HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-01-06 - Orange Coast Pilot(
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JRAIGE CIUT YD.UR HDMITDI,. DAllY PAPIR
WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 6. 1982 ORANGE COUNTY. C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Bay town -m ·ne~t .danger~
..............
UNDER WATER -This is an aetiat view or the ·corte
Madera shopping center arter it was flooded with water by
a violent storm. High way 101 r uns near the center. in the
vicinity or San Quentin Prison
Lie d e t ector t es·t
1 clears s u s p e ct?
By DAVID KUTZ MANN
Of tM D ... y f'Mee Su" Murder defendant Willie Ray
Wisely was given a lie detector
test Tuesday that, according to a
polygraph expert, clears the
Huntington Beach man of
involvement in the suffocation
death of his stepfather.
Wisely, 29, who could go to
San Quentin's DeaTh Row if
·convit'Jted or the March 9 death of truck driver Robert Bray,
was given the examination In a
courthouse holding cell in Santa
Ana.
Ted Ponticelli. the polygraph
expert who gave Wisely the test.
said afterward that the results
indicated that the defendant was
telling the truth when he said he
had no involvement in Bray's
death.
''There 'are no signs or his
trying to deceive me," PonUceUI
said. "I don't think he did
anything to create a distortion,"
Whether the six -ma11 ,
six -woman j ury hearing
Wisely's case ever learns of the
J e lly be arµ
for char~ty
CHEYENNE, Wyo. <AP> -In
the nation's latest ailly sittina
spell, 17-year-old Larry
Weaterdahl baa completed five
day1 lo a bathtub filled With
49 9'75 Jellybeans.
The Eat m1h School 1tuc1ent
emeried Tueaday wltb fS,057
wortb of pled1ea to fi1bt muscular dyltropby. •
He Hid be al.lo hoped '° earn .a note ln the Gulnn.., Book al
World a.ieotdl, r1lbt there nut
· t• tb"r wbo b••• nt o.it aadoul momenta in tube ftlltd
with~.
l
polygraph examination remains
to be seen.
Wisely. who is acting as his own~ lawyer, told jurors in his
opening statement last month he
gladly would take a lie detector
test
But prosecutor Ed Freeman
has maintained that the results
of· such examinations are often
unreliable or inconclusive. •
Wise ly's advisory lawyers
said they are unsure if the
results of the examination can
be introduced as evidence. "The
value cor the test> is yet to be
seen, really:• said attorney
Roger Je~ngs.
PonticeU1 satd polygraph test
results have been introduced as
evidence in previous cases and
could be used in Wisely 's trial lf
Superior Court Judge Kenneth
Lae allows It.
Wisely has m ai ntained
throughout his trial that Bray's
death was accidental and that,
in fact , no crime wa s
committed.
Bray's body was found pinned
beneath the 2,000 poond,
tilt ·away cab of his 1975
InternaUonal Harvester tractor
trailer rig on Sprin1dale Street
in Huntington Beach last March.
His death wu at first believed
to be accidental, but police took
Wisely into custody after
inveatlgatin1 the claims of a
Jallhouse Informant in Los
An1eles who aald the defendant
-admitted the crime to him.
Wisely had been in custody at
Loa An1eles Cowity Jail last
May and June on unrelated
robbery char••·
• It. la all .. ed that WlHIY and
otbera uaed Bray's truck to
transport urtOt.lct from Florida
\0 Callfoinla and tbarBray wu
kWed when he found out about
ht! UHdt car10.
•
D e ath toll at 22;
road unde rmine d
SAUSALITO <AP> -Just
ho urs after torrential rains
e nd ed, mud s lides began
undermining Highway 101 oortt>
of the Golden Gate Bridge,
toppling houses, f o r ci ng
hundreds to flee their homes and
pushing the death toll from the.
furious 21h-day s torm still
higher.,
· About an eightlt of this hilly
community across lbe bay from
San Fran c i sco w as in
··imminent danger'· from
mudslides. police Capt. Walt
Potter said to<lay.
"If it all comes tumbling
down. it'll be like dominoes,"
s aid Corrie White from an
evacuee center where she fled
with her two toy poodles.
Highway 101 at the slide site
was closed and the Golden Gate
was closed to aJl but emergency
traffic -disruptJng the route for
tens of thousands of San
Francisco-boUl)d commuters.
will bring 400,000 gallons down
on SausaHto," he said.
··Nothing can s top the
mudslides," said John Barrows.
county administrator, "It's like
all slides -you have to let it
ride out. There's lots and lots of
water in the soil
"It came very suddenly.
Everything was quiet ... then
things blossomed," he said.
A small battalion of bulldozers
from the Department of
Transportation was clearing
previous mudslides from the
eight-lane freeway at the Waldo
Grade on Tuesday night when
the new wave or slides began
shortly after 10.
Callrans engineers today were
at 101 and the Waldo Tunnel.
also known as the Rainbow
t.unnel, to determine the extent l~ which mud slides had
undermined them, said CaJtrans
informatio.n officer David Pa~son.
Mud slid from beneath the
highway downhill to a little
canyon of homes nearby, and
Barrow said, "Those houses are
Twenty-two people were
confirmed dead throughout
Northern California as a result
of the rains.
A three-block by half-mile
area was evacuated, but Potter
could not confirm the number of
evacuees. Sausalito Mayor Fritz
Warren estimated the number at
300.
•going." .
After a check on the east side
or 101, "a determination ...
was made that a portion or the
city is in idlminent danger. This
involves an area of about
o n e -eight h " of the
2.4-square-mile city, Potter said. Two homes were pushed
downhill by sliding mud, the
first knocking the second off its
foundation ; and one person was
killed, he said.
"We are getting a lot of waler
and we don't know where it's
coming from." Potter said
The s afety o f two
200,000·gallon water towers near
the slide worried many people.
Although county emergency
officials said they were not in
jeopardy. Red Cross s helter
manager Mike Tacbet said he
learned from police that "the
mudslide tipped them and some
or the water spilled ... into a
lake. If there is another slide, it
Jurors decide
Bonin guilty
BULLETIN
LOS ANGELES <AP>
WllUam Bonln. a twlce·paroled
sex offender, was fOtUld 1.Uty of
first-degree murder today In tile
Freeway Killer case, a aeries of
homosexual murders of youg
men and boys wbose bodies
were-dumped near freeways.
At least 300 evacuees were
taken to Martin Luther King
School and others were headed
for a recreation center in Mill
Valley, Potter said.
Many evacuees were worried
and wakeful. eager for news of
their properly Other s dozed
under gray Red Cross blankets.
Dianne Leslie, who· left her
cats behind when she fled her
home as it was threatened by
another house sliding down .hill,
recalled hearing "a dull roar
come from behind the house .
There was a flash of light and
another dull roar and then the
crush of trees being snapped. I
ran outside and my ,neighbors
were there. And the firemen
came and got us. I don't know
about my house."
Dr. Robert M. Perlman, 67,
whose house stood in the path of
another collapsed home, said the
family room had flooded ,
ruining the furniture.
'·Water was coming in like a
river. We were bailing and
bailing and we just couldn't stay
with It -we're getting old."
A resident since 1950, Perlman
added, "I've never seein
anything like this.''
* * *
Cle ar ski es ahe ad
for Orange Coast
A high pressure system over
Baja California pushed a Pacific
storm eastward Tuesday,
helping Orange County ~ape
the fierce rain and mudslides
troubling the northern areas of
California, National Weather
Service officials said today.
Weather forecasters said
Or an1e Coast residents can
expect partial cloudiness tonight·
with clearing skies Thursday.
The weather service said the
chance of additional local
showen would drop toni1ht and
diminish fuJiher Thunday. Fair
weather la npected to c:ontlnue
throu.ch SWMiay.
Oran1e Coast temperature1 \
are exJ)ffted to dlp into the
upper 409 tonl1bt and cUmb to
tbe loft eo. 'ftlunclaJ.
Early TuiMday, tbe wealber
aervlce bad warned Oraa1e
County to-' prepare for heavf
rain. But the high pressure
system over Mexico created a
buff er that helped send Northern
Callfornla's storm eastward·lnto
Nevada, a weather service
spokesman said.
Although mild showers earlier
in th~ week contributed lo some trarfic accidents, very little
storm dama1e was reported in
Oran1e County.
''It was dry all nitht here,"
confirmed Huntington Beacb'a
amateur meteorolo1i1t J .
Sherman Denny. "I knew the
storm was movins eHt. We
didn't 1et any more rain bere
near tM beach, altboup tbe:r
may have had some lnJand."
Denny said Tuesday'•
momtns and afternoon drialea
broaiM bl• raln total for the
-year ::f:.ln« July l 1111 10
5.5' l ~far abe.;d ol IMt
r.tar'1 tatal for Uda date, Ul
ncbea.
·~ .......
RO ADBLOCK Highway 101 north of the Golden Gate
Bridge was closed by this mudslide on the Wa ldo Grade.
culling auto traffic between San Francisco and Marin
County.
Polish students
going underground
By The Associated Press
Young Poles have begun
underground activities in
s upport or the
··co unt e r.revo lutionary "
Independent Students'
Asst>ciation, Poland 's army
newspaper says.
Polish authorities also said
domesUc air service will resume
this week and claimed nearly
normal production in coal
mines, but official figures
showed only 163 milliol\. tons
mined ln 1981, 12 milliotl' less
than planned.
Academy passed out leaflets
·saying "the present situation,
forces us to start underground
activity. Students of the Medical
Academy should begin passive
resistance to aJI orders. There
will be a Ume for action."
The article about such
leaflets, the existence of wbicla
has oot been independenUJ
confirmed, appeared to suaest
the authorities might seize upoe
them to justify strong measures
against future student organizing.
Polish Foreign Trade Minister
Tadeusz Nestorowicz arrived la
M'OSCOW today to sigp a new
economic protocol with tbe
Soviet Union, Polish sources lit Moscow said.
llllCI CUil IUTIEI
The o(Cicial PAP news agency
blamed the five-day work week
anctawo{k stoppages before"tbe
impositibn of martial law for Ule
shortfall. ll cut severely into
Poland's ability to earn hard
currency needed to repay its
estimated $26 billion debt to tbe
West. Radio Warsaw announced
Tuesday that the student union
had been dissolved, and the
army daily Zolnlen Wolnosci
said the student association was •
"prominent" among "strictly
Chance of rain 10
percent tonight, near aero
Thursday. Tonight's Iowa
in 60s .. Highs Thursday ln
mid-80l.1>etalls-Pa]e A3.
RELATED PHOTOs-M
cou~terrevolutionary
organizations."
Zolnlerz Wolnoaci 1aid
roembers of the students'
association ,Planned to call a
meetlnl to Warsaw to otaanhe
an intemaUona.I auoclaUon •itb
· '1Dtl·communl1t alma.'•
''This lnltiat.lve never came
about because lt wu bJ~ked by
the lmpoaiUon of the state ol war
(emer1ency) whlch batted the
actlvtty °'um uaoc:iatJon," tbt
paper said. "But some of Vie
acUvlstt of the a uoclatlon
pl•ylD• tbe role of l)Olltlnl
iambi .. weDt UDdersround."
The ~ sakt tbt ltudlnta
from tb• Waruw llltd lcal
.1111111•1
M•ml>ft'• o/ c~u """ circle th• 11lob• oa
'.'educa'6o..al" trips *' a /IHC
of Afr Force pbw1 ... ad au at tGlpo~ apn#, POii'
A7.
11111
-~-· ....... RESCUED -John Harrison and his daughters Micki. 20. and
Kris ten. 13. arrive at Honolulu . Airport after being
shipwrecked for a month on Palmyra Island.
Twin slirprise at 50
mGrandmot her gives birth
fl':ll '
•1'" RIVES JUNCTI"oN, Mich. < AP l After eight children h't"' and five grandchildren , Jolie Weste rs had plenty of leftover ,~:baby clothes. but now the 50-year -old woman is scouting
;,· .• ;around for more outfits -in sets of two.
Mrs. Westers and her 51 -year-old husband. Harry. ., ... z. became the parents of twin boys, J ames Michael and Justin
-. Manue l. And Mrs. Westers said Tuesday the unexpected
.:la addition to the fa mily was a "thrill."
"They have so much family around them." said Mrs .
JI.!• Westers. who lives in this tiny community north of Jackson. ·~·"They're going to be real privileged kids."
'• 1 The-infants were born Dec. 29 al Foote Hospital East an
'11'1 J ackson. with Justin weighing in at 8 pounds, Jounces. a nd
.,,,,J a mes at 7 pounds, 534 o unces.
.,i1 . When Mrs . Westers discovered in June she was
.: .. ,..pregnant, the first thing she did was s it down and cry for 10
'" minutes. But once she and her husband accepted the
... ,.,reality. they began to be excited, she said.
HONOLUL U CAP > -
Shipwrecked sailor John
Harrlaon walled nearly a month
to be rescued from a tiny atoll in
lhe middle o/ the Pacific. >J
aoo n as b e r e turned to
civilization, he was sent to jail.
Harrison , of Canada, was
arrested at Honolulu· Airport on
Tuesday night after he and his
two daughters, Micki, 20, and
Kris ten, 13, were flown .t, 100
miles to Hawaii from remote
Palmyra Island.
Harrison was charged with
taking pl'Operty that belonged to
a crew member when he sailed
to Aus tralia on his H -foot
trimaran, Sisyphus.
Harrison and his daughters
apparently left Maui in a hurry
Nov . 10 as b e was being
confronted by collection agents
for t he Bank o f British
Columbia , whic h holds the
mortgage on the ship, officials
said.
The Sisyphus came apart in a
storm Dec. 10 a nd the Harrisons
were stranded 1.100 miles south
of Honolulu.
At torney C. George Sphikas,
representing the bank, said
lla rrison, 39, owes $65,000 on the
principal , sever al unpaid
monthJy payments of $1 ,235 and
unspecified expenses incurred
by the bank in trying lo recover
the Sisyphus.
Harrison initially surrendered
his j>oat to the Hawaii Recovery
Bu reau but later hired an
a ttorney and .. eve ntu ally
secured repossession of the boat
I can't say how." Sphikas
said
Maui County Police Chief
Joseph C. Carvalho said the
felony theft warrant stem.med
from a complaint filed by Wayne
Stevens. a Sisyphus crewman.
Two other crewmen faled similar
complaints. Carvalho s aid.
Bail was set at S2,000, nut a
police spokesman said Harrison
would not be allowed to post
bond until he was returned to
Maui, probably today. The two
daughters were stayin g i n
Ho nolulu with friends. the
spokesman added.
Douglas plans DC-I 0 changes .
Safety modifications due t o pl ane's hydraulic system
WASHINGTON CAP ) -
Mc Donnell Douglas Corp.,
~·:builder or the D0-10 aircraft,
.,.,JWill seek to modify devices that
JIJ·~control the plane's lift because
... r.of concerns a bout potential
1lqklamage to the devices if an
engine breaks up
o•J• The changes to the hydraulic
:i :'!system. that control.~ the win11
I i slats will be suggested at a Jan.
t11 14 meeting lo all airlines that
"":Operate DC· 10~. a company
s pokesman said today.
·1:1 T he modifications ·would be ~1rlpe rformed during normal
11'".lfll ainlenance.
· · "We're not going to have a
massive recall." said Frank
··Tomlinson. the company's
;···1 Washington spokesman.
""'" ca: The F e der a l Aviati o n
-.. •1-A d m i n i s t r a l i o n a s k e d
sr ;-;
.
Mc DoMeU Dou1las to study the
effects of severe endne d~e on tbe forward wing slata. 'Wftlcl\
control lift, after an incident in
September involving a DC-10
operated by Air Florida.
In that incident, an engine
disintegrated during takeoff at
Miami International Airport.
The crew pulled back the
throttle and slammed on the
brakes at an estimated 11 0
knots, bringing the plane safely
to a halt.
But federal safety officials
raised concerns that parts of the
engine during such a breakup
co u Id damage the n earby
forward slats. If the slat ·is not
extended while lts counterpart
on tbe opposite wing is extended,
the plane could go into a
dangerous roll a nd possibly
crash.
:~~Driver in chase .. ; ,
1
Jaces drug charges Ir-~ Lake Forest man who led was hanging around the house.
IP.Olice on a high speed chase Upon seeing the police car
through the streets or Laguna approaching, Seddlar jumped
Beach and Irvi ne Tuesday into his car and raced away,
tnorning bas been charged with police s aid, heading east on
4riving under the influence or Irvine Center Drive and then
4rugs and e vading arrest, south on Sand Canyon Avenue.
according to police. Police s aid Seddlar then
• Gregory Seddlar, 32, was turned onto Lag una Canyon
$aken into custody by Laguna Road •. where Irvine offic~rs in
Beach police at about 11 a.m . purs wt at speeds exceeding 80
a ear Broadway and Forest mph broke off the chase. . ~venue after he sideswiped two Laguna Beach police said
Other vehicles and ran his sports Seddlar continued down Laguna
car into the cur b a police Canyon at a t'tigh rate of speed,
•pokesman said. ' rinally spinning out or control at
Seddlar and the drivers of the Broadway and Forest A venue
other vehicles weren't injured in and striking two cars being
tbecrash,pollcesald. driven by Laguna Beach
Irvine police said the chase residents.
began at about 10 a.m. in tbe 400 A Laguna police spokesman
block ol Orange Blossom. A s aid SeddJar wu then taken to
Jpokesman said a patrol car wu South Coast Medica l Center,
1ent to the home of SeddJar's • where h~ was examined and
former wife after a neighbor r e l e a s e d o n h i s o w n
called to say a suapidoua man recognizance.
O"ANGE COAST Dilly Pilat CIH IMect 8dwtrtlelftt 7141142·5111
All ottter ..,,,.. ... '4a-4321
MAINOPl'a ..... .., ... c:.-. .... , CA. Mell.-..: .. 1-. Ceilllil Mete, CA.,..,
The changes to be presented to
lhe air carriers are "a
precautionary m eas ure to
inc rease protection against
severe external damage" if an
engine breaks up as in the Air
Florida incident, a Mc Donnell
Douglas s tatement s aid
The company said one change
will be to install a hydraulic
valve that would act as a lock to
keep the slats extended even if
hydraulic lines controlling the
slats are severed Also, the
cable system that controls the
main hydraulic valves will be
modified to k eep t he slats.
extended even if the command
cable is damaged
The perform ance of DC -10
engines and forward wing slats
has been a matter of coneern
s in ce May 1979 . when a n
Am e ri can Airlines DC -10
crashed shortly after takeoff
from O'Hare Internatio nal
Airport at Chicago. killing 273
people.
In that accidel\t an engine fell
from the wing. the forward slats
were severe ly damaged , and the
plane went into an uncontrolled
rol I and crashed.
Tomlinson noted that the
changes "are not necessary to
mee t FAA requirements" but
were intended as a precaution
against damage from possible
e ngine breakups . The final
decision whether t o make the
c h a n ges will be up to the
individual airlines operating
DC · lOS. he said.
Polish reform
planned?
MOSCQW CAP> -The leading
Soviet newspaper s aid today
that Polish enterprises were
working "uninterruptedly"
during the first week of 1982, but
that Poland faces difficult tasks
in rebuilding its economy.
. A dispatch from Warsaw,
publis he d lo the Soviet
Communist Par t y newspaper
Pravda, aJso hinted at economic
reforms designed to Improve
labor efficiency.
It was not olear if Pravda was
alluding to a new economic
program promised by Pollsh
leader Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelskl
after he declared martial law
Dec . 13, suapendlne the
independent Solldarlty union.
Fighting fie r ce
NfCOSIA, Cyprus (AP> ,-
Iraqi and Ir anian forces were
repocted locked ln fier ce
fl1ht1na ln ·western Iran, 'where
lrtaq claimed lu forces launehed a major-otrenttve TUnday on
tbe eve of it1 1rm1'1 tU\
annlv~n.ary.
APW.....,_
CHAINED David Turner . 36. of Longview. Was h .. didn't
let lhe snow stop him from getting to work. He 'fashioned a
set of chaiils for his wheelchair out of a dog leash.
4 seized
• 1n teen
sex case
P olice have arrested four
people ln an Irvine house that
alleaedly wu belng used u a
locaUon ror acts of prostitution
involvlna a 15-year -old Tustin
tlrl.
Arr,ested in the 11 : 15 p.m.
Tueada1 raid at No. 6 Crosskey
were tbe owners or the house,
Steven L. Daniels and Emily
Allee OeJgado, each 31 : Chafle
Muslapba .Habbas , 26, no
address, a~ the 15-year·old girl,
police aald.
Daniels and Ms . Delgado were
a rrested on suspicion of running
a house for the purpose or "sex
for money," contributing to tbe
d e linquency of a minor by
expos ing her to prostitution,
pandering and prostitution, said
police Sgt. Leo Jones
Habbas, who allegedly was an
associate of the other arrestees.
was arrested on outs t anding
traffic warrants, police said.
·'The operation revolved
around ads placed in ·sex
magazines' that listed the Irvine
residence phone number and a
female 'Tina' to be contacted in
reference to ·companionship' for
one or more persons," said Sgt.
Jones.
Diliosaur extinction queried
Giant asteroid , volcanic eruption the ories a r gued
WASHINGTON CAP) -The professor al UC Berkeley, that
extinction of the dinosaurs m ay an asteroid hitting the Earth
have been caus ed by a giant caused the dinosaurs to be wiped
aste roid that slammed into the out in only three months.
Earth 65 million years ago, or it That theory, made two years
could have been caused by a ago, was based partly on ~the
huge volcanic eruption that finding of increased levels of
covered a million square miles iridium in the mountains of
or India with lava, scientists Italy. The iridium, which is 1,000
have argued. l i m es m ore prevalent in
The two competing theories asteroids thatn on the Earth's
were offe r ed Tuesday a s surface, was depos ited about the
scientists at the annual meeting time the dinosaurs died out 65
of the American Association for million years ago.
the Advancement of Science According to Alvarez' theory,
debated o ne o f the most presented Tuesday. the asteroid
fascinating questions in science: collision created a huge cloud of
Wh at killed the giant lizards that dust. which contained iridium.
once ruled the planet? The dust obscuPed the sun for
No one has the answer and three to six months, killing the
there are a number of theQries. plants on wbich most dinosaurs
Scientists want to discover what fed
happened because they think the The collision also could have
ans wer could shed some light on kic ked up a c loud of water
the Earth's future, and wh at vapor , creating a "greenhouse
might h appe n if g lo b a l effect"thatwouldhave warmed
temperatures increase. lhe Earth and kille d -the
One scientist, Prof Cesare dinosaurs. Alvarez said.
Emlliani of the Uni versity of He also says that a second
Miami , s uggested Jokingly asteroid might have st ruck the
huge volcani~ eruption that
filled the atmosphe re with
clouds of dust or water vaPor.
The eru~on occurred in India.
which wa.S then an island east of
Africa, McLean said. It may
have lasted as long as five
million years and ~overed a
million square miles of India
with lava.
Some 200,000 square rniles of
India near Bombay is s till
covered with that lava, McLean
said. The increased levels of
irid ium can be explained
because the eleme nt is more
prevalent in the Earth's core.
and would have been s pewed out
by the volcano, he theorized.
In any case , warmer
temperatures on Earth would
have quickly proved fatal to the
dinosaurs. whose enormous size
made ~l very difncult for them
to dissipate body heat. Even a
very slight warming , McLean
said, might not have killed the
beasts. but could 1h_ave. made
them unable to reprbduce.
Tuesday that the dinosaurs were Earth 34 million years ago, Fire kiJJs 2
w i p e d o ut b y a rai n of wiping out mi c r osco pic
meteorites that hit the m on the ocean -dwell e r s ca ll e d INYOKERN <AP) -A fire
head . His conclusion : "They raifiolarians. that started in combustibles
were zonked." But Dewey M c Lea n , a next to a wood stove has been
The latest debate has been professor of geology at Virginia blamed for the deaths of two
s parked by the suggestion ol Polytechnic Institute, suggested children in their mobile home in
Walter Alvarez, a geology_ the dinosaurs were doomed by a eastern Ke rn County. ~~~~~~~~~~__.;..~~-
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.,...._...
--
The coaverutlon waa
about tM 1812 cam'pal1n but eom• partJclpantl may bave
been daydrHmh11 about
U84t u former Vice
Pre1laeot Walter P. MeHale
held a tbree·day 1trate1Y
IHllon on t.be Eaatem Shore of Maryland.
The 1t11lon at the Wye
Plantation opened wlth. a
pneraJ poUUcal dl1cua1lon.
•On llonday, tho particJpanta
reviewed domeatic laauea
and forelsn policy was on
Tuesdayfia1enda. Aides Qae former vice
prealdeo refused to dlacu.aa
1~lftes-of the 1essiona .
.
Actress Jenica Lu1e la belni sued by her filmmaker
buaband Paco Graade for
*800 a week lo temporary
alimony, Grande's lawyer
ll)'S.
DIGGING OUT -Bob Hiestand shovels snow from the
front of his Sly Park, Calif., home east of Placerville
where recent storms have hit.
Grande is legally bllnd and
ll ves on $8S a week in a
shabby lQwer East Side
building, according to his
lawyer, Lawrence J'ablaa. A
lawsuit seeking a divorce
and alimony was filed lo the
latter part of 1980, shortly
after Grande and Miss Lange
separated, Fabian sald. The
actress since has bad a child
rathered by ballet atar
Mlllball Baryshnikov. Bay area man hits $773,102 jackpot Miss Lange's lawyer,
Maurice Spanbock, declined
comment on the s11it. A San Francisco man who
won Nevada's second largest
jackpot said that Presideat
Reagan's tax cuts would
save him approximately
$150,000.
Aaclrew Cbarles Taraer,
65, said he was told that 50
percent of his $773,102 slot
machine payoff would go to
Joe Hamilton, comedi~n
Carol Buntett's husband, is
recovering rrom a
"moderate" heart attack
suffered at bis son's wedding
last week and "the prognosis
is good," a spokesman says.
Hamilton, a television
producer, was stricken
Thursday at the wedding of
Dr. Karl Menninger,
CO·founder of the Menninger
Foundation, was listed in
serious but stable condition
at the Veterans
Administration hospital in
the Internal Revenue
Service.
"However, J was told that
if J won this five days prior,
it would have been 70
percent."
Turner, a real estate
broker, hit t'he jackpot at the
MGM Grand Hotel.
hi s son by a previous
marriage, Joba, to Marlon
McCarter, said Mi ss
Burnett's public ist, Rick
Ingersoll.
Miss Burnett postponed a
scheduled Jan. 8 weeklong
guest appearance on ABC's
daytime soap opera "All My
Children," Ingersoll said .
Topeka, Kan.
Menn i nger , 88, wa s
hosgitalized Sunday after
apparently suffering a mild
stroke, hospital director Paul
Kennedy said.
HUSBAND SUES -
Actress Jessica Lange is
being sued by her legally
blind husband for $800 a
week in temporary
alimony.
Santa Ana winds due
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We're Listening •••
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Call the number below and your mnaa8"t wUI be recorded.
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calls. please. ·
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedne1day, Ja!"u•rv 6. 1982 s · &a
PASS THE CHEESE -Frank Romeo <left>
and George Dakers load the firs t batch of
s urplus cheese to be given away in Orange
....., .......... " ....... ~ Development Council in Westminster. Tpe
pair are distributing the free cheese to senior
citizens in Orange.
,County at the county 's Co mmunit y
Driver faces murder charge
Countian blamed for freeway death of Huntington woman
A second·degree murder
complaint was to be riled today
against a Buena Park man
whose van struck a disabled
vehicle on the shoulder of the
Orange Freeway, killing a
Huntington Beach mother of
nine two days before Christmas.
The Ca lifornia Highway
Patrol 'in Santa Ana s aid
Monday it would seek the
murder charge against William
R . Eden, who had already been
arrested on suspicion of felony
drunken driving and vehicular
manslaughter. .
WoodSmall said he would file
the complaint in North Orange
County Municipal Court in
Fullerton this morning after
.Balloonists
to speak at
Orange Coast • Jobn S hoecraft and Fred
Gorrell , pilots of the fjrat
helium.filled balloon to crosa the
United Stales non-stop, will
present a free two-hour program
on their voyage Thursday, Jan.
14, at Orange Coast College in
Costa Mesa.
The program will begin at 8
p.m . in the college's auditonum.
Shoecraft and Gorrell
launched their lO·slory.tall
balloon, the Super Chicken Ill,
from Orange Coast College on
Oct. 9. Two days later they
landed the craft on an island off
Savannah, Ga ., completing a
2,SlS·mile trip .
The record·setUng balloonists
promised the spectators who
cheered their liftorf that they
would return to Orange· Coast
College to discuss their flight.
The Jan. 14 program is billed
as the fulfillment of that
promise. The balloonists are
expected to show exclusive film
footage of their voyage.
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Ctrtlf~d G~mola6i•I. AGS
AMERICAN PEARLS
We have all heard the
rascinating story of how the
Japanese produce cultured
pearls by controlling the
environment of shellfish that
have had irritants "seeded"
lnto their shells. .Tapanese
women then harvest the pearla
t h at grow around tbeae
irritants·. But now, back in the
Tennessee Valley, Americana
working in cooperation with
Japanese experts are creatmc
a huge peaTl "farm" wbJcb
may someday produce a larce
percentage or the world's
pearls. American freshwater
pea rla have been more
difficult to' find in recent years
•• poUution 1eeped into the ravorlte harvestlna 1rounda on
the Eut Cout. Pearl·bearh\I
muaael1 have been lQ'iplant.d
and the lint harvest of pearls
11 due In th&Tenneeaee Valley
next year. U early lndJcatiou
ol 1ucte11 bold true, America
.could become a major
producer of the beautiful,
1ou1ht·after fruhwater
conferring with highway patrol
investigators.
Killed in the Dec. 23 accident
near Chapman Avenue was
Margaretta Jean McFall, 50,
who had pulled her car onto the
shoulder of the Orange Freeway
when mechanical trouble developed. With her in the
vehi cle was her 14·year·old
daughter Theresa, who suffered
minor injuries in the accident.
In vesligating ofrlcers said
Eden, lo circumvent heavy
traffic on the freeway, drove bis
van onto the right shoulder 'and
speeded up lo more than 75 mph
when he collided with Mrs.
McFall's parked car.
Eden suffered minor injuries.
F.1.IGKT PRESENTATION -
Pilots of the helium·filled
balloon, Super Chicken 111
that lifted off at Orange
Coast College in October.
will return to the college to
present a pro.gram on their
cross·country voyage.
He was treated at Anaheim
Memorial Hospital and then
taken to Orange County Jail,
where he was held on $5,000 bail.
Woodsmall said Eden would
face trial on charges of murder,
mans laughter and drunken
driving.
If convicted on the murder
co unt , h e cou ld get a
lS·yearS·lO·life term in sfat.e
prison.
Deputy District Attorney Doug
Woodsmall said it is possible to
file the mtader charge on the
basis of a recent state Supreme
Court ruling.
The high court said the more
aggr avated c·harge could be
applied in cases where it was
al l eJted that the driver
knowingly endangered the Ii ves
of others. '
CSF halts
enrollment
for spring
: . .
Cal Stale Fullerton b as
stopped accepting applications
for spring admission in all but
extreme hardship situations.
Dean of Admissions Ralph
Bigelow announced .
In addition, the university also
h as stopped acceptin1
applications for all
undergraduate programs in
business administration for the
fall semester.
The cutoff is prompted by
unprecedented enrollmel\l this
year, Bigelow said: Enrollment
last fall was closed early for the
same reason, he said.
Hardship .cases such as
teachers who require courses for
school service credentials and
former students returning to
complete degree req11irementa
will be considered for sprtq
semest~r. Bigelow saJd.
Thbse.. uekllla-harcl~if>
•admission for spring may call
773-2310 or vlslt the campus to
obtain rurther information.
°"'1t1il piwmiel'll elm MW dlllgl'll b bott1 lnll'I *1d women, cr9fl9d
1n limeleel leoquetS *1d lnepll9d ~ lhe woncl's meet beeUtlful oen • •
J. c.JJ_,,,1u.;.6 J.-t.,~ -.I
cu It u red pearl. such an ME.MBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY
industry would create Jobi 1123 NEWPORT BL.\IO , COSTA MESA ®' while establllbln1 a new . UYIN'l'"THIMMILOCATION
supply ot one ot the world'• Ban11Amerlcard-M•'9r Chetve PHONE~,
1 moat beautiful obJeeta. .J!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~-~!!!!!!
S Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/WednHdiy, January 8, 1982
a.WALft&&.•BAU
.......... ,. 9
WASHINGTON -ID tM m»
ye1ra •lace thelr part1'1
taundlns, RepubUcaaa b1ve
... 'I •e•t«I eontrol of tbe Seeale rui: Democratl HYen U1De9 Uy in hours of naUonal
cdll1. It would take tome klad
~ crtaia to produ~ a 1wtn1 back
to Demoer•Ue cont'.tol any Ume aoon. •=DJ 1.re beadln1 into t... election yeu wttb a l~up dm .looka solid. They hold
51 of the 100 seats and niust rlak
ooly 12 at the polls next
M9vember. Twenty Democratic
at ts are al stake thlJ year, plua
d independent Sen. Harry
Byrd Jr. of Virtlnia. Byrd,
voted with the Democrall
· mauen of Senate control, 't IOiftl to tun again.
o rev~ GOP control, the ·
mocrats would have to hold
20 seata where the incumbent
s ~lection, win the seal
d is retiring, and capture
four now held by Republicans.
.. Put another way, they'd have
to win 25 out of 33 Senate
elections this year. That would
be more than a landslide, lt .
would be• miracle .
Their numbera improve in
1114, wben tbe term• of lt
RepubUcana and H Democrata
will be .... rtq. But It wtU be
1986 belcn the Senate elec~
calendu Upe bt1vUy to the
Democrats' ravot. Tho1e
electlon1 will be for 22
Republlcan aeat1, while tbe
DeinocraU WUI be defending
onty • doliln.
Tbat dv• the Republlcam
time to create, if tbey CIQ, a
record that ml1ht con1olldate
their control Into a Jo,1-term
majority. By tbe aame token,
continuing economic won could
produce a record that would
whittle their number and
abbreviate their lease on the
Senate.
·'The party has often received
its m1&ndate in momenta of
military and ~omic turmoil,"
Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr., the
majority leader, said in tracing
the hlatory of Senate traMitions.
"Its historical standing in the
Shuttle goof traced
-o tiny fuel cell
WASHINGTON (AP> -A
s peck of aluminum small
enough to fit on the head or a pin
may have caused the fuel cell
failure that cut short the second
flight or the s pace shuttle
~lumbia in November, a space
a4it ency spokes man said
TN£Sday.
qrechnicians who dismantled
the fuel cell at the Windsor
J...tlcks, CoM., plant where it was
rl)l;i n ufa.ctured, said that
apparently a speck blocked a
h~le 1·21,000ths of an Inch in
diameter. The blockage, in turn,
c~ed a buildup of hydroxide
dn><>sits in the failed cell.
Jhe failed unit was one of
three fuel cells aboard the
shuttle. The cells produce the
st¥p 's electricity.
t~ecause they didn't know
what caused the failure, the
• space agency officials ordered t'H; other two fuel cells, and a
r•Jacement for the failed cell
installed after Columbia landed,
tQtplso be closely examined.
J ,James Kukowski, a
StWkesman for NASA, said the
other cells were found to be in
excellent condition. They were
flown back to Cape Canaveral.
Fla., Monday and were being
reinstalled Tuesday.
No date has been set for the
third night of the shuttle, but the
goal is sometime in late March.
Maj. Gen James Abrahamson, a
NASA associate administrator
for the shu~Ue proeram, sald the
fuel call failure would not delay
the launch. ·
Marine Col. Jack Lousma and
Air Force Col. Gordon Fullerton
are the crew for the third flight,
which is scheduled to last seven
days.
Engineers have felt ~ll along ,
the problem was unique to tbe
cell that failed and caused the
November flight to be cut from
five days to two.
They theorize that the
aluminum plugged the tip of the
aspiratOr, a little suction tube
that pulls water out of tbe area
where oxygen and bydroaen
react to create electricity. The
water -a byproduct of the
electrical process -fiooded the
fuel cell.
a
eyea of the American people -
and voters -baa depended upon
lta abllity to meet tbote
challengea," be said. "Surely
the ch•llenaea that the 97th
Congreaa hu faced have been no
lea1 tryins. . . .Just a1 surely,
we wlll be Judaed by our 1uccess
ln meeUna them."
Bui tbe 9'7th Congress, with lta
Republican Senate, la only ball
done. The initial judgment of itl
success, and that of President
Reagan, will come at the polls in
10 months.
Over t.M COUfle of Republican
history, economic upheavals,
and sometimes wars, have been
the crises that helped them
ascend to Senate control.
Republicans first captured the
Senate w)ien the party was only
six years old. That was ln 1861,
at the beginning of the Civil
War. Republicans held the
majority untll 1879, lost lt ror a
Congr~. then recaptured it for
12 years.
The Democrats took over in
1893, but the economy collapsed
into depression and"Republicans
were back in charge two years
later, and for the ensuing 20
years.
Their next, and last, era of
Senat~ dominance began
immediately after World War 1
and lasted until the Great
Depression election of 1932.
Since then, Congress has been
Democratic territory. with two
brief Republtcan breaks and
with the Senate control they now
hold.
The GOP won control of both
the Seoate and House after
World War II ·and held it long
enough for President Harry S
Truman to label their 80th
Congress the "Do· Nothing
Congress." The next Republican
Senate was elected in 1952, but it
wasn't very Republican. By the
time that 83rd Congress was
over, deaths and Senate
appointments, plus the defection
of one GOP senator, changed the
lineup to 47 Republicans, 48
Democrats and one independent.
Baker tecalled the complaint
of Republican Leader William
F. Knowland that "I have the
responsibilities of beinl
majority leader in this body
without a majority.·'
To which Democratic Leader
Lyndon B. Johnson replied: "U
anyone bas more problems than
a majority leader with-•
minority, it is a minority leader
with a majority."
Baker ls a majority leader
with a majority. and promising
prospects of keeping it for a
while.
-------
1# ........
DEPARTING -West German Chancellor
Helmut Schmidt reenter) talks to reporters
outside the White Hous e after he and
President Reagan met in the Oval Office. At
left is new National Security Adviser William
Clark.
.
Friendly skies under control
Holiday. air traffic no problem for understaffed force
WASIUNGTON (AP> -The
nation's air controllers handled
the heavy crunch of holiday
planes smoothJy and efficiently,
passing a critical test for the
understaffed controller force,
government and airline officials
said Tuesday.
'·Our people were very
pleased with the way the .air
traffic system worked," said
United Airlines s pokesman
Charles Novak, reflecting the
views ol reereseotatives from a ha[f dozen other airlines.
The alrline officials and FAA
spokesmen said the problems
that did occur were caused more
by poor weather than the
r estrictions in flight schedules
imposed because of the shortage
or controllers.
"We didn 't notice an y
difference over the holiday at
all," said Ed Ellenberger , a
s upervisor ln the Federal
Aviation Adminis tration's
traffic now control center.
The Federal Aviation
Administration said an average
of 17 ,500 ntghts were flown daily
at the nation's 22 busiest·
airports from Dec. 22 to Jan. 4.
That's about 95 percent of the
18,200 average dally flights
during the holidays a year ago,
the agency said.
The FAA said delays averaged
about 450 a day nationwide from
Dec. 22 to Dec. 27, not counting
Christmas Day when there is
traditionally little travel. That
was a large increue from the
average of about 260 delays a
year ago.
But FAA and airline industry
spokesmen said the delays were
minimal compa r ed to the
number of flights handled. FAA
s pokesman Fred Farrar said
almost half the delays occurred
Dec. 22, when bad weather in
many parts of the nation caused
l,o75 takeoffSto be postponed by
more than 30 minutes.
The Airline Passengers
Association, which represents
more than 100,000 frequent
customers, said it had received
few complaints.
··All in all, it seems to have
gone very very well . . . Overall
we were surprised." said Janna
Aynes. a s pokeswoman for the
Dallas -based association. She
said delays were taken in stride
and "a lot of people have taken
the 'grin-and-bear it• attitude."
Since 11,438 controllers were
fired after they s truck last
August, forcing the government
to r estrict nights, offi cials have
been concerned about how the
reduced number of controllers
would handle the heavy holiday
load, particularly if there was
bad weather.
Le aders or the Professional
Air Traffi c Controller s
Organization, which represented
the s trik il\g contro llers ,
repeatedly warned of potential
problems dur1ng the holidays.
To prepare for the holiday
traffic and winter weather, the
FAA on Dec. 1 restricted flights
at the 22 busiest airports, cutting
flights to 78 percent of what was
flown shortly before the strike.
But there were almost as many
f l i g hts dur ing the r ecent
holidays as a year ago because
the recent cuts were based on
summer schedule.s, when there
are more fli ghts than at any
other time of the year.
FAA Administrator J . Lynn
Helms had particularly worried
about the Christmas and New
Year holidays. He said his fears
were eased when the reduced
contro ller s t 'ff s moothly
handled traffic during three
days of bad weather early in
December.
Airline industry spokesmen
said that generally, anyone who
wanted to fly had little trouble
getting a ticket. .
The heavily traveled routes
between F lori d a and th e
Northeast again were packed.
but officials from airlines
serving that are a s a id the
situation was no worse than in
past holidays
without the bother of writing
checks is our \1sa debit card.
You use it like a credit card
when you shop, and the
amounts of your purchases
are automatically deducted
from your &sy Money Checking
Account.
Four. We make it easier for
your checks to be accepted by
retailers with our Check
Guarantee Card. It assures
retailers your check is good
for any amount up to $100.
Ftve. We make it easier to pay
your bills when you're a little short.
Wtth $SOO, $1,000or even $5,000 (if you
qualify) in overdraft protection.
So see ~ &sy Money Counselor at
Allstate Savings about an &sy Money Check-
ing Account.
And see OOw ~ Easy can be.
J
I
STORM DAMAGE -A massive landslide t hat
dumped tons or rubble and crushed two car~
as it cascaded onto U .S Highway 101 blocks
" ............
the freeway in both directions in Sausalito.
Calif. At right. rescue workers help residents
evacuate their hom es in Petaluma.
How times change
LOS ANGELES <AP> -It
would have been unthinkable a
few years ago. To buy one of the
two official pos ters for the
Rolling Stones' current North
American tour, you h ave to
purchase a bottle of Jovan
perfume as well.
And if you wear the offi cial
Rod Stewart T-shirt being sold
outside his current concerts,
you' 11 be walking around witfl
the Sony logo emblazoned on
your back.
Signs of the times, and to
paraphrase Bob Dylan, the
times they are indeed a-changin'
as far as relations go between
Madison Avenue and rock'n'roll.
To Jay Coleman, whose
5-year-0ld New York marketing
firm Rockbill played marriage
broker to the Stones-Jovan and
Stewart-Son y matc hes, the
c h a nge is nothing s hort of
revQlutionary.
.,.. ________ -------
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/WednHday, January 8, 1882
.......... __ '
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. t.l
·ii
Since r ock bands are so at the concerts themselves. 1fJ
sensitive to their images, the different poster was available'·
deals are almost as varied as outside the arenas where Ul'eT
t h ey are num erou s . For Stones performed and from
example, on the free Rockhill Rolling Stone magazine. 1 1
concert poster for the Marshall Coleman s aid the Stone'&'
Tucker Band, band members initially approached him to looltT1
pose casually with a few bottles into a sponsorsbip deal. ·I··
of Ronrico rum quite visible; but "Originally it was to just haveri
Camel was limited to an ad on a sort of nest egg for the tour,'111
the back of the Allman Brothers Wasserman says, indkating that'•
poster. even ·the Stones were a bltb
In an unusual deal, a new nervous about the sluggish state
band called Sneaker not only of the concert market. ·I t
wears Jordache Athletic Wear They needn't have worried. ti'
attire in a poster but actually ·'The· tour grew and grew likil '
put the Jordache logo on the Topsy and will be the most
back cover or its debut album. lucrative there has ever been,' .. '·
The payoff, 1,000 pairs or Wasserman said. ~·
J ordache sneakers worth an He estimated the gross fronf! •
estimated $20,000, was used in ticket sales and merchandiainf ·
radio station promotions for the a lone at close to $50 million ~ r
band. and that's not counting revenueoJ
At the oth er e nd or the fr o m the c losed -circuit
s p e c t r u m a r e t h e broadcast of a concert comint! •!
precedent-setting Stewart and up in December. Ou
"When 1 started Rock bill,"
recalled the 31-year-old former
pre-med s tudent , "Ma di son
A venue and major corporations
had no interes t in tying
themselves in with rock'n'roll
because there was still this
image of rock'n'roll being a
co unterculture movement.
There's no question that going to
Woodstock was as much for
making a statement of your
political reefings as for the
entertainment."
Stones arrangements, in which · Stewart's arrangement wi -
TIEO..JNTO SONY SANG OF CHANGE PLUGS BEER. TOBACCO • .,..,,,,... ,neithe r act endorsed the Sony is a bit broader than the
S sponsoring product. Stones' deal, involving the
Rod tewart Bob Dyl.an Charlie Daniels In fact, when asked what the printjng of "Sony Tape presents
Woodstcck generation has pi c ke ting agai n s t big "Theprimary reasontheartists S tones contributed t o the Rod Stewart" on the orficial
grown up. companies. they're trying to get do it, make advertising deals, is multimillion-dollar Jovan deal T-shirts. It's also a bit more
"Som eon e who we nt to a job." not so much for the dollars but -described by all concerned as controversial in music industry
Woodstock today could be a n Similarly,rock starswhoonce forthevisibility." th'e most luc r ative tie-in c ir cles because o f the
advertising executive in hi s reared that "if the kids think So over the last few years, involving rock stars -band controversy over the use of
mid-30s making decisions on they're too com~rcial, they Earth Wind & Fire have become spokesman Paul Wasserman blank tape to record music and
how to s pend millions of may not be considered hip any nation a l s pokes me11 for replied: "Nothing. They were thereby circumvent purchase
dollars," Coleman said. "They more " have rethought their Panasonic's P latinum Series of just lending Jovan some sort of records.
understand that r~k music is a attitudes in light of skyrocketing port a b 1 e radio cassette sub Ii minal association in return ' · W e f e e I t h • t i t '
ver y positive part of someone's t our cost s, the soft mus i c recoqiers; Charlie Daniels bas for X amounts of money." inappropriate," said Bob MerliS,
lifestyle. It's a great way to market of recent years and -endorsed Busch beer and Skoal ln addition to the poster offer spokesm an for Warner Br08.
But more than a dec.ade has
gone by. Music -with the
possible exception o f the
anti-est ablis hment output of
some punk and new-wave bands
-ls back to being pl ain old
e nte rtainment, a n d the
communicate to teens , not _ for all but the biggest of tobacco ; Eddie Rabbitt is -buy $5 worth of J ovan Records , Stewar t's recor
som ething to be afraid of." superstars -the proble m or s inging a Mill er's beer ad; and products and you can purchase company. •
Teen-agers have also changed, maintainjng public exposure. the list goes on, with tie-ins the poster for $1 -Jovan was But ther~ wasn't anything
Coleman added . "When an artist doesn't have between Ronrico rum and the a ll owed to put its name on the company could do, he said. "
"Ten years ago, a kid bad an a hit r ecord out, t hey' re Marshall Tucker Band, Camel tickets for the Stones concerts, we rt: presented with a f '
anti-business attitude. You go to generally not getting a lot of cigarettes and t he A II man and to use its name in other tour accompli. We don't own
college tod ay, they 'r e not airplay." Coleman explained. BrolhersBand. promotions, but no advertising Stewart;wejust sellrecord.'I.",
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-w
Nurse-midwife
bill backed
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Legislation aimed al
opening many hospital doors to nurse-midwives
was approved by an Assembly panel Tuesday.
The bi ll , AB1 592 by Assemblywoman Jean
Moorhead, a Sacramento Democrat who Is also a
nurse, would forbid hospitals to discriminate
against nurse-midwives as a class.
Ms. Moorhead said that wouldn't force all
ho s pitals t o give staff privileges to
nurse-midwives, but would require them to set
uniform standards of entry related t.o the care
provided and exclude nurse-midwives only under
those standards.
Nurse-midwives are specially trained nurses
who work under a doctor's supervision, often in a
separate hospital maternity center that uses
alternative methods for uncomplicated childbirth,
with reduced use of dru•s.
An aide to Ms. Moorheial said there are 284
nurse-midwives in California. Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. baa proposed allowing some non-nurse
Jay midwives to pratctlce legaUy, but has been
blocked in the Legislature by doctors' opposition.
Doctors in the CaUlornia MedlcaJ Alsoclation
also got Ms. Moorhead's Assembly Subcommittee
on Health Personnel to acaJe down her bill on a 5-2
vote that remo\fe d prov lsloos letlin1
nurse-midwives perform eplslotomies when
complications occur al!,d several other procedures.
But lb. Moorbead aaid bc»pltala and doctors
can already autbodae nurse-m1dwtves lo do all
those thinas.
The blil aJao would let nune-mtdwlvea admit
..... pat.lenta to tbe..holpitals where they practice. . .
Aller the CMA withdrew Ill oppoetuon, the
1ubeommittee sent the bltl to lbe hall Alaembly
-Jle•U.b Comm.if,&M~ 1-4 vote. ,,
2
MOTHER SHIP? -The "Sunburst," belle~ed
to be the mother ship in a multimillion dollar
marijuana smuggling operation, lies at berth at the Q>ast Guard l>uyy station in Terminal
a
AP..._..
Island. The "Sunburst" and its crew,
currently under investigation. was escorted
lo lts berth by the Coast Guard.
Sheriff rises
through rank
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Sherman Block,
milkman's son who rose through the ranks of Los Angeles County sheriff's d~partment in
25-year career, is the 24th sheriff of the na·u,,.-111111111
most populous county.
Block, 57, undersheriff since 1975, recelvecl
6-0 vote by the county Board of Supervisors Tu
day to. replace Sheriff. Peter J . Pitchess when
retires Jan. 17. Pitchess, 69, who underwent t.ii
coronary bypass surgery in 1980, announced bis
tirement two weeks ago.
·The new s heriff, who joined the department
May 1, 19S6, said things will be sli1hUy diff '
under his command. .
"We (Pitc:hess and myself) are certainly
ferenl people and have distinctive personall
Any oreanlsatlon reflects the personality of
person Who lMds it," he said.
"One lh1QI we have in common ls a comm
ment to ~t. professional law enforcement .
and I will strive to maintain the level of excell
we have been noted for."
His job ls not the same u it was when
'county's first sheriff, Qeor1e T. B\ll'rlll, toot
in 1850 at the be11bt of California's Gold Ruab.
An1eles, a horse and bug17 town, wasn't even
state's second lar1est city. f
Now the sheriff bu more than 1,000 em,plo
serving a populatloo of more than 1 mllJ1Clft. BJ
said two tbinp will force chUllel ln tbe dep
ment: continual fiacal crisls and Public con
about crime.
"There la a bi&h level ol fear and Uller ov
the fact that 1overnmenl ls fallins mberablJ
provide safety for its dtiaena," Block said. •
think people are ready lo uawne a treater role
provldln( safety for their eommu.nl\)' . . . b
partlcf:]U"' lJ\ aome meanlnatul Pl'Oll'•m• sue as Del bol'hood watcbel."
B ock'• appolntment advancea bl1 ca :
dldacy tw lher1ff ln lb• June primary beea-.
will be able '° nm u an incumbent. 'Y -
,
....... .
r
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Orange Coast OAIL.V PILOTJWednetday, January 8, 1982 '
-~·.,..... DYtNO LAKE -Rock
form ation which
g.-ve Nevada 's
Pyramid Lake its
name shows effects
of water diversions
over past 75~ears.
Long wait no picni~
Man yawm way through lonely 3-day vigil
CHICAGO (AP) -When aomeone
coined the phrue, "All thlnas come
lo he who waits," he could have had
Elmer Tucker In mind. On Monday, three ct•Y• ot walUna
in a deserted lobby of the county
office bulldtnc paid off for him,
stretching his string lo 11 straight
years or being the first lo receive a
picnic permit from the Cook County
Forest Preserve District.
"I get a weird sort or kick out or
it,'· 11aid Tucker, who ·sot the permit
for hls Moose lodge In suburban Des
because they've seen me on TV "
Tucker aaid. "Somebody's alway1
kidding me about It durln1 the )'ear,
and we do need the picnic spot.••
Despit~ his penlltence, Tueller'.I
efforts sometimes 10 for nau,bt.
Last year. he went throu&h a wait ot
similar duration, obtained the flnt
picnic permit and made all the
prepara.Uona ror a rollick.int toocl ttme on July 12.
It rained.
-~~--------------Plaines. He is secretary·manaaer or the lodge. Collection .bought
.
·-.... • • .. ........ ,# ........ .. . ..
'
-~ .... ., ................ .
Tucker began his lonely vigil
Friday, selling himself up with a
folding chair, a radio and a ~w
books in the building's south lobby.
The long wait was no plc1tic,
though.
"I can 'l get much sleep, only
dozing, In this folding chair," he
yawned.
He becomes a minor celebrity each New Year's.
"A lot of people wave or say hello
ABERYSTWYTH, Wales <AP> -A
bundle of saucy llmertcks, drawill&a
and roueh drafts of prose and poems
by Dylan Thomas, has been boqbt
for Wales from a man who said he
wanted the collection lo remain ln
the poet's native land. The National
Library of Wales in Aberystwyth said
it bought the previously unknown
works for an undisclosed sum apd
would not name the seller.
, ...
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I
..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, January 6, 1982
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But there's so much more. In the months
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. .Qrange Oout DAILY PILOTfNedn11day, January I, 1812
Nixon
expe118e
' disliked.
COLUMBIA, Conn.
l A P ) -A c o 1 l ea e
teacher has filed a sult
seeking details of plans tor a state funeral for
former President Nixon.
Ronald Ouellette, an
fnslruclor at Eastern
Connecticut State
College, says be has
tried to get information
about funeral. But the
De partme nt of the
Army, which handles
such ceremonies in the
District of Columbia,
has refused to divul1e
the details. citing an
invasion of privacy, he
said.
DEAR READERS: The Consumer Product Safety Commission has published a
booldet entitled "Save Enern Safely," which
la available tree by writing to the U.S.
Consumer Product Safety Commiaaion Waabi.n,ton, D.C. 20207. '
CPSC suggest.a you consult building code
officials in your area for local safety
requiremertts and recommendations before !nsta~1 space heaters, heating stovea and -ansulation.
Here are some Ups excerpted fro"I the CPSC booklet
wlLll wleka ,_ lars• e ...... u., l'n • ..,
p8relaued 11eea a. ••eke a W aM ,,.._.
too •Hit aa. De,. .. bow..._ a. Mlft IWI
problem'
A.l .,lntM
Diuolve one tablespoon ol table aalt and
three tablespoon.a ot borax ln one cup of
warm water. Soak heavy twine, web u
butcher's twine, tor at leut 2' houri. Dry
tborou1hty before u1tn1 1.D cud.lea. Tb.la
should reduce uh and amote problema.
Film explaim YITA.
DEA& PAT DUNN: My _, .... .._ II
lavolved la 1pouoria1 a Velu&eer TH
A11la&a.ee <VRA> IMe.-DMe tM JU llHe .. , m .. available ........ -la recndlia1 volu&een or la espJaialac u.e .,.... .. a.
com mmd&y aemben'
L.K., .......... Bead
NEW PATCO HEAD -Gary Eads has been elected president or ''My main contention
Water Heaters. It has been estimated
that by lowering the water beater 's
thermostat from 150 degrees to even 130
degrees, the consumer could save 8 percent
to 9 percent on gas or electric bills for
heatin1 water each year. Consumers should
set back their water heaters to the lowest ·
temperature which will still serve household
hot. water ~eeda. This will reduce fu el bills
while helptng to prevent serious scalding accidents within the home.
The Internal Revenue Service bas
recenUy produced a abort film explaining the
VITA program. Thh film discusses the free
tax assistance program spomored by the
IRS. The film is called "A Vital Service" and
is available ori a loan-out basis by calling the
I RS Public Aft airs office at (213) 688-4113.
The film runs approximately nine minutes.
e ATCO, decertified union of air traffic controllers, s ucceeding the Is that the plans are
resigned Robert Poli. The election took place in Kansas City. f or med at pub 1 i c
----------------------------expense. And they are carried out a t the
Thermal lnaula&loa. The commission ~frers t~ese suggestions for do-it·yourself mstaUations: Carefully read all installation
~nstruc.tions on packages. Be careful when
insulating not t.o lift or pull electrical wiring
already in place. As wiring ages the
electrical insulation may become britU~ and
handling can damage it. Use a barri~r to
~RA petitions in inalls OK'd
.
t axpaye r s' cost,"
Ouellette said.
• Got a problem'' Then wnte to Pa t
f"I ARTFORD, Conn. (AP> -A
lu.Oge has ruled that 1he National
Or_gani zation for Women may solicit
p~ition signatures supporting the
E~ual Rights Amendment inside a
shopping mall.
May 27. The group said the denial
represented an abridgment of Cree
speech rights.
Superior Court Judge Wil liam
Bielucb ruled the group may set up a
table at the mall on Saturdays to
collect signatures from shoppers on
petitions supporting the ERA unless
1t interferes with activities or events
sponsored by the mall.
''My question is,
should we take the time
and money to plan a
sta t e funeral for a
president who left office
in disgrace."
Ouellette, 32, filed a
suit in October, and a
trial is expected in the
spring or s ummer.
Nixon, 68, resigned the
presidency in the mictst
of lh e Wat e rgate
scandal Aug. 9, 1974.
·Jc.eep insulation permanently away from light f~xtures and flues. Ask your local building or
fire officials how to install insulation around
tbe~e areas and for any barrier requirements.
\.... Dunn Pat wiLl cul red lape. getting
• .L the answt'rs and action you need lo
solve mequrlles m government and
• business Mail yrr..ir questions to Pat
Dunn. Al Your Sennce Orange Coast
Darly Pilot. P 0 Box 156Q. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 As
many Letters as possible writ be ansWf'red. but phoned
mqurnes or letters not tncludmg the ·reader·s full
name, address and business hours· phone number
cannot be consu1ered This column appears dally ex
cept Sunday.\ ..
·. ;J'he Greater Hartford chapter of
NOW had sued the Wesllarms Mall
in· West Hartford, which denied
N0W's request to circulate petitions ,,
JANUARY SALE
I'
featuring ...
Save
:50%
on thl'w three engraving dies
~ ordered on Crane's Fine Papers
• • From l.inu.irv J, I 'J8l lhlu febrlJ.ll)I U. 1 'i8l. you will _.v,. ~ .f
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Semester At Sea
P.O. Box 1527, Orange, Cllltf. t2M8
As Heard On KEZY AM/FM, KWIZ AM/FM
'-~~
· Dilly Pilat
Classifieds ·
Candle tip given
DEAJl PAT DUNN: I make my owa
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'
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, January 6, 1982
&ens given to Florida State
$2.5 million traveiing "Big Top" donated to university foundation
FAIT..UL -'Carrier~
Arnold Bertram ='
holds to the old: saying that neither·
rain. nor snow (etc.).
stops the U.S. mail a
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. <AP> -
Florida State University, with cluaes In
clownln1. hllh·wlre walkina and ju11~. baa been 1tven a present that couldn t be topped: a 98-year-old
travellna tent circus.
TIM Clyde Beatty-Cole Bl'OI. Circus,
wltb Uletl valued at $2.S rnilUon, waa
donated to nonda State by owner Jerry
Collins, university officlala announced.
The atrt includes a Bi& Top that
covers '5,000 square feet , 30
tractor·lrailen, a water truck, a dining
truek and 30 acna near Del.aJMJ.
Collins, who advertised the circus for
sale lut year, said he decided to &Ive it
to the Florida State University
Foundation because of the school's long
circus tradition. It offers a major in
.
clreus arts and holds an •nnual
student-run Ftyln1 Hl1h Circus, which
Collins called the "beat in tbe world."
The 74-year-old Sarasota mUUoaalre
has spent more than $2 million over the years trying to keep the Beatty elrcua ln
business.
Despite his errorta, the circus fell oo
hard Umes. Attendance. is down and
operating expenses have ballooned to
$15,000 a day durin1 the circus'
nine-month season.
·'American circus ea are 1oin1
through the same thin1 everybody ln
America is going lhrouah," said John
Pugh, vice president and aeneral
manager for the Beatty circus aJ.nce
1960. "They're having to adjust to the
limes and finances."
The Laguna Bank N.A.
305 Forest Avenue
Laguna Beach, CA 92651
(714) ~94-9474
WE'RE OPEN
The Laguna Bank, N.A . Is open for
business and we want the opportunity to eam
yours. Come In and let us show you our beautiful
facility. And while you're here. let us explain the
many ways we can serve your banking needs In
an efficient and personaJ manner.
As knowledgeable community bankers.
we understand the Importance of the individual
and we recognize the need for flexible personal
service.
E. W . Sullivan Ill
President ano Chief Executive Officer
A special bank fo1 special people
P .S. We are pl-aed to Inform you that we
now have off atr .. t parking.
8~% I
I 51/2o/o I from us I from them
I /
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I So what's your money
doing over here? ,
Don't settle fOf the 5~% retum you get from all the major
savings and loans (ex the even smaller 5 %% the banks give).
At Western Thrift and Loan Association we give 8Y.z% on our
passbook accounts. (Thars a 9% annual yleld.) Interest Is com
pounded dally and credited monthly. There's a minimum ba~
once. And you can wtthdrawyoor money at anytime ... with no
notice and no penatty. '
Costa Mesa Orange ·
2000 Harbor Blvd. ' • 1111 E. Ka19lkJ Ave.
('114) Ml-1161 (714) "7·1IOO
Long 8eactl
~1 Pac. Coast Hwy.
(211) •tl·U01
In fact, tent 1how1 have been
disappearina acro11 the country alnce
the te:sos. Tbe Beatty, Oklahoma 'a
Carson and Barnes and Calllomla'a
Circu1 Var1u are the only bll travellna
lent ahowa left.
Moat, like. the Rln1lln1 Broa. and
Barnum & Bailey Circus, now perform
In rented arenu.
Whal flo acboot oHiclala plan for their
bi& 1lft? Thu are ne1oUatlnl a aale of
the clrcua tq 1 corpm.atlon beaded by
the present clrcu.a "1•na1er. who would
pay the school foundatlon $2 milllon
over a 20-y~ period.
Campus officials said the university
won't actually run tbe circws but will
hold the stock and reap any prollta.
he makes his round
·in Sault Ste. Marie
Mich., which hes ha
nearly 30 inches o
snow this year so far.
STORE HOURS: ·
DAILY 10 AM TO t PM
SOUTH COAST A T -PLAZA
~·-COSTA MESA
IHH ST.
NOT HIN&
HELD BACK
SUNFLOWER AV.
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Orange Cout OAJl.V PILOT/Wtdhttdav. January e. 1982
State seeks an end
to medical dispute
Does a recently completed
st 11te analysis hold the unswer to
lbe see m i ngl y lnsoJuble.
years' ·Old indigent health care
dispute involving the University
9f California and Orange County
government?
Review of a draft copy of
the report -soon to be destined
for the s tate Legislature
reveals that some practical steps
a.r e being proposed. steps that
s hould be carefully considered by
t he two parties. That is . if the two
sides, as their representatives so
often insist. are truly serious
about resolving the dispute.
The debate is centered on
the county's refusal to pay for
indigent care that it considers
excessive or outside the scope of
a 1976 agreement under which
the university provides the
services at the UC Irvi ne Medical
Center in Orange.
Bills and administra ti ve
issues involving disagreements
have been sent to arbitration. a
lengthy and costly process or
attempting to determine who's
right and who's wrong; literally
item by item on the disputed
bills. Arbitrati.-On proceedings
soon will enter their third
year.
The state Department of
Health Services analysts who
wrote the legis lative report say it
is foolish for the two parties to
depend on arbitration to resolve
their differences. The' nit-picky
process moves too slowly to
handle the backlog of bills and
the magnitude of the issues.
Negotiation, not arbitration.
the s tate analysts say. should be
the byword. Simultaneously,
accordi n g to the repo r t.
negotiators shou ld begin
working on a new agreement to
replace the 1976 document. The
existing agreement. the analysts
believe. is too complex and too
confusing. At some point, a new.
more precise document must be
developed.
Wha t the st ate health
department officials want to see
are productive negotiations. the
kind that >1\eld results rather
than the appearance or results.
The analysts were not heavy
handed in their criticis ms or
conclusions. In fact, a reading or
the. draft report reveals that thP.
a n a l ysts attempted to be
eminently fair in assessing the
nature of the dis pute and how it
best can be resolved.
We hope the reP<>rt promotes
some action. The dispute, as has
been pointed out repeatedly. has
dragged on too long, at too great
a n expense to the county and the
university, not to mention the
d e la y. confusion and often
expense to the indigents who
have no other place to turn for
medical care.
It is the right time for the two
sides to lay down their arms. to
talk and t o act in the bes t
interests of the public -as the
s t ate analysts s uggest t hey
should
ficketing misplaced
' Members of the Los Angeles
cnapter of the J ewis h Defense
C.eague picketed the Newport
Beach home or state Sen. John G.
$chmitz last Sunday and are
\_llreatening a repeat this Sunday ..
'fi e urge league leaders to
re-think their position.
The furor was touched off
y;he!l feminist Gloria Allred flung
6 chastity belt at Schmitz during a recent Senate committee
hearing and Schmitz retaliated
with a press release couched in
coarse. abusive language and
S.ome remarks that could be
f airly characterize d as
anti-Semitic.
So the Jewish Defense
League members picketed the
Schmitz home in Corona del Mar
and threaten to d o it again.
League leader Irv Rubin has
been quoted as s aying his group
aimed "to turn this neighborhood
upside down. if necessary" to
d emons t rate the league's
opposition and protest to the
Schmitz' remarks
•
The league thus runs the
peril of placing itself a t the same
level as Schmitz in painling an
e ntire group with the same brush
that it would apply to one
individual. In this instance. the
group would be Schmitz'
neighbors.
If indeed picketing or mass
protests are felt.necessary. these
tactics would be more reasonably
a pplied to Schmitz' campaign
headquarters or offices or outside
the senate chambers. But not in a
residential neighborhood.
We hold no brief for Schmitz'
outburst. We have deplored his
actions in this space. Imposing a
protest rally on the peace and
tranquility or a residential
neighborhood. however. might
~asi ly produce precisely the
opposite eflect from that sought
by the Jewish Defense League
me m bers.
It might welJ rally a segment
of the populace to the support of
J ohn Schmitz.
Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex-
rtressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is 11w1t·
td. Address The Da11v Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa M esa, CA 92626. Phone 17141
t42·4321.
.
LM. Boy d/Tattoo artists
Q : How long does it tak~ a good Eauoo artist to do the average tattoo?
: A : About 20 minutes . This
-iuestioner also wants to know if . it
19urt~. Depends on where you get at,
t'm told. The needle goes up and
4own 50 ti m es a second and
penetrates only one sixty-fourth or an
)heh. tr the skin is fairly thick, it
j'egislers a mild stinging sen11ation.
~ut those who want their tattoos in
tender places can expect a little
111ore discomfort.
·.M ay b e you've read th at
)nowmobiles have replaced almost
.-LI the real Arctic sleddogs . Nature
Jove rs thought lbis a pity. at flrst.
-~hen they learned the chance was a
!J>oon to northern wildlife. Those dogs
~~ad to be fed. The caribou gunned ~down on their behalf was significant.
Q: Was Buckingham Palace ever
bombed In World War II?
· A : Nine times. ' • ''Let Sandi strip for you." How'&
that for a woman'• business slogan?
n attention 1etter, certainly. lt'1
dvert.1.sed by an Omaha lady who
trips old paint off harnllure to be
finished.
Q : What's the Ion.est any person u ever 1one without both food and
ater?
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
,._,._ ..... , .. ., .. lllt ., .. , •• Pl w... .. .
5'., c.tla MIQ, ._,_.CW,.~. It .. . ,,..,c-.. -...CA •a
A: Ten and a half days, according
to the records at hand. A 19-year-old
Bucharest man survived that Iona
when entrapped after an earthquake
hit his city several years ago.
Something else the weather
experts stiU haven't figured out is
whether hurricanes serve any
natural purpose. They redistribute
the earth's warm ah". true. But so do
other storms. Lightning, rain, snow,
these fill a need, just as the sunshine
does. But what good are hurricanes?
Research goes on.
Q: What kind of wood is it that's
stronger than steel?
A : Most kinds, pound for pound.
There's more su ear in certain
brands or ketchup than in mucb
commercial ice cream. More in some
botUed salad dressing than in cola
drinks. More in artificial coffee
cream than in many chocolate bars.
So reports the Consumers Union.
Surely you 've read that the
tutebuda of the catllah are in it.a
whisken. Beali the feet,· l suppOle,
'¥here the butterfly tutes.
Q: ls tt poulble aome people are
afraid of tbemselv•?
A : Mu.tt be. Tbere~s a "lentlnc
name for It.. Aut.oDhobla.
Thomas P. H•l•Y
PubUSher
•
Tax burden shifts to wages
WASHINGTON -"Whal a year this
has been!'' said my frie nd , th.e
president and chief operating officer.
"We will be paying no corporate income
taxes this year. or course, in three
years. no corporations wiU be paying
any taxes."
"That ii what RonaJd Reagan did for
us," he said with a laugh that might be
called bemused, because be voted
against the president. "What dJd he do
for anyone else?"
Not that much. Any review of the first
year of the Reagan administration has
to begin with the fact that it has indeed
made business the business of America.
Reaganomics may or may not work.for
all the people all the time, but it has
worked for almost all corporations.
"THE TAX BUllDEN has been
shirted dramatically from capital and
industry to _wages," said, Sheldon Cohen,
the former com missioner of the
Internal Reve nue Se rv~ce . "The
corporate income lax and the estate tax
have been virtually elimfoated; and
substantial benefits, such as windfall
profit tax deductions, have been
bestowed upon certain industries."
That's all part of, in the words of
Hobart Rowen, the economic editor of
the Washington Post, "the biggest tax
giveaway in hist-0ry."
The best part, it seems, has been the
ext raordinary provision of the
Economic Recovery As:t or 1981 that
allows one company to "lease" the
tosses <tax deductions> of another. So
now there is a brisk business in the
"selli n g " of the deductions-of
unprofitable companies like Chrysler to
profitable corporations.
Soon, when the losses and deductions
are redistributed, neither the corporate
winners nor the corporate losers will
have to pay taxes . The practice will
l'ive real meaning to a phrase like
~ ------------------------·~·~ Rl~HARD RllVIS 1'i ).
''America Inc." -with gimmicks like
this It will be as if we lived in a country
with-one great corporation.
We also will subsidize the huge
co rporatio.n being built by
Reaganomics. Each time another
corporation, like my friend's, avoids
t axation , the burden becomes
proportionately greater for wage
earners. That's what Sheldon Cohen
was talking about. For better or worse,
the Reagan administration is in the
process or creating a new tax system i'n
which the government will raise
revenues almost exclusively rrom
individuals who work for salaries.
As the powers of large corporations
increase -and as they become larger
and larger by borrowing banks' funds to
buy each other, thus absorbing money
that might go to things like home
mortgages -the power of each
individual worker will be lessened.
Economic well-being is relative, and
corporations, most of them, are thriving
io an environment that is driving w~ge
earners to desperation. The great
triumph of the anti-worker wing or the
Republican Party this year has been the
ease with which corporations have been
able to convince unions to renegotiate
existing contracts.
RENEGOTIATE -or else!
Or else what?
Or else we'll close this place. Times
are tough. There's a recession out
there. T here are no jobs for your
people. So do it our way -or else!
Then came the end-of-year layoffs.
When 1 was in Dallas before Christmas,
Texas instruments was in the process of
laying off a few thousand men and
women for a couple or weeks. More and
more companies are simply laying off
everybody between the holidays to save
a week's wages and costs -it does
wonders for the year 's bottom line and
the annual report.
Recessions, after all, are not
necessarily bad for management .
FrightenM workers can be pushed
around. Within a few years, enlightened
corporate management might be able to
hire and lay oH workers at will.
Perhaps the company will only need
people 40 weeks this year and l5 the
next.
How do you ·raise a family when you
don't know how many weeks you will be
working~ That's your problem. buddy.
The business of Reagan's America is
business. Happy New Vear to business.
Brown now has packed state court
Gov . J erry Brown 's latest
appointment to the state Supreme Court
may be a good one but unfortunately it
will always bear the stigma of having
been made for the WTOng reason.
For despite Brown's avowal that his
appointee, 50-year-old Cruz Reynoso.
was "the most outstanding candidate
for the Supreme Court"' it is a
well-known facl that the governor has
been under tremendous pressure for
more than a year lo appoint a Hispanic
to the court.
BROWN TOOK office imbued with
the notion that the court could only be
balanced by the appointment of a
woman, a black and a Hispanic. He met
the ·first two categories by appointing
Rose Bird chief justice and Wiley
Manuel as an associate justice. Neither
had prior judicial experience. He had
previously appointed Frank Newman
also without experience as a judge.
Manuel's untimely death in 1980 and
the resignation or Willlam Clark early
in 1981 created two more vacancies and
Brown appointed another black, Allen
Broussard, and Otto Kaus.
So when Matth ew Tobriner
announced his retirement to provide
Brown with his sixth appointmen" to the
seven-member court in the short period
of seven years, the fever for a Hispanic
appointment to the court had built to an
inescapa ble point for a politician
ambitious to become U.S. Senator in
this year's elections
Since, by appointing him to the Third
Appell ate Court five years ago, Brown
had made Reynoso th e mos t
experienced high level Hispanic justice
in the running. it was inevitable that he
llRl WITIRS
would name him lo the Supreme Court
regardless or who else could have been
considered.
· With that appointment Brown has
packed the court, already overloaded
with justices or extr eme liberal
persuasion. So much so that Stanley
Mosk, once considered the most Uber"I
member of the court, now emerges as
o n e o f the two r e maining
"conservatives" on the court.
For Reynoso's background is that of a
civil rights lawyer. He had headed the
controversial California Rural Legal
Assistance program for a number of
years but had retreated to the more se
sedentary life of a law professor at the
University of New Mexico when Brown
picked him for the Third Appellate
Court. At the lime the appointment was
greatly resented by the legal profession
who viewed Reynoso as yet another
··carpetbagger " 1n the long list of
.. outsiders" named by Brown lo public
office.
Opinions of his record as an appellate
justice bring up a mixed bag with some
praising his work and holding "his
judicial temperament, s upe r ior
knowledge or the law and faithful
adherence to research" earn him an
"exceptional" rating as a justice.
Others slate flatly he is not the best
qualified.
MOST VOCAL is John Feliz, director/
of the Law a nd Orde r Campaifft'"
Com mittee, who denounced the
appointment as "showing ~othlng but
contempt for lhe judiciary" and vowed
to carry on a campaign against his
confirmation by the electorate and at
the same time push an initiative to
require Senate confirmation or all
judicial appointments.
Actually, as a replacement for
Tobriner, Reynoso's appointment will
not further till the court for Tobriner
was the most liberal of all and the
closest ally of the ultra-liberal chief
j ustice Bird. But it does tend to insure,
given the respective ages of the current
justices. the li beral trend of the court
for at least a couple more decades.
And the e mphasis l•pon the sex,
nalional\ly and race of judicial
appoin tm e nts can never be a
satisfactory substitute for the selection
of the best qualified.
Most of us are filled with contradictions
1 have recenUy been reading a new
biography of Clifford Odets, the
torm~ted and unfulfilled ptaywrigbt of
the '30I Md '408, whose life ended In
waste and futility. He was a cauldron of
bubbllnt ~ntradicllons wbJcb he was
unable to reconcile: generous and
mean, humble and vain, HOllUve and
vulf ar. brave and cowardly.
1 then is one t.hln& we bave to leam
as we a« older -and lt 11 sw-pri1in1
bow m&ftJ f aU \0 learn lt -lt ll that nobOdJ ll all el a piece. We a" all,
more or leas. mottled patebwork
crHtmw ln our emotlOnal makeup.
Mo.t ol • are 1... vlvid uamplea
than Odela. but DD oae ti nemPt from
some ltl'aftle dlllooaee that mll'I the
harmOQY ol tM ~hole P91'1QDalit)'. This
11 more than •*Yinl that tterybody hu
defect.a; It 11 r.co1nlzJn1 lh•t all or us
contala coMnMHc"H• wltbln our
natutt •
We would n ot tend to be so
dlsappohtted ln people lf we took it for
given that the best part of themselves
may show up in one area, and the worst
part in another. The best part is what
they want to be, and aspire lo be; the
worst part is often what they cannot
help beini.
One of the leading theolo&ian.'l of our
time was a compulsive womanizer, as
is one ol the eminent psycholotlsta In
Ame rica, who writes movtn1 books
about "love" and "trust," d'9Plte hi11
record of infidelity. And the
contradictions in famous characters
like Franklin Roosevelt and Gen.
MacArthur and even the sainted
Mahatma Gandhi are self-evident to the
psycho-historian. .
Not only ·do our heroes have clay
in thelr Ceet, but our villains may have •
sold 1n lbelr hearts. lt 11 only ln -boylah
writinp that one can c learly tell the
Good Guys from the Bad Guya ; In the
d••P.eat literature , such 11
Dottoyovakl •a, cooct and bad a.re more
reallstlc1lty lntermlntled, and the
a Inners cro ra e t h r o u I h m o r • convlnclntly than the saints.
We are fOGd ()f catecortllftl people,
but 1ny ~nt who b1a worked
I
extensively with "criminals" in prison
soon learns that this category is no
more meaningful than "soldiers" or
"farmers" or "golfers," in· terms of
definin& a nd eva luating their
personalities.
They are almost as random as any
group you migbt choose, with one
difference -they were unable to cope
wlU\ their drives or rind adequate
substitutes for their destructive
tendencies. ln different life ,ailuatlons.
lh~y mlfh t· ·h•ve· 'r'etcted quit e
differently. And so might you, or I.
CllllYm
All l waoted for Chrl1tm11 wu for au
the one-Ucht drtvers to either set a new
headJllhl or • ticket but Santa dldn't
arrive 1 iue''· J.C.V.
NEW YORK <AP) -The lateat pe>etry prbe for "A. Co11t or Trees,"
ehapter In the aa1a of Rabbit and "The Vlrtll Thomaon Reader'' An11trom, JObn UpdJke'• ••Rabbit la by A1Qerlcan compo1er and mualc
Rieb," bu won the NatJooal Book cr1Uc Mr1l1 Thomaon, won in the
Crltlca Circle award for the moat crltlclsm cateaory.
di•Unaullbed novel published In 1981. ''The Mla~euure of Man" was
The book wu one of four cateaory cited u a "penetraUn1 study tha\
winners picked by the 22-member explores the history of the concept ot
' board ot dtrectora of tbe National lntelllaence and exposes the roota Qt
Book CriUca Circle. lta measurement In cultural and Updike's novel was called a raclaJ prejudice.''
"percept! ve, funny. wrenchln&
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, January 8, 1982
a 1 " a I If e ti m e o f m ua I C.j l
achievement, knowledae and •harp
f ellcttoua critical wrltlnt ...
pretentld In a rich volume that la
music to both ears and mlnd.''
The wlMers were selected by the
board from a nomlnatlna list of flve
book• ln each category. The awards
ceremoft)' will be held at the New
Sl.3 million paid for vase story" that brlngl"readera up to date Ammons' volume ot poetry -his
on the life of Angstron, first met 20 16th -was des.crlbed by Judges as an
years ago In Updike's "Rabbit, ''uncommonly eloquent, lyrical • LONDON <AP> -A Chinese blue was bought by Hirano of Tokyo, a
Run.'' meditation on American llfe today and white Ming porcelain jar was leadin&.. Japanese dealer, bJddJng
Another winner was Stephen Jay and a reaffirm-aUon of the poetic sold here for SL3.million, the hiahest against a Japanese private collector.
Gould's "The Mlsmeasure of Man." tradition of Wordsworth and aucUon price ever paid for a Chinese Solheby's said the early jar came
Whttman." k or art Soth b ' Id f i ll . Id ... which took the prize for general wor • e Y a sa . rom a pr vale co eetaon outs e
FO ROETS -Sen . nonficUon. A.R. Ammons won the And Thomson's book was des~ribed The Jar, Ju.st over 20 Inches high, En&laod, but refused to give details. EdwardM.Kennedy.~;,..;..;..;..;..;.;..;;_;__...;....__;.;;.;.;;.;,,;~~_;__--~.:-~~~~:....:...::~---=-....:..:..:~.:..:..:.--------------------__;=----_:...--.:__ ______ ~----------------------
D-Mass., wanted to
sup port Barbara
Kennelly for
Congress, but had
trouble remembering
her name on the
campaign trail.
Kennedy '
forgetful
ofna~e
HARTFORD, Conn.
(AP> -Sen. Edward M.
feennedy· was on the
campaign trail for
Democratic
congressional candidate
Barbara B. Kennelly,
but had trouble
remembering the name
of the woman he kept
calling ''this outstanding
candidate."
At one point during a
new s conference
Tuesday at the State
Armory , the
Ma ss achusetts
Democrat referred to
Mrs . Kennelly as
"Barbara McNelly."
Earlier, he had called
her "Mrs. Connelly."
Und3unte..d. Mrs . Kennelly laughed it off,
saying she was pleased
t o h a v e l h e s e ni o r
se n ator from Massachusetts at her
side as the special 1st
District congressional
campa'ign enters its
final week.
She faces former
Hartford Mayor Ann
Uccello ln the election to nu the seat left vacant
by the death of
Democrat William R.
Cotter . He had
represented the
Democrat-doml nated
district since 1970.
On Monday , Miss
Uccello criticized Mrs.
Kennelly for trying to
"fool " voter s by
bringing in a "big
name."
"I'm not trying to fool
anyone," Mrs. Kennelly
said. "People either like
Kennedy or they don't
like him. But I think
Senator Kennedy stands
for some very good
things."
'Fat Pool'
helps
dieters
PIERRE, S.D. CAP>
-The iinnual "LRC Fat
Pool" -an incentive for
legislative staffers to
lose weight -is on
again.
Six staffers from the
Legislative Research
Council were weighed
this week and each
contributed $10 to the
pool.
Al the e nd of the
3 s · d a y l e g i_:; I a t i v e
session, the staffers will
be weighed again and
those losing weight will
divide up the pot based
on the number of pounds
they've shed.
·'It stves you a little
incentive to stay away
from all the food that's
around here," said one
legislative staffer who
didn't want his name
used.
M~~er profile
~SAA FRANCISCO
AP) -White men 21 to
yean old were most
kely to be murder ~ctlms in San
andaeo in the first 11
on t b a of 1 9 8 1 ·1 cordlne to police
tiatlCI.
SAVE
UPTO
• HURRY IN FOR BEST SELECTION
• NOT ALL ITEMS IN ALL SIZES
• ALL SALES FINAL!
• LIMITED QUANTITIES
• NO REFUNDS • NO EXCHANGES
SAVE AS NEVER BEFORE
ver.yt ng must 1.10 , r t down to
the bare wallsl Don't ml11 this
opportunity to 1ave llke
never before on every
Item In our
stock!
ON THESE FAMIUS BRAND NAMES •••
MISSY SPORTSWEAR JR. FASHIONS
•WHmSTAG
• DESIGNERS
•DEVON• CHAIM
•LADY ARROW
•PYKmES
•SWEATER IEE
•LEEMAI
MENS WEAR
,
• HAGGAI• LEVI
•VANHEUSEN
• JANTZEN • CAMPUS
• HALSTON SHIRTS
• JaEY • 440 JAGUAR
.. LEVI
•IYEI
•SUND FAITH
•IEE WEAi SWEATERS
• IYER TOO DRESSES
•CALIF. KRUSH
•ALFRED PAQUEM
mwtl11P
•HEALTH TEX
•CAITllS .
•WIANGLEIS
• IAllAIA'S EXPllSS
'
ACC /HOSIERY
• HANES• ftlf Ail
• VIUlGE BAnr-'-
• LETISSE HAND BAGS
• PllNCISS GAIDNEI
• ANTOllA HAND BASS
•CONTESSA HANDIAGS
• BOMAI HATS & llTS
LINGERIE DEPT
DOMESTIC
• IUILINGTON
•J.P.STMNS
(UTICA)
•IEGALIUGS
• FIELD CIEST
DA YWEA R DEPT
HOUSEWARES
• r.tUSA
• ~DA
•COLONY GLASS
•CUL VII GLASS
• SEIDEN BRASS
• GENERAL ELECTRIC
HOE DEPT
•CANDIS
• CALI. LINGllll • SllCCA .
• MOYll STAI • DEENA • DIXTll • VASSAETE-·~•HUSHPUP.PllS-· ---
• FOIMm IOGllS . • NAJUUUZERS
i t
r.
I
•IXIEST
BROADCASTER -
.feasica Savitch of
j~~BC Nightly News"
jot the vote of
television n e ws
"anchors in a recent
survey.
'$avitch,
Rather ;.
1~op poll
·.NEW Y<JRK (AP)
Televllion news anchors 11------
would rather read or
listen to music than
watch the tube ln their
spare time, but they
view enough to say lhat
Jes.slca Savitch and Dan
Ralher are the sexiest
network broadcasters, a
new survey says.
-; The survey, prepared
~s part ol a promotional
~rogram ror the Scotch
~Whisky Information
tcenter, questioned 200 ~nchors at 85 television
~ 3stations in 24
"metropolitan areas.
c Rather anchors the
!·CBS ""EVenlng News"
duid Mlss Savitch is a
._eekend anchor for
I·
1
l'
"NBC Nightly News."
More than half of
those eked said they
watch le5s than 10 hours
of television a week,
-with only 12 percent
listing TV viewing as the
~vorite leisure activity. ~glgbty percent or the
;respondents said they.
~would rather read than
!watch TV , and 72
!percent would rather•
:listen to m&tsic than
'watch the tuhe . .
:.
xhaust
tandard
ased
WASHINGTON (AP).
, The Environmentil
•J>rotection Agency has
~announced it is euing
:tuture pollution control
:requirements for diesel
:Cars and light trucks.
: The change will allow
-.utomakers to meet
[
ugher 1985 standards
ontrolling emissions of
oot without having to
dd as much
ollution -control
equipment.
I• EPA said the change
would save car
companies between $188 lmilllon and $376 million
over a five-year period.
Instead or requiring
each diesel vehicle to
meet a standard of 0.2
cram per mile for soot,
tbe EPA said lt wowd
allow manufacturers to
average emissions for
tll their models -some
e~uld exceed the 0.2
aram per mile limit as
long as all averaged 0.2
~ram . The current
atandard is 0.6 gram per
rbile. · Some combustion,
comPo&tDds carried on
diesel IOOt particles are
1uspected of cau11nfl
ancer. 1
Tbe EPA said ital
cttoa would allow
manufacturera to drop'
plam to add expensive
trap Ollidlsen to aome
cara and ute cheaper
trap oxktilen on otber cars. A trap oxidiser
would eoUeet aoot from
tbe eshtMt stream for
later barDlq, poulbly under eutomatic ...., __ _
eoatrol.
Tbe re1ulatory eb•r.r.:r wbtch the edm ldoll propo911d
lutJear u part of a rell packa1e to belp DetnM oal ol lta llump,
aa be9li attacked bJI ••~lilts wbo
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• WEONESOAV,
JAN. 6, 1912
CAVALCADE
COMICS
STOCKS
•
Louisiana discovery creates millionaires
VENTIUts.~. La. CAP> -SUl1
in hla blue pajamas in the
afternoon sun, J .E. Jumonville
Sr. leans aialnlt the door ot ono
of his three Rolla·Roycea and
gases out over b.la S,000 acres.
''The best real estate deal
since the Indians sold
Manhattan Island for $24," be
saya.
Jumonville, 62 , a former
dredclng contractor and state
senator, paid $4 an a<;re for his
land in 1947. Today, those 5,000
acres provide him and bis wife
with an income from 1as
royalties estimated at $10
fpilllon a year.
Jumonville's ranch happens to
straddle a deposit of 1as-bearing
Baccarat absorbs a piece ol
th• 1aa re.venues u well. Asked
whether he ever lost Sl million
on a slll8le trip to Laa Vegas,
Jumonville smiles and replles,
"I haven't lost my life yet."
Most lar1e landowners in
Pointe Coupee Parish have not
changed their lifestyle as much
as the Jumonvilles. The king ot
France granted 10,000 acres ot
rich floodplain to the Parlanae
family in 1740, and 240 years
later, Walter Parlange Jr.
presides over the remainiDI
1,500 acres of Parlange
Plantation.
In his office, behind the live
oaks and porticoes of the
family's 18th-century house, a
Today, mineral rights in the
Ventress .area bring $4 ,000 to
$15,000.~n.acre per year.
l
sand called the Tuscaloosa
Trend, stretching across
Louisiana from north of New
Orleans to the Texas border.
The deposit lies four miles
beneath the flat pastures, cane
and soybean fields of Pointe
Coupee Parish, but it has
transformed the lives of any who
live on the surface.
T~n ~ ag_o.,. Ventress was
typical of the small towns in
Pointe Coupee Parish, a rural
county of 23,000 people 100 miles
up the Mississippi from New
Orleans. One general store, one
pecan warehouse and about 200
wood frame houses lined the
eastern shore of Falso River
Lake.
'ten years ago, more than a
third ol Pointe Coupee's families
lived beJow the poverty line, and
those in Ventreaa were no
exception. The older houses,
with peeling gray asphalt siding
and sacging porches, are
rernlnde~ of the recent past.
The gas jets burning day and
ntgbt ~ twoJ.i)lars staocUnc
as sentries at the entrance to
JumonviUe's ranch are beacons
or the present.
Only seven years ago,
landoW?lers In Ventress were
happy to lease their mineral
• rights for $10 an acre per year.
lb 1975, Chevron U.S.A. drilled a
sqccessful wildcat well on the
aearby Alma sugar plantation,
and by 1977. a major gas boom
was under way.
Today, mineral rights in the
Ventress area bring $4,000 to
$15,000 an acre per year, and
those' fortunate enough to own
land within the 640-acre tract
surrounding a producing well
can receive up to a third of the
well's revenue as a royalty.
Depending on the quality ot
the well , the size of bis
landholding, and the deal with
the oiJ compan~. these gas
tevenues can add several
thousand to several million
dollars a year to a landowner's
bank account.
Wl)at this boon has meant to
J .E. Jumonville is obvious.
Three Rolls Royces sit in his
garage; a small jet is parked at
a nearby airport. Jumonville
plans to trade one of the
Rolls-Royces for a cus\om
.. Mercedes 600 limoU5ine, which
comes equipped with a
computer-operated bar. a color
television, and a video tape
recorder.
Barbara Jumonville sports a
16-carat diamond, which once
(ell out Ol its setting and rolled
under a night-club table in Las
Vegas.
LOUISIANA
maid serves coffee from a silver
service. The Parlange's first
well blew out in 1977 and had to
be abandoned. A second well
produces 10.6 million cubic feet
or gas a day.
''We 've always been
ind ependently well off,"
comments Parlange, a cultured
businessman in his 50s who
favon Westem-sl)'le bats.
"There's been no change in
our status; gas was a little
lagniappe," a small bonus.
Gas bas made a bigger·
difference to the middle class in
Pointe Coupee.
Edmond Le.Blanc retired lo
his small farm in Morganza in
May 1980, after 37 years as a
government survey technician.
To supplement bis pensloo ol
$925 a month, LeBlanc went to
work for a private eoo•actor
two days after be left the
government. Meanwhile, the
Hess Co. was drilllnt a wildcat
weU Mftl'al buadred )'Udl from
LeBlanc's farm.
"We didn't kn-ow exactly
whether the well wu gotnc to
come in or not," recalls
Le Blanc.
"The night they were 1oinc to test the well, we all went out
there, and iced our beer down,
and waited and wailed.
"Finally, at 9 p.m. they turned
the gu ct.r...._and it lit. Partner, it
shot up Just like the well was
blowing out; a beautiful blue
flame."
An instant millionaire,
LeBlanc quit bis survey job
immediately, and persuacted bis
wife, Celina, lo retire as well.
The LeBlancs trad~ ln their
Buick for a new Cadillac, bought
a four·wheel drive Bronco, and
e mbarked on a vl1orous
retirement program of siding,
cruising, golfing, and big game
hunting.
''Let's face it: it's helped a
lot,'· says Celina Le Blanc. #
The signs of gas money are
obvious throughout the parish.
Per .capita income doubled from
$3,290 in 1974 to $6,619 In 1979.
Deposits in the Bank of New
Roads are growing by 25 percent
'per year.
Morgania, a tiny farming
village huddled a1ainst the
Mississippi River levee, boasts
one new bank and a second
under construction.
"If there was any property
available, they'd 'build another
bJlnk on it," jokes Clarence·
Wells, the butcher al HM&W
Market.
While Cadillacs and Lincolna
crowd the parking lots of the
,
new Hospital Road aboppiDI
center.
Thirty years aio, 50 percent ol
the bou.aea in Polnte Coupee
were classed by the 1ovemment
as substaqdar<l, because they
were eltber dilapidated or
lacked indoor toilets. Today,
com fort able air·condltlone.d
bri~k houses line both aidea ol
Hljhway 1, the main road from
Baton Bouse to the county seat
of New Roads.
The eas boom In Pointe
Coupee has enriched a good
many ordinary worldn1 people
without drastically changing
their way of life. ·
Albert Landry is a short,
paunchy farmer with a tattered
shirt and a perpetual smile. Uke
many older residents of Pointe
Coupee, both black and white,
Landry's first lan1uaee wu
French. In a heavy Cajun
accent, Landry recalls bow he
stru11led during the 1930s.
Like other local tenant
farmers, Landry plowed behind
a mule or cut sugal' cane 15
hours a day for a wage ol 90
cents. Once he acquired bis own
land, be did a little better.
''I used to grow potatoes,
cotton, and cane, but I couldn't
get nothing for it," he lauehs.
In Un'8, Albert Landry leased
a portion or his farm for $88,825
a year, but sudden wealth hasn't
changed him very much.
It takes time to acquire
expensive tastes, and like m~
Tocal small (armers, Landry lias
a lifetime of simple living
behind him.
The low wages and long hours
dcove-most of the young farmers
out of Pointe Coupee Parish
after the Depression. Landry,
73, is typical of those who
remained. Chickens still forage
in the garage where be parlts b.la
new Oldsmobile. The llvin1
rQom furniture ia shiny with
wear.
"I wu raised on a farm, and
that's about all I know," says
Landry , wbo keeps busy
' repalr~lf• eleetrlo fa~a for -~ and tencU#ll .. amall..-llerd or caWe.
Pointe Coupee's black
landowners also have reaped the
benefits ol the gas boom. Near
the Jumonville ranch in
Ventre5s, black farmers have
raised cotton, pecans, and cattle
for years.
"We just didn't have any idea,
all those years we were picking
pecans on the field, that the cu
wells would come to -u.s." sQS
Dorselline Battley Nelaon,
whose father owned 34 acres in
Ventress. "Sometimes I lie in
bed at night and I can'l believe
it's really true," she smiles,
looking past the rusty tractor to
the gleamine silver pipe.a of L.H.
-Sattley Well No. 1.
L.H. Battley died in 1985 at the
age ot 81, long before eas was
discovered on bis plot.
"S<>mebow in his grave he
knows something about It,"
speculates bis daughter.
"We never bad a lot or
money.'· rem em be rs her
brother, Felman, a soft-spoken
man in his 50s with a mild
French accent. .. But we never
suffered: we had a decent life."
In 1975, Felman Battley was
growing cotton on tbe spot
where the well now stands.
"You'd be lucky if you'd get
$1,000 a year. We were just
getting by, just makin1 it:
wam't enough to save." Last
October, the 11 Battleys who
own the land began drawin1
royalties of $20,000 a month. As
usual, the money hasn't affected
the older members of the
family.
"My life hasn't cban1ed,"
insists Mrs. Celestine Battley,
84. "You can't take it with you."
Felman Battley still does
construction work for $9.50 an
hour at a nearby nuclear plant.
He bas bougbt a new
Oldsmobile, and thin.ks about
rellrlD8 early. but otberwlae be
seems unaffected b)' tbe sudden
rlcbes. "I'm Juat myself," be says. ,
It ts still too early to predict
how the gu fortunee will chans•
tbe youncer members or tbe
family.
Landry Harlaux, 28, a
1randlon ol L.H. Wtley1 .._.
an lncome from uotber well
two mU• from Battler No. l ..
Harlaux drlve1 a rreen 1•1·
Cadillac.
"I U.e with a fortat," be
aaya Mllh«Jy. "God nallJ 1ave It to me)1-'
Harlaux ...,.. •·• aa lllour u an operat« at tlll':•arbJ Bil
CaJ'IJI II powr plllit.
''Peaple tnat mt dlff.,_ at wort," lie JM .... I do a..:•
At t.111 ~ U.. I• re•w
wW lillf Rarlaua aope wltla CM 1erlo• laoutlDI · ••ortac• l!'
Pohite'CDlllpee.
--
ProvimJ old ties still count,
William P. Clark was chosen
national security. adviser .1 87
~ .
"' I I I
I
j \
..
.,
..
,/ .. .,
QOITI A MAL -J .E. Jumonville-Sr .. or
Pointe Coupee, La., leans on his Rolls Royce
as one of his natural gas wells bubbles up
more riches in the background. He bought the
5,000 acres for $4 an acre in 1947. Today the
property brings in an income of about SlO l
million a year. }
'
RICH GIT lllCMIR -Thia IU well on the
Parlance Plantation In Pointe Ceupee Pariah.
La., produca about 10.1 million cubic feet of
natural 1•• per day. lta owner, Walter
FAMI LY AFFAIR -The Walter Yenney family
of Shenandoah. Iowa. decided there was no
need to s ulf er alone whjJe recovering from
tonsilectomies. Mr. and Mrs. Yenney with
.25th year Anniversar
f come see us al our •
new addr&ss
ALL MAKES!
833-0555
. Ask For Ray,
I.WE SPlCIAUST at
HOWARD Chevrolet
Corn9I' ol OIMt -0.... Sta -NElNPOAl; BEA'CH
Keep an eye on
local government . -·
in the
I
Wtn tickets to .the clrcua, area amusement attracllons or sPQrtln& evenls. Just fill out thl1 coupon and mall It locfay to the:
t1aa&fte4 Department, Dally ptlot
330 W. Bay Street, Coat• Mesa, CA 92126
•HUGH MULL:IGAN
............
<left to right > Andrea. Heather and Sarah
checked into two Omaha hospitals and had
their tonsils removed on the same day.
Cl&y: ----------,....,,..---
Te~;hcMle : _~-__,.--,.._..
Service rings bell
DEAR ANN : After reading \Ile letter
from the lonely lady !n Queens. I feel I
must write this.
l have been a telephone operator for 15
years. When I started . the objectives were
service, accuracy. speed. It is now speed.
sarvlce, accuracy and more speed. The
public would not believe how many
insignificant things ar e put on our record
-and they stay there for five years.
Failure to acknowledge a customer.
failure lo be pleasant. failure to give
dialing ins tructions, failure to maintain an
average of 26 seconds per call.
To ins ure s peed we are constantly
being monitored . The results bear heavily
on whether we get a promotion, stay where
we are or lose our jobs. Visiting with a
customer is strictly forbidden.
There are so many lonely people out
the re. Apn. I wquld just love to spend a few
minutes c hatting and cheering up these
forlorn folks . Too bad Pa Bell doesn·t have
a hear t. NO NA ME. I NEED MY
PAYCHECK
DEAR PAYCHECK: There's nothing
wrong with Pa Bell's heart, but something
musl be wrong with your bead lf you can't
understand the consequences or allowing
operators to chat wllh lonely customers.
The function or the telephone company
is to give service. How would you feel if
you were trying to call the firt>
department, the police, your doctor or an
ambulance and the lines were tied up b)·
operators who were chatting away,
cheering people up? Wake up and smell the
coffee, Petunia.
DEAR ANN LA N DERS: Please help
ine. I am so embarrassed and ashamed.
1·m a college freshman. a nd ever since th(•
s ixth grade I have wt•l my pants I don·t do
iJ as often as I used lo. but it is still a
horrible problem
Tonight I wt•nt \\ ith some friends to a
haunted house at the fairgrounds. I used
the bathroom at home before I left and
a gain when we ~ot there. but when wt•
went inside the spook house I wet my pants_.
q_Ar_IV __ _
twice. I was safe inside because it was
dark and we were all s quashed together. I
prayed no one would notice. and I was
lucky. No one did. I would have died if
someone found out.
When it happened in the sixth grade.
some kids did notice that my dress was wet
in the back and they teased me about it for·
days. I wished I could have died. 1 didn't
t e ll my mother or anyone else because J
was so ashamed.
That incident changed my personality.
I've been a quiet person ever since. When-I
laugh too much or get emotional. I can't
control myself. Do !,Orne people have
bigger bladders than others? I would
appreciate any help you can give m e.
N.N.
DEAR N.N.: You must see a urologist
and find out if you have a physical
problem. If so. you ought to wear rubber
pants until it can be corrected by surgery.
exercise or medication.
If there is no physical problem, accept
the fact that it is emotional. This means
counseling. Get going, and good luck.
CON FIDENTIAL to Tell Her . Ann .
She'll Take It from You· I hope she takes it
from SOMEBODY Wh at's magic about a
size 12? She'll look thinner in a s ize 14 that
hangs loosely Clothes that are too tight
show every bulgl' and make a person look
heavier.
There 1s a tng difference bet ween cold and
coot Ann Landers shows you how to play 11 cool
without f reezmg people out m her booklet.
.. Teen-age Sex -T~n Ways to Cool Ir ·· Send 511
cents and a long. self-addressed .. ~tamped
envelope lo Ann Landers. P <> Bn:r 11995
Chicago. Ill 6ll611
Slice of life treas11red
NEW YORK I A P l -The New York
Daily News is up for sale. and with it a
good part. of my life. Perhaps the best part.
I wi sh I had a few millionaire friends
, or knew some big winners in the New York
Lottery. Then I could sell my house and
books and the a luminum rowboat under
the porch and join them in buying it. I
should hate to see the paper and much of
my boyhood fall into unloving hands . Or.
peris h the thought, perish altogether.
I never worked for the New York Dailv
News. but I grew up with it. ·
Bedtime for me in Long Island City.
the tene ment and factory enclave just
across the river from Manhattan's soaring
skyscrapers. was regulated by a ritual
stroll up to the corner candy store to ask
the recurring evening question:
"Murray. is the News up yet'!"
. THE NEWS. B V SOME idiomatic
anomaly peculiar only to New Yorkers.
always came "up." as if from the ground.
like a fountain or a flower, never ··out, .. as
from a warehouse or printing plant.
"Any minute now." Murray would say
from behind the gleaming soda fountain
that produced the world's greatest egg
creams. a craving that I some times
indulged if the News reall y was late. But it
s eldom was.
' Down the street would roar the big
black truck with the s hiny red wheels and
large shock headlines printed on the sides .
It never came to a complete s top and most
times barely slowed down long enough for
the large, raw-boned boy on the tailgate to
kick off two or· three enormous bundles or
papers which landed with a thunderous
plop on the sidewalk.
The News was up. The bulldog. the
first edition. And the faithful knot of fans
gathered around the paperstand jostled
each other impatiently as Murray cut the
twine bindings with a lethal looking bread
krute that all day long had been busily
e mployed bisecting pastramis on rye.
"Mulligan, what is that you have under
your desk?" Sister Mary Lawrence. the
sixth grade nun, asked one day.
IT WAS THE EVE OF the heavyweight
c hampionship fight between Jimmy
Braddock and Max Baer. I g uiltily
surtendered my copy of the Daily News
with its sports section "Tale of the Tape"
f eaturlng page length photos or the two
fighters and statistjc!j .~omparlng their
weight. height. reach. -)>iceps and neck
size. etc.
"Tabloid trash,'' Sister said. But then
the start of a series on • · 1 nside the
Vi ti '' or the "Boyhood ot Pius XI" or
HUGH MULLIGAN
MULLIGAN STEW
something or that sort caught he r eye. On
following days, I brought her the sequels . ·
That , o r cours e . was and is the
strength of the Daily News. Something for
everybody Often s omething not found
elsewhere .
The News did not have a particularly
f or mid ab l e arra v of combat
correspondents covering World War 11 .
when it reached its peak circulation of
more than two million daily and nearly
fo ur milli on on S undav . Yet it sent
photographers and reporters and rewrite
men in battalion strength to cover the
Errol Flynn trial. • •
CARVED IN BLACK marble above the
42nd Street entrance to the News Building
is the legend: "He made so many of
them ... The s logan evokes Abraham
Lincoln's alleged line. ··God must have
loved the common people. He made so
many of them," which also describes t~
Ne ws r eaders hip : ordinary people
fascinated by extraordinary events.
The News seldom let them down. Little
Orphan Annie. Moon Mulliq~. Winnie
Winkle <the working girl l, Dick Tracy with
his bizarre cast of characters. < 8 .0 .
Plenty, Mumbles. Tess Trueheart, Vitamin
FlintheartJ . Terry and the Pirates and all
the comics were aimed at the blue collar
urban dweller.
C.D. Batchelor's Pulitzer prize-winning
e ditorial cartoons often ignored t he
ponderous political issues or the day to
concentrate on everyman's foibles and
problems. like taxes and highway safety. I
still vividly recall his harrowing "Inviting
the Undertaker '' series on rec kless
driving. ..
Crime is to the tabloids what candles
and s1aine(i glass windows are t t>
cathedrals. And top crime reporters like
Pat Doyle and rewrite men like Henry· Lee
and Arthur Mulligan lit up our humdrum
lives with all there was to know about the
likes of Legs Diamond, John Dillinger,
Crazy Joe Gallo and Joe Bananas. whose
sudden squea.Jing on the mob' to the
coppers inspired the headline: ':Bananas
Splits From Bunch."
News headlines jolted the s ubway
reader awake. "FORD TO NEW YORK,
DROP.DEAD."
ITS ~·VOICE OF the People" letters to
the editor column might not be the Times
of London's cup of intellectual tea. but it
roams with the beery bravado or the strap
hanger. · •
Won't some well-heeled, caring buyer
please come forward and save this
treasured part of my llf e and tablold-si&ed
treasure of our threadbare city for mlllions
more to enjoy. Please. Murray. is the News
up yet?
-...
STAN Df Uflf.Allf
AROUND THE WORLD
T ; +f . Sj)aCes not
't :t-'-~ eu wide open
~1111 King ftttw• .......... Ire -,.,. -
"No, I don 't have any requests-do we?"
··~~A '
Aquarius:
Changes due
Thursday, Jan. 7
ARIES <Mar. 21-Apr. 19 1: You obtain
needed material through aid of relative.
close neighbors. Individual you helped in
past returns favor, proves loyalty. Cancer.
Capricorn natives figure prominently _
TAURUS <Apr. 20-May 20 1: Study
Ari es message f o r valuable h ints .
Emphasis on pay me nts. collections.
locating lost articles and reaching beyond
current expectations. You'll be in mood to
celebrate . Financial pi cture is brighte r .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20 I : Past
mistakes are corrected, cycle is high and
you'll be at right place at crucial moment.
Focus on personality, special appearances.
ability lo revise. review and rebuild on a
more solid base.
CANCER <June 21 -July 22 1: Written
material aids in resolving dilemma. You
gain acces s to confidential data. you're
able to erase fears. doubts and you are
convinced of ultimate s uccess.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221: Puzzle pieces
fall in place: you have key which could.
provide ·answers to perplexing problems.
Accent on friends, wishes. aspirations and
a more pleasant domestic environment.
VIRGO (Au g. 23-Sept. 22 >: Define
t e rms. avoid s elf-deception. streamline
techniques and be sure that profes~ional
associ:ites fulfill their obligations .
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0 ct. 22>: What seemd
out-of-reach is close at hand -you'll be
give n added res ponsibility. more authority
and chance for reward will be e nhanced.
Relationship i ntens ifi es.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 211 : Clarify
inte ntion s of o n e who talk s a bo u't
investments. bor rowing, cos igning Dig
beneath surface indications: if per sistent.
you' II avoid-unnecessary problems related
to accounting, bookkeeping and collateral.
SAGITTARIUS <Nov 22-Dec 211:
Plans are revised: new contacts encourage
fresh starts, break with individua l who
leans. takes and gives nothing in return.
Look beyond the immediate -numerous
opportunities a re on twr izon .
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19 1: Focus
on practical issues. basic services and
employment. Contact made in past will
pay di vide nd s . You 'll be provi d e d
opportunity to increase income potential.
AQUARIUS (Jan.. 20-Feb. 18 I : Focus
on change of routine. ve r s atility.
diversification and special relationship
with member of opposite sex. ln matters of
s peculation. s tic k with number 3.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20 ): Accent on
details. fine print. restrictions. temporar y
confinement. delays. necessity for process
of r eview and rebuilding.
SAN FRANCISCO -A motivation
rese,rch firm was hired by the Detroit car
people who asked them Dr. Freud's
famous question: "What do women want?"
The research people came up with
this: "Six of every 10 suburban housewives
think the AmP-rican car is too big. A
substantial number said the streets are too
small."
No wonder auto makers are baffled.
Having run through everything from a
Model-T to a Japanese bomb. I think the
problem is there's no place to park.
"Have this prescription filled and take
a couple as ·soon as you can." said the
medic. ''I want that stuff to start building
up in you."
I HAD WALKING pneumonia at the
time. Better I should have kept walking. 1
stopped in front of the drugstore. Got a
quick fill. Took two pills on the run.
But the meter maid had the car by the
license plates and was writing the bad
news as l came out.
"Here," she s aid. "'I'll just give it to
you instead of putting it under the wiper "
I bought a station wagon when we
moved to the suburbs. l didn't know much
about country living -except for a book
by a New York writing lady. She raised
chickens and sold the eggs. It sounded like
fun.
"AFTER THREE MONTHS, J ohn and
I decided to repair the barn and kee p a
cow." You know. that sort of thing.
I said to, the children· "We need the
back of the station wagon for plants we 'll
be r epotling. Then we'll have jars of
homemade pickles to take around. And
sides of beef for the freezer."
Suburban living didn't turn out tha t
way . l got a freezer but we never put much
in it except horsem eat for the dog. l put in
a dozen steaks . I never got them out to
unfreeze in time for dinner .
About that time it became fashionable
to drive a foreign sports car
The children said: ··we'd rather walk
to school. Nobody rides in station wagons
anymore ."
SO I SOLD THE WAGON. l bought a
little British sports car. The younger child
had to sit on the older one's lap and bend
his bead down. But their psycfles didn't get
bruised.
I used to bump my head getting in and
out. I bought a leather cap to go with
Bermuda shorts with leather trim on the
J)istol pockets. That helped.
The suburbs began to grow. A lot of
people were writing those .. Back to the
Land" books. New people came s warming
to the outback. ready to pickle preserves
and castrate new lambs. All des cribed as a
delight by the corn-(ed writers.
THE VILLAGE PUT IN parking
meters. They hired meter maids. '"Our
growth demands that we do something
a bout traffic congestion."' said the town
council. "You can't ha lt progress ... They
issued themselves pa rking permits
Result was everybody began ci rcling
the block on the main s.treet lf a parker
got in his par ked car. a half dozen of us
dashed for the area like buzzards .
We eyed our closest friends coldly. We
snarled. We jockeyed for pos ition. Waiting
cars piled up on the street Congestion
became worse tharr ever. And finall y l ,
moved back to the city and rented a
garage.
l take a taxi to lunch.
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
TRY
TO BE
A5 GOOD
AS YOU CAN,
WITHOUT
AROUSING JEALOUSY
OJ:\ SUSPICION.
~~
Milk may cause upset
DEAR DOCTOR: I've bad stomach
upseu like diarrhea and cramps. F\nally
I've traced tbem to times I take more mllk
thaaaul. ·
I laave a lt·year·old son who also
eomplalm of similar upseta when be takes
milk la lar•e ••outl, It eeems to take
eff eet wltlila a few lloan. -
My b•lt•ad cu drink milk ._Y Ute quart
aad la• l»odlered by I&. I WOllder lf my
IOll ud I are a11er11e. OD d.a1s wlaea we
e11t ... die amo.at of milk or cloll't take
It •t all, we feel COlftfort.able. •• tbla a
com ... eomplalatT -
-MRS. E.
DEAR MRS. E .: Better let your doctor
make the specific dlapoela, but we believe
you and your son may be 1ufferin1 from
lactoee intolerance. We've written about it
in many columns becauae the conclitlon is
IO wldelpread. •
Some people have a deflclency of
tact .... 1bil 6a an enzyme tbat breaks
down the milk 1u1ar in the upper bowel.
T JOUI Hf~lTH
OR. PETER J. STEINCROHN
When it is absent, milk is not properly
digested and undue fermentation in the
bowel produces th~ diarrhea and cramps.
The condition may occur in from 5 to 10
percent o( white adults and is l'J'lUCh more
common in bhlcks. And mady a child stays
home from school because of lactose
intolerance. In some persons the
intolerance is temporary. Their resistance m•r be low after an Ulness.
I you and your son need to cut out milk
products alto1eUter, you'll need to add
calcium-rich foods to your diet. Some add
the lactue enzyme to their milk 10 they
won't be deprived. There's reaaon enouch
for dt1cu11in1 the problem with your -
dpctor.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, January 8, 1982 •a
THE WRITE THING
............
skillful use of ink. brush and pape r. This year
s tudents pic ked a number of the m es.
includin Ja an's we ather problems.
1 L9t Smokenders 1 I I I help you keep it! I
I I
I a111~;;~~!d:;r~~eQ~~~~~~~~~11~~~~~"y9 !~y9°F~~e~~~ 5~~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~1~:a~.~~~~~re:e~er~~.~~~=!~~e~~,;~o~~ip~~ I I shock treatment I
I Whal s special about Smok.enders is lhal you get 10 keep on smoking whrle you learn to quit And without garnrng I
I weight e1lher1 Sound too good to be true? Not on your hie Its a fact that thanks 10 Smokenders hundreds or thousands of I
people 1ust hke you have already learned to put their cigarettes out for good I So even ti you don·1 believe you can ever qu1r 11 wont hurt to hear what we have to say Jusr come to one of the I
I. Smokenders meetings below Leave your willpower at Mme. but bring your c1gare1tes and your New Vear s Resolution to I I quit smoking This year 11 s really going to happen-I
I MONDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY I I Jan. 4 or II Jan. 6 or 13 Jan. 7 or 14 I I .. I I Buena Par1c 700 PM long Beach 7:30 PM Newport Bach 7:~ PM I
HOLIDAY INN HYATT HOUSE MARRIOTT HOTEL I I 700) Beach Blvd 6400 E Pacific Coast Hwy 000 Newport Center Drive I
I (Fwy. #91 . I
Beach Bl vd. Exit)
&,,. c;,rrc•~·~ '"' ,.7~ A.-. 1 8\ i
'--------•CLIP ANO SAVE AS A REMINOEfl OF DATE. TIME ANO LOCATIOlle•-------'
Take the bus
to Tahiti next year.
Wouldn't it be nice to
have an extra $3,000
next year so you can
take that drea m vaca-
tion you've always
wanted?
Well, it's possible.
Because that's how
much you coul,d save in
just one year by riding
the OCTD bus to work
each day.
Here's how: Most
of us think the main
·expense of operating a
car is the high price of
gasoline. But there are
many hidden costs that
quickly add up. Like
depreciation, maint.e-
nance, insurance, even
parking charges. In our
area, that totals more
than $13 per day. And
that's for a car driven
only 20 miles round trip
to work.
The bus costs just
75¢ during morning
and evening rush hours
and 60¢ at all other
times. And we offer the
option of either taking
one of our regular routes
that cover Orange
County, or our express
rout.es specifically-
planned around large
636-RIDE
REAL VALUES ,
employment cen ters.
<Fare on express routes
is $1.50.) And, since 75o/c.
of the Orange County
population lives within
3-block.s of a bus stop, it's
very conveni~n(
Tu help make plan-
ning your trip on the
bus convenient, we offer
a free Ride Guide, which
most major employers
have available, or you
can call OCTD at 636-
RIDE for a copy and a
personalized rout.e
schedule that fits your
specific transportation
needs.
So take a ride to
work on the best bargain
around town. And have
a vacation on us.
9n items from applesauce to zippers Ill.Iii .....,
are .advertised every day in the ~-I FINI
• t
\
"You're not to dribble that indoors onymortl" . . .
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
"He's with the CIA ind doesn't w1nt~hls coffr -
blown."
MARMADl:KE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE "EN ACE Hank Ketchum
~mu11n1•· ~
"Will you get out of here, Marmaduke ... !
almost unscrewed your nose!"
JtDGi: PARKER "'·
HERE.'5 HOW
'fO MAN t7LE.
A FIEP.C.E
ANIMAL
'900~ ~l'l.l.INS
WELCOME
IO-n4E .
CLUIJ, Ms.
SW/Vf:L !
''Ar LEAST NOIJ we KNOW ~ Ul<ES S~MP ... Rleftr, MOf' ? I
BUT MINE
Wll .. LCOME
OUT, IF I
CAN
BoRRoW
AN IRON .
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
I!Ll RAISE HEJ? RE/IT-·
1HATILL PUT SOM~
~INKL.ES IN HER
I<' ACCOUNT t1
GET OUT WHAT
HAPPENE~
NANCY~
1HE 61r<l5' BA5KETBAlL 1EM\
15 NOT' 601N& 10 PAACTIC£ IN
'TUE Cff'ETE.RJA A~ !
&\..IE~ ME, OAO .. I JOS,-
C00\.0,(1 ~IT! 11'5
RAIM1"'1 ours1ot, ANO M'f
YIS latl i.lt6
~'f~OC1't0~
YOO HOO,
POCIOR .' YOUR GUCC I
"fASSeL,...HAS
SNAGGe!c:> MR5. AeRAM'S ~.Y. At:-AIN.'
by Ernie Bushmiller
I MERELY ASKED
HIM FORCHANGE 50
I'D HAVE THE
PROPER BUS FARE
..
I r
-
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, January 8, 1982 B S . -
€itrus park planned around Riverside lake
RIVERSIDE <AP> -A cltru1 of JUveratde Uve up to thelr pled1ea
berlta1e theme park will be built of financlal ua11tance and land. A
arouna Riveratde'1 Mocktn1blrd alte In Oran1e County also had been
Canyon Lake, the 1tate department con1ldered.
ol parka al'ld tecreatlon haa The park would preatrve cltrua
announced. • treH and include hl1torlc citru1
Parka DlNCtor Peter Dansennond exhlb!ta, such as a packlnc bowie,
closed to the public. supply ls 1uaranteed from the Gaee
Cana! and the city'a voter-enacted
Prop, R help1 to preserve
1urroundln1 cllrua land.
Jr., a former director of Rlveralde and would offer recreaUonal uaea
County parka, aald the department such as plcnlckin1. However, no
"I think lt'a 1ood that eo many
other areas eot Interested afterte
announced we wanted to bull a
citrus park," Daneermond sald.
"When l first started talldn1 about
pre1ervin1 cltru1 erovea, people
lau1hec1.••
Dangermond said the Riverside
site waa selected ln part because the
1rovea there are healthy, the water
The city h4l6 proQl.ls~d to turn over'
the 150 acres It owdl around the lake
to the atate and to put up "29,000
toward the ·puk, The county haa
ple\:laecl $197,000. Mmitor View Ce..._ 644-77JJ
would proceed with the 300-acre declslon was made on use of
park, uauminl the clty and county Mocklngbird Canyon Laite, currenUy
Initially, the state expects to spend
S3 million on the project. 1621 S-M'9MI Drive. NMWBart hoch·
ORDEAL -Singe r
Johnny Cash had
plan to try to save
famil y during a
holdup in Jamaica
when h e and his
party feared th ey
would be kill ed.
accordin g lo a
relative.
-Singer
/aced
·death
N ASl-(VILLE. Tenn.
CAP> -Country music
s uperstar .,Johnny Cash1 held at gunpoint with
friends and relatives
while his Jamaica home
wa s ran s acked ,
whi s pere d with a
brother-in-law about
plans to save the family ,
the relative says.
Chuck.Hussey, in a
copyright interview in
the 'Nashville
Tennessean, said he and
Cash never got a chance
to put their plan into
effect. lnstead, the men
and others in the house
were locked in a cellar,
and Hussey and Cash used a metal pole to free
the captives.
The break-in occurred
Dec. 21, when three
armed men burst into
the dining room where
th e famil y was
gather e d . The
Jamaicans forced the
family to lie on the floor
and searched the house
for valuables, said Reba
Hancock. Cash's sister
and Hussey's wife.
Hussey said the three
escaped with $50,000 in
jewelry and money.
Cash. like the rest of
the family, "expected to
have his brains blown
out at any minute,''
Hussey said, but was
"thinking how to save
the rest of us ."
"John and I lay there
whispering that we
could lake a chair and
charge the man with the
hatchet," Hussey said.
However , Hussey
said, the three escaped
with $50,000 in cash and
jewelry. and no arrests
have been made.
Ms. Hancock said the
ordeal made her realize
"that time is the most
precious thing you have.
You never know when
your time might be up."
Grower s
ask help
• • • ID Crt818
EL CENTRO CAP) -
Imperial County
supervisors are asking
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
lo declare a state
emergency in melon and
squash crops hit by
whitefly and the leaf
curl dlaease it causes.
"We've just bad abou.t
a total wipeout of fall
melons," A&riculture
Com missioner Claude
FinneU told the board
before its resolution
puaed Tuesday.
. It la the flut 1tep
towerd appl7in1 for
low-interest federal
dlaa1ter loans.
Tbe lou ln melon and
tqUUb Ulla IMIOll WU
..Umated by Pinnell at
more than • million. He Hld tbe yield of fall
melODS bM be'9 cut to 90 eratel ·per .an from aoo 1Dd tb1t Hvtral
lar1e 11owe:ra have been
wit.le to harvest •t all. \ ,
TOP RAMEN
OltllNTAL NOODLU
ASSGITtD FUYOIS
BUY 3 a SAVE 11.64
IOLGll FLEX
BUY 3 a SAVE 13.77
IOLGll FLEX
AU.WUlm
l&'m.UY
• Your style looks shiny
fresh In any type of
wuther Non-Aerosol
~ 3:4.00
·SAVE aee
VASELINE
lf1UllVE CAil
LOTIOll
Non11re11y formula that
softens skin on contact
10&.; 1.00
SAVE •t .911 ... ..... ~::,!--'I Thera1ran or
Theragran·M
l9 .... ,...., .....
100 .......... . ..........
Count
Vasya
YOIU ....
....... 7.00
4 i·tii•1!-
...... "T" ...,
.-Y •
BUY 2 a SAV~ 66e
IOID ENVELOPES
SAVE•t.03
PHOTO ALBUM
Mag111tlc Photo Albums; 1· .0 I IUno Type. 10 P1911,
t'ft" 1J 11'ft" EA. IA.
SAY• ea •
VICU
8AVE4·ec
IDRUCIY --wman . .....
414i9QS-
Hof
Brau . .......
IHI
SAVEaee
,._(B1c;>
STIC
BAU POllCT
PENS
Wrltn first
Hmt, IYtfY
tlmtt
,~ ... 1.00
_ ...
9 Inch PAPER PLATES
WE HONOR YOUR CREDIT!
·~
AD PRICES PREVAIL:
WED .. JAN. 6th. THRU SAT., JAN. 9th.
BIG 4 DAY SALE
SPECIAL I
MITCHUM ........ .............
lotion formula for
24 Hour Deodorant Control.
'
SPECIAL I
MITCHUM
Mel ..............
Easy Glide Slick
tor Maximum Deodorant
Protection
2.1 eL
llZI
VICU
Formula
44
COUlll llln'Ull
Cough SuPPfeuant,
Exf)IC1orant & ... ----
Antihlstlmlne.
:.; 3.00
BUY 2 a SAVE 11.18
STAYFREE llllJ.PAll ..... ,........ ............ ...............
,...,1. lJIO . .,.., 2 i s5
SAVB 38'
YapoRub EXCEDRIN
\ H 0 f1 1 n A Y S A ~,: f ~. q AM TO '.1 3 [' H~ M lJ ~ SAT 9 AM lO ! PM SUN 0 A Y
BUY 5 'SAVE 95e
.,.,~
. I , . -. ' ...,, f:. ~:. . . .. . ._,..,,;. ,,,. -.,.-~ --" ~ ,.i "'~ ' : ... .: ..,, ·~} ·:· t~'?9J '-:::?./ ~ -·-""-"~-
CUP O' NOODLES
MUCH MOIE THU A SOUP
AllORIDFUYon
2% oz. SIZE
5 ~$?
R &.
BUY 5 a SAVE 95e
MOBIL~ ,_
~-
Single viscoS1ty
with detergent ....
l~C..
514.00
Mobll
heavy
duty
~
SAVE•t .as
LYSOL
BOWL CLEANER
AUTOMATIC
IOWla.£MD
Wat,,.Stays
Crystal Clear
Fits All Tanks
Pure & UnswHtened
SPECIALI
MQIOl--
MICROWARE
\
. . .
. , . .
•=+W
-~-------
Orange Coat\ DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, January 8, 1982
POLISH TEAR GASSED -Protesters run
from tear gas grenades fired by soldiers
during demonstration in Gdansk. The
demonstrators had overturned a car and set
it afire.
INJURED AIDED -Unidentified victim of
demonstrations lies in snow near Lenin
Shipyard in Gdansk. The person was hurt
Dec. 16 during anniversary of
riots.
Photos dramatize anti-military demonstrations in Poland
By The Associated Presa
Dramatic pictures of
anti-military demonstrations in
Gdansk on Dec. 16 -the 11th
anniversary of a 1970 uprising in
the Polish port -were made
available to The Associated
Press.
The seven pictures, taken by a
Polish worker, came out of
Poland on Monday night.
They were, taken with a
camera left behind by a Western
newsman after Gen. Wojciech
Jaruzelski's Dec. 13 imposition
of martial law in a crackdown
on the independent trade union
Solidarity. Th.e union was
formed in Gdansk in August
1980.
The sequence of pictures
s how s demonstrators
overturning a car near the Lenin
S h ipyard during a heavy
snowstorm. The car Is also seen
ablaze at an intersection.
Dozens of demonstrators are
pictured tleeing tear gas
g renadea fired by Polish
soldiers. (above, left)
One shot shows a victim of the
clash lying in the snow. (above,
right)
Normal communications wit,h
Poland have been cut since Dec.
13 and much news coverage of
events there is pieced together
from r eports of travelers,
diplomats and other people
leavlng the country. Reports of
Western news agencies are
subject to censorship by the
Polish government.
The pictures were smuggled
out of Poland in the form of
small black-and·white prints.
··Let the photographer remain
anonymous. neither do 1 wish
my name to appear with them,"
the carrier or the pictures told
The Associated Press.
.. These must be among the
first pictures to come out from
Gdansk after the military
crackdown on Dec. 13, but I am
sure there are many more
piclure·s to come when the
proper channels are found. The
Polish man-in-the-street wants
that," the carrier said. •
Now it's 'dunip-a-date'
F irm provides novel out to relationship
CHICAGO CAP) -I( hints don't "So now that you've been exposed
work and excuses jusl don't. do the for what you are,
trick, Terry Morgan has a deal for "If l'm lucky, you'll be hit by a
you. car.
·'We take the most difficult "So you go your way and I'll go
situations in life," said Morgan, mine.
operator of "Dump-A-Date" and "And if you get the ur&e to call,
"Kiss·Off-A-Gram," which feature keep your damn dime."
You'll love our crispy North Atlantic fish fillet on a warm
bakery bun with shredded lettuce! Complete
with fresh cote slaw and golden fryes. ifs
great for lunch or anytime! Try our
Chicken Sandwich Platter. too!
not -so -subtle ways to end
relctlionships
Clients who call "Dump-A-Date"
are asked to provide all the gritty
details they can on the perso11ality
and whims of the recipient.
But "Dump-A-Date" has its
limitations. I
-SARE
TRAPS"
UcAllMI v..... °"
Oft• "' Ow 1,. h•h.... • .... ,.
"Fashion
Boots"
S.W 8-°" Toil¥ Hoe.. ,....,_ ._
~~
~ tw ..
• 11n.r tw.. cw Mm .. S..ell etf .. s-~ ,._..,.,
Acreu"-"-*•
°"""""" .... .... ._,, .... '.~ ~etalllcs"
...... :~IN"'ff'f"I~ .~ct'~~ fl ~•It ttltcllo"
• .. ~~ 8tonM .,_ • Gold
hl¥t lft tlOC~ DlttO¥H ..
c:-M'1Mt
"Now, we don't want to hurl
people," Morgan said. "But if you
tell us what the person definitely
dislikes, we'll go get it."
Imagine receiving a bunch of dead
flowers. a carton of rotten fruit or an
empty candy box.
Some messages can be mor e
caustic, Morgan said.
For example, a woman who was
disgusted with a boyfriend who had
li ed to her sent the following
message:
"You plucked my love as if it were
a daisy.
"And if you think you' re going to
get away with this, you're crazy,
"We will not assault people,"
Morgan said in a telephone
interview.· "We will not slander
people. And we will not throw pies."
"Dump-A-Date" will send a J messenger to hand-deliver a smelly
packttge or the bitter prose for the
right price. The "Kiss-Off-A-Gram" I
costs $12.50 and the more elaborate
services are priced as high as $30 or
more -depending on how far the
messengers travel.
Read all todays news
everyday
in the Daily Pilat
COLLECTORS
, .. Eid
·Gold Jewelry Sale
c
0 R
(7J~
!/~ 20% OFF JV~ " "'"4 Introductory
Offer .
$17.00
Reg . $60.00
Cathon Heif
CALL EMll.V
979-&111
our reg_ulor )ow prices
on jewelry in stock and
ordered.
Coins not included
--------·-.. ,,..,.. ___ -...., ..... --·· = ---.-·-id ·-·
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTtWednHday, January 8, 1982
91il friend of Reagan's
new securit:y BdviSer ----~lm.J----WASHINGTON <AP > -He
couldn't come uf. wlth the name ol the prime min.la r ot South Africa,
bad no oPlnloa to otter on nuclear
non·proltleratlon and uld he 1ot
moat of hla knowled1e of
lnt•rnatlonal affairs from new1 m.,uines.
But Wllllam P . Clark Jr~, a
wealthy Californian, had the ear d
the confidence . of Ronald Rea an,
Md in the-end that's what counted.
Re11an. takln1 office u pl'esident in January, named Clark as No. 2 man
at tbe State Department.
Thoee old ti• still count.
Reagan on Monday chose bis
friend as his national security
adviser, a poeiUon
of utmost
Importance Ip a
White House
where the chief
executive lacks
foreig p-14~
experience.
Clark thus
b eco me s a
confidant on the
mos t vexing and cuu
sensitive issues, a president faces.
And he becomes the White House
counte rwe ight l o the S tate
Department and all the lnstitutionai
luggage it must be ar in offering
advice.
Clark succeeds Richard V. Allen,
who arrived as an outsider and never
built much rapport with Reagan or
won the confidence or the inner
circle.
By contrast, Clark and Reagan
have been friends 15 years. They
struck it olf in 1966, when Reagan
was running for g ove rnor of
California and Clark, a r ancher,
served as his Ventura County chair·
man.
In Sacramento, Cla rk became
Reagan's chief of staff. He was the
prompter who h e lpe d Re agan
prepare for news conferences, the
author o f concise s ingle-p a ge
"mini-memo" that s ummarized
complex issues for R4fa&an. Within fi ve yea r , Reaga n
.brushing aside objecUons each time
-appointed Clark to three judicial
pos ts, elevating him from Superior
Court to the California Supreme
Court.
Critics pointed out, to no avail, that
Cla rk flunked out of Stanford
University and the Loyola University
Law School and fa ile d his bar
examination the first time around.
Yule lighting
ori,Pn traced
KANSAS CITY CAP ) -The
wides pread tradition or outlining
buildings with Christmas lights is
claimed to have started here al the
Country Club Plaza, which boasts it
is the nation's first shopping center.
The tradition reportedly started in
1925, when a s ix-foot strand or
colored bulbs was insta lled over an
arched doorway.
This year, more tha n 150,000 light
bulbs attached to 48 miles or wiring
adorned buildings in the 60-acre
plaza.
When Reaa•n brou1bt him to
W ashtnaton apeculaUoD aroM that
Clark would be tn the runnlna fOf' a
future vacancy ln the U.S. ~me
Court.
But Re11an wanted a friend at the
State Department, where a forceful
Ahpxander Hail wu taldn1 cbar1e.
Qlark admitted that lnternaUonaJ
lssi,aes weren't. hla forte. He said his
for4lign policy experience amounted
. to a 1967 vlalt to Cblle -"72 hours In
Santiaco" la how he put it.
He said he leaned on Time and
Ne wsweek for keeping up with
lntematiooai events, and beued off
expressina an oplnion on a tone list or
Issues. When a Democrat quiHed
him, Clark admitted he didn't know
that Pieter Botha runs South Africa.
Clark stumbled so at his Senate
F oreig n Relations Committee
confirmation hearing, that even t.he
Republican chairman, Charles Percy
or Illinois, despaired.
"Never again," said Percy, "can
we accept a man. who professes to
have no knowledge in the area for
which be has been nominated.'.:
Twenty-four senato rs opposed
confirming him and the papers or
Europe chortled. An Amsterdam
daily ran this headline: "Reagan
Chooses Nitwit as Minister."
But, it turned out, Haig and Clark
worked together well -Haig out
front as global strategist. Clark
ins ide running the shop.
And even if Clark was unable to
identify Botha, he was chosen for a
delicate mission to southern Africa.
His assignme nt: Nudge South
Africa toward granting independence
lo Namibia. Strengthen ties with
South Africa without antagonizing
black Africa. He won • favorable
notice for his performance.
Cl ark is 50, a member or a
prominent and wealthy family with
extensive land holdings in California.
He is a Roman CathoJic, the owner of
a 900-acre ranch, the father of fi ve
child ren. His grandfather was a
sheriff and his father was a police
chief in Oxnard.
Dropout rate
remains high
CLEVELAND CAP) -Nearly as
m a n y stude nts dro pped out or
Cleveland junior and senior high
schools last year: as gra~u ated ,
school officials say.
Records show 3,998 pµpils received
high school diplomas and 3,621 others
abandoned school.
The L!JM-81 dropout rate was about
9 per cent of the total secondar y
school enrollment and was virtually
unc hanged from the total of the
1979-80 school year.
Bald eagles killed
ORONO, Maine CAP> -Three bald
eagles we re shot dead , one was
electrocuted and al least four others
were killed in undetermined ways,
br inging the number of eagles killed
in Maine this year to the highest
level since monitoring began in 1973.
... .....
llllCI ...
Start a tax-sheltered, insured IRA or
Keogh Accoun~ at Gibraltar.
Announcing new retirement benefits for 1982. ·
Now, working individuals may deposit up to $2,000 per
year into an IRA. Self ·employed persons may deposit
up to $15,000 into a Keogh account. Deposits are tax -
deductible'and in terest earned is tax-deferred.
Fixed Rate. Earns 14%, compounded semi·annually.
Term is 18 months to 5 years. No additions accepted.
Rate offered during January only.
Variable Rate. Earns 26-week T-BiJI discount rate +W~>.
compounded daily. Term is 18 months to 10 years.
Rate varies on entire balance every 26 weeks. Additions
accepted. Substantial interest penalty for early withdrawal.
No trustee fee on new accounts for 1982 tax year.
Freel Interest-Earning Checking with your"account.
-Only $1,000 a year-$2.74 a day-could
lead to a million dollar retirement.
A wealthy, secutt retirement can be more than' a
dream. The chart at right tells the story.
Let's suppose your 14% account continues to eclrn that
rate until you retire at 65. Depending upon your present
age, you! account could grow to a remarkable siZe.
For example:fiymakingannual ~ts ofjust$1 ,000
over 36 years, you could retire with well over a million
dollars. And nearly all of it would be in interest earned.
Remember. too, that if you deposit the maximum $2.000
per year. you'll have twice as much money.
Check wit.h our expert Retireme.nt Account
Counselo~ at your nearest Gibraltar office.
GIB
lRA ACCOUNT GROWlli
At tnd ol Otopotll Otpofit
yurNo. Sl,000/yr. S2,000t yr.
5 s 7,687 $15,374
10 S22,9S1 $45.902
15 ~.254 $106,.508
20 $113,416 $226.832
25 $232,859 $465,718
30 $469,996 $939,992
35 $940.796 $1 ,881 ,592
40 Sl.875,501 $3.751,002
. ...,
SAVINGS
Assets over C billion dollars • Offices statewide
IC 1982 GibrallJlr Savini(> and I t'loln Asi.<'< •~lltin •
•
HUNTINGTON BEACH: f1J. Huntington Ctr. /(714) 898-9666
LAGUNA HILLS: 24260 El Toro Rd./ (714) 951-8454
RJLLmTON: 255 W. Orangethorpe Ave./ (714) 871-6101
NEWPORT BEAot: 2?'00 W. Coast Hwy. /(714) 631-26U
SAN JUAN CAPl.Sll{AN(): 31877 Del Obispo St./ (714) 493-5011
SANTA ANA: 3925 S. Bristol St./ (714) 979-7~
#4 Santa Ana Fashion Squatt/(714) 834-0717
>~uth ' Coast Plaza Villase
p~~ ~~~
sonalized engraving •
bUe you wait.
cnly Glass & Orystal
re you need to visit.
fbe selection will
. impress you!
Visit Our Unique
Stores And T ak"e Advantage
Of Th~ Great Reductions
At These And Other
Participating Stores!
Sunflower and Bear Streets
Santa Ana, CA 92704
nTITTTllTl'l'lrn'l'l'llTlnTlrW. ,hw..~ ........ ......,--(714) 751-6595
Cappuccino M•chlnes From $135-$795
• Coooer Cups From $~$53 lnietsoU
Espresso A6kers from $12 .. M9
Orange Coul DAILY PILOT/W1dnHday. January &, 1982
..
• Resldr.:ndal
• eommerclal Bulldlngs:
Only
Answer Page
offers you all this:
Takeout commitment requited
along with leases.
• C.llfomla's largest paQlng_ aotnt.
• Inexpensive-fess than 75¢ a day.
• Land LOans up IO one )'ear
SOI appraJsa1
• Wlde·area coveraoe·-15,000 square mlles • A location no.ar you, plus field representatives at your beck and call
e 24·hour service We never sleep
e Free unlimited beepmg,delivery and lull mamtenance.
e Quantity discounts. COn&itct:
• Jeff John.son
SOuCh Orange CounCy/ll\'lnt'
7W851'""°50
Keep 1o.Joucti with home. office. answering service.
school, kids. babyS1tter. etc. Save time. gas and money.
Call todey for 1111,.bltt IM I frtt HmottltnlUoal
"The better beeper"
@) flr.iSWEA Pff (jE~,
731·7777 • 953-5782
Cillloll·free 1-800-252·9161 Or calllnfonnllJOn tor l1lt
AnS*tr f>aoe office llQIHt you
Aqtflt •0< R.t0o0 RWJ to111cn11on
C~ICTOlt'I COAN EA
• 1...a .... C .... .._. Sii...,. Cl. $&.U
•• , '911
'""' .... -$411... .... .. ~pie L ... ft MlUt Mlt.M W P-Mtt.U $11S.lS GARFIELD BANK
~ Sllv .. ~ .,,,.... $1611 ... .-CMsl P'I ... Vltl-(7W) 0Ma
Now Offers
NEW MAXIMUM TAX
P'ICTITIOUI •USOIEU NAMa ITATl-NT DEDUCTIONS on IRA and KEOGH PLANS
Tiit lolltwlnt P4rton h doing -lnH•es· c •s CONSTRUCTION COMP'ANY, Sito 81rcll Str .. 1, -port 9Ncll, Ctllfomlt ~ Cllrlstopll•• A. Stephen•, •oe
luckMll, Coste MHt, c.ilf~nl• t»h Tiii• ~ I• conctuclH by en llldlvlctu.t. Cllrls S'"'*'s Tlll1 $1.t-I WH llled wltll Ille, Co~111ly c .. ri. of Or•noe County on
Dt<•m-14. 1 .. 1. l
.. 11 ....
t:.ffect1ve January I, 1982, every wage earner up to the age of
70' i 1s entitled to open an I RA (Individual Retirement Account).
Now you may deposit tax deductible contributions of up to S2,000
a year and have the interest earned tax-deferred until retirement
($2.250 1f your spouse is not a wage earner). If you're self-employed
you are now allowed to deposit contributions to a Keogh plan of up
tu $1 5.000. lh1~ 1s double the fo rmer maximum of S7,500.
Pvbllllled Or ... C.0.JI Delly Piiot,
Ot<. 16, U, JO, 1 .. t. Jflt\. 6, 1"2 SOf.ftl 13:75% 18 Months
ITAT-..NTOP' Ae.AJIDDlllMNTOP' UY M P'ICTITIOUI IUSINEll NAME Tiie l•llo•lflg Pttnns II••• tNlldoned Ille Ide ot Ille lkllll-''"'°'"' -: . YACHTING CONSULfAHT$, J.tt6 Vie Oporto. N"'•Porl B••<h. Celllornl•, nMl Rebert O. H•gln, u2 Virginie 'lace, Coste MHt. Ctllloml• n.21 Ro•trt Gordon lttr. U7• Morfllng1t11r une, Ntw"°'t Butll,
Callfomlt Tiii• llwlneU wM <onduclltd bv 1
('urrent Annual Rate Term
5~111 \linimum dt'p<hil. '\ub<.C1ntl•I intnt"\I P""•ll\ for nr1v ,.ilhdre• .. I.
~GARFIELDBANK _._118'll"'91•.fllC • au.~ -",,.,._.,,.
MON'fm.10
2417 W11ittier CM.
• (213) 729-1411
WTlll'f , .. m w. Gney IM.
(213) 57S-1MO
NOUYWOOO
6464 Sw9lt ....
(213) 414-'414
HUNTINCTON llAOt
9042 Glrfi9lll Ave.
(714) MS-H02
l'H'fftl~A ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I.} a-..no H'9in Tiiis ste.........,. w• tiled wltll IM •C....,ty Clerk ol OrMl99 c .... nty "" O.C•m-11, 1'11
~,., ... Put>ll•lled Orange Coot D•lly 1------------1------------P'llot, Oe<. U, JO, 1"1, Jen. 6, IJ. lta P'ICTITIOUS •UllNE5S
~.al NAMIJ ITATIMIUIT
PUil.JC llTl:E
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
CHARLES DUHAN AND
OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE .
CASE NUMBER A·111609.
Tiie following ptrlOn 11 doing b<lllntHH
Cll COMPO-QUOTE SYSTEMS ltt COMPU SURGE SYSTEMS CT! FOURTH OIMEN,ION W FOURTH DIMENSION SYSTEMS (S) FOUATh OIMEHSll)N COMPUTERS C•I 40 MICRO TECH 111 40 SYSTEMS, 11106 Palmetto Circle, Fovnt•ln Vellet, >:alltornla tVOI
M l r tam A F arn"m, 1110• Palmetto Circle. F°"'nt•ln V•lley, T o a I I h e i r s • cat11orn1e '7Jllll ben~ficiaries, ~reditors , 1,;!':.i~· " "_,.., t>v .,.
contingent creditors, and ""'""" • "'""'"" perso ns who may be Tiii• it1-1 wa• lllfld •"" t~ otherwise interested in the covntr c .. ,_ ot Or•noe county on
wlll or estate of · Charles Oo<emw 14.1"' • P'111J'n Duhan, also known as, Pu11t1"'9dO.tn01 co"'' Dell• P11o1. Charles Sigmund Duhan. o.c ••. n .JO. 1t•1. Jen.6, ,.., 5401 .. 1
A petition has been filed ·-----------
bv Barney Goldstein in t~ "'IUC "8TIE
Superior Court of Orange 1-----------
lllCTITICIU' •u•tNEU H-E STATIMaHT
1 ht rot10•i"9 per\.On\ •re oo•nQ
bu\UWU•·
AlfoNll~ C.ONlf'ANV, LlU. 20ll , .. *POU C..enlH Or1v•. Su11e ~~. Newport 8Meh, Ullle><noa flMO
M tr•bOlt•tf At•l•ft•, 11 ,.,otnt
Lorn• Oreve. (oron• O•• M•r.
C.•hto1n1• t2'~ Melahtt F-1 ......... 27 Point
lom• Oriv•. Coron• de• ""-•'· Ctlllotnl• -2' .............. , ..... s -~ 1)4 ..
t ... ~~~=·.f-~::~~~~11 •. 11 !'Olnl UHN O<ive. C.orono otl Mer. C..•l•torn .. '2•6
""'•'''" Al•t•h• (Ho11f'1nutvnt u Monterey t.11ti., C.orona oet ~r. '-"'
92'2> 11\ll l>vllnt .. " <tn°"cteo Oy e 91ntr" l>'OrltWr"'•P Mt•M>otl .. l l"lelah•
1 h1\ \t.ltl't"nent w•.s tu.a w•tn the t.oulltr Lier~ ot Or•ll~ t.ounty on
1<0.em-n,1te1
JllS.SU
P'ICTITIOUI •u101a11 NAMl ITaT•IMIWT T ht loll-Int penon• •re <k>l"9
""''""'"' OAGAL AllOTOIU . UUI Comm•rct Caftt., Ori••, *'e E. LAlllN Hllh, CA '26SJ. ' OAGAL S.M.M .. a C•lllornlt corponllon, ms1 c-u Ctnw Orlve, $tl«t E, lllQVftt Mlllt. CA
'1W. Tiiis btlllnes• Is COllCIU<l•d by •
c °""'•lion OAGALS H.M SEIO MeftTAV.VI,
"'""""" flll1 11-.... •• lllecl with f"9 County Clef'll ol 0r"'91t C.ovnty ...,
Dec "· 1"1. llolllCHA•L f'. O•AAND, INC .. • ...._,. .. Lew
-.. ..._. CtMw °"'"· a.... NewNftlleedl,CA,_
Tai. C1t4)7 ..... Pvl>lllNd Or-. Coest Delly Piiot,
Dec. JO, 1"1, Jen.•. IJ, 10, 1"2 saol.f1
Cou ntv request ing that ,...,. wuNTuu v~~
Barn.ey Goldstein be "~C::..~m::::::S ,_::.:::~.":.: .. ,.. ,...,. a ppo1 nted as personal T,,. toll-ln9 "''°"' •re 001,,. ,.,0 .... 1.,,11 P'1CT1nou1au11•1u r e p r e s e n I a I i v e t o IMillnesu• 1...-, ca. mu NAMe ITATaMaNT
administer the estate of NE w,. o RT "' ... i't 1 HE PUC11•-<>"'9t (..M•t o.11y P11ot. c..!a':..~~~1ftf ,_...,, .,, ctol111 the decedent -ENGt"EIUUNG. 1020 wot Ht• Dec ••• 1"1,J_, U.H.1• )MIMI WA•M SP'IOltOS •OS11'1£SS . • Str•t. C.lt -· Calllomle 92'.21 The petition requests ROI oue1opmen1 corp., • COMPANY. c/o 1•1 Oo•e s1 ... 1,
authorit v to administer 0o1awerec.,_tt1on MIC l9'fl( :;'~ 760• "-' .. ecll. Celltoml•
the estate under the This.,.,.,,,." 11 cOflductecl t>y • MetroPollt•n Lii• 1n1ure11ce CWJIO"MI09! C I n d e p e n d e n t Ro10ew...-1 corp. ,,:r.:~"li1~c;:.r;i.0~=·y::: Administration of Estates J.R ,,...,_.., Pr9'1dent "~ corpo ... 11on. tt F,_t venture, 1a11 Act. A hearing on the This, .. _, was 111ec1 with 111e su ~1a1oacouaTOF~LIFO•H1A 0oveStr .... s..11eito.N-portlletcl\,
petition will be held on g::~~~~~1~1 Or•,,.. county"" E•ttc1':":r'':A0:v~~N•Lo eei~;"~:, 1, COfldvcted by•
Januarv 27, 1982 at 9:30 "17-BUATON.DKHS<td ..,..,.,~
a .m . In Department 3. PvbtllNclO.enot C ... stOellyPllot, NOT ICE ~~·~~~~ OF REAL 22,.remon!Venlvr•
located al 700 Civic Cent~r Oe<.JO, l"1,J.,, 6.1J.10. l"1S.0Wl PROPERTY AT PRIVATE SALE ' =--~~=II
Drive West. Santa Ana, NOTICE 1s HEREBY a1vEH tNt Tiii• ......._ w• 11.,.. witt1 "" California. -• ~ JM unclers9*f, es Actmlnhtret•I• ot c-ty c1er11 ot 0r.,,.. c-y .., IF YOU OBJECT to the ,...... ••~ 111' 01•1• 01 ,,,. •t>o•• named 0oc..,.w 16, 1"1 dec-nc, wlll Mil '" prl••tt .. ,e to P'111172 granting of the petition, NM1nt t11e llltl\HI -11es1 blddet' -111e Pu1>111Nd 0r-. cont o.iir Pltot.
VOU Should either appear ,.,_..TIAMOU•NIO.•UDSINEu term• en<I condttloni llertlnelter Ot<. JO, t .. 1. JWI 6.. I), 20, l"2MOS4l. at the hearing and state -·· .... mtntloneelalld""'i«lto<onflrm•llon ·--------------MAM•ITAT•MtENT 1>V said !klperlor Court or1 Jenvery 12, -II' .-TV( vou r objec tions or f i I e Th• 101...,.1119 persons .,.. do1t111 1 .. 2 •• , tht "°"'of 11:ooo·c1ock e.m., ..--"''"" Written objectiOnS With !he fluslllHSM: or ll•trtttltf -'1111n ... tlmt all-COUrt before the hearing. OESEAT INVESTMENTS. 1SU by lew, ti the olltce ol tllt M•N v ... di 0r1 ... Etsl, S..lle m. u n d • , I I g n • 0 • s H A R 0 N Your appearance mav be C•ltMeu,Ctlllomlanall6 WENTWORTH, Admlnlslretrl•, c/o in person or by your Hen111to0a, 111 Taylor Orlve. MARCS.TOVSTE1t1.eso.,mJEesl attornev. Mclfttere,. """'· eei1torn1et11S4. soent""tll, Sllll• 100. S•nt• .....
I F Y 0 U A R E A T........,. Mtiewf, 141t C"""lll9fltm Ctlllornle tt701 . ell rl911t, tlllt, Orlvt, -lllltr, C.llloml• tQI01 Interest end nut• OI uld de<-t al c R E D I T 0 R 0 r a Ttduhl Hl•hlno': 117 Wot tllt llmt OI lllS dHlll, and •II rlgllt,
contlnoent creditor of t.he f1!11~~.n!..~•I••. Mon1e1>e11e, 111 .. •IWI in"""' 111111111s Htet• may
d f .,.. ""~ -,...,, ecqvlred by optrtllM ot law, or eceased, vou mus1 1le wernm "°"'''° 1M van 11.,...., otl'lerwl•, sine• 1111 -"'· in -10 vour c laim with the court w..,,, •etdwln ,.-· .. c.u1om1e tc»20 t11t 1011..ine c1ncrlbed , .. , pr-rty
0 r pre 5 en t It I 0 the Lou Jecolll, ,,. Le EnclM. Palm loc•led In the c-y of o.-.. St.ie
I t t · $tlf'lfl9t, Callf9'nle '2162 of Celllomle, al'CI ltOell" OH<rl-H persona represen a 1ve oorh A. McC•t1rey, ,,409 roti-t a{>polnted by the court •wbtM llMI.. v.,. HV'A Callfonll• Lot 11 of Trte1 No..,,., es.,... m~ within four months from "•1 re<or"4 In 11eo11 *· Peot1 it to i. the date of first Issuance w1111em Jell11M11, 1•11 Pein• 1nc1vt111e of M1act11-MttK. 1n C.Vrt. c~ Ctl!Mml• t1'11 Ille oftlc. et lflt C--.. Aecorder of of letters as provided In J.,., .. •· J-. cto •11at•t• ,.1•c°"'""· s e c t I o n 7 0 0 o f t h e ._ ..... ,., tm-.. v-0r1ve East, com"'°"'' 11-"'°'' J-wooct ca I lforrila Probate Code Ste. m , Ct1tt "'"'· ce11tw111• na• Ori••· Hllllllfltlen -..c11, c.111om1e · .t.rlNMt o.c.tro, 401 Vaquero A.P. t,._U1'°4 Tht tll'Y)6 for flllng clalms RNll ~.c.11tom1••*' 1141 .. _,.,.. -1nv111td tor ..... will not expfre prior to M.-; Mt,._, '°' •• ci .. (.,.. ,.,c.1 of .,...,r. •11 -.11 ..._ m••
four m-th f , .. _ d t Ortw, I'~. C.i"-ta t11M lie Ill Wflttlltl. 111'111 Wiii M re<tl .... et .... s rom ..... a e Tiii• ...,.._ It C~lad "" • ttl• •tlk• .. MAM •. TOV5TEIN, of the hearing noticed ..-.1,.,wf'tNlt uo .. m> ...... ~ Mr .. t. abOvt. J-A.J-$\llte "'·Senta...., c;.11..,..,.. '2'101. YOU MAY EXAMINE Tlllt ......... -llle9 ...... AIW'M't ... AIMlllllllt.Cl'f•. JAAON
t-flle k--t bV t .. -("" t ,_.., Cltf'tl .. o...,.. c-tY .. W••TWO-TH, ., may .. rn.tt •lttl '"' ... ,..., ""r . o.c. .... 21,ttet. ""'""" ......... ~'-* If you a re a person ,.,,_ c..n..,,... • .,.....,.., • ....
Interested In the estate "'* .... a...,. c:e.111 o•tv ....._ ••,.,111tttretr111 ~-11.,,, at '"" "OU may flle a request o.c.•.ittt,J-•.'*·'°·""~..,. 1'-.,.., ""' .,....IUtl• e1 t111• , llftle• ... .....,, "" lfttlllnt ...... with the coort to receive ..... ·
special notice of the filing PllJt 1911( TUMS OP' :!]= ce.11 • .....,.,
ot the tnventorv of estate =::.~'!'91~ 1119 !::? :-,.:r.,':
assets and of the petitions, ITAftMlwto. ....,.., c-t, '"' ..._.,.. c•1 ..
1ccounts and reports w11'MIMlltwA&.,11111M • _.... ......... ,,_. ~' ... -sc I_.. In CAl'tlo 1-s ... .,........, .. ONuTtM 111• wrt•• ., • ., •"•'· .,.. .,. .... r ~ ... ~ n '""'·· .,_, ... ICT'tnc.a .... ,." 11111.-" ••If 11 .. 11 111• of the Callfomla Probate ..,............. CMt~ " .... "' .-. ....,.,..., cooe. Tiie,........ _.... "-_..._ c ... " °"...., .. ...-.. -~ Petitioner Barnev .. • ••11•re1 ••r111•r ,, • ..,ow •• .. ...,. f!MHMf -.w• OIW't.
Gold t I • perllltnlllp ... ,.u,.. """' ,... .... .......... ,,... -... 11-• St n i.c. ........... _ .. CAl'TAIN$ _,..,,.._
CalW, 111"1 *fl 11'"4, .._.... OMHI! DlcMMlf .. ttl,
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---
NMtnt NOTICI TOCltlDITOH OP' •ULK T,_AN"IA
CS.U.61'1 .. MrU.C.C.l Notice 11 ,,.,,.,,. ,,,,.., to creditors ol Ille •ltllln ,........, trW!lfercrs 1"et • ...,lk tr-fer '' tboul to be m-on ottsonel property herelnelter detc•llled
Tiie neme encl Mlneu eodr"' Of Ill• Intended lr•n•lero,. 1, llALLEW·MCFAA LAHD, INC., UOU It SkvP••k Eut. 1rvl11•. c.111~111em1• Tiie loc:t tlon 111 Ct11for11I• ot ~ chltl Htcullvt olllc• or prln<lpel bv•ln•n olllct of t,,. lntencl•d ,,.,,., ... ., ,, lllt .........
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•
Gas guizlers revived?
B_igger cars in demand. as smaller auto plants close
Of;TROJT (AP> -Oesplte
r.urs of talk about the auto
ndu•try's move toward smaller
cara, the only Ford Motor Co.
ractory bulldlna cars this week
la turning out lull·&ized, luxury
models.
While Ford 's 18 other
auembly plants in North
America are closed to reduce
Inventories spawned by a sales
slump, the plant ln aubw-ban
Wixom keeps bulldln•
Contlnentala, Llncolna and Mark
Vis to meet a stren1thenln1
conaumer demand for bl1 cars.
"We have seen a atronc aw-1e
in the large and luxury car
segments'' of the car market,
uid J E. Cappy, ~eneral
Economist predicts
interest rate boost
NEW YORK (AP> -Henry
Kaufman, chief economist at
Sal omon Brothers, said he
expects Interest rates to reverse
t he downtrend that began in the
Call and start rising by midyear.
In the investment firm 's
annual forecast. Kaufman said
he expected the rise in interest
rates to result from increased
demand for c redit as the
economy starts to recover from
the recession .
Kaufman said he did not
expect short·term interest rates
to approach their record highs of
the last 12 months, but that it
was likely long.term rates would
threaten to top their peaks of
1981 sometime after midyear.
He said the drop in interest
rates since the end of summer
was creating the necessary
eondilions for economic
r ecovery this year and that the
next round of federal tax cuts
also should provide impetus to
recovery.
The rebound should begin in
the spring, he said, but he added
that it would not be as strong as
the avarage post· World War ll
recovery.
;
Nevertheless, he said , the
recovery will mean higher
interest rates.
"l\ confrontation between the
c r edit needs of the U .S .
Treasury and those of business
corporations is shaping up for
1982," he said.
Such a conflict is not typical
for the early stages or an
economic recovery and it
promises to produce a record
borrowing in the nation's credit
markets and lead to a
substantial rebound in interest
rates. Kaufman said.
He predicted new credit
demand would rise about $50
billion, lo a record $468 billion,
In 1982 Most of that would be
short·term financing, he said.
·'The ballooning federal
budget defecit a nd the
borrowing needs of federal
credit agencies will push the
growth in privately held federal
debt up lo a record $135 billion."
he said.
He also said state and local
governments would increase
their long.term borrowing this
year.
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
marketlDJ manaa"r of f''ord'1
Lincoln-Mercury dlvlllon.
· 'ThOle cars have refiectAld •
1reat strength rt1ht throu1h the
model year.''
lt'a happening at other
automakers, too. At the end of
November, full·slzed and luxury
models generally were In
s h o rtest supply while the
manufacturer11 had hu1e
backlogs of many compacts and
subcompacts.
Ward's Automotive Reporta,
an industry journal, listed 24
com pact and au bcompact
models. o r which ts bad
Inventories of 90 days or more
on Nov. 30. Only three were in
.shorter than 60·days' supply.
Automakers generally prefer to
keep a 60-day supply of cars on
hand.
Of 18 full·siied and luxury car
lines, only three had backJogs ol
more than 90 days and eight had
inventories of fewer than 60
days.
·'One theory is only the
afrluent can buy cars right
now," said David Healy. an
analyst for Drexel Burnham
Lambert in New York.
But another reason may be
that the gap in prices between
big and llttle cars is s hrinking.
At the sam e time. gasoline
prices are holding steady and
the manufacturers have been
able to improve the mileage on
the larger models. making them
more attractive.
At General Motors Corp .. only
two of five divisions -Cadillac
and Oldsmobile -sold more
cars in the Jan. l ·Dec. 2Q period
of 1981 than they did in the same
period a year earlier. For
comparison. sales of Cadillacs
increased 9.6 percent in 1981,
while sa t.es o f co mpact
(See BIG CARS, Page BIO)
HEW YORK IAP110UDH I 1r '~ Kal•SI pf I~ ,. Plnkr1n HASOA~llom OtytM l 1M.1' !Wlvar I ~16 1'-Piof1Hi8 lhowl1>9 1 bid• Dll"" 6 11·16 ..VO K•rn.n ' IM 11 Plalllnt ~ = ~t,\")' ~ 21V. J"' ,i~ ~:~~ :l~ ~~ UPS AND DOWNS - -• II'( o.•111•, ~ 26 Kenam 6"" 1"' Ponll ln•tUI -" ., of ::..teen 11 12 KtflpSY .,.., U \l'I P .. •GM 4 Pm. Prkn 00 ~OoweyEI JV. J\l'I lteullel ~ 2' PrsSteyn tncl\lcleret.itm.,,.up Ol•Crys 22'1'1 24 Kimbell 1fllt 1~ 'P'09rp merk-or comm-Ol1nCru lSY> a ICl1>9lnt IV. ,_ PbSvNC Inion for T""41tY, OcKutl ' ~ Ul't l(loolG JIM1S 1JI!~ Purt8en S1ock 81ci As1t OollrGn 16V. """ KntpeV ,., AEL IM "" 11~ Ooyl08 • 11"' II Kretos • •v. PutDC~ AFAProl ti)'> 1) DrfelCn U'l't tl'-" Kull<h 12 12~ QuakrCh AVM Cp 4 4Yt OunkO l I~ 1-"' ltn<tln U\l'I 1)\lo Re99nPr Accur•y 71M 7'11 Ovrirn ' t~ 14 L-R.s S"°' SY, Reychm AdOIWtW 10'1'1 11 Ettnvnc I~ 161'> uneCo »V. ~ Aevmno AdvAou >'->Y> EconLeb 1614 16Yt Lfln•• n¥t H •1t RHve ' All•lll s 2IWI 1114 EIPtsEI 10 10\lo LldSlor t)llo ""' RoadEa A .. aAI•• U•1o JS .... Eld.,8• ~ •V. Lln8ot » ~ RobOMy Allcolnc 0 .... 47 E .. N"'I 11'-t 11fll 1,, ... lrn 17 "" ==on •n.. 11'1 "" EtMod1 • n )jl i;1cic J2 ~ Sac111er Amer.. , .... 20 EnrO.v 11V> 11\lo MGF 0 I ~. tYt Sal.co AF11tn 4 4'1't EnrMell\d 1" 1\0 MtdsGE 1'\o> I~ StHelGd AC.t'Mt , .... 1•~ E11Rtv W l1-1M-IPI '"• 6" SIPtvl AlllGll ' ~ 6""' Entwlltl Fiio ,..., ~mP .SV. •ff. S<rlpu • AMkros ~ • EqtltSL '°"' 10\I> ~ RI ~ S'-S.nw AHatln• U \lo ,._ EqtOll ... .,. ~ krt s -47 Svcr.Mr •t.••r 111'> I~ vJFS( S.12 J.16 l!Urlon s ~ •Y> Svcmst s A HoMg ""' t F'111>rln ; 4\lo ._ ~ulLP 2'VI ll ShMtc:I AW.'41 ' U 14\11 FarmGP Jl\11 Jl'lll MnPI U """ Sltwmvt s A,,..IJ• "' ~ FlcikOf' ~ ,..,.. Mayn0.11 tV. •11'1 SlereRs 1 A"9S,. I"' 1~ FtlkSys -U M<COf'!" lfl't 1~ Aft9AGd l2YJ UY> 1'-tllostn SSV.. » M<Ferl 13 Ullo Sllkon• , Apple( 2otl. ""' FIEmpS 1' 1...., M<O<l•Y 12v. l21'> SClllWlr 8alrc1Cp •YI ~ FtWnFln S.... Siio MldUW 17 17'111 SwEISv llellyPP 4\1'1 4\0o Fl .. 8kl ttYo nv. MdldCap .... 9'111 Sl•ndyn ll'"IHE 10 I~ "lkllQr 1"'4 " MldlRH 1 11·1' SldMkro lletlcR g ,..... , FltNFI• ,,,,. 1411'1 Mldlllk ' n 22C\lo ~=.ft,' e .. 11Fr """ n Flurocb , 1..., 7'111 Miiiie• 1•1M ttYI sterisi B•,.lllMk too.<. 1.,._ FOf'eflO 11 21V. Miu IG 161'> 17V. Sl•••CI 8ftllM sv.. Slo'J Formlgll 111'1 2" , .. I Qv. 4Vo SW.-· .. lltftlPt JV. 2" Fr-Cf 10111 U MonlCot 4'111 4... •w lletlL • ""' 2t\lt Fr•nkE lll<o 19 . .p 1~ 1.-., 5-rEI 8nMol 14\lo 1S F'"SG ?9'f'> JD -ePd 24 .... 1"4 lllbbCo ~ II Fr .... nl • UV. lS\11 MortRn Ill> • BtrdSon •v.. 91.ot FullrHB 24'o 24" rlllln ~ I" Bl<1chr S-. S'9 GnAutm 6 ,.,.. MotCIVb S S\lio 111,.,,_. "' tl'lo GnOoo 111'1 JC\lo wllorr 11...., 1l ........ I J.i.' S.16 GnRIEJt 16 11 NengCp s >D n 11,,..Ton'I U Ullo -' HOit ' ~ 20\lo llv<k-Pl t GovEFn IO 1""" HJHGH 1S:V. U"°' 811flel1 )IV. -Gr•S<n ' 1' 161'° NYAlrl 41'> 41111 llllf""'PS ,,.,, 12-. G•eet'M ""' 1111• HkkOG • 19'1> ...... I CNL Fin 1 2Y, GreyAdv 10 7S lcoi.t 10\lo tai.
lO\lt ~ T..:umP n"'° -~"" . N(j# YORK CAPI T"9 loll0Win11 llsl 1'111 2 Ttl<mA 1IR'll ,.,,_ -. uw Over Ille · c-. nv, 12 ..... Tenant l 17 17'"' •!Och •nd werren11, 1"411 h•ve -up
21 2IV. T .. Ae 1 uv, M tl'le m<nt --n tht mo<t t>tM<t ..., I> Ill/• TIP'••y 24 241/. c>erceftt ol clltnQlt r~rdless of volv,.,.,.
16 "" TomtO I ~~ J_ll'I,, .. for T-. ~ .th Toyo!• --H Y· 5' .0 Tri< Pd '1 24\lo No t«Uf'l11et '"'ding -U are Ind
lSV. M TytonFd 12\lo 13o;. vded. Net -perctnt"9 C..._• ere 11\e 30Yi JI UnM<Gll 20v. 2IV. dllf•r•nc• belwftft the pr•vlou• c1CK1119 •v. •Yi US Enr 4 4v. bid price -100.•'• 1 .. 1 bid prke
ny, 14 US Sur I~ 20 .... ~ us Tro II~ 12 .... 20lo't UV•BMI al'> »Vi
.l'h '"' Un•Eni ,..,.. tv.
,. )tV. ~p~~ !?~ .. 12-... ' = ~ v!rH11 • u m. ~ i1v. n Veno .. , It """ • u 4414 Vekro g 14Yt 14lll s 1 l'lla U Vktr.S( Pl! 111'1 ,
27-, JIV. VldeoCp ._ "'° 7 l6 :16Vo tleHllall 18" ""° I
16..., -Wtl!Enr 11~ 12 t
!JIM 14 Weldtrn 3" '"" 10 11 211/o WWH0...01•P 12\4 nv, 11 ""' 12 d .,.,. 4J\O 12 13 1~ wme>rC n~ n 13 J7 • WIMrO Ill'> 131'> 14
4 ..... WIMO wl :i. 7711> IS
l4" U•l'I ::~tlu 6" 7"°' 16 ~"O 331 WOOCILOI ~ ~ l1 24 ..... UY, Wrlt1hlW 7Y> 1"" :i 11'1> 19\lo ZIMUI • 21\lo ,..., 20
7V. 11'> " • Nol _,lcallle 21 n t> 1•
2S
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0.C.EJI %~~
T• .. -Zleole< L .. lul un GdT.c.o
'-••Icon 5olvEx Cevco OllClyPI EleNvcl ALI Cp' ~~~:J!. Accv un S1mt1T< un 5<1511 • TSltric Orya vn P·eftftYen Fl•Cfpr ,_
BSH un
Na-
u"' i...;1.,, .<\"?,.., .... . ' ,.. . ...
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Pct . Up 250 Up 112 Up 167 Up 14 J Up IU Up IJ.J Up IJ,0
t.>p 11.S Up 12.S Up IU
UP 11.I Up 11,1 Up 10,7 Up 10.7 Up 10.0 Up • 7 Up •.S
Up '·' Up •> Up U Up I.> Up I.> Up 1.0 Up 7.1 uo 17
CPT s 11•,.., 17"' Olftnttt 16'1'1 ti Nl•lln A 4''A 4''111 NASDAQ SUMMARY C•IWtSv ,. )7 ~::no:ir, ~ 2~"" Nl•l•n 8 4So\lo .. • C•nrtdH 2 ... JV. Htrclwk• J JV. NoCer01 12'M 1"4 NEW YORK (AP> -MOii ecllve o .. ,. CepEn .\0 IS.l6 HrpAow ltt't 12\lo NwtNG1 """ 11-., tlle~oun~ Jloch "'If.lied by NASO
s
& 1
N vcrp wt TremE• K•lclOtt h crwuco "lvcrp s NwptP un " '"' 'h
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Olf U.l Off U .) Ott 111
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C~Sw s tl 1411'1 wttPS 14" 14"° ' CplnAlr 4v, fh H•rpGp -)'V. O .. tl ll'-)l\lo Heme Votv,.,.,. d AIAed C~ • t Ct..Cp 1611'1 17"° ~:C'1,'NI , n~ n~ vcrp • II'> ~ ~;~~ s m·= 1:: ,:'-= V. ClltrRlv ,..,_ 40 Helm'll'K JV. 3..,.. N11tr!>y > tlll. It StrlkPlr ' w '100 1.... t\4 10 II CllrmS ' """ """ He11rdF 211 21\4 ....... lll ... Ill'> MCIC --:n n" Cllr1Hou ' .. ""' Molobm J S-1' 2-. !;(!.M lll/'J 31-. L .. 1c..n· 224.900 2 ,,.,. , ... ~=Mr :: ::_,.., "-· ~ ..... ~ •• ~ ·:~ ·:: OFlfl ... lllG '·· 1.¥..!.!0 m. ~~ Clltlt* •9'.. H0<11R1 Pio ...... terTP 17 tn. r .. I"!.<_, 11·16 ~ CIMtlJL 2''4 1"' Hyattlnl 1M Ulll PCA Int Wt "' Nvcrp I .. 1~n 100 l\lt l\W Clo•'-S IMS 1111 U\I. 2"" Ptbttll I~ 1'lll Ok19tM · 1" 1 M6 1"' Getl'Tte 12' 1 l•lratnd 7 1\lo PcOaR ll! ~ A~ · · 1 ..--11.,.. ~=~ :;1• f7 l~l~E,,, ~ 2! P:,1e,xr :°"' ~ AdVtftCtd CmlSllr IS 16 lntmlG• .... ~ PeneE11t 12 12'-Oe<llMd CmwTel 1)\4 1S tnllkWSll 12'1. I~ P•nteir 17"' 17fll ¥~~
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. January 8, 1982
The duplex h11 the •ppearance or a •lngle·famlly
house, but It hu double the houalnai impact No
matter what your age 1roup. you could own a duplex,
live in one ball and rent the oU>er half.
Older Americans partlculerly are findini that
duplexes have many advanta1es, whether they are
side by side or up and down. The option of living In a
duplex -or triplex or quadruplex -Is t.horou1hly
analyied In a new book , "Where Will You Uve
Tomorrow?" by Michael Sumichrast, Ronal<\ Shafer
and Marika Sumichrast ($14.95, Dow Jones·lrwin).
"Since 1969, I
have been very well
satisfied with our
duplex home." wrote
Jean S. Trimble of
Lincoln, Va .. one of
the 1 ,400 older
~
IYlVIA Pllfll !?
persons interviewed by the authors. ·'The
arrangement gives us a home. The income from
renters gives us money and other necessities, the
depreciation on lhe rental side also gives us a tax
shelter. Tha.t has expired, but we still can deduct
expenses for insurance, repairs and one·hall or the
real estate taxes for the rental side.
"The tenants take over the lawn mowing, they
also are helpful in many other ways. We feel secure
to have people in the other side, especially when we
lake a trip."
.. My tenants are young and we consider
ourselves a family." added Bethune ~bson, a West
Sedona, Ariz., duplex owner. "Tenants are in fact a
good feature for a person living alone. This couple
checks up on me to be Sl{re I am OK. does odd chores
for me and minds lhe pets and plants when I am
away. I do the same for them.··
The dual emphasis on companionship and
privacy is a fascinating aspect or duplex living.
"In 1971, a friend or long standing and I
purchased a duplex jointly," said Mrs. Gwen
Waddington of Seaside, Calif. "l was 53 years old <a
widow) and she was 58 ldivorcedJ. We were both
renting.
"Now we each have our own two·bedroom\ living
room, bath and kitchen facilities , each with two
separate entrances. We have individual garages and
a joint patio. We reserve the patio ahead if we are
going to entertain. If we ate only sunbathing or
having lunch alone, the other is always welcome to
join. because we are friends.
"But we have made a point of not intruding on
each other. In fact, we seldom see each other; ii the
week has gone by and we have not been together, we
try lo have Saturday morning coffee and bring each
other up to date. We share taxes, upkeep, garbage
and sewer bills" which come jointly. We have wil~
made out in oraer that our heirs will not usurp our
·plan that we shall each have a home as long as we
live."
The Waddington arrangement does seem, as she
puts it. financially extremely sensible. Each pays
about $l28-a·month mortgage, Including taxes and
insurance. ln her area, similar accommodations rent
for $295 to $350.
I :,
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES : :
AMERICAN LEADERS
-1\11 -" _.-.,
-" _,_ _,,,, _, -,,., -" _,,._ _,._
--"' -th -1~ _,
NEW YORI( IAPI· Sale\, T.,.~ PFk• MM Mt c,_ _. Ille Wfl mott Ktiw Amerlc., Stock Excl\ef\09 I~. lr•Cllno netloNllV at more ,,,... s\. OomePul • ~.ooo If -v. HouOllTr ttt,500 ~ -,,..
GulfC•" I 121.-n -" NIHllllEn • ..... io-. R.,.MMiro '2,-2011o
Ml<lllE • lt;loOO 21'4 lnll 8ft.._ '7.500 •'-' W•no 8 7',5CIO 321'> T-Me• • 7S.700 2" 5u11ronEno • 1•.-,.,,..
_:j._ _,,..
-"' -11'> -14t -1
NEW YOIU((API Fin.If Oow·J~•"9' for r-,. J.,, s STOC•S
_ i-~ a... Hl4ifl a.-Clffe ca.
.., ~ llO ID m " "'1 n as .JO 11 tt 20 Tm 3111S J1'M l~ID Jn CM 7 '4 U VII IOtt.l 11011 IOI .. IOI.._ Ot,/· t~~·: MUO M' 1• J411J lU ~ ... ·~:
~~~~ •.m=.,.
U S1> •.~t::-!
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORI( IAPI J .,, S
AClv•n<eG
0.<llMd
uncll•"9MI Tol•I IU<M New 11191'&
New lows
Mi.<I AMEX all
Toci.y
401 .... m ....
' ,,
HEW YORK IAPI J ... )
Adv•nce<i
0.CllMd Un<llMOlfd
Total ''"'" New lllQhJ
N•w tows
METALS .
Tooey
161
~ ,,. ,,.
) n
c ...... ,.,_ .• , <•"" • 1101""'· u s,
UPS AND DOWNS CIHlln•Uor&. LAM32.M~e.....-1Mc ~ ,_ • pound, ClellYe<"eG
Tle$7.D4_..l•W_,_lte lb • ._....,1 .. ncem>•--· H.Y
~ ... IS.00~11-.
~let'-'S* !Olrovor .. HY
SILVER T...,.
.•
. '
H...OV .. H.,_, ., tSOpertr..,OUftC:•.'~
/'I ...
'
Orange Cout DAILY PllOT/Wedn.eday, January I , 1"2.
• ~-er1a cuts
price of oil
~ • NEW YORK (AP> -Alcerta baa DOtliled .• cU1tomen it cut crude oU price by 50 cent.I a
,barrel to '8'1 effective Jan. 1, lnduatry IOU!'eet
;bMeaald. , 1 Tbe eut, comln1 after weeks of dlaeusaiON
wlth oU company exec:uUv•, matched Libya'•
Nice for a almllar quality crude. But lt failed to
...S the price advantaae enjoyed by Nlaeria, wbleh
la charatna Sll.50 a barrel ror lta top·irade crude \IYt la ol JimUar quality.
• By cbarcJn1 lesa than A11erta and lJbya,
Nileria baa mana1~ to increue it.I production in ~ent weeta to an eatilnated 1.7 m.11.fion barrela a
4;jy. That la about triple ita depressed level of
Oi'oductlon last summer.
• All three nations are members of the
OraanluUon ol Petroleum Exporttnc Countries.
~ OU companies are not expected to jump at
.Ailerta'a oj1 at $S7 a barrel, mainly because of the ~erian advanta1e and the availability of crude
fliim other sources.
.. "How they <AlaertansJ think the; can aeU QYlhlDI above ($38.50 a barrel), I don't know,"
~done U.S. oil company official who declined to ta« ldenUfled because his company ls holding
ott·contract negotiations with Ataerta.
"At S37 we wouldn't be interested," said a U.S.
a'1 official whose company does not currenUy buy
from Algeria but bad been courted by Alcertan
otficlal.s to begin buyln1 at the reduced price.
'~he Nigerians are bein1 more realistic."
The price reduction J>y A11eria reOected the
continuing downward pressure on world oil price$ as a result of sluggish demand due to conservauon
by consuming nations and economic recession in
the United States.
The United States received an averace of m ,ooo barrels of crude a day from Algeria in the
fttst nine months of 1981, accordine to tbe latest
·statistics from the Energy Department.
.
• •: • C,.._. PICTJTIOUI eusttl ..
•· T.S..No.11.aMJL ._ITAftMlllfT
RI!,.: 21~ Tiie ......... .,..._ -......
.JRUSTORS : JOSEPH C ........... ,
A1'ENSDORF AND LINDA C. P&WTitAOING ... SM ....... ... NSOO.-F ~ ........... ~ .....
•OTtaOPTRUSTS•'SIAU ......_ Oft FRIC>.\Y. JANUARY 2', tta et PAUl.INI! L. aUTtHER,
•:HA.M.LOSAHGl!LE$TITLl!AHD AM ........ l ..... CAftMI. Tlt\l$T DEED COMPANY e1 dul't L. MARii! FORDE, 17 ~ ....... uMltf'Md'~ o.w.•~c:All11J. .. Deed of Tl'Vlt ,.._ Mel'dl )I, Tlllt .....-.. la c~tff .-, e
.... et lfllt. Ho. 11W>4, lft llMll IH5', .... ,...,_._ ....
.... tM of Oftklel Recoret Ill ltle ....... I.. lkllclW e f f I c 'e o f I 11 e C o 11 11 t y Tiiis ___,. -11'-I ........ ~cerJtor of Or•rteo ce11111., C-IY Oet1I of Or.,.. ~ .,. Celttenole WILL HU. AT PUaLIC DK. 19, Hll.
AUCTION TO HIGH.ST alOOER fl ,OR CA$H (pe'felllo'et time of Nie 1111 ,,_.,._.Or ... CMlt Deity PIMC, .... 111 _., of IN Uftlled SU ... ) DK.». "",Jell..6, 1>,.»;tm 1611 .. 1
MONIES MU$T BE TllNOUll!D IN ----------1
CA$H, CASHIERS CHECKS OR NU Illa
CaRTIFIEO CHECKS AT THI! •
FllONT l!HTAANCE TO THll Ot.O
Perkin-Elmer
sale reported
Tbe Perkin-Elmer Corp. bu compltt.d UM
1ale ol nearly au of the aueu ol u. OardeA
Grove.baaed Memory Product.I DIYlaloa to a Sail
Dleao corporation, tJ>e compan,y baa·~.
Tb• ule tranaten Memory Products
Dlvl1loa'1 exlstlni Une of dlle drtv• &Del Ulpe
drives produced and marketed t~ equl~:•at manufaeturen u well u tbe rilhta to a ol
fixed and comblnaUon ftxed·NID()Yabl~ cartriqe
disc drlv• to Cipher Data Productt Inc.
The Wlncbelter 8·1ncb cartrtdae dllc drlva
are nearint completion of development, the
company said.
NO DINOIAU.. -Large U.S. tM.atomobiles su~h iU this 1882 Lincoln Continental ma~ be
remnants of a past era, but as 1982 begins the
big cars are s howing more sales
than smaller classes.
Horace 0 . McDonnel Jr., Perkln·l:lmer'a
president. said the sale of tbe llemory ~
Divlalcn ls cooslatent with an announeed ltraUio
to concentr• resources in the data 111tetna fteld on development of hlcb·performance, J2-blt
microcomputers. .
FromPage88
BIG CARS MAKING A COMEBACK? • • •
Perkin-Elmer i11troduced the flrat aucb
microcomputer for commercial uae and baa
instaUed IDOl'e than 4,000 of tbem worldwide.
Chevrolet Citations dropped
19.7.
At Oldsmobile, aales of Okla•
and Olds 88 modela rose 13.9
percent and 1.1 percent
respectively, wblle compact
Pontiac Phoenix and
subcompact Cb~yrolet Chevette
models slumped 18. 7 percent
and 7 .l percent.
At Ford, sales for full·aize
models did fall from 1980
figures, but sttll · fared better
than their compact and
subcompact counterparts.
Industrywide, 1981 car sales
are off 4.9 percent throu1h Dec.
20.
"There was always more
demand for big cars than the
s ales sbowe~4 ' :_ said John
Stewart, GM marketlnc
direct.or. "When the Initial panic
,of 19'73·74 was over, you 1ot
some of that reOected. The same
is true now."
Price& for new compacts and
subcompacts have gone up
more than the prices for the
traditional larger models. Part
of that increase is due to
e:irpensive new technology
developed for the smaller cars,
but automalcers also have tried
to squeeze more profit out of
smaller cars, which now account
for more than 60 percent of the
total new car market. The resuit
has been that the price eap bas
narrowed.
"You can buy a Chevy Caprice
(full-sized> ror about the same
price as a Cavalier
subcompact~" Healy aaid.
"Gasoline prices have really
be$D Oat for a year DOW and the
prices ol the new subcompacta-
( )('(';tllft·ont
I ,of~ are really pretty b,icb." ..,..
Gas euulen that uaed to get Th ft I 30 f th lte A 10·12 miles per iaUon now get e na ocean ron ome• 11.
15·18 miles lo the city and 2'·218 walled and gated private residential
In highway drlvtni. Cappy said. community in San Clemente. Private
Arvld Jouppi, a Detrolt·based beach and private Swim "'Bnd Tennis
analyst for Colin, Hochstin Co. Club.
of New. York, says gasoline
prices are sure_ to rise further, ] l I",. l b and lt would ~e wrong to nterest On Y / tnancing avai a le
Interpret the current trend as a (714) 498-.2830 or 12 13) 277-9470. return to large cars. ._ __________ ..-..-..-..;..;...;.-.;,...;.o. _ __,
Cappy said automakers are
unlikely to overemphaalie large
cars because they know the
long-term trend is toward
smaller ones.
"I don't think we'll be taken lor tbe roller ~uter ride that happened previously,•· he said .
Read all todays news everyday
in the Illy Piii
QttANGE COUNTY COURTHOUSE, fllC'TITIOUJllUSINIJU t ..
:OCATl!D ON MN'TA ANA BLVD.. .....IT~TUlllUtr
•• ,.WEEN $YCAMORE STREET TM fol'-"'9 P9"-S ere clol
ANO •ROADWAY, SANTA AHA, lluliMSl-CAllFORNIA ell rl9'1t, lllle •"41 aoH TON TllAOlffG LTD, 1 .....,.~•--11eld.-, II Newport Colllor Drl"8, Now"'
••• Mid Dood of Tr1111 111 Ill• 9eecll, CetlMnlienMO ~ .,_ lft Mid C--, -Acllllle HHdecl, 4 SH IJten ...,.. Nie,._ .. , Drive, "--' Boo<JI, Cellfffnl
UC m of Trect No. 1711. Ill .,. .... C.-of C-. Mole, CeuMy Of 0reftllt, D't,. ~.Lid., -H-1 ltito of C11llfor11le, 111 ,.., 111ep Colltor Drl"8, New .. rt 8eecll ~ "' '** ,. ...... S2 ... CelllWIM .... ._....,,. Of Mbco!S--~. Ill Tiiis ..._, la <811411uctM tty e
.... effk e Of .. C:-ty Rec..-of ..-rei....-. .... ... <.....,. Ac:llllle .......
.-EsQtll ell cNdt oll ...,_ Tiiis .......,.,.. -fllell wltlt ..
--· .......,"'"' ...d ... k......i C-ty c.-of Or-~ '"' -.._Md ..w 1nlftff ... -"-rv., Hll.
...... Nld IMll •*8111 the rltM .. -Ft-
-pwtloll of IN lllrleco of 1M ...,_ ,,_,._. Or .... Ceut Deily Piiot.
,_, •rllll119 "'8••tl8flt, 1111111"• w Jall. 6, •S. •. 21, 1"2 *42.
.,.,.., .... of ... klodl lftcNdll\9 lloltr----------,,.. u clual ... of o11 -• drill"" _.,.. -
-•••-n1, ml11l119 01Mt••tlo111, ,._,., ••-
......._ wlltl ..... of Mid wrfece tfl oll wo1b. Wiila. ,_.,, mllllno fllCTITIOUS 9UMN•U
effOVollon1 or 1llefU provided, ....._ ITAT911119NT
•••v•r, lhe HMO •11•11 1101 .. TllO .......... --••• dolno ~tr-lo pnt!IOlt llefl1 drllll119 ff llullnn1 a :
.... ~-et!GOWwMclliltllOW.., SELECT PROPERTlllS, JUO 4lllt IK l!I -••'t effect ti. wrte<e Herlllor eouleverd, CCKte Muo, """9 of ae1c1 ._, -.,.WCll at"°' CelllorMef»a
.,...rwlcliw.etepolfttlo•-JOO Vlollo Corp.,• C•llfo r11 le
...,. to Mid twlece, •• , • ..,..,... 111 tM cor-•tleft, >t• ~ Bouleven1. •n• from l!dno Peu Ceplo11, Cotta MoM. CMlfllnll•ta» ~ ~I, 1tS3 '" -2.. Tiii• 1Mdlft9'S Is cCNlductecl "' ~ n . Offlclel Recorcll. ~•llDll:
,. Code: IS... VIOCloCofll. Pe~e4: HWIMS """°'A. Vlotle, ,.,...._ "Tiie atrHI eddreu e11d oilier Tl\11 ,....._ -lllOd wllll tM
_._ ~. II ....,, of .. C-ty Cler1l of Or ..... C-ty -
•••• pr-r1y dfterllM4 •lllOve la J-ry '·Ha ~rperle• lo .. , 206) Monrovle ,,,_, ~. c.... ..... c.llfern6e fMZ7. "'*41 ... Orwl9t Caul Dell• ..... ~Tll• ""*"•.-• ••K•••m• •v Jell.'· ta.•· 'D.,. 1-.i. ~ty lw .., lftcetnc.,.. of ___________ _...
.WHI MdreM Md oti-CMlfMll '9JC ma ~IMft. H _,, ..._.. ,_.,,., .tillld .... wlll .. INlllt, -• .-. • c.otet>ent or wene11ty, ••"'9t• or PICT1TIOUIMllH19SS ................. tltte, ,.. ....... ,« llWITAT&MSNT Wvmlw-. le...., .. ,.---. Tiie 191~ ...,_ ere CIOl119 ......... 9l'f'! .......... b l ~ ..... _ .. ,
E ~ Of nw._ w1U1 ,,,__ CONTACT COMMUHICATI°".
, _.... !ft Nld ,...._,, '"' ... ,...., .. Drive, H..,u,,..,.
... -· -... ""'"'of Boectl, ~ ..... :::= l',_ '-• _.,.. ..... JHI Perela, OSI aoerdwelll IN T .......... of ... Dr .... , ............ , .. ldl, c.llforllle
U'Mtld -, Mid 0..-of Tnoll, tM.ff ...... , ..... ~. Tills """-t Is Uftdu<tecl .-, .,.
• ,1119 -....Clery -Mid 0.. of IMtvi....: • ..,,_,,, l\ere1efer• oH<ulod •11• JDel f'l9A4z
......... .... ...................... ,... .. .....,.._ -, ..... wllfl tM
DKleretioft Of Oefeult -DotNll4f C-IY Clef'll of ~--CeWlty Oii fl(. Sele, elld e Wt'ltlell Hotke of J-V 4. 1ta Defettll elld l!leclleft le S.11. Tiie ,,,_ liMIMr ...... ~ Mid Hotk e of Pull! ..... Or ... c.st o.lly Plloe,
Def•ult -•tecti... .. tell .. .. J-••• 11, ~ p. ... ,,...,
=llllN~'MIOntlNrMI
Y II leutM. N-, strHI .... 1111( ..... T....,_ NwM8r of •
........ tr --CM4111c...... .... .. . .... ANG«l.U TITLa ANO TRUST fllCT1TtOUS9UllN•U
I D COMPANY AS T,_USTSI! ay NAM9 ITAftMllNT G a.f'OftATION tflllt CANaY Tiit fellowl11t ,..r..., 11 4101111 . Ml-•· NUii, •SUDA. CALIFORNIA AIS0°CfATl!O BUILDING ~~t Htt MAINTl!NAfilC~.c:~ACTORS, ... • • 1...a MecAl1flW lulll -, : JOlaPff C. AR•NSOOtt~ lntN c.ellfwllleft71• • • MO LINOA C. AREHSOOR~ ' " ~ l.OIMICMLUTITL• ._ ~ Vofpe, a t...11,
MOTMllJOHD ~'=9:"c!....c ... ._ ...... ~ ........ . ..
~. ~ICOCOttf'OltATtOH. . .. "-"Iv-. ti ..,s.......... Tili. ...... -,..... ...... ......... vie........... a.. of ar .... c-y .,. ~.Ji Ut•• Or-. C-. Deity ....... OKI &• 11, ""· !!"'·~_!"'·JM. .. 11,,.. ......, ....... Or-. c... o.:;:
;'Jr .Sm! ·-·-·~'Ii..'.!!.~ .. .....
&,. • IJCih 1111 ...... -I 4 4 = ~ -.... naw • """' ... ..,..... • .. ......... ~ It .... .....ITATWllT
eei • T ............ "r-11-..-e 0¥•~~ .......... l
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..... ~-'-Ordl,""' ~ ~ HMC. ....... a111t-_, ----· c-...... C:.llf ... """ ...... "11 ....__ aru., -v• ~c.llllrW..,
• ......... U.del•""'• TNl ....... 11~111¥• .., ....... ..
Jllll9C...., JIMa .... ........... _ ......... , ..................... ..
• ~ ....... ~ -c-ty CMtl .. °' .... c...ey .,. ~W.-IM &:M,Mtl. :'*-.... .........Or-. c... .,...,3 ·..:.·.::.= :-= == Dec .................. ,..
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•
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Dally Piiat
I
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 6, 19i2
OUT OF THE KITCHEN
SLIM GOURMET
SUPERMARKET SHOPPER
C2
C4 cs
TIMt FOR CHANGE -Economical recipes help cure January's budget blues with money-saving ideas.
Warm up with.a
hot chowder . C7
Budget meals
be tasty
Mind your rrioney without
sacrificing flavor,· nutrition
,
~ ,
• • , .
'f
"Take care of the pence, for the poa.nd.s will take care of •
themselves." It was the Earl of Chestfffleld 0894-1731) wbo ~
tredited the secretary of the Enellsb treasury. William Lowndes, ,
with this quotation. "
By the time most of us heard it from our mothers or ~
grandmothers, it sounded like sage advice from Ben Franklin, ~
"Worry about the pennies and the dollars will take care of ~
themselves." " Many people have already cut their food purchasing u low u
it can go. Still it's not enough. What more can be done in sla)'inl
with lower priced foods, planned menus and concentrated shopplnc .:
trips? ~
First, pare down both recipes and the size of serviJl&a. Many
ground beef and sausage recipes can be managed quite well with ~
about one·foQrth pound less of the meat produc\.
Two ounces of protein In the ent.ree is recommended, but many
are still serving three t.o four ounces. Add dairy touches to make
foods more nutritious and flavorful to make budgetlne more
appealing. Stay with seasonal ve1etables and frults to round out
the menu. .
Another important point to keep in mind is to serve well
balanced meals, that is food from the basic four food lfOUpa. This
create a reeling of satisfaction au its own. Casserole Cheese
. Sandwich, ror example, brlngs.cheese and e11s <meat group> milk
and bread for their respective groups, together.
Provide hot baked peach halves with the casserole and tossed
vegetable salad for the fruit and vegetable group. · •
Creamy Split Pea Soup served with homemade cheese bread '
covers several food groups. Just add a fruit salad. Macaroni and ,
Cheese R'.ing will provide a grain and protein, the vegetables in the
sauce represent that group. You need milk and fruit for balance.
Try t.o select recipes which fill the quantity demands of your
. family so there won't be left.overs, unless you plan them that way .•
You may want some soup or meat loaf for lunch the followinc day. ~
CASSEROLE OllEESE SANDWICll -:-
lsemap
6 tablespoons butter
l teaspoon pr~pared mustard
8 slices whole wheat bread 8 slices (8 ounces> Cheddar cheese
l.'J cup sliced green onion
3 eggs, beaten
2 cups milk
1 leaspoon salt
,... teaspoon nutmeg
,... teaspoon pepper
V.. cup grated Parmesan cheese .
..
Combine butter and mustard until well blended. Spread 1 side of
each slice of bread with butter mixture. Cover half of the bread
slices with cheese; top with remaining bread, buttered sides fac.lne
cheese. ;rm crusts; cul crusts into cubes. Cul sandwiches into 4
triangles each. Place bread crusts in bolt.om of buttered 2-quart
rectangula.r baking dish. Sprinkle with onion. Arrange sandwich
triangles on top. Combine eggs, milk and seasonings; pour over
sandwiches. Sprinkle with Parmes an cheese. Cover and
refrigerate several hours or overnight. Bate in preheated m-
degree oven SO to 60 minutes, or until a knife inserted near center
comes out clean. Let stand 5 minutes before serving.
Ring Mold :
MACAllONI CHEESE &ING
VEGETABLE SAUCE
~ pound bulk pork sausage
2 cups (8 ounces) elbow macaroni
<uncooked>
<See 'Tasty.' Page CS>
. • .
Eating: An expensive habit that.'s hard to brea~
87 MARY JANE SCARCEU.O
Of-~""',... Remember when bacon was 63
cents a pound and eggs cost 38
cents a dozen? That was when
you could buy peanut butter at
41 cents for a one-pound jar and
. a five-pound bag of sugar cost 65
cents.
Yes, those were the good old
days, but you may have uouble
recalling the exact time. Here's
a clue: Daily Pilot front page
stories showed Ronald Reaaan ~as governor of California,
Richard Nixon announced he'd
run again for president and
Hub ert Humphrey was
denouncin1 the Vietnam war.
It was just 10 years ago. A
check of PUot grocery ads
running in the same editions
show food prices at roughly half
what they are today. In other
words, if you struggled to carry
out $50-worth of groceries then,
it •houldn't be a problem today.
The 1972 pages also revealed
that shoppers al some .stores
received double or triple Blue
Cb.ip Stamps with purchases,
although trading stamps are
rare today. Another change m the last
decade has been in measures of
wine and liquor. Formerly sold
by the fifth, quart or half-gallon,
it now is bottled in liters, which
makes comparison more
difficult.
I( a buyer tbi.nks of the present
750-mUliliter bottle as close to
the formerly used fifth, ordinary
table wines are below average in
food price increases, altbough
special varieties and vintages
differ widely in cost.
For larger sizes, the current
1.5-liter bottles are similar to
half-gallons, and the 3-llter jug
compares to a gallon, although
the metric measures bold less.
A well-known brand of
California table wine sold In
half.gallon bottles for $2.78 in
1972.
The same brand today in
3-liter bottles is advertised for
MENU1
. 1972
$4.47 ·:1' ·bone stHk (3 pounds) .oe eakedpotatoes (4) .« tanned fruit & cottage cheese .85 rosted I.ayer cak.e (from mixes)
.2A . Qtf"9 lftetor8"Qe Juke --.-
•$6.08 TOTAL MENU2
1912
$7.7 ..
. S8
1.12
2.00
~ _.67
$12.11
$2.42 lhlcken breasts (31/2 pqundS) $4.52 .29 lavored rtce (1 package) .69
.32 rozen broccoli (1 PKk89') .83
• 79 li'Pl>f• pie ( reedymade > 1. 79
.20 ~ola drinks (2) .S3
2.89 1tosewtne<1.._.> 2.99
'$6.'1 TOTAL JlTIJ Meals were planned for a f amlly w ith two adults
end two children. Prices ere based on sale Items
advertised In Daily Piiot food ~.
$3.99, which still amounts to
more money for less wine.
Fair Trade price controls of
liquor, removed just two years
ago, didn't result in plummeting
prices, but stores. do discount.
alcoholic beverages or put
specific brands on sale now.
However, most food prices are
roughly twice as high today ts
they were 10 years ago, with a
few exceptions.
Chocolate chips have shot up
from 49 cents to $1.79 for 12
ounces, a quart of mayonnaise
bas gone from 49 cents to $1.39,
coffee was 76 cents a pound and
now sells for $1.99, baby food
jars of fruit and vegetables were
8 cents and now are 22 cents utd
a -name-brand diet cola once
advertised al 59 cents a six-pack
now goes on sale for $1.59.
On the bright side, a few food
items have gone up very little
(tbe survey showed no food . at
the same price or less).
Frytncchicken lets. sold at 59
cents a pound in 1971, are now
advertised at 69 cents ; a
package of slx English muffins
sold for 31 cents and now costa
H cents; t aneerines were 20
centl a pound and now aell for 29
centa and a 5-pound bat of flour
~was 59 cent.a and now la 79 oeab .
But these are advertl .. d
specials Uken fl'QID all •stonl
advertitina in Pilot leod .,.... ~·a:~~~~~--· not -reauJar shelf .,nce1, iDd
only food wu compared. 11ci1t d sltoppers also bay paper Sets of dinnerware an
r.roducts, health and beauty encyclopedia, ottered one piece
l --' 11 and pet per week, a1ao bfinl in buyen tema, c euung supp es and rlnl up DOO·food dollars.
food. none of which were Best food buv, la terms ~ included ln the lnformal suney. "
Other items i>ushinl up th• a m o u n t · tor· you r • mo n • y ,
total al the checkout stud come :!:!>:..~ = fr;:Je':!~
, from such diverse areas as weather ar lledtlles. •
pbotP developlDC, take.out foo4 A•other money-1aYIDI from the dellcatesHD Qdkm favorite UDOD1 aoa-c:oob ii tbe
and rental of r u1 c leanla1 least expeaalve f1'0lleD dimer.
machines. all of wblcta are One brand IOkl for • ce11t1 ..
p r o v l d e d b 1 m o d e r n 1172 and· J»robabl1 still l1 a sui»erma!'teu to attract bar1alaat'Jlc..u .... ...:;...'--_..__
cuitomen. ' • .... ~F.~c"T...,.be~ U. NM1Mr cu tM!
•
..
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/WednHday, January&, 1982
By •A•Y IANB ICAacsu.o
0( ..............
Now tbat tbe bollday 1ea1on la over,
perbap1 the relenUeaa barrap ot commerclala
for electrtc kitcben macblnery wW •low to a
dull wblrr. Each year muuf acturen outdo themaelvea
to aee wbo can market the lawat doodad for an
unauapeetin& public to buy and pve to the coot
who bu everythlq.
What the coot who bu everythln1 really
needs la a place to put lt all, but no one wraps
up cloaeta and cupboardl ln fancy paper to put
under the tree.
Appliance companiet push the tancy staff,
of course, because DO one actually 1lvea bulc:
•PPllanees for Chriatmu,
Moat bouaehold1 acquire toaatera and
portable mixers H weddln1 11tt1 or in
desperation when campln1 out in tbe first
apartment. And alnce no ooe Ip today's society
IDT If THE llTCIUI
can survive without those necessities, they're
replacfld u soon u they die and 10 to the areat
appflance burial •round.
So lnvfntors are left to devise bftcer and
better &if\ items we never knew we needfld unUl
the media bills starts.
One appUance advertised tb1a year waa an
electric fruit and ve1etable peeler -called tbtt
stripper -which should have been 1Jven only tO
Army cookl and cafeteria manaien.
The averace cook couldD't bother haulln1 lt out and hookln& IV'Up for a 1ln1le apple pie or
bowl or PQtatoet.
In (ac\. with 1tora1e 1pace at a premium
1"ventora abould be comblnln1 aeverai
appliance• Into one, wblcb would 1ive
companies yet another fleld to market.
Here are some 1u11eatec1 comblnaUona for
desperate aclenUata Unkeri.nc ln their labs:
-Shlah·kabob and bot curler aet '°' women who don't mind the subtle fraarance or teriyaki
sauce ln the curlers.
-Deep fryer and vaporbtr combo,
becaUH the kldl don't need French fries when
they have cold.I, anyhow.
-Jee crusher and truh muher unit wltb
several contJ'Ol Mttlnsa, or 50-pound tee blocks
will end up as a tlA&le cube.
-Steam lroe and facial mist machine to
eliminate wrlDklel everywhere.
Which briql to mind a new wrinkle on an
old Idea wblcb appeared a few yea.n a10.
Ice cream makers ualn1 table salt and lee
cubes, rather than rock salt and crushed lee
from times put, have made an lndoor proceaa
out of what med to be • messy. out-on·tbe-paUo chore. ..._..
<See 'KJtcbea,' page C8).
• ·aVIDg
nergy LOW ER PRICES ·ovERALL . .. . .
, The skyJ'OCketing cost
energy -1s-increaa1ng
areness of the need to
n serve wherever
ssible.
Here are some tips
hich will help save
th time and energy in
e kitchen:
-The dry cycle on
ur dishwasher Is a
al energy waster -
n 't use it. Let dishes
ir dry" after the rinaJ ·
nse.
-Your r efrigerator
d freeier also require
ergy. Be sure doors
al tightly. To check,
sert a piece or paper in
e door so part projects
hen the door is closed.
ose the door and puU
e paper -if it comes
t easily, replace the
sket for a tighter seal.
-Oven cooking u.ses
e most fuel , so choose
ther methods or
ooking wh e n e v e r
ossible . Co n sider
ove-top cooking. If
ngthy cooking time is
eded tor tenderness d flavor, try using a
essure cooker. This ~eatly reduces the
;q:o o k i n g li m e a n d
~oduces a very tender
;~d tasty product.
~ -St ir-fry cooking
e thods are very
acticaJ energy savers.
ey're quick and help
eserve the fresh colors
d fl avors, as well as
t amins. Overcooking
getables is an energy
a~te r . V a lu ab l e
t.rients ·are destroyed,
d the texture of fresh
getables is ruined in
e rcooking.
• -Avoid using too
uch liquid in cooking.
takes more energy lo
at the excess fluid and
luable nutrients will
lost.
, -Use h eavy,
e ll -in sulated pots
a de from materials
ch as iron when longer
o king periods a re
e ded . They retain
at better and the food
ks more evenly.
-Put lids on pots
hen coo kin g to
n serve h eal a nd
ftergy. •
11 -Coo k in l arg e
uantities when
ssible. Two casseroles
k In the same time as
e and one can ~e
ozen for later use.
aking extra crepes
nd p a n cak es then
rapping and freezing
r a 'future meal also
ves energy .
-When using the
en, try to plan the
enu so Uiat several
shes can be baked at
e same time.
1 -Prepare more raw
s. This saves energy
nsumption entirely.
or example, fresh,·
r is p broccoli or
ulifiower pieces make
deligbUul change lo
e menu.
-Doo~t heat more
ater than needed in a
•kettle. It's a waste of
rgy to heat a quart of
ater when only a cup ia
ded.
-· Don't ope n tbe
frigerator or freezer
oor unnecessarily.
e move all tbe items
eded for a meal at one rne.
-Plan one-diab meals
hen po11ible. Thia
res ener1y in two
ya -cookinc and c eanup.
-Learn to simplify
recipes. Find 1tep1
which can be eliminated
t.o save eneray in mlxm1
and cooldn1.
-Make coffee or tea
for an entire day at ooe
Ume and keep It bot in a
SNmP pot Of' t.bermOI.
l"lndlnl ud uUllllnl·
eoern·aavin1 cooklq
metbodl frequeatlJ .... 1
tbe coat'• enero, too. Tbne tlpe can help cut
lb• boutebold eaer11~
blU 'wbll• provtdlDI
addttlODat HYlDll •• • ••ort.
Red·X Produce Prices
m W11•111~SINO.et1 .39 Delicious Apples lb
ffi ffnar ..... .19 Cabbage " Sun Glint 14 1::~:: • 99 m Mini Raisins
H! .... 3:,.79 Brown Onions
Cost Cutters Save Up To 30%
~-= ::::-::-.=:::':: == r:. CM Cost Cutter Cigarettes 4. 88
C.1 Cvtltt °'"""' Macaroni & Cheese 1·~~01
• 26
Cn l tvltlf C11t
Green Beans 16·0!
Clft .36
m
'I! ,l.
ffi
PACK u-oz.
CANS
Red-X Grocery Prices
l'tPl*llfM O• ComlKl!jl!Mt I IO·Ol .89 Mr . P's Pizza ,.,
'""" °'""""' ._ .. , 2.39 Biz :u .. 1 Plot
Reuoi. .86 Refried Beans -:Wot Uft
Au.-...w., .. un 1.00 Top Ramen 4 3 .. , ,,,.
Red·X Grocery Prices
ffl °"' ""' °' R.C. Cola .99 .
'~ upot b" 39 . Yogurt tlft •
~ff Cott~ge Cheese 1~.:' • 85
Red·X Grocery Prices
lft1t1n1 Ctyatall 'H Folger 's Coffee ';!' 2. 95
'~ bfll lful Mn ..... l'llNI .. 89 Spaghetti Sauce IS-111 .. t
jlf
• llttull< 0< Ht! . 79 '~ Dennison 's Chili IS·ll
""
'* .60 Comet Cleanser ,, . .,
U ft
Discount Liquor Prices
~~ S~;resby Scotch ~4 .97 . "I MPl'• WM"7 •·~ Seagram 's 7 ~4.99 X a·~c~·;·
m
m
m
lli
PER
LB.
Rec!·X Meat Prices
l'ltltlc Style SllMNtf .98 Pork Roast 111
a.t lllot1141 IMllHI
10 1. 99 London Broil
U & 0 A CIMP Slllvltlf llldt " 1 . 59 Lamb Chops
U S 0 A C"-0.1-SllwlM<
Ml 1 . 69 Lamb Chops
Red·X Meat Prices
frtU ffi Ground Chuck ~ 1. 79
Ftua NII G-.<110.~N ~j 15 ffi Fried Chicken ,,,:::," 5. 99 '41tOllll ' •• Sf•t wnM Mtt ,.., 1111
111114 ffi Cheddar Cheese :·1 . 98• __ ,Al lf.u Wlll 1•11 -1W
JANUARY WHITE SALE!
OUR BUYERS HAVE SCOUREO THE NATION FOR THE BEST WHITE SALE BUYS TO EASE YOUR tST OF THE YEAR
BUOGET CHOOSE FROM A TREMEHOOUS ARRAY OF TOWELS BLANKETS PILLOWS. OISIN:LOTHS. POTHOLDERS
ANO COMFORTERS
Atdtft 11.-btd O<sbdolll °' t CunOll Towels On19n1 ly Fu nco
. •~ Dish Towels •" Ou'!'" 1•1~ T .... s O< 1 .. e1-, Stln4a<d Silt 3 99 .. 1.49 . ~ Pillows .. •
, .. rfa~Tdl ;;;I~ F••~• K•tchtn u 1 . 9 9
~~ tcii~h;n Potholder
'~ P;tt.;;;&i;n°'kset;Fm•
lhlndtt '~ Face Towels
, , Alftft Vtloe< ,
,,.. Kitchen Towels
• , bid.., '~ Kin Size Pillows
,,
u 1.69
.. 2.49
·:~-----,,[~-----, I m:mm llMllT IAllCIT I I f.l.?l!D nm TOP I
1 103 ... ~, I 1 1os a.....N1C1 I
I := .49 I I ~ 1.591
I ':\I", ___ .... "'"-... ·~ t-llC-11\ "'"-""· _,..,_, tpflClllt-~ -POrAlll\f ~-· I-. JAii tlllllV Ml ..... " ,.., ~ I . Jiii UIM!llfl -" ---• ~-..,..xcou~---MD-xCOUfllOel•.,· :1~-----, ·~·-----'\
1mmm 11rzamm ~ 1 ,,. 2.~1:'"11 1"--1.MC825 ...
1 . -.HA• II ·:=• I
I
'
J
-
Orange Coast OAJL Y PILOT/Wedneeday, January 6, 1982
' IRVINE RANCH FARMERS MARKETS
Imported Dania~
CREAM BAVARD
I lb. $3.491b.
Hormel Burgenniester
BARD
SAIAMI $3.491b.
Wlaconsln White or Yellow
AMERICAN
$2.79 lb.
Marie's
RANCH
DRESSING
16 oz. $1.39
PI.ACE YOUR ORDER NOW FOR
YOUR SUPER BOWL SPORTS
SPECfACUl.AR SANDWICHFS!
\\es ton
STONED
WHEAT~
10.6 oz. Reg. $1.29
I Yz Foot
Sene.6
81!.95
99~
HOLIDAY a.EARANCE SALE
Many of our hoUday sift pack.a, lndtcake.,
and lift tins have been reduced from 10 to
25"1
Vie De France
MINl·BAGIJEl•t'fS
A pedrs. of three mlnletm-e O'U8ty
Frmcb loaw.. An Irvine RaDch Farmers
Markda exdu8lvet
Gravenstein
100" APPLE.nJICE
MIMle entirely from Gn~ apples,
tbl9julce .. euperb. The orcbard ff.Om
wbldl tbe9e come .. cea llled orwmk and
oaly 4800 CMeS were
prodnced. The Mipply
la•nll!l!llJ
32 oz. Rea-$1.49 $1.29
St~ Hourr: JO am 10 6 pm. ~wn Days
OF VA:ltJES
· Eresh Hawaiian
,_..,..~
PINEAPPl,E-
. 39~Ib.
Top of the Une Hilo
HAWAIIAN.PAPAYA
Irvine Ranch Large
RFDCOACHF.IJ.4
GRAPEFR.tJrr
4ror $1.()()
39~ lb.
Chico Salted or Unsalted
ORGANIC
RICE CAKES
4Yi oz. Reg. $107
.....
80~
.
80~1b.
lexasSweet
HAMLIN JUICE
ORANGES 29 ~ lb.
Fresh Local
BUITON
MUSHROOMS
$1.191b.
Sunburst Farms
GRANOLA ~
GONE NUTS 9 } .291b.
Sunburst Farms
APPLE CINNAMON
CREAM OF RYE GRANOLA
~ $1.29
SWEEl'NLOW
SUGAR
SO pb. Reg. $1.06
Hollywood Roasted
79~
$ l.291b.
PEACH APRICOT BAR
$ l.691b.
ROI JED OATS
PEANtJT BUiTER Thompsen Seedless
II oz. Reg. $2.69 $2.05 RAISINS $ l.391b.
ttomem.de Irvine Ranch Farmen Marketa
Small •
901JRD0UGRBREAD
lloz.lolaf 75~ ..... $1.99
Where Tradition ia Country Fre•hneu.
Italian, Polish, and German
SAUSAGE
Made Freeh oo
Our Premlee9
Lean ..
$1. 791b.
GROIJND-B ..... F.F ..... Cf-·
Not to Exceed
30% Fat Content $1.49 ·1b.
RF.F.FBACK. RIBS
$1.091b.
Marinated
BEF.FK-BOIB
$3.491b.
SIDBOFBfEF
$1.291b.
BINDQUAR'l'ER OF
BEEP "° $169 . • lb ..
CAIAMARI S'IEAKS
$2.98 tb. I
DIJNGENFSS CRABS
$1.98 ib •.
llALIBtJT S'IEAKS
$3.98 ib ..
FRESBTROUf
Chewable Cherry
VITAMINC
Sweetened Only wtth
Fructoee
90 .... Rec· $5.49
180 ~ Rec. $11.49
\
'
$1.98 ib. ·:
$4.50 I
$8.95 ..
Store Hours: 9 am to 9 pm. Stwrt Dtzys 1)1
jt
IRVINE STORE
14002 Myford Road At Santa An a Freeway
838-2851
TUSTIN STORE
13152 Newport Avenue At Irvine Boulevard
COSTA MESA/NEWPOR1 STORE .
2651 Irvine Avenue South of Mesa Drive
•1'(
838-9570 631-4404
SIOl'I Houn: 9 am to I pm. Sfwlf Dtlp
• 41
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/WtdnHday, January 8, 1982
_...,...,. Gl8llON8 you'd lole. 1om• llnDortallt f\lncUoa manufacturers were approval of the culinary Except for t h •
MW 19ar markt J»rottln ·maala apart from appetlt• Jolned by water 1uru1. auppoaedly slimmer
b•llDnlllC of my reached lta ap.a wlth appeuement I mporters and food T o d a ~ t h • Nouvelle Cul1lne,
nd decade wrltla1 the prot.ein·•&Mlrin& tuu Su•ar. fat and calorin maker• lo promotion• heavywel1hta of haute French cooklnt i1 about
Sllm Gourmet '""t' all protein and became the new aimed at cubin1 ln on cul1lne are 1tumblin1 as popular ln America
mn. notbtn1 but; teveral addltlvea to ltar, fro1en dinners are of the '701 centered thecrue. over each other u they u Frenchfumlture.
a v e A me r l c an reported chalhl -c>roved 9e1uallnl and eventually pitched u U1bt. . around fit.Den. Why? The more you ru.1b into print with their F'or tmipeotioft trMIWI
ltudea toward• to be tbe undoln1 of aurpaulna the concern Americana have Americau took to the run, the more caloriet veralon1 of tbe new '°""""'°"treat•, plut ,..,_
in1 cha.n1ed in the proteln'1 popularity. over pneervaUves. become ao 1u1ar·phobtc road In blue0 1trlped you can eat (and buy). cul1ine. on 111rir fubltUutH, Nfttl a
t 10 years? Here'• The fun food era Ll1bt auperHded that durin1 the 1970• 1neaken in an effort to· Calori&.eutlln1 In the The statue foodl of the •tamped self·oddreutd
t I've observed. ended. natural as t.be winnlnl many opposed the melt off the calorlea k l l c be o -once ·sos and ·eo. -pate, mvci. and "1 c..U to
e once widespread Sometime dwinl the ad claim. federal 1overnment'1 accumulated durto1 con1ldered a deviate cheese fondue, quiche s LI M • Go U R ME r
on that "calorie• 1910 the Americ an Today, everythiDI attempt to ban au1ar years of car-1llttn1 and notion for a handful of Lorraine -are viewed SUGA R · REDUCED
't count" has been public be1an to suspect from beer and wine to aubaUtutes. elevator·ridinl. diet devotees -bas H unpardonably 1aucbe RECIPES, P.O. Btn 824,
ou&hlY repudiated. that food mt1bt have ulad dre11ln11 and The 1rowtb induatry S w e a t a b i r t received the 1tamp of in aomequartera. Sparta, N.J. om1.
ay calories count ~i=::==~=:=:::==::===:=::::=::::::::=::::::==::::::::::;=:::=::::::;:==::::;=::::;::::::::::::=::::==:=:::::::::::=::::;=:=:::::::=;;;;;:=::::;:::::::::=::::::=::=:=:::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::=::: •=.,an~•·ract, You Always Save At Stater Bros.
low-calorie cuillne
become a culinary
cate1ory ln its own
rl1ht.
Cookbook publishers
and food manufacturers
aay low-calorie ls one of
,.the fasteat 1rowlo1 ~gments in the food field. ith StaterS •
Calorie counts are
everywhere to be seen
a n d b e a r d .
Manufacturers print
nutritional labels oq_
their products;
ma1azines compute the
calories for their
recipes ; and
calorie·saving claims
are the hottest selling
point in advertising.
Whal really doesn 't
count anymore is
carbohydrates! In fact,
the status of "carb"
foods has flip.flopped.
Starch foods like
bread, pasta, cereal,
rice, grains and potatoes
are newly popular.
Once shunned as
pudge-provokers ,
natural and wbole·grain
carbohydrate foods are
reclaiming their place
as the staff of life.
The emergent food fad
word of the '70s was
fiber.
The indigestible (and,
therefore, presumably
n o n -fattening )
nilly.gritty in whole
grains, fresh fruits and
veeetables. fiber has
co ntributed to the
car bohydr ate
comeback.
Amer ica has
rediscovered Mother
Nature's greenery. It
used to be that you bad
to coax cbiJGttn to eat
vegetables. Today ,
many are vegetarians.
Talk about
turn·aboutsl Protein has
fallen fropi favor with a
resounding thud.
This decade opened
with a rash of diet books
devoted to the fiction
tha.l the more protein
you ate {meat, ch~.se,
eggs l, the more weight
Battle
diet
DONDNDALL A_...._
ASIDNGTON -A
lo 1 ·1tandln1 battle
m y be warmin1 up
b l ween nutrl lion
ocms-IJldlliOle WbO
t lnk 1overoment
s ouldn't be telling
pie what to eat.
WCllllPVt
TMl-TO .... , ()111111\11.1
IAUSTO c-O(Al(llS()a
~
-Cl'll&U uu r• f'UllS
11.U TABLE BRAND Lii·~ Sllcecl
Lii Bacon
IA
1
1.ll S•.~•
Ll 11.H & LB
~IJllQMl9U
CHARMIN
TISSUE
I
BEEF
ound·
' teak --I
e<>NE IN
LB
BEEF
BLADE·CUT L.•1.11
Ll•1.11
Ll12.n
l.•1.11
Ll•2.11
Chuck
BOUNTY ·
TOWELS
MIOU
BOLD
OERGENT
Roa•t
87~
... _._ l ls~CEss I ,.....,... GMtble llCE $119
HaaedCAJopces ~~~ .. '·~-·~~·~
Fol_..__,~"°""' 11our .,.."'
llts-AllallllS $-:.n.KT ... ,
Yalnli• 1M8
YalYlll• 11
Plltbl Oil =:r ·
ar-Tl'llt t:r:'f"""
t ••oJJ'
o• '1.11
°'gr
• • ... '1.59
• ""' '1.10
JllWy 22. 1912
._rnba_l'locllr_sc .,'=_0¥i'ocs..... _ l.___l_F_m_ .... _r•NT--IOOZ-$4_.04___,I
Fresh Pork
. ..,--~· .. llAST
-Clwc.~ s•mam
•• ,llOl--111 .. Tfll&St -STlWET
llOf fO UCUO -"" Wll .. lllf
Sale I
... 11.71 Nrvlc• ••II ...... -............ ..,
... •1.11 MD NTATI SM.Al
Ll•2.11 Al.Ill ... SAUi
Ll11.ll CUTfO~
mrEl£Y JICI amt
Ll •1.11 IAll 1111
smEIUI
FOA LAUNDllY
ALL
OERGENT
a:zo.oz
NORTHERN
TISSUE
l"llOCTU I QAllllU
DAWN
DISH ~!QUID~
OECOllATOll WH~ Ofl COLORS
GALA II
TOWELS
l·llOLL
.. u uc
.. uuc
..... •1.11
.. u 11.ll
I
,
i veatock producer
I ups generally have
br,atled· at wbat they
cotalder ill·founded cl lms that fat and
ch lesterol found in
m41!at contributes to
belirt diaeue and other
disorders.
lmiSllS QUI =..--
Pat Cnflllts -c.. c..~
lh llltll Ids $J1111
SacarsPnm•---
• -'1J1 • -'1.8 ,,----~----~--~--~-.--1),.tJt--
... -'1.51 ~I~ j;fllllt ·
Meat industry
representatives alao
• have been critical of
some of the govern·
ment'a diet work.
the latest episode
tnr.v olvea a new Ac culture Department
pu llcatioo lo the worb
for some time, Food 2, w~ich was to have
offered recipes and
nu,trltioo advice,
iDeiUdiQ a teetiOD OD
fat ud Cholesterol.
A e c o r d ·1 n I t o
department IOUfefll wbo
asked not to be ldentlfi•cl, tbe. flnal
cleeialaa OD wbetber to
proc ... wkb Jl'ood 2 bu
not Mm ...... Pd that
the tat·ebolHterol
queatloD l• 1tlll belnl
renewed.
IESSl.EI =:r.·
CIOll IUSSE al
SClmSIY SCOTCH
t
'".OZ
•..... s1m • _,1:; FANCY CRISP RED DELICIOUS
• -'1.32 APPLES
SJ.19 I
_ ..
-·1.45 _•1.11
-'2.SI aiiiilNA~l21c
ailoir ~.aa•
U a. NO l D'AH.IOU 19 c 1!111 ... -·~ ... ui
• •
(f"1'UlPapCl)
4 ..... at room temperafur e and
aeparated
Ir\ CUP 11\llk
1 CUP (4 ounces)
a h redded Cheddar
cheeH ~ cup chopped
on.Jon
1 • teupoon dry
mustard
r.pper
ace:
Y; teaspoon aalt
.,_ teaspoon
I '
~ cup ( Y; stick>
butler
1 YJ cups thickly
sliced onion
2 cups sliced
zucchini, V•·inch thick
1 cup thinly •
sliced carrot
1 cup cooked peas Y; cup chopped
celery '
Y; cup chopped
green pepper
1 teaspoon each :
,salt, sugar and basil
1"' t eas poon
garlic powder
Y; cup c old
water
4 teas p oon s
cornstarch
1 t eas poon
ins tant beef-fl avored
bouillon
2 cups coarsely
c h opped canned
tomatoes, well drained
Preheat oven to ~50
degrees. For ring mold,
cook pork sausage until
brown and crumbly ;
drain; set aside. Cook
macaroni according to
package directions, but
cook only 5 minutes ;
rinse and drain. Beat
egg yolks in a large
mixing bowl until pale
yellow in color. Add ·
s ausage, m acaron i ,
milk. cheese, butte r .
onion and seasonings ;
stir until well blended.
Beat egg whites until
stiff peaks form. Fold
into macaroni mixture.
Spoon mixture into well
buttered 6Y;-cup ring
mold. Place mold In a
large roasting pan on
oven rack. Fill pan with
hot water to l inch from
top of mold. Bake 45 to
SO minutes or untiJ-.t
knife-inserted n ear
center comes out clean.
Remove mold from par
and let stand 10 minutes
before unmolding onto serving plate.
Meanwhile, for sauce,
melt butter in a large
skillet with a cover.
Cook onion until tender,
about 5 minutes. Add
zucchini, carrot, peas,
celery, green pepper,
salt, sugar, basil and
garlic powder. Cover
and cook 10 minutes
stirring occasionally.
Ble nd together water,
cornstarch and bouillon;
stir into vegetables.
Bring to boiling. Add
tomatoes; cook and stir
3 minutes. Keep warm.
To serve, s poon some
sauce in ce nte r o f
m acaroni ring; pass the
re mainder.
CHEESY BEAN
SANDWICH
6 serviD1s
1 can (20~
ounces) pork avd beans,
well dt_ained
'h cup chopped
onion
l 'h cup chopped
green pepper
, 2 teaspoons
Worcestershire sauce
2 teaspoons
prepared mustard
~ teaspoon chili
powder
3 French rolls,
cut horfiontaUy
in half
l'h cups (6
ounces) shredded
Provolone
cheese
~cup catsup
18 . small raw
onion rings
Preheat oven to 400
d eg r ees . Com bin e
beans, onion , g r een
pepper, Worcestershire,
mu s tard and c hill
powder in a medium·
sized saucepan. Heat
until hot and bubbly;
Peachy tips
Serve wnm baked
peach halves on a cold
winter morning! Place
peach halves and syrup
iD a bakin1 dhh .
Sprinkle with cinnamon
and bake at 375 degrees
untll hot. Top .hot
peaches with a mixture
of yogurt and ,ranola. .. .
Left·over rlce and
canned cline peach
tHcea work well
to1etber tor a cndelt and
delfcioua deuert l
Simply mis the peacb
1Uee1 end cooked rice.'
SwHte to taste. Bake
ln 850 .,,._ OT• until
hot. Serve wltb warm
milk, ti deS&ect ..
keep warm. Scoop out a
•mall pottlon of eacb roll to fOl'm a well. Toast and spread Heb wlth
butter. Stir 1 cur chffH lnto bt•n m xture ..
Spoon bean mixture
over eaeb roJI. Bake s to
8 mlnutee or untU bean mlxtu..r. la bot. Remove
from oven aod aprinkle
a a m all portion of
rem alnin1 cheese over
each roll. Spread about 2
teaspoons of cat.sup over
cheese, a1Jowlqg some or
the cheese to s how .
Garnish each with 3
onion rings. Return to
oven uatU cheeee t>eclna • Sa.It to LUte.
to melt, abouU m nut... W uh pea1 ; drain .
Suve lmmedlately . Combine pea1, water,
caEAllY SPIJT PEA ham shank, on.ton , bay SOUP leaf and popper In a
YleW· It c•.P9 •·quart Dutch oven .
1 i>ound dried Heat to bolllna; cover apllt pu.a an d r e d\t c • tie at . Simmer 2 to 2"' bo"1n or
until pea1 are tender
and meat f alll olf bone.
Remove bone from
broth; cut meat from
bone into bite-size
pieces. Return mieat to
broth. Gradually sUr ln
milt. Heat to servlne
temperature . Salt to taste.
6 cu.PS water
• l ham s hank
with meat (about
2 pounds>
, l "" c up s chopped onion
1 bay leaf
~ t easpoon pepper
3 cups mllk
VONS TABLE KING
BEEF LOIN
·~ PACMGE
MEATS
f'llCiH/11111 cu1 Center Cut Por1< Chops
CQ\fflll'f SML.fll6 Ef<O ~
Fresh Pork Spareribs
Ill ) 98
Lii )49
0< lllJll.""$Pf.FMJ ~ UI. I IP POnl Clll J 79 Corned Beef BftSket 1.11
fllllU'. VICl. "Ol$1UIE-2 1 9 Vons Boneless Hams Le
VNJIE. MK ~l!IMATTACHf.D Fresh Chicken Breast
U1 .69
LB 129
Pl'lr~PMJC..,UI AW() 7 9 Fresh Roasting Chk:ken U1 •
T 11111.t M<. nlOll1' 10 1 H&S Vons Hen Turt<ey
1 ~rM:JWlE~o sucro snm Price "' Bacon
Lv.N ol\tC) lt1Ull
Fresh Rainbow Trout
,A/'ICY f!IOWI Northern Hallbut Steaks
~~eaks
l& .79
lll •99
UI ) 49
UI 249
... 238
\IOf'5 TAa.Llll<G llal'Ull'I 4 7 8 Beef F1et Mignon SteeUi.a
~w"T=.:"' ... J 99
... 248
I.I 219
a::.=.~""i=CVT LA ~ 29
l:i::l~W'~°" I.I 198
ti:ifBroutTt1Ullf1C> ... 2 °8
b=•~Beef 1.1.2°9
Tl\ll..f MIO l.&M tvUll Beef Cube Stakt
~~out
LIQUOR
GROCERIES
ROl"2' ricmu: Heinz Tomato Ketchup
460lll<t llOnu: -~ Ocean Spray CocktaD
11s
139
1ooz JM ~--AP!eCOJ l'M)IA'l£ 5 9 ~"8(111!'f()ll~H
Tropical Preserves •
''!>OZ""' ~PUii'\~ 79 Ragu Spaghetti Sauce •
~=i\ Cheese .33
~~~ IJCH'f>l(Af.f1.0l.Olllll .. TC~ 79 star Kist Chunk Tuna •
11 ~Ol 040 0 .. I ).()L MC 12 !>OZ
()AT"'f"I /101 Cltl:US~ 99 Motlier s Cookies •
1&QUl<CTCM CUT 31 Sam Price ... Gree.n Beans •
~ ()(J!<C l!()nl.E snm Price ... Apple Juice
2~ llOm.t. l£lXAllR Oii OC1 ". 8 Pepsi Cola
129
115
219
.55
HEALTH [, B EAUTY
~~
~~~
~"'Ret~~ a::..-n:.. Color
179
]05
2i500
300
2?3 00
\
J
Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT,WednHday, January 8, 1982
·Big Jim .... • ••
•Watch for our January Opening
• Quality Meats and Delicatessen
Famous Since 1982
2000 Newport 81vd., Costa ~·~' ~.
DELI
•ou.a. u f'\J0.\()11$ Jerseymald Yogurts
139
3 ~100
tool<f. ~ SA>E I 00 Danola Cooked Ham 175
~~~ j19
llOr<Sf,.,.._,~A0\~5""1': eoUI 2 J 9 Longhorn Cheese U1
jC~~u~ 5~1 OO
179
135
VARIETY DEPT.
w.:;.m~&~
~~OlllMO[
~:.;~
600
VOMSUQOID
BLEACH
IWFGAU.ON
BOTI\L
PRODUCE PLANTS
~Wl1F!'[.~AST,l\¥Ollll! 15 Coacne1111 Grapefruit v. • ?-!<" 1'\>r AS.10ltT£D ttanging Ptants
c..,.,~_.
l..Jtrge .a.vocados
!Ill.I\ TQP1 Off Crisp ounchy Carrots
fA .29
U1 .19
U1 .29
u,eu el9
U1 .39
!HI<>< POT UPllD<T
Auolted Tropbl Pllnts
·~l'Qf
Lush Table Fem
•~POT Blooming Ech!Yeria
BAKERY
-6f'/\CI\. OIWOOE '!9U,_ Oii Cinnamon RollS
H£R£'8 YO<.llt aW1C£ TO Owtl lltE
VfRY lATBT IN srort!WARE
COLORIPICS "'
M<JQ, BOWL
OR PLATE
VOURQtOICf
R£-OUl.AllL y "'
,. '
II I
h1q
r
HOCIUa e AJll TO JllDIUGlft AT Jll08T .,.._ •dt
P11tCO ~ 'TH(IM, ™"<.JW!D, JM 7 TO JM. 1 J, I "2, CAI.I. (21 ~) S'9-1400 ~ l.OCATIOtt Of'STOM l't!:AllDTVOO. l'IOT NJ ,,,.,._ NfO ~ 1'! 1* AD ancTM AT W>N, »>4 w. Int IT~ 6'' 1 W, IOn4 IT .. l.Oe NIQIJ.O.. INI OMO
• •dJ
\):)
~nleacfl 1122 1,.,.., a StHtnfd•le
• C..ttl ..... 1M I.,,.._..,._.•'"' Ofa ... .Aye.
NfO LAI WQM. SALU" UtAll. OOAl"1lD Oftl.Y. "'°81' l1'0llO Of'IJ'll M TO llllDflCliT 7 Oo\Vll A Ml!JC. I SCIO W, ...CO &VO..
Hund"llOft •Hcfl ~ ...... ~ 1MN ,._.. V•r
210l2 aeecfl le.ct. .-1".A....... U101em1M.e Ad. 1U01 ..... I ld6ftpr ,,... c ............ ....
..0 IAtM ltvcl MOl1 Dohffr f'lrtl Dr. 6 Vlctcwte
.1 •
'"I , •• .-. .. v~ • "" , .............. , ....
L..-.... • $.,)
2~1 Aid! ,.,_., • "" .,
I
l
...
Orange Coatt OAlL-Y PILOT/\ViCfnHcJay, JanUlrY e, 1982
II 10U'vt ever craved beat, 1Urrln1 2 minutes (Do not allow lt to boll.> a 325 de1ree oven 40-45
10•etbln1 lavlab but to cook away raw nOW' Cool 1U1hUy. mi out ea u o t ii t be
tla,lfty, almple but laste. Gradually whlat To Auemble: U1bt1y aurface ls faintly 1olden
l•J,lnaUvely seasoned, lo milk and heavy oll an 8 x 8 x 2-lncb and puffed. Remove
1ou 11 learn to llte cream over medium baklna pan. Arran1t from oven. Allow to
Greek cuialne in a heat unUl thickened and half the e11plant 1Uces c o m e to r 0 0 m
lwtr)'. smooth. Stir in salt, over bottom of pan. temperature. Cover and
H 11 tor l c a 11 y , the pepper and nutmea. In a Spread the meat fillin1 retri1erate 4.5 hours or
Orffka were a relatively medium bowl, beat the on top evenly; cover overnight. Cut into
poor people, and learned e11s . Add the cream with remaining e11plant sq u are a, tr a oaf er
to 'reate rich, ln1en1oua sauce ao eggs, beating slices. Spoon the cream s quares to a shallow
foocl1 which were alao well. Return completed sauce over this and bakln1 pan JlghUy oiled
ttonomlcal. sauce to saucepan. Cook sprinkle t op with 2 with peanut oil. Heat in
Tbt Mouuaka 'is ooe and sUr over low heat tablespoons crat ed a 250 degree over for 45
-
ALL OAl!EK -
Imaeinative seasonlne makes
Moussaka a Greek
classic.
veralon of a claaalc until mixture is thick. Romano cheese. Bake in minutes.
G r e e k d i a h . r -----------------=:.:.=.:=.:.. ______ =============~==:====::::=========~-------=--TrtdlUoully, Mousa aka
waa llUlde with e11plant
and lamb, wblcb were lb~penaive and readily
-'vailable in Greece .
.. \If there was little
meat available, the
Greeb wouJd UH olive oil liberally, whose
distinct navor gave the
llluaory taste of meat.
The io1redients of
Mouasaka could also be
varied to include other
ve1etablea or potatoes .
In any cue, the result
was an inexpensive but
satisfying meal.
Ironically, olive oil is
a relatively expensive
cooking oil today, ·but
modern cooks do not
have to sacrifice
authenti city for
economics.
The Mou ssa ka
featured here is made
with peanut oil, which~
recommended as an
economical and
delicious substitute for
olive oil in this dish.
Peanut oil is closest in
composition to olive oil
of all the leading
cooking oils.
MAKE AHEAD
MOUSSA.KA
Serves 1·8
1 l ·pound f i rm
eggplant, unpeeled and
cut into 'A-inch round
slices
Salt
4 tablespoons peanut
oil (use more as needed)
MEATFILUNG
2 tablespoons pea·
nut oil
1 large onion, finely
chopped
1 clove garlic,
crushed
1 potmd lean ground
beef or lamb
~teaspoon s alt
~ cup tomato sauce a tablespoons dry
red wine
· 1 small O·inch) bay
leaf, crumbled
~ teaspoon dried
sweet basil
'A teaspoon dried rp.semary
CREAM SA UCE
14 cup butter
3 tablespoons nour
1 cup milk
1 cup heavy cream
1 teaspoon salt
'A teaspoon white pepper
A das h fr es hl y
grated nutmeg
2 eggs
2 tablespoons grated
Romano cheese
Salt eggplant slices
lightly and stack in a
colander. Cover with
aluminum foil and
weight down' 1 hour to
extr~ct liquid. Rins~
slices under co ld
running wate.r and dry
thoroughly on paper
toweling. Brown slices
on both sides in hot
peanut oil. Drain on
paper toweling. Heat
peanut oil in a heavy
10-inch frying pan. Saute
onion until golden. Stir
in garliC', meat, salt,
tomato sauce, red wine,
crumbled ba y leaf,
s w eet ba si l and
rosemary. Simmer,
uncovered, over low
beat until liquid has
been absorbed. Melt
butter in a m edium
saucepan. Stir in flour
off heal. Return to low
Cooking
with class
F A.ISE&O'S in Corona
del Jlar wlll beeio a
serlea ol after-holiday
cookio1 classes
Saturday. Call 673·2343
for more lalormaUoo or
rese"atklal.
IUPIR IAYlllGI 011 IUPIRllAL FOOD IAVIRI
................... liiili .. _ ....... ~ .. ..., ... ::i. • ,. __ ._.._.._ ... ....,_. i,....~,.., ............. ....... . f0t--. _,,, ,.....__ ......... 1poc:.s.-.• 0....-........ ..
2"4W. ,,..... .. ... _ .. ..
21.0L IOUND ,H.OL IOUAll Jt.OL CYUNDll lt..OL Ol&.oHO
~ ~ [ '~ l'Mll llGHIS tfSltVfO HO SAii 10 CO-H ClAl OfAlllS OI
wH01ES•1t•s SOME son 0t1N<ts "'°' &VAl1Aa1t '"' \If Niu-A COuNn
Thit od qnly tffectlw ot H1.19h.t El Roncho
oftd Hvgti.f l1d0 MUS ... COllMlllll NCU AYAK.A•U 'lllmMlllOUI 1'111 .. O_TIOll
WI WILCOMl FOOD IYAMlt IHOlt•l•I llM-Ol ~ n.oz
SOJAt(
SI 99
ROUNO S2 ., --
JUMBO EGGS
GRADl'A'
CHOOSfYOUR
OWN FROM OUR
BULK DISPlA Y
CARTONS AVAILA8LE
UIUTJDODll
USO A Grad. A Fresh Fryi119 Hoftd Cur U S 0 A Chc>Ke Beef, Bonelffs ... Chucli Cut U S 0 A. Choke lleef ... Chuclt Cut 69 CHICKEN WINGS........ . . LB .69 ROLLED SHOULDER CLOD ..... LB. 2.49 0 -BONE ROAST .................. t~ 1.
U SO A Gtode A Frfth Fryi119 E.lt. Hom.Pork·frfth E99t Oven Reody I 89 E R Porli, S.o.onfn9 9 CHICKEN LIVERS, .................. l a 1.29 HAM LOAF ......................... LB. • BRATWURST SAUSAGE . . . LB 1.6
U S D A. Grode A Hond Cul Frying Chiclien U S 0 .A. Choiu lleef...Chuclt Cut El Rancho
FRESH LEGS & THIGHS ............. LB .• 89 7-BONE ROAST ....................... LB. 1.39 RANCH STYLE BACON ......... LB. 1.29
FRllHFRYltlG
CHICKEN BREAST
W/Rl8CAGE. HANO CUT
L8. 1.19
109 od •••o V.~llo 17-0t
VIDAL SAllOOlll99
SHAMPOO
V.dol 59•-, •ot r to .. o ,,_ 12 °'-I 99
FINISHING RINSE •
V.clolSo\-•01
REMOISTURIZING CREME
VtdolS...-I.Or
HAIR MIST
1.99
1.69
1 lb. c.llo 19 CABOYS ................. : ....... Ille. • .
--~~~~~~~~--11-....lllllf..
Pocilk Fillell -~ I 69
FRESH RED SNAPPER ..................... LB •
Nortl\ern-9y-th•·Piece
IMOKID HAU•UT .... tB 2.49 C.nler Cul Fro1111·0.fro1led 4 99 IWOllDFllH IRAKI ta •
froien/O.fro1ted 2-oz. Eoch t
IYUfflD CLAMl ................ 5 •o• I froun/o.froited
MAHI-MAHI.. ...... .... . LB 2.49
GIANlllDE
49-0Z.
INCL.
15c OFF
LIMIT 2 ·.89
Block & Whole ... 2~CI. 30-Gol.
TRASH BAGS ...... ,, ....... .
2'·01. Bottle·Mople Blend 1.59 MRS. BUTIERWORTH SYRUP ... 1.75
Oil free. 8·01. Bottle
KRAFT IT AllAN DRESSING
O<eon Sproy ... '8·01. Bottle
PINK GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ..
23.5 oz Co"
KA L KAN DOG FOOD .
32 Ch Hungry Jock ~19.
COMPLETE PANCAKE MIX ....
15 .5 Or Troditionol & Home Style
RAGU
SPAGHlnl
IAUCI .................... .
.75
1.49
.59
.99
33·0z Applelime Glou Un1wHtened
ORIGINAL APPLESAUCE . 1.09
6 Pit 12·oi:· A& w. Sonatit or
SEVEN-UP. . .. .. . ... 1.99
7 Or Glau Jor
PILLSBURY WHEAT NUTS .... 1.45
Nob1s<o I 9-oz
OREO COOKIES . . . ........ ,. 1. 79
I-LB.
GLOBI A.I 59
IPAGHlnl .......... •
MO.I nxas -y
"'"'°""''° HcHI Oo ... I 2 '9-0\. -SOUP BASE .95
-
HotlM ri.. 1.0, "o
DRIED SHRIMP 1.99
13-oz. l(oholo
lllMCHll N-••obo • .,....., J &-0. l'\9
RAMEN NOODLES .23
1.39 -.......... •9
w.1~ IS-Ot (...,
BOILED MACKEREL .. . .. I .OS -. Wei l'O< ....,..., 6 Or 11\9
BRE AD MEAL
a1;;1m1~·
9Ch.EntrH
GRllll GIAllT I 2 5 LAIAGllA e
Swonton 6-Ch. Ent,..
CHICKEN NIBBLES ........................... 75
2-lb. So. Style ltototo.t
ORE·IDA HASH BROWNS . . . . ..... 1.01
t·lb. Nothon'1 l(l\0Ciwu"t or
BEEF FRANKS ............................. 2.49
I 2-0I. "'edoln .1 '19 MOUA RELLA BALL.................... •
""9Mt it.ovlM C11t Ronclom Wgt.
MOt:-'TEREY JACK CHEESE ..... la. 2.21
16-0i. HugMt -.u °'"" SALAD DRESSING ............ ......... I • I 9 .
°'""Gian! ltllof ond ~ley ... 10-0i.
RICE ORIGJNALS ............... ~ ............ 81
P9f>S*fd9t PMm, Allft!., Ch.rfY, llu.bttr'Y 10 OJ.
FRUIT SQU~R!S ............................... 79
U.S D.A Choke Lomb
SHOULDER CHOPS ........... La 1.89
U.S.0 .A Chooce Lamb
0 -BONE CHOPS .. LB 2.79
U.S.0.A Choke Shoulder Cul
LAMB STEW ......................... LB •• 99
BOlllLlll LAMB
SHOULDER ROAS
WESTERN GROWN
1.8.1.89
Choblo.. "'"' IOM. a..•o~ody l litet
PLAIN LABIL ·-l.75·llr
PLAIN LABEL SCOTCH
750-MI
PLAIN LABEL BftANDY .
2••
... 9.98
........ 4.29
I
I
I.
large feftd.. 2A ! IGG MAllY ...................... EA. • ,, I
Wlu.IA•l-IONOMA
in South eo..t Plua will
olfer an eilbt·part buic
aeriet of cooldnC clusee
1tartln1 Jan. 21 on
MODdaJ eveaiap. Cost
ii '1• f• tM Hriee,
an-d a aelledul• ,11
avail .... at UM store .•
Cbef Roy Plnio will
teacll • elua oa food
procellOl'I OD Ian. 11,
and Tarla P'all~er
will laltnld Oil cb
clHHrta Jaa. U at
WllUUDl·Sanoma. Call
Tst·tt• for lalonDatJoa.
·--1n1cnn 7 DAYI I ...... , TH .... , .IAll. 7, ......... , JAii. I 3, I 912
We accept ALL c•upons from other Supermarket• --
a cs s s a ·aa 2 SC ft
..
IS IT SOUP YET? -Leftover ham sparks the fl avor for an easy
.. chowder.
Soups chase chills
Hearty me ala to wann the family
s prinkle on grated
Cheddar cheese.
HAM 'N CHEESE
CHOWDER
1 p~ c 11: age < 5 'h
ounces) au gratin
potatoes
4 cups water
1 can (16 ounces)
tomatoes
1 c up uncook e d
elbow macaroni
2 tablespoon s
Worcestershire sauce
1 tablesJ)oon instant
minced onion
1 t.easpooo s aJt
Orange Coaat OAILY PILOT/Wednesday, January 6, 1982
l:DOK WHAi O.AllFORNIA'S
LEGISLATIVE 8DDY
HAS DON.E FOR YOUR
DANNON . BODY.
WOW!
callfOrnla legislators have said, "Yes!" to dairy coupons. so now •
you can save 2sc on two cups of cannon"'-Amerlca·s best-selllng
yogurt. cannon LoWfat Yogurt has about half the fat of non-lowfat
yogurt. It's high In protein and calcium, too,
with no arttflclal Ingredients. ·
---~~rta program of exercise and eat-
ing right. Make refreshing, all -natural
cannon part of It. And your good-\
looking Callfornla body can be a great-~-··
looklng oannon Body. WOW! .
P.S. If you don't see oannon In your
.. store, tell the manager you want to
start getting your cannon Body. NOW!
OJ
>Ol ,.,,
r
~v
0
rT
SW
na:
)flt ·-1,..
•) '}
''.:l b
do .
.O'.J
Chase the winter chill
with either of these two
hearty winter soups.
Ham 'N Cheese
Chowder and Savory
Beef Potage are
designed for hectic
meals or whenver time
is short and appetites
are calling for a meal in a hurry.
2 c up s dic e d
cabbage
1 to 2 cups diced
ham
2 cups frozen cut
green beans or other
vegetables
TASTE YOUR WIJN THROUGH
AU 15 DANNON UARl£11£S.
r--------------------------------------1 1 ~
; 9mtr it666 SAVE -25~--[1sc 11: The creamy potato
chowder is accented
with bits of leftover ham
and frestt cabbage.
It's made quickJy and
easily using a package
of au gratin potatoes to
add a rich cheese flavor,
not to mention the
convenience of potatoes
with no peeling or
slicing.
Or pr e par e a
homemade beef and
1 teaspoon caraway
seed, if desired
1 cup milk
Combine pot.aloes and
s easoning m ix from
package with water,
cabbage, ham , and
caraway seed In large
s aucepan. Cover a nd
simmer 15 to 20 minutes,
until potatoes are
tender. Add milk; beat 5
minutes, uncove r e d .
Serves 6 .
SAVORY
BEEF POTAGE
Shredded Cheddar
cheese _ Plaln
Coffee
Lemon
van Illa
Apricot
Banana
Blueberry
Boysenberry
Cherry
Dutch Apple
Peach
Plna-cotada
Pineapple-orange
Red Raspberry
· Strawt>errv
. . -~ I
-Otn CUPS DANNOW®YOGURT l ~~
DEALER Redeem this coupon for a retail customer m accordance with the
terms of this otter We will reimburse you lace value plus 7¢ handling
charge Customer must pay tax where ft prevails The Dan non Company
Inc P 0 Box 1703 Chnton. Iowa 52734 Void where proh1b1ted
licensed tued or otherwise restricted Cash value 1 20th ol 1 ¢
•• 1 ....
l urr
OFFER EXPIRES 12/31112. I • v~~~tab)e SOPP. thjt's p1p1n1 hot and ready to
serve in less than a baJf
an hour.
For a tasty garnish
1 pound ground beef
4 cups water
Brown beef 1 large
s killet, stirring to
crumble : pour off
excess fat. Add water,
tomatoes, macaroni,
Worcestershire s auce,
onion, and salt. Cover
and simmer 10 minutes,
stirring occasionally.
Add beans; continue to
simmer, covered, 5 to 10
minutes longer, until
beans and macaroni are
tender. Serv~ sprinkled
with cheese. Makes 6 to
8 servings.
12sc I 99'172 1 u336 l''h
....._ ___________ L ----------------STOllECOUPON ----------------J ·l'.>
A
~---Better You---........
in '82
, a se11Unar for women who want to live life better
ponsored by:
DATE:
TIME:
.PLACE:
.8:30
9:00
10:00
Jl:OO
12:00
1:00
1:15
Junior League of Newport Harbor
St. Andrews. Presbyterian Church
CareUnit Hospital of Orange
FRIDAY, JANUARY 22, J'82
.8:30 A.M . • %:00. P.M.
ST. ANDREWS .PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF NEWPORT
BEACH
The. Program
. Regiltration -Cohee. and P.cutma
.eat Allen, M .F .C.C. "Hobfl.Reitructurlng"
(P.at Allen ba6.a private practice tbat ipecjalizea m helpjng
· people eakablilh. a politfve Ufeat11leJ
Ed Corell~ Ph.D. "StreH,Ond the. Proce11 of Coping"
(Ed Corell ii known for 1emioar1 preamted. oationwide on
t~hylio~ reiponae to 1tre11) · v· · Dillon -Film -"Off Your Duff"
(Vicki Dillon u the fowdn Ir. PredMnl of Bod11 Accounting Inc .
1Dhich.01mtl in wdght reductton.ond /itMH det>elopmmt)
Lunch.and faahiona by Gimone•1 of Newport B•ach
Film -"New Dtrectiom for Women"
JoNph.Purach, M.D., "Alcoool, Onaga.and Tenagers"
(Dr~Purich ii~ for hil work with V.LP.'• & celebritU•
who bave.alcoholaffd drug problem1.)
For More l aformat»n. P hone OJ~f512; E~ 31
roR TICICBTS, ,.,LL OUT AND llAIL THI S COUPON BBl'OU ,IANUARY 7, au
--~----------~---~------------------~-------
A
Better You
j n :s2 ..
,
.UGill'MION 1'0JUl:.P,_.. _.... '5.00 tor tae~~-. ..... _,,,...,.,.....
......, ....... P'ff illcWn i.cA. *«ohlr._0'9d progrom ~-
NOMI ............................ : .......................................................... .
AMM .................................................................................... ..
""" lo: CflJ .................................................................... • ...... ,. ............. . ,.., ........ ~ t,... ,,...,,.,,
N...,.,C 8'llQ\. CA-I ,,,,... ................................................................................ ti••······
• td
Save 500 and enjoy the :::
Sunrise Surprise!
If you've never tried Sunrise3 Instant Coffee.
you're in for a delic ious surprise!
You see. Sunrise is real full·bodied coffee.
blended from choice coffee b eans and just enough
chicory to get rid of any bitterness.
And right now. you can save soc on any size
jar. So go ahead ... try Sunrise Instant Coffee.
And surprise yourself!
Cllfhe Nestl6 Company, Inc 1982
" "It's rich, and It's
not blttw."
David Brown
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• Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, January 8, 1882
l'IC'fl.,..,. •li•Hll• .. MAMePATaMINT
'Tiie fell•wl111 ••'"" I• del11• ----··: UN1¥llltAI. AUTO BOOY &
lll'AINT, ta.It Htw .. rl Be11ltY1rll. ~--~~ ..... , MlthMI Oav141 0 ... rerCll, HI))
NHlllll• A-ue • ...,.,., C:aH .. f111• ,,.,.
Tllla wtl!IO•• •• tOflduct" by ..,
lnCllV141v.el
W<Nel D1vld OMl••I
Tiii• .... -w• "'" ..... 1111 ,_,y , .. , ... , OtHte C:ouftly ...
Ottemw ti, ltll
P1""9
P111tlllMCI Ot .... C•ll Oelly l'lltt,
Oe< n. •· '"'· J., •. u, ,..,~,
PICTIT10Ut BUllN•U
NAM8 ITAftM9NT
Tiit lellewl111 penon ll dolnt
l>Ulif'leUH: l"INISH LINE, 1110 '-"1111 5t,..1,
Hulllll\tllDfl BMdl, C:.lltomle .... Denlil J. IC-. 111•1 Lyllll St,...t,
Huntl ...... ._II, Callfomle tlt4t
Tlllt ..,...,.., ll <Oftclu<leel by a11
lnCIMll ... 1.
o.MIJ.K-
Tllll 111........,. ., .. llllG wllfl IN
C.W-IY Clerk of 0r•"9t C:o..nty °"
Oe<en'lt>er t•. 1'11.
1'11'1197
Pvllll...., Or-. Co.It Dolly Piiot,
OK. H, 23. ao. t•t. J., 6, 1"'2 ~I
PICTITIOUS BUSI NIESS NAM• ITATIEMIENT
T l'I• lollowlno per1on I• do I no
bu1l neu es: A -1 TH E M ESS£N G£1l
SERVICE, 1'115 E. 17tll Street. No. J20,
S.ni, AM, C•lfoml• '11'01
Rol>irt Edward J enkins. 072
Dumbreck Df'IYI, HunllnQIOD Beoc:.11.
Celllornle f2'4'
Tiii• l>uslN .. ll Conducled by In
lndMduel.
11-.t E.J-ln•
Tflll sMo..,._I w .. llled with lht
County Clet1l of Ore"9t County "'
Oect mller I} 1•1 P11'GM
Publl-Or-Co.It Delly Piiot,
Ole. H, U, 30, 1'11, Jan. 6, 1"1 1
~ .. ,
........
NOTIC• Of' T•UIT•••s SAL& NO.,_,_
........
l'ICTJTIOUS BUS.Nt:a
NAM<l ITAT•MeNT
The lolf-iflf ,..._, ere dolnt
buslntn .. :
THI MARK E T I N G OEPARTMINT, 2t Montpalller ,
Newport 9-11, Celltornl•.,...
Kennell\ W. AolCI, Inc •• •
C•llfornl• c"--'""· ?t Monl99111er,
Newport llMCll. c.,1t01Y"le n.,..
Tiii• tiu.iMu h co!Mluctid l>y a
c~•t"" KlftWlll W. Atfd, ll'IC,
1(-lfl W. Atld, Pr"i.tftl Tllll •tei-1 WM tlled wllll lfte
County Clerk ot Oran91 Covnty ""
Oecemller If, 1'11
1'176111
P11MllMCI Ol'Mim Co.It Delly ,.,~ De< U. ao, ltll, J ... 6. II. lllJ SS>ll_.J
PICTITtOUI BUllNIU
..._ITAT ...... T The tellewl111 P«Mfll ere doing butl llOH ao:
IA•TELL MAlllN I
ILECTllONICS, ISll Monrovl1
Avenue. ,.._.. lieecll, Cetlfwni•
'2663
len.11 C«por.clon, a c au-..11
corpor1tten. rm Moflro•le A .. 111111, Newport 9"<11, C.lllvn\le t1MJ
Tlllt O..Sl110u 11 c..,Cluctt4 •~ • (W por 1t6M.. ._., °""" •tloft H.,..,. RombtrO,
""9tlclllflt
Tllll ............. WM flleG with Ille
County Cttrto of Orlfl99 (_,,Y -
Oe<emller 14. '"' l't1m1
Publlllled Or-Coot Oelly Piiot, ""-Oec. u, JD, ltll, JM . 6, u, _1"2 SS>l2 .. 1 Publl-Orenot Coe1t !Jelly Piiot. Oec. 16, u. 30, ltll, J-.. •. 1912 ~1
Plc;TtTtOUI t tlSINllU lllAMll ITAT•M•NT l"'ICT1TtOUa BUSINIU Tiie tollowlllQ ,,......,, ere doln9 HAMIE ITAT•MaNT
butlneu ••· The tollowlng --· ere doing HAMMOND PIANO RENT4 L bvllnenas
COMPANY 210 E. 11\11 SlnNll CMlo BACON'S AIRPORT PHOTO, 4251 Mes., Cati~ ' "B"' M•rtl ..... Wey, N-11 &each. °'""" J -LM. m• OU T .... C•lllOrlll• t2IMO
c-11. o~a. c.Mlfwlll4l t11.o B•c""'• Airport Plleto. ""' • • Nteo o. Lee, 1616 OUT,... C-1. C•lllor"la cerpore llol\, 4111 •• B" o..-•. Collfoml• ,,,.. Mertlno••• W•Y. Newpor'I I H Cll,
Tllh l>uSlfteU I• condUCl•d lly q.11i.,111ot2M0 (hlllbend & Witt>. Tllll O..SlneH II conclucl•d by a
OtmlsJ. LM corpor•llon
'Tiii• --1 -lllld wllll H .._,,tAl--1"-.lnc:. Co..nty Clerk of Dr•nee c ...... ,., ... ..-. G-BKOll. p, ........ ,
December If, 1•1. Tiii• .. .........,, •• flied-wlltl W.
1'17 Covnly Cler• ot Orenoe County on
Put>Ullled Orange COISI Dolly Piie!. Oectmbtr 21, '"'
_DK. 16, U, JO. t•t, J•. 6. ~ "417~1 1'11-
Pul>llVWCI Or ..... C-Dolly Piiot.
Oi' U, JO, ltll, JM ,, 13, 1"1 ~,._.I
l"'ICTIJIOUS •UStN•U
NAMI STATllM&NT
Tiie followlno per1on I• doln9
butlneUH" FLIGHT PAT HS. 000 Campus
Drive, Suite Hit. Newport Buell.
c amornla n..o
F rtCllrl<k B Jecol>UI, 2'1S Alli
Vl•I• Drive, Newporl Beecll,
C•lflornl• t2660
NolllkMIOn I• r.rew olvt111>y Bank °' AmtflU NT & SA. s" Olftorlll• StrHI, Sen FraftCIHo, C1lllornle.
.. ICM, lllOI an eppl"•llOI\ WH tiled with llW ~rOller of ttw Currency on January •. 1911 •• '4)Klfltd In 12 CFR S of IN Comperolt.,•1 loWnuol lor
Net1on11 B-•· tor permlulon to
reloc•t• ltl Soutll c:.o .. t Tow11 Ceflter
Branch Ir-om J3IOO Brl•IOI Stre.C 10 • •II• o" A nion Bouleva rd ,
•PPto•lrn•\ely JOO f"I eot of ,,..
Anlon·lrhlol lnt1ruc1lon, Co•I•
~ Oranoo Goun(y. Celllew11I• Any pe.-. wlllllno to commen1 on
ll'lll •Pfllk.,IOll mey Ill• IW• comments
In wrltlno wltll tlle Rttlone l
Admlnlltrlltor ol N•lloNI Bank•. 14111
Nellon•! B•"k Region. t Merkel Plu•. Steuon Street T-• UIOI,
S.n Frenc:lko, Celllornl• ••1os. 11 MY
pert0n Clftlr•t 10 prot.U the vrentlno
Of '"" _.,, .. 1 ... tw ..... rleflt to Clo IO II lie Illes • wrltt.tn llOlke of 1111
l"llfll wltll ltw Comptroller et the Currency wltllin 11 Cleyt of Ille Cle• ol
thl• publk•llon T,. norw;onlloentlel
portions ot llW -tlc•llon .,. on Ille
wllll llW ~taller ol IN CUl'rtfKY
OI pert of N pullllc Ille . Tiiis Ille II
... 11.1111 tor llUllllc 1"""9(11on c1ur1no
reoul•r t>uslneu llouf\
Publhr.o OrMIOI Col\t O•llY PllOt,
J•n 6, ll. t"2 •~-
On F__., J. 1'11. el 10.00 a.m.,
Imperial COl"-llCIOll of America, at
CIUIY 1ppolnlM TrutlM under end
pur\uer>t to OeM of Tnnt reconlecl
June lO. 1'11. et Instr No 337.S,
1>ook 11150. P•91 1145. of Ollletal
Record•, .aecuted 1>y: Ru"•' C.B
Karlen end Jeni• K. Kulen, 11.nl>lnd
and wl ... as ""''°"· In ow office of 1111 County Recorder ol Or•r>t• Cou11ty, Stale of C•lllornla. WILL
SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO
HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH
Cpeyable et tlma of Hie In lawful money of ,,. '\,lnlled Slllnl et: ,,..
Norlll front entrenc:.e ol the Olvhty
T1111 t..dlneu h cOflelu<ltO by an
lncllvldUAI 1-------.,.-~-------'
F B Jee~ ..-.-"81~
Tflll steterrwnl w•• llled wltll ttw 1-------------
~ ......... •oo ~_on....
WHI, ~ AM, c.llf«nle ell riQlll,
lltle end 1-t c°",,.yed ID 8lld llOW
Mid by II -Mid Deed ol Tru•I In ttw p.--rty 111 ... ..., In t.elCI County
end State c1Hcr1bed es.
PA•CIELI
Counly Clerk of Oren91 County on
December 21, '"' 1'111tft
_._. 0.-C~ty Piiot,
Ole U.30. ltll,J M 4. U, lt12S»WI.
l'IC'tlTIOUI BUSINESS
NAllll• STAT•M•NT
Tiie tollowlno per1on h Clolnt 1M>1lneues
OECO GRAPt4. 604 Reinier Wey,
COSll' Mill, Cllltornla '161-
Jemel Roy H•rlll, 604 Reinier
W•y. C0511 Mew. Cllltornl• t:»»
l'ICTITIOUI •UStN•SS
NAME STATllMIENT
T.Ae lollew•ft9 "rsOft h dol"
b\lslneun :
OTS DISTRIBUTING. U J North Elm, Orenot, C•lllomle t:!llOS Wiibur H. Kendell, ""12 Via Cru1
LIO-Ni.,.., Celllornli 9:»17 Tiit.-Mloltn ll """"'<led l>y en
lnclfvl-1
Wlll>ur H Ktncllll
Tiii• tllltmenl WI\ lllec! wllll the
Countv Clerk of Or-County on
J tnuory •. tte "..,. PuDllllleel Orono-Coon O•lly Piiot,
Jin 6, 13, 20, 11, ltl2 101 .. 2. Unit No. 9. •• 111own end OHcril>ed
In 111• Condomln4um Plan recorded on
October 6, 1976. In -ll9U. -Tiii• l>ullneu I• COndueleCI by •n 1-------------
, ... of Offkl•I Reccwd• of Mid c-tY. ,
In Ill• C1lyol l"'lne.
PA•CEL 2 PICTITIOUI •UMN•U An undMclid one i.....ty·lllird lt/Ul l"'ICTITIOUS •USINESS NAMll ITAT•MaNT
lnltr .. 1 H I tenant In common In IM MAMIE STAT•lllllENT Tiie lollOWl"9 Pi"'°"' ertt dolnt
IM lnlll<'HI In on<1 lo IM Commot1 Tiie tollowiflo per'°"' ere dOl"O -lnH••:
Ar .. OI Loi I ol Tr.ct -at per m19 t>u1lntt1 .. · A B L E M A R I N E
llltd In -Jtt, P•91• 11 to n. COSTA MESA ME MORIAL ¥/1.INTENAHCE. 819 Me'110r lll•nO lnclu•I••. Of Mlsu111neou• M•P•. HOSPITAL. JOI Vk ....... Street. Cost• Ori••. N•*POrl &Hell. Celllornl• record• of wld County. n l\Kll term 11 tu61
lndl•IClllAI. JemH R. Hirlll
Tllll --• we• tiled wllll llW County Clerk ol Orenoe County DI< ••. '"I. Fl,.,.,
Pul>lilNCI Or-co.st Oelly Pllo4,
Dec. 16, H, JD, ltll, JM 6, 1"2 j.Ml .. I
cietl ntd In Ille Artie le tnlltlttd Mtle~'=°k'!~qul•ltloft Corp.. Brl.., Lff L.everkll, JOO S...tll
'DellnilloM'" ol llw OK1ari1I011 of • De lewue, CCl<Po< .. IOft, 100 W••t lro1Clwey. CO.Mi Mffa. C.llfor"I• 1--------------C ov e n en h , Cond lllon1 •nCI Tentll Sirwet, W11mlf>010ft, o.t1w.,.. '2i21 . NOTIC•Of'SAL&
RHtrldioM recorO.O on October 6. '"°' Rotlff1 DaNld Le.,...kll, )00 Soul/I OP: •EA'-l'lllOPE•TY
1'74 In boOk" I !9U. paQe Ill I, of Tlllt llldlnHs I• concl\Ktttd by 1 Bro1C1wo. COltl Miu, C1lllor11l1 AT P•IVATll SALE Offlcl•I Rec.well ol Hid CoulllY (9W CorpGrillOll .,.,, .... NOPJllJ
"Oecler.Cloft"'l; Tiii• llodlnH• Is cOftdlKted try • In uw So.lperlor Court of ttw Stet• ot E aupllno tlwrefrom •II 011, oil HHl91 Senrk.. llmlted -11WnNP Ct11fornl1 tor 1111 County ol Lo• r lQllll, fT'lnerel1, miner t i rlQllh, AcQUlllllon C._•110ft R_,, Ltverkfl Anoet" In 1111 Mitter of ttw Estate of
n e tur•I G•• rlQlllS, and Diiier Cher!HL K-n. Tflll SI_,._, WM Iii.ct wllft "" DONHARRYTHATCHER.OecHled
llydro·c•rboM by WNIM>evtr name Sec..Ury CoVf\IY Ci.t1l 01 Or•-c-ty ..., NOllU I• MrtbY Qlven llWI '""
l'ICTITIOUS BUSINllU
NAME STATllM•NT
Tiie lollowlnt per1on ll dolno
busJ-•· AAA PLUMBING & HEATI NG,
Stl Fullerton, Newport Beacll, alltorllla 9"'3
W iiiia m L De vi•, Jr , Sii P:Ullert.n. ....._, Beecf\, C..lllcwMI ._,
Tiii• -· 11 ,_ucteo l>y .,, lndlYfd ... I.
Wllllom l 0 .. 1,, Jr
Tllh stat-w11 llllCI w1111 lht
County Clerk of Or•f\91 C-nty ""
December U, t•t
""'" Publlllltd Or-CNst O.lly Pllol, I OK It, U. JO. ltll. J_, 6, 1"2 j.MWI known, -t1Wrm11 •Item, and ell Tiii• _, was llled •1111 ..., Dec~ JI. 1'11 -rsl.,,.O will t.tll ., Prlv•t• wie.
produeh O.rlveCI from tny of IM Covnly ci.n. of 0.•-County .., PH-10 tt.. ll'911ftl and l>nt -· •ul>l«I , foregoing, lhel mty lie wHllln or unoer Oeomtier t•. ltl l . PublllNd 0r-.. COftl DOiiy Piiot. to c.ontwmeOon ol said 5-lor C:0..11, 1111 percel ot I •nd 11erelnebo•• Pl1.., DK. n. JO,'"'· Jen. 1, 11, l"'2'*41 on or .,1., 1,_ JOlfl O.y of J.., ... ry,
ducrlbeel, tooether wllh the perpet ... I Publl-Or ..... Co.st DOiiy Piiot. ttU ii Jhe ·office of ROSS W
rlQlll or Clrllllno. mlnlno ... plor1no. OK H, 2 •• JO, 1•1. JM '· ,.., -· .~I: AMSPOKElt. to EHi PelmCl•I• •nd ....,.uno tlWretcw •nd ttorlno In ~»4' f"9WUll ''~ Bl•CI .• Pelmdtlt, County of Los •nO rernovlno ,,. ..,,_Ir-om >&Id•-.t.11911 ... 5161t ol Celllcwnlt, •II the
or •ny -land. Including'"" "°"' I I I I I Id
10 w11tp1toc11. or dlrecllontllY dr111 -••1ttC ""'Ji[ NOTICE O F DEA T H OF ~:!;.! ~,• u!n~,,,:~r,;.•.111°.~•.11 mll\e tr007' land• otller lll•n llloH ' rv ""' F L O R E N C E ,,. riot.I. title •nd lnltrfft !NI IN
11ereln1oove Cllscrlbed, oll. or OH W A N KOWSK I A ND O F HMll• ot Mid oec-,.., K4'11feel -111. t-.h --1ll Into. lhrOUQll NOTICE OP: T•USTEE'S SA~ ,... 1 lie
or ecr'OH ttw •-1•• of 1111 ,_ -GTD No. OJDt P E T I T I 0 N T 0 ~:.~;":-:4o.:~°7.,.,°' ,:~:; ':, 0~1~
M •eln•bO..,. Cltl<rllled, •nd 10 bOllom Re. Jullner ADMINISTER EST ATE 0tteu1.a. at Ille llme of Ottalll. In eno
well wlllpsloektel or e11recllon1lly G u AR D 1 AN TR u ST DI! ED N O . A -111659. 10 1111iwcer111n rul pr-rty .iw.1.0
arllleel -••.tunnel• and .,..Ill uncllr SERVICES. • corpGrellon u duly T '" Ille Covnty of Oran91, Sl•I• of
•nd lie-th or beyond ... ••t ... IO< -·n-TN<lM -... fot-1"11 D a I I h e i , s • Calllornoa. oarticultrly Clttl<fllled ..
llmlll hreol, -to,...,,.111. rei...-1. docrl--ot tru1t WILL SELL beneficiaries , c r e d itors tooow1. to-wH ~UIP. m.lftllln, r-•r. Clttepe" .,.., AT ,PUBLIC AUCTION TD THE and contingent c reditors o f I U"lmproved fHI property In
operel• •ny 1uc11 wt111 01 mlno HIGHEST BIODEll FOR CAS H 'ALL Flore nce Wankowski' a nd Oreno• county, c.a111ornl• more wll ...... 1, -wr, llW rltfll lo Clrlll, RIGHT, TITLE 4ND INTEREST II I I 4"< lbed
l'ICTITIOUS •USINEU
NAMIE STATIEllillENT
Tiie lollowlno per1on '' e101n9 -'-.... , THE H088Y SHOP. 440 £1st 11111
Slrffl, Co&le Mna, Celllcwni• t1'21 Homer Spark~ McCl•ll•n, II U
esst w L•n•. Newport 8••ch. C•lllorl\1•'2660 Tiii• ...,.,,,..., 11 c-uct.O by an
lndlvldu•I
H.S M((lell•n Tflll ttat..,_I w .. tiled .. 1111 llW
COVftlY Cltrk of O•an~ Counly on
Deeem.,.r )t "'' ""-PuDllllWCI Or-Coa>t Delly Piiot.
l)ec. U , JO, t•t J~ 6, I), 1'92 JS.Q~I.
mine. •lore. UPIOrt .,,., oper•le CONVEYEDTO ANDNOWHELD BY per sons who may be pa;,,;uE~r .... ofr !ht ~M1 ..... lt \lo ol
lllrOVQll .... •url•• cw ow -r 500 IT UNDER 0-d OI Trust In Ille otherw ise interested in the '"" SoU1-I 'M ol ttw Soulll V, ol LOI NIUC .m
IHI ol I,_ Subs<lrtece ol Ille l•nd pr-rtylwntlnefterd .. cribed Wtlf and /Or e s tate: 4 In &tock It. of Troc:I 14, "'COlll l-------------1>er•1ne-Clol<rlbed. TRUSTOR: Joflft W Jullner, en Boutevird Farms" u per ma p
PA•CllL > unm•rrled.....,.. A pe t ition has been filed recorded In Book 10, -•ll lnd a. of NOTtC:ll Ol"' T11tusr11e·s SALi:
An 11wmen1 tor lnoren •nd eoreu BENEFICIARY: -oeret MeYttr. by G 0 rd 0 n Hersch e I Ml1<•ll•l'WGU\ MIP>. record• 01 H id RC:~D1tH"ooucnR1Yo over Ille prlv1lt drl¥H willllfl TrlKI .., unm•rled_,..,, 1 1 ~
t>Ot .. per ..wod111eo In -lll. Rocoroeo o.cemtier t>. '"°••Bradford in the Superior county, t09e111er witll •1 •Hem.,,, GUARDI A~ TRUST DEED
P•oes 10 to II l nclu•IVt ol 1n11r.No U7ll lt1-ll1n P1911165 Court of Orange County :::~.·~~~,~~.r,::f,o:~:!i:o:;: SER~ICES. A CorpGrelion .. Cluly
Mhcell•"eou• M•P" record• 01 o1 Olllclol RtlCOtdl In""' office ol llW request ing that Gordon acrou other,.,,.,. 1n 11001 11. 11, It -•n1eo Trust• ...-r '"" 1o11ow11111
Oranoe COUftly, Calltornla Recorder d Or-County; ••Id -H h I B df d b •nd 2o In ltlCI Tract 16 or any dflcrlbed -ol tru>I WILL SELL PA•CIEL• I ersc e ra or e ·T P UBLIC ·ucTION TO THE ot lru1t dUcrlO.• Ill• lollow no I t d I roubjllvhlon tllueol llerelolortt " " Enenwlll(I) a ~II tattmlfllhl -11y appo n e as persona crt81ed a nCI now u hllno lor tllt t41GHEST BIDDER FOR CASH•••
l•l•r• perllcullWIY .. , forlll In ,,. A pot11of\ of Lot ll of NtwPot1 r e p res e n t a t I v e t 0 btnelll of said ••nd ""' ebo•• ... riOfll, l"I• ancl llllerHl ,OllVtyed to Article tfl11UICI ""Eaw..,..,1.-· of ~ H•iolll•. In ttw city o1 C0511 Met.a, d I · t th t t f oeocrlti.o. •nO now ,.fd IJ\t II unoer t.elCI 0..0 of Oec'l•ratlon under Ille Stcllon County of Orange, Stile of Cellf«nl• a m n1S e r e es a e O 2. Unimproved rul pr-1y 1n IM Tru•I II\ Ille property Mrelntller
M•dlnol•llnwcll ArtkleenlllledHespermeprecordtdln-•.P ... Florence Wankowski County 01 Or•noe. C•lllornle , ducrll>ed
10110•• "u111111 .. :• "Support end aof MIKlll.,,....,.Mltl>S, lnttwoffkl (under the Independent dncriti.oa • TitUSTOR. S.mir 1t11our1 ano
s.111em•n1:· ··Encroecllmanl" and of tlWC-v Recorderot N ld C-y, Administration of Estates TIW w .. t-Nll of tJ>e Nortllwttt S.l\ir Kflour.r
"Com..-Are• Ee_,_1 .. OH<rlbed • lollow.; 8eetflfllno et the Ac t ). The petition t"S set for QUMttt du. Soul!>west qu&rter of IM BENEFICIARY Unlled lndu&trl .. PA•Clil S rno.t NOf'11wfly corner of ~Id LOI U , Soulll 'h of Lot • 1n Block 1'. Tr at I 16. Group. Inc: .• • NevlCll Corp0rtll011 EH•menth) es >UCll eaumenthl 11e1no a Po111t In tlW so.rt11M"9t'ly 11ne hearing in D ept. No. 3 at CoHt Boulev1WC1 Ferm•, C<1unty 01 Recoroeo Oecem1>1r lt. 1tt0 11 ~~~;~e':::~.:::~·~~!~ ~~ =~~::C::;.·,:~~=-~,: 100 Civic Center Drive. ~~n~~C:,•1nof.!:'\~~.·;s!: ~~-11~~1s::z.,,.~~~-;1:::.!:
OKl•r•tloft ol c-"· Condlllo Northulteny llllunNrY ol ~Lot''· W est, in the City of Santa ,. ol MIKlllMWOUS """~· record• Of Recorder d Oronoe County, Hid Clttlld
end R .. trktlons recorded"" J-•• U S.JO IHI .lo lh• true "lnl •f An a I 'a 11 I 0 r n I a 0 n Or•noe County; looelller wltll ... ot tru•I ducrll>ld Ill• lollowlno m• In -lllM, Pll04I ''°· ot Otllcitit 11e91nn1no· INflc• c:oftllfwlnQ se..411 JO" February 3, 1982 at 9: 3() e•r.em•nt• for "'"' pUrPoM• •nd tor pr-L~Y•• ~ Tr-t ~In ,~ Ct ... of Record• ol Hid County (9W "Masi Ea ll al~no 1eld Nortfl•••t•rty 11v1no -malnttlnlno pipeline• In. ~ • --·-·-" DeC11r1tlon"'l under the Stello """"41,.,. tO teet to e Point; tlleftce a .m . _,and ec.--otlwf lenOI In 81ocU COSle Me.._ • per map recoroeo In
IWedlntl•J In well Artk lo entltled a Soutll "1' w..i t62.S1 ,.., HI • point; IF YOU OBJECT to the 11, 11, 1'-70 lleretofor• cr .. 1.a •"6 ,...., UI, Pege 11111rouo11 ll lnclww
t0Uow1· "Owner• Rlofil• -°"''"· then<• Nortll w w~ '° '"' ni • granting of the p etition, llOW o l•tlno tor 1iw _,., o1 Hid of Ml1<elleneou11n~. records o1 t.elCI Utllllltl end C1blt Tetevl•lon: point · tlltn<e Nort11"1' Ealt1'2.S1tMt h Id Ith lendllrlt1bolle6Hcrllled C°"nly
""Utllllln."" "S--11-Settl•ment,' to tiw' true oolnt ol lleQlnnlno. YOU S 00 e e r appear ) Unlmcw-re•I pr-1y In tlW MAY. BE -'LSD KNOWN AS l60
"'Encroecllmenl"' Oncl "Communlt MAY BE A'-SO KNOWN AS: U3 at the hearing a nd State County of Oranoe, Ce lllornle, Sonore Roed.Cost1Mne,Cellfornle
,.acllltlttEe...,_.,... Pelmer,ColllMew.Celltorl\le your Obje c tions Or file oncrlbedes· ""Ill • •ltMI _,...,or common
PAttlL6 ··111 • JtrMt _, .. , or com"'" written objectio ns w ith the TM Nort,..11 v. of.,,. ~thw••t v. duton•llon I• •llown •t>ove, 110
E111'""'1t lor dral,,_ pU'llOM dUlgn1tlon Is sllo•n ebove, 110 oft ... Soutll V.ofLot•ln81ock"of we rr•ntv II Olvtn ••lo Its
over,-,llwOUQll-e<rouLob wurenly Is g ive" •• to 11• COUrt before ttie h earing. Trtel 16. Coetl llovltverCI P:trml In omplel-sor correctnenl "'
encl BofTr«t .... es,,...mepllled comptet-•orcorrecin..a>." You r appearance may be 1111 county 01 or1no•. s 1111 01 TM-1k1orv...-t.eloo.eoo1
-lit, Peoit 12 to 1' lnclu.I..,. TIW ~kltry unellr t.eld o.edof ·n pe SOn o r by your C1lll ornle u per m ap tllereo( Tru1t.byr-ol•l>rMCllorelel1Ull Misc e11a11eou• M•PI. record• o Trust, bY ,..._of • l>r9ec:fl w Cllleu" 1 r recorCllcl In 8oof< 10. "°"'JS ...a J6 of In Ill• ollllgellot11 secured tllereby, ~ ..... Courltv. Celltofnl•, .. tors'-• 1n 1111 01111getloM HCureCI thertby, attorney· Mlsce11e.-.. MIPI. record• of Hid iwtttotor• taKu1ICI -Cllllverlld to
end con<enlrelMI tlow Clreln ... over, lleretotore e..c....S end 4ellwr.-to I F Y 0 U A R E A Or•no• Co..nty, 1ooet1Wr will\ ell the uncler"9ned •written Oe<llratlon
,
recipe for use with lb• older, laraer let cnt•m
malt era.
2e1&s
I cup 1u1ar
VANllLA
I C£CaEAM
\14 teupoon H it
2~ teaspoons vanlll•
2 cups halt and hall
2 cups heavy cream
Beat e111 lD a lar1e bowl and add auiar
1raduaJly unW thorouatily mixed<• wire wblP
workl w II for thl1). Add aaJt and vanilla. Beat
ln half and half fraduaUy at nrat and add
cream. Mix well and pour lnto lee cream
maker. Freeze acc.ordla1 to manufacturer'•
directions. Makes about ~ 1allon.
!BOLD LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
!"DAWN LIQUID
~ DETERGENT
22 oz 134
49 oz 84 oz 171 o z 21s3G0719 12 oz
48 o z
J
40 ct
60 Ct
192
2ss
109
213
298 under, '"'°""' ...., oc,,.. Lot O of t11e llftder1'9Nd a wrltttQ Oeclorellefl C R E D I T O R o r a M.......U for 1trfft P<i'11GMI end tor r1Dt11..,1•unotll ~.~~-tor~ •• ~.-..
Tre<t "23· .. • .._ lllld"'....., of o.teull -OefftenCI lw ~. aM t i t ed·t of the ••Yl"O -""'"'°""1111 pipeline• 111. ~ "'-~" '" ~ US. P•O .. 2t lo '9 lllcluslve • wrllt ... ,,..keof .. Mdl ..... Mtl«ti... Con ngef\ Cr I Or over end 1Cr05t otlwf IMds l" Block• .. C<tUM Ille uncler'llQrwcl '° Mii Miid ~-.._ ___ _
NlllUllll\toUI M•P•. r ecerdl 0 to c,outt 1W wldlflitfled to Mil Yid deceased YOU mus t file 17, 1t, lt-70lnMICI TrecU6,or M1y property lo '9tl1ly Uld .Ollgellons,
OrenoeCoull'y,C.llforflle , ll'ot>lf'ly to Mll1ty .. Id OOfleltfOM. your Claim W ith the COUrt rUubdlYltlon ll!ereol, llHelofore Nldltwnol~e~~~~-"'!*'1,_c~ .. -lo c;,i;:.,:•;::~~:;~~: ::.,~ ;.•~•r =.':.'.:':..":c~~.J=: or present i t .to the ~~~~·,~~ :~d .. ~!",::~··:~~/~11;=: 11 ;.;,;;" ...,"'101;,
ru • pr09ertv d11cr11>1e1 •kve 1 .,. •K..wd Selllemt.r "'· '"' ea personal representative e1ucr•-tMtr.ecNu '°"' 1nemDOo11 1012 a•
P<l<PMleo 1011e: •Notti\ cove. ,, .. 111e, 1Mtr. "°' 1*2Jn .,... I01t,... 1wo, appointed by the court ''"·of Vld0tt1c1e1 R«ora.
Said Ml• will lie meoe. t>ut wltllout
BIZ
'~:1~'°'*' r.w .. dltcl•lmt of::::!':.,~:-::.... llM wlti-t within foorf 1m1 onth1 S from· ol ~:;~~f.;~~~!"'on'~.:..9;7:;::.i;;:~ ov1111111 or wmenty, uprm or
env 1104lltlty fOf llfly lnc:or~tneM of covena11t or warraftty, •• ,.. •• ., t he date 0 rst ssuance-Hit, or pert CUii •nCI b•lence lmptltd. "'911'dl11Q tllle, -MMlofl. or I DOWNY
the strwt ......,., .,... ot111W <ommo lmot••. ,....,dlno 1111e. ,..JtM!eft, • o f letters as provided In u1e1111c.a 1>y 1101• u<uree1 •Y umllranc.. llD .,.., ttw r .... e1111,..
ditl ...... 161\, If .. y. ,,_ ...-.111. encvmllr-. ID ... , -""*""" Se ti 700 f th p --t M t • 0 T I D Cl eft Ill 111<1~1 --of ....... 111 l«-S.ICI tole wlll ·--· -wit-I prlll(lpel Mn o1 ....... (1) MC-C on 0 e rvuco e or O•O r rut ee 1 N ICI Deed of rrutt, wllft Int-I M
cov•n•nt or werra11ly, u..-m or llywklo.dofTrust,wl91 1 .... ft• Code of California. T h e ::::::,1:..i·.~;1,:;~~:..:r:~11J" 1n .. ld""9prootlded,ed•~•,ll011Y, FABRIC
lmpllM1,fflWdl"Otlt1e.--ion. or 111sold1WprOWICIM,--... 11...,, t ime for filing claims wlll 11111 or afters to w lft wrlllfto ..., llfl4H ,,.....,,,., .. 1e1 Oeedof Truet,
I LAUNDRY
AID
1ss
""""'.,,_ ....... y .... , .... elnl .................... Oeed .. Tr ..... not expire prior to four wllf llertmwd•l "'9etor.Mldottkl ,fee&. <Mrot• ... d ..... " .... , .... 25oz SOFTENER ,rl•I• -"' ... ,,...,,, t«u ..... ,....,_, eftd t .......... Ille ., I ..,., t fl k I Tfv\IM •nll .. IN INSb , ....... .., llY .. 1e1 0.... of T""t• wlltl lflll-t Tl'tl•I• .. et H '""" Q"'9d 11Y m onths from the date Of •fly 1 me .. ttl pul>l •t Oii Mid Oeed fl( Tr111I. s.+11 NII wlll lie
MY•-· II ...,, UftClltr 1111 ltmit of held Oii llMl•MllY. J-V 1a,. Im • YOU M AY EXAM INE ,:.,•id this alll Clll'f of• Ot<ernller. ft 11:00 A.M., .e ,,.; tr~t tntr..U lo 38 OZ ..... 221 ~ ... .,,..,... 111..., ... w ... 111 °""' .. Tr1111t • ..., .... wtt1 • the hearlf'O noticed abOve. "''i'_,....,.,.......... 11e111 011 '#MllOtlde'I JO!luerv ta 1t12 346
UICI Deed 9f TNll, lwl, Cllet9ff a ft lltOt /1.M. M 1t1e f._. _._.. 0.-J E"lled lO-dl_, Trwt Died I«~ l«•ted lueft-f/I tM TNIM oftCI « 0.._dl9ft Tniil o.11 ter¥1<9' *411M t h e file kept by the COUrt. A4"'>lfltstrotrl• wit!\ e1 1600. R. llM'1elr. Or ...... C.lf!Ornle 96 OZ •••• tr""•~..., Mid o.e. e1 Trvtt ot 1t111: • ........,, 0r ... ~ tf you are Interested In the wi1t.•~o1 1,, ... °' .,..,, 11-------------1-----------........ --------.-----1
tor '"' _.... r..-...y .,.,..,... .. ""'· estate, you may fllt a oftlll..,ddec:HNll Tll• tote• e1M1111t of "" """''d I COMET I ~o~Mf'.~. -~· ~.~H BAR toM1 .. .-oo. Tiie tot•• "*'flt ., ,,,. .. ,..1e1 req' ues t with the court to ROUW AMPOKI• M••n<e °' ""ooo11tt1011 _...,... llY T ... ..-tcwv "°*' Yid DM4I of .. lln(.e fll , ............. -IONll 11'1 tu I................... »Id~• .. 101111. '-U. •tll
,,1111 11er•••ter• uente11 •"" .. 1e1,,...,.y1e •---.~w1t11 rec eive special notice o f .......,ca.._ 11\te'"'· ..,...,.,., ..... """'°'" CLEANSER ... ..,.,.. • .,...,..._.._. .... lftWrm, ..-owe-.-........... the Invento ry of eatate ,_...,.... '°''" ....-.-.. ~"· "°' o.c, ...... • °"'""' w ~ , .. , .. e~. w ..,_., .. « t nd of th tltlons """"9Y'tw """1•..,...·1•"·111"1
la, hit,_.. wrltttfl Netlu ef ...... ._... ....... ,,...,, asse s a epe I ...... °"""'"" O•lt:o.c.n.rtS,t•t 60
o.teutt •~ 1:1.ct1111 10 s.11. Tiie 0ete:oec.Meru ,,.. acc ounts and repor't$ '1lllllW ._..... o uA•o11.1nRusT
11.W.rtltMll ,....,. lllld Notk lt ef OUMtOIAHTAU" described In Section 1200.5 PUllll.,. 0r...;. CMtt Delly ....... ot!IOH•YICH. Powder.
o.1e1111 ..,. • ..,..,. t. .,.., • .. CMllDM1t¥1C81. of the California PrObete Jen. •.1.11,.., m..i • .. ~~ 21 o z . . • • -.-111 .. ~--·~ _ .. _... ,,.....nyallK..... ~,._.. Codt. 1.001._.,..,,, • OATI0~ .. 1411, 1,M9ytlilr,lt.O ... altt 111'.0 .... ltt ·~~----~,. .CA.... frOlll bobysithno IO windliw 0r .... CA ..... ...... ,,,_. 11•1) ~ lht daillifitd Ser\o 17MI nt ... lt
ty ~--..... ' ,. ...... ~ QnctaY l1'IDt Wiii find helD_ tr ..... Ill.~ =~DIM . , • .. ~ JiJOJ ( Contult fht s.vfcl ~ Ill •••er =hi :.;;'A>~w10 ~c...~.,.. PubO 1119 cilMlflfdlol :'! =...-.., ..
,_....Oreil9tewtOe11y111>1-.. ........,0r.,.ewta.iir....., Dally RI H,m13mu ~0-....C...OM" .... '· ,,, ... ... ' ow. n.... ....... ... ~ 1912 l Dec. fl. ... *'·.,.,, .. ,. ,..., ____________ __ ,
'
Our "'" PrOfl<tlOll l'Olo<Y OU" llllte\ tne. pn(ft t'O ... eff«t .... ~911¥
iMl\lolr'f 1 nww TUtMS.tv _,,., u it11
I
\
Sometlme1 It '•
HHllU')' to entert1ln
even wlMn the bud1et la
already •trained.
At tbeae tlme1, tbe
hmovative holte11 looka
to chicken and turkey
prepared ln a new way
to put tocetber a menu
that la kind to both
palate and purse.
2 tableapoona
butter or mar1arlne
1 can (U~ or 14"°'
ounces> chicken broth
rice
14 cup dry aherry
l cup pubolled
2 cupe diced
cooked turkey or
chicken
1 can (4 ounces)
chopped mild green
chiliet, drained
. YI cup sliced ripe
olives
..
1 teupooo slllt i 1reen onlona with lope, 1Uced
1 aoft avocado
Daley sour cream
(optional)
\
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTmedneeday, January 6, 1982
...
P A R TY DISH "
Chicken is ffavored• ..
with tomato. green}\
pepper and onion for
an economy dinneri
that's festive.
For the dinner to be a
succeaa.-every part of
the meal should be given
t h oughtful
conalderattlon.
Cook mu1broom1 in
butter ID 10.lncb 1klllet
until tender, about 5
minutes. Combine
chicken broth and
sherry; add enou1b
water to make 2"°' cups
liquid. Add liquid, ri'ce,
turkey. chllles, olives 1~~--,.~.-.~IU~i7J~~liiit~~jii;:jliii~iaiiiiii"""~~~~FB111R:.,.~~~~~llflr-.--ir-~__:··
That 's why it 's
important to cboc,>se a
rice tbat'1 undergone a
parbolllnc process.
Thia p~ removes
excess surface starch so
the rice cooks UJ> into
firm separate grains
every time.
The rice won't get
mushy or sticky, even if"
dinner ls delayed
because of late arriving
guests.
Milanese Chicken with
Parmesan Rice Is a
lower-cost meal that
doesn't taste or look
inexpensive.
It's a perfect dish for
entertaining since
quality convenience
prod ucts , like the
envelope ol Italian salad
dressing mix used to
season the dish, shortcut
the preparations.
The rice cooks
unwatched so attention
can be focused on other
parts of the meal, as
well as on the arriving
guests.
Just before serving,
rernov~.1.be chicken and
-stir dry vermouth, fresh
tomatoes and green
peppers into the pan
drippings to make the
Sa\.lCe.
Grated parmesan
cheese iB sprinkled over !RC OR s~g· .the rice.
West Coast Turkey ,l?~ET RITE
2
ltr ett• Rice Skillet is suitable ....
for either family or
guests.
Combining leftover
turkey with ingredients
typical of the
Southwest -green chilies, r1pe olives and
avocado -makes this
meal·in·a ·skillet an
exc;ling as well as
convenient dish.
MILANESE CHICKEN
WITH PARM ES&N
RICE
1 large broiler -
f rye r chicken,
cut up
1 envelope ( .6
ounces) Italian salad
dressing mix
2 tablespoons
vegetable oil
1 medium onion,
cut into ~-inch wedges
1 can (13~ or 14'n
ounces) chicken broth
1 cup parboiled
rice
in cup dry ver·
mouth 1 green pepper,
cut into thin strips
1 tomato, cul into
'n·inch wedges
2 tablespoons
grated Parmesan cheese
Sprinkle chicken
pieces with salad
dressing mix. Brown in
oil in large skillet over
medium heat about 7
minutes on each side.
Drain off fat. Add onion.
Cover and cook over low
heat until chicken is
tender, about 25
minutes. While chicken
is cooldna, add enough
water to chicken broth
'l o m a It e 2'\'.i c u p s
liquid; bring to a boil.
Stir in rice . Cover
tightly and simmer 20
minutes. Remove from
heat; fet stand covered
until all liquid is
absorbed, about S
minutes.
Remove chicken to
serving platter; keep
warm. Spoon off fat
from skillet. Add
vermouth to skillet and
brina to a boil, stirring
constantly to scrape up
browned bita. Add 1reen
pep p er: con tinue
cookiq 2 to 3 minutes.
Stir in tomatoM: beat
tbroup . Spoon rice ont.o
servina platter; sprlnlde
with parmnan cheese.
Top with cblcten; pour
sauce over chicken.
Mak•t1emncs.
WEST OOABI' TUUEY
aJCB 81DLLBT '°" pound mua b~
room1, aliced
BLADE CUT 88 ~U.£K ROASTlb •
DRUMSTICKS 98 ORTHICHS
Frying Chldlen. Grade A lb e
PARKAY
MARGARINE
.. 11 oz. Ctn.
f'ILADY LEE 19 ct !!!£~ITS ,~oz can •
Butterm11r
ITUF-N-READY 79 TOWELS
Piii" 10 SF 1te1 •
~CARUNC'S ( fllt59
6!!~12Ntt 120LC..~ ,,. .. .,. .. ,.,,.,,,,.. ....
we,,__ 11111uJn 1111 Cl.., caanect, .._... °' Jltt •1 MIO....,. .. * ..... ...,, .................. "'°' ,,,.
t•lsr r'uf .. IO nftlct I .. illllf-\
._ ....... a ._,,,.... ... ~ .......
T-BONE
STEAK
llonOed Beef LOln
ARMOUR
BACON
Slc«I
PORK LOIN
ROAST
Slrloln Cut, 3 lb. Avg.
COTTACE
CHEESE
Lady Let, 32 oz. Ctn.
159 ~.
!LADY LEE • 119 !~EF F~~S,_11-· ..
ITORTLLA 59 £vff~'!... eoz.119• TICO or NachO .
~··
'"
T
I -· ....
f'IJENO'S 117 ct ~~EESE Pl~. f'IAMERICAN 1-59 ct ~!f~~e~ed 120Z.Pk~
TOP SIRLOIN
STEAK
eonetess 80nOed llttf LOln
WHOLE BEEF
BRISKET
Bon8ess, llonded lk!ef. 7-9 lbs
CROSS RIB
ROAST
Boneless llonoed lk!ef Clluek
RED DB.ICOUS
APPLES
W~ E1tra Fancy
3:.. 79:.n
D'ANJOU
PEARS us. No. 1,""" OUllty
d 39 ~.
LONDON BROIL lb199 STEAK
BofWtess 80nOed Beef Top Round
"129 BONELESS 1 ss !!~U!!>e!TEAK lb
RAINBOW
TROUT
&-100Z.
BELL RUSSET
PEPPERS POTATOES cruncnv. Fresh U.S. NO. 1, l*"!I Slrt
".49 ~. ~.25 ~n
FRESH TROPICANA
EOOPl.ANT JUICE
HNYy&Rrm Qr8ngl Of Cflpef\"ult
~.39 ~ .. .. 198 ..
ltt. umtts
..
. ...
·~
"" M ,,,
....
"• • 7 ..
" ·:: ,,, ..
•Cf .
• " "° ,, .. 11-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.~ OW ...... ......_,,_....,_C'-.,._IO .. ~ '-1 ........ ~-Oh,._.,, .--v ,1'1\ ,ltt .. ,
Lower prices overall
'I ... ....
"" .. ,
OI
"'
l
I • I "
-------
Qrange Coa1t DAILY PILOTJWedn11day, January 8, 1982
Stom may J1M and
flummet i'#ltb ••eetrtbtal 11*4; but
at.ere'• oae commodity
JOU can count on la
today'• food world:
~uub .
. Frequently eonaumen
qverlook bard-abelled
· 8quaab ID tbe produce
department because
they don't know quite
laow to aeleet or prepare
it.
WINTeA SQUASH -
Cheddar cheese. sour
c r ea m a nd h o t
p1pper sauce spice a
tf\lbbard squash.
But tbla versatile,
lbtrlauinl veaetable can
boost a menu lo a
9arlety ol ways: it can
be stuffed, mubed or rom blned wltb other eetabl• or meats to
uce main counea or
companimentl.
I Ralphs USDA C:haice-Steak Sale!
, The winter aquub la
also low-calorie, tu1bly
•utritlou1 and
economical.
Two delicious reasons to take advanta1e of the
seasonal, mature squuh
are Spicy Baked
Hubbard Squaab and JI editerranean-Style
Butternut Squub.
Tender chunk.a of the
bubbard are coated with .-i aromatic, mellifluous
sauce accented by
cloves and allspice.
Another notable
element lo this
melt-in-the-mouth dlab ta bot pepper sauce, an
la1redient that baa a
OveJy but quiet influence
'°foods.
A fuclnatina mix of
flavors can also be '(ound in Mediter-
ranean -Styl e But-
ternight Squash. ·
As its name au1gesta, ft is an earthy blend of
Italian herbs, juicy
tQmatoes and bot pepper
't..@uce, 1pun throucb
bn1ht cubes of butternut
equaab.
· Top it off with a dollop
of sour cream and
carniab with. i-ed onions
and you'll bear cries of
"dellcioso" all around
the dinner table.
DOutile Coupon
Present this coupon along ~Ith any one Manufacturers' "cents off"
coupon and get double the savings when you purchase the item Nol
to include .. retailer ..... free" or .. grocery purchase" coupons or e11ceed
the value of the Item. E•cludes liquor. tobacco and fluid milk
products
Limit One Item Per Manufacturer•' Coupon
end Limit 4 Double Coupon• Per Cuatomer Coupon Ett~tlv• Jan. 7 thru J1111. 13, 1982
Present this coupon along with any one Manulactufers' "cents oft ..
coupon and get double the savings when you purchase the 11em Not
10 include ··retailer free .. or .. grocery purchase' coupons or exceed
the value ol the item. Excludes liquor, tobacco and llu1d milk
products
Limit One Item Per Manufacturer•' Coupon
and Limit 4 Oouba.Coupon• Per Customer Coupon Effective Jen. 7 thru Jan. 13, 1982
USDA Choice-Beef Loin USDA Choice
41@1>
Double Coupon
Present this coupon along with any one Manufacturers· ··cents olf'
coupon and get double the savings when you purchase the item Not
to Include "retailer", ··free" or "grocery purchipse·· coupons or exceed
the value of the item Excludes liquor. tobacco and llu1d milk
products.
Limit One Item Per Manufacturers' Coupon
and Limit 4 Double Coupon• Per Customer
Coupon Effective Jan. 7 thru Jan. 13, 1982
Present this coupon along with any one Manufacturers· ·cents orr
coupon and get double the savings when you purchase the 11em Not
to include ' retailer... f1ee" or grocery purchase coupans or exceed
the value of the item Excludes liquor. tobacco and fluid milk
products
Limit One Item Per Manufacturers' Coupon
and Limit 4 Double Coupon• Per Cu•lomer
Coupon Effective Jan. 7 thtu Jan. 13, 1g92
USDA Choice
Large Meaty End
-Land O' Frost
Assorted Varieties
Wben selecting
lterd-abelled squaah for
these delectable
ac;companiments, be
sure they are intact and
tbOW DO evidence of
decay.
Seeds should be
Ccooped out before or
after cooking because
they're inedible.
Whole Top
Sirloln
Sliced
Meat
Top Sirloin Beef Rib
Steak Steak A bonus for dieters
"nd nutrltion-conscloua
clHlsumen, a 3'11-<>unce
bubbatd bas only 39
calories; a butternut
aguub. 54.
Moat bard-shell
•arleties can be stored
for tone periods of time
-three to six months or
longer.
SPICY MltED
BUBBA&D SQUASH
3 pounds bubbard
squash, pared, seeded
-.nd cut.. into 'la -inch
pieces (about 4 cups)
Water
Salt
per lb.
88
per lb.
28
Ralphs
per lb.
38
Limit 4
per
customer
4 tablespoons butter
or margarine
3 tablespoons flour
U.S.D.A. Choice
Beef Loin Old Fashioned Straight Bourbon
1 cup milk
1 cup shredded
Cheddar cheese
'la cup sour cream
\4 teaspoon bot
Jiepper sauce
• Pinch of ground
cloves
Pinch of ground
allspice
3 tablespoons soft,
fresh bread crumbs
Parsley sprig
1optloaal)
· ~ In a medium saucepan
combine squash with
enough water to
measure 1-inch deep.
Add 'la teaspoon salt.
Cover. Simmer 10 to 15
ialnutes or unW tender.
J>rain; put in a 9-incb
file plate or shallow
>f)akint dlab . Wipe
-saucepan dry. Melt
butler qver moderately
· ·!lr1h ·beat; add nour,
~ 1 minute, sttrrtac
on1tantly. Remove
from beat; 1raduaJly
«Ir in milk. Return to
,beat, cook 4 to 5
ml n ute1, 1tl rrl DI
CODltu&ly uati1 mixture
'thickem ad bolla. Stir ~ cbeele, aov cream,
·llot pepper a a uce,
ov~!L ~llaplce and mauu.aa !.4 teupooa
t. Coot °"" low be1!~1 ?9tlrriDC comtantly, unw
. cbeeae melts. Do not
~ ~u. Pour ov• aquub. ;Jtprlnld• with bread
erumba. Bake tn a
171-Clecree cmn 20 to 2S
lnui.. • until bot and
ub-.11. Garnl1b wUb'
~ . .,,., .........
·=~ i «YU 9IJITDIQ1T
Porterhouse Ice
Steaks Cream
per 1b.
38
Limit 2
Per
Customer
112 gal. ctn.
• C ....... 1N1 by "•lpfle Oroc..-y Compeny. Alt ........ ...,._;
•• ,...,.. .. ,_ .. ,.,,. .. ., ,J,.. ..... .. ................. ., .......... ....
69
Sewlnp , ..... to,..,,.._ ...... ,,..._ pt Ice, or'"' d•t• 1Hlor to lnltlel
.. f!'C• redU«tOn ••clwl•• of N.eftlNd Of promotteMt price•.
Ten
High
1.75 ltr. btl.
Rubinstein's
Fancy
Pink
Salmon
l • .,.... ·--. ••• ..... --' .. , ... •n•. ffi•~'.:.:So':J~ --·~· ':-~-= .-. ... lllS
........... w;. • • ,
1211-..-. ... ,-....
11211 lJl Sf.... .
J
.
88
per lb.
Assorted Flavors
Val-U-Pak
Trident
Gum
08
Limit 4 per
customer
pkg. of 11 1tlck1
Fresh
Rainbow
Trout
21/2 oz. pkg.
"Country Stand"
Fresh
Muihrooms
&oz. pkg.
ay KP LVPOPOaT ~ ........
NEW YORK -It wu called ''Tbt lJltes
ol Ua" ud aaore lban likely wlll never lff tbt
U1ht ot day. But for Tom. Rice, lt may have bffn
the mott Important muakal the acclaimed lyriel1t
ever wrote.
"It aot ua 1oln1 and tau1ht ua how to work
to1etber," aaya Rice of b.ll collabotaUoo with
mu1lc writer Andrew Lloyd Webber.
That wu ln U..• mid·1lxtle1. Now, 1ome 15 years later, the bot Rice-Webber team enjoys the
euphoria of three hit sbowa -the controvenial
"Jesus Christ Superstar," tbe 1kyrocketln1
"Evita" and the aurreaUatic "J01eph And Tbe
Amalina Technicolbr Dreamcoat.''
"Dream coat'' la In Its pristine story. actually
more endurtn1 than Rice's two moet prominent
sbows, "Superstar" and "Evita." It'• eQjoyed a
dtrrerent kind of succefs in England since 1968
when ll premiered as a short "chlldren'a oratorio" ·
ln schools and colleges.
"Originally, lt wu written to be sung totally
by a choir,'' points out Rice. "but we've been
adding things to it ever since. It just keeps
growin1.••
Since then, it has become a full-blown musical
in the Rice-Webber tradition, wbicb ls to say it •• operatic in form. In other word.$.,no dialogue.
"I think you have lo be pr~red to break the
rules a bit," says Rice. "A lot of critics think you
have to rewrite 'Oklahoma' and do things exacUy
the way the great, great shows are performed. But
we proved that we could go all the way through,
make It continuous and ma.ke it work without the
dialogue. Besides, why pay someone else to write
the book? It's more economical this way."
"Economical" might be the way to describe
Rice's work in more ways than one. The initial
production of "Dreamcoat" to a first-reluctant and
then-appreciative audience of parents at St. Paul's
Junior School in London ran only 25 minutes.
Rice's shows are usually Ujhll)' constructed,
quickly-paced an!I_ Jlve you a Bible or history
lesson in the process.
••Not to be pt'etentious about it, I lhin1I: a lot of
people in the early 1970s generation were taught a
lot e>f things about the 'Bible and Jesus Christ,
thanks to 'Superstar,' "Rice says.
The same might be said of · · Dreamcoat, · ·
based on the well·known Biblical story of Joseph
And His Brothers. Of course Rice and Webber take
certain liberties with the subject, as the two did
with "Superstar," a so·called "rock opera" that is
clearly the most controversial of their shows.
"We were accused of being anti-Jewish in
'Superstar' by one or two extre·me rabbis," says
Rice. "Of course we weren't. I think most of the
people protesting didn't really listen to
'Superstar.' They just obje~ted, rather, on
principle lo the idea of rock music being mixed up
. ~Ms the ~" to make
t~la new year the funniest ever!
·~001~~
t>QoQ~!atAO
MOVIE.RATINGS
FOR PARENIS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
'=r~Od:=s;*c;;ou:;pe;s;:•;;;:;:;~
trailers•hard tops•convert-
ibles•motor
homes•tawn
mowers*limos •corporate
headquarters
•garden carts
Model A's••••
•typingtabtes
wheelbarrows•
recreational vehictes•gotf
carts*model
tralns*bikes *pianos* cars
refr~ators •sk~·~
If it's got wheels,
you'll move
It faster In•
Dally Pltat
classified ad.can
642-S611end.
frlendty.O.
vlserwHI help you
turn "°"r wf\eefs1nto ca9h ••
•••• ~ ..... "ct"CIJ<'-"'°" ~
°'8pmaA +-suau Ana '"2
M8tin.s Sat. • Sun.
RBJS IPGI At sno-at 1:00 ,.,~~ ,., ...
~EIF_.. HEAYall"GI
Shows•~ 7:15 9:20
,~
~ .........
llBllEl .. CfO Nle90...-UU ·-
with God. Roe.It lftUle has evil connotaUona ln that
context." Despite the neaaUve backJuh, the 1ood
eventually outwel1hed the bad, 11 Rlce recalls.
"fi'or every ~rson who wrote I 'hate' letter,
we' had 250 aaytni that lh11 ii a wonderful piece
and lt's enabled them to study the Bible. I mean,
that'• why we wrote ll -as an entertainment We
weren't tryln1 to say that Jesus WH God, or tbit
he wun't. But the publlclty, no matter how
ne1ative, certainly helped."
"Superstar" put the Rice-Webber team on
ce_nter stage. "Evita" kept them there.
"My bJ11est thrill was opesalnt nlaht for
'Evita' in London because that really turned the
corner for us," notes Rice. "Until then, we'd had
tbe one..blc hit commercially in 'Supentar' and we
AIDING HIGH -Lyricist Tim Rice is e njoying
the beginnings of what may be his third
Broadway hit -"Joseph and the Amazing
Technicolor Dreamcoat. ··
had ·Joseph,· this funny. little piece that was a big
success on a lower level. But with 'Evita,' we were
no longer blokes who were only going to have one
hit and fade away. People began taking us a little
more seriously then."
Rice's idea for ·Evita' germinated frorrt. a
radio show he had heard one day in his car about
Eva Peron, the one·time power.mad ruler of
Argentina. -
George C. Scott In
I . "TAPS" (PG) 1
11. "TIME BANDITS" <PG>
''ARTHUR" Ill Plue
. "ONLY WHEN I LAUGH" <">
THE PORT THEATRE
"; < n?fill
.Hwnorand
eroticism in a tendet-
and entertaining wori<~
)lnct Mallin, NEW YOl!k TIMES
• -__ ., llllTllAl'IOJl(JU
•-.Cl'ilWUNIO-... c ----c:...."'°""""'
·::::S 111111~~~~·
~
·::J ~ ... ·:
~~:a
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, J1n\11ry 8, 1982
~~~
# ty~~~
NOW PLAYING
•BARGAIN MATINEES•
Monday thru Saturday
All Pertorm•nces before 5:00 PM
(Except Special En91genien1s 1nd Holicl1YS)
LA l•t.llAOA MAll o Mnodo 01 Rot•c•on•
LA MIRADA WALIC·IN 994·2400
,.._ c econ· "'*""" """'°"
··TAPS"'"" .................. 1..-..a ----_°" __ ._ ...... _,
--···-........ RAIDERS OF THl LOST ARK -.... il't .. ..., ....... ·-··---... -1 __ .... .,.._ .... __ ,
REDS -....... ---·-·-"NE1cnteo...-· "" .,. . .., .................. -,_ ......................
"A.HINCE OF MAI.IC!" -.... tl!t ......... ...
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALl<·IN
...., ..............
SHARKEY S MACHINE lilt ••• J ......... .
oa-c econ•'-""""""°"
··TAPs·· '"°' 1141 >" ,,. .-.. ,..
LAl<IWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WAlk IH
Focvll'( Al Del Amo 213/6!4·9211
.... ~ ........ c:MiM.&-.,.
CHARIOTS OF FIRE· '""' ' ti., ... ~. ''· .... " ..
LAGUNA
_,,,.._ ..
'S.HARKY'S MAet11NE·0 flll . ............ _
fe culty 01 Cone11ewooo
213/531·9510
REDS' lll'OI n•.••.•• t c:al'1'I CM11 IA&..& TMM)UQM(kl'l I ACM 1 OA'f flOI' l'MAT OA'f I P'l.AIOll•UfCtl
--~--"°"OI ... ..._.,
RAGTIME -• ....... , ... , .....
.I~ &.llMIOflll • WM.TlaMAnMU
BUDDY BUDDY '°' U M t N . 4.M. I 111 I M 19"M
so. COAST WALK·IN
SoYll• Cooll Ht•ov
ol llood•oy
494-1514
..., . ..,...,. ..
SHAl'IKv·s MACHINE 1111 , ...... ,,. .. ---·-·-.,. ·~ ~~11~.t:>!!: .. ::
... ~ ~ -«iHS >• "'"6 00 -· .. • e 45 IMPOATAIH NOTICE! Ctlll nAIN UNDER 12 fAU!
"''''''"'Wat .. • Mt.ft ftuv fft 5 30 • $1t Sw1t H.,, 41 30,M
CINf..f1 SOU110 • !COil AM CAii MOIO 1$ IOUll ~
-1tO oUll CAI IWllO -GllTOI ACX8SOlll '9Sl110ll -11111' .. l'llllTlal t•a&.L ~ llllft.-D Oii AM -
ANAHEIM
ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN
''*"'o' ti ol l•mon St 17 .. 9150
l'Mll .............. , ,.UJ
ABSENCE Of MALICE (PGI -STIR CRAZY 1•1
t M 11 SOUhO -----.--I T~N~~P£;AN 1111 -4 lftlt MY'Otle ICl9llC8 """°" HEAVY METAL I'll -DRAGONSLAYER' lll'OI
t"'I ll SOUl<O -......... ~-------
8UI NA PAVJ
BUENA PARK DRIVE·IN
l.i"Cotf'\ A..e Weil ot •rM>tt
121·4070
91JINA Pl'Ql
LINCOLN DRIVE·IN
t\ncoln Av• #•" o• cnott
121-4070
l ..... so''"' ......... A CHANGE OF SEASONS-.. ,
Clift··~""
010ftoa c aeon · NIOnn' ~
TAPS ,_ .......
THE CANNONBALL RUl'f -
, .. , .... KAI COlm ro TIU., ... , .....
GHOST STORY 1111 .......
THE CHANGELING 1111
•1•1•.1•w1u•.~11Glm'-11•11•r•e•_MO_D-:IE=~~i.:111s· ....
Son o..Qo llwy ot l<oo•"""' (So) NINE TO flvt-1111
962·2411
Wf S'¥•'·~1fl.
I HI-WAY 39 Dlll'jf IN
. •I
l Jj WA,ftQA
LA HABRA DRl~l IN ......... -......... , __
17MU2
")PA"4t,f
ORANGE ORIVE·IN
' .,. . •.". ,,
WARNER OQIVf IN
WOlft•• A•• W•ll ol .... ,. 111>4
M7·Htt
Cllt( fl 50UN0
hoc~ ... 0 So QI
G.llo.n Gto-t f•thWO•
191·3693
·-..... '" .... "'°---REDS' -....
'UP IN IMOtllE .. 1111
.............. °"" •••lll()'f"O
•NEIOHBOl'IS ' t•1 .......
CHEAP OECTECTIYE -
'Of"IO Al"IO frwl'
a St0•e COf'•q•
558·7022
NOWPLAYINO
IACfTYc.IM' OIMft tsOtl I
1•uo1WOD111MOU ·
IMlt 17U ) &s1 oess
t
' i
•
Orano-Coaat DAILY PILOT/WednHday, January 8, 1982 .-------------...
.. *** "8ro0w. Cen Vou
8parw A Olma?" ( 11175)
Dooumantll'/. Olrec:ted by
•' pt.-ipe MofL Tha ln\plct
of Illa o.p,...io.. upon
~...,_..ofllfeln
America dllf9r9 ffom Iha
•· aver-. WOf1ctng "*' to uof;:;1111.
•• ILOWWCY
Wbafl Aldly r-... to
entertain 111 a 11udlo party,
IL~:::;·
llNlwe MRNIYMLL.a
MOVIS • * 14 • ..,,. Hol.a Of The .__...,._ .. CttMI Aot>-
ert Taytor, Linde Clviltllo
When 8 p 111 IQlf la louftCI
dMll Oft hie llllp, I dletter
boat lltlpper dllcovws I
ettanga map tN1 IMde to
• ~ N8lf fortune.
••• tmcNIWS ~~,<=-.....
~ HAWIDAYI~
..
I A80 ....
YOUAllCID~rT
Feeluted: "How c.-ac11 ...
Jedi.I Ate Made" and
"Au1tr11·1 Real Trout
Cir-."
• THI .""9IONI
I olDK&t'a WILD
OY8'IAIY
"Wldowl And W~1"
CW.t: Harrllll Nelton (RI
• MACNO. I l.EHNA
~
Cl) TIC TAC OOIQ4 9 anar,....,...,.
TONaKf
SC-M"'11n la -dur·
i"G the proctuc:tlon of
''TwlllgM T'healre." a nt1 MUl'NTI
Gueat.: GllldY9 Knlgflt. :8) NTa AlfO THE wour·
Ray ~ ii I onMnen
....,_for M ~
orc:t111tra playing the
mulllC of Proltoft9v
(Jl)MOYIE * * * '"The Wortd'1 GtMt·
eat Atl\late" (11173) JoM
~. Jan..MldlMI Vin-
cent. A ooedl who la hlrv·
Ing I run of bed ludl
..clKna to,. root• In Af\1.
ca and ~ I Mll)lr
lllhlML 'G'
7)11 (%)MOVIE
•. ***It "&elng There"
(1919),..., s.Mar., ......
vyn Doug!M. A ~
:. mtnded. ~191d man. .._ only lcnowNldge of
:· the 011t1ld• world 11
lhrouet' tale'Allon. glint
tremendou1 lime and
p-. by unwlltlngly con-
:.. vtndng tycoof'9 and pottt ..
--ttlM lie ii • genlua.
'PO'
1:11. I ON THI TOWN
~ a '°"' thn)ugfl Oomalne Clladon and
~gw4nertel ln
Napa v..., to -hOw
c:hlrnpagN .. made; pro-
... of llrlg8r Chllca Kiwi,
fiDf"*1y wltfl the bond
SUPIRHeRO -WllHam Katt 1tars as
Ralph, the reluctant superhero, on "The
Greatest Amerioan Hero." airing at 8
tonight on KABC (7). Connie Sellecca
stars as Pam.
Autua: ,,_. • man .no ""* localtona IOr produc:.-
tlon ~lllaa.
I II PAI& Y llllJD
LAV..& ..UV • "'*"""" . Lerwiy and Squlggy repleca
the glftt M dlt9ct0r'S ot Iha
IMWll tMlnl ltlOW ., the
~· I IYEONLA.
MATCH~
M•A•t•H·
Wiien Hot Lipa ~
from Tokyo to .. Y there's'
"big newt," Frtnk
-lt'1 hi• expected
111omot1on. I TIC TAC DOUGH
MACNEIL. / LEHMR
""'°"" ., JOHNCUMY
IKAT8 NT8' AND THE
WOlf AHO OTMIR ICE
DAHCa
1117• Olympic: gold medal-
.. , Joflft Cuny perlonM
~1nc1~•~
graplled by Cuny and
Pel• Mar1fnl; olher lltet·
Ing SIMI leetured Include
Jo Jo Stetbudl, Jacll
COl.lrtney and P1trlc:l1
()odd.
Cl) P.M. MAGAZJNE
A tour ol aapen1lve
BINlmllrl ~ ~:
• -fO'tlle """° .. being ,,.._, for nl0thel1lood.
l1) YOU A8ICED FOR rT CID Titl YEAR THAT WAS!
1M1
P11tldl O'Neal hoat1 a
looll 11 the most mlmOfl·
b4e avent1 of the prevlOUI
yew.
l:008tM. .......
lac u-magic to get Ille
pan of Romeo In the
IChool play. a a N!AL P£OPl.E
FANM. Y REUNION
More then 100 lormar IUb-
jec:ta, lndudlng Rlcnard
Slmmona, -advo-cate Ceptaln Stldly. the
world's futeat bear CltWI-
., anCI the moat popular
wait,_ In America are
-In dlpa and "' the ltu.-
dk>.
• lotOVIE
•• ._. "No Men ta An
ltland" (1118 2) Jattrey
Hun1er. M.,.,,.. Thomp.
9«1. Stranded on Guem by
the J~ during Wor1d
War II. American George
Tweed org1n11e1 Iha
nllNw Into aftac:tllle guar-
f'lla unlta. • 0 Tit1 GAEATEST
'.Ma.cNfHaO
A tanatlcal army thrNlans
to C8llM 1 worl6-wlde pla-
gue and Ralph, the only
I*!°" whO "'l'f be able to
, stop them. -to be
coming down with the dll--· D THE POWER PtNCH
Ken Howard talk• about
M•uel haruament In the
worllplaCe.
• P...M. MAGAZINE
A tour of expenl1ve
8ahamlan dream houtM;
• zoo gor .. who .. being
trained lot motherhood:
Mana SMver meett Holly-
wood'1 "" reporter: Of.
Gnnkt'I on UllnQ ~
;1 ~gaining.
•*It "Tiie l1landar"
{1978) Dennie WMver.
Stlaton 0... A r .. lred
"*"'-' lawyer ~ •
Honolulu hotel .. and
becotnM entangled with •
runewey wlU-, I U.$
Senator and 8 N~
mobet4W.
• JOHNQJMY lkA.1'91,_.,. NIO THR
WOlJl NG OTHM tee
DAHCU
1111• ~ gold mod ...
Ill .>Oflri Curry Pll'f<H m1
.._., Ice ballet• c:flOreo-
Qfaphed by CIJtry and
Petar Mllr11nt; other lklt·
Ing atan leelured inc:lude
Jo Jo 8tarbuc:ti. Jacll
Cou.rtney and P1trlcil1
~. . ~;::;f ARNM
**'A "HIPC>Y Birthday,
Gemini" (1MO) ~ne
Kahn, Rita Mor9nO A Hlf·
vard lludent'1 bl<thday
party .. * famtly"'t 8oClth
Phll1delphl1 llome
becolT>M en ~
uparlence for hit vlllllng
d-'•'R'
(l)MOVIE
* • • "Apocelypee Now"
(1117111 M1r1on Brando,
Martin S'-1 OirecteCI by
Frlllldl Ford Coc>pola An
1n1e111gance aoen• emoaru
on • mitelon up river into
tne Vletn-Junote to
find and klll a myet•loul.
AWOL Army oflloer whO
h• lolled all prevlou1
anempll It hit c:apture 'R'
D*>VIE * * * "Pate'1 Dragon"
(11177) Helen RedCly,1Shel·
ley Wlntera. With the help
ol a chllbby green dragon
noamed Elliott. en orphan
eecapea lrom hl1 nasty
fOStat lamlly Ind together
the two of them head for
M8ine. 'G'
~II CI> Wt(RP IN
~n
Arthur'• --of Ilia wife Catmen Uk~ '*" out on their llrat dll• we
jMf9CI wMn t,....,, lltand
their 25-yaer c:o11ege
reuNcift
• ALL .. ntl! FANM.Y
Miii• and Gloftl leadl
Edrth a methOd by wNch
marned people can "fight
IMly"
61) THE GIUUNI
COHCEAT8
Carlo Maria Glullni anCI Iha
LOI Angaiea Ptliltllnnonlc
wa -In r--..i and
perlormanca of overtur•
and preludee to lour of
GIUMPC>I Verdfl c)pe,u
Qr,,MOYIE
• • • • "&eckal" ( 111641
Richard Burton, Peter
O'TOOll King Henry II of
England cluMI with the
Arcilb!lllOp of C•nterbury
Clufl!:!:ll the 12th century.
t:OO II CIJ MOVIE .. * * "The Long Rldet1"
( 11180) J.,._ end Stacy
Keach. David and Keith
C1rr1Cllne The bloody
aaga of lhe lnlM*d 18th·
century Jeaae J-cole
Younger gang II Chfonl·
ded 8 0 Titl FAU. OA1't
Colt and Howle go to l.M
Vegaa to picll up I lmd·
nmeconman D CMllALERT
'tHAlllL LISTINGS
"The Agony Of EMt Alr1·
c:e" The pljgbt of ttarvlog
people In EMI Alrlc:a and
what aorne Amet1cana are
dOtfig 'to helCJ .,. dociu-
mented. 9 KNXT CCBSI
9 KN&C INBCI
• l<TLA Clnd.I e KAOC (ABCI
e KFMB (CBSI
8 KHJ·TV (Ind.)
e l<CST CABCI
e ICfTV llnd.1 e KCOP·TV (Ind.I
e ICCET lPBSI
e KOCE (P8~1
0 On TV
Z Z·TV
IH HBO
cc (Conemaxl
IWORI NY., N.Y
dll (WTBSI
Ill tESPNJ
Ctl (Showtlmel
... Spotlight
e (<:able News Networl!I
• Ml!JW'GNFY"IH
"The Hit Ma114W'I" Gueatl
Kai Rudtnall. HeNtn Raddy.
The 8Mch Boye. DlvlCI
Dalton .
• THEGIUUHI
OONCPT8
Cerro Merli Glulinl and Iha
LOI AngMM Plllfnannonlc
.,. -In ,.,_ ... anCI
perl~ of overtur•
and prlludel to lour of
Oiuaeppe Verdl'J operaa.
CD)MCMI
• • *14 "TN Mowllllg" • l ttlOI o.. W1llac1, ,_..._....A_
lllflr ,._, ,._ ...
........ lnlo • Ullr
,__ .... 1111 1111
llOUI ~#Cl ~ ...... ·It
MO. 8 TM1 PACTI GI' .... ...., .. ""'~ .... ............... Oclnellol\
In Ille .. IO Mlp •IOI •
-IMMlnd" .,,,.,,
• A MY WITH OONIW> ca....
A ptltll'lllolil New Yotll
t,...trletl •"nt (Pred
Gwynne) ell~ that be
muet oope on hie own
....... he ._ hie iono-
lllM Mllttlftt In IHI lll'MI
HOfowlq .motaUon of •
Ring Lltdn« lhort llOf'Y.
~MCMI·
*** ... To 8" (tMO)
JMt Fondl. Dolly Plt1on.
Thr" wortclng women
rebel aoa1f11t tMlr IUbju-
gatlon by • --chauWllll .,__'PO' ..-•a QUINCY
A 1...,.eo-·1 dMth trom •
CINg -00. pr0ftll)t1
Quincy to 1t"'1 • putlllc
IPL~
..... ..,... Alllde' '*'lon-
llllp wttfl AMtlld Ahmed to
,_hie emberooect ol,
anCI Sammy Jo -s ... _, .. her pllMpOrt 10 •
~•future.
• ·A DAY WITH CONMO
G'9N
A pr .. entlout New Yortl
thHtrlc11 agent (Fred
Gwynne) d~1 thlll hit
lnUtlt COi)\. on hla own
when he io.. hie lono·
lime ... i.tanl In 11119 ,.,..,
Horowitz adaptatJOn or a
Ring Lardner 11t1on •toty.
(~J ~MOYll!'
• •14 "Hurt Beal" ( 1980)
Nick Nolte. 8ltey S'**'-
~ llYee of .,.., sienw•
tlon llgenda Jack K9rouac
anCI Calot anCI ~ c-
"" -c:hronlded, e.q>laf-lnO tM OfCIWth of !Nit , .....
6oneNO .. Uler IPl"d •-ty r99U.. ~ on
the-.
10:30 ...... IDINT
HErWON< NEWS
Qli)™EHQTH
8AOTHUW IN COMCERT
Percy anCI Jimmy Heeth
perlonn Mlectlona lrom
thelf altlum . 'Jn Motion.. In
a 111711 c:oncer1 taped at
Ohio State U!Werllty. (R)
(D)MOVIE * * "Improper Ctlant)els"
(11181) Alen Atkin. Marielle
Hartley A -* of mlsun·
der111ndlng1 cau... a
IOClal WCHk4W lO IUaplCt
that a aeparateCI couple
•r•chlld 1buMt1. 'PG'
($)MOYIE
••'I\ "fear No Evll"
( 111611) LOUla .bKClan, Lyn-
da Day 0-09. A man'•
dlflc --Ill reflected In en
antique minor which hie
flanc:M -lo commun+-
cata with lllm alter he cffea
In M accident .CIMOWE **'h ''The HatCI W•f''
(1980) Patridt Mc:Goohan.
LM VM CIMf A l*ed
---"" hM to make one
~ hit ~ he c;.,,
retire. 'R'
11:00 ea• CI> a a
NEWS e IATUN>iAY N9QH'T
Host: Steve Martin.
au.ta: llk>nClle.
G PAUi. HOGAN
• THEAJIE•ONS
SupersthlOua L-getl I
"lign" that her mwrlege la
doomeCI.
• SAHFON> AND ION
When i.-.t la hit In the
noae over the 11tec:tlon1 of
1 girl, he deolOee to take
karat•---· eD DICK c;AWTT
(.B)UOVllE
• • • "ln1IC1a Movn"
( 11180) Jonn Savage. David
MorM. A oewcomar to the
gtoup of regullfl II en
Oakland bar may hOld the
key to ,.,..,ng the bwlen-
Cler'• d-ol becoming •
pro l>Ukatbalt pWfer I
rMlity.'PG'
1 t:ao e WK1'P .. aNaNN•n
Mr. Cat1aon l ... AM; to
stop. 300-pound----t~ to atop
uelng radio air tJma to ...
rellglou9 "'11fecta. (R) 8 49TOMGHT
Hoit: Johnny Car•on.
~DlvlCISI~
8 9 MC Nl!W8
NIOHTUHI G IDT Of' GM>UCHO
eTHEoooCOUPU
Al a llKpr\M for 0.C.,
Fell• redKOrltM and
returnlehM l"8 apartment. -~ ... ~. and Jiii'• m#Tllge ..
ttrlllned by Mika'• lnter•t
In the Widow of I man he
lcHled.
I KCET~
CWT'IOfB MC
MEWi
Cl) TMI WHm acAPE .....
··---·-------_.. ______ .._,_.~----~~..---------------------------..... ....ti
;JUBE' TOPPERS
,
KOCE.8 7:30, KCET 9 8:00 -.. John
Curry Skates Peter ari<l the Wolf and
Other Jee Dances." Jee ballet ts skated
by 1976 Olymplc gold medalist.
KNXT 8 9:00 -"The Long Riders." Brothen James and Stacy Keach star
with brothers David and Keith
Carradine In made-for-TV movie.
KTTV e 9:00 -"Merv Griffin.·· The
Beact\ Boys and Helen Reddy are among
guests.
KNBC ! 10:00 .-'·Quincy ." A
teen·a1er s death from a drug overdose
!Prompts Quincy to start an anU·drug
campaign.
CZ)MOYm * * • • "Thi Oerden Of The~ .. (11171)
Uno~. Oomj..
nlqua 8andl. Directed by
vntorto De Ska. AlltJ.aem-
....., .edllalty and poiao.
~ 111¥9dal the .._of two .......,. ,.,.,... IMng
In hel)' bele><e Wortcl War
IL
tl:GO. IHA NA NA
~: Mlfton ..,,.. e 9 LOW 90AT
A -bellellM llet hu.-band la planning on
dlepoelng •of lier, anCI I
c:raehlng bor9 II mlatlkan
fOr' a -Id renowned ,lew9I
tlllaf. (R)
GMOYm *•It "The Oecar'' ( 1Me)
Stephen Boyd. Elke
8--. An o.c. noml·
nee'• r1M to feme It
raoellad by hie fl1endl and
lonnw lrlencM.
• AoWCEOOllCk.AI
Gue1t1: The Hud1on
8'Qfherl, Juttln Uale. Mel
Tlllle, Al Harrlngton, Jay
l.lffln. • rn avER't'llOOY'I ·--· "The SaMce Economy"
~~WOMAN •••'A wl.eat Tango In
Pllril" ( 111731 Mllf'IOl'I 8'an-
do, Marl• Schnelder
Dnc:tad by &wn.wdo e...-
toluc:cl. A mlddHl-aged
man wMM unflittltul wlte
r-lly committed 9'*=lde
and M unlfthlOlt.i young
-~ and beglr'I • compllcated affair
thr0U9flout ·whlc:h they
remain l\llMIMI to each
olllet. 'R'
OMOVIE * * •'h "TllOH llp1,
ThoM Eyee" 11oeo1 frenlt
Lllngella, Glynf\ls O'Con·
nor. A llamboyMI eummer
ltodl ac:1or. wflO ~
of 8roedway 1tardom,
~ an lnc:omOelent.
~prop bO!I and .,,_._ .. ,_with
a dloru9 glr1 •. R,
12:068 MCMI * •~ "Rl1uata" (11178) Hal
HOlllroGllt. t...ence Dane.
~ doc;tCQ v-Uonlng In
tM Cenedien ~
are larr.orlied by an
unll-I'll. (R)
12:11 (I) MT COUJNe: THE .. "" ........ voeum... from the IUCll-
ence 1-..pond comlcalty to
hypno111 1ugguflon1
made to them by tNa
~.
12:SO 8 QI TOMOMOW
GUMta: pra.tltut•turned·
author TrudM Al>M-Pe1•·
9«1; female llpOftec:aat•
Jayne KIMedy; Senator
81rcll 8eyh; Margaret
Whiting and RoMmary
etoon.y. (R)
• MOYIE * * "Thal MM Georoe"
(10071 Oeotge Hamltton,
C4audlne fwOlir. A oang of
thieYel plot the theft of •
I011une In gold bullion from
an armored truck In
Morocco.
• Ml£ dlDBfT Nl'nwc>M ....
1:00• ..,_,.
........ ~Cour•
0--" ( 111371 Spenoer
Tracy, ,,eddle 8arthofo.
,_, A .,...., Youne bO!I
lewne "*'l' te.orll on 1
rougfl~-... .MOW * * * "Cflenlpegne F« C-" I tHO) Celelte
Holm, Aonald ~. An
UI~ oaniul plane
to Mfld 1 QIAI .,_ Into
~tc:y. <ID ON LOCATION
"Tiie 81Jtth Annual Young
Comedlan1 Show" Tom
and Dlalc 8"'ottlen .,.
joined by .._ .. talented
comecty newcomer• 11 !tie
Roxy In Loa AnoMM for M
-*10 of tun. ·
1:toe MCMI
• • •4 "Jubal" (11158)
Glenfl FO.d, E.meat &Ofe>-
ninll. A young drWler Mells
the lid of • nllnl814W'.
daughter attar he It l«ced
10 lclll In...,...,.._,
1:11!.= ••'I\ "The formula"
( 1HO) Merton lkando.
George c. Scott. While
lnwltlg111log tM murelar of
I COIMI• '*• I veterM cop
uncoYer1 1 c:onaplfec:y
lnvotvlng Iha 1U9Pllliofl
of I tynttlellc: fuel fonnull Cil':;:. "°""*lial. 'R'
• • .. • Jodi' ,..__, ..
( 11175) Jactt Thorn~.
JM:kl .Weever. Whlla
attending M Austrllllan
unlvwally. 1 fO<mer lool-
1>111 ,,., turned electr1dan
adv-hlmMlf tlwough
altlirl with a beautiful pro-·-and I rlc:h ~ manlec:. 'R'
HO 8 INTIRTANmC'T
TONIGHT
St-Mwtlil i. -dUI'· Ing Iha produc:tlon of
"T wiighl Theatre " ·= * "Don't ""-The
Phone" t 11180) Jamea
w.-morMan<t. Ao Garr-
•· A peyehopeth wlltl numerou1 peraonatlty
quirt!• commt• a --of iF~ci-
2:\1 Movtl • *°" "A.lilt Arty Glr1"
{1t60) 8Hrtey Mee~.
Oftld ~ Job anCI hus-
~lng occupy the
-... (11111 MWly err1Yed In*" Yor11 City. a:ao1= **'I\ "Nana" ( 11134) Anna
Stan. Uonel AIWlll. A beau-
tllul and mat•lallttlc wom-an ._,. the -*IO of
heartaclle when •II•
blCOn'IM lnvotved with a
hanClaorne llaut-t.
CID MOVl5 * • 'I\ "Clllforflla °'9ern-
lng" ( 111711) Dlnnl9 Ctwll-
toe>f*. ~ O'COl"10f.
A equare young man from
Chlc:ago atr1V91 on the Cal-
ttomll beectl -and ~ lnvofllld with the
dlUGhtar of en aging
beld1 bum. 'R'
2:A08 MCMI * * * "A Doll'I Howe"
(19731 Jane Fonda,
Edward Fox. e...o on tM
..., by lbMn. Conffonted
by her lluebend'• .,,,,_....
JOHN DARLING
tty, • "'°"*' ....,,. lllr .. ....-y
.. != •• "'--ffle laet" ( 1t10) ...,........,ollMI, ... .......... e:t0e MCMI
~o" c11111 Dennla . ..... ,...,,Cinda.
a.Cl)~
• •• "Nutcl'tllllle.lt ,anca-
.,.. (tt7tl MIMlilad Voloo
-of MIClllllif ..... Mellaaa '**' end CMetephet
..... A gln'a low Ind OCMt·
• .,. ..... duttnQ '* ~ edvelltOr.. ~
~to help I Mndo
-eoldlet llllcMr tM ..,... of • ~
mouet. ·o· .-a:>~J ***"No •" (1HOI
Jlckaon lrowne, Ctoelly. .... a Haiti. FOOCIQlt of a
--of-~,,_. .. OOftOltlt Mid In New Yott! ~ duir1ng ...,._. '*. 117t, tllllWrtno !tie
Oooble Ito..... Cally
Slnwl, .i.,. Taylot anC1
~8'W!IOll•>. ·-pied Ill tNl~twy
'PG' <ID~
.............. (1"41
Rlclhatd lklrton. Pat.,
O'TOOle. l<"'9 Hlnfy II of
England ~ wM the
ArCfltllllho9 of ~
dut1ng the t2tll centuty. •...w. * * "Wlllla & Ptlll" (IMO)
Mich.Ml Ontlc_,, MwOOI
Kidder. Three peopla
beglr'I I triangular r~
In ~ Villlge ltlet
continu.. trwougnout the
mercurial IOClal mll*I of
the '70.. 'R'
4:.IO. YC1'f NM. TO TMI
llOTTOM 0# THE MA
"No Way Out"
4:.46 (%)MOVll
••~ "Blood faud"
( 19801 Sophia Loren, Mar·
cello Mutrolannl. A widOIOt
la lldeCI by M ldNhtlc;
lawyer anCI a amelltlme
gengat• In her venoeful
c:ru11de ag1ln1t the
rnefloeo wtlO kllacl ,..,
h<dbanCI. 'R'
Th•r•d••'•
oa,,, ·-~ "'·"·~·
~(I)*.* "Sunday In .... v Offl.. ( 19M) Clift Robert-
-· ,,_ Fonda. Al1er being jlted by hs boV·
friend and trlwltrlg to New
Y orti to vltlt .,.. bf other. •
young women c:onll6er1
her polltlon on vlrOlnlty
D * * * "Pat•'• Dragon" ( 11177) HeNtn Recldy. Shel·
ley Wlnten Whh tllW help
of • cihubby green dragon
named Ellk>lt, en orphan
eec:apea from 1119 nuty
lo.let family anCI loge1her
th9 two of them head tor
Maine. 'G'
1:30 Ct) *•'A "The Hard Way"
( 1980) Patrick Mc:Gooflan,
LM Ven a..t. A hjted
-..air\ hM to malt• one
more hit befora he cafl
retire. 'R'
HO. * ~ "Clipped Winge"
(10531 8-y Boys, Lyle
Talbot. Tiie Boys ec:dden-
lllly get tham1elve1
recruited Into the mllltety
anCI find 11\et thllYV9 end·
eel up In the lerflale bet.
rldt1. ~CC)** "Double Trouble"
( 1g&7J Etvtl Pruley.
Annette Oay A young 8r1t·
llh halre11 bac:oma1
attracted 10 I lamoul
American poo 9ingat CID CS) • • • "II To 5"
I 111801 J-Fonda, Dolly
Parton TbrM worlll"G
women rebel agalnet their
subjugation by 1 male
cilauvlnlat boll 'PG'
10::30 • *'I\ "Windl 0 1 The
Wuteland" ( 19381 JOhn
Wayne, Ptlylllt fr..., A
ltagecx>Kh ownel' ·-againll 1 rival to obtain a
vatueble mall contract In
Callfomla. e • * "From Noon Tiii
ThrM" ( 11177) CllarlH
Btoneon, Jt• ll'alancl A
Clrifter II roc:rulleCI Into •
r~ rot>bOty gang. 1.-e •• "The,._.,
Edge" ( 11157) Riiy Mlllar>d.
Anttlony Quinn. A cion man
lnvolvH an lftnOffflt
randw In I ...,_ d Ila
~. u• <t> • • .. ,__, O..."
(1N tl ltaor K-'t ....... .... ew.. All.......,.
truolli". • be..itlful
hltClllhllar Md I ...,..
paWo llJllt ttwellllt ...
..,,. route .......
,.,,.. -... and ...... 'PO'
1l:OO •• * • ~ ..... ,ooc
Forwwd" (19431 ~
.... WllllMI OMeon. A
mo,,11 "'' lt•o~• ~ .... nMloNI IClll-
• tllMrl ... 111end1 •
~WIOOlclarlm.
• ••~"War Of The
Wiklo•lt" (11.3) .IOM
Wawnt. Merttla soon. A
pr.tty ldloOllMFf* ~
eel ffom I email I--hl"'"8 -nten I OOl'I~ ..., boot!~ ....
~ 0( r~ rMllti_
~.., Olllaho!M ..
men. (%) •• "Lao The l..lllll" •
( 11110) Meroallo ....,.._,
ni.MhWhltelaw. ,.
t:t:IO •• *. "8toltlet, Cell
YOl.I Spare A °""81"
{ tt71) Doc:uma11111~
Dlrectad by ~ Mota.
The lnlpec:t of the 0.:W-0 .,,_ upon dffterent ....
"** of lite In ~
om.. ll'pm the -· working mM to Dl\>-tlntt
GdmNll. -1:00 Of) •• "&rMIUng Glau"
(19801 Hazel O'Conn«,
l'tlll Oanlele. A 8rtl.lall Pl"* pop ,..,.. llfeltyte ~
matel)' IMClt Jo tr~.
'PG' 00 ••• "Sunday In ....
York" ( 1904) Olllf RoOwt•
ton. Jana Fonda. Alter
being jilted by ,.., IM>y·
friend and traveling to~
Vorlc to vlelt lier ~otlllr. I
young woman~
,.., poaltlon °"virginity. t::ao (C) * * "Slelplng CW
Munier" (IMe) ~
!Ugnor... V-M~
Occupanll of I ltaln com-
per1menl .,. t•oeta lor
death It the ~ ol 8
derenged lrlller.
1:AI CZ> ••• 'A "Tha ~
MM" (19'01 John Hllrt,
AnlllOny Hot*ifll. A dido
oateo pt111liclan talc.ff
under 1119 wlflO a "°'~
deformed man ~ 1i9!f
tll then hid ~ "*" • a,.., .,.... uhlbl1lonl.
'PG'
2::IO 0 • * 'h "The Hard W.-,"
( 1980) Pa4,lc* Mc:Goohln.
LM Vao a.e.I A htf9d
.......,, has to make one
more hit befo<a he can
ratlfa. 'R'
1:-00 ct) •• * "Hud.tet>erry
Finn". (111741 Jeff Eut.
Paul Winllelcl. 8ued Ofl
the lloty by Marti Twain. A
young boy anCI • runaway
ala¥9 become lnvotllld In a
--of adventur81 while
ltaelng down the MinlUlp..
pl RI.., on I rett.
Oil ** "Xanadu" C 1$80)
Olivia Newton-John,~
Kelly A young arllst, •
heavenly muM anCI • sentt-
ment1J mllllonelra join
forcos to op1<1 up a h<.lgl
roll«-<llKo pal-'PG'
1::30 Cl * * ~ "o.lsy Kenyon"
{ 11147) Joan Crawford,
Dena~ A woman
llnela llerlell In • romantic
dller'M\a over wNcl'I Of her
two lo\lw8 Iha~ 11\S•
& •• * ''Nutc:r9Cller
FMtMy" (1117111 ANmatacl.
Votcel of Mlc:helle LM,
....._ Giibert and Chris-
topher LM A girf'I kMt
and COU'1lge -t•ed
during her many ad-.
tur81 wfllla attempting 10
helCJ • hlnOtome eo4CI ...
undet Ille spell of • two-
lleleleCI rnouM. 'G.
4:00 CJ *•'I\ "Hugo The Hip..
po·· (111761 Votces Of 8uf1
IYM, Pa.;t Lynde A pink
Nppopot•mus likes an
adventurou1 trip, a.ooom·
panlec:t by a 11111e black
boy 'PG' CZ)*•* "II To 5" (19801
J-Fond•. Dolly Parton .
ThrM working women
rebel agaln11 their aubju·
glllon by • mw Clhauvinlt1
00.. 'PG'
l:OO (C) **"Talking Parcel"
6'30 CJ **~"St• Trait -
The Motion Plc1ura'• ( 19711)
Wllllam Shain«, Leonard
Nimoy
by Armstrong & Batluk
. ~~e1:1tivity,' Friday has tWO ehilting
....
scenes
a, TO• JO&Y wheelchair. He's chattln1 with llliaa An1e1ou ,
• • ,,._...., who ta on ber fi.rat visit to St.amps in 30 years.
t~ NEW YORK -Tbere are two poelUvely . "Al. they were demoUlhinl ... chanlinl
'!ebilllDI aeenea ln ''A Portrait of Maya tbe atore around," he says, the 1eneral store
An1eJou," the premiere inatallmeat Friday that wu Mia An1elou'1 home unW she wu 13 . even.., In 8lU Moyen' new 11-part public TV in the backlround. "I saw it ... some ol your
t 1erte1, .. Creativity:" work." ti! -"I ueed to have to walk over here," the '"Oh, darllnt, God bless you," the now
~ lter W1a )107er. u tbe two ltroU toward the renowned poet and novell1t aays, elHrly
alll'Olld tneb tbat separate ''tM black part" toucbecl by tM 8tat1,1re. "I tboutht everyt.blQs w bolDetoft., Stampa, An .. from &be Qh from 1AY cbUdbood was cone."
tbl wbtte falb live .... I lined tt.· ... I .
d no __ ._ ·~e Tber J -·• ... be It's an lmpreaalve ·atart to a remar .. able I ... ---• • • • • WUUJU .. I all alane. I bated It, croulna thole railroad aeries, which wlll continue wlth balf-bour f ...Jracu." · proarama -after the 80-mlnute premiere -on Sq The two app.roaeb the tracu, 1111& AQ8e.lou a weekly buia throutt\ May 21. The lut tbow ln
• -paiMd, &lmolt pleadiq -falllaa hlrtlMr ud the 1erie1 a!lo la an hour Iona. J firtMr' ....._. IMr wldte eompuloa ... BUI, I tell "Cl'eaUvity" ii • to1,1ch subject for TV to
I JCMI. to...,. llOw muell tld8D don't cbule, I'm tackle, even for a man llke Mo1era. one of UM
'Ml ..,.. ._ tG ~ wlda JOQ now. I'm DGt medium's true clear-tbiDken. Re cODC9del up
'
,..._ It far.., ,.__ ~ U.... I doe't waat front there an "m1U6ona of words and buladredl
cto IO ...-u.re. I really dma't." ol u.or•" oe lbe subJect, and tbat bJi effort
r. "Porlrilt" atn at l :JO p.m. rrtda.J on eaoompuaet ooly "11 pro1ram1 an4 (••
&OCS <•> It 10 p.m. OD KCBT <•.> tbeol'MI." ·•creatlvlty," ln Moyera' coacept, :.. _,_ 1'11ilardld blaell mu IUlla a ....,. u1.IUllft9i rat.bet' U11111 dtftw U. proceu, lD ,,1erafboOtYfrim a raek atlaellecl to llJa·~~~p~eojfe-~ playwrt1bt Samaoe Raplaaelloli,
filmmaker John Huston -aad coocept -tbe
tomato, tarba1e, atmoapberic reaeareb,
ablurd art.
M for the people, be aaya, ••AU ol ta.em try
very tiard. they find patteru • ._.. none ......
to ex.lit, they cbal1en8• dlum,pdoaa, Lbey take
rl1k1, they •ltae upon chance, and often
collaborate wltb other crenlve people."
And there is 1omethlq else about tbe
people, Moyen san: "Some are unheralded,
some are extraordlnary -but non.e ao
extraordlaary" -and thla la pa.rtlcuJarly
lmpertmt to the aeries -0 that we mlpt not
aM ounelvee in them."
Mrs. Flowers, she says, "the lady of Stampe,"
who read to the I-year-old chlld wbo, at the
time, could not speak. "I had bad a ...
difficulty . . . in St. Louis when I wu 1 and a
• ball," she says.
''For the inner Ille to nou.riab," Moyers
condudel -and it ma)' be the moat aipificant
point. to come from the nnt show -"enryoae
needs to be touched by someone. Wlt.b Maya
Anfelou, It wu a 1randmotbet wbo loved ber
vaaUy, and a radiant black ante! who read
Die kens to • UtUe strl not quite a.·· .
Democrats complain
I
•
-~---
...
•
CLASSIFIED 06
El Modena's Bob Lester
wilL add spice to the county
.all·star football game. D2.
Changing of ·the gUard.
·UCI's Fuller returns to a familiar role tonight
By JOHN SEY ANO ..................
It took 11 sames and three different players, but UC
Irvine's Kevin Jl'uller will find b.lmaell back ln a familiar
role tonl&bt (7:30) when the Anteaters bOlt Drury Collete
at Crawford Hall.
Fuller, a senior, wUl start at the l)Oi.Dt 1uard po11Uon,
.. spot that hu liven more than one fieadacbe to bead
coach BUI Mulli1an thll season.
FULL°" WUL a& aaked and expffted -
provide some 1corin1 outside ao that UCl'a
potent inside same will be that.much more
effective.
The preaaure -and poeiUoo -will be
notbinl new for Fuller u be band.Jed the
same reaponaibllitiea tut year. In fact, be
started 22 of the 26 games he played,
averastnc 3.8 usilts, 5.8 points and 42
percent from the field.
It was' t,be latter two fi1urea that
caused Mulligan to reevaluate the point
1uard PoSltion this season, a judgment
wblcb left Fuller on the bench for the start
That outing, alone with the fact Fuller (, abootlna
62.1 percent from the field <he's only averaaine 3.5 point.I),
prompted the head coach to put the ball back in Fuller's
bands.
"You have to feel tood about aomethint Uke that,"
says Fuller of tonight's starting aaalcnment, "because I
bad to work my way back up.
"It's ~n frustrating, but I knew my Ume would come
around. I figured if I Just stay patient, something would
ba n."
AND, IT'S Mulligan's hope that Fuller
wlll be able to make something happen,
especially on offense. Opposing &eams,
especially of late, are wise to UCl'a
strength along the front line. AB a result,
the Anteaters are seeing more and more
defenses which are sagging into the
middle, leaving the 12-to·LS footer for the
euard at the top of the key, So far. either
UCl's guards have missed, or haven't
taken the shot. Thus, teams sag deeper
and deeper.
· of the 1981-82 campaicn.
Everyone MuUl1u tried to t1H in
Fuller's place, however, didn't fill the
"I'm definitely not going to be
tentative," says the 6-3, 185 pounder.
"When you play basketball, at any
position, you just have to go in there and
play. You can't worry about mistakes
because you're going to mate them ...
it's just part or the game.
-.~ .......... • I ANOTHER RAM QUARTERBACK? _.Joe Montana of th'e San
• Francisco 49ers. emerges from the Rams dressing room
Tuesday for a workout at Rams Park. The Rams loaned
their facilities to the 49ers when rains in Northern
California forced them to the southland.
void.
Fl&ST IT WAS junior transfer
Leonard Johnson, who bas started 9 of
UCl'a 11 games and averacect 4.3 point.I
while shooting 45.S percent. Johnson,
although an excelient fioor leader, stlll OLD TIMES -Kevin Fuller
hasn't demonstrated a skill for putting the will return to point guard
"I don't feel any pressi.att at all," be
adds. "In order to play the -iame rtibt there can't be any pressure, it s supposed
'to be run." .
ball in the basket wltb any reiutarity. tonight as a starter as UCI
Next Mulligan used fretbnlan John meets Drury
That's not to say Fuller didn't feel th~
load last season.
Barkey, whose numbers of 2.8 (points ·
per game> and 37.5 (from the field ) speak for themselves.
Finally, Mulligan turned to 8-8 power forward Ben
McDonald_,_ conaidered by the coaching staff as the best
athlete on the team. Well, that experiment fell nat, too and
Mulllgan subsequently went back to Johnson.
Actually, it wasn't '1nt11 Fuller's performance last
week against East Tennessee Stale that MuJUgan's eyes
opened again. Fuller came off the bench to score seven
polnta and help the Anteaters erase a lO·point second hall
deficit enroute to a 77-75 win.
"Last year there was pressure, but 1t
was my own fault," admits the Long Beach CC product.
"Pressure is more mental than anything else and I was
putting pressttre on my~lf. I wasn't enjoying it like I
should.
"LAST YEAR I was tight and this year I'm loose and
more decisive on what I'm ,going to do. My frame of mind
is different."
Fuller has demonstrated his new attitude throughout
this season. Rather than coming off the bench and trying
to do things lo impress Mulligan, the senior has ju.st
let bis play speak for itself.
Is Malavasi thinking about F erragamo? Patri~ts
· pursUing
Nobody> came in on the noon balloon • Presumably, the Kinp don't have a • It is absolutely incredible how the
from Saskatoon and asked me, but. . . SPORTSCOLUMMST player .lood enough to influence Jerry players' attitude toward the NFL's Pro RobI•DSOD. • When Georgia Frontlere, Madame Busa Into firing Coach Parker Bowl changed for the better when the
Ram, gave Coach Ray Malavasi a vote BIE McDonald. game site was permanently established
of confidence on New Year's Eve, she • A.awning everyone is entitled to an in Hawaii.
said she was "very excited about bis J 11£1 opinion, J will take Vin Scully and Hank • Meanwhile, NFL commissioner
plans for 1982" whlcb would ft Stram as the best pro football Pete Rozelle says bis major concern
presumably include a better season broadcasting team. about Super Bowl XVI in Pontiac,
than 1981. • They• arrest people ror peddling Mich., is snow removal so the audience
• Malavasl's first statement of 1982 get around the rules and resuJaUooa, football betUng cards but Hollywood wlll be able to reach the SUverdome.
was to point out that the teams who consider how Henchel Walker will be Park passed them out and paid off on
have made it this far in the plod to paid for bis appearance u a sprinter in them during the recent thoroughbred
Super Bowl XVI all have "strone the upcoming Suntist track meet in Loe meeting.
quarterbacks who can throw the long . Angeles. ball" and one wonders If Malavasl ls • If the NFL names a most valuable • The wire services will soon
th. k;,u, th ghts of g ed va· ce player, you would anticipate some votes announce the.ir athletes or the year and, m ~-e ou a uy nam n thankfully, no golfer or auto race driver Ferragamo. for San Diego's Kell~n Winslow.
• Those who would put the knock on • In the interests of common decency, figures to have a shot this lime.
• WITH THE COMING of a new
season, you are reminded of one of the
great lines you wish you had wriuen
. . . lf there is anything duller than
track. it Is field.
FOXBORO. Mass. <AP> -I
John Robinson has been invited
to leave powerful Southern' California, where he lost ju.st 11
gJmes in slx years, to become
coach of the New England
Patriots, who lost 14 games tbisl
season.
The National Football League
team offered the USC head
coach the job Tuesday and
expected his response today.
If he accepted, the 46-year-old
Robinson would become the
1 i
I
I I
i
I
Clemson as ~e national champion of you would have thought CBS would
college football are asked to consider have spared us Pbylliis George telling • THE ROSE BOWL people, who
lamented having Washington and"1owa,
could have bad it much worse . . . they
could have bad the USC Trojans.
• New meaning for the term
rinky-dink is provided by the Mizlou
television sports network. eighth coach in the 22-year '
history of the Patriots, replacing i the Tige.rs looked as good as any other us about the field conditions at
team in the holiday bowl games. Candlestick Park and how the t9ers and
• YOU KNOW YOU& LIFE la getting
humdrum when you start listening lo
coUege basketbaU on the radio . . . and
enjoying it.
• If you think there are not ways to
Giants would be affected.
•AFTER WATCfilNG the Hawkeyes'
performance m the Rose Bowl, Iowa
coach Hayden Fry was not the only one
who went home sick.
• There is nothing surprising about
Willie Shoemaker being named
thoroughbred raclnt'• man of the year
inasmuch as the Shoe may be the
game's man of the century.
• The view fTom here is lhat
CinciMati and San Francisco will make
it to Super Sunday and home field
advantages will play no litUe part.
• Howard Cosell's Super Bowl
prediction was the Oakland Raiders vs.
the Atlanta Falcons, neither of whom
progressed as Car as the playoffs.
\.-
Kings still
can't win
in Philly
Cromwell, Irvin na""'}d to All-Pro team
Rogers, D~rsett and Anderson make up AP's first team backfield
From AP dispatches
George Rogers of the New Orleans
Saint.I and Tony Dorsett of the Dallas
Cowboys, wbo finllbed 1·2 ln rushing, and
Cinclnnali quarterback Ken Anderson, the
passiaa champion, make up the backfield
of The Associated Press AU-Pro team for
the National Football Leacue's 1981
season.
Two other rookies also are on the ftnt
team -comerback Ronnie Lott of the San
Francllco 49ers\and linebacker Lawrence
Taylor of the New York Gian\.S.
Safety Nolan CromweU and punt-return
apeclUiat LeRoy Irvin are th• only two
Rams named to the squad.
C&OMWELL ENDBD the season second ·on UM team ln tackles with 82. He also hd
21 uailU and five interceptions.
Irvin returned 41 punu for 815 yard.a <a
13.4 anraae> and tbree tol.'<'hdowu. His
lon1nt TD of IM yards came a1atn1t
AtJuta early ln the aeuoa.
Al10 aeleeted to the first team was
Cincinnati punter Pat Mcl.D&Uy, • Villa
Park ..... product. lldaallJ led the NFL rn DUDt1q wttb a 45.4 ner,aae.
'l'be;.CO"boya ana 4hr1, who play Sund~ tbe National Conference
ebam p, placed 11 playen on tbe
AP't ftnt ·• aeeoad teama announced Tunda)' ud aeleeted by a nationwide
paael of 14 1port1 wrlteu and
broedeMln.
AD-NFL 'eam
ALL-PROS -Nolan Cromwell <left I
and LeRoy Irvin were named to the
All-pro first team and were the only
Rams· selected. Cromwell is a free
safety-a nd Irvin 11 kick -return
specialist.
the All·Pro team. Along with Anderson
and .Mcinally, Cincinnati haa tackle
Anthony Munoz on the first team and
rookie Cris Colllnsworth on the second
team.
Ron Erhardt. who was fired
1
i
Dec. 22, two days after New
England ende<I its worst season :
ever . Its 2· U record tied •
Baltimore for the worst NFL :
mark this season. I :
PATRIOTS GENERA~ f.
Manager Bucko Kilroy said
Robinson, who had a 59-11·2: · .
record at USC, was offered the I position for many reasons. '
"When you're lookine atj
coach of this caliber you'r
1 looking at bis track record. He'
always been successful as
assistant and head coach.'1 I
Kilroy said Tuesday. "He'a l
extraordinary guy in teachln I
skills. He's a very hight I
organized individual a s a I
and a coach. I
"One of his lop traits l I
leadership on and off the field J He's not a real tough guy but h
is lfl"eat in lnsUlllng the wlnnin '
atmosphere.''
In firing Erhardt, Patriots
owner Billy Sullivan said th
coach was "too nice a 1uy." H
also said he wanted the nex
coach to be more of
disciplinarian.
Kilroy said the team receiv
permission Monday ni1bt I
Dr. James Zumberce, USd
president, to tallt with· Robinson.
ASKED IF THE team ba
•considered Robinson before ,.
Erhardt wu fired, Kllroy said,
"In this trade.. everybody kDowi
w_hat's Coinl on. 1 ' •'A lot of people ln tblal
business, I know, bad feelers out
for lndlvlduals (before tbe'
season ended) and then the ,
<NFL> teama ~ad good ae&IOlll
and they for1ot about it." 1
ltJlroy noted that before tbe
. Pinta Bowl, la wfllch Pe
State beat USC .. 10 on New 1
Year'• Day, RCJIUloe bad said
publlcly be wu la~ ln tbe 1
Patrlota' Job,
But Kilroy denied a ~ •
Globe report Of lut week tUt
1lobtaaon alreadJ lllad beea onertd tb• poiitloL Bc+*ss •
,.._baa faur ,..... Wt -.. u.:: contraet! ...
. ---. \ •
~==;:::j~~..;.;:;::..:.·~O~ra~n~g~·~C~o·•·tOAILYPILOTJW~•~d-"-''-d-•....,J_•_n_u_•~--8-,_19_e_2 ______ ~--~~----------......;~------------------
.
Tigers put reporter
in cage of ~s own
From AP dispatches
. DETROIT -The Detroit Tigers Ill
say they are restricting a reporter's
access to the baseball team because
the newsman obtained a confidential report on
the team's players and wrJ>te a storY. about it.
The report by Manager Sparky Anderson
was a criticaJ evaluation of the players on the
American League team and the results,
obtained by reporter · Vern Plagenhoef,
appeared In a story last month in the Grand
Rapids Press.
Tiger General Manager Jim Campbell said
Monday the club no longer will make hotel
arrangements for Plagenhoef, will not let him
ride team buses and won't let him enter the
Tiger Room. a hos pitality room at Tiger
S~adium. Flights and hotels are booked by the
Tigers but paid by all newsmen traveling with
the team.
"I am taking steps l feel are appropriate to
lighten s ecurity." s aid Campbell. "He ( Plagenhoef) s ays that someone gave him the
report and that puts everyone in this
organization under suspicion "
Chargers haven't 1orgotten JJ
SAN DIEGO -John Jefferson
may be gone -traded lo Green Bay
in a salary dispute -but the all -pro
wide receiver hasn't been forgotten by bis
former San Diego Charger teammates.
A bumper s licker on the back of a van
owned by San Diego defensive tackle Louie
Keicher reads :
"Who Shot JJ?"
Quote of the day
"Some nights the shots faJI, some nights
they don't. Sometimes you win, but you
lose. Sometimes you lose. but you win and
that's how I feel tooight," -Washi~gton
State basketball coach George Ravellag
after his team lost to USC 73.72 i~
overtime. ' ' --
Montrealstops Bolton's win atreak
' Bob Oat.ey acored the dttlalve ~·
soal at 2:52 ot the aecond pertod u '
Montreal defeated Boaton, 3·1,
1topptn1 the Bruins' undefeated wlnnln1 •lr .. k
at iutven umea lo hl1hll1ht NHL actlon
Tuesday rtight. 1t w•11 the 22nd consecutive 10111,
lncludlna pluyotrs, tor the Bruins ln Montreal,
where they haven't won since Oct. 30, 1976.
Elsewhere, . Joe Mlillea acored bl• fir1l two
NHL goals eight 11econd11 apart ln lhe middle
period. pacina St. Louis to a 4·1 triumph over
Minnesota ... Goaltender Daa Bouchard
blocked 28 shots for his first shutout of the
season In leading Quebec to a 3-0 victory over
Washington . . . Guy Cll..W.ard .acored "4'o
goals to lead Cat1ary to a $·4 decision over
Colorado . . . Center Wayne Gre&lky of
Edmonton, who became lhe first player In NHL
history to score 50 goals in less than ~ games,
has been named the NHL Player of the Month tor December
Tripucka, Pistons crush 76ers
Rookie Kelly Trlpucka scored a
career·high 28 points as Detroit
handed Philadelphia Its worst defeat
so far this sea$On, 124·101 , to
highlight NBA action Tuesday night. The win
s napped the Pistons' three-game losing streak
and the 76ers ' four -game win streak"
Elsewhere. . . MychaJ Thompson and Billy
Ray Bates each scored 25 points to spark
Portland to a 115· l 10 victory
over San Antonio . . Mike
Bantam scored 25 points and
pulled. down 12 rebounds as
Indiana s napped a
three-game home ('Ourt
losing streak with an 87·82
decision over Phoenix . Stv Williams scored 21 or his
season-hiRh 34 Points in lhe
second hair and Randy Smith
n11>ucu added 25. leading New York
past Milwa.ukee, 112-102, for its fifth straight
victory . . . Dan Roundfield scored 26 points
and Jobn Drew added 25 as Atlanta blitzed
Cleveland, 113·103 ... Ray Wllllams scored a
season·higb 32 points, including the last four, to
pace New Jersey to a 114 ·108 win over
W asbington . . . Resgle Theus scored 20 points
to lead seven teammates in double figures as
Chicago dropped Denver, 134-128 . . Elvin
Hayes hit a turnaround jump shot with 18
seconds left to give Houston a 112·111 victory
over Golden State . . . Michael Brooks scored
15 of his 26 points in the second half, leading San
Diego past Kansas City , 112·104 Rookie center
Steve Johnson scored 15 of his game·higb 28
points in the first quarter to lead Kansas City to
a 36·27 advantage after 12 minutes. San Diego
took the lead for good midway through.the third
siuartu oo a short jump sbot by l!hU-SmiUt.
Shula. McKay to coach Jn Pro Bowl
0. !Mlula of Mtamt and Tampa •
Bay's Jolt• McKay, fresh trom ~-~
defea\8 ln lhelr rotpective •
conference playoffs l••t weekend,
were named Tucllday aa head coaches tor the
NFL Pro Bowl Jan 31 In Honolulu. Shula wlll
coach lhe AFC. while McKay will handle the
NFC ... The University of Wisconsin has been
placed <>fl a one.year probation by the NCAA tor
football recruiting violations
and Improper use or runo.s
and entertainment. The
probation, effective Im·
mediately, does not aflect
the football team's eligibility
ror postseason competition or
television appearances ...
Pete Johnson, running back
of t.be ClncinnaU Bengals,
has been named to replace
sMULA Joe Cribbs of Buffalo on the
AFC Pro Bowl squad. Cribbs injured a knee In
last Sunday's loss to the Bengals ... Defensive
end Vern Den Herder, an ll·year veteran with
Miami, has tentatively· announced hls
retirement from the NFL . . . Tight end Dan
Ross, who has led Cincinnati in receiving the
last two seasons, says he set a record for club
receptions M\is year while playing with a broken
foot.
Scully wins Ford C. Frick award
Veteran Dodgers sportscaster •
Vin Scully has been named to relceive
the 1982 Ford C. Frick award ..
presented yearly to broadcasters who have
made major contributions to baseball ... The
executive director of the Major League Players
Association, Marvin MIJler, says he is collecting
evidence to show that baseball team owners
have conspired lo stop competitive bidding on
free agMt players .' . . Steve Burka of the
Washington Hu$kies, who upset USC and UCLA
over the weekend, has been named lhe Pac·lO
Player of the Week. The 6·3 guard scored 17
points against UCLA and hit a 28-fool shot al the
buzzer against the Trojans which sent the game
into overtime . . . The Philadelphia Phillies
hope to solve their problems with shortstop
Larry Bowa this week. Sowa wants a new
three-year contract or has asked to be traded.
The shortstop is currently in the final year of
his contract . Free-agent pitcher Frank
Tanana has agreed to terms with the Texas
MOna iich s top
Oiler s, 68-62 ·
Barons lose to V erbum Dei
Mater Ot!I overcame a penalty.filled contest
which saw 49 fouls whistled to hand HunUn1ton
Buch a G8·62 defeat to hlahllcbt. area hlsb 1chooJ
baa.ketbaU action Tuesday nleht.
In other contest.a, Verburn Det beat Fountain
Valley, whale Newport Chrl1tl1n mauled St.
Michael's.
Here's what happened:
Mater Del ea, Huntington Beach 62
The Monarchs, 10·5, got 20 polntJ from
sophomore forward Matt Beeuwsaert to hand the
Oilers their sixth loss in 12 ouUn1s.
The Oilers led by four at the end or the first
quarter, but lost the lead early in the second and
could never catch up.
In the battle at the free throw line, Mater Dei
hit 22 of 38 charity tosses. while the Oilers were 18
or 23.
Keith Salay a led the Oilers with 14 point.a.
Verbum Del 67, Fountain Vallei 57
The Eagles outscored the Barons 18·9 In the
first quarter and it was clear sailing after that.
Fountain Valley, 9-4, reduced its deficit t.o slx
,points after three quarters but couldn't get any
closer.
Jeff Hughes had 19 points to lead the Barons.
while Ken Harter added 13 and Mike Newton 10.
Newton, incidentally, a sophomore, was playing in
his first varsity game.
Calvin Haynes and Donnie Brown had 22 and
20 Points. respectively, for the Eagles 02-4 I.
Newport Christian 53, St. Michael's 11
Newport improved its record to 4·5 aft.er Its
mauling of ~apless St. Michael's, which could
manage only one basket during the first 16 minutes
of play.
Chris Howard was the leading scorer with 16
points, followed by teammates Mark Frederickson
Cl3) and Scott Kilpatrick (10).
Rangers. Te1:~::v:~~;~c•ed••ed Sea View play
RADJO~ Basketwll -Drury College at UC _h • •ght
Irvine. 1:30 p.m .. KWVE oos FM ). Ski Reports 1a Ul' "S lam -Southern California conditions. 9:43 a .m .. ~e ~ _
12;43,3:43, 7 ~43 p.m .. KNX 0070). --
The anticipated wild Sea View Leaglle'
:county all-star game given charm
And it comes in the presence of South Coach Bob Lester of El Modena Hii/1i'
basketball race gets under way tonight 6n rour
fronts -wilh two of the five contenders <Costa
Mesa and University> colliding in a tossup affair
while Estancia, Corona del Mar and Newport
Harbor enter wilh the favorite's label.
Each is billed to begin at 7 · 30. as are several
non-league skirmishes.
After 22 limes to tne ute you would think the
Orange County All-star football game would
hardly be in need of any hype -but the selection
of El Modena High Coach Bob Lester surely does
that for the game -which is scheduled for June 28
If Monday·night> at Orange Coast College.
The Brea Ljons Club still hasn't nailed down a
commitment from Sunny Hills High Coacb Tim
Devaney, who has led his Hawks to two straight
unbeaten league seasons, but Lester is for sure.
' It's ironic that Lester hasn't been tabbed
before for the All-star game, which pits many or
the graduating seniors, but on the only other
occasion that he was sought, the Shrine Game in
Pasadena beat the Lions Club to it.
Lester will use his own staff as assistants for
the game and there Just isn't any doubt -the
South will be favored .
Absolutely no one comes across better than
Lester . A charmer. he'll keep everyone involved
entertained, to such an extent there simply isn't
anyone who's going lo buy any poor-mouthing
from Lester.
PREP SPORTS
ROGER
CARLSON
The Ee features 30-man squads with CIF
finalists lowed a maximum of four players, the
balance t ree players.
lt'll be a while before Lester and his staff
pick his team, but when he does, I 'll be sure t<>
call and griJI him about his selections.
Let's see. Three from Edison. Fountain
Valley, Marina, Estancia, El Toro, Westminster,
Capistrano Valley, Santa Ana Valley and Santa
Ana and a couple from Foothill. Singles . of course,
from a few others . . hmmm. that doesn't leave
much for El Modena, does it?
Oh well, Lester will figure something out
FORMER EDISON HIGH baseball star Tom
Duggan was recently recognized with 1981
All·American high school honors by the American
Assoeiation of College Baseball Coaches.
Duggan, an infielder now al Orange Coast
College, was one of eight selected fr.om California,
25 others coming from the balance or the country.
l>uggan was a second team choice. The only
other Orange County player chosen was David
Cochrane of Troy, a pitcher-first baseman named
Of\ the first team.
* * •
THE SHRINE GAME in Pasadena ,
incidentally, has its game scheduled for July 17 at
the Rose Bowl.
Don·t be surprised to see the Shrine Game
being played al Anaheim Stadium in the near
future -like about. 1983
* * •
· Still tuning up !or their league play, which
begins next week, are Marina, Edison,"&urtta}p
Valley, Ocean View , Westminster and "La'gana
Beach.
Unbeaten Lakewood invades Marina, Los
Altos is al 12·1 Edison, La Quinta visits 8·3
Fountain Valley, Ocean View takes its 8-4 record
to Inglewood and Westminster is at Long Beach
Wilson as they lune up for Sunset League play.
Laguna Beach, 6-6, plays host to free lance
Woodbridge, a seniorless but 10-1 outfit. It's
Laguna Beach's final tuneup before South Coast
League action Friday against visiting San
Clemente
The Costa Mesa-University duel features 6-4
Ke n Bardsley of Mesa , with an 18.4 scoring
average, against the 19.2 scoring ability of 6-6
Brad Guess. Craig Rouse, a 6·3 senior ( 13.4
average) 1s also a big factor against Mesa's 6·4.
13-4. 6-4. 6-4 look .
Dave Palmblade, a 6-2 junior. rounds out the
Mustangs' lineup, averaging 10.9 points a game.
JUST WONDERING: Neither team has had a common opponent
Why do television networks give the viewer all during the non-league and tournament season.
El Modena High 1s actually localed in the
North, on the north side of Chapman Boulevard,
the game's Mason-Dixon line.
of t hose shots of the fans making faces? Corona del Mar and Irvine s~are off in a
• • • Why aren't there two football playoffs? One game featuring balance on both sides of the ball -
COSTA MESA HIGH'S football program for champions. the other for teams with good the difference is that the Sea Kings of CdM Coach
Some have suggested El Modena belongs 1n
the North, but the Vanguards apparently have
never wanted any part of it They've been with the
Rebels since the beginning.
continues along the same format, with Jim Hagey records? Jack Errion have been winning with balance (5·2>.
and John Carney as co-coaches. The Mustangs will Why doeso't the slate ClF step in and reshape while the Vaqueros have struggled to an Q-6 start.
operate in September with Carney handling the the ridiculous geographic setup as it now stands Estancia (playmaker Jeff Gardner and co.) is
defense and Hagey directing the offense. with such oddities as Death Valley, San Luis in the El Toro pressure can tonight, while Newport
Onassis Nixon, Costa Mesa High's top football Obispo and Brawley in the same section as Santa Harbor and Saddleback, the two schools new to the
' I
The date of the game. incidentally. finds the
Angels out of town. which is t~ way the Lions
Club likes it.
player in 1981, was chosen as the school's Athlete Ana, Pasadena or Long Beach? league, duel at Newport.
oftheMonthforNovem~be~r~.~~~~~~~~~-.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
College f ootball
COLLEGE BOWL ROUNDUP
Independence Bowl
CO.C. ll .. Slloe•_.--. Lil.I
T~HSA&Mil,Oll18hom8SI 16
0.rden Stale Bowl
CDec. lht hst II~-. M.J.I
Te~11.Wltc-ln21
Holiday BoWI
(Dec. la .. s-°"991
8 YU ll. W8\Nnglon SI >t
C.llfoml• Bowl
(Dec. It .. ~·-' T oleclO 27. S... .JoH SI U
Tanger1n• Bowl coec. ,, .. °"'-· , .•. ,
M luouti It, So<llhern MIH\s•IPl>I 17
Peacn Bowl
C!>e<. J1 .. AtlMul
WHI Vlrvtni.1'. FlotlcM •
Bluebonnet Bowl
CDK.Jl .. 14_t..,I
Mlchloion 33, UCLA I'
Cotton Bowl
(JM. I .. 0.H•l hWH 14, Al_,,.. 12
Fleet. Bowl
CH9. I .C ,,__lat
Pem SI. 1'. USC 10
.Ro•• Bowl
C.Nill. IM P•.-,..1
WHh ...... 21,1-80
Orange Bowl
(J.M. I M Ml8"'1, ~18.I
Cl•tn-22, ~--1S
JOHNSON lk SON
Presents ...
fi
Pete the "Greek"
NFL's
Pick8 Of
The Weck
INTO
t Blue:-Gray O.me
Cl>e<. U et-...-.,, Al•.I
8i.t•21.0......•
!klg•r Bowl
CJlll. t • .._ OrtHMI
Pitt 2•, 0--0f• 20
Sun Bowt coec. • • •• ..... , Oki•-40, Hpuston U
0.tcH Bowl
CO.C. • •U•--•llMI
Honh C:-ln• JI, Arlo.8nMS 27
Uberty Bowl
CDM.•et ......... I
Ohio SI. 21, H••r fll
HeM ot fafM Bowl 10.." .... ,...Ill, ..... .. ......_..._,.,IC_t
E•lt·W••t Shrine Geme
CHI!. t ....... Al'8)
EHi A1!418n .... WHI All·•l8r\, CM,_ 1••11oon.
H11la Bowt ''--.............. ,
EHi All tl.lrt va, w .. t All·tl•rt, C"41 ......
1 ... p"'
Senior Bowl
CJM. 1' at,..... .. , Ala.I
Horth All tWt VI. s..Ah All•\18<1
SUNDAY
NATIO NAL
CONFERENCE
Son Ff'OM:ilco
o•er
D.elas
A._.lltJCAH
CO HFlltlHCE .. .,. s .. oa.,o
.r.=:====================================~==~======:::;====~ New Parts Department Hours
Now Open 8:00 am -1:00 pm S a turdays
_]
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. January 6, 1982
It waBn 't that unexpected Bardsley
picks UCI Top bowlers vie
in Anaheim event 'LA Southwest stuns Rustlers in conference opener
Ken Bardsley, an All·Se• View
4.~aeue selection as a junior and
currently leading Costa Mesa
.High'• buketball team wlLb an
8yCUaT8EED£N
0( .............
They Itemed harmlest toouab, but tbt LA
Southwat ~tan played Jutt the kind of tame
Golden Weat Coach Jlm Greenfield expected of
them Tuesday nlaht.
And to Just· about everybody's surprise -
except Greenfield'• -the Cou1ara atunned the
Rustlers 91·88 ln the Southern Cal Conference
opener at owe.
"Yeah, I waa worried. Th'y 1et thine• g0Jn1
and they're tough," admitted Greenfield, after the
Cougars put a damper on what had been a
splendid first half of the season for the Rustlers.
-COMING IHl'O TUESDAV night's contest, the
Rustlers carried a very Impressive 13·2 record -
the kind of mark that is suppoeed to supply a little
intimidation -particularly to a visiting team with
a 7-8 record.
But not LA Southwest.
Coach Leon Henry's squad jumped out lo a
12·point lead midway through the first half behind
the hot shooting of 6·2 sophomore guard Ron
J ordan and the center play of 225-pound Roger
Graves.
Graves scored 14 of hls 23 points in the first
hal(, while Jordan added 10.
But even when the Cougars held their 12-polnt
advantage with 9:43 remaruning in the half, they
couldn't shake the Rustlers.
With Truiett Hatton and reserve Sherwin
Durham hilting key buckets and center Art King
co~necting on a three·point play, the Rustlers
quickly turned the tables on the Cougars to take a
38-37 advantage in a span of 4:32.
TWO KEV BASKETS by Murphy Davis in the
closingseconds gave GWC a 46-43 advantage at
halftime, and it looked as if the Rustlers had
gotten their act together en route to win No. 14.
But LA Southwest did just what it did in the
first half -namely come doWQ with the important
rebounds and bit clutch free throws to once again
open a sizable advantage.
With 2:21 remaining, LA Southwest's Leroy
Bishop connected to give the Cougars an 86-78
lead. And in the next few moments, the Rustlers'
We want you
and we need you.
That's why we are
holdins an Open Houae this
Saturday Uanuary 9, 9 AM -4 PM)
at our Irvine and Inglewood faciliti•.
We are American Medkal ~ a np6dly pow·
iDg member of Anwrlcaa lto.pllal SupPIJ C0rpo.
ntion -one of the wortd'• lead.Ing ba9ftb can
orpnbatiou. We dnelop, maaufac:tuN aad
marbt u exten.ln line of hlshJy adnamd intra·
ocular lem a.ad extencled·war contact ..._ which a.re ID hllb demand within the mecllcal optka
market. ff you an qu.a.Uflecl for cme of the follow·
lq poeitlom. w. mc::ounp you to plan now to Join
ua tfda Saturday at the faCillty nea.nllt you.
Project • Senior
Manufacturins Engineenllnglewood
We have two pomtiom available at our lnalewood PlanL
The Protect !Qllneerlna poeltion requlree 5 + years ex-
perience. The Senior paettion raqulree 3-5 lee" menufao-turlna enatneerlna axpertaooa. APOlicanta or both poei-
tiODI must have a BS degree ln liiduatrial !ngineerlnt.
Mechanical Bnstneerlna or Biomedical Enalneerlng; 3-5
yeert 'related experience in e manufactwina environment:
capebla of U,bt mac:bining and have knowledge of cuttlns
tool•.
Manufacturing Engineer/Irvine
Thil pollitioft ~either a BSME, BSD! or BS in
Biomedical B.natneerlna. canctidatat mWlt alto have 3-5
yeart experience In Manu.f acturtna £nainearlna within the
aree of medical devfoa-manufacturlna and familiarity
with FDA CMP requirement• for implant..
Quality A.urance Engineer/Irvine
We require a BS dafrM ln lnlinearina (or a Science
df9ctplloe) ud 1·2 yeera Qualfty !nglnearlna experjence wbldi would fncbada axp9f'leoce ln the followinf: devel~
ment of quality r=proceduret and prot1ram plan1:
datannlnation of on methodl in Prooeta Control.t: l"8'liewlnl of !nitDl&rtq and Maoufacturlna drawlnp and docWIMIDtetlon for quality raqulrementa.
R8988.l'Ch • Development
~
Mecbenk:41 Bnatnee , 3 years mechanical delisn To be camldered. e$:: have a BS d8ft'88 In
experience 8n0 full of material Mlaction
for applied loadl and raectlom oo various 1tructuree.
Production Control Supervi8or/lrvine
CandJdatw mu.t have production and inventory control
5 PNwioua superv19ory exl)8rianca and a 4-year detrea are eleo raqu1recl. Bxperleooa in mum ulml. ahop floor control and Inventory manasament
would be a daffnlta plus.
Produdlon SUpervi8or/lrvi
~we ~ a ooUete dapae, preferably in Bnainaarlna or
a limOat qQAAtitatf•type dlldpillle. SOma prmoua "4191 .... , experMnce. lt at.o Pnferred.
h.,.cdoa SuDervlwlhudewood
Tldl pomtbl ~·2 yean Q.d'ty CaatJooJ •perWorJ ~ad a BA or BS detNe In a Sclenca di9dp.1na.
R1111 c D11W•t1ea 1acmta dlNct1nl the dally actMU. of tba ~-work force In t8rma of quality of work P8"'
fariMd -~ effldaney. ...................... .,. .. ,.. .....
I .. sts .... 1.-;~-.. ·~ ............... ,....,.,,., ....... _.._ '°' ........ .,,.. ....
:ro:t.::?£::·:-r~"'=~ 3r! ....... •rlw 1eAw. .,.. ................. '" ............... .... ..._..,.._._ '!ad .._.._.
........ Ne , • .,. , ... , 7 ...... ... _ ........ .,4 a.--11....-
4 '
Oarln Bowen, Ray Jacobs and Art King were
1lttln1 on t.be bench, compliment& of their Clftb per1ona1 foula.
Clutch Cree throws by the Cou1ars' John
Wilbourne then sealed the victory.
"They shoot and Jump very well," noted
Greenfield afterward. "fn fact, talent·wlse, they're
probab\)' better than we are. But still, I thou1bl
our kids played hard and showed they could come back.
"We just didn't take the ball IMlde enou1h. We
were forced to shoot too much Crom the outside,"
Greenfield added.
FORTUNATELY FOR the GWC coach, his
player11 know how lo score Crom the outside -
particularly Hatton.
The sophomore guard topped all scorers wi th
32 points, and many or his shots came from the
25-foot range.
"Hatton is a J(reat player. He's got to be the
premiere shooter in the league," noted LA
Southwest Coach Henry.
"We were ready toni1ht. I Celt we bad a real
good practice yesterday (Monday l. They had to
play catch up and that's why we were able to play
our game," Henry added.
The Rustlers, meanwhile, had plenty or time·
to practice before the game. ln fact, GWC had
played just one game in the last two weeks (a 99·83
victory over San Diego Mesa Saturday nightl.
"Sure, the layoff probably showed tonight,''
admitted Greenfield.
18.4 1corln1 average, has
announced hls intention lo
attend UC Irvine.
A 6·• senior, Bardsley has
been a lhree·year starter ror the
Mus tangs and Is cons idered one
or the top prep players in
Orange County.
· With UC Irvine Coach Bill
Mulligan in attendance Mooday
the Mustang senlot pumped in 2S
points, 17 coming in the final
quarter as Costa Mesa tried to
raJly, but fell short by an 82·75
count to visiting Edison.
Uni blanks CdM
Libby Zartler scored two goaJs
and Sue Steele and La urie
Bondra ad<1ed one each to lead
the University High women's
soccer team to a 4-0 victory over
Corona del Mar in the Sea View
League opener for both schools.
In other league action, Karen
Bonnett and Betsy Gazda led the
way a s Estanc ia trounce d
Saddleback. 7-0.
Earl Anth o ny . Marshall
Holman , Mark Roth and
defe nding champion Steve
Martin will all be on hand for
the Miiier •High Life Classic
P r of ess ional Bowlers
Association tournament al t.he
B runs wlck Wonderbowl in
An a h eim with the s econd
s i x -game qua lifying block
scheduled to be run off tonight.
More than 180 of the world's
top pro bowlers are competing
in th e t o urnament that
cc nc ludes Saturday at 11 :30
a .m. with a national television
audi e n ce that will b e
tape-delayed here (Channel 7, 4
p.m .).
Today's action got under way
at 4 o'clock and will run until
10 : 30 with a third and final
six-game qualifie r Thursday
from 9 a.m . to 3:30 p.m. The
first of three eight-game match
play events will take place from
7-10 p.m. with two more Friday
to pare the list to the five top
bowlers for the finals.
Anthony was admitted to the
P BA Hall of Fame last vear as
KM .SPECIAL
FIBERGLASS
BELTED
RADIALS
You'll Ilk• your lcMMtle colon
snapshots MN llTTll as leoufttul
cot.OR INLARGIHEH1'1
., .....
"''" ., ....
m,u ......
s~311g 0978-P1M8::J ll
1!>2 locl\
THE KM.78
"Our Best"
4-PLY
POLYESTER
CORD
BLACKWALL
5"x7" For Only 79• Eoch
S"x10" For Onty1 .99Eoch
Mooe From Your fo\lonle color negollve
Ole. Volld Jon. 6-9, 1991
he s wept to four tltlet and set a
one -year eunings record of
S164,73~ He wllJ undoubtedly
become the first bowler to reach
the $1 m illion plateau this
season. He has 5951,106 in 11
years on the tour.
Anthony was the first winner
of the Hi1h Lire tourney in im
and from 1974 through 1976,
gained Bowler of the Year
honors each season. In 1975, he
became the first bowler to break
the $100,000 barrier.
"l don't know if l am ready
for the season right now,''
Anthony said this week while
warming up for the tournament.
··But it would be nice to start out
the year with a win here. But I
don't feel I have had enough
tim e off this winter .'·
He s uffered a heart attack in
1978 b ut h as co mpl e t e ly
recov.e r ed with las t year's
s uccess proving beyond a doubt
he is ready for a continuation of
his career. Al 43. he has set his
sights on the $1 million mark.
Ho lm a n w as second to
Anthony in money won last year_
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Utah
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aos1on n 1
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lndlMWil7, P'-'11• 12
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O.lroll 114. PN'*-lpl\le 101
New Y-llJ, Mllw-M 102 Chleego 1)4, Dem., 111
Portlend llS, Sen Antonio 110
t.•n Dle90 112, K.,ense• c 11y 104 Houslon 111. ~Stele 111
T ....... \0-
C Ille 9911 •I 8o6lon
Mllw-••I N-JerMY Washington el PN._lpNe
S.n AMonlO et Utell
$.an Dle9ul o.<wer
Dalles 11 s..1111
.774
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lt4 UV.
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
LA Southwest 91, GWC 81
LA SOUTHW•ST -Jordon 20, Gre,.., 23,
Mlll•I '· Wlltloume ,., Gnten •• Bis,_ 12. Powers J. Toe.It· 30).3191
GOLDIN WHT -Hatlon tt, Devis 12,
8-n ll. Jee-t, Klr>O 14, O..rN m I.
Rewis 0, MCGee O Toe.ls· U 1•ts •· Hell11-·GoldenWHl,4'-43.
Tout'°'*' t.A Souttwrest 11, Golde11 W"1
13. FO<li.cl out: Klnv I Golden WHO, Jecotia I Golden Woll, Bowen IOolo~ wuu
TKllnkel foul; Goie»ll We~ bencll
HIGH SCHOOL
Mater Del 68, Htn. Beach 62
HUNTINGTON IEACH -~ 6.
Ayres 13, 51\eckleford 13. Harrtveft 2, Mlllt
10, Herl!M J, l"ee~tra 2. S.le'a f4 TOl•ll·
ntl'tld.
MATI• 011 C«* 2, Terbell •• Jecllton
11. Bff-\Mrl 2<1. J-r '· Ne .. 11111 S, Perk Int t , Fleleler 4 Total$! U U·ll ... sc-r,0ua..wr1 Huftlln910h BHcll JO 1S IO 17-4' Mater Del 1• 22 13 ,,_..
Total loult Huntington 8eecll Tl. ~lef
0.1 n. Fouled out: Jeever !MeJer Dell.
Ayru CHunllngton Beach), Harrigan
(Huntlnoton BH<lll, Miiis (Hunllng1on
8H<lll. T.chnk•I tout\ HIHlllft9lOll 8N<ll
bench
Verbum Del 67, Ftn. Valley 57
l'OUNTAIN YAl..Ll!Y -KMI' 2, H•rter
' IJ, Vllleftueve •. H~tt It, M•urel J,
Wlllt•Mlr 4, --... 10. TOl•ls· ,. .. ,, S7
YE••UM Dll -T-nMnd '-Br-n JO.
Ha,,.1 22, Hammon •. o.ne, 10, A...,.,_,
I TOIOIS. JI IJ.1•67 S<-.. ., 0...rt•rt
Fountain Velley t 17 " IS-SI Verbum ~ 11 20 10 ,._.,
TOtel fouls Fountain Y•ll•Y '· Verburn Del 14; Te<Mlo l louls Yerbum 0.1 bencll
COLLEGE WOMEN
UC Riverside 16, UCI 65
UC ••YEUIDE -GolMll n . SCott t. Holm 1. Swill 4, Ulttirner 1, Hem,;,.,,., 1'
Totals 1'._IS ..
UC 1•Y1Ne -H.tmllton 12, Rendell 4,
l..ewl1 t7, Buclle,..,, I. Simpson I. Gomt1 L Tole It: 2111 11 U .
Halftime UC INllM, 31·2'1
Total'""'' UC lllwr>lcle IS. UC ll'VIM It
HIGH SCHOOL WOMEN
Coat• Me11 70, Uni 47
UNIVERSITY -Conlrero 13, HI,.•. U,
Melluber• 2. Ne-11 ). Zlmmetmen 10,
Ru"' o. Uncle-•. Wiiton o. Seavr•wt 0
Tot•lt: 16 l~J4 '1
COSTA MISA Lu• 11. Lamor I . N .. l t. Se-r U , Gercle I. Ar...-erl1 6, M<:A-
0, Price o, Rl"'4tber911< I. GlellnQ 0, Slllo•I< O. Gredy 0 TOl•I\. 3010.17 70
Sc ... llYOllatttrt
Unlversily 12 J .t I 7~
Coste Meu n 1' n 11-10
ta.I ~UJ\l>otally 17. C..,1.&Me" 24J
F ... leo out: !;Mela IC0511 Mewl, MCA-
ICoila ......... TttMl<el foul ..... IC.I•
Mewl
Htn. Beach 71 , Senti~ 21
SANTIAGO -Rus ... 1 II, Sow•. 0-0, Wiison 1, Limo 1, Uwlt 0, Jiminez o. ToC•l1
tJ.1S11.
HUNTINGTON •EACH -Cerr 1•.
Cordova I T-t , Poclllo 4. Hemlley
1, Cooper o. Mendou 12, 8ucu1> IJ,
Cllnkenbe•rd 7 Totals » 1 13 71
k ... llYOuaf1•rt
Senlla90 7 1 • t-21
IWntlnoton ee.dt 20 11 U 1>-11
Tolal loul• Sentlevo u . HunUngton '"'" IJ: "°"ltdout lime IS."11190I
CdM 48, lrvlne 43
CORDftA D•L MAR -Esley 10, K9fldell t, Oscll,.... 4, GrH nllerg IS. Briscoe J.
Rom....,.._ TOlelt• ltl0.104
l•YINI -St1t1tmon 12, Mont I , K Ocl9fl
6, Prwtl S. TrMnmell t, E Oden t . Totell
111·1SO.
k-"' Ot.iarwrt Corone del Mer t 1S 10 14-41
Irvine 10 13 t 11~
TotelfOUb Coronede1 Mar1S, lrv1M11.
Edlaon 60, LB Poly 57
LONG alAGH l'Ol. Y Adomt J, Hiii U.
Reedy 6, Wllllemt '· Pel119 I, Hell 2, L.yllOI
•. Meto.,... 4, JollntOn o. 8Hnt o. McKinney
2. ••uard4. Towit n 11-11 S1
EDIS«* -K"'P'le '· Houll I. Trt1)4 7, B ltl ner 12, DenHeyer 14, T enebe 11,
Utd~-2, TOWlt: 11140-lt 60
Npl. Ctlr. 13, It. Mlcf\ffl'a n
U . M1"4All.'I -L .... I. Y•I t,
O'o.t\Mll 4, llOC!ltr I, II~ t. Tot•lt: 4 ,.,. 11
NIW'°"' CHRllJIAN -H-•--It, 1(11.,.trlc• 10, ,._.., •· ,r"9rlcU. ~ Scllracler 2, St-1 t, $111•' 4, T.telt1 u ~s
Sl. "-~o..-n St. MIC,l\Ml'I 0 I 7 t -11
H-POrt CIYl1tlen I 11 U 12-13
T•l•I ftllll 11 Mlt llHl't Ir New.,.n CIWl111M 21; F...a.d OWi T_.. IN _ _.
Chrlttlll\)
E•tancl• 58. El Toro 48
at. TORO -Cerlond•r 0, Cl••k 4,
0.Mlton •• ~W• 0, HOIMH h, KenMI t, M<OIU •· TOlol• 22 MO 46
•STANCIA -lbutlll 0, Cerp•,.l•r t ,
Yelcller 4, HollOlld 10. ~,MUiien S, koles o, cnrl\t"*" •. Hatlleock 10. Hu...., ts.
Total\· 14 10.11 Ja . SC.-"' Ola,,.,.. El Toro 10 I) 14 ,_
Ellencla IJ IS 11 1t-•
To1a1 fouls: El Toro 11, th te11c1• H;
Fouled..,., Cer•..-r IEI Torol.
Capo Val. Chr. 49, Lib. Chr. 43
ll•ERTY CHRIHlAH -J l,ocae....i. '· Smith t, c._i 11, 9,_,. 4, a . Loell.er'ble
S, M< Ferland 4. Tote ls: It S-14 4.1.
CAl'O YAlL•Y CHRISTIAN LIO~ 27,
Jonu 14, T..,,,.r 4, Fuwno O. Wrlont 0,
Powe• ToCell: JI 7-14 4'
Sc-•1 o.mn
L 1 ber1 y Ow1$lt.., I U IJ 11-4
C•pO Valley Chrlsllen II ,. 10 ''-"
Totel fowl\: lll:Mlrl' Cllrl1llen It, C-
Ve 11• Y Cllrltllen I•. Fouled owl: J.
Lockerble (Libert, ChtlUlen).
NHL
CAMPaaLLCOffl'•RRNC•
S....-Dl•W. W L T 011 GA Ptt
Edmonton
Van<ou,,...
C•lt••Y ltl"fS
Coto•.OO
JS ' ' 1)3 15' S1 14 1' I 14.1 U> lt
I) 11 9 160 115 JS
1) 21 • .., Its •
t U t Hit 1tt 14
N...-k OlwkleR
St. L...,11 Mlnnetote
Cn1<e90
Wlnnlpev
Ton1110
Otlroll
" 11 • 1.U '" 41 u 12 11 ,.. 1• 42
IS ·u t 111 1't 3"
1J 19 I 145 'IO M
11 11 9 1'4 I 11 JI
11 t3 6 Ill 1 .. 29
WALES CC*l'ERENCR
l'etrk* Dlwblea
NV l\lendtn 23 11 5 1.. llS 51
Pllll-lpltie 24 IJ I US IQ 4'
PltbbWQll 11 1S i 111 t!O 41
HY 11.._-. 1' 1e S 140 151 17
W Hlllfl9ton 11 U l 14. t.. t1
A8-Dlwbi-
B0$10ft 2J 11 S 1'3 130 51
MontrHI 21 10 t 1'1 110 51
8ullelo 21 11 I IS4 IU so
OWbK 21 IS 5 1'1 171 47
H•rtfonl 10 20 ' llt IH " . T....,.Y1k-
Pllll-pflle S, K ..... l oueto.c >. WM1Mn91on o MontrNI J. BoJIOfl I
St Loub4,~1-1 caioerv s, coeor-•
T ....... 10-.
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Time· 11.73
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Yllll"9 VIDfl ITtMSU,.I UO
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$2 • XACTA I IC>-11 pelO U1 00.
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Women'• eoccer
HIOHKHOOL
University 4, c..-del Mer O
Unlverslly 1<0<1119 Zeruer J, SIHI•. Bondre
Ett.encla7.~llO
Tueedltv't trenNctlon•
LuaaALL
~~
MU•NESOTA TWIN$ -Sloned Sal
lkll•r•, catcher, end s..m "'"'""'°"· ,_.., to_,..,,~
........ LN91111
ATLANTA llltAYES -$1--Gl-H~-• ._ -l'!Wlfl, loo --CC!fttrect. llOOTULL ............... L....-
lOS ANGELES RAMS -Ftref l ..... Tay!«, ei. CMHn, Hewrttt Di-,,,,..,.
~rtiur _,,,, OM RedelCowkh, asaki.it ,_Mt.
MIAMI DOLPHINS -AnnollflCH tht
rotlr......,. • Yer" Otf\ HffWt. defeMlve
llMmell socc•• Matwl.._Setcerle ...
Cl«Y!l.ANO FORCE -Sold •utoen
Altloerreve end l•n AndilrtOll, •-••di. lo the,. _ _.., Rocltah. TM Fore. •Ito wtn
twitch lb ..,__,_ freft p1c11 wm. New J•rse.,, 11 .. .._kets' .... ,.., 11111911er.
NEW YDl'K ARROWS -,...... Or..-.
IOllltovk, tor.ens, ... two.ye•r CMVect.
COLLEGE
Bl\SIElBALL
Campo'82
&allbo.rdlng
Hunting ~ Dlaplay
8hootere Aow
PttneeaHlllt
Admission $4.00
Children $1.00
Opens
1.00 pm weekdays
Sat & Sun 11:00 am
Cow. Palace o
iJan 8·17 · == -TONIGHT
7:25 p.m.
~WAVE -Fl-108
• •
Mesa, Eagles, CdM open league play with victories
Coeta Meaa, Estancia and Corona ctel Mar hlah 1cboolt Jumped ort t.o a rut atart In the Sea
View Leacue race as each pott.t vlct.ori" t.o
blghlllhl women's buk..etbaJl actlon Tuead1y
night.
In non-league artalra, HunUnaton Btath
smothered Santiago, while Edison beat Lona
Beach Poly In overtime and Uberty Chri1tl1p
dropped a close <leclaton. t~ Capistrano Valley
Christian.
On the college scene. UC Ri verside edged ui.;
Irvine. Here's what happened:
Cotta Mesa 70, Unlveralty 41
Senior Nora Seager scored a game-high 23
points and added 16 rebounds a.s the Mustangs (6-2,
overaJJ. t..(J in league) rebo\.lnded from a dismal
first quarter to beat the Trojans.
Teammate Nance Lux added 11 points, while
Angie Garcia contributed eight points and 16
rebounds.
University, (4·6, 0-11 was led by Monica
Contrera and Lorita Hines, who had 13 points
each.
E1tancla GB, El Toro 46
The Eagtes got 25 points from junior center
Debbie Hughes and 10 each from Amy Hathcock
and Joan Holland.
The Eagles <6·3, 1.0> loo by only two points
before taking control in the nnal quarter.
"ll was a very tight game." said Estancia
Coach Joe Wolr. "They actually went ahead 37-35
in the third quarter before we tied it up and rlnally
reeled off 10 straight points.·•
Robin Holmes led the Chargers with 28 points.
Corona del Mar 48, lrvlne 43
Lisa Greenberg scored 15 points add Cindy
Kendall scored all nine or her points in the second
half as the Sea Kings held off the Vaqueros.
The Sea Kings held a slim 38-36 lead entering
the final quarter or play.
Senior guard Lisa Slessman led Irvine with 12
points.
Huntington Beach 71, Santiago 21
The Oilers improved their season record to 8·5
by crushing the visiting Cavaliers.
The Oilers led by 13 at the end of the first
quarter, 24 at the hair and 43 after three periods of
play.
Senior Kerri Carr had 16 points, while Tammy
Buckels added 13 and Betty Mendoza 12.
"Everybody got a chance to play tonight ...
commented Coach Joanne Kellogg. "We needed a
breather. Everyone played hard and well
Santiago just doesn't have the talent this year ..
Pirates, Gauchos
open conference
A paii or talented guards lead their respective
basketball teams into conference play tonight
when Orange Coast College travels to Fullerton,
while Saddleback entertains Citrus. Both games
begin at 7:30.
Coach Tandy Gillis' Pirates open the South
Coast Conference campaign against first-year
Coach Roeer See's Fullerton Hornets, and Gillis
will need all the help he can get from hot-shooting
guard Chris Beasley.
In two years, Beasley has scored 682 points for
the Pirates and is now 14th on the all·time OCC
scoring list.
The Pirates (9· 7 > are coming off a 62·61
non·conference triumph over East Los Angeles.
while the Hornets (7-8) have dropped their last two
outings, losing to El Camino <if>-42) and Oxnard
(68·60)
Saddleback, meanwhile. boasts a 10-6 record
thanks to talented sophomore guard George
Turner. Turner leads the team in scoring (309
points>. scoring average (20.6) and rebounds (120).
Citrus ( 10-6) will also have to deal with
forward Dave Wisniewski who brings a 13.3
average into the contest, and 6-10 center Rick
Doyle who is averaging 10.3 points.
r
Edlton to, Lont leach Poly 57
Janet Bittner hit three of four neld 1oa1t la
overtime to help the Char-1er1 overcome •
se•son·blCh 31 turnovers.
Chris Hill. who had a g1me-hl1h 25 polnta, hll
a Jumper wllh three aeeonch remalntn1 kl
regulation to tJe the 1core.
Bittner riniahed the game·wlth 12 points, while
Tina DenHeyer added 14 and .Kim Tanabe 11
oolnts and 12 rebounds.
Edi.son Improved lta record to 10-3.
Capo Vattey Chrfetta.,_ 49, LIMrty Chrl1tlan 43
~ Liberty Christian saw lta Academy Lea1ue
record ev.-i up at 1·1 as a miacb taller Capi.iruo Valley Christian squad picked up I.he victory on ill
home court.
Liberty Christian got 12 points from Lis
Chappel and nine from JoAnne Lockerbie before
Lockerbie rowed out.
Liber\y Christil\n battled b1ek from an
ll·point rirat-half deficit to pull even at 39·39 berore
Capistrano Valley Christian pulled away ror the
victory.
OC Alver11de 86, UC lrvlne 65
Donna Hammond hit a jumper with seven
seconds remaining to hand the Anteaters, S-9, the
bitter dereat. ~
UCI led 65-64 with 21 seconds remaining, but
couldn't maintain tbe advantage as UC Rivetside
worked for the last shot.
Dorothy Lewis led UCI with 27 points arid 17
rebounds.
Too many Waves
sub01erge Titans
MALJBU -Forward Orlando Phillips scored
24 points and grabbed 15 rebounds Tuesday night,
leading Pepperdine to a 95-76 non-conference
college basketball victory over visiting Fullerton
State.
Guard Boot Bond added 20 points and had a
game•hlgh 10 assists for the Wives, who raised
their record to 7..C. Forward BlU Sadler and guard
Dane Suttle added 16 and 15 points. res~tively .
for Pepperdine.
Guard Leon Wood paced Fullerton, wb.icb fell
to 6·7, with 29 points. Reserve guard Ricky Mixon
added 16 points for the Titans.
USF 78, San Jose St. 66
SAN FRANCISCO -Guard Quintin Dailey
scored 20 points as No. 8 San Francisco beat San
Jose Stale. 78-66.
The Spartans were never in tbe game. scoring
just foClr points and committing seven turnovers in
the first nine minutes lo fall behind 16-4. They
trailed by 11, 32·21, at halftime and got within
eight points four minutes into the second half
Basketball scores
co::r ~
USF 11. Son J-5(. .. Pe_._ ts, Cel 5'. Fwllerton 76
1..oyol•. Cal 15, cat State t LA I ..
too Oonr.eve 71. Whl-11\ S4
Gr•ce ~. c.t lleptlat 61
Cel Poly ISl.01 tO. LA Blllflll 41
N•bra s ll• We sleyan 75 .
Pomon•PltW .. ~ ~ ... (ta.-t..__ so Ala ... •Felrballll• 15, Herwwd St.
11
UC Sen Dle90l4, Redlends 5'1 Rec II lat
Air Force SI. VelP¥•1tO ..
~
T .. HUMtO,TCUS4
Teo .. SS, THel Tech SO
ArUnwt SI 71, Mo.·ROlla "
S-0.
Ttnn.·~ 11 • ._le<l\1en
SI •l ~ -
ET-St tt.F.,,....en14
Mercer n. Herdln-Slm-SJ
L°"l1l•rw T«'l 7S, W-62 ~OUlnetll IS, KentUCll' St. 7,
SW l~ "· 811ffato S1 N C.·Wllmlngloft 14. Bwfl•lo St It
h.t
Army P , Rip S4
D•r1~6t. Ma~.14'
Prlnc-IO. Felrla.td 4' IOO
Lelllgll S1, "--56 ,__,.,_.,,w_n
SI Pel .... 176. 0-llng SI
sleMn.w-a.t -111 . .Chk-Clrclet.4, Fl-A&M
•2 TOURNAMIEMTI
N~C'-k
Stet-'7, N-Orta-.. lhrtll
Cent•"9tl' IO, Morel\eed SI 1-4
ltlllrdl
Colnmunfty c:otle99
~c.t~· LA S.U-tt, 0..-WHl II
C,prea .. Rlo-SO
l01 An(ll'lft CC 44, I.AH.,_ 40
S.nto Molfc• 10.. Eelt lA ti
Hlati achoof .. ..... .
II
Mat« o.i ..... -....... 9Hcll67 Verbum Del t 7, F...m.ln Y•lle, S7
1..eouna Hll!l 12. Meytalr.,
H••POrt Cllrlttlen SJ, SI Mk hMn
w .. t....,. tl. Ger*" G,_ 60
Colle9e women
"-<-e
UC lllwrslde ... UC INIM tS
H19h achool women
IMYlre ........
Coste ..... 10. Uftl\l'ertlty 47
cor-c111 ""-•. 1n;111e G E 1t8"de JI, EI Toro 46 ...........
H1H1tlngtm18eacfl11, Sentla9011
e.i ... .o. YnO llH<n Poly 51100
C•plstr-Yall•Y Cf\rllllon ...
liberty o.mtlen 0
-------
College bllsketball OUTSTANDING
VALUES!
Tomgtit'a gemea --Drury el UC lnl,.
WllltmenMPDnl .....
SE L.oulMenaa1 USIU . ......
A.....,. at MIMltoa-SI
Awtlut'll at Keflbldl'f
CltMel at GewVI• 5'. ~II Giorgia Ttclt
R11t99f"'e1°'*' w1n1em& MerV at E ... c-una
G-tl•atFI«* G_......_. .. Swtl\CMIMIN
L.SU•IY...,....
T•••"'-' Altlllnlo at Mc-St Ten....-M MlulMlf>pi
S. MIMluillPI •t N.C.-Cl\erlotte Notre OArne 11 Yl'91nle
Jolln1 Hoe*IM et Well• Forft1 a-
... -~ at Ylll-• eoiee1eat......,u. .. .. ....,...,... .. 1#_
Temple at luc.l,.11 c-tttue et syrec.,..
DUCl-MS. ...... _..,,.. 0-..-.. SL Jolwl't •
HofWa 94 W. OletW S4 Wk~k.atl-
l•fayefte at ll. JoMllfl' • St. f'rMCI,, N.V ... lAnt ISlend U.
VMI atMtlnt
Ntrltl ~at Merylefld
......... • M«tflllt'ltm
Ultce M 'lennont -Awttln 1199' al MlllOUl'I ... llllMll ...... St.
e.wll"90f..., .. Olllo u. ~r• ......... etK..,iist.
Oltltltwwll .. Deytll\ MMl ... at~ll. wni."-• ,...._.. ..... ~ .............. E~•~ M.1-•1-se. ............. ~ ..
ToledoatMleml
SO<T-St. al Ntt>rMI<• .__..
SMU •1 Arl!AlftW~
N T eaot SI el Le,.,.,
Rec II ... Wl~·P.nilde et C.o~
Thund~ ........
P..,.,dlM 11 Fr_ St.
S.ftt• Clan et Peclflc Cl~Mucld M Western Wtilllfl91or1
•ec111at ..... st ... IMortMn Arl-•vu .. Celeredo ll . ....... ....._,.__,
Ute\\ et~
S..-..11
Samford II Atll·Lltlle Rock
SW Ml-1 St. el""'-St.
Mo. Soul ..... at 0.-et R-
Sooltll • ......,,. •• °"-Fort H•n se ... T•....t'.I Peto
Utell $t. 11 !fi. ~ ... st.. ........
Wlt .-0,_ 8-J et Butler S. llltllOIHI o.+oMon
llllftoltM .... 1t1w0Mr11 ,,.,_.~St. ........... _
WIKOMM at MIClltten
Ml._... el Olllo St.
Wm, .._,at W, IMIMls ....
W1'tNret~ ...
................. "'91151. ""'°" .. Mlddle ,. ........ M9"IMllM~ .. ......... onlll ... 0.. Soolll\enl
...... ..... UIAllbWM .... ~ ......... ... ~~, .. ,.,..... ... W. V.,..... T•• aktWMM ltflliln Merrillt ...... . .......... , ... ... .,,., .. ...... ,.,....,....,..
• ..... ._Pklfl( .. ,.. L.-.
N1W ltt2YW 9UAMIUM WAM*
4 Door. ()ptlona Include
cloth ..ta. radial tlrea
and ~I (Stll. 3078) p>3503)
Lilt P.ltce SI I.JOI
Dhca•t SUIO
SALIPllCI s9
I sc•occo Coupe. 5 1peed
transmlalon, metallic
pelnt, reer window
wlper/wHher, alloy
wheele, ll.-.o c...n. encl ,,.,,., CStlL 3235)
(Ot7715l _ \
· SALi NICI 5 10 695
INl'lalU UNDH·MIH & WO•KS W1TH A.NY CA• SntlO snnM
• Aw ... bar _.oa. 34•• • .. llt-111 ..... CIOlltf'OI
•Hoe Equallnr "1_,... 11'CM
WE STOCK HUIDIEDS
OF PARTS FOi
IMPORT CARS
AT LOW PRICES!
OWIGf YOUI PlUGS
FOi arm
GAS MIUAGI & KOllOMY
POI MOST IMPORT CAIS
tnM ll7IM
I
REOUlAR RESISTOR ant MnT ·~~ 77, CJ9c 149 198
TUIE-UP KITS & PARTS
,0. MOST IMl'O•T CA•S
• IGllTIOll i.-UP lrTS llCl.UDllG •••
(SPAR PlUGS, POlfTS & COIMllSll lrT)
(IGm>OM CAP Ale tOTOll"lfT)
( POltTS & COllKllSll llT) (£.r_ • VW COl.S (FOi 6., 12 VOl.T)
~ • ~= I 25°':a.!~~sl
'IU/tllll 0
NIS
"" fl f
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednteday, January 8, 1982 DI
si ... to "' -~ ........ lr\OCb. (eoyto ......... """"91 ...... . .............................. ........
mus•Y ::: 1'' ' 1r raa
2 2 POtTUTU l-'~l IOOTrlllS + 2 PLUS 1 STEEL BELTS
Sill •91CI flO UIC
-lftUMllU tu
'19.517SR14 us." S1 23
'20$/7$l14 u• ... S2.3•
'21.5/7$R14 "'·" S2.49
'21.517SRU ....... ,, 62
'22.517$R1' "'·" $2.79
,23.517511' -·" S2.9$
36 MONTH UMmD WARRANTY*
FU~LERTON GARDEN GROVE · LA MIRADA SANTA ANA WESTMINSTER
10912 KATELLA AVE
t<MELLA fi EUCLID
PHONE 638·0863
14207 ROSECRANS AV( 120 E FIRST ST AT CYPRESS
PHONE 944 6437 PHONE 547 7471
15221 BEACH 8LVO
PHONt 893 8544
...
Orange Coat DAJL Y PILOT /WtdnMday, January 6, 1882
---~--PW:hh-W811 ......... ...." . ......,. NOtlCC tt ...... y OIVIN t111t Tll• ........... ,_ It e.1 Z:-Jlli~'::~~ ........ . CllY C..-. -.0, -._" tlllt cMr A fMINA ••A,HICI, tm.,j 11c..-..~-----~-..... AM.CAWJM. .. 111W " n:• e.-.., .. "-"Mr . JANI NltH•. _. V• ,,._,
,..,.,. ....... It .,.. .... -~~"1:· ........ .., 1111
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, 111• '·""· er • -.......,_ .. b9< ,. "" ..,.," .... -,_...., ....._., .. . . . "' ""I If! .. Clllfttll ~ City ,..._.Or..., c_. Deltr,.....,
"'' I " Pew Dflw.. C*IM ..... OM ............... ·-.......
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"""APICATIO WI IHaL ffRI, ..a ll'flCI A..._.. ....... ~leat'-t '
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, Mell • .,_ '-refOdlefl fl/I ,.. Meu, Or ... Cowlty, c.ilfw·111e.
...._ Aloy ......, wltllllle " -' efl ~ 111<11 ~IMll .* fwtt'I Ille Ml 11111 9"1kailloll ,_., fllo lllt Qmmtl\b -_.~of ell....,_ 111 w r ltlllt wllll Ille lle9lo11•I Miii ...,._ .......... lfl tlle ..,.,..., Allml11latr4llor tf Neltorwl tenllt, 1.i11 :\,,e_,,lftdNlt. 111 ceee fl/I ~.u-. Hello"•' .. "' ll•tloo, 1 Merllet •r-''* "'9 -flf "'8 P ........ t. Pl•H, Si-t Str•t T-r # 2101 • lecroter,, T,_..,, ..... ~. S... FrMCltco, CetlfOrnla .. 10S. II eny
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Ir ell Ill.. .. If llt ni. e ., ..... flOlke ol lllJ
VM4'0r w!ll i. rtq;il,., 10 cerftOly l11tenl wllfl llle Comptrollor of IM , wltll .. I -..itc.-.. E-' Emptoymtnt Cutr-y wltlllfl 21 • .,. of Ille .... of °"'9f't"""' '-eoW ...... lonL tllh PVllll<.elloll. TN _..,Clllli.Mlel
Tltltt.oMr.altsullJM'toe flMftClet portions Of h e!IClllC•tlefl .... 011 Ill
..... ,."" COllirect IMtwooft Ill• •1111 IM CAlmlllrOllor Of llW Cur,_.,
OrMtt c-ty Tr-It Dlstrlet encl N ... rt fl/I h '"*k Ill~~ lilt I t II • u . s . D • p • , ' "' • II ' • I .......... tor pul)lk l1114»<llon clurlnt Tr~UCll\. r .... tar ~neu llourL
All blcNers wlll M rcequlrtcl 10 ~lllll9cl OreftOO C.O-St Dell., Piiot,
: ctrllty tl\et IM't .,. "°' 011 Ille Jen ••• 13. •• IM-41.
C....ptroller a.-.. ·• llst of 11Wlltlb4t 1-----------uMreclerL
Ore11 .. c-t y Trenslt District PllJC lll1Cf
.. ,..., llDtlflte ell llidd9" INI It wlll l--------'~--efflr1N1tlwly l,_e tllet In t OOMcl 10 Mr--•....,.., llltO ~to
lllls ~-. mlllOfll't bln""u 011terprlM wlll lllO efforclod lull
._,-tunlty le Mlllmlt bldt In rotC11Mt
10 tlllt lnYll8tlOll Wiii "01 be
.iecrlml.....,....,... on Ille~ el reco, cOlof. w _..., or19111 111
,_._, ..... "" ""eWVIS.
DATED: o.c:omt.r JO, 1"1.
PuOllSl9d 0r"'91 Coesl 0.lly Pltot,
Jen. 6, IJ, lta 151"2
PICTITIOVS a\llt1teu
NAMll ITATeMllNT
PICTITIOUS IUSINl.SS
NAMe STARMaNT
Tiie followlnt porso11 h clol119
IMdlllffSOS:
TOPICAL$ INTEllNATIONAL,
1116 SltYl•ll ~ne. N-rt a .. cll,
Ce lltont18 ftMO
Robert M. SUtlty, 1116 Sltyl•rtl L-. N--1 lloecll, CAllllortlle tJM0
Tiiis buslnoss Is 'Oflclwcled by en
lncllvl-1.
R-..t N. Sulley
Tlllt st.t...--flied wltll tM
Cou11ly Cl-of Or•1191 fou11ty on
J•-ry4,IC. .. , ...
Publl-0.."'91 "'8SI 0.lly PCIOt,
Jen. •. 13, 20, 27, t"2 1o>.n.
Tllo to1i.w1119 --• ••• dot~ INMM~•:
LoallUN IMAGES. 11u1l·.----------
a1~ Drlw. H~ llMcll. PtCTITIOUS IUSINl.SS
CAftM6. MAMaSTATalldNT
JOll:l>H 11. LeallUN, llUt Tll• follow!~ ""°" 11 001119 ·~ ....... °""'· .......... ....... "'"'--= . CA......_ OTS DISTllllUTING. tSJ Nor11t
A II LEN I. Lei llU N, IOUI Elm, Or.-., Cellforlllt'*S ain ...... Driw, Hunt"""'" INCll. Wiibur H. Kendell. Ut$2 vi. Cnu,
CA.,.._ Levune Nlguel, C.lllornle tM77
Tllll """-IS COfMluc'8d b't 9fl Tiiis m.lnoss It ~ucled by e11 llldlyMluel. lndlvld...i
~ U.1t11 Wiibur H K-.11
Tiiis ---fifed wlUI .. Tiiis .... -WAI filed wlltl IN C-ty Cllnl fl/I 0refl90 C-.. WI c-ty C-o1 Or.._ C-y .,.
Dec. tt, ""· J ....... ., •• 1"2 ,.,,... ,. ...
,._I..., Or ..... C..st Delly ,....._ Pvbllst.d Qr"'I09 ~I Delly PllOl.
00<. >0, ltl1, JM.•. ti, 211, 1"2 .MIMI J•n. 6. IS. 20, 27, 1"2 101"2.
. 11111 1mc11
WADE
• JULIA A. WADE . a
: 35-year r esident of Santa
•Ana, Ca. Passed away on
• January 4, 198.2. She is
survived by he r brothers
Mi ~hael Scruby of Santa
• Ana, Ca. and Roy Scruby of
'San Pedro, Ca .. sister Mary
Scruby ol Chicago, Illinois.
Services will be he ld on
·Thursday, J anuary 7, 1982 at
·2:0-0PM al Harbor Lawn
Memorial Chapel with Rev
Aaron Buhler or Lhe Harbor
Trinity Baptis t Church.
Costa Mesa . officiating.
Services under the dfrection
, or Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive f Mortuary of Costa Mes a
"540-5554.
\ ..
WRTON
ARTHUR R. LORTON. a
life.time resident of Santa
Ana , Ca .. passed away on
January 2. Ul82 He wu a
IS·year employee or the
Flower Equipment
Company. ha ving been
retired ror the past 91,;.
years. He was a member or
the Teamsters Local 1'235.
He is SW'Vlved by his wife
Sadie , daughter Roberta
Brown of Tustin, Ca .. sons
Ar thur R. Lorton, Jr. of
Santa Ana. Ca .. William
Lorton of Anaheim, Ca .. and
Allen Lorton of Fountain
Valley, Ca .. his sister Ahce
Smith or San Jacinto. Ca .. 11
gra ndc hildr e n and 3
greal·grandcbildren
HOVEY Graveside services Tuesday,
BRADFORD P. HOVEY, January 5, 1982 at l :OOPM at
'Ill, age 2.8 and a resident of Harbor Lawn.Mount Olive
'Newport Beach. Ca. Passed Memorial Park with Rev
· away on January l , 1982. He Aaro~ Buhler o~ the Harbor
Is survived by his parents Trinity Baptis t Churc h
• Bradford a.nd Ferris Hovey officiating. Services under
·or Newport Beach, Ca. and the direction of Harbor
·sister Frederika Hovey of Lawn· Mount Olive Mortuary
\ .
Newport Beach. Ca. and of Costa Mesa. 5'40·5554.
paternal grandmother Mrs. STAllK
Edith S Hovey of Los WALTER G . STARK.
Angeles, Ca. Mr. Hovey was r esident of Huntington
a graduate of Newport Beach. Ca. for 25 years
Harbor Hi&h School and Passed a~ay on January 2.
UCLA, and he wa s a l982. Survived by daughter
m ember of Sigma Ch i. Dorothy Boggt;ss of F ort
Services will be held on Bragg, Ca., s1ste-r Alice
Wednesday, January 6• 1982 Horfman of Del Mar. Ca ,
at 3:00PM at Pacific View granddaugh~er , .J eanne
Chapel with Interment at Orosco of CaMom1a and 2
P acific View Memorial grea~·grandsons. Funeral
Park . Pa c ific View services will be held on
Mortuary directors Thursday. January 7, 1982 at
· 11 : OOAM at Pacific View
-----------Chapel. Services under the
McCoaMla MORTUAl•S
Laguna Beach
494·9-415
Laguna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495·1776
HAUoa UW~MT. OUYI
Mortuary • C.eme1ery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave .
Costa Mesa
~5554
,_CllROTHHS
l&L •OADWAT
MCMTUAAY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
IM.TllH ... OH
SMTH I lVTNtU.
WISTC'-"" CHAPeL
427 E 17th SI
CostaMese
848-9371
....ClllOTHMI SMn'MI' M011UAllY
827 Main St ~tington Beach
S»t539
PAC..C:ftlW 1eDllAI ,._
~llY -;r;t;v;;~va
Newport Be.c:h • Mf.2700 •
di r ection o f Balli
Bergeron-Smith and Tuthill
Westcliff Chapel Mortuary
or Costa Mesa. 646-9371.
. Nenmne Society u•liit'"°"-.... "IAL A~ iu . 646-7431
uT1rterfture tefTSth"M complet~ story of ourl .. ~Jetv... . ..
c.ttfortroe"'""41• l4 lira. Cem.tlllr.
.Slnce.1910
6.
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A s
s
I
F
11
E
D
6
4
2
•
The marketpl-0ce on the Orange Coast . . 642 -5678
EQUAL HOUSING ·.
OPPORTUNITY I
'llll1lllf•1 MoMcr. All real estate ad·
vertlsed In tb l1
newspaper is aubject to
the Federa.I Fair Hous· Ina Act of 1.168 wbkh 1111kes It llleaal to ad-
vtrtlle "any prefertnce.
limitation. or du·
crimination based on
race, color. religion,
sex, or national origin,
or an intention to make •nY such prefertnce,
limitation, or du·
cnminatioo."
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any
advertising ror rea I
estate which is in viola·
tioooftbelaW.
\\ I , I i ': \
TAYLOR CO.
ht· I I I c 1L ·, 'I II' l .1 lti
J..STOIY DUflLD M.1.-S27t 500
200' to beach ! Most attractive &tdg. &
lge sundeck upi} BR, 1 ba1..patio in lower. 2 F.P. Owe $230,000 1.D. 13%
$49,500 cash down.
WISUY M. TAYLOR CO .. REALTORS
r"lllS. ...... Hlltloed
MfWPOlrT CHR. 'M.I. 644-49 I 0
Dalebout
Bay &Beach
Real Estate ·
._ ____ _. REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE$1NCE 19'49
HDIMsforW. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 1002 •
·······················1 P'llV ACY PL"S · With this 4 Br. fenced in,
pool home on a quiet cul·
de-sac In Easlllde Costa Mesa A beaullfu.l back
yard. with covered peUo
& a cozy fireplace in the •
living room. There's
COME Wl1H US .•• TO UHCHO SAM
JOAQUIN. Most desirable location.
Fabulous view or golf course and
greenbelt. Two bedrooms and den.
End unit. Middle level. Flexible
financing. Price just reduced $16,000.
NOW $199.000
1617WESTCLIFF DI., H.I . 631-7100
R.-.4$100,000
SPY&WS
IYOWHEI Ot'ean View ~75,000
6br/4i,, be. 4100sq f&
SOUTHPORT MODEL
OWNER FINANCING
.fflGHLYUPGRADED
Olfer991res Jan. 31
ZS Bodega Bay
Call owner 759-0737
OWHll .ANXIOUS BrautifuJ, immaculate,
ni00y laoc!scaped 4 Br
home on cul·de·sar
Spacious rooma. View of eoll course from proper·
ty . Owner-assisted fUWlcing. Only $139,500.
Call now. 9'19·5370
imre! Assumable loans --------1 and an aruious seller.
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
Only $169,900. Call:
9'19-s.l70.
AtLSTATc
REALTORS
f'1ld out about the high·
earning real estate sales
career opportunities
with THE RE AL
ESTATERS. L1cen11ng school fees completely
refundable to school or
your choice. Extensive
aa.la training. for in·
formation, call 751-6191
121/t'I• PIMAMCIMG
s.ler-D ... Nt• Spacious Rancho San
Joaquin Townhoml'
w /panoramlr golr
coorse view! Featuring
2 Br /den & wet bar, fplr.
etc. Call 759·1501 or
752.7373
Walker & lee
Reel fstate
) S~ I SO I
19U"'.Y SHAIE
...._TWUCHOICE!
Low DoW11 r.,..t! Mo DoWll ,.,_ .. ,
Or YOll Tai Us!
NEWPORT BEACH
sharp 2 story townhouse.
3 bdrm , 2''1 ba th .
fireplare. patio plu' 25'
BOAT SUP' SlLLER
WILL L I ST EN '
~.IXXI!
1a11oa 1ay rrop. R ...
•675-7060•
Isl UIDf buyer can a r !!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
OWMa ford this home. Pnced at
WIU CAllY! . only tlM.000 Kathy. agt lilE
Beawtul Eastside Costa 1 &t&-SCll6
ac.. home plus in·law -------· qua_rters. 3 bedroom (l'TSIDE main house with l M
Find in Spyglass this well maintained 3 Bd,
ram rm beauty has it all.
including mount~un and I
aty li&hl views Ownl'r
will assist SM9.000. bedroom. 1 bath unit I $119~ FantMlic location wilb 1•
RV accea. Cloae In to Assumable oan at 10'1
Newport schools and 3 Bdrm. Spa: Ca ll RCTaylorCo
lboppina. SW.500. MS-91.Sl ~' ' 'I)(\
rLUSIAED
INDEX ,,,..,. M,Cll
642-5671
lllOH ................... .......... ..., ... ,..,. .... ,,.,.
:"~::.::::= .......... __. ......... ..,.
HOUSIES FOi SAU
IM!·ll .. onm MAL tsTATI
llll·IM mnw .........
IM.IMMBS. tmST.-.r
fl9WCI
..... JI
AMMOUMC8•rn ....
LOST&Po.D .,.. .
f'llSOtW.J ., ..
SBYICI IMllCTOIY ..
ICHOQU&
MTIUCTtOM
"" JOISWAMlW ,.,.
t&PWAMTID 11 ..
t•CHNINSI -..... fmYOYOU ... IOAYS I MAIM ~ .......
fUMll'Ol1'•TtOM .........
MIYOMC911 ..... .,,.
· 11 It's got wtwtls
you'll move It
f1sterln1
Dally Piiot
classifltd
ad.Call
M2·51711ftd .. ,......,.
lcl-vilorwtll "'""" ..... yowwMtls
lntocasll.
OPE N HOU~E
REALTY
/
For Class1r1e<1 Ad
ACTION
Calla
Daily Pilot
AD· VISOR
642·5678
For Ad Action can a
Daily Pilot
AD-VISOR
642-5678
things fast with Daily
Pilot Want Ads.
-& RNlt TELEVIStOI TE"llS •
C T W 8 Y L 8 A L A 8 L P U R J T T A
S E I L T I Y N R E T T A P T S E T H
0 S T A 0 T A A T R E 0 M L T E L B S
S S L R T F L E T K
R E H M T l ! ~ ~ C ?
T ~ ~ ~ t " 0 0 A L S Y A M L 0 R Y A
Y t R K A E R 8 L A I C R E M M 0 C A
P S E E H T 0 0 F M M R 0 P C H M L E
R U I N G C P L I L U L E T L G P 0 C
A 8 R S V E T M L E L A R S I S T R R
U 1 I H A T R M M T C P T 0 P S E A K
T A E S A E K A C G A I N H S S R M B
NERN ST AT LIS Z E.G AK CAP
K A E R 8 H 0 I T A T S S E I 8 E G H
G T A R I 8 H M S 0 T Y A H T U I A 0
,,...,.....; ................ ""-'cl, ....
wwd, "'· ..... Of........,, fW ...... •It Ill. 2
Spot c....... ,...... :.
Drep T .......... C"fdtrll!ll ~ F1et T• ,_.,. AIM Oi'9 • DrtRutt ......... .... s. ...._. a-.
TOllllfl"IW: U ..... T""'*
"" U81
·....__~ ~
11·
THANKS to all my ttllert & buyers ...
for a really splendid year!
WHEN SELUMG OR IUYING1
CALL
JOHN GRANATH
"the leaLtstor" ~
S!RVICB
lNTEGRJTY
. \11 'EXPERIENCE l ' PllOFESSIONAUSM
RANCH REALTY -WOODBRIDGE
SS 1·300S · , 551·3000 "leaLlstlngs' ((}
3 Bl, 2 Ba, "Atpcn", AJlmbl, 1•~ Loan $16',SOO
llroedmoOC', J Br, J Ba, Sunny Patiot 116',SOO
Rancho San Joaquin. 2 Br, l Ba A Buy 1167,000 s Br. MPrf'ICOtt" Woodbrldrr'• Pinnt SJ4',000
Turdaock Ridrr "Moncrdto" VALUE $37',000
SUBMIT YOUR Rc.U.tin1 HERE I0,000,000
CllAWUFf UNITS
Located on Eastside, C.M., these units
are in excellent condition. 5 very
private units, two 2 Bdrm and three 1
Bdr. Assume existing financing and
owner will help finance. FuJI price
$349.500.
HOUSE + DUPUX
Eastside C.M. location, large 2 Bdrm l "'i Ba house with service porch and
garage. Two 2 Bdrm l Ba units with
alley access. Try $30,000 down. As·
sume low interest loan. Asking
$230,000.
LIMDA ISi.i HOMIS
Prestige pool family home . Main
chaMel view from beautiful tradition
4 bdrm , 5 bath. $1,495,000.
Wide lagoon view from spectacular
architectural design 6 bdrm, S bath,
playroom. dark room & den.
$1 ,350,000.
UK> ISi.i HOMES
Featured on Homes Tours lovely
traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm. 3
bath home, newly redecorated .
$475,000.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus
lge recreation room & 2 patios. &am
ceilings. Xlnt value at $420.000. L
CAIMATIOH COVE
Spectacular harbor view from 4 bdrm .
4 bath bayCront. 2 boat s lips.
$2,050,000.
WEST IAY Aft.
Remodeled, like new 3 bdrm, 3 bath
bayfront. Slips for 2 lge boats.
$1,200,000.
Dalebout
Bay &Beach
Real Estate
REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 19-49
COME WITH US •.. TO IAYSHOHS.
Bayfront Mediterranean Villa. Built
like a fortress yet loaded with charm
and eleg'°ce. Regal living room with huge fireplace. Paneled dining room .
Wine storage cabinet.. Co nvenient
country kitchen. Five bedrooms.
Family room. Fabulous view or the
bay. Three -car garage. Elaborate
souod system. $2.100.000. Fee.
1617 WISTCUFF D... M.I. Ul·7JOO
w.DT -SUPEI AREA
.,..1111111. wtt4 ... I J ... ..._...,,........,OwMrw•W, ........
UDO PENIMSUU FOR $51,000
FamHy reloc~ting out or state and
ne~ to sell their mobile home . 2
bedroom. 2 bath. double wide. Walk to
shops and beach. Owners are VERY
FLEXJBLE!!
UHDH COHSTlUCTIOH OM LIDO
Unbelievable but true with $20,000
deposit, owner will provide wallpaper
and decorating service al cost on this
3 bedroom gem. The time to buy is
now.
UDO EHTEIT AIMING
Lots of warmth and character~· n his
charmin g 4 bedroom home o ge
lot. Den can be converted in o 5th
bedroom. Large landscaped patio.
GIFT SHOP
2 lots in Cannery Village Going
business. owners retiring. Owner will
carry 1st T.O. Can be purchased with
or without inventory.
Have IO«Dethin& to ull? IF\nd what ¥OU want in Classified ads do it well. Dall Pilot Classifieds ..
A URE GEM!
Elegance and quality in this
outstanding Bayshore horn e .
Beautifully designed & decorated .
Extra large corner lot with
s pacious r>atio s and lavish
plantings. Lovely master bedroom
with enclosed sunroom. Absolute
perfection at $495,000 Fee.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060 .
BAllOA ISWI BAYFRONT
......... Z 1t!J w ..._ w• weod _. ;-. 4 ... 6111t ra IOAT SUP,
... w.& Moire .. i..&. s 1.200,000 .........
\fM'ERFRONT HOMES, INC.
lt£AL £ST A Tt s... ~. 1'1-'Y M.411=~
HOISi PlOfan Dramatic· Home -Approx. ,,,_.
Acres -4 BR -Pool -Spa -Re~led Recently -Park 8 Cars + R. V, -Great Location -Can
Kyeep ,!,_!fones. Mal'~ More, On our vwu Property. Only 128t.OOO.
• '•
I
11
I
.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT!Nednttday, January 6, 1982 . ,
.......... ..... ... Wt ............ ........ ....... .... J.... .......b w •• •• .................... •..................... . ....................................................... t••·········· ............................................ .
...... •• C..W... II I' P , ...... 1141 .._. tiff Ma:,.wf.... INt ..._,_.,,, .! HM._., • JZ t' I, • ._. 114 Ml alff .... JI • .. • ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ............... ••••••• ...................... • ................................... _•f•••••• ................ • • ..
' YMIOfTION 116.0llMPrtct LOVILYUll 0C IYOVO• UNftl. A8111 LOAN !aehn1t Pndln1 ••.2~baLY1.dli,lm· Bdr, 6 f1mJly room, 2 Cd£ DI.GM ........ llkfe-CM, •ha" I ltr Ntu lht CoU••• ••d IAM YU tOWll.. I lh AT 11'1. owe. JREAK Group IJIC. lmplO)'tt If rm, 2 1ty. No .,.. •.•• Wt-Im, ,.,., •• VI· Al.LUfftI11d PAID
Qrn'1111a to.do. I lllw • R•I lot W/llU llbappiq, No qu1Uf~l11 I POOL n yra. Hubor Rid•• EVIN •lllft DOWH. Tramltr \UIAt ........ ,.... c• -.
--. -..-. poo1'• roaf6.itu 11,. t .Call IO 1111.ke ll youra. r10· Llh new. lr1 • Br nw>untabJvlew3 BrJba, PMOOA#l'l'Mlll. ~~~~'::!>'::a'f.fr m Olado. 1~BA. "25 JACOllWLn Comput before ,.., -c.u1Wtur8';, Oartll 111. . l8KllatllV2.:.. $121,IOO, w/booua rm Onlr deft. $4IO,OOO · low down. •-•v.ui w rmrt1treati..'100per rm. lit, Lut • Oep. No NWBJY M•IS reot. C111toaa cl•e!t•
T.:: ~ -·-~·;'°.tn~;.:'00:~;',':t Courtuy to blue. y;;,,;• mo. &ubJ•n to rental PN. •Tm f"WIW"f" ~~~~r/: a~:;'e. ~~: . .. .. .., ,.w,i,Vs ·1 SI I l..1~0 ......, , ... Sllll w.tae. Near new •·Pita. 2 aurvey •differed llllln· 'Br ~1 Z~ bi, 2 cer eurrrs. bdrm 1 b ro111d• wllll plua~ ~ 7 . M met ....................... BISJ'BUY JN NB bdrm, I beth acll \\Alt ~. I yean Leutt 1ar. Pauo. MSO Pb : I • a. taamciplaa. ,w .. h ·
IUll-4MOl ~~ 2 Ir 1 Ba, ••llDIMS owaer, larf!.C•pe Cod wWi llnpla~ tncloMd srant IAuee rlsht to >..._.. ~.:'~ apa. 11.000 't'l:'kll*t.Hopttt. -----llilll•I OWDll'wlll ne.!.:~~~ WOODlllMI ~n:.~-~.ooo. Pllio. 1arair.e-..,. lit. :=;,ror 1ub·le11e. 2 ~cllllive t B •~ Ba pl, Newport adll.lt townbouH • nn from ... ..,., eau Curt 11, 111 Sl"tMOl -l>oe ct1h flow. Nowfor;proceul11. ape, leftnia, aec. 1al•. BR 4 aa-.tura, ll"Om M IYOWI• =-BUI Oruody, ..... ..._.. lJN CMIMbeach. llSO. Alt S w/pvtapa,2 + ta, •W.Wllloe, l<Gll'U
lll·Jal !_e.~:.,Jult'1 elrluloce. t,!!'! Wl911ALLY ,,._Lec•••f tr,m.tlll. ...................... 8Gla 2Ho\4 BAH2 tar t•r.1n.:r Newly decor. 1 Br. dpll,
•90MHOUU uirlUIUI '"'
1
""" '-~will ·12t. .. 811.boalaludWaterfront MDPOR'l'SMOUTHD.R. •I otp. "°° · aep. by au. Qltlel. Bdrm COlldo wUI let you ftAID .. ~ laacb. DOI .,.._. cany ' ., 3 ..... 2 •·. Y•= ren· y....... •arb w/-c~··. MMm7 *It IS JBt.lBa.lar,.yard live In labuloul Wood· .Uiatl1111u .. Pt0P1eread C111YDr.UQiqtM2Wrm Ytlll oo I on bome1 ... ---• .. .. ..:;::::.=:..:..------j l!nWd over .
ll&J!!.,..IU.o?U,AI!:. bridletoronl.Ytt•.•· thla month'• National l'r\be,lal'ftllvlDllbd wlU1 tu.ooo dwn . tal 5.Mo. 7 7. reacleled 1tha • It, Noe!+f!IO.Ml·l•t.
OCEANVIEW2 Br. 2
1
81. Call tor detafia •your =c relaUve to din. area. Excellent m.!.500 c.w .. .._. )12 ~1:-:Z '750 a Br 2~ a twnbu "10. AUrldlvt funt. lft
deck, yard, HC sate. penonal itlspmloa. Harbor60.C -Bly, Udo, Pea .. Oceanl ~ ...................... ss:s/moyrly-I 1 Br a9t. l>ttl. patio •
.. .v. Owner l·l30-M40, ~· ~-~~· p ....... •. Vlew • .Eboulh 1pace to .. ·" . 1 c..t?!•••• M•• ... 2 """'••atet u!!! fl:-:e. Muurec.noa.
--,.,..... WUI ·-""' 5 ... 0 '" fer K.atJiy act f4tS086 ~c arocean view . --·•• • -... ...._ 6•1 1400 pet. 121')4 ·510., =--~I .. ._, ~u.a~-:.-=k ... •.• ear-11 b··'ld ..... 20.000. MUST ... yrsnew. -•uano · .,. .,, ... -,.. •z•z ..,.._,...,.._,
...,,.,.IN ~YearNew le•lll obn Ca~I for ippt Er..! frbi.ont • . . a+ family formal din-....................... --• • ZZM-BRlltJtnDr. ~ ----....•, 11o...1..t... to '" th& br1od new ' s..sw, m,•1 y. 1 1i szooo 1'wllbaf a BJl 3 BA rec ""-AiJt, a Br. Adlllu owe... .. M• ~. ~ 2 SS1·3M lisUQ8 ol fa~ bay-..,., 22 DtW condo• w /13 .:li:J:0 apa. I (Id, 2 car ,a,, bolt aUp S!AVJEW, 4 br, 2~ ba, only,oopeta.
Complettoety rechmo3dBelRed3, bit.II tamUy bocne bo:ll ms~rn•u i'k•1. •~• OCMii Y1i cstm borne and .. R. .......... I ~1••·1 SZSK 5d wn. ,..__._ .......... _ •2z /mo MM054 + I.rm, belt ocean view• 541-*3. l~bltal bea ' · lovelydinin1arulhlt's LowornodownCondoln youbel.be,iiacl&eoltbls i=NW•t .,.,,._..wn carry yrs. _..__ • ......, JJ44 pool/lenn.le/aec. Sl.IOO. '150/mo.MobiJebome .1 8A.Ptrfett.,~.eoor... pe""-. for •nt•rt1'-'n1. '-"--.a-at ···umabl• 1175,000 pnce which lD· 3BR, 2BA, Pool. Owner m-55GO . •••••••••••••••••••••• )Q).3129 """'' .. ... lW u~llllC ... -... udes _.. Cl Property 2 Br. l Ba. •••o•••••••••••••••••• ..l::::4,;=-=:;__----1 Br. XIII& cond. Adult., UllllllOOI: ~fS comlorllble family loan. f!ms., 1 tarp parcel of · t UNITS C.M. LO AS· bOl.lae In high tr1mr Twnhome, new 3 br, 3 ba, 3 Br. 2 Ba. or 2 Br. 2 Bl. ~~ aecure lltl
Reiltors,t"IMOOO room ind 1 buutlful CallTlm1 nUM-6535 --s••••·yy y-...WJSUP SUllOWC ~~3ATP~;4N area ol Westside Coata ~. car. P1rk.l.._pool. Den. Stepe lo beach. ~Blvd,..,_U73.
:=======brick flrephce . _,__ _. U ~· · Meaa.TerriflclorAnti· Jac.p!5/mo.133-~7 fl1>1c.S'11115/mo. Prole 11ion1lly SPACIOUS 611-Jlll Altttlt.lon builckre/ de-ONLY.Aatf7M383. que Shop, .Accounting Woodbridge Eslite PROPERTYHOUSE IL lk9'•.._. 3740
landsc:1ped lot .with is the only w 1y to lipn. See thls home in 4-p&ex in Sota M1ria, gd crnce, Law Office, etc. Hoene. 4BR. z~BA, fem 803850 64.2·1010 .. •••••••••••••••••••••
pleat( or room for a deecribe lhi1 lovely 4 YIU.A l.UOA prtV1te community wilb cond. Positive c11h. Xlnt parklna. Will dis· rm. djn rm, lrplc, patloe, 3BR. 2BA, Pvt Loe, 2 H.l.'1 FINIST
pool Located nur bdrm. 2\.IJ b1. home. (lr."""-or•---t permitareMtyforexcit· $W,OOO,(nt)5"-5975. ctmremodellngw swt. lake, Pool It Tennis Pools. friae. W/D, NB. Spaniabt:lltateLiviD&I ·
._._ y,.. ... -le Pool your .......... ,_ . ..,., sq. e1· YI ege1. • o. _..... .... , .,.,c .... Soulb Coast Pl111. ~'-'"" wilb the faml· ---ini lddit.ioo. Owner will ~ """"' ft Pri ·1 •1000 Ill _,,. ,_. Lu. t .,_ D•p Bfal&lful park-Uke 111.r·
'204,800. Owner will con· ly in mind. Fam. rm. -. ..-.. • su._u.inate to Cooalnll'· ~...,.TS!'. c d n g t be y 1 rd ~1327. ~118. Office lltl"312 7•11135 eves. roundl.011. Ternced sider 111 otren ! Call and 3 bdrms. on one resources. ldul two Uao loan with~ down. ~ S500 I mo . 548 . S4 42 . 7SG'7 pool. Sa.nkeo su bbq,
LUXURY DUPLEX,
919-ZJIO level. Kuter bedroom bedroom villa for your Fut eKrow poaaible! h{ic~ld~'4t.380r.!:; 110-5829. ....aut ....... ~ •• ~ ... ~ BR Bhlls. 3 br, 2~ ba. Fam 1p1rll:lln1 fouotain1. T ... .,, S\ite«>ttupiestheentlre flnl home. Fresh 11 a •.ooe incllades IHd. .... •Uiugv.;a • rm. pool SllOO mo. Sp1clou1 room a .
2lld level. Good location. d 1I1 y . 0 p e D s t 0 cau Jeff Bertuleit for atWoui. IZS0,000. CON00·3Br. 2"'i Ba. lg 3ba. 3 Cir,.,, 2100 sq ft . 78N:JIM 875-~ Separate dloi111 lrtl. SO. OF HWY . Two --~----apaclow 3 Br 2 Ba +den ... So CMll ,._.
units. Upperhu mioi·vu 12".--YA
u.soo flaptooe P•lio. $148,000 detalla. IYCO, IMC. m 1 • t e r b d r m · Gll'dener ind 11soc. pd. OCR ENT ALS W a I k ·In c 1o1 et a •
· auurnable at 12% 64J.SZOO m•>MS-2251 w/balcony, dbl gar1ge Need q111llty renter l·.Sbr'sfrom$200up homelike ll:llcheo It
ti ocean. LaWld~ !P• e ------~ In ~•rh u.nll. Aa]acent to ~ .... • Tard Lew option Is avail•· w/opner, frpk, central w/cood refs. Rate It 7:i0-3314 7 days.Jee cabi.neU. Wilk to Hunt· ble.PrictdatSU9.~. --siss.ooo .vac.S750mo.2182 Maple termanegot.752-5740 d . 1 b ...... -Center.
Irvine Terrace. $449.~ '7S.17 •111n&A '105 Ro 979 5370 o Awar winn ng 3 + r M.....,. .: *Cote Really Located in C.O.ta Mesa . 0 . r 3 BR.1¥4 BA, J& din/UV· dpl1, 2 batht, modern lBdrm·fum.$415 two 2 Bdrm 2 Ba un its llM·Dlli. in& rm. encl P•tlo kitch w/bll·ins, lg rncd ~ & Investment are creat rentai.. They 3BR-.,2BA. Fem rm. Kida mot111:1 ev~63n843 yd, pur opt '655. Adultl, no pet.I.
' 64().5777 have Plliol It 11rages. OK. No pets. t;o singles. 3 Br. l"" Ba. Woodbridge OC·RENTALS 750-3314 UUliUea Free!.
ll11LC-•t• c-.... '"!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!~l "'!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Aalwm 95K lit loin ind ST15/mo. l7S4 Iowa St Condo. Close to schools 1.,, "" 644-1836 2Br 2 Ba, ""bill bch, dbl LA QUINTA HERMOSA 1-.------•I S..Ch •• 1076 OWC2nd. 1-3 B. ond b & lake. S'TOO/mo. Aviil cu. frpk, RV /boat l62l1 Part1lde Ln, l blk
._,
1
• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "4"' r t' o. 2'h a. tmmrd. Robin 4t7·2541 storage, lent'. yard S700. W. ol Be1ch, 3 bill• S. of 't513 ~NSl>a:1"~-... AMCE ..-....iua DOW... car. sml yard. frplc Of'.,·3331 en River. 8*-3567 S'~lAa-OM UDO ""'_......, " D/W, S67.S /mo avail ......_~
875-Htt
E.SIDECHAIMER ...,_.odi 1041 5 ~custom de· = lar:./~~~~~~ 1/15/82 673-2282. 9 to 5 UNTAL.S ZBR Condo. Adult 147-5441 C.W .. W. I022 Priced to sell now ! ....................... cor1ted Is an escep-wkdys. lBr,lBa ~ ·eom~ex.2BA.NrHoag. WlFn..ETREEAPTS
•••-•••••••••••••••••• Comlll.remodeled.lofaOCEANFRONTModulu tlonal valye. value s...-3BR,3 BA,pooltenrus. 2Br,1Ba 1700 :50o 0•11Jg_~ftDep. lBR fum .. 1rm,1aun1,
0411GOMIA kind + llnancing. Type Homes, 24 hr. formal dining room & 1 c.,1,.,.. 1071 gd. ICX'. twnhme Lon 2Br,2Ba $850 __ gs. 7 Jacuul, vo ley ball,
New tle1anl • Br Vic· &t6-5a16Kathy, 1gt . securit~. "'9 '!'i pvt bch flmily room. Lite, airy j ....................... 96H688or675·3455 I 3Br,2 ~ SSS0-1835 Harbor Vu Homes. 4BR. bHket ball Ir tenn1s.
tori1n putial vu, + f1stµng pier. Cedu &spacious. ' AIAHDONED *Clean 1 bdrm duplex ! I LeRaisorRlt 833·8600 2BA, Sl07.S. Avail Jan 846-0819
ownr /contractor rinan. ONLYSIOS,000 Cottage type, redwood ASAD SACK of a once LohfwS. 2200 ClfStptiog.Qulet.$350. Woodbridge Chateau 2 17t.h.6'4-4157/760-9312 •-ltedi 3741 avall.1&75,000. 3 Br 1 Ba. Priced to sell deck, pool. guuded · No • .., "•74 bdrm 2 b C I W-''" to...... b 3 bd 2 ...,..... -· beautl!ulhome!Bul -lt •• .. •··~· .. •••••••••••• pets_ . ..,. . a .. rp c .. pro-..,... ~ac. rm, ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------i now. Unbelievable gate. 1dlt1 only. No sill on almost an acre; NIMELOTS l&2BRTrailers."iiii5& fessionally decor1led, bahome,commpoolFor OCEANVIEW •W411'BIACE : financing. Kathy, agt 900. 489-3811 has swim pool. 2 frpks, m PCH. zoned C·l . owe up + Sl.SO Sec. No endoeed ga rage, $875 mature couple no dogs. Fireplace, garage, util.
41MM·Fll j '*':ial6 ....._Yielo 1067 ' lam i:m ind overlooks piper or exchange., Children or Dogs rmnlblys.52-5211 S850 mo on yr lease. pd.,yud.*-'171 Sunny, ligbt-n-brigbt ....................... 4lhf11rwayatSanJu1n K.at.hy,•&l64&-5C*i 642-9193 urtlerork 38R, 2BA . 642-361118 . Ml prt9"1di 1769 and new co t.M market ...sA YllDE LADAlli Hills coll course. Aban-Vi • rd -~ Fem Rm. Frpk. Fncd Harbor View Homes. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• with brick lroot, side 3 bdrm, 2 bath, lrpk, dbl owe •lt30.000 dn. 4 Br doned by elderly folks VIEW LOT iew._pn v ya • gar. r yrd. ll50. lsl & last. Sec Br. Den, frplc'. I arc! OCEANFRONT 2. 4 Br.
ind re1r pat ios .. g1r1ge, A·l cond +lam nn +pool and and up for gnbs Of. a,z..Paclfic Ave. CM. 1~.~·~e':64247s2 dep. Avail Jan 1.Sth swil1U1llllcpool,Ja~uu1. AVlil Winter. WeekJy i
hardwood parquet floor· I ~!SOO. Owner wiJI 85· spa. Sl82.~. Open Sun $5000 DOWN fered alJl.50.000. LLa.nd Manon, •fl 648 5096 OC R.ENT LS Cbtld tr P ets OK . 2 car ~ar1_1e., pnvate lilmhly.fn.7171. l'n1 throughout. Xlot . sist lD rinancing. J•R 10. Call f-d-'11''-. NB cCIOdo owe p1-r alone worth this.) Owner auiat. . A 644-5444 I 0 c It I 0 n In c I dts
-"' ..,. "' . ,,,.. . a....-.~I....., ~-ma l·S n~rw's/lofwroomrno$2d00epup ~ ...... bridge. 2 stry, 2BR. cardener, pool.. service. Want aomel lbinc xlra local.loo • fess tba11 100 I loJ McC...., lltr. Dill\lle Crain Ir Assoc. ~ Ill olfen. Prin. ""--P.....L..& ~ 1·-;'/41 ·v ......... Av a 1 I. F eb . 1 5
l . s pee 1 a I n 1 2 Br.
p1ces from Sl,000,000 541-771' 714!S3f.50 on!}'. Klthy •ct 848-SOM - -• ·• 2450 750-3314 7.days iee B'JBA. Pool. Spa, TenniJ $1400/roo. TI0-0347. T~e, completely ~~~. a.alR!!!l,ooosticwal1.ly OMBANXIOUS ...,..._.,wJVt..w ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......... ~ .. · ... """I I I' 2br 4tLake.W75Mo.Lease. rwn.111115.Mo.780·91!1. ............ -lh 1r.•y5-m10 ~,;.~ 'ciirco ()11..,.htlll.. LEISURE WORLD· ....... ,, " ... n a·. rg 7S8-0US,97.S·7909 . F.astblutcs 4 br, family "'
combioaUao of assuma· -2 STOIY .-_. Re.!od tile': f1mil~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Laguna Hills. Single w/gark. 'bdb-q yat10. boo~· Woodbridge. 3BR. l~BA room. lge yard. 642-5161 IALIOAIAY CLUI bleandC]W'Mrfilllnclng. -Spacious Agea.n Heights room w/blt in b1r ...... .._, family home,-ownera ups , 1 s • pets o • ., Condo.M mo. or&to.8l07 Luxury Exec. Apt.
CaUDOW loc&ledlnlh.tMesadel 2 Br . 21so s q It 1400,000. C1ll today. ForS. 1100 <01te 111 will swap ~~!~ALS 750.33· 1· ~l-2215 Roomy 3 Br, 1 Ba, NB Ocean view. "50/mo. 644-721 I Mar ue1 ,. c loae to townbome with extra 642·6173 or 646-5096. ••••••••••••••••••••••• bomea on tn1l buts. QC~,. , 1 B loft brook area. lrg yard, 1Vail im-_llG-_11102 _____ _
• ~ ~ ·~~~!nt ~ f:emi~or:~lh~! Mary Larrick Agt. OCEANFRONT Modular Pbanea-0521 ~s~1de 2BR Spanish. .,i:, IMl :ves yo~ med. tllOO/mo. For info
just ri&bt for I large two large bdrms. Terms Type Homes. 24 hr QlofSNte 'diain&. yll'd, Encl '((Ir, i L' .d H t agt cell Cyn, DVll Inc.
(llllily. Covered plltO available 00 thla slll.rp l«\ll'lt~, "'9 mi pvt bch Pla:rtv 2600 ~=:: ~~00 mo m-~D I ar • ...:;~-'-'1.-020;.;...'-------
aad lrefs. Nnr 011 Ole investment. Sabmtt ill MEWPOITHGTS + fl.stung pier. Cedar ..... ~ ... ••••••••••••• Bluffs Condo . 388, martet It $165,000. Call off AskiA $140 l50 Cllled drive. secluded .s cottage type. redwood FOUR SEA.50NS or NW 3bdnn, l'l'lba. rim rm. 2"'9BA New Crpt/Paiot --------1 S.WJ i.:...L,lit, · Bdrm home + sep1r1te decll. pool. guerded parld.iH. $1800/icre.120 din rm. den. fflllc. 2 car 2 car 'car Frplc IBtlO. DUf'LD Dm.PoW 14441 motbtr·in-l1w unit. ate. adlta only. No acr.. 10 ml. Spohne. gar. ~/mo lst +sec. Wkdys, 73i-3383. Eves,;
OlaYenlent location leH Sltl,IOO. Terms. Rbt. · 900. 41119-311_6_ WA. X1nt bldg sites. Va Avail now Debbie · TbeLak lBR Lo.st C -Wknds 640-a36
thaa2blocufromshop-Find what you want ln Kllliken.831·121116 C1H•tl.Gh/ mi. pned front1ge ~112. _ Tes .. p I .5°~· '
J>lnc. 3 bdrms. ind 2 DailyPilotCluaJfieds. I Cfypfia 1500 ~GOOf:lhunt~ng.fis· E!SlDE2br.lba,ff11k .2 ~·una~~ th°:'Laee: HCAMY9NLSE b1tb1 In each unit .1'!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ I ·~. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ l skiing within 30 car gar SSSO/mo. Avail. SS2.S ·Days 752.8200 1 2 BR McLain Condo Fireplaces, separate 11...il.RC!"'VeaDE ... ..,_..odi 10" ' 2lotaln Pinecrest lawn, f111D· '1ex. terms. Ideal Feb. l. Owner agt, Eves.558-.95il ., Sll2Spermo.Ca11Gerry
ms,c811>'lsanddrapes. °"8tandlng 3 Br 2 Bi ' I Whittier valued at ~)927.az:s5<Dkk l COie to So. Cst p1-;1 L.,..•a J241WttI1t11 l2fl
Jarages, porches, blt. ~" "" ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• Relit Hills Mem Park. mvestmenl property. l 644-lQIS. ~ 673-1781 or760-tm
~ 7 years old. Oners !::. ~a:ru ;.·::y I "43./e1. Wiii sell for ltd....,.. Grttnbrook Home ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• have boucht elsewhere. finucing at below A A MO/ea.5.s7"908 &dl•g1 2100 BR.2 ba. Uv. fam. DR 2 ~EANFRONT Modular lmmlcul1te 3 Br. 2 ~ $319,000 12~% flnaoc. 1111rtet rate of lnte.rest. • • C r.w ....................... car gar. Snell fenced l YP~ Home~. 24 yr new urpeu, • PllUll. in&! , Full price of only Pl 1rtp 1600 dylBrlrvmecoodo yd. 900mo. Sl.200dep secunt~. ~ ':111 pvt bch ~enced yard, gudener
17141673-44" Sl21,IOO.Call751-31tl ... :.! ................ $22,000 equity. F /P fi40.6140 ' • ~ .... ~sbinf pier.edCe:!!j uxld 9!?50/mo. Isl. last 12 I JI u~m• Slt.6.000. Otange for! Mesa Verde 4 B 1 ...._..e ype. r w + secunty. 842-4740
FD __ · '· r. pood · • deck, pool, guarded C .. , , HARBOR ..........__.. .a--• .. E I SAL£ N rt !!etch . Back newcrpttrpauit.gar en I gate, adlts only. No *'I '.u I
SB.La IOUIHT AN01HEI
Beautiful Mesa Verde 3 BD w/fam.
room . Located on a quiet
cul-de-sac. Seller will carry a lg.
~<!:. $175,000.
RCTaylorCo ·
C'14Q -<.)C)QQ
'"'-I 044 ht.I I 044 ........•.............. .... .................. .
Dir
llAUTN. llltfTWOOO Assume
hlah balance loan ·on this lovely
Woodbridge TWNH.M. Spacious
2BR+den, 21hBA, 2-Car garue.
wet bar, _pri vate beach alon1
w/pool 4' lake privileees. *292.SOO
Myrna Boom 551-870Q.
Pltem TO sau Lowest priced 3
BR, 2·story . Carmel. Fiiled
w/trtcHlional "Cottaae Charm"
th1a home bwJt by Broadmoor
bu wood noorine in the fam rm
' ktttben. Assumable lou. To
'" ii to buy! $164,900 Lorralne
Reid 551-8700.
""'"''""'" IVTVRY-ewpo . ltpooher.SBS0.546-9950 . doga. From $775 mo . U.fwwlaMd 3425 This cozy 3 BD. 2 BA + (am. Rm. in Shopping C)enter. 18.000 Bay exec condo. 2Br 2"'9 F.astside $500/ H •3816 ••••••••••••••••••••••• H bo Vi 1 h sf with credit tenants. ~a. usumable 11 t.;'X-yard 3' Bdrmmos .Houu11see .' TOWNHOUSE end unit. ar r lew near comm poo as Pr i me c o rn e r -f1~. 21., yrs 145.000 nds ~air and ('leanln Spec. view 3 br. frpk, like new. 2BR 2BA. din· good assumable loans and is priced Anahei m. s1.43o.ooo eq11tyfor. eau"9"to 5 752.5040 :r h1rdwd nrs, deck, nr mg, lg patio, balcony.
to sell. $237,950. ' Cash (No loan). Net in-Realtor, 7~11111._ <1.97-1852 ' lown/bdi. .S. 494·6930. AIC. frpl. self-dean
RAU come $150 .000 /Yr Three bedroom, 2 year ZBr 2Ba2 ti.,. 3bdrm, 2ba, Emerald oven, drapes. Sec. gate. Find in Spyglass thi s w e ll Ground lease-60 Yrs: oldhome ln Cla1rmont. tyPool~0•r.comm Bay.2atory,nrbeach, pool. rlubhse, sauna.
maintained 3 BD, Fam. Room 20 Yrs fl at Ca II : WiU n change for home PROPERTY HOUSE lovely . Sl200 I mo QI.let, nr Fwys S670 No Owner /Broker. (714) or rondo in Newport .,..,_1G<A ,,.21010 1%13)51471. pe'l.577~2580. 751-0796 beauty has it all, including 833-2237. Area.Can1ddcuh ....,_,., ...
mountain and city light views . 67W964 581 PARK DRI VE ....... ..,_. 3252 ~Coedo.
Vacant. 38r. 111 re· •••••••••••••••••••••••• Owner will assist $549,000. i--------13' prime OC prop. Ex· decorated & new cpts Exec. 4br. ~ba. Cam rm . 3 DOtfTOYllLOOI( HEWPOITIUCH change for T.D.'a. Huge yd. 1750 mo cargar,v1ew,nrocean.
Pool and spa in old
Coronadel lfar. 1 bdrm. Ocean~. Also 2 a.nd 3
bdrm.673-32'1111·5 This quality 4 BO, 2Yl BA Spyglass Hilb visibility. C-3. 7$Z..5lll, 831-11211 Bun 0wner 549.2042 sum. 974-3420. Ocean view. l20 n. fron· ..:~=~A&lL.;..· ____ , with breathtaking views of ocean & tage. Use existing build· •L....1 ._.......... -Ellec .. 4br. 3ba, ram rm. 3 Soacious 2 Br. 21,; Ba.
city lights. Call (or details $649,500. ing ol 4000 sq. ft. or bui~d w:.':i 2900 D.. ,.. 3226 $icaf.8:it~~: nr OCt!ln. ~b::.ge~~/tdi~:
. IEST YALUE 10,000 aq. ft. Owner w1U ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• .... •••••••••••••• CU H up, pool, spa. Upgraded in Spyglass, this 4 BD home on carry. $715,000. 631-7300. Pvl ply looking for home 2 bdrm. pvt yard. p1tlo. N1 El. S ORES·3Br. . M
choice formal lot. Motivated seller Realtor. to buy on lease option ~er. Cas pd.· :0 g~~e4:.~~1; ~L M'fm~· S750~~6oo
Sa " ubnu't all offers " • .,.,., 000 · 1 Bick B• Y • 1rv1 n e > · 681·3526 _.,, Woodb ·d ys S . ~. . C .... l1l•1/f0w• Z'J.fUO Flbulous ocean view 2 ;_... mo. n ge 3 TWAMSFIUID 58.UI ..... ..__ .. I 7ff Br Condoa Hlgbly UP· MONARCH SUM MIT· 1 BR.'6 mo. lease. Pvt yd, · d t t II th· 5 BO & """ :....... · b · Ocean View 2 + den no pets. 559.3194 : lS espera e o se lS ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,.. gr.._., wu er/dryer, 1 · · 1157_.133 Fam. Rm . & pool. Spyglass view Leisure World Condo. For ••••••••••••••••••••••• rein&. stturily g1ted. poo,..,,.. S77S per mo -'--""'-'------
h OnJ $695 000 Silt By Owner. 2BR, ...._,_...... pool, tennis. S'lOO/mo. m......, WEHAVERENTALS ome. y • · 28A. Uparaded carpets. ....................... A&t •5180. San Juao l BR·S47.S., SJ 3
RCTaylorCo
h40-9000
•s· ON LIDO l•YFIONT
Mediterranean gracious livfug.
Dis tinctive architectural
d etails, 4 BR. ram rm, marble,
custom tiles. Master suite w /2
fuJl baths, & skylight dressing
rm . Dock ror lllrge boat. ~~ooo Dona Chich ester
HllGH'I 0. .. AMCI The view
f ro m th is magnificent
Mediterranean VIiia is
unparalleled. Ocean, harbor, golf
courses, mountains. Appr.ox .
6 500 14. n ol the ultimate bl elerance. Harbor Rlqe custom.
Pool, spa. sauna, EnCOu.nter the
beitht o/ luxury. Appro1 .
$1,815,000 ln exiltin& fbianring.
.,C0>,000 SuwVae ShUJer 642-8235
Great View. $85,000. c:.e..._. 1124 BT.. )2J2 BR. SS9S . Irvine·
714·545·7101, Kon·Fri. -••••••••• .. ••••••••• •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• !.BR·S450. 768-6661 or S..5. 714-770-833113-SPM. Newport Heigbta 3 lidrm. HOME FOR RENT .,.1.3211 aant Dan
I~ Pr rt ZOO 2 bl. frplc .. 11rdener. 3 Bdrm. '650. Fenced Ylefo 3267 T• ... ••• ... -..... ~::? •• -.... :.S~11
St. S700/mo. ~ !i::::,~eis~:;:: ! .. ifOi(~·roR·1H:~H··0 .. ~.~~~~ ... !!~~
INCOME MIJJfOrtlndi )l6' dep. 545-2000. Agent. no 3 Ir 4 Bdrms. $650-'67.S.
PIOPllTT ••••••••••••••••• •• •• •• fee. Fe n c e d y a r d s 6 Sl'ICIAUST UDO ISLE ch1rming • "'811• Y6y J2l4 garages. Kids Ir pets
bdrm. 2~ bath, lrg sun· -·•• .. •••••••••••••••• welcome. lit mo + dep. from 3-19 units. IJ1 pttjo, completely up· 5 Br. 2~ Ba. split-level, 3 I ~2000. A&ent, no lee.
Tern nallable lo suit ~ 11700 mo. Yur-car gange. redec, pool .... ,.,, •ect. )Hf
yourattds. . BiJJ Grund 87S-6161 pri v 11. No pets .......... •••••••••••••
' Lill It "4Jll 11!/mo. -.am. ulxulT IAYNOMT
• <lualfled Ads ire rt1llv It I --IHdl H4t 3 Br. 2 Ba. With boal allp. IDllll "peopletopeople"I'· ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• Av al I. now. M 1 n y ND!W1W\'! ~ Ales ciUI with bl& rt· $11btooeean. Elea1nt2 1menlli". $3$00 Mo .. ~ !!!.!! adenl\l and big re· Br. Paml)y Rm• Den. Brmer87S-41J2.
714/841·0763 1ull.l l o /lace your .llo. Pllllh crpta, 2~ 1aim-------i 292S Collece Ave ~ift a • caJI today Ba. Cedar 6 glue, 111n. TM1•-.
C ea.5171. · deck, dbl cer prv __,... Co,,t1 Mesa, A_ IU•&.•i .~ully mi Int. 8plicloUI •bdrm, 3 bath,
yri MNIU, no pet.. ID· ram. home. N..r palnt.
qa,.. It 511 ath. St. carpet. llovt lll ready .an. Slmo per month. Ast.
Nr bucll, Jbdrm, 2b1, .. -.-!!!!!!!!!!•'••••• n. Gardeotr lllcl. No r-... llZ·D. Bllllot lllud Waterfl'Olt
H<lllS POil RENT I a-. 2 lie. Yearty rH·
I 8drm1. MTS-'750. tal. . llo. f10.0M1.
reoctd yard• 6 SPYeLASS
fara,.. Klda 6 ,.ta Ocean • ol1ht view,
weleOmt. lit mo + clep. 4bdrm, lam rm, s car Mio •• APal. DO fM .
•· 3 ... I~ ba, famJly nn. CMl All ...... ; ......
THE
"GOOD
LIFE"
YUA·AOUHO FUN:
Social Activo1111 01
•e<:IOI •Free Sunday
Brunch • 880 s •
Pa• hes • Plus mote
Gflf:AT AE~TIOM
feM1f•FrMl-
(p10 & pfO lhc>pl • 2
Helllll Clobl• Sauna
• Hydromesnge •
Sw1mm1ng • Golf
Orov1ng A1r111e
IEAUTIRJl APTS:
S•nglu I & 2 Bed·
1ooms • Furn11111d
& Untumcshed • Adult
Lov~g • No Pets •
Mooels Open 011ly
9 IO 6
Oakwood
Garden Al*tlMl'lll
Newl)Oft leedl N.
880 Irvine tel t61M
(714) 645-11(14
Newpof1 leedl s.
t 700 16111 St •Po•., 11 t&1o1
(71 4) 642·5113
Balboa Bay Cl ub, 2 BR
rro lo mo lo memben.
psclO. 640-9805
SHORT TERM
Beach rent1la, 21tl bdnns, avail. by week or
rmoth. A&t, 875-1170.
BEACHFRONT 2 BR, 2
BA , w1nler only ,
SS70/mo unfurn 1lso
51182
'f&t:::.4 .............. , ....... .
..... ....... )116 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Balbv1 bland W1ter-rna. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Ye1tb'
rental p?S/mo. 770-0347.
.._, ..... llt7 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Bachelor. Wilk to 8e1eta
• Sbopa. "!!.'Unit. No noe .... ,_.1 ~
2bdnn. • yearly. Near
btadt. MUihali Rt11tf: m.o.
New HR, 2BA. View. Jae, UU. Yrty .
211·721·7272, D171 .
1 .I
-Orange Cout DA.IL V PILOTJWtdnhday, January&, 1982
.!.!~ ""2 Mn.-r-1 .... -.......... -itfitiii,..,lifb _ .... . ~ ............. -.... O.INIUW-~ ... ' ...... 4411 ....... 11.T... Wl'-'i Hit IWIW..W ,,.
__._,,.,, ... ., ... •••••••••··~·" ........ , ............. -•••••••••••••••••• "•-•••••••••••••••• -11•••••••••••••• -•••••h••••••••••••• 1'Z1f ltJI -•11•••••••,•••••••• •••r .................. .
CliM'iilMlr 1111 Clilllt ..... • JIM......... 11411 llJbol Iu. • • ..i "'-•l,...•t• for LIJamBT iS(nor~ Whq fl ........................ Coet·•·PGO· Bil w/aome MIALB
_,111111111111 ... , .......................... _,, ................. t 1Ndlf l ttdea1tttt, 8tlbol .._apt. IT&.l., llOO aq.ft. tor ltaH .... v-::t~• Arnqenowfor Orey. a~ 1rt old. No flP l~ ~ui· --..rACVl.AI OCIAH ~ Tt1plt1, a bdnn. l br thtdlo, oft street ~h'otlt.f15.f7.0 aftlpauedwbda. Pttllty ol parlllna 4' homuquityloau Olllar. Vic CM. wt-'1 la MaaadM Sala. •ctn UOlftl VJIW: .... u,,.u, lnodry, prq, mo-to-mo, lmmcd. Hu 1 • fur a room Part NtwPOrt Twnble to bloc II to Wutrllff, Xlm aboo lot. on Bal~ tolW.~orinore. ,..l,f7J.22U Territory Aullablt:
,,....., ftNl, lart• ...,,.-0 ,.u. p W occ .• 2 blU to be1cb. w/priv1tt entrante ' lhr w/prol penoa, ten· "-tom lftterior dnlp Ptft.,1Ufooctt!.~t.ra · Compe«tJverelf!i· Loll: Cat. Himalayan Saddlebacll Valley, a It .,... AatlloftJ WllOdtlDd. maeoo. DIUSMMS be Lda ofclOHt apace nil racquetball. llealtb Rudy to move In' Com· flc to~~ 0erry Put, friendly service Lone Ha! ) VI lltll' Newport leach. Mrt.
•callMM1$T,wllad1 •-•BR 28 .. ,.._...,...t 1 BR view tplc declla To 1ln1le penon, no sea etc f40.7•'. peUtlve rates, call Rob, pa..apl t ~t. reel 8'7•1 i. .... ,_ CJ REcW. •RO' llodft f40.tl01 .... ... • • "' -.,... • • • • • 111\chm:nio~MO-INS -• &sl.-, ate or~ •lore, art BranchMana1er a-.w. •· " · • Dnpea Nr Schools. ldlt.I, no pet.a. tm mo. Mature Womu. Non &hop office etc llOO JUDI FRANTZ Hurtbrollen Family Apt Ma1111er, mature -. llA Condo. Stpe lo Kida OK. No Pets. Oya IU·llU, eva Room and bath. rem. Smkr. Wanted to Shr Qilc.om executJve office, m> Sn.au S73·3930 c IT ~.oanclalSvc 54M'1M 780-7111 couple. Beaut main· kl frDlc. llacl Oar. SS7·1177 •·81 SI 0 0 ! mo · .. a n Y Beautiful Home In HB. 400 eq. ft Pvt balb with .,._:.,•&a• f ' 1 . 320 isir1Beach 81 · , -b 1
' ht F 8 -taiMd. 44 Wlill, COit• Adulla. lill tto-aao 1mel\IU•. eu.aue evea, -..1763 ahower Balboa Penln --~ oru e. •Q ... u..<: m w pr M.a. Adult.. no peta. · mo Nll•COMH>IT Srnl Studio, nr Malo &T7.antdYS wf2women.,...· l100 · llGCJ · rt loo& term leue HwlUnatoou.ach l n1cr Sp1nlel w I A&Jt + ial/boaYt Wkdya HA, llA. Frp lc, 2 L ;.s-1 e R Apt Beach. Gd kllrh. MOO Fem. t1share1orteou1 rm. · l>tautlfully decorated° t..oana,aecuredby Westminater Uc , Irvine ·
c1r,ort SpacH. Com· Downatalra W/PaUo ' UWincl.-..aou L& Bdrm, bualneu furn. twnhse w /reap Lovely office on Lido NBarea. , icombin•tiooof Woodbrid&e 891·9174 , -M~,M;;..;;12-·tll01-.....-.·----
..aty Pool. Avell Jan l Yard. P'rpl~ OW Pool l Bdrm loft apt. Frplc ~ or •tudint, refa worklng female. Un· Pen. prol, ~or. ready &12-8202. reallcperaonal ~7-2537 A.111 ~hn
'IL •11Aue. Dave Spa Carport, No Pet•: atove, rdri&. dlw, ablki req d. Kit. prtvlte1ea. be Ii e va b I e room 1 to rmve In, 950 aq fl, re· property. lat q, nr So. Coaat We have aevttal open·
Scbwelcllerl 84MZ3S Wt; Qnly "'5 2'SO ~a.n. lll/l11t + ~ utll. 64S-m wtwaterfalls, etc. $300. aa. 6'15-GOO wlldyi ar••L ••:e.et Plua blktwht Shepherd ln11 for t•perleneed
!Ya,IU-tl'4af. Harla.5a-aM7 · m>tmo.4.94·7222. llluUr w/BA. Pool, l1t 4c NB/CM area. 780·8045 So.o,..;..C..tw on~BI~~ 1280 sq. ••1•c-•/ mix · • K 1 h l u a ·• Mechtnicaf uaemblera
I BJl, cowtyard, 1125 per '270. lBR dplx. Ina quiet ~611 rt IHd 316' Lut. lflS. Ref Check. Space a\lan In atynah Pwuulr/ 7~/6'13·19611 for • laHr mf• firm. mo . 2U ·H1·573Z or sal _, ... , ,.,. 549·7051 Ext 214. Or ...... lawauitaforcomp1llbJe ft.utor11e.35'1q.rt. ....,,... ,., Soldtri11aandU&ht1hop
714-f13..C1M . smok:::;v-;:: ~:~al ....................... 5'S-5l05 ,_.., 4150,· tmant. Includes recep· RetJooomlct 9'5-6700 •••••••••••h•••••••••• '~. l~!t ~~f·~:ir'F: experpttferred.
2 Bdrnt. I bath condo, l rel W th PAii NEWPOIT Nice furniabed room In ....................... tioniat , •nswerina '•1•1cwllh 1100 lea~collar' bell, No. We are • division of
blott to beach. Wuher, . 954. 17 . 541·3829 c--y .... UI pnvate home, C.M. Call Car11e In Corona. del aervlce janitorial ind ,....,, 4150 ••••••••n••••••••••••• CM549-111M Jobn.loo" JohAaon aod
2BR,2BA.NewerApt Bit ~'" -lfter&om ~ Mar S55/mo. nwc:hmore Calico ne .... •••••••••••••••••••Any witneu lo accident u 1ucb ofter 1n u · dl')'tr, refrl1. 2 car ln1. Gar. Adults. No UVIM6 · 710.0347 · rn Gara&e !or rent on mvoMna truck, bone & Found: M Doxie Red ceJieat beneflt packaae. f!~1&7eor. 7!}!,01~ mo. Ptu. MM.MS-4137 Bacbelon, 1&2 bedroom ~~...'!!~t !bbd.!:i. ~:·· seer-~-m4>95l·3MS Balboa Pen. next lo Fun girl, 00 toldeowest bet. lihho11oy Colorln&. Send resume• or apply
·-· _...,, • 2bdrm, lba, kitchen, encl apt.sUownhouses -""I -•c • ~c. auideCo.•-:.:-.-..wp()IT Zone (10.,.,'x20\AJ'), $lSO Ellla/Garfield, Tues. VI c Ed In & er ' at: Laakm1JU1 Electro
3 Bdrm. Z bath coodo, 2 aar East Cost• Mesa . .Ftom~SlOOO 64-4-1900 llOO/iro. (?l4> • Euua ta Mesa $40 ,...SULA roo.673-21M!,173-a930 Dec.2.!lth, U :30AM.Call Maybrooli.W1·7549 ()ptlca lnc., ln2 Calle
car p.ra1e, pool, •P•. ~/mo.M2·4A9. !'() fVE! Apt." Condo F\lm. room or 0 C.C. permo.842-%227642·9'171 Spacious e1eeutlve of· Storage-R.V .. trailer· 962-1763 F'CUld. Doble l-2·82 HB Avl1dor, San Jun.
tennl1. 11200 m o ,,. Femaleonly. llSS aiogle gar. ufe &, flcea acrou from City boat. c ... US/mo .... __ ,...,. prol. Fiddler l.ndlanapolls68ushard Capi1tr1no toff Aero 1»e717 or751-0ll9 1 BR. S3&0 mo. util incl rentals Villa Rentals. 751.0C eves. attutt. 731 W. 18th St. Hall. All ae.rviees av1tl•· Kht cn-0800 "" aJVUIJU f 984-77m Puerto)
lb!lrm,newtydfforaled Adlta, no peta 383 W 875-4912Broker. Room (poss Zl CDM , C.M.873-7787. ble,'optioo1l'.Ftom22S : · 'Accomp. or your EOEM/F /H
Adult.I only. No pets. Bay 548-S5l6 Cku.nfront for Winter nice prlv. duplex to Storage Gara1e. single aq.ft. up. It re11on1ble MK•··-gartaes , rH·pt .. r::.1:v::a~IXS,h~~~~ tlCIO UUJ pd 9wi> l BR, lots of wood Rentals. Furnished & prol., reap., aulet, M, txzo. Costa Mesa. rentaJs. No lease r e· ..... 4650 irthdiy-grams, etc. e':ins;n d Is wallpaper. S38S mo. unlurn. Broker. 675-4912 refs. bse privileges SIG/mo. &12-4907 wkdys, Q\ired. Cal1673·3002 ....................... •3148 Heidi. Female black/
A1t11t•M•1~ Salary, $ll00 up me
Experience Nee. Must
be able lo attend Train·
1n1 School. J 1n 18th
~
--"-'-"'"'""'~...;;;...;;,;;;a""'y1'----Aalr.forBlll,631·1266 OC"'• ... VIEW d'"IUX'" 2 wtndsS..7MS 9-5. <Jfi Jenieo Retirement Home Lott& Fomd SJOO tan Shepherd Parrot C:O.W... JIZ• "'""'' ... ... 1celnCDM,2ndstory forOU'UUanladies.For •••••••••••••••••••••••Female black /trey •••u•••••••n••••••••• Bachelor size, no kit~h. Br. 2 Ba. deck, yard, WES'rCLIFF AR EA Double 11ra1e. storage walk up. euy access. llllo&U·91• "6-33.5l m 11 ed EI k hound
......... ft.. utJI included. E1sts1de brick rrplc ' gar . Roomw/privat~bllh nr or?W/SideColtaMesa. carpeU. drapes, panel-I 644-3656. ~-u "v CM.1225.63l·M16 SECUR . CATE . Hoa1Holpit1I Mature, MS--1•3 uig.450aq.~. Found. easenJi Club
MIWPO-HGTS $850/mo. or lease opt. prol. Cmle. non·sipolter. 675-5444 ...,.,/l .. ttt/ FOUND ADS · h 1 M APAITMIMTS
Beautiful landscaped
garden 1pt.s. Pool & Spa
Covered parking .
Adult.s, no pets.
lBR $435
2BR.JY.BA. ~
161 E. 18th, 6'2·0856
131 E. 18th, 6'6·6816
NEWLY DECOR.
l Br. au pd, end ear
d/Wuber, pool. Adults
641-5073.
2Br. l Ba Apt
Newly decor. Gas pd
encl aar .. pool, dshwr
Aduhs. 642·5073.
3 Br Townhouse
Newly decor gas pd ,
encl gar .. pool, dswhr
Adults. 642·5073.
2 br, 1.,., i,~. twnhse Adults, Sunset Bluffs 642•61146, leave dlessg. ~~.~ ..... ~~~~ Lease Brookburst/Atlan· •• ~.~............. ARE FREE ~f:s.~0y~:f1fnl~og Condos on Pacific Ave U-t-L. u...e....1... I OO u ta 300 sq ft, $245/mo a.311218 styl e , l gar , w /d at Victoria. C .M . ..__ 4 l617Westc ·rr.N.B.Wanl 963-&11 963 ...... .=;~=------book.ups. AdullJ, no pets. -6»9440 642 8808 ............... ,....... financial inst. 7000s .f. 71 •9306 Opport.ity 5005 can• Found: black a., while
ATTINDAM'T
Live In. to uaist han·
dlc1pped woman who is
employed. Own bdrm. c:o.ta Meu. ~·2"7 t:~ I /9. $500 mo. : with large l~t &. extra SIALAIK MOT& Isl. floor, Agent 541·5032. NEWPORT ....................... uz.s611 male cat in The College
....,..""'" deck. 759-0414, 759· 1042. Wkly rentals now avail. EXE':UTIVE Executive Suites has of-LOSING LEASE, q u1 I-Parli area. 646·2802. --------
E/SJOE l br. lge yard. QUet 2 Br 1 Ba garage $105 & up. Color TV. SUITES fices 1vai11ble nr O.C. ting bldlness, selling out ,..... SJSO ATTIMTIOH:
utlls pd , p ets ok , patio, poot Adults, no Phones in room-. 2274 IN . Airport,from$36Sw/full ALL JuppUes and rix· Austral ian Shepherd, •••••••n•••••••••••••• Ambitious boys and
l.\'50/mo.Call5S8-0933 ""'c. """".1801 "H" l5th. Newport Blvd. CM ~"'•GE service available. Call tu.reslnch.tding : rrele, 2 yrs, tri-colored. NEEDCREDIT? girls l~lJ years old. lo
I Br Condo' frpl,., macro, St"".~,,.:--7.,.,,. • 646-7445 ,_,,,. now for 1 month free Display cases, wailing wearing Hoipital ID. wortt one or two even· ' '"'" '"" • -rLAJ.A Li.s 133-9976 room chat rs. Beauty _.63...,1_.·1..._000....._ _____ Get Viaa or Master Card ings 1 week gettio&
2 car garage _w /opener. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Steps to beach HEID A PLACE? New lwcury office space a · Salon h1ardryers and with no credit Check newspaper su bscrip·
pool & Jacuu1. $575/mo motmo. utils incld. Reu. W~kly Rites in 1 r vine · s bll~iest D.~rlntl. hydraulic chairs, mir-lladl L• Mix GUARANTEED Write lions. Transport a lion
5'S-3115 PROPERTY HOUSE Kitcbeoettes·Phones center!' Easy Frwy ac· 1M ron,shelvehndplants Lost Dec 29th nr lo DPL, PO Box 4775, and constant adult
Sharp 2 Br. 1.., Ba . patio 642-3850 642·1010 "Z" Channel Movies cess Ava.ii. now! Call Otflce s ace. ~ sq ft. Abo, make-up, shampoo Newport Bl & Wilson Las Veiu Nv. 89106 1uperv1sion provided.
&t 1ar1ge. No pets Balboa Island Waterfront Sandpiper, 00 Newport for details. SQ> per mo ls( and last and hair producll. Male, 55 lb Choke Collar. GllAHD OPIHIM• Call 3 lo S:llPM, ask for
$475/mo 546-9950. '3 Br. 2 Ba. Yearly ren· B!.Cost1 Mes1164S.9137 551•1131 64M2JO Cont~1~;,hn 6759007, Call631-9754or -"95~1;...;;-94..;.;TI""'------ESCoaTS Andrea, 6'2-4321, ext.
2 Br. 1 Ba 22C8 Canyon t.at JnS/mo. 770.0347 ~ve on Npl Bth $90/wk *-'"'E-,.ES• eves after6 ..... 89IH809 -Found· Retriever mix. EXTIAoaJHMAllE •343!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
Dr upstairs No pets. Pule Knot Motel. 6302 W -· VTTI'-I MO. FIH Co111nellrs, rac1al5. body b I on d e r e m a I e -= 3 ..,..._ c--..1... ~ Formerly Linda & S395/iro. Sierra Mgmt wOCMll vwuu PCH. NBMS-0440 1 r rom l room lo 1400 sq. Mewportc..ter wraps. NB area Lrg Shepherd/Husky mix, Vicki's Back with the
C.O 64l·ll2C. 2 baths. all 1 level, V'"arl)• on the beach I n Prom $1 l.51 sq. fl. No ~rst class full service d1entele. 832 6202 _ black & white ma le best
Alft'OMOTTVE
P.+aC1.t1,_1 --1 fireplace. 2 car gar. "' · · lease required. Adj Shepherd mix, black &t 3Br. 2BI, bonus rm, encl w IW cpts. Decorated Hotel rooms. kitchenette Airporter Inn 2172 Du-EXEC olfices. includes ... .,_., Trwt b r 0 w n f e ma 1 e
Specious z Br, l 81. $395 p1t10,. frplc. service bh Ill. Sl.250. Avail Jan & bath. S280 up monthly I ~ Call AM . 833_3223 all 1men1t1es From Deidii 5035 Shepherd, buff/white
3 Br, lt,; Ba. $425 Laun· porch. mt & txl redone, 30_ PP'1S90l04 + $22!0 secunty depos1L -$225/mo 644-7189 _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• male. Lab, black male Aflmltis Mcnsaqe
dryfac.1poo!.548-9SS6 no pets Cass 1714 1 2306 W. Ocunfront.
1
. 17THSTHET NEED A BUS AD SatllerMhj.Co. Lab mix . black male Open24hrsadaf'
66',0207 AadDri•er Automohve expenence
preferred S day week
Salary commensurate to
expenence. Call Greg
[M\klin/Parts Dept. at
San Clemrot.e Ford
m.INNING large I &t 2 : !m-6766 UDO VIEW Gorg. 2 BR. New P 0 r 1 Be a c h COSTA MESA DRF..S.5? Answenng " All types ol real e11a1e Af&han. black female '1days a week
Br, Z Ba. Garden Apt QUJET ADULTS over 35, fp, ~Imo 675•6359 6'73-41S4 , 2 or 3 room office suites. mail service. conferent'e mvestrnent.s since lid Newport Sheller. 125 69 Gorgeous RI rls to
Pool. no w.18th. St. Wl!um 1 Br. upper. $325. vac.-R..tab 4250 A/C. plenty of prkJ. Util room Adj. OC Airport SpecW.-g la Mesa Dr 644·36S6. ~:!~Ll~~ ~·::if~'s
WESTLAKE VILLAGE Beaut landscaping No Ocean rrt. Lg, 3 BR, 2 BA ••••••••••••••••••••••• mcl. Avail now Call SIOO/mo 7l4·833-01!'2 z.ctTih Found. Bm & Wht Spr-10ur1 5 1 5 Ba n k 49Mt90
peta.LJ;EWARDAPTS. upper.2cargar,fpl,yr. OCEANFRONT2 &4 Br. ReaJonomtcs 875·6700 NEWFORTOfflCE 642-2171 545-0611 1nger Spaniel. Around Ameracard. Master ~d::~donl~c~~i;,:;1~~ · ,. 2020F\lller1.lln, 631·0397 ~~ 200 1 mo N 8 Ava.ithl. 1Winter. Weekly I Shatt 2 ok suite in pre-Prime bayfTont loeat1on ---------_Zlth. M 64s.S850 Charge, Amencan Ex
Pool,spi,laundryroom, 2 BR. goll course view,--------Mon ly 673·7873_ sti1100&a1rportarea.37S ideal for 11w firm. 1n-Lost chocolate brown press. Diners all
patiosordecka.Nopels.1 ~rm.Nopets.Askfor Nr Hoag Hosp. L11hl &t No Tahoe condo, 4 Br s sq. n. For details l'all surance or acl"l'g $150 f;T:~:~t3:ed~_ab~~~ Burmese, no collar welcome 714 /645·3433
BABYSITt.ER. -For in.· fl11t, school days Feb·
June, or. S.C. Plaza..
556--8019
Garaaeuvall. BiU,631-1266 ~':"i!u!f :~~ps , i~i:!, min Lo Northstar 5450-~16226 __ _ pr sq ft mcl 1an11or 50".4 equity Short or long Olild's Christmas giJt. 2ll2 Harbor Bl. CM Babysitter Wanted.
Bach $360 $550 ...... ....._ 21..---1 ....... ., • ., .,.,.,.. wk. Tom 1157·1668 600 SQ. fl Mesa Verde ~---•-IKNW\ ma'nimum. Vic 3rd &t Begonia, CdM For tot.a.I relaxation with Prefer C.Ollege Student. 1 Br "°5-5415 . ' ~· -""""" ,..., '""'""'" \t 81 o... b I area lol C--&-.. ~ ••• -Pl ll 67c.o'"°" Tues.Sal. 8 3 0 to
2Br· .•• 7• '"""·S Fanuly, 2 children ok . e g .... ar ca in. poo _....... 111...-.a~, IUtr -~~-,,_-_ _ a professional massage l2:30AM.e3l.Ol30 .,.,,~ Pool nopets 5459908 lbclra.2ba I. color Iv, 2 frplcs, -545·4123 --Newport8e1ch V1ewor 67.,21 6 Last:BlkUmbrella.Gold ~evel0.6,548·2817 lv"'~===..;;.:;:;o.;;.., __
TSLMgmt. 6'5·8122 · · . · 2 blocks lo beach. Patio sl111114. 545·~16 fi ...... '''"II ••rvt"" Law ~ H di E d · h N d ri----------~wing ma chine BAYFROLIT ,...., ru ~ ... n a n e ngrave Lonely Tonag t? ee * 2 Br. C.Ondo nr S.C a,>er•tor. experienced. $67S iro. 673-3728 ..... to sa.-. 4300 1""111 Suite. Comp law library Joseph A Stanko Sen-Company' Call Monica IAIYsm& Phu~. S.A. Pool. Spa, SIJ\gleneedle,goodpay. Yearly,oceanview.2BR ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pna...office.760:94~-a nd many extras Widow has US for llmental Allacllmenl ~-1822 Person needed to meet
Tenru.s. $580. Adults. no piece work, benefits tBa,2patios S65(). 3BR2a,,BA. H.B. $225 /mo Costa Mesa. 250 sq ft 7~-0IB2 TD's/Re Loans. IOK up Davenport Island Hunt-COEiis.Would Love To 6/yrold clrl aherschool,
pets. 642-9652 &W~or646-3189 util pd $100 dep Slllte S17S /mo. Ullls in· 3nns. Ba & Kitchen $400 No Credit. / No penally ington Harbour t213J Party with You ! Call I.~ lo appm. 2:4Spm 6U·1460or646-49ll --------9111)..78749111)..2615 cld. 779 W. 19th St 561 w 19th CM Call Deruu~Assoc !.737311 S92·1SJ6 everyday, Mon-fra. Bachelorl.1251 2864 2Br,lba,encl.gar PvtNewi>ortHgts2BR1Ba. -~1-8928 J k~2a7 SEU.1dle1lemsw1tha -Leslie or Sylna MUST BE DEPEN -LasalleCM mo , rncd pallo Avail 1/16. no kitchen 1400 mo female to share apt al -----ac . . Daily Pilot Class1f1ed Have something lo sell' Anytune 761·9036 DABLE. MUST live
957-2740 alt 6 SUOmo. 640-7804. 644-671IOor646-ll89 Prom. P~~/mo Want Ad ResullJ 642-5678 Want Ad Help' 642-5678 M_ Oassified ids do 11 well I TNY.t 5450 witlun walking distance
2bdrmduplex, Iba. gar. YBSAIWS -••••.•••••••••••••••••••••• •.•. ••••••••••••••••••••••• to school. Stonecreek PALM MESA APTS
!.561 Mes1 Dr.
l Br. un!um. $360 I Br.
funi SQ>. 2 Br uofum
142$. Adult.s only Call
M. S46-91160.
Podfk
Ttm1etADtl ~PARK DRl~E CM
Bachelor and one bdrm
• apta. All adulu and no
~ool, BBQ and room.
1 Br. Unique 2 story
aeparate house, well de·
e<rated, sun deck, pool.
<Jf street parking. Utils
incld. 2 miles from
beach. $375 /m o .
714/642·3957
Westfleld'
FAMLYAPTS.
Sparkli.Dg clean large
apts for families w /I or 2 <flildrm. Nr park. Heat
ldryrmSSZmo Bachelor,pOOl,spa,g1t. Clean.prof Flo share l 2fl.Yforlhtpnce Elementary, Wood-
5411-4932 ed security $450/mo. furn 3 BR Condo w/ ofl!' PA COUPONS bridge, Irvine. Ref's
Isl lasl $200 stt Dr JacuiuinBlu!fs lmmed , • 8 DAY WEEK SPECIAL l3COUNTRIES' PleasecaUM2·046lafter frilu 2 II. 2 la C,.;pe 6i1.5171 or Bill ava.il. Sl50/mo. no last. • HAWAII !• 5:~m.
AdullJ. no pets SSOO mo 64S-sal6 nex Bus 557 3200 res • $40. 631 ~
l522Ham~~04;~ NEW·BEACON BAY '00-0672__ • 8 Days • 3 Lines • 8 Dollars • ,.,~ .'::::= .. " • • ...-2 b 2 b F, child ok, shr lux 4 br -~~-_ .... &"' r, a. vu, •
Largt qtoel Eutsidt 2 0/W, cmpctr. WtD. gar condo Pool. lennas. etc I II s easy to place your 8-0ay Week Class1f1ed by mail. and 1t ...................... . Br Townhouse. patio. Tennis. p\1 bch, dock $215 6'5-51.23 NB'!£)' __ · • Sc:t.oll &
garage. 5475. Adults. no SltXiO/iro. yrly. 83S-JS35; Share 2 BR. 2 BA in CDM I costs 1ust $8 -thats only a dollar a day' To Qualtfy for this lwtnicKoe 7005 ~L211 Cabrillo. 673-3116 _ 2 bl rrom bch. BR. BA e special offer you must be a non-commercial user offering •••••••••••••••••••••••
. ---3 Br 2 Ba wtocean vu. sei> rrm apt by outer e merc handise for sale up to S800 per ad. and the price must S3UO WEEK Chnst11n
uu1s paid Quiet. Unique avail. immed. f750tmo slain. avail 1 16 S260 I be 1n your ad The cost stays the same whether your ad Pre-School 320 E. l8lh l Br. endsd garage. No yrly lse. Agt 673.™ · 673-Z163 __ ---1 • St Costa Mesa. Special ~7~/mo S48-8251, Partly ru.rn. bachelor. Fem toshr 3Brbayfront • needs eight days selling time Or JUSI one ram 646·5423
---·-avail immed 5400 mo on Bal Isle w/I M .. 1 GROUP PIANO lessons
Fireplace, pool, pvt yrly .... blk lo beach Fem ~.Jmo.673 l~ • Use -0ne word tn each box About 4 w ords make one 7 yr old . 56· Thurs
patio, dishwasher. on M -67J.:J3S5 In'! Stewardess furn apt 4:20-S: lOpm 551-5332
Etside,allinx·lrg2Br nrbchCdMfemnosmo e class1f1ed llne of type M1n1mum ad rs 3 lrnes Please pnnl t....1......w.-....... 7075 garden apts. From $S60 Avail tmmed Vaulted plainly --5,57.2841 Ceiling. Stps to Bch 25-35 $300 675 5148 Mon • •••••••••••••••••••••••
Garage Door operator. l~ A-I House Cleaning lady. Sparkling clean 2 Br I 'I•
Ba. $490. Fenced. ut1ls
paid. Refrige. 2 small
children OK. no pets
1960 Wallace 642·4905
Lrg 2BR. $595 yrly . Pnvate Rm w/Pvt En: • r------------------------------, 1.Uworkbythtjob,have
642·3490 trance & Ba. HB 1250. • warted in the best of
Brand New Deluxe, lBR Util Pd. 536·0794 I I homes. Have xlnl ref
Condo r or I ease, M/F, M·smkr. no peu, 25 • I CaU after S.30pm llll
Bantin1
OPllATIONS
OfACB
Newport Beach office
seelll f/time Operations
<Jficer. 2/yrs. S&tL ex-pen~ required. Musi
ha vt thorough
knowledge of savings
operations anclading
IRA/KEOGH . Some
supervisory experience
prderred. For further
information & intervie\\'
call
Bryan Taggart
644-7255 WISTllM
flDEIAI. SA YIMCi S
14 Corporate Plua
Newport Beach, CA. cpt!drps, fp, encl. gar yn +, l2SO mo ind. ulil • I 9: m. 541-2434
w/ ele<' opener. storage, Al\4,~7975 I HOUSEKEEPER Pref
pool & jacuzzi t650/mo • live in Exper. xlnt ref, · • Mature Woman Non I $ I 00 I neat. sober. pleasant. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
E.O.E.M/F peid. Nopeta. Eastatde 3 Br. 2 Ba. frplc, UR. 2 BA. ~25 like new. 9625
3118W. W'Llsoo 631-SSSJ PROPERTY HOUSE lsl + last + dep Smkr For friendly • Fu 6'7Ull2 or M0-2853 CdM u--. Call Ml>-S992 • I I posit.Ive. ttU1ble, loves Bir Help, day /eves 11 2 BR. l BA, newly dee. 642-~ 642-1010 """' 10 AA cluldttn. Do dnve Call or part ·time t M 2 br, 1 ba, frplc, gar 2 before 10:30 PM • I .vv befnoon. 831-2427 64&-5.544 Dorothy end. gar, adullJ only I no
pd!~l819
Wesuide Costa Mesa.
dplx. upstairs, 2Br. lBa.
c.entral beat, refng &
stove, enclosed garage
Quia 6 safe. No kids or
pets. "50 mo. 541-5442, m.51211.
• Z Br. l Ba. Mesa Verde
upper. No pets/child.
Newdecor. 1475. 833-1974
Poo't"::l~ old
O:nnadel Mar. 1 bdrm,
Ckean view. Al.so 2 and 3
bdrm. 673-32'71 l l ·5
IAYTIMlllS
SPACIOUSl Br.
Cathedral ceilin&. walk
lo clOld. dlabwaaber.
nr..,&act.ga.ra1e,pool6
laundry f1 clllty .
N!rm.
•W.BaySt.
.~t•J
. ----~
O-Polllt 3126 bl.ks to beach. Yrly Prol to Shr 2B R, 2BA
••••••••••••••••••••••• /mo.673-2571 CdMHse.tblkfrBch F • I 13 20 Young married man llAUTICIAMS
$100 FREE RENT Wint.er rental. Large 2 Pref. 558-5311, 675-9619 • '1 • would like odd jobs evts lmmed. openings for
28r lBa enclsdgarage s 1 &t wkends Can do a cosmetologists an •- y'ard ' .... ol grass ~ Buch,across t. eve • I 5.IO vanety of h1ndym1n N-rt n-1~h salon.
.. · """' · rum or un urn 5304 M/F For 3BR, 2BA, fpk . I jobs. m.9525 eves, ask ~-..-DC ' ~~or~e9230Lantem. Seasbore.851-8070 ~ ... Gar. NB. S22S Mo. • ' £or Bill. Guar salary + com·
_. ....... ,._. NewOreanView 2 bdrm ~st, last. (David ) t AddS2.60foreachaddltlonalllnefor8tlmH ,-------mwlon~to60'k.Call HllpWlllhd 7100 forintervaew.646·7451 OCE.AM YIEW 2 ~ ba . gar . $7 SO 838-0825 days. 673·2374 • I .. ••••••••••••••••••••• IOOl(ICERaEI From Dana Point most 1146-Slllll Ev 645-2682 Eves. • I IOa'"
acenic blufr. like new! M/Fneededfor2BR, lBA I Publish d f 8 d s ta t'ng •ccft.t•Uft! lhru trial balance. Be I.he nnt occupant! Laguna Beach House. '• my a or ay s r I -----------A ~·~ multiple sets of books.
Only 4 units. 2 Br. s:nsprmo.1st&L11tPI ·11 Classi'fi'cati'on UCllYAIU selr·starter. Clexible.
w/fri>lc It 2 Br w/den. S75 Dep. Call 494-4427 • --------------------C&.RK M.in.typingskills.Min.2 airry for the best view! after7.30 • Rapidly growing lnl'l yrs exp. Salary com·
tB2!S to S67S. Adults, no NICE 2 Br. 1.,., Ba. laun-F. Shr W/Sm, 21 to 30. I Name_________________________ f:~:~ny0r~~~kli~g d1.ne: mensur1te w/exp. Prof.
pets. Daxs 643 · 12. dry beamed celling. No 2BR. BA, Nr SC Plaza. • II Address ... ~d offiCf'. 640-2912 wtndl66l~l. .... ~ .... ct\. ...,5, + Util.966-0S88 • ----------------------divldual for entry lenl .,.._ ~ ~· poaiUoo in our accounu loal*upt.9/ ,....._. 3140 CLEAN2Br.1Ba laun· M/F loshrlrgho!Tl('w/3 I Ci'ty Zi Phone receivable dept. Must a.r.
....... •••••••• •••••• dry, garage. No pets. students t>ast C.M. • I p _ __.___ -------type80wpm. accurate· For Nwpt . Beach
F\JmiahecUcUnlurn. l ·2·3 $425. l7S+utll.631-1S97 Ch k M Q I d 0 ly, 10 key by touch. Ac· Restaurant. Call for ap-Bdrm. Apls. Gym ' 493-Z710. ... b 3 b • I ec or . . enc ose counta receivable exp. ~nt-nt. IUI! """I. ask Jicuni, Sauna, pool. M/F lo .... r 3 r, a a ..... '""""'v tennis, voll eyball. Wut I ..... lit house. Laguna Beach, • I Charge my ad to· helpful. outstandin& orMcr orbodtkeeper
bMlietbtiD. game room .... •••••••••••••••••••• or beach 4"·S177 • I · rocnpemallon 6 benefits
Hllnl Bch. IM6-06li 2br. -:JcarJ)el, drapes. , ·-...... """''"-·'e, ocean
1
O ~ # E in a pleu1nt workln1 IOOllllPll tult No clltld ~ .....,._J .......,....,.... • xp environment. Contact Plrt·t ime leading to lBr.w/loft,l~Ba.Crt>lc. im'.:iiSta.sm . 'bay viewb VllJr ---------------·----PatMW.,AMF~citn· fUll ·lime, F /C book·
pool, 1ara1e. 1475. Laun· · Balboa1 Z br. 2 1• pre · • Ufic Drillinc Intern a . lleeper for mortgage
dry facU nr sboppinJ. \I twlfl,...llllt4 prol. rem. $450 + ~ 1
1
0 • # E tloaal, ll012 Mitchell brohn1e in Newport 847~ aru.tall•d JtO utlla. John M1calu10 • ---------------~p. ----So.. J"ine· 714~7·I051 Beach, a row th op·
•,:;;.:, '!:ci:r.:.~~!: s·E .. A·w·iuN·o· ~~(~:~~ 13F1·7Vset2 ,• L----------P-AY-THE-POSTAGE_________ fX>EM /F. =~it!1.1;~h c~~: f..~~ .. 841·1511 or v1• I .. GE OI~to "":'M~' 2S.»: • r, ••••••••• WE 'LL --------·----i, AIC refutlet pvt A/C . ~=.J!rt:~~:." ,,,_,_ ~ airline eap. preferred. .,. ...
--New 16:2 bdrm luxury lrg. rm, pvt. batb IZISin· • I 111111 NO POST ACE • I Alic> tow A/C 6 variO\la S..93$0 MAm•S WALK adult apta In 14 plans. 1 cl. utll. Nici! 8"·Z718 • I NECESS"RY 11 dutlea. Salary com· Sellin& an ... i.ln1 with a 3 Br. Townhouse_ Apt. Bdrm from S490. 2 bdrm llagreittru. " , .. .
Verd. •1.nile . double ,,. $570, TOWfthOllte .. ,, to •hare dual • I IF MAILED : :.-oo~:{~,tc:/!~ e-i1~j~~1ec::~:~1~Ad
car fa.rate. near Hun\. from tMO + poola, ten· imater Br 2" Ba. lux. t. Pl"'-_________________ .'---lN_T_H_E __ 'o_. So. SalltaADa .1.~!!1164.2-_~
HatboUr. Chlld~n OK. ma. wal.erfatll, pondaJ Dau Pl coodo, pool • UNITED STATES ·111'
1
.11 · --
...,,, Gaa for cookinS • heat· jac., z frplc'a. ••i • 1 'O • • • • • • • • • • • • .... • • ••• tBR. BA•.~. Pool, ten· 101 paid. From Su llft«I. BUSINESS REPLY LABEL " ala• PlaylfOWld. Kida otego Frwy drive North Hou1tmatt wanted. '• 11.1 • ~ • • 1 OK. No peta. 1125 Mo. on Btacb to McFadden fall\UY ahnoiphert In S '11tSrc1..•ssPUM•T 1110 1s.cosu-..esa.01..1,01t1111a Ji' ~ Ad"I~· ,,.._ \ :
5.'11·2545. then Well on llcF1ddtn N I. Wr comnuanll)' pool , • ~ ' ~~
2 Br. patio, tar .. new to Seawind Villa1e. 'buc'* ... per mo. • l< POSTAGE WU BE PAIO 8Y AOOAt!SSH :. Exper. ncws p•Pfr dil y ... ~to
Cflltt. redec, "50/mo. 14 118. Covers atl but food • ' Orange Co11t Daily Piiot handle hy ac<"Oun\11 for Or•nae Coast
SJl.b, (113)93:70.0 .._ 4ot0 10111 dlatanre calla. ,. 4' 1i•1y Pi•11t t Dilly Pilot Salary. comm1ulon and. CL6S! TO BEACH . ••11••••••1uu••u•u• 'J9.fllD 1
1
• ..,.· cactlltnt bentriu. Growth opportunltlea a.cWot 1tovt6Nfria. 1Aama•~MotarJ111, MM>MMATE wANTgo1' f for peraon wilh <'ll"ftf 1mbltlom. Stftd
AD tllll 'peld. tm/mo. •No. P1c.lflt COHt l'.l Toro Condo, doH toi • (J ~ tomn;'I, !"Ur\t 10 ~',la'it~ :, . .
• ......._._. .,._ • ~ Jttt,theot cHttr. Pool, patio. , ..... 1ew 1;m•!!"!f· ~ --•• , _... • • er "-"'· 2 bdrm 2 ba. Jln • ~ ~ .! • ................. _ .... ,...,.... ---·--.._ .
ol ' ' ,
•• ~~~· leach. Mall '• • llaopptu 1 • 1 loi 1llO ~ :;:U,1 ·,~:'~e .":a i 11uei o,,,,.
I It • ..,..,. Vleuri1 -·~·~· •• .-.-~----11 ... l--z:-=-:;~~::: llaft, rr,lf. "'ftlh, ........ All ...... •tr. J lif ..... .. 'I -rift, •wlr ,. .m. W/D. a., ,_.; ~. 1enntl co•· • e .
• -
!!!!~~~~-1~· p • .... Cd ..,.. Al td --~· l I I . • •••.
t __ ._.._.. .. _,~.-,--... .,._,.,, .,,,. ·, -;-Mi i . u.-PioWI-......,,._. .... ~··
Fii I ' ••••uu•o•••••••••••• ...... ••••••••••••••• ~ I~ vw t I -...., ....... '.;;:-.-;; ........ , ..................... , ~ ~ AOOR!SSLVE l11al FlNEnNISHWORK •••DRYWALLiAOOUSTlc•••••••u••~••••••••••• ....................... •••••••0•••U••••• .. •• ....................... PLASTP PATCJtlNO BALBOAROOrlNGCO. r
Nl'Nll1 ~al~: law of RemodellnC /Doortb\1111 l•ynup. Fl.illy llr'dt C~~ p~=1 HAULING ~ronry :'t •1:tla~y, c.e..P..... RttlutrOI. Int/eat. 30 'lbeooly roonn1 c:o. wit~ • ~WAL -"~aui K)a.22 _ -h!!fL?JO.lJIOCdM iniW'ed. UZ·M49 Dry.all stucro·Tlle .... ~~t~:.?i~. ble~e~:n;.,,:!j:bra· ~~ej:!;.~!;.~~r rra.mat.Pal&IMS·2t11 ronttruc:tlon nb1te1 , ,• 1111 Pli Ill ......... OIARRENOVATING ........ Ser.le" ~. J.8."8-lllO Rlck&1l·OMS •83l·200t• eic .~llDick Neatpetchetttexturea Fre.nt f1U743 , ~
n.i·a ALLyo:p'/y :.~·b;~·l·.:_~••c•~•h•••••••,• ~.!'~. Lot/txl ~. ~utt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• O«leral lhlalalnance HAUUNG udul haa AllTypes Masonry t,J.8 PAINTINO MJ.IJ lt Tit ·.•-;
for a -, 1 • ...-r "' omea, ca..vJnD ·"" ... '9_ E.M O..l1n • Check Repairs Ir Decoratlnc ~k. Lowett ralt. Vfr/ reu llr boftded SPECIAL! INT /EXT. Int/tit Plutttioa ••••••••••••0 ••••••••r •.., l>day 1d yr _'!· any~~57•• r~ s.ntc. P 1 ct a I I 11 I I S H 1 • 't •Ra M0.$144 a>i>541-fWi531... ,._, all t..::. .... w• Low Hobday Rain TILE INSTALLED ti}' intbe _.~.....,.. --...-. MTL /PCB Harvey .caU 758-tt7S. -~· · ~.....,-P'rftfllt 84512$8 AIJKlndJGuaraatffd w-....................... HardiMln H<litEIMPROVEMENT TbWxou,Jotui. CUiltomBrid: MllODJ')' I'm Small-My prkt1 . Rda Jam.ISP ~~. DAl.Y "t:rt '(!d r ~mo WeC.reCrptC~ .S4H?Ol. Rtpair·Nallltenanre HI di• Compl. yard coo1trUC· are amalH Cdll, NB Ir A ••1 c.tomTild1oora " , N.OT :lir631 i:o osta eso St~~ean,._.,~hol1. Bedrlc.. Heatln1. carpentry, !!!~!t::::!! ......... tloo. pool deck• Ir Irv. Elp'd. RonS73"477 .... ~ .................. , Rtal \lied bt1 k pavers.i.•l •Ytcl LI d , WA .... 8 mount •1 .. 1 ........................ elec, tile. Free eat. No WUJtaREALLYCLEAN enrloeuree. Loul ref1. • DrauarleartdfromSJO t.il <'Ye 11 ·~.-DmcTOIY ruse al It er. x ur~ _ uar. '"-"'-" ELECTRICIAN -~riced .IClb too 111\111. 645·2811 HOUSE! Call Ginlh•m 00-1112 O.L. M~un P1lnlln& Plumblnf Repairs Mex. et. etr. our l t;, ~
DO IT NOW I teach er. a & ea 3 7 Sluampoo a. aleam clean. right. frN .. ti mate on CM. Girt. Fr--t. ,,..,, c123 C.over I.hat ro:trrete with Cult. w . U r 1382471 Free tat M•M Nz.9033 orOU11. NS-t512 • -:.
•...1.11t.-.41_.a__ S.30lm·S:30prn •os ar· Color bn&hlenera. whL largeoramaUJobl. ""' ... .....,.,, Ina Freeesl. 731.a28l · cu.tomCeramlrT1le ~ _,......_,. cess 96.S·MS crptg 10 mlo. blearh. Utt.f3111al l'7a.o351 lbldalljobl,l&e/aml ROBlN'SCLEANlNG brick! Pillot, drives, AllPaintini·· t~e t Oi1bwuberi dlapouls, PtomptJUV Freust \~'. ~c~~~~:. MUBabys1t lnMy Home Hall, b\•td1n rms SlS ~ F.lertric our Seetl•tty. ~~er.~~~·d ,. t==~~1 ~et,r.S4HLH 9650. Neat •
111
romp1et!. :1/~ ! r!~f::!d r~i Ch11C'lll7&-J40I __ •·
Repl"t'$tlltatlve forWorkinf.:Mothers 'Bl avg room $1.50; courb ~ '&:rk' dts>tnda· ~·~-C U .._ • ..., Freeett. Refs. CJ·7292 ynexper. JlmS3l.-S T-SWrl« •
••• rt .. 71.-••• •'"-W....., o Yrd R" 110 chr· tt Ouar •Urn An Si Job ...... ..,.... .. , raftam.n. A ~t" wo.... d•""nda· ••••n°••••••••••••••• CUSI'OM 1~ oxT --.... • -.. -··~ .,, u"" ~ .. ~ . .... . ~ • e y le I JClba 8 s 11 Call I • •• ...,_ c 0 ... I / r. •••••••••••••••••••••• ; -•••••lil••I Avail ~40 5933 or petodor Cn>t repair •GHOOO 11 or ma · e ma Call Pam & •AB M VINO.Exp • EXPEM'SERVICE "••+,M•111•.t •ExpertTreePrunin&• "' = Ml-41 IS yrs exp Do work Afttt4PM.1164·5231 fk>ti Dwliht. 763-1012 prof,J low r~tea. Quiet, LOW RATES ••••••••••••••••••••••• I I' __ ... ., Acct Hug mxsell.Jtefs,53l·OI01 .... , PROF~lONAL ..._ rtls-H k . camulserv1ce.552.0UO Commerca ... mecaPf'-, ............................ tcr -No Steam/No Shampoo-........... •••••••••••• HANDYM N T .,.,.pe e ouae eep111g NU· BROOK 54~ ll7S PIOf'llTY Servicea 957,8388'1:! P/R Qtrlies, WZs Fm ••••••••••••••••••••••• St . ~ ....... I u TUES SENS Et ~ES &lppUea rumished •Aioi MOVING• NEU;ONS PAlNTINO MAMAGIMIMT :. StJnL1 Co let Set Fur all you need to know am~ 11 at. Fast IBL RI · Trustworthy. 957·8003 Top Quality. Sperial Int/Ext Resld/Comm <>ranee Co. area. IS yrt ti" ,s.n. Re:'. ~5834up about banknlptt'y, roll dry, ~te eat 839·1582_ Topped/removed, clean -!nt-2265 WestCout Maintenanre ratt ln hmdllng. 25 Yl'I Arouatir reilln&•· Refs. aperietice. Cell for info C> ---'7~14/83Hl62 team Clean fo r \he up1,lanreMJ· 751·3476 HsdwoodRoon :!5%olf! New Yr Special exp Competitive r.11tea. lit''d. Free est. 83'7-2637 and rates. •J
.... mce a.p.ir Wkttn --Hobdays ! Best rates for Gardtnifl& Wanted ....................... on House Cleaning! No overtime. 730.1353 p~ f 6W 112 111 • * * * * * "'" ~ ......................................... ~~g dates' Call Mowin&. edgln&. raking, ~~~Dcf~~:S& 831·2988/640-&681 _ STARVlNGCOLLEGE .:?::'.':~ .............. 1-dikg;a.p.lr
pt, prof. service on GllWICI & SOM s we e P I n & • Fre e waxed. Be ready for the eed bsllpr av11I S'I\JDENTS MOVING HANGING $10/ROLL "••••••••••••••••••••• JAYE TREE CARE ~
ma Jo~ S:~.1~-~~:ve · 5 Bui!den Since 1947 llf /Coecrete :~-..'!!.tea. 845-4372 or holidays! W.4881 English speak. C10. Uced. '! .. 1241 ,;~27 . Disr. on paper. Stri P· 111tdom1. build Ing. re· Complete 1erv ic.e and..-, -Additions · remodehn~ ....................... .,.,.,,,.,,, ......._ erked857·6i95 nsur ·.,. .... ping. Scott645·9~ mo e ang, mainl .. re· stump. grinding. 10 yra
..... Doors. windows, patio THOMPSON'S WHY NOT ONE OF ~;::'................ CONNIE'S CLEANING JATCH US GROW! UC. PAPER HANGER pairs. haulin11. Steve exp. Lie. lfl!. 640-9308__._~
••••••••••••••••••••••• rovers Freeest. Reai. I CONCRETE CONSTR. nn~BEST!Simmon~· Haul.cleanup,roncrete QUAUTYWORK . STARVING ACTORS &nded & guar. No job 673-8106 --·~ ••• AUSJ'ATE PAVING u c '310042 S49 2170 u t'. #393.183 64_2 8482 Gardening,646-~ rermval Dump Truck ___ 962·0'168 MOV ING COMPANY lClO small or too large. •~ , _ _, ,.
Sealcoatang, S\riping. -• k ,,.., 1 .. -fast & Careful Lowest IC\,. -• T ....,2728 _...., ••••••••••••••••••••• .. Repairs. Comm /Ru MacHAUCOMSTI. COHCIETE ~Senlcet c SUV.~· --WEEKEND/WEEKDAY Rates Law Allows MIC r ote._. ooy....... • ...................... Cred. learher Help With
11387362 64S-8181 Custom homes, frarn •60'persqft • ••••••••••••••••••••••• DUMPJOBS HOUSECLEANING Vi_~a Larilns 673.o853 ___ ,._,&PttCott ~Pt1BS0FORL~ school prob. & English ing, remod, French Bnck &Blork 615·9027 Tree Trimming & &SmallMovingJobs 551·&443 ........................ m~es, al 30 yrs tang.(ESL)Ml·SSS4PM <!
Driveways, parking lot doors, skybghts & patio ;.---t-1PtL.. --p~vaJHat RlelasonOdablde C..llMIKE646-1391 ~" -p-..e.g ..._,._.Cart ex . eeest.770·?J2S_ 'WlldowC...... '·'
repairs, sealcoating covers 848-3652 ~ ,,... nres. au ng. HAUUNG&DUMP ' ....................... o((l Roofing. f ast Service! ...................... J ,,.,., A"phalt. 631 4199 -· -•••••••••••••••••• ••••• Jobs CI ea n · u P s ••••••••••••••••••••••,• F\ne painting by Richard Beautiry your t'e or v•M• Refs Free "'-1 ' ~ • R081'STEINBRONER. iraor.rESTfM.•TH ?60-91115 673.$043 . JOBS,ukfor Randy, BRICKWORK : S!"al ii patio w/lush pot1ed or ,..,.. · . ~ · •RESlDENTML• .~ u r. GEN'LCONTR l\CTOR nu;a; "' 1t4 • ---~ - --641·8427 jobs. Newport , Costa Sinor Uc. ns. 13 yrs of hangingplanlll. 494·9582 Avg 1 sly S30: avg 2 stY,1;
Driveways, parking lot I.Jc. Jl9946.1 645 6456 _OJSLOm 64().2062 -Wallpaper Contrartor. ~UP YOUI ACT Mesa. Irvine R erb ~~ ly~.I custo~.~·10 Green Velvet lnleriors llPAllS OML Y! . Chris 957·8388 ~;
rep.I.rs s•alcoat1'11g SELL ·di · -h Gary Gompf. Lar 328240· STh-3175 -213 •"1 ~""3/714 ""91286 All '"'" ...... n.....r Wi d Cl ' · ': . ' 1 e items wit 3 Trade your old sturr ror Lagwui.20Yrs.494-4366 TODAY ! Yard/garage ---"' . ....,, .,,, · ...., . ......, .-"" in ow eaning,,,
rooftn& repairs Lied. Daily Pilot Class1hcd new goodiu w 1th a . ---cln·~. etc. I ton truck. Have something to sell• WANT ACTION' F'uld what you want Iii Free est . qual serv •.
s.6Aa alt63Hl99 _ Ad. Cl~!fl.~642 567.L_ Sell idle items !42~ $25. 63H983 (24 hrs) Clasa1lied ads do it well ~1~ds~2 5618 Daily Pilot Class~ Ousilied Ads 642.:M:!! D ·Rae 675_~
8ank1ng
~STANT
OPERATIONS MANAGER
•Supervisory experience require.d
TELLER
•Minimum l Yr exp.
NEW ACCOUNTS
• Minimum l Yr exp.
MESSENGER •Safe driving record
CORPORATE SECRETARY
• 80 WPM typing
• 80 WPM shorthand
• Dictaphone exp.
• Banking background preferable
ACCOllCTS PAYROU
• Bookkeeping exp. requh·ed
•
UCB'TIOMIST
U typin&. bkkpg, varied
duties 20 + hrs/wk
Irvine. Call M7·Sll6.
UC8"'r/SIC'Y
Lale typing , filing.
general om re duties
Hrs 9am .. pm. ApP,IY
at: Charhe's Chili,
Corporate ()(f1ce. 761 W
19lh St.. Costa Mesa.
Wed thru 'Fri between
IOam lem. S48:2294.
EXECUTIVE
SECRETARY
BIG 8 CPA FIRM ..
LOCATID 14 PASHIOM ISLAND
( (,
Trainee
For District Mllager
This lughJy successful local newspaper has
an opening ror a trainee '" the t'irculat1on department Basic skills 11o 1ll entail
supervision or 10 lo 14 year old boy and i:1rl home dehvery earners Areas o( super\'1s1on
will be deh\'eT')'. rollert1ons and sales Selected applicant 11o 1ll receive hbt'ra I
starting salary, reiiularl) bCheduled raises. bonus opportun111 e~ and many rrtnj?e
bener1ts such a~ t'ompan} paid dental and health plan. group lire insurance 'ar.111on and sick lea'e
Company \•ehtrle IS rurn1shed during working hours
A~plJcant.s mll'lt be over 18. have a good
dnvmg record and be neat appearing llours a~ generally II l\M lo 9PM. Monday tbru Friday Some overtime is available.
If you are qualified and interested in learning the r1rrulation business rontarl the Dailv Ptlot at 330 W Bay. Costa Mesa be rore 10::.> AM or after 2 PM daily.
Ask for Don W1lhams or Ken Goddard
) )
14NTED
c c,..-~ccs~--> >
'Newspaper.
CO[t[iers for routes
in Huntin~ Beoch,
Fountain Valley & Newport Beacli
: '·~ . ,.
: '.
' . ,.
h:
.~ . ... . ...
.... . -.
. . . . ;..
. '· , .
~
I I
•SKllTAlllS• .Pa1ro1J 1l. B. $14,400.
R.ecellt. T 5.5$12,000.
T70Did. R.E. $1t,200.
Elp. Conlultant Oun
Us lteiDden AIY IJlc .
... Bitt:bF.al'MEOE
NewpartJID.lllO /Free
-------
--.. -~ ..
#1 lll~c-tr._.
.,..,_.llvd.
COll'AMISA
'tta..,_I ...
MOWIU ht UM btlt dealt bl llllldwn CaWorala
c ... a.u1Toct111
/(1()() tl.11\lo! bM I
C1M.1 Mt-.1 SAO '>tOO
.. t14J ",-....................... c:...r. l '--~==~~-1 ······················· 1-'71 Silver Camaro 2:21. ~I taimoM SIM ml. lmmac. IS500 °' W. blt~r.~ll ovn•s • m Good cond. Nda TONNE.AU COVER -'-' -ok beat o1 Fit1 MG'1, i1. '11 --r • .Never Uled. S75 Call 7«).18.15
MariaGl-1'197 lvemaa a. .... Hzt
'772 .......................
ttYOL•ONA&a IN OllANGI_ COVNTY I
IALB.la'9CI ~av
!XPEl'n
UILlm
'°"'° ...........
<DTAMllA
.......................
•CHIYIOLIT
MIW ltll
MOMTICMLO
Lm'f·OYa!
Auto. lrlnl .. air rood. + many other utru! Gorsieoul! (-).
OMLY$7'tl
HOWMDca..Nlet
Dcwe/Quall S...
NEWPOlT BEACJI
llMISI
S&USFllST! We have a IOOd selectloo
ot NEW" • USED , .
COMMH L
CHfVllOlf1
~ · ...
~41>-I 200
I ..
Jlldge -----='· ...,. ~ ...
RulinQ pictory for Nerpport Beach officials fighting increased commercial use of 'facility . •
By GLE~·8C01T studies with the detall ordered environmental reports were approved tbe muter plan at tbe to Jnchade eerloua dlacu.a•lona on
.,_..,....,...., ' by Sumner could t•koe up to legally lnsutrtclent on nine February meeUnc but bad not C&.tttln1 back the uae o( the
A master plan f~r expanding another year to preR.are. points, including the project yet started any of the m~r airport u • means of relievtna
John W~yne Airport was Jn announcing his ruling, description , discussion o/ Improvements, such a• adverse environmental impactl
suspended indefinitely today by Sumner Issued an injunction alternatives and examinations expansion of tbe pauen1er cauaed by the Jet aircraft uafnl
Orange County Su.P4'rior Court prohibiting the county Board of o f c u m u I a t i v e a n d terminal, len1thenln1 of tbe lbe fadlity. tJ~df8Bru1ceSumner.1wh1oruled Supervisors froJn lmplementin1 growth·lnducing lmP.acts of runway by 737 feet and "The bl.ltory ol Johll Weyne
a rtse~rorinbml enthta mp~ct Its master plan aimed al expansion. · lncreasinR parking. Airport sho"8 that unlike other repo ~c ng e exparunon · · • .
are insufficient virtuaUy from . In his nlge paees of flnd.lnp airportl in Southern California,
cover to cover. . "This is . a $100 million project that that Sumner read ~ about 30 most of the affected restdenuat Sumner's ruling was perhaps people in his courtroom today, area was in place before the
the biggest victory so far In the WaS just frozen in its tTaCkS." the judge said : "To define the a i r p o r t ., w a s u 1 e d
quest by Newport Beach project as a 'concept' when in commercially, hesaid.
officials to fight the increasing fact it is one of the largest • • For this reason , the
commercial use of the airport. increasing daily nights from the He found fault w It b. a undertakings ever contemplated dl1cu11ion and consideration of
"Thisisa $100millionprojecl current4lto55bytheyear2000. description in the reports that by the·County of Orange is a such an alternative is not
that was ju:;t frozen in its The expansion 'plans -or the master p t!a n was a misleading description." unreasonable. The report must
tracks,'·' said a hJiPPY Pierce perhaps new proposals -can ~ "concept." also address the alternative of
O'Donnell, a private lawyer put in lo ef f ect once "A reading of, the description The lack of discussion in the termination of commercial use
hired by Newport Beach to environmental Impact reports gives no hint of the vastness of environmental reports on of the airport except for
challenge the adequacy of the that comply with the law are the project that the action by lb~ alternatives to expansion of the commuter connections to other
environmental reports. certified by the supervisors, he board on Feb. 18th (1981) would airport was "the most 3lowlng airports and even consider the
Dejected county government said. .~ trigger," he said. deficiency" that Sumner said he alternative of closing down the
officials said new environmental S u m n e r s a i d t b e The Board of Supervisors found. He said the reoort.a fallecl. airport entirely,'' he said:-
~, ............... . ..;
RULES -Judge Bruce
Sumner has s us pended a
master plan for expansion ot
John Wayne Airport. • ••
&nin guilty
UNDER WATER -This is an aerial view or the Corte
Madera shopping center after it was flooded with water by
a violent storm. Highway 101 runs near the center. in the
vicinity or San Quentin Prison.
EMPTY -San Francisco's famed Golden Gate Bridge is
devoid of traffic today after a mudslide s wept over Hi ghway
101 north of the bridge in Marin County.
Bay area residents flee homes
Death toll in northern state . storm r~ses to 22
SAUSALITO CAP > -Just
hours after torrential rains
ended , mudsli des began
undermining Highway 101 north
of the Golden Gate Bridge,
toppling houses, forcing
hundreds to flee their homes and
pushing the death toll from the
furious 2th-day storm still
bigher.
About an eighth of lb1s billy
community across the bay from
San Francisco was in
"imminent danger" from
mudslides, police Capt. Walt
Potter said today.
"If it all comes tumbling
down, it'll be like dominoes,"
said Corrie White from an
evacuee center where she fled
with her two toy poodles.
Highway 101 at the slide site
was cl06ed and the Golden Gate
CASUAL TY LIST -AS
was closed to all but emergency
traffic -diaruptine the route for
tens of thoua'ands of San
Franclsr.o-bound commytera.
Twenty.two people were
confirmed dead tbrouehout
Northern California as a result
of the rains.
A three·block by half-mile
area was evacuated, but Potter
could not confirm the number of
evacuees. Sausalito Mayor Fritz
Warren estimated the number at
300.
Two homes were pushed
downhill by slidjng mud, the
first lmocklng the second Off its
foundation ; and one person was
killed, he said.
"We are gettine a lot of water
and we don't know where it's
coming from," Potter said.
The safety of two
200,000-gallon w~ter towers near
<See STORM, Page A!)
Polish st~ntS 1:1riderground . .
·Group organized with ''anti-communist''.aims
bad been dissolved, and tbe.
army daily Zolnlerz_ Wolnoaci
said the student association wu
"prominent" amone "strictly .
counterrevolutionary
or1anl.ations."
Zolnierz Wolnoscl said
'members of tbe students'.
playing the role of political
gamblers went under1round."
The paper said that studeatl
from the Warsaw Medical
RELATED PHOTOs-M
''There will
be. a t ime for.
action .''
Academy passed out leaflets ' ·sayin1 "the present 1ltuaUon,
orces ua to •tart uaderll'OUDCI
actlvlty. Stuctenta of the !ledlcal
Academy should beain pMllve
resistance to alt orders. 'lben
will be • time for action."
The article about such
leaflets. the niateoce of wblcb
baa not been ladependenlly
conflrme4, appeared to •UICelt
the a~ mllbt Hiae upon
them to JUltlfJ 1tron1 meuurt1·
a1atn1t future student
or1anl11M. . PoUlb tonlp Tr8de IUnister
Tadeua Nestorowtea ani...S tn
lloacow t.ad11 \0 •lP a ~ economic protoeol
1,
Storm caught -z f orecas-ters
by surprise
REDWOOD CITY CAP) -The
worst storm In more than 2S
years smashed into the San
Francisco Bay area over the
'weekend, leaving a trail of death
and destruction in its wake.
Why didn't weather
forecasters lssue a warnlnl?
Richard Wagoner, chief
meteorologist for the National
Weather Service office in this
city s~uth of Sao Francisco,
displayed a satellite photoerapb
of lbe gathering storm, taken
Sunday, as he explained.
"If you measure all the tbinp
there are to measure, there just
isn't anything unusual about this
thing," he said.
And even at dawn MondQ, ·
with ra1n falling lo blinding·
sbeetl and the wiod bowllq, the
full extent ol the storm waa not
•recognizable, ,he, said.
But by 1be middle of the
morniq, thin•• were Just u
chaotic at tbe office u tbey
were in home. and on bJlbw~
over hundreds of mllH of
Northern Californ.la.
"My God, when we HW the
ralnfalJ amCJunta, well, they
were Juat phenomenal,"
Wacooer said. "I'm just amued that-.....,.._ with-nett _._..,.
cbaracterilt1ca could do wblit it
did.!'
For example, be said, Maria
County normally cu exped
from ' tot ..... ol ru from • •'-"m wb.ic:b looted HIE• tbe _.
whicbltruct&llWIQ. = "We aot allDOll • ha thla ~.. ........ • '"l'tM cbuetll of tbat, nil, U., _..
very• ftl'J Ilia. 'l'Mre la•.., 1wou1c1u~tMt.". w.,... IMw·to .. latellt ltorm.., .._._,,..._ ..
bl1ef, eol4 ...........
Ytar'10.,, •
in freeway
murder · trial
By FREDE&JCl(SCHOEMEHL
Of .. Dally ..... , ....
LOS ANGELES -A'
relatives of several of the
victims looked on, Wilttam
George Bonin, a 34 -year-old
Downey truck driver, was
-convicted today of 10 murders
· linked to the so-called freeway
killer.
Bonin, who once U ved In rustic
Silverado Canyon in Oranse
CQJ&nty, took copious notes at the
dlfenae table as tbe verdicts
were read before Los Angeles
County Superior Court Ju4ge
William Keene. Reading of tbe
verdicts took more than 45
minutes.
Court. personnel were notified
-Tuesday afternoon that the
seven-man, flve·woman jury
bad reached verdicts in the
cues lnvolvin1 young men and
boys but announcement was
delayed until this morning'
because Judge Keene could not
be present to receive lbe.m.
Bonin was acquitted of two
murders, those of Sean King, 14,
of South. Gate and Thomas
Lundgren, 14., of Reaeda.
However, the jury found that
special circumstances existed to
qualify Bonin for death in the
gas chamber at tbe San Quentin
state prison. A second bearing
will be held before the jury to
determine whether Bonin should
be sentenced to death or to life
imprisonme nt w.ithout
possibility of parole.
More than 150 people,
ine1udlng parents of several of
the victims, were seated in the,.
courtroom as the verdicts were
re ad . An equal number of
spectators was present in 'the
corridor outside the courtroom.
During the lengthy trial, Bonin
was linked to the crimes through
the testimony of two admitted
CONVICTED -William
Bonin has been found guilty
of 10 counts of murder in th~
.. Freeway Kille r·· case.
accomplices in two of the
s layings and the dramatic
last-minute testimony of David
Lopez, a r eporter for Los
Ange les television station
KNXT. Lopez testified that
Bonin admitted the series of
killings to him.
The freeway killings drew
their name from the fact that
the bodies of many victims
w e r e d u m p e d a 1 on c"Si de
freeways or major highways
throughout Southern California.
Several of tbe victims either
were from Orange County or
were dumped within the county.
Although Bonin was charged.
with 12 deaths by prosecuton in
Los Angeles county, homicide
(See GUILTY, Page.\%)
Wreckage of plane
found; 3 dead
I
which Is inaccessible by fool
The crash site was described u
the southwest slope of Mount
Woodson.
llllCI CIAIT llATlll
Chance of rain 10
percent tonight, near aero
Thursday. Tonight's lows
in. 60s. Webs Tburada7 in
mid-«>s. Details Pace A3.
M trnba• of COftgf'tU will
circl• 11'• glob• o•
.. ~ .. tript .. 0 ""' of Afr Foret pimw•. . .Ollll
aU at t~ apnff,,..
A7.
I ~
I \
j
~
BEN LOMOND <AP> -
... cue workera today taMd tbe
1rhn job ol d1Caln8 out at leut , •llhl houHI burle d to an a,,alancb• •I JnUd lo this remote, wooded community
aorth ot Saata Cr11s.
Elght to *> people were feared
dead ln the homes In a steep
canyon above 1,.ove Creek ,
authorltlH nld 'l'ueada.Y. At
leut n.loe other: people died ia
Santa Cf'ua County from the
two-day storm that started
SUAday, lherifra officials said.
Tt1elve lneb• of relD t\.t.rMd
the San ~remo Valley hl~
to mud, buryina the homet and
trewlna trees, rubble aad rock•
acro11 the only road lnto tbe
steep canyon, aald sheriff's
Investigator Joseph Henard.
"We hope to aet tnto thetn
today;• said aherllrs Lt. Lloyd
Gray.
The First step, l\e said, la to
"push a road completely
through so we can cet
eQ.ulpment into the area." Survivors in the Sall Lorenio
Valier and otber l1olated
poclleta ol \he county were cut
off from the out.Ide world, wttb
no water, oo power and DO
telephGne ~ce. Otay aald .. ...c
Re1eut woriert ln heavy-chnf
veblcl., e•rrled emeraertcy
wa~r IUPPllet to tome stranded
people, Gray aaJd.
•'There'• placea we haveo't
even rotten to yet," be sald. 1
Au\1toritiel cordoned off tbe
Ben Lomond area Tuesday ~
prevent looting and dlscourace onlook~ and people hopini to
return to their homes. Several
ln•t•Does of lootln1 were
reported but none bad been
conrtrmed, Henard said.
M•fe· than 70,000 people
1hroulhout the ~nty have been
without elodriclty since 8:32
p.m . Monday, and PG&E hid no
..Ulb.llte wben power wouJd be
reatoHCl
E tot Santa Cruz, residents
o uel Wfre tryinJC to dig out
f 11 l•yer or mud deposited
by witera e to 7 feel deep in
places, Gray said. Resident.a ot
that town were evacuated
br~ny Monday.
* . ~o.unty spared mudsliOOs * * From Page A1
STORM . Cloudiness due tonight; clear skies seen Thursday . •'
the slide worried many people.
Although county, emergency
officials said they were not in
jeopardy, Red Cross shelter
manager Mike Tachet said he
learned from police that "the
mudslide tipped them and some
of the waler spilled . . . into a
lake. If there is another slide, it
will bring 400,000 gallons down
on Sausalito," he said.
A~ ........
ROADBLOCK -Highway 101 north of th~ Golden Gate
Bridge was elosed -by this mudslide on the Waldo Grade.
cutting auto traffic between San Francisco and Marin
County.
A hl•h pTeasUre system over
BaJt California pushed a Pacific
storm eastward Tuesday,
helpina Orange County escape
the fierce rain and mudslides
troubling the northern areas or
California, National Weather
Service officials said today.
Weather forecas ters said
Orange Coast residents can
expect partial cloudiness tonight
with clearing skies Thursday.
The weather service said the
c hance or additional local
showers would dfop tonight and
diminish further Thursday. Fair
I weather is ~xpected to continue
through Sunday.
Orange Coast temperatures
are expected to 1dip into the
upper 40s tonight and climb to
the low 60s Thursday.
Early Tuesday, the weather
service had warned Orange
County to prepare tor heavy
rain. But the high pressure
system over Mexico created a
burrer that helped send Northern
California's storm eastward into
Nevada, a weather service
spokesman said.
Although mild showers earlier
an the week contrib14led to some
I
traffic accidents, very little
storm damage was reported in
Orange County.
"lt was dry all night here,"
confirmed Huntington Beach's
am atevr meteorologist J .
Sherman Denny. "I knew the
storm was moving east. We
didn't get any more rain here
near the beach, although they
may have had some inland."
Denny said Tuesday's
morning and afternoon drizzles
brought his rain total for the
year beglnnlng July 1, 1981 to
5.56 Inches, far ahead of last
year's total for this date, 1.41
inches.
··Nothing can stop tbe
mudslides," said John Barrows,
county administrator. "It's like
all slides -you have to let it
ride out. There's lots and lots or
water in the soil.
"It came very suddenly.
Everything was quiet . . then
things.blossomed," he said.
Expert says lie detector clears Huntington man
nJ
A small battalion of bulldozers
from the De partme nt of
Transportation was clearing
previous mudslides from the
eight-lane freeway at the Waldo
Grade on' Tuesday night when
the new wave of slides began
shortly after 10.
k~ DAVID KUTZ'MANN ~D-"Y~IMlSUfl
L11-t.turder derendant Willie Ray
1Visely was given a Ue detector
'l~st Tuesday that, according to a
_p9lygraph expert, clears the
1f'Untington Beach man of
~pvolvement in the suffocation
"\!hth or his stepfather.
Wisely, 29, who could go lo ~n Quentin's Death Row il
0 nvicted of the March 9 d~th
!) 4
'tnt
of tr\lck driver Robert Bray,
was given the examination in a
courthouse holding cell in Santa
Ana.
Ted Ponlicelll, the polygraph
expert who gave Wisely the test,
said afterward that the resuJts
indicated that the defendant was
telling the trutb when he said he
had no involvement in Bray's
death.
"There are no signs of his
trying to deceive me," Ponticelli
said. "l don't think he did
anythinj( to create a distortion."
Wh e th e r the si x ·man ,
s ix ·woman jury hearing
Wisely's case ever learns or the
polygraph examination remains
to be seen.
Wisely, who is acting as his
own lawyer, told jurors IJI his
opening statement last month he
gladly would take a lie detector
test .
But prosecutor Ed Freeman
has maintained that the results
of such examinations are olten
unreliabJe or inconclusive.
Wiaely's advisor y lawyers
said they are unsure if the
re£ults or the examination can
be introduced as evidence. "The
value (of the test) is yet to be
seen, really," said attorney
Roger Jennings.
Pont1cem said polygraph test
results have been introduced as
evidence ill previous cases and
could be used in Wisely's trial ir
Superior Court Judge Kenneth
Lae allows it.
Wi sely has m a intained
throughout his trial that Bray's
death was accidental ao.d lbat.
in fact , no ul..me was
Caltrans engineers today were
at 101 and the Waldo Tunnel,
also known as the R ainbow
Tunnel, to determine the extent
to which mudslides had
undermined them, said Caltrans
information officer David
Paulson.
ll.escu.ed Canadian lands in jail
l tiV I i ........ -,.... .. ..
committed. ,
Bray's body was found pinned
beneath the 2,000 pound,
till-away cab of his 1~75
fnlernaUonal ~a.tvester tractor
trailer rig on Springdale gueet
ip Huntington Beach l~st March.
Mud slid from beneath the
highway downhill to a Lillie
canyon of homes nearby, and
Barrow said, "Those houses are
golng."
After a check on the ea!it side
or 101, "a determination ...
was made that a portion of the
'City ism imminent danger. This
involves an area of abot.rt
o ne -ei ghth " or the
2.4·square-mile city, Potter said.
:.:.._ H 0 N 0 L ~LU < AP > -}h~~~ waa cha;i:.& wllh storm bee .. to and the H,.rn;..ns
Shi p wrecked s a i Io r John taking property that belonced \o were stranded 1.100 miles 90\lth
Harrison waited nearly a month a crew member when be sail~ of HonoluJu. to be rescued from a tiny atoll in tc>• Australia on his 41 -f6ot Attorney C. George Sphikas,
the middle of the Pacific. As trimaran. Sisyphus. representing the bank, said
soon as he returned to Harrison and his daughters Harrison. 39, owes $65.000 on the
civilization,hewassenttojail. apparently left Maui in a hurry principal, several unpaid
Hllrrison, of Caaada, was Nov . 10 as he was. being monthly payments or $1,235 and
arrested .at Honola.hf AirpOl't op confronted by collection aaeats unspecified expenses incurred
Tuesd,y night aftel' he ailltd bis ,for the Bank of Br It l 1 h by the bank in trying to recover
two daughten, Micki, 20, and Col~mbia, which holds the the Sisyphus.
Kristen, 13, \lfere no1'n 1,100 lnortgag~ on the ship1 oflk!l!Js f{arrlaOn initially surrender-eel
;,miles to fl~.-aii frDm remote d. -hl4'bolll to'the Hawaii Recovery
~dhllmyAlsland. be SiSyphus came apa Bureau but later hired an
100
P ollglas to" ~Odify
:nc.10 ~-slats
• i
'{II i • . ~ WASHINGTON <A P ) -t.he plane could go into a 1~c Donnell Douglas Corp., dangerous roll and possibly
:»;uilder of the DC· 10 aircraft erasfl. ' • will seek to modify devices that Tbe cbaqes W be presented to
,sontrol the plane's lift because the air carriers are ··a
wS\r concerns about potential pr."ecaut.ionary measure to
0~amage lo the devices if an increase protec\ion against
. ~hgine breaks up. severe external damage" if an
;111 The changes lo the hydrauJic engine breaks up as in the Air
• ~ystem that control~ the wfnR Florida incident, a McDonnell ~Slats will be suggested at a Jan. Douglas statement said.
~ /.4 meeting to au airline!' that The company said one change
i'tpperate DC-10~. a company will be to install a hydraulic
,spokesman said today. valve that would act as a lock to
' ' The modifications would be keep the slats extended even if
.p.erformed during normal hydraulic lines controlling the
Tiiiiaintenance. slats are severed. Also, the f "We're not going to have a cable system that controls the j assive recall," said Frank main hydraulic vaJ.ves will be
l omlinson, th~ company's modifie d to keep the slats. 11 ashington spokesman.. extended
The Fe.deraJ Aviation The performance of DC·lO
d m i n l st r a t i on a s k e d engines and forward wing slats
cDOllllelJ Douglas lo study the baa been a matter of concern
trects of severe en«itne dam~e since May 1979, when an
n t.heforwardwingslata.,whic~ American Airlines., DC·lO
ontrol lift, after an incident in crashed shortly after takeotr
eplember involving a DC-10 from O'Hare Inteq1alional
perated by Air Florida. Ai'rport at Chicago, killing 273
Ir( that Incident, an engine · peopJe. •
lsintegrated during takeoff at Jn that accident an engiJle fell
lami International Airport. frem the wing', the forward slats
he crew pulled back the wer' severely damaged, and the
rottle and slammed on lbe plane went into an uncontrolled
rakes at an estimated 110 roll and crashed.
nots, briDCinc the plane safely Tomltnson noted that the
a bait. chances "are not necessary to
But federal safety officlalal m eet FAA requirements'' but
aiaed concerns that parts ol the ,..,, intended as a precauUon
ngine durinl such a breakup aaalDat damage from potalble
.ould damare the nearby en1tae breakups. The fift'al
orward slats. If tbe alat ii not dtcilton whether to m~e
xtended while iU counterpart cb•D'IH wlll be up to the
the oppoelte wllll I• ertiuld, . l•dlvldual airlines
From Page A1
GUILTY. • •
investigators believed that he
was involved in at least 21
deaths.
Bonin was arrested in June,
1980, In Hollywood while he was
under s urveil lance after a
juvenile informant told police
that Bonin had claimed he was
the freeway killer.
There was tension in the
packed courtroom as Judge
Keene took several minutes to
look over the verdicts, then
handed them to the clerk to be
read.
"Mister foreman." he asked Juror John M. Lang, "have you
arrived at verdicts in this
case?"
"Yes, we have, your honor,"
' Lang said as the jurors stareid
around the ~o urt room but
avoided looking at Bortin.
Bonin's fate was sealed with
the reading of the first or 25
verdicts.
"We, the jury in the above
entitled act-Jon find the
defendant, William George
Bonin, guilty of murder, a
felony, upon Donald Hyden," the
verdict said, "and we further
find it to be murder in the first
degree."
The verdict was read Tuesday
but Keene was absent attending
a funeral, so the announcement
was delayed until today.
Atl~llta
trial begins
ATLANTA (AP) -The
murder case against Wayne B.
Williams wiU be revealed "like
a Jicaaw puzzle with a lot of
pieces filtin1 in," the prosecutor
tbld lhe Jun~. aa openln~
ar1uments began \oday at the
long ·awaited I.rial.
But a defense attorney said he
will prove that "you don't get a
killer from a boy that was raised
Ilk• thl1 boy was.''
YIUUam1, a 23-year-old black
rr~e -lance cameraman, it
cllarlll!d with tulln1 N at.haniel
Cattr, 27, and Jfmmy Rat
PayM, 11. They were lwo ot •
younc blacks ·~• 1layln11 over 22 moat.hi prompted oae ol tbe moat nt•ael•• pollce
inve.Uc•Uent ta the nation'•
b1ltoty. No al'l'eltl have been
mid• lft UM• other db~ • •
attorney and ··eventually
secured repossession of the boat
-l can't say bow," Sphikas
said.
Maui County Police Chief
Joseph C. Carvalho said the
felony theft warrant stemmed
Crom a complaint filed by Wayne
Stevens, a Sisyph~ crQWmu.
Two other crewmen filed similar
complaints, Carvalho said.
, BaJI ~¥ ,JS4=t. at $2,000, but a
Police spokesman said Harrison
would not be allowed to post
bond untiJ he was returned to
Maui, probably today. The two
daughters were staying in
Honolulu with friends, the
spokesman added.
His death was at first believed
to be accidental, but police took
Wisely into custody after
investigating the claims of a
jail house informant in Los
Angel'8 who said \,be defefdanl
admftted the crim~\o him.
Wisely had been in custody at
Los Aogeles County Jail last
May bd June on unrelated
robbery charges.
It is alleged that Wisely and
others used Bray's truck to
transport narcotics Trom Florida
to Cillfomia and that Bray was
killed wben he found out about
his illicit cargo.
...
At least 300 evacuees were
taken to Martin Luther King
School and others were headed
for a recreation center in !tfill
Valley, Potter said.
Many evacuees ,w~e w+aied
and wakeful, eager for news of
their property. Others dozed
under gray Red Cross blankets.
Dianne Leslie, who left her
cats behind when she fled her
home as lt was threatened by
another house sliding down hill,
recalled hearing "a dull roar
come from behind the house.
ANNOUNCING
OUR WINTER SALE
BIGGEST AND BEST EVER
I u
,.
*Price
'le.
•
1
.~ ........
DIOOING OUT -Bob Hiestand shovels snow from the
front or his Sly Park, Calif .. home east or Placerville
where recent storms have hit.
Bay area man hits $773,102 jackpot
A San Francisco man who
won Nevada's second largest
jackpot said that Prealdnt
Reagan'• tax cuts would
save him approximately
$150,000.
Andrew Charles Turner,
65, said he was told that SO
rtercent or his $173, 102 slot
machine payoff would go to
Joe Hamilton, comedian
Carol Burnett's husband, is
recovering fr om a
"moderate" heart attack
suffered at his son's wedding
last week and "the prognosis
is good," a spokesman says.
Hamilton. a television
producer, was stricken
Thursday at the weddif!g of
Dr. Karl Mennlnser,
co-founder of the Menninger
Foundation, was listed in
serious but stable condition
at the Veterans
Administration hospital in
the Intern al R~venue
Service.
"Jipwever, I was told that
if I won this five days prior,
it would have been 70
percent."
Turner, a real estate
broker, bit the jackpot at the
MGM Grand Hotel.
his son by a previous
marriage, John, to Marlon
Mccarter, said M iss
Burnett's publicist, Rick
Ingersoll
Miss Burnett postponed a
scheduled Jan. 8 weeklong
guest appearance on ABC's
daytime soap opera "All My
Children." Ingersollsaid.
Topeka, Kan.
Menninger, 88, was
hospitalized Sunday after
apparently suffering a mild
stroke, hospital director Paul
Kennedy said.
Tbe c0Dver11Uoo waa
about UMt l882 campa110 but
1ome partlclpantl may have
been daydreamin1 about
1984, aa former Vice
Prealdenl Walter F. Moedale
held a three·day atrateu
. ae11ion oo the Eastern Shore
of Maryland.
The ae11lon at the Wye
Plantation opened with a
1eneral political dlacuaaloil.
On Monday, the pa.rlicipants
reviewed domestic laauea
and foreign policy was on
Tuesday's a1enda.
Aides to the former vice
president refused to discuss
specifics ol the sessions.
Actress Je11lca Lange is
being sued by her filmmaker
husband Paeo Graade for
$800 a week in temporary
alimony, Grande's lawyer
says.
Grande iJ legally blind and
lives on $85 a week in a
shabby lower East Side
building, Clccording to bis
lawyer, La19Teace Fablaa. A
lawsuit se•klng a divorce
and alimony was filed in the
latter part of 1980, shortly
after Grande and Min Lange
separated, Fablan said. The
actress since has had a child
ratbered by ballet star
Mlkball Baryabnlkov.
Miss Lange's lawyer,
Maurice Spaabock, declined
comment on the suit.
HUSBAND SUES -
Actress Jessica Lange Is •
being sued by her legally
blind hus band for $800 a
week in temporar y
alimony.
Rain diminishing
Cotutal
l ... -lewl .... ~ ....... aot 7 ,000 Ifft todey -s-y c-lllt sklu , 11111 tll• weatller ser.)tl<•
···-of wtncB ~lo ....... Ill
PHSel Forty mlle·-ftOur IUSll
•••• rePorle<t l.,.Ml•Y •I L,•IJ.• •rr-helld In ttw 5-1 8er_,,,lno
-.ni.IM.
Cl\ence of rein 10 119r<ent tonloht, -----------ne•r iero lluncley.
coa1ta1, 1n1anc11ows .o.. c on1a1. Exte-J-d l111enc1 lllON mlcMOs. W•ter s.. lf.f.le
El-llere, verl-wlnca S to 1S
llnPb wttll ~ 1o .. foot ••net •• .,.. ~orec-•t lllra11111 Nrly We4n .. dey eaopt J 1 ~
llOl111wnl IS lo 10 knots w ltll .. to ._.~ c~ -_, wetMt. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Wlncts IJIComlfto nor1fl to not'Ul-lt 1 C0A$TAL ANO ~HlAIN AREAS
10 lo JO knob. Mostly clolldy ll"°"llfl -s1rono ,,.,,-.ri,. winds In Ille
••rly W""9Mlay •1111 t ll•nce of mount•lnt •nd below cenyons
•llowers. Frld•Y· Wlndl ~omlno •Hterly
Sat11rday .,,., dKrNlif111 durlno IN
d•y. 01Mrwl11t fair. HIQM F'lday In V.s. •ummary ,,,. c .......... a,,, lo., -'" IN o rnountalM 42 to St. About S -. ... warmer S•lurdey. Lows In Ill•
A slorm IW'OuOllt lrffll -lo Ille central llocky ~telns and muell
of ttw SoutrMest, ...,..edlnt in.o Ille
coasi.I -Ill IM 40s and In Ille mouni.IM In IM 20L
Plel"'·
Winter 1torm wernl1111• were In Tem'.ner-tu•e• effect In _..In •re•s of Utell, T • ,... • ' Coto•--Hew Mnlco Perh of Ille $ .. rr• Nev-oot I IMI of snow
In » lloun. lr•wl ecNl-le1 were Allleny
posted In ~ So.l1tl 0.kote end All>Uqw
noru.-1 Netir.-e Amarillo
Ooaens of people died In AllCllOr8Qlt
weelller·••l•ted e ccldenu In Asllnllle
Arl1one, c.tllornle, Gelor-. Nll'W Att•nt•
York. Ulell -Wa~ll9'0fl. All•ntc Cty Cold ,ir ...,..., ecron Ille Great B•lllm-Plalns Into , ... MIUIH"'91 Valley, llrmlnQllm
-11111 llomperetyrn lie-tero In """•rtk Ill• nor111ern Pla lns and 11pper Boise
Mtuluipell v.i .. ,. BoslOll
Sklet-. 91Mf'ally titer over Ille Brownsvlle Att•ntk C.O..C 1tatn. Blrll•lo ~ wn for'ec•I leler In IM clay Cllerlun SC
from New Enol•nd to Ill• Gre•t Cllarlstn WV
LOH, Ille 110rlllern Olllo Velley C,,..,e_
River Ven..,, IM centr•I Mlullslppl Clllcaoo
Riv•' Veli..,, the cenlr•I Pleln1 •nd Clnc lnn•U
Ille lower Rocklff CleVet•nd
R•ln •nd a few t!Klnder"'8wen Columbus
were Ull9Ctecl to reech from Ille Oel·l't Wttl
U"'9r Ohio Vell•Y IO Ille 0 .. 11 CoH t Oenvet'
...... -from Ille northern Pec:lfk. DH MOll'ft
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from minus J1 ~"' In Hevre, P'elrllen!IS Mon'-, 101J In Key Wnt, Fla. Herttord
California
Anottwr Pec:lfk 19onn MIO miles off
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deetllt 9fld SlOO mllllon In ~
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We're Listening •••
Moon letl Tllur'48y 4:'5 a .m.,
rlMt J: 10 '·"'·
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PASS THE CHEESE -Frank Romeo (left>
and George Dakers load the first batch or
surplus cheese to be given away in Orange·
D9lfr .......... .., ll'Mrtcll O'
Development Council in Westminster. The
pair are distributing the free cheese to senior
citizens in Orange.
,County at the count y 's Community
Driver faces murder charge
Countian blamed for freeway death of Huntington woman
A s econd-degree murder
complaint was filed Tuesday
against a Buena Park man
whose van struck a disabled
vehicle on the shoulder of the
Orange Freeway, killing a
Huntington Beach mother of
nine two days before Christmas.
The California Highway
Patrol in Santa Ana sought the
murder charge against William
R . Eden, who had already been
arrested on suspicion or felony
drunken driving and vehicular
mans laughter. He will be
arraigned Jan. 14 in North
Orange County Municipal Court.
Deputy District Attorney Doug
Woodsmall said tte Y(Ould file thel
Ballooni8t8
to speak at
Orange Coaat • John Sboecraft and Fred
Gorrell, pilots of the first
helium-filled balloon to cross' the
United States non-stop, will
present a free two-hour program
on their voyage ThuNday, Jan.
14, at Orange Coast College in
Costa Mesa.
The program will begin at 8
p.m. in the college's auditorium.
Sboecrart a nd Gorrell
launched their 10-atory-tall
balloon, the Super Chicken Ill,
from Orange Coast College on
Oct. 9. Two days later they
landed the craft on an island off
Savannah, Ga .. completing a
2,515-mile trip.
The record-setting balloonists
promised the spectators who
cheered their liftoff that they
would return to Orange Cout
College to discuss their flight.
The Jan. 14 program is billed
a s the fulfillment of that
promise. The balloonists are
expected to show exclusive mm
footage of their voyage.
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
C1rtifi1d G1moloai1t, AGS
AMERICAN PEARLS
We have all heard the
fascinating story or bow the
Japanese produce cultured
pearls by controlline the
environment or shellfish that
have had irritants "seeded"
into their shells. Japanese
women th«m harvest the pearls
that grow around theae
irritants. But now, back in the
Tennessee Valley, Americana
working in cooperation wlth
Japanese experts are creating
a huee pearl "farm" which
may someday produce a lar1e
percentage of the world's
pearls. American freshwater
pearls have been more
difficult to find in rffent years
aa pollutlon seeped Into the
favorite barvestln1 1round1 oo
the East Cout. Pearl·bearlnc
mussels have b6en Implanted
and the tint harvest of pearls
ls due ln the Tennessee Valley
next year. It early lndlcaUom
of 1ucceu bold true, A1Jertca
.could become a ma,or
producer of the beautt ul,
1ou1bt-after frubwater
complaint in North Orange
County Municipal Court inl
Fullerton after conferring with
highway patrol investigators.
Killed in the Dec. 23 accident
near Chapman Avenue was
Margaretta Jean McFall, 50.
who had pulled her car onto the
shoulder of the Orange Freeway
when mechanical trouble
developed. With her in the
vehicle was her 14-year-old
daughter Theresa, who suffered
piin6r injuries in the accident.
Investigating officers said
Eden, to circumvent heavy
traffic on the freeway, drove his
van onto the right shoulder and
speeded up to more than 75 mph
FLIGHT PRESENTATION -
Pilots of the helium-filled
balloon. Super Chicken III
t hat lifted orr at Orange·
Coas t College in October .
will return to the college lo
present a program on their
cross-country voyage.
when he collided with Mrs.
Mc Fall's parked car.
Eden suffered minor injuries.
He was treated at Anaheim
Memorial Hospital and then
taken to Orange County Jail.
where he was held on $5,000 bail.
Woodsmall said Eden would
face trial on charges of murder,
manslaughter and drunken
driving.
If convicted on the murder
count, he could g'e a
15-years-to-life term in state·
prison.
Woodsmall said it is possible
to Cile. the murder charge on the .
basis or a recent state Supreme
C.ourt ruling.
The high court said the more
aggravated charge would be
applied in cases where it was
alleged that the driver
knowingly endangered the lives
of others.
It is the first s uch driving
related charge to be filed in
Orange County .
CSF halts
enrollment
for spring
Ca l State Fullerton has
stopped accepting applications
tor spring admission ln all but
extreme hardship situations,
Dean of Admissions Ralph
Bigelow announced.
In addition, the university also
ha s slopped accepting
applications for all
undergraduate programs in
business administration for the
fall semester .
The cutoff is prompted by
unprecedented enrollment this
year, Bigelow said . Enrollment
last falJ was closed early for the
same reason, be said.
Those seeking hardship
• admiuioo for spring may call
773·2370 or visit the campus to
obtain further information.
cultured pearl. Such an MEMBERAMERICANGEMSOCIETY
Industry would create Jobi 1823 NEWPORT BLVD COSTA MESA
while eatabll1hln1 a new . 36VIMllN TH&IAMI LOCATION
aupply ol ane ol the world'• hnkAm.ncerd-M..-Ctt•rve PHONE
1 moat beautiful objects. J~!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
............... rt. --•
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednt1day, January 8, 1982
~filU~UJ[~}-Cre11tioni8ts vow strong fight
!R41oe injureil
~ auto bombing
LlTTLS ROCK (AP) -
CreaUoalatt vowed to ''take the
ofhaalve" after a Judie
oHrturned a it.ale law requlrl.n.I
achooll to teaCb ereaUorillm -U-
tbey teacb evolution, and tbe
lll11llllppl Senate 1truck t.be
llnt blow, pusln1 a •hnilar
rulln1 . A eballen1e of
Lowalana'• new creatlonJam law
l• expected to be heard tbla
.a~n .
\1. . DI1trict Judte Wllllam
Overtoo ruled Tuesday ln Utt.le
Roell that the Arkantat law
violated Flrtt Amendment
a.uarantees of teparatlon of
church and 1tate.
blolOIY teacher, uld ln hlt law, alto beinl cha1Jen1ed by
CO-pate rulln&. the ACLU.
"l believe that thla cue wllJ Loublana Sen. BUI Keith, UM
de.al ueatioa...clenu a l•t.al.--. u t h or 'lrt-L tr u t • l a n a ... -•
blow," aald Robert Cearley Jr., creatloniim law, aald bla
wbo niprwented the American confidence wu unahaJtep by the
ClvU Ubertles Union in the suit ru1lna. a1alntt the law. ,
:IS.UBLl.N Ireland (AP) -'lop
police 1clentlit Dr. James
O'Donovan. a ke)I wttneu
•lllmt JRA iu~rrJll.U acCUMd 01-klflin1 Britain' 1 Earl
OWltbatten, 1ulfered aertous
lnjurlH t.od•i" wlatn bla )'-trlPI*! car exploded 11
ove t.o work, pplice tald.
Donovan, 40, dlrector ol the
naic Science Department at
blln police headquarters,
ffered "very serious" let
uriea but bis We wu not in
1er, a police spokesman
d . Be was taken by
ulance to St. James'
pltal in downtown Dublin,
re he was undergoing
tment.
oline price1
me th.ii year
ASHINGTON (AP> -The
e of. 1aaoline will rise five
ts a gallon and homeowners
hear With natural 1u will
their annual bills rise by $110
Ing 1982, according to the
at government predictions.
he Energy Department also
IMS foreign-oil imports, wbicb
ha.ye fallen sharply the last two
>"fars, will climb in J982.
II.ad year figures
tbld by Detroit
DETROIT CAP) -Year-end
rtgures for the automobile
Industry in the United States are
expected to show that 1981 was
the worst sales year for the
automakers since 1961. Those
figures were expected to be
~~MN.today,_ _ he roundup of bad news from
t past 12 months began
sday with General Motors
{>· reporting a 1981 sales d$~hne of 7.S percent, compared t ~he already depressed levels
0 1980.
-P..ive nations nix
~an for U.S. aid
'i'EGUCIGALPA, Honduras
<AP> -A U.S.-backed plan for a
$20 billion economic aid
p~ram for Central American a~ Caribbean countries bas
be'en rejected by at least five of
the Central American nations it
wqf u l d be n e r it, E con om y
Mllnister Ruben Mondragon
reports.
· ~ondragon said Tuesday that C~s ta Rica, El Salvador,
G.vatemala, Honduras and
Nlcaraaua . refuted to auume "~oala and commllmeau that
mI1bt uve been lnJurloua to our
ecooornl• aQd our peoples." He
did not elaborate.
Burger to block .
/inn takeovr?
WASHJNGTON (AP) -U.S.
Steel Corp. la plannln1 to belin
Its proposed a1U billion takeover
of Marathon OU Co. at mldnlcht
tonltht unless lt la blocked by
Chief Justice Warren Burier.
Mobil Corp., which also
wants to acquire Marathon,
asked Burger on Tuesday to
block the U.S. Steel takeover
until the full Supreme Court can
hear arguments on an appeal
Mobil rued last week.
Another merger
propoaal offered
KANNAPOLIS, N.C. CAP> -
For the second time ln as many
years, Cannon Mills Co. has
received an unsolicited proposal
for acquisition of the company.
Cannon announced Tuesday
that it received the proposal
from Pacific Holding Corp., a
company owned by David
Murdock, the Los Angeles
developer and private adviser to
President Reagan.
Democrats woo
organized labor
WASHINGTON (AP> -nte
,Democratic Party ls welcoming
organized labor back into the
fold and hoping union leaders
will bring the-rank and file witb-
tbem.
•l•l¥te • tl anythin&, crea·
tlon-1clentl1t1' effort• wlll
be lntentlfled,'' Duane Giah,
a11octate director of thr-
lnltltute for Creation Research
ln El CaJon, Calli., aald after the
•'It w11 •Imply and purely an
effort t.o Introduce the biblical
veulon ot creation Into the
pu bile school currtcula,''
Overton, the Methodbt ton ol a
.........
Sl'ICKING A NECK OUT -Petunia. top, a giraffe al the
Bronx Zoo in New York City, stays close to male offspring
born New ¥ear's D~. T~baby gtraffe weighs 125 pounds--
and is already 6 feet tall.
Steve Clark the Arkan1at Arkansas wa1 · outtunned and
attorney 1ener~ who defended outmaneuvered," Keith aald.
the law ln court, aald he hu not "t•m confident that with the
made up his mind on an appeal. proper def en a e , proper
The law which wowd have te 1 tl mo n Y • we ' II w i n in
1one lnto etfect in autumn, aald Loulalana." ·
P u b ll c • c boo Is le a c bin I Laal year, Arkanau became
evolution must also teach the flnt atate t.o adopt aucb a
creation-science. bill, baaed on a premise that
Evolutionists believe the public schools can be required t.o
Earth l1 billions of yeara old and teach creation from a scientific
life forms began developin1 standpoint without rell1ious
gradually several million years materials.
a10. Creationists 1enerally hold
that the Earth and moat life
came Into existence suddenly
about 8,000 years a10.
The ruling , based on a
nine-day trial last month, Is "a
very serious blow to academic
and religious freedom," Gish
said in a telephone Interview.
Fish said he had 1reater
confidence in Louisiana's
defense of Its new creationism
Creationists have circulated
the blll in most states and have
offered It to Congress for
nalional action.
The bill goes to the House.
M ississi ppl Sen. Emerson
Stringer was told of the
Arkansas ruling minutes before
be guided lbe bill to victory on
the opening day of the 1982
legislative session.
TV studio accident
knocks out senator
ORLANDO, Fla. <AP> -Sen.
Paula Hawkins was knocked
unconscious when she was hit by
a falling 6-foot section or a
television studio backdrop.
The accident occurred
Tuesday night in the WESH-TV
studios in Winter Park. the
Florida Republican's hometown.
Mrs. Hawkins, 54, momentarily
blacked out, but was conscious
and lucid, though in pain, said
Rudy Daniels, the nursing
supervisor at Orlando Regional
Medi~ Center: he was in faia
condition.
X-rays were taken or Mrs.
Hawkins' back and head and she
was admitted so more tests
could be conduct ed today,
Daniels said
Sonny Bloch, host of "Real
Estate Action Line,·· which was
being taped for Sunday, said he
·'looked up and saw this divider
coming down. It bit her on the
back Of the shoulders and OD the
head and knocked her out cold. I
·said, 'Paula? Paula?' There was
-no response. I i>tclt"ed her tnmd
up and let it go and it dropped."
Democratic Chairman Charles
Manatt met Tuesday with the
presidents of 20 unions and
acknowledged the session was
··a recognition or the last 10
years of organized labor not
taking a direct and active role in
party .acti":ities."
Poland crisis pOses U.S. draft problem
Panel aak' Smith
to extend probe
WASHINGTON <AP>
Attorney General William
French Smith reportedly is
being urged by the two top
mem bef'S of the Senate Labor
Com mltt~e to eJtpand the
Investigation of Labor Secretary
Raymond Donovan, according to
a story In todby's editions or the
W aahington Post.
WASHINGTON <AP) -The dealing with the draft
military crackdown in Poland registration question "on the
may have complicated basis or current events" in
President Reagan's decision on ... Poland.
whether to end peacetime draft ·' Catto refused to discuss any
registration, Pentagon officials recomme ndations made by
have Indicated. Defense Secretary Caspar
"What be is going to decide in Weinberger to Reagan, but there
the lllht of current realities, I do have been reports that
not know ," said Pentagon Weinberger has told the
spokesman Henry Catto when president in effect tha( ending
as k e d about t be d r art draft registration would send the
reglat.ration situation. Soviets a wrong signal,.
Meanwhile, a senior Army Weinber,er was said to have
general , who a s ked for made tba.s argument at a
anonymity, said the Reagan meeting with ~eagan about a
administration has a problem week before Christmas when the
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you maintain a minimum balance
in your account ($500 in checking,
or $3,000 in savings).
administration was preparing to
impose economic sanctions
against the Soviet Union for its
alleged instigation of the
military crackdown in Poland.
During the 1980 presidential
campaign, Reagan opposed
continuing draft registration,
which had been ordered into
effect by former President
Carter about two years ago.
Carter took the action alter the
Soviets invaded Afghanistan.
W elnberger is also believed to
be opposed to peacetime
registration.
However, Catto acknowledged
that the Joint Chiefs of Staff
"fa vor r ete ntion of
registration."
Dur ing the Ca rter
administration, the JCS went on
record· as favoring registration.
Some members of the Joint
Chiefs wanted to go further and
r estore the peacetime draft
because they believe it la the
only way to solve problems with
the all-volunteer force.
"Our position hasn 't
changed," saJd a member or the
JCS recently. He declined to let
his name be used.
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedn11day, January e. 1982 H/F ...
~um~~
!leston rips SAG
for Reagan rebuff
. HOLLYWOOD (AP> -An
angry Charlton Heston baa
btasted the Screen Actors Guild
for refusln1 to give President
Reaean lta annual award
because or his handling of the
air controller's strike.
Heston -who, like Reaaan, Is a former SAG presJdent -said
the decision not to give the
president the SAG annual award
for fostering the "finest ideals or
the acting profession" was
"embarrassing," particularly
because it was made after the
White House had been told the
1981 award was going to
Reagan.
State hospital
security rapped
SACRAMENTO CAP) -A
legislative committee, angered
by the escape of mental patients
Crom Patton State Hospital near
San Bernardino, wants to boost
security.
D\lring the past six years, 477
patients have escaped from
Patton , mo s t of them
"walkaways " from the
medium·security facility .
During the same period, there
were only three escapes Crom
Atascadero State Hospital near
San Luis Obispo, the state's
max I mum security mental
hospital.
Maureen fund
shortage told
LOS ANGELES CAP >
Maureen Reagan's senatorial
campaign is going to do wtthout
its expensive management firm
for now and rely instead on
volunteer help.
M iss Reagan confirmed
Tuesday that the
Westwood-based Dolphin Group
would cease to handle her
campaign, citing a shortage of
funds .
Legal gambling
law proposed
S AC RAMENTO CAP )
Another state constitutional
amendment is being proposed to
legalize casino gambling in
California.
Introduced Tuesday, SCA42 by
Sen. John Holmdahl, D-Castro
Valley, would authorize casino
gambling a long 20 -mile
stretches of three highways
leading to Nevada: Interstate 15
from the Los Angeles area, and
Interstate 80 and U.S. Highway
50 from the San Francisco area.
·~-......... ON THE TOWN -Actress Elizabeth Taylor leaves Chasen's
restaurant in Beverly Hilts on the arm of Zev Bufman.
producer of her play, "The Little Foxes." Miss Tavlor
recently separated from her husband, Sen. John Warner ...
Death ·toll rises J
.i~ !!!~0t~,e~!!~\~~-r~~~!
K1r1 lJ an unolftctal U1t of 21 ....,.. ._...... •
people confirmed dtad and one 11. u.....,.. ... ........,., wt1t ":.·#':': ' ml l ..._._..,..... ...... ,.,....,._..
"person 11 aa and prMWIMCI ••"4•11-*llll•• ... _..,,. dead ln Northrn California. ....,._,._..._
• tt. J-. y ....... -lllllN ..... .. CO-Pl•MIOMAO .._..e110flllell"-"--..... lft..,_ 1.Je'f(le~.u • ...,~ ...... crw CtwC-W_ ...... .,....._ t
C:-'Y, ...... ~ lfl "'"*i ... t. a.wy Me1'9M, •, IMte CNI, , ..... ~
11'11111 llld lntt Mr llM!t ~ '"'""""' ' I. c.rOtl ....,,.,., a.. A!"M, lllM Wftlll .,_
ltllltl ............ ~. ..... Dr•. 71, .... lft --...,., ............ ~ ...... . s. Ollt .......... " ... ,,.,_Wied tft ........ In BOllldlffCreH Int ~Ide.
6. U l'lldtntlfltd ,.,.,,., rtct11trt4I lroM
mlldtlldt '""°'" lft ltf'I LMllOIW. 1. ,,,_,... L. Wiiii.-. Jt, 11tcty ,__.
TUH!Ny from~ et Ptlteft.
I. Clltl!v Canlou, r....-.M inltMI 11'1 ~ Crttll, •• ._... dMd 11'1 Ult left~·~
1 .. """"' C-t .................... ,__...,_ t. Cl"""'9 Ha-, "• Heywwd, dlM lfl _.. ecctdtfttOl'I Hl9ftw•r 11 Moncier. 10. Otvld OleM, », SM ,.,_t.co, tl9d In
ldel'I H'"'*81. CMtro Vollty tfwr Mt -"'" 1'"4ltr trucll on lf'llent.W MO NltflNy. 11. ,...,.... 1rw111, """as,..., AMttmo,
Wfftrff _, tnadl .,.., ..... --...... "°"" w rwKuen, ,_ .... Moftdtr.
12. C ..... "-Mlwtln, 19, S... Alltltlmt, dr-
111 •I• ll'ICllH of •• .., -,,., -~,
al1er S..!Mrt119 8 NllAI,.., Monday.
IJ. l(el·YU HM!, ff, a S... Frafl<llCO SC...
Untyenlly prot-. Tll•ul'Oft, .,._. -lit.
"°"'8 was '-' otf fOUl'ICleCIOf'I by ""°"'* _,, "'°""•' 14. ElolN Jov AkllmOncl, 56, s.n M•lto. 1111 •v
car wllll• trouln9 street 200 fffl from her apartm ... teerly -•Y.
IS. JOW9ft Gaflll, 1' M 11, 0 .. y City, llllled In
•ulo •«IOent In Sa11 Fr•n<l"o Mo110ey
•ll•rnoOl'I ,,_ Ul'llOef'lllfltCI _,..,,, Jt, San ,.., ... KWleO
-•Y 11'1 • ---OIKOVereO '-·-17. 8ruce Furclllenl<lll, o . who wu
electr0<u"d Mondey at 1111 -111 lhe Sent•
Clara Coumy <llY of Monte Se+--wlllle tryl"9 lo
drain llb ,_with• •umc> l>UIT\P
11. " -20 Mkr.1e veter, n. ,,., 111ter
Rehnquist hack
WASIDNGTON (AP> -U.S.
Supreme Court Justice William
H. Rehnquist has returned to
work after a week-long hospital
stay during which he underwent
withdrawal from a drug
SUCCUMBS -Actor Hans
Co nried , not ed stag~
sc r een. ra di o and T.Y.
performer and the voice 6n
many cartoon s hows. h"
died of a heart ailment. A@
was 64. .tl
How times change rock noW commercial ,11
•111
l 'J
rt l
LOS ANGELES CAP> It
woukl have been unthinkable a
few years ago. To buy one of the
two otf1cta1 "l>OSters tor tie
Rolling Stones' current North
Amerkan tour, you have to
purchase a bottle or Jovan
perfume as well.
And if you wear the official
Rod Stewart T-shjrt being sold
outside his current concerts,
you' II be walking around with
the Sony logo e.mblazoned on
your back.
Siens of the times, and to
paraphrase Bob Dylan, the
times they are indeed a-cbangin'
as far as relations go between
Madison Avenue and rock'n'roll.
To J ay Coleman , whose
5-year -old New York marketing
firm Rockhill played marriage
broker to the Stones·Jovan and
Stewart·Sony matches, the
change is nothing s hort of
revolutionary. PRODUCTS PLUGGED Times are indeed
a-changin' as Bob Dylan. center. noted in one
of his popular songs. Rod Stewart. left . now
.. ~ ........
nas Sony logo emblazoned on back of his
T-s hirt~ while Charlie Daniels. right. ha s
endorsed beer and tobacco.
Since rock bands are so
sensitive to their ima.,ges, the
dea ts are almost as varied as
they are numerous. For
example. on the Cree ReckbiU
concert poster for the Marshall
Tucker Band, band members
pose casually with a few botUes
of Ronrico rum quite visible; but
Camel was limited to an ad on
the back of the Allman Brothers
poster.
In a n unusual deal, a new
band called Sneaker not only
wears Jordache Athletic Wear
attire in a poster but actually
put the Jordache logo on the
back cover of its debut album.
The payoff, 1,000 pairs of
Jordache sneakers worth an
•estimated $20,000, was used In
radio station promotions for the
band.
At the other end of the
spect rum are the
precedent-setting Stewart and
Stones arrangements, in whlc.h
1neither act endorsed the
sponsoring product.
In fact. when uked wbaLthe
Ill•
' at the concerts themselves. ~
different poster was availabl~
outside the arenas where ~
Stones performed and fro.Pf
Rolling Stone magazine. ,
Coleman said the Ston~t
initially approached him to loci;
into a sponsorship deal.
"Originally it was to just haJ~
a sort of nest egg for the tour:it
Wasserman says, indicating tb&l
even the Stones were a Wt
nervous about the sluggish stat.l
of the concert market.
They needn't have worried. 1. 1
·'The' tour grew and grew W..
Topsy and will be the m<*1 lucrative there has ever been,:;,
Wasserman said. •<f
He estimated the gross f"-J
ticket sales and mercbandisiaa,
alone at close to $50 million rM
and that's not counting reveoptt,
from the c losed -circ uit
broadcast of a concert coaU.nc>
up in December. • -,
"When I started Rockbill,"
recalled the 31-year-old former
p_re,med student, · · M..adlson
A venue and major corporations
had no interest in tyin1
themselves in with roek'n'roll
because there was still this
image of rock'o'roll being a
counterculture movement.
There's no question that going to
Woodstock was as much for
making a statement of your
poli~cal feelings as for the
entertainment.''
Woodstock generation bas p i~ k et in g again st bl g "The primary reason the artists Stones contributed to the
grown up. companies, t.hey',re.trying lA get do it. make adv.ertising. deals, is multimillion-dollar Jovan deal
Stewart's arrangement witb-
Sony is a bi~ broader than
Stones' deal , involvin1 the
.J>rinting o{ ::SOOy Tape presen&.I
ft.od Stewart·' on the official
T-shirts. It's also a bit more
controversial in music industry
circles be ca use of lb
controversy over the use
blank tape to record music
thereby circumvent purchase
··Someone who went to a job." not S() much for the dollars but -described by all concerned as
Woodstock today could be an Sl milarly,rockstars whoonce rorthevisibility." the most lu c rative tie-in
advertising executive in his feared that "if the kids think So over the last few years, involving rock stars -band
mid-30s making decisions on they're too commercial, they Earth Wind & Fire have become spokesman Paul Wasserman
how to s pend millions of may not be considered hip any national s p okesmen for replied: "Nothing. They were
dollars," Coleman said. "They mor e " have rethought their Panasonic's Platinum Series of ju$t l.el)ding Jovan some sort of records.
understand that rock music is a attitudes in light of skyrocketing port a bl e radio c asset t e subliminal association in return
very positive part of someone's tour costs, the soft music recorders; Charlie Daniels has for X amounts of money."
''We f ee l that lt
inappropriate," said Bob Mer
spokesman for Warner B
Records, Stewart's recor ~ li!estyle. It's a great way to market of recent years and -endorsed Busch beer and Skoal In addition to the post.er offer
communicate to teens, not for all but the biggest. or tobacco; Eddie Rabbitt is -buy $5 worth or J.o.van But more than a clecade bas
gone by. Music -with the
po.s si ble exception of the
something to be afraid of." superstars -the problem of singing a Miller's beer ad; and products and you can purchase
Teen-agers have also changed, maintaining pubUc exposure. the list goes on, with tie-ins the poster for $1 -Jovan waa
company.
But there wasn't anything
company could do, he said. "
were presented with a (
accompli. We don't own
Stewart. we just sell records '.
·anti-establishment output or
some punk and new-wave bands
-is back to being plain old
en t erta inm e nt , and the
Coleman added. "When an artist doesn't have between Ronrico rum and the allowed to put its name on the
"Ten yeai;s ago, a kid had an a hit r ecord out, they'r e Marshall Tucker Band, Camel tickets for the Stones concerta,
anti-business attitude. You go to generally not getting a lot of cigarettes and the Allman and to use its name in other tour
college today. they're not airplay." Coleman explained. Brothers Band. promotions, but no advertislnc
Nurse-midwife
bill backed
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Legislation aimed at
opening many hospital doors to nurse-midwives
was approved by an Assembly panel Tuesday.
The bill, AB1592 by Assemblywoman Jean
Moorhead, a Sacramento Democrat who is also a
nurse, would forbid hospitals to discriminate
against nurse-midwives as a class.
Ms. Moorhead said that wouldn't force all
hospitals to give staU privil eges t o
nurse-midwives, but would require them to set
uniform standards of entry related to lhe care
provided and exclude nurse-midwives only under
those standards.
Nurse-midwives are specially trained nurses
who work under a doctor's supervision, often in a
separate hospital maternJty center that uses
altemaUve methods for unCQmpllcated childbirth,
with reduced use or dru(s.
An alde to Ms. Moorhead said there are 28'
nurse-mldwlves in California. Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. bas proposed allowint some non-nurse
lay midwives to pritctlce leplly, but hu beea
blocked in the Le1tslature by cJoctOta' QJ>poeitJon. ' . Doctors in the California Medical ASlociaUon
also got Ms. Moorhead's A.uembly Subcommittee
on He-1th Personnel to scale down her bill on a 5-2
vote that removed provi1ion1 lettln1
ourse·mldwivea pnform epl1iotomle1 when
complications occur and aeveral other procedures.
But Ma. Moorhead said holplta.11 and doctors
can alre..S, autboriie aurs.mklwf,• to do all those~ ••
The bUl allo wouJd let nune-rnldwlves admit
patients to the hoeJ>ltal• where they practice.
Aller the CMA withdrew lll oppoelUon, the
1ubcommlttee aeot the bW to the lull ANembly
Jfealth Comm.iltee OD a 7.0 VCl&e.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
MOTHER SHIP? -'the ''Sunbur1t1" belleved
to be the mother ship ln a multimilllon dollar
marijuana smuggling operation, lies at berth
at the <;oast Guard buoy station in Terminar
' .
Sherif { rises
through rank ·
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Sherman Block, ..
milkman's son who rose through tbe ranks of
Los Angeles County sheriff's department
... 25-year career, is the 2Cth sheriff of tbe na
..........
most populous county.
Block, 57, undersheriff since 1915, rec:eiv
5·0 vote by t.be county Board of Supenilon
day to replace Sheriff Peter J . Pitcbell when
retires Jan. 17. Pitchess, 69, who undenrmt
coronary bypass sureery in 198>, announeed bi.s
Urement two weeks aao.
The new aberiff1 _who joined th~ deputm.en
May 1, ll:SS, said trunga will be lligbtly dlff
under bis command.
"We. (PiteMss and myself) are certainly
rerent people Qd have diaUncUve penonall
Any orlanhatlQO reftecll the penODallty ol
peraoo who.leads it," be Hid.
"One tblnl we bave in common la a com
meet to bomst1 professional law enfOl'ffllJent .
and I .ut ltrtve to mal.Dtaln tbe level of ucell
we have been QOted l«."
Ria Job .. not the Hme .. lt WU when
COUD\)''a ftnt. aberitf, Georp T. Burrill, took
in 1850 at the betcbt of Califonla'• Gold aUllt.
' An1e1el, a bone ud bu111 town, wun•t even
atate'a MeODd lar1est clt7.
Now the aberllf bu more Ulm 1,000 emplo
1ervlta1 a population of mon thaa 1 mWion.
aald two tb1np will force cbanCea la UM clepM.. ment: continual fiJ1Ca1 crlall and public ~...ei!'ll
about crlrne.
• ''l'Mn ti • hilh level of fear and J;=.• ov tbt fact tlllt toVernmtnt la failtnl abb
provide Nfel1 for ill clU...." 8loelt .ut.
t.hlllk people an read.1 to uaume a ,.....W role
providlq aaftt.r for U*f com11ualt1 . . . b
Island. The "Sunburst .. and its crew,..,
currently under lnvestlgation. was escorted
'lo ill berth by the Coast Guard.
u ... ~watcbel" partl=t'na ~ IOIDe ••aniDIN ~
aMttt. appolatm~nt advaaee1 bla ea
dJdacr f• llMrift ta tlM 1-. prt....., e..ea .. wUlbeabletpnmuu~ ... _
~ .
--..
... 1
~ 7-,.-·
l
I • .
WEDNESDAY, JAN.6,1ta
CAVALCADE
Pr~ old ties still ~nt,
William P. elark was chosen
COMICS
STOCKS national security. adviser . . . 87 --.
BY GLENN 8CO'M' Ot .. Diiij ........
El Toro Air Baae should be
acquired and moved from
Oran1e County to make more
airspace for a new regional
airport, an advisory panel to the
County Board of Supervisors
will recommend.
Meeting Tuesday in Santa
Ana, the county's Blue Ribbon
Regional Airport Committee
unanimously a,reed to include
the recommendatloh ln a final
report due to be sen~ to the
supervisors as 11arly aa next
month.
However, ·a a.a1ge1lion on
where that re1loqal airport
should be built ii atilt
forthcomln1. Co,mmlttee
Chairman Keith Murdoch aaJd
Tuesday the committee has
narrowed its selections to two
sites: Santiaao Canyon and
Chino Hills. Tbe members are
expected tp make a cbotce at
their Feb. 2 meetine.
• 'l Ft the dl~Unet lmpreuaon
from the discus~ ~ay ttaat tt
ian-i likely he'll ~ no rtpmal
airport ia needed," added
Murdoch after U. meetlaa.
Tbt cqmmlUM alao dedded
Tuesday that an asreement
should be made wltb a second
military base ~e Loe Alamltoe
Air Base, to share use of the Air
Force facility with civlUan
general aviation alr~raft.
And in a third
recommendatloo, the committee
meaitlen au11ested that efforta
be made to lncreaae UH bl
Onn1e County realdenta of
Ontario lDt«national Airport.
The committee members
acluaftlledted the dllfleultMI ia
pel'auadlna the Marine Corp1 to
sell kl Toro and bWld a new afr
baae ellew~. One problem la
that federtl law now would
prohibit a direct tran1f er of
money paid to buy tbe bue lnto a fund to build a new site.
An amendment to tbe law
~ would .have to be paaaed by
COQJ'ell to allow the tranater,
committee memben aald.
. Committee membera aald
movlftl El Toro 11 an attractive
idea not only becauae of
conrueta with mlllt.ary aircraft
fo( atnpece but· a1ao became ol
lta ''lncreaaln1ly lneompaUble"
atalua wltb allrroundlnJ areaa.
Another laaue la whether local
offlciala could cut tbrou1b
federal bureaucracies faat ,
~nou1b to a11ur• •~eb
tr au action la time to IO
with the extensive-plannin
needed to comtruct a re,S
airport.
At leaat one ob9erver at
meeting aald be ·didn't tblnk
recommendaUoo wu feasible ~ Howard Seelye, aide to Coo-
.gresa man Robert Badham, r
R-Newport Beach, said officials I'
would discover that the feder
bureaucracy ''is a real thJcket." ' Valley· police ·plan hit
Two locations for new facility draw criticism
Two ~Ible locatlona for a
new Foutain Vall~y police
ataUon have drawn critidam
and a threat ol le1al action from
aome local reJidenta.
About S5 people attended a
publtc atud1 HHlon on the
project n.e.day nl&bt before tbe
Pouotaln Valley City Council.
Tbe coundl toot no aetloa on the
P'OJect, and Mayor Ben Nielsen ·
said additional public bearinca
;robably will take place before
the raaue ll resolved. .
Mo•t of the residents in
attendance live near Loa Alamio.
Street behind the Civic Center
Complex which locludu. City
Htll, tbe Fountain V.Uey
Library, the Community .Center
and the exlltlnl police atat.lon.
On-e proposal caltS' for
eoa1tructlon of a
U,000-equare·foot poUce statioft.
bebincl the Commualty Center,
close to the Loi Alamos boualnl
tract.
TESTED -'The new Wyclilf e Gardens senior
citizens high rise in Huntington Beach has
................
passed its first trial by fire, according to city
fire officials.
The Loa Alamos 'residents
were represented by attorney
.Norah Morrison, wbo told the
council -this plan ·would
..destroy" equity ln nearby
M•a and cause increased &r~ m'Oblema. • I
Complex passes fire 'te§t'
Safety features save day. at Hunti~gton 'ff;,11· Ilse
Ill. llorrlson said after tbe
meetln1 that -residents are
prepared to take lecaJ action to
pr.•rM& •nattuctlon 1f tbe ......,them.
"Tiley (the resldeat1> are
-.ell llnaneed, and they don't
mind apeadin1 it,'• alae said.
"They will file ao action to
make SUN it <the station> is not
located there."
By PATRICK KENNEDY
Ot .. D.ity ...........
The Wycliffe Gardens senior
citizen complex in Huntington
Beach la a concrete high-rise
bull ding de S' i g n e d to b..e
fireproof. It got its first test
under ftre Monctay and pa:ssed
with flying colors.
Fire officials say a gre.ase fire
started on the eighth floor when
an 84·year-0ld woman who lives
alone apparently forgot t.o tum
off her electric stove after she'd
fried potatoes for lunch.
Grease ln the pan caught fire.
The woman tried t.o put a lid on
the bJue, but Ule top wa.s too
small and names Ucked around
its edges, fire officiaJs said.
She then tried to smother the
blau by putting the kitchen
throw rug over the pan. The
corner ol the rug caught fire and
the· situation allegedly was
getting out of band.
The woman retreated from the
kitchen into the hallway. Flames
bad reached above the metal
stove shield and the outside ol
the wooden kitchen cabinets wu
crackling with fire.
Fire officials SllY this chain of
events happened quickly.
Just u quickly, several safety
features in the building clicked
on. Heat set off an overhead
sprinkler. Smoke set off a smoke
detector buuer in the kitchen
and the hallway, where smoke
had poured after the woman
opened her front door to escape.
These two devices set olf fire
alarms and also flashed buner
signals to the buildln1
superintendent at a switchboard
on the first floor.
When firefiahters arrived
about five minutes later, the
btaie was uut, drenched by the
spri{lkler that poured out 30
gallons of water each minute.
Fire investigator Mike McKay
said sprinkJers usually prevent
fire from spreadin&. However,
be said. without the sprinkler
system, the enUre apartment
could have quickly turned lnto
an inferno.
George TruppeUi, deputy fjre
marshal for· the city, sayw tbe
entire 14·story building is a
model of fire safety.
He says even ifi the sprinkler
system had failed during the
grease fire Mooday, the blaze
would have been contained to
the apartment and wouldn"t -·
have spread.
"Wycliffe was constructed
with concrete walls that won~t
burn. Each of the 186 units is
completely separated from the
others by six inches of concrete.
It's safe t.o say there'll probably
never be a major fire at
Wycliffe," Truppelli said.
··But until the fire Monday,
the building had never really
been tested. We 're very happy
with the resuJts."
Wycliffe was built in 1979 for
$6 million as a subsidized senior
citl1en housing complex for
about 225 residen~. It's located
Huntington nixes
chari er revisions
-uununaton 8-eacb · olfleial1
have rejected a proposal that
v9ter1 be uked to elimlpte
electlonl for the clty attorney
city treuurer and city clerk and
to make those posltlo111
aPPOlative. ·On a 4-3 vote, the City Cowed
decided Monday to take DO
fianber action on thOH and otber
elty eNrter-revision propo1all
by a cosnmittee of former
18ayon.
TIM mayon commlttee •u
foriaed In 1980 by tlae ctt1
Codell to review tbe !_Alf~~ $arte'. But Ma)'GI' Rudi ~
aald MoDdaJ that tbere didn't
...,._ lo bie publle ·~ lor .., ol tM propoMd _ ....... ....... . . "Uaa.ili t.lliih'1 ltroQI flllilMllC
la tM commmltJ to ebagil;tlMt dmtll', tliii l 1aeft DO,..... lo
oU Florida and llain streets. It's
the tallest -and moat fire aafe
-bu.lktipa in tl)e c.ity, TruppeJll
says.
The enUre structure bas
sprinklers and smoke detectors
in each room and hallway. All
apartment doors -ate
self·closing.
Durlq the meettn1, llayor
Nielsen said another possible
alte for tbe ataUon la now under
COUidel'ation;-I le laid this site
la a clty-owned lot on Slater
WILD BLUE YONDEllS DEPT.· -A grc>up of
Orange County's finest business executives and corporate
giants have j~t come in with a preliminary proposal
aimed at solving the jet airport woes of our region. You
.. must indeed salute their effort. '
Known as the
Blue Ribbon
Regional Airport
Committee, the
•g r o u p w a s
assigned the task
of finding a
suitable place
, where big
commercial jets can ply die airways of Orange County
without shaking loose everybody's molars on each
takeoff.
Appointed by the Board of Supervisors.. the private
sector executives were given a few months to solve a
problem that has defied solution for more than one
decade.
THAT IS TO SAY, Orange County's John Wayne
Ail'pOrt has been the problem. It's an okay place as far as
most of the aviators are ~cemed. It's the people Oil the
ground below the fllpt pattemr iD Newport Beach ..and
parts of Costa Mesa and trvine, who haw IUffered ~
the noise impact. •
Anyway. preliminary reporta from the blue· ribbon
group today indicate that the committee ls
recommendina several very lolical steps.
First, yo.a clear the air. That means that ri•ht now.
we have a lot of machines overbead in our reaton. You
have prtvatt, eommerct• lllkl executive aircraft out ot
John W8yne • Y•• ~ave mibtary Jets and other
craft fromil art•CirPI Air Station at"El Toro. You bve a lot rlyMria trom Marine Corps Air Station
tusUn, th9 ( ..... -Put It f1J ~ an4 .you have Ill aerial trafftc jam
akin to ~_,Coal illhW•)' looks Uke on a summer
S&anday~
n •
TBVS ro CLMa the *, the blue ribbon committee
says you buy out ~ El Toro air station and the Tustin
helicopter 1e-and you move tbem elsewhere ..
Addltkinllll~. "'8 allow private avtaton. wbo now UM Johtl Wa)'lfl'lll ntvnl numben, to operate out~ the Loe
Alamitos military ~ .
• 'Tbi1 teloeauon Protram would provide •'*'lh ualaaed air.apace to allow ~ ~ .• f!9W IUPll'. J8t
A venue beetween City Hall and property would displace tbei
the Crocker Bank buildina. programs.
Yet another alternative, city While not opposing a ne
officials aaJd, ls demoUUon of 1 police station at the City Yard
the exlltl.ng police ataUbn "and the youth league representaUv
rebuilding on that site. A said they would n~ help
drawback to this pl,an is . findlne a new recreauon area
displacement of the police -the project proceeds. cS~partment . to temporary One police station booste
facUJtleeduringtbecomtructlon from Loa Ala'moa St-ree
period disagreed with bis neipbo
T h e o t h e r s I t e u n d e r concerning the proposed Civi
conaideraUon elsewhere in Cent~r location. .
Fountain Valley is the City Yard Michael Dow, an Oran~ property, located at w. ard Street County deputy district attomer and the San Diego Freeway. said that as a person involved
At Tuesday's meeting., ae,veral the legal 11.Y~tem. he ~ " .. people auociated with yoetb-nearness of sirens comforting.
bHeball-and football procrams His comment prompted
voiced coneem that construction la,ughter from opponents ol ttUaJ
of a new po!lce atat.ioq on thJa plan.·
Clark .in warning
of prog~Blll: cutbacks
Supervisor Ralph Clark,
Oran1e County government's
blunt taJ.klna board cbaJrman
for two years, warned Tuesday
that new ~al hardships 1n 1982
could lead t.o sharply curtailed
services and progranu.
Supervisor .tsruce Neatande
could take the chairmanship,
predlcted that, If state aid faib
to materialize, ·'we simply will
not be able to provide services
we have been providine.
,,
:I ,,
·~
ID bla ,.state of tbe County"
address to fellow board
memben, Clark said: .
"It la clear t.o me that 1982 will
be a difficult year for Oraqe
County. Our fate is tied
inextricably with the fate ol tbe
state of California, a
1ov,.-nmeot agency which tells
us ills fiat broke. 1'
"We can cut and trim," be
said, "and fmd n~ ways t.o be
innovative, but the hard facts -
will not change. U we do not
have the money, some programs
will be cut back severely. and
others will die.''
-clan, who stepped mde
T_u es d a)' s_o sophomore
Clark said the county avoided
severe budget problems in 1981
thTD Irr tu-Tt a ~e 111 (I urt>~-
-~enerous 1bJu1 expected. .L.
"TMJ/'w btm ~ for c~ to tab off for ~ ttnw "°'°· .. "
international-type airport inland at either Chino Hills or
Santiaio Canyon.
Wbile lbl1 solution sounds ra&ber clear cut, it isn't
without itS problems. First, you'd have to convince the
militacy authorities to move El Toro and Tustin. Some
estimates have suggested the relocation of the El Toro
operation would cost four billion dollar11 by itself. Then
th..-e's a question of bow l~tbat would take.
Peiople under the future Oilbt path at. Chino Hills or
Santlqo miaht not be too happy with a superport at that
location but, probably there are. more of us down here
than them up there.
IN 11IE SUM. now that the blue ribbon execs are
be&lnnina to release their .r~mmendatiooa, you can
anticipate a lot of criUclams of their olf erlnas. The group;
in fact, bu already drawn some sour notes. partJc-.lllrlY
from 10vemment ball.a, by some bureaucrflll wlM> fill.the
1roup Yt'U movtn1 too slowly. .-· ' ,
Some ~ tbeee bW'ea~rats are Ule .-me ones who
'have srappled' with.the airport vexations for a decade or
so and are no closer io a 1ohrtion today than they were 10
yeanaeo.
DDPITE ftlE canlaSMS thar will surely come
now. you have tO thank tM eoa'aiialttee for t....., on an
enormoualy thankl .. tat. tor wlt.ich they wiU "*bly
iraw only 1eatttnl ........
Addlttoft.U,; the eomailttee ol executives allO drew
our au,.ort ~ema llltO WI')' sharp focus once qaln.
That foCUI la tlaat tb8re Juat l1n't any quick ftx or.
euy IOlutla!n -P-'riO'.d.
1 ,.
,•
..
J
..
4
------------------------------~
Orange Coat DAILY ptLOT/WMnHday, J1.-~ 8, 1982
Where Will you
live tomorrow?
1'he d\lfl~x ~-die •11>ear~ ol a m•l•f amUy
house, but it h• Mbl• the hcMlalDc impact. No
matter w~J't°"' •I• 1roup, rou couW own a duplex, live la ooe alld real the other ball.
Older Americus particularly an ftlMll•1 '\hat
du~•ee have 111411)' advaotac•. wbet-'er they are
aide by •14-or ult ud 4own. The opUon of Uvin1 in a
duplex -or l.rlplex or quadruplu -la tborou,bJy
anal11ed in a MW t.>ot. "Where Wlll You Live
Tomorrowf" by llicbaeJ Swnicbra.i, l\oeald Shafer
and lluika lulldchrast <•H.15. Dow Jonet·lrwin).
''Sln.ce 1Ht, 1 °-hue been very •ell
utlatled wllla our a.,.
duJlex home," wtoie . :>
Jean s. Trlmf>W., m111 mun1~'"7_,,.
Llncola. Va .. Olle of rDll 3... T
the 1 .•00 older
peuons lnlervlewed by lbe authors. "The
arra...-ient 11'• ua a home. Tbe mcome Crom
renters Jives us rnOfty and otber Deee&Sities, lbe
depreclatiqn on the reatal aide alto 1lves \as a tax
shelter. That baa expired, but we .OU can deduct
npeasa for imuruce, repairs aod OM·half of the
real ee\ete tadl let UM rental aide.
''The ~ --t• •ver the lawn mowin1, they
alto are belJ"'1 la muy other ways. We feel secure
to have people In Ute o09er aide, etpeclally when we
take a lttp."
••My tea ants are young and we consider
O'lrselves a family," added Bethune GtlMon, a West
Sedona, Ari.I., duplex owner. "Teoantl are in fact a
rood featurt ror a oenon 11v1n1 alone. Tbis couple
chffks up on me t.o ~ sure I am OK, does odd chores
for me and lllin4ls the pet.a and pluu when I am
away. I do the s .. e for them."
The dual eaphaais on companionship and
privacy is a fa1einatin1 aspect of duplex liviq ..
"In 1'71, a Jriead of long 1taadin1 and I
purchased a duplex jointly," said Mrs. Gwen
Wa~ of Seul•e, Cali!. "I w• S3 years old (a
wide.tr) and she w11 18 (divorc•>. We were both
rent1n1.
"Now we·~ llave out own two-bedroom, living
room, bath M4 llitct.en facilities, each with two
separate entrances. We have individual earages and
a joint patio. We reserve the patio ahead if we are
1oin1 to enl«taia. If we are only aunbathlnl or
havinc lunch alone, the other is .,ways welcome to
joia, because we are friends.
...
"But we bllve •ade a point of not lntnding on
eaeh other. In fact, we seldom see each other; if lbe
weelr bu 1one by &M we have not been together. we • ~
try to have SlltuHay momin1 coffee aad bring each
other tap to ct.le. We share taxes, upkeep, garbage
and sewer bills, wbicti come joiDUy. We bave wills
made out in order that our heirs will not usurp our
plan that we shall eaeb have a home as long as we ••
live."
"rhe Wadd.in&toa arrancement does seem, as she
JUll it, futaaeially alremely sensible. Each pays
about $128-a·llloeth mort1ace, includla1 laxes and
insur,.nee, In hr area, almUar accommodationa rent
for $295 to $350.
·"'
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--
. Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT /Wednesde~ January 6, 1982 -----------------------~.,._ ______________________________ .;.;.. ____________ ~------~~!"'I
Tigers put reporter
in c~e of his own
From AP dbpatcb.ea
DETROIT -The Detroit Tigers Ill
say they are restrictina a rePQCter's
access to the baseball team because
the newsman obtained a confidential rePort on
the team's players and wrote a story about it.
The report by Manager Sparky Anderson
was a critical evaluation of the players on the
American League team and the results,
obtained by reporter Vern Plagenhoer
appeared in a story last month in the Grand
Rapids Press.
Tiger General Manager Jim Campbell said
Monday the club no longer will make hotel
arrangements for Plagenhoef, will not let him
ride team buses and won't let him enter the
Tiger Room, a hospitality room at Tiger
S~adium. Flig~ts and hotels are booked by the
Tigers but patd by all newsmen traveling with
the team.
"I am taking steps I feel are appropriate to
tighten security." said Campbell. "He
< Plagenb~f) says that someone gave him the
report and that puts everyone in this
organization under s uspicion."
Chargers haven:t forgotten JJ
SAN DIEGO -John Jefferson
may be gone traded to Green Bay
in a salary dispute -but the all-pro
wide receiver hasn't been forgotten by his
former San Diego Charger teammates.
A bumper sticker on the back of a van
owned by San Diego defensive tackle Louie
Keicher reads·
"Who Shot JJ?"
Quote of the day
"Some nights the shots fall , some nights
they don't.. Sometimes you win, but you
lose. Sometimes you lose, but you win and
that's bow I feel tonight," -Washi~gton
State basketball coach George Raveling
after his !earn lost lo use. 13-72 i~
overtime. '
Mon\feaJ stope 8oeton's win 1tr1ak
S.-, OaJMy 1cored the dtelalve m· 101l at t : 52 o( the 1ec:ond perfocl u '
Montreal defeated 801ton. 3·1,
atopplq the Bruin•' undefeated wtnntnc 1trealt
at s~ven aame• to hlablithl NHL action
Tuesday night. It wu the 22nd con.secuUv. 1011,
lncludin& playoff1, for tile Bruln1 In Montreal,
where they haven't won 11nce Oct. 30, uns.
Elsewhere, ... Joe Mulle• scored hla first two
NHL goats eigbt seconds apart ln the middle
period, pacing St. Lou's to a -4·1 triumph over
Minnesota ... Goaltender Daa BoHlaard
blocked 28 shots for his first shutout of the
teaao_o In leadina Quebec to a 3-0 victory over
W•ahlngton ... Guy CMM&blard scored two
goals to le'.ad Caleary to a 5·4 decisk>o over
Colorado ... Center Wayne Gretak1 of
Edmonton, who became the first player In NHL
history to score 50 aoata in lea.a than 50 1ames,
has bet!n named the NHL Player of the Month
for December.
Tripucka, Pistons crush 76ers
Rookie Kelly Trlpucka scored a
career-hlSh 28 points as Detroit
handed Philadelphia its worst defeat
so far this sqason, 124-101 , to
highlight NBA action Tuesday night. The win
snapped the Pistons' three-game losing streak
and the 76ers' four-game win streak"
Elsewhere, . . . Mychal Thompson and Billy
Ray Bates each scored 25 point3 to spark
Portland to a 115-110 victory
over San Antonio . .' . Mlke
Bantam scored 25 points aQd
pulled down 12 rebounds as
Indiana s napped a
three-game home court
losing streak with an 87·82 desclsiJ>n Qver Phoenix ... Sb WUllama scored 21 or hi:;
season·hilh 34 points in Ui"e
second half and Randy Smith ntf'u~u added 25. leading New York
pa.st Milwaukee, 112-102, for its firth straight
yiclory . . . Dan Roundfleld scored 26 points
anCI Job.a Drew added 25 as Atlanta blitzed
Cle•eland, 113-103 ... &ay WUllams scored a
season-high 32 points, including the last four. to
Qace New Jersey to a 114 -108 win over
Was hington ... Reule Theus scored 20 points
to lead seven teammates in double figures as
Chicago dropped Denver, 134-128 ... Elvin
Hayes hit a turnaround jump shot with 18
seconds left to give Houston a 112-111 victory
over Golden Stale . . . Michael Brooks scored
15 of his 26 points In the second half, leadinR San
Diego past Kansas City, 112-104 Rookie center
Steve Johnson scored 15 or his game-high 28
points ln the first quarter to lead Kansas City lo
a 36·2'7 advantage aner 12 minutes. San Diego
took the lead for good midway through the third
quarter on a short jump shot by Pbll Smith.
' Shula. McKay to coach tn Pro Sowl
Dell Slt•J• of Miami and Tampa O Bay'• loll• Me1'a)', fre•b from
defeala in their respective
conference playoffs last weekend
were named Tuesday aa held coachea for tbe
NFL Pro Bowl Jan 31 ln HonoluJu. Shula wlU
coach t.bt AFC, while McKay will handle the
NFC ... The Unlveralty of Wl1conaln hu been
placed on a one-year probaUon by the NCAA for
football· recru1Ung violations and lmproper use of fundl
and entertainment. The
probation, effective im·
mediately, does not affect
the football° team's eligibility
for postseason competition or
television appearances ...
Pete Jobnson, rwuling back
of the Cincinnati Bengals,
. has been named to replace
SHULA Joe Cribbs of Buffalo on the
AFC Pro Bowl squad. Cribbs injured a knee in
last Sunday's loss to the Bengals ... Dereulve
end Vern Dea Herder, an 11-year veteran with
Miami, has tentatively announced his
retirement from the NFL ... Tight end Dan
Roaa, who has led Cincinnati in receiving the
last two seasons, says he set a record for. club
receptions ~is year while playing with a broken
fool.
Scully wins Ford C. Frick award
Veteran Dodgers sportscaster II
Vin Scully has been named to receive
the 1982 Ford C. Frick award,
presented yearly to broadcasters who have
made major contributions lo baseball ... The
executive director of the Major League Players
Association, Marvin Miiier, says be is coUecUng
evidence to show that baseball team owners
have conspired to stop competitlve bidding on
free aient players ... S&eve Burb of the
Washington Huskies, who upset USC and UCLA
over the weekend, has been named the Pac-10
Player of the Week. The 6-3 guard scored 17
points against UCLA and hit a 28-foot shot at the
buzzer agaJnst the Trojans wttich sent the game
into overtime . . . The Pttiladelpttia Phlllies
hope to solve ttheir problems with shortstop
Larry Bowa thn; week. Sowa wants a new
three-year contract or has asked to be traded.
The shortstop Is currently in the final year of
his contract . . . Free-agent pitcher Frank
Taaana has agreed to terms with the Texas
Rangers.
Television, radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Basketball -Drury College at UC
Irvine, 7:30 p.m., KWVE (108 FM). Ski Reports
-Southern CaJtlornla conditions, 9:43 a .m ..
12·43, 3:43, 7:43 p.m., KNX (1070).
Monarchs top
Oile rs, ·68-6!
Barons lose to Verbum Dei .
Mater Del overcame a penaJty-fllled con\est
which saw 49 fouJs whlaUed to hand HuntiQlwn
Beach a ea.62 defeat lo bl&bU1ht area h1th 1cboot
basketbaU acUon Tuelday nl1tit.
In other contata, Verbum Del beat Fountain
Valley, while Ne~port Chriatlan mauled St.
Mlchael's. •
Here'a wh•t happened:
Matet ().a II. Huntington .-.ech •2 The Monarchs, 10·5, 1ol 20 polnla from
sophotrtdre forward Matt Beeuwaaert. to hand the
Oilers t.ijelr sixth loss in 12 outines.
The Otters led by four at the end of the rtrst
quarter, but losl the lead early in the second and
could never catch up.
In Ule bllttle at the free throw line, Mater DeJ
hit 22 of 38 charity tosaes, while the Oilers were 18
of 23.
Keith Salaya led the Oilers with 14 points.
Verbum Del 67, Fountain Valley 57
The Eagles outscored the tJarons 18·9 in the
first ciuarter and it was clear sailing after that.
Fountain Valley, 9-4, reduced its deficit to six
,points after three quarters but couldn't get any
·closer.
Jeff Hughes had 19 points to lead ther Barons.
while Ken Harter added 13 and Mike Newton 10.
Newton, incidentally, a sophomore. was playing in .
his first varsity game. " ..
Calvin Haynes and Donnie Brown had 22 and
20 points, respectively. for the Eagles U2·4>.
Newport Chrtattan 53, St. Mlcheel'a 11
Newport improved its record to 4-5 after its
mauling or hapless St. Mich•el's, which could
manage only one basket during the first 16 minutes
or play.
Chris Howard was the leading scorer with 16
points, followed by teammates Mark Frederickson
( 13 ) and Scott Kilpatrick ( 10).
Sea Jliew play
,.begins Wnight-
The anticipated wild Sea View League
basketball race gets under way toni&ht on four
1County all-star-game given charm fronts -with two or the five contenders <Costa
Mesa and University) colliding in a tossup affair
while Estancia, Corona del Mar and Newport
Harbor enter with the favorite's label.
Each is billed to begin at 7:30, as are severaJ
non-league skirmishes. And it comes in the presence of South Coach Bob· Lester of El Modena High Still tuding up for their league play, which
begins next week, are Marina, Edison, Fountain
Valley, Ocean View. Westminster and Laguna
Beach. After 22 times to the gale you would think the
Orange County All star football game would
hardly be in need of any hype -but the selection
of El Modena High Coach Bob Lester sui;,ely does
that for the game -which is scheduled for June 28
< Monday·night> at Orange Coast College.
The Brea Lions Club still hasn't nailed down a
com milment from Sunny Hills High Coach Tim
Devaney, who has led his Hawks to two straight
unbeaten league seasons. but Lester is for sure.
It's ironic that Lester hasn't been tabbed
before for the All -star game, which pits many of
the graduating seniors, but on the only other
occasion that he was sought, the St\rine Game in
Pasadena beat tfie Lions Club to it.
Lester will use his own staff as assistants for
the game and there just isn't an)'. doubt -!he
South will be favored.
Absolutely no one comes across better than
Lester. A charmer, he'll keep everyone involved
entertained, to such an extent there simply isn't
anyone who's going to buy any poor·mouthing
Crom Lester.
PREP SPORTS
ROGER
CARLSON
The game features 30-man squads wtth CIF
finalists allowed a maximum of four players. the
balance three players.
It'll be a while before Lester and bis staff
pick his team, but when he does, I'll be sure to.
call and grill him about his selections.
Let's see. Three from Edison, Fountain
Valley, Marlna, Estancia, E1 Toro, we5tminster,
Capistrano Valley, Santa Ana Valley and Santa
Ana and a couple from Foothill. Single.s. of course,
from a few others ... hmmm, that doesn't leave
much for El Modena, does it?
Oh well. Lester will figure something out
FORMER EDISON HIGH baseball star Tom
Duggan was recently recognized with 1981
All-American high school hOMrs by the American
Association of College Baseball Coaches .
Duggan, an infielder now at Orange Coast
College, was one or eight selected from California,
25 others coming from the balance of the country.
Duggan was a second team choice. The only
other Orange County player chosen was David
Cochrane or Troy. a pitcher-first baseman named
on lhe first team.
• * * THE SHRINf; GAME in Pasadena,
incidentally, has its game scheduled for July 17 at
the Rose Bowl.
Don't be surprised to see !he Shrine G.ame
being played at Anaheim Stadium in the near
future -like about 1983.
* • *
Unbeaten Lakewood invades Marina, Los
Altos is at 12·1 Edison, La Quinta visits 8-3
Fountain Valley, Ocean View takes its M record
to Inglewood and Westminster is at Long Beach
Wilson as they tune up for Sunset League play.
Laguna Beach, 6·6, plays host to free lance
Woodbridge, a seniorless but 10·1 outfit. It's
Laguna Beach's final tune'-P before South Coast
League action Friday against visiting San
Clemente.
The Costa Mesa-University duel features 6-4
Ken Bardsley of Mesa, with an 18.4 scoring
average, agalnst the 19.2 scoring ability of 6"'6
Brad Guess Crajg Rouse. a 6·3 senior (13.4
average> is also a big factor against Mesa's 6-4,
6-4, 6-4, 6-4 look.
Dave Palmblade, a 6·2 junior, rounds out the
Mustangs' lineup, averaging 10.9 points a game.
JUST WONDERING: Neither team has had a common opponent
Why do television networks give the viewer all during the non-league and tournament season.
El Modena High is actually located in the
North, on the north side or Chapman Boulevard,
1the game's Ma~on·Dixon line.
of those shots of the fans making faces? Corona del Mar and Irvine square off in a * * * • Why aren't there two football playofrs? One game featuring balance on both sides of the ball -
COSTA MESA HIGH'S football program for champions, the other for teams with good the difference is that the Sea Kings or GdM Coach
Some have suggested El Modena belongs in
the North, but the Vanguards apparently have
never wanted any part of it. They've been with the
Rebels since the beginning.
continues along the same format, with Jim Hagey records? Jack Errion have been winning with balance (S-2),
and John Carney as co-coaches. The Mustangs will Why doesn't the state CIF step in and reshape while the Vaqueros havJUJ.nauled to an 0-6 start.
operate in September with Carney handling the the ridiculous geographic setup as it now stands Estancia (playmaker Jeff Gardner and Co.) is
defense and Haeey directing the offense. with such oddities as Death Valley, San Luis in t~e El Toro pressure can tonight, while Newport
I The date of the game, incidenlaUy, finds the
Angels out of town. which is the way the Lions
Club likes it.
Onassis Nixon , Costa Mesa Hlgb's lop football Obispo and Brawley in the same section as Santa Harbor and Saddleback, the two schools new to the
player in 1981, was chosen as the school's Athlete Ana, Pasadena or Long Beach? league, duel al'Newport.
of tbe MonthforNovem2be~r~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.,.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
College football ·
COLL.EGE BOWl ROUNDUP
Independence Bowl 10.. ttat ....,_,, u .1
Gerden Stete Bowl
CO.C. IJ .. l..i ·-· N.J.I
Holldey Bowl
10.C.MatS..~I
avu JI. wMNnotOl'I si »
Celltornle Bowl
10.C. " .. ,,_,
Tolldo f1, S... JOH SI. JS
Tenoertne Bowl co.c. ,.-.. 0r1-. ,. •. ,
Mh•-1 It, SOWi-" Mlwi.IOlll 11
Blue-Gfey Game IDK. lht Mell...,.,...,, Ala.I
8111• Jt, Gery t
Sun Bowl
10ec.a .. 1t ... MI 01o1.-40,~14
0.torBowl
10ec. ... , ...........
North C-IM 31, ArlleftMI 27
a
LJbeny lowt . ~ f -I COec.•9'........., u_OM•St,11~· --
Hen of Feme lowl
IDK." .. 161 II a ,.., -.t
M......_.1411111tt,l<-t
Peec:tt Bowl co.c. )I ......... .
W"t VlrQln\9 ». ,lo<lde 6
Btuebonnet Bowl
(De< • ., .. --..
Mk11'9M D. UCLA 14
Cotton Bowl (~.1 .. 0.11-> T OH 14, Al-f!\11 17
R•tt• Bowl
...... , ........ 11) P-St.•.usc 10
AoMBowl ,,,.._ ' ..... -....
WHl\lftGIOftS.1-.0
Oranoe Bowl ,,,.. '-~ ...... C .. _ft. NMlr..U IS
SUpr ltowt , ........ Neworte.-1
""' 14. o--;I• 20
EHt·W••t Shrtne Oeme ,,,_, ........... ,
EHi Aft.I'-" vs. Wfll All tlM._ C-
J at -
Huie Bowt
(.Im ............ ,
~Ht Al .......... Wet( Nl•-1.,.., C........
1 al l tMn.
S.nlorlowt .... ,. .. ._.. .. , .... )
pjorlll All-l .. rs vs.. Sooltfl All·1 .. r1
JOHNSON & SON
Presents ...
~ ¥11 • \,
Pete the ••Greelc ..
NFL's
Picks Qf
The Week
SUNDAY
HATIOMAL
COMFllEMCI
Son Prnclsco
OYff' D..._
AMHICAM
COMFlll MCI
New Parts Department H ours .
Now Open 8 :00 am • 1:00 pm Saturd ay8
• • 4 = a 4
i
IM H /F Oran • Cout DAILY PILOTIWedn,.aday, anuary 8, 1982 .,.. ____________________________ ...,. ...,;.----------------------....
MA WllSl9• .. CG'll'all.UeCa
L.111-*'tl• Ook1911 $la ..
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,.$11 S\'t
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kit Aftlonlo 20 10 Nt1 -
De11Ytr IS 17 .... 6
Houston 14 II .431 1
Kenu1 City " 11 .Mt IO Ulall 10 10 m IO D•H•• ' n .m ., eAITE•M COMl'E•EMCa
AllMlk Olvltlea
Plllledtljlflla 24 1
Bolton U 1
N"'Y-11 IS _.,.........,_ tJ 11
.114 .....
161 YI Ql 7\oOt
.4J IO\lt
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New JtfWY 12 ,,
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ClllC'OO Clevelend
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n 10 A11 -
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II 1A ~ ' II II -
11 " • 2S
T_.,..tkMw
t.uenta I 11. Clevel-103
IM5-17,"'->la12
-Jerwy 114, Wtil\l"llfon IOI
Detroit 124, PNJedltlllN• 101
N"' YWll 11a, Nlltw-• un ClllC"° 1)4, o.no. ... UI
Portt-llS, S.. Antonio t 10
!.en oi.., 112, 1(-• Clly 104
HOUtlOll 112, Goldltn Slele 111
T.......-10-
Cllk 11908180Ston
Mllw-• at -J«wy WHllll'IQIOft .. PN.-lpllla
Sen Anionic> et Ulell
Sen Ole90 at Denver
OellH at Seattle
·*. I .. ISYa
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
LA Soutttwelt 91, GWC 18
LA I04ITMWlllT -Jordan 20. GreWt U,
Mltcel t , Wlltloume 16, Gl'ffft I. B~ 12,
......-.J.T-:~U.31tl
OOLH" wan -HattOft n . 0...11 n.
Bowen ll. Jee-t. 1<1"9 14, Ourllam I,
Revis o. Mc.Gee o. T o1a1s: 3S 1•u •·
H•lfllme: GolanWest,*"43.
Totel fouts: LA ~ 17.~Wetl n. Fouled out: King IGolo.tl WKtl, ,,__
IG•hten Wtttl, Bo,.en IGoldeft WHll.
Tt<llftlcel lo<JI: Go10tf! Wffl bench.
HIGH SCHOOL
-Meter OeHI, ttm;-.8 eaett &2
MUMTllllOTON llEACM -Thom_, 6,
Ayrfl 11. Slwlckleforcl n. H•rrloen 2, MUlt
10, H•,_., 2, F-lr• 2. S.leya 14. Tolels·
n1•U 4'
MATa• OEI -~ 2, T•rtiell I, Jack""'
11, BN uwseer1 20. J-r t, Neu.th S,
Perk Int t , Fielder 4, Tola ls: 23 n ·ll ...
1c .... ..,, °"',,." Hunll119fon llHch 20 IS 10 17~ Meter Def 16 tt IJ 17-
Total foul•. HUfttlnQlon -II 21, ""'9r
O•I 22, Foui.d OUI JM91tr fMel•r o.11.
l\yrH CHuntlnoton Buehl, Ha rrlo•"
I HuftllftOIOft 8ea<Pll. Mllll C Hunlln91on
Beac!ll TK1'ni<•I to.its: HuntlftQIOft 8-PI
bencPI
Varbum Del 67, Ftn. Velley 57
,OUNTAIN YALLIEY -KotlY 2. Hart..-
'J, YllllMIU9•• •. H...,, .. 1', Maurel J,
WPlll-lr•. NewlOll 10 Toi•••· Ht-Un. v1•aUM DEi -T_n .. no I, lrew" '°·
Ha ynes tt, Hamilton 6, Oo<-sey 10, Ander-.
t Total\· 21 IJ.IU1
k.,..ll?Ollitt1ien
Fountain v.u.v· · t 11 " 1J-i1 Verbum 0.. II ?O 10 lt--41
Total to.Ill. Fountain Valley •. V.,bum
0.1 14, Technlol lovl•· Verbum Oel t>encPI
Npt. Chr. 53, St. MichHl'a 11
ST. MICMAIEL'S -Ludolpl\ 2. Veit 1.
O'OonMll 4, 81oc"9r 2, F1r9uM111 2 Totet•· '
J.1111.
Nl!Wf'O•T CM•tnlAM -H-rcl ...
Kllp•lrlcll 10. T-" 6, F.-rkllMlll IJ.
S<Plr-r 2, SNer1 2. Slllay • Total•: U ).S
SJ
Sc-..,, °"',,.., St--lil~S 0 1 1 2-tl
NewPOt' Clwl•llMI I II IS 12-Sl
Tol•I fouls. St MICN•I'• •• Newport
C"rl•ll"' 71; FovltCI oul: Tworll I New_,
CPlrlStl"'I.
COUEGE WOMEN
UC Riverside 66, UCI 65
UC ••YlllSIDI! -GO\sell 12. Scott ,, Holm 2, Swift •. Uni mer 1. Hammond )t
Tolelstt•UM
UC ••YINIE -Hamlllon 12, ·-· 4, Lewis 21, lklCNneft I, Sim-I, GorneJ L
Totals: 2111-116) t
"'911tl,..: UC,,,,,,,., >2·29.
Totel loul•; UC Alvenl4ie U, UC lrvl_,t.
-HIGH SCHOOL WOMEN .
CostAI Meta 70, Uni 47
UNIYaltlfTY -Cont,..,. IJ, HIMt, u,
Mallubere 1. Newell l, Zlmmermen 10,
Autfl O. Uftdt,_ t . WilfOll 0, S.1191'._ 0
Tota ls: 16 1S-:M 41.
COSTA MlllA -Lu• 11, Lamar I. Neal 6,
Sff9er ta, Garcia 'Ar1Mr1CNrl1 •. McA._ o. Prlu o. Al_._., a, Glellno o. Stllovl<
O. Gredy 0 TOIMs. JO U~1110
~..,o..n.n
Uftl~erslty 72 1 11 1-41
Costa MHa 11 It 12 17-10
Totel loufs· Unlve1slty 11, Cotta Mffa 24;
Fouled out: GM<le CCcKt• Niese). McA-
ICos1• MllMI ; Tecllnlul foul. NOi I Cotta
"'4118).
Hto. Beach n , S.ntJqo 21
SAM~tAOO -A<nMll 11, SOM 6, Owwt O,
WllSOft t. Lima 2, Lewl1 0, Jlm lne1 0. ToleM:
9J.U11.
MU .. Tl .. GTON ••ACM -Carr 1',
COf'clne t. TownMftcl t, Pe<lllo 4. HMlllirJ
2, Coo,,.r 0, Menclou 11, thtellel1 II, c11n11.--1. Tot•••: n1.1311
~'70.,,.,..,
S.nll•90 1 2 • t-21 Hufttlll9f0!\ 8-11 20 1J 2S 1~11
To1e1 lou~: s.nt•avo u. HUfttlnoto11 •-" U; F°"IMOlll: LIM• CS.ntla90l
Eltencla 51, El Toro 4'
a L THO -Cer1 e11c1tr 0, Cterk 4,
OeMIMll •• Oever .... a 0, l10itn'l •. 1(-t, McGiii •. TeC•ls1 tU ·IO ....
•tTANCIA -lbushl 0, Cer,,.ftttr t,
V•l<M r .. Holl-10, MecMllllan s. k-o. Cllrltlnlen 4, HelllUKk 10, H""'" f:S.
Tolal1: 14 I0-11 • k-II? Qooel1en
El Toro 10 ti u t-46
e stanclf u IS 11 1t-•
Totel fouls: El Toro 12, ll•lall& u ;
Fouled oul: c-1 ....... CEI Tore)
Capo Val. Chr. 49, LJb. Chr. Q
Ltal•TY CM•ISTIAN -J. L.ockerllle •.
Smith I. ~ 12, Bl'OWft 4. B Locke"'9
S, M<F.,i.1eu. TOCals; It S.IU l.
CA~O VALLllY CMltlSTIAM -Lloyd 11,
Jonn 14, T-r 4, Fuwno O, WrloM o.
P-er TOC.I• 21 1·1A ...
k-II? Qooel1en
Liberty OWisti.n 1 1J 1f tt-a
C .... Y .. levCllll'l"len 11 16 10 12-
Total fouls: Llberly CP1rl5llen ''· ~ V e lle y Chrlstleft 16. Feuled eltf• J . LocHfllile llAitnY Clwlst!M),
NHL
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1' 11 I IU 15' 42
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Phlladielohia 24 IJ l
PlltMur9'1 18 U 6
NY llaftOff' 16 II S
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ISi Ito ft
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•• "' 21
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Bllf'llO 21 11 I IW IU ,.,
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Smltll 6 IUwl• ~YI. It 17 Pe,..ltle• -Weth, L A, ,,.,.~ AUll'lt. ~Ill, I JI,
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HeftO,SI-. LA, 11: 50; Pr-. PPll, 11: 50. s----•• Phil..-tpl\la, Barber H lClarh ,
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Lltlle T-Doll (Armslnlllol 7.00
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Atte...S-.-• ....
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teew-.....1 ,.,.. ..... .....
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Avon f uture• tournement
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.. ,. 7-6; Mwjorle Bleek-.. , .... _
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Cor-rlM VMlw, 1 .. , 1-S; Kin) Sends def.
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def. 01-°"'°'· ... , . .., South Avstraflan ep.n , ........... ) Plnl•----Andy Andrewi •f. OWlt Lawis, H , '"'· Sieve ~......_ .$.,_., a.11, ~ ~:
11.0d l'r...., def. e-IE-er•. ·~ 1-s;
Marte E-dtl. w • .,... Hem-. 6..a.
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1•,M .
Cha~ Round torunemant
let~) ,.... .............
Jlm111y C.onnen def. Ello! Teltw:,.r, .,,, .. t. t.•f/ VII" Gel'Ul•ltl' clef. JOM-Lull Clerc, 7-S, .. 2; Iv"' l..Mdt def. Wolt• F111911,
.. 1 ... 2.
Women'• eoccer
Ml9M SCHOOL
Unlvenlty 4, C.,,_ clel Mer 0
UftlYtrlllY s<orl1111: z .. 11., 7, Stfflt.
Bondra.
Eltelld• 1, ~ o
..c>oTllALL ................ w..-
L.OS ANOllL.l!S •AMI -F#ed L ......
Teyler, a. c--, Hewrltt Olaon. "'"* ~ .,,,,, o.tl A-O'rlcll, .,..,......
<Mellet.
MIAMI ~PHIHS -i\ft"°"llCed Ult
retl,..,..... et Vern Oen HeriMr. -~ 11-111. socc•• .....,, ..... s-, .. L.Mtm
CLBVILA..0 FOllCIE -Sold •ui.i
Ast111err ..... IM Andtnon, ·-·r•. llO
IM Hew...., ltoekeO. Tiie FOt'Cl •!90 wlll 1wlkll lb flr'IWound clreft l*:ll win! N.,.,
Jeney, If IN 9'ocuts' selectloft 1111"'1«.
NEW YottK AllAOWS -S19Md Or-
Nlkllwk, ~.to•_.,.., cOfttrett.
Starts
Friday S'i)iirts&
Boat Stiovv
CO~LEGE
B1'S.ICETBAtL
C•mpo'82
S.Uboerdlng
Hunting Dog Dlaplay
a 6 a a a c s cs CU CUC USS 5 SCl \W i . 1 ·-
M esa, Eagles, CdM open league play with vict ories
COit& Meaa, Eat.an~• &Dd Corona Ml llar
blab achool1 Jumped off to a fut •tart ln the sea
Vtow Leaaue race as eMh Potted vlctorie• to
hlihlight wome n's b11k.elball action Tueaday
niaht.
In non league atratn, Huntlnston Beaeh
s mothered Santia go, while Edison beat Loni
Beach Poly Jn overtime and Uberty Christian
dropped a clou decision to Capistrano Valley
Christian.
WOMEN'S BASKETB.4LLm
On the college scene, UC Riverside ed&ed U~
Irvine. Kere's what happened:
Coat• Met• 70, Unlveratty 41
Senior Nora Seager scored a 1ame·high 23
points and t1dded 16 rebounds as the Mustangs <6·2.
overaU, 1.q in league> rebounded from a dism al
first quarter to beat the Trojans.
Teammate Na,ce Lux added 11 points, while
An gle Garcia contributed eight points and 16
rebounds.
University, (4·6, 0·1> was led by Monica
Conlrera and Lorita Hines, who had 13 points
each.
Estancia 58, El Toro 46
The Eagles got 25 points from junior center
Debbie Hughes and 10 each from Amy Hathcock
and Joan Holland.
The Eagles <6·3. 1·0> led by only two points
before taking control in the rinaJ quarter.
"It was a very ti&ht same," said Estancia
Coach Joe Wotr. "They actuaJly went ahead 37·35
in the third quarter before we Ued it up and finally reeled orr 10 straight point.s."
Robin Holmes led the Chargers with 28 points.
Corona det Mar 48, Irvine 43
Lisa Greenberg scored 15 points and Cindy
Kendall scored all nioe of her points in the second
half as the Sea Kings t)eld off the Vaqueros.
The Sea Kings held a slim 38·36 lead entering
the rinaJ quarter of play.
Senior guard Lisa Stessman led Irvine wi th 12
points.
Huntington Beach 71 , SanUago 21
The Oilers improved their season record to 8·5
by crushing the visiting Cavaliers.
The Oilers led by 13 at the end or the first
quarter. 24 at the half and 43 after three periods of
play.---·
Senior Kerri Carr had 1.6 points, while Tammy
Buckets added 13 and Betty Mendoza 12.
"Everybody got a chance to play tonight,"
commented Coach J oanne Kellog1. ··we needed a
breather . Ever yone played hard and well.
Santiago just doesn't have the talent this year."
Pirates, Gauchos
open conference
A pair of talented guards lead their r,.espective
basketball teams into conference play tonight
when Ofange Coast COilege travels to Fullerton,
while Saddleback entertains Citrus. Both games
begin at 7:30.
Coach Tandy Gilli.a' Pirates open the South
Coast Conlerence campaign against lirst-year
Coach Roger See's Fullerton Hornets, and Gillis
will need all the help he can get Crom hot-shooting
guard Chris Beasley.
In two years, Beasley has scored 682 points for
the P irates and is now 14th on the all -time OCC
scodne list.
The Pirate.s < 9· 7) are coming off a 62-61
non-conference tr iumph over East Los Aneeles,
while the Hornets 17·8> have dropped their last two
outings, losing to El Camino 146-42) and Oxnard
(68-60)
Saddleback, meanwhile, boasts a 10-6 record
tbanks to talented sophomore guard George
Turner . Turner leads the team in scoring (309
points>, scoring average (20.6) and r ebounds (120).
Citrus ( 10-6) will also have to deal with
forward Dave Wis niewski who brings a 13.3
average into the contest, and 6-10 center Rick
Doyle who is averaging 10.3 points.
Edlton IO Lone 8e•ch ~ 57
J anet Bittner hit three '1 four field 1oaJ• Mi
ovorUme to help the Charcera overcome a
seaaon·hla.b Sl turnover•.
Chril HlJl, who hacl a aame·hilb 25 polnta. bk a j umper wlth t hree seconds rem1lnln1 ..
regulation to tJe the score .
BiU.ner fi.ni..abed t.be came with 12 poinll. while
Tina DenHeyer added 1' and Kim Tanabe U
ooint• and 12 rebounds. Edison impf'iVed ltJ record to 10·3.
Cepo Veltey Chrtatl•n 411 Ubeny Chrlatlan 43
Liberty Christian saw lta Academy Lea1ue
record even up at l·l •• a much taller Capistrano Valley Christian squad picked up the victory on ita
home court.
Liberty Christian got 12 pointa rrom Lis
Chappel and nine from JoAnne Lockerbie before Lockerbi~ fouled out .
Liberty Cbrlstian battled back from a n
11-polnt firal-haJf deficit to pull eveq at 39-39 before
Capistrano Valley Christian pulled away for the
victory.
UC Alveralde M , UC Irvine es
Donna Hammond hit a jumper with seven
seconds remalning to hand the Anteaters, S-9, the
bitter defeat.
UCI led 65·64 with 21 seconds remalninR . but
couldn't maintain the advantaee as UC Riverside
worked for the last shot.
Dorothy Lewis led UCl with 27 points and 17
rebounds.
Too Dlany Waves
suh01erge Titans
MALIBU -Forward Orlando Phillips scored
24 points and grabbed 15 rebounds Tuesday night,
leadin& Pepperdine lo a 95-7iJ non-conference
college basketball v1ctory over viaiUn1 Fullerton
State.
Guard Boot Bond added 20 point.I and had a
game-high 10 assist.s for the Waves, who raised
thetr record to 7·4. Forward BUI Sadler and guard
Dane SutUe added 16 and 15 points, respectively,
for Pepperdine.
Guard Leon Wood paced Fullerton, whicb fell
to 6· 7, with ~ points. Reserve guard Ricky Mix_oo
added 16 golnt.s tor I.be Titans. ·
USF 71, S.n Jow St. 66
SAN FRANCISCO -Guard Quintin Dailey
scored 3> points as No. 8 San Francisco beat San
Jose State, 78-66.
• The Spartans were never In the game, scoring
just four points and committing seven turnovers in
the fi rst nine minutes to fall behind 16-4. They
trailed by 11, 32·21, at halftime and got within
eight points fo ur minutes into the second half.
Basketball scores
cc::r
USF 1', SM>.-$C. M Pe-dine ~-CeTSI Fulter1on 16 Loyola. c.t n . c.1 Stale f LAI .,
foll Gon1e99 '1, Wiii_,, S4
Gre<.t'5.<:al ... tttl Cal P°"f ISl.0190. LA BllPCIU 41
"•lllr eslle Wesl•I"•" 7S,
Pomon•Plt9tr6'
Puoel SoolNI M, Clar-•·-so AlaSll•Fei,_.I 115, Heyw-St
11
UC San 01e9014, lledlefteh St .......
Air Force S1, Vetoaralso 49 ----r .. uA&M ... TC\I w
TuH SS, Tun Tecll W
llrlle"11" SI. ~-llotle S)
T•nn . .Cr..n..-..11, "-lacl'tlen
SIU
E. T-St. 12. Furman 1'
Mercer n, Henll,..$im,,,_. S2
Loul1I-Tech 15, W-lft U
SO<.ltPlern IS, 1(-uc:lly St. 1S
SW Loulsi-t '9. Buffeto '7
H .C -Wllml ...... 14, auff•IO St 11 ..,.
Army S1, lllp 54
Oartmoulh 62, '""'-'-"' • PrllKellon •, Fofrfleld 4t (811
Lefllell S1. Sl-llNW S6 !tr.ode,......, 61, Wtotner 62
SI. Peter'• 76. OowllftO W
Sleno11,w-u M._,
Ill .-Clliu90 Ore• ... Florio. A&M u
TOU•NAMENTS
M~Clnek
Sle'-'1. NtwOrle_ .. lllrlU
Ctfltenerv eo. -•IM•cl s1 1• ltfllr.,
Communtty cohge
~(#~
LA s-lltl, ~ w..-1•
Cy-•.lllo -SO
LOIAllQMftCC 44,LAHer'bor40
Seftta Moloka 111l, EH t LA ti
H'9ft IChool ""'I r Melet' Del ... _,,.,,..., ...... 12
VertMHftDel•l . F-in V•llo S1
L•OVM Hiiis 71. Mey1alt 40
NewPor1 Clw1tll.., SJ, SI Mi<ll•I••
" Wot.,,, U. G«Cllefl G<"ove 60
Colege women --· UC Al_,.. .. ,UClrvl,..6.S
High achoo! women
S.Y-~ CHI• -.10, Uftlwnlty 0
CorotWI def Mer•· lrvlM 4l Estancia SI, IEI Toro,. .........
HIHltl,..... lleecll 11, Senti-21
£ ....... LMt ..... ~,, "" C•pl1treft0 Yelley Cllrlttlen 49,
Liller1y Glll"ltll"' 4l
--
College basketball OUTSTANDING
VALUES!
Orury et UC lrvlne
Wllilmen M Por1l-$E ~ el USIU ....
Ale-. 81 Mit&IMi.t St
A11t1urn .. Kenl~'f c11-.. •• o.or9• at. Clem_ al Gwrti• T.cll
llllt9ertM°'*9
WttliMll & MlltV It Ed CMollN
o-oie • ""°'* O-.. IMIOn .. '°""' CMOllM
L.sueiv....-..n
Ttu•S-. A111on1o et Mc-St. T_ .. Nllsetu"°"' 5. Ml~ et N.C.< ..... lot1•
MOtr• 0.... .. Vlrelftl•
J llflnl Hcll*lm et Welle Foc"1 ·-....... c..11 ... •t VIII-•
Co ... te et eo.ton U
Mew HllmlleN,. et eroWn
Temple 81 lklcklWll
C-tlcut .. S~ O\Ml-M St . .__..,.,
o-.-i-et SI. Jolln'I Hohlra 81 W. 0--14< St.
Wk fllte $t. ail lone
L•lll...-tte et 54. "-Pl!'S St. ,,_Is, N.Y. M Uni 1si-u.
VMI 9tlNIM
NOf'tll CerolN at MM-fiend
Nleo•r• et N""'-""'
Utk e at V""*" .......
Autllll Pwy .. ,,_,_,
N. llllllOllait .. llst.
aow111111~et0111ou.
CIMlll Mk"'-et Kent SI
Clll(l ..... M De~ Mentt• .. C.....-M. Wm."-•e.1.....-a. MtcNeM• W.Ml<HeMI Ev-vlllt.a ~ ... -........ ....... ~St.
ToledO 81 Mlelnl
S.cremento SC. •t N-Hll• .......
SMU elAR-• N. Teu1St .. u...... ......
Wlt.·P~ et c.tor•
Thurtdey's gem" ....
P~dlMM F.--5\,
Settta Clef• 81 Pa ille
Cl--Ml* 81 W.tern WMlllnvton ........
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S.rnlorcl •t Arll·Uttte llock
SW Ml-I St. al ArUllMt SI
Mo. ,.,...,,. .. Orel ·~ Soutll Al ...... •t Otcl•-
Fort He1i St. et T-•1 Peto UtePISt.etW. Te~SI.
MIN.-
Wla • .or-..., et Wltr s.11~·~
IN ............ ., .... ," IMl-et~St. ..,....,.",_
WIKefltift et Mic"'9M ~eta..se.
W"' ,_ .. W. IMIMll ....
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A.llr..iMMIMO.T-
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MIW ltlJYW
OUANTUM WAM>N 4 Door. Options lnctude
cloth IMla. rad4al Urea
and rnot'91 (Stk. 3079) f003503) u.t,._ SI 1,JOI
Din 1 t SIJIO
SALIPllCI s
SCllOCCO
Coupe. 6 1p eed
tranamlsalon. metalllo
paint. rHr window
w l parlw11har. alloy WMelt.,.-.0~
and mofel -aa35) (0177115) SAU NICI
'10 695
.I
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/WtdnHday. January 8, 1982
lllTl · 111111
Pacific View Mortuar
directors.
-S.MMS
TRJCK.EY
LT. CO L . GEORG
CLARENCE SIMMS, age 81.
a resident of Santa Ana. Ca. member of Eastern St~r Passed away on Monday,
Laguna Beach Lod&e. She 11• J anuary 4, 1982 in Santa
WANDA F . TRICKEY. a
15-year resident of Costa
Mesa, Ca. Passed away on
January 2, 1982. She was a
• survived by her brother Ana, Ca. Col. Simms ba
Harold H. Fink of Costa served in the U.S. Marine
• M~sa. Ca. Private services COrps dunng the 1st World w~ll be held under the Wtt and wilhlhCLU s Army
d rr e-c-t-hrn l> t Ha l'b 0 r during the 2nd World Wa
Lawn·Mount Olive Mortuary and the Korean War. When
of Costa Mesa. 540-5554. in Costa Mesa. Ca. be w11!i
CAMPANpzzl an active m ember of St
MARY T. CAMPANOZZI, Joachim's Parish and wa~
resident of Costa M~sa area also a m e mber of the
for 20 years. Passed away on Reserve Officer s Club.
Jan';lary 5, 1982. She Is Beloved husband of Ruth
survived by her husband of Simms, a nd beloved father
55 year s R occo, h er of John (Jack> Simms ol dau~bler Rose Snyder of Riverside, ca., George ·R.
; Cerritos, Ca .. sons Fra~k of Simms of Cosui Mesa. Ca.
; Huntington Beach, Phil of and Eileen Murphy of
• Whittler, Ca. and Joe of Ontario, Ca., also survtving
: Ha~thome, Ca .. 2 brothers, are 9 grandchildren ·and 6 ~ 3 s11ters, 9 &randchildren rreat·rrand c blldren .
and. 1 creat·arandchll~. Friends may caU at PiercE
: Recitation of the Rosary will Brothers Bell Broadwa)
·be 4N\ 1bunday, January 1• Mort a from 4~oopu t • 1982 at 7·00PM at St John u ry · • 0
: 9:00PM on Wednesday and the BapUst Catholic Church on Thursdav from 9·00AM tc • .-mt M-.ss of the Res OJ • -•• • urrectlon will be on 6·00.PM .. Mass of Chnstian
• Friday Jariuary 8 1982 al Burial Will be celebrated at
IO :OOA•M al St. iohn the 7 : 30 PM on Th ursday.
BaptistCathoUcChu.rchwilh Janu~rr 7, 19~2 at St,
• interment at Good Shepherd Joaclum s Cathoµc C~urch.
Cemetery. Services under ln.term':nt will .be at
"the direction o f Baltz R1verud-: National
Bergeron·Smilh & Tuthill Cem~tery. Pierce Brother!
Westcllff Chapel Mortuary B,ell Broadway Mortuar)'
, of CoBta Mesa. ~l. directors. 642·9150.
HUNTER STARK ~ EUGENE JOHN WA LTER G. S~ARK .
·HUNTER a r esident of resident of Pluntington
• Ottawa, rtiinois. He passed Beach, Ca. for the past 2!
.: away on Januar y s. 1982. years. Passed aw.ay on
· Born October 18 1918 in January 2. 1982. Survived b)
: Chicago, llllnols . 'Survived daughter Dorothy Bogges ol
: by his daughter. Carole F~r\ Bragg, Ca., a sister
; Summers of Newport Beach, Ahce Hoffman of Del Mar.
.. Ca., and 3 grandthildren. Ca .• granddau~hle~. Jeann~
: Douglas, Kristy and John Orosco of California and ~
: Harmoo. Recitation of the grea\·&ran~sons. Funeral
• Holy Rosary will be on services w1U be be.Id on
: Wednesda,y. Jam1ary 6, 11182 Th.urtday, Janua~ 7, l~ at
at 7: 30PM at Pacific VIH 11. OOAM at.. Pacific V1ev.
Mortuary Chapel. Mass of C~apel. Services under t he
Christian Bunal will be on d 1 r e c t. I o n. o r B a 1 ~ 2
Thursday, January 7, 1982 at Ber1eron.Sm1lh & Tuthill
lO:OOAM at Our Lady Queen Westcliff Chapel Mortuary
of Angels Catholic Church of Costa Mesa. 646·9371. · STATON Newport Bea ~~· Ca . WALTER SYDNEY
Interment at Pacific Vlev. STATON, passed away on
Memorial Pa~k . Newport December 31, 1981. He is
Beach, <;a. In heu of no~ers survived by his wife Jean of
memorial conrtr lbut1ons Costa Mesa, ca •• daughter
m ay . b e made to .the Heather Barnes of Costa
American Cancer Society. Mesa. Ca., son Staff Sgt.
------------. Ronald Staton of OakJand,
McCOIMICK MOWTU.HllS
Laguna Beach
4~9-415
Laguna Hiiis
768·0933
San Juan Capistrano
495--1776
HAUoa LAW~MT. OUYI
Mot11JB,Y •Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
~SSS4
,_Cl •OTHHS
la1. lllOADWAT
MOllTUA.IY .
110 Broadway
Costa~
642·9150
IALTI .... ~
MrttaTUTM&L
lllillfe&MI CHAPll
421 E 17th St
CostaM ...
8 .. IJ.9371
Ca .• and 4 grandchildren. He
will be dearly m issed .
Private services wilJ be held
for immediate Camil.y only.
. Nenrune Society c••"""°", -•UlllAL "'HA
'646-74b urTnerfture l e s oompl•ttt 1tory of our ~lety.._. . . •
c.11 ................. c.e.-.1•··
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nort1r'•MMk•:
All real eat1te ad·
vertleed I n thh
~ptr II 1ubject to
the Feder1I Fair Hou•· I.QI Act of lMI which maltea It UJes•I to 1d· wrtiM "any preftrHt'e,
limitation, or dia-
crimln1tion b11ed on
rice. color, reli1100,
eex, or nat.lonal ori ain.
or an inlA!ntlon to make any aucb prererence,
llmll1t100, or dis-
cnminat.ioo."
This newspaper will not
knowinaly accept any
advertisin& for real estate whkb iJ lo viola·
lion of the law.
J.SToAY DUPUX M.1-SUt IOO
200' to beach! Most attractive bldg. &
lge sundeck UP~.? BR, 1 ba, J>atlo ln lower. 2 F.P. OwC $230,000 T.P. 13%
$49,500 ca.sh down.
WISUV M. TAnOI CO .. llALTOH
2"11 1S. ...... H•·IMll
MIWPOIT CIMTll. M.I. 644-49 I 0
Dalebout
Bay &Beach
Real Estate ·
______ _.. REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949
mlOIS: ActYtrlken
...... dlecll .. ocb
cWly -= ...... ,.. I u . Tiie
DAILY PtLOT •-• ....., fOf' .... flnt
l•correct IHertloa ,,.,, ..
COME Wf'n4 US .•• TO IWilCHO SAN
JOAq\llM. Most desirable location. Fabulous view of golf course and
greenbelt. Two bedrooms and den. End unit. Middle level. Flexible financing. Price just reduced $16,000.
NOW $199.000
1617WISTCLlflF DI •• N.I. u1.noo
1.-..ttHO ... O OWtB AMXJOUS
,.______. I OOJ i SPY~S BeautilUI. lmmaculate, -nicely l&ndscaped 4 Br ••••••• .. ••••••••••••••1 IY 0 H home on cuf-de·sac
•••••••••••••••••••••••
P11V ACY Pt.US Ocean View ~75,000 Splciourroomt. View or
With this 4 Br. rtnced 1n, 6br/4...., ba. 41005q ft golf coune from proper·
poolhomeooaqllielcul-' SOlmlPORTMODEL ty Owoer ·aUilled
de-sac in Elstside Costa OWNER FINANCING financilla. Only 1139.500.
Mt.a&. A be1utiJul back fDGHL y UPGRADED Call llOIW, 971-5370
ylrd. with covered pilio Offer expires Jan. 31 A" ..
&a cozy nrepl1ce in tht I 2SBodeg1 Bay LLS.,.·TE livina room. There's Callowner759-0737 ,,.
.. 642-5678
SUVICB
INTEGRITY
EJCPIRIEHCE
PROP!SSIONAIJSM
RANCH REALTY -WOOOBRJDGE
SS1·300S .'leaLl."e SS1·3000
3 Br, 2 .... "Npeu", A9nbl. 1..-. Loll! 1164,500
BrO&dmoor, Hlr, 2 Ba, SWiii)' raao. 1164,,00
llltldto hi Jotq11ln, 1 Br, 2 .. A Ivy 1167,000
S Br, ''~n'' Woodbridp'a finest SJ44,000
Turdcfock Rldp "Mon•dto" VALUE IJ7S,OOO
SUBMIT YOUR RuU.W.1 HIUU! so.~.ooo
CllAMPUlf UMITS
Located on Eastside, C.M., these units
are in excellent condition. 5 very private units, two 2 Bdrm and three 1
Bdr. Assume existing financing and
owner will help finance. Full price
$349,500 .
HOUSI + DUft.ll Eastside C.M. location, large 2 Bdrm
1 ~ Ba house with service porch and
garage. Two 2 Bdrm 1 Ba units with
alley access. Try $30,000 down. As·
sume low interest loan. Asking
S2~.ooo.
UDO PIHIMSUU FOi SSl,000
F.amHy relocating out -of state and
need to sell their mobile hom e. 2
bedroom, 2 bath, double wide. Walk to
shops and beach. Owners are VERY
FLEXJBLE!!
UNDa CONSTRUCTION ON LIDO
Unbelievable but true with $20.000
,. depo6it, owner will provide wallpaper
and decorating service at cost on this
3 bedroom gem. The time to buy is
now. ·
UDO IMTllT AIHING
Lots of warmtt{ and character in this
charmin g 4 bedroom home on huge
lot. Den can be converted into 5th
bedroom. Large landscaped patio.
GIFT SffCW-
rmre! Asaumable loans --------1. . Rr••TORS and a.a iMl®S sellec. ••11..&LflMIUtc;H~~ ....... -..:.;.;;..-;.:.:;;;..;..:__;_::_-1--0nly $169,900. Call: ~T-.n.
f1tP"'O SelerD~• -· · Spacious R1ncbo Sao M&l.Tft.I CHOICE! A LLS'rA f .E Joaquin Townbome ~~,,~.,...~! ll"t w /panoramlt' golf ,__...... 1m
A1r•LTOAS owne·viewl Featuring 0rY09T U.1! ----~-~---2 Br/den & wet bar. fplc. N EWPO R..,· BEACH etc. Call 759-1501 or .., l'1nd out about the high· ~ 7373. sharp 2 story townhouse.
earning re1l estate nles 3 bdrm . 2.,., b al h ,
cueer opportunities fireplace. patio plus 25'
w Ith THE RE AL BOAT SlJPl SELLER ~ATERS. Llmasioa WI LL L I s T E N ' IChool fees completely .$285,000!
"'-lable to school or .._. 1trJ Ptop.
your choice: Extensive .......
salel tra1n1n1. For lo-*675-7060.
fon111Uoe, eall '751.tltl l9U":Y SHAil ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I.St time buyer CID a(-r=
ford this bome. Priced a'l
only 9'.000. Kathy. agt
~ -IWlE -awt•
WILi.CADY!
8t...w.I EuUicle Colla
... bolllt pi. i.ll·law 1-------• q111rten, 3 bedroom (l~JSIOE male bouae with l I fW
bedroom, l bllth UDll. $11~08 .
Find in Spy&J111 this
well maintained 3 Bd,
ram rm beauty has it all.
lacbtdiA& mountain and I ~ li&bt views. Owner
WI 11118\ $.')d,000, r.&altk locatiOD With >I
RV ateeu. CIOH In ID I A.uwnable al 10%. Newport acbools and a Bdrm. Spa. Call RC lctylorCn
......... ,MO. ~91.51 : "
Cl.MSIF1ED
INDEX
Te .... Y• M.Call
642·5'11
mots ........... ''"" ""' .... ... ... ..,. ...... .. ............ "" .... ' PILOT _..., ... ..... ..__. .............
OPEN HOUSE
REAl rY
/
For Classified Ad
ACTION
Call a
Daily Pilot
AD-VISOR
642-5678
For Ad Action
tall a
DailY Pilat
AD-VISOR
642·5678
tbinp fut with Dally ======~I PlJat W1nt Ads.
.. & llNlf TELEVISION TER•
CTVBYLBALABLPURJTTA
S E I L T I Y M R E T T A P T S E T H
DSTAOTAATREOMLTElBS
S S N 0 Y l R T F l E T K
R E H M T l ! ~ ~ C P
T~U ~lRDOAlSYAMlORYA
Y I R K A E R B L A I C R E M M 0 C A
PSEEHTOOFMMROPCHMLE
R U I N 6 C P ~ I l U L E T L 6 P 0 C
AIRSYETMLELARS I STRR
U I l HAT~ MM TCP T,O P S l AK
TAESA EKACQ AINHSSRMI
"ER N s TAT l l s·z E 6 A~ c A p
KA£ R B II 0 I TA TS S E I'B I 6"
G T A R t B II M S 0 T Y A M T U I A 0
: HNlllll -* ~ .... ~ .....
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Alt ,...... "-"". DfY"'-......... .... ~ .... ..
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~=· s~~cj}lA-~t.~s· :-.: ~ IJoy QAY .. POUM-----
•
............... ol the '°"' toO.liW -· ... "°"IO ... IM .... -•
LH>A ISU HOMIS
Prestige pool family home. Main
channel view from beautiful tradition
4 bdrm, 5 bath. $1,495,000.
Wide lagoon view from spectacular
architectural design 6 bdrm, 5 bath,
playroom, dark r oo m & den . -
$1,350,000.
WO ISU HOMIS
FeJhlf'4 on Homes Tours lovely
tf.tdit.._spacious, custom J bdrra, 3
'blth'I bonfe. newly redecorated.
$475,000.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus
lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings. Xlnt v'lllue a.t $420,000.
CAIMATIOM COYE
Spectacular harbor view from 4 bdrm,
4 bath bayfront. 2 boat s lips.
fl.~.ooo.
WIST IAY AYL
Remodeled, like new 3 bdrm, 3 bath
bayfrq,tt. Slips for 2 lge boats .
$1.200,000.
Dalebout
Bay &Beach
Real Estate
Itek.ESTATE EXCELLEHCE$#1CE 1949
coi.ea WITH us ••• TO IAYSHOllS . Ba)'front Mecliterroeati Vnta . Built
like a fortress yet loaded with charm
and elesance. Regal livi.nj room with
huge fireplace . Paneled dining room.
Wine storage cabinet. , Convenient
country kit chen. Five bedrooms.
Family l'OOlll. fabulous Yiew of the
bay. Three car garage. Elaborate
sound syslem. $2,100.000. Fee.
2 lots in Ca nnery Village. Going
business, owners retiring. Owner will
carry 1st T.D. Can be purchased.with
or Without inv~ntory.
"lSl8ENTIAl REAL ESTATE $EltVICES
A IAU GEM!
Elegance and quality in this
outst anding Bayshore home. Beautifully designed & decorated.
Extra large corner lot with spaciOlls patios a nd lav ish
plantings. Lovely master bedroom
with enclosed sunroom. Absolute
perfection atS495.000 Fee.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060 .
THE 11.TIMAn -ON WATER ........ ~ ......... ... vu. 2 ... zv-. ..... ,..
rte. $745,000. •
OVER 51 YEAAS OF SERVICE
HOISi "°'•" Dramatic Home -Approx. ~
Acres -4 BR -Pool -SPfl -
Remodelf:d Recent~ -Park 8 Clf'S + R. V. -Great L«ation -Clll K• 3 Honea. Maybe More Your Own Property. Only $219,
..........
Tbe coaveraatlon waa
about the um campalp but
tome participant.a may have
been daydreamln1 about
1984, aa former Vlce
Prealdent Walter F. M09dale
held a three·day 1trate1Y
aeHlon on the Eutem Shore
of Maryland.
The aeulon at the Wye
Plantation opened wlth a
1eneral political dlacuaalon.
On Mond•Y, the parllclpaota
reviewed domeatlc laauea
and forelp policy wu on
Tuesday's agenda.
Aides to the former vlc:e
president refused to dlacuas
specifics of the aeasiona.
Actress leulca Lanie ls
being sued by her filmmaker
husband Paco Grande for
$800 a week In temporary
alimony, Grande's lawyer
says.
DIGGING OUT -Bob Hiestand shovels snow Crom the
front of his Sly Park. Calif., home east of Placerville
where recent storms have hit.
Grande is legally blind and
lives on $85 a week ln a
s habby lower East Side
building, according to bis
lawyer, Lawreace Pablaa. A
lawsuit seeking a divorce
and alimony was flied In the
latter part of 1980, shortly
after Grande and Miss Lange
separated, Fabian said. The
actress since has bad a child
fathered by ballet star
Mikhail Baryahnlkov.
, .
Ba.y area man hiu $773,102 jackpot Miss Lanie's lawyer.
A San Francisco man who
won Nevada's second largest
jackpot said that Presldeat
aeagaa'a tax cuts would
save him approximately
$150,000.
Andrew Charles Turner,
65, said be was told that 50
percent of his $773,102 slot
machine payoff would go to
Joe Hamilton, comedian
Carol Burnett's husband, is
recovering fr om a
"moderate" heart attack
suffered at his son's wedding
last week and "the progn06is
is good," a spokesman says.
the Internal Revenue
Service.
"However, I was told that
if I won this five days prior,
it would have been 70
percent.~·
Turner, a real estate
broker, hit the jackpot at the
MGM Grand Hotel.
h is son by a previous
marriage, John, to Marloll
Mc carter, said Miss
Burnett's publicist, lllck
lagenoll.
Miss Burnett postponed a
scheduled Jan. 8 weeklong
guest appearance on ABC's
daytime soap opera "All My
Maurice Spanbock, declined
comment o.n the suit.
Hamilton, a televisios
producer, was stricken
Thursday at the wedding-of -etrtldren, .. Ingersoll ni .
Dr. Karl Meaalager,
co-founder of the Menninger
Foundation, was listed in
serious but stable condition
at the Veterans
AdminlstratioJl hospital iD
Topeka, Kan.
Menninger , 88 , was
hospitalized Sunday after
apparently suffering a mild
stroke, hospital director Paul
~ennedy said.
HUSBAND SUES -
Actress Jessica Lange is
being sued by her legally
blind hus band for $800 a
week in temporary
alimony.
I
Santa Ana winds due
Qcce.ion.I relft .-" lhr°"9h today. Showen ..-tly endlr19 by
loftlt hl. ~ c1Mtl"9 trom tlw
Mrttl Of\ TNlndey wtlll ~· AN
•I-Ill atcpt 4 •-tht un.,on-. Conlin-cool d•o •nd nt91111
lle<omtng '°lctff. Lows In tlw 40t
tOftlgllt end Tllurteley. """' bOlfl
cleya In .. 91!1. Cllenc• of relft '°
...,cfflt ""°""" t-y, decr9"1nt to 10 -Qftt '°"'ll't-
v.s. summary . . .
81tter ~ In .,,. '*"hem Plollfll,
u ln In Celltwnle ..., -from tM
rnovntelfls "' CalffOrlll• ""°""' , .. greet bHln Md centr•I "8" of u.
Roc11te1 merllod 1110 weetllor TVHdey.
Tllo Melfi Iott mount•d from ''°""' '* Mw ............. Mtkwl lillCe ~. wttll ...... 22 ...... r....-1td. Mullblldn llUrled llOllSitt
rwer Sen Frenclsc:o, -llP to I r.ot ot -blocli.ecl ._ .. ,n PltltH.
Som• .,_ wot repoMH from
west°"' Now Y-le LH• Erto, 8ftd '*'" •--11y cloudy 94_.,.... In IMNot1Nnt.
CIHr llllet ~v•llod ecrou lhlt
Soulll••st. white Ill• Pectltc Norlll_hed.,_
For to09y, IN ~I h lot.,..
'""" Coloredo -~Artlo tM Greet Lelln r~. •nd ecrou tllO Norttl AUentk Con!. R•fft ,,
pndlctM In .. Mi.AUMllc COHI
end VOPff Olllo Veti.y, es ...i1 ot In ,.ru .. IN ~ .. Golf c:..t end
Sewtlwrn c.aHtorn&a.
Very cot• tompe retvru ore
P"dlCtM lfl ttw llOt1llorn Plelnl, 1110
tntt l MIMI -flCIUlorn P4•to.., .. Ille cMtrel ,,..,,, -........ GtHt ......... T_llW...,,.. ...__, tllo neU. et
-.-n r ..... '""" • -of " llOlow lfl ~.-··to• llltll ot 1t In er-it ... T .. u .
Temperatures
AltNlny
AllMICIW Amwllto
/Utellot ... Aaflnllto
AtaefM Atleflk Cty a.ttltMn
MATtOtt ,. u
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Extended
f orecmt
~OASTAL AND MOUNTAIN
A9'EAI -Tllurlde., through
S.h,,d•I' pertt., ci-y Thurldey wltll tlnlfll ,....,..,,., winds. Felr
• l'rldey end Sel1tr•t l'. Hltlla Tlllt,....., ... ., lftH<-.1 _.
end n to a .., .,,. ,,_iai .... A11cM 10 ... ,,. •••• ,,..., ~rl••Y .,..
lelllnlty. i.-ts • 49 lft Ille cotlltal
8rMI Md mmtty ln IN IOI In IN _...,._
What do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you llke?
Call the number below and your meaaa1e will be recorded,
trantcrtlMd ad dell•erecl totMapproprlate tdltor.
The tame.......,. amwwrtna Hntee may~ to reeord let· ten to tJw edttot on an.y topic. Mailbox contri ora muat lnclude
their name and telephone rwmw for •ertfica . No clrculaUon c•lll. pleaee. . . ~=·----Tell .. what'1.on your mind.
,,
--------------·------------· ---------... 4111ii._
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wtdneeday, January 0. 1982
PASS THE CHEESE -· Frank Romeo (left l
and George Dakers load the first batch of
s urplus cheese to be given away in Orange
County at the county's Communit y
~,... ..... ..,....,...O'
Development Council in Westminster. Thie
pair are distributing the free cheese to senidr
citizens in Orange. !
Driver faces murder charge
Countian blamed for freeway death of Huntington woman: ...
A second-degree murder conferring with highway patrol He was treated at Anahet"1
complaint was to be filed today investigators. Memorial Hospital and then
against a Buena Park man Killed in the Dec. 23 accident taken to Orange County J~· ,
whose van struck a disabled near Chapman Avenue was wherehewasheldon$5,000b .
vehicle on the shoulder of the Margaretta Jean McFall, 50, Woodsmall said Ede.n w d
Oran_ge Freeway, killing a who had pulled her car onto the face trial on charges of .mur~.
Huntington Beaeh mother of shoulder of the Orange Freeway manslaughter and drunkco
ninetwodaysbeforeCbristmas. when mechanical trouble driving.
The California Highway developed. With her in the If convicted on the mur~
Patrol in Santa Ana said vehicle was her 14-year-old co unt , he could get ·fl
Monday it would seek the daughter Theresa, who suffered 15-years-to-life term in state
murder charge against William minor iajwies in the accident. . prison.
ft: ~den,-wbo baQaJready l>een Investigating officers said Deputy District Attorney no-,.g
arrested on suspicion of felony Eden, to cir cumvent heavy • Woodsmall said it is possible to
drunken driving and vehicular traffic on the rreeway. drove his file the murder charge on the
manslaughter. . van onto the right shoulder and basis of a recent state Supreme
Woodsmall said be would file speeded up to more than 75 mph Court ruling.
the complaint in North Orange when he collided with Mrs. The high court said the mah
County Mu~icipal ~ourt in McFall's parked ca~. . . . aggravated charge could t.e
Fullerton this morn111g after Eden suffered mtnor tnJunes. applied in cases where it was
.Balloonist•
to speak at
Orange Coast ....
John Shoecraft and Fred
Gorrell. pilots of tbe firat
helium-filled balloon to cross" the
United States non-stop, will
present a free two-hour program
on their voyage Thursday, Jan.
14, al Orange Coast College in
Costa Mesa.
The program will begin at 8
p.m . in the college's auditorium.
Sboecraft and Gorrell
launched their 10-story-lall
balloon, the Super Chicken III,
from Orange Coast College on
Oct. 9. Two days later they
landed the craft on an island ofr
Savannah, Ga., completing a
2,515-mile trip.
1
The record-setting balloonists
promised the spectators who
cheered their liftoff that they
would return to Orange· Coast
College to discuss their flight.
The Jan. 14 program is billed
as the fulfillment of that
promise. The balloonists are
expected to show exclusive film
footage or their voyage.
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Cutififtl G~mololli•t, AGS
AMERICAN PEARLS
FLIGHT PRESENTATION -
Pilots of t he belium·filled ·
balloon. Super Chicken 111
that lifted off at Orange
Coast College in October.
will return to the college to
present a program on their
cross-country voyage.
alleged t hat the driver
knowfn1ly endaruiered the lives
of others.
CSF halts
enrollment '
for spring
Cai Stale Fullerton hes
stopped accepting applications
for spring admission in all but
extreme hardship situations,
Dean of Admissions Raa,ti
Bigelow announced.
In addition, the university aio
has slopped acceptin g
applications for atl
undergraduate programs jn
business administration for che
fall semester.
The cutoff is prompted by
unprecedented enrollment this
year, Bigelow said. Enrollment
last fall was closed early for the
same reason, he said.
Hardship cases such as
teachers who require courses fbr
sebool service credentials al\a
former students returning \o
complete degree requirementa
will be considered for spring
semester, Bigelow said.
Those seeking hardsb1p
• admission for spring may c*1I
773-23'70 or visit the campus to
obtain further information.
We have all heard the
fascinating story of bow the
Japanese produce cultured
pearls by controlling the
environment of shellfish that
have -had irritanta "seeded"
into their shells . Japanese
women then harvest the pearls
that grow around these
Irritants. But now, back in the
Tennessee Valley, Americans
working In cooperaUon with
Japanese expert.a are creatlni a huge pearl "farm" wblch
may someday produce a lar1e
percentage of the world'•'
1>9arls. American freshwater
pearls have been more
.difficult to find ln..recent years
as pollution seeped lnto the
favorite harveatln11rounda on
the East Coast. Pearl·beariDI
muasell have been lmplutecl
and the first harvest of pearls
la due in ~ Tennessee Valley
next year. U early lndlcationl
of success bold true, America
.could become a maJor
producer of the beauUhal.
1oucht-alter freshwater
cultured pearl. Such an
lndu1try would create Jobi
while ntablt1hta1 a new .
s upply of one of the world'•
A moat · bo1ut1tul objecta. J~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!if!!!!!!
D I
....
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 6, "'2
-.
Ullll IEICl /11111 Cllll
CAVALCADE
COMICS
STOCKS
82·3
84
89
Proving old ties still count,
William P. Clark was chosen
national security. adviser . . . . 87
Panel would move El ~oro
Action urged to milke way for new commercial: airporl facility OOt financial djfficulties cause concern
9Y GL&NN 8COTf ........ "" ....
El Toro Air Baae should be
acquired and moved from
Oran1e County to make ~
airspace for a new regional
airPOrt. an advisory panel to the
County Board of Supervisors
will recommend.
Meeting Tuesday in Santa
Ana, lhe county's Blue Ribbon
Regional Airport Committee
unanimously aereed to include
the recommendation in a fioal
Lagunan
to seek .
council
Though the filin'g deadline is
still more than a month away,
one Laguna Beach resident bas
already announced he will be
running in the April 13 City
Council election.
Dan Kenny, 40, wbo bas lived
in Laguna for three and a half
years, said his major goal as a
councilman would be to work
toward pre~erving the "small
town, village atmosphere" or the
Art Colony.
Kenny, who is married and
bas five children, bas served on
tbe city's Design Review Board
fo{ ttie past year and a half.
J>rior to that, he served on the
Municipal Services Committee
and on the Circulaliop ind
Scenic Highways Committee of
the Local Coastal Plan.
Kenny bas a Doctor of
Pharmacy degree from USC,
and is currently employed as the
director of pharmacy services
for Brea HosJ>ital, CareUnit
hospital fn Orange and a
hospital management
corporation.
Three Laguna Beach City
Council terms will expire in
April. N0oe of the incumbents -
Kelly Boyd, Howard Dawson
and Bill Wilcoxen -have
announced whether they will
seek re-election.
First-time candidates have
until Feb. 4 to take out papers
with Laguna Beach City Clerk,
Verna RoUinger. Incumbents
have until Feb. 9 to take out
papers.
Kenny said he is definitely not
a pro-growth advocate, and as a
councilman, he would favor
limited development.
"I don't see why we have to
build out the town to the
report "due to be sent to the
supervisors as earJy as next
month.
However, a su11estion on
where that re1loaal airport
should be bull~ ta atill
forthcoming . Committee
Chairman Keith Murdoch said
Tuesday the committee baa
narrowed its selections to two
sites: Santiago Canyon and
Chino Hills. The members are
expected to make a cboice at
their Feb. 2 meeting.
CANDIDATE -Dan Kenny,
40, says he will run for a
seat on the Laguria Beach
City Councir.
maximum," he said. "People
who live in Laguna moved there
for the charm of the town. I
would want to maintain that."
Kenny said. special attention
should be paid to the city-owned
Sycamore Hills property to
make sure it iJn't "paved
under'' u the city works to
erase its debt on the land.
He also said be would
advocate the development of a
specific plan for Latuna's
downtown-area, 'tspeclally along
Forest Avenue.
"We should be working to
preserve the small shops,"
Kenny said. "That is a major
reason why tourists come to the
city. I think if there was any
signiflcant change in the
charocter of that area people
wouldn't come."
Kenny is the first city resident
to oUicially announce bis
candidacy. However, the three
council seats available in the
April 13 city election are
expected to be hotly contested.
"I tot the disUnct lm.prewon from the discu.ulon today that it
isn't Ukely he'll •~Y no reponal
airport ii needed,'' added
Murdocb atler the meetint.
The committee alto decided
Tuesday that an a1reement
should be made with a aeeond
mtlltary base, the Los Alamitos
Air Bue, to share uae of tbe Air
Force facility with civilian
general aviation ~rcralt.
And in a tbard recom-
mendation, the committee
memben 1ua1ested that efforta
be made to Increase use by
Orante County .residenta of
Ontario lntemational 'Airport.
The committee members
acknowledged the dilficultles in
perauadina the Marine Corpe to
sell ~ Toro and bwJd a new air
base elsewhere. One problem la
that feder.,al law now would
prohibit a direct transfer of
money paid to buy the bue into
a fund to build a new site.
An amendment to the law
would have to be passed by
Coneress to allow the transfer,
commlttee members aald.
, Committee members said
movu.'i El Toro ls an attractive
Idea not only because of
conflicts with military aircl'aft
for airspace but also because of
its "increuingly incompatible"
status with surrounding areu.
Another issue is whether local
officials could cut tbroug
federal bureaucracies fast
.
~nough to asaure such a
transaction in tlme to 10 &bead
with the extensive plann9nt
needed to construct a reglooal
airport.
I At leqt one observer at the
meeUng said be didn't tb1nk tbe
recommendation was feasible.
Howard Seelye, aide to Con·
.gressman Robert Badbam,
R-Newport Beach, said official•
would discover that the federal
bureaucracy "is a real thicket."
·Bank burglars knew system?
Laguna police probe theft of $25,000 from safe in remodeled facility
The bur1tars who drilled and
sawed their way into the vault of
Laguna National Bank and
Trust Co. in Laguna Beach over
the New Year's weekend
apparenUy had knowledge of the
workings of the alarm system.
according to a police
invesUgator.
Detective Alex Jimenez of the
Laguna Beach Police
I Department said today an
examination of the bank's alarm
system Tuesday showed the
mechanism bad been tampered
Fn.fil buys
John Wayne
T ennis Club
The 15-court John Wayne
Tennis Club in Newport Beach
bas been sold to a
Newport-based real estate
investment firm for $2.5 milllon,
it was. revealed Tuesday.
Ken W"llllg. who founded the
club in 1974 with Wayne, said the
new owners -Dominion
Equities Corp. -plan to close
escrow on the purchase by
March 1,
Willig acknowledged there bad
been other of(ers for the
280-member club, but said
several ol the offers would have
brought radical chan1es to the
five-acre tennis complex on the
east side of the Upper Newport
Bay adjacent to the Newporter
Inn.
with during the burglary,
causing it not to function.
Jimenes said investigators
were continuing to trace
workers who mi1ht have bad
access to blueprints of the bank,
which wu remodeled about 2~
months ago. The b~Udlog
formerly served aa an
automobile dealership.
He also said an audit by bank
officials failed to turn up any
additional missing money or
valuables other than the
estimated $25,000 in cash stolen initially.
The burglary at the bank,
located at 310 Broadway, was
discovered Monday by"
employees when the bank
opened for business after being
closed since Thursday for the
holiday.
Al l~ast two burglars entered
the two-story building by
jimmying a lock on a door which
leads to a crawlhole on the roof
of the structure. police said.
Once over the bank vault, the
thieves used high speed drills
and saws to cut a 14-by-16-inch
hole in the steel encasement.
One of the burglars, who is
known to be small in stature
because of.the size of the acceis
bole, then dropped into the vault
and scooped up $25,000 in cash
·from tellers.' drawers.
J imenez said there is no doubt
tha t the burglars were well
versed in the layout of the bank,
which opened for business on
Dec. 1.
Treasure Island plan fought
LaUJYer~.ask court to nix county OK for high-rise resort
The Treasure Island Tenants
Assoclatl°'1 bas made good on
its threat to challenge in court
O.r_ang.e County a])])toval of
rezoning for a 440-unit
ti me-share condominium
complex tbat would displace a
2t6-unlt mobUe home park.
According to auocialion
spokesmen, their lawsuit -filed
last Tbunday in Orange County
Superior Court -seeks to
prevent lsauance or building
per._.lu a,nd to set aside
appf'O\fal of the condomlnlum
project until provisions are
made for low-to-moderate ·
income housing ,opportunities.
Lawyen represenUn1 the 500
auociatlon members said
county approval of the
ti m e~sbare lodge denied
residents of low to moderate
income access to decent
housing.
·'The overall goal of this leeal
action is to maintain housing
opportunities for a11 economic
community revels," said one
association spokesman.
The lawsuit s pecifically
alleges that county action on the
project vioJated provisions or the
California Environmental
Quality Act, the state Coastal
Act, the county's GeneraJ Plan
and the Soulh Laguna CoastaJ
Plan. In particular, the legal action
claimed that the Board of
Supervisor&' approval of
rezoning for the time-share
project ran counter to the
county's own housing POiicies
which require that 25 percent of
a given project's units be set
aside for low and moderate
income people.
However, county officials said
the 25 oercent requirement did
not appiy in the Treasure Island
case because time·share hotels
are considered commer~ial, not
residential, uses of the land.
The lawsuit. which Treasure
I s land residents bad been
threatening to file during
various county hearings on the
project, also seeks to overturn a
r e location plan tentatively
approv~ by supervisors. -Glaucoma clinic
open to senio rs ·
· A free glaucoma clinic W'Ul be
ortered to ~a Beach senior
citisens Jan. 15 rrom 10 a.m.
.unW noon at the senior center,
184 Legion Street.
Seniors are urged to attend the
clinic. Early detection of
1laucoma may prevent
blindness.
Supervisors chief
warns of cutbacks WI LD" BLUE YONDERS DEPT. -A group of
Orange Count.y's finest b';'sin~ss executiye~ and corporate
giants have JUSt come m with a prehmmary proposal
aimed at solving the jet airport woes of our region. You
must indeed salute their effort.
woe
Supervisor Ralph Clark,
Orange County government's
blunt talking board chairman
for two years, warned Tuesday
that new fiscal hardships ln 1982
could lead to sharply curtailed
services and programs. . . \
In his "State of the County'
address to fellow board
members, Clark said:
"It Is clear to me that 1982 will
be a difficult year for Orange
County. Our fate is tied
inextricably with the fate of the
state of California , a
I .ake Fore st
man charged ,
afte r chase
A Lake Forest man who led
police on a high speed chase
tbrougb Laguna Beach and
Irvine Tuesday bas been
released on bis own
recognilance after belnt
arrested on suspicion of drivlnt
under the influence of drugs and
auaplcloo ol evadin& arrest.
Gretory Seddlar, H, WH
taken loto cuatody by Lapna
Beacb police at about 11 •·m.
near Broadway and Forest
Ana• Jfter be sideswiped two
other ftbicles and ran bit aporta
car into the curb, a police
apokeaman said.
Seddlar and u.e driven ol the
otber veblcl• weren't ~ured
Mrioual7 In tbe craab, poUc:e
Hid.
lrvlne police Hid Ute ~
...... et about 10 a.m. la tM d llloell ol Or_,. Bloaom. A
· 1poll•man said a petrol ear wu
.. , to tM home ol Seddl•'•
lotmer wif• aft.er a ••labbor 1altld to report a aupfetom
............ ar'OWld UM bOaM.
government agency which tells
us it is flat broke."
Clark, who stepped aside
Tuesday so sophomore
Supervisor Bruce Nestande
could take the chairmanship,
predicted that, if state aid fails
to materia!Ue, "we simply will
not be able to provide services
we have been providing.
"We can cut and trim," be
said, "and ftnd new ways to be
innovative. but the bard facts
will not change. If we do not
have the money, some programs
will be cut back severely, and
others will die."
Clark s~d the county avoided
severe budget problems in 1981
thanks to state aid more
generous than expected. But be
added:
"Our Sacramento advocate
may not be able to pull the
rabbit out of the maglc bat two
yean in a row."
Clark described 1981 •• a
"bittersweet year" for Orantre
County ,overnment, ••a 1ear ol
achievement tempered bj
setback.a ... "·
Slntlinl out areas or lln1erln1
cootroveny such aa the status of
Jobn Wayne Airport and the bilb emt ol boualaC, Clarks.wt
acUona aimed at avertin• crises
wei;e olte..n tbw.arted by a. • •relulleaa flow of eT'eaU
( wblcb) puabed us into
un• anted cootroveralea and
unneeded confrontatlou."
Oae aucb area wu Jobn
WajM ~ wbleb IM '* would r.naln Oraqe CowltJ••
mala commerclal air UH to tbe
outalde world Uu'IDuCb UM 1-.
and ...... unUI UM tDd of tbe
ceaUll'J.
Tb• airport and Its '"'r.':: lmprovem•nt1 bav~~
tar1.-t frequa~y bJ erttla ..........................
ebo1ea for lar••·•calt eom..aat J« operaiklu.
Known as the
·. Blue Ribbon
Regional Airport
iCommittee. the ~~.group was Jll IUIPllll }Nfl'r, ~sfsi~n~ dt~~ ~as~
· suitable place
·w h e r e b i g
commercial jets can ply the airways of Orange County
without shaking loose everybody's molars on each
takeoff.
Appointed by the Board of Supervisors. the private
sector executives were given a few months to solve a
problem that has defied solution for more than one
decade.
THAT IS TO SAY, Orange County's John Wayne
· Airport bas been the problem. It's an okay place as far as·
most of the aviators are concerned. It's t he people on the
ground below the night pattern, in Newport Beach and
parts of Costa Mesa and Irvine, who have sulf ered from
the noise impact.
Anyway, preliminary reports Crom the blue-ribbon
group today indicate that the committee is
recommending several very logical steps.
First, you clear the air. That means that rieht now,
we have a lot of machines overhead in our region. You
have private, commercial and executive aircraft out of
John Wayne Aiport. You have military jets and other
craft from the Marine eo.i. Air Station at El Toro. You
have a lot of wblrlybiHe· from Marine Corps Air Station
Tustin, the old bllmp bue.
Put it all together and you have an aerial traffic Jam
akin to what our Coast Hlahway looks like on a summer
Sunday attenaoan. "'
THVS ro O.EAa the air, the blue ribbon committee
says you buy out the El .Torq air station and the Tultin
hellcopter baae and you move them eleewbere ..
Additionally, 1'.0ll allow private avtators, who DOW UM
John Waym ia reoord aumbeN. to operate out of the Los
Alami\OI mllltary airfield.
Thl1 relocatlan ~pro1ram wo•lld_~provlcle enou1b uauaed air~ to allc>w eomtructtoa o1 ·a new super Jet
"They'~ been 1Daiting for c~ eo cab off for aome tirM now ... "
international-type airport inland al either Chino Hills or
Santia20 Canyon.
While this solutlon sounds rather clear cut. it isn't
without its. problems. First, you'd have to convince the
military authorities to move El Toro and Tustin. Some
estimates have suggested t~e. relocation of t.tie El Toro
operation would cost four btlhon dollaMt by itself. Then
there's a question of how long that would take.
People under the future flight path at Chino Hills or
Santiago miiht not be'too happy with a superport at that
location but, probably there are more of us down here·
than them up there.
IN THE SUM, now that the blue ribbon execs are
beginning to release their recommendations. you can
anticipate a lot or criticisms of their offerings. The aroup.
in fact, has already drawn some sour notes, particularl)'
from government halh, by some bureaucrats who felt the
group was moving too slowly. •
Some of these bureaucrats are the same ones who
have grapPled with the alJJ>Orl vexations for a decade or
so and are no closer to • solution today than they were 10
years ago.
I • DESPITE THE CRmQSMS that wUI surely come
now. you have to thank the committee for tatdn1 on an
enormouSly thankless tuk, for which they wUI proe,.bly
draw only scattered applause .
Additionally, the ~onunlttee of executives alto .dPJew · our airport problems into ver)' sharp focus once. 11aM.
That focua la that. there Ju1t isn't 8'!l qaaiei· fti •
eaay aolutkJ:n -period.
a
I
>'
. ..
'•
II
•I
•I
•J
·'
-
Proving old ties still count,
William P. Clark was chosen
national security. adviser .. 87
county
D
0
· Action urged to miike way for new commercial: airport facility but 'financial difficulties cause concern
IY GL&NN SQWI' ... ..., ........
El Toro Air Bue should be
acquired and moved from
Oran1e COunty to make more
airapace for a new re1ional
airport, ~. advisory panel tQ the
.County Board of Supervisors
wllJ recommend.
Meeting Tuesday in Santa
Ana, the county's Blue Ribbon
Re1ional Airport Committee
unanimoualy ageed to inclDde
the recoounendatioo in a final
report due lo be sent to the
supervisors as early u next
moo th. ·
However, a 1u11eatlon on
where that re1lonal airport
shou·ld be built la still
forth com i 01. Co·~ m it tee
Chairman Keith Murdoch said
Tuesday the committee bas
narrowed ita selections to two
sitea: Santiago Canyon and
Chino Hills. The members are
expeeted to make a choice at
their Feb. 2 meeting.
Clark predicts
• cuts 1n county
aid. programs
S upervisor Ralph Clark,
Oran1e County 1overnment's
blunt talking board chairman
for two years, .warned Tuesday
that new fiscal bard.ships in 1982
could lead to sharply cwtailed
services and programs.
· In his "State of the County"
address to fellow board
m~bers, Clark said:
• ~ 1'It ls clear to me that 1982 will
be a difficult year for Ora.nee
~ounty . Our fate is tied
inextricably with the fate of the
stale of Ca lifornia , a
government agency which tells
us lt is fiat broke."
·Clark, who stepped aside
Tuesday so sophomore
Supervisor Bruce Neslande
could take the chairmanship,
predicted that, if state aid fails
to materialize, "we simply will
not be able to provide services
we have lteen providin1.
"We can cut and trim," be
said, "and find new ways to be
innovative, but the bard facts
wll\ QPt chanae. lf we do not
have the money, so e procrams
wUl be cut ba se rely, and
others will die."
Clark said co ty avoldel
severe budg pro
thanks to stat
generous than
added:
•'Our Sacramento advocate
may not be able to pull the
rabbit out of the magic &Jal two
years in a row."
Clark described 1981 as a ·~bittersweet year" for Orange
t;ounty government, "a year of
achievement tempered by
setbacks ... "
Singling out areu of linJering
controversy such as the status of
John Wayne Airport and the
high cost of bousinl, Clark said
actions aimed at averting crises
were often thwarted by a
"relentless flow of events ,
(which) pus h ed us into
unwanted controversies and
unneeded confrontations.''
One such area was John
Wayne Airport. which be said
would remain Orange County's
main commercial air link to the
outside world Ulrou.gb the 1980s
and perhaps until the end of the
century.
The airport and its p~
i m provementa have been
tar1eted frequenUy by critics
who believe a new alte should be
~-o•tD for 1-.r•• .. S1cale commerdal jet operations.
But Clark said the economics
of build1ng a new airport and the.
time such coutna~1 ~~~ take make Joba Wa A1J"POl'l
the best hnmedlate alive.
"I believe 1981 wu the year
that people realized tbat John
Wayne Airport will be the
number one airfield in Ora.nee
County for all of the 19808,
perhaps the only major airfield
we have in this century," Clark
said.
He added, "In the next year,
we must move ahead on airport
improvements as fast as the
lawyers, the accountants and
the obst:ructionista will let us."
Wayne Tennis Club
sold for $2 million
The 15-court John Wayne
Tennis Club in Newport Beach
ba s been so ld to a
Newport-based real estate
investment firm for $2.5 million,
it was revealed Tuesday. •
Ken Wtll!g, who founded the
club in W74 with Wayne, said the
n ew o ffners -Dominion
Equities Corp. -plan to close
escrow on the purchase by
March 1.
Willil acknowledged there bad
been other offers for the
280-member club, but said
several of the offen would have
brought radical changes to the
five·acre tennis complex on the
east side of the Upper Newport
Bay adjacent to the Newporter
Inn.
"If the Duke was here be
would have approved of this
off er," Willi.& uid Tuesd~
during an afternoon conference.
"And," be added, "lf be bad
looked at all the offers, tb1a is
tbe of\ly one be would have
approved."
Dominion Equities chairman
Burton Smith and the firm's
president James Kelly, both
Newport residents, said they
plan some chanaes at the club,
but did not detail bow extensive
the changes would be.
The new owners were asked
whether they intend to relax the
club's requirement that tennis
players dress in white.
"We may," lau1bed Kelly,
adding, "bu\ tennis ia like the
Marines -you're expected to
act and dress properly.''
Willig, who bad hinted at one
point the club might go for more
than $3 million, said the club
needs "new direction and new
leadership."
He said be had rejected other
orfers because be (ell they would
have "ei;ploited" Wayne's name
or turned the club. Into a social
oraan.bation. One offer, be 1aid,
would have cban&ed the club
lnto a t.eonls complex for women
only.
...
Four in lrrine held
On teen sex charges
~ Pollee bav• arruted tow
people in an lntDe boUle t.bat
all .. edly WU belnl used U a1 loc:aUoD for &di of proetltutioa
lnvolytq a· 15-year-old TUltlA
&h'l. Arr..ied la tbe 11:11 p.m.1 hndaJ f'md at No. e Cnillb71
..... tile OWMr'I ol tbe ......
ltn• L. o.m.&I aad ...U,'
Aliff 1>111• ..... 11; Cltil8e ll••ta•t.• Babbu , II, ao addr.-, .... tM 15-JMl'-old lilt'
~ .... . o.-. ..... ~.-.... ..,..... ....... ital ??ti • .... ,.. ta.,...,.... ot ··--
"I tot the dlatind impn!llJOO
from the dlacuuloo today t.bat lt
isn't likely he'll sa_y no reponal
airport la needed," added
Murdoch after tbe meetlnl.
The committee also cfeekted
Tuesday' that an a1reement
should be made with a aeeond
military bue, the Los Alamitos
Air Bue, to share use of the Air
Force fa~Uity with civlllan
aeneral aviation atrcraa. And in a tb1rCI recom-
!mendatlon, th~ commiJtee.
SUCCESSOR -Supervisor
Bruce Nestande is the new
ch airman of the county
board;
members 1u11eated that effort.a
be made to lncreaae use by
Oran1• Count)' residents of
Ontario lntenuatloaal Airport.
the committee members
acknowleqed the dlttleultlee 1n persuadlna the Marine Corpe to
'sell El Toro and bwld a new air
bue ellewbere. One problem ii
that fedeal law now would
prohibit a direct transfer of
money paid to buy the base Into
·a fund to build• new site.
An amendment to the law
..., ............
WARNING -Supervisor
Ralph Clark says county
programs may be curtailed
in 1982.
1..ake Forest man
charged in chase
A Lake Forest man who led
police on a high speed chase
through Laguna Beach and
Irvin e Tuesday bas been
r e I e a a e d ~· h i a o Vi n
reco1tahance after bei ng
arrested on suspicion of driving
under the influence of drugs and
s~picloo of evadioc arrest.
Gregory Seddlar, 32, was
-taken into .custody · by Laguna
Beach police at about 11 a.m.
near Broadway and Forest
A venue after be sideswiped two
other vehicles and ran his sports
car lnto the curb, a police
spokesman said.
Seddlar ~the drivers of the ~ ~les weren't injured
aerloaaly 1n the crub, police
said.
Irvine 119lice said the chase
beean at about 10 a.m. in the
400 block of Oran1e Blossom. A spokesman said a patrol car was
sent to the home of Seddlar's
former wife after a neighbor
caUed to report a suspicious
man hanging ai'oJJDd the house.
would .have to be paaaed by
Con1ress to allow the tranaler,
committee memben said.
, Committee members said
moviDI El Toro is an attractlve
idea not only because of
conllleta with military aircraft
for airspace but also beca-..e ol
lta "lncreulngly incompatible"
status with 1urroundln1 areu.
Anothel' issue la whether local
officials could cut through
federal bureaucracies fast
~nou1h to aaaure a ucb a
transaction lD time to 10 ahead
with the extenalve plann1n1
needed to construct a reeional
airport.
At least one observer at the
meeUna said be didn't thlak tbe
recommendation wu feulble.
Howard Seelye, aide to Con· ·
.gressman Robert Badham,
R-Newport Beach, aaJd olftclala
would discover that the federal
.bureaucracy "is a real thicket."
Plan to be
unveiled in
lease dispute
By STEVE MARBLE Of .. e>.illy ..... , ....
A six-point program aimed at
settling an angry dispute
between homeowners and the
Irvine Company over
skyrocketing land lease fees iQ
Newport Beach and Irvine will
be unveiled Sunday.
The program -e ntitled
"Leaseholders' Bill of Rights"
-was developed by leaden of
the Committee of 4,000, a group
claiming to represent 41000·
disgruntled homeowners in the
two cities.
Barbara Young, leader of the
committee and a Newport
escrow officer, declined to detail
what her group is requesting ln
the program. ,
"It's a matter of options, of
reforming leases and reforming
ways of purchasing land," she
said when pressed, for details.
The leasehold dispute lnvolves
people who own their homes but
lease the land under them from
the Irvine Company.
The grotUICI leases, which run
from 50 to 75 years, require
homeowners to pay six percent
of the appraised land value to
the Irvine Company.
The leases also caJJ for rental
adjustments to be made alter 20
to 25 years. And that's what's
causing the problems.
Because of soaring land
values, homeowners now are
discovering that annual lease
payments are skyrocketing. One ·
Newport resident reportecl his
yearly fee went from $1,600 to
$67,000.
"The problem all a long," said
Ms. Young, "is that the Irvine
Company is trying to sell us
something that's already ours."
She said she "doubts" the
development firm will accept
the six-point offer and that
affected homeowners will push
ahead with plans to sue the
Irvine Company.
Las t month the Irvine
Coml>aDY unveiled a plan for
allowing affected homeowners
to defer up to 50 percent of the
annual fee. The amount defe~
would be due when the property
is sold.
The Irvine Company has
~steadfastly refused to recognize
the committee as a bareainine agent for homeowners.
"lt's difficult to even meet
with a small group because
leaaeB are different and
· conditions aren't the same in
each case." explained Martin
Browe r, an Irvine Company
spokesman.
"The Irvine Company wanta
to s plinter our group,"
responded Ms. Young.
She said that past "overtures"
for meetings from h er
co mmittee to the Irvine
Company have been h~nored.
~,
~·~ · .. ~\J Flymg puzzle proves earthy woe
WILD BLUE YONDERS DEPT. -A group of
Orange €ounty's finest business executives and corporate
·giants have just come in with a preliminary proposal
aimed at solving the jet airport woes of our region. You
must indeed salute their effort.
.~ . ,~~' "~ 111111111 m~
. Known as the
Blue Ribbon
Regional Airport
:committee, the
group was
assigned the task
of findi~g a
s uitable place
w hi e r e b i g
commercial jets can ply the airways of Orange Coun~
without shaking loose everybody's molars on each
takeoff.
Appointed by the Board ~ Supervisors, the private
sector executives were given a few months to solve a
problem that has defied solution for more than one
decade. ~
"TMJ/'~ been wmtm, /or c~ to t«* of I for some tinw "°'°· ... ,
international-type airport inland at either Chino Hills or
Santiuo Canyon.
While this solution sounds rather 'Clear cut, it Isn't
without its problems. First, you'd have to convince the THAT IS TO SAY, ·orange County'B John Wayne military authorities to move El Toro and Tustin. Some
Airport bas been the problem. It's an okay place as far as estimates have -suggested the relocation of the El Toro
most· of the aviators are c0ocemed. It's the people on the operation woUJd cost four billion doUarfi by itself. Then
ground below the fll1ht pattern, jn Newport Beach and 'there's a question of how long that would take.
parts of Costa Mesa end Irvine, who have suffered from People under the future night path at Chino HUis or
the noise impact. Santiaao might not be too happy with a superport at that
Anyway, preliminary reports from the blue-ribbon location but, probably there are more of us down here
·group today indicate that tbe committee ts than them up there.
recommendlng several very. lolical steps.
First, yO\l clear the air. That means that rilht oow, IN THE SUM, now that the blue ribbon execs are
we have a lot f1f machines overhead in our re1ion. You be&innin& to release their recommendations, you can
have private, commercial and execi&Uve aircraft out of antleipete a lot of criticisms of their offeriftls. The 1roup,
John Wayne Alport. You have military jets and o«ier ln fact. has already drawn some sour notes, particu?arty
cnft from tbe Marine CClrDB Air Station-At .ELToro·__._---from 1QY91lmeot-hall1, by .aome.bw'eaucrata who felt the
have a lot ol Whirlyblrdi from Marine Corps Air Station group was movina too ak>wly.
Tustin, the old blimp bue. · ' Some of thele bureaucrats are the same ones who
Put it -11 totetMr and you have an aerial traffic Jam have gtappled with the airport vexations for a decade or
akin to what Our Cout fflthway lookl like on ••summer so and are no cloeer to a solution today than ttiey were 10
Sunday afternQoa. years ap.
TRVS 'ro CLEA& tbe alr, the blue ribbon committee DESPITE TU ca.maw that will surely ~
says you buy out tbe El Toro air 1taUon and tM T\llUn now, you have to thank the committee for takin& on •
helicopter k•• aad you move them ellewbere.. enormomly tbankl .. talk, for which they·wiu probably
Additionally, you allow private aviaton. who now uae .draw only acattend app!aUM.
John Wayne ln record numbers, to operate out of the Loe. Additionally_. the committee ot executives also drew
A!aml&ol mlllt.ary a1rfteld. our airport problems Into very sharp f ocua once .,a1n.
Thia relocatlOn pro1ram wouldJrovlde enou1b That focua la t.bal there Just lan't any quick fl& or
muted air IP8ee to allow~ a new super jet euy ~ -pertOd . .
\
I•
-.
WEDNEIOAY,
JAN. 6, 1M2
CAVALCADE
COMICS
STOCKS
Proving old ti~s still count,
lfilUam P. Clark was chosen:
national security. adviser . . . 87
. .
,
A~tion urged to mQke way for new commercial~airpoft facility ~t ·financial difficulties cause concern
BY GLENN SCOTT ....... ,... .....
EJ Toro A1r . Base should be
acquired and moved from
Oran1e County to mate more
airspace for a ·new regional
airport, ~ advisory panel to the
.County Board of su·pervisors
will recommend.
Meeting Tuesday in Santa
.Mia, the county's Blue Ribbon
Re1ional Airport Committee
unanimously agTeed to include
the recommendation in a fln:al
LB bank
',burglary
probed
0
The burglars· who drilled and
sawed their way into the vault of
La1~·a National Bank aod
Trusf Co. in Laguna Beach ov~r
the New Year's weekend
apparently had knowledge ol the workings of the alarm system,
according to a police
investigator.
Detect.lye Alex Jimenez of the
Lagurta Beach Police
De-pllrtment said lod1ly an--.
examination of the bank's alarm
system Tuesday showed . the
mechanism bad been tampered
with during the burglary,
causing it not to function. ·
Jimenez said investigators
were continuing to trace
~ workers who might have bad
access to blueprints of the bank, which was remodeled about 21h
·months ago. The building
formerly served as an
automobile dealership.
He also said an audit by bank
officials i.lled to turn up any
add\lional .missing .money or
valuables other than the
estimated $25,000 in cash stolen initially.
The bdrgiary at the bank,
located at 310 Broadway, "was
discovered Monday by
emi>loyees when the bank opened for business after being
closed since Thursday for the
hollda)'.
At least two burglars entered
the two-story building by
jimmying a lock on a door which
leads to a crawlhole on the roof
of the structure, police said.
report due to be seat to the
supervisors as early at next
°'on th.
However, a au11eatf9n. on
where that region•l airpor}
should be built ls stlt
forthcoming . Com roittee
Chairman Keith Murdoch said Tuesday the committee bas
narrowed it.a selectioni to two
sites: Santiago' Canyon and
Chino Hills. The members are
expected to make a choice at ·
their Feb. 2 m~ting.
hf cot the dlatane( lmpr.-on
from the discuul9b todn tlJ'at l\ isn't likely be'll ~ no rellOUI
airport ls needed," added
Murdoch after the JPMtibe. The commlttM •lto dedd~
Tuesday that an a1reemttnt
should be made wlth a secmd
mllltary base, the Loa Alamitos Air Bue, to abate use o( tM Air
Force facility with c:ivllian
geqtral '9iaUO'n aircraft. And to a thard recom-
1mendation, t~ co.mmittee_
members IUHested that effort.I
be made to increase uae by
cOrant• Cou.,iy realdenta of
Ontario International Airport.
Tbe committee members
acknowleqed the difflcultl• in
per.uacllna the Marlfte Corpl to
'sell 'El Toro and bwJd a new air
base elaeWbere. One problesq la
that fede~I law now would
prohibit a direct transfer of\
snoney paid to buy the base into
a fund to build a new site.
An amendment. to the law
CRASH VICTIM -Polict officer Jerry Stukkie
and fire Captain Don ~wanson give. aid to
Charles' WOod, 70, of U>sta M~a who was
thrown from his vehicle after colliding with
............. ..,_.. .....
another car at BrQadway illld TtisUn avenues
at 11 a.19. oday.ppllce.said. Wood was taken
to Fountain Valley Community Hospital.
Supervisor Ralph Clark,
Oran1e County government's
blurtt talking board chairman
for two years, warned Tuesday
that new fiscal hardships in 1982
could lead to sharply curtailed
services and programs.
In his "State of the County"
address to fellow board .
members, Clark said:
''Jt la clear to me that um will
be a dUncult year-for Oranie
County. Our fate i s tied
inextricably with the fate ol the
state of California, a
government agency which tells
us it is flat broke."
Clark, who stepped aside
Tuesday so so phomore
Supervisor Bruce Nestande
coald take the cbairmanablp,
predicted that, if state aid fails
to materialize, "we simply. will
not be able to provide services
we have been providing.
"We can cut and trim." be
said.
would .have to be passed by
Contreaa to allow . the tramfer,
committee membert aald.
. Committee members said
movlnc El Toro is an attractive
idea not only because of
conflicta with military aircraft
for airspace but also because of
its "increasingly incompatible"
status with surroundinl areaa.
Another issue la whether local
officials could cut through
federal bureaucracies fast
4nougb to assure sucb a
tranaaction in tlme to 10 abead
witb the e~tensive plannin•
needed to construct a regiooal
airport.
At least one oblerver at the
meeting said he didn't think the
recommendation was feuible. Howard Seelye, aide to Con-
.gressman ~bert Badham,
R-Newport Be h, ·said olflciala
would discover t the federal bureaucracy "ls a real thicket." ,
Plan to be
unveiled in
lease dispute
II)' 8TEVE l;IARBLE
Of .. Dlltr Pfllll IUff
A six-pqint program ai.med at
settling an angry dis pute
between homeowners and the
Irvine Company over
skyrocketing land lease fees in
New_port Beach and Irvine will
be unve1Iea Sunday.-
The proaram -entitled .. Leaseholders' Bm-oT1t'fgfils''
-was developed by leaders of
the Committee of 4,000, a group
claiming to repre_sent 4,000
disgruntled homeowners in the
two cities. ·
Barbara Young, leader ol the
committee and a Newport
escrow officer. declined to detail what her group is requesam, in
the program. ·
"It's a matter of options, of
reforming leases and reforming
ways of purchasing land," she said when pressed for details.
The leasehold dispute involves
people who own their homes but
leas~ the land under them from
the Irvine Company. •
The ground leases-,·which run
from 50 t.o 75 years, require
homeowners to pay six percent
of the appraised land value to the Irvine Company.
The leases also call for rent.al
adjustments to be made after 20
to 25 years. And that's what's
causing the problems.
Because of soaring land
values·, homeowners now are
discoverin~ that annual lease
payments are skyrocketing. One
Newport resident reported bis
yearly fee went from $1,600 to
$67,000.
· "The problem all along," said
Ms. Young, "is that the Irvine
Company is trying to •sell us
~that's alrew ruirs,"
She said she "doubts" the
development firm will accept
the six-point offer and that
atfected homeowners will puab
ahead with plans to sue the
Irvine Company.
Last month the Irvine
Company unveiled a plan for
allowing affected homeowners
to defer up to 50 percent ol the
annual fee. The amount deferred
would be due when the property
is sold.
The Irvine Company has
steadfastly refused to recognize
the committee as a bargaining
agent for homeowners.
"It's difficult to even meet
whb a small group because
leases are different and
conditions aren't j he same in
e.acb· case," explained Martin
B·rower, an Irvine Company
spokesman.
"The Irvine Company wants
to splinte r o·ur group,"
responded Ms. Young.
She said that past "overtures"
for me e tings from her
committee to the Irvine
Company have been ignored .
Wayne Tennis. C_lub . ~\ -
sold I or $2 rn_~~lian _-.. FlyiDg puzzle eroves em1hy
I . I
I
The 15-court John Wayne
Tennis Club in Newport Beach
has been sold to a
Newport-based real estate investment firm for $2.5 million,
it was revealed Tuesday. _
Ken Willig, who founded the
club in 1974 with Wayne, said the
new owners -Dominion
Equities Corp. -plan to close
escrow on the purchase by
March 1.
Willig acknowledged there bad been other offers for the
280-member club, but said
several of the offers would have
brought radical changes to the
five-acre tennla complex on the
east side ol the Upper Newport
Bay ad,jacent to the Newporter
Inn.
"If the Duke was here be would have approved of this
2,000 Mesa
homes dark. .
after crash
About 2,000 €01ta lleaa
rea·idents were without
electridly briefly Tuesday mpt
a fter a bit-and-run driver
slammed into bis car, cauaiDC It
to ttrike a power pole, aecordlq
to the California Hi&bway
Patrol.
John Barta, 4', of. Newport·
Beach told authorities he waa
southbound OD Brlatol a' 10 p.m.
wbn tbe driver ot a 1171 DlllMID
... mmed bla ltll llerffdn. . ••inl It to .P. out ot eOllltrol
west of Campu1 Drive. Barta wa1 treated ~ad
relteled from Boa& Memodal
Bo•=tal. Autborlttea are Mell tbe hit-and-run drt..,,
Bout Calif ornla Ulaoa
offlciall Hld power wa1
netored wtUdD m1a-.. to all auatomen llwbal w ... ._
Drl••· Newport Boule•ard, ...... loulnar4 aad.., View DrtVJ. '
woe
offer," Willig said Tuesday · -
during an afternoon conference. WILD BLUE YONDEKS DEPT. A group of ,---------:::;;;:;:;;;~::::------I "And " be added, "if he bad looked 'at all the offers, this is ,Orange County's finest business executives and ®rporate
the only one he would have giants have just come in with a preliminary proposal
approved." aimed at solving the jet airport woes of our region. You
Dominion Equities chairman must indeed salute their effort.
Bur.ton Smith and the firm's Known as the
president James Kelly, both ~ B 1 u e Ribbon
Newport residents, said they Regional Airport
plan some changes at the club, Committee, the
but did .not detail how extensive · b'\ , . g r-o u p w a s
the changes would be. Jll 111 .. lf ,~~ t'r assigned the task The new owners were uked rw1 ,, o f f i n d i n g a
whether they intend to relax the s u i ta b I e pl a c e
club's requirement that tennis w h e r e b l g
playen dress in white. .. We may," laughed Kelly, commercial jets can ply the airways of Orange County
adding, "but tennis is like the without shaking, loose everybody's molars on each
Marines -you're expected to takeoff.
act and dress properly." Appointed by the Board ol Supervisors, the private
Willig, who had hinted at one sector executives wer e given a few months to solve a
point the club might go for more problem that has defied solution for more than one
than $3 million, a.aid the club decade. needs "new direction and new
leadersbip. •• ·
He said be bad rej~ed ~r
'oflers because be felt they would
have "exploited" Wayne's name
or tunaed the club into....a eodal
or1anlzation. One offer, be said, .
would have cban1ed the. club
into a tennis complex tor women
only.
Kelly said be and bis partners
CUJ"fently ,are ne1otiatln1 with
the Wayne family over the
contlnuecl use of the late actAJlt'• name. •
Accordlna to le1a1 CODtnets, 1
the W•JDe lamlly can withdraw
Joltn Wayne'• name on a
IUMDontb noCiee. "~ I recall," WlUil 6* of I
tbe late actor'• latarea la1
t.ulil, "Wayne oalt walked OD a
eourt one time. U. took a coude ot 1wlnp and that waa that."
Re aald Wa1.n• frequeatlt
allowed ua> at U.. ehab to p1., ~ or brtc1&9. wtU:a. aid tt 18
WaJM'• former wife, Pilar.--~ ..iOfltmn&I. .
1 ••rm 1ure WaJD• ....... '
nta ba•• been ID~ a
' 1~ Cbe c:~~b II jt Uc1 ~ been IW Pilar, Wllll1 1alc[ 6
THAT IS TO SAY: Orange County's John Wayne
Airport has been the problem; It's an okay place as far as
most of the avtatorS' are concerned. It's the people on the ~
ground below the fifght pattem, in Newport Beacb' and
parts of Costa Mesa and Irvine. who have suflered from
the noise impact.
Anyway, preliminary reports from the blue·ribbon
group today · indicate that the com lhittee ls
recommendlog several very logical steps.
First, y°" elear the air. That means that ri1bt now.
we have a lat ef machines overhead in our region. You
have private. commeretal and executive aircraft out of
John Wayn& Alport. \'ou have military jeta and other
,craft from U. MariDe CQrpl Air Station at El Toro. You
&ave a lot.,, "'1.lrlylli* from Marine Corps Air Station
• Tustin, the old bll• ~· Put it all tdlltli'er and you have an aerial traf{lc Jal1\
akin to ~ aur (oat llpway looks lltte QJl a summer
SUnday~. · .
~ ' THlJS TO CL~a the lllr, the blue ribbon committee
says >'°" buy out tile El Toro air station and tbe TulUn
hellcopt~ ,base and you move them ela~re ..
Addltiona111., you allow private aviators, who now use John wa,-m retort numben, to operate out of the Loe.
AllJDi&OI military alrfteld.
Thil relocatloo 01'0IRDl wouJdJfOVlde enOUCb UMIMd alr epHe to allow~ a MW,..,_ jet
'I ~
"Thq've ~ waffilipg for clcan:alce to &aM off for amM time "°'°" ....
international-type airport inland at either Chino Hills or
· Santia20 Canyon.
While \bis solution sounds rather clear cut, it isn't
without it$" problems. First, r,ou'd have to convince the ·
military authorities to move El Toro and Tustin. Some
estimates have suggested the relocation of the El Toro
operation would cost four billion dollar!i by itself . .i'hen
'there's a question of bow lone· that would take.
People under th~ future fil1ht path at Chino Hills or
Santiaco might not be \oo h@Py with a superport at'that loca~ but, probably \here are more of us down here·
Ulan them up there.
IN 11IE SUM. now that the blue ribbon execs are
beginnina to release their recommendations, you can
anticipate a lot of criUclams ol tbelr offerings. The group,
in fa~, hu already drawn some sour notes, particul~ly
from 1overnment halls. by some bureaucrats who felt the
group waa moving too slowly.
Some of these bureaucrata are the same ones wbo
have gr..,.,led with the airport vexations for a decade or
so and are no closer to a solution today than they were 10
years ago.
DESPITE Tiii: carnasMS that will surely come
now, you have to thank the eommlt!fe for takinl oo an
enormously thank! .. talk, for wtdc:li they will probably
.draw only seatterect applaUM.
AddlUonall)'., the committee of executives alto clreW
our '1r'Part problem.a into very sharp focus once qain .
That foCua ll tbal there Just isn't any qulek ftx or
H)' IOlut~ -period.
1
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Orang• CoutJ)AILY PILOTJWednudey. January 6, 1982 '
.............
ROADBLOCK -Highway 101 north of the Golden Gate
Bridge was closed by this mudslide on the Waldo Grade.
cutting a uto traffic be twee n San Francisco and Marin
County
8 1iomes buried unCler slides
• 8EN LOMOND <AP> -
Reacu, workel'1 todoy rac e
1rlm Job of dlHinl out at lea.11
ei&bt hou1e1 burled ln an
av 1 lancbe of mud lo th ls
remote, wooded community
north ot Santa Cruz.
Twelve inches ot raln turned Valley and other Isolated
the San Lorenzo Valley blllaldes pockets ot the county were cut
to mud, buryln1 the homei and off from the outside world, with
rew· s, rubble ud rocks no water, no power a nd no
u ss the only road lnto the telephone servfce, Gray aald.
steep canyon , said s heriff's Rescue workers in heavy-duty
investigator Joseph Henard. vehicles carried emergency
water supplies to some stranded Eight to 20 people were teared "We hope lo get into them people, Gray said.
dead ln tbe homes in a steep today," said 8 herirr's Lt. Lloyd "There's places we haven't
canyon above Love Creek, Gray. .even gotten lo yet," he said.
authorities said Tuesday. At The first s tep, he said, Is to Authorities cordoned off the
least nine other people died In ''pus h a road comp letely Ben Lomond area Tuesday to
Santa Cruz County from the \hr o u & h so we can & el prevent looting and discourage
two-day storm th at started e~ulpment into the area." onlookers and people hoping to
Sunday, sheriff's officials said. Survivors ln tht: San Lorenzo return to their homes Several
* * * * * * * * * •
County spared m udsli<ks
Cloudiness due tonight; clear skies seen Thursday
A high pressure system over
Baja California pushed a P~cific
s t orm eastward Tuesday,
helping Orange County escape
the fierce rain and mudslides
troubling the northern areas of
California, National Weather
Service officials said today.
Weather forecasters said
Orange Coast residents can
expect partial cloudiness tonight
with clearing skies Thursday.
The weather service said the
chance of additional local
showers wouJd drop tonight and
diminish further Thursday. Fair
weather is expected to continue
through SundHy
Orange Coast temperatures
are expected to dip into the
upper 40s tonight and climb to
the low 60s Thursday.
Early Tuesday, the weather
service had warned Orange
County lo prepare for heavy
rain. But the high pressure
.,stem over Mexico created a
bufrer that helped send Northern
Califorrua's storm eastward into
Nevada, a weather service
spokesman said.
Although mild s howers earlier
Jn the week contributed to some
traffic accidents, very little
storm damage was reported in
Orange County.
"It was dry all night here,"
confirmed Huntmgton Beach's
amateur meteorologist J .
Sherman Denny. "I knew the
storm was moving east. We
didn't get any more rain here
near the beach. although they
may have had some mland."
Denny said Tues day 's
mornjng and afternoon drizzles
brought his rain total for the
year beginning July 1, 1981 to
5.56 inches, far ahead of last
year's total for lhas date, 1.41
inches.
Instances of looting .were
reported but none had been
confirmed, Henard said.
Mor~ than 70,000 peopl•
throu_cbout the county have been
without electricity since 8:32
p.m. Monday, and PG&E had no
estimate when power would be
restored.
East of Santa Crui, residents
of Soquel were trying to dla out
from a layer of mud deposited
by waters 6 to 7 feet deep ln
plaees, Gray said Residepla or
that town were evacuated
briefly Monday
* * * From Page A1
STORM. • •
the slide worried many people
Although county emergency
officials said lhey were not in
jeopardy, Red Cross shelter
manager Mike Tachet said he
learned from police that "the
mudslide tipped them and some
of the water spilled . inlO a
lake. If there is another slide, it
will bring 400,000 gallons down
on Sausalito," he said.
''Not hing can stop the
mudslides," said J ohn Barrows,
county administrator. "ll's like
all slides -you have to let it
ride out. There's lots and lots of
water in the soil.
''It came ver y s uddenly
Everything was qujel ... then
things blossomed." he said.
.~$26.5 ~illion state budget proposed
A small battalion of bulldozers
from the Department or
Transportation was clearing
previous mudslides from the
eight·lane freeway at the Waldo
Grade on Tuesday night when
the new wave of slides began
shortly after 10.
p• ,.
:•,·SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov
,.Edmund Brown Jr. will propose
t IO• $26.5 billion budget this week
l that s lashes ~50 million out of
1• J0cal government aid and caps
olhcr slate spending at about
i·one·half the rate of inflation.
~ T he budget proposal ~untaJJ'ls
·•no direct tax increases. But
indirect tax increases in the
,1f-Qrm of faster collections and
. "''
higher penalties on late laxes
would boost lax receipts by an
estimated $645 mHUon.
The Democratic 'overnor will
also propose starting some or
those quicker tax collections
during t he r emainiflg1 five
menth!H>f th&-l"8l-82-ftse8"t year
Lo raise a n addiJ.ional $338
million, boosting total state tax
revenues by nearly SI billion.
Those figures were reported budget proposes a Sl.2 billion
today in the Sacramento Bee increase in stale spending, from
and Sacramento Union, and the current $25.3 billlon to $26.5
most were confirmed by budget billion, an overall increase of
documents obtained by The 4.68 percent.
Associated Press. Compared with an estimated
Bro wn 's offic e declined 8.8 percent inflation rate, that
comment-until the budgerts--l"epresents a -3 S p ercent
officially released Sunday, but reduction in spending power.
the figures were not disputed. Welfare recipients would get
Brown's eighth and final full8.8percentincreasesintheir
grants , but fund s set aside for
state employee pay raises allow
raises for the m of about half
that rate.
Caltrans engineers today were
~t 101 and the WaJdo Tunnel,
also known as the Rainbow
Tunnel, lo determine the extent
to which mud s li des bad
.undermined them, said Caltrans
infornnrt i <Jn-otfl c e-r-U-a vi d
Paulson.
;;'!le scued Canadian lands in jail
There is no specific proposal
for pay raises because state law
requires bargaining be~ lha
state and employee groups on
pay and benefits. However only
$168 million is earmarked in the
budget for pay and benefits, a
ltgure that would provideless
than 5 percent for r aises if it is
divided across·the-board among
the state's 220,000 employees
Mud slid Crom beneath the
highway downhill to a little
canyon of homes nearby, and
Barrow said. "Those houses are
going."
After a check on the east side
or 101, "a determination ..
was made that a portion of lbe
city is in imminent danger. This
involves an area of about
o n e -e ighth " of th e
2.4-square-mile city. Potter said .
""HONOL ULU CAP> -
.' $'h i p w r ec k e d s a i I or Job n
<Dftarrison waited nearly a month
to be rescued from a tiny atoll in ~'ftje middle of the Pacific. As
n•s't>o n a s h e r e turned to
civilization. he was sent to jail.
Harrison, or Canada, was
arrested ·at Honolulu Airport on
Tuesday ni ght after he and his
two daughters, Micki, 20, and
Kristen, 13, were flown 1,100
miles to Hawaii from remote
Palmyra Island.
Harrison was charged with
taking property that belonged to
a crew member when he sailed
to Australia on bis 41 -foot
trimaran, Sisyphus.
Harrison and his daughters
apparently left Maui in a hurry
Nov . 10 as be was beln1
confronted by collection agents
for the Bank of British
Columbia, which bolds the
mortgage on the ship, pfficlah
said.
The Sisyphus came apart in a
J )ouglas to modify
l lC-10 wing. slats
,., WA S HINGTON (APJ -
I !M c Donne II Doug I a s Corp
·11builder of the DC· 10 aircraft
'•"Nill seek to modify devices that
control the plane's lift because
• •bf concerns about potential
c:1damage to the devices if an
., engine breaks up.
,,. The changes to the hydraulic
system that controli; the wing
l slats will be suggested at a Jan.
1r JA meeting to all airlines that
. operate DC-lOs. a company
s pokesm an said today.
, • The modifications would be ff e~forme d dur ing normal
k
aintenance. '! .. We're not going to have a
1 assive recall," s aid Frank
. omlinson, the company's
1 ashington spokesman. :~The Fed"eral Aviation
·~dministration a"te<t
:!:McDonnell Douglas to study the
: ·ffects of severe eniine dam~e
n the forward w~ slats, whlc~
ontrol lift. after an incident in
eptember involving a DC-10
' per ated by Air Florida.
1C In that incident, an engine l:~isint-egrated during takeoff at
, iami International Airport.
he c r e w pulled back the
hrottle and ' slammed on lhe
rakes at an estimated 110
ots, bringing the plane safely o a halt.
But federal safely officia&J
8ised concerns that parts of the
ngine during such a breakup
ould damage the nearby
orward slats, If the alat Is not
xlended while its counterpart
n the opposite wing is extended,
the plane could go into a
dangerous roll and possibly
crash.
The changes to be Ptesented to
the air carriers are "a
precautionary m easure to
i n crease protection against
sever e external damage" If an
engine breaks up as in the Air
Florida incident, a McDonnell
Douglas statement said.
The company '511id one change
will be to install a hydraulic
valve that would act as a lock to
keep the slats extended even if
hydraulic Lines controlling the
s lats are severed. Also, the
cable system that controls the
main hydraulic val_ves will be
modified to keep the slats.
extended
The performance of DC·lO
engines and forward wing slats
has been a matter of concern
since May 1979, when an
American Airlines DC·lO
crashed shortly after takeoff
from O'Har e International
Airport at Chicaao. killing 273
people.
In that accident an engine fell
from the wing, the forward slats
were severely damaged, and the
plane went lnto an uncontrolled
roll and crashed.
Tomlinson noted that the
ch ans ea '•are not necessary to
meet FAA requirements" but
were intended as a precauUon
against damage from possible
engine breakups. The final
decision whet.her lo make lbe
cbanaea will be up to the -
lndlvldual airlines
08AMOl. COAST
Daily Pilat
ClefflftM ...., • .,... n41A:J.517S
All otlMr .,.filMneaM2-U21
storm Dec. 10 and the Harrison5
were stranded 1,100 miles south
of Honolulu.
Attorney C. George Sphikas,
representing the bank, said
Harrison, 39, owes $65,000 on the
princi pal, several unpaid
monthly payments of Sl,235 and
unspecified expenses incurred
by the bank ln trying to rerover
the Sisyphus.
H&nisoo iniUaJly surrendered
his boat t.o the Hawaii Recovery
Bureau but later hired an
From Page A1
GUILTY. • •
investigators believed that he
was involved in at least 21
deaths.
Bonin was arrested in June,
1980, in Hollywood while he was
und er s urveillance after a
juvenile informant told police
that Bonin had claimed he was
the freeway killer .
There was tension in the
packed courtroom as Judge
Keene took several minutes to
look over the verdicts, then
handed them to the clerk to be
read.
"Mister foreman." he asked Juror Jotln M . Lang, "'have you
ar rived at verdicts in this
case?"
''Yes, we have, your honor,''
Lan& silid as the jurors stared
around t he courtroom but
avoided looking at Bonin.
Bonin's fate was sealed with
the reading of the first of 2S
verdicts.
"We, the jury in the above
entitled action find the
defendant, WHliam George
Bonin, guilty of murder, a
felony . upon Donald Hyden," the
verdict said, "and we further
find it to be murder in the first
degree."
The verdict was read Tuesday
but Keene was absent attending
a runeral. so the announcement
was delayed until today. ·
Atlanta
trial b egins
•
ATLANTA (AP ) -The
murder case against Wayne B.
Wllliam.s will be revealed "like
a-Jigaaw-pualle with • lot of
pieces fitting in," the prosecutor
told the jury as openint
arguments betan today at lbe
long-awaited trial.
But a defense attorney saJd he
will prove that ''you don't get •
ldller from a bo)' t.bat was raised
lli• th1J boy WU."
WUUams, a 23·year-old black
free -lance cameraman, la
charted with killlnJ Nathaniel
Cater, 27 , and Jsmmy Ray
Payne, 21. Tbey were two of 28
young black• wboH 1laytne1 over 22 mcmtha prompted one ol
t h• most extensive pollce
, Jnv .. tt1atton1 ln tit• naUon'1
biatory. No am!9ta bave been
ma•• la th• 218 other fHlhl1 ,
attorney and "eventually
secured repossession of the boat
-J can't say how," Sphikas
'S aid.
Maui County Police Chief
Joseph C. Carvalho said the
felony theft warrant stemmed
from a complaint filed by Wayne
Stevens, a Sisyphus crewman.
Two other crewmen filed similar
complaints, Carvalho said.
Bail was set at $2,000, but a
police spokesman said Harrison
would not be allowed lo post
bond until he was returned to
Maui, probably today The two
daughters were staying in
Honolulu with friends, the
spokesman added.
Brown's proposal would gave
elderly couples on welfare an
a dditional $72 m onthly . A
mothe r with two children on
welfare would rece ive an
additional $45 monthly while
state employees would rtceave
about $6S monthly in additional
pay and benefits
Most other state programs
would be limited to 5 percent
spending increases in the fi scal
year beginning next July 1.
Local schools would receive
increases averaging 6 9 pen:ent
in state aid, but c ities and
counties would have their dfrect
state aid cut by nearly one-thlrd
At least 300 evacuees were
taken to Martin Luther King
• School and others were headed
for a recreation center in MIU
Va lley, Poller said
Many evacuees were worried
and wakeful, eager for news of
their property. Others dozed
under gray Red Cross blankets.
Dianne Les.lie, who ten her
cats behind when she fled her
home as il was threatened by
another house sliding down hill,
r ecalled hearing "a dull roar
come from behind the house.
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