II. ~ ' H• lllG n:n.tbel•es~pluu ... _ ................. . lbttl '!t_~ack. _ ................... Aleo. •:;,z.abampoo lMPO,RTANT
Sal Ml .... ~· If~ -9, sell LOSING LEASE, qtlil· and~ ucta. NOTlCETO Pill• S·ll aliUt 6 M1Sl:I!!!!-UltabuaiMN,aellin1out CIUQJ.f™or READERSAND
•hd1. Wiii train. Uei .. ltJI All •:ripUes and fill· allerS,....,. ADVERTISERS --........ t:.;_lnc IMltna : ,...,...ff The price ol items .,..._ ..t.t!J y cues, waltlnc ,., __ ,.~ ....... wall ad..-tlled by vehicle ,..,,., ..-room cbalra. Beauty ~ ,,._ '" dealen lo the vehicle TWIOPllATOI ... _. 11111 .In~; Sala. balrd1"1trt and .tt, otnce ult.t. etc. clU1ifiecl advertl1in1 Giid ~t for TWX ta' ~ iill9 Ntlwooa b)'dm&lic: chairs, mlr· 111 h o fl er. Take colwn• does not In·
•dlll& Will\ratl. I•· ,_.,, lAftlt pric• ran,.....,.MClplub. Delivery ln .January. dlldt any appllcabl•
... _._, ,~. 1ur lta or Ken ~~e.•mpoo KlRX JIWEL&U .. lD4t. lictDM, trensrer ;: __ -..... mm1. Call: ardm·-.-, lftdhait Hattier• Colla Mttta. rw. n.uce charcea.
& C Gt·t'l'Mor ..... ,_roralrpollutlon con· ~~~~~~1!!!1~=::~ ttJO afttrt "in..,_ trol devite certlllcatloat ... 1 or dtaler dotumeatary •••••••••• • • • -•ff•••ff•A•=• pttplntiae tbarps llD ,.._I It ...... Btaalilul Color TV. 2 yr a. «.blrwlte specified
'-le oulllt, 11.h 251DNewport Blvd. wmty. ftH dellttry~ bJ&headvertiffr.
WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FOR USED CARS
ALAHMAGHOM
PONTIAC/SUlilU 24IK> Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA l 549.43~ 549.1457
WEIUY
CLEAMCARS
AND TRUCKS
CONMRL
CHEVROLET
~ 11.irt••f 111"1
' I " I \ ,, ~ ·" \
54~1200
tl6HIUUI
Top dollars for Sports
Cars. BuJ.s. Ca mpers. 914's, Audi 's
Ask ror U/C MGR
JIMMAllMO
V()U(SWA•IH
lf7U Beach Blvd.
RUNTINGTON BEACH
14J..JOOO
WIMllD
YOUllXOTIC
&•mSHCAIS
-... . 3100 W. Coa~t Hwy.
Newport Beach
IGMIS
Y• a~11:;:_r of SUl•t• _., Hit
-,,.. tid.eU (ISt.00) lmwold turntlllt • .., __ .............. •••llJ ,...tou.t rtt. w/apeaken, aqt I fll.mMAIT9S ~·..... aalM.•TMl. ~I COMl•t• _. .. ._ STOPU I .,_&llAIM
AkAHll• ...... .... .. .......... 9'ICI
CIN,..OIJll •• M:.• .. , .. r:.i:.. ~~E1:~ .:.-;_T:."1:1' ..
Tt *'8 lkMU, eatl • ll =A TA.NKOP
Ut·••H. u&. au. !!!'. ,,-,,. ••'° •.,...,car .. ..w.._ ........ -· Cl • .. , llr'-71,• a11d'lllll Mo,._ II CALLMOW t•• •" • All•t•A
OUNGE COUNTY'S
&
Sales-Service· Leasing
IDYCARVER
fOJ.5 IOCE·BMW
'76 zw.?, red. am/fm . al·
·loy wbls. l6500 firm Call
aft. 4, 548-8196
lt717lll
White/red leather "in·
t.erior. hu all options.
THIS CAR IS LIKE
NEW · MUST SEE!!
(lk.932VAA)
SAODLRACI IMW
ll 1·2040 4tMt49
tt7'200J
MttaWc Fjord.lblue. air
condlllonlngh stereo cauette1 Ilg t 1110)'
wbffla, tully recondl· \iaatd, new l1ru MUST
SE!CAll!
SADDLaACI IMW IJI~ 4t5-4t4t
lt7tJJ•
Renna/black, •unroof.
air condlllOl'lln1. tltreo
cauette.ll&bl alloy
wbttb. fos llctiu. CALL
TODAY '
9741 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ..,....,.. .... ~
to•MW
-r*L9etM1 ;
Compare Hou.st of Im I poru Direct lease and 60
mos sensible pymta
Dial 213 o r
714/MERCEDES is 213
or 7141637 ·'2333
l972MBCIDH
250
4·d oo r , s edan .
brown /tan Becker
AM/F'M. power brakes.
power steerinc. air ron·
chtiorung. 01c.012FZB I
UDOLBACI IMW
ll l-2040 4tS-4t4'
·~!.,c._·
COMNh.L
CHfVROlfT
' 'l l If'•• I
"\\I"-·
SU-1200
'* • • I. T1ell
21'6Thunn •B
Cost• Mesa
You are the winner or
four free tickets tS18.00l
valuetotht
~, ......
... IY!ltew
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CDM'ER Jan. 2· 10 To rlaim tickets. rall
1142·S8711 , ut. 272 .
1'rltets must be cl1imed
by January 8. 19112
lt7S MllCIDES * * *
4SOS&.C .• Biscalnt, Sll wen.
Ivory with ttd ltau.tr 421-t cyl,runt good!
intenor. has 111 poaslblt tOBOMZ·TfOZ
opl1o ns and i~. in 1980 El Cimino Con a~utt mint rond1t:~ qubta. va. auto. all u · this1Samuststecar... tras. Top. 10,700 mi
SADOLllACI IMW Sl.780.
lll-2040 495-494, 5'9·2585
'80 MB 450 SL. Cham 'Tf MOIU Carlo. loa<hd.
pagne, luthtr. cassette air, fl.Ill power. stertO.
Call $69--SlZl ct.. , al.ml
'76 450 SL. Sllvtr/bU ,..... "JI
leath. polished alloys -••• .. ••••••••••• tow nu 642-.. , &42· lMO
.. t74J ...... ,.
_ ... ,................ Sacnnc1m1 ·11 Doc11e
AMI .... lat EditiM.
... 1 1irla -Pa1-off lea-~
#OISALI
71 ' Pinto hatchbark.
dlM. 4 speed. new tires.
l•cc•ce rar t ,good ~ioncar 11200
080. ~L570Jefl
13l·Tm Maria
W Pilllo Hachback. Wa.s
in wrttk. Body and
frame dam.ace. All else
Ok· VI. (47,0llOori4 ml>.
new trans ' rad11tor,
fUIDP, very eood whls ' tifta. no broken glus.
l•terlor cood. Reda
avlil. A creat deal for
•di.Ink or parts sales.
lllst sell all tocetber.
S100. make orr Call
•*4aft7:30pm. ....
"-Melo 2UITburin
Q>lt1Mes1
Y• are the winner of
four rrte licttts <SJ&.001
value to ca
s,..fl. Yecatiott .......
ANAHEJM
CONVENT I ON CENTER Jan. 2 10
To claim tickets. call
a.J.Sl78. ext 272 .
Tichts must be claimed
"by January a. 1.982 ••• '73 Purte. 1 owner. low
ml, ireal mech cond.
ID>/bst .Cr. 497-4924
"J4 Pt.to Hatr hback, Cl>Od tend thruout 2nd owner Asking Sl.350 Or
best offer 960·2U6, or
~.,.
'75 PlNTO SQ UIRE
WAOON. Tiais one will
mlM Ole perfect 2nd
car . lee t od a y.
171 4UMX > S1999.
~ Robins. Dir .. llarbor Bl•d., Cost a
Men. 142-0010 or
NMZll.
,.,. '974 .......................
'1' Ve1a Wagon. New
Utw Hds ma. 1200 Call
538-Gll8 btf ore 3. a rt 6
People who ntoed People
Tb at 's what the
OAJLY PILOT
SERVICE DIRECTORY
__ lS all.::.abou=t::...'--
.......................
CAllLLAC
CLEAIANCE
SALE!
lt7' CAIML.UC
SIVLU
(1AKZ762)
Sl0,995
1919 CADILLAC
S8AMHYILLE 1314WOXI
s1995
1 '79 CADILLAC
COWi llVn.u
(8116W0V)
s1795
I '11 CAllUAC
PlaTWOOO
•ouettAM
(e23Ul.A)
s1995
1tltCADILUC
COWi DEVILLE
(3S3129)
Jl0,995
t .. tCADILLAC
&.DOllAlllTI
($116761
'M,995
· "76 CAIMI.UC UOIADO
COMt•t .. CJl1"PM) '• Clft.r il90d t hr U
,,.......,., 12-ll.al
Orange Coalt DAILY PtLOT/Tuelday, Oecamber 29, 1981
~---~--
•••
Equipped with:
• Factory Air Cond.
• Automatic Trans.
• Power Steering
• Power Disc Brakes
• White Sidewall Tires
OR
5195 Down Plus
EXAMPLE: SER.# 111714
• Low M ileage
• Choice of 4 Cyl. or 6 Cyl.
• Fro nt Wheel Drive
• AM Radio
• Deluxe Wheel Covers
Tax, Licew & Doc .... 11tary Fee • Body Side Moldings
CHOOSE FROM 2 DOOR COUPE OR 5 DOOR HATCHBACK
AND
•LY
SALi NICI "495.H ........ lk. & Dec. is... $HI.GO D•-r:.:.
$Ito.ft .... $1U.H 0.M.Y. ~ ~ -UO he-es ,_ hr • ..... ef $1427.tt 0.-,.....,.., c• .. w .,.., .-ii
$14UJ s::.:::: .... " ........ $JJlt.IO ... ..c. c ...... Al.a. H.JJ%. ,.,.... pric. $IO,Jt7.70 .. .,,.. ..... cN41t.
·suggested retell Drlce may hav• dealer fn1talled •~uori•s All Cars Sold On Approved Credit. All Cara Plus Tax & License & Doc. FM.
All Cara Sut>Mct to Prior Sale. Prloea ~ Thru Mond~y, Januery 4, 1981
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY!
,.
' ~
' •
I
I
i
-----------.
• • • • • r
DRAIGI COAST YOUR HOMITDWI llllY PIPll
TUESDAY. DECEMBER 29 1901 ORANGE COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
I •.
Schmitz: ousters free up campaign time
Corona del Mar Republican striwed of 3.CJSsignments by Rules Committee
1y STEVE MITCHELL
ADMONISHED -Sen. John
Schmitz h as found that
critical remarks of a week
ago have proved costly.
....... ~ .........
State Sen. John Schmitz says
the loss of his chairmanship of
o n e co mmitt ee,
vice-chairmanship or another
and ouster from a third panel
means he'll have more time to
devote to his campaign for U.S.
Senate.
Th e Co r o n a del Mar
Republican was s tripped of
three committee positions late
Monday in a closed-door hearing
of the Senate Rules Committee.
"They (the committee) will
rue the day they did this because
t hey just turned me loose from
three time-consuming jobs to
campaign for the U.S. Senate,"
Schmitz said . (See related
column Page A3.)
Last week Schmitz released a
newsletter entitled ''Attack of
the Bulldykes," in whi'ch be
assailed abortion r ights
advocates in derogatory terms.
The lawma ker said four
recent hearings on his pro-life
a mendment "were infested by a
sea o f hard , Jewish and
< arguabJy) fe male faces," and
termed feminists as "murderous
marauders of the pro-abort.ion
encampment."
The stat e m ent angered
feminist groups, legislators and
othe rs and led to Monday's
closed door session of the Rules
Committee to consid e r the
Schmitz ousters.
The five-member committee,
headed by Sen. David Roberti of
West Los Ange les, d 11mped
Schmitz as chairman of the
Con stitutiona l Amendments
Committee, vice chairman of
the Industrial Relations (labor)
Screws tightened
Reagan to block pipeline sales to Soviets
•Y Tbe A.ssocla&ed Press . ~ President Reagan. moving to
-.Punish the Soviet Union for the
anilitary crackdown in Poland,
will block the sale of equipment
'-or a pipeline that would carry
natural gas from Siberia to
~Western Europe, well-placed
•a d m i n i s t r a t i o n a n d
·congressional officials say.
A f te r reviewing
re co mm e nda tio n s by a
high-level task force, Reagan
also decided to halt exports or
high technology to the Soviet
Union, including com puters. and
suspend maritime rights under
which Soviet ships use U.S. ports
and aviation rights under which
Soviet airliners oper ate within
U.S. boundaries.
. An aide who asked not to be
identified desc ribed the
progr am being pursu ed by
R eagan as "tightening the
screws." It marks the first step
t a ke n by t he administration
against the Soviets. whom
R eaga n blam es for th e
imposition of martial law in
Poland.
A source in Washington. who
sajd congressional leaders were
Jwtice takes
strange twist
for doctor
SAN JOS E CAP J -A
physician who was attacked and
robbed by two men a ll egedly
hired by his estranged wire must
p ay her $1,500 a month because
s he has no other means of
support. a judge has ruled.
"I guess I'd better stick to
medicine because I sure don't
unde r sta nd t h e judicial
system," Dr. Dudley 0 . Scott
Jr. 's lawyer quoted him as
saying Monday when the ruling
was issued.
The lawyer. Willian Dubbin.
said be was considering an
appeal.
Scott, 46, was ordered by
Santa Clara County Superior
Judge Read Ambler to make
temporary support payments
beginning Jan. 1 until his
divorce from Lidija Scott is
final.
Mrs. Scott, 45, faces trial Feb.
1 on a charge of solicit.Wll th~ commission of a felony. She bad
asked for $10,000 in temporary
support for herself and their two
children.
<See DOCTOR, Pa1e AZ>
ORINGI COAST 11111111
~L o w c loud s early
ednesday morn f n g,
berwise variable high
oudlness. Lows tonight
along coast, 42 Inland.
igbs Wednesday 62 at
beaches, 67 inland.
INSIDI TODAY
UC l1vtne•1 unbeoren
1rreok ii ooer '11 bailcdboU.
Tmdoht rlae Anteot•" tr) ro 1aloao• third place fn o
tount0nwftt. SH,,. Cl .
INDll -.:: ... .. .._ M
E---~ •.. -.. ....... .. ... =~ .. :,
being briefed on the econonuc
sanctions today. confirmed the
s ubstance of the administration
report.
Reagan. spending a week-long
holiday in Californi a . was
expected to announ ce the
decisions this after noon after
receiving the recommendations
Monday of the administration's
Special Situation Group.
T he gr oup met 21h hours
,Monday while Reagan was on
Other punitive
moves planned to
aid Poles.
I his way by helicopter lo a n
afternoon of manual labor at his
ranch about 100 miles north of
here . Tbe recommendations
were relayed by telephone by
Vice President George Bus h.
Edwin Meese IJJ . the
pres idential counselor. ~nd
Adm . J a mes Nan ce. acting
national security adviser.
The president will confer later
in the week with Secretary of
State Alexander Haig in Palin
Springs, deputy White Hause
press secretary Larry Speakes
said. Haig was speaking in San
Francisco today.
Although Reagan's aides have
said he would consult with the
Western allies about any steps
taken in connection with the
developments in Poland. those
likely to be announced today
could be pursued without allied
cooperation.
Meanwhile. defiant Polish
workers are producing
automobile parts that don't fit
together and engaging in other
acts of industrial sabotage,
accordjng lo uncensored reports
reaching the West.
But Poland 's mi li tary
government c laims work is
returning to normal as the last
strikes against martial law are
.dropped
Warsaw Radio quoted the
Ministry of Mining and Industry
as saying 939 miners at the Piast
mine in Silesia would return to
work today after ending their
13-day occupation -the last
l arge -scale protest against
martial law.
. ... ...._
MOTHER WORRIES -Colette Marquis shows photos of
daughters Micki, le ft, and Kristen whom she claims are
stranded with her former husband John Harrison on
Palmyra Atoll in the P acific Ocean.
Sailor may save
shipwrecked family
J i.LOS ANGELES <AP) -A
anadian man and bis two
uabters, living on raw fish
d coconut.a for three weeka
er tbelr abJpwreck on a South
adftc atoll, may find a private
acbtaman offerin1 the r.eue
o•ernmenl ofllclal won•t
Vl'ange.
U.S. Coast Guard offtclala aaid
man baa aalled from
bri1tm.. bland to retrieve
bn Hairlton, a 3t·1eas:-old
4ta1&rla' dHl•ner from
aneouver, and dau•htera kt,•. m K.rtltea, 13. from
mpa MAii, about llO miles
Wiit iii llanolulu .
'l'fbe ma, known to UI oaly LarrJ, bu left Clariltmu
litd 500 mllH 1outb of
allllJ'f* OD bll yacht Frimdly '
lild could be wttb them wWdn II ._., •• eout Guard Cblef Bob
IBaeten s aid in Honolulu on
!Monday. t "H's up to them to decide
"Whet.her they want to accept but 1-don't t.binlt It will be a difficult
dedaion after bein1 stuck there
for three weeks."
Tbe Harrlaons were 1ailln1
tbe lr 40 -f oot trimaran
"Slayphua" to AuatraUa when a
t)'pbooo bit Dee. 9. Tbe '200 000
craft was dlsmasted by 40-ioot
waves.
A Coast Guard rescue plane
w 'tbelr narea and drQPPed
up fuel for the trimaran to
ake 80 mll• to the atoU. Two
1 after It wrecked on a f'flfJf
ece, t1land caretaker Ray
.... IMll'Ulft spotUld the craft ud
elp'ed Harrhon cont.ct attt. .ta Mort wave radio . ne SllJpbua' form« o'WIMI'.
(8" ATOU.. .... Al>
,J,
committee and took him off the
advisory 17-seat Commission on
the Status of Women.
Reached in Sacramento an
hour after the rare committee
action, Roberti said it was
"tragic the whole action had to
senator refe rred to femlnlat
Gloria Allred in such terms.
''That comes close to makin1
r efer ence to a p erson as a
lesbian, and she's not," Roberti
said . "Sh e s ho u ld not be
s ubjected to that kind o f
''They just turned me loose from
three time-consuming jobs to
campaign.''
come toUUs.
"Schmitz' comme nts were
anti-Semitic , improper, they
castigated a whole audience
with sexually deprecating
language, specifically referring
to on e wo man as a butch
lawyeress," Roberti said .
In Schmitz' r e le a se, the
language from a legislator."
·'Schmitz made a point of
people making nasty comments
about him," Roberti continued.
··But a higher s t a ndard Is
ex pected of so meone
representing people."
But Schmitz denies he made
any derog~tory commenta about
J ews. and termed hi• ouster
·'shows American citizen.a the
double s tandard or llberaliam."
"I didn't say antttitn1 bad
about Jews (in tbe reJeaae)"
Schmitz said ln a telepboo•
interview. "I jual uaed tbe WOfd
Jewish. People can blaal
. Germans ail they want, but jUlt
use the word Jew in a news
release a nd you're
anti-Semitic."
''It's prepos terous, it'a
ridiculous, and it's exposed U..
left wing of t he Amerlcaa
political system for the pboni•
they really are."
Regardin1 the committee
action Monday, Schmitz said ~
cri me he committed waa
attempting to defend bimaell
after being attacked verbally by
pro-abortion forces at recent
<See SCHMJT'Z, Pa1e A2) ·
SYMBOL OF SUPPORT Rep. Don Riller,
R-Pa .. lights a candle on the podium at a
Congressional panel studying Poland and its
............
new military government. .President Reagan
had asked Americans to light candles in their
windows to show s upport for Polish people.
Refugee food aid criticized
Austrian chancellor says U.S. should take in Poles
I BAOGASTEIM, Austria (AP>
-Chancellor Bruno Kreisky has
criticized a U.S. offer of food aid
to Polish refugees in Austria,
saying Washington s hould
instead offer to let more Poles
emigrate to the United States. I "We have enough fl our, sugar
1lnd rice." Kreisky said in an
1nterview published today in
Vienna's Die Presse newspaper.
"The Americans shou ld take
more refugees inc;tead. · ·
The chancellor's comments
followed President Reagan's
offe r last week to send food to
Austria to help the country care
Prosecutor
named in
Donovan case
WASHINGTON CAP ) -A
three-judge court today named
Leon Silverman. a New York
attorney and former Justice
Department official, as special
p rosecutor lo inves tigate
whether Labor Secretar y
R aymond J . D o n o van
sanctioned illegal payoffs 'as a
private businessman in 1977.
Silverman, appointed by a
panel composed of three U.S.
court or appeals judges. is the
first special prosecutor to be
n a m ed ln the R eagan
administration.
He will examine allegaUona
that Donovan, while an
executive or a New Jeraey
const.ruc\lon firm, wu pre1ent
wben another officer or the
company banded an enveJope
conlalnlnt 12,000 to the head ol
L ocal 29 of the Laborers'
International Union.
Tbe charee came from Mario
Montuoro, a former orflclal of
Local 29. Donovan at the time
was necut1ve vtce president ol
\be Schiavone Construction Co.
of Secaucus, N.J .
Donovan lut wHk called a
nt•• cocaference to denounce
ll011tuoro • a "damnabl• and
contemptible Uar.''
for the estimated 50,000 Poles
who have fled their country in
recent months. Many are housed
in refugee camps and private
guest houses at government
expense. i Most hop e to e migrate to
/Australja, Canada or the United
States. However, they have been
delayed because those countries
say they already have fi lled
immigration quotas.
Kreisky was Interviewed in
this mountainous ski resort
south of Salzburg, where he bas
been spending the Christmas
holidays . But he declined to
m ake predictions about the
future of Poland, where lbe
commun ist gover nment
declared martial law Dec. 13.
··w e mus t r ealize wha.l
happens in the political realm iJl
P oland does not happen a1ainst
the will of the Soviet U~on,"
Kreisky was quoted as sayin1.
Austrian officials in VieMa
ba ve complained for months
they wer e not receiving help
from other Western countries iJl
coping with the flood of refugees
that have arrived in steadily
increasing numbers throughout
the year.
Charge amended
for Newport firm ·
By KEITH TtJBEll .,. ............. ...,
The state Department of Real
Estate bas filed an amended
accusation against American
Home Mortgage Corp., al the
s ame time dropplng cbar1es it
bid filed earlier this year.
Tboae charaes, .flied in
October, includ~ alletalloas of
fraud, miaapproprlatlon or
divenioa Of investor funds for
ita own benefit, commln&llnl
tru•t funds with lta own money.
m la representatlon and
couP!fm_to ~ecelve invest.on.
-Tlie amenaed accuaalion
atatea tbat the Newport Beech
mortc• firm advanced f\IDda
to borrowers from lt• truat
accow:U acalnat a Un• of credit,
t.bereb)' reduclnS the balanc. ln
,tbe a~ to u amount wblcb w.. less than tbe aure1ate
UabUIQ' ot Americu Home.
t cc8pany admits ll did ...
Ulla fUncllD• procedure. The
amended accusation alle1• tbal
tbl• procedure conatltuted n•~!f:.nce and a f allure to n ,....,....,.. supe1 <i1IAoD
otel' tla e actlvlty of ··=:: .. o.part-ot «••I .,tat• bH re•olled a..·auteme......._
~· compaa1 eaa ., . .,. ... _ --.
. re-al .. tale ......
~
license. Tbe restrictions, whlcb
should not impair the comP8ft)''I
ability to do buaineu, warn tbe
'company qa.lnat:
-The intenUonaJ mlklQI 'QI
false, miaJead.iq or deceptift
atate menta, written or oral. to
the public, the preu or diellU
re1ardin1 the nature of lbe
'invesU,alioaa, aud.lta, fig
conch.aaklrw or uliona tak•
the department in conn
-1th the alle1alions; •
· -Vlolatln1 provialona o(
Callfonaa real •tate law; .. ....._.
-Tbe CODlPaft7 muat ·~ a quaJ'W'ty tnaat fWMI P!Md•
statement to the Real ~
;D epartme-n t contal a fa l~~pl•t ~-account ·~a
transaction laformaUoa._ ~
almllar •eelatoa wu la~
down to Amatcan Hop1e ~ ~ary ltal.beriDe Z"8et, • ·" •• •••e ••••d .. tll• teem II •. ·· "' 1 A 1 po• •a ID a n for ta•e e~art-.at of Real Batate
:csecllned to commeDt n
1l:bar,.. and tM Md1iOll. I ...... ...,, ••• WU
.•:r:_alaed~ Pree11 ... •• 0 .
t ··w• .... • <teua
ltlPO.•>tUt .. ~1· fli" a.row••_. L r lluda 11, we reeciMllel :=-~.._. ,,
---·.,_--------~------~~~-~~-t:. .
Al ••••• 2'f'oeC011t DAILY PILOT/l'uesday. December 29, 1981
Judge upholds village right to ban handguns
CHICAGO (AP> -A ,._e& Jud1•~~--tt1Mtla
1uburbu .tUqe to M8 a. aaJt
and P"M'tlCID 0U1• .. -.
U.S. DUUlct JQdll .........
Decker aal4I the .. ..._ Oro¥.
ordinance la val.kt ........
=rinse upon tile lacltYNual
I btl provided b1 U1e 1J11M6a
I dU.UiMaa...~--
A ttorneya for one ef ,•tte 1rou~-' ~ clt11ena °"*.., tbe
OrdinllllCe IM41 tMy win -...aJ
the ruUnc.
'' Martin AallmMlf· •orton
' Grove .Ul... 111Uol'9ey, Jailed
FromPapA1
AMERICAN. • •
'fll tbe cbeeb • .,..t .-nc
• go out ultlltlle feiMrtna 4-1.: ~ ~ ... .,... diet it
...... paMlbM •• empt need • tine ot credit to eover the k>as,
•bicb it tUfDeel out 'W'e didn't peed.
. .'"TbM;~ UHi ended tb•
.Wbole t.Mnf:'' :
1 Rillaldo N6d tlae •attel', new
reaolvttd. affected · aot only1
businea but tM PtfcbolOllc:al
weU·bein.c·of hi.I famlly. I
,. "The elfect tn our lavelton
was mhlimal, but tbe human
tac tor was juat terrible,"
IUnaJdo1U.. 1
''Peoplej9t~'t~: that. we w..r\ ...,.... wtlb
, aomethiq erl•la.,. P...ae
ihou1tat •• •tole jllo .. •. 1t 1iffectea iitiWileanct"""clllwrm.
.; •Kida 1l9lild come wP • DlY
cbildr• ... uk if r .... in jail.
It was tentbk.
"I'm juat glad it's onr."
I I From P!R8 A1
iDOCTOR •.•
! The Judie, wllile callinc Mrs. i Scott· a alleged c1uduc:t r "outrageous,.. said • hu II()
Deeker'• rullna ·•a landmark
chellion."
Tbe vllla.1e board voteCt 4·2
.Junt 8 to ban tbe 11le and
IHltHlon of band1un1 by llorion Grove's 24,000 re.ldenta. 1
The ordinance, amona the rnott
1trtn1ent enacted In the United
States, waa i mmediately
eballen1ed In court aa an
lnfr l naement on tbe
eon1tltutlonal right to bear
arms.
In a JS.pace decision, Decker
1ald, ••reuonable people can, in
1ood conscience, oppose what
Morton Grove has done, while
equally reasonable people can
tu.Uy support this ordinance."
He Hid the Morton Grove
tru1tea "must have been aware
of the deep.seated conviction of
a number of its citizens that they
should be permllled to retain
hand1uoa for the protection of
per1on and property.
"The trustees concfuded ,
however. that the public interest
outweighed th e claimed
p e rsonal Interes t of the
opponent.a of th.is legislation. The
ultimate settlement of this
troublesome political qtiesUon
must be returned to the cil\zens
of Morton Grove where it
properly be.tones rather than in
the court."
Dec"er also said his rulinl
llft ed a atay blockln1
enforcement or the hand1un
ordinance.
After the decision. Ashman
told reporters, "maybe if other
communJties implement such
ordinances around the country,
there could be a lot or American
lives saved . . "
Mike Null, an attorney for
some of the opponents , said, "I
think the law is unconstitutional.
I th.ink it should have been held
that way by the Judie. ln the meantime, Morton Grove la
foln1 to divest lt.3 citizens of
1uns."
Null said he will appeal lo the
federal appeals court and
expect.a the case ulti mately to be
decided by the U.S. Supreme
pourt.
t Decker Hid the ordinance
don aot viol.ate the U.S .
,Coa1Ut.utlon'a guarantee of a
elthea'• rl1bt to bear arm1. Re
alao .. it falls within tbe at.ate
'comtitution 's proviaion grant.in1
the rtibt to have 1una except
where government is exercising
.. Police powers -the 1tatc'1
'ObU1ation to~ tbe aeneral
~ealth and welfare of Ill people.
Tbe nrst c:hallenae of tbe
vllla1e ordlna6ce bad come
from Vlctor QuiUI, an attorney
and sun owner. Three other
1uita followed. All but oae were
con10Udated at the federal level.
The ordinance abo est.abliabed
a face-off between the NaUoo.al
Coalition to Ban H and1uns.
wblch baa provided Morton
Grove with legal services, and
the National Rine Aa.soclatioo,
backers of the opposition.
Confusion muddles
jet noise decision
A long-awaited decision on w~uld have led to ~at figure,"
whether John Wayne Airport said Ken Hall, an aide to County
s hould be allowed to continue Supervisor Thomas Riley.
exceeding state noise standards Neher's exact decision said
has produced co nfusion in that t he noise impact area
Orange County . described. by the. 1981 70-~ecibel
Administrative Law Judge Community Noise Equivalent
Robert Neher said the airport Level should be reduced by 20
should be granted a one·year per cent.
noise variance on the condition Bill Martin, the airport's noise
it decrease the area impacted by abatement officer, said that 1981
severejet noise by20percent. n o ise contour hasn 't been
But the state Department of established yet.
Transportation, which has veto Riley's assistant Hall said the
power on whether or not to grant county is still comm itted to
the variance, has not accepted reducing airport jet noise by 7.5
Neher's decision. decibels.
Instead, Caltrans has asked But county officials said it is
lawyers for s even diHerent not yet known what sort of
parties with interests in the case decibel reduction would have to
to comment on whether the 20 be made to meet the 20 percent
percent reduction is realistic. reduction fi gure.
Caltrans reported it will then
make a final decision on the
variance itself. It has never From Page A 1
d enied an ai r port a nois e
variance. SCHMITZ Neher's decision was based on • • •
10 days of testimony taken over
a three-month period earlier this
year in Costa Mesa.
hearings on h is proposed
amendment to the state
constitution that would recog·
nize life a s b e ginn ing at
conception. other means ol ~ ttate lbe I was a holnemaker fw mueb of I the couple's 22.,..,. ._ri-.a I Under CaUforala law, marttal
fault is not a flM?t« in tettin1
• support, Ambler -.c:t.
CRASH KILLS TWO -T wo were kil!ed and 23
iniured after brakes on ski chair lift at Val
Venos.t.a, Italy. ski r esort failed, sending
............
s kiers hurtling into a station at the bottom of
the lift. Portion of c hair lies on ground after
Monday mishap.
Ray !kola , a n attorney
repr esenting Newport Beach -
a critic of loud jet noise -said
Neher's decision "isn't as severe
as we wanted but still strong.
·'The judge seems to be saying
·we're no longer telling you how
to reduce noise, we're j ust
telling you to do it'," lkola
expl ained.
At one point in the hearings,
he noted, feminist Allred tossed
a chastity belt at the senator
"meant for my wife."
I Dubbia 18'd th&t "fnim a
layman's point of view, 1 tbink
f it's unfair. It doesn't make
1 ·aense." Catastrophe force urged lkola said he will meet witb
the Newport City Council m
January before m aking
comments to Caltrans.
"That's my grievous crime
a nd they st r ip my
chairmanship," he said. Then.
contrasting his situation to that
of Sen. Al an Robbins, who was
charged with sex crimes last
y ear , Schmitz said, "You
commit crimes agains t your
girls -especially if you're a
Jewish senator . and you get a
committee chairmanship."
i "But the judge did the best be
could . . . w'U• tlte •lli•ti•I i statutes alMI prior c.a ... The
! judge was coafreetM wltb a
' sltuati<ln tbat to my kaowl ... e : bas not aria• in CaUfonlia
1 before," he aaicl.
Mrs. Stolt ..... edly wmt to a
San Jose ~ wlMre she met a
man wtio .,.... to wrmi.1• a
contract asnllt tor Sl,580,
according to poliee.
Scott bM llleen 1e1>arated fl'Olll
his wife ·~-was attMftd and robbed -effice ,.rtlne lot Oct. *· e' ~ pnec.
WASHINGTON (AP> -Sen.
William Proxmire, D· Wis .. says
tbe United States should take the
lead in dev e l o p i n g an
international torce to deal with
the aftermath of a nuc lear
explosion.
''It Is gruesome to
contemplate, but the truth is the
international community ls not
prepared to respond to a nuclear
catastrophe," Proxmire said in
a news release Monday.
"Given the possibility that a
From Page A1
nuclear explosion will occur
s1>mewher e , 'som etime, the
industrialized nations should be
preparing today for the
complicated process of clean·up,
medical care and humanitarian
assistance."
Accu s ing the R eaga n
administration of "half-hearted
atte mpts to limit the spread of
nuclear weapons,.. Proxmire
said the United States should
convene an in ter n a tio n a l
conference on proliferation.
I
injury. ·~ .. ,
Upset that ber '4tnand's
. injuries "were n•t •••ere
enough," Mn. Stott N:e.1nd to
ATOLL INCIDENT .••
• pay the asaaitaru, peU~ Mid.
· One man U.eri twlepbOMd Scott
and offered to ft8TIM tie IOUtte
1 of the contr•.
The man led Seott ..a police I to another man· who allqedly
' set up the .. 'Mt. n.t mu
, made a laPl"ftWde4 te.lepMine
• call to a W01D.a wllee, Yake
'Scott identifte4 .as 1'al of bb
1 wife, police uld.
i A 24·1ear.. tnu aiao wu
charged in the catc, ~ no
• charges were filed against me
Informers.
!Taiwan man may
~ not be extradited
LOS AHGELSS (AP> -Lea I Angeles ~ lwwe .o pl .. to
J extradite ••l.11aeton P. O..C. I the vktl• of a M.• million : burglary wtlo "6Pet a~ t aay is ..... w ,._. -.See
1 Jnvolvinl .UU.. of dotrm..
! "We hne•jd,entlfte_. W.P.
t! Cbent la Lei Aate•~-Md W.P . tbent from.Tai...., asp~
being the ..... penoa," Los f Angelea .,eMce Capt. Dou1 J Watton said Mo•••1'· "9'at
, Taiwan baa• jartldletiee tn tk
' United States ... •• Mft DO f jurlsdicUon our MJ erlee1
I alle1ed to ltave O«'\l~ in
Taiwu. I haft hem latl IDM
t.bat we a.ave ao extreMion I treaty, IO lt .... M bNrillc OD
our In~ ...
Lucio Marampon of Victoria,
eeid boat repairers are planning
to fiy to the atoll to make the
craft seaworthy . Marampon
said Harrison still owes him
"24.000 on the trimaran, which ~•s::riSQD denies. . Meantime, Harrison's former
wife and the girls ' mother,
ichelle Co l ette James ,
~m plained Monday that "at
1s point, ther e is no rescue
m issio n t h at i s being
organized," by U.S. or Canadian
officials.
"We had bee n inrormed
several times that there wouJd
be from the Coas t Guard in
Honolulu and then I guess the
governments became involved."
·Mrs. James. 37, said.
Coast Guard planes can't land
on the atoll's World War II
Jir1trip and will not get involved
Onless life is threatened, she
1aid. TIM! Canadian government,
m eantime, is balking at a
fescue's pricetag. · t Officials ln Ottawa scuttled a
lDission planned last week by
Ille Canadian Consul in San
J'rancisco when they learned it
would cost between S7 ,000 and
1t12,soo, she said. ~-: ' Th e y ( t h e C a n a di a n
.aovernment) have a certain
1bud1et that they allow each year
'lor rescues of Canadian citiiens
from any type of danger In any
,art of the world." sajd Mrs.
anes.
"However, they tell us that
this (rescue mission) would ~at
up one-twelfth or the entire
bud1et and that is Loo much.
I tii~l'illl ca.a.._ ~Mtt 7141142·M11
AM..._., dep91'1m9nta 142-4321
• MAIN~E
........ k .C..UMeM,GA .... __, ._ ,,..,C.,aMeM, CA.tMa
Basically what it boils down to is
that they would like the U.S.
government to pay for half or
it.''
Canad.tan officials also ruled a
boat rescue too costly at 21 days
for the round trip, but Mrs.
J a m e s said Kristen is too
frightened to gel in a nother
boat. Although "no one is in any
phys ical danger" despite
sleeping in the open, "they are
very traumatized." s he said.
Mrs James said she doesn 't
have the money to hire a private
plane to rescue the trio, and the
governments haven't accepted
Harrison's pledge to pay for it
once he's off the island.
"Unfortunate l y the
gov e rnments felt t hat this
(Harrison's word> wasn't going
to be adequate and wanted
someone outside (the atoll) to
put up the bond," she said.
Lawyers out
in Sadat case
CAIRO <AP) -Lawyers for
the 24 Moslem fundamentalists
ac c used of a ssa ssinating
Pcesident Anwar Sadat
withdrew from the case today,
protesting the military court's
rejection of their demands.
Attorney Abdel Haleem
Ramadan, who said he had been
represe nting th e main
defendant, Lt. Kbaled Ahmed
Shawki e l-lalambouly. told
reporter& all defense attorneys
bad withdrawn. About 20 ol the
lawyers attended a news
conference conducted b y
Ramadan.
"The team protests the court's
refusal ol all lta basic demands
Including lU refusal to admit
defense witneasea Into the
court," Ramadan read from a
prepared statement.
Saudi role eyed
JERUSALEM (AP) -Sen.
Charles Percy and Israel'•
deputy foreign minister dllftrtd 1 today on tbe role of Saudi Arabia
in arransln1 an Jlraell
ceaae·rlre with Palt1tlnian au•rrlll• ln ''llY I larael recUo reported. '
T he conference , he said.
should identify res tricted
produ c t s a nd c r ea t e a n
international s ys t em o f
enforcement.
·'The greatest threat to
mankind is ready access to
nuclear weapons technology,
and lhe United States simply is
not doing enough to stop it,"
Proxmire said.
He said lnternational Atomic
Energy Agency safeguards are
i n adequate l o prevent the
clandestine transfer of nuclear
technology and s hould be
overhauled.
The United States should "get
tough" with allies who he said
are quietly shipping nuclear
technology to inter ested
countries, Proxmire said.
··Switzer l a nd and West
Germany flre h e lp i ng
Argentina," he said. "Italy ls
helping Iraq. And countless
s mall s hipme nts of critical
technology are occurring from
France, Switzerland, Italy and
West Germany which, in total,
re present a hemorrhage of
nuclear technology.·· '
The Reagan administration,
m eanwhile , should withhold
shipments of advanced tactical
aircraft lo P akistan until it is
assured that Pakistan will not
d eve lop a nuc l ear bomb,
Proxmire said.
County offi cials, though,
expressed some confusi.on with
Neher's proposed decision.
Several said they are unsure
how or why Neher came up with
the 20 percent figure.
Neher could not be reached to
elaborate on his decision.
"I don't believe there was
a nything in the hearing that ·
Opossum act
rwt violation
PORTLAND. Ore. (AP > -
Fed eral investigators h ave
found no criminal wrongdoing
by two policemen who admitted
dumping dead opossums in front
of a black-owned restaurant. a
U.S . J u s ti c e Department
spokesman said.
·'There was ins uffic ient
evidence or violations of federal
criminal civil rights laws," John
Wil s on . the Ju stic e
Department ·s assistant director
of public affairs, said Monday.
The opossums. which had been
run over by patrol cars . were
placed in front of the Burger
Barn in north Portl a nd on
March L2 by officers Craig C.
Ward and James E. Galloway.
the investigation showed.
THIS WATERFORD CLASSIC
IS OURS ALONE.
Robbins was acquitted of the
charges earlier t his year.
Schmitz was also critical of
the Rules Committee failure to
notify him of t he closed -door
session until it was too late for
him to appear in his own
defense.
"l get a Mailgram an hour
after the last plane leaves for
Sacramento." he said, adding
his Newport Beach start didn't
find the Mailgram announcing
the meeting until they opened
the offi ce Monday morning.
"I wasn't even able to defend
myself." he said. "I'm glad no
Republican voted on this."
Democrats Roberti, Barry
Keene of Eureka, and Nicholas
Petris of OaJcland. s upported the
stripping of Schmitz' various
committee roles.
Republi can Ray J ohnson
abs tained on two votes. and
opposed Schmitz' removal from
the Status of Women panel. The
only other Republican, William
Craven of Vista, was ill and did
not attend Monday's session.
Ughta crystal flre with our 'Tiffany style"crystal
lamp by Waterford. Blown and cut entirely by hand
In Ireland. It's ours exclusively. Approximately
22" high. $950.
SLAVICK·s
Flnt ~ 5'rlCe 1117
W'Nre r~ bt.sr .surpris(.s begin.
,. ....... lllMd (114) 644-1380. ~ '-"
Mio Or..-1M ~•SM 0..00•1..-Vlgltl
'
'
AllW....,_
BEACH STROLL West Ge rman Chanct'llor Helmut
Schi:nidt and his wife. H<Jnnelore. walk <Jlong the beach on
Sani bel Island in Florida . Schimdt, h is wife. a nd
d aughter. Susanne. will \'acation in Florida until J anuar\'
4, when they will makt• an unofficial \'1s 1t to Washington.
D.C.
Phillips denies run1ors
of rift with Princess Anne
Despite reports that he was
having an affair, Capt. Mark
Phillips says he and his wife.
Princess Anne, are "close
enou gh" t h at they n ever
doubted one another.
Phillips. 33, married to the
only daughter or Queen
Elizabeth II, denied in an
interview published Monday
A million·dollar deal for a
biography of shun ex Bealle
J ohn Lennon by Albert
Goldman, a utho r o f a
controversial biography of
Elvis Presley, has fallen
through , The New York
Times reported
The agreement collapsed
because of a disagreement
between Goldman's agent.
John Hawkins, and Avon
Books over whether Avon
could publish the paperback
lhal his marriage was on the
rocks, as newspaper reports
said.
Some reports claimed
Phillips developed a close
r elations hip with Angela
Rippon, 36, the first female
news reader for the British
Broadcasting Corp. She was
writing a book about horses
with Phillips.
version before a British
ed1llon comes out. the Times
said.
An agr eeme nt among
Avon. Will iam Morrow & Co.
and Hawkms called for an
advance of about $1 million,
but a contra ct was not
signed.
"Elvis," Goldm a n 's
scathi ng biography or
Presley, angered many of
the late singer's rans.
Coastal
Extended
forecast
Low c touO\ e•rl y WtcJn•~d••
mornin9, otherwl\~ v•t ••bt• "'O"
cloudlneu
C041Sl•I -50 lnl•nd •f CO<l•l•I
1'1'1111 61, lnl-•I W•l•r 60
EIMwhlre , tlOht v•r••blt' wind\
e xtept ... H•rly I lo 14 wnol\
Westerly \Vllflllfll 1 to 1 ffft tnc re-•t.1r'9
clouds toni91\t
V.S. sunimary
More snow tell over mucn ol ""'
Onlo and mid M1n ln loo1 ••"••• e•,••rn _.,, ot the centt•I P•••n' .,,., puu of wasninoton, with n..i•Y
-'" centr•I 1111nors on -•v In Ille Wftt, J-IH ~n CIH ""ll •lier ......_..,., stor-,,.., dl>m~d
wp to 2 feet ot snow •c.ro\s '"'
Rocklo , bloOl"O hlqnwav• and
Sllwttl1>9-n •kl rHOr'I•
• Sprlnfflekl, Ill., 901 S onclle• of snow Mond.ty In Ille lour1n winter
storm In two --·· ar>d up to S Inches of snow cr .. 1..:1 nHarOOu•
drfvlnQ condition" trom IOUttwrn
Mlclll~ ecrou nortllern t lllnois and
11ndleM Into Olllo
A winter storm ••rnlnt was In effect Mondey lor ..-1 of centrel
llllnols. Trefflers •d•IM>•les were
luued for ,,.,.._n llllMh, ,..,,......,.
lndl.,,., central *"' _.,,...,. 1..-.r
Ml<11'9MI. not1hem Olllo •ftd Wfftern
Pen111ytvenl•, with "P to~ addltloMI
Inches ol snow POSSlble.
Rein --c.ont--Uw st•te of Wallllnglon, wflll -llehy .,._ In Ille -.tl'INtwm ~rt of Ille
U•te.
Ll9hl snow fell In the nonnern
Pi.1111-across nontwm MlllM.
SOUTH E RN CALIFOR .. 14'
COASTAL A .. 0 MOUNTAIN AREAS
!tom• night and mornlno low
<toudlnfi\ tn lh• co•~t•t •rr•s
Varo•b,. hlQfl <louOtnH\ wltll II"''' w1nd\ 1n tfte "'°"""11n\. In coastal
•••••. n~ In "'" 60s .__, In IM u-r JO> and 00\ Mounl••n 11w;in. •S
to H w1lll IOW\ 1S lo lS
T e mpe ratures
A .......
AlbWQu.
11merl110
An<llOr-
Alllnllle
Atl•nte
Atlante Cly
Belllmon
8 1rmlnontn
8tim•rc.' 8olM
8CKton
8rown\YUf'
Butteoo
C11erl>ln SC
C,..rt\lnWV
ClleY-
Cllk -Cln<lnn.CI
Clevel.,..,
Cotv,,,_
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ow1ut11
El Peso
Felrbe'*J
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H•l~n.a
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lndnepl~ °' J<tc,..,, ....
03 Jun~•u
Kan. City
10 LnV-
Ltttle Rock
l1 Loul>••lle
10 M•mplll\
OS Miami
Mllweuk•
Gt follpls-St.P
10 Nelllvlllt
1'I N""OrlNns
10 Ntw Y-
NC>r'lolk
0t.1e Cltr
Om•h• 11 Orl•lldo
Pl\lladptta.
P'-"1• Pltlsb\lf"On
Tb c c •e" tor o f th e
bt1·m outhed Brltlah bt1ot
after whom American
te leviaion'a Archie Bunker
waa patterned says he's
retlr ini hia char•cter for cooct.
The reason: with Britain's
Conservative Party in Power,
be 11ys, llfe 11 be1h1nln1 t.o !f mltlte art.
"He Just Isn't funny any
more -not with Prime
Minister Mar1aret Thatcher
in office," aays author
Jokaay Spel1ht, 58.
S p eiaht brought Alf
Garnett -the vulgar, angry
working-class bloke rtom
London 's East End -to
British television in tbe '60s
with the Indepe ndent
Television show "Tlll Death
Do Us Part."
Sen . Nancy Landon
Kaaaebaum was mailed an
unusual holiday greeting by
Wiiiiam Gibbons, the trustee
overseeing bankruptcy
proceedings or the Rock
Island Railroad .
At a recent hearing, Mrs.
K assebaum , a Ka n sas
R e publican , ex pressed
frustration over Gibbons'
apparent reluctance to sell
portions or Rock Island track
so other carriers can
continue service on the line,
which goes through her state.
·'There are ti m es one
would like to fashion a dart
board with his picture," the
senator said.
Gibbons saw the comment
in a newspaper and sent hor
a letter, enc losing his
photograph.
··I suggest that you affix it
to your dart board and
practice," Gibbons wrote.
.. Who knows? You may even
become proficient. Best
wi s hes for a pleasant
holiday."
A computer programmer
is crusading to make sure
her father is remembered for
c r e a ti n g R u d o1 p h t b e
R ed -Nosed R ei ndeer. a
Ch ristmas fantasy set to
music which has sold more
than 140 miltion records.
.. , . m Rudolph's older
sister." said Barbara Lewb
of San Francisco, adding that
the deer with the lightbulb
nose -an ugly duckling with
antlers who became Santa's
indispensable helper -was
conceived by her rather, the
Tate Robert L. May.
Mrs. Lewis wants her
father to receive proper
credit f o r twanging
generations or heartstrings
with the creation initially
intended as a promotion for
Montgomery Ward, where
May worked u an ad man.
NOA.A V \ 0. .... <-••h
ll JI
ti -11
IO 10
10 Sol ,. u
u ~
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lO s
SS lS
Sl 1S
0 >O n 21 It IS
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OS
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0 31 .. ..,
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Rtno •S ,.
S.11 L~t n 11
Se•ttl• ,. ll °' St LOUI\ n • . 01 S\P.Tem~ ,. 51
St Sit fol••~ )0 s °" Sc>oll•ne n " Of Tul\e ,. " We•llln91n •• J1
Wl<lllle » ..
CALl .. C>l'NIA
l8ertlleld SI a ,.,,..... SJ .,
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0.IMd ,. u
~-....... St• .......... ,. . ........ c.., S1 .,
S.CretMmD St Jt
California
~ c.Mtorni. wlll be fair aftd
wllldy _,, wltl\ 9000 w -Illy.
H cept tor -coni.1 toe end •-clo<.lds.
........ ;;,.;, ...... -~~-Rf_RIP_DR_T s...o.... .. u
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Tllan'ftal 11 "° 19"-M 41 ...... SJ ,. ...... u ,.
l.tllt..... ... •
The N.Cleftet w.-r Sank e H'"
tempera""°" •I ttw ~ tMulCI
II• lft the low•• 601. •"" ••l•r , .... ,.,.,,.._,.
Ill L• ~ ttw M1!f> wlll ,_,.
tMmld..e..
V•l .. y r1lfleM wlll ll••t l\lfltt nur ...
MwtlYlll -n -·~-.. Ila.,. .... .._.. 111.,. cfoliid(-•nd
wlflft, wltll ..._ ,,.., JO -19WJ 111 ......
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wl .... It• l'flllfl. HltM wMI rt.Cl\ M
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Tides
TOOAY
Se<ONI -s· u p.m. .o J WIDttHOAY
"'"' "''111'1 t2: tl • m >I Flr~t 1-4:-0 a m 2.6
Sac-1\19'1 10:«1 e .m. U
Sacond -6:0S p.m. 0.0 Sw11 ttt• ' n o .m , rls••
we-.-•:••m..
Moen uh l .U p.m , r l•u
WedMMl.ly 10:0? •.m
We're Ll~ienlng ~ ~ •.
What do you like about lhe Dally Piiot! Wbat don't you like?
Call the number btlow and your me1Ja'le wU' be "-corded
lranscrlbed •nd delivered to the approprfatt editor. t I • •
the same 24·hour answfrin& aervlce may be .eCt \o ~ let-
tera t6 lhe editor on any tpPtc. Mailbox contribu\ora must t:Dt8*
their· namt and telephope numbtl' tor vertnc:auon. No clteuhGan
olls,Me~ ~
Te us what'• on your mind.
. •
. -
-84~..-.. .""t , ' I ___ .._.__ -
.
l!
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I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Tueaday, December 29. 1981 H /F
EYES HAVE IT l chiei lshigami. a Japanese
a m ateur photographer. took thi s striking
study in contras t and entered it in a Tokyo
.. , . ...,.....
photograph~· contes t The contrast m<:1kes
onl~· the eyes of the girl anc1 ettl ..,land out
Creation
• science
ruling due
LITTLE ROCK. Ark. CAP> -
A federal judge is expected to
wait until after New Year's Day
to issue his ruling on the
constitutionality of Arkansas'
c reat ion-scien ce law , his
secretary said.
Shirley Bowling, secretary to
U.S. Dis trict Judge William
Overton , said Mo nd ay he
worked over the Christmas
holidays on his ruling but didn't
finis h it. She said Overton began
hearing a three·day trial
Monday on redistricting, and it
would be Jan. 4 or later before a
creationism ruling is issued.
Overton h as been wading
through hundreds of pages of
testimony and exhi bits from a
nine·day trial that attr acted
national attention . When the
trial ended earlier this month,
Overton said he hoped lo have a
ruling before the end of the year
The 1981 state law, called the
Balan ced Treatment fo r
C r eation -Sc i e n ce and
Evolution.Science, says public
schools that teach evolution
must leac h creation .
Evolutionists hold that life
developed s lowly through
millions of years. Creationists
generally believe that life was
created s uddenl y a fe w
thousands years ago.
If upheld by the court, the law
would lake effect in September.
Overton has said the sole issue is
the law's cons titutionality, not
the validity of the Bible or the
theory of evolution.
The American Civil Liberties
Union filed suit agains t the law
in May, saying it was vague and
represented the establishment of
religion by the government.
Arkansas Attorney General
Steve Clark defended the law in
court. He drew some criticism
from the Creation-Science Legal
Defense Fund and r e ligious
funda mentalists such as the
Rev. Jerry Falwe ll of Moral
Majority, who said he did not
take advantage of the defense
fund.
The treasurer of the legal
defense fund said Sunday his
group bas raised more than
$50,000 in do nations s ince
forming eight months ago.
Ex-PO W's
due Bpecial
car plate8
SACRAMENTO (AP> -
Beginning Jan. 1, former
prisoners of war in California
will be eligible for s pecial
automobile license plates,
featuring the initials "POW''
!followed by l'our digtts.
The plates, wbkh will cost $25
lnlttally and $10 annually to
renew, wlll only be issued to
thoae who have ·'proof . . . of
former POW status," said Gary
Niahlto ot the state Department
of Motor Vehicles.
Nishito, wbo ser ves as the
.department's reatstraUon chi~.
••Id proceedi from the •ale ot
the r'•tes will go to a ltate env ronmental fund . He
esUmated that from tbt lut
three war• up to 10,000
Californians may be ellrlble foe
the plales .
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of llM Oalty Ill• Slaff
Why 1s state Sen. John Schmitz so headhnl' hungr~ .,
There·s one reason <ind one reason only Schmitz.
Corona de l Mar r esident. Marine Corps fl eo;C'n e colonel.
J ohn Birch Society member . wants t o c :..iptur~ the
Republican nomination for the C S. Sen<:1tl' S<.'at n<"' held
by S.I. Hayakawa.
Schmitz is a m ong seven c.·o nt end(·r~ for thl·
Republican nomination. A Jillie mor e than J.t percent uf
t he vote would take the nomination
Schmitz beli eves that 1f ever\'onc
remains in the running. hi s cadi·e of
hard-core right wi ngers Y.111 put him
over the top. He points. aceurately. to
the fact he garnered 20 percent of the
Republican vote whe n he sought the
Senate nomination two years ago.
CHMITZ WANTS to do beltl'r th1:.
time around. To that end . he h as
unle ashed broadside after broadside scHoEMEHL
When several Republican party leaders <lt!:imisscd
his candidacy, Schmitz released a threc·pagl' statement
entitled "The Attack of the Plutocratic· Puppeteers .. He
termed them .. aging bourgeois oligar chs ...
ln an inter view with a Newport Beach newspaper
and a subsequent interview with a Los Angeles te levision
station. Schmitz suggested a military coup might bt· in
order s hould Preside nt Reagan 's economic policies fail.
Most recently. he labeled feminists who objected to
his proposed anti-abor tion st a te constitution a me ndment
sta nd as "bulldykes· a nd s aid tht.> protl'St l'r~ at a hl•;.m ng
represented "a sea of hard. J e wi sh and <arguably l
female faces."
BECAUSE HE has chosen to trea d as no polttit·al
figure has dared to. Schmitz has drawn m <:1ss1vt· media
coverage.
His name has been bounced throughout the stall'.
from Eureka to Encinitas. from Downey to Death Valle~·
The statem ents have built na me identification and hav('
let the hard·core right wingers know that he is their guy
-and in the running.
One wonders how much farther it can go. Members of
his party cons ider Schmitz an emba rrassment
Democrats despise. nay, detest. him.
Bother Schmitz? Not in the least. says Brad Evans.
who wields the pen for much of Schmitz' campaign
material.
"SCHMITZ LOOKS at thi s thi ng I the Senate
campaign ) a s a craps hool a beerhall challenge,'· said
Evans. Schmitz's strategist. during an interview in
Septem ber at the Torch Club. a bar across the street
from the Sacramento bus station.
. . But ~or the ti~e being, ~hmitz does not appear to be
r1d1ng hi gh. despite anything he or Evans might say.
The Senate Rules Committee stripped Schmitz of the
chairmanship of the Senate Committee on Constitutional
Amendments. The committee also took away his vice
chairmanship on the Senate Industrial Relations
Committee and booted him from the Commission on the
Status of Wome n.
State Sen. Alan Sieroty, who represents a heavily
Jewish district in Los Angeles. wants Schmitz out of the
Senate. Period .
The combined Sunday edition of the San Francisco
'Chronicle and Examiner contained an editorial urging
t he Senate to censure Schmitz.
Will Schmitz weather the curre nt storm end be
su ccessful in hls candidacy? Evans thinks so. Why">
"Because he comes rlaht out. He cuts throuah all the
bull . You don't 1et au the bull. lhe uneodina deluce of
bull. When people vote for him, they know Hllctly what
they're voUng for ...
'
A4 H/F Orange Coaat DAILY PILOTfTueaday. December 29, 1981
millTI~rn~
Terrorist takes big stride
Armed party move feared with abduction of general
ROME (AP > -Premier
Giovanni Spadollnl said today
Julian t e rrorism look a
"quantum leap" with the Red
Brl1adea' kidnapping of U.S.
Brig. Gen. James L. Ooder, the
first foreign official they have
abducted.
He also s aid al a news
conlerence that the government.
with U.S. support, will maintain
"inflexible firmness" and refuse
to negotiat e with the ur ban
terrorists . The Red Brigades,,
who released a picture or Dozier
on Sunday, have not made any
demands for th e NATO
general's release.
Spadolini said : "We are
certainly faced with a quantum
leap in which the terrorists are
trying to transfor m their armed
movement into an armed party
... The explicit attack on
NATO, the connection with the
attack in Germany against the
U .S . Europe a n f orces
commander who miraculously
escaped, demonstrates that in
the new strategy of terrorism
there i s a prevailing
lnternational objective.''
He said the West German
RAF terrorist gang -
implicated In numerous attacks
on U.S. military installations ln
West Germ a ny -h as been
mentioned in the Red Brigades'
communiques on Dozier and
that investigators are looking
for connections bet ween the
groups.
About 100 police. wearing
bullet·proor vests and assisted
by police dogs, today searc~ed
ho u ses and stopped cars in
Ponte Alto, outside Trento, after
receiving what was described as
a tip that Dozier was being held
there. No details about the tip
were given.
Judith Dozier. the wife or the
general, identified the man in
the picture as her husband and
said it raised her hopes, NATO
officials at Dozie r 's base in
Verona said. Dozier. the
h ighest-ranking U.S . Army
oUicial in NATO's Southern
Eur opean Com m a nd , wa s
kidnapped from his Verona
Economy indica#Jor
index falls again
WASHJNGTON (AP> -The
government's Index or Leading
Economic Indicators fell for the
fourth straight month 1n
November. but the decline
slowed to just 0 3 percent, the
Commerce Department reported
today.
The index. which is designed
to show future trends of the U.S.
economy, had fallen 0.8 , 2.1 and
1.6 percent. respectively. in the
previous three months.
November 's modest decline,
while hardly good news for the
weak economy, seemed to
indicate the current recession
m ay also begin losing strength
before long, a development that
would be in line with most
analysts' forecasts.
Iranian official
killed by g unmen
BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP> -
Gunmen in I ran killed a
Parliament d e puty, firing
squads executed three accused
born be rs and c itizens were
warned to beware of s pies.
according to official reports of
the Tehran government's latest
struggles with its enemies.
Mohammad Taki Behsharat, a
loyal follower of Iran's supreme
leader Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini, was killed Monday by
gunfire from a passing car in
Tehran. the official Pars news
agency said.
Cemetery protests
to budge t cuts
WASHINGTON CAP> -A
mock cemetery or more than 500
wooden crosses stands across
Pennsylvania Avenue from the
White House as a sym bolic
protest agai ns t President
Reagan's budget cuts in social
services.
The Community for Creative
Non-Violence, a loc al social
action group that is sponsoring
the demonstration. said Monday .
the phony graves mark the
deaths or homeless persons
around the country who have
been v1ct1 ms of "exposure.
hunger and neglect ..
Traffic deaths
down/or holidays
By The Associated Press
Good weather and a lousy
economy might have helped
keep the Christmas traffic death
toll below estimates made
before the three-day holiday
weekend, a National Safety
Council official says.
During the holiday period, 320
traffic deaths were reported on
the nation's hig hways, well
below the 450 to 550 deaths the
council projected would occur.
Ex-Polish envoy
urges cutoffs
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
former Polish ambassador to
Japan who renoun ced his
position lo protest the Warsaw
regime says the United States
should cut off all trade with his ·
homeland and the Soviet Union.
"Do not give a single penny to
the perfidious Polish junta."
Zdzislaw Rurarz told th e
Commission on Security and
Cooperation in Europe.
Food stamps
autlwrity cut
WASHINGTON (AP J -The
Agriculture Department has
revoked authority o f 2.300
wholes al e rs to accept and
redeem food stamps in a move
the agency said is aimed at
reducing fraud
Ass i s tant Agric ulture
Secretar y Mary Jarratt said
Monday that from now on. the
department will authorize only
certain wholesalers to act as
food stamp redemption centers
for specific purposes.
apartment Dec. 17.
Experts al the Interior
Ministry in Ro m e were
examining the photo, found in a
tr ash can in Milan on Sunday, to
determine if it is a montage. An
anony mous call e r tOld the
Italian news agen cy :.\NSA
where lo find the picture and a
short communique
Police had no immediate
explanation why the terrorists
might have made a montage,
but a Communist senator and
several newspapers suggested it
wa s an indication that the
50-year-old general was refusing
to cooperate with his capttlrs.
··The simplest hypothesis . .
is that the general resisted and
continues t o resist , also
·physicall y," said Sen. Franco
Calamandrei.
The picture shows Dozier
holding a placard covered with
anli·American s logans under a
ba nner bearing a fi ve-pointed
star and symbol o f the Red
Brigades. Police said they
b e lieve th e plac ard was
superimposed on the photo.
·'The Red Brigades have
never given out a photo of a
kidnap victim when the hostage
was dead ... said a high-ranking
police orri cial who asked to
remain anonymous "Seeing
what we have so far, I would say
he is still alive.'·
Italian newspapers said the
general's expression -a wry
smile appeared lo show that
he had not been broken by hjs
captors
Withdrawal
of ·savings
hurts economy
WA S HINGT ON <AP J
October's rlood or deposits IO the
nation's troubled savings and
loan associations dried up in
November as interest in the new
tax ·exempt All S a ve r s
Certificates waned, the latest
government report shows.
Savers withdrew $1 6 billion
more than they deposited in the
bel e aguered S&L 's in
November, the Federal Home
Loan Bank Board said Monday
That made November the
eighth month in the past nine
with more withdrawals than
deposits. with October's net
deposit gain caused only by the
rush to buy the new certificates
when they were introduced Oct
1.
For the s avings and loan
associations, November was the
l llh straight month their net
worth dropped, omcials said.
with a decline or $636 million to
about $27.9 billion
The new r epo rt s aid the
slowdown in the growth of All
Saver s balances -from
October's $16.5 billion gain to
$2 5 billion 1n November
reflected lower November
interest rates on the certificates
and the fact that the initial rush
to purchase them may have
used up a large portion of the
potential market.
Yields on short term Treasury
securities rose 1n Monday's
au c t io n s. co n tinuing a
mo nth long genera l upward
trend. officials said
About $4.9 billion tn six-month
bills were sold at an average
discount rate of 12 448 percent,
up from the 11.838 percent or one
week earlier
Al'WI .........
IT'S SNOW FUN Five men needed all the
stn.•ngth they eould muster to move small car
from snow~· parkm~ spot in Aspen. Colo
Snowfall, m easuring up to t wo f eet in some
spots. has hit the Rocky Mountain area
Skiers love the snow but 1t 's hazardou~
Test-tube birth 'day of hope'
Feat hailed accomplishment for treating infertility
NO RFOLK , Va <APJ -The
birth. the first test-tube baby in
Ameri c a , con ceived in a
laboratory dish. was a "day of
h ope" f or treatment of
infertility, says the physician
who conducted the procedure.
Eltzabeth Jordan Carr, who is
l day old today, is .. perfe<:Uy
normal." said Dr. Fred Wirth.
the pediatrician attending the
d elivery by Caesarean section
Monday morning at Norfolk
General Hospital
Judith Carr, a school teacher
from Westminster. Mass., had
h a d thr ee a bnormal
pregnanc i es. fo r ci ng the
removaJ or her Fallopian tubes
that are necessary for normal
fertilization.
"This conditio n made it
·~-........ 'EVERYTIME IT RAINS .. : Pennies. 23.450 of them . ar e
counted by Sgt Bob Mayfield of the Oregon State Police.
after they \\ere found in m etal box on rural road near
Central Point. Or e Jose Zamora. a coin collector. says the
box of pennies. a Christmas gift. had fallen from his truck
early Monday .
completely impo!>~tble for Mrs
Carr to become prel;(nanl except
by the prcJ<:e ss of 1n vitro
fertilization." i;aid Or Howard
J ones, who runs the in vitro
clinic here with ht!> wire, Dr
Georgeanna Jonl'~ In vitro
"in glass' ml'ans 1<,ol ated
from the li vmg organis m
··what a wonderful Christmas
pre s ent for th em ," sai d
Jacqueline Bac hm an , who
moved mto the Carr.., former
home three weeks ago when
th ey moved to an other
neighborhood Mrs Carr, 28, is a
school teacher and her husband,
Rog e r , 30. 1s a mechanical
engineer
Since Ors. Patrick Steptoe and
Robert Edwards pioneered the
process in England with the
birth of Louise Bro .... n tn July
1978, about 20 test tube babies
have been born 1n England and
Austra li a. includtng one to an
Ame rican couple 1n England
earlier this year
"I think -the s1g01f1 cance of
this day lies in the fact that we
have demonstrate d that the
lech01que Of IO Vitro fertihzat1on
1s applicable in the hands of
others 1 think lh1c; IS a dav or
hope ... Jones said -
Five women trt«Jled at the
Norfolk clinic arc pr<•gnant. and
there are lhou~ands on the
waiting list
Jones said there 1s a pool of
about 21'.! milhon mvoluntanlv
infertile people .... ho could be
helped by in \"ll ro rcrtthzation
Th e p-r oce ss invo lves
re movmg a mature egg from the
motht'r s ovar). fc rt1 1Jz1ng 1t
with the father's :.perm in a
small g la ss di s h i n the
laboratory and transferring it to
the mothe r's uterus hours later.
If l he embryo success full>
implants itself. the pregnancy
proceeds normally
Dr Mason Andrews. who
p e rformed the Caes arean
section on Mrs Carr, s aid that
had nothing to do wi th the
method of fert1lizat1on
Jones said the \\ork done to
improve in nt ro f ert1hzat1on.
used on women who~e Fallopian
tubes are m1ssmg or irreparably
blocked. could lead to better
treatmen t of othl'r t ypes of
infertili ty
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Ghirardelli
Square sold
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -
GhirardelH Sguare, the s hopping
and restaurant center that has
become one of San Francisco's
most famed touris t attractions,
bas been sold to two insurance
companies.
basis of race and that white
peo pl e w ere f avore d I n
appointment to positions
Northwestern Mutua l Lire
Jnsurance Co. of Milwaukee,
Wisc., and Real Property West
Jn c . of Br it ain b o ug ht the
2 .1 ·acr e SQ l!Jl re fro m Mrs
William P Roth and her son,
Willi am Matson Roth for an
undisclosed amount.
Diabl.o plant
ready by swnmer?
Jury deliberating
fate of Bonin
SAN FRANCISCO IAP)
Di a blo Canyon nuc lea r power
p lant should be operational for
t he summe r peak e lectrical
demand and a seismic review of
th e facil ity is progressing
without problem, a uti lity
spokesman says
LOS ANGELES IA P > -After
a graphic 10-week trial in which
they saw photogra phs o r bloody
bodies and heard grisly details
of homosexual murders, j urors
in the Freeway Killer tr ial now
must decide whether to convict
William Bonin in the deaths of 12
young men and boys.
Pacifi c Gas and Elect ric Co.,
owner and operator or the plant
near San Luis Obispo, submitted
its fourth status re por t on the
seismic review program to the
fed eral Nuclear Regulator y
Com mission.
Body found
Th e t wice -pa r o l e d sex
offender, 34, could be sentenced
to d ie m the gas chamber if the
p a n e l decides he k i lled the
victims. whose nude bodies were
found dum ped along Southern
Cali forni a freeways.
at botwm of cliff
Judgment vacated
in college suit
LOS ANGEL ES IAP > -A
20 ) ear -old Woodl a nd Hil ls
woman last seen Christmas Day
apparently fell to ber death from
a cliff in Malibu Creek State
Park. but sher iff's deputies said
h omicide d etectives were
investigating
SAN F RA NCISCO (AP> -The
U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals
h as vacated a civil rights
judgme nt which favor ed the
Black Faculty Association of
Mesa College 10 San Diego
County.
A departmen t h elicop ter
located Janet Ahlert's body at
the bottom of a 50-foot cliff along,
Goat Butte. a popular hiking
trail, on Monday, Lt. John Love
said
The judges fou nd ··ctearly
erroneous·· the trial court's
acceptance of a claim that the
association had m ore than two
m e mbers, a ltho ug h no others
were listed at trial
Pob:' s bid nixed
The s u it. against the San
Di ego Communit y College
District. alleged that there were
discrim inatory practices on
SAN YS IDRO I A P l -A
P o lish woman 's req uest for
political asylum in the United
States has been rejected because
her case wasn't cons idered
'"co mpel ling .·· d espite her
assertion that s he bad been
jailed in Poland. immigration
officials say.
Cheese giveaway
going slowly
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Only about 5 percent
or the 3.3 million pounds or free cheese available to
California poor has been distributed, but the
giveaway program is expanding, state officials
say.
OHicials Mond ay said they were hoping
som eone might donate the services of an airplane
to h elp t ransport some of the cheese Crom
Northern California warehouses lo Southe rn
California , where the bulk of the state's poor live.
The cheese was ordered released last week by
Presid ent Reagan following r equests from
consume r groups and organizations representing
the poor .
Some 168,000 pounds of the c heese, in
fi ve-pound blocks. was distributed to a~ut l~
charitable or ganizations in Northern California
before Christmas day.
But Monday the re were 660.000 pounds in
sto rage in Oakland, 1.2 million pounds in Union
City, 700,000 pounds in San Francisco and just over
600,000 pounds in Modesto, sai~ De borah Zermeno
of the State and Consumer Services Agency.
"We 're hoping to get someone with an
airplane so we can fl y some or the cheese down
south." said Ms. Zermeno
"We gave away all that we had." said Don
.Cava n at San Francisco's St. Anthony's Dining
Room where 744 of the fi ve-pound blocks we re
distributed.
··or course, we didn't h ave enough for
ever ybody,·· he added "We must have had 2,100
people here.··
He said the center has been told it will be
getting more cheese to distribute later in the week.
J esse Orta, a member or the governor's
Inner-City Task Force which is coordinating the
distribution of the cheese , s aid the food is expected
to r e a ch Southe rn California by today or
Wednesday.
SeveraJ states have applied for authoriialion
to distribute the cheese, but California is the first
to ship the food to the poor, Orta said.
Another 19 million pounds -in 40-pound
chunks and large drums -may be made available
for r elease in California if Reagan gives the word,
Orta said. ·
Orta said it will cost $1,200 per volunteer
truckload to deliver the cheese from Northern
California to Los Angeles . There was no estimate or the air transport cost.
Because of the expense, Orta said he hopes to
pers uade service clubs , businesses and the
military to voluntarily assis t in passing out more
cheese b1 New Year's Day.
Police suits costly
LOS ANGELES (AP> -P olice-r elated
litigation has coet the city ol Loi Ancelet fl.8
mllUon in settlement.a over the lut nine years, the
cily attorney's office aays. TM total wu calculated by the clt.y att.omey'a
office at the request or the City Council, wbkb
wanted to know what the city lid doM "to make sure t.be police a.re act1n1 In a raponalble,.ay."
1'be sum inclvdes all Utlt"tkJG -tnehadlftf alle1ed .... ult, ratae arrtlt, falH imprisonment
and abootlnp -ucept trafftc acddilnt.I.
..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTrruesday. Decem ber 29, 1981 H/F
·~-..........
Dinosaur
plwtograph
to get aid
LOS ANGELES IAP> An
at>rospace firm wi ll ust: ispec1al
processing to try to enhance u
"severely underexposed "
photograph said to have been
taken of a dinosaur like creature
in an il:.olated African lake, a
s1mkcsman said
HUNT BEGINS D <.ivc Fisse. 37, w aves as he
a nd voluntt.•cr Davt• Ourkland head out to sea
in search of the ~reat white s hark that killed
a sur fer near Mo nterey last wet·k
The picture was a m ong 23
rolb of film exposed by Herman
and Kia Regusters during two
months i n the J un gle
Spokesman J ohn Sack said
Monday that when tlie picture
failed to turn out , 1t was sent to
a tos Angeles ae r ospa ce
co m pany wher e special
processing will try to restore lhf"
images He declined to release
the name of tht: firm "for
security reasons ·
The Regusters returned th1$
month from their expedition to
the Congo Republic The group,
wh i ch i n c l uded seve r a l
Congolese offtc1als and wildlife
ex perts. was sea rching for
M o k ele·Mbem b c, a hu ge
creatur<' reported sporadically
for two centuries by natives and
occasional visitors
Which killer: Inan or shark? • IS
Hunter on 'reconnaissance dive' saved from icy waters
MONTEHEY <AP 1 A
37 year-old man vowing lo calch
Mon terey Bay's killer great
w hite shark "ir it takl•s me the
res t of my l i fe " t ook a
"reconnaissance dive' without a
wetsuit and had to bt• rescued
from the icy waters
Davirt F1sse came down with
hypothermia a fter his 20 minute
dip in SO-degree ~alcrs Monday
A boat chartered by news media
c e1 me to his rt·sc.ue when his
eompanion couldn't start the
motor on lhc1r HI.foot aluminum
launch to n•ach F1sse
• • 1 d1dn 't realtze the waters
were as cold as thl:'y are:· the
San Bruno man said
T hl' clLlo havt• attracted
con s 1derahlt• publ1 c·1t~ and
p rovoked -;kl·pt1c1sm among
officials
··Th1l> I'.'! st upid I mean
ser ious!\· folki>. · sa id John
Mccosker, cl 1rl'ctur or the
S t einhart ,\qu<1r1um in San
Fra ncisco '"Whal chance has
t h is man of r1nd1ng the
individual shark or any shark""
'"I don l expect them to get the
s har k: I just hope the s har k
doesn't get them ... said Patrol
§
Lt Ken Boett cher of the
Department of Fish and Game
in Monterey.
fo~isse and 20-year·old Dave
Burkland of Cupertino came to
Montere.> to hunt a great whllt'
s hark lhe1t killed a surfer Dt'c.
19 fo'isse·s motive retr1but1on
for Lewis Buren 's death His
weapons a h1g h·powerl'd rifle
and a 38-caliber bang st ick
designed to stun the shark. ll1s
hunting dog Natasha 1s along,
and Burkland has a large
hunting knife
T he shark has been estimated
al more than 20 feet long by
experts who exam ined the bite
taken out of Boren·s s urfboard
rlSSt•, who dl'SCribes himself
as a ~old 111 os1w<'tor . amateur
diver and hunt1•r . :.:.11d he hopes
to ta kt• Lht· sh Jr k ,tll\t:, lraµµing
1t ind l'ag1.· when he and
Burkland fuul it... ·nest ·
Md'oskt't doulttN1 tlw pair
tould 1d1•nt1h "h11'11 '.'!h.11 k killed
lhe :-.urfer•
'"I' 11fortun.1tl·h shJ rks don't
"'ear uniform:-·.ind 1 lwr1• ' no
way of tl'lllng "'h11·h 1101• 1l was,"
hl· said
M o 11 t ('rt'' h .i rho r m il s I er
Brook.. B11\\ltJ' "aid llw Y.hole
generJI atlllu<il' h1•rt• I)> 11rnt U1e
whok plan •l> 111 1·11n1·t·I\ 1•d The
allatudt• I)> 111· II rwn·r find the
shark and that 1f ht• d111· ... hl''ll be
1n big t roulilt·
The couple told a skeptical
news conference they and others
on the exped1t1on spotted lhl'
creature tn swampy Lake Tele
on several occasions The only
µ1cture. however. w.is taken by
Mr., lfrgustcrs on ~ov 28,
~hen she said ... , saw a largf',
serµent like head and neck pop
out of the water a bout 100 fCE·t
av. a'
t{logusters hcid said t he picture
"as taken tn deep shade
Suck reported that the lab thal
origrnally processed the him
s aid the underexposure ma~
have t~cn caused by mo1stun•
that seeped tnlo the camera
d a maged the batteries and
caused the light meter l"
m:ilfuncuon
Grades • issuance restored
CLOVIS (AP> Clovis West High School will
drop a 4-year-old policy of withholding report
ca rds because of unpaid student fees on the basis
of an advisor y opinion from the attorney general's
office.
The opinion was sought after Don Greelev
demanded the report card of his 15-year -old
daughter, Dawn, when school officials kept it
because she owed S7 .50 on an overdue library
book
After the report -card issue was resolved ,
Greeley said he did not object to returning the
book
SFA's 14K Gold Jewelry Sale!
28% to 46% Off Original
Prices Originally $50 to $470;
now $35 to $270.
• The jewelry: precious bracelets,
necklaces and earrings.
• The selection: herringbone bracelets, rope
bracelets, link bracelets; herringbone necklaces,
rope necklaces; pave diamond earrings.
• The place: the 14K Cold Boutique,
Fashion Jewelry Collections-w here
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Saturda y 'til 6 pm. Surdy l 1 noon to 5 pm.
'•
1111)111111
TUESDAY,
DEC. 29, 1981
CAVALCADE
lllJlllTll lllll/flllllll llllll f1~~~~SION
Three face long tenns
Trio convicted on 79 counts in coast rapes
Tile .dlree were retW"Ded to
°'anc•.· County Jail to await 1t11t ....... Jan.IS.
• ·oran1e County Deput7 l>latrtc~ Attorney Rlcbard
Toobe1• aald 1tep·brotber1 ao..N ltuuell, •• and Robert 'l'Uftn:~•. both ol Downey, flM!e
-~ that could exceect IDO J'!~~U fO'!_Dd CUl~ty
lloiaay of one count of kidnaJ>piDg for robbery, two
eouata of. kldnappln1. tbree ~ ol n>bbery. 11 cOUllU of
fottlble rape, and 14 cowm of
torclq the women to commit
another sex act. • . J • h • h h l Tlii -Chlrd crerenaaiit, TQlii unior ig sc o~ tf:!:..':;.~ "!,~-:~·.::i
ontions get hearing LJ::~~~:1p~~U:..=; J:' ;De of the three lncldent1 ~jdend by the Jury: . --
Should the Fountain Valley
School Distr ict break up its
present kindergarten th.rough
eighth grade structure to create
separate elementary and junior
high school campuses?
The workshops, all belinnini The firat two lncidentl
at 7 : 3 o p . m . , b a v e bee 0 ~curred last February.
scheduled as follows~ Jan. 18 at In the ftrst. Toohey Hid, two
Moiola School, Jan. 20 at Fulton men oftered a ride to a woman
School, Jan. 218 at Talbert School wbo .. car bad broken down in
and Jan. 28 at Masuda School. Lona Beach.
The grade level oraanbation In the second . incident, a
82-3
BS
88
Erma Bambeck has her
own set of tips r egarding
the winter fireplace. See 82.
a
0
..., .............. The question, wbir.b bas
stirred debate amoni parents,
will be the subject of four public
meetings in January scheduled
by a district committee studying
grade level reorganization
options.
study committee, made up of Buntiolbln Beach woman wboee
p a r e n t s , t e a c b e r s an d autt> bad broken down on Pacitlc
administrators, will consider Coast High~ay accept!d
the comments made at these uaiJtance from two men in •
workshops in preparinc its pickup ~ck:
BEAUTIFICATION PROJECT -Huntington
Beach residents and businesses have donated
more than $19,000 to develop area
overlooking Bolsa Chica State Beach into ~
blufftop park.
Junior high advocates say
grouping larger numbers of
sixth, seventh and eighth grade
1tudents together on one campus
will permit more specialized
instruction in the basics, more
elective courses and smoother
transition to high school.
But opponents of a j unior high
school system · say grouping
older students together may
foster the earlier emergence of
social problems such as drug
abuse.
Also, a junior high school
system might require some
stud ent s to attend classes
beyond their immediate
neighborhood.
A flier encouraging
community members to voice
their opinions on middle schools
at the upcoming meetings is
being distributed to district
parents.
recommendations to the board In both 10c1dents, Toohey said,
of trustees. the women were taken to Tonner
This committee wiU make its ;Canyon near Brea, raped
report to the trustees In early repeatedJy at ltnifepoint and
F e b r u a r y . A s e p a r a t e robbed. . . .
c o m m i t t e e w i I I m a It e In the third incident, which
recommendations regarding occurred last June, two
school closures. 14-year·old Huntington B~ach
Trustee Roger Belgen said -'rls hitcbhikinc on Pacific
restructuring and school Cout IBghway accepted a ride
closures both are necessary from three men in a similar
because of the district's truck._ . •
declining enrollment. Toohey said the teen·acers
He noted that 1mall groups ol were abducted and taken to the
upper level students (grades six same 1eneral location and were
through eight) now are rapedrepeatedly.
scattered tbrouchout the district Tbe three defendants were
with few teachers aaalcned to arrest.a in July by Hunt:ingtoo
them at each school. Beacb police.
By grouping these s tudents
and teachers together at fewer
sites, the district would have
more flexibility and be able to
p rovide more specialized
instruction in math, English,
science and social studies,
Belgen said.
Pre-workshop
set at GWC
Marine found guilty
in death of skater
Residents planning to enroll in
the "Writing the Romance
Novel" course at Golden West
C oll ege can attend a
pre·workshop meeting on
Saturday, Jan. 9.
The free sesaion will be
conducted by television and film
writer Richard Perkins at 10
a .m . in Fine Arts Room 222 oo
the Huntington Beach campus.
El Toro Marine Robert Keith
Martin has been found guilty of
vehicular manslaughter for an
April 11 incident in which bis
van stru ck and killed a
lS·year-old girl roller skating ~ong an El Toro street. S The Orange County Superior
Court jury also said Martin was
guilty of driving under the
lnfluence of akohol. The jury.
which deliberated about four
hours Monday, found Martin not
guilty of bit·and·run driving in
relation to the incident.
quarter·mile down tbe road
before stopping.
"He didn't fulfill the legal·
requirements ... bul I think the
jury was juatilied in ftndin& bim
not guilty on that count," said
Maauire.
Robert Chatterton, s tandiq in
for Martin's recuJar attorne:y,
Marshall Shulman, asked Judae
Everett Dickey for enouch time
before sentencing for a complete
probationary report on Martin.
Dickey set sentencing for Feb.
1.
The main s peaker will be
Linda Wisdom, a Huntington
Beach r esident and former
Golden West student whd haa-
j ust sold her sixth romance
novel. Also speaking wlll be
literary agent Pal Teal of
Fullerton.
~' ~,~~
Public access
pushed/or
Laguna coves
Two of the Orange Coast's
quiet coves are under increasing
pressure to be opened to the
public.
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors has taken action to
improve public access to
Thousand Steps Beach in South
Laguna and Emerald Bay in
Laguna Beach.
The supervisors agreed to
appeal an Orange County
Superior Court ruling that the
sandy beach above the mean
high tide line al Thousand Steps
belongs to adjacent property
owners.
The appeal to the 4th District
Court of Appeal in San
Bernardino will seek to void
Judie Bruce Sumner's rullaC.
Edward Duran, deputy county
counsel, said because no mean
high tide line exists, Sumner's
order barring trespass by the
public seem s an "idle and
useless act.••
County o ffi cials have
periodically negotiated with the
Laguoa Coves Association, a
local homeowners' group, on
ways of establishing joint use of
the beach.
HB donations pass
$19,000 for park
More than $19,000 has been
donated by Huntington Beacb
residents and businesses to
develop a blufftop park
overlooking Bolaa Chica State
Beach.
Mike Multari, city planner,
says the money was received
from more than 300 donors.
AminoU USA Inc., the major
oil producer in the city, offered
last summer to match park
donations up to $25,000 that were
received before the end of this
year.
UC Irvine gets
8218,000 grant
A $218,000 grant from the U.S.
Department of Education has
been awarded to UC Irvine to
enhance the retention and
success of minority graduate
students.
Tbe money will be used to
grant research positions on
campus to minority students in
an effort to help the students
develop and sharpe n their
research techniques and skills
as they work toward graduate
degrees.
"It's been gnti!ying that so
many people hav e made
contributions," Multari said
today. "I wouldn't be surpriled
If we make it to $25,000 by the
end of this week."
Multarl says ii the city 1eta
the full matching grant, the
$50,000 would purchase 75 treea,
150 shrubs and an irrl1atlon
system for the one·mile·lon1
blufftop north of 11th Street Oil
the ocean side of Pacific Coast
Highway.
MuJtarl said it doesn't appear.
that the city funds can le1ally bei
used to develop the par~
because it is part of the BolN
Chica State Beach operated by"
the California Department ol
Parks and R~reatioo.
State recreation officials ban
agreed to maintain any park
development on the bluff1.
Multarl said more money would
be needed from yet
undetermined sources to plant
grass and for new top soil.
.Presently. the blufftop ian'tr
landscaped and is used for oil
pipelines and pumps. 1 .'
Inquiries to the Blufftop P~
Fund may be made by c
S36·5511.
· Caryn Dilorio, a roller skater
and an honor student at El Toro
High School, died at the scene ol
the accident at A venida d.a La
Carlota.
Martin's van had just paued
another car when it swened
back into the outside lane and
struck the curb and then the
victim as she skated on the
asphalt next to the cutter,
according to testimony.
Shops and "banks out to zap you
Her mother, Barbara Horton,
£. ho sat through the
ve·week·long trial, said she
opes publicity from the triaJ ~m affect public driving habits.
t 'ii:i'lt waa senseless slaughter,"
'be . i . eputy Diatrlct Attorney Mike
Maguire said be was happy with
the convi~on. which could amd .If art.in to prison for as long aa
three years and eight mooU...
lie added that the not guilt y
·verdict on the bit·and·run count
waa understandable because
Martin did check the scene
momentarily after the incident,
and drove only another
A blood test taken sligbUy
more than an hour after the
incident indicated Martin's
alcohol level lo bi.a blood waa
0.21 percent, said Maeu,ire. A
level ol 0.10 is considered the
legal level for drunkennesa.
Martin was allowed to remain v
free on bis own recognlzance by
Dickey, but bis driver's license
was withheld. Ma1ulre noted
that Martin al10 is facina
prosecution in Central OrUle
County lluniclpal Court on a
separate charge of drunken
drivlna.
Pharmacy accused ·
of illegals~
A Corona del llar pb&nD8CJ
llle1ally IOld more t.bu n.a
addictive Codeine tabletl ID tbe
put lb moot.bl, • caatlaallll police lav11t11atlon ltu.
rnealed.
Newport Beach pol.lee Hid a
,...Ullllury aadJt ol tile rwww• at Jail'• Plaannacy, .. S .
Coast Hlallwa1 also aMwl
quantltfea oi Demerol
ampltetamlaea. cocaln• aad
morpM.IM were 1old •tu.oat
~.
Pelke, no latd tMJ'" llfted Ua ..... ab ...... of Ndll.
at die druc atan, report tbe
Ylclladcm could date Mell ....
1ean. PllarmacJ OWDll" ..... Jack'' o.an.c. ... ,...,. .......... .
" ..... f I 0111, -a.ft Mia o.._.,-,o10......_ .. tNe••.•WJ .... .... .,....... Dee. 11 • .... doe GI
coHplracy to sell morplalM.
Tbel.r arrai_..meat baa beell Ml
forJaa.5.
But police, wbo ban been wlatlld ID tbe 1Qy91tisattae bJ
tit• ... Board ol PUrmac1
and tbe federal Dru1
S•forcemeot Admlal1tratloD,
DOW ~ tbe)''ft ........ ap Ill
··-lit ..,.rate Ttol.U.. Ill tbe cora.adel llar drul ...._
lanl&S.a&ort aat• dlleJ wW
ult t.be Or ... Ca -D111rkt Atlor••1'1 office to flle
acldltkmml daarl• .. alalt ... ~......... . -o.--.. rndaed todQ Ill ...
pbarmaey, said Ile Cftt••t
COIDllMllt • tbe ~ II tMI
Ume. Be IMMd, "'"''• *Mt P•lt•lcltJ OYH t'e fOJloe
Jaw.atcaUoe ua't n.rt Ma ........ ''If AllJtbl•C," ... HJ•,
11bu11-Ma.,.....,
• ..
HOLIDAY R EFLECTIONS & SUCH : Some
dour·mouthed economists were predicting nobody would
be buying anything for this Christmas season and
personally, I don't know where those guys were hiding.
Since nobody was
going to be out
shopping , I decided to
•fl follow my usual
~\ procedure, which is to -------m,.... do all the gift buying on Jll IUIPllllf~ ~ Dec. 24, and give a little
-last·moment lift to the
1s a g g i n g bus i n es s
1community.
The only things I found sagging were my knees and
shopping bags.
One head clerk at a major department store at South
Coast Plaza summed up the situation this way: "We may
not be setting any records, but we're mak.ing money ... "
I DON'T KNOW if the stores were futl or shoppers or
not, but they sure were full of elbows. I've got the bruised
ribs to prove it. I s uffered more cheap shots than a Ram
quarterback who was behind 51 to 6. Which most of them
were this last season.
••• If the economy does have the hiccups, one thin& that
might help wOUld be if the banks would be faster in
cou1blng up money to the customen. Have you ever
noticed that when the bank line ii clear out to the cigar
store, they have one teUer at the windows and 17
employees shuffiln1 paper ln the back1rou.nd?
When the bank lobby ll vacant, they have elght
tellers at the windows.
YOU CREEP FOaWAaD in the line and finally aet to
the window, where the teller tells you : "You're ln the
wrona line, air. You should be ln the tooi one over the.re,
where the •lin 1aya Notes."
Maybe that's why they call them tellen. Tbey tell
you you. re la the wrona line.
At one bank up ln Santa Ana ,_ we'll call lt Flnt
American U.Ueu -every empAoy• in UM place ... meet
to be oozin1 around ln slow-madla. Yoa inquire If tbeN'•
a problem! •
''Oh yes sir." the teller says brightly. "Our BUMRAP
computer is down. ..
PLEASE NOTE THAT bank computers never break,
malfunction or short-circuit. They always "go down:·
Later they may come up. But right now they're down.
You might find it refreshing some day to have a bank
person blurt out at you, "The bloody BUMRAP is busted
again."
* * * Let's race it. the computer age is upon us. even to all
.the video games that were snatched up by the populace
"I we tM md o/ ,,.. bank UM"°'°• GfOf'Qf. G«orrlt' ,..,.,_, ..
for Christmas presents. If you don't bave a video same at
home, you can always go to one of the game arcades or
quickie markets.
Young people are absolutely addicted to this
nonsense, pumpang an endless stream of coins lnto the
aadgets.
ONE AllCADE OPENED ln Laruna Beach ~
once there was a nice Jlttl~ tobacco sbop. Tbat'•
'" ~pplng ooe kind of addict.ican for anot.heT.
You walk into that hoie·ln·tbe:waU arcade and the
place soundl Uk• a rock concert tape belnl ptayed at
double normal apeed.
YOU don't t.blnk tl '1 all addldlon? lJatm. beNIMI tM
clerk'• counter at tbe Lquna video arcade, tMN'1 a
llar1e nadce that proelalml, "ll Sneaky Smltb COIDll 111
Here. Ooo•t Let Hlm Play ... Call Illa f'1tbtr at Once!••
Oaly t.be name wu cbU19d to protect the IUlftr.
.HOMll.
I,
• Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, December 29, 1981 H /F ••
NY E COMPO I TE T RAN ACTIONS
QUOtAllC*t llt<l\101 f lllAO•t 0 111 fMI .... YO•• MIOWllT, l'A(ll'I(, l'IW IOITO-. 01 t•O• f ••• C••(UUIATI noc• al!CM41f911 ANO ll"°UIO l'I' Tltl NASO AlllO "IST11111 T
....
• • m reVIew
ll wu an action-packed year In the butlneN
world. Here were some of the Lop 1toriee of 1•1:
-Slandard Oil or Oblo, nu.ab with AJaallan crude
oil, put $1.8 biUion on the table to ICOO'P up Kenoeeott,
the nation'a larcest copper producer.
-Du Pont, already No. 1 in t.be chemical
industry, emeried victorious ln a three-way baWe
for Conoco, t.be nation's nlnt.b lar1est oil company. ll
was the bluest takeover ln U.S. bmineaa hllt.ory:
$7.5 billion. Seagram, one of the ru.nnerupa1: didn't
come out too badly: it -now owu 20 percent" of Du
Pont, the aevent.b laraeal company in America. Mobil, lbe other runnerup, then pursued Maral.bon
Oil and aot into a shoutina match with U.S. Steel,
which has finally tired oft.be steel business.
-General Foods got out of the fut-food bualneaa
by selling off Its Burger Chef chain but went into t.be
packaged wiener and bologna business by acqulrln1
Oscar Mayer for $460 million.
-Prudential Ins urance, world 's lareesl
Insurance company, bought Bache, one of lbe
nation's largest stockbrokers.
-Not lo be outmaneuvered, American Express
bought another large stockbroker, Sheanon Loeb
Rhoades.
: -And also not be left at the cash register, Sears,
Roe buck bought stiJI another large stockbroker, Dean
Willer Reynolds.
-Merrill Lynch and E.F. Hutt.on didn't seU out
to anyone.
-Nabisco, the cookie and cracker maker, joined
f orces with
Standard
Brands, a rood
a nd liquor
pur veyor , to
cr eate a new
company ,
Nabi s co
Brands . It's
ranked fourth in the rood industry.
-In 1976, when Roy Ash, former head of Litt.on
Industries and former top Nixon and Ford aide, took
ove r the co mpan y f o r m e rly known as
Addressograph-Mulligraph -it's now AM
International -he moved the headquarters from
Cleveland to Los Angeles, where he happerui to Uve.
In 1981, Ash was ousted, and a Chicagoan, Richard B.
Black, took command of the company losing a lot of
money. So now AM lntemational's headquarters
have been moved again -to Chicago or course.
Also moving across the country from Los
Angeles, where he had been president or Atlantic
Richfield, was Thorton Bradshaw, who took over as
the new chief al RCA in New York. One of the first to
leave after Bradshaw's arrival was NBC chief Fred
Silverman, who, having held t.be top progum spot at
all three networks, now had no place to go.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGIS""
HEW YOfU((API FINI Oow.J-.,,.._ I« Moflclrf, OK. 21.
AMERICAN LEADERS
~
STOCKI
JO '"" °11TA ::r'cw ~ ~~ ~ 20 '"' •n J12.ti 11•.n m.-t.u • II'> IS Ull lOt.tS 110.16 !09.Jt 10t.tl • o.• -~ .S Sit.. Ja# MU4 MSA S..'11-U2 ...... .... .. . .. .. . 2.lCZ.-
Ttefl Ui,tOO
• "' utlls m.a • '-.S Sn. . . .. . . .. . . . . •• ..,.. ••
WHAT STOCKS DID
Hl!W YORK (AP) 0ec: :it Prw
Actvencecl Todoey ,., a,t
Oec:llMCI '115 "' u flCMftOl(I 471 .. T'c.Cel l-..... 1"2 .. _ """' n 11 ,.. __
2' ,,
WMAl AMUOO
NEW YORll IAP) 0ec: 11 p,....,_
Todey ~ A4ver><ecl 201
Oec:ll-J76 210
UM~ m D9 ,.,._ m 74$
"'-"""' I l ...... ._ 11 " METALS...-,
<•~r ,.._,, <•"" • pow...,, U.$
dHl!ftetklN. Le .. ,,._ • ...-,
UK Oo4f <-•pound, dellvw ....
T .. CloM MIUISW .... <-1te lb. a...e-1 ... 11 c:...Cs • poo.ind, H. Y.
M9ttwy ........... .
l"U..._..SO.OOtroyo1 .. N.Y.
SILVER_.,,
GOLD QUOTATIONS
~:,,...... ...... '*·"' ofll1.7S. U...: ....,_ llai,. ..,., ••. ofl UAI
P .... : .-.., off U.Jt.
Pr....i.t: 11'1.AI, oft U.tl.
~ LAllt nai,. PIMI. * .., iio ........... . "...., . __ , ,,..,, ... ,, ......
N'S .......... . ........ , .... , ... ,, _._, '*M. .. ... u .
........ , (Oflly .... ,., ...... , ~
... 14.7S,,.IO.J6
SYMBOLS
'
Read the Orange Coast
newspaper that keeH ~OU
In --the informative
1842-4321 . .111111
~----?---=-~----------..--_,.. ........ ...._~="""""-______ .._ ____ ..., ________________________ 11191 __ ............................... -..i ..
. ----·-----··----
Orange CoHt OAJLV PILOT/Tuelday, December 29, 1981
'~ EviNiNG..;:;;.;. ~
...... NIW9 ! ' OtAMJl'I~ TMAMIMHUNT
THIMUPNTI
011Mt: Clllryl Ladd
.
,...... °' '°"°""' °"*"" , In Tl*d WOIW~. e.-.v ..... Ou.•-= ...., l'WflnOtOll
0.-.. Llbet-. Lee Ac1r AMIN, ~ I "°Ct-•· • OCMlll't' "Meye L.ont. Of The Jun.
gle'' "-9lne of the GIMM
~ ... oMlutlOll -. 11'1
the JutlO'M Of c.ritn.1
AIMftoa.,.. tMllnlMd. Q
• '"'ooueTIAU OD'fW'f
"~on: The llielld
Tl~ Foroot" Cap1eln
~~W IW
cnw ~ t"t hletory,
lnllebltent• M4 natur•
I Cile nce ol Cllpperton
llland. • eor• •toll off IM
COMI Of M9aloo. (R)
(I) TMI WN:J/IC't --..0
OflJOMnwf WWTW
au.t: Ao«>et1 Fulliw.
HO• Ill TOO Q.oel "°" ~ • HAWAlll'M-0
Mc01t11ell llOM elt1< •
attenglet wno murdltld
tM women, IM\ltng MCt>
-1no • b6orldl wto with
thel1 •-g11lahly maoe
i II lllNEU M POftT
DICK CAVETT
Gu.I, Maalmllill> Sc;MU.
[£S
OH NO! Chachi makes an appointment
with the doctor his mother is dating
unaware that the man is a gynecologist,
on "Happy Days" at 8 tonight over
KA BC (7 ). Scott Baio is Chachi and
E ll en Travolta guest stars as his
mother.
Mutlel ~ 111111 .,,.
~l (A)
* *'141 "Hof• PeredlM>"
( 1"6) Gina LOllOl>rigid1.
Alec Gui~. A Frenc:h
Lotherlo 1111mp11 lo
ltlangl. -*'gflll liy9t
In a hOtll wlttl "" nelQh·
bOf" •wife
* * ~ "Newalronl" Biii
Hunt•. Ctvla Heywood.
Two rlvll ,_. compan-
ellempt 10 edge Heh
olhe< out In 1 rece lot the
Aullrlllln ,,_ viewefa In
1111 '40&. "PG'
• eENW>€TT'E
~IN OONCER'T
81rnld1111 Peter• 1>4tf·
lorma • ver1e1y or aongs as
well u her lllTIOUa blnen•
dence e:ao. eutLIEYt
• 1 LOYE LUC't'
Lucy .. tends In lnvltlllOn
lo lhl d1nc1 by throwing
hltMlf 11 VIII JOMIOll
• KCET NEWUEAT
I!) II ISINHS REPORT
Cll8NEW8 (JJ ltAANEY MIU.EA
A deapera11 citizen
thr11tena lo blow hlmsell
Ind lhl pt8Clncl U!y high
( MOVIE
• "Roll« Boogie" ( 1979)
Linde Biik, Jim Brey A
lllenled Ind rleh muS1C1I
Sludent MIS out IO Win •
roll« 1kltltlg boogie con-
, .. , belor• reeurn•no "«
mualcal etudlel 'PG'
(S)WOAKINO
Berry Bostwick, EllMn
Brennen and James T1ylor
are emono the many &tars
INlured In lhil special.
bued on hundreds ol
lntllVlews conducted by
jou1n1llS1 I author Studs
Terkel
7:00 8 C88 HEWS
D NeCNEW8 9 HAPPYOAYSAOAIH
R1lph II lotced Into • box·
Ing metch wolh 1 lootball
brul-over the atlecllOna
ol • ptllly glrl
• AllCNEW8 8 YOU ASKED FOR IT
F'•lured· .. ,_, Roehrs
In Jepan" and "New Mr
Ametic1."
• THE JSffMON8
Allen, the "wNt• sneep" or
lhl Wlll11 lemlly, returns
homl.CP8r12)
., JOKER'S Wll.D
SI OVEAEASY
OUMI: Moine Sulllven. (R)
i> MACNEll. I L.a4RE1'
AIEPOAT Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH
®) ENTERTAINMENT
TOHIOHT
An ln1-wllh Debbie
Reynolds_
Q! THE MUPf'£T8
GUM!. Mellsae M1nchlS-
ler. W: THE WAY IT WM
"1957 • "S8 NBA Chem-
pionthipa· 8ol1on Celtles
Vt St, LOUIS Hewka" 0 TEN FOR THE TTT\.E
A look beck II taken II the
yMl'e ten beat 111m1 who
wlH compete In lrwt NFL
pllyoffa to detetmlne this
Y91r'1 Super Bowl cont ....
'"'''· 1:.30 8 2 ON THE TOWN
F11turld lrwt Righlout
Brot""• talk lboul Old
u,._, • reunion Ind thl
future, • look at • g1oup
lllat helps mo•,.,_• cope
with chlldren·s bed h1b<te;
•woman who censors per.
tOnlllzed lic«IM plllea a a FAMll y FEUD 9 LAV1:AHE I ~LEY
&COMP.AM'
Wrwtn Lenny and Squlggy
diSlpPNf. lhe girts lrac;e
lhem lo a circut
8 EYE ON l..A.
F111urld vialt San Fernan-
do Valley Juvenile Hen.
ollbelt Cllrtoonlll Gll'tan
Wilson IJ MATa.GAME
8) M'A'8•H
Frenk decides to meka
money by auctlonlno oH
the CllT1p Qllblge wl'>lfe
H1w1t1ye·1 love Hie su1fer1
8 _.IOUS a111cii
I TIC TAC DOUGH
MACNEt. I LEHRER
REPORT
'1!) HEWS
Cl) P.M. MAGAZJNE
A SChOol 10< nann-In
England. 1 profllSIOnll
•nvent<><
(Ii YOU ASKED FOR IT
FHlurea· "Mllklng The
Dlldty Black Mamba" Ind
"P11ro1 lmpersc>nllora ··
©'NM 8A8t<ETBAU.
Loa Angeles Luers "'
Utll't JIU
<llMOVIE
• • • • "Becki!" ( 1964)
Richard Burton. P1t11
O'Toole King Henry II 'of
England CIUhes with the
Arcllblst>op ol Canterbury
du<i~ lhl 12th century
8:00 fJ llJ SIMON & SIMON
A J Ind Rlck -hi1ed lo
lnvesllg.111 1111 death of en
lnlmll 118,,_ wllo WU
klUecl by • lion D Q! UTTLE HOUSE ON
THEPRA#W
Mrs. Oleson's newly
ldoplld deughter Mis OUI
to becOllll 1111 star or the
IChool 1 .. uv1I (Part 2) (A)
~MOVIE • * * "Lonely Are Thi
Brave" ( 1962) Kirt. Oouo·
lu, Walle< Mlllhau A
.,,.,'" end hll posse try 10
trecll down 8 COWbOy who ""'*' lrom 1•11 encl heeded lot thl mountains
G (II HAPPY DAYS
D INltDE~
Thlt religlous progrem,
r ... tlng to thl dftir• of
minions In Chine tor relig-
lous freedom, oesGrlbeS •
c.rutlde to Qll'-funds lo
purcllue blblee lot dlatll-
butlorl 10 Cfl<llller>I tn Chi-
ne GI P.M. MAGAZINE
A SCllOol IOI n1nnlel In
England; a ptOlesaionll
Inventor; Chi! Tell pr•
CHANNEL LISTINGS
fJ KNXT CCBS>
0 KNBC INBCI
9 KTLA (Ind )
• KABC (ABCl
Cl KFMB fCRSI
0 KHJ·TV (Ind I
ID KCST tABCI
tD KTTV (Ind I
• KCOP· TV t Ind )
fD KCET t PBS>
'•KOCE IPBSl
0 On TV
l l ·TV
"' HBO
C IC•ne""aM I
• (WO~I NY , N '('
1T IWTBSI
f t ESPNI
S (Showlome)
0 Spolltqhl
8 I Cable New \ Nelwork l
Pit .. llllucinl: PIUll NII·
eon on lul-minull tex
deduc11on9
., caaMTE THE
a...DMN
Hugh Oowna hol11 11\11
enter1alnmen1 fj)9Clll wtlh
guesll Ed Aln4ll. 01nny
K1y1, Johnny Mathia ,
Sell• end Crol11, and
Dlvld Hiiimen held to
benllll UNICEF.
ll) THE COUSTEAU
OOYllEY
'"Cllpperton· Tiie lll•nd
Time Forgot'" Capllln
JecquM Couttaau end hi•
Cl-explore Liii llillory,
lnheblt•nll and nelurel
science ol Cllpperton
1111nd. 1 coral 1tOll olt th•
COHI ol M1x1Go (R) m> HIOYA
'"Anllotny 01 A Volclno"
An ln1.,n11lonal 111m ol
geo1<>g1111 lludles Ml St.
Helena In In ellot1 lo
uncovet cklll wlllcll wlll
llld 10 mor1 eccur111 pr•
dlctoona of eruption• on 1111
lulure (R)Q (~MOYIE
• • '"Sleeping Car Mur-
Cle<'" ( 11168) Simone Sig·
norel, Yv11 Monllnd
Occupenll ol a lreln COM·
partment ere t11tget1 tor
Olllh at 1111 hendl of a
derenged killer
(S)eczAME
John Bynet lhOws you
1toonga alranger thin lrulh.
llrger than Ille. and unter
lh11> enylhlng you·,., --· 0MOV1E * * "'The Allie" ( 111711)
C11r11 Snodgresa. Rly Mll-
lltld A t1br1t1an 11\lel In Ille
put With,_ memorlll ol
• lovl wflO dlupC)llted
'R'
l:30 8 aJ LAWAHE &
8HW..EY L•-ltld Shifley help
Lenny and Squlggy leunCh
their 1ellnl egericy (RIO
• AU. IN THI FAMILY
A ahldy tllffman huallel
Arehie Into 9i11ntng tor
coatly llun\lnUm aiding to P'-• ,_, lou,
CID MOVIE ... * • "The LUI M11tried
Couple In Ametlu'" ( 11180)
Geo1g1 Segel, N•t•ll•
Wood. A hlPClifY mar11ed
couple blgWI 10 wonder
11ow lleppoly mettled lhly
•Hlly ere alter Mllng •» of
their l1llnd1' marrleges
1n<1 up In 1111 divorce
c:our1 'R'
l.AFF-A.-THOH
A comedian hotl ltld four
com•c con1111an11 wl'>o
comp111 1geln11 one
enolhlr -f111urld In thlt
unoeMOfld comedy g-
ShoW
t:«> 8 (I) MOYIE
'"Incident Al C111trldgl'"
( Pllf'llllr•) Elllln 8rlMl!'I,
p.,n91 Roberti. A woman
cempelgnl tor and wln1
-.cllon u "*'" In • CNl8dl egalNt the polltl-
Gll ClOlr\IPtlon ()( • tmeN
WMterntown.
O Q!MOVIE *** "Flom H•e To
Eternity" (Perl •3) (111711)
Helelie Wood. Wllllam
0•¥•n•
8 0 THAIEFS
OOMfl>All't
L.llty ..... wl'>il• ... lbc>Ut
Ject.-1 love lite ltlll 111-
JICll lultout end T1tl1
emberlllMed. (R) Q D C*.DMN: THE
WOM.1>'8 MOIT
FMULOUI M80UAaE
OMt'I "-d*'-the
cmuovw
• • "'LoophOle" ( 108 t)
Albeit Finney, Merlin
si-. Tention builOe lo I
etllttettnQ cllmu wnong
1111 metnbln ()( • 981'11
WllO ere pllnnlng lo •1<•
cul• en ellbOtlll blnlC
rot>bery lrom 1111 _.
1>110W 1111 1t1•t1 ol Lon-
don "PG"
(S)MOYIE
• • • ~ ··&11no Thlt•"
( 111711) Peter Seller-. Mel-
vyn Oouo!M· A ~
ml"'*'. mlddll-8Qld man,
wl\OM only knowledge ()(
th• outeld• wo1ld 11
through ·~. Qllne
tremendout le me end
power by unwtnlnQ!y C<lfl·
vlnelnQ tycoon• ltld polltl·
c._ 111111 he 11 • ~
"PG" tO:OO····· .we 0 HART TO HART
The H1111 llltl off one sltJ
trip to Veil whet! th.v INrn
thll one of lhllr friend•
mey be pllMlng to """'* hl1 wife on the eloQls. (R)
• PMSEHn
OMOVIE * * '-' "SllldUtl Memo-
ri.s·· (IMO) Woody Allen,
Chlr\olle Rempljng. A IUC· °'""" "di<eclor ,_ • pert0nal crilMI U hi tr1M
10 mue '°"" major c:feci.
llons In his 1111. 'PG'
(?)WOVE * * * ~ "Tiii Kneel< And
How To Get II" ( 11145) Rite
T Ulhingh1m. Rly Bl'ookl.
A young man allempla lo
blComl l)Ot>Ulll' with thl
lldies by l luct)'lng his blel
lriend'• methods
tO: 11 OD.., SNEAK
PMWW:JA*JMY
Hulblnd·ltld·wife comk:a
Jerry Stlllet end Anne
M-• Introduce lhl mew·
.... ~· ltld mport• _,u coming to Home
Boll OtllQI In .J--v tO:iO. IHOIP9«llNT
NETWOMNIWI
• IUPEMTM
PAOFU "Gregoty Pecll ..
• 00\'WV
"Ml)'ll Lorda Of TM Juo .
gle" Rem11111 of thl Cllllle
M1yen cMllullon OM(> In
lhl ~ ()( Central
Atnlticl -eomlned. Q 11.ooeeewoa NIWI
• ltAT\JfllDAY....,.
Hoel: Howltd ~.
au.I: Randy~
• c:ou.ecae
IAIKETMLL
'"-............ st. .Jtlwl'• vt . VILLANOVA fflH •t•y)
eTH1J&+CtlOC4
tt HIC)Clleon end Uncoll'I
c.ndo It, Ge«ge ~
hi c.n too
• IANR>fllD llMIO 80N
Fred buys 11811 OWMr8"19
01 • ptof...ion.I fight«
WllO c;en ., flgnl.
• DOC CAVETT
au.I: MaalmMlen Schell
(Per12ol2)
®MOYIE
• • • ~ "Tiii Chine Syn-
dlOIM" ( 111711) Jedi Lem-
mon, J-Fonda,~
Oouglu. An embllloua
lellVl9ion I~ per-
1u1d1a a cont CiienCi•·
11rloken ~ lo eld
,_ In ,_ effot1• 10 b<Mll
1 ""'°' 11ory on .,., IC!Ci-
dent el 1 ~~
pClnl. 'PG'
n:IO 8 (I) NCAA
MllCETML.L Maryl•M .. UCLA ,._
MleY)
D8TCNGHT
Incident' heads for series
l FaEO aOTHENBE BG
A T........_w..tltw
NEW YORK -CBS' movie "Incident At
restrid&e" tonight is lbe perfect prototype for a
ture aeries. It takes a star from the CBS stable,
ts her in an unconventional situation and then
akes it all fiuffy and entertaining, although not
eood that it will hold up to too much scrutiny.
e show airs at 9 p.m. on KNXT (2).
But it doesn't have to. 11 lt happens, it'll only
a network series.
Eileen Brennan is the star and, lookinf at the
Wy turn her "Private Benja.mln" is taking, she's
ady for a new weekly vehicle. The unusual
ltuaUoa it that Ma. Brennan moves to Crestrtd1e.
70., md becomes sheriff of tbe town that 11 IO
pt il lives clean air a bad name.
lh. Brennan ls sympathe tic in the
believable role of the cto-cooder wbo aweepa up
e ol um ratty town'• dirt, but not enoqb to
pede fUture story lines.
Todq'a aeries have beeome too Callfomla·
ud New York-oriented, anyway. Wla.t network
needl I.I a modem drama in Wromlnl, even lf
tbit mcme was fllmed in Utah and aQJ aeries lt,
to be abot ln Hollywood.
San Davie and ber bubaad arrhe In trl4lt juat ln time to be nm olf lbe f'09d by
d 1\111 wbo have torched oae ol the town'• three
..... f per'lorl. .
San cal.la tbe poUce and ft,. department, and
Ober ol Crestrtdce it rudl.ly apparent wben
old ......, •trolls out ol bla ear aad touea • r can on the around. So much for "t.aw and
er.
TM .-.t altueiloo tbat ~ 8ara'1 ..... of
... ,. occun ID tile d.1Mr4 'hro redDeet adMft
f
rough up an elderly couple because they wouldn't
give up their seata. This is some touch town, and it
turns out that the look-the-other-way mayor,
sheriff and mob guy, who owns one ol the rival
massage parlors, are all ln coboota t.ogetber.
Sara has had enough. Sbe decides to run for
sheriff. Residency requirementa and aucb basic
l a wma n detai ls as fa miliarity wltll guna
apparently don't matter. Sara eays she's a good
administrator, and she deserves to wear a white
bat, tilted radically to the left: She even su11esta
that· maybe they glve maaaages in the maua1e
parlor.
The town's major newspaper, also oo the take,
endorses the cur rent do-notblDI aberiff.
Fortunately, thlt it a two-Mnpaper town. and tbe
amall, struUUnt newspaper ptlnta tbe ~·
Sara wins and bu to deal with aeveraJ rlffralf
deputies. One wean b1a unllorm ablrtl opea to tbe
navel. Another 1eta teen-a,.,. drunk ud aedueea
them .
Sara weeds out tbe trash and ~ •UHC•
parlon off-llmita ~ her =•· Sbe tbm 1.u more money ftom tbe com ler' bJ pobltlDc out
tbat bla penoD&I HpenMS _.. 1.....,. ~ Mr
department'• budcet. Sbt wtm tbe reepect of her
deputi• and even le.ma how to tboot a laD ID OM
easy leuon.
lt all leada to a ~all vote., which UM ~
rtcsr but DOt before Sara pta bv lDdletm•ta acaiut u.e reapoulble for Ute ..... .,. parlor
fire. ..I Ju1t mar be back," _..,. tell• Ja•r
tupporten.
Sure. la a MM about a womu lberift. a..ct
local UP•np fOr partlaalan. Tbe Detwarl wW 1M
CBS. \
--
f UBE TOPPERS
KTLA e 8:00 -"Lonely are t he
Brave .·· Pene tra llnc 1tudy of a
rebellloua cowboy escaplna from jail
and pursued by a posse.
"KHJ e 8:00 -"Inside China ." A
crusade to gather funds to purchase
Bibles for dlst rlbuUon in China Is
described.
'KCO P e 8 :00 -"Celebr ate t he
Children." Special t o benefit UNICEF is
,hosted by Hugh Downs . Ed Asner.
Johnny Mathis and Danny Kaye are
among r uests.
KN XT 9 9 :00 -"In cid e nt at
Crestridge." Movle premiere. A woman
r uns for sheriff in a small Western town.
. See story below.
Hoat: Johnny Carton
GUMtt. Jen.-St-111,
Pet• BllbulU.
8 0 AllCNIWS
NIGHTUNI
-~IH THe
IKY
Thie fj)9Clel dNla wtltl lhl
ltnj)aCt lhet Ille ellpl-
hu mede on people'• """ -"'"'*"· (Piila 3-4) • M>OKa A ,,...,.,., police onic:.t ..
killed trylno to prevent •
robbery Ind Danko la
blllnld by lhl man·• pen.
net.
I Ken NlwueAT
ON'TlONED AllC
NEW8 ~MOVIE
•• "Ole Llugl\lng"' ( 11180)
Robby Beneon, Chlllle
Durning. A songwriting C10 dr...., 11 lldld by • am1t1 "'°'*"' In ptoW>g hllnMll lnnocenl ol • murder
charge ·PG'
(Q)MOVIE
••"Emmi~ II Thi
Joya Ot A Women" ( 11175)
SyMI Ktlllel, Umberto
Orlinl A belu1ltul ~
,,... living wllll he< llut-
blnd In lhl F11 Eul lnlll-
8111 • young wom111 Into
her coletll ol pleuure ..... .,.
'1 :46 (I) WON<JNQ
B11iy 8oe1wtck, EllMn
Btennen end J-Taylor
are emong lhl meny 11111
IN1urld In !Illa S91Ciel,
bald on llundr'lda 01
Interviews eondueled by
)oumallll I IUlhor Stud•
Tltllet
(Z)MOVIE • * '-' "HI, Moml" ( 11170)
RotM1r1 DI Niro, Jennll1t
Sall A VlelllllTI Viti< an
returna nome to Hew Yono
City end b1cotnM lnvol\lld
In the pornogrephy lndul·
try. 'R'
-flmllGHT-
12:.«> • IHA NA NA
BUMI: Connie St_,.
8 111 FNITA8Y lllAHO
A men joumeya bedt In
IJtM lo IN lualy deya or
Ille 19th century, ltld 1 Q1f1
,..._ 1111 horrtfying night
of,_ mother's dlllh (R)
• OONT&IPOfWIY
..-Al TH ll8W8
"'How Sele It Our Food?"" .MOYll
• • ''legend Of The s..
WoH" (11175) Chuck Con·
nors. Bllt>er• eacn &1MC1
on • etory by JICk London
A writer 11 kldneppld by
the Ct-of ..... IM'lllng
~ end midi nm ""'' by lh• thlp's ll11y-
lernpered ceptein. 'PG'
12:10 a a rOMOMOW
Gu.ta: entertlinet Peter
Allen: ~ llUlhor Allll·
~ SoliNnltayn, pen 2
(R)
• MOY!! ••'141 "Telll Of T.,ror"
(11182) Vlnoenl Prloe, Peter
Lone. Tlww etor!M by
Edger Min Poe: a widow-
.,. 1 llrlt wife lntrudle on
hll ~ """1egl; •
c:trunkMd -brick• end mortlt to put en end 10 hie
....... .n.ir;. ~
-hypnoel9 to IUlplnd • collMgul ~ Ille
end dlllh.
..... IOIHT
NETWOMNIWI
1•• MOYIE * ..... "The LUlly Men"
( 1952) Susan Heyw11d.
R00ert Mitchum. A COW·
boy dOM ~hlno to
becoml 1 rOO.O ater
• MOYIE * * "SllnMy"' ( 19721 All•
Rooc;o, Chrla RoblntOn. A
l•llleln•k• becotnll •
Vlelnlm V1l1t1n'1 pett0n·
11 -epon or revenoe
~lmlllltlnd
1;0I (8) MOYIE
• • • "'ln1ld1 Moves"
( llltO) John Sevege. Oev1d
MorM. A -to 1111
91oup m regullla et .,,
Olllland bar may llOld the
kly 10 meatlng lhl berten-
•:•~of becoming •
ptO bllkelbalt play« I
rHllty 'PG' 1:108 MOVIE • * * "Thi Vlfgon Sol-
d le rt" (11170) Lynn
Redgt 8\fl, Nigel P1trlek. A
ll'OU9 ol .. INllly nllVI
8rl11111 recrullt iewn lhl
lllCI• ol Iii• and war when
,....., .,.. _,, 10 blllll In
Melly9il.
1:11!=
• '141 "Thi Wotllltlg Glrla"'
TM91 glrta lind no job loo
held 10 hlndll and w111 do
anything IOI money 'R'
(Z)MOWE * * "OMlll 0-" (11177)
Sondra Lodt•. 54tymour
CuMI. While 1111 wife la
away, a man lnvll11 !WO
1nrectlvl teeo..ege glrfl
lnlo hll hOuM tor lhl night.
..... diacoYlr1ng lhet 1111
)'OUnO bllullll .... l'>Oml-
cld .. mlOllCI 'A'
1:308 NIWI
• .-EDOIWMAI
Cohoe1· Dorn DILulM.
0.-ta· Bobble Gentry,
Rflonda Bit ... All• Hiie)'.
Jeff Bltber. Miki 1111"0
(C)MOVIE
• • 'A "Hewalronr· 8111
Hunter, Chrie Hay.oocl
Two rlvll ,_. cornplnlea
1nwnp1 10 edge Md\
other out In a r-tor Ille
.t.u.lllllen -..,.._. In the '40t. 'PG" .MOW
• • ~ .. The Formula"
(11180) Marton Brendo,
George C. Sootl. While
1n-ug11lng thl mu1der ol
• colMlegul, ........ an cop
uncoVlta • conll)lrecy
lnvoMng '"' aupptlUion of • •ynlllltic fuel lormull
~ lhl oll ~ 'R'
l:OO D ENTERTANoen
TOMOHT
An Interview with Dlbble rn t:Ot8 MOYIE
• • • "lndlecrllt" ( 11158)
City Grant, Ingrid 8erv-
men. A rlcl'I Americln end
1 European ect1-tal In
love llUIOugtl hi delnle 10
bl mltrled. t:aO·= • • 'A "Cura• 01 The
JOHN DARLING
NOWPLAY1NO
COITAMUA EdwJrd"s ens1o1 540·1444
COITA•U Edwllll's Cinema Cent• 9711 414t
UTDM Edward's Saddteback 581 SHO -IMft Wtslllrooll 530 4401 -OrlflVl Mllll &37·0340 r;;;:;;:-------... -........,,---.1
.. BEST PICTURE, BEST DIRE
OF THE YEAR •••
NOTHING COMES CLOSE."
-Myroa JlelHI, LA RUDD
"'*-' , , ... , EllO Ftam. Int. ~ , ... A 11em.
.. OUNMll IC)tMOe ...
ror IN°"lf'Oul Ille W .. I
• MCMI
• • "(lgM-I.ltd An•·
lout" ( tM7) MWINI Scoll,
Jldlle Cooget!.
l:AO ....
...... (%) ~ CtWlllJN
"The P-*'Op• ••CH>.., INfAK ,....,..l JNaJNltt
~-wtr. oomic1
.Wry Sllliet 11\d AMI
a..-e lnlloduce lhl mov·
.... ..,.cllil anCI ~
_,,, COMlt>g to HOMI
Bo• OHloe In Rtnulty
Cl) LAl'P-At-THOH
A comedian h<>ll end tour
COl'nic contH11n11 wm>
~omp111 1ge1na1 one
anothlt Ill INIUted In lhlt
UllCll'lllOrld comedy gatnt
ahow.
l!Ol (I)MOW
* *** "Kr1m1r Vt
KrllTI.,.. ( 1117111 Ou111n
HollmM, Mef'yt Stteec> A
man blni.s with hi• ...
wlfl lor CUllody of their
young IOI\ eltlt Ille walk•
OUI on ll>lm 'PO'
t..'30 (CJ MOYIE
* * * • "Love And
DHth" (11176) Woody
Allen, DI-K-•on
(ID 8TEPPtNO OUT: THE
DHOU 'I GNJW UP
Thia aequet to !hi popollr
ll)IClll "Who Are TM
Oe8olU And Where OoO
They 0 11 111 Kida?'
updalff 1111 story ol the
••lraotdlnery l1Jnlly wl'>k:h
now Includes 20 ph)'9lell-
'Y:!'end1C8P941d. clllld1en
(S) THE OlOEH DAYS
COAT
A young gorl IH1n1 to bet·
ter apprec1111 the sporll ol
CllrltlmH altar she 11
trlntporfld beck "1 llrne 1,1, •.=al blue COii
* * • * '"Orcllnaty Peo-
ple" ( 11180) Mary Tyler
Moore. Oonlid Sullllllllllld •;OO!=TMJ(
• * * • "JulklS CMlll"
( 11153) Marton Brando,
J1mea MHon
4: 10 8) MOVIE
• • • "Yello•nock ..
I 11155) Un McCarthy, St•
Ol'>en Coun lllQll
4:30 (ID MOV'IE • * * '"Thi LHI Meffied
Couple In AmerlU" ( 1980)
George Segal. Natalll
Wood
1t'ed1te-sday'•
Dayll•e Mo.,lr•
-MORNltG-
t:00 ~ * * "Thi Ledy Ven-
lshM" ( 111711) Elliott GOUid,
Cybil Shepherd. An Inno-
cent men end • beeulllul
women .,., swept Into •
dudly eaplonege caper
lboerd • Eu1op1en
ea~ trllfn 1ra .. e11ng
lftrough J)rl•Wll NazJ Ger·
meny. 'PG'
t:ao m • * '"Blula 8usl«s"
(!1150) 8-y Boys. CrelQ
sie-ia. One of the Boyt
beComll • 11ng1ng .., ...
11on u • reaun or • tonSll-
ilctomy
10:00 CS) • • • • "R4Mir1ec-
llon" ( 11180) Ellen Bu<styn,
SIM Shlpltd Al18f a near
flt .. 11.110 ~ldlnl. I WOM·
In hnds lhel Sftl lies ll>e
eblloly to heal others but is
peraeculed because or her
rlfulll to Clllm a d1¥tne.
onllulnc!e 'PG' t0:ao. *Yo "Slgebrusll T11M'"
( !1133) John Weyne, Mency
Shul>ltt A COWbOy unjust·
ly lmprltOnld tor murder
escepn lo llunl down ll>e
rlll kill« end prove hla
CIWni"'-ICI
••• "Snowblll
EaprNa" ( 11172) 0Hn
J~. Heney Olaon A
New YOik ecc:ounlant Ire.
velS -· 10 Ille Rockies In
1r1 .. ....,.... to modemla •
ditltpldetecl 11111 relOft he .,.,..,lttld. ·o·
HIGO. • • "8ey0ft4 A fllM.
Mlftable 00uOI" (11M)
Oll'lll "'*-· ~ ,_
telne A nowllet Md 1
n1 we pep11 publl1h1 r
ettempt to dllelfove the
ecGillDJ 01 $1'-llftllll
~ CC)•• "H ..... The
Sleyer" 11911) Jac;k
P~. ~ t.,ry An
ed-11urOllS ~ men
enlllt• Ille lld m • bMd of
wwnc>r• to flgnl Ille eoAI
UllCM, the -IOtd wflO
killed !lit '""* end ..
hOkllnO an ·~ '°' ,.,,_ _,
12:00 ••• "Tl>l lncrldlble
Aoc*y Mounleln ~ ..
( 1977) CM1 Connelly, FOi·
,_ Tudl•. In an 8lllf'llC>I
10 .. ..,. thl town ol St Jo.
Ml1eour1, the town telhlt'I
f90l\llOr a tr_,. hvnl
r-to Celltotnle ., * * * "Thi SllYlr
Chellce" ( 111$5) p .... Hew·
Min, Virginie Mayo A
young Or"" deelg,,. Ille
LMI Supper c;llellee
(%)•***"Kt-Vt. Krem.,.. ( 111711) Outlln
Hollman, Mef'yt S1r119 A
man 11111111 with hit 111·
wole tor cuatody of ''*'
young ton eller lf'I wellle
out on 111em 'PG'
12:30 0 * • "Legend Of TM
SN Wolf" 111175) Chuck
Conn«e. Befl>ll• BKto.
8.-l on a llory by Jo
London A writer la kkl-
nepl*S by the et-ol 1
Hal llunllnjl t111p ltld
mede lirel mlll by lhl
t11+p'1 1'411y·1emperld CAP·
leln PG"
1:00 IC) '"' "'Sleet" ( 11180) Lee
MajOlt. Jenrnl1< O"Heltl A
belulllUl women ,. ...,.,.
Id by e IOUQll coro11ruc:tlon
loternen In runnono tftl
COfTl9lil'Y llhl lnheroll 8'*
her lathe<"s aueplcloue,
"eccldlnt1f" death 'PG'
Cl) • * * "Forbidden
Pllnet" ( 1956) Wllt1t PIO-
geon, Anne Frenclt 8flMd
on Shlk..,..,•'• "The
T ltl'IPlll " An outer 11P11C1
mlttlon is lllH!Ched to
1oe111 • prolaaor .no hu
~ Mlltng IOI • numbe< °'
~ on 1 dtltent p4ene1 ol
the Mure
2:00 CID • • "lCanedu" (IMO)
Ollvll H_.on-JOlln, Gene
Kelly A youog llftlll, e
'-\'Inly muM 11¥1 a ... u.
~Ill momonllre loin
fofc. 10 °'*' "" • huge roller-dllco pel-'PG'
Cl **'II "Rough Cut"
( I llao) Burt Reynoldt, L.ee-
ley·Anne Down A Brilietl
aocllllt• lures 1n ln1eme-
tlonel )ew'll 1,,_. out of
re1lr-1 lo help h« slut
$30,000,000 1n diamonds
'PG'
2:01 Cl)**·~ "Tt>e 39 Step1"
( 11178) JOhn Miis. ()awl
W#net A men~
1111 qwrry of bOltl ""
polk;e and • secret group
or 1or11gn agent• °'*"''ltlQ
In Engllnd when hi la
trlmld tor 1 11rengiw'a
murder. 'PG"
9:30 0 *<I: • "Angels In The
Oullleld.. ( 1951) Peul
OouglH, Jenet Leigh.
Celeallll IOICIS tpUI lhe
Poltlburgfl Plralll on an
unuM.111 wlnntng sir_.
l.S., •*'II "Thi Cel From ,
Outer ~ .. C 11179) Ken '
Berry. Sindy Duncan. An
••tr11err111r111 1omcet
crUfl lends on 111th ·o•
4:000 • • "'Hangw 18
( 1ll801 Oltren McGaVlll
Rob111 Veughn "'-'c;n.
er1 11 a teefel go .. ernmenl
in11e11111on lnveS11o•t• Ille
CIUM OI a 11111~11'1 IUd·
den dlSlruction 'PG'
(1J * * * "Tiii Wiiie PrlnQI'" ( 1974) RICllerd
Kiiey. G-Wilder An IN·
Hne pllol ttranded In lhl
d1ser1 encounters 1
strange 111tle bOy lrom •
doatent p41ne1 wno 11
-Ching for the e«i .. of
h .. U!lh•wlness
4::30 ct) * * "Hlwl< The
Steyer" ( 1118 1) Jeck
PllenQe. John T1try
by Annstrong & Batluk
..
Nobody leans on Sharky's Machine .
-~
·:S 1111.~1~~~~'
~
~ H" Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTuesdev. December 29. 1981 ..... ---------------------~
" \
Fan hopes to erase
a bitter memory
trom AP cU11patcbe1
HOUSTON -Construction [!]
worker Preston Riley has a little 4. t
more at stake ln the playoffs than
most San Francisco 49ers fans -he's looking
for t• little vicarious revenge.
Riley, 34, who played three seasons as a
wide receiver with lhe 49ers in the early 70's,
left a piece of his heart in San Francisco when
he muffed an onside kick in a 1972 playoff game
with the Dallas Cowboys.
•'The ball was on the ground, spinning
toward me, and I thought I had it in my hands,"
Riley said . "But It hit my shoulder pad ... and
by the time I reaUzed what had happened,
Dallas players were all around the ball.
"After the game, l don't reme.mber what I lid: It was probably as bad as I've ever felt In ifty life."
· The Cowboys took advantage of that break
to score the winning touchdown.
Quote of the day
Tampa Bay Buccaneers head coach
John McKay: "Last week. on my TV talk
show, l said to some fan, ·vou don't know
football from a banana.· The next day l
got a crate of bananas sent to me. Next
week I'm going to tell someone he doesn't
know football from a Mercedes."
.
Sikma's jumper wins 1t for Seattle
Center Jack Slkma's baseline m
jumper with 30 seconds left broke a
tie game and helped lift Seattle past
Golden State, 104-100, to highlight NBA action
Monday night. The victory was Seattle's ninth
straight at home, one shy of the club record set
in 1979-80. Sikma and teammate Gus WIUlams
shared game scoring honors with 26 points each
World Free led the Warriors with 25 points ...
Elsewhere. George Jobasoo led a fourth-quarter
rally with 11 points to lead Indiana to a 103-95
win over New Jersey ... Boston forward Larry
Bird, whose totals showed 59 points and 22
rebounds in two Celtic victories last week, was
named the NBA Player of the Week.
Starr receives tw~year ,pact
Bart Starr, whose Green Bay •••
GREEN BAY, Wis -Coach [!]
Packen woo six of their last el1ht
NaUonaJ Football Leaauu aames this season,
was given a new two-year cont.racl Monday.
endlna speculation that he might be fired.
Jud1 Robert J. Parlna, the Packers' chief
executive omcer, said the club's seven·member
executive committee unanimously decided on
the new pact after carefully wel1hlng both
failures ond the recent successes of St1&rr's
regime.
The Packers finished the 1981 season 8·8 as
the result or thu second-half turnaround after a
2·6 start. They mlssw the NFL playotrs by 1
game when they lost 28·3 to the New York Jets
in the regular-season finale Oec. 20. St.arr's
record ln seven years as coach is 39-65·2.
Propp propels Flyers past Calgary
Left wing Brian Propp scored ~·
three goals while Ken Uaesmaa and '
Behn Wl1soD each added a pair to
power Philadelphia to a 7·4 victory over
Calgary to highlight NHL action Monday night
. . . In the only other game played, Minnesota
overcame a two-goal deficit on third·perlod
goals by Brad Maxwell and A.I MacAdam to tie
visiting Colorado, 4-4 ... Wayne Gretlky, the
center for Edmonton who appears ready to
make a shambles or the NHL scoring records.
was named the NHL Player or the Week. It was
the second week in a row and the fourth time
that Gretzky has won the award. In the Oilers'
last two games he has scored fi ve goals and had
four assists.
Blue Jays get Powell from Twins
The Toronto Blue Jays acquired •
outfielder Hosken Powell from the
Minnesota Twins Monday and
shipped minor league pitcher Paul Mirabella to
the Chicago Cubs. To get Powell, the Blue Jays
agreed to give the Twins a player to be named
later In the Mirabella trade, the Blue Jays will
receive a player to be named later .. A touch
of the flu has slowed down Heisman Trophy
winner Marcus Allen during USC's first few
practice sessions for the 1'~iesta Howl
Television. radio
TV. Basketball -St. John's vs. Villanova
in the ECAC Holiday fes tival. taped al Madison
Square Garden in New York, 11 p.m .• Channel
9: Maryland vs UCLA. taped at Los Angeles.
1L30 pm . Channel 2.
RADIO: UC Irvine vs. East Tennessee State
at Milwaukee Classic, 5 p m .. KWVE (108 FM >;
Mar yland at UCLA, 8 30 p.m .. KMPC (710), Cal
Stale 1 Fullerton> vs North Carolina St m the
Rainbow Classic. 4.30 p.m .. KWR'M Cl580 t;
Utah at Lakers, 7:20 p.m .. KLAC 1570)
HB, Vikings, Mesa win
Chargers, Eagles suffer one-point losses in girls basketball
There's a definite Sunset League navor lo the
semifinals of the Marina High girls basketball
tournament as Huntington Beach and host Marina
both notched victories Monday night. Only Edison
failed to make it a complete sweep as the
Chargers lost a narrow decision to Foothill.
Costa Mesa. meanwhile, advanced to the
second round of the Estancia tournament,
although the hos t Ea'gles suffered a tough
overtime loss to Pius X.
Here's what happened:
Huntl~on Beach 42, lrvlne 35
Seruor Tammy Buckels scored 16 points and
teammate Betty Mendoza added eight points and
13 rebounds as the Oilers used a second quarter
s purt lo down the Vaqueros.
After a slow start which saw both teams
score only seven first-quarter points. the Oilers
Marina 51, Ocean View 38
The host Vikings will participate in the other
semifinal contest against Fountain Valley (7:45
p.m ) thanks to some Cine play from senior center
Yvette Howard and a tenacious defense which
allowed the Seahawks only one point in the second
quarter.
Howard scored a game-high 18 points and
grabbed 10 rebounds as the Vikings turned a
six-point first quarter deficit lnto a seven-point
halftime advantage.
Teammate Sandy Corbett. a junior guard,
added 14 points, while Arlene Anderson had only
two potnts. but contributed 11 rebounds.
Foothlll 44. Edison 43
T he Chargers, 7-3, let a 15-point first quarter
lead slip away as the Knights avenged a 17-point
defe at handed to them by Edison last week
outscored their opponent~ 18-8, during the next "We started out strong, but we kinda relaxed a
eight-minute stanza to grab the lead for good. ..-little and they came out strong in the second half,"
"Both teams played rather poorly in the first summed up losing Coach Dave White "Foothill
half," admitted Huntington Beach Coach Joanne outplayed us in tne second half. They deserved it."
Kellogg. "We played better in the second. Edison. which still led by 13 at the half. was
"We couldn't get much going after that outscored 28·14 during the final two quarters of
although we won." play
Irvine was led by Kim Odeo's 16 points.
Huntington Beach will meet Foothill in one of Foothill, 7-2, was led by Ann Dean's 21 points
the semifinal games (6 p.m.) at Marina High. The Chargers got 20 points from senior Tina
Basketball scores
c°!1!P-c., ... U of S.... D'-91>60
MOfll.,.. M, UC S..te B•ber• •I
UC Al-sldtn,H•Y••rdSI u
Cel PolY·SLO 70, Cet 8~1111 ~ Teytor st, HltW•ll·Pac:lfl("
C.I St Norolt'loi.t 6.J, ~ SI ,.
8VU·H-ell 70. Pac:Hk .. .......
I deho St 7', l-hiKh St 12 Nev-C Aono) too. Humlloklt St
S4 -G-Vle So),°"" ... Tt<h 41
Fl• ~'°.SleNJS
T•nn.•C.h•lt•noooe ce
T ... n.-MM11n0 M...,_.
0.P•ul 74, llllftolt St. SI
Cll\<lnnatl u, C--1'
O.trolt 65. 0--•I ToUllNAMl!Nn
W ....... T .... CleM6c
M l ttou rl ''·US C St tc!Wmplon.....,l
Ale .. 81rmltlgfoem Tl. W<hloeft n
tcontol•l..,.l ...... CleN
Wlclllte St. 1J, CAii SI. F.iler10fl 70
N. CerollN St.,, M ICl'MO.,, SI. 4' ~~
Arlt.,.. '4. Mon4.eM St. ff
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C-lco SI f1, LA 8apthh7 "
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TOUllNAMINTS
F-11-S. .... AM
~"'• Monk• ll. s.odleOIKk .. Dl1le IUlllll) '3. S-1• ,.,.. 1• ,_
LOl\9 Beedl M, G-1• S7
Pu•Olne n. c.-.te"
S-0-..MeM
M•H l.ltrlr.l 70, •mcierl•I Y•ll•Y"
It to HondD s•. SD ~ 4'
Grou""'"' "· S<otttdele '1 Boer.ilelCI ... Soutl\WHtern U
Dewn" ..... ' Glendale. Arlr, H , Trede Tecll II
c errlloo 1'1, Cemp Pendlet.,.. 71 U
Otl
Al ... rr.ldl'IJ. 1191\t\H'e ••
Dewr1 74, (Ari-. c...-S7
Htgh echool
TOUaNAMSNTS c.. u,o.,....,_.,
Cette -SJ, Mer~ SO M• .. , Del tO, l'-111 45 o ...... "·Servile S4
L.Alteweod '7, Newport H•rbor H
c--~" F-l•ln VtlleY ... Hawe-n. •t htencla SJ, C'*'9'f St
La QwtnU f1. Et--...~ s.fl~ CIM•tJ. D-Hllll 47 v•hf11 ............
Not,. 0eMot I~ Oel.tl 60.
l ...... • lffoelllO Sffte ,._ S1, c ........ )J Cot)
Le Hw• fl, .,,,_ MontOofner• • St JOlll\ ltotco 70, VIII• P•rk • <.--""'·-v111 .. n1ty "· v~ie • LM .......... C-,... •I
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f
Den Heyer.
The Mustangs hammered Rowland on the
boards to post their fourth win in five outings.
Senjor Nora Seager had 13 points and 2Q
rebounds. Angie Garcia, Shelly Neal ard Nance
Lux all hauled in 10 rebounds each.
Overall . Costa Mesa out-rebounded ils
opponent. 66-28.
Plus X 55, Estancia 53
The Eagles couldn't hang on to a nine-point
fourth quarter lead as Yvette Perrodin scored 10 or
her game-high l9 points to tie the game at 49-all in
regulation.
The Eagles. 4-2, had a chance lo win the game
with nine seconds remaining but couldn't get a
shot off
ln o~ertime, Pius X jumped out to a quick
four-point lead before Estancia closed the gap in
the final seconds. Again. the Eagles had a chance
to score in the waning moments as Pius X missed
the front. end of a one-plus-one with six seconds t-0
play. but they couldn't get a good shot al the
basket.
Debbie Hughes led the Eagles with 18 points .
while teammate Amy Hathcock added 16.
Pruitt to leave UCLA
LOS ANGELES CAP> -UCLA Coach Larry
!>'armer announced Monday that junior forward
Clllt Pruitt had left the Bruins' basketball team
"for personal reasons."
Jn making the announcement, Farmer sald
Pruitt's leaving "was not as a result of any
peraonallt.y conflict, but rather the forward's belief
that his career would be enhanced by a transfer to
another school." ·
Pruitt, a 6'1, l90·pounder, started the flnal 11
games of the 19'0-31 season. While playin1 In 27
games a year aao. he avera1ed 8.9 polnll and 4.2
rebounds.
The year before1 at a freshman, Pruitt
averaaed 6.2 polot.s ana 3.0 rtbounds wtllle pla.yinl
ln 81 1ames for the Bruin1.
Pruitt WN lneUalble fort.he fu'at four aame!l of
the year and dldn't play ln UCLA's mos\ recftlt
outJa1. an 8.\-'N vtclOrJ over Louisiana State al the
New Orleana Superdome lut Wednesday nJcb
Near-shocking ~utcome
Wichita St. barely survives Cal St. Fullerton scare
l'·ronl Al' dJspatcbn
HONOLULU Tony Martln converted four
The -Bencals made 82 percent of tbelr nelcl
Roal attempts comoarod to onJy :n for the •ten
free throws lo the final 24 »econdl to preserve No
2 runkl'd Wichita State's lead u t.be Shockers
defeated Cal State f'uUerton, 70~. ln an o~nin1
round aame of the 18th aMual Rainbow Cluaic
Monday nlgbt.
North Carottna !Se, Penn St. 50
SANTA CLARA Center Sam Perkins hit two
free-throws in the last six aeeonda to alve U\e
top.ranked North Carolina Tar Heel• a bard foo&hl
56 50 overtlme victory over Penn State In tt.. CabJe
Car Classic. The lightly reaarded but touah Titus cave lhe
undefeuted Shocke rs a scare before being
subdued The undefeated Tar Heels, Jed by high·acorer
Perkins with 23 points and six rebounds, held off a
stron g defensive e ffort by Penn State and
outscored the Lions 8-2 In overtime.
With Tony Martin, Aubrey Sherrod and
Antoine Carr euch scoring six points, the Shockers
forged a 32-26 hulrtime lead and lncrea.sed it to 14
points alter five minutes of lhe second ball. Penn State, bnnging North Carolina as near to
d~ut. as the Tar Heels have been this season, was
le by Mike Edelman with 10 points. C~ter Mike
L ne had four points and nlne rebounds.
But the Titans failed to fold and behind the
llcor lng efforts of Ricky Mixon, who bad 20 points,
and Leon Wood and Tony Neal who had 18 points
each. Fullerton pulled io within two points on a
Mixon jumper with l : 52 remaining.
The Lions' Craig Bume scored a 12-foot
baseline jumper with seven seconds remalnln1 ln
regulation time to knot the score at 48.
MIHourl 65, USC 58
LOS ANGELES -Center Steve Stipanovich
scored 15 points and grabbed eight rebounds,
l eading a balanced Missouri attack as the
seventh-ranked Tigers downed host Southern
California 65-58 in the championship lijlme of the
Winston Tire Holiday Tournament.
Montana 64. UC Santa Barbara 61
SANTA BARBARA -Forward Derrick Pope
scored 26 points and grabbed nine rebounds,
leading Montana to a 64-61 non-conference victory
over UC Santa Barbara.
Pope. a 6-7 junior, made 11 or his 13 field 1oal
attempts as the Grizzlies raised their record to 6-5. Guard Jon Sundvold. who was selected as the
tournament's most valuable player, added 14
points and had six rebounds for the Tigers, who
raised their record to 8-0.
Guard Doug Selvig added 12 points for
Montana, making six of his seven field goal
attempts. The Grizzlies made a season-high 66.0
percent of their floor shots. Forward Ricky Frazier, who was ejected from
the game with five seconds remaining in the first
half for throwin~ a punch at one of the Trojans,
added 12 points for Missouri.
Center Richard Anderson paced UCSB, which
(ell to 3-7, with 19 points and seven rebounds.
Forward Wayne Davis and guard Michael Russell
added 17 and 14 points. respectively, for the
Gauchos. Fresno St. 48, New Mexico St. 41
FRESNO Fresno State hit seven of 11 free
throws in the final 1: 42 Monday to defeat New
Mexico State, 48·41, in a non-conference game. VIilanova 63, Indiana 59
NEW YORK -Aaron Howard hlt a jumper to
s nap a 59·59 lie. and Stewart Granger polished off
Villanova's stunning upset with a slam dunk as the
Wildcats defeated 11th-ranked Indiana, 63-59, in
the first round or the ECAC Holiday Festrval.
Bobby Davis had 15 points, 13 of them in the
second half, and Rod Higgins added 11 points and
seven rebounds for Fresno. Jaime Pena's 13 points
were high for the Aggies.
The game was lied seven times and the lead
c hanged hands eight times but the Bulldogs'
tight-fisted defense allowed the Aggies only two
points in the final three m inutes as the free throws
gave Fresno a winning margin.
Villanova. 19th-ranked nationally, will meet
St. John's tonight for the tournament title. St.
John's edged Kansas 76-75 in the opening game.
Idaho St. 79, Long Beach St. 72
POCATELLO, Idaho -Senior guard Robert
Tale hit his first nine shots of the game en route to
a 29-point performance as he led Idaho State to a
79·72 non-conference victory over Long Beach
State.
After Howard's jump s hot broke the tie,
Villanova chewed up more than J th minutes with a
delayed, four·corner spread offense. But the
Wildcats nearly let it slip away with poor foul
shooting
John Pinone, Gary McLain and Granger each
missed the first shot of one·and-one free throws
down the stretch, and Indiana bad a final chance
to tie with 15 seconds left. The win was ISU ·s eighth in 10 games. giving
the Bengals of the Big Sky conference their best
s tart smce 1974, when they were 7·2 in their first
nine outings.
An apparent game-tying basket by Steve
Bouchie was nullified, however .. when officials
ruled that Indiana guard Randy Wittman had
stepped on the end line before passing to Bouchie. Lon51: Beach State of the PCAA dropped to 2-6.
WINNER C:ouc h Joanne
Kellogg's lluntington Beach
High Oilers defeated Irvine.
42-35. in second round pla~
of tht• Mtir1nC:1 Edi son
tournev
Chargers win, but
LB, Gauchos lose
Edison High didn't need any
1 ·u c k w h e n t h e C h a r g e r
basketball team c rossed the
border into Nevada Monday, but
Saddleback College could use a
little luck these days.
The Cha rgers routed host
Carson City 74-48 Monday night
in the first round of the Carson
City Classic and will now tangle
with Reed High tonight at 8:30.
Meanwhile, on the community
college front, Saddleback. hurt
b y the absence of two key
starters, was routed by Santa
Monica CC 83-66 in first-round
action of the Santa Ana Holiday
Tournament.
In another high school game.
Laguna Beach was stopped by
Notre Dame of Sherman OaJts
70-60 in the first round of the
Villa Park Tournament.
At Carson City, Rick
Di Bernardo scored 21 points and
added nine reDounds, and Mark
Goudge chipped in with 2Q points
as the Chargers had little
difficulty with an outclassed
Carson City squad.
Tim Smith scored just three
poants for the4Chargers, but he
dished off 10 assists, while Chris
Millard came off lhe bench to
score 14 points.
The Chargers Jumped out to a
44 ·16 halftime advantage and it
was clear sailing the rest of the
way
ln another high sc hool
tournament game, Laguna
Beach High saw its overall
record drop to 6-5 aft.er the
Artists were handed a setback
by Notre Dame
Neil Riddell pumped home l5
points for the Artists. but the
res t of his teammates could
muster JUSt 15 points, 10 coming
from 6-2 forward Rudy Dvorak.
The Artists were down by just
three points early in the fourth
quarter, but the Knights
connected on 10 of 14 free throws
in that period to put the game
out of reach
College football JOHNSON & SON
Presents ...
COLLEGE BOWL ROUNDUP
Independence Bowl
IDec. net Morot..._,, u .1
Gerden State Bowl
10.C. IJ .. llm ·--· N.J) T •l'ne~-ll. Wlscon•ln 21
Holldey Bowl
(Dec. ""'-l>Mee> &YU a . Weshl .... OI\ SI )ft
C•llfornl• Bowl 10.C.1• .... _,
Tol-11,S...J-St.H
Tanoef1n• Bowl
CDK. 1f .ot Ort ..... l'I• I
Mluourl It, Soutnern MlulnlPl)I 17
Bl~·Gtay G•m• CO.C:,U•t.._ ... o:Ary. A&a )
8t11eJl,G•yt
Sun Bowl (OK.,. ... ,, •• ,
0111• ....... 40, WOU\IOfl 14
Gator Bowl
10.C .... J•lt-•111•1
No~lh c;erahna ~t • .ltrUn\ .. V
Liberty Bowl
IOK •• M ....... al
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Co.it. JUI ltn I • I"'• AIA.I M IUIHl,_1 Slelt 17·'"01 'fl ICelltH
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Peach Bowl
(Dec. JI .. Al .... tel
WUI Vlrolnle ( .. Ml ,., FlorldA 11 ~~).
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Bluebonnet Bowl
(Dec.JI .. _)
\JCL.lt (7.J-1) ., M lchlo•n l l 1 Ol
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USC 1 .. 1.01 ""-l"tM S.et• l .. J.Ol. Che-
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Pete the "Greek''
NFL's
Picks Of
The Week
SA'TVIDAY
Mall• .. c .......
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New Parts Department Hours
Now Open 8:00 am -1:00 pm Saturdays
I ti 0 H N S 0 N & S 0 N I L I ~ c 0 L N -?vi E R ·,C u R y
2626 Barbor Boulevard, Co ta Me.a (714) G-40-8630
---· ....
-
Orange C~t DAILY PILOTfTuelday, Dtctmber 29, 1881
HALL OF FAME -Mrs. Ralph < Marion i De
Palma, widow or the lat e racing driver
who lives in Costa Mesa. accepts a plaque
from J ohn W. Burgess. De Palma was
~
recently enshr ined in the Racing Hall of
Fa m e in Flem ington Fairgrounds. New
J ersey.
De Palm a: One o f th e grea ts
Record holding. auto racer inducted into Hall of Eame
H.aJph De Palma was one of the most revered
. and respected automobile racing drivers of bis
time including Barney Oldfield and the former
Indianapolis cha mpion (1915) was recently
ho nored by t h e Racing Hall of Fame at
Flemington Fairgrounds in New Jersey.
. J ohn W. Burgess, director and manager of the
Briggs Cunningha m automotive museum pre·
sented De Palma's widow, Marion, of Costa Mesa
with a plaque emblematic of his enshrinement.
According to the records, De Palma won 2,557
races out of 2,889 he entered. He won 36 100-mile
cha mpionship r aces in all parts of the country
· lflTH llDTICll
SWANSON August 1, 1918 in Brooklyn,
R E I NHO L D I RI NK l New York. Survived by his
S WA NSON, r es iden t or wife LucUle, son Wiiiiam M.
Corona del Ma r , Ca. Passed Angell of Mission Viejo, Ca.
away on December 27. 1981. and grandson Brian. Mr.
Survived by his wife Mary An g e ll wa s a. P ublic
.Lou. 1 son Floyd Swanson of Accountant in Newport
E verett. Wa shing t on, l Beach (Of' 30 years. He was
daughter J ean e Todd of the past State President or
'Escondido, Ca ., 1 sis ter t he Society of California
KJarla Brick of Pleasanton, Accountants and was a
'Ca., 5 grandchildren a nd 1 m e mbe r o f St . J a m es
greal-grandchjld. Services Episcopal Church.~Newport
wUI be held on Wednesday, Bea ch. Funeral se ices will
D ecembe r 30, 1981 at b e h e ld o n T b r s d a y .
ll:OOAM al Pacific View D ecerllb ~r 31 , 1981 at
Chapel with Rev. l)onald 3:00PM al Pacific View
Kut& officiating. lnler ment Mortuary Chapel. Interment
'lll P acific View Me moriaJ al P acific View Memorial
Par lt . P actrl c Vie w Park, Newpor t Beac h.
Mortuarydireetors. P a c ific View Mo r t ua r y
ANGELL directors.
E. MALCOLM ANGELL, MacDONALD
'r esident of Costa Mesa. Ca. E R N E S T C .
·P,.assed away on December MacDONALD, resident or
'28, 1981. He was born on Anaheim, Ca. Passed away
· on December 27. 1981. He is
-., survived by his son Manny, .,.---------o;;:.· daughter Joy Malmquist of
IAl.ntUGHOH
SMITH & tuTHILL
WISTCLlff CHA,IL
427 E 17th SI
Costa Mesa
646-9371
Naea•onas
5MITMI' MOlrTUA& Y
627 Main St
~nt1nQton &ac11
536-6539
PACIAC Yl(W
...., .. Al,Aal
CefT'etery Mortuarv Qiapel-Qematory
3500 Pec1f1c View Drove
Nllwe>cl't BH Cl'l
84-t-2700
Garden Grove, Ca., sister
Ma ry Allred of Longdale,
c a.. 3 grandchildren and 5
g r e at ·grandc b il d reo .
Graveside services will be
h e ld o n We dn esd ay ,
December 30, 1981 at 12:00
noon at Ha rbo r Lawn
Memorial Parlt with Rev.
John MacLau&hlln, Flr sl
PrH byterlao Church of
Garden Grove officiating.
Servtc ... under the direction
of Harbor Lawn·Mou.nl Olive
Mortuary or Cost a Mesa.
540-~.
MOBLEY
LOI S PATRI C IA
MOBLEY, resident of lhe
area ror th• put 30 years
altttt movlq here from San
,Jerll•rdloo. Ca . Passed
way tn Oeeember 21, 1111.
Ille la 1urvind by ber
a..NDd ~amln Mobley,
Jr., ton Jam•. daufbler
Jady Ann Yanes of Costa
11 .... ea .. s f enckbl.&clren, J 1l1\er1 an l brotbers.
Pr•~~ tem* will be held :.,~~~~.!!; Lawa llemortal Cha I with
lntermtnt Imme attly
followtq. lervt~.. uder
tbe dlrecUoo of arbor
Law•·llowlt Otive ~orwery oleo.ta ...... M0-SN4.
from 1908 through 1926 and is the only drlver to
race rr consecutive years.
In 1919 he drove a Packard car at a speed of
1(9.87 miles per hour. The air speed record at tbat
time was 126 mph, makin& De Palma the futest
man on earth or in the sky.
He still bolds reeorda tor four bill climb races
including one to Ill. Wllaoa from PaMClena in 1924,
a race tbat UI no l~er contested.
In 1980, De Palma sWl held the rerord for the
most laps leading the Indy 500, 613. Active drivers
Al Unser and A. J . Foyt were both less tb&n 100
laps behind him at the time.
DEATHS
ELSEWH.ERE
P A R I S I A P 1
Dutch·born painte r Bram
v an Ve ld e, 8 6 , who
illustrated works by Irish
playwright and close friend
S am uel Beckett. d il'd
Monday
SACRAMENTO <AP>
Marlt Rodman , 63, a
manufacturer or political
buttons who scored big with
his .. happy face.. button.
wed Sunday.
ROME CAP> Ercole
Gra:dadri. 81, a lawyer who
represented a number or
fa m ous people Including
Salvador DaU and the late
Ch a r lie Chaplin. d ied
Monday.
MEXICO CITY IAP >
Albe rw Terrones Benllea.
94. longtime senator a nd a
m e m b e r or Mexico• s
cons t itutional assembly
wh i c h d re w up a
con s titution a fter the
bloody revolution or 1910,
has died.
E NC INITAS CAP>
Belt!Q H. Dyer, 95, who
wrot e more th a n 400
children's stories ln boots
a nd ia41aiane a r ticles
under the pen name Helen
Gordon Boyd, died SUnday.
SAN ANTONIO, Texas
t AP> -Lutlaer Harri•
Eva••, 79, a fo rmtr
d tr ector -ge neral or t he
U n it ed N a t io n s
EducaUooal, Sclenutlc and
Cultu ra l O r1a n luUon
<UNESOOI. died.
DENTON, Texu (AP> -
E•1e•e CoaleJ, 13, a
rormer lead tenor or the
Metropolltan Opera, dJed
P'r1day.
MEt.DOU'RNEJ... Australia
(AP) -Sir •~ll•ald
A•MU. 72, • major figure
tn developlDJ Au1tralla'1
civil avlaUon, tran1P,Orl,
tourl1 .. abd c om ·
111anl callon1 lndu1trtea.
died.
AT L ANT A 1A P 1 -
Newell Edenfield, 70, a U.S.
District Judge in northern
Georgia s ince 1967. died
Saturday. He was a former
president of the Georgia
a nd A tlanta ba r
associations
CHARLCYITE. N.C. tAPI
K.C. "Nlck'0 Loughlin,
76. a former Celanese Corp.
president who helped bring
sy nth e t ic f ibe r
m a nufa ctu ring t o t he
cotto n growing South. died
Saturday
ALFRED. N Y. tAPI -
Dr. Howard R. Nev Ille, SS,
former president or AUred
University, wed Thursday.
He was forme r president of
the University of Ma ine
and Cl a re m ont Men 's
College in California.
NEW YORK <AP>~ Dr
S amuel Kountit, 51. a
leading transplant s urgeon,
died Wednesday.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. CAP>
-St ate Rep. Palma L.
lloblnSO«I, 60, wJlo helped
establis h a m e dical
college In East Tennessee,
died Thursday.
SAN F RANCISCO (AP I
-J. Enlld>ert Duaplay, a
f ioneerlng surgeon who
o u n ded a n ation a lly
acclaimed trauma center
at San Francisco General
Hospital. died Friday.
COLUMBIA, S.C. <AP1 -
Dr. John Patrick DolH, 58,
a Unive rsity of Squth
Carolina history protee.sor,
a uthor a nd edltor of a
critically acclaimed hiflory
or the Christian church,
died Frid~. Dplan wrote 1$
boolt1 In En1ll•H. French
and German and edJled a
10-volurne "WMOry of tfle
Church."
HARTFORD. CoM . (AP>
-WIWam P. Gwtu T4, a
former chairman ot Onl~
Al ·craft Corp .. the
predec eu or of Unit ed
Technolo1tes Corp., died
Friday.
RICtDIONO, Va. CAP) -
Vice Adm. •••Hll &. w .... Tl. Wbo oace hudecl
..
I "•°" .... 11.4.tllt
MOTIC.8 Ott S.U.8 Ott COL.UT•llM.
eYMC:V•aePMtn
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~CNtHlll TAICa.GUT COlll~ATIOfll ..... ct...._ .. _ U...._...CA_
NOTICa II ......... 01\laN .............. _, ............. . .... " .. w•:=• .. • .-.k _... • • ._.. .. 11• P.M.., J-'J
""' ... ... .. • .. O.wlf ... ~ ......... "-1 C.* on.-.. .....,. .,,, ~9MCll, CelllenlN ..... ~ ..... ..,..,,...,_, .....
...... $1 ........ ,., •• lfl ........... ., •• , ........... _...
""""'· ........ Mil.., .. ~ .. --· .... ..-r ... "' ..... ..., .... .., ...... .
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-~~ Oflw , S..lt.1111 ~ ....... c.lltontl• .... ,, .. ,~
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ICMllMIL.a "A"
oa1e11t11•T1011
IC:AL.I AMOITMO: Cllelllle!IMedel •e,...1>-•T
111111 coh1m11 plelform type, ''"lppeel •II" IS0-.1Hlk -..,.elw e toll,_.t\tMell ...... ...,
N II lle.,1111 .. ..._. ~ •ltfl • ~llY f/f * Ill .• Yr Ill. FlfllltMll Ill dirt rn ltl-wrlllllle ........
f'llffll"*I wltfl -(0 lllNWY dwty _,... ,.._
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ly,..
AOOINO MACMINl1 Vklor "'°*I U t-2M •"" •N
tt•ll4ard e<<-•• •• hw11INIH 11, """"'•-·
l'IL.I CA81NIT: Coi. Model •*-~L • ._ Ill
drewer .... I style Hie wlltl IO<ll end •II 1-..ci
t<CH IOl'IH" '"'"'"*" bY m•11ufec1 .. rer.
l'L.OOa SAl'I: OlellOld MOClel • 12Jo7 dO\lllla
compertnwnt wllll doutlle "E" r•llft9. Unit with key
<Nft91 c.omblllatlon, UnH lnJt•lled •• -p1.,., by
..... ,.1 C011trector.
WALIC·INl•IACH•IN aE .. 11110a11tATO•: Elder'•
c111tom P••·l•brlceted M<ll011el welk·lll <OOI•'·
Appro•lmetely 1'0" • f'O" • l 'O'' 1119" Coull* 4'1m.I
cOOler to De llootl"6 IMl•llecl Oii ••l-'1119 c-rete
llell. W•ll• .,.c11ortc1 wlWI •1•111'"6 st.eel piM. All frem11111 ol -111.111 coot•r .. le<t •I lllM .,.._
dO<lol•• fir ,,,_,1y •Pe<eG ...., 11recec1 ..., •II
treml119 trwted lo lie moisture resit..,., IMarlor
CO••t•d wltll prime dOmelllC m•ftllfe<IW• .IMO
...... m11 11111111 stucco emoo-•l""'iltllm mtt.i "°"""' ......,.. ,..._,. to moldecl poty•y,_ -"°""" cleMllY wlltl • '"I('" fector ol .tJ 91 75 I'.
1111111e11o11 1" 1111ci. and lfpe s c £nertor ••II
avn ecn <_,.,, wlltl ""'"l""m H ---· ~..,.. wall 1Wfece NI will 111t adjac .... t IO ~ -11
flllllhed -14•· ltlk k""' m.,.I,,. 1.,.. ...,_
tf••lecl te be moist..,.. retltlalll wllll .,. --type p_..._ C-1..,..,1,_ wltll -111
"""' m-twlt.cll -ptlot 119"1 <--
twlt<ll -_....., lo Inter!« ••II sl4a Ollly for
electrlcel ~tloll by olMrt Llt"I lurnltllecl ll\all
lie Klll•rt< w.,,. ~ 1'9ftl lltrlvre --I be
-•ed bl' ele<ttkleft. aoa 1o 1>e lvn\klled wlUl-t 11 H Cll "Elle<" ~IN<led W ' I 71'' 0'F..,,,IM"
walll·lll -· wit" I_.., -•-riot linltll of .CMO llucto •~ •lvmln""" llOlldecl IO I~ •1111 •llO•Y .ii-Ive. OoM equl_.s wfffl Oetroe
c am 1111 Ill"'"· H ll·<loal"ll· cllroma pl•l•d
m1911allc _,_clel type getllel. a ......., dUly
c11,ome 111•1ec1 "''" ,,_ Mc1 1o<klno ..... kl. o...
111 .. Ellec" 20" -40" •otld reeci.-111 ooor ~urnltl\acl •llh •luml"""' cowed NM -dlel lllermomeler. Full pet1m•l•r <101 .. ra penel to u111ne.
IHCl.UDEO IN ITEM •'2
WAL.IC·IM COOi.ea SHIL.YING: El1-1 CUiton\
mel•I centll......., toilet •lumlnum •N lwl"I lwo 121
Mtllons. Olle Ill Mtlloll •'O'' • U"' wldt, four 14)
tier hlgl>. One Ill aectloll 6'0" • It" wloe. -Iler
111911 mounted o\lltr c111e11 ... clreln pan. lnsblled ..
par pl•n
CHICKEN OaAtM l'AN: Elller·s cvstom mel91
co11•trut llon, alae a nd •ll•P• •• 11•• Pl•n. •1111ro•1,,,...1, s·• .. ._ • 24"' •Ide • , .. -...
Collltr..c\ecl wltft lle<ll -latt efld .., .. .,, wldl rolled
.,..., Oii ritM "'°' lrOlll, <OMlnKled el 1' -..lwe11l1ecl lrwl wlltl llOnom pllcM<I fw _.,..... IO ...... , """' ..,.. ....... clr•l11. Left ... ol ......
_..., Oii •" leQI wlltl -'le -,,_,.,.., °"
11"199•·
..O•TAeli l'.IUll RACll: ICMIC.ICENI -EK*ar'1
c.ntom m.tet lllOI ce,, for 11"' a i.·· --Eac.11 tlld9 to l\ew 14" '°"9 ...... -141ed ....... Ilka IO
..,...., ... , -'""" tllcllnl out ,,,__ ... Oii S" a 1w· ,. .. .,, _., IWIWI usten.
Walk·lll ceolet door lllCluclltd In Item • U.
.. OaTAka llOT ,.LATE: Welh -I •H·J:I
llOWe< ..-. ~. llS volt. """''-with ,..,., -4119 ....... I S ....... cl CcetM<l«t as lumltlled ~
m•1111l•ct.,,....,
woac TAat.I: E11-s cvstom metal cOllltnKtloll,
tire •ncl "'-•• -plan. ._ .. lmetely f'O'' lOllC
• 2'0" detP. Moun!M Oii 114119 •-wltll winlW,
M j.,lleble leet. '"'"''-wllll -I II 16 ...._. t•lw•nlr9G ullelenllell. U11ll 1l1ecl to flt -· reec;.,.1,, c1oor 11 llldlc•lecl °" p1e11. r..,......-with *•••r.
aaACM·IN "lllt:azla: TreulMft 1pe<lel ~
•GLT 2..22 H UT wllll tap --c--•utom•tk Otfrott . .,,.,_•lmel•IY so <vllic feel l'ur11l"'9cl wlltl enodl&ed •l1Hnl11vm all!Mlor lronl encb • ..., IN<k, _._ ....... 1 ....... llltHkll' ..... _
10 rteM -""'9ed reec:i.-111 _, Oii aide - -
I II rlpl _,,.... rMCh-111-°" ""'· .... ltll
Mff..c;lolllle Ufft "" tv,e hi ...... ,..,.,......, ..,.. ... lleewy chlty ,_...., 111 (6) c...._ ll>l•ted .-1 wire
-1 ..... •1121t-1..o.
CAN Ol'INI•: Edt\lllCI •t ,,_led Oii ~ ......
Moo111t1111-k • as llldl<elecl on £1• .. r'l P6eft.
..OT SIMlt: Eider's cwlom mee.1 <orwtNc1loll. _..1_,. •'O" IOnl a l't'" wide,<...,,.... -
two m w· • w· • 1..-...., """ ....-.. •"" ,.,,., ...... .,.. iw. 111 1r· 11 tt" *..........._
E11llre 111111 c-t.acl 111 ecc..-nc:e -..,....1 -"le .................. Oii .,...., type .... trfVI
Mlllt•ry .....,.._. Itel. 1'11ml-wlUI "-ti -
left llend-IPIMllnM lftdk•-Oft P4M.
SMIL." .. TM POT MOOCI: Elster't c-,...,.. c:-tructlell. .,....,,.,...1., , • .,. loftt • 1'0'0 '"'*·
C-nidltd f/f It ...... 1.,.. Jtt ti.lllleu -· Well -...... aJM as llldketecl Oii plM. F....C
,.., ., ......................... u -pot ....... tH<ed ... 4'' ~ ............. ..,.., .. ..,.,,, _
Ill 111 ....... Wlllt. SNll 11111talled ....t ....... ID w•h
f .......... .
SINK WAU. l'L.Atltl ... : El~'s t-,,,.... c011atr11<tlOft, ...,...1rne1ely •'O" !Ont. ,...,,..,.
alll.>11 lie ......... from.of'""'~-...... M4lle of pot IMff I 1'"91 •m. l'IHll!t11 <..an.tied f/f
............................. 1ec110111111--
tlltlla to,_ -1.....,. .. Ufllt.
MAMO ..... aXTIMOUllMI•: Kidde Mollel
• SAICI , dry c"9mlcel wltll mov1111111 twcllet,
llllt.Mled --......... p!M.
TIMI CLOCK ANO CAlllD MOLOaa: La"""'
-· • tlS ....... "*""' .... ,._ -IMlollil '" ................ --................. ..., ...._., p6M. CllN ~ wlal ttw ~It\' flf IJ
Cafdt Ille~ r•. MewftlM -............ ..., • .............
OIL. "'-ftR: de.i Mk f'IMIO -I •NW-Ml' ..
fllt" MaclllM lllfllltM-•1111 ell 1tell4er4 ~ .......... -' ....
P•Y K•ee•I: lpaclel ,.,_, fry "'9<.U ,_ '~ ,..,_ ......... 1 ... ...., .,_
wllllwK"M.,....,..._...,_..,
:;AN DI EGO CAP)
Gerald v ..... ard. 13. a
marine b lolo1lat who
Mrved rront le. lo 1980 a1 southwest ,..Jooal dlrectOr
of the Natfoaal Marine
rtaberln Servlcea, died
Dee 18. atl eo.t Guard foreft a , .
Ule P•clnc, dttd 11onc1.,,. I
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WALL. PL.AAMI .. A•• CAl'I lltW'I QMeM -\II (.~ .................... _. ... ,
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ltbltllff '""-' -· H IMlcet .. 9111 .....
WALL. l'L.AIMIN•1 lltl•t't cvele"' "'"''
c-1r11et•. lo ~· "'4 •"I ltetll ""9lf' .-"
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Oii t'O'' .... Entire t-~ruct94 f/f It ....
1y.,. M2 tl9l11ln 1 tlffl °" 1-., lleell -aWe t411•*"-'· Mol#lled .... l•MllH ......... wit1'
.. lw•11lad ......,.,. ... u-•rvcflK• of._.,....,
wllll llOJI -·· .... , ........... --·....., lllo16en H rM\llred. \.
CNICCIN WA8MI•: llltler'a c vtwm metel
co11t1r11e1111\. tile Miid ....._. •• per """ Ulltt C0111lr11<'9cl flf 1' ..... 1e.ltll•t 1\MI. Ufllt ......
cM<ll, 111• ....... II" • 2'" w.. .,.,,.. ~
wllll ei.M Ill T·ll•Y -•H·• ...,U ......... .... , I•,,,.. Oii rece w•y wlUI M•l111"6 Re9I .......
llre<UIA-Ellllre ""11 lntt.llecl at Int ... ...., .. ......... 11-. • Solo)
........ .-wllll •loM Ill c ........ ,,,,_ ,._.
<"k l<"' lloldlflo K•-. tla ord9reN -......
CllPI, Int• UI .-,.,d llO-rt .... ~ -
...... ,. IMMdt<A.
aAOOIMG l'.IUll MtO 1Caa1M: Ke .. 1111 -ett4
Ir•""' lry wennl"' Kr-. Ollly. lor "'°*I •2>LO·.
80L.L. WA8Mla: Ge11era1 Electrlc M•••I
•CFO.JI, llW• Or-llol I-..,.,..., •"""-
1tu l ••tHlor. re mowebl• drewan , <Ot'11411•WIY
remow.-.. •-• -elld e11 alaftdllnl -'et u l11r11l.,,.. lly manvfe<lure• and IN fOllOWllll:
M-1 •CX·3'1 4" aclJ .. 1t.ble •lalnleu •-1e91 t lled to IM Modll •CFO-JI Mrver .
~I •CX·"59dec11H tt<kl.
CONDIM•MT c•••NllT• E l•l•r "I cuuom •oodl,,..._I cOM1ruc:tl011, tire and tl\e"9 .. per P4M
•11d elew•llon C011dlme111 c•lllM I lo be woed
conttr..ctloll wllll 941 •llPOWCI M1r1e<tt caw-lfl
111111 p reuure l•ml,.•ted ptullc. Top to be
c .. atruct.acl Of 16 9'U9f, Type :I02 •lalnteu tWI wltll
cuto..11 tor trencll try "''"" I • S71 --121 lnt.11ral "V" tlott lor 110lcll119 of trenc:ll fry beft.
MIAT L.AMI': T·ll•I' -.Olno type .,.,,....., _.
•H..00 wllll _,,, ei-t h•rnlllNd wltll lloldlno
billtUt •••II, llS volt
oaOl!lll -llU: One Ill T-Model •16-, wall 11-wltll tlrt.., (1., <Iii>' 0... 111 ~
IT' m -lwlth <llP'
Dlll'LAY 01\llDt:aS: Eltter'• <vslom mlrnr COll~lrlK1lon IO Ill dltPl•Y <-et IM k -Oii llUns.
all'•IOl!•ATllO OISl'LAV CAlll: Tra .. IMll
S pecl•I Medel •GHT 2·U H P U T wltll
•PP•o•ltnel•IY so , .. bl< ..... ol dltpley .....
S.11-cOlll•lrwd lap ......,,, .. c-euor. F""""'9cl
wllll two 121 oi.u rM<1>-l11 doo" on,.,,,_, aide
•lld two 121 IOllCI reec ... ln doo" on c...,., tide. lloCll
,,...., aide -. to tie lllftled. L.alt " llld!UIMd on Ill•"· E....,lor -Inter-ol anodized '"""'"""' w llll spe<l•I 90ld l rame ero .. nd 11au tSoora.
F11r11llhed •1111 Mlf-c'°'I"' comllll type lllft9H, t"
N•YY ..... ., ~ -.i. <•I •l•I wire --Pl•led •Nives. IU volt, 60 cycle. •in9le pl\IM.
COFl'llE MAICEllt: Brewmlll< M-1 •SRPC.
comp.ct._..,. 1111 .,.,., ... 1omellc uslllQ .,.....,...
llllera, fl.ftmflecl wllll lwo UI -lllonal werm1111
e1eme11b Oii IOP""" -Ill sarvlnv di<_,.. IU
WOii, Slf>919 pf\eM
l'AI'•@ CUP OISl'ENMH: Liiy tllllp llf'I ""'9.
1111111 111to cus-r Mrwlce counter OM 111 -·
• 2EC. and -( 11 -I • JEC.
TUaMOVEa Dlll'LAY: Prince Castle -I
•41t 1101 l oocl w.,mer wllll Modal •426·>0
"'"'""''d
WAITING CMAlllS: Holtywoocl -•lSUP
<olOlll•I -d ••ln wttll tllp sa•b U......-.0 beck and wet wllll •l•I""' brOllH nalll>Hft .
Upl\015-Ill Oe<OI' • OC-44 m-.nn --· Fram•• of lnM-llllltl\.
CO""ll MAltla SJUEL.D: Elller'a cvstom
-,---· ,,.. .... .., 10 ,_t ... _ ... collffm-
ICI MACHIMI: llOH Tomp -· ••c...za.sc wllfl Ice °"""" <-lty Of _ .. lmatety HI la
,.., d•y S.ll<ont.IMcl compre•---Oii
191111
DIS,.LAY CAaO MOLDEllt: 11 .. c11no -I
• llJF, tt" •Jr', Wllll <lvome. •lft9le -""'°' II rOllftdbe.M •
SL.ICE•: 1-... llOllet .... tool tlkM -I •
MB·UO INSFI. enodl~ecl elumt"""" 11111111, IU -· sh•t l•pMle
l'aEMM>MATIC: W.-ver -· ·-·
aE"alOl.ltATION SYSTEMS: lllC._ d celll,
comprH-a. ....,.., wrvke w"""· -., .. ,,.,, I-.. ., oil, wlt>rallOll •llmlftetora. lllt""" clrlera.
'°'"'old welwes, wmlb •""all nee:•._.., l*tl.,. 1-r to u 11nplet• Ille r.ir19erell011 IMUHl9lloll of tlle IOllowl119:
SYSTllM A: One (ti Ollly walll·ln <-. I H.P.
<OlldeflUllt 111111 -m•tt111no 01-t0t1.
All rafrlgitr.Clon IYtl•mt luml•--llllUllH In ecc-• with Elt..,..1 ...,... .. -Nlc.ttlklilL
Compre1~ mo..ntH elld t111talled Oii ,_ n
lncllc •l•d Oft Elaler's •1•11. ,.,,,.1.,... wltll
lcom...-c- -otll« -·~--.., lllCI-• tl•,,"'9 -'° clay sanlce Oii r-<tYtltm, ,.....,..,. lrMar, reftleer•tM ..._..., ,_
•l'WI k • mecl>l119.
AOOlTION TOICNIOULa ••••• 24'' • ... • IW' S.E. ~ "'" ,_ ., "'9111
pr••MI•• lomlnaled P4Htlc, lotK c_..._ wttll cOlldllneM rKeU.
•SS»._ v-wllll _.calal" "X'" - -enamel colutnll
U" • W ' a IY>'' S.E. 1-111C>t c-Ill ...... ,..... ...... !Mnlnated p!Htk
•ssn ._ -w1111 _.ce1.u1lft "X" .,_. -
-I < .......
Hou.,-_. •JSUP ,,.._ e11e1n wlltl "'-
wets. U""°'sterecl lle<ll --1 ••Ill __., 11.-tt N I-U ...... terecl lfl Decor •DC ...
mender1ll ......... Fr-•I Fniltweod 1111111\.
H"9' Floer .. COVNC" to lllC-ell I-_,.. ~trim • .,.._,. to comptetely l!Ktell. NOT£: Tllla b ., tMll'llele of I'.,..._ to lie ..._ 111 tfte eWeftt that Mdllloftet • ., ..... It ~Ind,~ .. .... to ..., for .. 1c1 eddillOllel ,.,. ...... Wt
lnst.llelleft --""" -rele per,.,.,.• Is llel119 c...._ for In 11111...-.
FrM Dnip Top 2J ... loll tr•atl re<~lft Modllt • SC·Hl wltll ., .... .,_ elld ...... top.
llllll IEICl/lllTI ClllT
FBI probing
Laguna Beach
jail death
Laguna Beach police officiala
bave confirmed the FBI baa
begun an investigation into the
jailhouse death o f Robert
Wardman last July.
Wardman, 37, a Laguna Beach
spa salesman, was accidentally
dropped on bis head by a police
officer in back of the station
while being removed while
drunk from a patrol car.
He dled hours later in his cell.
An in-house investigation and
a probe by the county district
attorney's office s howed no
evidence of criminal activity.
But th e U .S . Ju s tice
Department, acting on a com-
3guilty
• mrapes
on coast
~'?br'•e m,n a cc u s ed of
kldnapplnc., raping and robbing
~r YOUllC ,,omen -three from
Uuntiqt.on Beach -have been
t;.md piJty of 79 counts MODQy
i~ Oran1e County Superior
Qourt.
:,,._ne_~ ~ere return_ed to
Oranl6 County Jail to await
~tendlll Jan. 25.
~.praa1e County De puty ertct Attorney Richard
ey said step-brothers
d ltuaseu', 26, and Robert
Tlnln •. a. bolll of J>owney_Jace m1~_that could exceeo.::mo
~an ~ -~~b was fo und guilty oncf aj'" 0 f 0 n e c 0 u n t -0 f
dna_p_pins for robber y, two
I of. kidnappin1. three
_ol. robbery, 11 counta al
e nrpe, and 14 coWILs of
alq the women to comm.it
tber sex aci.
· Tbe third defendant, John
19, also of l>owney, wu
guilty of 17 sexual
litj Toohey s aid Krom w.as
;aecued ol participatin1 in only ·
1>ne of the three incidents ~by the jury. . -·
l ·-Tbe-Wlrst two in cidents
hc_eurre.t last February.
• In die first, Toohey said, two
•en ottered a ride to a woman ~ car bad broken down in 18tf .. cb.
plaint from city activilt John
Gab.riels, b as ·initiated an
investigation of po11ible civil
rights violations, police officials
confirmed.
· Gabriela said he asked the
Justice Department to conduct
its own probe several mootba
ago.
He said be was not satisfied
with the internal inveaU1ation or
the results of the district
attorney's investication.
"I just don't want to be in a
similar s ituation where I'm
tpken to jail and dropped on my
bead, then left unattended in a
cell,'• Gabriel.s said.
Acting Police Chief Neil
Purcell said he is cooperating t.o
the best of his ability in the
federal probe.
"If 1 bad my way, I'd turn
over the entire internal affairs
investigation (results) to the
FBI and the Department of
Justice," be said.
"But I'm not at liberty to do
t h a t beca use of pending
litigation (by the dead man's
family) and the fact that the
internal affairs investigation i.s
in the bands of the attorneys
representing the city."
Services
for Mr. Utt
scheduled
Private services are to be held
i n G lenda le this week for
Newport Bea ch resident and
longtime attorney Max Eddy Utt
who dled Sunday.
Mr. Utt, a second cOUJin to tbe
late Orange C o unty
congreuman J amea B. Utt. was
associated with the Newport
Beach law firm of Gibeoo, Dunn
and Crutcher for more than 50 years.
He was a retired partner in
that firm at the time of his
death.
Mr. Utt wu a trustee ol the
Los Angeles County Lrw
,Ubrary from 1947 to 1956 ancf
was a ctive in planning the
present library bwldin1.
He was a past president ol
Town Hall of CaWornia, Friends
of the Claremont Colleges and of
S o uth e rn C al i f o rnia
·Presbyte.rian Homes.
Mr. Utt is survived by bis
wife, Bonnie Jean; a daughter,
Virginia Stockton of Laguna
Rills and a son, Dr. Roger Utt of
Chicago.
H e al so leave s four
-grandchildren and a sister, Mrs.
D.L. Darsie of Glendale.
The family bas sulgested
m e m ori a l g ifts t o Hoag
Memorial Hospital or to St.
Andrew's Presbyterian Church
in Newport Beach.
Pharmacy accused
of illegal sales
"--
A Corona del Mar pharmaey
Illegally sold more than 27,000
addictive Codeine tablets in the
past six months, a cootinuinC
police i nves ti g a tion bas
revealed. Newpollt Beach police aakt a
preliminary audit of the ree01dl
at Jack's Pharmacy, 3025 E .
Coast Hil~~ay, also shows
quantities of Demerol ,
amphetamines, cocai ne and
morphine were sold without
prescriptions. .
Police, who said they've sifted
tbroup iix months of records
at tbe ctru1 store, report tlMI
violations coul4 date back HftD
ye an.
Pharmacy owner Jobn "Jaek"
Geannc. a •yur-old i....-.
N'-uel reudAt. and clerk Aalta
Gabler, 42, tA Dana Polnt, an
tree on SIS,000 ball alter b1111s
arnsted Dec. 11 oo suspkbl Ol
conspiracy to sell morpblne.
Tbelr arraipment bas beeD Ml
for Jan.~.
But police, who have been
ualated lD tbe lnvesUcaUoD bJ
tile ttate Board of Pbarmac7 .
U C.l .s!'ta grant
A"211.000 srut from tlMI U.S.
•Department ot Sduutloo bu
'.... atrarded to vc lniDe to .. allaace tb• reteatloa a•d MC~.., of mlnorltJ 1rllftate•
I
and the federal Dru1
Enforcement Admi nistration,
now report they've turned up at
least 100 separate violatiooa al
the Corona del Mar druc at.ore.
Investigators said they will
ask the Oranie County Diatrict
Attorney's office to file
additional cbarses a1ainat the
pair this week.
Geart.na. reached today at the
pharmacy, said be couldn't
comment on the cbar1es at thla
time. He noted, tbou1b, that
pu.blicity over the police
investi1ation hasn't burt bis
businea.
"If anytbln1," be said,
''bualnesa bas Increased. I'm
1ettlnl Iota ol calls from peop&e
who s~ they want to help and
aupportme."
Police contend the pbarmaey
aold dnap wtu.out .,._mlltlinM
to "dnll abuser lJpe•·r-Ud
"re1ular cUllomen."
Undercover poliee asents, It
WU reported, purcbaMd dr1IP
from the pharmacy on five.
occuloal.
"We just walked up to tbe
eoullter," OM lDY•U,ator Mid,
''aDd uked f°' eome ~
and we sot It."
Tl\• arrest eam• after
undercover a1eat1 r•PortedlJ
purcbued a quantity of
mOI ...-. and mon Ulan l,oel ............ , ....
llllJPlllt
TUESDAY, oec. 29, 1991
CAVALCADE
STOCKS
TELEVISION
82-3
85 88
THE LINE'S BUSY Looking like a s cene from a familiar
Alfred Hitchcock movie. these blackbirds line up wing to
wing on telephone lin es on Golden West Street near Ellis
Erma Bombeck has her
own set of tips regarding
the winter fireplace. See 82.
D
0
'
!Wly ........ ..,o-y .......
Avenue in Huntington Beach It's what yo u might call a
party line.
Marine guilty in teen-ager's car death
El Toro man's wn struck skater, 15; jury iays driver under alcohol influence
El Toro Marine Robert Keith
Martin bas been found guilty of
vebicwar mansla ughter for an
April 11 incident in which his
van s truc k and k i lle d a
15-year-old girl roller skating
along an El Toro street.
•, The Orange County Superior
Court jury also said Marlin was
1uilty of dri ving under the
ln!luence of alcohol. The jury,
which deli berated about four
hours Monday. found Martin not
guilty of hit-and-run driving in
relation lo the incident.
· Caryn Dilorio, a roller skater
and an honor student at El Toro
High School, died at the scene of
the accident at A venida da Ls
Carlota.
Her mother, Barbara Horton,
wh o sat t hr o u g h. t h e
five-week-long trial, said she
hopes publicity from the trial
will affect public driving habits.
"It was senseless slaughter,"
she said.
Deputy District Attorney Milte
Maguire said he was happy with
the conviction, which could send
Martin t.o prison for as long as
three years and eight months.
He added that the not 1uUty
verdict on the hit-and-run count
was unde r standable because
Martin did check the scene
momentarily after the incident.
and 'dro v e onl y a nother
quarter-mile down the road
before slopping.
"He didn't fulfill the legal
requirements . . . but I think the
jury w as just.ified in finding bim
not guilty on that count," said
Macuire.
Robert Chatterton. standing in for Martin's regular attorney,
Marshall Shulman, asked Judge
E verett Dickey for enough time
more than an hour after th
incident indicated Marlin'
alcohol level in his blood w
0.21 percent, said Maguire.
.hopes publicity will . affect :
dri'l?ing habits
befoKsentencing for a complete
probationary report on Martin.
Dickey set sentencing for Feb.
1.
Martin's van had just passed
a nother car when it swerved
back into the outside lane and
struck the curb and then the
victim as she skated on the
asphalt next to the gutter ,
according to testimony.
A blood test taken slightly
level of 0.10 is considered the
le~al level for drunkenness.
Martln was allowed to remain
free on his OWn recognizance by:
Dickey, but his driver's license.
was withheld. Maguire n~
that Ma rtin a lso is facin,:'
prosecution in Central Oranc«
County Municipal Court on Ii
separate ch arge of drunke~
driving. 1
Shops and "banks ou/, to zap you
HOLIDAY REFLECTIONS & S UCH : Som e
dour-mouthed economis ts were predicting nobody would
b e buying anythin g for t his Christmas season a nd
personally, I don't know where those guys were hiding.
Since nobody was
g o in g t o b e o u t
shopping, I decided to
foll o w m y u s ual
r..\ procedure, which is to
-/-: do au the gift buying on JDI MURPHllf ~ ~ Dec. 24, and give a little
----------'--.... ..,._ last-moment lift to the saggin g bu s in ess
community.
The only things I found sagging were my knees and
shopping bags.
One head cler k at a major department store at South
Coast Plaza summed up the situation this way : "We m ay
not be setting any records, but we're ma king money ... " .
I DON'T KNOW if the stores were full of shoppers or
not, but they sure were full of elbows . I've got the bruised
ri bs to prove it. I suffered more cheap shots than a Ram
quarterback who was behind Sl to 6. Which most of them
were this last sea son.
••• If the economy does have the hiccups, one thing that
might help would be if the banks would be faster in
coughing up money to the customers. Have _you e ver
noticed that when the bank line ls clear out to the cigar
1to re, they have one teller at the windows and l7
employees shuffling paper in the background?
When the bank lobby is vacant, they have eight
'tellers at the windows.
./
YOU CREEP FORWARD in Ute line and finally 1et to
the window, where the teller tells you: "You're in tbe
w rong line, sir. You should be in the Iona one over there.
whe re the sign says Notes."
Maybe that's why they call them telJers. They tell
you you're in the wron1 llne. ·
At one bank up in Santa Ana -we'll caJl lt First
American Listless -every employee lo the place seemed
'/,4 be oozin1 around ln slow-motion. You lftqulre lf there's t problem?
"Oh yes sir ... the teller says brightly "Our BU M RAP
computer is down ... "
PLEASE NOTE THAT bank computers never break.
m a lfunction or s hort-circuit. They always .. go down ...
Later they may come up. But right now they're down .
You might fi nd it refreshing some day to have a bank
person blurt out at you. "T he bloody BU MRAP is busted
again ...
* • * Let's face it , the compute r age is upon us, even to all
the video games that were snatched up by the populace
"I I U the md of the bank 1iM "'*1, ~. ~ l'tof'f91"
for Christmas presents . If you don't have a video game at
home, you can always go to one of the 1ame arcades or
quickie markets.
Young people a r e a bsolutely addicted to this
nonsense, pumping an endless stream of coins .into the
gadgets .
ONE ARCADE OPENED in La1una Beach whett
once the r e was a nice little tobacco shop. That's
aw,.pping one kind of addictiQD for another.
You walk Into that hole·in•t.be·wall arcade and the
place sounds like a rock concert tape bein1 played at
double normal speed.
You don't think it's an addJcUon? Uaten. behind tbe
clerk's counte.r at the Lacuna video arcade, there'• a
· 1ar1e notice that proclaimt, .. ., Sneaky Smltb Comes lD
Here, Don't Let Him Play ... Call HU Father at Oneel "
Only the name waa chaqed to prcact the l\lllty.
Honest .
:=====---~=;;;;,;;;=:::.::::;::;;;;;,;;.~.;;.::;;;.::.;:;:....,;:._---1
' •I
. .
111111
Hospital 'war'
still hot for
Irvine facility
By BICHA&D GREEN
Of .. ~HlllS...
Irvine's so-called hospital
"war" is still going strone.
State Health Department
&pok.eswoman Mildred Mulder
said Tu s tin Community
Hospital, the Chatsworth-based
Health Wes t Foundation.
3 guilty
• mrapes
on coast
*="'~~~wa s f o und guilty
n •¥ of o ne count of
1 naj>_ptng for robbery, two e of. kidnapping, three
of robbery, 11 counts of
e rape, and 14 counts ol
ng the women to commit
•nother sex act. The third defenoant, John
om, 19, also of l>owney, was
·and guilty of 17 sexual
Wes tern Medical Center lo
Santa Ana and the
Tennessee -based Hospital
Affiliates International haven't
withdrawn their formal letters
of intent to build bospjtals ln
Irvine.
M eanwhile, s ome local
officials are sayin1 privately
that the latest 'hospital proposal
bas the greatest chance for
s uccess because it inte1rates
several factions of the local
medical, business, political and
education communities.
This lates t proposal, made
public last week , calls for
attorney Dave Baker, an Irvine
resi dent, and B ec kman
Instruments Chairman Arnold
0 . Beckman to form a non-profit
corporation under the name
Irvine Medical Center to build
the city's first hospital.
The pro posa l bas been
endorsed by an Irvine Health
Car e Committee which includes
Baker, Beckman, Irvine Mayor
David Sills ; George Hoag II,
chairman of the Board of Hoag
Me morial Hospital ; Robert
Lombardi , c han cel lor of
Saddleback Community College,
and UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel
Aldrich.
People f o r an Irvine
Community Hospital, a citizens
group with the goal of ensuring
local people have a voice in
health care planning, presided
over the formation of that
committee.
Baker, a former candidate for
Irvine City Council and bead ol
PICH, said that, given the
various fa c tions that are
supporting the Irvine Medical
Center proposal, it baa some
obvious advanta1ea over the
other proposals on file.
. ooh.ey s aid Kro m w.as However, spokesman for Western Medical Center and the accused of participating in only · Health West or1anhatlon, say
1>oe of the three · incidents the latest propoaal baan't ,iOmldereCI by the jury·. -· i i d d t. 'Jhe.flrst two incid ents int m ate lbem Into ...:.__ •• ___.1ast February. withdrawing their propo1ala. MOJLtf.-1•~ Health care offtclala U.J tbat lo the fint, Toohey said, two competition ls intense to build
men oftered a ride to a woman 1 1 • first i..~ ttal ...__ ol .W'bose car bad broken down in rv ne s • ..,..p Qlll'll;auae the city's rapid &rowtb and its
(Beach. relatively affluent citbeoa, most the second incident, a o f whom have medical ua.tmcton Beach woman whose insurance plana.
.bad broken down on Pacific Mayor Sills says Irvine ia the
alt 'Highway accepted biggest city in the state with no -...~ t.Stance from· two men in a hospital within its borders.
!,MCQJ) truck.
e women were taken to Tonner p harma CY a_n~on near Brea , raped ~• 'In both incidents, Toohey said. _
epeatedly at ltnifepoint and d {
. bbed. accuse o
t.
n the third incident, which •
curred las t June two illegal sale -year-old Huntington 1Beach
rls hitchhiking o n Pacific
U('Bigbway accepted a ride A Corona del Mar pharmacy
om three men in a similar illegally sold more than 27,000 ~c~ __ addictive Codeine tablets in tbe
Y said the teen-agers past ·six months, a continuing ere .~ and taken to the police investigation baa
am al location and were revealed.
a atedly. Newport Beach police aald a
• ee defendants were preliminary audit of the records
w.-i_..._.,,ln July by Huntington at Jack's Pharmacy, 3025 E .
Bl!J1a.!j•ttollce. Coast Highway, also s bowa
Services set
for Mrs. Utt
of Newport
quantities o f Demerol,
amphetamines, cocaine and
morphine were sold without
prescriptions.
Police, who said they've ailted
throueh six months of records
at the drug store, report the
violations could date back seven
yeara.
Pharmacy owner Jobn "Jack"
Gearing, a »-year-old Lquna
Nieuel resickllt, and clerk Anita
Gabler, 42, ol Dana Point, are
free on 925,000 ball after beUll
arrested Dec:. 18 on suapictoo ol
cooaplracy to sell morpbble.
Tbelr arratsnment bu bff9 aet
for Jan. 5.
But police, wbo have been
as1i1ted in the inveet11attoa. by
the state Board of Pharmacy
and tbe federal Drvt
Enforcement Admlnlatratlon,
now report they've turned up at
least 100 separate vlolat.Jona at
tbe Corona del llar dnat 1tore.
lnveeti1aton aaid they will
ask the Oraqe County Diltriet
Attorney'• office to Ille
addJUonaJ char1ee a1a1Dat tbe
pair tbll week.
Oeutns, reaeHd todQ at tbe
pbarmacy, aald be eoulda't
comment oo the ebars• at tldl
time. He noted, tboqb1 tUt
pu bllclty over the police
ln•••t11atioD baaa't burt Ma buala-.
.. II aaytbln1:· JI• •~ld,
· 'bu1lDN1 bu Jaereued. I'm 1ettlq loU ol calla from ,.,..
1tbc> IQ ~ •ut to ......... aupponme.' _
Diiiy Nit ~
TUESDAY, D DEC. 29, 1981 Erma Bombeck has her
D CAVALCADE 82-3 own set of tips regarding STOCKS BS
TELEVISION 88 the winter fireplace. See 82. '
. ~;;.=--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.J..6~
Deity ...... ~ ......... ~-:
THE LINE'S BUSY Looking like a scene Crom a familiar Avenue in Huntington Beach. It's what you might call a ~
Alfred Hitchcock movie. these blackbirds line up wing to party line. ~
wing on telephone lines on Golden West Street near Ellis ·· ~~....:::....~~__::..._~~~~..:._-=-:...:...:;..:...:..:._:_...:..::..~;..:.;,...::..;;..;;..=::.=~:.:..:..:-=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::
•j ·1 :1
Marine guilty in teen-ager's car death '.i
El Toro man's wn struck skater, 15; jury $ays driver under alcohol influence .:
a nother car when 1t swerved!
back into the outside lane and~
struck the curb a nd then the t
victim as she s kated on the:
a s phalt next to the g utter, l
El Toro Marine Robert Keith
Martin bas been found guilty of
vehicular manslaughter for an
April 11 incident in which his
van stru ck and killed a
15-year-old girl roller skating
along an El Toro street.
five-week-long trial, said she
hopes publicity from the trial
·will affect public driving habits.
"It was senseless slaughter,"
abe said.
Deputy District Attorney Mike
Maguire said be was happy with
quarter-mile down the road
before stopping.
"He didn't fulfi II the legal
requirements ... but I think the
jury was justified in finding him
not guilty on that count,'· said
Maguire. according to testimony. --+ . .
t The Orange County Superior
Court jury also said Martin was
1uilty of driving under the
influence of alcohol. The jury,
which delibe rated about four
hours Monday, found Martin not
1uilty of bit-and-run driving in
relation to the inc\dent.
.hopes publicity will . affect
driving habits
A blood test talten slightly
more than an hour after the .
inc ident indic ated Martin's
alcohol level in his blood was·
0.21 percent. said Ma1uire. A ·
level of 0.10 is considered the
le~~l level for drunkenness.
· Caryn Diiorio, a roller skater
and an honor student a t El Toro
High School, died at the scene of
the accident at Avenida da La
Carlota
Her mother. Barbara Horton,
wh o sat t hr o u g h the
the conviction, which could send
.Martin to prison for as long as
three years and eight months.
He added that the not guilty
verdict on the bit-and-run count
was understandable because
Martin did check the scene
.momentarily after the incident,
a nd drove onl y a n o the r
Robert Chatterton, standing in for Martin's regular attorney,
"Marshall Shulman, asked J udge
Everett Dickey for enough time
before sentencing for a complete
probationary report on Martin.
Dickey set sentencing for Feb .
1.
Martin's van had just passed
M artm was allowed to remaur
free on 'bis own recognizance by
Dickey, but bis driver's license.
was withheld. Maguire noted
that Martin also is facin(
prose.cution in Central Oran&:
County Municipal Court on
s eparate charge of drunke
driving. '
Shops and "banks oul to zap you
HOLIDAY REFLECTIONS & SUCH : Som e
dour-mout hed economists were predicting nobody would
be buying any thing for this Christmas season and
personally. I don't know where those guys were. hiding.
Since nobody was
g o ing to be o ut
shopping, I decided t o
foll ow m y u s u a l
I"-'\ procedure, which is to
--------~~ do all the gilt buying on TIM MURPHlll ,~ ~ Pa~~:~·~~~t g~r~ ~i~~!
1 sagging bus iness
community.
The only things 1 found sagging were m y knees and
shopping bags.
One head clerk at a major department store at South
Coast Plaza summed up the situation this way: "We may
not be setting any records. but we're making money ... "
I DON'T KNOW if the s tores were full of shoppers or
not. but they sure were full of elbows. I've got the bruised
ribs to prove it. I s uffered more cheap shots than a Ram
quarterback who was behind 51 to 6. Which most of them
were this last season. ••• If the econom y does have tbe hiccups, one thing that
might help would be if the banks would be faster in
coughing up money to the customers. Have you ever
'noticed tha~ when the bank line la clear out to the cigar
store. they have one teller at the wlndows and 17
~mployees shuffling paper in the backarqund?
When the bank lobby is vacant, they ha,.ve eight
lellers at the windows.
YOU CREEP FORWARD in the line and flnau, &et to
'the window, where the teller teU. you: ''You're in the
iwron1 line, sir. You should be ln tbe tone one over there,
•where U1e sign says Notes." ~ Maybe that's why they call them tellers. Tbey tell
)'OU y90're in the wrong line.""
"Oh yes s ir." the teller says brightly. "Our BUMRAP
computer is down .....
PLEASE NOTE THAT bank computers never break,
malfunction or short-c ircuit. They always "go down."
Later they may come up. But right now they're down.
You might find it refreshing some day to have a bank
person blurt out at you. "The bloody BUMRAP is busted
again." • • • Let's face it. the computer age is upon us. even to all
the video games that were snatched up by the populace
"I ue the end of the bank liM ftOIO, ~. G~7 Feorpe~ ..
for Christmas presents. If you don't have a video game at
home, you can always go to one of the 1ame arcades or
quickie markets.
Young people are a bsolute ly addicted to this
nonsense, pumping an endless stream of coins into the
aadgets.
ONE ARCADE OPENED ln Laauna Beach where
once there was a nice little tobacco shop. That'a
1· .. applfta one kind of addictiQll for another:
You walk into that hole-in-the-wall arcade and the
place sounds like a rock concert tape belnl pla1e4 at
double normal apeed. ·
You don't think it's an addiction? 1!li5 tbe clerk's counter at the Lquna v~ .._..,a
tarce notice tbat proclalm1, • • U 8DHkj, Oa•• m
Here, Don't Let Him Play . . . Call 1111 t'atber at_.!••
PoUee COD&..cl ... ...,...,
IOld .,... wltlilout f.HHrl---'
to "clnaa abuHr tv,.9;r-Ud
•• ,..,.._~ .• r -·
• l one bank up ln Santa Ana -we'll call lt First
American Uatless -every employee lD the place seemed lo be oozing around in slow·'moUan. You inquire ll there'• I Problem?
Only ·the name wu chanced to prated ~ juUty.
1Honest.
, '
. .
1111111:1111
A. . 1rport ~ssue
'
of e xpansion
up to court ·
By GLENN SCOTr
Of ... D.ity "" ..... Orange County Superior Court
Judee Bruce Sumner was left
today lo deci de whether
en vi ronmenlal studies of
expansion pl ans tor John
Wayne Airport were sufficiently
lacking to caus e airport
improvements lo be s uspended. ·
Attorneys for Newport Beach
contended Mo nday during
Irvine
hospital
war stays
By lllCHAJlD GREEN
Of .. Delly ..... S-
1 r vine' S so-called hospital
··war" is still going strong.
!)tale Health Department
spokeswoman Mildred Mulder
said Tustin Community
Hospital, the Chatsworth-based
H e alth Wes t F o undation.
Wes t e rn Medic al Center in
Santa Ana and th e
T ennessee-based Hospital
Affiliates International haven't
withdrawn their formal letters
of intent to build hospitals in
Irvine.
Meanwhile , som e local
officials are saying privately
that the latest hospital proposal
has the greatest chance for
success because it integrates
several factions of the local
medical, business. political and
education communities.
This latest propos al, made
public las t week , c alls for
attorney Dave Baker, an Irvine
re s ident , and B e ckman
Instruments Chairman Arnold
0. Beckman to form a non-profit
corporation unde r the name
Irvine Medical Center to build
the city's first hospital.
The proposal has been
endorsed by an Irvine Health
Care Committee .
Health care officials say that
competition is intense to build
Irvine's first hospita l . ·
closing arguments ln their case
a gainst the Orange County
G o vernment tbat tbe
environmental impact reports
are inadequate.
Los Angeles-based attorney
Pie rce O'Donnell said the
reports paint such a rosy picture
of the pending $75· million
improvement project that they
are more like "a sales and
promotional brochure" lban
documents intended to give bard
facts on lhe consequences of
expansion.
However, the county's lawyer,
Michael Gatzke, claimed today
that attorneys for Newport
Beach and Stop Polluting Our
Newport (SPON> bad failed to
prove the reports don't measure
up to legal guidelines. He told
Sumner the reports conform to
lhe California Environmental
Qua lily Acl be caus e lbey
describe how the improvements
would affect surrounding areas.
O'Donnell and SPON attorney
E . Clement Shute of San
Francisco are asking Sumner to
rule that lhe reports are
in c omplete , meaning
improve ments a pproved in
February by the County Board
of Supervisors cannot proceed.
Sumner is expected to issue
his ruling within the next few
weeks, lawyers say.
Although Shute and O'Donnell
s pent several hours Monday
detailing why they believe
environmental reports are
inadequate, a recurring theme
was that the studies don't
discuss further expansion of the
county airport.
According to the supervisors'
mas ter plan, the airport
terminal, runway and parking
facilities will be expanded to
allow average daily commercial
jet fligbta to increase from the
current 41 to 55 by the year 3000.
The Oigbt increase, however,
depends on use of jets with
quieter engines and modified
takeoff procedures ao overall jet
noise will be reduced.
0 ·Donnell and Sbute claimed
county officials are abortsilbted
lo believe that the airport will
not eventually be expanded
again to handle even more than
tbe 6 .l ·million annual
passengers in the master plan.
Pharmacy accused
of illegal sales --
A Corona del Mar pharmacy
illegally sold more than 27 000
addictive Codeine tablets in 'the
past six months, a continuing
police inves tigation bas
revealed.
Newport Beach police said a
preliminary audit of the records
at Jack's Pharmacy, 3025 E.
Coast Highway, also shows
quantiti es of Demerol,
amphetamines. cocaine and
Services set
for Mrs. U tt
of N ewport
Private services are lo be held
in Glendale th is week for
Newport Beach resident and
lon,ume attorney Max Eddy Utt
wbo died Sunday.
• Mr. Utt, a second cousin to the .J •a l e 0 r a n g e C o u n t y
~n1ressman James B. Utt, wu
,!J•ociated with the Newport
;,.each law firm of Gibsqn, Dunn
llltad Crutcher for more than 50 'jears.
t~ He wu a retired partner in
Mat firm al the time of hi•
death.
Mr. Utl wu a trustee of the ~· Angeles County L•w IJilJltley from 1t.1 to 1156 andl
,was acllve In plannlnc tbe
resent library buUdtng.
He wu a past president ol
. Hall ol Calllorn.ia, Friends
tbe Claremont C0Ue1ea and ol
outbera California
bytertan Homes.
llr. Utt ls survived by hll
Ue, Boanle Jean; a daulbter, ·
lr1lala Stockton of Lafuna
md a IOft, Or. Roter Utt ol
UfO.
He also leavea four
UMlddktrwa md a titter, Mn.
.L. DuW ol Ga.dale. T._• famU1 b H 1u11 .. ted '•9'1.or lal 1Ut1 to Hoa1
HiorlaJ Hospital or to St. bnr1 Pnlb)'tertan Cbureb ·
Newport &.Kb.
morphine were sold without
prescriptions.
Police, who said they've sifted
through six months of records
at the drug store, report the
violations could date back seven
years.
Pharmacy owner John "Jack"
Gearing, a 59-year-old Laguna
Niguel residebt, and clerk Anita
Gabler, 42, of Dana Point, are
free on $25,000 bail after being
arrested Dec. 18 on smpicioo of
conspiracy to sell morphine .
Their arraignment has been set
for Jan. 5.
But police, who have been
assisted in the invesUgaUon by
lhe slate Board of Pharmacy
and the federal Drue
Enforcement Administration,
now report they've turned up at
least 100 separate violations at
the Corona del Mar dru1 store.
Investigators said they will
ask the Orange County District
Attorney's office to file
additional charges againat the
pair this week.
Gearing, reached today at the
pharmacy, said be couldn't
comment on the charges at Ulla
time. He noted, thou1b. that
publicity over the police
investi1ation hasn't hurt bis
business.
"If anything," he said,
"business bas increased. I'm
get~ lots of calls from people
who aay they want to help and
support me."
Police contend tbe pbarmaey
aold cl.nap without preac~
to ''drug abuser types' and
"re1uJar customers." ·
Undercover police a1enta, it
was reported, pprchued drup
from the pbannacy on five
oeeuM>m.
"We ~UJt wallted up to the
tounter, • one lDv..U,ator ..W,
·'and asked for aom• Codeine
and•• Sot it."
Tb• arrest came a ftu undercover a1ent1 reported.11
purebaaed a quanUtJ of
morpblne and IDON tllu 1.000
dru1tablet.t.
Diiiy Piiat
TUESDAY,
DEC. 29, 1981
CAVALCADE
STOCKS
TELEVISION
B2-3
BS
BS
THE LINE'S BUSY Looking like a scene from a fa miliar
Alfred Hitchcock movie. these bl ackbirds line up wing to
wing on telephone lines on Golden West Street near Ellis
Erma Bombeck has her
own set of tips regarding
the 'Winter fireplace. See 82.
a
a
r -·-· .•
I -
o.llY " ......... "'Gery.__
Avenue in Huntington Beach tt•s what ~·ou mi ght call a ·
party line
Marine guilty in teen-ager's car death
El Toro man's van struck skater, 15; jury says driver under alcohol influence
El Toro Marine Robert Keith
Martin has been found guilty of
vehicular manslaughter for an
April 11 incident in which his
va n s truc k a nd k i ll e d a
lS·year-old girl roller skating
along an El Toro street.
fi ve-week-long trial, said she
hopes publicity from the trial
·will affect public driving habits.
"It was senseless -s!aughter."
s he said.
Deputy District Attorney Mike
Maguire said he was happy with
qua rter .mile down th e road
before stopping.
"He didn't fulfill the legal
requirements ... but I think the
jury was justified in find ing hi m
not guilty on that count,'· srud
Maguire.
another car when 1t swerved
back into the outside lane and
struck the curb a nd then the i ·
vi cli m as she sk ated on the I
asphalt next to th e gutter,,
according to testi m~ny. .:J
The Orange County Superior
Court jury also said Martin was
guilty of d riving under the
influence of alcohol. The jury,
which deliber ated a bout four
hours Monday. found Martin not
guilty of hit-and-run driving in
relation to the incident.
.hopes publicity will . affect
driving habits
A blood lest ta ken slightly
more than an hour after the
incident indicated Martin's
alcohol level in his blood was
0.21 percent, said Maguire. A
level of 0.10 is considered the
legal level for drunkenness.
· Caryn Diiorio, a roller skater
and an honor student at El Toro
High School. died at the scene of
the accident at Avenida da La
Carlota.
Her mother, Barbara Horton.
wh o s at th ro u g h th e
the conviction, wbicb could send
Martin to prison for as long as
three years and eight months.
He added that the not guilty
verdict on the hit-and-r un count
was understandable because
Ma rtin did c heck t he scene
momentarily after the incident.
and drove onl y a n oth e r
Robert Chatterton, standing in
for Martin's regular attorney,
Marshall Shulman, asked Judge
Everett Dickey for enough lime
before sentencing for a complete
probationary report on Martin.
Dickey set sentencing for Feb.
1.
Martin's van had JUSl passed
M artm was allowed to remam
free on his own recognizance by
Dickey, but his driver's license
was withheld. Maguire noted
that Martin also is facinc
prosecution in Central Orange
County Municipal Co.urt on a
sep a rate charge o f drunkeq
driving.
Shops and banks ou1 to zap you
HOLi DAY REFLECTIONS & SUCH : So me
dour·mouthed economists were predicting nobod y would
be buying anything for this Christmas season and
personall y. I don't know where those guys were hiding.
. ~
/:'a\
TOM MURPHlll ~If.
Since nobody was
going t o b e o ut
shopping, I decided to
follow m y u s u a l
procedure, which is to
do all the gift buying on
Dec. 24, and give a little
last-moment lift to the
sagging bu s iness
community.
The onl y things l found sagging were my knees and
shopping bags.
One head clerk at a major department store at South
Coast Plaza summed up the situation this way: "We may
not be setting any records. but we're making money .. :·
I DON'T KNOW if the stores were full of shoppers or
not . but they sure were full of elbows. I've got the bruised
ribs to prove it. I suffered more cheap shots than a Ram
quarterback who was behind 51 to 6. Which most of them
were this last season. • *. If the economy does have the hiccups, one thing that
might help would be if the banks would be faster in
coughing up money to the customers. Have you ever
noticed tha~ wheQ the bank line is clear out to the cigar
store, they have one teller at the windows and 17
employees shuffling paper in the background?
When the bank lobby Is vacant. they have eight
tellers at the windows.
YOU CREEP FORWARD in the line and nnally gel to
the window, where the teller tells you : ··vou're ln the
wrong line, sir. You should be ln the long one over there.
where the &ign says Notes."
Maybe that's why they can them tellers. They tell
you you're in the wrong line.
At. one bank up in Santa Ana -we·u call It Ftrst
American Listless -every employee in the place seemed
.to be oozing around in slow·motioa. You Inquire lf there'•
•problem?
"Oh yes sir:· the tell er s ays brightly. ··o ur BUM RAP
computer is down. ··
PLEASE NOTE THAT bank computers never. break.
malfunction or short-circuit. They always "go down ...
Late r they may come up. But right now they're down .
You might find il refreshing some day to have a bank
person blurt out al you. "The bloody BUMRAP is busted
again.··
* * • Let's face it. the computer age is upon us . even to all
the video games that were snatched up by the populace
''I aee tM md of tM bank UM"°'°· G«Jrge. G~~,.
for Christmas presents. If you don't have a video game at
home, you can always go to one of the game arcades or
quickie markets .
Young people are absolutely addicted to this
nonsense. pumping an endless stream of coins lnto the
gadgets.
ONE ARCADE OPENED In Laguna Beach where
once there was a nice little tobacco s hop. That's
a• applng one kind of addictiQr\for another.
You walk into that hole·in·the·wall arcade and the
place sounds like a rock concert tape beint played at
double normal speed.
You don't think lt's an addict.ion? Llaten. behind tbe
clerk'a counter al the Laguna video areade, there'• a
lar1e nol1ce that proclaims, "U Sneaky Sml&h 'Com• ln
Hefe, Don't Let Him Play ... Call His FaUMfr Once!"
Only the name was chanted to p...._ jullty .
Honest.
.1
,,
. .
Orange Cout OAJLY PtLOTfTueeday, O.Cemb« 29, 1981
Dow Jones Final
Off 2.09
cloelng•.21
• • ID reVIew
It was an acti.oo-packed year ln the bualneH
world. Here were some or the top stories ot 1•1:
-Standard OU or Ohio, nu.sh wlth Alaalr:an crude
oil, put $1.8 biUloo on the table to scoop up Keoneeott,
the nation's largest copper producer.
-Du Pont, already No. 1 ln the chemical
industry, emeried victorious in a three-way battle
for Conoco, the nation's ninth largest oU company. It
was the biggest takeover in U.S. bualneu blatory:
$7.5 billioo. Seagram, one ol tbe runnerup1, didn't
come out too badly: it now owns 20 percent ol Du
Pont, the seventh largest company ln America.
Jifobil, the other runnerup, then pursued Maratbon
Oil and got Into a shouting match with U.S. Steel.
which has rinaUy tired or the steel business.
-General Foods got out or the rut-tood business
by selling off its Burger Chef chain but went into the
packaged wiener and bologna business by acquirinl
Oscar Mayer for $460 million.
-Prudential Insurance, world 's laraeat
insurance company, bought Bache, one or the
nation's largest stockbrokers.
-Not to be outmaneuvered, American Express
bought another large stockbroker, Shea.non Loeb
Rhoades. I -And also not be left at the cash register, Sears,
Roebuck bought still another lirrge stockbroker, Dean
Witter Reynolds.
-Merrill Lynch and E.F. Hutton didn't seU out
lo anyone.
-Nabisco, the cookie and cracker maker, joined
for ces with
Standard ~ Brands, a food
a n d I i q u o r ~~ o
purveyor, to -----------·)-I.~ ~r:~eP ~ :~~ 11011 •mnz ?''.:+
Nabisco ~--Brands . It's
ranked fourth in the food industry.
-In 1976, when Roy Ash. former bead of IJtton
Industries and former top Nixon and Ford aide, took
over the com pany formerly known aa
Addressograpb -Multigraph -it's now AM
International -he moved the headquarters from
Cleveland to Los Angeles, where be bappem to live.
In 1981, Ash was ousted, and a Chicacoan, Richard B.
Black, took command or the company losine a lot ol
money. So now AM lntemati.onal's headquarters
have been moved again -to Chicago of course. Al so moving across the country from Loa
Angeles, where he had been president of AUantic
Richfield, was Thorton Bradshaw, who toot over aa
the new chief at RCA in New York. One or the first to
leave after Bradshaw's arrival wu NBC chief Fred
Silverman, who, having held the top procram spot at
all three networks. now bad no place to 10.
STOCKS IN THE SPORIGHT AMEllCAN LEADEIS
UPS AND DOWNS
MaW VC.C IA~ -~ ._ ..... , ......... ~--~· ..... =, .... ,.,.., ... .., ........ ..... . ...,,.,...,.w .......... ., .•
........ • .... . I e,.., .. ~ tM.7'. fl/I ....
....... CNMl,. ... 1""'•~ ....... ... l'.a.
fCW'fONllN')-----..... --~ ...... ------~---...... -..---
1. II I~=~ . :.:·~ " . Ii
METALS
c .. ~ 7t~ .. I <•"h e "",_.· U.S. -~ ~D:-MC..-e,....... ZlllC a ... _.--. • .._...
TlaS7.-~WeM1-*tt.. A......_7~nc.-.e ....... N.Y . ..,_., .. ., .. _ ..... .
~NM.•tnoret., N.'f.
SILVER
"~&.._,., .. _,...,_
GOLD QUOTATIONS
(