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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-01-08 - Orange Coast Pilot* • • • • • .,IUISI CUil YOUR 010111 DAILY PAPER FRIDAY . JANUAR Y 8 . 1982 ORANGE COUNTY. C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS U.S. 1nale· !fllemployed rate np Santa Ana winds due to ease on coast Chilly Santa Ana winds that snapped trees, toppled signs, fueled fires and caused a rash of power outages along the Orange Coast T,bursday are expected to let up late tonight. The brisk winds, gusting up to 30 mph along the coast and reachlne speeds or 50 mph in canyon areas, are predicted to diminish and give way to fair weekend weather. In Mission Viejo Thursday . * * * High winds • • persist • • 1n region By Tbe Auoclated Press Cold winds strong enough to twirl a car a r ound on the freeway and rip roofs off several houses continued to blast t hrough Southe rn California today. but forecasters say they expe_ct the 1usts to ease tonight. The National Weathe r Service said winds were up to 75 mph this morning at Mt. Laguna, a bove Pt. Mugu Naval Air Sta lion, where Pres ident Reagan takes off and lands when he ls visitine his Santa Barbara County ranch. Winds up to 60 mph slashed through R iverside and San Bernardino o n Thursday, rippin& .the roofs off several houses and shattering windows in a wide swath. "They will be as strong today." said Pat Roe, a weather specialist with the National Weather Service. "In San Diego County , they will be even stronger t h an they were yesterday. lt will be very dangerous for vehicles in some areas." As two more semi-trailers overturned on Interstate 15 north of Fontana this morning, the California Highway Patrol began stopping trucks trav~ling in that direction and detouring them from southbound 194 at Devore, in the mouth of the windy Cajon Pass. to surface streets. Near Fontana, a moving car was whirled around by wind Thursday and the driver wu killed whe n another car amastied Into It. Northbound lanes are not yet a ,problem IJ! that area of San <See "!ND!I. Pase AZ> Repair work to clo•e ramp Caltran1 0Ulclal1 have announced repairs on the southbound Santa Ana Freeway offramp leadln1 to the southbound £01ta lleaa Freeway wtU caue the ramp to be cloted to trafflc durln1 everuna boun. A Clltrull 1pokHman .. 1d work would belln Jan. 25 and eonUnue GU AprU 2. The ramp ,nu be e&oMd between tbe bo\ln of I p.m. and 5 a.m. weekda11. WOJk CNWI will be lu~Uq aew barrier rail and alao wldealna tbe ramp. Colt ol tbt project II •• ooo. D«ourl wW1 be 1« up aloal NfWPOl't ... Mel'..._ n .. u.. when tbe • , .. , .. elmeed. even ing, firefighters said the stiff winds hampered efforts to extinguish a fire in a two·story commercial structure. The fire, t hey reported, caused $350,000 in damage. In Huntington Beach, a large sign outside a car wash near the intersection of Beach Boulevard a nd Edinger Avenue was toppled by the chilly gusts . Wprkmen in nearly all of the Orange Coast cities reported trees bad been snapped by lhe winds . In Huntington Beach, city workmen ·said several 30·foot trees were uprooted in the city's Central Park. At least two other trees were snapped, falling, on cars. "There wasn•t any substantia.J damage," observed Daryl Smith, Huntington's-superintendent of city landscaping. "A few bent hoods and a little scratched paint." A two-car accident on the Santa Ana River bridge between Huntington and Newport Beach also was being blamed on the wind. California Highway Patrol officers said the Thursday morning accident was caused when a 15-foot·long board was blown off a pickup truck, landing in front of an oncoming car. The motorist, 20-year-old John (See COAST, Paie i\2) * * * Big r_dachines attack slides in Santa Cruz SANTA CRUZ CAP> -Huge earth-moving machines were attacking mudslides today after s lippe ry, debris-laden mud prove d too big a job for backhoes and hundreds of r escuers trying to unearth roads, homes and victims burled during a 2~-day killer storm. Recovery work was complicated in Santa Cruz and its surrounding hills by a critical water shorta ge. Tbe water system serving 70,000 people was shut off Thursday night to give crews a chance to repair leaky. storm-damaged pipes and pump water into a stora1e tank. Santa Cruz County, along with Marin, Contra Co"Sta, San Mateo and Sonoma coullties, wasl declared a disaster area by President Reagan, ·making them eligible for federal help. Damage from the storm ls estimated at more than S280 million by s tate and local officials in t.bose five counties and three others -Alameda, Solano and Santa Clara, wbJch Thursday aaked Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. fOI' emergency help. The devastation · "is almost Indescribable,•• said Dan Forbua, a Santa Cruz County l \lpervlaor' Eleven of th• U confirmed atorm·related deaths occurred ln Saq&a Cna County. About.100 bomef were wrecked, 300 more dama1ed, 1,n> people displaced and 40 roads cloaed or "lmpauable all the way tbroup," Jl'orbul Hid._ Power for 50,000 CUltomen wu CMlt far 4t boun, IDd 4,000 ltiU llM no eJ•tridty a.a. nuand~. "People don't realbe J~ -. denatated tbtl 11na II,.. said (8" ILIDSI, p_. Al) OeltY Nlit "'*.., l"llUtdl O'o-tl Mesa cocaine drug bust. Officers uncovered maohlne guns. s hotguns.-and rif~es. during the raid. Four were arrested. SEIZED ARSENAL -Newport Beach detective Al Fiseher eyes-l"5raeti..rnade Uzi automatic seized Thursday during Costa ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Guns seized in Mesa drug bust Newport Beach narcotic officers ftn covered a small arsenal of machine g uns, shotguns and rifles Thursday during a Costa Mesa cocaine drug bust. Police said the late night raid at 327 21st St. turned up a collection of weapons seldom seen in the count.ry, including an Is raeli-made Uzi automatiC, German shotguns and a wallet gun. Arrested at the scene on charges oC selling cocaine were Anne Marie Appleby, 24 ; Stephen Mark Appleby, 27; David Scott As ton, 24, and Zeynep Simsek, 18. All were listed as Costa Mesa residents and are•being held on $15,000 bail each. Police said officers arranged to h ave undercover agents purchase an ounce of cocaine at the house and later conducted the raid. In addition to the guns, police also seized knives, switchblades and numerous rounds of shotgun ammunition. Desert train crash kills Mexican alien THERMAL <AP> -One man was killed and Uve others were injured when 14 car s of a mi l e -long Southern Pacific freight train derailed. spilling a radioactive car go into the desert, authorities said today. Stat e health officials and railroad workers picked through the wreckaee to see if casings for the radioactive cargo bad ruptured. But Kim Wong, a physicist for the California Occupational Safety and Health Administration, said that "as far as we can tell" there was no radiation danger from the derailment. Riverside County sheriff's Sgt. Terry Burdo said one m an, a Mexican natiqnal, died at Indio Community Hos pital from i njuries s uffered ln the derailment. Four other ,aliens were hurt, one crllically, and one county fireman, Ken Moore, was treated for a minor knee injury and released. Nursing supervisor Dorothy Ryan said the names of the Mexicans, all of whom she said CALIFORNIA Patm • 'Springs . Thermal • Freight Train ~ Derailed MEXICO DERAILED -This is where a mile-long fre ig ht train ca rryi ng radioactiv e material derailed. injuring five people. h·ad ent ered the coun try illegally, were withheld pending notification of relatives. None showed any radiation exposure. she said. Search for Coast man puzzles Newport businessman reportedly lost\ ~If Catalina ' The disappearance of Newport Beach stockbroker Dean Tyler Jenks baa aut.borities puzzled. J enks, a 32-year-old Laeuna Ntc.uel resident, was last seen early lu t week leavlDI Newport Harbor in his business partner's 30-foot sailboat. The boat was discovered the following day beached on the Catallna coast, two miles west o( Avalon. U.S. Coast Guard officers said ther,e was no sip of Jenke. They also said the boat'• sails were down but that Ill eni:t.nei set on automatic pilot, wu atU runnLnt. 1 Jenu 11 one ot two Newport bu1ine11men wbo have reoonedlY beea IOlt at ... la ..ParlW boatlftl mtlhape off the Ca&il&na eoastUne ln &be pMt wMll. ~ i•1·loa1 air and oeeu ...... rer .. , ........ NewpGI'\ resident Jerry Hamilton, identified as a Fontana Ford dealer, wu called off Sun~y . Hamilton reportedly was swept off his 39-foot sailboat Sunday In '°"'h weather. An unJdenUlled woman sallln& Sails we·re down .but engine was still running. J ·e n ks may h a v e been attempting to hoist the vessel's main sail at the time of the mishap. The boat's boom , Metcalf said, could have swung, knockinR Jenks into the aea. ··Also~" Metcalf continued, "you' have to re.member this Is the whale migration season. l' was hit by a whale three years ago and it's pretty traumaUc." Metcalf said his partner was a seasoned yachtsman who bad worked aa an om~r for tbe pert authority In HawaiJ years •So· lie a11o aald Jenn was In a tood frame ot mind when he left Newport In the boat. Figure postwar record WASIUNG10N lAP ) -The nation's unemployment rate su rged lo 8 9 percent in December as johlessness among adult men. hL'>ltmcally the most stable element of tbe labor force, set a post World War II record, the Labor Department reported today The Bureau.11r Labor Statistics said the hair a-percentage-point jump from 8 4 percent to 8.9 percent overall left close to 9.5 million Americans out of work as the economy plunged into a deepening recession . The agency said the number of "discouraged workers" rose by about 150,000 in the fourth quarte\' or 1981, to 1.2 million, the highest h!\ cl recorded since the government IJcgan keeping those stati s tics i n 1970. Discouraged -...orkers are classified as those who report to government i>urvcyors that they want to rind -...ork hut have given up the search in lutiltly Discouraged workers are not counted in tht> department's overall unemployment figu re. The rate an California also was up s 1gn1 r 1canlly, from 8.2 percent to 8 9 Black unemploy ment reached 17.4 percent last month. another post war record Department analysts said the overall jobles!. 1 ate last month approached the !:i percent high in May 1975. toward the end of a months Ion~ rt·ccss1on brought on by the Arab •iii em bargo. If uncmploymt-nl exceeds 9 percent as many private economists p1 edict it will this year it -...il l reach the highest level sinct• the government began keeping month-to-month figures in the late 1940s. At the While House. deputy press secretary Larry Speakes noted that tht' administration ex p eclPd a rise in une mployment but added that "we antic1patl' that at the end of th e secon d quar t e r our programs will lx:g1n to work and that we will see an upturn in the overall economv ·· He said the ;idm1nistration has confidence "our programs will work " In lhe pa~t . administration orricials h;ive sai d rising unemployment is the price the nation must pay for bringing down double digit inflation. Since July. the department said , m ore l hun 2 million Americans have been thrown o ul of work and the unemployment rate has shot up almost 2 full percentage points. BRANGf COAST WIATHll East to northeast winds 15 to 30 mph in and below coastal ca n yo n s dmintshing tonight. Lows tonight 30s to low 40s. Highs Saturday, 66 along beach, 60 Inland. INSIDE TODAY Country '"~rator Mort11 Robbins !OJll the urba• cowboy crau i3 blad19g OUIQW with fake bullets wWa too much pretend and not ~h 1ub1tance. Page AB. 11111 Oiange Coat DAILY PILOT/Frld1y, January 8, 1982 ~l OLSNN IOOft "~ .... --:\ levsal 111aPMie 1,.elallata ID uae Aomu Catbollc cbw-cb laid t~urlday tbey will 100D HDd a fetter to U.S. AUorney General ft'llllam l'NDc,b Smkb obJec:tini to new, anon aar-atve federal ~eportatlon pollelH for tendoeumented worken. The poUci• eome from the fect.eral lmml1raUon and N~turaUaation Service, whose 4eputy diltrict dJrector, Omer SeweU, wu quoted tbls week u ~ytnl bit wdrken wUl double their raldt on Southern ~allfo.mla factories. ., • Sewell •aid hll 1t1tf 11al1nect to workplace raid.I wlll lncreue ttom 11 to «> or SO otftcen by February. A natloaaJ dlNCllve requlrea bait a dlatrlet'• lnveaU1aUve 1tatt to work 1t.reet duty. "We bave been plcklnt up about ao or ao mecaJ auem a day ln the lut aeveral month& and now we expect that to io up to maybe 75 to 100 a day," be Hid. At a news conference called to respond to Sewell's ataternent, 1tbe d irectors of Hiapanlc Mloiatry in Orange, Loa Angeles, San Bernardino and AT&T settles suit • • t n antitrust case ( · WASIUNGTON <AP> -The Justice Department announced foday a settlement of its ?-year-old anUtrust suit against Am.erican Telephone & Telegraph Co. that will require. the telecommunications giant lo give up local operalinJ tompanies within 18 months. ' - 1 Bell Telephone wlll have that 'ime lo reorganize before it lhust divest it.sell of the local · 010mpanies. ! The settlement allows AT&T l'o continue to run its nationwide loog·dlslance telephone service. The BeU System also will retain tts main subsidiaries; Bell Telephone Laboratories and Western Electric. The agreement also allows AT&T to provide telephone equipment for c ustomer s, including lhal now furnished by local BeU companies. In advance of the announcement. trading in the s tock or AT&T and related ~mpanies was balled on lbe ~ew York Stock Exchange. immediately after Presid~nt . Reagan took office a year ago. The department had abandoned previous negoliat~ons begun by the Carter administration and Baxter said he intended to pursue the case in court "to the eyeballs." However, oflicials in the departments of Commerce and Defense reportedly urged Rea1an to resume negotiations because 'they fell that breaking up AT&T would burl the nation's communications system in wartime or national emergem:y. Also, the Senate bas passed a bill, endorsed by AT&T, to require only a limited breakup of the BeU System. On the side or the telephone company, there have been reports that AT&T was worried it might lose in court and be forced to divest itself of major portions of the company. There had been reports that the Justice Department was pressing in its negotiations to convince Bell TeJepbone to sell o ff some local operating co mpanies and s hare long·dJslance facilities with lls growing number of competilon. San Dle10 dl~sea called the ralda aftronta to human dl1nity. A poller piMed to the wall at th• preH conference lent a dramatic touch to their concerns. It nad: "Jeaua, llary and Joseph were aliens, retu1eea and mtcranta too." The dlrectora, lncludln1 Vather AJJan Deck of the Orange Diocese, said they object to all of the raJdl and spot checks a1aln1t Hlapantcs as dl1crlminatory against those who are legal rHidenta. "This policy, ln adatUon, ls an attack upon the unity of famllies," they said ln a written statemeot. ''It means quite literally that children wtU be comlnl home from school in communities aJJ over Southern California to find that their - father or mother was disappeared.'' Those parents probably wiU return, they added, but al a price of perhaps $250 lo $300 paid to a smuggler . Father Deck said his group . isn 'l speaking on behalf of the Rom an Catholic Church as a whole, but rather the four dioceses, which represent more than 2.5 million Catholics of His panic origin. He said the objections are based in the moral teachings of the church. He said the directors plan to draft the letter to the attorney general t oday and send it Monday. The attorney general's office oversees the activities of the Immigration service, he said. · Deck said about one of every three or the more than 300,000 His panic p eople in Orance County are undoc umented, adding that their parUcipatioo in the local workforce ls essential to the reeion's finaocial he.Jth. Father Patricio Guillen of San Bernardino said he would like to see immigration laws changed to problbit such raids against peo&>le who have no rights to defend th~mselvea. "We just want to say we are concerned," be said. "We don't want to be passjve and silent." Tracling was also halted lo lbe stock of Jnternationall Business Machines Corp .. the target of Ute federal government's ·other rpajor pending antitrust case, hm m e d i a le 1-y pro m p t in g speculation among analysts lbat a development In that case l'ltljgbl be imminent. , IBM s pokes men declined ~mment and lbe exchange said \\ did not know lhe nature or the pending development. Sources at .the company said a major ,development was immloent. Mesa won't fight development ruling In New York, the Justice Department and IBM were granted a hearing at 1 p.m. today before U.S. District Judge David Edelstein , who was hearing the case. Assistant Attorney General William Baxter, in charge or the department's antitrust division, and AT&T Chairman Charles Bro wn sch e duled a news conference to "discuss developments in the case." 1 The department declined to say in advance of the news conference what the substance or its announcement would be. . But one official said it would be "very important." • The administration disclosed Dec. 31 that it was negotiating ~ settlement wilb Bell Telephone. A major antitrust suit to break ~P the Bell System was filed. by Lbe Ford administration in November 1974, and the trial in the case, in recess over the Christmas-New Year's holiday, bad been due to res ume Tuesday. Tbe Justice Department's disclosure Dec. 31 that it was aeeklog a settlem ent represented a sharp change from tbe department's position The Costa Mesa City Council voled Wedn esday not t o challenge an appellate court ruling that inyalidated a l~ inftialive that stopped the development of more . than 650 homes and apartments. However, the city of San Jose has decided to petition the state Supreme Court on lbe same mattPr, according to Costa Mesa City Attorney Tom Wood. Following t he Wednesday meeting, Wood said San Jose expressed interest in seeing the case carried to the state Supreme Court because of its importance in rezoning property by initiative. He said anyone can ask the slate Supreme Court lo consider a case. Robert Logan . the cit y attorney of San Jose, was not available for comment. At the meeting Wednesday, council members Norma Hertzog, Donn Hall and Ed McFarland voted not to appeal the decision to the s tale Supreme Court, while Mayor Arlene Schafer and Eric John· s on vot ed in favor of the appeal ll was the third time the council bad voted on the matter since the 4lh District Court of 'Ban. on gals uphel,d, '• R uling favors Boy Scouts , ' OK.LAHOMA CITY CAP> -The Boy Scouts of America .has a constitutional right to bar girls from becoming Cub ~"'couts, U.S. District Judge Luther Eubanks has rul~.. . .I He said Thursday the organization acted w1thm . •ts t ight.s in denying me mbership to Marystephanie "Toffre" Constantikes, 9, of Norman. . . Her father. John Constantikes, filed a $250,000 lawsuit m June against the Boy Scouts of America. the Cub Sco~ts ~ he Last Frontier Council of the Boy Scouts. saymg ~ts aughter's constitutional right of rreedom of aasoclation. as denied by the scouts. Eubanks agreed· with Scout fficials' contention that they have a constitutional right to limit me~bership to males. AppeaJ ruling Dec. 1. Jn a closed session Dec. 21. the council voted against appealing lbe decision and Monday the councU d ea dloc k e d 2 to 2 , wi th McFarland absent. The council 's decision Wednesday night came as a blow to the North Costa Mesa Homeowners Association that bad led the initiative drive that rezoned properly owned by Arnet Development Co. and South Coast Plaza from medium d e n i:ity lo si ngl e family residential. "I'm a little disap~lnted that the council didn't act a s vigorously as a sister city did." said Jon Paradis, vice president of the homeowners association, referring to lhe deq.ision by San J ose. City Attorney Wood said without support from Costa Mesa the chances are reduced that the slate Supreme Court would agree to hear the case. Henry Segerstrom, owner of 13 of the disputed 68 acres. said. ·'I hear a spirit or cooperation and hope that perhaps the issue can be put to rest without an appeal." Garage fire b urns h o use in Huntingto n · A fire in Huntington Beach destroyed a garage and caused "considerable <tamage" to the interior of a house today. The cause of the blaze at 20172 Harbor Isle Lane was unknown early today, fire offi cials said. Jt was reported at 7:50 a.m . Firefighters had it under control within 25 minutes, said Roger Hosmer, deputy fire marshal. No one was reported injured in the residential area near Adams Avenue and Magnolia Street. •'The fire started in the garage and that buildina was the primary loss," Hosmer said. "There was also conalderab&e damaee in the dwelling portlon ol the structure, but lt was not a total loss." Hosmer said 'tbe 1tron1 windl had dled down befol'e the blaae was reported and didn't hamper elforts to put it out. 4 colleges cloeed KHARTOUM, Sudan CAP> - Authortth~• today sbut down lndeftnitely tbe four unlvenlti• In tbe :al of thl• laat Aftie• -after tour dmJI ol bloody utl·P!f'DIDMlt 1tudlal rtota. IM ..._nan radio aald. ' ,.,...,.... STORK TRAGEDY A sobbing Randy Rumrill hugs hi s brother Steve Rumrill as they visit the Love Creek area of Ben Lomond, Calif .. and stand on the wreckage of the ~ome where their father· and possibly two others are believed buried. .. From Page Al N ORTH DAMAGE. • • Carl Kent, a fire captajn in the state Department of Forestry who worked Thursday ln Ben Lomond's Love Creek section, where a m assive mudslide crashed onto canyon homes. burying as many as 20 people in their homes. ·'The slide -250 acres of mud fronr the ridge top of lbe creek -look everything in its path," he said. "I saw a car that bad been folded in -half like an envelope. . .A couple or houses look like someone beat them into little tiny pieces. "We know where the roads used to be, we don't know where they are now. we -know where lbe residences were, now we're not sure," Kent said. "It's the most awesome thing I've ever seen in my life." "So far we've m anaeed to take care of the hospitals," Forbus said. ''If people don't take baths and don't flush toilets . . . and we gel time to bring the water supply back up, we'll be in good condition.·' The storm Sunday through Tuesday pummeled a 200·mile stretch of Northern California from Sonoma County north of San Francisco to Santa Cru.z on the Monterey PeninsuJa with up to 15 \nches of rain in a 24·hour period. At its height, 320,000 utility customers had no power. The Golden Gale Bridge has been closed twice this week, ,during the downpour Monday and for 20 hours beginning Tuesday night, when a mudslide undermine d Highway 10 1 leading to it. Aaullukla ol ColU ...... Mt bJ1 brak• to avoid ala~ Into t.be board and 1we"*9 lD front ol another cat, driven by 21-ytar-old William Jobn Vuko ol Newport Beacb. Anaataaakia suffered bead Wurl• and la reported la tood condition at Hoa1 Memorial Hoepltal. Yuko wu t.reat..S and released from the ho1pltal'1 emeraency room. • Southern California Edl1on offlclal1, meanwhile, rePorted the auat.s caused a sprlnJdlq of power outages throughout the county. Alone the Orange Coaat , Ediaon officials said the outa.ces affected few c ustomers and ·power was restored quick~y. No power lines were downed, they said . In Newport Harbor, where tbe winds were clocked at 30 mph, several boats were swun1 free from their moorings but were quickly retrieved. The bri.sk gusts, the NaUonal Weather Bureau said, have been chilled by a cool air m ass that bas shifted west from the Rocky Mountains. Temper a tures along the Orange Coas t Juve been reaching a daytime high of about 60 and dropping into the low 40s at night. In the canyon' areas, weather . offi c ials said, the mercury dropped into the uppe r 30s Thursday evening. Week end weather is predicted to be slightly warmer with clear ~kies and no wind. * * * From PageA1 WINDS. • • Be rnardino County. the CHP said. In the Los Angeles area, several thousand hour-long power outages were reported for Department of Water and Power customers this mdrning, said s pokeswoman Elicabeth Wimmer. · M ea nwhile. in Ventura County, widespread powe r o ut ages were r eported throughout the Oxnard area, and So\llhern California Edison officials were bard pressed lo keep tabs on the situation, said area manager Orace Racicot. Trees were reported down on highways 101 and 126 through the c~unt y, although no accidents were reported. Officials estimate it will lake days, perhaps weeks, lo bulldoze into the slide, clear the debris a nd unearth victims. ~-Disaster Area----------" Above the community of Scotts Valley, "the mountain is sitting there where J arvis Road was," Forbus said, describing a lOO·yard·long mudslide. "The backhoes moved part of it, but it was loo big a job. They were slipping.·· In Santa Cruz, leaks in an e m e r gen cy b ypass pipe Thursday jeopardized the dwindling water supply, said city manager Richard Wilson. Taps went dry for "1ree hours Thursday night in a drastic conservation effort while repair c rews tackleQ the. leaks and pumped waler into a storage tank . Residents were urged to draw up to two gal1ons of water for drinking or cooking by 6 p.m. lo see them through t he night, Wil son said. ~ NEVADA San Bernard ino A p Conservation was working "quite well ," be added. All schools were closed. and most businesses, restaurants and industries s h ut down voluntarily. . ........... EARTH, WIND, FIRE Map locates areas of California damaged by storms in the north and fire. fanned by high winds. in the south. • • u1s1na A CCESSORY SALE .. ALL CUISINART PARTS ANO ACCESSORIES 20% OFF 3 days only! Sale thru Sunday, January'IO PROCESSORS Llat Pr1ce DLC IOI •••••••••••• 130.00 DLC •·· ••••••••••••• 185.00 DLC 71 •.•.•.•..••••• ,280.00 Our Price ''·'' 14t.tt '''·'' CROWN HARDWARE Everything YoU want In a hardware etore • Alt~ open 1 day9 • Wffk, w.tottft °"" Thute. tll t ,M • ( ........... ROYAL PAIR -Thailand's royal princess CbUlabhorn and her new husband, flying officer Virayuth Oidyasartn. look \lP at a large group of people outside the palace at Bangkok after the wedding Thursday. Dianeyland trip int1pired boy Fransle Gerlager, a 9-year-dld South African boy aged by a rare disease, went to school for the first time, his self-confidence bolstered by a trip to the United States and to Disneyland. Fransie returned home from his three-week trip in 1981 determined to attend school, according lo his mother, Magda Geringer. ''Tbe trip overseas has The town of Bonham, Tex. toasted the lOOth birthday of a political giant -the late House s peaker and hometown hero Sam Rayburn. Lady Bird Jobnsoo, the former ·first lady, led about 1,100 people in the celebration, which featured birthday cake and punch. The widow of President World Airways is strugeling through hard times, says President Edward Daly, so Daly s~s he' 11 struggle along with it. Daly said he'll return half his annual salary or $52,000. · given Fransie much more self·coniidence . Before leaving this morning, he seemed apprehensive but he is not as shy a s he once was," she said. Tbe boy, who is bald and wrinkl e d because of progeria, an aging disease, will be allowed to wear his hat in school to cover his head. Lyndon Johnson said Rayburn "walked through the Capitol,and district like a man driving a wagon - pulling up the reins to talk." Rayburn became one of the most powerful figures In congressional history in his 18 years as speaker. He was elected to the House in 1913 and served until his death in 1961. That won't make much of a dent in the $46 million lou that World suffered durlne an 18-month pefiod that started in January 1980, but, said Daly, "An example must be set at the top." Wtiea ....... 1 CanH d•okled to· propGM to • .,, a. llMeal, be did It wttll a l.0-1quare·foot plea 1plubed acrou a downtown billboard ln Syraeuu. "It waen't a compl•t• au.rprile -I mean the Idea ol 1ettlu marrled -bec:a\IM we'd lalked lt over," aald Caru10, 28 . "But tbe bUJboard WU a Nal IUl'friM. It 1ave us a memory to •tart wlth." Mias Senecal, 25, aald the offer waa Qne ahe couldn't refuse. They are plannin1 a Julyw~I· Caruso aaid he cot tbe idea wblle handling advertl1in1 tor 'his tamlly's reat•urant. Aunt Jo1ie'1. The 1l1n. reading "Beth, I Love You! Will You Many Met Michael,•• went up near the restaurant. Composer A•dre Pre.la may be making plans for bis fourth 'honeymoon. The director of the Pittsbur1h Symphony. who divorced actress IUa Farrow in 1979 after nine years of marriage, applied for a license to marry a Britlsb woman, an official aaya. Miss Farrow was Previn's third wife. Rita Kane, an Allegheny County registrar, confirmed that the partner on the marriage license is Heather Halea, 33, who has been escorted by Previn, 52, for nearly three years. She listed her occupation as "making designs on glass." ALTAR BOUND -Andre Previn , Pittsburgh Symphony conductor, bas applied for a marriage license to wed a British woman. Heather Hales. Previn has been divorced three times. Winds decreasing ·coastal d•cr••~nv In ¥•11eys -co.st.I e .. es. W.,rrt« ... .,$. c•., •In. H .... 1 In 0ret9 County today M to ... Vell9Y• c.en -• lllQl>l In tlle '°'· 1-•UloU. HIOfl• In ~ns -... 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" If " . . ... •• SI *7 .. 0 ..... • • JS • ,. . " 11 • D ~~ ....,, eca"9rM -•M ! lllf llPllT . ....._..,. twecatlll .. _._..,Uerel......_ T ... V .. 141¥ .... rHI a11 tM iwrtNn1 "9(1fk' TllenMI C-4 .. .....,. -..n 111 tflo Twr_. •• " .. e.Hc.-...-. '. ... ... • • • • ... ... .. .. .. ,. ........... :Tide. -...... t • .. t t 1W ,.,,., ... 1 • ... ,.,.. ....... ' • w SKeMlew ~111111 'f'ODA'f' t: .... ,.., 1111a.m. 1:a.,.,.. t :'1p:lfl. Whal do you like about lhe D•lb Pilon What don't you Ukt! Call lhe number below and 10UI' metJ•I• wlll be re<orded tran1ttibecl and deltvered to lhe appropriate editor, · • ' The aame U.hour ana....._ eervtc. may bt UHd to l"ffOl"d lit-' ten to the ecl6tot on any toptc •• Mallboil eoMl'tbuton muat leelude their name aad telephone nu..._. for nrillcaUon. No clrcul•U. calg,ple.... . TtU ua ,mat·a on your mind. Full extent of lobbying not reported, documents say ). WASHINGTON (AP) -CIA Q1rector William J . Caaey f.u.d to report lbe full extent cl b1a lobbylnc ot Treaaury and Stat. Department offtclaJa on beba1f ot lndonella in 1971, 1overnment i ctocumenta show. The Ju1Uce Department'• erlmlnal cllvlsloo la revleY(lnl the m•tter to aee It CaHy <Violated federal law by f aWnc to reelater ae a forel1n a1ent. Department olflciala say that ln the put, crlm1na1 char1ea have been brou1bt only when a foreign agent tried to conceal his work. Jn a revised dhcloaure statement filed with the Senate Intelligence Committee last September -two daya before the panel ended its active investigation of Cuey -the CJA director acknowledeed be bad one meeting at 1'reaaury and two meetings at the Internal Revenue Service in 1976 while representing lndofleSia on a tax question involving that nation's oil industry. Casey did not say with whom he met. He 1ubmJtted a fetter from his former law fl~m1 RoJera & Weill which deacrioea lhe two aeaslona at IRS as ''information meeUncs." But IRS documents obtained by The Associated Pre11 ahow that Casey also contacted the State Department. And both documents and the recolleetton ol otflcials who were then Involved with the issue Indicate that Casey also contacted Cbarlt!S M. Walker, the asststant treasury secretary for tax policy, and possibly Treasury Secretary William Simon hJmself. · The documents and interviews show that Cuey was lobbYinc administration officiaJa out.side formal channels to change U.S. tax rulings on a matter of importance to Indonesia. Asked about the matter. the CIA said Thursday, "Rogers & Wells made a good faith determination in 1976 that no registration was called for. The firm continues to believe that determination was correct, and Newport Center ride panel formed A 20-member advisory committee has been selected to belp develop a share-a -ride proeram aimed at reducing traffic bound for Newport Center. The share-a-ride program was one of the conditions imposed by the Newport Beach City Council last August when it approved the Irvine Company's plan for expanding the shopping and professional center. The expansion project, the subject of a referendum, calls for a 300-room hotel, new office towers, two restaurants and condominiums. The Irvine Company h.as agreed to bankroll a shar e-a-ride program for th.e entire center until the program becomes self-supporting. Firm:s with representatives on the advisory committee include Pacific Mutual,• Avco and Prfoe-Waterbouse and Co. The share-a-ride program has been nicknamed "Centeride" and a Cincinnati firm, ATE Management and Service Co., has been hired to implement the program. At this point, Pacific Mutual is the only Newport Center firm with an existing ride s haring program and it involves fewer than 20 people. Dan Carlsson, an Irvine Company spokesman. said the principal tool that will be used to persuade persons to use the new ride sharing program is money. "~ is tbe incentive," Carlsson said ... People can save up to $2,000 a year by car pooling or taking a share·a·ride van." He said the first step In launching the_program will be to determine where Newport Center employees live and then match individuals with other center employees who live nearby. He said car pools will be establis he d and then vans pur c hased lo take o v e r transportation responsibilities. It is projected the "Centeride" pr o gram will b e full y operational early in 1983. rt Mr. Casey concun." Tb• a1enc' decllned to answer any other queationa. ----u On July 9, 1978, Walker~ IRS Commlaaloner Donald Alexander that lndoneaia b hired New York lecal cOUDHl help galn a 1 private tu known In the IRS as a tax l . "I a11ume that, In vtew ~ tremendOU6 importance at matter, the forthcoming request will be expedited b your office," Walker wrote. In an interview, Alexandej said, "I recall Treasury' Interest in this matter, an Treasury is not normally a party to a letter ruling. This wun't the kind of cue they got Involved in normally." ~ A memo by I RS attorney Steven Hannes shows he was called by Arthur Dornhelm ~ the State Department'\ Indonesia Desk on Sept. 1 and 2, 1976. According to the memo, Dornheim told Hannes that. Casey had informed him tbe I.RS had refused, to issue tbe taJr letter ruling and Dornbeha, asked what IRS would need t.Q make a ruling. ,1 The contacts are slgnificanJj because they call into question. the defense raised by Casey for not registering . Casey'fil defenders have said be did ~ have to register because the law, exempts attorneys doing legal work in established agencyi proceedings, lite the I.RS t.u: letter ruling process. ·r But IRS bad not even begun a process, officials said. r ., USS Fanning~: shipmate~ ~ • reUDion set ---·-Former crew members of ~ U .S.S. Fanning, a World War ff era destroyer, are searching for their shipmates lo hopes cH organb.lng a 1982 reunion. .A The Fanni.ne wa" com missioned in 1937 ud decommissioned in 19t1 followine service in the PacU.e during World War II. ... Former officers and cre'1 interested In finding out more a bout the proposed reunion atf asked to contact Fred Winger'; 712 Hewlett SL, Bakersfield, CNl 93309 or telephone (805)'323·'1013!· The reunion is scheduled for Jone in Des Moines, Iowa. CM slaying for jewels alleged ~ tJ I , Prosecutor says hairdresser murdered by pair I An Orange County prosecutor bas asserted that a 25-year-old native or Lebanon participated in the killing of a hairdresser in Costa Mesa last April to gain possesajon of valuable j e wels the 4\tictim regularly wore in public. Deputy District Attorney John Conle y told a six -man.· six-woman superior court jury that murder defendant Rami Darwicbe helped his roommate shoot and rob hairdresser Carl Lawson in the parking lot of JoJo's Restaurant on Harbor Boulevard. Darwiche, who lived in Costa Mesal is standing trial In Judge William W . Thomson's courtroom on murder and robbery charges stemming from Lawson's death on April 13, l~U. The hairdresser's body was found the following day in bis car, which was left in a Santa Ana industrial area n e ar Edinger Avenue and the Newport Freeway. Darwicbe's lawyer, Ronald Kreber, claimed in bis opening statements Monday to the jury that it was the defendant's roommate, Sam Monsoor, 20, who attacked Lawson and shot him in the front seal of Lawson's car as i).was parked at JoJo's. Kreber said Darwiche, who bad been asked to go along with lhe others for a drink, was in the back seat of the ·car and saw Monsoor allegedly shoot Lawson in the chest with a handgun. The defense lawyer said there had been no indication that Lawson was going to be attacked. Following the killing, both Darwiche and Monsoor fled to the East Coast. Darwicbe eventually was arrested in El Pa&<>, Texas, and some of '· Lawson's jewelry was found Olli him. J Conley said he would present two witnesses who saw the fight take place in Lawson's car at. JoJo's and who provided police. with descriptions that matched> both Darwiche and Monsoor. K reber said his client fled witb' Monsoor. who turned himself in to police and awaits trial latei this "year, because be believed he was implicated in the tilling by his presence in th~ car. u "He felt he must be involv~ He was there. And that was ~ reasoning in not going to ~ police al that particular time,~ Kreber said. i Lawson, who was a custom jeweler in addition to owning an Anaheim hairdressing salonc was known to wear as much~ $60,000 In jewels In public1 authorities said . . It's Time to Celebrate! * We-Ve Got Unbelievable snow & fantastic siding!!! * · Mammoth Vail 97" 81" MClty SUn Vally 84" 73" SnaWliiril 130" 1• ) I • \ Oreno• C911t DAILY Pt~OT/Frlday, January I, 1882 P~oblems .persiSt in Polish regime BONN, West Germany (AP) -After three weeks of martial law, Poland'• Communist rulen ftave come up with no anawen Jo their natlon"s lollt·term problema. Gen. Wojctech Jaruselakl, the premier and Communist Party chief. and hls associates sWl lack a clear policy to deal with the independent labor movement. Western reporters in Warsaw report shortages of food and consumer goods appear to be &etUng worse again after a .ma~sive relief effort by Soviet bloc countries that improved aupplies around Christmas. Long lines are reported in front of ,barren shops. Despite repeated promises of fundamental economk reform, the regime's only concrete proposal has been for steep increases in prices, something no previous government has been able to carry out. • -Radio Warsaw r e ports criminal proceedings against Solidarity activists who resisted martial l aw by trying t o organize strikes or handing out leaflets. Travelers reaching Vienna tell of government NO SOLUTIONS -Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski s till lacks cle ar policy to deal with P o l a nd 's labor movement. efforts to rid the cities of posters, alp and other 1ymbol1 of the independent labor movement. Commun.lat Party membenrwbo a:re-members ol Solidarity are reported \,\Dder preuure to renounce the u.n,lon. But Radio Warsaw rellOl14d thls week that repreaentatlvea ol the official uniOM controlled by the Communist Party were ne10Uati.D1 with Solidarity. the 9'141 milllon·member lndependeot trade union whose pressure for economic and political reforms resulted in the proclamation of martial law. 'Ibe broadcast 1ave no indication who the Solidarity represent.ath;es were. Lech Walesa and mos~ of the rest of Solidarity s top leadership are in custody, and J aruzelski hinted to West European ambassadors on Monday that some of them may be deported. Official sources said last week Walesa agreed to begin negotiations with the government to end the crisis, but other sources stid the government rejected bis condition that other top union leaders and Archbishop Jozef Glemp, Poland's Roman Catholic primate, ~ included in the talks. So far, negotiations between the government and church leaders seem to have done nothing to ease the crisis. The regime claims the country is returning to normal, and Radia Warsaw frequently reports improvements in "the r h y th m of w o r k . · • Th e government claimed production of coal, Poland's main earner of hard currency, was n early normal on Monday. But Western observers s u s pect that production is running at only 50·60 percent of capacity due to slowdowns by the workers and shortages of equipment and spare parts. West German government sources fear that if Januelski cannot restore order, -the Soviet Union may intervefl~ militarily. "If Jaruzelski fails, Walesa will not come. Brezhnev will come," Peter Glotz, executive secretary of West German Chancellor Helmut Scbimdt's Social Democratic . Party wrote in the newspaper Rheiniscbe Merkur. Liberal DemOcrats form 'think tank' WASHINGTON <AP ) -A group of leading liberal Democrats have announced the ope nin g of a research organization -a ·'think tank" -to d e v e l op p o liti cal alternatives to Reaganomics and othe r con s ervative economic policies. Organizer s of the National Policy Exchange, which counts lwo likely presidential candidates in its ranks, say they lbope to produce new economic ideas that can serve as a platform on which liberal and moderate politicians can run. Ray Marshall, secretary of labo" in the Carter administration, will serve as president of the organization. Other directors include former Vice President Walter Mondale and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts, who ar«; UJtely presidential candidates in 1984: Reps. Lindy Boggs of Louisiana and Richard Ge phardt of Missouri; former Urbao League 'President Vernon E. Jordan Jr.; and AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland. Paul Jensen, vice president of the Exchange, said the organization hopes to attract moderate Democrats as well u liberal and moderate Republicans. "We know that the liberal-moderate perspective of the last 20·30 years is not working anymore." Jensen said. "Economic and social changes have rendered those solutions less and less effective. We need to ~nergize the liberal perspective." ENTER THE Eeaileril go lialfway Schmidt makes concessions on Poland, Reagan on talks ~ WASHINGTON (AP) -W•t 1111 Mnl German Chancellor ffelmut Schmidt moved part way toward . Hala seemed pleaaed that duterencea between Bonn and Waahlnaton seemed to bave narrowed as a result of .Schmidt's visit and expre11eCI DIALOGUE -West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt regards U.S.-Soviet detente as best insurance against confrontation. Aliens asked to ·report embracln1 the U.S. poeWon on the Polish crisla thia week, but t h e United States s howed interest on accommodattna . some of hls concerns as well. No world leader 11 more devoted than Schmidt to the concept of U.S.·Soviet detente and It seemed apparent the chancellor had some Impact on President Reaaan on that Issue. Speclflcally, Schmidt reaarda the maintenance of a dialogue between the two as the beat insurance a1ainst a superpower confrontation. So when Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. went before the press, this week be demonstrated a ereater willingness to maintain contact with the Soviet Unlon than at any time since the Polish crisis began three wee!ls ago. Haig said Reagan and Schmidt agreed that U.S.-Soviet arms control talks set to resume in Geneva next week should co ahead because they "constitute a special category of East-West relations.'' WASHINGTON (AP) -An And be said both agreed that estimated 100,000 aliens tlving in the arms control issue is so t h e United States under a important it must be dealt with special program -most of them "outside the context of normal Mexicans -are being asked to East-West relations" and that report to immigration offices talks should continue "except because it bas been determined under the most exceptional l h e Y are i n e 1 i g i b I e for circ'umstances." permanent resident status, says The Geneva talks center on the Stale Department. reducing intermediate-range nu- But no mass deportations are clear weapons in Europe. planned and the affected aliens H a i g added th at hi s are not being rounded up, the "inclination'' is to proceed with State Department said this a scheduled meeting with Soviet Thua Schmidt can claim be won U.S. agreement to deal wtlh the Sovieta on arms control -an l11ue of substance -and also received first.band a11urance1 that Waahlnaton will clve serious consideration to a superpower summit. Schmidt also can tell bla countrymen that his conceqlona to Washington involved rhetcric rather than substance. Alter his aides had said la.st week that the crackdown in Poland wu an autonomous Polish matter1 Schmidt publicly came arouoa to Washington's •iew that I.he Soviets were indeed responsible for instigating the crisis. And he gave grudgint endorsement t o Rea1an's decision to apply economic sanctions against the Sovieta. He thus m ade it clear be had no quarrel with Reagan's view that it would be wrong for the United States to conduct business a.s usual with the Soviets al this juncture. But it was critically important for Sc hmidt to win a commitment from Reagan that it is indeed proper for the United States to condu.ct.negotiations as usual with tbe Soviets on the vital issue of arms control. • some surprlae that the iwo countriea wound up ae close toaether as they did on the iaauea discussed. At a newt conference an bout after a farewell breakfast meeUng with Schmidt, Hall wu able to say that the Polish criala represented ''a profound failure in the East and not disarray in the Weal." Nonetheless . so m e of Reagan's more conservative advisers are bound to be dismayed by the president's willingness to co ntinue diplomatic dealings with the Soviets so soon after Poland has come under military rule. One analyst recalled the Carter administration's displeasure in May 1980 when then-French President Valery Giscard d'Estaing met on short notice with Brezhnev without consulting the United States or other allied countries. The meeting occurred only five months after the ·Soviets sent troops into Afghanistan and Giscard came under sharp criticism because his meeting with Brezhnev was seen as legitimizing the Soviet occupation of that country. Fired controllers asked for donation week. Foreign Min i s te r Andrei Although Mexican authorities Gromyko on Jan. 27 to lay the WASHINGTON (AP> -The girding for a drawn-out battle reportedly are displeased with groundwork for negotiations on approximately 11.soo air traffic to win reinstatement of the the U.S. decision, the Mexican r educing in te rco n ti n enta 1 con1rollers fired by President controllers to their old jobs. embas sy h e r e issued a nucleararms. Reagan are being asked to He acknowledged there have statement denying reports that And, without being asked, contribute $100 eacb to keep been no signs the administration Ambassador Hugo Margain is Haig also sugge~ted that a their decertified union afloat will reconsider its refusal to being recalled to Mexico City-in s ummit meeting between financially, its new president return the controllers to the protest. Reagan and Soviet President said Thursday. airport towers. Florencio Acosta Burgunder, Leonid Brezhnev may be Gary Eads said at a news Eads, 37, a Kansas City the third-ranki.,ng member of arranged because Reagan feels conference that the Professional m e mber of t he union's top Marg al o 's s taff, said the "communication between Air Traffic Controllers policymaking board, was ambassador is going to Mexico governments is more, rather Organization "will not roll over elected to serve the unexpired City next week "but not on this than less, important'· during and play dead." term of Robert E. Poli, 44. Poli matter. He goes about once a times of crisis. Eads said the organization is resigned last week. fortnight, and he has plenty of .----------------------------------------- other business to discuss there." M argain met this week with Diego Ascencio, assistant U.S. secretary of stale for consular affairs. to discuss the issue. The affected aliens bad been given temporar y permits to remain in the United States because of a 1977 federal court decis ion requiring the State Department to make available 144,999 visas to applicants from Western Hemisphere nations. T hal many visas bad been assigned improperly to Cuban refugees in the late 1960s and early 1970s, the court fo~nd, so t h e extra visas should be granted to make up -for the discrimination. The court ordered that Latin Americans who had filed visa applications between July 1968 and Dec~mber 1976 should be granted the chance to obtain them. However , approximately 245,000 aliens, most of them Mexicans , h ad sought visas during that period and were given the special permits. 'Ibe State Department said it determined last month that all 144,999 visas ordered by the court had been granted. When the program be,an, said the State Department, it was understood that the aliens given the temporary permits would not necessarily be found eligible for status as permanent residents. e axe falls! Hundreds of imported accents, gifts and furnishings must go as we race toward inventory. Choices are incredible. Resist no more, these values say give in! DOORS OPEN 10 A.M. SHARP. flRST COME flRST SERVED. SAlE LIMITED TO FLOOR STOCKS ONLY; ENDS JANUARY 31 . 25-50% off reg. Golden rattan. 16 x 16 x 16" and 20 x 20 x 20~ Reg. 79.99 & 99.99 Chests ......................... 54.88 & 74 .88 Wide selection of sizes. colors. varieties. All silk flowers ................... 25% off reg. Wjde selection of colors. styles. From the Orient. All decor ceramics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30% off reg. There's a bubble in the heavy base. Reg. 1.99 Hlball glass ............................. 1.28 _Used on Japanese trains in days of steam power. Reg. 2.99 "GREAT FRENCH BALtOON ADVENTURE" SWEEPSTAKES I ~ __ ~]::.___ Pnze. and soar to France' Com- /~ p~ :t •. . Win the Grand getting carried away 1 • , ·--] away on a fabu· plete details are _...._ ... • • . lous nine---r--. available on day $1 0.000 hot·air balloon rJ '-our AKAi excursion for two across , displays Other exciting France's Burgundy '· prizes include: 3 First region Prizes-Honda Explore medieval MBS Motorcycles. chateaus and vii· 5 Second Prlzes- lages. Experience Concord 'Men's or memorable cham-Women's Watches. pagne llft·offs and 10 Third Prizes- feast on local dell-Nikon 35mm EM ''· cacies. camera Outfits,15 : Just Fourth ~- come in. fill Tiacom Cordless out an entry Extension Tele- blank. and take phones. Enter a look at AKAl's in-1 now. And vive la credif>le new videocas· France and the sette recorder, the AKAi VS-11 VS-1. You may find yourself . . Teapot ................................... 1.88 Decorative and practical. For tabletop and fireplace. All matches ................. : . . . . 30% off reg. Gelshas, children, ducks, etc. From Japan. Reg. 2.99-14.99 Porcelain figurines ........... : ...... 1.88-9.88 For adults and children. Family fun. All toys, games .................. 30% off reg. Camphorwood. Birds and plumtr'ee handpainted. Reg. 249.99 Cheat ................................. 198.88 Handpalnted on delicate bamboo slats. 2 x 367 Reg. 2.99 Scl'Oll ................................... 1.99 l! ~range Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 8, 1982 s • APWI ....... FIRE AFTERMATH -Fire crews walk through ' the rubble of a large beachfront home in Malibu after an earl y morning blaze destroyed an apartment and garage on Thursday. Two homes on an adjoining lot and one home once owned bv comedian Joe E. Brown were also desfroyed in the fire whipped by high winds. · Brown seeks ·reven·ue hike ·in State of State speec h SACRAMENTO (AP> -Here are excerpts from Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s State of the State speech to the Legislature on Thursday: Before anything else, I .must congratulate the men and women who made this unusual building come alive with the memories of our remarkable past. Their craft . and artistry ,lire truly impressive. In all candor, I IJlUSt admit.I was skeptical of this project. In those days, I was thinking .of Jess and couldn't imagine the magnificence of this building and the inspiration it wouta give to school chilsiren to carry our tradition into the 21st century. There is a fair stock of bad news today : crimes in the streets, bus inesseS-failing, people thrown out of jobs, toxic chemicals, home prices beyond reach, electricity and gas costs climbing, family breakups, lonely elderly separated from the pulsating life of the younger generation, brutal repression in Poland. Yet, walking through · these historic halls 'turned m y thoughts to years past -my father inaugurated 23 years ago in this chamber, his mother born in Colusa County 71 years earlier, and her fatner leaving St. Louis in March of 1852, and traveling across the plains to Sacramento. And I tell you, the people we serve have riot ceased, have not changed, have not forgotten the dream that took them or their forebears to California to create the good life. In the pas t decade, the graduates of our schools and universities have Jed the world in making the transition to a hi g h -t ec hnology , re s ource -efficient, information-based economy. In the place of wasteful and environmentally damaging activities, Californians are learning to extract more and more good from each unit of energy used and from each pound of material mined or recycled. Per.person, residential n atural gas cons umption dropped 16.9 percent froiv 1976 to 1980 , and gasoline consumption fell 4.9 percent during the same p eriod. Forty-six large power plants, costing $2 billjon apiece, thought necessary just 10 years ago, are now found unneeded in today's more efficient economy. With suppqrt from members o( both p~rtie s, we have v i g o r o u s 1 y e n f o r·c e d environmentJt! laws to protect the air, the 'Yater, the coast, the "I .am mendirz.g one-time recom- certain revenue measures." wild rivers, and the general quality of life in California. Most of these measures were enacted before my term in office. So the task has been essentially to extend and d ee p e n the commitments made by those who prece~ed us . Far from limiting job growth, such a belief in quality has ~oincided with the creation of over 2 million new jobs in California ~ince 1975, a growth rate 40 percent higher than the national average. One out of every four of those new jobs has been created, directly or indirectly, by the e lectronics, aeros pace, a nd related industries. Here again we see the energy of character in the pioneering contributio'l. of our citizens who have miniaturized the computer from huge room-sized machines to dimensions smaller than your finger lips. The counter acting cause qeclared so necessary by Gov. Burnett was found in the challenge posed by the Soviet Union's launch of Sputnik and President Kennedy's subsequent call for putting a man on the moon. That required pioneering work in computers and aerospace and the results are s ti 11 driving our economy forward. Those who firs t built this Capitol could not have dreamed thl(t we would convene at a point in 'time when a few i:;ercent of our people could feed all the rest. Yet even as we urbanize and pave over more prime agricultural land, our farmers continue to supply about half the nation's fruits and vegetables and much of its wine. In the last five years alone, California agricultural exports have increased 120 percent and helped position our state as an international trading center. Financial institutions from other states and dozens of foreign countrjes have rushed to our borders to take advantage of the growth that has f ew parallels ii"! the world. Business Week recently reported that California was one of the five most attractive states for business in the nation. Another prominent business magazine termed us the No. 1 state for"Venture capital. By any measure, there are few places on earth to compete with this, dynamic confluence of diver!:e people and resources. Yet we are not without our flaws. our scars, our sorrows, our fears, our failures. As in three other times in the last 12 years, our economy is temporarily in recession. This means tighter budgets, lower tax r eve nues, a nd rising joblessness. The economists are divided in their forecasts, both for next year and succeeding years. To cover a one-time budget gap, I am recommending certain one-time revenue measures. These· will suffice if the economy improves later this year as expected. ( I THIS IS JUST ONE OF THE GREAT RAINCOATS MAKING A SPLASH IN JWR JR'S NOW. We think therE:1 's going to be a lot of excitement over all of them. Because $59.99 for any all weather coat in this special collection Is something to act on now. Even if it doesn't look like rain ... today. Our plped poplin trench shown, khaki or beiQe, cottonfpolyester shell with nylon lining, 5 to 13. JWR JR'S, 37. To order. call toll-free 1·800-345-8501 . 'I Orange COMt DAILY PILOT/Frid~, January 8, 1982 Style change due in county govenunenl?· With 3r<l Plstrlct. Supervisor Bruce Nestande assuming the chairmanship ot the Board of ·Supervisors, there doubtless will be some style changes at the seat of county government. Nestande, a former state assemblyman and aide to Ronald Reagan when he was governor. has strong connections both in Sacramento and with the administration in Washington. Taking advantage, of the latter. he has made frequent trips to the nation's capital during his first year in office and. as a result. has been criticized for missing more s upervisorial meetings than any other member of the board. But Nestande claims he always goes to Washington with a pocketful of Orange County agenda items and , while testilying or conferring as a committee member on federal ~ssues that can affect the county. •s able to lobby for beneficial cha nges in the way the federal government deals with loca l and' regional agencies. He shares the Reagan view that federal officials should yield more decision-making powers to local governments and on that score-is particularly Interested in obt aining local flexiblllty in the use of federal funds that now will be handed out as block grants. As a supervisor, Nestande has been a talker, a questioner and a prober, compared with the more rnatter-of·f act outgoing c h airman. Ralph Clark, who believes in ~laying close to home and missed only one board meetin8.._l_ast year . A saiu ming Nest a nd e continues to maintain his Washington contacts. the new vice chairman. Roger Stanton. doubtless is quite capable or running meetings, and Nestande has a staff of competent assistants to handle the extra paperwork that Calls to the chairman. Time will tell how the board rares with the new style. but considering the drastic changes in both state and federal relations with local governments it could be that more attention to Was hington and Sacramento is important for the county. However. Nestande should be reminded that so long as his e lected office is here. so should be his principal interests and energies. · No flight increases Although Pacific Southwest and Western airlines both say tJley want to add four more flights at John Wayne Airport in April. these proposals will not come to pass. By April. the access plan for commercial aircraft serving the airport. either will have been upheld in an appellate ~court or wi ll be modified with s ubstantially (ewer drastic meas-ures than immediately re-allocating eight of the current 41 allowable daily flights. The noise-rattled should be reassured that there are no plans on the 'horizon to boost the total from 41 to 49 to accommodate the airlines' "intentions" to increase their service. Sources. both from county government a nd the airline ipdustry, say notices issued Last month by PSA and Western were in reat1ty only reminders that th ey want more than thefr current two daily departures if and when access plans are redrafted. Some lawyers .. including PSA General Counsel Dennis O'Dell. claim the airlines could add extra flights immediately because U.S. District Court Judge Terry Hatter's rejection in September of the current access plan sent the 41 -flight limit out the window too. But you can expecL airport operations to remain remarkabJy consistent despite this backstage activity. The airlines have too much at stake to alienate local officials. a nd c hanging an airline's schedule is a giant undertaking. -They make take chances in the courts . but airline s apparently aren't about to try playing political power games at their ticket counters. Lingu~tic ban~hrnent Secretary of State Alexander Haig has been "banished" from the English language and ordered to ··speak only classical Latin for a probationary period of six months" by the Unicorn Hunters of Lake Superior State College. Haig was singled out on the language purists' annual New Year's Dishonor List for his chronic "misuse and abuse" of the la.~guage . .In Haig's unique vocabul ary. they noted. even ··getting old·' becom es ·•maturation." And of course the secretary is renowned for his trick of turning nouns into verbs. After mulling over 2,000 nominating letters suggesting the l)an ish[l'\ent of misused a nd overused words and phrases the Unicorn Hunters included on their official list suc h redundancies as "first time ever" and "all-time effort" and • the e uphemis m s ··revenue enhancement" for tax increase and "repository" for dump. Not-to be -entirely-negative, the ·group honored Secretary of Commerce Malcolm Baldrige for · his distinguished effort to wipe, out bureaucratic lan~ua~e. Baldrige is the official who has had his department's word processors programmed so they will not print stilted words and phrases on his personal "banished" list. The Unicorn Hunters say their goal is to "make a lot of people feel guilty" and they take credit for helping promote the de mise of such parroted lines as "Have a nice day.'' That in itself would be a notable c0ntribution to pUrity in language. And a more important co nt ribution to plain , understandable talk. Qplnl°"s expressed In the space above are t~ of the Dally Piiot. Other views ex~ pr essed on this page are' those of their auth<>rs and artists. Reader comment Is lnvlt-' ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. PhOf'le <no 6.t2-4321. . . (...M. Boyd/Woodpeckers' woe I I What with tbe timber barvflllta and the metal utility polel, tbe nation'• wood~ckera are runnln1 out of eoul)l boles in trees for tbelr bomel, . •ccordiq to tbe fo.resten. Wbat ate• ~OU loinC to do about that? a& just the bark of tbe wWow tree blrcb bark, too, containa a .. .......... ' Am asked if there's much wlld rijuana arowtnc In tbla country. te a bit. Blrda 1eed it. Remember t, if • pot plant ts tound tn YoUr ORANGE COAST . llllJ!lll lt.ack foJty. Tell them, "My canary ldld it." . L Twenty-one pubUaben ~the rllbtl to Richard Hooter'• humoroaa war D0"1 •M•A-S•B'' bffore Wllllam ,Ornlfl ae~ it. TbiDk ol tbtl ft Q. Do nudlat camps let llqle me n? . A. Now most do. But none dkl so ears qo. Tbe early camp operators New York and New .JerHY 1arded unatta~bed mal• at a eat to be .. tb)' f amUy nudllm. T9'olN{s P. Hiley "' PubtllMr TMmalA.Mil.,.... ... Editor B•rWa«.reilllCla Edltorl• P ... Editor 'Hit squad' credibility dims W ASHJNGTON -Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker announced weeks ago that the threat to President Reagan and other high officials from Libyan assassination squads was "diminishing." What was diminishing was the credibility or the reported threat. The c harges that l ed to the international uproar -and the tightened security measures at U.S. border crossings -were contained in a 40-page secret report by the CIA to the National Security Council. My associate Ron McRae has seen portions of this report. FROM THE OUTSET, foreign policy experts outside the spy agency assessed the CIA 's assassination alarm as "possible, but not much better than 10 percent." But obviously, however farfetched the possibility, it had to be lreated seriously by security agencies. •'The Secret Service tracks down dozens of crank calls every year, including threats to shoot Reagan with psychic bullets." one official pointed out, adding, "But we don't broadcast them all over the world." What made non-CIA people in the adminislration suspicious of the Libyan hit squad story is clear from the CIA report itself: -The chief source of the hit squad allegation, who claimed to have been present when Libyan dictator Moammar Khadafy gave orders for the assassins' mission, demanded $500,000 for bis information <whether he received it is unknown). The fact that the informer passed a lie-detector test is not compelling; a practical liar can beat the gadget, particularly someone· with the coolness to demand a half-million for his story. -T h e informer a lso provided t he names of some buddies in Beirut ·Q . :.a-ac-1-11-111-11-1-~ a who would be willing to sell information on the drug traffic. The CIA recognized some of them as hustlers who had been peddling phony documents for years. Oddly enough, though the CIA itself was dubious about this part of the informer's material , the Drug Enforcement Administration began s tuffing s uitcases fuJJ of cash in anticipation or a big score in Beirut. -Two or the 14 names on the hit squad were members of the Lebanese Shiite Moslem sect, Amal, which has been engaged ill a blood feud with Khadafy since their leader . Mousa Sadr. disappeared in Libya in 1978. The FBI claimed that the names were ·included because of a "computer error" and were quickly removed. Yet the names were still on the list in documents issued at least 12 days later. -Several of the informers are known to have connections with Israeli intelligence, which would have its own reasons to encourage a U .S.-Libyan rift. -The report calls the evidence of the ·hit squad's existence "overwhelming," and predicts that "more detailed information ·is forthcoming" from reliable sources. None materialized. ..-THE CIA REPORT predicted confidently 1.hat its evidence "guarantees the support of allied governments in any action deemed reasonably necessary to protect the lives of American officials." In fact, our allies, when briefed on the ClA findings, found them unconvincing -in a class with the white paper on El Salvador earlier last year, which was later shown to have relied on highly questionable and probably forged documents. Footnote: There is a possibility that the CIA was played for a sucker by its own "disinformation" campaign directed at Khadafy. The campaign, ordered by CIA Director William Casey tast May, used foreign nationals for the dirty work. Knowing what the CIA wanted, and without proper supervision by American agents, it's posslble the CIA's foreign hirelings cooked up the "bit squad'' on their own. It fit neatly into the Reagan administration's political scheme of things , and -voila! a full-blown international incident was born. Brown's free radio time challenged (Today's column is by Mr. Waters' anociate, Phil Jordan.) The old expression Is "put up or shut up." The time is .fast approaching when Gov. Jerry Brown, admitted if still unofficial candidate for the U.S. Senate. will nave to do both, sort of. An "exploratory committee" has been busily raising money for Brown's campaign for months, and the Federal Elections Commission bas finally gotten a r ound to asking Brown for a declaration of his intentions. This is routine, and Brown may well have answered that, yes, he is running for the seat now held by Republican S.I . Hayakawa by the time this column is in print. · ' STILL, IT WILL be Brown's first "official" admissioi\ of his plans for higher office -this time around, that is. He made abortive tries for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination in 1976 and in lB. Perhaps the most important significance of such an admission, however, will be to give ammunition to those Republicans also after Hayakawa's job. They are upset about the amount of free radio time Brown has been receiving, all over the state, in recent months. Radio talk shows are popular -look at their ratings -and Brown has taken full advantage or them. In addition to the usual talk show format, in whicb a flll IATIRS show hos t chats with a guest and listeners phone in, Brown has done, and seems to prefer, shows in which be is the host, in effect running the show. Such situations are made to order for the articulate (some say "glib"> governor. Critics charge be stacks these s hows, scheduling n~ar -adulatory guests, quickly cutting less than adulatory callers off the air. The several Republicans who hope to oppose Brown in· next year's general election campaign haven't been happy with the situation. but felt there was Mythic~ conference recalled One of the most important confer.ences for world peace never took place. It was the Heiperic1es Conference that was created in the mind of autboT J .B. Priestley ih bis essay of the same name. The mytb,cal conference was a summit meema1 of world leaders that took pl~ce ~ the island of Helperldes. Joul'UlllU from *°'1nd the world were nowa bl at llNAt ••pense to reoort the ob•lCM11 mdlMtrtvial. Tbt ltadera of Amertc•• Jlualla, Bn .. wt. rr... and otbel" powera of tbe Warld apeDl tbllr time polf.urtq aDd pontlflcat1n1 while tbelr aldea compl-...S about room 1enlee. Thea, It UPf IMd. All of the leadet• of tbe wo1'lct euddenlJ 111teumbt4 .to • etm•·llke Wneu th.tclldD't tllidu1er tlMil' llultla, but put ....... Into. dMP ...... ~tllilnWM • .,..~ world c-1.... IAedM of .. m•~• ao lm,ortaat apeee ei nothing they could do about it. Even ir Brown "puts up" in his reply to the Federal Elections Commission query. under the Federal Communications Commission's "equal time" rule, he wouldn't have to "shut up" until he actually files nomination papers, a step he won't have to take until Maren, lots or radio shows from now. Al least one Republican hopeful, however, hopes to have Brown off the air -or have bis would-be opponents given equal -air time -soone-r than that. Ted Bruinsma, perhaps the longest shot in the Republican field, is filing suit, charging the broadcasting networks involved illegally gave, and Brown illegally accepted1 what amounts to a Senate campaign aonation of a quarter-million dollars' worth of air 1 time. · SINCE THE CHARGE comes from Bruinsma, it has to be given more weight than it woulcl_be worth if it came Crom one of the other candidates in the race. He may not be well known to the California electorate, but he knows his law -in order to ent.er the contest, be resigned bis job as dean of the Loyola University School of Law . More, in pressing bis case, Bruinsma will become better known to the e lectorate he hopes will, next November, send him to Washington. So.far, Brown and his backers profess to be unworried at this cballenge. Brown's committee chairman stressed bis man's still·unannotrnced 1tatu1, adding that slnce Brown ia a Democrat an'd Bruinsma a Republican, the latter "has no standinC to raise the problem ln the first place." - Not so, accordtn1 to Brulnsma•a attorney: "Any citizen bu the rt1bt to complain about an illegal act." Brown ia still goin1 on the air JM , perhaps-;-iO\ for mucb.1on1et. .t ' l Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/Frlday, January 8. 1882 Photograplier <lepicts P.e~ple in buff in art project . NEW YORK (AP> -llto'a clotbln1 dHl1ner Econ von l'urateaber1 poaed ln bh blrthU1 ault. Porn 1tar Annie Sprinkle poled la btJ' wortlq clothes. And tb• otb•r people ln pbotocrlDber Cbarl11 Collwn'• book, "N'ew York Nude," were alao u U1 t1Ue proelalm1. Collum'• 1oal wa1 to abQw New Yorkers 11 they really are: ulebrltiel md nonentitla; the 1lowlqly baoPy and the lonely and Jadtd; lbe joyful and the mora.e, tbt lovely and the ... well, some will never be centerfolda la pta,yboy. But "New York 'Nude" la not "Playboy." It's not even tn flesh-toned color; it'a black and white. It ta an art book. And CoUU{D wants to be perfectly clear about that. lt'a bis way to break away from his usual vocation - pboto1rapbing for retallers • catalop -and to do something of more luting value. Collum 1Ull 1 bad to calm t.be1r wbat·me·na.ked Jittera. He had a technique. "I have to let them know that I don't have any ulterior motives," he 11ya. "We'll talk for a few minutes, and then I'll 11y, 'Well, I'm ready to start.' and then J wUI' tum my back to them" while they undreu'. Collum eued his subjects into full nudity by startln1 with head·ahot portraits, letUn1 them buUd t.belr confidence. "After a couple of roll a, tnevtt.ably, they calm down," he say1, "And then, they becln to have the opposite feelint; they begin to ettjoy them•elvea -it's a llberatine experience." Judging from the reports of aome ot bia models, it seems to work. Advertising art director Courtney St. Clement, who posed with her then-fiance, now-husband and bia ex-wile, sayt, "It just seemed like an • adventure." • Not that there wu no lwinle of concern. "You tbin.k, 'Oh, my God, l'm here and all my cellultte ls showlaa.''' abe 1ay1. The reference a pparently wu metaphoric; her photo show• no cauae for concero about cellulJte. Ellen Da~d. who hu made public appearancea •• Marvel Comlca' Spld•r-Woman. is amon1 those who posed but doesn't want to talk about It. Collum recall.I tbat, even WbeD abe started t.be po1inf, she wu "seated to death.'· "lt'a sometbinc f did ior myself, not for other people." she says. ' And~on von Furstenberg, the cl designer, 1ay1 it'E somethln1 e always wanted t< do, even tf tt meant removini bis designer clothing. His reason: "L'm 35, and if ' wait much lonee.r , I would no· have a nice picture naked." IN THE FLESH -Paul and Elaine Kurtz Sandler and twin sons, Andrew and Justin. pose in the nude for Charles Collum·s new I ........... , book "New York Nude." Collum says he , wants to show New Yorkers as they really , are. "It's an approach to the 'Family of )Ian' series, in the natural state," be says. "It's every type of person you could think of." ' It's also an admittedly difficult job, to capture the soul of Ne_w York City in nude Conservatives to hold bash, but who's coming? ., portraiture. . ''People are basically the same," be notes. "But I can only tell you that people that have looked at t.bis book tell me that they are unmistakably New Yorkers.'' And, he says, the viewers feel it's an "uplifting book; that they ., just feel eood alter having looked at it." ln ·Bum, says Collum, "It is very non-sexual." Well, not absolutely non-sexual, but, Collum says, ln selecting photos to be printed "it's really the overriding mood or theme of the photograph that makes the decision.'' "New York Nude" is part of a project by the transplanted Texan. In 1977, be published "Dallas Nude." Now -look out, LA -be'a seeking models for bis next book, "Los Angeles Nude." Although Collum is not averse to stopping ~pie on the street and asking them to pose -be says be bas never ~n slugged, by the way -he has found most of bis models through the media. A favorable notice in a Dallas magazine brought people to bis studio in that city. And a local television s how gained him models tn New York. Because tbe models were volunteers, they didn't need to be sweet-talked into posing. But WASHINGTON <AP> -The embossed "invitation" to the $1,000 fund·raiaer says Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. wlll speak on foreign policy. But tbe State Department says he will not. The invitation -sent out by five conservative fund-raising groups -also says Treuury Secretary Donald Regan will speak on the economy, althouih an asterisk serves notice that lie # INVITED -;J-ames A. Baker is one of several Reagan lieutenants who may skip conservative bash. ,, now Appeo.rinq '1 SffilTH ard JOilES is merely "invited, but not confirmed." Tretsury Department says Regan bas no plans to attend. · Nor does outgoing White House political director Lyn Nofziger. The "Big Three" al the White House -chief of staff James A. Baker IIIJ.. deputy chief of staff Michael veaver and counselor Edwin Meese Ill -also are "invited but not confirmed." Tic}tets are $1,000. With. a capacity for 400 to 500 persons, the event could yield $400,000 or $500,000 before expenses. Top off the day with a "First Reagan Inaugural Anniversary BalJ," at $150 a ticket. That could mean an additional $300,000. For anyone who can't make it, but still wants to donate $1,150. there is a line on the reply card to accommodate them. ·'This was put together so that major conservative supporters will have an opportunity. to .get together," Cran said. When first asked about the event, be said the presence of administration officials on the invitation was important. "The draws are important and that's what people are going to pay $1,000 for. They'd come without (the administration speakers> but they wouldn't pay $1 ,000." . But informed several days later that many of those listed bad no plans to attend, he said, ''It says on the invitation they're not confirmed." And Steve OeAngelo of NC PAC said, "The fact is we did invite these people." Cr an s a id the sp onsoring ~ t' groups are still hopeful some of , th e o ther administration' officials can attend. And while they stress the : fun c tio n is be ing s et up '• independently of the White i House, they are appealing to the ;J incoming White House political 1 director, Edward J . Rollins, for help in stocking their speaker's 1 list. "They basically ha ve called and asked if I can call and get ' Baker and Meese" to attend, Rollins. said. "I will certainly ask lbem if they 're going to attend ," he said. "I think it's an 1 important event '' Despite problems with the sc hde dule , sponsors say everything is moving ahead s moothly for t h e "1982 Conservative Leadership Conference and First Reagan InauguraJ Anniversary Ball" on Jan. 22 in Washington. If so, that could mean $700,000 or more for the warchesls of the five organizing groups. GI bill would off er college cash: . . Steve Cran, a spokesman for one of them, Americans For Change, says, "It's going to be a big success. . .. It will be worth doing." The other sponsoring groups are the National Conservative Political Action Committee. Committee for the Survival of a Free Congress, Fund For a Conservative Majority and National Congressional Club. The event is advertised as a day:tong series of briefings involving prominent officials from the administration, Congress and the "New Right." • WASHINGTON <AP> -A presidential task force is shaping a new GI education proposal that lD1lY offer youths $8.000 to $9,000 for college in return for a three-year enlistment. The new educational benefits could cost about $1 billion a year. Pentagon sources said. But they contend it would be a profitable investment because it would attract high-quality volunteers into the armed services. If approved, the plan would be IVY'S LEAGUE Winter Sale the first to offer non-contributory edu cation payments sine~ the old GI Bill of Rights died more than five years ago. Since then, the services have offered a Veterans EducatlonaJ Assistance Program <VEAP> under which a man or woman in the service contributes $1 for each $2 in benefits received. A stu(ly group working for President Reagan's Military Man power Task Force has developed ouUines of a new GI education plan but a number of ' details still are unresolved. Officials familiar with the group's deliberations say they 1 e xpe ct the plan to inc lude1 features aJong these lines: -The new college benefits would be available only to young men and women who enlist after . Congr~s enacts the necess~ legislation. . -A youth enlisting for three• years would qualify for a · stipend of possibly $8,000 to4. $9,000 to pay for tuition, books and other college expenses after!... leaving service. · Starts Saturday, January 9, 1982 l 0 a.m. to 6 p.m. 40% to 50% OFF ~&~ Frrliq&Sdturddq &30pm-1<00pm 9<X>pm-I 30dm ALL WINTER ITEMS 3333 W. Coast Highway NewportBeach. California. 123 Fashion Island, Newport Beach • (714) 840-5721 Store Houn -Tuel., Wed., S.t. lCM p.m. • Mon., :rbur., Fri. 10-9 p.m., SUn. Noon.a p.m. .. . Huge Post-Christmas SALE 50°/a.80°/o Off ·Every.thing In Stock THREE SUNDAY EVENINGS, 7:30 P.M. January 10, 1982 MUSIC FOR GREAT LOVERS The Pacific Symphony turns to thoughts of love In a program of music Inspired by hfStory's greatest lovers, highlighted by a rare performance of Schoenberg's Romantic masterpiece, Pelleas and Melisande. The concert opens with the classical beauty of Gluck llnd Includes.Ravel 's popular ballet suite . February 28, 1982 LILI KRAUS, PIANO Liil Kraus, whose Mozart performances are legend the world over, makes a rant Southland appearance. The all·Vlennese program In- clude& 20th century claaalca by Webern and Berg and the monumental Brucltner Ninth. March 28, .1982 A STRAVINSKY CELEBRATION A f••tlve concert cetebratlng the 100th blrttlday of Igor Stravlnlky, ranging from hi• witty Clrcua Polka (Written for·~ young elephentl) to the 20th century masterpiece, The Rite of Spttng. Pacific Symphony prlncfpal playera are featured' 1olol1t1 In Baroque worka of Monteve:dl and Bach. .. Order all three at special discount prices. sec. A $'9.).acl Sec. B t21.00 Sec. C t 16.00 CONCERTS A.RE A.T KNorr'S THEATllE A h*: Ser*« S &lw COClll DCld ) ~ I I f l Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Friday, Januuy 8, 1982 \ WASIMU.S, Tenn. CAP) - Country •upentat Mart.)' Rob- bins, who helped plOMtr (\ID· ftfltter balladl, uy1 tbe vrban cowboy crue ii blulna away wltb take bulleta. Robblnt, belt known for IODI• llke "El Puo," "El Puo City" and others, aaya the urban ®W· boy trapplnes or mechanical bulls and cowpoke-flavored music represent little more than a brash youn1 1umlln1er stalk· ln1 the fastest SUD in the West, The "urban cowboy" erue, popula.rUed by the movie of that name starri.nc John Travolta', ln· eludes dressing in cowboy hats and boota and western shirts and jeans, dancing the Texas Two· Step and the Cotton-Eyed Joe, and riding mechanical bulls In bn1 that play country muale. Trouble ii Robblnl aay1 t.bll la too much pr•tend and not eoou1b 1ubltane•. '' 1\Jrban Cowboy' h.. bad DO Influence on country muale that wa1n'l lbere before, exe.pt OD the YOWll people," H)'I JI.ob. btna. ''They saw Travolta •• ·a eow· boy and dreued Ilk• him ' becau.ae they liked hh:n. Some people made money Off tbia trend. ••A mechanical bull la not 'cowboy.' It's make·b,Ueve •cowboy.' But it's· nice that it 1ives ~e somelblna. '' And Robblna dlfferenUatel between bla music and the "Urban Cowboy" sound, t.boulh he won't cite any 1on1a. .. Cowboy music i• what I had, not 'Urban Cowboy' muale. lt waa authentic American folk mu1Jc, ·• be aay1. Duptte the way b• t.ika, be'a not enUrely crtUcal of th• crue. "Mayb9 tt 1ave people the chance to be aomethin•· It Sivea them a chance to be somet.hlna they want and to 1et away from . aomethlnc they don't like - tbtlr Jobi ln mott caau," he 1ay1. Robblnl, who bu been ainlinl on the Grand Ole Opry alnce 1953, ii aomethiDI or a cowboy himself. He bu two horses and .._ 150 head of caWe on a 250·acre ranch aouth of N .. hville. He has been rtdini all bis Ute and be can rope. His Mualc Row office ts adorned with pictures of botaea and western landacape . And he baa a pickup truck, thou1h be rarely drive• it. Hla career dalff to the 18CIOI, when he had hits like "White Sport Coat," followed by bits like "Don't Worry," "Mr, Woman. My Woman, My Wlle, • "Devll Woman'' and others. He's 56 now and one of tbe moat endurtn1 and versatUe 1in1en in the bwdne11. "I've done what I wanted to do," be aaya, explalntn1 bJs career longevity. "l'm not a real lood musician, buL I can write pretty well. I experiment once in a while to see what J cao do. I find out the best I can do ii to stay with ballads." Robbins, whose hobby la rac· log stock cars, performed at fund-raising runcUona In U•> for another cowboy-type -Ronald Reatan. "He's the only chance thh country haa," Robblna aaya. A year aao, Robblna sulf ered a ~ea.rt attack, a decade after under1otn1 heart 1ur1ery. He took off work for two moat.bl and la on a strict diet -no dairy producu -and vt•lta hli doctor every two month.I. "l feel fine," be says. Looking back on hl• career, he says be could have branched out into acting, tbou1h be did mike a few B-uade motion pictures. "I. could be a bil movie star lf I'd have taken all tbe small parts I wu offered," he says. "But I want.eel the rans to be proud of me and they couldn't because alJ I was going to do WU grunt." . Study of rats helps chart growth rate cycles • ID children !>' LOS ANGELES (AP) -Rats a· grow quickly just after waking up each day and most slowly as they're settling down to go to oJs lee p, a nd human children ·'almost certainly have similar n· growth cycles, a French scien- tist says. 9 Be:;ides the daily variations, V.~'or. Claudine Oudet of Louis ;Pa ste ur University In ~1Strasl>Ourg said her group also ,found seasonal changes in rats, ~<with the greatest growth coming 1 in the spring and lhe minimum • ... ----------------~ in winter. But she said "It's not clear" whether human children have seasonal cycles. She said one of the best studies, done in England recent· iy, "found that onJy about 30 per· cent of the children actually ex- h lb it seasonal variations in growth rates. The Ma'Xlmum is in the spring." Ms. Oudet described her re· search at a UCLA "Conference on Factors and Mechanisms Influencing Bone Growth." The French group periodically counted the number of actively dividing cartilage· cells on the upper end of the jawbone in young rats, she said in an fn. terview. Rats are nocturnal, whlch means they sleep in the dayUme and stay awake at night. ·•we found that the growth rate (as determined by the rate of cell reproduction) is al its maximum around 9 p.m. and at its minimum around 9 a.m.," she said . She said simllar cycles are almost certainly present in human children, who also are subject lo 24-hour biolo1lcal cycles, called circadian rhythms. She said the cycle ls reversed in younssters, who would reach their daily growth peak around 9 a.m . Jlnd theJr low around 9 p.m. Confirming the reverse theory in children is a problem, she said, since "you can't determine the dally growth rate of a kid. You've got to kill the rats" to get the data. She said the researchers also exam ined bone growth and found similar daily and seuonal cycles in bone formation but no dally chan1es in the rate at whlch growing . bone is mineralized into its hard, rigid form. Tbe variations ·also were seen in rats' leg bones. The goal of the research was lo determine the best time to modify the Jaw bone's growth rate with mechanical devices. Dentists use the devices on young patients whose upper and lower jaws grow unevenly. caus· 1,ng the teeth to meet incorrectly in biting. The mismatch can often be corrected by slimulat· ing or inhibiting growth of cartilage. By applying tiny versions or the devices on the laboratory rats, Ms. Oudet said her group concluded, "You can stimulate this cartilage better or inhibit it better if the appliances are worn during lhe period when the cells are preparing lo divide. ~~\ ~ ...... ~ Our tt Frame sate F•·Everyone! ~~'' 0 b 1 b n ') '< s 0 0 91 11 'll 11' ll OJ 8 ,~ -!. •1• ~· '(J 15 !)I 91 lo ll be ·10 'ti 1• '(< b ~r u Alert issued on lamp D'EAR READERS: ~The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission is alerting consumers to a potential safety hazard involving a table lamp. Four million of these lamps were produced and sold nationwide from 196.5 through 1975. U the lamps are misused or carelessly handled, they pose a risk of electrocution or electrical shock. Ttie warning was issued voluntarily in cooperll'tion with the CPSC by A-Bee Syndicate Inc. 0£ New York, !11.Y.; B & D Molded ProcTucts Inc. or Shelton, Conn., and Injectron Corp. of Plainfield, N.J. CPSC staff has identified these companies as manufacturers and distributors of the lamps according to definitions in the Couumer Product Safety Act. According to tbe firms, the lamps were designed and manufactured in conformity with existing industry practices. They could, however', pose a potential safetyhuard itthe lighlbulb socket is dislodged or removed from the lamp t>ase , thereby exposing two electrical terminals positioned on either side or the socket. The lamps consist of a black plastic base with three legs which support a plastic shade covered with bubblelike protruaions. The shades were produced in three colors: white, ltme-green and neon-orange. The lamps stand approximately 16 inches tall, and some were made with lhe name "A·Bee" on the s mooth collar at the base of the shade. The lamps were sold nationwide for approximately Sl each in variety retail stores from 1965 through 1975, although the majority were distributed in the eastern half of the United States. Some lamps may have been given away as promotional items. Oonsumers who own one or the lamps should take the following· steps lo determine ii there is a safety hazard: unplug the lamp: remove the shade and turn the lamp upside down ; throw the lamp away if the bulb socket falls out· of the base or is loose enough to expose the electrical terminals. Anyone requiring additional information about this warning should contact CPSC's toll-free Hotline at (800) 638-8326. Watch not received DEAll PAT DUNN: I ordered a watclt laa& Odob7er from Merllte lac. My $Z7 claeck waa caUed lmmedlatety, but I laave .ever received Ute watch. My tlaree ..,_,-411tance plloae calla to Ulla company bavea't bnMtpt any response either. I hope you can Mlp me. J.D., HutlaSU-Beacla A YS contacted Merllle and was promised thJll · ~ watch would be mailed within 10 working days. If it doesn't arrive sborlly, let AYS lmow. Sale Is On Now I Buy One Frame a t the Regular Price. · Get a Second Frame That C... the Same or Le.. for One Cent At Aaron Brothers 1 e Frame Sale when you buy one frame at the regular price you c.an get a second frame that costs the same or less for one cent. A frame for a penny fits your budget! And our frames flt your style! From sl.mple to sophisticated. There's elegant gold leaf t--_...a... ....... ~-..,-+----:111191"...i...~~ fln1sh frames; sleek section frames In silver, gold or pewter metal; contemporary plastic tee-through box frames; fancy or unadorned &ames with ~ and backing; textured or smoodl wood frames In a variety of handsome finishes; artistic frames with a lot of color or simply plain frames with Qmi.traJ finishes. Plus moce! In a wide range of mes that wtJl fit most anything from a f avortte Uttle snap-shot to an Impressive seascape, (Custom bcn'Qlng, fitting and labor not Included,) The Aaron Brothers 1 C Frame Sale fits you for a penny! -· ., MONITORED -Joy Wayt~. 19, is monitored ~ontinu?usly for several days after brain surgery to remove her epllepsy at SMILING -Joy Wayte is relieved and happy to be home. free of epileptic seizures and looking forward to returning to the University of Washington in the spring. ------·,Are career ioomen givjng FRIDAY, JAN. 8, 1982 STOCKS COMICS GARDEN BS 86 88 ., ........ Harborview Hospital in Seattle. She underwent an operation lasting s112 hours. greater thought to snaring. husbands? Colunist Bob Greene thinks so . See P.age B2. Brain sUrgery cures epilepsy . c . for girl, 19? 1 ... SEATTLE CAP) -Joy Wayte, 19, underwent 8~ hours or brain sur1ery to remove her epilepsy. The surgery by a 20-member team on the Mercer Island woman took place Oct. 1 in a basement room of the University Hospital.. It was a harrowing stay that could mark the end or her seizures. But it aJso took away part of her ability lo walk and lift her left arm. J oy had suffer ed seizures since she was 8 but they were getting worse. Sometimes she would have three a day. Once, in mid-September while chowing down spaghetti in a restaurant with friends, she became silen t. Her eyes widened. She jerked her head from side to side, no loneer hearing the din or clattering dishes or seeing her pals. .. Eff? Eff? Eff?" she blurted. Friends touch her. One holds her hand, another puts an arm over her shoulders. Suddenly the tension leaves Joy's body, her r ~ J eyes relax rrom tbelr wide .tanr and panic leaves ber race. Sbe'a had another seizure. For years, she bad 1one tO psychiatrists, bypnotistl? biofeedback iMtructors, taken medication, all to no avail. · "There wasn't a pattern," she recalls. "At first I thou1bt they were just stomach pa.ina -tbeJ. start out as a funny reettnc la my bladder. I started calllq them my 'funny feelln1s, • or 'ffs.' I guess that's why now 4 keep saying 'eff' when I have seizure." Last spring. Dr. Robert 1. Wilkus, her doctor at ll\~ Epilepsy Center at Har~ Medical Center, said be recommend surgery if one kind of medication didn't wort . When the medication fail~ tests began. Doctors dete~ that the epileptic focus was on· the right side of her bra.Jn and speech on the left, so her apeech. would not be affected by UM surgery. P sychological tuts al10 s howed s he was a 1.o~cl candidate. Joy was warned c# possible complications but tolcf doctors to proceed. Late the evening of Sept. 30, her head was sha~ with m electric razor. ' T he n ext morn i n1 ~ neur 011urgeon Dr. Geor1e Ojemann operate..d.. Jo~ remained awake because the doctor needed her help to identify the parts of her brain> controlling her muscles. : She felt no pain because the skull and brain have no pain nerves. Dr . Kim Burcbiel, chief resident in neurosurgery, drilled holes in her skull while Dr. Alari Artru held her band. When tW number of holes reached seven Artry said, "Now , we're ball done." Burchiel used a cuUing tool to connect the holes and lifted out a circle of skull. ·. BRAIN EXPOSED -Tbis is what Joy Wayte's brain looked like several hours after the start of her surgery. She was still awake so she . could he lp .the surgeon identify area controlling her muscle movements. Ojemann, Wilkus and othez: doctors then watched aa electrodes resting on J oy's bl'alri- prod uced waves. Ojemann stimulated her brain with pulad· of elect.ricity lo map the area controlling her muscles. .. Ojemann decided that tbe ~ area controlling muscle acUvttt was well away from the center DA · seeks 'poet~~ justice' . Prosecutor pleads case to jud_ge.and jury in rhyme· . WHITEVILLE, N.C. <AP> - Justice is not enough fot" District Attorney Lee J . Greer -he wants poetic justice. The 72-year-old Greer, known as the "Silver Fox" with a silver ton1ue, often summarizes the state's evidence in verse. Hls poetry attracts attention from judges, jurors and defense attorneys, and spectators who make a point or being in the co urtroom for h is final arguments. ' "They know he's going to quote eome poetry or the Bible and that he's probably going to make up some poetry," said Michael Easley, assistant -~strict attorney. . Arter more than 10 years as prosecutor, Greer says be will not seek re·elecUon this year. l\ssociates and atUe court officials say be ls part of a dluppeartnc breed. ''He's one Of tboee who believe in mating a powerful arsument lo the jury," sald Franklin Freeman, director of the state Admlnlstratlv• Office of tbe Courta. Greer s~d be decided not to Helt another term because .-dmlnlstrative matters were takhll up too mucb ol bta Ume and keep6q blm out ol court. As chief prosecutor for Columbu1, Brunswick and Bladm toantill, be IUpervl .. nve uai"8at proMCuton ud twe odMi' emploJ ... , lie WM eleet.cl ta mo Aft.r ......., u Colum'bu1 Couaty's clerk or court for 22 yean. Greer said he developed his distinctive courtroom style to gel the attention or jurors. He sees nothing wrong wilh making poetry that some people migJit consider corny. "He believes in m .a k i n g .a p o w e r f u l 1 t ,, argumen ... •·As long u you're reel Una the facts,lou can make it rhyme," he aai . • · Here is one of bla poems, s ummarlzln1 the state's evidence in a murder trial: "Tlw llate contndl: "That if Bobb, cffd"'' flO tMre '°''" mi m,... mind "He Mould how left laU piltol behind. "No, he djdn't f10 u.n. to join tn ,,.. JM • • • 8fCCIUN lw tOnt tMre "*" o loaded,... . .. """' "°" ""' ~ ,...,.. .., com"'°" ..,... "Y°" CM Ne tlane toOI tM> 1 ,.,,..,.... I "Alld °"' cica 4"o nadilw Hf . ··n. DIMd -at 0 plot'f ,,. 1'od 0 ,.,,,., to be. through the lip. "So ajtn-all i.s said and done, "David &1 dead, kiUed by BobbJ/'1 gun. "The ltate contendl you should see cu a fact "That there t.Vas no ezcuae for this act. "Thi& is what this ccue ii all • about "And you shot.tLd find IO beJ,40l1d a reoaonoble doubt." The jury returned a guilty verdict. The poetic style Is "entirely . acceptable procedure," said · Giles R. Clark of Elizabethtown, r esident Superior Court judge for tbe 13th Judicial District. Clark said Greer bad adapted his extensive readin1 in classical literature and poetry to bis prolesaion. "We're 101na to miss him," be ta aid, adding-that "the court-i_ room ii certainly going to Mt !dlrferent." /ndianam 1 • INDIANAPOLIS <AP) - Some people make New Year's renlu&nl and otben make tan of them, but a 1urve)' of Indiana's more famous follta 1bow1 tbelr vows Ul'J from "loCl6rl cldlit't _, to MMI a ..., =::::=:_.,~ • ••.tlld -DaRf .. u. /ot:e, ~ of epilepsy which meant the: epile ptic tissue could. bi removed without much fear ~ causing damage. :· Finally Joy was put to sleep and Ojemann removed a piec6' of brain about the size of a plum'.: After .Aecking the braid · waves, the doctors conferred and agreed to remove anotbee small amount of tisaue. . S uddenly there waa -problem. Joy was wakened &DCl couldn't squeeze her left band ~ wiggle her left toes. :- 0 j emann explained to tb• family in the waiting room 'that he was ending the operaUon. : "We removed the bulk , but ~ all. of the epileptic brain," a.. said. : It will be months before Jo~ knows ii her epilepsy ls curectr . In some cases the -"bures COID4p back in a few months. Sbe bat bad none so far. t "I'm really happy about that," she said. She lost most peripheral ~ · lo her left eye, but· it ll returnlnc. , · Joy plans to ~ride bicycle and stM'll audl a class at tbe · Un verslty · Washinlton. Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/frlday.,January 8. 1982 ............ Shakespearean theater is patterned after the original Old Globe in London that burned down 365 years ago. · ·-------------------------------------------, I · Our 8th Annual .... I i Cl:rRUS SALE! i I I a=-=-==;;:;;=~ I CHECK THESE SPECIALS I I AND si:ocK UPI ~ .· RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTllY I •'I 0 1 •t... ·. ··inz HAU01a.¥0. COIT~MISA-14a.l IH ---~-­ '' "' ..... . . 25th year Annlversar) f come ... us at our ~1 ~ new addrtss ;::-:: . . f..SllSIUG .. ... a......,_. .... ....,.. ..... c.' Jp.77 Antique Show/Sale Tocs.y Uw Sun .. J8n. 10 It the Huntington Center l'NlfL .C>utltMdlno COUectloN from 50 deelera. AtlO free ewlumtion clinic. 405 fwy and Beech Blvd., H.S, I Congratulations! It's Sam Miiier'• Birthday et Diiiman• Reat;urent0f9' SUM. 'TIL' --22 years at DllllNlna :=.. , 45 years a Balboa'• No. 1 Citizen =: 75 y•rs •rw:t still going strongl ~· r---ff•l•r:l•Til-----u:-!'"---((illJit]JJ---,r----i(il!J;l•ID----, I --~ II NnCM>f'I II NnCAM.OAO! I I MD TlllM I I LAMS HAN II TDAS MAllLIN I I GRAPEFRUIT I: AVOCADOS 11 .. ORANGES I I 4 . s 1 oo II 3 s 1 oo :, 5 l,M. s 1 oo I I ~ II ~ II I I I.Mill I II u.11 1 II LM* 10 LM I '------~~----1 ! _____ !~----JL-----~~.:. ____ J • r---"f(•lPJ:1•T11-----, r----"1(•l•J;IiI.1J----,r----~--, I .. HAft TM KST 11 I.Miii C~ II Lnna •.... ' I I 11 NAY'll II Mn A I La. MO I I MUSHROOMS 'l ORANGES II Tosaeo SALAD I I Ii II IDYU• I I 89C ·~ II 5 S100 II S1H I I ...... II u.. II I '1 U.4LM. 11 ....,.1tLM. II LIMllJ.... I L-----~--~-l ! _____ :~ ____ JL _____ !~-----J Announcing the sale you have been waiting for. annual clearance 40% to 70o/o off Sale be pas JllllllfJ 11 DEAR ANN LANDERS: I realize it would be a miracle if this letter made the paper, but I'm going to write It anywa:v . . Getting this orr my chest and having someone listen will make me feel better. The problem ls my husband. The way he treats our chlldren makes me sick. I call it child abuse. He says l am crazv. Will ~·ou pl-:ase tell me what YOU cull it?· He niver says oue \\'Ord to our. teen-agers <three or them -15. 16 and 181 unless it's to tell them how dumb. useless and· ugly the~· a1·e . ll seems thev can't do anything right. His constant belittling has hit one or our children so. hard she has become withdrawn and afraid to open her mouth. t'm worried sick about her. Her' father has made her feel like a fat slob completely worthless. He tells her every day that she is ugly. stupid and clumsy. She believes him. The girl c1·i~s a lot and keeps her foelings to herself. She ref uses to talk to me about her problems although I have tri~d to open the lines of communication. Our children have no re.spect or affection wh.atsoever for their father. In fact. rm sure they hate him. If one of the kids makes a mistake. he never lets up until the child is in tears. I call this EMOTIONAL child abuse. He says there is no s ucti thing. He claims abuse means physical beating. Is there such a thing as emotional child abuse·~ I leave il to you. KALAMAZOO READER DEAR KAL: You bet there is such a thing as emotional abuse. Another term Is mental cruelty. Your husband sounds like a bully. He was probably belittled and e motlonahv battered by his father. · The only way to break this vicious cycle is through counttllng. Your family doctor or clergyman should speak to him (privately) and explain what he Is doing to his children. Another problem is your relationship with him. I susped you are at odds with one anotlaer a good bit of till lime and the kids have bee• th~ battleground. · F•mllf counseling wou.ld be Ideal . • . with everyone Involved, speaking hls piece and laying his f eellngs on the llne. I hope you can get someone to Intervene In behalf of the children and make your husband see what be Is dolnf to their Uves -and yours. Everyone would profit. . DEAR ANN : In answer to the Quads in Quad City: You were correct. except for the tip. If you leave no tip al all. a waiter or waitress might think you forgot. When you le.ave a penny. or as in this case. each girl leaves a penny. t he message comes through loud and clear. The service was lousy! So; you see. Ann. even during these days of inflation. a lowly penny can pack a real wallop. Let's send up a cheer for the penny. If more people left them. I'll bet service would improve. DJL IN TUCSON -DEAR TUCSON: Not a bad f4'ea -but I hope nobody leaves a 1793 Flowing Hair penny under the plate. It would be the tip of a Ufetime. Would you believe over one hundred thousand doll ars? Don't /Lunk your cMmutry teat. love ii more than one .et of glanda calling to another. If JIOU haUt trouble making a dutinctlon JIOll Med Ann'• booldd, "Love or Sa and How to Tell Ille Dif/erertu." Send a long, self-addreued, •tamped enwlope with pr re~st and SO cent& to Ann IANJn1, P.O. 80% 11'95, ChteaflO, IU. 60611. Women eye altar .. An acquaintance of mine -a less than sensitive fell ow encountered a woman at the elevator of his office building. She was dressed in a sharply tailored business suit. a nd she was carrying a briefcase . ··Haven't you heard?" the man said. .. Heard what?" the woman said. "The fad is over:· the man said. .. What fad?" she said. "Working women:" he said. Now . . . the fellow is wrong. The economy being in the s hape it is. women are destined to make up a significant portion or the work force for decac;les to come. Maybe even forever. But behind the man's attempt at humor lies a truth. a truth that is jusr bt>coming evident. It is this: WOMEN, I N G REATER numbers want to get married and have families. They want to gel married so badh· that the,y would g ladl y forsake career possibiltties and office life for one good husband. The same women who a decade ago desired nothing rJlOre than ~ shot at a good job wlth corporate advancement down the line now crave a marriage propgsal from a nice. successful man. There are no surveys or studies that have pinpointed this yet (although figures do s how that weddings in the United States are ~t an all-time high >: the surveys and studies generally run anywhere from six months to several years behind the trends. But if you spend a lot of time talking to people. both men and women. vou know that it's true. The idea of marriage has become an obsession with modern women in a way that would have seemed impossible just a few years ago. . .The reasons for this are probably varied. You can lump it all under the catego1·y of changi ng times. Huge numbers or women have been in the work force for long enough that they now know there is no inherent glamour in getting up to commute ~o the office every morning. The economy 1s rotten enough that some women are lusting after the security that comes from the kriowledge that someone else in the family is responsible for paying the bills and meeting the mortgage commitments. THE GENERATION OF dlvorced women that came into being in the '70s is ' now .. finding that freedom can also mean loneliness and solitude. Women who in their early and middle·20s could see no further· than a cQrporate or1ani1a'tion chart, are now i n their early and middle-30I, and they ar• reallslnl that if they are ever 1olng to have famWea, It bad better be now. I'll leave it to the Sociologtsts and theorists to decide the specir~c reasons why. All l'm sure about is that it's happenlng, and that this rampant desire for marriage on the part of today's women · is a throwback that is at once surprising and intrtguin(. I have talked to many woman and men about this. One of the women, who was extremely articulate. wrote clown some thouabta for me. Here they are: "I am a 28·year·old woman, unmarried. l bave been ensaiecJ once. and my I~ Nlationahlp wtt.b a man wu IOI Glffllf two years. Most of my high school friends are married. Some have their own children. Both of my sisters are married. and each has a baby boy f was raised in an upper middle-class societv whatever that means anymore and r always ass umed that r would have mv own marriage, a station wagon. kids: and memberships to the beach and countrv clubs. · "WELL, THIS VEAR my high school class is holding its 10th class reunion. I will be returning to my home state or Florida alone and single and looking for the people who signed my yearbook telling me how far I would go. what a clown I •was. how I could always make others laugh. and what a good dancer I was. AJI of those strokes from my high school class. What will it be like. 10 years aftef? ··As for my personal life. I spend the majority of my lime working and the rest of it wondering why my most recent involvement with a dear man has been shot to hell. irretrievable. r am not stupid or ugly. ls this the meanin~ of fate? Destiny? Please. oh please. don·t say ·yes.· .. That woman is unique only in her ability and willingness to sum up her desires so succinctly. Every indication is that she speaks for great numbers of single women. especially women in their 20s and 30s. wh o look at t heir married contemporaries with a combination of jealousy and anger. I SPOKE WITH a woman friend who is successful in the field of entertainment. She is 27 and unmarried: she r~aches thousands upon t housands or people through her work. She is attractive. and has never been lacking for men to spend time with. "I'd quit this work tomorrow lf I could find the right man to marry me." she said . .. Y-ou can go only so far. trying to be good ror ·the pubUc. · If l had one JVJn who I could spend the rest or my life with. I wouldn't ~are if no one else ever knew my name again. What good does being fafmous do if you don't even have a husband?" l would guess that. several tears ago, she never could have foreseen feelin1 the way she currehtly does. Women now ap~ar to believe that. althoulb marria1e is often l\Ot perfect, it seems to be preferable to lives spent on ttleir own. Twenty yean ago that would not have been such a radical thou1ht, but in Ught of recent history, it ii. l 1m rapidly runnln• out of space Here: • I had wanted to recount for ygu a long convenatlon l had wlth a wom.ao who, in the mkl·lffOI, Met one ol U.. ldeal and creative careen iOI~ her, and who wtlttnaty 1ave lt up \0 ~a~. She hu M>me thou1httul thlnp I& iay about why she did what • dld, iiild how It lJ workinC out. In M'edneeay'a cohlml). -•'II talk With her. f I j f "Her atory ia a almple one. She loved and ICMlt and *-me ravlna vice-president." rou1 HIAlJH ' OR. PETER J. STEINCROHN l Dosage gives little relief I DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: At times I you have called aspirin one of the wonder drugs. In fact, you '-ave said lt deserves a I , plac 1 e right lat the top of the Ust. wiab my own experience allowed me to second tbe motion. I am 55 and have been suff erlng from osteoarthritis of the blp and back. My doctor calls It a form of degenerative arthritis. It is supposed Lo be common at my age. Wbat did be prescribe? Aspirin, of course. I've been taking six tablets a day for months. I find little relief. I ask, "So what's so wonderful about aspirin?" - MRS. E. DEAR MRS. E : The main purpose in treating arthritis is to relieve pain. reduce inflammation -and also to prevent deformity. Aspirin, properly prescribed, will usuaHy help reduce pain and inflammation. Too often . however, aspirin is prescribed in insufficient doses. Six tablets a day in your case, Mrs. E .. may seem like a large enough dose. Apparently it isn 't . Ideally~ a high level of blood salicylate leversbou1d be m aintained. Otherwise there may be failure. For example. in a recent article in Geriatrics by Ors. Paul H. Waytz and .!a mes J . Pattee on treatment of rheumatic diseases, they suggest that appropriate levels can be attained and kept constant by takin8 8-00 <on the average 12-16) standard 5-gram tablets of aspirin daily. · Treatment should begin with 12 plain aspirin tablets per day. Always to be taken with food and liquids and with a snack at bedtime. Better take such high doses under the care of your doctors. For there may be such side effects as ringing in the ears and actual temporary loss of hearing. Other side effects are nausea. bloating, heartburn. There also may be blood loss. Sometimes aspirin causes confusion in elderty patients. It should be discontinued before surgery to prevent excessive bleeding. Some patients with nasal polyps and asthma develop hypersensitivity. I suggest that you discuss proper dosage again with your doctor. An increase in your aspirin intake may give you the comfo1 t you desire. Thousands of patients like yourself suffer unnecessarily because they take in- sufficient aspirin. I still call it a wonder drug, Mrs. E . - .. PllSOIAlln Q.&A. BY MARILYN ANO HY GARDNER ~ot knockout for Dempsey Jack, Demp sey, the popular ex-heavrweight boxing champion. says: "One o the most unexpected questions ever asked of me was by a girl reporter. She said, shyly, 'Though it doesn't appear in the record books, weren't you once knocked out by someone who weighed almost 200 pounds less than you?· Suddenly it came to me. Shortly after 1 had my nose fixed <not for beauty, but so I could breathe more easily>, I wsited the home of a friend who had a three-year-old son. I picked up the kid to play with him. Suddenly he punched my still-tender nose. The pain was so great I fainted dead away!" Helen Gurley Brown, the editor of Cosmopolitan who hyped Burt Reynolds' . career as a sex symbol by ~aklng him the fir st "nude" center fold In the quality.magazine field, says the most provocative question she was asked after that was: "You're s uch a believer In sexual freedom , but what would you do if you found out your bustiand was cheating?" "My answer," Helen told us, "I'd klll him!"' When we asked Mickey Mantle what was the biggest thrill of his thrill-filled career with the Yankees, Mickey gave us that still-boyish grin and said: "My biggest moment, Hy , was when the ballpark, jammed with fans. gave me a standing ovation for 15 minutes during ceremonies retiring No . 7. Whenever I talk about that thrilling scene. the sus tained cheers still seem to ring in my ears ... Q: Why ls there no letter ••Q" on the telephone dial? A: Because the phone dial is set up in eight groups of three letters. and two had to be left out. The "Q" and .. Z .. were both deemed unnecessary. Football star Joe Namath. a fter shooting some sexy s<:enes in the film "C.C. Ryder & Co .. " with Ann-Margret's husband watching, was asked if that dii:ln't make him nervous ... It might have," Joe chuckled. "till I found out that it was he who wrote those scenes for the movie'" "During one of o ur -question-and-answer periods," Carol Burnett remembers. ··a woman in the studio audience stood up and said, ·carol I've been your fan for a long time. Could you please send me a picture of Lucy?· P.S.: I sent it:" Send your questions to Hy Gordner. "Clad You Asked That." in care of the Dally Pilot. P.O. Box 19620. I rvine, Calif. 92714. Marilyn and Hy Gardner will answer as many questions as they can in their column. but the volume of mail makes personal replies impossible ·por SHOD BY ASHLEIGH BRILLlANT 1•0 HAPPtLV SP0.10 MY WHC>Li LI~ TRAVELING IF I COUL.0 HAVE AN0Tt4E" LIFE TO SPENO AT HOME. New start for I..ihra Saturday, Jan. 9 ARIES <March 21 -April 19 >: Be meticulous concerning detaJls and be alert to subtle nuances. You'll be involved with intricacies. fine print and necessity for reading between the lines. TAURUS <April 20-May 20 >: Be J"eady for revisions, necessity for rebuilding and messages which call for change of policy. Highlight versatility, flexibility and ability to e.ommunicate ideas. · GEMINI (May 21-June 20>: Emphasis on money, investments, home repairs and the gail1ing of allies. Family member is concerned with domestic situation and requi.res special attention. CANCEll ,(June 21-July 22): Methods will be streamlined, techniques will be perfected and you'll be at right place at • propitious moment. LEO <July 23-Aug. 22>: Hidden resources surae to forefront. You have plenty to s~y and could appear before the media. You re on brink of major discovery and added reco"nltion. VlaGO (Au1. 23-Sept. 22>: You reach more ~ emphasis on friends, hopes, wi1het. added popularity. You'll finish ma}Or a11l1nment and be rid of annecesaar, burden. UUA d~ept. 28-0et. 22>: You. make new lt.n lft ~ dlrectJon. 1aln lldded lndependenre and you'll 1et to hffrt of I llOIOSCOPI BY SIDNEY OMARA matters. Emphasis on career. preslige. participation in civic project. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Spotlight on teaching, rising above petty diff.erences. gaining greater security. Focus also on travel, communication and ·a more positive definition of spiritual values. SAGGf'tARIUS <Nov . 22· Dec. 21 >: ..Look beyond the Immediate, perceive potential and rev~ew budget. Individual close to you presents program which supposedly would result In financial bonanza. . CAPRICORN <Dec. 22·Jan. 19.>: Avoid rushing to judgment. Focus on legalities, l>ubllc relations, ability to be patient. Old debt will be repaid. AQUAJUUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18>: Some steps will be retraced. Be analytical. Don't be satialied merely to· know something happened -dis~over why It occurred. . , • PISCES (Fe b . 1\·Mar . 20>: Re\ationship lntenaifies -1tron1er f amlly ties result from minor crisis. Cycle favors chan1•. travel, variety and wUlinpeu to t11te chance on your own abtltttes. ... / Orange Cout DAJL;V PfLOTJFrlday. January e. 1882 NEWSPAPER FOR SALE -Just five months after the Philadelphia Bulletin employees agreed to a SS million bailout, they were told the newspaper is being offered for sale. Craig Ammerman. executive editor. answers ,., questions from his newsroom staff after t announcement was made Wednesday bv t paper's owner. The Charter Co .. d Jacksonville. Fla .. conglomerate. HALLIDAY'S SPECTACULAR, SUPER, SALE Suits, Sport coats, Shirts, Sweaters, Slacks, ~aincoats .. and Jackets. All FINEST QUALITY STOCK SAVE 20 TO 50% SAi F ST ARTS TUESDA y I JAN. 12th • 17th & Irvine Avenue, Newport Beach, CA. 92660 Telephone (71~) 645-0792 The Committee of 4000 is' holding a meeting for all Leaseholders and friends .. Sunday, January 10,.1982 7:30 p.m .. Marriott Hotel (Ball Room) Fashion Island, Newport Beach Vote on leaseholder ,Strategy for 19821 Come to the Sale at the Shop for Pappagallo ... before our cupboard is bare! • J If your closet is bare and you 'Ve no shoes to wear. Pappagallo's beving a SALE-so you shouldn't despair. We have lots of styles. and colors galore. Our shop's full of treasures ... come in and explore I Sale ataru January 7 r Laauna Beach in Lumberyard Plaza \ 384 Foreet A venue #4 714 -(94·7708 Ora• Oout DAILY PllOT/Frldey, January-I, ,fl-~FP I Nn YORK -Henry Kaufman bu done It · ~ ttlala. HI bal reminded ua,· aa be daM -.ea. rear, I $.bat federal IOVtnlllleDt ftnanclDI M.cla wW put tb• el'Ullh on otMI' borrowen, 1uet. u bullwtee ud even COGl\lmtn. upward acaln before midyear," Hld Kaufman, tb• cblef economllt ol Salomoa Brotherl, a HCurtUe1 flrm. By the end of tbe 1ear, ht warned, "lon1·term ratu w)U probably be threatenJn1 their 1981 bl1b." Kaufman 1eldom hat very 1ood n•w• to deliver about latA!rett ratu, but that probably lan't bis fault, at leut over tbe put 11 ~an or ao of bll federal deficit -deftclta that must be ft.Danced tn the marketpla~ Ju1t Hite anyooe elN'a d•bU. Well, with one bll dltterence: Federal debt td• prtorlty over yours: the federal debt, you may be sure, get.a financed, even 11 t.o do IO meant paylfta extraordlnary interest rat.ti. l There WH almost notblAI DtW lD uus al moat an)'OM wbo can add ·a column ol n1urea can see the pot~ntlal financial problema, but you mJ,bt have thou1bt ao becauae o the lmpaet. Tbe atoe!k market, for example, wu jotted aa severely aa a daydreamer walking off a curb. This ls the service that Kaufman performs : He reminds, loveatora and tbe public In ieneral, that they · ~"" cannot live a daydream, that they can't wllb away the bla federal deficit and wander about aa lf all was w9'1. "A coofronlation between the emit needs of the U.S. Treasury and those of buslnesa corporations ls shapine up for U182," declared Kaufman in his analysis of "11182 Prolpecta for Financial Markets." Only a limited supply of credit is ever available, as any borrower Is well aware, and when the demand for those fwtds rises so also d~ lnterest rates. And that, Kaufman fort<!Uts, is 1oin1 to happen again. "Interest rates will start to trend irregularly Aa a realllt, Kaufman knows that thtte bit 1overnment borrowlncs can't be l1nored, and that an Inevitable confilc:t la batcbed wb,n bualneaa at the same time needs to raiae lar1e amounts of cash for enierprliea aucb Ii, for instance, the much publlciaed relndustrlallaaUon of America. Under such clrcumstanct11, aomethlnt bu to gtve. lnter..st rates have t.o live, says Kaufman. Too much demand; slmple u that. It's been eoinl on for a lone tlme too. James w. Cbriatian, ebief economist at tbe U .s. Lea1ue of Savin1s Aaaoclations, looked up Federal Reserve Board n1ures on the subJect and fairly well documented It. In the years 19SO·l95', he found, the federal government t.ook only a 9.1 percent share of funds raised in credit markets. And in the years '1955 ·1959, the percenta1e fell to an almost minuscule 1.2 percent. Even as recently as 196S·l969 the federal 1overnment's wedge of the credit market pie was only 6.9 percent, compared with 46.3 percent for lrr-""'!"'9 ....... ~7-1"'.:'co~•:-7•:':•~•..,..."""11 non·flnanclal businesses and 10.7 for state and ...-c ... .-..~.z MWwct......, local governments. 9"' ... ....,. ..,,,. It all changed in the bil deficit years of the =: =:: 1970s. In the first five years of the decade the t01'S11_..._ ~ 11-.. federal share rose to 10.4 percent, and in the next .... =::=.:•.... five years to 23.3. By 1~ it bad reached 24.6 percent. · A BEAUTIFUL BUY The Alrance to Save Enerpy has prepared a brochure that oontams t 2 srnpls. 1nexpenSM1 mess~ to tal<e Wf'llch can cut down your home energy use by 25% Tr.at in tum can cut down the amount of money you pay for home enetpy (For example· DKJ yQU know that electncal oo"9ts "leak" l;leal? The brocl'lure wil tell you how to prevent,, and save.) T7l9 brochvrfl wrlJ also t811 you about easy thlfl{}Slto do to cffimneys and ffues. to pipes and dtlcts, to shower heads. to 818ctrk;aJ out- lets, to weshfng ~ to <*:lots end win- dow$. to wtWr heelers Do them 81. and cut your Metpy use by 25~ The blOcnure No mere coincidence; it would seem, that inflation and interest rates also rose during that decade, when it was still believed that government could provide for everyone with a minimum amount of pain. Now, we have the pain. There may be reasons for it other than fede-ral debt, but nobody realistically ignores the likelihood that debt bas something to do with the economy's problems, for its hypertension, its high temperature and its tendency lo forget. Kaufman doesn't let the patient forget, though that seems to be the patient's desire. Better, be -seems t.o think, to face the facts -lo be jolted at the curb than to be confronted In the street by a car. He forecasts a record high federal budget deficit of S80 billion, a "tug or war between business and the federal government," and a return to soaring, and maybe even record· matching interest rates. China eyes tourists PEKING (AP) -China ts Sl)rucing up its ancient capital of Xian for a steadily increasing now of tourists visiting the famed 2,000.year-old pottery army and other attractions, the People's Daily reported. In the first 11 months of 1981, more than 57,700 foreigners toured Xian, 75.5 pe~ent more than in the same period in 1980, and they spent more than $13.5 million, the Communist Party paper said. More than 10 million Chinese visited the city. it added. f · contains accurate diagrams sncJ easy to follow d1rectx:>ns Taktt our advrc6. Send for our free brochure. "The 25% Solubon." n can save you plenty of money. ------------------- The ~a to s... £Ml'fl1 8o•S1200, ~O.C.~1 "'-sewndmct~IKlfKfl'l·SIVlflO.monty~npbrocllunr NAME cirr STATE AHE At UANCE TO ~VE ENEM Y MERGER PAPERWORK -Staff members or Bankers Tli.Ust , banking agent for JJ.S. Steel Corp .. make preparations in New York prior to issuing 'checks to people who have ,., ........ tendered shares of Marathon Oil stock. The steel giant took control of Marathon for $6.2 billion. Reagan eyes· productivity hike unleaa this trend is reversed. bipartisan cooperation." WASHJNGTON (AP> -The Reagan administration is relying on a team of scholars, corporate executives and labor leaders lo find a solution to the perplexing problem of steadily declining U .S . business productivity. Once the most prodigious manufacturer of goods in the industrialized world, the United Slates has fallen behind several other countries. President Reagan, lamenting the decline lo productivity. said there can be no economic prosperity Reagan gave a pep talk Wednesday to members of a National Productivity Advisory Comailllee, which be hopes will explain why American business production has deteriorated and now trails tha~ of Japan, West Germany and other industrialized nations . ·'The commission is vitally import ant lo the countTy,'' Speakes quoted Reagan as saying. "We cannot have economic prosperity - sustained 1rowth without inflation -unleaa we have better productivity growth." Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said Reagan told committee members that solving the productivity problem "requires The chief executive told the committee the nation "doesn't need another study, another report. What we need are concrete suggestions and specific recommendations." OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS H:lo~J,:a.\~ cio:-T~: 1~ 1r" r,.ui~~t ~ m; ~g:'lti ..,_,ltt t bids oloGas f.12 "' lnlrallWI ~ 1 PallllB •lld ._, on.rs Ir\' amCIH """ "\Ct Intel 2114 21"' P<G•A ·~rto.tt l'IWIMn as of mlSllr u 16 lnlrcEnr 5¥. • PM1'-YP TIW"' "'IQK do ncit mwltl 1J l~ lntmtGs Mli "'° ~ .. ,.u !n<l-recail onP.,. » 2'Vt ln911Wltl 12\lo 1M "-ME"' ,,..,._._., <-di• ll"lt IW. lwaS.UI ~ w1\/o ~e<1talr lulon ,., ,_...,,.._ C.r•Tt• DI'> ~ JamP., IS\/o 15"' P_E,.,. Stock Bid Asll Cutlrl'd ' 1 lilt Jerico s 11 11\lt Pttrtt 1 ::~t= 1:~1:r gr.~. 11.. I~ ~::r:..d. n" I~ ~=I ,AVM Cp 41/t 4V. 0.ytM s IM 14 ICelr.SI pf 1W. II Pl•'8SS •AAccldcu1.,ray N I 09"1 • """ ~ 1ta1var Iii. '* Plnllrt11 W ICM 11 OolllbAf 26 36\lt Kamen t 17Vt II PlonHIB :~f.e':r: .:--,:: DelC~EI ~ 1~ ~=r.~': :4 i/' ~~~,.,. AIHAIU U ... 2.5¥1 Ol.C:ry1 2211'> 2A l(wffol 21'11. 2t Pl'HGM AH<alnc 4>1Vt 46 OlxnCni lWt a Kl"'ball """-19'111 ~NS«eyn AMH J ,.,. Oo<ull ' 2A 2Allt "''"''"t ~ •' ~9!'lc .,,..,.. .., --Oollf'Gn ..-. ~ l(IOOfG ._ r<OM• Al'urn 4 4~ OoylCIB s 11\o't II KMPaV IS I~ ~Bon ·AGrett ,"" IN Ori.Kn ~ ~ Kretos • '"' Putl>CeP AlnOp I .. u o-110 • ~ ...-. l(ulkk• 11111 1"4 ~rCll •AMlcros J1V. J1-OUrlm s '"" 14 Lefl<•ln ~ 2A lleoen"• !AH•lln• 14\11 14\lli EalnVnc 15'11 1'\/o l.Aftdltft SYt SV. Aay<IWll tAOu.u 1~ 11'4 Ec•Lett 1..-,..,.. ~o ¥'!$ »llt lteyrnnd ;AltHMQ "" Wt EIPHEI 10Z ICM Lflnn ,..,_ ~ ....... ' IAWold s 22 DV. Eldffh ~ 6111 LWStor IM 14" llMlllh ANdlta .--~ EleHucl 1M 12" Llt\But ~ »llt ltottaMy ~An• ,,_ I,_ EIMOCll s D ~ ~ ~ ..-. lt..+on ~ ... ,... ~ 12v. E,nr1>ov ICM 1°"' MCIC D "-A"'9C 1t tt\/o Enr"'-'M MGI" 0 s t SMli., ~PldM t lJlh IN 1 l).16 11~1' MNIGE 1-. l S.JKo ArdeftGp 1"I Mio EnAsv l\'a l \Ct ~IPl 6\lt •v. SIHelGd AtdCola ~ .. Enlwlstl ~ tv. 5irEP 45" 4SVI StPeul AllGILI 1~ 1~ EqutSL ~ 1~ t 514 SV. Scrlt»H I AllanA1 10'4 2CM EqtOll "9 I~ Me llrt 1 .._ ~ Sen-.. lrdC41 Mio Mio wll'SC S-32 ~16 Marlen 1 ..., 64 d llallyPP ..... .._ l"wlTll " ~ MeulLP 2'\f> JI ltEmvt ' 9-HE 10 1CMli l'armGp itVt ,,,. MeyPf 21 Dllt aAs t Bafcll t 11·1' J\11 l'ldl<or ~ l1'lt Mee;. 1 t t l<Ofl• • ... .,, l1l4 n l'IBiSyt Miio J.IV. M< 1"-It SCelWtr Brtl&Mt 10\lo ICM l'llloltn a •11t M< arl le I~ SwEISv ... llne ?.~ W.2., l'tfmpS lW. llY M<°"8Y 11\lt 12 SUl!dyn BanCPt '" ,. f'CWnl'ln ~ S MlduW 17\lo 11 $tc1Mkro .. aL I 2t wt\ifa l'lat911s 21\IJ 21"' Mclldeatl f'llt t Stclll99S IBovMgt I~ IS l'llcllgr 1.-lt MICllllft 1~1' I B9111bC1,do o ICll'Wt 11 l'i.HF!a 24 14\'t MICl~ll t 21'11o 22\lt lrdSon 9"' flh ,..,rocll • 1~ 7-Miii 1"" It Blrtcllr ~ ~ !' ..... to 21 21~ Ml.u IG 14111 11 I Blyvoor °"' 10 l'Ol'tn~ll M ~ MoMa s GYt 4>1 :=~ 1 w1 t.:: ~~s:' = 1: :Sl ! I!... NASDAQ .SUMMARY i ::,~-::-.r am ~~~~' ~ m= =:.::.: = NEW YORK IAPl --I acllw .,,.,. ; a .. nuoS I"' 12\IJ nA11tm '"' •v. MotCl\1111 _, ~ SIO<ll• ..-lied Ir\' HA$0. 6 CHL l"ln 2 214 110ovcs ~ 2 .. Mueller 21\IJ zrv. He-Volume &lei Aslled ~· 1 CPT t !~ .m• n,!'IElln 16 17 Herf'OCtl 1 JD D .....C · · Jltl!O It ""' -"' I C•IWtSv -.(1' "" IOVo HOta I ~ ~ uS-Mf:a m....., I 1·1' I s.n -I.at t CenradH 2" •14 reScn s 1~ I~ HJHGM 1M t4111t Enlttv ... 14UOO "'-l\lo -loll 10 C-.oEn -l~i. ""' ~ NYAlrl _. ~ Me<<~ 2"'--2~ H ..... 11 C.Sw I U U'lt ..,Adv 71 7$ Hk iOG t 1111t 11v. Nu<rp 1.. m.• ,._ ~ +I'-12 ~lnAlr • n Glflnta IW 1' HE 10't4I ~ l'lno .. . a,400 '"' 2 · .. · U C....Cp 16¥1 J7\lt G_.,rad'd Mo 1W. H A ., CSI' MCtC .... 1112,1'0 » ~ + ~ 1' ci-etllllv af\IO lM ..-1P s !0\1119'111 $tsn e 4'\lo .._. $Y<Mer .. lt'J,000 ll'llo 12 ..... IS ClwmS I 11* ""' Herctwu I ellt erGt ~ IN 'Melllrt s.. 1e,ta0 ~ ..... -Ml 1' ~Heu I lt ltMI Hrpll-12" JM HGt 11-ll'llo 1nttl .. . . . 1•,oao 2114 21'1l -"' 11 l>ml.M 1S 16\IJ NanGll IA JISV. NwstPS IS 15\lt II flOtUll 1' 11 HartfNt tl\IJ 21"' Notlell Jl'llo el" AclYanced .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . -It Cllut* 4J\IJ ~ HKlll>O • 17\ifa ,,_ Nucr• • ... M Oo<llned .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. • . to1 20 Clrlk a 6 611t H .. lftllftc M "-NtltrS., 1 11 1"1t \ln<Mn9fd .. .. .. .. . • ... ... 2,110 I CltlSoGe M ... ~I' t7¥ ~ = 17'11 ti Toi.1 1-.. . ... .. . .. .. .. .. .. J.171 ClllUIA a4 ~ ......,,. t ~1' N M Jl\11 Jl'll New llltN . .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. 1' CltlUIB » ~ ~ f'llt ~ ~ 41 .. H--. . . ...... ...... . . .. 4 24 Cl•nJL uw. ~ tHerldtt ... 4Vt Ferro M 1\lt ToUI sells .. . .. .. .. . .. .. . .. .. ts.•.-tS ~UTUAL FUND ' Pct. Up &I U41 IU Up n.J Up 2111.0 u, lt,O U41 It.I u, 17.t Up 11A "" 11.J tip IU U. IU U. IU Ut1 IU u .. IU Up 11.1 u .. 11 .. Up IU' U41 tU Up tU Up IU U~ IU "" 11..2 Up llA Up 11.1 Up II.I Up 11.1 Up 11.1 lltt. Off IU Off IU Off IU Off tU Off 11.S Off 11.S Off 11.1 Off ICU Off 10.t Off .... Off 10.0 Off It.I Off .... Off t.S Off 1.1 Off ... Off LJ Off Li Off .. , °" 7.t Oft 1.J Off 1.1 Off 1.J Off 1.J Off J.J Nl. Hl. NL NL C.llMJ•M71. ,.,. ......... to wwti fol,... • 8 .. . If you mutt ••U your bome ln today'• depceued real estate market, wh1 act crab all tbe advaatact1 of a "lrado-lnt" 11'• commonolae• procedure w\\.b lbe family car, so why not wflh lbe family boaae? Utldet thll arrancement, • broker buJt your bouH, thu• 1Mnt you t.be equity t.o buy anotber home. Sine• the sale and a qulck buy rtalty combine two tranuctlons, many liminc problem• uauaUy usoclaled wlt.b bouHs are eliminated. For all concerned, a lradMlt can-have many 1&dvantases. In use are three different type1 of lrade·lnl: 1) Under the "outright trade-lo," ~ the broker buys your bouse outright, and you apply the equity • :" ~~l~,:i:t ~o= IJllll _ PllTll & Z This is like an .. .:::1..- excbange, since the two t.ranaactioru are completed simultaneously. For the seller, it's the best arrancement; you're relieved of owning llwo houses at the same time. From the broker's viewpoint, an outright trade-in is the most risky; it should be used only tn a much stronger market than today's, when the broker won't be stuck with the house. ' If the property represents a good long.term Investment and the broker is wiUint to put money into the house, this trade·in is attractive. New·bome builders also may like such trade·ins, since they are prepared to carry an inventory of houses anyway. 2) Most frequently used is the "guaranteed , trade-in'' plan. The broker is g1ven a specified time period in which to sell the bouae at an agreed·\lpon price, explains Prentice·Hall. If the broker is successful, the homeowner cets the entire price, less broker's commission, even if it is more than the price agreed upon. If the house doesn't sell, the broker buys it at a slightly lower price to compensate him or her for the risk and expense of carrying the property until it finally is sold. For you, the homeowner. the deal .works out ao you are assured the minimum price for the boue by the time title to the new house must be. taken. Tb.ta, ypu are relieved or some of the pressures of timlni. The broker assumes &-conditional Abli&ation, but in most cases will not be asked to futrall it. • If you, the homeowner, need Immediate cash, the broker can arrange to advance tbe guaranteed amount (to be repaid with interest). In this way, you are actually in the same position as if there bad been a direct trade-in. 3) The "contingent trade·in" combines an option agreement on the old house and a conditional sale or the new one. The two contracts or sale are executed simultaneously, with the contract for the purchase of your new home conditioned upon the resale of the old one within a set period. If the broker is unable..to complete the resale in time, both contracts are canceled. Since the broker doesn't have to lie up any working capital, the arrangement is beneficial. The success of a contingent trade-in depends on the willingness of the seller of the new house to tie up his or her capital for the optioa period. But as Prentice·Hall says, lhe seller of the new home can limit his or her obligation to keep the property available by providing that the conditiona.l contract may be terminated upon so many days' written notice. Whether an "outright," a "guaranteed" or a "contingent" trade-in, all are aimed at helping you keep your capital as liquid as possible -and easing the problems lhat almost always arise between broker and homeowner on timing of original sale, replacement, etc . While the outright trade·io is tbe most advantageous to the home seller, the guaranteed does appear the most equ.itable both to you and to your broker and therefore it lhe plan you both abou.ld weigh first and most carefully. Trade-ins IJ\Ue &ood sense. !STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW .JONES AVERAGES. NtW YO.Kl.AP) Fhwl o..J--. • 'Ntw YORK (AP) -Selft. Tiwn. price ThwtMY. JM. 7. ,,_,Ml dWl9t f/I .. 11tt1ett -ectm I . . =.... y~ n:r-:: •.. .--. m '"" ~ m. ~ f.~. :. MMll 1 t,tll... zt\o\ _ .. • T"' MAt ft.ID JM.• ...,.._ ta 1aM 7SI-,.-. II Ult ICllUI w.21 *A6 tW.1\-'-"· aaMAINr ..... '~ .::_· .. ~ 5411 a.II.JI M2.6e 117.la M .1._ ut l!••Ofl. u.)ii --·~ ...................... ·····-EU•-Co so IOI 2~ :+. ij Trell .. .. . .. . . .. .. .. • .. .. . . '§ ' A-.. TOT •:.t •11t _ ~ Ulllt .................... .. =:Ind I :::: :· ~ : Stll • .... •. • • .. • .. • .. • .. •.. I MGIC lllY ..... -+ -WHAT STOCKS" DID ~=" :;;..: a ~I \41 1 . NIW YOfllK I.AP! JM. 1 ,.._..._ en..-'"' -\41 WtlflWC-*·-SJ"-+ • T-:z. a.n c..... --..-JM + .., ...... _.~ _., c._ .._.. ,,.., + .,. ;;c-j; ,.. . cu ..... I_ ''" ==-.: WMtT-JgiQ AMERICAN LEADERS lflW vo.-K CAPI Ja11. 1 "'-· Mv8'1Ced T-W. •sr. DK..._ IM ~~· ¥=: -1$1 ,., .......... I 1 .... -. .. 21 .. . u '· ,. ~ .. aw vo.-ic CAPI .,,,, .. let• .................. ~ .... T ...... ,.,._. • ~'.:~• .... I...., ... "1' ... llflUf. ....,. .... I lnW • ......... f//fftUL . .............. ....., .......... ... . .. .. ._.... •c-. ·-"""-.. ...,,., ...... . . f 1 a IJ lJ • " u a ) , . • I i r I ~ 1 l I· 1 ~ ~ I ·"I wi~.thty'd get to a commercial pre~ soon so 1 could go to the bathroom." . by Br:ad Anderson . '~You forgot to say goodbye to him." · 1 THINK l'LL . 00 SOME C.ATE.RWAULINGJ TONIGMl' IT N~EDSA · 5CIM'FIC Ml~ T~ SOL. VE IT! ~ --- I 15 l'01' A RXX.ISH M0'1H1 ~ HAS Sfftk;EP Me frolt Wll\JeS I~ PA cRUeL. FLAMl:OF~· ,_. ~ • SHOE "Don't you two have a serious bone In your body?" DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum ~~ • 1~'r THERE SQHE ~TO TAI<£ A 6A7U . wmwr emrt( AU. WET? ' NANCl' OH, PEEWEE ---RUN INTO THE KITCHEN ANO GET HEA BANANA GoRDO ---AND PLEASE STEP ON IT FUNkl' •INKER•EAN ~re.NI UOE!> ... I )CNOUl 1Hf1f ~'S c.ENTCR 15 016, eor I aw:H ~Ll ••• ! corr l£f ~ 5'ZE N-lD STRENG1M lmlMIOOE ~ { NE. OU10EO'f0~~ A •RWt ~tN \ ~ ~. AHO i>U'Rt WW flRSI 'l)S'fi 1·8·12 so YOU CAN -rAKe YOUR SHOWeR NOW, eu-r PON'"f° use -rHe IOWE!L-S.' by Jeff MacNelly 11'MT1_, 51~1NG VP~ 'A~ITYAY. by Ernie Bushmiller \ \//; / C..,_,_..,..._..... l·B·BJ. by Gus Arriola by Tom Bat1uk . by Kevin Fagan '· ' - Oranoe eo... DAILY PtLOT/Frtday, January 8, 1882 IACRAlll:NTO CAP.> -A •tate ~ cowt .... N,lected a v .. ~ mu'• complaint U..l \be woman wit.Iii wboGI be llYtd. bad ·Da11ed blm lato acr..a.. to cltYlde tom• ..... •tawwbMr. WlllllUM•wu,....., ti•• pa&r IDO¥.t NH totfl'W1 and la October lt'18 t.My ana tbelr lawyen lllMd the written alfffm•nt to a1vtd.• Ua. ..... ettat., the court Hid, reJ•ct.ed Sclunot•a eompJalnt Jll Wldue lnftue11ee. A uaanlspoua thrtt·member paaeJ ol tbe 3rd Dls<rtet Cowt ol A•peal upheld a 1871 written a1retaaeat betwttn Barban llMalfMld and lfortoD Sebw>e to ..... ...,,.. ol ')l'Operty tbey aequ.l.Nd earlier. Selunoe......,. ukM •Yuba OOunty Superior Court Jt.adtt Lo eanetl tM .,..eement, bued OD 1tatemenw ol ftve trltne1ae1. Sum•arblnc tbe1r tatlmoay, tbe appHll CO\lrt Hid tbtY alle1ed that lb. Shuf(leld "cursed baraued, na11ed bad1ered and otberwl1t did everyUUa iD ber power to make Ille mlMratile tor Scbmoe un&U. b e ac.reed to 1l1n Uu 1tJpuJaUaa." The appeal• court •1reed, BoUnc that botll aldtt new • •ult was pendtn1 aad bad llW)'tH rHd Hd Ill• tfae asreemet. TM court a11o noted that the elalei ol undue~ wH madt nearly two JtlU'I after tbe aireement waa tloed. lebmoe ~tended be WU the vietlm ol u6due inllue.nce in 1lpm, U. ... ment, Tbe eour( aald tbt couple •tac1ed ~vi* toeetMr lA 1'7C aD4 apUt qp 1Jn llarcb llr78. Ill. SbQffleld tbea 1ued over an alletecl oral acreement to divide property. Scbmoe "mat heve Jlad 1eeond thou1ht1 about •lCDlnl the 1Upu11.Uon but till• ol no import; feelln&• ol resret cannot be equted with not.IOU of \mdue tnlluenee,'' wrote JuatJee Robert Pu~!•. He also 1ald the f aet that the two were living to1ether didn't neceaaarily mean they were In a "confidential" or tru1t1n1 relatlonablp that was prone undue lnftueace. But fbe &l]>el'lor Court Jude• ruled that tbe two weH not bl a relationablp of tru1t tbal wu prone to abuse wbeo tbe aareement was •lrned, u' ., ........ Repentant thief returD8 . GARDEN CITY, Kan. (AP)_;,, Tbe manaeer of a dlacoun' store says a repentant thief bas ,helped restore bis faith in people. Wayne Vanetta said a man came to tbe Alco Diacount Store to pay $700 plWI $200 interest for goods be said be bad stolen in 19'15. Vanetta said the man told him be was a student at Garden City Community College lo 1975, when be was apprehended for shop1ifting at the st.ore. Tbe young man told Vanetta he wanted to pay for the stolen 100dl to clear bis conscience. He said be was thankful be w u cau,bt and kept from a bl'e al crime. He then paid the money in casb . CttARQED -Claus C. vonBulow. right, arrfves at a Newport. R.l., courthouse for a pre-trial hearing into ch arges he attempted to kill his wealthy wife with Vanetta declined to release the nnm'a name and did not "'say what . kind of coods tbe man bad stolen. . insulln injections. ''Parter, Morton, Dualmon and CUta.p6e. '' Facing death living task. MEMPRJS, Tenn. <AP> -S111y Dwyer, mother of six and wire ot a City Court Judie. talks easily on a subject most people abun -death. A professional mortician, sbe is fascinated with tbe reaction of tbe Uvin1 to dying. "People have skip,ped the psycbolo1ical upecta of death," ahe aald. "Death lan't aomethinc most people talk about in polite society," said Mrs. Dwyer, a recent graduate of the Guptoo.Jooea CoUece of Funeral Services iD Atlanta. "They say, 'Sbe pused.' What did she pass? Or they say, 'He expired,' like be was a magazine subscription." Born iD MempbiJ to a mother who was a lawyer and a father who was an electrical en1ineer, Mrs. Dwyer was a medJcal artiat for a prominent local physician for~ yean. Before entering Gupton-Jones, she served two years of 40-bour weeks at a local funeral home as a mortician's apprentice. During that time she helped embalm 25 bodies. She bad no real intention of going on to a professional mortician's school, but sbe found she couldn't renew her apprentice license without further training. "And 1 knew, with aU the famUy 1 bad, I'd have to get away. There's a school lo Nashville, but that wasn't far enough. 1 couldn't be coming home every weekend,'' sbe said. So she enrolled for a year's course at Gupton-Jones in Atlanta -without a c:olleee de1ree, tbe training requires two years. In a class of 120, she was one of about 25 women, and earned the Distinguished Achievement Award . ......,"'+-~~--~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ....... ~~~-When she told him abe was moving to an SDlllS BENSON HAu.. JL LT. CQL.L GEORGE A HARMAN BENSON, JOHN .. SlD" HALL, JR .• CLARENCE SIMMS, age 81 resident or Hunt\ngton died on January l, 1982 at St. a resident of Santa Ana. Ca Beach. Ca. Passed away on Joseph'• Hospital, leevln& Passed away on Monday Januar y 5, 1982. He is his wile Diane. The family January 4, 1982 in Santa survived by his wire Linnea, requests no rlo"".ers please Ana, Ca. Col. Simms had sons Arnold or Scottsdale, a o d p I ease send a 11 served in the U.S. Marine Arizona and Ray of Newport contributions to St. Joseph's Corps during World War I Beach, Ca .. sister Cora Alcoholic Unit or So1&th. and wltb tbe U.S. Army Nelson or Mission Viejo, Ca., Coast Community Church during World War 11 and the s grandchildren. Services Private services to be held ltoJ'ean War. When ln Costa will be held on F riday, on Tuesday, January 12 llesa, Ca. he was an active January 8. 1982 at lO:OOAM 11182. member or St. loachim's at Pacific Viow Chapel, MILSTEIN Parish a nd was also a New port Be a c h , Ca . HERMAN MILSTEIN m ember or the Reserve Interment al Pacific View passed away on January 5 Officers' Club. Beloved Memorial Park. In lieu or 1982. Survived by his slslet busband of Rulb Simms and nowers the family suggests Jean Lerner or Chicago beloved father of J obn contributions to the Arthritis llllnols and friend Rein1 ·(Jad:) Simms of Riverside. foundation. Pacific Vie" Rose Susco of Long Beach C.a •• George R. Simms or Mortuary direct.ors. Ca. Graveside services wil Costa Mesa, Ca. and BROWN be held on Friday, Januar> 4lau1hter Eileen Murphy of S A R A H E V E L y N 8, 1982 at 9:00AM at Harbo1 Ont.ark>, .(;a., al9<>-surviving BR ow N , r es l den l o r-t...a w n M emorl a l Park . are 9 &randchildren, and 6 Newport Beach, Ca. Passed·Servlces under the dlrectior 1reat·1 r a ndchildren. away on January s. 1982.tof Harbor Lawn·MountOllv1 Prlen(ls may call at Plerce She is survived by her· Mortuary or Costa Meu. ttrothers Bell Broadway husband Stewart E. Brown'540·55S4. Mortuary oft Thurs d ay, of Newport Beach. Ca., bis WILLIAMS l anuary 7, 1982 from 9:00AM soes George Fisher of Santai THEO DO RA CLAPP toe:OOPM. Massof'Christlan Susana, Ca. and Jobn Flshe:r WILLIAMS. age 59, resident • Burial will be celebrated at of Santa Ana, Ca .. daughter oCCoronadelMar.Ca .. passe<' T:30PM on ·Thursday , Karen of Newport Beach, away on December 30. 198 January 7, 1982 at St. Ca. and 7 grandchildren. at Flagship Convalescen JoachJm's Catholic Church. Final interment services Center In Newport Beach Inte rme nt 'will be at wtll be held at the family Ca. She rs survived by he1 Jllverside National plot at Westm i nsterhu s band , Bailey A Cemetery. ~ce B~otbers C e m e t e r y • N o r t b WUllams, Corona del Mar Bell Broadway Mortuary Middletown Towns h i p . Ca., daughter. J an Williams ~lr:;;:;ton:;;·~ea:;:;;;;:;:=:=:;;;;:-i Penns y l van I a . Harbor Prlncetoft. New Jersey, 101 •. Lawn-Mount OUve Mortuary Steven B. Williams o Ob.al MOlnUAl•S of Costa Mesa Corwardlnl'Denver, Colorado. sister L-ouna Beach directors. 540-SSS4. llarearet Clapp Webster o •494·9415 · CAMPANOZZI Labalna, Miui. Hawaii. Laguna Hills MARYtJT. CAMPANOZZJ Born on January_ 17, 192' 768-0933 realdeot Ot Costa Mesa are~in Los Angeles. Ca.. Mrs San Juan Ca.ptsvano for 20 years. Pused away o Williama graduated with the 495-1n6 January s. 1982 She I class of l!l19 at HunUneton survived by her husband 0 Beach .Kiih. ~hoot. She was SS years Rocco, b e mamedtoMr.Wfffiamstor ~LAWN-MT. OUYI dauabter Rose Snyder o~~ years. and ~evoted her Moft"c-::,;.~1•ry Cerritos, Ca., aooa Frank 0 life to her family and the 1625 Gisler Ave Huntington Beach, Phil o L o r d . S h e d I e d o f Costa Mesa Whittler, ca .• and Joe 0 complications caused by 540-5554 Hawthorne, ca .. 2 brothers. multiple sclerosis wblc~ stl& s sisters. 9 erandchlJdren bad for over 30 years. She and 1 1r .. t-1raadchlld. was conlllM!d to the ,-1a11hlp Recitation oftbe ~U>' riiJConvalescent C.nter •Ince be OD Thunday, J8ft. 7, 1iii!Oclober t. 19'1. A me~ortal· at ?PM at St. Jobn the aervlce will be held on .BapUst Catholic: CtMattb and Friday, Jan11ary 8. 1-.Z at M~n or the Resurrection l :OOPM at CaJvary Church. wlll be on Friday Jan. 9 1010 Tustin Ave .• Sant.e Ana. t• at 10AM at St.'Johtl tilt Ca. In lieu of fJowera, BapUlt Catholic Church witb contrlbCltJont may be made interment at Good Shepherd t o T h e G I d e o n • Cemetery. Services under lnterna\lonal, Santa Ana the dlr•cllon of Balta Cam~ P.O. Bo. 1'71, Santa Ber1eron-Smllb fr TutllJU Ana. a. "'s;'w Wntdlfr Chapel Mortuary WALTER G. STAAK, olc.ta ..... ....,l, lrHldent of ffuetln1too l'OllD ~leacll. Ca. f« the pat\ 25 FRANK PHILUP !'ORD, tart. PHa•d 1way Oft &oa1!time retidenl of ~WI anuary 2, 11111. Sutvtvtd by hacb, C.. Pu.Md away U\lp.., Dorothy Bont1 of December 11. t•1. Ra 11 r.t Bt..,, Ce .• 1later AUc. aaniTtd bJ bis dHPtft',,llolfmao ·of 1>tl Kar, Ca., Aatolnette llal'ul ol SllY#C:::dau1bter, Jeanne lprlap. lbrJled and b1 of Calllonala and I bb IOll hllMJ .llklulel Pd~at·ar&Mtoot. Funeral of Laa v.,., Nenda. a. .. r•tcH were bt ld on -.Or of '* ~ Mi...-,, Jeuary 'I, 1• at .Ul be cm J__, t1 1• :OOAM at Pactflc: View l :GOAll at M. Calnertaa' ~· a.n~ llndtr tbe Ca"oHe Cbureb, L•IUD .a r • • U • • o I 8 a l ti 8eaell. Ce. MeC•.:!:'riMNll1aiUI • 'hU.UI MorturJ, Lapaa ..._ ._. llOl'taarJ dlriicWs. eo.aa ...... .....,1, . Atlanta apartment to study mortuary science, her husband, Buddy, a fofmer ctty commtuiooer, threw up bis hands and sald, ·'Anything 11ae wants!" Mrs. Dwyer's entire funily attended ber sraduation in the •Prinl. and she betao wort at i local funeral home Oct. 1. She is serious ln her devotion to continuing eduution for morticians. "It's absolutely essential to keep up with current developments. Set-much is beio& denJoped in this field, it's not eoouch to read a few Joumala and tblnk you know what's loinl oo." . And she's dedicated to eneoaraclnl a realistic approach to death, even amoq children. "Death must be faced as a reality," she said. "l want to see little c~dren taken into f'J)leral bomes to see granddaddy in his casket; to be told the truth. They take it in their stride beautifully.'• Mrs. Dwyer aaid she plans to emphasize counseling the grief-stricken iD ber work. 'T\merals are for the mental health of the bereaved loved ones," she said. "A &ood funeral service ts an asset because it creates good mental health. You must give a lot of yourself, be compassionate without becoming involved." c ......... ftlL'Y PILOT tit .... , e •••"" .......... .. ...... re,ulr•M•ftte for ....... . ,. ...... ... ................. 142•321 unm . I j; I l I Oratfge Cout DAILY PILOT/Ft1d~. Ja,,uary I, 1112 ' It may Hem too cold to think ahead to !ummer but your our1try wlll be featurln1 , umme' bloomlna buJbe and corma tbil month uch u trl&rldla, w•taonla, cannu, UUea and 1ladJolua. Tbeae f avorltes are uaually a sell-out and 1ardetlera buy early to lnlure1111ooclaelecUon. Don't let the names tripidia end wataoaia icare you off. lnltead, be on the lookout tb1J month for them. Tri&rldia bulbs will bloom for up to two months with lar1e s-e lncb blOllODll at tbe end of ~ lnch stem.a. The colors ranie h'om wblte to rellow, orance. scarlet, pink and Wac. There ia also a strain that bears nowen with tl&er spotted inner petals and known more commonly u the Jilnlcan shell flower. Wat.sooiaa are related to 1lada except their tlowen are smaller and the planta crow taller - up to six feet. They come in both evercreen and deciduous varieties. The evergreen varieties are frost tender; while the deciduous variefies are tJardy. They comein many shades of pink, red and white. Gladiolus are an all·time favorite and should be planted at 10-day intervals starting now so that the blooming season can be extended. Lilies are best planted as soon as you get the b\llbs to keep them from drying out. Be sure to choose a well ~raining location for they don't like wet feet! Canna r hizomes should be available now also. They give you brilliant color with their foot-long flower spikes ln the shades of red, yellow and pink. They'll bloom from early summer to frost time. Canoas will range in size from 1~ to s feet and their foliage is a dark and light green and deep bronze which makes the canna a perfect accent for . •ny sunny garden location. ~ PLANTING TIME -Now is the time to plant those summer blooming bulbs such as gladiolus. lilies. Mexican shell flowers and watsonias . Shade trees available now Since it is bareroot season, you should be' thinking about planting some shade trees. If ~elected now in bareroot form, you will find that they can be grown both easily and successfully. Ask your nurseryman for the names of trees adaptable to your area. Let him explain the growing conditions that are needed and guide you to trees that have the proper size, growth habit and speed of growth for your particular landscape. A slow grower is the goldenrain tree (Koelreuteria paniculata) which reaches 30 feet in an open style of growth. It is deciduous and rather long-lived. A taller grower ls the maidenhair tree ( Gingko biloba) which usually reaches 75 feet at full ~aturlty. Its fan.s haped medium green leaves 'urn gold in the fall before dropping off. Plant only the male as the fe males produce a smelly fruit. For hot and dry areas, the California Association of Nurserymen s u ggests the ''Moraine" ash, mulberry or the Chinese pistache. f course the trees mentioned here are · ust a sampling of what is available an bareroot rorm so be s ure to check with your local nurseryman. To plant bareroot stock, prepare the planting hole before you pick out the trees. This should be dug larger in width than the area encompassed by the roots when they'r e spread out which can be from 18 inches to two feet wide. Set the tree in the soil at the same depth It was ln the nursery. Place it on a mound of soil in the bottom of the hole and then spread the roots out. When you fill the hole, use 50 per~e_~ 91 native s oil and 50 percent organic matter. After filling it t hree-fourths of the way full, so~ jt with water to selUe the soil and then flll in with the rest of the 50/50 mix and water again. You will also find these bareroot trees in plantable containers which you can put into the s oil, pot and all. It will blodegrade as time passes. Following your nurseryman's suuestions in tree selection, plantinc methoda and eventual care, should give you a shade tree that will bring you beauty and eltjoyment for years. . Floral arts group will meet TM Oran1e County P1ora1 AN Guild wlll meet Mood•y to bear Mrt. Cbarlea Puckett of Fresno 1peak on nower arraniinl. TM cneettq ii Ml for the Woman's Club cl SUta Ana, IOI N. Baker St., It 10 a .m . For more lnformatJon call Mrs. Arthur Ruhli1 at M4·1117. THE ORANGE County Branch of tbe Cymbldium Society of America will meet T\lelday Garden Calendar at 8 p .m . in the Weatmlnater Civic Center's Community Services Room. Ned Nub, of Armacoet and Royatca, will dlacuu orchids 1rowo outside and anawer au orchid related quesUona. JAPANESE GARDENING will ~ t.be aubjed ,of landscape lf'cbltect Fredrick Lane next Thursday when the Friends ol the Hortense Miller Garden meeta at 7:30 p.m . ln tbe Lapoa Federal Community Room, 280 Ocean Ave., Lapna Beach. Lana bu Juat returned from a month's vtalt to Fuchsia~ society names officers New officers wUI be installed by the Costa Mesa-Bay Cities Branch of the National Fuchsia Society Monday. They are James Perkina, prdident; Mary Warwick, vice president; Eliaabeth Bronston, corresponding secretary; Gladys Carl, rec:ordin1 secretary and Charles Laudenberser. membership chairman. Otber officers are Hermann Schlueter, treasurer and national representative; William Rhoton, alternative representative; Mary Warwick, refreshment chairman and Bette Bronston, publicity. The officen will be installed in the Community Center, 1MS Park Ave., Costa Mesa, at 7:30 p.m For more information call 548-8207. 111•1111 CllClllll • Don't ml.as the creat bartaina during the bareroot sea.son. Plant shade and fruit trees, roses, grape and berry vines. • Have you made your first planUn1 of gladiolus yet? If not, it's time to select your favorite colors at your nearest nuraery. • Put in your perennial vegetables now: artichokes, asparagus and rhubarb. • A light winter feediq can green up a tired lawn. Japan and wlll ahare hit experieacH 111d knowlqe. The meettnc t. opeo to the public and refrHbmenta will be served. For more Information call La1una Beach (:Jty lfall at 411-1311. THE 80VTB COAST Garden Club wUI meet WednOlday at 11 : 30 a. m . in t.be Three Arcb Bay ClubbouM, SO S. La Senda, South '4tuna, to hear Mrs. Dooa1d Geor1e speak on "bcitlq Table SetUnp For All Occaalooa." Mrs. Geor1e la a muter flower show Judie and editor ot ''Golden Ga.rdem. •• The South Coast Garden Clob recently announced wtnnen at lta benefit for the Crown Valley Community Park Botanical Gardena. They are lone Jeffrey, first prbe; Steven Cox, second prize and Catherine McDonald, third prize. Congratulations to those winnln1 South Coaat Garden Clubbera. .Arrange1nent classes slated A claas ln the fundamentals of flower arranging will be offered at Saddlebaclt Collece ln Minion Viejo durin g t he spring semester beginning J an. 18. The course includes basic skills applicable to desianinl at home o r to entry.level employment in the retail noral profession. Course topics include plantin1 small green plaMA, workina with dry materials, sUlt and fresh floweT"'Vranti.nc. Field tripe are acheduled to wholesale flower markets and nower l"Owera. For registration information, contact the Saddleback College Admissions Office at 831""5SS. Plant chen-iea For color during two seuoos of the year, plant flowering Japanese cherries. In spring, their blooms burst into a spectacular display and in fall before they shed their leaves, they take on fall hues ln vivid and lovely ihades. Gardeners living in milder coastal regions can even enjoy fall color with the nowering cherries. Plant them DOW during the bareroot season. Camellias, like few flowering shrubs, ~UJive happily for years with their roots crowded into a t ub. They seem, if anything, happier for the discomfort than not. So, it ls the wise gardener who cboo6es a durable container when planting a camellia this way. taking into consideration that he won't have to move it up to a size larger pot for a long time. Geraniums grow like weeds ln California's favorable climate, but that doesn't mean the gardener should treat th·em as such. Leave them unpruned year after year and they will soon look like weeds. Prune them back severely to two to three buds above the ground level. They will put __ . . _. • Whe n pruni n& roses, leave only the f rth J b wtb d 1-1. bet•-th b NS 16349 ,ICTmous •Vl'M•n P1CT1W eutt•aa Pecnw ..,..... h lthi . o new us gro an uua ...::r an ever y NOTICE OF DEATH OF MNM STATaJqMT ..-..n•TC•HT n. ~~':. ...,. i---e_a __ es_t._m_oe_t_vi-=-g_o_r_o_ua_c_an_es_. __________ s_u_m_m_er_. ----------------~ONALD ~X UMME ~~:~~"~"1s ~n1~~-~~-~--··-------------------------------------· A k a D 0 NA L D M . e. GORDOtt &ALL a.No SON, ce> wn Juoa; c•> tuNHT GH ~RTlES, 1IMI~ • 8 A.MMES A.ND o F 1m1 s.ne. uw.n.a Street. F-.i..1r> "AC'"'c CHUTSM. ten'"• VIN ~~·--~:CAW:::,, P E T I T I 0 N T 0 Velley,c:.tlfonllat71111 Or .. Hwtllo ..... ollMcl\,CAflMJ Jon R-rt Bell, 11121 S.nte OeYld l.M ..... Mier, Mn II• ..._.. .... ...., ...,id,..r, CA ADMINISTER ESTA.TE L•ur•ll• Slrffl, Founteln Velley, VllUDr., ... Al.,.._:...._CA~ .... NO. A-111670. C•lltorftiet71111 J.-. Mii .......... ..,, .... ,.,...~:y~~=--T 0 a II he Ir s , Tiiis ~·Is cOftduei.cs ..., .. v111eor .. ~9McJl..CA"'41 Tt1a ....... 1s · ......... ~ .... -..... lndlvldu.I. -"'"...,..It C........-.., .. "" ---•.-.-... ,beneficiaries, creditors JonR_,,a.11 .,,....,c.....,..&'""9>. .,,..._., 41nd contingent creditors of T1:11 11e...._c •• 111..s w1tt1 o.. Oewldl......WMl9t' "'" :=,.~ .... -.,. DONALD MAX BAMMES. county c .. n ot o ... ,. county on Tllll .....,,_ -t11ect wtt11 tt:e c .... , °"" et Or-. ~ • a k a D 0 N A L D M . DKembet' .10. 1"1· "11'112 ~~. ~ Of 0r.,._ c..My ... OK. 21, 1'11. i8AMMES and persons """''"*'°'.,..coast oeuy Puoc, "'"* Jectl9a.~•----"'1Mllj ~ho may be otherwise Jen1,a.u.12,1te 10M1 ,.....,...0r.,.c.o.teo.1ty"I•. ,..._,. .. '--fnte rested In the will 1---=----------""_... __ OK.U , lll1,J ... i.i . u. "12 w 1.., ..,..,.w .... ,.,.. ....... and/or estate: -•.,. •""' · ..... ....,.a...,..... ~ llK ~ .... CA ... A petition has been filed PlllC •11£ ..,,_.1.._. 0r ... c:..se 0.11, Piii!«. by DORIS M . PHILLIPS, "~~~!~~=::s _ o.c.u.1t11,J ... 1.1.1s.1• s-.~ ~ k a D 0 R I s M A R I E Tl•• followlng PUHn Is doln9 "'CTITIOUI &USIN•M 'PH I LLI PS In the Superior bvslnenes: Tll• ,:.=~..:T:!'::!".T,. dolr19 P9lJC 9ITll Court of Orange County TAllNOWSKE CONSUL TING. tMlslneun: •---------- requesting that DORIS M. ~1:,:.';!i::,~. N--1 hed\. oa.s HOTl!L coNsuLTANTS, ,1CTtnousau11MH1 PH I LLI PS, aka DOR IS It~ R•lell T~•. 1101 C)U MeCAl"tliur Blvd.. •••. .... MAMlllTATaJMMT . .1u A R I E p I p S N9W-' lleedl, Cellftlrftle ftMo T ....... _...,. per-•re -..,.. rn H LL I be BerUlilr• L•IM. Newport BHcli, Fred Gl•1>e111. HH Le ,u, MIMU•: ilppolnted as personal ceuiom1etMM a.-lmM111t,c.11tom1e""7 "La. M DAIRY", 1112 SeM.e AM f e p r e s e n t a t i v e t o 1,.!1~1~~ " ~ ..., ... "•••• SNw, 11a E11c•typtus, Aw-. c--. c:.tlfornle nu7 administer the estate of R-...R. re-Bree.ce1tfonll4inu1 T• v. u.. sm Ouk,_ A-. Till1 lllal-Is C-leof by en lnrlM.~'27M DONALD MAX BAMMES Tiiis ,..,..,,_, •• tlled wtu. .,,. ""''"'°'Pllr-•-letleol o«Nr tMn c-. u.. sm Ouk'-a.-. aka D 0 NA L D M : =~';.~,:,Or•-C-ty Oft .,.rtMofllp, lnolfte,c:..llforftle'2714 BA MMES, Costa Mesa. ,,,,,,, Tl:ll ::.: .. ., flled wllfl ... 1.J1~1~_,,_. Is coMilclM .., -t a . ( u n d e r t h e ,..,.,.1_ 0r.,.. c-t oe1•y '"1'"· c .... n1y c 1er11 o1 Or•-county °" T• v • .__ f n d e p e n d e n t JWl.l,l,U,22,tta -.,, DK.,.,.,-.,1 .. 1 Tiiis _. wes llled wm. ... Administration of'Estates • "11'741 CCMllllY Clerll of 0r.,.. c-ty Ofl ~ct). The petition Is set for -• .-nH Pu1141"*' 0r.,. co ... i Detty f'llot. Dec. 1•. 1t11 L ,._,., -llK J .... I, I. IS, 2l. ltC ~I "1"81 ~·earing In Dept. No. 3 at1 •. ----'·"--------..-"'*1.._. 0r.,.. CMSt o.itv Pilot 100 Civic Center Drive MINaCOUltTOP P9JC 911a 0ec. "· u. "'1.J ... 1.1.1"2 ~t. .West, Santa Ana, CA 92701 CAU,_MA.COUWTT •n February 3, 1982 at 9:30 0110.~~·uusa ~1CT1nouuu11 ... 11 a.m. . l'OtlCMAW•OP•AMa MAM•ITAT•MaMT IF YOU OBJECT to the • CAM MU,_.• An.._ Tl:• 1011ow1n1 P•rso11 11 do I no granting of the petition 111 tM MeftH et .. AtlPllCMlell o1 lluslnessH: ~OU Should either appear =·~i:..:.~N JOHNION For, NEWNP~:,."~: ... ~R~:. ·:.: ... 1C..~s at the hearing and state "ATRICIAANNJOMNSONl:esfllect T-00 , ... 8alH:oO StrHt, Coato 'your o~ectlons or file • cietll..,. 111 w. c..-t lw en.,_. Meae.eeilffom1enw ""'rltten' Jectlons with th e11owt119 ,.uu-r to cliefl .. lier Denni• 111111 ... so2 1 .. c Bey, "" e ne me lrom PATRIC I A /I, N N B•lllOe,CellfWlll•n.61 'court before the hearing. JOHNSON to ENGRIO OCTAVIA Tiiis ........_. 11 <Oftduc:IH ., •n \~our appearance may be Jo+4NIOHTURNER. llldh•~ ...__1 b It 11 ..._, ..... tllel eH ,._ ......, I Mites n person or y your lntereateof tn '"' ,,...,., ••orwaeld Tiiis ~• •• flled wltll.,,. attorney. •PP••• hlore tl:h co .. rt 111 CCM1ntv cten o1 Ore,... CIMlnty °" I F Y 0 U A R E A 09.-,.._ No. 1 et 100 Clvk C9fltltr o.c.mller 111. '"1 r. R E D I T 0 R 0 r a .,, ............. s.... ~ CM-·· Ofl P11411blled Or ... c-0.11~'= contingent creditor of the t'.:;!!;.~=~~"·.:;·c:;: J .... 1.1.1s.u.11111 we1•1: deceased, you must file 1:ew • ....,. ..... ,........ 1w ~ o1 • • • _. • • •+· · 'tour clalm with the court -,.,... ,... ... .,.,.... Pm.C lllll "tCTlTIOUI IWltMRM •AMSITATSMllMT' Tl:• follewln.e per..., la .. ,,., -1-.. : URBAN LANO RISCA.RCH ASSOCIATES, *YI~ A-, B ............. ~.,.., RM9n AIOn ....... k--. *¥1 Olemonct Avonue, B•lll»Oe ttleilCt, Cellfonllet*2 Tiiis ~-Is Condlilc:tltd by ... lndlvlduel 11-.n A. Helldr1dl ... Tl:lt ~ w• llMd wlttl t1:e CCM1nty Cler1: of Or911t9 c-t, 1111 Oeumber 7. 1•1 """' l'\IMI.._. Or .... C.... ~ly Pfllat, Dec. II. u. ,..,, J ... '· •• tta S41M1. pr present It to the .._:: !-~.::::.. U: :.:C.: Jr----------.. personal representative '"TM Deity,.,...• •••••.-r., "=:!=:r• appointed by the court ..,.n1 clruilMIOfl, .........-"'"'" TM ........... ___ ...,...,._--,-~~-"-, ... -... -.. -...... -.-.. "'"· -..., 'Within four months from <_.., .. ...,... Oflte • --'-..,.....: 1w111iaiTAT'iMi''" 'he date of first Issuance =.. _..""" • .. •Y"' WM AVIATION, 11111 a-AM Tll• 1e11ew111e ,.,..,. 11 -.111e ~f letten as provided In ot.T1Eo~1&,1t11. • ... ,c:.ea-...CAWIP llWIMN•: Section 700 of the Probate =.,"ii."':.c-1 ... ~.:-.-.!~ 4A!~·C: 0ri!'.'~o:!:4~.::• Colle of California. Tt'le ...... a. CMTa• • ....,.,. CM& ..... ,CA_, Ml .. J. OrelM. •• w...-.. ~lme for flllno clalms wlll c.. ..... ..,, ... ...,..... lllUc .... .._,• ..... AM L ... -..0.c:.MMlll- llOt expire prior to four •••te aae, c• '""1 .... o tt> A~~~:C... .., • 1~1.:...,..._ "c..-ctM.., .. 'tnonths from the date of -:.-o..-. c.-o.tty,.., ...,.. ...... ..._ --~• o1 the hearing noticed ebove. o.c. ,.,.., ""·,,_ u.,. ,..., Tlli. = .-..._ ... .. Tiits ....,.. -....,. .,.. .. t YOU MAY EXAMINE .. -• c:-tY ~-' 0r.., CWMy 4111 C-ty a.tit" 0r-.. c:i-.., 9111 he flle kept by the court. .a .. .,.., n. ""· o.tfll*w •· "" ,..,,,. f rou are Interested In the .,,.._ .._..1.._. 0r..., C9llll Deltf ,..._ ~n ate vou may file a PICTmOUl.....U. ' ,.......or.,..c:..01111Y""-J•.•·•·• .. u.i. -.,. ' equesf wtth the court to ...,. " • .,...'" °"· 11• ""·JM.'·'·''-"" ._._ ..... __ ..__ ............. -4 ecelve special notice of .!:.i.:e~ .,..... ... .....,. llfM1 ' ...C Illa the Inventory of estate McNtATY'1 a · CHAM AM • Pl&l 11111 I 1-l ~------~-~--\ssets and of the petitions, a.wow1CNU ,... cw-DrM:rr--:--:------~~ ; t d t lnrlM ~t.1711 •ccoun 1 an repor s "IJii;1·,. .. 1 N•wt•" Jr., 1 PICTIWMtt••• •scribed In Section 1200 o.wt., ,.,,_, ~.,,,.. u.. naftMHT Of the C.llfomle Probate K_._ ..... ...._, a OtNtll, ..::...-::---.,._. -...... Code .,......~.,,,. 1uv••• JOJOeA L°'!-LN I ata~l•Y K . lcltwara ..::.....---"~......_"" • • ._.........,....,CA_ tt•r•-at Law, 17M ~ ........ Jr. ..._.,._..._., .... ,..,..,, wy TMe ........... ,_ Miit .. au • ......_ ...._. ....._, CA ew"rt atv~., Cetta a.cv °"" .-:" ... c:-tY 111 ... • IP.!'~P.l.:~11111;1'1. (114)1 ...._ ... ,.. n.19 ...... ---... --· ---------_.. • r,._ .......... ....... Or-..C....o.M9 .......... ~c:..eo., ....... T1M-------.1t:-:;:;;.'.:;•'~"t.:..•;.;.;.o......,,_......, __ , ........... _._ ... .;. ... .;;.;.. ... ~·.;.'-;;.;;.1;.;.'";;..;.; .. ;;;;;...;;;••~11~· c-. Cllrtl .. a.._ c.-, - SlarlY~ur -own Business If you had started your own Daily Pilot daily paper route just a year ago you'd have $360 or more today depending on the size of your route. That's a great reason to join the newspaper today! Daily Pilat · ) 642-4321 I would like to be a .Daily.Pilot carrier. I ·Name .. •••••••••• • •••••• • • • • •• • • • • • • •••• Address • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Zip. •••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ • From the. alley to the microphone: That's the story CLASSIFIED C6 of Nelson Burton. C3. Ra~ llouse-cleariing was no sm·prise A t l east one f ormer ~ssistant maint ains firing w as a blessing in disguise Coach Ray Malavasl's dismissal of five asaistants this week came as .no surprise. It was reported. In this column more lban .a month a,go that auch a move was imminent. The only mUd shocker was who went and who remained. When Malavasi first expressed his feelings about the staff, everyOPe -wlth the exception of Dan Radakovich (offenalve Une) and Jim Vechiarella (special teams> -was to get the ax. Arter an apparent change of be art, however, Radakovich went too, while Herb Paterra (linebackers) and Paul Lanham (quarterbacks> joined Vechiarella on the list of fortunate survivors. Fortunate? Well, maybe stretching things a bit. One coach, in fact, feels his dischar1e may be a blessing in disguise. '.'To get fired from any other place might have been disastrous," said Bud Carson. the team's former defensive coordinator, "but everyone knows what a kooky organization the Rams are. "Actually. they did me a favor." . Carson isn't biller, he's more relieved than anything else. This past season bad been quite a strain on the man who developed the famed "Dollar Defense" (seven defensive backs), which helped tl\e Rams beat the Dallas Cowboys in the NFC pJayoffs en route to Super Bowl XIV. Georgia: Rains not for -sale TORRANCE <AP> -Georgia Frontiere, owner or the Los Angeles Rams, has qenied a published report that she is considering selling the National Football League club. The South Bay Daily Breeze reported in its Thursday editions that Mrs. Frontiere was willing to s ell the Rams and has initiated discussions in that direction. Mrs. Frontiere said the team ''most certainly is not" for saJe in an interview with KNXT-TV. , The Daily Breeze reported that two sources have confirmed th a t there have been preliminary discussions between M.r s . F r o n t i e r e o r b e r representative and an agent for St e v e Ros enbloom , Mrs . Frontiere's stepson a nd the son or former Rams owner Carroll Rosenbloom. The e ld e r Ros enbloo m drowned in April of 1979 and left 70 p e rcent of th e Rams' franchise to Mrs. Frontiere, his wido w who later married com poser Dominic Frontiere. The remaining 30 percent was le ft to Rosenblooni 's five c hildren, but ultimately was purchased by Mrs . Frontiere. Steve Rosenbloom was fired as the Rams· exec utive vice president by Mrs. Frontiere just prior to the 1979 season. When he later sold his share of the Rams to Mrs. Frontiere, the sale reportedly included the right or first refusal to buy the Rams if she sold. That right of first re!'.lSal reportedly s till is in effect. JOHN SEVANO Carson probably knows defenses and defensive schemes as well -if not better -than anyone else In the NFL. Unfortunately. Malavasl felt Carson posed a threat to his power, subsequeolly shackled him throughout the season, and finally alleviated his fears at the end. Of course, Carson was not aJone. Malavasi felt\ a number of coaches were trying to undermine his operation. Thus, the head coach did a Uttle house cle aning. "Sure I feel bad about letting somebody go," said MaJavasi, "but that's part of my job. I let the m go because ther e was a difference in philosophy and tbafs the truth." Added Carson : "The easiest people in the Ram orgamzation tQ fire are the assistant coaches. We're sort of the bottom of the ladder in Los Angeles. . "They're screwing us because we're the easiest guys to screw.·• °"""' ,..... a.n ..... ·'She'd probably start out asking for SQmething like $45 million," the Daily Breeze quoted a source as saying. "What she wouJd accept is hard to say, but it might be in the neighborhood of $40 million, de pending on how hard a bargain she wants to drive or how badly sbe want.S to get out of the public eye." ALL IN THE FAMILY The Leach famil:v of Laguna However, an employee of Mrs. Frontiere expressed the opinion that she ~ouldn't sell the Rams, being quoted as saying "I wouJd be very surprised if that were the case ... Beach just can't get enough tennis. From left. sitting are Jon , 8. Mindy. 11. and father Dick Leach. the USC tennis coach. Standing. from left. ar e 19-year-old Tammy. 17-year-old Rick and their mother Sandy . Only Tammy hasn't joined r acket C&l"ICIO has a point. It's a helluva IOt euler to get rid ol five coaches than it 1145 pl&¥era. "Ray forfeited all our prlvileees to aet a new contract last season," said Carson. ''All the players got a big raise, but the aaalatant coaches didn't get anything. That wW tear tbe bell out of a coach's morale." Carson went on to say that KaJavui wasn't alone lo his exodus plot, that assistant 1eneral manager Jack Faulkner, a clOse friend of Ray's , helped mastermind the operation. "Faulkner is more powerful than a lot of people believe," offered Carson. ''I'm sure he's calling some of the shots." To which Faulkner replied, "That's not even fair to say that about me. I had nothing to do with those coaches getting fired." · Discipline, added Carson, was Malavas i's major downfall this year. "Ray never really stood firm to ahyone or made a tough decision." As an example, Carson cited one coaches meeting where the subject was Dao Pastorini. "Ray asked us to vote on whether we should bring Pastorini in or not," Carson explained. "I raised my hand along with one other coach. My feeling at the time was why not, at least he's worth a try." MaJavasi, however, seeing the majority vote against s uch a move, reportedly said: "Good, becauseldon'twanthim." "Anyway," added Carson, "he came back the next day after watching him work out and acted like we had all voted to bring him in." Was Malavasi running scared this season? Did he panic? Carson wouldn't go as far as saying that, but he did add the head coach became too conservative. ··Every week Ray would come into the meetings and say he didn't want any .changes made. He wanted to keep things simple. Well, that violates everything I've ever done ln the past.'' said Carson. "You have to be able to innovate. "ln L980, on Ray's suggestion, we put in a (See RAM, Page CZ) A f am:ily racket T ennis keeps Leach household busy By JOHN SEV ANO Of .. o.lly ...... MM! It's not easy trying to coordinate a tennis family. Just ask Sandy Leach. Take Monday, for instance. Her husband Dick, the men's varsity coach at USC, was just returning from Palm Springs, where the Trojans were competing in an intercollegiate tournament. Meanwhile. her two youngest children - Mindy, 11, and J on, 8 -were restless. With a light mist faJling outside, there were no tennis courts to practice on, plus Mindy was complaining she was going to be late for her bas ketbaJI practice. Finally, her eldest son Rick, 17, was trying to hurry back from the airport after spending the last two weeks in Elorida and New York, where he was competing in a pair or international tournaments. ONLY IN TAMMY. the eldest 119 years old) and the token black sheep of the family, was there relief. Tammy is the one member of the family who doesn't play tennis -but she's dabbled in just about everything else including singing, dancing, cheerleading and cooking. Tbe Leaches are a tennis family, though, there's no mistaking that. The hardware the fa mily possesses in terms of trophies could build an entire naval fleet. Sandy, in fact, can't even r emembe r the last tirrte her family spent a Thanksgiving together, or a Christmas for that matter. because there was a tournament to attend. or c.ourse. as far as the Leaches are concerned, all the apparent disorder is worth . You see. this is n't your a verage tennis family that plays for the sociaJ aspect or the recr eation the game provides. This is a family laden with both talent -and potential talen~ -starting from the father and working all the way down to the youngest member. "There's a common interest we have, and we aJI enjoy what we're doing,·" says Dick. who started playing the game at the age of 12. Now 41. the father of four never turned pro himself. although he was good enough at one time to be ranked among the top 10 in the United States in doubles. Today. Dick and his son Rick are the No. 1 ranked father-son team in the U.S. NATURALLY, DICK'S background is tennis oriented. He coached the tennis team al Arcadia High (be also coached the ''B" and "C" bas ketball teams to a league championship) before moving on to San Marino as the club pro there'. He then got interested in private development of which he still retains a portion in the Racquet Club or Irvine and the Oja~ Racquet Club. Throughout all this he has introduced and coached his children in tennis; especially Rick. who he us ually travels with from tournament to tournament. ·'Tennis is a game of such skill that you have to play it all the time," says Dick, who adds a serious player will work almost 3S() out of 365 days a year. "Within a week, you can lose so much. Tennis is not a seasonaJ sport -it's daily." And that's how the Leach family, who reside in Laguna Beach, approaches the game ... on a daily basis. "J feel all three 'of the kids> have tremendous potential," says Dick modestly. I've never forced my kids to do anythi ng. If they want to quit tomorrow. that would be fine w ith m e. -Dick LHct) "All three can be ranked internationally. It's just a matter of who wants to work the hardest." SO FAR THE FAMILY'S biggest success has been Rick, but then he has a few more years on the others. "It's all up to me," says the left-hander, the only southpaw in the family, "as long as I work hard." Does he feel any pressure? "Well, dad wants me to win ... but he just tells me to do my best. It's nice because he's aJways there with me " Rick, who attends Laguna Beach High. -and his doubles partner T im Pawsit, recently won the Role x international doubles championship in New York. In April, the duo will play John McEnroe and Peter Fleming, the No. l team in the world, in an exhibition in Phoenix. He's done little to embarrass himself thus far. Last year he toured with the Junior Davis C up team. one or only three 16-year·olds to make the squad. In fact, to illus trate just how tough the odds were. only 32 players were invited to camp with one -fourth of that total staying on a permanent basis. THE EIGHT·MEMBER TEAM VISITED 12 ciUes throughout the summer. playing in vario~ national tournaments with the final stop being in New York for the U.S. Open~ "Doing something like that reaJly makes you want to succeed," Rick contends. "It also showed me I wasn't that far from being thare." Neither are Mindy and Joo who, despite (See TENNIS, Page CZ> The Rams earned a berth in the Super Bowl following the 1979 season and went ll·S in 1980, but were eliminated from the NFL playoffs in the first round. During the past season, however, they were 6·10 and missed the playofts for the first time since 1972. Montana hopes pressure is on Dallas Dodge r s d e al Castillo San.Francisco quarterback will try to do his shar e to apply the heat . LOS ANGELES <AP) -Tbe LA.K.EltS SEEK WINNING WA YS CHfCAGO :.... The Los Aneelea Laken return to NBA action here tonight against lbe Chicago Bulls, and t.be big queation is whether or nol Uie team can retutn to its earlier style of play -characterized by winnJnt - with center Karee rn Abdul·1abbar back in the lineup. Thf' 7·2 veteran center miued sill games befol'e returalq to the lineup Sunday nifht •&a.inst .wattle at. t.be Forum, .but his abafnee 1idn't a~m to affect lbe Laken ln the lou column. Loa Anaelea rattled ort ab Oral&bt vlclorlea without ·Jabbar 81 Tlte Aasocl•ted Press "Pressure'' seems a comfortable word in Joe Montana's vocabulary. "The '-8ic thing we try to do Is always keep pressure on the other team's defense," sai~ Montana, the San Francisco quarterback who'll lead the 49ers into Sunday's National Football Conference championship game against the DaJlas Cowboys. "If you've got• guy alx yard1.001itn lh• field, you throw ,to him and let hlm pick up the six. maybe break tackles; you never know what mltht happen," said Montana. "That kHps th• PfeM"re on Uie defense. If you keep the ball ln play, somebody's 1otn1 to malre a bll play sooner or later. "U you have to lb row 20-25 yards cl'1wn &.be fl9ld. it'• a quesUonabl• ltpe throw. It ml1ht set ln there and lt mtatn.aot. Of another kind of preaaure that will aeeam&rany Sunday'• 1•m•1 llon&ana aald: "It'• run to plQ ta 1am• Uke Ulla. ·~----------------.... -------.~~- M b d f bi best ti (..os Angeles Dodgers announced This one and the next one . . . I hope ontana a one o s pro ou ngs, tbursday t.bat they have trade4 there's a next one." connecting on 20 of 31 throws for two pitcher Bobby Castillo and Montana said he is used to big games touchdowns and 304 yards, his first lime outfielder Bobby Mitchell to &.he because or his college career at. Notre over 300. Minnesota Twins in eJCchanet Dame. Montana admit! be is a UtUe surprised for pitcher Paul Vol1t and . ''There was a lot of pressure to being the he's come along so fast ln the jOb, but catcher Scotti Madison. quarterback at Notre Dame," be said at said: "It bas a lot to do with Bill's Voltt. 231 will be usllffd to the 49er camp, shifted to the Rams' teaching. A tot of lt bas to do wltb his the Dodferi' Class AAA farm facilltiea because or heavy rains ln offense and a lot has to do with his work on club al Albuquerque of t be Nort.bem California. "We played In a lot of fundameolal1 wlth the quarterbacks Pacific Coaat Lea1ue wblle bli IJmfs -Ute So11thera.C.a1 pme, throu1houttheseason. M•dlaon, al10 U, •Ill be usually a bowl game, a lot ol otheTS." usl1ned to the .Dod&era· Clad "You work on your drop, belnl in t.be AA club at San AntonJo of the A three-year Nf'L veteran wbo Just pocket, beilll forced out of lbe PQCket, all Texas Learne, completed 1\1' flnt fuJI aedQD aa the Ger th u • wt ao .... rou1h •-l.. M.. bl ed tbi e wme. AVen now, we 5 wi Vol ... , a ,..~.2 ri1ht·b-...a-., •• rter, vl\ta"' ossom • year, .... ... __ , ..1...&l .. d ri u .• ... ·~ -wi\b Coach Blll Watab balpln& tum to .... oee -c VI.. u 01 prac ee. led U.e Callforllia Lea1ue lo develop. Tbe 6·2. 200·pound •uarierbffk Montana amts.d aa he spoke ol oae Ume vlctoriea last. year aa be was the NPC's tep·ranlted pueer, ed&lnl be foraot one of Watah'• baalca. an compiled a H·7 ,.eor4 at Dallas' Danny •hite. MonlaDa ft.nJsbed lnlereep&Aoe be ~w ln the playalf came Visalia. He struck out 10 the rt1ular aeaMD with 311 completjom m acatnat the Giants. batt.era In 'lM lnnlaCi iDcl bed a4 418 atteeapt• tor 3,515 yerda and 1t .. 1 threw tbe ball under doreea," he 1a14. earn~ run ..... .,.ors.a touchdowns, and he wae l~pt.-1 II "I didn't aet ..,wnc 00 lt. I abouldni Madllon bit .M2 lut year wlLb limes. have t.rl«t to ford &.be bail. 1 abouht ban ae bo~m and 110 rum-blltted-la In lut SUnday•a 11-M wUdcarcLPtayOtt throwa it away. I tried to make UM play at Vlaalla. H• 1tnaclt out Juat sa vlctory over tl• New Yon <Haan.........:._= andl\w•dumb.l'maUU~ • _UmeaiD.Bllll!lataappu.rMM*.: Orange Coat O~IL Y PILOT/Frtd , January 8, 1882 ·.---------------------~ Kicking not that easy says Stenerud From AP dlapatclles KANSAS CITY -Klclting field m 1oal1, even short ones, isn't euy. • t Even extra poloU in a pressure-packed National Football League game aren't u easy aa they look. 'I'ake lt from Jan Stenerud, who bu been klekine tootbaJls In the NFL ror 15 years and needs Just 31 more field aoala to tie George Blanda'a record or 335. Stenerud, now with the Green Bay Packers, won numerous games in a dozen years with the Kansas City Chiefs, but the field 1oa1 be probably re members best ls the 31-yarder he missed in a 1971 playorr with Miami. A good kick wouJd have won the game tor Kansas City, but the Dolphins won in a second overtime, ending the season ror the Cruets. In the second game of the next season at New Orleans, Stenerud lined up for a field goal attempt with the score tied 17-17 and time running out. "That was the first time J had ever felt uncomfortable," he said in an interview with Joe McGurr, sports editor or The Kansas City Star. "Never before or since have I felt that way. I tell almost sick." Quote of the day Jim Kllllagawor&h, TCU basketball coach, asked how bis players took it when he told them the school was on NCAA probation: "They turned up their steroes so loud after I told them, I couldn't tell." I Gervin goes wild In Spurs' win Geor1• Genl•, tbe National m Bas-ketball A11oclatlon'a leadlnt scorer, tallied 45 points In lead.int the · San Ant.onlo Spurt t.o a 123-112 victory over Golden State Thursday. Gervin, averatlnt 33 points a game, connected on 15 or his 28 shots, added five assl1t1 and pulled down five rebounds . . . Reserve guard Jim S,Harkel scored a seuoo-hJ&h 24 point.a as Dallas held orr a late San Dle10 rally t.o brand the Clippers with a 113-112 victory . . . Seattle 1uard1 GH Williama and Fred Brow• scored the final eilbl points as tbe SuperSonlcs pulled away to,defeat Houston, 116-107 ... Lea ltobluoa scored 25 poiota and Kyle Macy added 24 as Phoenix earned a 110-14 victory over Detroit at Pontiac . . . Orei Ballard poured in 27 points and rookie Jeff &ulaad added 23 tQ lead WashlnJ(ton to a 109·100 win over Cleveland . . . Guard Larry Drew scored 18 points, eight ln the final quarter, to help Kansas City claim a 107-103 triumph over visitin«i New York. Bengals' Anderson adds award Quarterback Ken Aader90ll, the m National Football League passing • t champion for the third time and the driving force behind the resurgence or the Cincinnati Bengals, was named Thursday by the Associated Press as the o rrensive Player or the Year tor the 1981 season. Anderson, earlier named the AP's Most Valuable Player, received 40 votes to easily out-distance Toay Dorsett, who had 21 . . . Charle Youa1, the tight end for San Francisco, says the 49ers have succeeded because head coach BW Walsh made j.hem believe in themselves. "He has a talent for instilling beli.ef," said Young. Miller stalks field at Tucson Open • Stadler leads ; Tapie trails by two TUCSON (AP) -Craig Stadler had the lead and Johnny Miller, though rive' s hots back, had his targe t score in the Tucson Open , the opening event on the IO.month pro golf toµr. ''Before the tournament started, I said I'd be happy to shoot 70," Miller recalled. "Well, that's what I got. Two birdies and two bogeys and lots of 2-putts. I'm pleased with it. "Now," said Miller, still suffering from jet-lag from his 20-plus hour tlighl from southern Africa, "I'm going to try to shoot about a 66 and get right back into it." surgery last year, said he has taken a club job in Colorado and will play a restricted schedule In the future, skipping the summer months. Tied at 67, two off the lead and 3-under-par on the rain-soaked, 6,797-yard Randolph Municipal course, were Laguna Nlguel's Alan Tapie, Leonard Thompson, Scott Simpson and J ay Haas. Tapie highlighted his effort by holing a 00-yard sand wedge shot ror an eagle·2. Bruce Lietzke, a two-time Tucson winner, bad a 71 . So did PGA champ Larry Nelson. HaJe Irwin was in a group at 69. Stadler bogeyed bis first hole, got the shot back witb a birdie on the next, then started a string of three consecutive birdies with a 30-foot putt on his sixth. which he said .he mis-hit: IN CONTENTION -Laguna Niguel's Alan Tapie is only two strokes off the pace in the Tucson Open after a first-round 70, a round which included an eagle-2 after Tapie holed a 00-yard sand wedge shot. Miller, a four-time winner of this event and the dere'nding champion, won the biggest prize in the history of the game, ssoo.ooo. ror his playofr triumph Sunday in a Sl million tournament in Bophuthatswana, then hurried back to defend his title here. "I'm better than J was vesterday, but I'm still not right," Miller said Thursday. "I figure it Ctbe trip> cost me about three strokes. 1 should be back to normal about Saturday." Kings outfox Caps LA rallies to tie Washington, 3-3 Stadler set the pace in the first round with a 5-under-par 6S that, he said, could have been better. "I didn't drive it very well and l missed several short putts," said Shdler, who has won $200,000 or more in each of his las t two seasons. LANDOVER, Md. (AP > - Jim Fox scored at 13:21 or the lh_ird period as the Los Angeles Kmgs came from behind for the second time and lied the Washington Capitals 3-3 in a National Hockey League eame Thursday night. Washington took a 2-0 lead in the first period en a power-play goal by Dennis Maruk, his 29th of the s eason , and a short-hande d goal by Jim McTaggart. The Kings lied it in the second period on a power-play goal by Steve Bozek, his 27th of the season, and ~nother gO"al by Charlie Simmer. "It was a good. solid day, nothing spectacular," he said. "For this time of tbe year it was pretty good. 1 can't complain. l dido 't expect lo shoot this good a score the first round of tbe year." Tayl~r honored Al Geiberger, whose heaJth problems have jeopardized his career on three occasions, opened his 22nd season or tour activity with a 66 that included birdies on his last three holes. NEW YORK <AP> Linebacker Lawrence Taylor of the New York Giants today became the first rookie ever to be named The Associated Press Defensive Player of the Year in the National Football League. The honor comes just 24 boW"S after the 6-3, 237-pounder from North Carolina was made the overwhelming choice as the NFL Deten.<sive Rookie or the Vear tor the 1981 season. Doug Keans, making onJy his seventh start of the season for Los Angeles, turned aside 25 W ashingto n shots while recording the tie on bis 24th birthday. "We'd like lo win, naturally," sa id Kines Coach Parker MacDonald. ''but our goals have not been coming that easily. The 44-year-old Geiberger, a former PGA champ who is on the comeback from major . From Page G1 "We're not shooting enough," MacDonald said. TENNIS: IT'S A FAMILY RACKET. • • being a rew years away rrom their teens, are formidable powers in their own age brackets. Mindy, who -=taim·s she aet.s t.eued a lot by her scbool classmates, got interested in the sport "because my brother and dad played," and, contends her mother. because she lilted the tbou1ht of traveling. The same reaaona probably bold true tor Jon, Coo, who bas won rour straight lO·aad-wlder low'neyl. "U lflndy works real bard ... ," says Dick, bis voice trailin1 as h" pondered a.be proepec:l. ''Rl1bt now, Rick and Jon C01Qpete better than Mindy. Rick and"J0n seem to ftncf ••YI to win, wbereu lillndy takes tbe otber way out. Sbe always ... 1111 to have an ucuae. either it'a too cold, or too windy or the balls aren't nfbt." ''He'• Ju.et makhll that up,'' Mindy eoimten, as 1be foetl on lo uplain bow she beat.I her younaer brother. I ' ••g YOl1 WATCH SPOm, .. contlftuet ber f atber, "you'll notlce a lot ol Um• bow even people an when they're plQl.nc, then all of a 1udden IOIDeoM raise• their lent. Tbat'a the · ~ ID oNel' to be a ftalnplma you bave to • , maiDtala 10UI' ln.t ud be _.... to..ralle lt." Tbere'• no preuLlre ueoeiated wltb that pbll09Gl*J, J8ft lloiOd .... lldftee. .............. lGfted ., -.. to do IQWDI. If the7 ....... to Qtdt talllCll'l'OW, &Mt ...... be lljM ........ ..,..,..., A good example of that would be Tammy. the eldest, wbo bas no real interest id the game - although she ls good enough to beat a good majority or her dales. "I just wun't tbat competitive," says the family rebel, who attends BYU and is majoring in bome economics. "Plus, I bad so rqany other 1.nteresta. ,.. I look back It aJwaya seemed like m )' dad wu witb Rick and I waa with m:· mot.her. J J\lll wun't u inf1uenced." WIUCH FINALLY brin11 us t.o the motber, the one wbo tries to coordinate th1I household of tennla junki•. "1 budlet my time around tbe'teno.11 ctuba,'' ajlmlw Sandy, wbo plays ror the social aspect . more than the competition. "I try to do lriy shopp~ durln1 my ort houn because I know tht week are devoted to the kidl." .. I'm very proud ot atl ot them," 11.)'• Diet Of biJ chUdren. "They're all 1ood k.lda who work bard and are well·mannered. TIMy allo apprec!late what their mother and I ban done for them. "I don't kDow what the ultimate pal would be •• Maybell allot tlMm could,_ iD tbe top 100. But ·even If they don't 1et to a.. top I'd Uke to 1ee lbem try it tar a few ,..,. becat11t lt'1 • 11'9at chance to ' '" tbe wartd ••• One Udaa't lol'dt= ......_ 1ueee11 befaU1 tMf...U,.WIN -••flm~. Islanders win In final 13 seconds Clark GUUn' shot from ln front m· or the net wllb 18 seconda lei\ raWed ' the New York Islanders to a 5·4 . victory over PblladelphJa Thursday nl&hl In a Natlopal Hockey Lea1ue same at the Spectrum. The wtnning,oal came as Eryaa T...UJer beat Bobby auk on a faceotr and MUJe BoQy took a shot that rebounded lo GllUea. who poked it in with Clarke han1lng 9n his back . . . Third-period goaJs by JI•' 9eaala& and Wut Pa~ment and clutch 1oal-teocUn1 by Bunny Lar~ue were enou1h for Toronto to earn a 4-4 tie with Calgary . . . Rookie Ted Nolan scored his tirst NHL aoaJ, a short-handed tally at 13: 15 of the second period lo snap a 3.3 tie a nd lead Detroit to a 5-4 win over Pittsburgh . . . Peter Mc"'b, moving from the bench to a regular shirt, scored his 20tb and 21st goals and assisted on another as Boston knocked oft Winnipeg, 8·6 . Robinson still considering offer BOSI'ON -The New England m Patriots' court.ship of John Robinson • t is taking longer than expected, but the team's negotiator said progress was made Thursday. ~ T~e National Football League team wants the USC coach to succeed Ron Erhardt, wbo was tired Dec. 22 arter three years as head coach of the Patriots. Charles W. Sullivan, the Patriots' executive vice president and negotiator , said Hookstratten, Robinson's attorney, is considering the team 's second contract proposa l, which was conveyed Wednesday night. IFrom Page C1 , Cllppert lhoW inter•t In Thompeon 81tat says bft·NBA elub II ~ I au°'"° laubtball ~ , .... in acqu.lrllll DH.. .,.. .... , the lnJur1-placued atar of I.be Deft¥er "'""Ce "TbeN • been tome tilk but I don't know w It wUI lead,'' SUu.Hld l_n Deaver WedDelday after bl• ClJ ppera lo1t to tbe Nuuet!1 136·114 ... Olympic iold medal 1wlmmer .Im Sterkel ol the Unlvenlty of Texu·AUIUn wa1 named Thursday nitbt u Lhe wlnaer of the Broderick Cup, 1lven by the A.uoclation tor Jnlercolle1late Athletic• for Women to the outstandlna woman colleSjate athlete in her chosen aport. The natJve of ffaclenda Hei1hw won tour events In 1980 as a freshman -settln1 four AJAW and four American records -.at the 1980 AIAW National Swlmmln1 and Divin& Ch a m pl onshi pa ... The South west Conference, wb01e ·football champion Is the annuaJ host team Jn the Cotton Bowt , bas declined an ofter of more money to move the game to Houat.on. The Greater Houston Bowl Association, which sponsors the Bluebonnet Bowl · in the Astrodome, offered the SWC $1 million above current revenue lo end ils lone-standing association with Dallas ... Tim Hundley, an assistant football coach at Nevada-Reno, has been hired as a defensive coach at Oregon State University. ·Television, radio Following are the te>t> sp0rts events on TV tonight. Ratinos are: / ., / / excellent; / / / worth watchlno; / / fair; / forget it. A 8:30 p.m., Channel 9 I { ../ NBA BASKETBALL: Lakers at Chicago. Announcers : Chick Hearn and Keith Erickson. The Lakers return to action after a four-day respite to take on the Chicago Bulls. This will start a seven-game road trip for the Lakers over the next 12 days. With Kareem Abdul-Jabbar back In the lineup and the Lakers enjoylng a substantial edge in the NBA's Pacific Division .standings, Coach Pat Riiey's crew appears ready for all comers. The Bulls, meanwhile, are -having their trout>les In the Central Division. RADIO · Basketball -Lakers at Chicago, 6 : 30 p.m .• KLAC CS70). RAM ASSIST ANT COACHES • • • nickel blitz against New l!;ngland that teams didn't pick up on until we got to the pJayotrs. Ray didn't want to do anything like that this year." Carson was victimized by the media for much· or the defensive problems the team incurred. In . particular, It was written tbat he didn't like Jack Reynolds, Bob Brudzinaki and Fred Dryer and he was the major force in letlilUl them l(O. · Nothing could be further from the truth said Carson. "l wasn't consulted on half the things tbat went on on defense. I wanted to go to a Pittsburgh-type defense this year that featured a lot of stunts, but he < MaJavaai) didn't want to do that. Carson also petitioned to change tbe team defensively rrom a 4.3 ((our down linemen, three linebackers> to a 3..t (just the opposite>, but Malavasi nixed that idea, too. .. With a 3-4, the down linemen hold the blockers while the linebacken came up lo make tbe tackles. That's what teams did to us this year. The oose guards would bold (Rieb> Saul so be -couldn't come out and make his blocks." The Rams, indeed, with their problems on the . front line, would appear better suited tor a 2..t. But that's MaJavasi's decision to make and with him opting tor the conventional 4-3 you could see why there may be a dltrerence in philosophy. So, what was Malavasi's reaction to Carson·s charges? "I'm not going lo make a rebuttal, J 'm not going to say anything," he said calmly. "l think I was as strong u I could be with this r"°tball team. Why don't you try to pinpoint the rl,al reason why we lost rather than putting stutf in the paper that's not completely right. "I wanted certain things done a certain way and I didn't get it done. There were certain things the coaches didn't believe tn that I believed In. I did what I had to do." As for some of the other charges, Malavasi had a simple, "no comment." You can take that to mean whatever you want. "I told my wire early this week tbat I didn't know it I was going to be fired or not, but I hoped J would be," admitted Carson. "I figured l was going to leave arter another year anyway. Like J said, they did me a favor." The Rams didn't do themselves any favors, though. * * * ONCE THE NEWS lellked out, it didn't take long tor Carson to get a few otters thrown bis way. Carson, in tact, is one of those few coaches who can name his own ticket. I know it I was given a head coaching job somewhere, he'd be the first coach on my staff. * * * CARSON ADM11TED the rumor5 about him taking over Malavasi's· job during the season didn't help. ''Those people who wrote I was l09king for bis job were dead wrong," he said. "I'd rather not be a hnd footbaJI coach than lalce over the LA Rams after MaJavasi was fired." • * • IT'S GE1TING CLOSE to tbat time of year again. The Dodgers will hold informal workouts at Dodger stadium starting Jan. 18. They will leave for Vero Beach tor the start of spring training Jan. 24. Wednesday, the Dodgers unveiled their 1981 highlight film to the media called, "The 10th( Player," in reference to their fans. · The film is available to groups a nd organizations on a 24-hour load basis at no charge. The Dodgers' World Series film will be shown after tHeir Jan. 18 workout. * * * THE DODGERS PLAN on introducing newcomers Mark Belanger and Jorge Orta at a press conference Jan. 15. Already vintage Tommy Lasorda, the manager bad this to ;say when asked what his plans were for the left.handed hitting Orta: "How the (bleep) do I know. If he was walking right past me, 1 wouldn't know the (bleep). I've never seen him play, we'll have to wait until sorint training.'' College football JOHNSON lk SON Presents ... COLLEGE 80Wl ROUNDUP lndeoendenc. Bowl IDK.fl ..... aua,,_.c,Le.1 Teus A&M '3, Olli-St 1• 0.rden St.it• Bowt C DK. ta ....... _.,,..., IU.1 r---.wi-1n21 Holldtiy Bowt IDie. ti .. ._ Otaell BYU .. WMNflll.,SI.» C.lffomla Bowl IDie. 1t .. P-1 Tol-27, S.. J-. $t, U T•noer1n• Bowl IDie. tf•o.t--. '"'6.1 Ml-I 1t, Soul,_,.n MIMIM'"" 11 lllu.-Grey 0.me IDlc.ISet~ t.AM.J ..... , •• Gery. Sun lowt IDK.•••t•-1 OklllflafN 40, ..,..._ 14 0.torBowl , ....... Jee ...... , N"1tl ~>I. A,._t t7 .... ofFefM9owt ,..._,. .... I at1.,Me.I M•tr•t-te,11-..t ~ecll Bowt (Dec.. J1 ........... , WfttV ......... f<IWtM6 Bluebonnet Bowl IDK.11 .. ......_I Mk h'9eft al, UCL.AU Cotton Bowl fMa.t•o.MMI TeaeSl4,Al~I Fl9at• Bowt , ........ ,....JI, """" St ... Ute 10 AoMBowt .................. , W•IM"910ft 21, I-0 Or•nge Bowl , ... , .. ..._,,. .. .) Clem-n , ....,._. u Sug.8owt , .... , ..... OrtMMI Pitt 24. Gawe!UO ' E ... •w..t SNtne G•me , .... , .......... , E•tl .......,.. ""' w.tt All·•en. C-..... ,.,_ tMahwt ............... , Em All"'9n""" W,-All..,...._ ~ 7411' p,m. Ofwnmte Gold 8owt -,-.· ....... Dlalial TMm ~-All418" "'-Te8ftl -' All .. ten .. Pete the "Greek" NFL's Ptck11 Of The WHk SUMDAY HATIOHAL CONFlllHCI .,.,..llco o•er 0.-.. AMRICAH COM ...... CI Ctacln ... ..... S.Dt.p New Parts Department Hours Now Open 8:00 am -1:00 ·pm Saturdays R y l Oranglt Coat DAILY PILOT/Friday. January 8, 1982 &I . ! Burton howls them. o ver with his ·commentary ! Once eliminated, bowler spHts tou1)'Wment . actiori, strikes up· .. a television conversation, sparing no one . j 8y LARRY SIDDONS .............. lmailu lb1a scene: Roll Guidry hu Juat 1lven up a home run and been replaced as the pltcher ror the New York Yankees. Instead or c<Mnt Into the clubhouse to shower, however, Guidry beads tor the television announcers' bootb to provide expert commentary for the rest or the same. l\ sounds rar·retched, but lt's exactly what Nelson Burton Jr. baa been dolna tor the past seven years. Burton ls ·one of the leaders on the Professional Bowlers Association tour, havlna won more than $500,000 In purses and gained a spot in the sport's Hall of Fame. He also ts the color analyst ror ABC's "Professional Bowlers Tour," a weekly series of llve telecasts of tournament finals, which beelns its 1982 schedule Saturday with the $135,000 Miller A"ron, Ohlo, Aprtl 2•. ABC alao plans covtra1e of five tournaments on the aprlne tour ln May and Jun~. Saturday's TV, radio TELEVISION 10 a.m . (2) -COLLEGE BAS.&ETB4LL - San Francisco at South Carolina. (4 ) -COLLEGE BASKETBAIL-Vlreinla at North Carolina. Noon (2) -'CBS SPOa T8 SATURDAY - East.West Shrine football aame. (4 ) -COLLEGE BASKETBALL -Wuhington at Ari%ona Slate. 1 P.:..m. (7) -WIDE WOaLD OF SPORTS - Rula Bowl telecast rom"'lliwan. - 4 p.m . (7 ) -P&O BOW,LI NG -The professional bowlers tour begins its 21st season with coverage of the MUler High Llfe Classic, taped at Anaheim earlier ln the day. SPORTS ON TJ" •• , 'II High Life Classic at Anaheim. StartiJ)g Ume ls 4 p .m . PST (tape·delayed). • Bt)RTON IS SCHEDULED to be al the mic rophone with announcer Chris Schenkel as the bowlers with the second·through fifth·highest pintails from the first three days of the tournament compete in matches to determine who goes against the top bowler for the championship. If Burton is among lhe final five, he wiU compete for the crown and his place on the air will be taken by Dick Weber, another Hall of Farner who has retired from the PBA tour. "I think I've probably made the final five 25 or 30 limes since I've been doing the ABC work," s aid Burton, 39, of St. Louis. "I used lo make it every week, but the older you get the tougher it is." The son of another Hall of Fame bowler, Nelson Burton Sr., Burton was approached by ABC in 1974 alter Billy Welu, a retired bowler who had teamed with Schenkel for two years, difd or a heart attack. "I WAS ONE of the first of the younger bowlers lo break through the Dick Weber-Don Carter 'team bowling' mold," he said . "J had also done some promotional work for AMF, a leading bowling equipment m anufacturer. and worked as an analyst when CBS was doing the PBA." Eight weeks of live auditions led to a one-year contract with ABC, but Burton recalled that his first telecast after agreeing to the pact was delayed. "I made the finals that week, so I wasn't on the air . " he said. A conflict between bowling and broadcasting never has developed, Burton said, "although I do pay more attention now to the TV part. When l started I was only 30 or 31, and I was much more inter ested in doing well as a bowler. I • • • 11 PllG COMBINATION ·-.,, .. ,. 4r>h' •1 ,., ••• c-.. , "1 .... 11 11 ~ nll l.· WREllCHSET Drop forged steel wifh broached drive ends. 8 88 SET CHOICE STANOAAO 116-487193 Ott METRIC #6'89'62 "NOW, l'VE REDUCED m y bowling to compensate for TV and the difficulties of training as I get older. In the next couple or years, I'll probably reduce my schedule to the point where I'm only bowling part·time.'' But Burton, who owns a travel agency and a share of an automobile dealership in his home town . is not sure he wants to make TV a full·Ume profession whe n he retires from bowling. "I'll have to see what the opportunities are," he s aid. "Right now, I'm not interested; I've got the sport and my other bus inesses. I'm interested in getting back into the bowling business, too.'' =~ SPIN-ON OIL FILTER Fits most Ford products This will be the 21st consecutive year for the PBA Tour on ABC, which has garnered impressive ratings from the show. Last year, an average of 20 million people tuned in to some portion of the weekly Saturday te lecast, based on ratings of 8.5 by A. C. Nielson. with two stops -the National Championships and the Showboat Invitational - attracting more than 23 million viewers each. THE PBA CONSISTENTLY has drawn larger average audiences than telecasts of college and professional basketball, tennis and golf on other networks, and Burton has an idea why. "l think it ·s because of the sudden·death format," he s aid. "The second-best bowler h1 a tournament can suddenly be out if he has a bad game. Other sports you have t-0 watch for two hours before you have a winner. With bowling, we present four match winners in 1 ~ hours. "There's also the attraction that a lot of people have of watching the TV bowlers for tips." T he PBA's winter tour runs throuih the $200.000 Firestone Tournament of Champions at: • • I • I • Holntan le ading _ From AP dispatches • MarshaJI Holman establis hed a 140 pin lead #PHBA 2 39 EA #PH13, PH25, 279 PH30 EA CARBURETOR CLEANER BERRYMAN PINT CAN #8X100 13oz. SPRAY #81008 over Guppy Troup alter four rounds of bowling • Thursday n{ght in lhe $135,000 Miller High Life FOR MOST CHEVROLETS Classic at the Anaheim Wonderbowl. Holman, of Medford, Ore., posted a 5·2·1 I 1978-'80 V-6 231Engine (Except Moni.a and Turbo Charge) record, including games of 235, 247, 238, and 246 after taking a 12 pin lead into the round. For 36 FOR MOST FORDS 8 C~inder 1966-'80 (289·302· games the 12·time Professional Bowlers 351 Englne&c.ptMustong8ou),6C~inder Assodation champion totals 5,050 with a 226 • ~~lt~V-6).DODGE/ PlYMOUTreH 8 8 average. (318-360-~·383 Engine I Second place Troup, of Jacksonville, Fla., be.pt Hi·Peffonnoiic.) EA fired a 268 in his final match to total 5,901, just • seven pins ahead of Wayne Webb of Indianapolis, FOR MOST CHEVY Monza'• & 14•9_ who ranks third. Vega's 1972.·n ll·4140 Webb, the 1980 PBA Player of the Year, EngiM) qualified in 17th place but averaged 230 for eight I FORD r Mustang & Pinto 1974-'79 1688 games, inclutling a 24•·238 win over Holman, to V-6 171Engine2800CC. CHEVY · lli5iuirg~eiiniiiiiiitoicoiiiiiiinteiiiiiiiniti0i0iii.iiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiil l:i:: ~= ::~~:._ I A8,EA This week's Spec a 91v1 .. (9a.122EngNt Tl: • 4 :50 p.m . (9) -NHL HOCKEY -The Kines meet the Maple Leaf• lo Toronto. 5 p.m. (2) -NFL REVIEW AND P&EVIEW. 9 p.m . < 13) -COLL~GE BASKETBALL - UCLA at use. RADIO BuketbaU -Lakera at Detroit, 4:50 p.m., KLAC (570); Loyola-Marymount at Cal State (Fullerton>, 7:30 p.m ., KLON (88 FM>; UCLA at USC, 8 p,m .. KMPC {710) and KDAY (1580). p.m ., KMPC (710) and KDA Y dS*l>; Saddleback at Riverside CC, 7 :30 p.m . KSBR (885 FM>. ... Sunday's TV, radio TELEVISION 9:30 a.m . (4) -NFL '81 -With Bryant Gumbel. WI'• HB...a YOU DO n lllOllTI DAILY9-9 SAT.· 9-6; SUN. 9-5 RED CAP Ory Chemicol- ldefol for home, cars, boots, compen, etc. #310R 6 98 EA CAROL SERIES 3200 Custorh tailored sizes to fit most cars, •xcept those with electronic ignitions. 4 Cyfinder Engines 3 49 SET 6 Cylinder Engines 4 49 SET 8 Cylinde; Engines 5 49 SET ... ~·· PYLON- .• Sii.es to fit most cars & trucks. 149 ONE COMPUTE It.ADE Olt TWO UflUS VACUUM Extra long cord plugs into cigarette lighter. #6488548 .9aa EA 4 97 SET KILLYOIL DltAINPAN Rust proof; GalvaniLed 11 .. 1; 13~ qt. capacity . 11uP28s l 9 9 EA w.m•1 ap WASHER Pre mixed. Ready to ~IP'JI use. 1 Gol. .99 11349M Al REBUILT 2 SR9ed -Tested to OEM specifications. For Most CHEVROLETS 1965-'81 (Except 1967}. For Most FORDS 1966·'81. For Mott BUICKS 1964-'81 (Except 1975 with lnt•rmittent Wipers, & 1967). DODGE·PlYMOUTH 1968·'81 (bcept19n.·91 wit+i lntetmitt.m Wipers). PONTIAC 29!• 1968-'81 (Except 1975 lst Production with Intermittent Wipers).~CH FUILRL11R CR·PRO FUEL 2± FUEL RIGULATOll 10 a.m. (4) Al"C CHAMPIONSRJP -San Dleao al Cincinnati . 1 p.m. (2) -NFL 'JtODAY -With Brent Mu11burger. (9> -TENNIS -Finals of Challenee of Champions, taped In Rosemont. Ill. 1 :ao p.m. (2) -NFC CHAMPIONSHIP ~ Dallas at San Francisco. ! 5 p .m . <7> -GREATEST S PORT&, LEGENDS. • 5:20 p.m. (9) -NBA BASKETBALL -Th& Lakers meet the Bucks In Milwaukee. : . RADIO : Football -San Diego at Cincinnatt, "10 a .m .• : KNX ( 1070); Dallas at San Francisco, 1 :30 p.m .,; KNX 0070). : llasketball -Lakers at Milwaukee, 5:20 p.m ., KLAC (570). • Hockey -Kings at Buffalo, 3 :50 p.m., KPRZ, ( 1150). RUBBER QUEEN DMp plush carpet with durable rubber be.ck. Block, Blue, Gold/beige, or red. EaGLEl MAG WHEEL CLEANER Restores original beauty. Non·obrasive. #01 -08-24 WIRE WHEEL CUANING IOJ FAN BELTS DRIVE RITE- Mode for Long Service. For Most Cars . 1!! 8 oz. deaner & 8 oz. Neutralizer/Rinse #02·08-12 3~~ IGNITION COIL _. For 12V cars. Fits most Domestic & Import cars. 3 98 EA lf6.t27272-0amestic I #~27280-lmport KS 1-6-82(001) lt7t CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE Options lnclude dual comfort seat.a, Cabriolet top & Cadillac wire wheel covers. (895WQV>. Anaheim 1280 N. Euclid • n2·9840 •Anaheim 2340 W. Uncoln Ave. • 999· 1621 Buena Park KJRt&Blm •La Mirada 15081 Imperial• (213) 947-5641 • •Minion Vi•io 24510 Alicia Pkwy.• 951-9175 Orange •8795 5256 8each Blvd.• 994-1320 Costa Mesa 17.39 Superior 'Awt •• 642-3314 •fountain Valley , 9880 Womer Ave. • 964-6427 •Fullerton 141 E. 1inperia1 • 731-6971 ·~rton 2971 YcirW UflCla • f96.47IO Auto Supply 1100 N. Tu,tin • n l-3000 •Riverside 1 CM03 MOgnofio Ave. • 359-3041 •Santa Ana '260-4 s. Bristol St .• 7~1432 •Santa Ana 1302 E. 17th St.•9~1 I . I -. I I: 1· .. I .. I . . . .. . ,. .. ' Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 8, 1982 La.kers ba!ketbaU Bobby Sox registration 1.a1un11 N1auo1 Robb to be ht>ld Sulurdoy 111 fi 1,°" rea1s1r11tlon on C:rown V"llcy Pa l a Bela markt't• Nlauel from 10 8 m 10; P w;.y in Laguna l.eo1ut-ls for alrl - .. CltJmbake Week SoHuaa llo11p1t11·, 5$2 Club .. uth\'ni Call~ 1 nottli 72 22 29 t urn II amatt'ur Jolfcrs Jan P or ci;hth unnual Crosby ·Sou'h ro um Tournarnt1nl t I I ~ crn Couritt)' C:lub N 8 rv ne Cout I. · <'WJ><>rt·Beuch L::tle League regtJtratron . un1111a1on Vull rt'Rllllr1111on rr,1 pl t'y tJttJ Lt•aiu hi•ld S11tunJ.. 11Hrr1, •a<", 0 Ill 1 .. ~ Rc:h I ,.y und Sund . o "'' oO · 91991 f'lotll•t>r 11 lly at Wurdlow Playtol'l! should l1rl1; UnllnMton B.•at'h lo rcsu1trutron, llour ~ " harrh ('l'rtlftctttl' RemMfttn9 MfM Mtl•dU .. Jlln. 20 New Jene~. ~un. 2~ Detroit: Jan. 29 Mllwau e~. . 11hould brui(l a C<'l'llf • s. aaes 9·15 Grrls I l'l(iNtrlltron. ltd 1.urth certlfl<'utr lo Slinupi. wlll 111 uurnurne111 Is hll'hll h • Wl•('f( which llh10 lncl~d .a I Of (l:1mbul<e llo II cs n' n e ho~~ ~ckur11 lliJlnx. an unusual "hllarl tl It tourney featuring und h~~~ u~~nhdulrrowlng" holes for low each duy 1J urc· fl 11 m to 4 II P '" S om.., PlllYHl>t ,, •Id • <'hool (Uon O ~ M llfl• Wwrd/ Phocnhc; Feb. 3 New York .r'eb. \2 S Anlonio: Feb \4 Boston. 12.4~ lln . il'eb 16 seaute: Feb.· 19 • ~·:i'<i~n St11te: Feb. 23 Den~er : Feb. 26 Jun. 23 und 30 durl~ ,ie ht•ld Suturdayi., For mor(l Inform (l l!ame hours Stransky 111 49$.S36S.utlon. Phone Coralyn • " .. <'i.ppt•1·s pla .· · SIX ·bOmes. Entry fue. 199.95 .H nR 1n Hl1th .. ,.,,, 121 u w ow '8"' /~aes 13·151 urid ttY,1'."!Jlton Uc•ac·h 18 ""'"8Ue>. e ~u11r1• Patk Cu II 968 8329 frir mor(' lnf11r rnut,1u11 Phll11delphl11: Feb 28 Cleveland. 2 1>·~· h 9 Kansas City. March 12 -Chl:::o· Murch 14 -Dulhuo, 7 P m ; M h '30 S an Diego : April 2 arc A ·1 4 Portland, 12:30 Pm . Phoenix. pri A 11 11 Seattle 7 April 9 Denver, pr G td' Run for 'floag rt k. IO·kllnmetor . 1 ve ilometer 11nd ~roJg fTollv1t!FE:i;~ ~nefits roini;i to 111c•ludcs u T shfrt ~ Ct', S7 50 \\hich Wulk for llouu r . pm : April \4 Utah. April 16 o en Stale F m All Globetrotters play Entrv ft•t• $.50 w lk '" 111 non-runners brun.ch o't In u ~rs v. ill bt• tr<•aled to afl£•rwurd A 111<' d Cou~I C.'ountr} Club wulkl•rs "11r 11 '"" bl' given t o world Masters Marathon All games played at the oru . RouM, Tou:.i. of Orun (' Sen;i1or Ut•nniolo (" . • i:c ounty games ol 7 30 p.m . unle!>S noted Ticket tntornwtlon d Tickets are priced at Sl~.50. S8 50 an $7.00 f'or more information. call 12131 Thi.' llarlem Globetrotter:-. mukl' then annuul uppcaranc•· al lhe Forum in tngle~ood Saturcla~. Jan 23 ill 2 Pm . and Monda}, J11n 25 at 7 30 Pm toasted b . • ai1 P\:nlt•r Ht!'/I be Suluta . ) tnuMu of ceremonies Paul be heid a~~ others Pn('e, S75 It will Beach arrwtt llotel In Nev.Port Tenth annual World Ma:.teri. Murt~thon nd 10 k1lom\•te1 run :-.l'l for JJn :II '" Orange IX'adhnl' (o1 l'nlrll'!> I' Jan 2:> Entr) rt•c SI or $11 v.1th fr11med l'CrllCICall' or p.11 t11:1p.iuun L.ito· cnl r\ f('l' is adcht1on ul S3 C'ht•ck or mone' order'\ ·~ould bl' mudt• out I ll C\~ of OrJllltl'. 67'6-6000 I !Mustangs 1faCe test · CdM offers challenge By ROGER CARLSON Of -DaUr l'lleC SUH There's been a lot of noise coming out of Costa Mesa High, thanks to what appears to be the best basketball team since the dynamite 1966 team -tonight the scene shifts lo Corona del Mar High, where the Mustangs invade for a duel with th~ Sea Kings in Sea View League basketball action. The second of four s t raight e ncounters with contenaers for the crown. Costa Mesa's credentials will ·get a stern and multiple test. It starts at 7:30. Awaiting Costa Mesa are (1) Coach ; Jack Errion, (2) standout guard Chris Lynch, who has aver aged 32 points a . game in his last two starts, <3> tou~h : man-to-man pressure with a legitimate : press. (4) the home confines of Corona : del Mar. : IT'S A COMBINATION that not m any • have solved and for the Mustangs. who ; were 57.40 winners at University on 1 Wednesday, there's no chance to look ahead to Monday's game with visiting : Newport Harbor Costa Mesa attacks with a unique setup -there ia no legitimate center or : guard -they're all 6-4 senior forwards, : except for Dave Palmblade, who is two ; inches shorter a nd a class behind, but • still anothe' forward type. : It provides Coach Tim Parsel's Costa ; Mesa unit with balance. but it has its : disadvantages with the fact tnost teams I a re going to field taller front lines and , quicker backcourts. I Each is 1-0 in league play, along with , Estancia and Newport Harbor. Costa : Mesa is 6-4 overall, Corona del Mar is t 6-2. working on a six-game winning I streak. I ! C HANCES ARE I F you fl\ake 50 • points you'll win. Corona de l Mar has : no.t allowed its six victim s more than 47 : points and only one (Katella, 75-70> of t Mesa's list of losers has managed over i 50 points. It's two different looks -Mesa defends primarily with a zone <which > may be lo Lynch's advanttige wittt his range>. while CdM disdains it. Errion ' once called the zone .. Un-American." Elsewhere in the Sea View circuit it's E l Toro (0-1) al sizzling Newport Har bor Cl-0). University (0-1 ) at rival Irvine CO·l > and Es tancia Cl·O> at Saddleback (0-1), all al 7:30. Jrvine will try to snap its seven-game losing streak against 6-7 Brad Guess and Co. and Estancia takes its running game to Saddleback . where the R<Jtdrunners await ~ith a potential stall. WHILE THOSE FOUR are In tbe second of 14 rounds, South Coast and ' Angelus League action begins tonight, which includes Laguna Beach and Mater Dei, respectively. Laguna Beach, 7·6 overall, hosts one of the favor ites for the title, San Clemente. Mater Dei's Angelus opener is a natural, rival Servite. and there's no way the Monarchs can handle th.is crowd In their cracker box -it'll be played at Santa Ana College. Neil Riddell paces Laguna Beach , with his 22.7 scorine averaJe, but blue chip quality seems to end there. with no one else averaging in double fi1ures for the Artists. On the non-league scene, ·u.e bis one is VerbuQl Del at Ocean View. Other games involving Oran1e Cout area teams include L(>ng Beach Wit.on at Marina, Huntington Beach at MllUkan and Woodbridge at .MagnoUa. VerbUJll Del opetates with a ·~. 6·d • front line, backed by the quickness ot 6-2 Donald Brown and 6·3 Rlchar~ Townsend, while Ocean View is' led by 6·9'A Jim Usevltch and his'21.0 avera1e . ~~_ leavee Hawke · ' Lasuna Hillt K1&b School'• bullttbaJJ te1an wW bl wttbout HunUqtao Beach IUI~ trailer Jha ~ t.onlP1 bee•UH Of I~ IDeiililllillJ • J I t T b• ~' Lant, wbo was wlth the aawu • tbl Brea lDvtta~ ~::-=~·..., Tickets arc p1•1ced at SS 50, S7 SO and $9.SO Chlldcn under tht' UR'-" or \2 receive a $2 dli.counl C'ull 642 1463 for more fnformutwn s ·Addi111mal 1nformat1nn phone ~12 OJl!O CHRIS LYNCH Corona det Mar DA VE PALM BLADE Costa Mesa J IM USEVITCH Ocean View NEIL RIDDELL Laguna Beach MATT BEEUWSAERT MaterDet Lakers rate d NEW YORK <A P> - The Loa Ang e les takers-Phoenix Suns game tut Ott. 25 drew the largest audiente in tbe nine year• o f Christmas Day Nallonal BaatetbaU Associatton ,amu on CBS, the 1.••1ue announced Wed.ileeday. Mt. SAC, ·Grossmo:rit favored Orange Cop,st picked to finish fourt h in South Coast basketball. race Ever s ince I boldly predicted the Cleveland Indians would be in the 1981 World Series, my role a:; a s ports forecaster has been on thin ice, to say the least. But 1 must admit. I'm much closer to the community college basketball scene than 1 am the Cleveland Indians. thank goodness. With that thought in mind, here's a look at the Sou t h Coast Conference basketball race this season: 1. Mt. San Antonio, Coach Gene Victor, a Newport Beach resident, doesn't mind that lengthy trip up the Pomona Freeway to Walnut when he knows his Mounties are awaiting him. Mt. San Antonio boasts a 12·4 record. and most of the Mounties' s u ccess revolves around a talented center by 'the name of Derek Moore. It's sprprising that the Mounties boast the recc'kd they do, especially with the loss of the two players who sparked them last season Paul Perkins and Mike Kearse. Perkins. the South Coast Confer ence player of the year last season, moved on to West Texas State, while Kearse, only .a fr eshman las t se ason . d e fected to Riverside CC -which is one reason why Riverside CC is so good this year. Stilf. the Mounties aren 't perfect. Earlier in the season. Orange Coast - then on a roll -ripped Mt. SAC, 75·48 in thf' championship game of the Miles Eaton lnv1tational at OCC. a. Grossmoot. No. I'm not smoking any of that stuff. T he Griffins of Coach Rick Wilkerson are for real this season. thanks to seven players who are 6-6 or taller. T h e G r I rr I n s ( 12.4 ) b 0 as t s l x' sophomores, a 51 . 7 shooting percentage from the field and a talented sophomore• forward 1n 6 ·6 Mike Whitmarsh . Whitmarsh averages 19.7 points per game. and hauls down 8.5 rebounds per contest. His supporting cast includes 6-6 forward Keith Jones ( 11.4 scoring, 6.S rebounds> and guard Brian Garadonna who carries an 8.0 aver age. Grossmont captured championships of its own tournament and the San Diego Mesa tourney and jumped out to a S·l record. However the team was hurt by the loss of point guard Keith Hill who wlls ruled ineligible because of a transcript problem after the Griffins' 5·1 start. 3. Santa Ana. Coach Rolland Todd's COMMUNITY COLLEGES CURT SEED EN Dons reeled off 11 straight victories earlier tn the season. Most impressive was a 97-96 verdict over Riverside CC. However. the Dons have also fallen upon hard limes. los ing four straight before opening conference play with an 89-76 win over San Dif;go Mesa Wednesday night. The Dons have lost to East Los Angeles. Dixie College or Utah and to Saddleback twice. Todd, for one. figures this year 's race will be close. • • 1 think the team that can win eonsistently at home will have the edge. Last year. Fullerton won the ~itle with three losses and three or even four could win it this season." Todd predicts. Guards Willie Patterson and Greg West lead the Dons in scoring. Patterson carried a 17.4 average into the conference play while West is at 16.0. In addition. Santa Ana is receiving excellent board work Crom center Robert Gustajvis and forward Joel Washington. Combined, they average 14 rebounds per game. 4. Orange Coast. Des pite the loss of 6-7 center Frank Luongo who quit the team for personal reasons, and the lengthy absence of 6·5 forward J im Baldwin with a broken nose. Coach Tandy Gillis' squad refuses to give in. The Pirates (9·8> were not impressive in a 73·52 defeat to Saddleback and a 66-50 loss lo Santa Barbara GC in the Saddleback Tournament. but they did bounce back to score tough victories over LA Valley < 42-40 J and East Los Angeles < 62·61 ) in two of their final three non-conference games. Talented sophomore guard Chr: Beasley has led the OCC scoring in all bu t two of the Rirates' 17 games, and the 6 I s tandout currently averages 20 points per game. · .. r guess I was too optimistic before the season started,'' Gillis says. "Things haven't gone quite the way J thought they would." OCC, before Wednesday night's 70·59 defeat to Fullerton. was hitting on just 42.3 percent of its shots. That's the lowest OCC team shooting percentage in 16 seasons . "We're not shooting as well as I thought w e could and I feJt we would be considerably s tronger ins ide,'' Gillis points out On the rest of the league, Gillis says: "Everyone is looking for Cerritos and Santa Ana to be the teams lo beat. but I think Mt San Antonio 1s going to be very strong, and I'm very impressed with the way Grossmont has been playing lately " 5. Fuller ton. The Hornets improved their record lo 8·8 with OCC. and 6-6 freshman forward Dan Wright and 6-4 sophomore forward Andre Smith have been the catalysLs behind their sporadic success. Wright leads the llornels botti in scoring ( 17 . 9 average) and rebounds (8.4 averagel. Smith came into the league with a 16.8 scoring avera~e. "Andre and Danny have both done a great job for us, pickmg up the scoring slack. Bul in th is conference a team with JUSt lwo players is not going to win it," concedes first year coach Roger See. "In the first 15 games we've committed 35 more turnovers than our opponents and that's why we're 7-8 instead of 10-5." See adds 6. Cerritos. The Falcons m ay be the early favorites m the conference. but their non-conference performances weren't that thrilling The Falcons are 8-8 after thei.- loss to Mt SAC. Their victories include wins over their alumni team. that awesome quintet from the Azusa· Pac1f1c JV team. and good ol' Camp Pendleton. The Falcon losses include setbacks to San Joaquin Delta, S anta Rosa an~ Glendale. Arll · In Cerritos' defense, the Hornets did hand Cypress one of its most convincin~ defeats a 53-46 decision Dec. 5. And the Falcons have played both Golden West ( 13·3) a nd Long Beach CC on even terms before falling Also in support of the Falcons. all but two of their non conference games were played away from Cerritos The Falcons' top score r 1s Tim Kuype.r who has led his teammates in 12 games and boas ts a ga me-high 26 in helping Cerritos stun Riverside. 76· 72. 7. San Diego Mesa. The Olympians are 1·12 Need I say more? W ringout set for Saturday 5i HI RIPllT \f¥ ~ OUTSTANDINC VALUES! Six c lasses of sailboats, ranging from J -2 4 s to Performance Handicap Racing Fleet yachts will see action Saturday in Huntington Harbour Yacht Club's Winter Wringout Regatta lo be sailed over ocean courses. One of the highlights of this annual event is the video-taping or the racing whi ch can be viewed b y s kippers and crewmen at the clubhouse after the races Lido Isle Yacht Club will stage the first of its three-race Adult Sabot Series Saturday. Racing will be over bay courses starting from in front of t he LIYC clubhouse. R ustle r s travel to Santa Monica SANTA MONICA -.:0otden Wes t College, stunned "by LA Southwest i n its Southern CalUornta Con f erence basketball opener Tuesday night will try to bounce back tonight when the Rustlers tangle with hoet.,ianta Monica CC. The <;onalri ouuco~ed Ea.St Los Angeles, 106·91 io their opener and are 11-6 on the year. GWC, 13-3. was handed a 11·88 setback by the upstart Cougars Tue1day at home, A cold second half, tn which Ute llUllJen conneet9d on Ju.t 14 ol • from the noor (. percent). ltd to fWC'a demfae qalnlt LA SouthWMt. I SIEaaANIYADA Here••• Ow s•I <-lllons lo< fllurtday. LaJMll ~ no new, bew 7 IMI. ~ -paOed ...-.. l wrlau 1111 .. I-al No new, 110-144 ln<ll ti. ... mac:N,. 9"00tna0 -P<KUd -dff, ~K <ll•lrl days, two <flair' •1 nlQhl. D.,,..,. Mil a...cll No MW, !NH •11 IHI, ma<lllM Qtoomtod •nd open po-. ,_ cllalr lllls Salla Sltflottt ,..o new. S:..st ll·lf reel, mechlne gr-.!--n powo.r two t Nl"- S ... •r llewl -No new, ll0-131 ln<l'lff, ,,.,_ end machine P«•lld ....-, , """ <llaln. Tallff 0-.r ... o new. baM S IMI, POWder, mau1lne groomed and pecked powder, two <llalrt. H-51.,. NO new, beU S• ln<M\ 11 lodge, UI lnc:IW• •I lhe lop, machine oroomlld, pachd powder.,...,,,, <!lairs Al,.,.. ~ -No new, I IMI al IOdge, 11 IHt •I upper mountain, mechlM oroomed, pathd """"'*'· llw <Ila Ira, one •urfa<e 1111 H........... No-· S feet al la•o. t IMI al 100, POWdor -maclllne o.-..11c1. ,_ chain, row ...naca 1111s. S411aw Yall9\1 -1,200 l•I. no -. -h~ ••ti, •owder •nd packeo powoer mac"'"* tr~. ubl• car, QOndOle afld 11 tllaln. Al ,,200 fMt, nio ...... bate S '"'· ..-. P«hd .. wder, mad1IM "-· 11.,. "411>1•. one 1r1p1e, -wrtec• 1111 Talloo Siii ..... No new, baff ~11 IHI, Powder ...., maclllne PK•H ~. two ct\81••. -·-"""*"'" Y•lley No new. I ll> baff, -end m•chlne oroomed P•U•d powder. lull -rallon. Siil llKllM -No rww, n lft<he\ •I too, 60 lnt!IH el botlom. POwo.r and ma<:lllne groomed.,.,_, "" "'"'"· Ml. aosa -No n.-w, bne 1•-U• lnt,,.s, maclllne oroomed •nll open powder, lull ooerallon. I.cite 5-mmlt -No new, bone 1·12 leet, Po- and packed ~r. 1-clwllrs. Slttr• Sid RMKll -No new ...... , ,. lnc:llls, powcttr and mathlrw oroomed, lwo ctowi. chal". Kin--No new • .,. .. 10 IMI •i 1>onom. IS-11 f .. I el IOP, DO-r •nd P<K•lld .,.,...,.., elQlll 1113. Mr. ..... ~w 1 ln<hes, be•e 10.,, 1 .. 1 al lodQ•. 13V. Itel •I too. pow.S.r end p11<:kH powdar. M• chairs D ..... RI... ...0 ..... ,.. '"'· DO-eno paOed ~r, lo.w Chain. CLNTltolLCAU,OaNIA ..... f'M•-CI-. Mafftf'Mitll MMMYI• -No new, INM 10\I> ..... pad.ct OOwder wllh _., ~. 2 ,__, .. J ~·----· li<helrt , _ __. -.... -·SIMI NM,_.. -paO,eclpowotr, 1-cllal"- ~ ..... -No ,..-1 NEW 1982VW OUANTUM W AGON !, 5pd trans. air cond., leatherette seats. radial tires and morel (Slk. 3009) (004 796) Ll1t Pric• S 12,065 Dl1eoUnt S 1370 SALE PIUCE s 10 695 NEW 1912 SCllOCCO Cou pe 5 speed transmission. metalllc p11n1. rear w indow w1per/w11her, a lloy wheels. stereo caseette and morel (Stk. 323S) (017766) SAU PllCE s I 0 695 N9A .. ., .... CO..••••N<• ...... OMelee ..... .,. SHUit Plloenla • I. ll"tl. e• u .•. 7911 JI " ·"' > H IJ ,$94 S ,. .......... Goldin State *01tgo 11 1' .Sii M 11 I• ."3 • • u .uo" .....,...Dlw"* $MAllt.Mlo O..W.r ._.,on JI II M6 K•n•uClty Ultll OtllH " 17 .• w. u " .cu 1'h 12 21 .JM ""' " •. us""' I t 4 .HOU LUT•aN Cle*PlaaNCll AINMkDM al• PlllltcMl&lfli. 25 7 •ottOll " • New Ycrir 11 16 WtllllftOlon 14 II Ntw Jlf'MY It 20 C-•Dtwlal• lllllllwMIUe lf14111tN AUtnlt CM<aeo Otlrolt Cltvitland " 10 11 IS u " 14 " u " . ,. ,_....., •• k_ Plloenl• 110, Ottrllil" •••1\11191on 1119. Clewl•nd 100 l(ansu CJIY 101, Hew York 103 Se•ltl• 11• • .-an 101 O•llt\ lll. Sen Oltgo m Sen A--.lo 123. OolcMfl Stele I 12 T ........ aO-a l.a'-"tt CN<lllD PlllltOt ... t et lollon Cl .... land 11 New JIH'"•'f Atlaoteet Mllwtull .. Inell_ It Utan Oe11wer •1 Porlltnd College r•tlna1 NCAA OIVISTON 11 1. Vlrolni• Union Ill 2. NtbretU-Ornellt >. Cl.,.lon Sl., Pt •. 01 .. rld"' Colun\ble S. Ct l Slalle Hot'lhrldgl •. Cal Poly ISL.Of 1 HortllO.IUJC• I. Wrl(lllt St .. Ofllo t.8toomsbu1"9Sl,.P1 10. ICtnlu<lly WHleyWI 11. Albtnvst .. ~. 12. Centre! FIO<'lclt 1>. Ct! ~ 8"el"tllekl U. $pr1ngli.td, Man IS. S.Cred HMrt. Conn 16 Ind. st.·Ev-wllle 11 C ... .,...yst., Pe 11. Marv1-.e.it1mor1 H HWMl-lst JO. MOll.-.tfl, H.J. IKA/o DIVISION Ill 1, Augusterit, Ill. ISi 2, SltMn ~lencl, H.Y >. SL AndrWws, H.C 4 Otte<-. ()fllo S Wld9Mf, Pt. 6.Clan,Mtu 1. Upselt, H.J. I. 8eloll Wl~ t 51. i..-ence, H Y Iii.) W-. Ind. 11. Oklll-. Pt 12. Whcontlr>-Milw..,k" 13 worcester-Plvrnout11, PMeu. u . PolJid.lm SI .. H. y. 15,H-.Mkll. 16. Neb<•ll• 'Wffleyen 11 Grove CllY. Pe. II H•mllton, H Y 19 Heldelbero, ()No JO R-..v. ,Jtl - .742 1111 ''" ..... .Ul 11 .>7S 1> ..., -Sit M M1 M .ti• ' .424 • •• 1'V. 1.0 !40 UH 1S2 7.0 141 •2 111 f.I " It.I tt 10-2 • ., 90' .. I 10 •1 S1 1-1 so .. 2 • 11-1 ., s.o • .. J 31 .. , l5 S-1 JI 1·2 J4 t.J 13 .. I 1J l·J 1• n.o 121 Ml 1H ., 11• •1 11' S.> ,.. M ft •1 • s-1 n s-1 n '-I 16 ... " S-1 S1 .., .. f.I ,. .. , ,. J.1 • .. , Z2 .. , II H ' COMMUNITY COLLEGE South Coaat Conterenc. L..Nlm o-.11 W L W L Ml. Sen Antonio I 0 12 • 511111 AN 1 0 13 • Fullerton 1 O I I Groumont o o 12 • Ore~CoMI 0 I t I C.trllOI 0 I I I S.n0"9o-O 1 1 IJ s.tllrUT• 0-11:•1 S.rtl• AM ti Or1119t CNfl Gros..-ti Fu41ert0ft Cerrllot •Is-Ole9o Mu• Southern Cal Conference . ~-.. W L W L Sent• Monie• Cypress LASou~ LOS A llQllffs CC I G<>lden-0 Rio Hondo 0 EHi LOS A-lft 0 0 11 • 0 ' s 0 1 1 0 1 • ' 1l , • 1 LA H•rbor 0 I 1 t s 10 T ......... aG-17:•1 Goloert WHI 11 Sent• Monk• R lo H-ti Los AnotleS CC LA Htrbor 411 LA Sout--.;1 E HI LOS A-ltt ti CYl>ttU Meeloft Con .. renoe ........ . " ......,_, 10 ltlvwtl*C:C I e ....... _..... t • t.11 Oltte cc • • '"'• • 1 ~~r • t ............ " • 1 ~t._t,:•I ........ et R.,,.,.. cc len Olee9 ec •Citrin ~·~·'"·-·· ow.HI . " 11 • 11 ) It , 7 1 10 1 ' 11 . ' H&QH 8CttOOL ITANDINOS ... view L•u~~. 0-.. • I. • I. c .. tt lNM 1 O • • Conn.I cl9I ,.,._, 1 O • I e•tencl• 1 o ' t N ... "'1 Hal'W I 0 • El Toro O 1 1 lr\tlN I 1 0 SecldlWKll 0 I t University • • O t • TMlltM't0-.,111•1 Cott• MKe .. ow-... 'Mat Et Tote• Ntwwr\Hol'Mf' EUlll<leM~k Unlvenlty al ltvlM South Coeet Le99ue .,......... • ..-1,:ltl Ltfl9 lltecll WlllOll 11 MMl111 kn Cl-et~'"'" Youn• Hlllt ti 0ent Hiii• II P."1.) C•plalr-Vtlley •I Minion Viejo Angelu• LHQUe T ......... a .. MH{):•I Servile~ Mitt• Oii •t Sent• An• Coll-811Np MDnlOOrnerY ti ., .._ Amel NofMHgue TMitM't .. -C7:•> L-8Mc1I WlllClll •I Mtrllll WOOdbr'ldgll et Mt9noflt v erl>Wft Oii et O<Mfl View Hunllngton llMcll et Mllllun HIGH SCHOOL WPMEN Honn 70, fftn. Vly. 31 •1vaattoa 9'0RTH -Cr•••-It, Miiier ll, Jontt fl, Pocter 11, ,......... 4. Totll•. J3H10. .. OUNTAIN VAl.LRY -Berton t. Pucllelllll 1. Arledge 4, llUl'<ll I, Glnltlurg U . Oewls 10. Totels: 1' Ml >t Sc-..,~ Mortll 11 12 1t 21-10 Po;int•l11 V•llev u 12 • t-Jt TOl•I fOUl.1: Hortll 10, F-teln Velley I. Lakewood 53, Marin• 48 LAICllWOOO -Ftuber 2, Well• 12, ~on H, Ancler'SOft 4, Vorl\lt\ '· 8oC>1 2, Green I Tot.Ills: 22 .. ,.,>. lllllAatNA -SmtllwOOCI 3, Lonie ll, Howtrcl •. At'msb'Oft9 t. C-tt 16, LoY• 4, AndtrNft 4, 8ell1n1y O. Tol•l1: 214·1l 4'. k-..., Olwlrten L•k•w-n 12 u IS-U Merine 10 1• 10 1•- f 0111 loult· Ltkewoocl t , M•rlnt ll; "ouled out: L.oyt 1-rlnt l Edlaon so. Mater Del 42 •OtlOll -KrUllfl• 11, H-•· Trept J, 8111ner 7, ~v .. 11, T-be 11. TMll~ HIMS SO. lllllATRa l>l!I -K 8tllW t , KIMll 2, P. eeur >. Gorman 11, J.,.,,._, •. Verl~o 1. TOl•lt: 1S 12·24 0 . Sc-..., °"''"" ECllloO 4 IS 12 11-50 Maltr el 11 • IS I~ Tolll loutt : Edison 10, Mtler 0.1 20; l'ouled out· amner IEClllonl. OenHever (Edison),~ (Meler Oel), TedW<M: EClllOfl Coecl\ While lmne a , University 3t 1av1Ma -SttslmMI •• E. Oden •• K. Oden 12. PNlll r, Tr.....,_11 1, Flynn •. Bow.r >.Tot.alt: n s.n tt. UN1v•as1n -Conlrer• 10. Hines 4, HIWlll 7, Zlmmerm41n 10, V--a. Me1Wblf• S. Tottfs: 16 7-20 lt. k_..,0.."9n lrwlne 11 14 12 12-49 University 12 • • 12-Jt Totel loult lrvlne II, Unlvenlly It; Fo11led out: Steumen (lrvlMI. K. 00.. llrvlntl, Pr11e11 llr•lrtet, Underwooo I Vnl •e rslty). lt<llnl c•I Gtrcl• I U rtlvtr>llyl. E•t•nci• 57, Seddleback 5 SAPOLIEaAClt -JOM>On 2, Aull o. McGlrinl1 1, Mo<lllL'*I 0, Hntll 2, T-0 Total.: 2 , .. :s. llSTANCIA -lbutlll O. Cerpenter •. Vetcller >. _,_ 4. --4, Conw•y J, M.cMllllen •. ScllolH 2. Cllrlt lm t n •. HttllcoO 4, ~JI ~"°"'""" Seddl-k I J 0 2-S Etl41ncl• u 10 16 11-SI Toltl fouls. Seddl-k t, Etltf\Clt U. CdM 53, Coate MeH 44 CORC>ttA OEL MAa -Elllty 12, 8rlte0e •. Romney 0, Kend•ll U , O•cllfttr •. Gr .......... 12, Ooclclt 2. Totall JI ._12 U. COSTA MESA -Lu• J, Ulm•r 20, Ne411 2, S.419er t, Gercl• I, A.-rlt •. M<:.41- o, Rf,__ 0, Stljovk 2. Total\. JO '-IO ... Sc-..., OIOlf1tn Cbrone Cltl Mer 11 1J 10 U -53 Coll• Mew 11 1 12 u ..... Tot•I fouls.; Cofone del Mer 10, COiia Me .. 11; Foul9dout Lu• ICOlll~I. Tuoeon Open er_.. 14_.., »»-4f 410....... • ....... Al1111T.... ~ IUU ""'-"' ~ "'"'*'~ .... ...., ~~-.. ...., c..._1 ~ ... o..-....... CM¥111...... ...._.. ~......... ....... ~ wuw-. aw.-41 Vtll<t HW"" ~ .=i=r = ..... ., HNtll »-,,.._.. •• ,,, Jll94tl = : AIMr.._ JIM ,...,,. SWt-4t .,.,_. • .,, ~a.-tt Jim~ ~ ·-"""-~ Riil ~-.... ~_.., JN Hiter ~ H•i. lrwln >S.M-4t •ru<• Oooial.. ,...__.. .. ,,., H-1 u.a.-10 0•11 ltrlclley U-._10 TWll Jenllh.,. ._,._10 $ltV9 J-U.IS-10 F11lry Z-ler M·»-10 l"ll'rHI Fflltr u.JS.-10 C..,tta 51,... n...,_,. J•CNIL M-»-10 Hlllltft G1w11 »-,._10 ...... ._ ~-10 Jim Deni JS..U-10 .... , Fltzllugtl ,..._10 One $tedilon U-U-10 l.allfly Wldklnt U.U-10 Jotlflny Mfli.. U.U-10 JM ·->4-»-10 Andy llMn »-S.--10 Jefl T'*'-> »-U--11 ROft Streck M-11-11 Jofln ~..., U.»-11 Ed l'lorl U-V-11 Terry Oltlll M->7-11 0.... Lltllw »-»-11 0on Poo!rt U.2'-11 Oewld 5-JS.2'-11 MllleMlll ~11 Ptllf Oostemull 11-U-71 Marti O'M••n J1·*4-11 Bruce Ll-t M-V-11 IC'tllll ""llH W.37-11 L.Mry Ntlaon :U.»-11 ROftrtle Bl«k J1·-11 MIU o-td i..JS-71 Victor R~ U.»-11 Oon J_., U-»-11 Otn Ht lldonon U.»-11 Otle Oouolats i..u-11 Biil l(tttw1 •"-11 J onn Schroeder M-at-11 Pll McGowan JS.1'-11 Terry ~ U-»-71 Ot•ld EchotrdS >t.V-11 Jim a-)6.U-71 JOM Jtcllaon U.-11 Scott WetklM Jl·M-11 Clltrlle Glblon -.-12 MIU Sfnltll · U->7-12 Woody •1ec11-n ~7-12 Jim Simons •Jl>-12 Red Cutt »-»-n J.C. SnMG ».-12 Tim $1mpSon U-17-12 D••• Elc11e1i.roer U·»-12 O.A. Welbrf119 316-16-12 GHroe Bums 11·»-12 Br•d 8ryent )t.Jl-12 Clllp 8ecll M·Jl-12 Tom Clltln •-n Jell S.fldert J1·U-12 8111 S.ndtr >t.D-12 Jon a..i... .--12 H-••d Twllty lS.11-12 Mike Reid »·»-12 Fred Couplt1 ,._._12 Biii Britton ,._,._12 LM Elder )t.Jl-12 Merk L'l'I Jt.>4-7> BoOl>v Wtdklns M·,.._7> Larry Rinker »-11-n R .. C•ldwtll U.Jl-7> Scott Hoctl '1·3'-12 Art well Jl·»-n Jtlf Mltci.fl •V-n Homero Bien<• ,._,,_ n $tew M.n n.,._n Grltr J~ •v-n Fr•• c-,..,,_,, Jlfrv Heerd 11.,._n O•n• QulQlev l1·-n Mtwe Mel..,.. J7·»-1J Mike McCullouell Jt.lol-n LOft Hl'*le Jt.J7-l'S Lou Cr-•»-7> Clll Clll -·-I JS.»-7> Ot Ye Hiii Jt-Jt-7> G41ry Hal~• >~•-n G•ry Trll-lol·JJ-n R09tr Mellblt JM7-1' 8111 C•ll• >1·>1-74 MIU Soll JS.,._1' Gtor .. Cadle Jt.•,-1' Fred Mertl 11-31-14 Jim lertler ,..._,. ... 8ym.n .. ,._,. Miiier S-r >1·3'1-14 Ed Set-l7·J7-1' Merk P'11ttltr U-40-75 ~.e Arc...... ,,_,._,, Steve LIM>ll!r l1·•-7S 8111 GMrttt •n-15 J-.. -l~«>-15 Gree LlndQultt ,..,._,, R-r C.Mn 37·»-H Tommy v11en11,. ,..,._,, Miile Brennen >1·»-7' Morrlt Hlltel.i.y •»-IS M.,11 II-•11-15 Larry Mire ,,.,._,. llo«ITwey ,..._76 Lyn Lott •»-7• Jeff Kern .,._,. °'" Polll ,..,,_,. Arwty Norttl Jt. >7-7' Ptul Pu.U. J1·Jt-1• lntem•tlon•I tourney (et .,.,..,., Seoltto Africa I Maril MCC.n .._,~,,. Andrew NWrr-v 11..-1«1 Alen Pete '1·14-141 Iowa blasts Purdue Basketball scores Ohio St. stuns Minnesota in Big Ten co:_.-r Prom AP dlspatc:hes IOWA CITY, Iowa -A se<:ond-halr surge led by Michael Payne and Mark Gannon helped No. 7 Iowa to a 62-40 victory over Purdue in Big Ten college basketball Thursday. The two Hawkeyes combined Cor 13 points in the first nine minutes of the period. That run, plus a stout Iowa defense that held the Boilermakers to just 14 second-half points, gave Iowa its first Big Ten victory of the season and pushed the Hawkeyes to a 9·1 overall mark. Purdue lengthened it• losinJ streak. to six games, falling to 3-7 overall and 0·1 in the league . Ohio St. 49, Mfnnesot• 47 COLUMBUS, Ohio -Clark KeU011•a basket wilb lesa than three minute remalnlnc for Ohio ~te e nabled the Buckeyes to upset sixtb·ranked MlMeaota 49·47 in the Blg Ten opener for both teams. The Buckeyes, who polled their 1Lxtb 1traf1bt victory, clinched the victory when freshman tuant Ron Stokes lank a Cree throw w1lh three secondl Jett. zone press defense forced the Billikens into 13 turnovers in a first half which ended with Louisville on top 42·24. Lancaster Gordon, Milt Wainer and Charles Jones each scored 12 points for the-winners. Sant• Clar• 71 , P•clflc 89 STOCKTON -Senior Bill Duffy scored a career -high 29 points to lead Santa Clara to a 71-69 victory over Pacific. Duffy shot a perfect s-ror...a from tbe !loot And '·for-4 from the llne in the !int h•ll, and overall the Broncos abot 64 percent for the aame. ~ Titek'S Ued the game at 54-Stt wilh six mtnuta left ln t.be game, and tied lt aialn at 58-58. Derryl WiUiams' basket put the Broncoe ahead to stay. Steve Howard had 21 polnt.1 for UOP. The Tigers' Matt Waldron'• 37-game streak of double fi1ure1 ended Tburaday when he scored only seven pointa. Idaho 72, Nev.·R•no M Frnno $1. U , ..._rdlne • S.nl41 0 •• 71, Pacllk " Western Wttlllno1on S7, CleremOftl·-SI ....... Color-St. SO, BYU 40 ldello 72. Nev-(11-1M12 otl Wyoming JS, Ut.11 •t Bois. St. 71, Hort ..... n Arl10111 n ........... h•n ·EI Peso •• l'ort H•y• SI. ., W. TtJtn SI. to, Ullll SI. 11 Ark•-54. 51. SW Mluovrl SI. u Or•• Rotitrtt 120, Mo Soulllern a Arti•Llttle Rocll 17, SemfCH"CI 11 ~ llllnol1 60, Nortflwttlem SO Mlclllten St . .S, INllent SI low• •t. PwdUe 40 WIK.OMlft •1, Ml<lll .... U Olllo St. ft, Mlnnetot• •1 CrtlOfllon 11, S. llllnol• S9 W. llllnola 102, Wm . Penn 41 Wlt.-G,...,. Bey ... llutler '2 .... Louis vii le 19, St. louh » T111-llS, Wfelo $1. 4J .... u. '2. Navy ,. AllCI04edllM $1. "-,..,_ ., MICldle T-I), Allrtll '2 Mtrtlltll '7, O.wldNn U " Gt. ScMMrn n. Htntfil.llmmo,. HCMll-._, .... , Ha LCMlltltfta .. MoreflHdSt. tt, W. ICtl\Ncky S1 a tcllt'llCIM 1 .. w. Vlr .. nle Tt<ll JI lleltofl .......... Mwt lt 1' ·-Otl ••.,. ... ~ .. TOU•9'AMawn ...... .._ C•ll• •Noire Oemt 70, Ollm ":t:•rtM. 111 • ., '9cllk tot.. Otece, lrtO, A ...... ,.._,,,_SI .... flt '--It, O,_wllle, Ill, SI CofftMUntty eon.oe ............ c~a,.,...._ vener• 0.11#'11,., .... ----· .. ~n.~11" c....,-•. ~.,. RSNO -ldabo forward Gordie Herlllert •CC>red •la DOtnta ta the second o'ert.tm• perioil to lift llth-ranhd Vandal• to a 12-H victory over Nevada·Reno la the Blc Sty Conferenee opener Tbundey. Tbe um-WU lMd 29-29 I~ the ball, Dotted at ... at the end or n1ulatiaa pa., and a-ta at Uae end I ~U.• tint o.trUme. la Ule leeand ~·· Jltrlllrt, W"t I.A 47, Tt .. Ttdl 4t TiltUJ, v.Mwo 1• ......... °""" Old.,.,,....:.~ .. ... MJ:!~ . CM'MO .. MM II, C... Mt.-.. lti.claP,11•• lb U Ph ftetsll ..... ~•JU.Ill· ........ II ...-.; ..... -........ '"° ,.... 1t11row1 to pr .......... ,...... •••.• u.,.... Wiiliitile ~ ,,..,.... ~ . ......_.,..,,. -·. ........... ,....~Jt .............. c-i • .................. ~ Qrange Coat DAILY ALOT/Fr1day, Jl_J1Ulry 8, 1812 NHL ~•1.1.COM,a•INCI ......... .,.~ Wl.T .......... ... 1 "' '" .. t• tt t 144 ID a. IJ 11 10 IW lit a U 12 S ~ t• JI t ... 11t ,... tA • ...,.,..ot. ..... Ml-IOU ft, LMlll Cltk ... Wlnnl11t1 ,.,onlo Detroit 11 lt IJ 1'7 1•1 • "11 • ua '" a "u • m trt •1 •• Ill • IM "' • ti II 11 171 lat P 12 ,. • •«> 177 • WA'-•ICONP•••NC• Plllrica Df.,..._ MY ltl ...... ra t4 11 S 114 1Jt Q Pftll ... ltl'IN 1A U 1 Ut t•' ft ~It~ 11 11 • "' 1•1 '2 HY awioon 11 II S 144 t• 1' Wtlll~ 12 U • ISi 71 21 .._Df<tlV. •••on u 11 s 111 tM u eu11110 22 11 • 1 ff "' n Molllretl 21 10 t 1tt 110 SI OueM< 21 1S s ltl "' 0 Heriford 10 21 t ,,. 0• 2' T~ak#M ic1...-a,W ........ I lotlon I, Wlnn1cM19 t H Y laltndt" S. ""''-lpfll• 4 NY lllf!OM'I 4. venc.,wr I Oelroll s. Pitt-Oii • Toronto•. CMowY • T ........ t9-e !>I. LOUlt ti Color.00 ..._., •• ca_ .. 1( ...... , ...... Wlnnlpeo •I Oetroll llo11on t1 ~ llufle...i lilerlflH'd Cllkt90 et NY Renotn Ct lOMV et E~ Pl\ll.et411Nt ti HY la-rt VMIC..,_ ti PlllsbolrQll MOft1,..., II ~ow Wttl\lft(llon ti St. t..o..11 Klng1 3, Cepltel1 3 Sc_., ... "_ Lot Angeltt Wlllll,noton fl'lrst ... 1'1M. 0 , 1-l , 0 1-3 1, WHlllnoton, Mar11k tt IVellcll, Veltnlfntl, S:ID.2, WMl\lnotofl. McTl9Qolr1 2 I Owclle1nt . Holl I , t :J7 PtMllln.~etien. LA, J M, Ctmtaott, W11, 7·1M; Green, WH. I: u. H1119•lellem LA, 11·«>. Vtlenllne, w ... 11 IM, Holl, Wes. 20.00 ..... l'enM 3. LOI Anoel«S. 8-11 2' !Dionne, Htrdyl, 1:01. •. Lot Angeltt, Simmer 1 ITerrlon, Foo>. S: U. 1'9Mltles·MCT-rl, WH, l :OI; Olonne, LA, •:oil, Wena, LA. 1J: u ; Mulwy, LA. 1':2'; Gertner. w ... H ·U . hylOf', LA, 1t:42 \"111 ..... r ... S Wes,lllnglOft, Cerpe""' IS tWeller, MecKlnnon), S.12. •· LOS AnQOtltt, Fo• u IMurplly, Uwl•I. 1):21 Pen•lllo ·IAWll, LA, !:JO; T•rlor, LA, •:4'0, McT-r1. WH, ClcMlbltmlnor. •:«>. $11ot1 on ..... -LOI Angelel ••U-2' W ••II I 119ton "·''"-1'. Go•llu -Los Anoetu, Ke•nt WHlllnoton, P•rro. A -'·"" Loa Alamlto• TMUa$DAY'S aaSULTS , ..... ,......... ..-rteftlw• --.i wr.!.~~ ~ ~~· 10 IO S IO l.00 111 Melle You l'nlucl IC#OOUI S.. I ... Jt111nlts .Je1 l~sJ 4.10 Al>O r•cecl: Rocbt Rnelle, o--, MM.cl, Sltpplrt Uvety, ~Cit Men, Any Time Ledy, Sliy Roule, l.tClv Alvel"t Time: 11.10. U eXACTA 1•21 N ICI U..IO. saco"o a.11e11. a , ... en Tet> I!"' Up IC:.doul t.40 UO UO 111, LHoue o.M9r (Adtlrl 4 60 uo Limited Polky ICre-rl l.10 Al>O r-: G'fP'y S--rmen. Hot Stoca. • Leos Blecll llMr • ..tuw•r• On ToP. G--· lllt 11<11 Time 1061 TMIRO RACE. «lO ytrclt At\cly lua I BleVlnt) II 20 10.20 JM Plunder> FIHll I Freoy) 12 00 J.IO Added vet .. IHeru 2.60 AIM> rl(ff: 5-llctl, Bob VIII Moon, Dub!-. Our 1'Ur11 Jo, 81centennl•I 8M, El Rtm411. RoYtl 11¥ Won . Time 20.1• lJ ll XACTA IM I Otkl SIJ:J 20 'OU a TM llAC&. 0 '"'" Gow lnSl•l-ti.I •60 • 60 J«I Sov""OfSUmmer l AOelrl 4t0 2.tO P"<" Pkur (Oonll-•1 2.«> Al>O rtetd: EHy Wty Sb , -lencllOly ~l1lrt1, Fulur•d L•d•. Ptlnled Rebel, 1'rlple S.i.. Time· J0.45 u llllACTA IM I oelo m 20 ""™ RAc:E.«lllytrdl A"'ley L.,..... !Hert) t «I l 4'0 2AG Oltllflcllwty IMllC'l\elll I) IO UO LNCll119 St# 1Cf'N9trl 4M AlllO ,...,, Alive Gel. P•rr Seit. Im Kttty Grfffl, J .. tenold I.Ott, Coslly Clltrm. Time· 20.2'. U aXACTA 1 .. 71 paid $.0 10 SIJtT" llACI. 400 yerC11. Oolly1 ..._I 8ie.riMI t IO • JO UO Pieffer...._ !Hartl J 60 J.60 euo• Roy•I I Mll <lltll l LOO Al ...... , ............. , .H!Mltl,"'"' N •··~· Tiii l'TlfM DMM, .._. ..., c-.,._.._o... '141tt a.11. r· .. ,, ..... 11AC9, -"'""· MoV9 Oii i.MY CA*lrl •• ,._. ut 0 .. 11 ... (Mltcfltll) • • • •• MIM (N~l ..... O t• "'Wiii Mlle (Atmlll'tl\tl ••• AIU r.cfft Jtl MKet, Lii •111 LM, aetllt Uno, •11t1t11 ~-... Mt•ttr .._. Tlmt•&JO. U •x~TA Ooll "" ... u o. Atlt~; •.IA· IUNTN lllAC•1110 y ... IM ........ ,,en...,, •• ... a.• "*"" ~ IPMl.llMI •" •M hnta Anft• TttUatOAY'l •HUl.TJ , ..... ~--., 'tan ltACl.•flw'°"91 O•ntl"tC.-t CHorrlil 40.IO 11,IO 7M Sllfl N ,leet tOl1¥trMI UO t .IO Pueblo~elOltll 1M Alto .....,, R-y, A-ton 1!1411!re, Trelflc P•tern, P1111.-1p111a lted, c..... CMlec ... n ... ., 1 12 111. HCCNIO aACa. • lurfonOI . S-c-IHtwll'l'I 6.00 JM UO C~n ~ IVtlMNeltl I JO JM Sllrenne•a 8o't IOr\ee•I Sa AIM> r-· WW, Son A-le•. T°""' Tim, Run And Grin, Merr.,,...~ .. , I'm COlltcl- Tlmt; l:IU/S • ti DAILY DOU•Le CHI oeld •111 «>. TMlaD •AC•.• lurlonOI. Gl .. nllc l~rl • 00 J.IO uo BOid And 811nd IV1len11 • ..Cel I• 1AO R191I '•lft IM<Cetronl tM AllO raced: Seminole IClcl, HtlMlr-. Predllecllon. Time· 1.12. "OVaTM llAc:a ... ..,.l4flQO o-0teor-•n (Stioemtkerl s M UO >.00 Muffle IOtl--.Wvel s.• JM Miu Ptrwl•n IC.tenedtl JM Alto reuod: ASll me-· Pr-Prlnc9", AmleeuG. Time: 1:11 J/S " "TH llACR. 6f 111''°"9L ~rdenl .. Olrl (CellentcMI AIM U tO 1UO Mii Ull~ 10.~MYtl I tO SAO Gr•nd91'• Pookty IMcHtr ... I SM Also raced. Siie's A 5w..,.., Perfect $j)len-, $tock ~II. Ooon'• Udy. Vol .... Time: 1:1UIS. ts RXACTA l .. SI pelo Sl, 100. SIXTM aACll. 6furlonot Mt. Enltlullwn I Oe '""°"""~) 12.10 •· 20 •M ~~::.!~, 4.60 ;:: Aho reced· Rewlhon, Hot Trech, 'lmpreul"" Force, Huroor, Pleyer Joe, Cour11n c.ndy, P9wv"1 Bnl. Zln.-r I Time: I 14 1/S. sav1 .. TM RACI! ..... furtonvt Speed Br-IM<C•rronl •.20 J to 2 20 MtJHlk ,, .. , (Toro) •.oo 2AO Cepture Tiie Spirit I OelellOuuey•I 2 . .0 Alto r•ced. SttnClup Comedl•11, CCMlrt Compllence, P-Too. Sele At Fll"ll. Time: 1:112/S. U RXACTA IMI oeld MJ 00 U f'ICK $1)( l .. S.S.11·11 !Nici Mt, 115.• wltll •-wlftftlllQ ll<kets ltl• llortH) U Pk k SI• COM41N!ion Oltd Ul7 4IO wltf\ IOt w1nn1r19 ticket• Clive llor••I EIGHTN RACE.'"" turlonvs Ho Ho (Del.,_.,.,., • 20 z 60 2M l"OY'l'I Acll 19-mellerl ).20 2.to Pirtle Law IGUlfrtl >.«I Aho reced: Ptlll's lrlumpll, Flying "4hlek, N•llw FllMr. Quick Rolallon Time· I. II. NINTH •ACa.11116mfl ... Mr. Reector 10el"'°"5Mytl •.OO S60 3.00 Ellort ... sly Cfl'e<-11 100 SOO On Tiie Prowl C~tl lM ACM r-.ed: Provi0efllf411, AP«lle Scout, llltcll Bell, 5'1or1l119 Cteu, T-Bob Time 1 . ., l /S U llXACTA (141 oeld UA 00 AllendenU:IS ..... Women'• fletd hock~y M ..... 14..-r 1, H• .... .., e.tcll I Newport H-K.orl119: Stodd•rd 1 IE•-4, ,_...._ VtlllY I Edl1on i<Orlno: Spoth 2. lltktr 1, Je<kmen 1 Pro bowtlng 11i11111« """Ult cl6uk .......................... , .._._L.t-*n I Mtr"'811 Holmen 6,050 I G""9Y T._ S. t10 l w • .,,.. w.bO s."' 4 Joe Hutclll,.._ S,17t S MtrllS.er SM1 • O••• O.vl1 S.t:SO 1 8111 Sir-S,IOO e. BotJO-; 1Cnl119•• s.m •· Steve w"1i.ro s,aot 10 Tom Millon S,7'1 II Bruce CM'ter S,7ff 12. Mike Aulby S,141 ll. J•y Aolllnson S,116 14 Gr" o.rn.u.os s ... 1 IS. Alen Gr-I S .... 1 ... Sl•w ~" s.m 11 G..,...oe P-s • ..o 11. Jol\nny P9trlQll• S,'3' It. P111t Mowr S,W 20. Jemt1 Mffltf U17 JI. Gii Still.er UI> 22. Denni• Jee_. S,60S 13 F r•nll El.,.... Jr s,S«> Z4 G"J OIOIMon s.•7 Wortd CMMple"ahlp Doult!H , ... 111 ........... , ......... • ., .... Mettt-..hfwl ......... ..... .......... Vk. ,,_.,., , ... 1-6, .. ,. ....,.. 011lltlltf ... ao1eu TttlCIY fff, •tttr "'-1119'Mll ~ ,., •.J, 74. a..hnge toumMleftt .............. , ............ -JolWI Mclnr" •· v" .. 0trv1.iua, ..a. .. ,, .... Ille .... ._ ..... JoM I.WI (IH'C, .._., M ... ,, ""'"""" C-•dof. lwen l.llMll, ...,,,..,w. Wotllien'• tournament cetw....,.....1 .,..,_ ........... 4NltH Ja.f!H •I Leslie Allen, .. t. tot, • .,..,. "'4W ... Jullt HMr~ .. I. •·J; Mortin• HtWft lll•o def JoA11,.. ltwu.11, 14, t-2; i?lwle HenlU fief KMl\y Rl111ldl, M, ·~· louttt ._,atr•ll•n Open , ......... , ........... lfflll .. Pet C-*f. Merit IE...,_..,, M , •~: l(tm Wttwktt *'· Brdo Oyu, .. 2. •·2, Tim Merette*'· Miii• e r...-,, .. ,, M ~' Wrelttlrta cou.aof' 11t-t<!l~:-.t;'1'%r'\~:..'.11.1 .. 126 -MCArtllur (AIAI clle. Riiey, llH l)t -CoMn IASUI Cle<. M•urey, S.>. u2-Tl\Omff (AIAI dee. Wlllltm1, 1.s . ISO -L. Kl•ll•• IASUI de<, Ct1tro, S-1 IM -J . Klllltr IASUI Cit<. C .. rll, ... 1'7 -Suder (AIAI I Koetl\, 2'2. 07 -611u!tr IAIAI dtc. Orne, 1M, ltO -Wllltflelcl IAIAI -.C:. Ettln, S.2 , _, -E•-CAIAl Cite. Severn. II S MIO" SCNOO\. c.M 11, u .. ......,.., » 100 -..,_ IUI de<. Menltulco, 11.0 101 -...,.. lorlelt. tu -Wlllte IGdMI p. Lin, 2:S1, 121 -l'tlll4tlUI p, SIPOfltrO, :J7. 121 -HlflH IVI dK"(l,fOlltelltr. >-0. llt -·~ ICdMI Cle<. Kim, f..1 1«1 -°"""" IC4Ml p.O.tdo, l :S1 147 -LeftUI (C4Ml p, $tttln, J:tO. ISi -Mc,.._t IC4Ml C1K 8--·· .. , I" -RIYH ICdMl p. Miiier, 1. 14 • 111 -a ....... CUI p Gl-lllno. SO 102 -H-.IUl-t>vlorlell. Hwl -LuclW'-> CCOM) p. LllM1, l .U. EM-"· Mtl'1u t 107 ~I (Ml dee Guy, M . IU -OI..., IEI p, Oetlslo, 1:21. 121 -Curry IEI p, Solis, l:SI .. IJt -Alpert IEI •< Yonekure, •. , 1M Ptoetn 1£1 -by forfeit. 1t0 -HOitorf !El -by forlltl U7 -Ooldlteln IE I de<. Asll, IH IS1 -J-(Ml Cle<. Rflrr. S-2 I .. -Ac1tmt IMI Cle< HelrlO, 2.0 111 -... verlEI wont>ylorlell 200 -Painter I El won by ICH"l•ll. Hwl -Cuvfello I El won by lorfell. ,._, Vly. •, Htll ... tell It 100 01-llilll dt<. Strecll, 1·4. 107 s Mino IFVI "°"""forfeit. 114 -M. Mino IFVI dee. Hen...,, t-4. 121 -R-H (Hiii Cle< CIOU9flen, 11 I 1Jt -TlloMpaan I FVI p. Otvtry, t ·n 13A -Ufle< IH8l Cle<. Rkl\trcb. ).2. l«I -HOff..-IHBI p C-.llbell. 4 JI 141 -Mencllln IFVI p, Flnc,,_p, >.5' 151 -GrubW IH81 Cle<. Stellltrl. '-2 1 .. -fl9Nlfore (FV) Cle<. C .... r. J.I CIJ -Olct.enon (FYI p. KeuCllrlll. 2 41. lOJ -Flt'lley IH81 p, Gomer, 1 '4', Hwl -l.enrtck IHlll Cle<. Abifre, .. $ /Thured•r'• tranHctlon1 lllASEaALL ............... LOS ANGELES OOOGERS -lr- 804)by C.tlflo, ptkl\t<', -.....,. lllllllcllell, oulfltl-. to.,. Ml--. 1'11fts for Paul Volet. pitc,...., end Scotti -.UCS1tor1, c11- Aulonec1 Volt! "'All'""""'-et IN Pectll< Cont ~. -Medi_, lo 5111 Mlonlo of !tie TUti IA ..... IASICETMLL ................... _ .. , ... GOLOEN STATE WAflRIOR5 -Pt-.llCI Sim Wlfll.,....s, lorwerd, on Ille lnlurw lilt. Actl•eled .._McDowell, lorw•rd M>CCllR Meler 1..-W Stec er u .... HEW YORK ARROWS -Signed l'rent.1 Sl·LOI, mlcllWCltr -Otl-r. lo• t--contrtcl COLLEGE HOFSTRA -A,,,_ed Ille rfflenttlon of llkk 1(.-r, llelcl "9-11 COICll MOltRIS BROWN -Fired umber1 A-. lletd footbtl f Cotell OREGON Sf ATE -H•med Tim H~ au1111nt looltllll coecti. PURDUE -"'-'rtc9d Ille rHl9fllllon of Mike H-wlU, Hslsl..,I IOOlbtll CNCll, to lie mey ~ defensfw coordl11411or •1 WHllH'"ll Mkl\lolfl. CdM, Eagks ruk Sea View Sea Kings start quickly to roll past CM; Irvine wins Corona del Ma r and Estancia higbs have moved to the top of the Sea View League race with 2-0 marks after tbe first week or play, aner recording triumphs Thursday night. Meanwhlle, Costa Mesa and Irvine are tied with 1·1 loop marks, a nd Saddleback and University bring up the r ear at 0-2 arter Thursday's games. In non-league acllbn, Edison topped Mater Dei, and Marina and Fountain VaHey were beaten. Here's how it went: Coron• del Mar 53, Coit• MeH 44 The Sea Kings raced to an 11-0 lead, and a lthough Costa Mesa battled back to close the gap, the Mustangs could never recover. •·we j ust we re n't hitting the baskets we normally hit," said Mesa Coach Paul Kahn. "After 'woME'N.'S BASKETBALL .• that terrible start, we played '3rp tou1h the rest of tbe way." Cold shooting hurt tbe Muatanca. who could only connect on 20 ol 81 floor abotl .and • of 10 trom t.he foul Une. Three dllf erent Cd.I{ players paced a balanced attack, aa Heathe.r E1tey, Liu Greenberg and Cindy Kendall p0urtd ln 12 potnt.I apiece. !ttancta 57, S.ddteback 5 Tbe Eatlea embarrUMd the Roadru.Men and £1tancla Coach Joe Wolf admitted that Monday's teal a1alnst lrvlne thou.Id be • blt aLltfer • ''Debbie HU(bea played an outatandln11ame for u• ottenslvely <21 po[iMa> and (Joa.n) Howland bad aboUt 1evila ualata," Mid Woll ... &It.Md• ia 1·1 overall. in the first half, scoring the final two field goals berore intermission: and led the rest of the way in disposing of Uni. The Oden sisters, )Clm and Elaina, combined for 20 pointa and Lisa Slessman added eilht for Ir vine . The Trojans were led by Brenda Zimmerman and Monica Contrera who had 10 points apiece. L•k•wood 53, Marin• 48 Coming ofr the c hampions h ip of the Marina-F.dlson Tournament, the . VUtln1s started ort 1982 in sour fashion, losing their rin'al pre-league contest to Lakewood. It wu a one·point 1ame in the final minute, but Marina was unable lo convert and was foN:ed to (oul. The Lancers buried four free throws in the final seconds to cllnch the win. North 70, Fountain Velley 31 The Barons chose a rUQed opponel\l to cla&e out their P~·lea1ue 1ea10n, and after •laYlftl cJOH for one half, Hw the 1ame start to aUp away lo UM third quarter. Llaa Olnaburl had 15 pointa to to with Deanne Davia' 10 !Of' the Baron.a. now 1-e, Fountain V1J.My opens Sunset Lea1ue r••Y Tuesday at home a1ain1t Huntington Beach. • . . j . . , . . .. . ; , )ltt WI THE REAL ESTATE RS ·---~ ·-- : 1/J MI. TO OCEAN = ONLYSUUOO! -2 Br 1~ Ba condo In securit, &•led comm. -Features tmnia, pools, ss-• aaunL EZ financ· inc. Teri M arqun. •et _ -,. L22L Re/ II ax SOWICES s.r-'*-7 llft.IYIOT& PllPAIATllll ~~ .......... ,.. ...... , BUlllS£ =-- ,,,, 1 .. ~ your old atllff for new ioodles with a O.Uif'led .cl. '42-S678 -... ::= .. _..i. ~ ... .,...._. °""' PhtteY-........ c .......... -........ c.. ~ .__, ......_ ................. _"'....._ ... ="""''-' ===-""""" a.... .... --...... ~t:....u"~ IUTS &MUINE . cmMm c-11 ....... -....... =t:...• ........ Qart .. ......w ...... °'"' ~..:·· tllJ -----------"" Im ----.., ------ .... --------mmtllAT1811 _... ~ ..... a.vwo... .... ~ ......... _.._......ll .... 1'rt161n.Tr1•tl ==.i.,,. AIT..._E C-11 . =:~ 8"na.lo« ll ... 4W.....0nlfa Trwb v-=-~= RMW tllt --tul ... '111 ti• - lllt .. -------- o-.1. "" All1a-t ,,. -. "" ,\_ ...... ,_ -.... flll c..., . . "" ~ ··:m om... . -...... Iii . . . .. mi l'WI... .. .. ~ .... 'Int ..................... rm , ................. -~... •• . "111 ~~~ ... : ... :: ..... := ......... -._..... ·"· llO flQ llOI flM Ololl' ,,. ,....... -"" ........ "• = = ..... ..,.. ... ...,.., . mr ...... .. ... - i::;t"'''""!'"""" . fl ,..,.. ..... :: :::;: ··= ~ ................. .. v ................. '"' v ....... ' ........... '"' RD ~ .... , .. RS,ISEI o-11 ............... = Ame ............ . ...... , ........... ··-c..let .................... -<Mitt ...................... , a.oo ................... -~:: .. ::::.:::::::::.:.·= ~"'''' ...... -~ ... ,,.,, ....• ~.:: .. : .. ::::.7.'.".' .• ·.= g"' •. ••••i•~········­................ , ... , ...... -....... ::·::··:::::::::::= :::::::·::::::::::: of r1tt.,Hu 1tl1 -.................... __ ........... -..... .. ............. -.............. ........ . .,, ...... .. * ~ • ' t 00 • = Q) ~ • >< a.:> •• --- The marketplace on the Orange Coast THE REAL ESTATE RS THE REAL ESTATERS LOAN ASSUMPTION : COM duplex with 1ood ruwictn1. Eich unit hu 3 Bdrm 2 Ba, family room. Close to ever· ything at 5429.500 cou cw NIWllORT MAI.TORI Htt L c:...e ltWy • c..-..... •75·5Stt COUtBCIAL 1 2 stores, 1 blod: to ocean. 25~ down. Owner will carry balance. D6S,ODO. .... ..,,..op . ..... *675-7060. CAPISllJIS NEW LISTING! Rare ~le story 3 Bdrm COD· do 111 lovely carden set· tine. Mon ltl CO!tdition. 1145,000. Call Eileen Dinwiddie for details. 642-5200 J PETE J BARRETI REALTY To place your message before the read.In& JHibUc, ~Tiet Clauif'ied. 14.2·5'78 THE REAL ESTATE RS THE REAL ESTATERS l9UfT:Y SHAii lit tune buyer can af· fordth1J home. Priced at -•llS-T•V•Al.-U•E-1 ~,ODO. Kathy, agt In Spyalua, thia 4 Bd home oa choice comer COST A MESA lot. Motivated seller ST AITEI II.YI "submit aU offers." Only $125,000! Auume t525.0DO. tll.OIO In loans at S83Z RC Tc1ylor Co . . AFFOIDAILE PllVACY! monthly. Owner wall carry. Family room with coiy fireplace! 3 larce bdrms Sparkling coadillon! Hurry. call 81Mi50 Secluded 3 Bdrm 2 bath. hardwood floor home. THE REAL ESTATERS Famil~/ lv.iJ!l •rea with I•-------• brick fittpll«. tOIJWl· ·11YNTBliCE tk spa. 129,000 down. G f .1 13.~ interest 00 loans. reat am1 Y home on Call ror more details. FEE comer location 3 541-2313 bedrpom. forma I lmng THE REAL ESTATERS l1dlce4SllO,OOO SPYGLASS IYOWMEI Ocean View ~75,000 6br/4..., ba. 4100,.q ft SOUJlUIORT MODEL OWNER FINANCING HIGHLY UPGRADED Otref' expires Jan. 31 25 Bodega Bay Call owner 759-0737 room-pl1.1t large family roam. patio for enter· laintneDl. Oversized, ule noor. double carage with builtio storage and W'OIUhop. Seller will U · list In (UW1cina. '75-341' CIE 110111 l'lllS CD. OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE llG CANYON -VIEW! Beautiful Versailles Model. Quiet Cul-de·Sac. Winding Staircase . Marble Entry, Spac L.R. Elegant Features. Garden Kitchen. Oen W /Frplc, Huge Mstr Suite. Highly Landscaped. Paddle Tennis. Great View! Special Financing. $875,000. (!) ·--........... 759-9100 #Z c_,. •• Pleu HewportCftlhr NEW BUSINESSMEN Contact the DAILY PILOT for Information regarding the ' county requlrementa for using a Fkltldou1 Bullneu Name. 142-4321 EXT. 332 A MIWLY COMPU'llD lfTM C9"WY CLASSIC C~c· three ltol'y eq..trin utate, over 1,200 square feet, 1ix bedrooms, five and one-half baths, sweepinl eoHd ~Y stalrcue, second service staircue b 0 reatbtakinl crystal and brus chandelier ,ln entry bat~ ve flreplaces, Ubrary, CUltom 1ourmet kitchen . white marble entry.a. pest apartment with own kltcben, plus much more. r~m.lc view · "i·aere lot. Cutom pool. apa, dedm, aDd complete llndacaplna ineluded. Custom butk bJ W1lE CaftiVUCtioil. By .,... ... t. orrBRl:D ATSl._.. COLDWeL BAN~<?R~, .~::i ... .. . . , . ~ .· r ... .. .. .. '· I - -Wldt ..... view from apeetac'ular -~ deliln s bdrm. s batb, pla7room, darl room 6 dtn. ~ a.alQ.000. WO .. HOam Featured on Homes Tour1 lo~elr ! tncH&tonal apacloul, custom s bdrm, a · bat.b home, newly redec.otated . · tm.ooo. ' -I I ,,_ ~YMAWsDllAMHONI 4 Bdrm "en_tertainer'1 dellabt" with 10' w t bar, 10x20 workshOp, 16x82 PoOl 0,.. ....... 1'!!.;•" .... ''"',.. . .,,,,, II. ef M •••l•S. flf ... Fantastic Cin~cina -sioo.ooo <13".t) at $H08/mo. FUJI price $1~.500. Prcsentea by Harold Reynolds Perf orlnance Real Estate 979-64.\3 ) owe '!il:'t. • 1r +l•rm+•~ ........... 0,.. ... I• It, Clll f• d«atll. ii-Cralo • Ateoe. 1 '91.A IALIOA ..... LttMf l•lliilli~i!illi---· • YClml people· Poot your ' Wiil llAU. y ~~ reaourc••· ldtal two AllMD ~. bedNom vW. for your tNt If -... m-....a u 01lt iw-. Frtlla U I -•-H d ~ h y . o~· ". t 0 thll month. atioul ... n..--.. $l~'" 000 ~c matiH le ' ·-pat · -· ... ~a..oc • auumabl• at UCJ.. --• · • v Newly remodeled s bdrm, 2 bath plua ; ____ ...................... .,_. 119 recreation room It 2 patloa. Beam : TWO STOIY IUNT ~•n•I~-:'~=:~rT m. 1044,.,_ · 1044 .ble.Prieeda~-·*· Ide C.IDPblll lot •Pill <ti ......•. , ............... -.. •••••••••••••••••• (*Cote Realty ~ f:.::= ::, ... celllno. Xlnl value at "201000. : I • Ii ID vat meat ocea8 vu HtJD bome ud ., ...$777 .>. you be tbe ,..,,. ol Ulil >4 Dee't ..._ ........ OM! ' CAIMATIOM. ~Oft I Spectacular harbor view from 4 bdrm, 4 bath bayfront. 2 boat 1lip1, •• 050,000. Green Valley -planned community. Spectacular 2 stry 4/5 bedroom. Beautifully land.sea~. professionally decorated. Quiet cul-de-sac . Sprinklers, playhouse. Wat.r softener, purifier, garage door opnt. Fresh paint inside. Xlnt flnancing. Veterans: IRVIME + VliW! ASSUME t 1/J,.e IM191ST! AmamabaeLou tm.oao llt'lce wbldt • 4 ~ a-..,.,. parcel ol ~ ·-·0 WIST IAY Aft. Remodeled, like new 3 bdrm, 3 bath bayfront. Slfps for 2 lge boats .. $1,280,000. : BILL GRUNDY . REALTOR : -' •. r i . Dalebout Bay&Beach Real Estate • REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949 COMI WITH US ••. TO IAYCHST. Great pride of ownership will be yours. Custom five bedrooms. Hardwooc;l floors . Two fireplaces. Beautifull cabinetry. Formal dlnlng room. Pool size yard. Luxuriant landscaping. $495,000. 16l7 WISTCLlfF DL M.1. ~SIOEHTIAl. AEAl ESTA'r£ SERVICES SPAllLIMG COMDmOM INWTaUfF New carpel, paint & drapes have made this a most perfect 3 Bdrm. home! Pool-sized yard with large pt\io. Super sunny Eastbtuff location. A value for $279,900 including the land. IN NEWPORTCENTE,, 644-9060 JASMNI CUB * •PLAH 4* * Extremely popular 3 Br plan featuring magoif icent decorat- ing, fplc. gourmet island kitchen, formal dining, family room & io- house laundry. All this & more for only $389,000 FEE. 759-1501 or 752-7373 IW OCIAM I IA Y VIEW • •CLlfHAV..• * Fantastic view from this 3 Br ex- ecutive home on FEE land! Perfect for entertaining!! $650,000 (exclusive 759-1501 or 752·7373). * WA19110MT NOMI• CllATIYI AMAHCIMfa Sensational 4 Br home smack on ,the water!! Featuring French doors, frpl, professional decora- tions & private sandy beach. On- ly $2165,000 & seller will carry AITD. Leasehold! 759-1501 or 752-7373 * TJllTUIOCI * SIJtt ,_ MONTH ii all you pey when you take over exiltiq lit T.D. Si>acious 4 Br executive detached home f eatur· inl formal diniq, family room & frplc. Only $213,500 FEE. 759-UOl CJll''m·7373 •a.I TO llACH * l~RMAMCI· AYM ... Goraeu 4 Br detailed home. 1 blk from ocean OD FEE land only .. ,000. '19-lSOl or 752-7378 MIWFOIT llACH OMCI ,., ... ..,..... ..... 111• •1111 17141 ~7J7J I ltllmAI, .... OMt..UMIM.1 .. SIJl.000 CAI.I.: DWeA ~YOlll No down up to $135,000. Hurry -ask for Yusef. CENTURY 21 962-4450/962·0103 Tastefully decorat ed 2 Br + den Irvine e nd unit condo w/view! Excellent financing includes a 91 -i'; lSt TD +verr flexible owner assisted financing w1th minimal acceptable down payment. Call AdrieMe. agt. 759-1221or975-1060 for-details today! c... ....... 1022 ------------ o--w••4 .WW.bit hl,ia baluce ~ loan available oo tJU pnmt.1ao.aa Newport IOllU llALn "; '7S.2J II . ',,,=> ., Beacb \'er11 I llet B!ITBUYIHNB bac be I or Co o do . owner, W. Cape Cod ; Artlltlcally apsraded.1 w/ oceao view. $US,800. 0 Lota of amenltleal 6Gll41or-.mi .• Modena chabboule aJMI s.a .,, lt7t :" reluln1 POOL 1re1. -·-................ , Bem.llul Ocu.n View! ,# m.ooo. Mutt'" to •P· MOn••• DOWN preciatel Call m-2:* New larse 3 br, OHID T.W. .... , vt..P.m.tmo. NS-•11 TOWNHOME 1----... s..-DEUt:.HTS MIWPOIT CoteOS c.,1 ... w 1071 _ - C.M.1-2 LOT -~ ....... ••••••••••••••••• Save from Foreclosure : $3900 down. ~~1s!bc,:!~¥:f1J --··ct l fe.~ ....... !!~~ A I 3 B F IR $11"' 900 abe la SOXJ;J7' 'fitllplen_. "'"-•-ssume oans. r, ' UJV, • ty c1 room for • new uJi. 4 _...NI W 000 M Price ~ Studio. 1112' bdtmt from ... -................ . IL Auwne ·~ lit T.D. SuDJlY, 1tabt·a-brl1ht f~ CM, aba.rp 1 Br Huntington Harbour home on water. Aildn&price$l05 000 and..._ oa the market home on R-2 lot w/nu Boat dock. $.559,000. Owner will trade. ' witb brick lroot. aide rod" 1car1ara1e. Call E .. y ll•ing can only .,,000 le up. All have A&AtlK>Ma barely deacrlbe tbla &ood auumable loana A SAD SACJC cl a OIM!e beautiful 3 bdrm, 2 ba. wt.th lo-down P•Y· a.... ......... ,..__,..... It ' $115,000, Nr. Beach. Beaut. expande(I home. Assume $96,00014% ln. Low dn. Newport Beach Duplex. $40,000 dn. Xlnt. summer rental. By beach.' and rur papoa , Cwt.U,act1131-UM. bardwood PM1uet floor· Ina tbrou1boat. Xlnt fl l~~O location . lea than 100 ... met pacea fr•m Sl,000,000 £.aide-c.M. 2 Br l Ba. bomea. Reallatlc11ly hrdwd floon. 1 car aa.r, priced at t3115.000 with owner wW finance or VA combination ol USUIDI· terms. Call Cwt II, al( townhome. Take over .. ._..... ... ._ ou~-J lomla. flreplace. centraJ meiU. Pool, rec. room, lite m almoat u 5 J A/C; climate control, aub-parktn1. uuna 6 bll awlm pool, 2 I ks, ·~ extensive security jacuul " aome with fam rm ud ovu :i. ayatem . Easy care oceaoviewt. «h lainray at Sui Juaa 6't landauoing, plus a lilll IOll COllne. Aha• ' · r{ t · daned"" by elderly folb ma 101 1cen v 1 ew . Md. up for uabl. Of. ·~ ... ooo. fend at $1.50,000. (La.ad .• alone worth tbia.) ~ ~.,:~1 ": 1--------1 ble and oner rmaoclna. ..;63;:;;;1;..;;:·llll="'------ "l-Oltl ,...._..._. 1006 eau,44-7211 ...oMHOUSI • -... •••••••••••••••••• 3 Br. l Ba. larae yard Ii '"" ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ·~~down @ 1000 .... &U-Om, Ast. ·'11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ........... xlnt location 1 r= 0..-IN ... I JUSTUSTED IHWTILUFF Beautiful j)ool home on fee land ! Assume $67,950 1325.000~price .,..,., ... T.,_! ·A'.11860() "9!f~w/V.J!r!! -·••••••••••••••••••• r. luv DBJ~HT· =~~. l..owesl price in eoi1e1e ~-Lovily bcine Oil Cliff Dr. ..... ..... j . "~.. • • "'"" _ _ .r~ aDOOaq_ft 4 Br l~ Remod titch, family F.S. I IN •i FU'lt time in~tora or 'C... .. MGr IOU c:o.htlilitM IOl4 Bl (amity room home ' NlflilMJIPJL.__ room wfblt In bar. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $125,000 1st at ~~. 4 larse bdrms plus family room.. Excellent loca· tianl Hurry, call673.SSSO bl:o'ers. 2 ~rm coado ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••• .. •••••••• .. ••• with RV •~. SeUer '573C.U.,.,,Da:1,.Ylll'll: $400,000. Call today. OCEANFRONT Modular J with larsc IMna area will carry $100 ooo AITD " 642·6173 or 646-5096. Type Homu, 24 br ; Low interest loans. ~all T~of .. Towa ~VI~w2:;-2::. at~'°' 10'yra. P\lll a..,..IMda 1041 l!lat)'LarrickAct. aeoarity, "'mi pvt ~b ... for more details . Oua1c 4bdrm,3ba,So ::.:!s YI d. • CJ • pricea.a.,IOO ••••••••~.J;;;-.......... IYO-..-+ fisbin& pier. Ce~~~ '· THE REAL ESTATERS 546-2313 c1 Hwy. A real charmer. 'I.a\. Owner 1~9440. · OCEANFRONT Modular ,,..,,_. coctaae type, redwooa ' Uillii -l!·!' ~:' .. o • ..,,.,, ":rnos.ooe ~.:,•:'.:i ;:;. :; • ., •:.;~;1:"'1~ .. ~: ::.':!· .'.'l;~·~: ~ -----~3~ 833-2801 . 3 Br 1 Ba. Priced to sell + fishing pier. Cedar m>untain view 3 Br 3ba, ~· ... IOO. ••u t Last buildable lot on the now . Unbelievable CotUg type, redwood ~~~~~·tl:wbd:::: Pricelaihih• ; cUff1 in CdM. Between financing. Kalhy, agt E.SIDICH"'•MH dtck, pool , llllrded Poppy /Poi nsettia. 646-SOIS AR ~· adlts only. No ~. 5MabllebomeafouaJe. ,r, 644-7020 Brandon Rosen-Priced to sell now ! ~.@,900. 499-3816 MEWPOIT HGTS ~;.000Pk~!12pet1 . · ~, berg, 1gt. Qxnpl. remodeled, l of a "--t.l-~ Gated ~~---~ • v--kind + fi nancing. --drive, secluded 5 136000 Lovel home •· '• COM DUPLEX --...,15 Kath .__.__ ..... 1 Bdrm home + aeparale • · Y 111 • 700KARCUER1TE 3bdrm,2bath,frpk,dbl 645-SOIS y,act. Excenti:i2'Br'2baun· motber-ln·law unit. Lacuna Bucb. lH CWy 2 Wocb to oce-. CM of ...,. New const~uc tlon. gar!!•.~~ wc1°11°.d,: it. ~st ocean front. n9t.to0. Terms. Rbt . d~1ree oceu view. M,...lt architecture $134-\Tit'_... Mlllikeo. , ... av-. Lquoa lfllla, Club Parll:. Q OWMt' ls •ffYClhd to Ml tWs l..... ~ · · .~; .. fim•""'m· 1. p••TMOYI No. Laguna. Now ~ ._ Muaaee -.-.., UH COTTAGE . -CltMING 3bd rm 6 2bdrm . ---... -$250000 · -·· ., lbcAi.o-. $136,tOO. $411,000, rmancinf avail. ltoJMcc.nlt,lltr. Owner packln1 and wiU 1 ~.,_U C rcW '•> 0 d R-11-fina•ce this 4 Bdrm _,.... _• ~ .. • t 8 llMIJS -SAN CLDINJE w n er / 8 r : -•• Ollt.a MeaaNorthhome. 497 11•1 '" Jlrtf "" ~. ..... (TIC)6'7S-N3l. This quiet cul de UC __ ...:..;..;;_·~"-=---I --················· Ellallhlwd Ille-. mffs fla ..._ -------..-..-.~-..----home ii look.Ina ror a SAU IY OWMR SS000 DOWN r-:::::i:=~· "'_; Olly I blocll to oct .. -4 ..... TE-• S«:\lc4}}A.-/£ f,~S· .... famlly! Will consider Imma culate 3 Br 2ba NB condo. owe paper. As mlll1 ao.s. $495,000. ,.mu .....,.., a.&Y a. P01W1 f.AtM 14%loanfor7years with ocuo view home . ~all olftta. PriA. • 20'7. dow o ! Fuo-Fatura: Larae ~k. CIDly. KM!ty act-.~ WATERFRONTHOMES,M:. ·~:.,.'! ~ move rut buyers. oak paneled den. As- ltfAl. EST A TE Sl•.900. Call* I lSl a.unable loan ud selJer S... llefUo. "'-"' Mlneto11••• I ............... ,_ ........ _... fl.DlnC.ins. S31J.OOO. Call ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!u!!w,!!.=-!!;!!!!! ......... !!!!!!!!!!36!!!~!!!~!!!~;;.!!!!!!!~~.I ' n' 1T I I I :L~;;;~or _ ab an offer for thil ~ 0 E 0 I X I '.: MESA YEIDE new 3 Br 2"'1 ba ocean I I I 11 • TAKE OVER $139,st'O at view home offered at SPACIOUS S.USH conA•E In Eastbluff. Owner transferred and must sell. Lg liv rm, marvelous ram rm adjoining kitcb w /fplc and wall bookcases. Lg mstr suite -Two additional BR . $279,500 Barbara Aune 642·8235 {PU) .WESTCUfF -DBJGHT Lovely 3 BR + fam rm w/sparkling p<>ol -inviting warm decor w /custom shutters + + newly landscaped. Real Pride <:I Ownership shows in this home. CI06e to park, schools, . be-ach ALL ! $269,000 Fee Jane Paquin 642-823.5 (Pl2) 12%! 4 Br 2 Ba. corner ~,000. Edna Lundberg I T E S K 0 ' ·~! One nelgllbor to another :·y \~sfs~~dS1~7~5'::,~ ~L... I• 1~ I I "Wllal '' your ton 11111no In Bkr. Call now 751·0205 ... vfewt, privacy & quiet _ . . . cotleg•?" Otner ne1gn1>o1 took· Maa Verde, 10% down. 3 can be found in this uni· ,--------. 1ng al n1s w111e1: "All ·'--." bdrm, former model. que 3 bdrm, 3 bath & I' M I G E L T I . S144J.500 owe. Open family room home . -r-1 -r-1 -,,.--,1..._,I,....... 0 c.,..,p1e,. ..._ n. ... k1e qvoled Sat /:MID 11-Spm. 1657 Sellen may help with . . _ _ . _ by M•'"' .. ..,. ~ -"' Texu Cir. 831-2120. fananctni. $445,000. · ,__.__....__....__....__. ........... -~ 1•--No 3 be1o. ve9t & ......_ 5'118 LOCATIOH A 1 * u;i ~ ~• 1 "; * Prtd• of ownersh1'p. ~ PflNI NUM&UIO ll!TftS IN E---1-.~ ff....1..-" tHlSl SQIJAl(S ~.... OCaD views. plans to U · Mesa Verde Fixer P8Dd. All this + seller 6 r;,r-:,::::;, itrrm 10 ! j' j •. J I I WON'Tt.MT. fiuncin1 for this 3 . - . Prine oo.ly SUS.GOO. bdrm, 2 bath quality SCUM-LETS A.awen. Cl•llftc .. h I HOO so.nm Bkr. heme. $315,000. STAR GAZEK .... t-~--.--~Cl.ATlPOU.A.N-~.....--~----4 ...... It Te .... ~,... ·-·-·-·-u-::.__ == =~ . ..._ ... ·-,. Jrlo UllorMa ·-.... . ..... ·-·-·-.. _ ..... .. .. ,,..._ ..... ,,_ ,,,... .,....... '"'" .,,.. o..., no.or .. _ .. ,_ """' llCM •Oto'I Jl-IO-•O. !1-tP-UM 1'1-•a.. •Y-....... ,,_ ·-.,._ ·-·-·- Law,~ f:.! Won 't lut! 4 8r lovely home OD cui•sac at. Take ad· Y'lntage of buyer's market " 1n1loua owner. Excell. term.a. ()po Hae Sat/Sun 1-4, 2120 Alter. Call DOW· I l .. . -. REIM~ Hail -•INdi 1140 . llACHDWLD Locaed in Woods Cove jlllt 2 • bort blocks to secluded beacb. Eacb ll:dt hu 1 bdrm + extra ~leepiog area with ~ &t large deck. Room to expand 00 lrft abaded lot. Seller ftnMC· I.al. Price reduc.ed to ltl5,000 . ....................... ' PAN'f ASTIC I 10110.. ........ ~--CIL-1 ' POOL HOME IYOWloa PrimLoc.elee! in Newiiort Beach. 2308 ltlt ''°"" ..... II"* U'-• ..., lllT• an. •- 30 YEAR AXED RATE I 131/3% INT.' LOANS ,,_. ~. No ~ilaltfj. , _ C7i 4J 4.t4-lt 77 Ins. A1ltlU Slt4,000. -----=---.--• 81abmitl ...... ::-~:------ Why do people buy townbomes during a real estate slo'Ydowon We think it's our super duper assumable low rate loans. The new residentlof .... ,.. ..... tell us it's the inherent amenities llke the 1a1ebo aod garden like recreation area the Cape Cod environment and the convenient goodfes that io along with e•ch home, and the unique location (cl0&e to everything ). Fum'8bed 2 and 3 bedroolll_ models and recreational facilities are open daily between 10 :30 a.m. and dusk • Located.bi the corner of Fairview Rd at Avocado in Costa Mesa. From $137 ,ISO. We'll ~com~ yaur reasooa too ! .,_. M-·-· .,... .... ·~ ::-:::.... =~ ... llllt:tl.tm.t =~ :=. =~ a o. • ......, •-:s ~Good ®~ ()Nncol PARTICU CLL,£VYLOT£110QNV£AW SEl£LOT£EUSGPTSSAYE J TR l £ 'f l ,R ~CS£ AH ~1 CM V 0CSP£CKAlUaHlStlVHS ORU~~OEIMO LICULE ACH MU,lllTOlMOISStYOlt ti RAIT'fTl"•HLlllll ELEILALllT~llf P(ATO I s L J T " s~s I I [ 0 y • , s • t T TlCOSLALOTMOSJ,lRLR OtlTOILlUTOCOEJSASM IS Tl PACllllCCllLTA£"' TDRS(WP~T(L,MIN~llSl MN £RIVIHl~Al_A.tCT Al,CIL tl WAl"P llltt ONLYS12UOO 8'IJI lbb 4 Bdrm-beet 1rea-1luh roof. Tbo11111d• a ochr ••ktt. TrJ su.100 ......... 410I , ... 1ln_..T_.. ..... + .. + PoOI. MIML'•te lJL-1•• qtn. 0...'• afftriel llDut· 1111 db • ., 11tartr11. hll ,rlu tlSJ,Sot. ·~~=~===::. •I Siied from J.11 uila. 1 Tenna available to auit r your needs. , • .. . 714/Ml.o763 ~ 2925 Colleae Ave 'I Costa Mesa. CA,. " 'I ·' AMIYAl.UY ,, , ...... , Near HW 4-plu. I _, ll*m, I bltai eacl .ail wlllt ~. eae.._. , Dlllo. .... "'-lat. Poe u1lt flow. No• • ...... lill 0""41J, lltr,!JS.1!1. . " . , .. . ,. I : I • . ~ •• . . .} ( .. ~ .. ., . ' . : I. l : r • ' ' 1 91,,, .. ""'' • 01lll1tUlltl• & UCh • '"' & Ate Aoo111 • '''°"' UllO~C.0"'0 • J09 10 8t.tcl\' SllOitt .. ~ C,f A f NVI~( J~oM f ~ T '' '."fit,} ' •11 Ii d I • • \ COUNllYCL• UYMIM MIWPOIT llACH "" adialt ~-munlty 'rii · tbe Baek Bay. Spte· tacu)ar Spaj 1 1wlm· "*'I pool.I, t llJhted ten· Iii COW1J, blie trallt, puttlo1 1reen . Bacbelora. 1 and 2 bedrooa11 apanmuta, ud towllhou1e1 from Hto '1000per montb Ori Jamboree At SM Joequln Hills Road (1l'>f't 1IOO PC FEE! Apt. 6 Coodo --------r naala. Villa Rfttals. l7S-4ftZ Broiler. Oceufront for Winter Reatala. hnfiabed • uafum. Braler. 17M9U Orange Collt OAILY PILOT/Frld1y, J1nu1ry 8, 1982 •ll!lii!!llli"i!!iiiiiilliilfl!i*li.il."il;l~l •• 1.111 ........ ,. ••• ~.~....... !'!~.=~~_. ..... ~ .. ~ ..... , ~.!:? ...................................... ~~!t ............... ~ •• ~~.~.'l.~rt ....... ~ .............. .. II Blbyslt ln lly Home ~fl at.am de.n. E.M. Dtllan fl Check Tree Trl m.in In l fr HAUUNO~OUMP Wt1tCoutllalntt'nnre r1DeP1J11t1n1 by Richard PLAITER PA KINO 1'ILEl,-.STAl.Lt!D .. ~ forWottrlntMotMre1Bl Colof brl1httntl'll wht Pa<' k a 1 I n & I S H !Wmov1l 1t Rtuoo1ble JOM, ulrtor Randy, 151~ olfl NewYrSpet'lal 8'nof. Ur. [hi l3 yrt of Rah~ros. Int/ext. 30 AllKlndtOuarant~1 the Wttk. Ll'I Yrd le . t..,,U · 10 inln. b tarh MTL! PClJ Hat v t Y Pri«t Haulln1. Odd 141· ootlouHCltanlnf I W'~<'IAllomen. 'ft'· Ntat. PllulS4S~T fl4ofa Joflll IN "1 Aoll. uo SIU or Hall, IM dln. rma 115; HatdlllOll ~3701. _ Jobi. C lean -up•. a.IAMUPYOUIACT 13l·•ta.ta ~ Ntat119tchtt6luturn C\lltomTllt f1oon •~1-'1-144-:ii: ~a.'t!:,.t~h ledtt~ ~~a•73·10U TODAY ! Yard/1araae ~~1Houap eelTeanlnh1 Z5 1,.. :;:.'"~1 lnt"'/ .... ~t°' "t J.IO ~ ~.'!rctk/o!~~~ 4lcy pet odor. Crpl repair ~·~ ................ H•t,._. rin·~. etc. 1 ton tnK'\ w.,. a tnoo our Booded Ina Ref• Color s.A ~·11 tno1 or ours. M$.8S12 ;;·:.;0 •0 .:;;J;•rn• lS yra HJ> Do work ~.' r~1~;:t~"!: m;•l................. AGl-1113114 hrt) 8tth Wl.Ol58 tl(pftt, 9QCIPJ1 Plrk ~Holiday~ -ci.tom C.ramlt' Tilt :> bolll )'OU ~ow 11\Y!eV· Reta. 1·0101 tareeoumalljobt. carpentry -Muoary HAULING ..... ! 1,,J-BPAINTINO JlliUil ,· Prompleerv free Kt.~ a ~nlrnas:f •"II NoSttam/NoShtmpoo c.I 3, ROolln&·Plumbln& Qulck rle~nupyd ....... ••u••••••••••• SPECIAL!INT/EXT, •••••••ou•••• .. ••"" Cbuckf1~140I -' Stain~laliJt.Faat Ele(lJlc our Specialty. Otywall ·Stucco-Tllt Freeest.Kn1S3l·09$3, BRICKWORK : Small d!ywall. LarryM.5-9313 Dral.nldearecHromSlO T.._Senlct ~ ...._~" d · t.P.1 Cltan Quick! dependa· ~I. J.B.Me·99IO RlrU3~ tbs, Newport, Costa G.L ManaunPalntin1 Plumbln Repalra ................... . ..... , ................. Stum Cltan ror the bit. WeDoAnySiieJobl oeneratMalntalnance HauUn,/rlean·Up, dirt, 11:;:15. lrvane. Ref a. Cwt. wort. Ur 1312418 . M '42·~3 •Exl)tl'tTret Prunln1•' Nall.1 by Cl1rtnda. Kolldays! Beat ratn ror •631·2004• Reoalrt' Oecorallns ahrub tree trim, etr . -1111. Free eat. 731·8211 Oiehwather dt1ponls. Commercial Lanclfca :. M~nlrure1, ~edlrures, the bl& datu ! Cal I R~ID/COMM'L ·~1x• Rax HO:AW Junk, trub.141-49.!t_ Muonry our epeclalty. All Palntln&: Int 5'50 ext toilet• ' iaucets re· Servlc 951 nail air. 14 •1115__ ..-114M-=.. ... 133:;;:;· -----2IO yn ••P.· Do my own HOM. E JM PROV EM ENT 1 HAUIJNG-8tudent has Cle~ 3u1ck, depend a· l850. Neat &i complete. pafred or replaced. 11 lodfn1fL! c:-.t/Cwrth WOl'fs.Us d.AIW..8126 R~air-lhintenanre ~lnK'k. Lowest rate. ble. e oanyalzeJob! Freeeat.Rers.8S1·7292 Lrt!XmJirpj31·6666_ ••DPm•• 64J.5'71.ntlJ2 ~·· ..... ,tt, ..................... , ... UC'DELECTRICIAN !1:: I~&. <'lrPtntrJ· pt.Call759·197& All,.:63l·~• CUS'TQ}tlNT/EXT Pt-1fwMvairmr.t TlllSllYQ-,..,------------.i counta ~°'!a ar· THOMPSON'S Qual. won . Reu . rates • li e. free est. o Thank you, John. .,,pes asonry EXPERT SERVICE ... 1 ... luu1uh1uu1 ••49).2220• * ' liabl ., a IUVl('C, re· CONCRETECONSTR P\-eeest. 63J.50'12Tom Job too small. 84.5-2811 ,. ..... • Very teas, llr. bonded. LOW RATES rlOPllTT ARRllll a •• rpt.142·1 Uc. t:lm83 &42·8482 CM. tew••• &b541·7650/~9906 NU-BROOK 545·117~ .............. I!........... • •••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••........ I "-"~ lbidalljobs I I ••••••••••••• ••••••••• l\....tftft'\8 kM -•~• P/R Qtrllea. W2s1. Fan ••••u••••••••••••••••• c~m• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . eels~ WantaREALLYCLEAN ~~ n c asonry NELSONSPAINTING Or111&eCo arta l5 yrs ! S( Co I ;:,e • "'""° s •FRENCHDOORS• Quahty.exper,llcd. HOUSETClllGln&ham Compl! yard construr· lnt/Exl Resid/Comm expenen<'e Calllor1nfo JAY TREECARP! ml.S. mp ete l·UP GllWtCI Ir SOM •ll&per sqrt• 10 panes lnatalled, 6' __ Davel·IM·9798 Girl. Free t.6'5·5123 lion, pool decks ' Acousllc ceilings. Refs, andratea Complete strvire an~ Strv. R~~s S40-Buildera Since lN? BncUt Blork. 67$·!211 slider openl.n& 1150 com· F.uropean Crah.sman All ROBIN'S CLEANING enclosures. Loral re.rs bc'd. Free esLll.11-2637 HM 112 stwnlJ &rinding 10 Yrr- ..... Addition.a remodeling c...lcTM. pl. \unpaint.ed)MO-tOOS Jobs. Big,or Small. Call Stmre-athorouehly ~12 PAINTER NL'EDS .!!J!. _Lins 540·9!!8 __ ...................... Doon. windows, fl9llo ......... n ........... , Aft.er tPM. 964·6231 clean house. 540.0857 Cover that roncrete with WORK "' '-~11 g/1.,-r Tllforillg - AUSl'ATE PAVING rovers. Free esL Reas. FIH ISTIMATES liih-..INlnllmnag PROFF.S.SION L t:U ---bnck • Patios drives 30 yrs exp. Int •••o•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••.t•••••··~ Seak~atin&. Stri~ang, Lie. #310942 549·2170 Custom 64().2062 .... , ................. , A ty work, dependa· walls 'etr 54118,136 ' text. Acoustic relllngs. Custom buJldin&. r e· Creel. te11cher Help wl Repairs. Comm/Ru. ROBTSTEINBRONER, Gardening Wanted HANDYMAN AT e, refs. Call Pam '1ri::'.:":C: · • .Q!vl!fainting847-5186 modelln&. ~alnt., ~e· school prob. & EnaUs~. 1:177362. 00·8181 GEN'LCONTRACTOR Hansen'sCeramlc Tile Mowing, edging, raking, SENSl~~~lCES. Bob Dwi11ht. 763·7012 =::'?•••••••••••••••• pap.n.g -pair1l;... hauhng. Steve Ian&. lf.SL) ~$1·65§4 PM.11 """vewa", a ,. f I t U ,._..,., ,,. Ftoors-Showers . Tubs s wee Pin£. Fr ee ExpettiseHOllltkeepln• •ABC MOVING-Ex" , ••••••••••••••••••••••• looftllgm.8_uu Wllldow C..... ·.1 1111 ,s, P r ID o r. ,.....,._, .... 5·6456 Call anytime 972·4639 Su f h " ,. HANG NG RO repairs . sealcoa ing. ,._ .. ..._ -eatlmates. S·t372 or Rem>del Repair. Patios. ppllea urnls ed pro(. IOw rates. Quirk, I $10/ L~ roorangrepaus Llr'd. wpe-11 c:.to.Woodw~ 645-5737. Paint. Panel. Quality Trustworthy 957·8003 carefulservice.mlMIO ~sr. on paper. Stnp· ...................... , ...................... , S&SAsphalt631·4199 ................ , ...... 0 •••0 •0 •00o•o••• WHY NOT ONE OF ~2110l Qwihrled hskpr avail. •A-I MOVING• -..l!!i:!i._Srptt64S-9325 • REPAJRS FOR LESS "Let the Sunshine In" r ... .....___ Fl.NEFINISHWORK '.:rownrmulding. THEBEST!Simmons ..... oodRoon De1>end F.n&llsh speak Top Qua1~·1 Specral UC PAPERHANGER Shin(les, nat 30 yrs CallSunshlne Window • ...... __,. Retmdelln&/Doorsbung mantles. wall units , Garderung,646-6684 ~ ....................... Rel cbec:ked8576195 rarelll' ha Ina ""lr' Bonded & guar. No Job ex Freeest.710.272S Cleanin Ltd _ja:..~~ 0 ••0 •u0 •0 •••••u• Randy720-1260CdM rab1·nets Hardwood -· -" ..., too LI t I •R"'"IDENTIAL• AGGRESSIVE I I -!;ardeningwanted.byu-HARDWOOD FLOORS CONNIE.SCLEANINO exp Com....,itive ra es sma or oo a~e "'"" '' ega ,., .... 0 RENO-VATING solutions to ... ood pro .,_ ~· Fr est Ton"' 898-""~ A\0 1 ... Y..,,. avg 2 sty ... repmentat1on, law or. \..IVU\ .. per hortirultur ist. ov11ulirully cleaned &. QUAUTY WORK Noovertime.730>lls:I -·-~ " "' _,, ' fi 3' hrs. stS·8422 Compl. int/ext &. eust. blems. 631-15211 Specializes in plants & waxed. Bf ready for the 962·0768 SfARVING COLLEG E WallpaJ>er Co~tractor Oins 957-8388 • lalbrlfftita cabtl'leU.2Syrs 645 ~49 Drywa1 ga rd en ma int holida.}'s! ~:...488! WEEKEND/WEEKDAY STUDENTS MOVING GI.I)' Gompr. Lie 328240 llPAllS OHLY! Prol Window Cleaning.: .... ~ ... ~........... Carpet Strtlct ....................... Greenhouses, Vegetable ........ HOUSECLEANING CO. Lie. ,T124·436. ).aLW\a. 20Yrs. 494.3366_ All Types, 646-8463 Free ~t · qual. serv • • Babrilt, our CM homes, 1 •••••••••••••••••••••., DRYWALL/ACOUSTIC gtahrdening. .orclllids & ...................... , 551-M43 Insured. 64HM27 .... I Pet co,.. 'BALBOA ROOFI NG CO. Jl.:Rae 675·0941' ti We ea C l Cl l•yrsexp "'·lly 11· .. ·d •· o er exot1" p ants •··~·;,;.••~·;.•!.,:.:,,••• Cl v· w d yr up,an me. re rp eaners • .ru • .. ' · Haul.t>leanup,roncrele Japan6eUousetleanin.: WATCHUSGROW! .---·· Theonb'roori.ngco.w.ilb ear 1ew an ows 00. 646-5759 Steam clean & uphOls !Muted. ~32·5549 114.:~·4278 rermval. Dump Truck. Experienred. Weekly. STARVING ACTORS Beautlry your oUtl·e or construction r ebates Xlnt servke. free est. O.C.C. AREA--Truck mount unit Selling anything with a TIEES _ Qu(~k ierv. 642·7638_ _ _ 9wT1Trans, 642·5196 MOVING CQMPA NY patio w/lush potted or 673~43..i6J3·8229 Ken 673·9018 .. Lovi ng mother wi 11 Work guar 645 3716 Dally Pilot Classlrled Ad Topped/removed. clean DUMP JOBS u you netd a boo~keeper FitSt & Carerul. Lowest hanging plants. Huber Roofing.all types. Sell with EASE! 1 babysat, rullt1me . WANTACTION' as a simple matter •• renre:s repaired & &Small MovineJobs asrussyasyouare.ull l Rates Law Allows. M/C GreeoVelvet lnten ors New·recover·decb I lt'saBREEZE 546-~ ._ c.t~ired Ads 642 5678 just call 642-5678 UlSlllled. m .3475 ~l!Af IKE 646-1391 _ , 67H!!l.!O .. Xlnt_rers . I Viu. Lic/J'!~J73·-0853 213-42J:.~31714·979·7286 uc 11411802. 548·971L. _C!assified Ads 642-5878 ! ~ ............ ~~!~!~~ .... !!!~ !~~~ .. !?~~ ~~.~ .. !!!~ ~~.~~ .. !!!!.~!~'!'! ..... !~.~ ~!.~~ .... !~.5.! ~.~.~ ...... ??!. ~~~~ ......... ~!~.~ ~~~ ..... ?!~! Nace funusht<I room m SEALARICMOTa OCEANFRONT2&4 Br MtF.M·smkr,nopets.2S M/F to shr 3 br. 3 ba l617 WestrlJH NB Want SloreorOfflce 135o0sq rt Ate.tis Mau-.. AllistcmtM-.ger · pnvate home. C.M. Call Wkly rentals now ahtl. AYall. Winter. Weekly/ yrs +. S250 mo inrl util ; house. Lai:una Bear h. rinanrial Inst 70005 r Mesa Verde Area FOUND ADS Open 24 hrs a daf' Salary, SllOO up "5ome arter6pm.S48-6892 flOS & ':'P Color TV . Monthly 673-7873 Aft!,545-~L I '!r~ach,~.499-5p7_ ~~.A entM1·5032. --545-4123 I 7daysaweelt Expenenre C"ec Must Waterfront 3bdrm, 3ba, Phones in room 22741 No Tahoe rondo, 4 Br. :; Mature Woman Non 'MI F lo sh are. du a I EXECUTIVE Store lease for sale 320 sq I ARE FREE 69 Gorgt>ous girls to be able to attend Train·-( sandy beach, pool, jac. Newport Blvd CM min lo Northstar 1450 Smkr. For Friendly I master Br 21 , Ba lux . I rt. lo.nl( term lease. pamper you. Jacuzzi. ang School Jan 18Lh ~Q14l 840-8087. 64&-74-45 wk. Tom857·1668 CdM Hse. Call 640.:-,992 Dana Pl rondo. pool. SUITES 1 beaut1rully decorated, &all; Sawia Lorals as well as 646·~ -- Room q~oss. 2) COM, HEID A PUCE1 ~e Big Bear cabin. pool before 1!):_30 PM. 1ac. 2 frplc's 496·2661 IN NB area. tourist s R a n k !•-------• nice pnv du~lex to , Reas. Weekly Rates tbl. rolor tv, 2 rrvks. Pror to Shr 2BR, 2BA I afler 6. ~ ·~'!~~E ,,..._ -832·~ 11!!!!!!!!1!!!!6!!!!4!!2.11!!!!!!!!5!!6!!71!!!!!!!1111!!!!!!!!-I Amerirard, Master ATTBfTIOH: pror . resp , quiet, M.• Kitchenettes Phones sl 14.545.&116 CdMHse.lblkfrB<"h F Housemate wanted. ,...__ •-------•-= Charge. Amenran Ex· Ambitious boys and refs hse pnvaleges. I "Z"Channel Movies LAKE ARROWHEAD Pref 558·~11. 67!'>·9619 Family 11tmosphere in New luxury .orr1l·e space l UTAIL SPACE Australian Shepherd. ~~~.~~ D7il~/e6~;_34a~~ iltls 10.J.3 yeau old, lO wtnds640-7845 ~..!967 Newport Home sips 8 children ~v~ N 8 Nrrommunity pool an lrv1~e s bus1t'St on Harbor Blvd 1280 sq male, 2 yrs. lri ·<"O\ored. work one or two even· WESTCLIFF AREA Bt ta Mesa 645·9137 ok. n~ pets, 'nonsmkrs M F For 3BR. 2BA. fpk. ~ bea<"hes. SJOO per mo =er~v~~Y n~~~Y Caal1 ~-a+l~~agnes 35' 6sq7._'61t 00 ~~~l~g Hosp1ta ID ::i:~~:la~a~:O w11h ~~~s:ap~~e~ut:~t:,~~ Room w pnvate bath or I only. Wlmdstwkly Dttk. Gar NB. S2Z5 Mo Covers all but food & r det Is ""' uu urn, ., Ti Hoag Hospital Mature. jYearly. on the bearh. ~97341~6389 151 . 1a5 l 10 av 1 d 1 long distance ,.alls or 11 Cock·a·poo Blk w some a proless1onal massage lions ransportat ion prol rmle, non·smoker.1 Hotel rooms. kitchenette -838 0925 days. 67J.237• 7~0780 ~5_1.:J.2_31 640.4230 Store or orrire 3 rms. Grey 31, yrs old No Sttve 10-6, !'>48-2817 :::er~~s'i~~a~~0;1~~~~ S'Z75 . & bath S280 up monthly .... to Shn 000 1-:vt'S ROOMMATF. WANn:D 1 •DB.UXE OfffCES• 1 BA, Kitrh 567 W l9th Collar Vie CM M9 OG26 Lonel)• Tonight' Need Call 3 t S 30PM k for 642 6&16, lea ve messg. I + S280 secunty depo!lt ....................... ~:I Toro Condo. l'IOSl' lo From I room to 1400 sq CM. S400 Mo Call J11ck. l..~1.!..61!'>·22J3_ -Compnnyi Call Mon1C'a Andre:. 642.432~.s ext La B h I 2306 w Oceanfront F. child ok, shr lux 4 br Luxury penthouse. O<'ean M 11 . •. h · .....,2277 , -t·. Blk Umbrella Gold 9«>.1822 guna ear newly · a s "' s opµ1nii n. Froms1 ua1q rt No _....,.___ u.... ..,.. 343 d • r Newport Beat'h condo.Pool.tennis,elc· & bay view. Villa ,. I w H d er . ~verything urn. 6734154 5.645-5l23Nan~ Balboa, 2 br. 2 ba. prer l'enler .-oo . pat io. lease required AdJ .....,.allntal 4500 an le Engraved COEDS Would Love To IJ!!!!ll!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!! Nr busline. 494·6176 · -I 't St d r pror rem 1450 + '~ Yll'W 2 bdrm. 2 ba Jim Aarporter Inn 2172 Ou ••••••••••••••••••••••• Joseph A Stanko. Sen Party wi th You! Call AUTOMOTIVE Bdrm den Pvt BA K'th Vocatioll R...tal1 USO n ewar ess urn apt utils John Ma raluso llSS-2813 art 8pm pal. Call A}t 833·3223 4.ooo s r, SI .J20 mo ti mental Attachment te s I 1 e o r Sy I v 1 a , ..... 5 .; pnv.' Pool. tennis. ~~. ········:· .. ••••• ...... ~~~M J~~I: s~n 540 6565 18·5); 631·7569 Resp mtroommatt' for 17TH STIHT sprtnklers & loading ~~:po:.~~~~ .c,~t~\ Anytime 761-!1036 I couMTiiMAN ~645-5846 ___ Palm Spnngs area tMon· UM 1 evs/wknds_ Balboa l"e• apt 673·1807 COSTA MESA dork. otrire spal·e avail. 592.LSJ6 Zl yr old non·stra1ght at Dealership or rorei"n u..&.I. I 0 lerey CC> condo 3 BR 2 Sh sh hous F v 2 afl6nmandwknds (714)831·0409 trlK11\A rem~le rece~· .. ~Mottff 4 0 Ba . rum w/atrium M/F neededfor 2BR. IBA are arp e. J 21X'3roomolrieesu11es -----Found 1 2. sht-harred. ~ .. _ · •w auto parts experienre ••••••••••••••••••••••• Golr. tennis. Daily. Laguna Beach House llT\lllrg rmlo p~baMlh $2~~~lD. ~!rk N/ewporor rt Twnhst..: lD AtC. plenty of prltll Ulll Nf\B .. ~ BMirlrAh •8f1Slone ~ YOW\&. cat all blk. F. !~ ::~~~~re:edpry1~:s preferred Call Glen rorc ,. u ve on Npt Ikh S90/wk. wedcly ' monthly rates S375 pr mo Isl 6 Last Pl . .. °" .... r w P penion. en tnrl. Avail now Call . or ~3 . L , ~ leather COiiar & bell. No an appointment Pine Knot Motel 6302 w av a ii 71• 558 8001 S75 Dep. Call 494.4427 d ulil Nick 964-2168 rus. na1oquetball. ht-alth ~lonom1rs 615 6700 per sq rt Allen t Qt ~·1994 ~~Ei~;':.rcf ~:;x IOY CAIYH PCH, NB645-0440 ~5PM. a.sttror Mark _ afle.r7 30 Man) e!t.!I.!_ spa. l'tt' 640-7499 Share 2 ok sd1k 1n pre ~!·~ Female black Shepherd I · -IOUS IOYCE • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Mature \l(om11 n Non stJgaous airport :irea. 375 5eorap 4550 Retnever mix named P'lcmme Sftlien AMOIMW •• • • • •• • • • •• • • ... Smkr Wanted lo Shr sq rt For details rail ••••••••••••••••••••••• Heidi Female black/ I ln\1leyourrnendstosee 640.6444 • • I Beaut1rul Home m HB 851"6226 Storage·R'V trailer tan Shepherd Parrot l'xot1c hngene. loH• po _......__ __ a.DAY WEEK SPECIAL w/2 -.'0l'l'lt'n 964·6163 600 sq. rt Mt>sa Verde boalC M Sl.\1mu Kirk Female blark /grey lions. creams & party AUTOMOTIVE • • I Fem 27 shart' l(oq:cous are;i 631~ m j x e d EI k h 0 u n d j!ames 1n your home. Pcrit CC<11oca..iti.1~r--• - rum twnhsl' w resp !'>45·4123 Senior C1t1ien nel'ds 644·3656 with an exr1ting home AlldDrher • 8 Days • 3 Lines 8 Dollars • 1 work1ni.: remalc Un 40x50· outsidl' storaj!e Found : pas;nji Club 1>art) by LADY J Call Automotive experience.. • 1 hel1<•1 ab le rooms BAYfROHT I spa('e for romm bus & wishes lo plare ''I( M for your early party preferred S.day week., • . "'"waterfalls. ell'. SJOO _Pnll'.ll'OHlre 760·94•0 van w/eler avail On , dale 17684441 Sales Salarycommensuratet~ • Its easy to pla.ce your 8·0ay Week Classified by mail and It • ). NBICM area 760 804!'> -- -; premises p m . St'I'? barliless. yodelling do!( re~ needed expen ence Call Greg $8 th t I d II d ' To Q al f fo th s C.OSta Mesa. 250 sq rt 646-0404 1118-382S F O R T H E Ounkh.01Parts Dept at costs JUSI -a son ya 0 ar a ay u I y r I • IRmmte to shr 48R 3RA 5Ull.e Sl75/mo Utrls In -· --Found bla1·k " while SanClementeFord. " • special offer you must be a non-commercial user offering apt on Bal Is S22S+ulil cld 779 w 19th St Mtc•••oet I male Cat IO The College so p HI ST I c ATE D • • MIF 21 3~. non·smkr. 851-8928 ._.., 4650 Parli area 646·2802 I.ADY Lotions. potions. 4tMttO S merc handise for sale up to saoo per ad. arid the pric e must I BnanorJotin61:>·6762 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -. 11n~erie . bedroom eabys1tter·housekeeCr h h d • Claslom exeeullve oHit'e. •...... tut M L b R l nd t H .__ be 1n your ad The cost stays the same w et er yo ur a IMIF non smkr shr 2 400 sq rt P1'l b;ath With JmsenRet.iremt'nl Home """" w e a I e j(amesa O}S osless Mon·f'rl Rersreq'd e• • d h d II t t • master bt twnhse, fpk, shower Balboa Penm rorChnsllan ladies ~·or • w~~old markinj!s. "Ler 3 fun rilled home party 640-895'08.J0-5 .JO Span.· • nee s e1g t ays se 1ng 1me or JUS one Sllll. m1rrowave Avl Im ~_mo_642.4623 1!1f9641_9169.5S6·33!'>1 I ~heH~r·~1ghhtmey" ~luSr IP..11gd!es only 770 !'>162 yietnamestOK_ • • med. CM S37:i + 12 ut1I -• e ,.) BABYSITTER For an• Use o ne word in eac h box About 4 words make one • ms+ dgep Sure1h 851 ·2089 Iv Lovely orrice on Lido ...... /l•nst/ I ;.~i°' J Ol' 642 01~· TrG¥,. 5450 rant. school days Feb): 3 Pl Pen. prof. decor. ready ,._e --••••••••••••••••••••••• June. nr S C Plaza.• • classd1edl1neoftype M1n1mumad1s lines easeprtnl lomovein,850sqrt.re FoundoObermanFHB 2FtYrortht>pnre 809 -• Male 2329 to ~hr CdM 2 as.67!'>-6200wkdys ••••••••••••••••••••••• Alabama & Adams ~ 1 -;1 • plainly Rr. Iba. frplr $237. -....U 586-3422or536·8990 oflJl'l''OPAUNCTORUIPEOS~S Babys itter Wanted<. • • Ava11immed 640·2715 So. 0.-.C. Co.h o,pon..ity 5005 -----Prefer Colltl(e Student, r:------.-----------------------.., Space avan 1n styti sh •••••••••••••••••••••••Found. Dalmatian F. ap HAWAII " Tues Sa l 8 30 t~ • I I • Harbor Ridge. Attorney law swte ror compatible LOSING LEASE. quit· Pro x I Yr . ,. 11· S40 631·36ffi 1 12·30AM 631 0130 • will share with pro· lfnant. lncludts recep J t.mgbusiness.selhn11ou1 Magnolia, H BJ on billow .t& ----- • I I • f:::i;'>~I c°:n~~~ S~~~· t1on1st.. answering AU. .supplies and r1x 1/41~ ~·~m I ~ ~:i~~tf:d> tocarefortt • I I • +7!'>2944.2 days. 640·2434 sen•1re. Janilonal and lures1ndud1ng Found ladies· gold ID ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm old baby from hna.. eek nd5 Bob murh more Call Cornne DI.splay rases. waiting bra re 11' t ,. F a~ h 1 0 n Sdloolt & I to 10 or llam. Mon thr • I I • ~es. w e . l71419.Sl·~ -room cb~m. Beauty Island ldl'fltar1 644·1382 I ......_.._ 70051 Fn an CDM home. Refs S • ""' a • Bdrm. Study Priv. BA. -n Salon hairdryers and I Lo--R -d --K--1 I ,.,_smoker"""' 7901 ,. • I .vu .. Poot Tennis NB S400. """""' hy~aulic <'hairs. mir st. ewar · eys. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,..,.,. vr..-.. I I------+-----.._----+------+----__, I 00-5846 PIMHSULA ron. shelves and planls 1 rase. Wd. Brdg Center. •S31 90 WEEK Ch nstaan 10.80 • Fem. 23~ yrs to shr lg Spacious executive or-Also. make·up, shampoo I Irvine Contact Bob at I Pre·Srhool. 320 E. 18th IAIYSITTll ' • 1 i-:~-----l------+-----t------:---t---:--:-~'1 • I apt NB with same. $290. rices across from City andhairprodU<'LS. 1 J,?aJ.ll'.!J.!!~!L__ Sl. Cosla Mesa. Special I Person needed to meei • f 13:20 ~337_7 Hall All servlcesavaila· Call631·97Mor l..Alst 1/1182 bet Baker & Proiram.M6~23---6/yr oldgarlartersrhool' 1, ' • Shr lBR Condon.: Bea~·h. ble, 'optional'. From 22!'> arter6, 898·6809 I Fairview. and Adams & ,,.._ Wmhd, 7 075 ' U6 to approx 2:45pn'i • I 15 80 • SZl5 +ul1l '• dep+last. sq.rt. up, at reasonable Cosmttics. ra~ials. body ~arbor: I pr eyeglasses ••••••••••••··~··•••o• e\·eryday, Mon· F r i ' • rerltals No lease re· wraps NB area Lrg m brown case w/Betle A·I House Cleaning lady, MUST BE DEPEN'-; •• I l-----.L----....1..-----J..-------l"-----1 • 63l~7 lired.Call67!:,3002 __ clienteie 832.6202 engraved on lens Call , allwork~ythejob.have· DABLE MUST liv~ Add S2.60 for each addltlon1l llne for 8 times F Rmmt Wanted to Shr Clfice In CDM. 2nd story · BS380.t.~~ 21 hrs : worked in the best or within walkin1t distan<'f • I • Mission Viejo Hse S300 walk up. eaay arress, Mrdg 911. T,_t Last 1·8, Gry /blk strps F I homes Have xlnl r".r. to school Stonerree~ I incl ut1l Full Pri\'. rarpets. drapes. panel· Dtidi 5035 cat mtd·long haar. blk ~all arter 5 30pm tall Elementar), W oo~· • I . •• ~.eHome_546_ .~_0-7~ Sat ll\&. '50eq61.!~.. .. •• -;~:·:::_.••C••o••••• nAneaahl"Olla~ 4c mots cvMir ~OU~SmE_K~E1~~34ER P-rer ~~~a~f ~.~~:A!! I Pub II sh my ad for 8 days Starting .,.,....... _..........":" • .,. . earn "' en er ~ • 3rd Rmmt. M. Nonsmkr .... ~IT All types ol real estate 63H5M3 b\'e m Exper. xlnt rer. 5 lOpm. :. 1 • 25-lSyrs S250 mo. 1st & """ r-v investments ainre 1949 neat. sober. pleasant. l11!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! • Classification • ~.Pool. Nr sc Plaza. Executive Suites has or-~ill SCRAM-LETS pog111vr. reliable. loves 1------... SS7·'m8 Eves, Wknds. rices available nr O.C. 2*t TD rluldren Do drive Call Banking _"\ • Name Airport,fromS365w/ruJI • IUtWERS bernoon 631·2427 -.-... TIA.MS -• M/F lo shr 4 br house. service available. Call 642-2171 545·0611 M'1 You ng ~a med man """~ "" .. • Addre ss • Msa Verde, C.M. $320 now ror 1 month Cree. Aviary Oxide would llke odd jobs eves OFftCH • + utlls. S4S·3810 f I Li.sa83.1-9976. Eam 16~ on Balboa Stokl~V-EGGiOmTlet & wkends. Can do a Newport Bf>arh om c,. M F _.. b b ~5 r /lime Operationt C't Z'p Phone • I 1o .... r2 r,2 aeon· Bavf ti lalandlntltdeeds.Over 0 . hb t variety or handyman Clficer, 21)rs S&L ex"· •• C~~ck or M.0 . enclosed '01 • ~n~·:3s~J~o~ocE r~~ crnce s/;!~~ aq rt ~~~~~~~ng *1ne~·~:acto~s:::~~ f:501W2 · 9525 eves: ask l;"~~~e ~~~T~ :4;~ • S58-aM4,67S..l793 S400per mo. lat and last • ._.tfy, lttr Other neighbor looking Frirndl>. honest. un knowledge or saving~ • Charge my ad to: • =:~~~.Yt~:~~t ~~l~n 675·9007. 675-J"' &!1!~ .. wallet: "All !'VE ~!~t:n~1:~ y& r~~ppe ~K~a~1~~G~r15:~: •• 0 ~ # Exp . •• ~~·nW.~ ,, util. IMO.RH v;.r:.:/Re~ns~~:Kr~:, ft=ry.Wallet .• call to ~~~~~~~n~~~::P:~.f ~i::;;!dry F!;~~r~~: L .. _ M/F fum 4 BR house. Mr..,.rt c..ttr. No Credit' No penalty 646-5194 ~tlonan ram1l}' mj!mt, inlormahon a. 1ntrr\'it• • • r::rl. Shores. nr bch. flrst clua . full aerv1re DmnilOPAuoc. 873·7311 F"'"·-.. : Valuable i'tem. tin (?) 955·1_669 -call • D # Exp • •-t ·15 gar Id EXF.c. olfictt, Includes .,..,.., !!'!'r.w-.a......a 7100 Bryan Taggart .. • • enn · · w · all amenities. From AITanae~owror Westcurr Plaia. Ca ll to --644.nss ~ • • ~no $350. +'':I util. /rm.144-7119 home fQllllY loans Identify. 642·ZIM8 ... ................... WISTaM ":; 1• L------------THE POSTAGE-----:---• NEED A BUS . AD· ~~1~'::t:'. F<Uld: Eldertygray do1. ACCOUNTS ADllALSAYIM6~· :. tr: ·--------WE'LL PAY 11111 --~~;;:;····Q_!: :. ~~ .. c;;::;~7;1 ~~=-~ ·~~;~" l£l::::d·:~~· ~~;:~;;:.~~' lll!J!l!l!l!!~:!!!l~I!!· !!!!!.~!!!!!r!!!!!:!!!!!~~!!!!!;yl!~~!!!!!t: .. : 1r MAILEO Mar.as/mo. NEWPOllTOPPICE C.t.T.f\nant'lalSvr. roundland m i x . tailed oriented in -1 .. ------• • IN THE • 'f70.0347 ~me i.....Jtoet lotatton 187 Beach 81 Australian Shepherd. dlridual for entry level UNITED STAUS ••Ingle 1ar. ufe ' ~" RmlinctoaBuch Doblt mix. V1nla, ......i.~ in our ar-.•nts • ~ ,, • n w Ith S klrll fw la• Orm., \n· Lout, MC1lJ'td by ~ Mix. Golden Lab _....... wv e t BUSINESS REPLY LABEL '" e ~m.~ .. 1 t. ::-ftor1:ct'fin,fo~ a=:~=a~ f~:~1.~n~1·:. ~~~tt;e ~Ia;b.!;.:.e:~~u~a~!~ E ~ E11tJlde, Co1t1 Men, ...... ... An imal Care Center ly, 10 key b~ touch. A~· • 1t1.1 ~ • I 10..10.24, 175/mo . 180 " · ...... ..,... count. rttt1vable txp • FtltU(lASSPUMlflllO u COSUMUA.CAllFOltNlt .. St Da ....ua c...... ,_...,.,. lltlpful, outshndinl( • 2 ....... , ant '"'U IU PAO BY .--ssu . 8 • t'•. ~·tu-9543. • Newport Btach. View of. t : writ/ Found '°"' black /white romptDHlion. btnt fill • !! ~..,.. ~" .... 0 """p .. f • u.... Beacll sarase, -Reier. Fl.Ill Hrvlct Law ,.,_,,., Aniol'• male Cal. Vlr. In a plt1t1nl workln11 3 Orange COHt lllV llot ..... ~ n..iu 9:: 8'&Jtt. Comp. law Ubrary ......... Bahr/Harbor. North tnYll'OftmUt. Cont art • "' 181 111>. e "'"'' Au d t "'-"• .. _ .. '"•"0100 P' .. u 111 AMF "'-I n .: 111·1, p• ". 1r • I fw"-llh. ,4471 :!-..?'' ny ex raa. •••••-.............. ~-"'~:~ , • .. ... 1 , <n: l' . 41 ., -·-• •• •-• llOI rw 11114 IHO Urlt Drllhnf lnterna 1• S • ;~.~ ... · •• !~~ ~ llAb c1" ~i':.=:t";::,··N4i:: _ ................... t~,1~=.~ ... ~~~:1 1 : 'I lox 1MO ! • ;i:• ... ~Ja·~:~l:. ;;.,:~~= t•~~~~~· ::rti~ur lillli&Mi'S IX>E Mir , • ~ 330 w. lay St. ""' If •. .,_Ml~. w t t:J:~~~ ... •11 rtW11·inar, •t': .. ~!!COl",,m!ll A:=,.t:-~~~~~ C t ............. ca asa2e -r• ---~ IR.'1111 ,.ni . -.. l Allo ·-A/C. variom • 01 a.....-, "'••v • ~; . ._lb, Jd Sdl~.i.,.tto " .... ,111=.1.: nwtlVDI MKU ntl~l•t•ry tt•· .tatter AH .. ~ ... ,,. ... ta ......... , C "' .. H7 •-••tap.Calf e 1 ......... ,•••••••· J-.Wl"'·HH; :=u. tttl!!I =-~ -eau -to.kllfi ~.;t~ w., For Information call lnturaftc:e admlnl1trat1ve ..-.CA~C" Wll Ha T.• • M .. -....:;.;.=~-=--· ---"1-uallablt Pln•b "'~1Jj>1r Ct. Hun·l· I 4f).il4I •••ALOMCI ~a!ar.iohnwa1ne ~ lkll. EJp,i_ u . •TARIELL• Electroalu firm In Airport. !•f · not giared. Salary 011otla· •°Siiia lt26 .. Join Ult Los An11lea 1\mt1 ClttuJatlon Team • adapt your work schedule to )lour llle8l)'lt. won. $/hr• a dly In a Time• Clrcula. tJon aalea office near your home 6 have more Ull'lt for your family, •t11dlea or leisurely Pfriodl. We pay hourly Ir cocnmi.uiom. ~=~~~ '*"lary. Wll train. ble. Xl.ntopportunlly for Amet1ca'••·u&est Mil.It be able to type the n•bt person. Call Ind d t •-lll!!ll-11111 ... --I U~ HPlnf. Ex· SOwprn. lntere1tln1 714 /"2·0885 !pen en 100'1 • DINT .... U9T .. pd. iochadllll •c~t.I wort wtue•t oppt'y for R E c E p T 1 0 N I s T LOS ANGEL~ TIM ES 1-------1-------Part·Umt lHdl•I to .... .........-:fable• acCOW\ts re· aelr·•tarter. Salary Medical£ Back Office As· General office abUltles, 137SSUnflowerAve,CM •SICllTAlllS• WordProc...a.. fllMlme , F/C book· ~MAMA•v•ou c vable. Permanent open. 7l4..a33-:IOM for ln· ~~!'!. Exper!!.e_ced. 11ood telephone eti-.... _ .•• ~e'°El lo PayroU R.E.114.400. Need akllled operator 11..,.r for mort1a1e EQerl Art ~lion .r~rea reUa· tervlewappt. ..........esa. 845--quette. l ull benefits, fflUA'wP7 mp yer ft«~. TS.SSJ2,000. with xlnt. command of . lln*er.,e le Newport toOkSq fOC'~a Rt~!~· ieperaoo. 11: -"""'~tu.;.;..;A• .. ....-... -...,.-1---Models, aciora, Film nut be well or1anizedi S ... LES T'fODict. R.E. 119,200. grammar formattln11. a.acb, s r owth OP• 1111 ~ rtuwly VALOR ELECTRONICS ~""' xtra1. Xlnt opp, new rel.lable, fr capable o "" Exp.Consultant Oun Will train on Burrou11h1 "1mltY. 1alary com· wffh!xcti&eo otenUal 540-mt MuJti branch caaualty I aces / type 1 . workloa w/ minimal Oran1e Co's leadlo1 UiReindersAgy,lnt' Redactron. F/f' noon lo mu1urate with U · for Penonal Growth·• Generalllelp ~l bu opeoln11 In ZJUS.7860. dirtttloll. Call tor in· =t~:r rinhemhak..!.~.~s G1JBlrchF.at'64EOE 8 PM Resumes to· 180l2 perteeee. Noo·amoker ~:;:~,_ootur. llClltly Ernndi, Hell! tn Anlbeim. Loa& Beach It Models• £1corta. Pem tervie'W betwffn 10.12. r°' 1'11 f'""1""1 .. 1· "'-rtl83Ul90/Free Sky Park Circle, Irvine, llNl--.CaU·ItUe •-.o~ Otrl a. B 0 llllanteotflces. ln1lde JanUlh•l2lh.15CH141 1111 proeasona 1 " .. -..w..., 92114 Attention . ' nee Seeb OUR El· ce • ome . C· I ct· <Wy.TopSl -"-"==-o;;;.;;;:;=-=~=-1 penoo. Must have 2 yrs o~rbara. __ __.,.....,_,....._ __ , ~toCom leme ta cmJooat1'ravel. Houra ~~·&0~:~~:1e1~=: ~A!ll2. UCwrlOHIST expr. Position otters SECUTAllES .... ..,0 ..... 1111• u tip t do • Aedble Mull have own , I I I t' be Jill tof comm •-j b ''!!!1!!!!!111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ .. ,_ - 11 ·-~1.{DIJ •O va e t'ar.BeRellable per. helpful. Attractive Modlftu.l.ated or oc:a accoun 1n11 na • "' Work temporary o s 1· llllld ..,_. a..rance ~Team. Excellent 41.1.2744 salary, commluion, fr. Needs tall attractive firm. 9·3pm. Heavy salary. Cal Mr. Con· close to home. x..AY TECH. lllDC!Y ...... r~pontl· Benertt Paeh&e in· inge benefits packafe. men/women Cor agency pbones,Utetyplng,froot trucc1forappt.54ll·l424 VlCKIHESTON DENTALorMED . ble ptnoa lo handle cl u de I Med I ca 11•-------•I FOi app'l caU Debbie at asslgnments. 541·7762 ~ficepel"IOOali:i:. A~ly SAies Part-Time &~IATES Prefer CRT. f\111 lime ...,.a ltdler, recon· ~Plus a Per. --...s.c.,.._, -=FGS...::::;.:-.:<~71::.;:4...::)~:=..;=-..·--Nursin& ID penon at et& r, 8UOYVtSfT MQ.CMOO Nice surround1n1s. I04S die beM a::,~.m: • ee.tol~llCtlon. $1800 Girt Friday, with ap. JIW'&ll ...... HS AJDl Skell~ • E~h~tmo{e, W/WASHIM6TOM Days Newwrt Beach ••••••••••••••••••••••• prepare p t oat U Qualifiacl Hlmtlllpoa titude for flfures. 'fled l 11 .--1450 o. am no ~ " Hamilton 11 tr----a ' ~c. 700.2S54 Fe ma le Australian .._... Salary com· Btacb. IC7-«M4 S I I n i f I c a n t Must be quali n a Exper'd all ahilta. Conv. Real San Clemente 1 ~fllJ .._ --• with exper. -==;;;..;.;;-....;.;'"""'"---1 respomibiliUes, with re-phases ol benchwork in· Hosp. Nwpt. lkh. Bring , . other people you wi I 1ee ...._ Auft ..t Mee d ii Shepherd: ~f'eat r r11bie Rfs~=~le at Cb:l~~~,c:'uon ;!~_:a~:: :gr 'iaa\~~: ~l ~ec:l~:.'xf:i ~ :;~e n!d!.o1:e:t~ u ~~~~!ned :_~ u m:ni'!. Yt~g~1!~ ~~~~!~~ ~0e°!~~nrh ~~ ; .. ~ ...... i(;,;5 =iti::~iy~.en~:~. d)jj -.. ... -... ... ..-C Avraiel~acectle• !,,oartuerxe·. MS-2M2. local.ref's a must. Uyoo lilifeina.Call:M2-IO«. dillies, 20+ rsJ wk. nmu circulation dep1t. opening for secretary ••••••••••••••••••••••• shotl.~7-6610. -•n "'"9"•"'"' .. • att a mature, responsi· 1 lrvine. CallSS7·Sll6. field rep. Many i>eo~ e with good organizational WaDled Birdseye Maple Xlnt small watchdo1. Auertlve p_er10Ji. er1et1c Auislan t. ble professional call --•.• ... --•n•M_E__ UC.-r/SEC'Y on the p/t c:lrculat on skills, eye for accuracy chest' & Bedstead housebroten, loy1I c.om- Newpor t Arch u Top Pay for R i&ht ea&A.LOfftCI (714 )SS6·4047 tor in · ExecuU-Sec t 1 Lite trplng, riling, :;:C,'ufa':~ma ~~: & attention to details 546-1377 panion. all shots . • Martaas Pll·~~ .... •Aoa~ f.!._l_OD...:,.~ays. Non· ~ressome,•cct'&e.xt· terview. DIA .. Convet ... re•ry :: oenera omce duties. r-.......A.t-g J'usl a , .. w Ability' lo cope with Ameritan Oak Curio .::SS7~-Gi=.l:.:::0 ____ _ t _._ ......-._._ perience npos ·,_ ... ,_wan• ..... to .. -con· -rauor.Fle ·" "'w.,....,., .. d verse J O b 3 -'"b'-11 t ed Fri., u a for .Judy or 19ffAL/Auhtmt ::~=:!io: ~lorlbe~tex· ~~/"sa~v:~~aec~!~ ~~·c9:~i1~~· t Cf.1( ~ea~~:~s~~~P~ re1spons l b1l1t1es , ~~~~.:1~51:$1~. i:~u .. ~uc:h: l Riney. 1.a.~ typin& skills necessary dtingexotkhorneparty UEnsurate with ability. Corporate0f'lice,761W. irons In their com· &hort.handorspeedwnt Oriental vase $7S, spayed. Call Eric (Cafeteria Worker) No Experi•nelpful, but for busy real estate or. plan sweeping the Corona del Mar area. 19th St .. Costa Mesa. munlllea.Wepayhourly in& required, non 631·5979 · ~alt6. eq>. nee. Sam-~:30, ron· not nee. Newport Beach lice. Referencu re· soul.bland. LADY J reps 673-7993 Wed lhrll Fri between wage + generous com· smoker. salary oprn. ANTlqU E CLOCKS : Husky Sheperd Mixed, J'rl. Good ene Its· area. 52554 quired. 640-9900 for in· earn up to S3S pr hr or 10am·1Pm. ~2294. missions. U you have a Call : Kalle, 64°'9350· Chime-ssoo. Strike or M, Great Watchdog! 1!f.25G. terview. rrore full or Ptr. Call , REGARDLESS OF neat appearance & 1prin&Ji259i631'-S879 67J..7~ .,..... tfJ9Mt111t for more info. 768-444.1 t PAIT-TIMI EX p ER l ENC E or knack tor talking with ... _. IO I 0 A ... I050 CllMIF~ ..... "1t·tlme eveninp, IP· Pb lo penon at: Two . a..,.. From lt.alY. 22S'1 FIUview Rd., C.11. ------ tor 2.Sat a mo. Costa fit 1 .... ,.r u.,..1r __ _..._ • GtFTWAIEDEPT. education . Texa s rv.IV\le talk to us about *iriuo1n••y• ~eces ._, u--.... ....... d d part t1m'" at ~-: 1 M bl ,......"'Y ~ """ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~""._,.. nee e " Newport Beach At I atur~. persona e. Refinery Corp. otrers this great p/time op Fast paced Realestate HARBOR AREA I BUY Public Gardens i n . · energetic person needed you an excellent op· portunltv Call Mon-Fri. <Yfice ~sharp, well APPlJANCESERVICE * * * * .,..... Corona del Mar Call lorney , interesting with ar!JStic ability to 1 h' ' ,.,_.Office Teny Moo thru Frt 8.30 general pra~uce_. S/yrs ll'l!rchandiae & display POrtun ty to ac ieve 9157·ZJ61, ext 1204. orgaruzed Gal. 75wpm. Webizy used appliances Good used f\tm1ture Ii Want a cb.ange? Start AM-4PM exper. Ellen. 8511733 I ~ware an our NewPOrt high income plus cash SALES REP ror new at with good Secretarial -Wttellrtt0nd .. guar Apptiances--OR I W111 h . h f:... I II .. _ h bonuses and benerits in t 0 r n e y c 0 rn p u I l' r skills An21Jances. 549.3077 seu or SELL for You t.beNewYearrig twit 673-2268 ...,.UOFatoreh· cer . udc , ach store. Mon·Fri. Costa Mesa area. Write service. rull or part· =· ....... 1r....,.5 •uct10M ~~·~ • "I D e1labli1hed , area.nig la,exper.ne.c. 9-3pm. FW Sears Bo 711 Fl 2900 llUY•-Lt• .... C ES ~•SK"' ,.._. pleasant mod HAIDW AIE 1 · · • x · · Um!, romm + exp. Send Contact Peggy : 833· , _ ,........ "'"9~7.8133 64MH•. l ll·f'25 Part me. Barbara • e'h' 1roup Luuna Beach full time ~a~;lid:.,PP.fuu~~ THESGUIMLDI DIU1 DG Worth, Tx. 76101. Ru u me t 0 : Br ad Grubb & Ellis """' " foraait.s..3390. practice. Must a~e re· rHail sales. Coast ..... U~ · 2937 E Coast 1610 an gue r. Nellon, Receivable Data Refri g. frost free. clean, l lUYAllMITUIE CAS... • ~:~:i:e'D:~~~ Hanhratt,497-4403. tti;~~. __ Ne rt Beach UIMVESTMEMT Systems. Wells Marine works good $150. Les 957·8133 HOUSIWAll SALIS j Group1640-1122. Holeec:leanin& t day per Uve-ln Hselteeper & Aid Part Tune/Sales F..am while you learn. Bldg • 3190 Pullman Ln. SEClfT AIY fEXEC. ~13. 548-4485 3) sofas. New. S88. Lov· Nor p/Ume. Apply:! ~Asaht Wfflt. 4 hrs per day. Best Conditions & Meedltro ~7 H E R I T A G E C06taMesa,Ca.92626. Personnel/Advertising Dryer, gas, clean. works eseata $88. Sleepers. Cron Hardware, 1814 • kOOhr.CallbeforelOor Salary Must have Best Positions available de· INVESTMENT will SCRY/T Dept. has opening per good. SSS 548·8513 or $199.FACTORY9SH708 San iutuel, <Harbor E:~er:3ncEd 0[1tho aft6PM,OO.SOOO,U9. ct Refs Be"ch Home. rmnstrating pr~ucts m teach you c reat ive Strong secreta~':f;kills expansion . Nwpt Bch 548-4485 KJNG INNERSPRING View) ~::~b.~DA~: Housekeeper. p/tlme 499-l!r72 grocery stores in your financing, 1031 Ex· needed. Hrly wage. F'.nancia~ services hrm. Washer, clean, works EXTRA FIRM mattress e&.alCAL ell& NB.1 64CMl12t. wli. ~.in exchtanh1e for MANAGEMENT area. ~iff ~' 3t07bonus. ~~i'opn~~t t~~~~~~li~:: xerox work processing a Good .. typangN. sho 8 rth 0 akned . f.'!o.~. $95. 548. 8513. ~ never..,!!,!dedl, Nweo!11'er ~ Qiaomer service. Part VlDll in 'ues ouse. Join our team. P /T, . must.848·3611Lynn expe. req. on· m r ............... .......,tsac .... -e ••me (fie•lbla hours). DINTALASSIST. Matweind1vidual. Ref's . I plv ••ay lflME EJtper counselorsThre Se"mstress i·n tailor Call 64~0123 between Refngerator Whirlpool usea queen sz. worth ~·~Office. R,DA exp. <!r preven· ~~~ .. _<:ael! ~·n·ot999!>m· ::1~s on Y ap ' a~..-~~afudenl OK. f:= ~~u;f'!:pmp. ly r~~ s~. must do fittings s.2 FF Side by side Harves t $399, cub only, S2l& del. OC .1.1__. Ana. talive. quality office. -ua A.WI' u 8a M F .. ,.._ Cl T .1 Gold Ulle New S3SO Usually home, 754-7350 ~7~ 7SZ.Z'780 F tr, please leave mess. ..:CMiii/~N·B~arii':ii~ii~iii:mMsom·m. j "t .1gha· lt lpersonn t er v.1 ec;,onfiCdena I j "'rvwu ea.nen a1 or SERVICE ST AT ION AT 080 Canes' Twm bed sill. S7S 752-1320 H 1.. I & tf••rT,.._ • Shop, 5$35 Warner Ave . TENDANT P ltime Ap 631-1508 or ti.ade for Queen. Cl.lllCAL Dental, Full ti me .n11&HJ F' Catter opportunity for PAIT TIME Vt.Dtt, :)46.SllllO H.B.846-7391. rry Shell Station 11th & Refng $200. Freezer $200 CDM General ollke. accurate chatnide, RDA, Ortho Boy lS~~~I :iruve-ln. =~~tr:s~=~~d~~ &-9pm. Expanding youth SECIETAIY rvine NB. I Wsbr/dryer $125 ea 760-0161 tnilt.IOOd withfl&ures. exp. req., fringe Will Pav Top SS For Ing reta"il cl ot ina cou~selln11 firm has RESTAURANT F\nancial&engineenng Sewing Machin e D/W 00.646·5848 _New ethnic look sofa. Houn.l:-.S,SUOhr.to benefrts,NB642·stt'7 ' 2 ngs ror 3S sharp Lunch waiter/waitress cons ultant s seek Operator. experienced. Whirlpool F /F refrig, 22 $100. Dorm aitt relri11. start. Wan er/Harbor n.-.. -am sh1''" no Ri&ht Person. 640.777 chain~. Excellent op-~goina matur~ -ople "asst boilermu plus DP/WPS Specialist s111gle needle. good pay. cu 't. xlnt cond. sacr. $100.bothnew67~ --Call~ for .......... -· ... days, Eves546-2718 porturutv for the highly v r:". n.. Ba A .I • I t a l I I ----: · • up. nee. Apply in motivat~ goal oriented to motivate ambitious .,,,1ter r. PP~Y ID 'II s ron,. sec re aria piece work. bl'nef1ts ~SS7·4639 art. 6. HV Home. Remodeling app•atw penco: Dippity Donuts. 111 ••••er/ Aide . d' Id ·1 R 11 10.13 yr olds. Call 2-Spm. Pe rs on • J a n · 9 • background & report 642-9652 lmpenal Relngerator 20 sale. Couch and lovt$eat a.DJCAL 1154 Newport Blvd .• S days/1 ni&ht. male :::a~a1~~1lent:xp:~1 64.2-432t.ext.343.Asklor 9:30·10:30am, Rusty writing exper. Must SblpplnR clerk nl'eded Q.i It. Sid·by-s1de. good SlSO; lg glass top coffee rrr ,....... avail. fore. ·=II.=-------semi-invalid. 646-0424 I Andrea Pdican, 273S w. Coast have 2/yrs exper . on N 0 e xp er I en c e ~ ... """'" table""". 760-6839 clerical tuJa -weekends helpful. Excel eot . Hwy NB WANG 20 or equal. , ........ .,._ _, t:"::r:' in offlcse of Siert c..... ...;c:.===..:°'~e.;...;ves~. --1 employee benems in· REST. . ~u-... ~ I /rm. (714)770.1353. ~I ~ry bb~~tant eye rokr -642.0638 2Twin, 4 poster bed.a with medleaJ lab near Hoaf. . Salary Housekeeper for 1 elude: medical. life.! PAYIOU "' """"' ua.;u "'a 1u y o wor •-..:-I OIS mattresses. Hi~Boy ..-rson. live-In. pvt. dent a& Insur a nee I it•-YISOI ""-......& ed Ii h ...,... SECIETAIY at a fut pace IS re ,.._.,.... "'est t hi W ta-Bolp. la N.B. llon.·f'r . commensurate with ex-..,. h T V . . _....,. .,..""' .. enc IS c.,.,.., .u--..1 ......... _ •'--/ q&ared, Full or part llml' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....,, M·ma c n I .,as N. ~aper. nee. WIU per. 10·6:30i 40 hrs. room " bat ' 111· ·• l;llDl!lOD plan and more., I Restaurant chain cor· part/time. & day ·•·uiirV"f".--oH__, Bo k ble. ahog. A or•• . tndo.CallM1-5512. 1La1una ~i Is. IJlr . English s pea n1. Applyattheneareal porate office in lrvinf, boaten/booklleeper, C1 .. Hl:trTrcmN startmg at SJ.SO. 0 8 Tl Table-6chairlSSO.Small •-----•-•l1 DreyCus, 768-3784, m.1179. .....a'SOUTPOST needs exper. payroll Moo.·Fri. 333 Bayside Newport Beach Tour I On Tape. Inc .. 7ll·C W ESTA lamptableS20. Portable ~ ...:.780-=.::9353=·~----Hoose Man ager . EOE supervisor to lake Drlve1 NwptBcb. Company needs a 17th St. Costa Mesa A'"'JION dishwasher· works &ood ._... ~~v. ise Teena In charge of restaurant Reltaunnt special person with ex· ~M25 -"'1 $30. Nice olflt'e desk·6 IMIMYINfOIY ™1~~ payroll Knowing com· PIT Deli. help ottded. cellent typing/wc,rd· Student or P /T1me SATJAN9allOAM drawerS&S.Call · COUMTllS Prolelllana.I with xlnt. ----=642~-233=1~--I Salary,~~~~ Some !Mer payroll is a must. call tiiaween9-ll AM. prottSS111g skills. Small ' employed, room It board on premises at 836-2997; ~1·7910 Special l day u1i1n· abort band fr typln1 IM5IDE SAW & Experience Nee. Must Good ro benefits. salary 752-5401 orr.ce fast paced in I +salary 111 exchange for so19ak St. Sa~ta. Ana Baby f\tm. Cnb. Carseat mtlll, .Ju . 13th, Wed. abilities needed for C... Senk Sp be able to attend Train· commensurate with Newport Center loca afternoon housework & f'1"1;'lure. furn1sh1ngs & &Olaogin& Table szs to 5_:45 a.m. to 10 a .m. No Newport Beach Real • • •II' ing School. Jan llth ability.Call: ~-9322 lehll s.Mt tion. Travel privileges child care. Newport appbanc~s. antiques. Sl25.S59-6572 u perience required. Ea late 1 n vestment Take charge pe~~ .10 .,,.., -·· au.1.au •ctST La 11 u n a B e a c h art er 1 year. Salary Bch Refs Mrs Colwell etc or this lovely old Din .... w/ • ~halrs,SlSO., C.UToday Un k usume resPOnsibtbties ..:....,.._..:..:..:=~----rnAR-hardware full lime based on qualifications 644·2507 or760-2690 home """" ~' ' 55J· ... , Ftrm. A«OUD I bac . ol order desk and MAHA.GEi ISJEFWOIK CoastHan:lware. C811Jean7S9--015S. TEACHER Inf I IMpect:9.tS saledate dblbedStOO.,reclnrS2S., ._,.. ID'OIDI a deflflite plus. customer service tor p e 0 p 1 e 0 r i en t e d 497 4403 8 n l'tulHa.nsoo. Auctioneer bunk bed S6S .• sofa bed en-Lin·-CallSberriSC9-2988. marioeelectronicsmfg. Cent ral Kitchen pharmacist needed to.,..,.,.,. . . SEC'Y / RECEP . Dtvelopment Program, SSS.19ZJ 100.549-1.520 • -h · Coordinate order pro-Manager needehdCby wortt in our Lake Forest ~ . Olallenglng opportunity Pita me Member or Lady Englander queen -1 llla~e you~ 1 op&in1 cessing work load Huntington Beac •ty store every other Sat .. Full-time manager wth buly Lacuna Hills transdimpbnary team brass bed, xlnt cond ~IUSOfNl~ e.erb)'1111Dgthe ally among your staff, ~~~~~~: 9-Spm on a pernuJnenl wanted. for Balboa lls. Law olllce Top pay, Spttial ed & Spanish PVBLJCFURNJTURE rned-r1rm mat $545 J7239rdsiN.f PUotClauifledAda. monitor paper work pendingooexper Apply basis.Callformterview Jr . sportswear & benefats.B»f660 l_pmport~S7~11 Jackie *llll'JION• 64S-~••'--ES te. .,.,..._. MOWIS THITIME now. oversee customer 735 •lHh St . H .B. app't: swl.mwear store. Ex· """ ww E.O.E. for job seeJiera to check ~!~~~~:,ss~~i'!!! ..:536-885=..:;;;:;::.::l"-. _____ THE GUILD DIUG ~~i: PM'!~f:1·:~~· SECRET ARY TEACHBt·DAYCAH I TOl!ih 7:30PM Munificent Dining Set! tbe Daily Pilot Help electronics a plus, but 17141 5M7t7 Balboe Island. · Opt n In g for-a Experien<>epreferred Lovely new & used WilfSeat 111. Must See to Wanleddusification. If not req. Salary com· MATURE PICTIJREFRAMER secretarial position 642·0411 1' bdrm. dining rm. bving Appreciate! S8500 OBO ~Y~~ ~a:~tlsc~~ ~ty~r~ ~~:.: o~ W " ~c~~~~s~r/rr;~·use~ Some 78hts. E::i'usive ~:;.t t;:. g:u!;pem: Adv Sales chinas, bunk b e ds 6"~·Eve~ft6 ' · OMAlli....I ill · Th R~ .... 91-h d d Jel rm furniture. rockers. ,. _ __, Ml,.,.,, Davs aider orterln.g your llllllY at Newmar 1020 Varied hours, Nwpt Bch lrvine9116·1622 jewelry boutique. Call, boun· 8-S PM. Salary Top ;POrts0 programs PLUS LOTS OF MISC Mrricea with an ad in Vi:17tb St. Costa Mesa, ~~~~.:..~~.!!P· nee. "~ .1.1rsy tormtervlew.1.~·l.542 oegotJable. References locatedadJ. John Wayne I UVE SAVE SAVE Frwdll.o'fee•5"t 1 11 tbe Job Wanted CA ...:•.:.=w"= ..... =-='""'.=...;-=<N;..__ -CJROJEwELRY •recommendations re· Airport Growing firm We.honor BofA. MC. Circa 1900. aull u Y -==--------1 ...... 'cal Talle-c arge gal Friday. Cl ·r·ed 1 c h' · Ch k & Hand Carved Frame Clte(cr)l.PhooeSU.SS71 w...... ...... eau·~ ........ , ....... d b I q11red. Write ISSI I needs 4 reliable peop e I as ier s ec $ w/BelgeUphl. Matching _,_ ...,. . ...,, Part /time position B~ht, goo iter a GetGREENcash Ad 11982, Daily Pilot, interested in making Cash. NO PERSONAL 0 llb ' •lat available for Meoical ski1 • light elem,·, al.ba1nd forWIUTEelephants P.O. Box 1S60, Costa money. Good future ;; CHECKS PLEASE I ~1:,~Da~s.· ~~~J!1e0. I ................... ., Technologist near Hoag sa es. Hours ext e. withaClasalfiedAd Mesa,92626-0560. steady employment I Food available Items ~·es~t6PM'. '""'"" •• Hospt. in Npl Bcb. Ap· Costa Mesa. Ask for Call642-5678 557-7660. subjecttopresaht. c.Y "' __ __:::;=-.::=---• / : prox. 2.S/hn per wk. Lie. J 642-1686. MASTBS AUCTION SOFA: Cream. L shape C l.&u9~· S*$ req. Call ~5582. IHI &tah Sain :imsv.. Newport Blvd CM $.'500. More : ftUJ 'Milt a Wonderful World Prestiglou1 Laguna ~9625 646--81186 493·2870 : Exper. newspaper dilp Y salesperson to of Shopping, right at &acb Real Eatate Of. 8 n. gtttn sectional. Good • bandle key accounts for Or1111e Coast your fio&ertlps every· ficeoeeds2aalespersons lllcydts IOJO quality, like new $1.50. : Dally Pilot. Salary, commission ,•.nd . day ! D a I I y Pi Io t for gentral Real Estate. ( <C:> ) ....................... Aft6,SS1·3S40 : excellent benefit.I. Growt.b opportwlitill Classified Ads. To place Exper pref. Laruna ( ) Repairs. SJ + tube for Sectional Sofas, $251. ~ for person with career ambltiooe. Send your ad, call 642·5678 Shores Realty Co. nata. Also other misc. Swivel Rocker.SI.SO. complete resum~ 1 0 Muii Fendel, PO and let a Classified Ad· PreglerRltr. llNTID repain.495-4568 Orbestotfera 642-1104 .: .!}ox i~ .. ~osta Mesa CA.'926216. N0o phonl, V110r help you. '94·0748 Bicvcle bovs 26 .. near calls, please. An Equal ppor· .t 1 , -==::;.._ ____ 1. tunlty~mployer. • 1. aily Pilat ···················>. ~:::·.:;: ' ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT. . ~••••••••••••••• S30W.IAYIT. •COSTA MH A CA.t2t21 : Sales ( ) ··~---~-~~~~~~:~·~:.~~~~~~ ...... .:. ( <o:> ) I 'EXECUTIVE SECRETARY BIG 8 CPA FIRM LOCAtm .. fASHIOM ISLAND Bii 8 CPA firm located ln Fa.hioa Island is seeking a ~rofe11iona l secretary. Typing 75 wpm, shorthand 100 wpm, capable of wor~ ~.wellorpn aDcl venatHe. Competitive ltaJt!il sa,lary ind excellent beadl. Trailee F• llstrict Mllalar Thia blChlY successful local newspaper has an cipminS for a ttalnee In the circulatloo department. Buie skills will entail alQM!l'¥1aion of 10 to 14 year old boy and girl home delivery carriers. Areu of 1upervliloft will be delJver'l collectlorl9 and aal•. Selected appl\cant "ill receive liberal atartina aat1r1. ~aularly schedul1..d raise•. boeut oppqrlunillea and ma11 ft l•ft lieaetla 1Ucfl as compuy pakl ~I •Del htdlt DllD, ~ Ille klluraac., vacatlo11 aod9kite.ft. Co~ptnJ vehicle 11 furnl1btd d1rln1 ~lioun. A~ m111t be over 11, bave a. Jood drMn• NCOr'd ahd be neat appearbw. tio.n are .-..UY 11 AM lo 9PM, .... , tbru : J'ricliy. Semi avtrt1me II avallable, : If you are •uallfled u d lntert1ttd In • ~.!' ClftUllUGD ...... coatact ta.. : id.cr.~f;tl.~ Meta befon. i AM far 0. WIWUll oa-k• Goddard. : . . 'tfewspOper Carriers tor routes in Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley & Newport Beach • • • CALL CIRCULATION . Dif>ARTMENT _.,,.., MOW25'/FT Redwood 2x6 fteck1ng1 4-3>' long ; also redwooa fencing. Lowest prit'e guer. Jim or Ken ll\Ytlme1 646-11885~ l HP ComprtSSOr, paint pot, botes, runs 080.~ZCMS .,.....~......,, M*:limc: .. s..cr.. '75 Pinto VB. Most of body and all errgtne.tn· aide parts and uphoJ, aeata etc in good shape! Good &lass, doors, hatchback, rear, en1. radiator, new tuna, wbls ft tlres. Part out or repair. Call ror informa· tlon aft 6 pm or wkoda. llllB-SIM4 31' diesel cruaer. Loe. Mimi truck chrome lube France. Fully equipl. bumper. NewllOOBO I llS.SOOartrade.m.2890 SS4-9H5 , . <lasaic 36' 1936 Stevens, Toyota step.up bumper. · ' • • xJntconditioo. New lllOOBO H•.t1tl .... IOHft&c•• •• IOIO 642-7898 554-9145 -••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 40' Owens Tahitian, live-PORSCHE -Old. fllldooed claw-foot Old country kltcben aboard slip avail Call, Easycredit-time bMb b&b, aood cond S12S. cabinet, unique pressed Judy« Harvey 642-4644. payments Daya 17S·llT2, Eves back. rocker. 548-8727 11wn.,9.UU15PM. EngU1erebuilding, *'1175 after5pm. OWNER FINANCED restoration. RSR Jtw9y 8070. NO MONEY DOWN 714/~-9223 ••-••••••••••••••••••! •BALLOONS 31' Pacemaker IRS trans uel, 12 volt 2.4S. CT RUBY. Ap· Uoiquepenoaalized&ift F/Bsedan generator starter =r-~ffll j fcrlJO:tbday. weddln&s. Must sell. 613-3460 gauges .. steering whl er __ .. amuv.Call64.S-"45 -...... W tOH compl. 1300 'ood eng a.c=c•....._& Ballooo!olNewport -case, misc tui ware. -~ :'.'.:...... 1079 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644-Gl Ml1ula1-UDO 14', good condition, -"""'~-=-------... ·-•••••• ... ..... ... w-.. IOI' n.eoo. ••MS•• .. •••••••-• .. •••••••••• Call: 631-6648 Save Sl.000 or more on · INh.-,./ rme F\ut abown lo your WAMTID Docb own bome by Darrell s.unden ... -401'7. c.u tt/J .. •"-'tff aoAi.Si..i.PSro1l9a£Ni-' 5Pll for App't. WilJ Air~ Npt. BCH.. 20" 2S'. 30'. CollliderTrades. 53'-fllJ 35'10.46'0·5 PM. 9070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMPORTANT NOTJCETO READERS AND ADVERTISERS The price or items advertiJed by vthicle t 11 t I •-IOIO dulera In the vehicle -................... WAHI'ED: Two to Four Ml.,..w.t.. d uairied advertising 1..061NG LEASE, quit· USl7s_-1S ~r HR78·L~ D!.wk,month'46-0551 columns does not in· tintlluliaeu,sellin&out med tires IA Id cond. WANTED: Slip, U · dude any applicable ALL aupplies and fix· Abo Motorcycle Jactet chance ror uu o r tu.es. licmse, lrusfer turslDcllJdlng: sizeJl...tOCall. magn1r .. 47· cutter. reea. finarice charges. Dilplay cues, waiting 64M629 IS'1·2111N fees for alr pollution con· room cbaira, Beauty tiWcal Balboa Coves.· Power tro1 device certifications =:1::.Ji:lrc~'li~~ :ir~ llilliwllts IOl3 boet slip for rent to 30'. =!~O::.~~e~t!Z. ran, lbelves and plants. ••••••••••••••••••••••• m.ll.56 less dhenrile specified Alao.= IDlk• , shampoo &UITAI . by the advertiser. andhair ucta. NewfeoderStratocaater 38' Off1bore moorln& I Al·t'1S4or with uw 40 wall w/27'l '17 Sportcrart ta '311/ after I, -.aoe amptiller .lilust sell. Ask· twin en1inu, ma :J. •• ~ ........... .. •-••••• ~~· Da 752-2227, ev ~ +Ta· endboo•Bo· HeU:"Bouqlleta de· v.,,,,..,., .. 4.ooo erma · Uvered. Perfect for Vlbrapbooe. 3 Sods. 3 Oc-'"!!S'l'S-!!!!!!!!!!91!!!!79!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1•!!!!!!!~ !!!11occulon.673-4419 taves. Good COnd. SSOO r= 12 Ba.p-Ca.ae Big 11 aui OBO. S3f..-r3 a>at slip availablefor up Gourmet Potato Chips. Gibson acoustic J .45 lo 18 ft power boat. Call -dell ered. ~ glitar '75, &d cond. ffSC _9157_.0fOO _____ _ -v $300. 67s.@l Will exchange uae or my ~~cosru.'lfv'~~ OMc:.,..,,., & aaaaic 36' ~vens ror , __ _. 'zz'w=t IOIS uaeolyour slip. 642-7898 ....... ..,ctures. 554-1277 ....-,...-• 300 lb cut l.roo wgt. set ••••t•••••••.••••••••••• ..... h"ll9f toto w/bencb Ir tu attach· ~ -·•••••••••••••••••••• Mi!~!!!! meat $150. Norelco 132c..ler 1957 De Solo s{a wgn microwave $175. 3 $400orbesl0f(er. llJ STOIACE Classic. Needs some ban&oola 910 BIW TV 554-91'5 RV wort, but worth it. Runs tl!O. Boocie board 125. 'Ibermal Fu Copier, $30. =1Iorb!:: 11'ze. 24 wel.l.l!!O/olr.0.·99'7 -.5517 Remington BC-2 D hr s ecurity, rree ..,..._ .. Eltch•lve Tiffany Club c.opier, $150. Micro-Film laUJ1cblng Ir waehin1 Ytl!Wln '530 membeuhip. No dues. reader. $30. 831-1613, privileges. Newport ...................... . ~ price. 957-8390 873-018 Dunes. 1131 Back Bay •• Jeepeter Commando. <Nang> ...... -Dr. Newport Beach. 4bxt.3'Kmi.2newtrs. OJke llacblne · Uaed . in = .. ••••••••••••!!!! ~10 BUck V-6. szsoo. Good W'Oltial order. ISO/bat MIIJTARY llACAW Cone!. .rf-6130 cir'JIN519 S12DO wm. cage. OBO. 'Stamp Collectiona cau-.as Te put..... 4WlltttDriYfl '550 ~urclla1ed by Dave ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... •••••••••••••••• eooper. ra-I Or,,_. lotO Aircr9ft t 110 Big Um, tuts Flot Trac .._9507 .._. ........ ~••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• with 8x.15 chro me -_, M .. , __ W _.. 8-re Qaulc 1 Austrian spoken, little UM, $300. "!" ·-acwuc. On· Grand. Be•ut. But· f19.M25 ~ w/Drintinl Foun-ternat. Reuonable. ----------- taill 6 Coin Box. $300 ••M2·1960 74"'-~" OBO. tr.Mml. M. Pll Yamaha B-12 elec. or1an •Mint CGDd, lo mi 13495 Olllom 300 Gallon Salt fthU fin1ah $1000. like •t'142 Water Aquarium. oew~ Complete w /ca blne~1 -11-a-so-n---8~1--m-1-1 n-.-7-fl-. Filter 8y1tem. Uv Beau&iful)y Refinished. sa.illler. Decorations Ir X1nt Tooe Nl. llutSeel f1a.cll38. m.7570 M BUY'EM SELL 'EM WE PAY TRADE 'EM TOP DOLLAR RESALE FOIUS8 CAIS SALES ALANMA$MON rOMT'IAC/SUIAIU 4~~,:!:f,:OCmM 2'80 Hartior Blvd. Robin's Ford COSTA MESA 549-4300 549-1457 -'~4.;o..:::5:;....:.2:::;..;9-.;;6:;...;::3;__ WEIUY a.EAMCAIS ANDTIUCIS CONNELL CHEVROLET .0Jl.1rt• I I · ' r:-I \ \1 f \ 546-1200 Altos, .... rt-4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '705 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 77Alfoao.o Spyder.17,000ml. Immaculate! $8500 675-3114S '82 R.ABBIT .CONVERTIBLE Loaded with s speed, AM/F'fl stereo, metallic paint. sport wheel. white side wan tires & more• '11165 Our Discount 870 SALE PRICE 510,295 our 01scount CIEVDJMW ......... 2 ...WO•.,. Htrel A ft• remalnln1 '11 Models 6 Demoa ere 1Ul1 available! We RJedall.ze Ill: European delivery and rJawleH prHWOed BMW's. Where Cuatomer Service Co~a J.Jt ! Sala&rvtce.Uuln& D W. Lil, Santa Ana (114) 835-3171 Cloled Sunday lt717l3i White/red leather in· terior, has all options. THIS CAR IS LIKE NEW · MUST SEE!! (lie. 93:2V AA) SADDLBACIC IMW 131-2040 4t5-4t4t 1979 320i Henna/black, sunroof, air c:ood.ilioning, stereo cauette,llgbt alloy wheels.'foe lights. CALL TODAY! SADOLllACIC IMW 131·2040 49Mt4t I ta WO-. ... . MOWHt C4lm ... U1 'roday I & SA••ACI 'aGJlpePby. II VltJo Avery pkwy olf J.5 lll·JMO 49Mt49 Cloled Sunctap O tlf."4 '82 QUANTUM WAGON 6~tl ,.,,-~~ p E c I s A L Fully equipped With Air, 5 speed. ' • leatherette seats. rad1a1 ttrerr · -. morel List Pnee our Discount '120'5 1570 SALE PRICE 510,695 '81 VWJnTA toaotcl with s sPffCI. ~•r stereo prep Ust PrlCt $9055 our Discount ioeo ;. . SALE PRICE s10.195 ' E ...... , SALE PRICE s7995 t--=-------------~~...;....;;;...---.__.;;__.;;-.;;;----~ '81 RABBIT CONVERTIBLE s9995 •ftUt Auto .• w. s. w. tltes, sports seats & whee~ stereo cassette, verv low miles. white top '82 VW SCI ROCCO s '81 VW SCIROCCO S l~ wtm.lllOV Wflffls. rear WlndOW Wl$fler &. wioer. s S«>ffCl. stereo cassime. s soeeJ. nietafllc oalnt. rear wtnoow wasner & wtoer. aHovs. AM/FM stereo cauette. Pin strle>H & morel SALE PRICE s10,695 '81 DASHER WACON ,,.. DIESEL Equiooeo With llr. sun roof. Wlltte slOe wall tires, ieatnerette wars. stereo. oreo & me.rel '10l70 1415 '81 2 DR. RABBIT se495 '°''"' 4 speed, air, AM/FM stereo. leatherette seats soorts sens & motel Ust Price 'M10 ·our Discount 1015 SALE PRICE s9395 '81 2 DR. LS RABBIT DIESEi. 5 7495 Atr, stereo cassette. low miles. leatherette seats & moret ·--~ '81 VW P/U. Loaded with H/D !)kg . stereo. prep., tlnteo gtass. 4 speed, radtat tires. custom value Pko. & mortl Ust PrlCt '7210 011r Discount 1011 s7495 · "" ·~\ Alrconcl, sunroof, am·ftnsttflO. Orange COllt DAILY PILOT/Frfd1Y. JahUlfY I , 1112 • ~~~~.. ..._..,,,.... AIMl.lifuW ..._bs11'W ~bstrW ~UiM .._....., ....._.,_. • ' ~ ..• ..•................... . ............................. ~-.I........... ... .... ....-............•. , ................................ -............................... . , ................. '..!?.·~ ~ ........... !?!~ ~;;~.!!'!' ... .!?~ ............... _!?!! ~!.£ ....... !??! ~ .......... !!~ ~~ .......... !!.~~r.····-••1 • • 1 ltllDATSUM ........... .. ...... tU·IC;~aa.e '11 nftcmCCO ~.RM aJI _.. ,......_.,,_.won ....,,_. JllWAW _..,_., _.,....,,.altlMW DJlaiDlti '-pllUl iun t XU.. Prieect at• ·w~fd;,,_ .,. .. ·_.H.>.,a ....... 0r ATl.~8.AN/rlfittrto. ..... Pt'• ••••nlue .......... •/flClOllJ ~ .......... ..!!!&Jlf: .... mt ...... ct ... 11..._ __ ·~· Jll~CULATl l Uacltr ....... , &Jr a 1u1roof. 11,000 • -Olttr. ~ '8 aa.&c, ala&. coed, : -..wu l.OOOlownttmll" a..tt .... ti... '7JPOllC .. t14 mllu. Lille new . I : v.a. A/C, P/8, PIS, : ...... SH91 PGl1I D6Nd ..... ud • 0,.1snlt1 -t.o litre. 5 <lllm> ...._ tf JI eall: "6-ZMl • •• ,._, 0.1.~ -. ..... 1b1111•t1. 1PHC1 1ttrH m•a• SMfl -..er. ................. o+ •• ttll : JZlfl•u.1111 OIR~:.~:l~~:~~T• fw}..'~clo~ 1. ~J =z~,•barp,· •barp i .~~:. W!·=~ ;-&:ai·OiiioA~;-;;.-~ : lt1' Htl -4 crTl•IG7·D · 114tl 117U•adl Blvd. AMIN ltttto, l·toat auto1n1llc lr111., air ==ttt!Jr.'·'b!~·r~lr ~~2~tred lntr. s ~sl.~: vmr==. =4.IDJ,.·~~~·E~ =·.~~!~ t~~rT:: =~t· ul~l lllor.o I ted. 32,000 ml111. l.Gab •driveaUbnew 11711•. adlBlvd. ;::.:.se~co .. U,080ml.(lic.lCME•> terlor. (l81VlU) =~· lull(,.!tcond . 11 M·=~-(Wiii) . IOZMO . ~coupe. Low~ o.r:~N ~~Js~r~~J>e~ : 1qCA!rt . MUST 14K mi, ::r -~~· •. ~'. MM=MO l:,•· Blue. XJat Coad. <iJrdtff"4• avnroor. OIRYSLER/PLYNOUTll Harbor Blvd., Coate ::~ACllMW 487-MM. YOUSWA•.. · .. tor7 S7'tl •E.lltSC.,S:A lles~i eo.0010 or ;Dl-H 4tMHt IW t7JI 117l1 8eatb 8lvd. '77 tllS C.oupe. XhU atMAllMO l 4 t=14ll '71 Cullan Supreme !iiilll llaiqut. tllxlru ........................ HJ.JMt Qal. '11.too. Pvt pty, YOLISWA... tt .. O Brovclt1m, 2 dr, btw :11u1u . aml dwn, .. : ,,., NAT ·-·~c•u fU·Ul·OUI home. 11Jll 811chBJvd. ii'roao·i:;.r;;A·GoN· Urea. xlnt. cond. 1 ..... s.21111 W....ZOOO ..,,_ »mDBuaineu. 142-2000 V.f, ut tl tu· owner . $4 ,400 . :it• Ptrfea con . • Ownpasne ed.IUoa All 150 "It a., xtnt cood! UK, •eo.•15 vw left ' rifht alt c!xt. °'°;,w~• ~~w'. (714)151-1464 ! apcl, All/Pll Stereo/ Olltioni. still under. fie· •.door ' ae d a n • belie/ dk brn Int. door, '73 left door. S50 lni • br1lle1. Great PWo 9'57 •tam, rt.It ea1, mutt sell tory w11Tanty A MUST brown/tan Beck er fll,000.ISO-OU. each. Western style whl falDlJy cu. (107llYE) ..................... .. •ASAP . 0 200 080 SEE~ . A.11/IX~er b{aket, • '74tl t SPencltt rlma lot &lper Beetle S*115. Tbeodote Robina FOISAU : m.7151. AM'UitSEECARI Ci:. (lie.~:}· Comp restored, mint Pea.Ml-t7'4 l'md.JaeOHatborBlvd., 71' Pinto h1tchb1ck , : l+w•ACI IMW SADOLMACI IMW SIDDlaACI IMW cond. SC P'laru. Air -'7t'fWIAllrT =~eaa. 842-0010 or r'u,an,.1•:~a·cnt•.,U0res0•1 ~ l DAY • 0 49Mt4J tl I 49 t4' cond. Pwr wlndowa, l>)'Damite custom 2 door ~ ............. ...._ _____ , " • a : -..OSAU "12 Flat aso. Good Cond. aorf, elect mirror~! 4 apeed. Xtra clean. IMPORDFALCQN ~1llon car.Sl200 : ... llu1t See! Becky, lt7S.-C•U lelthet,aJarm.llr.HiJ UDMBOll) Cllltomlcyl.reb111U," 'teu70Jeff $1511 4SOSLC 751-tGext2llS4 S46tl IU!reo@IO. T»mT 131.nt7 ll1ri1 t .& $SSS '111128 3P. 43k ml, Comp. Ivory with red leather "ISl14 Porsche, air, rims, JIM MAllNO ~rl1ne 500 Sport V6 Pinto u-tchbac ... Was -.V... re·con d . clean, lm.erior,haslllpouible reblt2.0xlot,$5$00obo YOUSWA•IH ,2dr.Ori1Pot.T· <Ml • ! C4UJ•'• IJl!50./0BOm.ili1 options .111d I~_ In MS-~ ll71l8eacbBJvd. •PBTop4M.!t,_~uto. in wreck. Body and • . ..,an btQe/mocca ..._. 97•7 lblolute aunt condiuoo, "12 914 Porsche paru or l4J.2HO ~ , , ~· .... .._. frame damage. All elae • s..eect, alf rH'oos 6 thialaamuatsee car! I! wmie. New '742.0 reblt. "19 , . 72 Ford Sta Wan. new OK · V& (47,000orig ml>. , ftllSI _.. ....................... SADOLllACI IMW Weben, many extr11. • ...... vw Rabbtt, Z3K ma, radlala, brb, wlll •.U•n· oew trans l radiator, ;, ...... tirown/tan 71 HONDA t 949 Jud,y~U· ........ cooc1. mem no tean, no clinaa. pump, very &ood wbla & • ...---..llloptJ 1 ACCOIO 548-7$64 aw OBO 144-Wl Urea, no brilten &lass. •· ..._ onap us 5 speed, air " atereo. • llBZ 300 SD. Turbo 931 • L3K ml loaded. ·· ~ Interior good. Reds •: •Narlalilver/blue Very clelJl. UIMUPR) diesel, immaculate. Belt Oner. 0ya'1ai.1n1 "IO VW~Top Cam_per. ·~ Falrlaoe, &ood cond. avail. A areat deal for :· ~.llloptlona. SlffS Take over pymts. evm.au , Good e, nu clutch, nm, muat sell, 1700 or mechanlcorpart.aaales. t'. ~ 1reen/t1n JIM UHIWI\ n4-684-8200 '78 IUSC L lb i pn>O S43·2CMS belt offer ..... 2500 Must aelJ an together. i: ..aom.~1·,7331 _...,_ 'SI MB 3000 4d tt Ster A/C .~~rf :}~· ·n VW Dasher Woody '63 Fllcon. aood cond! $700, make ofr. Call t ..-...1 .. _, Y1870UUBeSW1cbAB•lvENd. brownz alloys, !~o~ooe: she>Wroomcond.S2'i,500.' S~~ W_1n, anrf, roof MUil see! Malle offer. 968-58Uaft 7:30pm. f' ...... "' uoleleather loldea 11000 i I ~·7421 r ...... air, am/fm, new maw '73 Pin to W~n xlnt ,; 1111.omiUc,lllopUons. I Z.1000 imc. szj~.552~2.m· lola•-ct 9756 ~& ::lt01:~~ nw'~: 'rt T·Bird. 2SK ml, xlnt transportat on', new • •79 •CCOI _, """"'· . • • · condltlon lUOO. brakes l radiator, $1000 ALSO Ill "' D '70 MBZ 280SL. Xlnt ••••••••o••••••••••••• [lo.4)676·5736, aak for (7l4) l3l·°'°9 • firm. Aft. 6, call B33·l41S. 2 cir, 5 spd, air 1m/fm, cond. $18,800. P h ..., --· ~ NIW '"I '1 very clean. 675-3.545 714/446-2060, 714-640-7880 ~l DEALlk IN U.s.A:-YdYo 9772 L.. tt45 '7t4 Pinto, 2 dt r.t~ spd. goods•o .,,._~V~LAl~E! '81red4'dr'Civic,l2K111i. '79 300SD Turbo, Ant. ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• ranspor a ion. S ., _, •(1) ~ wb1te/beige, dlx diaital AM/FM cass. ~· wJParch. int lthr ~' •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• 'Tl Mark V, xtr1 cfean, firm. 613·5835 Uomltic. Xlntcood.17000549·7621 am/fm cus Cl\;J #I YOLYODIALll Cartier stries, fab. Int.. •72 .. ..-0 (2, .. _. Bl "/bl k -· • ""I\ IN ORANGE COUNTY! ......... ---1 "l.. ,..'"' ;..;Jc ac.. a.c · 'llOACCOl.m ml. $23,900. Also '80 ~ ............ .., •• Xlnt eond. 4 spd S99S or S•AA!!a· ~a IMW 4dr,30,Wm1,S749S 300TB St~t. Wgn. blk ~~==-SAUS,SBYICE 'TIMa.rt V. Design. mdle bestolferW-6146 ---"' 56-2120/8.'Jl-0688 w/aaddle lDl. Snrf. 3rd CLOUD SUNDAYS ,; Ate u..!.ING ~1?s~ top cond '6200 ..... 9960 -:~·~ Plcwy '79 CIYit'. Air. AM/FM back ~•t.1....~/fm uss. 10VERSE"ASl>EIJV'ERY ... •••••••••••••••••••• 00 VieJo cus. Xlnt cood. 26,000 I 3lK nu, Jl<S,500. Eves: •--a. 9765 EXPERTS W.C., ttSO "19 Volare station wgn. Avery Pkwy <1·5 FWY1 rru Call 675-4186 7a).QllS. ,..,......_ 1 --••••••••••••••••••••••• wood-rain sides xlnt : 131-2040 495-4949 "12 Z!IO, mint cood, orig. ••••••••••••••••••••••• WLI IKE 'Tl Monarch Ghia, 4dr. cond 97g.9789 • CbedSUndays ltlO HONDA , owner, full service re· '79 TOYOTA COROLLA YOLYO small V..S auto air P/S . • 8 .. ~ 1 ~speed. AM/PM stereo new , $5600 Dys ecooom i c a I ' c y I llli6Harbor Blvd. m 1 • S2 •89 5 'pp '78 FUry Sport Coupe, lf7'CAOIUC 8.DOIADO c~ (357PPMI 58995 lt79 CADILUC COUPI DIVIUI (1185WQV) '8795 1971 CADt&.L.AC R.&TWOOO HOUGHAM (&23Ul.A) S8995 I tlO CADl.LAC COWIDEYW rrrrv.J) s11,995 I HO CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE (353129) Sl0,995 I '79 CADILLAC SEYJU.l (1AKZ762) SlQ,995 1979 CADILLAC SB>AM DEVILLE (384WOXI S8995 Offer good t.bru Monday, l·U-82 --;. NABERS GA DILL~ , lt7tl20I '""" , ACCOIDSDH cordsr.<:Jsreen,tanint. Automatic trans . 1 . P/B PrW stereo' 62.c N1ceCarforsale Cheap! • ~port p.g., .black on Blaunpunk,t PS PB 865-2J646· evs 7~ eni1ne silver exterior & COSTA MESA (!l4W.i322 · radio. heater, auto -Illa, all O;P.t•ons Only wire wheels' 1 owner'. I S llARP! (315308} I ~9303 540-94'7 ,, r,..... . lrw, pwr t trng. pwr 211looHARBORBLVD 27 ,000mtles . <11c under 23:000 m i' 62MBZ~.~-eng, Priced ri1bt atS399S 7SYOLYO ..._ar.~nyxtras. bralles,a1rcond .small COSTAMESA . • SOIYPV) Take over lllc.lAOU99l) stereo. Macbe tares, Theodore Robilil Ford: 2,.SDLw•~H xlnt coo631LP1W " air, VS gd mileage, looks I.ale. needs some body work. 3l60Hlrbor Blvd. Costa ,. "'-· -~ · good, runa good Sl999 or l::Jft1860 UDOLBACI IMW 1 . 0f!!'...... $1950.Sat/Sun,644-9573. Mesa. 842-ooio or Automatic. air, 72K ..... _ ttSJ offer 752·0687 days '1'tV ·2040 495-494' CHRYSLERlPLYMOUT~ tel 210 SE 3.5 ~11 Xtn clean. (7581' JD) •••••••'••••••••••••••• 963-481 eves. ask for !!~~~~~~~ "'-97 2o1 m>E.lafSt.,S.A. 19IB llodel._SUperb ex-"ISblue~Uca, lomi. lint SlttS '78 MustanJ. t"To¥, AC. _,St""u'"",---~--• I -·• .. •••• 541·'"'"7 I ample of this rare car. cond! 548-464 hm or wk JIM MAllHO New OTBOn. R It rans. POlllloc H6S NOTICE •••••••• ,, &l2..QfB6 151·1911 VOl.ISWA&IN · "2-946:1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• how Daily Pilot Class~ • f 210 2 dr. ...,._. '730 'llO MB '80 SL. Cham. T..... '767 18711 Beach Blvd. '68 Mustang v.s auto, '72CENTURION lfied ads display their • 106 31 ....................... pag Le th c ....................... 142-2000 stock, 2nd mature Fl.Ill wr. 2 dr, runs messages with legibility Coltdor'1C.r ~: a er. ass, •'76TR7. l2K mi. On '77 1179 Volvo 264 GLE. owner. Gr eat cond ! ood 75.494.32114 and impact? Our ads , y • 1972 XJ6 Jaguar. Good 559·51Z7 Ena. New Cl utch brlls, Black with 1rey Interior. SO. 848-1542 Gramma 's '65 Lemans we arc proud to say, re· t .• mo. O.E.L. cond.Newtires,brakes .• ,,,, MBZ 200D • d AC, Stereo. Xtras. Load.ed W/all IC· w~ft·Ad.s c 11'"2."78 aedan,runs super,good ally get rt>sults. Phone Cap. cost f4964. Res. . 642-7614 Paul ~/fm tape • .. s p • 673-1081, 752.2352 cesaones. S8750. 545-9579 .... a ..... ..., lomun . 968-9207 _642_·567_8. ____ _ value $2481.92. Total "-do 9736 · 557.c82g '73 Staa Coovt. New ,6M1 V5ol R d 8 ......... Hew 9IOO 'Aaltos, Mew 9100 ...OS Mew 9100 T nas, Vans & 4X4s We're your Ram·TOl.fl Trt.d Center' 'IO CHIYIOUT PICICUfl j1T111tll 57297 •t0TOYOTA rtCIUP lll'lllOll 54997 '7' FOID lAHCHBO ,,...,.,. '7tDODGE PICKUP ttlll'lnl 55497 Cmt1. $5409.12. Cost · = Capri ena ""-Pl vo oun ac.. • • · ,..,... 69 t t It ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 ">ftN'n Dsl ~ wire · · """' ' Cl I All · d •U•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0••••••••••••••••••••• • eue ... vv. 0 8 e '76 Lancia Beta 1800 """"u ' _.d'J~. au c. prime · ~~~~ll!!"llil;i!!!'!!!!""'!!!!!!!!!!!'!l~!!l!!!i-'!!IP~!!i Delivery. Order Yours Brown w /lea th in tr: ~t11ter' sorf, xtra. uel tank G~1t body. Not run· .. Today! &,OOO ma. Air 645.0670 :,.,,__..34Km1.S17,750. Y•WlllL 9770 nln1. $500 Firm . :· . . Mmda 9731 '71 220Dsl. Xlot cond. "IS BUG 1ood cooditlon. 11 Volvo !!4J A/C. sun· , &woof. 30 mpg. SSSOO. BEST OFFER get.a It, root, AM/r a tape. auto. . • ..,.,......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 497 .... 73. ....................... 963-0926 752·0607 MUST SELL. "1-1819 J!1100. Dan 868-42163. !:::'T" . '81 RX7 GS 5 I t7U ''7 ... $700. ....Used 1• """ •Harbor Blvd ~.IMMACULATE coo· ....................... nal!!Oll! C7S.J070 • • r ...... u es1 dlUon with a ~.SP.fed -.., __ ~-1 ,_ lllc:l ~--~ ~·~ ~"1lion1.Dg ............. uwn1~ pt., • ·_-..... 7 ....... 14 ..... /51'-l!C.4.,..CM......,.'-'4 ... lu0.__1 ~:i.MtFM stereei ATTIMTIOM ~paint., bod; • lot. .................. ~ .. .. t ' • l . " omette l ONLY 16,000 W. ~· 111.-Z j 14c.ent'ifoo~: miles. miles! Must sell. ONLY TONNOEAWtu•cosVER 77-scllOCCO 146-9100 $1.1.000/offer Please call '" everunas t'ts MG'1. '71-'81 Dynamite sport coupe C1 • H ff I 5 559 13 7 3 Never used, S75 w/anly 55,000 mlle1. 4 ...... ••••••••••••••••• • Mari1631·7'717 lvemsg speeCI, 1tereo, air. COMT9WLATI• <6711SPG) CADILUC7 llfl/!f!llJ ·-· Clean 19 MG Midget. 1 S4ff5 We spedlliu lo leues ....,..,....,... WE'VE ownr. S41~.8229CIU .-.e MAI.IMO for the business ex· ,..... YOUSWAGIM ec:ut.1ve6 profeasion11. -.~~~~~ MOYEDI ... ...,.. '744 mu Beach Blvd. W. SelecHo. ... DATSUN710WAG N •••u•••••••••••••••••• 14 2 Ofltew 1912 -t ~l .. automatic trans . n OP ll I Y1Sl'f --'7' M•I '71 Beetle. 64,000 ml, xlnt C1•1i::s 2 11r cond .. AM /FM ~ D . 'B' d sh .....,,,. "·tr Mow .. Stodd • lt«eo ' luggage rat'k fAClllll ynamlte r str. ape . ....,.,., or ••d o . C841.SEU> (084lA I 12995 m w/only ~1.000 miles. fer.~1 NM&R~ ~ Theodore Robllls Ford. -J~: stere:c>i wire wheels. Top '71 YW IAllrT .. -u ....... _81 d C t ' -. YOUI condlUoo. (477613) CA fLL A . -""'""' v .. os a MAZDA ,4995 Dynamite custom 2 n ~ Meu. 642·0010 o r r· door.' speed, stereo l<iXJH.uh.~lll\.t1 .. A0-8211 _ ~/A Jllj f. JIM MAllHO cusette. Xtra sharp! c,.,.,.,, """'' S40 'llOO • .., 210 Waaoo. 5 Spd Lo ... •m YOUSWA•EM (5701.JJO) I!!!!!!~~~!!!!~ •lli. "500. Dy 542·8010 -l87ll Beach Blvd. Slits '.'." Iva; llMIBlS • MIS 11111 SI. CISIUW MSUl4 142-2000 .... MAllMO "* "71 Serille Elegante, "'nm. 8210 Htchbck . ......... 97lf . '750 \IOLISWA... ~~·b~~p~~:~ xlnt r unning cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11711 Be1cb Blvd condit.loo. $10,000. Call: am/fm stereo cass.. OUMGE '66PORSCHEtl I 142-2000 weetd11a. 7Si-1109. or put ~P.!:.amust sell COUNTY'S Jet black beauty in '71 vw51uanb1ck. Good weaends, -.Z!63 ~ ... , . ...,, · fabulous condition. ,.._.. •••t Sell•. 96cA • EXCLUSIVE ""'""" ... ,...,., 1t Eldorado. Firemial 'II Dataun 280ZX. copper, • (653XSB). 080. 545-211114 Slvr W/VJ lthr mt, Im· GL pkg. 9,900 m i ~~·f.'~B•TI sstts -c. ·---root. stereo $11 ,900. Xlnt cond ~'£1\A JIMMAllHO 77'fWIAllrT ._ """'v ~11;760-3&. W PUEALHdell SHIP!be. YOUSWA61H ~~ 42 sr.:Jdoor w~llh !:'~ji~.00~~4 ,. BZlO, Itta clean, gott1 e ver anyw re 117U Beach Blvd. · ~~! 13850 Dys LDt.beworld! See us1t l42-JOOO miles,a~;l.5RX ) C:--0 tf17 RACH IMPORTS ...... u..a.aaMA 1t'Z10btcbbcll,w/shade 848DoveSlreet,N.8. Have something you ,,__,_, 53Jlmi I l8500 kit am/fm cass. 17,000 752-otOO want to sell! Classified YOUSWA•lt4 bltofr.~J· or mi. 9!000 OBO. 546-n78 195 Harbor Blvd .. C.M. ads do it weU -Call 18711 Beach Blvd. •• Z2I. Good cood. Nd.a ft'M 631-7170 NOW, 642-5678. 142-2000 paint . ..,. or belt ofr. ~~ ~~~ ~~~ ~~~ ~~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "79•rlinetta· .. V-8. T·Top. Air, Tape, 20K ml. Belt HOME OF THE ·AFFORDABLE LEASE PLAN!! '12 MC CUSTOM J DI. HATCHIACI Offer. 875-4582 a..,.. ttZO ••••••••••••••••••••••• mMYIWA60M 8 cyt., air, P.S., P.B .. l)OMf windows, AM/FM -.o. tlnt.d glut. ti" wheel, LOW MILEAGE. Stk. No. 5183 (lie. 180Cll3) s 99 lt76UMCOIM MAM77 ve. Mommtc. .u. full poww, AaMFM ......,_ MUST SEEi Slit No. 5233. (Ne. 433PAN) 53999 lt7ta.8CUIY 117 VI, air, power atttrlng, power windows, NMFM stereo, wire whttl1, tlnttd glua. Stk. No. 4728. (lie. 564xue1 54599 lflO tieCUIY CAPll 8 cyt. eutOtnltlc, air. pc>'N9I' steering, power bf._, llnttd gtas Stk. No. 5299. (Ile. 195ZER) '4999 lt7fY.W. IA.n 4 cyl., tl.ICOfMltlc:. power Ii.ting. Muet • • ._No. 5tlt (lie. 5'3WZU) 13999 MAll77 A.T .. P.S .• P.B., full power, powef windows, poww ... ta. At.NFM s"'90, whl.._,1 11,. ttn whttl. tinted glaa Stk. No. 5i·71ic:. ''RA) VI, automatic, ftetory air, Aa#FM atereo. Stlt No. 5142. (Uc. 247408) 52899 ltlOIUICI ...... va. ~. flctory air. •tree11. power windows. timid oi-, lertdlU top. Slk. No. 5231. (lie. 0151ZLC) •9399 lt79LIMCOUt ' --. ---------, - •Jan. 8-Jan. 14• Robert Conrad f le(iJ and G. Gordon LJddy .. See 'on ·the Cover ,' Page 2. • . . Soap stars hopping 'Brideshead Revisited' <.Handicapped hqving at Playboy Hotel-~' readied for Channel 50 i. their day on tube ... . . Teleview1, Page 2 i ; I i I I ~ i f i l . I t I !llKIU- ~ ---- ----~-- al :> ; Televiews ....................... , . . . . Page 2· .., On the Cover ............•............... Page 2 ~ Highlights , . . ...... : .. . . .. .. ...... 1 •• Page 3 ~ Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page 7. 14. Inside TV .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Page ~ g Letters .................................. Pa·ge 8 ; Word Gome ... -. .. . . .. . . . . .. . . . .. . . . . Page 8 ~ TV Puzzle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . Page 8 2 Daily Cr.ds . ., .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .. .. Page 10 i£ Prime-Time Details ................. Page JO Tube T~ra_ .. -· .•• --• --......... --f-49'-ll 'Cable Subscription .• ; .................. IJ>age 18/ l>afltitne Dra'"° ....•.. : ................ ~e 27 . . n ... :Ja_ . .• . f9A .. f'll-.M~ UUl(K' •••• , •••••••••••• ,_. ••• ·'<". ~gf 28· 9 KNXT (CBS) ' ' . 1121 W. SulllltBhd., Los Anlelel, Ca. , eKNBC<NBC> 3000 W. Alameda Ave., Burbank, Ca. . e KTLA (Ind.) S800 W. &.met Blvd., Los Angeles, Ca. eKABC (ABC) 4151 ho9peet Ave., Loe Anceles. Ca. (8) KFMB (CBS) . 7877 Enaineer Rd., San Diego, Ca. eKBJ·TV (Ind.)° 5515 Meln>le Ave.: Los Angela, Ca. C 10) XCST <ABC> 8330 ED&meer Rd., San Dieao. Ca. • K1TV (Incl) ~ 57'6 W. &mset Blvd., Los Angeles, Ca. • KOOP-TV (Ind.) t1S N. La Brea Ave., Los Aneeles, Ca. OKCET <PBS> 4401 Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles. Ca. •KOCE(~) 1S7'4 Goldea West&., Rwatinston Beach (D) On-TV' ' · • 'U3f Grud Central Ave .. GlendaM;Cla. (J) Z.TV 1 a1I Nebraska Ave., Santa Monica, Ca. I Cll), HBO • , . "ffine.t;.fle Blq.,_ aockefellef c.iDter, N. v:: "· Y .' ~ CC)• Clnemax) . • Tlme-WeBlq.,llod:efeU~rCenter,N.Y.,N.Y. e <WOR) fr.Y\,N.Y. al (Wlm) Atlanta,Ga. (I) (aPN) • I ' Cl> (Showt.ime) ·black <S > Spotlight ·e ccable News Network> --Piii . MAINOfiFICE -West Bay St., eo.y MeN, Ca. . Mllll Mldlw: ._ 15'0, C'.-Mele, c.., 92626 Te ..... w:"'2-Gt'I - ------------ Minorities and the tiny screen By MICHAEL DOUGAN °' ............... . Awhile back I had the opportunity to screen an old e dition of "Amos n' Andy ," that much-reviled early 'SOs sitcom concerning the adventures of on~ very black Klngf.isb and bis motley assortment of friends. "Arnos n' Andy," originaBy a reclio show-ttarriaf a eoup!e--of-whi~ geys in "blackvoice," was yanked off the air, not surprisincly, as a racist representation of America's laraest minority group . Since then, old copies of "Amos n• Andy" have become as rare as hen's teeth. Eveo the video archives at UCLA, America's larcest collectioo of kinescopes, videotapes and telefUm, bu only one episode in its vaults. This ia the one I saw and, in truth, it didn't seem that racist. Feminists. more than blacks would have just call to condemn UliJ single show, which ·dealt with Kincfisb 's mother-in-law problems. Georie o_f today's popular "Tile Jef'fersons" program seems every · bit a:s meanly stereotyped as Kiqllsb, tboqb WI charaaer at least bas t® socially-redeeming quality ol.wealth. - Nor was Redd Foxx's characterization of the dishonest. selfish old coot on "San.ford and Son" a particularly kind image of the modem black man. Have we really come so far? Well, yes.· Despite these programs, the depiction of blacks on the tube' has crown more realistic since the early '808 when commercials ~int acknowledged that blacta bruabed their teeth, ·lraabed their laundry and ate break.fut cereal. · Witness the "Ha])py Days" episode set to air next. Tuesday. At lut this witlessly charming and immensely popular, series ~clcnowledg-es that the days of the '509, for some segments of our society, weren't all that happy. In pext week•• lbow, Al, the jowly proprietor of Arnold's aocla joint (played by Al Molinaro), asks Fonzie (Henry Wmkler) to wateb the pJace while he takes a mysterious oat-of-town trip. The Fonze lea.ms tba( Al is headini off -·are you ready for this? -to join the Freedom Riders, that courageous battalion of blacks ud whites who cruised the south demanding civil rights for all and, oft.en, enduring physical violence as their immediate reward. Fonzie joins Al in Dixieland where they are taken in by a black family. Complications stem Crom_a_aeeminClY aimp.le invitation:-to hmch. 7 Side by ·aide, actor Robert Conrad bean a striking resemblance to convicted Watergate conspirator 0 . Gordon lJddy. The mirror-lmase effect 11 no accident u Conrad, who's tnowD for bis tou•h·IUY roles on TV abow1 such u "Wikl. Wild W.t:• "Black 'Sbeep Squadron" and "A llan Called Sloane.'1 sUrl ill an NBC World Premtwe mcme "Wlll, G. Gordon Liddy." 11te tWe>·boar drama baaect oa Lldd1'1 autobioerapby ain &owlay at t p.m. oe Channel c. Defiant lo the day be entered and left prtaon for bis crimes, Liddy was tbe only coruspJrator never to 1ive in to authorities investigatJn& corrupt political practices durin& the Nixon ad1Pintstration. He would serve the loosest JaJI term of any of those involved ln the cov~r-up of the break-in ol the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Water1ate Buil4int in Washington, D.C. ~ ''Wlll" la a character stucly of IJdd)t, a former attorney. nu qeat and concresaloDll candidate and cluef mastermind behind the Water1ate break-in and other Ule1aJ activities. Tbe plot. were batebld to euure the reelection oL Richard Nl&OD in 1171. J "Alta' readlq UM book, I wun•t •W"lri•ed wben I met. IJddy," said Comad. ol "Will." We haven't previewed this episode. Though we doubt it will get too heavy, the concept seems commendable. Along the s ame line, "Benson," starring the master of deadpan 'Comedy Robert Guillaume, was recently honored by the NAACP, which gave Guillaume the Best Performance by an Actor in a Comedy Series trop&y during iu annual Image Award ceremonies in the Hollywood Palladium. The nice thing about "BeUOll" la that it isn't.about a black man, per se. Although be started bl th~ role as a servant (first on the madcap series "Soap"), the title character bu been d.evated to an administrative position in aovernment and his color bas notbinl. to do with Lhe story. Both "Happy Days" and "Be'baon," incidentally, are products of ABC. AS TELEVISION DISCOVERED blacks two decades a10, producers have now acknowledged another, more specialized minority ~roop -'the hafldjcappecl.. Spurred, perhaps, by the United Nations declaration of 1981 as the International Year of the Disabled (which was, by many standards of meas urement, a bust ), they've learned that a tale of some disadvantaged person overcoming that disadvantage holds considerable dramatic value. There's nothing like the triumph of the human spirit to bring a lump to our throats . This sudden attention to the disabled can be credited, we hope, with a certain amount of consciousness-raising on the part of the American public. Notable are the shows that brought that most invisible of handicapped people, the mentally retarded, onto the screen and into our scheme of considerations . First there was "Stepping Out," a beautiful Australian mm presented by PBS, concerning a group of developmentally disabled adults who staged a remarkable music and dance program in Sydney's magnHicent opera house. This documentary not only revealed what retarded peoplec can do ·when given the training and opportunity -and what they did was outstanding -but it left us with a bottomless reservoir of admiration for those who devote themselves to bringing those abilities to the fore . More recently, CBS presented "Bill," the true and deeply moving story of a mentally retarded man who spent most of bis 50-odd years in a See Handicapped , Page 17 57 '§ .. .. . "People still are in awe of the man. He never broke during that entire period.·• The NBC drama may provide some. insight into the mind of this fiercely loyal man. He was. the product of a stem and brutal father, a dUtant mother, schoolmates who abused him, a German housemaid wbo befriended the lonely boy and Ustened to HitJer speeches with him. "We cheeked everything that went into the script," Conrad told The Aasociated Press. "ll wam't enough that the material was ln Lldcfy't · book ; we bad researchel'S make sure that the events were accurate. I don't trust anyone." The actor purchased "Will" for bis own production company and bis daughter, Joan, is the film's producer. Arter a dinner mffUng with Conrad. Uddy aireed to sell the rights to NBC. "Uddy himself was a big help," Conrad said. "He was on many of the locations, and when I waa perplexed about a scene, I could ask him, 'Gordon, what would you have done ln this situation?' He also wran1led the rats and ate a parklne ticket." (Liddy toot care of the rats. which fl.cure in tbe boy Gordoa'a conqu•i of b1a fun. When a atudio vehicle wu ta11ed for metal partin1 Liddy 1tartled the o«l~ by swaUowt..-the ticket.) ' , Hti!hllthts for the \Well '9!!!~.~--~i!.-... ~~~ ... illjmilll!l~;~--•. .-..!iiiilm.-~!!!B!!!!!!~!!!!!!!l!!9!!1!!!~----9!![1!1--· ~ ~ ----· c8. Friday ~•I** dl9cl-. a ..-. DOCTOft specials "°"' IOc*inO • .._. ttie Hugh 0 ·1rtan and K-. ~ ...... -· .. today. rtna Mtioe............. a. JN«JNf'f .. -... ---°' ~-,.., of. doctor wtlo ~In '<.Ill t.noa. and"wNr'9 the lliftllil ... A"1can b&-" In order MC .... li:IO~ TME a.AHOCW NEVAWUZ Jn thla Mlmat.s cotnady. the greedy J.8. TNmPl!Om ~ on w. llllllnd ol ~ and lltaa to modemlaa " for .. _, ®=r"'-<HWnAN ANDB• ... W ~ Animated. A boy and girl find eOvenllK• with • --°'~ arao•GMAT~CW COUNnW~ Lynn Andencn, eotw. Fargo. and Ulcy J. o.tlon -~ ..... tw.on.. t..,. peito111M1nOe from the MOM Grand Hotel In Reno. AfiLstDON 1~. MICAl. OAIZl.I laedarl of the PM1 ltand to NOiin ,. 001iedei110e i° on "---. miter • tragic pea1. ::> al YOUNG '8>fll.l"8 1:GO. 1WN1G WITH TME ; INCW. STAT\..IR "'°'1--< "Tha Skater" A drug Fflanda and Mae>dat• ?' lnwatigetton at • loc.i Ice Qdler to honor the Sldar rlnll dMtroya • youn 8lotflera and tNlr contn-....,. • ...,.,allone. button 10 coun11y anw-t:ao. WLUI taftftent Tllla-apedal profllaa M • ll.m MG IUUTY -getlc and lneplrlng Mlllhail Batyahnllov '-ta ~-Tc:Nlllov9y'a dMaic bal- ._ ()) WOMING let 1e1acaa1 from tha Aoy8I Barry Boatwk:k, Eiieen Oeler• ~. eov.nt Gat- at.vlan and J-Ta)'tc)t dan. Ac:dalrned dancara .,. among Iha many It_.. Devld Wal and ..._.. Plltk .....,,., In .,. "*'91. -flaelurad. bMad on llundteda of • tiwQNG IT lntal ._ ~ by ''How To 8uMw And Suc- )ollnWlll I 9lllhor 8tuda oaad lfl The 'IOI~ Aw of Tarte& ~·a rll09I •IOOMaM 4:IO(B)INOWWHITSllMO ~ "*' tall ~ TME llNIN DWMN: ~to 1M w1tt1 1n11a16on.. LM ON STMll 10:00. TME lOU MM.I A ltaQe perfonnanoa of • ~AMDe 0#-STAM tha falry-tala claHlc · Leu ,.... -... .,. .._. fMWl1ng ...,_ .... and at\lddad ...... ~ ~ Taped at N9w " IW ballaMll19 the \Mlted Yortl'a A9c1o City Ml* Negro Co1ag1 A#ld. Hiii. • WHO'e KmPNa The Utlia Amcala -.... turad In tllll dlpa and ...... t::IO <ID l**ttl WNW!flCK .. CC»ICll'l I The ---with IUdl . 11118 .. ''Walk On~." "Do SUP£RSINGER. -Superstar Emmylou Harris brings her special musical and vocal style to "Austin City Limits" premiere Saturday at 10 p.m. on KO<;Ef°CCh. 50). l::IO. HOWTMEWSTWAI IOCN~ WON Elq)arta. ---._ ad¥o-- On ... nl 10 ()Ngon, c:alaa and~ oon- LI*• (BNca Boxlaftnar) le -In KOET ~ foJ • lhol while protecting • dlacuaeloft °' ... -'9 YOU"Know The W"'I To San Joae?" and "I Know l'I NeYS ~ TllM Way ,..... '° '* credit per-tonna .... .,.,.., .._ tram lhe peal and~-a:GO~ ~ OAIZL.I The Utlle A--. -.... lured In .,,. dlpa and .,,,._ 4::IO <ID MANI atMTWt NCt••nw ADWINrUN ~-A boy and girl find edventura wltll • --°'~ EYB9lla t:oO (JI) TWO AGAINST THE ARCTIC A wolf, a woMw1na and a polar II.-.,. - --by two &klmo cflol. dren dur1ng ... ltNggla lor ~ In Iha Atdic Clrda. (Pawl 2) e:GOGI NWCA'811UWING.... 8UT Wtt0'8 UITB•tcat Hoata; C.ct ~. Stan Mooneytiam. ~: EINm Zlm~ Jr .. Oearl Jonie, w-.n 8hatnar. l:OO 9 TME l&.Bfr 0... Hoat9: Stan Mool~. C.cl l-.nce. Gl.-ta: Mika DougMa. Dk* VIII Pattan, ....._.. McGo- ~ CD> INCTACUl.Nt ~* Vlclor Borge, Bfitt EJcland and lnWNltloNI pop ata1i A88A ._.,..,. "*'411 that -taped 11'4 In CCIC*tlwlQan and Stod&- llclm. 11:00 (I) mNN lM JcfWI 8yflS .,_ )'OU tlllnga ltrwigar than lNtll, larger than ... and -- than ~ you've -.-n·ln u-encore pr-. antetlona from ... Show- IJlona 8lnrre ~- MO (B)O-. If CONC:MT An ~ lllghtc:k.tb perlonnenoe 1ron1 IN Sporting Club In Mortta C-'O le .,,...,...,, ...... .. • lllm monuiga al Cher'• Mrty ~ with 8onny8ono. Saturday specials ~·.­MOii•• l::IO <ID INOW wtl'TI NfO 1"111"91 DWAl'N: LNEONSTMI A ~ partormanca ol the • fairy-tale claulc IMNrtno ...,..., ... and ~ T-oact al N9w y ortl'• Radio City Muelc: Hall. l.'00. CHNITO: NIW C.-lllCM .. MT A dlacuaalon with the Inter- ~ .,,.,.,.__ manUI artiet. Cllrlalo and • look al .. wortia. (l)WOMING ..,,.., ....... EllMn ~and,.,_ Ta)'tc)t --. Iha "*1Y .... lealwed In ... ..-.... b...s on Juldreda o1 ...... .... conducted by joumalat I author Slude TerMI. , /'... I ,OOO's of Movies For Sale or Rent See ~ Video Experti at • • • ... .,..,...,,. Thia ...... _..... ol .............. ..,_.,., ,... uoaea wtio Mw "9d ~ .-allde~Md ~ In ClllleorNa. •~o.vn. The LMda "-*' -.... ""*' In llm cllpa and lhorta. l:OO. M..UI TNa ...... ptolllaa ... -.,.cJc and lnaplrlng pdwor. t:ao Cl) 1"I WN:MY WOlllLD Oii JONATHAN WINTEM Ouaat: AoOar1 Nier. 11::IO • .1M* LONDON WITH WIWAMOIV_. The .. °' the c.ittomlan lltJthof ... traced frOm ,. youth to hla unlirMly dMlfl alltla909of«lln•~ ._ Nin1nO Wiiiem 0.-.. AfiSUIOON ~-WMAT"9 L8IT CWTME ~ David Sclto.nbrun n*"'-of a r9llgloua MCI and......_ of MCT. caltad Iha 8lmonttea from t2:00 ()) llZAMI .... runw... (p.,.f 1) JcfWI 1¥-.,_ you (I) TMEWN:MYWOM.D ~ ...... ttwi trueti. °'JONATHAN wwrw wear ..... -.. and_., Guaal: AcOer1 Fular. ..... ~ }'OU'¥a - IV89tG l.'00. '8T1ZO MAGIC A CNc:Mo cfllcl joumayt bad! to Ille rooea of hie cUtuN. l::IO. MACH Pa. TME IUN Thia fun..fllad KCET 11»- c:W. o-'ed ._.. <M- chn, ~them ... ---of.wgy. 7:00. M'JllUmO#-MAN Didi Vin Petten '-la tllla looll Into the Mente of human behavior and ~Into -of Iha "'°" ~ phenorn--1 -cl.._ cullure. • tQ OCMl9T -TI4I MIM'YOM GATtmt A &.OC*MCIC Mwtlrt 8lllllam namn• ...... of ... fout..(ley World ~of Jeiwlltl Holocauat ~ held IMIJuneln~. --4:11 Cl) llZAMI John 1¥-.,_ )'OU .... •anger ttwl lrulh, Wear ........ and -- tfian ~ you'w ---."'°° STl!WMT' Aodl lftU9ic'• ra6gnlng ,,__~--In Ihle conc.t. taped lw at ... Forum In Loa~ llnglng meny of Illa hit aln- g6aa ........ cuta from -of hie lllbl#M. Sunday specials JAMJNff tO, -MON•• l:IO. B.8ltwtr ,M'Ta Mlchael NH1111th and See HighlJghts, Page 4 VIDEO MOVIES SPOKEN HERE • LORD OF THE RINGS CAnrmatedJ • RIST.MONDAY IN OCTOIER/Walter • PHYSICAL IOHvla Newton-Johnf Mcitthati • MOMMY DEAREST /Faye Dunaway CONTINENT AL DIVIDE IJohn lelushll • PATERNITY J1wi Reynotd1 • STARDUST MEMOlllS[#_oody Alle11 • CliSH OF THE TITANS/Laurence Ollv • CAMNONIAU RUN llurt Repold1J • GREAT MUPPEI CAPIR/Ml11 Piggy . • NSTORY Of THI WORLD . YJ..,.St•lv~· ..-, COST~ MISA • 6464921 • ., ;.111m119s for the \Vfek i .F'r,om Page 3 ..., ~ of the Pdlc >. Ma' Alpllrtory CompMy .g -....-.s In ttlil ortglnel ~ prodlM:tkln of non-ttop u. ~and""'*" g> t:1D (JI) THI YIM 1"ATWAI: -' ., > P..ndt 0'.._, 1-e. ttlil I-IOoll at the ~ -· 0 ---ltofthe~ is: yeer. NISUIOON 2:00 ....... MD GllETB. Englebert Hurne* dlrldl •• ltllry tlllle oper9 beMd on the Ortmm Brothen' tllle lllld ttenelated to Englllh, .. peitormed by ~ of IM Nol~ I.JN. vwalty Opera Th••tra Symphony Ora-tra and 1M Olafl 9¥1 Chldren'1 Cboft.9.. ·Y(UtG~ ~ "Mandy'• Onndmothet" A~­ from England ~ o·a.v..1 Inda her ,...... tionlHp wlttl her orand- dalgt!W ltrlllned. HO • .IOMN CUM'( IKA18 NTM Niil THE wour ANDorte ICE ~ 1tl't~go6d~ ... JotWI Cuny pri)mll _.., loe ti.-... choteo- gniclhed by Curry lllld .,..., Mlf1ine; ottlet IMt· Ing ..... tlllll\.red Include Jo Jo Stwbudl. Jaca Courtney and Pttrlc:I• Dodd. ._. A Di\Y WITH OONMD -A~ Nilw Yott! t11 .. 1r1c:a1 •oent (Fred Owynnet .._...!Ml he mult cope On .. _, when ... loeee ,. iong. Ume .....,_In""' .... Horowttz edllpta1lon of • Ring l.Mctn. .,,, llory. .. ;JOHN CUM'('8 'CllWOI" Olymplo gold m•d•I· winner .,... Riming end "Ice Capedee" .., Jo.Jo Si.tbuck IOln Cuny tor thi9 dlls*Y of IUtlno lttlllry. HO (Jl)THI YIM 1"AT WAI: W1 ~O'NMI hc*llHe IOoll et Iha "-' -· ... _..of the pr.-. ,..... ~ ... OMZfCMTOONI Niil PUNNY NOP\.I ma....., ...,. z.. z.ea Gebo!', Phll -.. Auth Bum. .... llMc:, l'tiytll ... Md~ Qr• toclrlct....-.. Ml.-..itwn' l'MTI Mlc:llMI H"mlth and -*-9 of .. ,.. Nia Alp9itoly ~ -....... In""' Oliglnel procMtloll of non-etop ----~ W (I) PAT COUM: THI .. H'fPWOl•I V~fromthlaudlo­ .,_ ~ oomlceliy to llypno•I• 1uggHtlon1 ..... to "*" by tNI ~. 1:1t (JI) THI YIAR THAT WAI: W1 .,.... O' ..... '-" Ihle lo-* .... moll --· ......... of tllepr.w- yew. Monday spec la I~ ~11.- IN THE BEGINNING -The Petrified Forest in Arizona was among the 100 different locations and 30 countries visited by author-narrator David Attenborough Lynn Anderlon, Donna Fwgo end Lac:y J. °""Ori -IMtured In ... tv.on-...,. periorm1noe tram IM MOM Grand Hotel In Alno. Arid IOON 12:00 (JI) DIONNI WAllWICK If OONCaT n. ~ with Midi hlla • "W .. On By." "Do You Know The Way To San JoM?'' and .. , Know ... ,..._ ~ Thie Wey AQMI" to her ~ per. tonne her ~ ""-"°'" .. PMl and~· di. JN:#. LONDON WITH Wl.&JMt DWANm TM .. ol IM c.llornl9n MhOr II treced from hie youltl to ,. untimely dMttl .. the • ol 40 In • docU- cW-INln1ng Wllllerft 0.--.(R) ~ aGI. ()) UN •A CM0Ua. QWILaMOWtt Anlmetad. ~. *"*· an wWI • tied -ol pup-~ lo¥e, NM aw.y and J011W the *-to be -Ille poocla of Illa drelme.. (R) ... ()) ... IUNN'r8 *DWORLDOI· ~ ~.The ~d of ~•IMOTTVMt· "41ft!, ~ owr poor rat· Inge. "" .. lMlny to be ....... -pt911dent. • WOM.D INCW. ''Frri Tetpl: Co11t11110t .. OfA~ .... •• Aimed In llllNI, ... ........ wlltl T .-pl!, hie flll'llly, tnerldl ... ..._ __ ** .... tfle ... tflCI --of IN former CIA opefltl~ and fugitive ............ ... WOM.OINDW. "PNM T.,e: CUc f I' a • Of A °"'flr'Oul MM" ,.._.lrl9mnll,IHIWAHI ... T.,., llfl ~. .................. ................. __.., .. .._CM .,....... ... """'" ---·-= 10:a0• ._.!MN '--of Immediate .,..,. -and OOMSn to Alnen-c:en knlgn polc:y. lndu6- lng ""*6911 ltwotWWll9l 1t In Ille Middle bit, •• - INned. 1u1oeMYra~ THE Q&D KILL.M Hoef 8ob AyM loob It the~--c:a.. and .......,_,.. of ~·· Syn. drome and 1M current _,.to lrdofm per· antll and doc:tofS lbout the ~olthe.,__ a:IO;CNllll'A A determln•d athl•te ,._tollthla~ llold him bec:ll from becoming ail Olymplc: c:Nmplon. di Cl) THI NIW MAID A -!Mid ii--• -and~ trtencs to• llt1tl boy. Tuesday specials JNIAJNN 11, ---·· l:OO(l)OYIRTIJM A .._.. llM puta ttue ......... totMteltln!t* *'Y ...... ... MO(J)TOM ..... N#O .,..ANTON Peitoi1M19 tor the .... ... ..,._,Tom~ Md.._,. Miion ~ • l..M Veg11 ~ In lhll epecW.. AfiL IOON 2:00 (JI) (19' .. eotafti Alt •••a,.. ntafltdub perl-from th• 8portlng Club In Monte c.to. WCl)ClMlll'A A dM•"'~ atlllete ,.... to ... hla lwdolp 1101c1 11111'1 b•cll from II IDOlntftt Ill Olytllp6o ••1•L 419(1)1"1-aiwD .,. ........ '--. ,_ _, ••n11~ ............... WCl)MlllCIEEITWi during the filmm~of "Life on Earth," the 3500 million year epic ·saga of the development of life on this planet debuting Tuesday at 9 p .m. on KOCE <Ch. 50 1 AH091811rl MAGIC ADYINT\R At*neted. A boy and girl find ~tul9 with • --of·~ (l)OYBmN ,,. ~ ...,.. put•. true trlendalllp to the \eet In thle 11ory of prejudlCle. ~ e:GOCl)TOMJOtaNl/D IUIANANTON Pei1onNr 10 tor the llr9I lt.Ntogeet_.,Tom~ and a--Anton dam. • 1..M VegM audlll10I In thlt ,.r~ :.::: Hew M The ChlJ.. dren Gone?" A penetrtl· Ing IOoll Into the llopee end ~of~··~ -*d. Oumtl: t.lcNll LA!ndon, Ctrol Burnett, Roy Cllrtl, Clled ~. o.ei.. 8ooM. "°9ar ~ ....... -Collly. to:IO. "°""CUM'( IKATm P'ETIR NC THI wour AND one a ~ 1g1e ~ go6d med9- llt Jolln Cuny peffomw _.., loe .,..... dloteo- ...... by Curry end ,...,~~--­lnO .... tlMur9d Include Jo Jo Sterbucll, Jedi COW'MY Md Patrtcda Oodd.f"> , '*'. ll8'tWff l'MT'I Mlcll"I H .. mlth and ~ of ... P.:Hlc Arie ""*'°'~ Company -........, In ... ortglMI procluCtJoft of llOfMtop laughter end muelc:. Wednesday specials MIMAJNff11.11M MGllll•ll •<1:>1"1-.MDC. ...... ... --.....~ . ....... J.8.~ ................. ,, _ _. ..... moderna. h tor hie own par90fWI gain. HO(Jl)Ctw...QWl\M: THEUTTUnw.wt Hoef Joel ~ cttoNdee • tM .-ty ~ of CtlllPfln'• ~ ..... ~Ion ol -ol hit._ ellentt, lnc:ludlng "The Tremc>." "The Rlnlc" end • 'Shanglleled .•• 1~. THE'°"" TON The .,,.... MmlOI-of Ille Faw Tope -'-lured In lllCfl _,. c:t...ic:. -"Bemedllne" and "Sttn<l- lnO In n. 8Mdowe Of Lo¥e." l:GO Cl:) THI aAM> OI NIYAWUZ In ... "*'-led c:OtMdy, ._greedy J.B. Trumpflom Cl ....... Ori .... lllend of Nev-and tnee to IT.odeitlim h for .. _, .,.._.gain. ..... ,_ (J)aNCTACULM ..... CAMO ~~,..... . Md clandno llorMI •• llftOftO .. Ktll 111 ttlla -nlng of entwtalnm•nt ....... Celtty Lee Cfoe- by .. Jim ~ end Flo- "' Qordoft. 1:1te MATIOIW. WIWINCW. ''Tiie .__... em-<11- ....,., undlfWet• ftlm fool· • of how .._.. teed. .... end wlly tlley etwdl pnMdae • -pertp«> 1M on thla IMOlnatfnO lllld fMr90INlllll.Q ... LOa .......... ONTDAWN!ID8 LM "°"' 1111 ea-ty WI- .... ..... with ou-t ..... Carl ....,,., and""" .. ,cMlor, ttlle apeclel llollSllldlawerd ...... • llwt a...nc-w. Maryl .. r.., 11141 • .,~." .....,_.. •• -(IAUlllWM .. .. , . .,.., u.. ........ ~ ..... loclfl lffl-Liii• T ..... ~~ .................... lor the title "MIN Cllfic>t· 11111 USA," with the theme being the 1940'L • NATIOHAL GIOGMftlC INCIAL "The ShetU" ExtflO<dl· n«y underwelAW film fool· • of how lhltlla '-'· ,. end wlly tlley attacll prO'Adee • 'l9W petapec:- tlw on tNa fMc:lnetlng end .__tllh.Q Cl)arzAME Jam~ --you thlngl etrenger then truth, larger then ..... end -- than llriything )'OU'W --uo ID MAM AUl8EU. WMNngtOfl'I top politic* Mtiriet pok• fun It major laM.-end -llori99 ol the day from thl State ~ vwtlty of New York In Buf. fllO. (l)~ntON A oomedlen bo9t and four c:omk: c:onteetant1 Who c:omp•t• egelnat on• anothlr -teetind In IHI uncaneoted c:OtMdy o-ne lhow. 9:00. MAM AUlla.l Wlllhlngton'I top poltlc:8t ....,.. poll.-full .. major --end -•ottea of the day from the State l.W- \W91ty of ..... Yott! In Buf. fllO. • AU.THIGI OWEllD~ The aconornk:. polltJc:al lllld eoc:lll It.lie of ''Main- •tr ••I." Ame,lc:e 11 reviewed by '-'-si.wi Stemberg and Benford Unger ol Natlonll Pubic: Redlo'I nlghlly r-llege line. Cl) THE WIO<Y WOM.D OI JONATHAN WWlW ~ Howm'd Coell.. .... AU.,.._ CClN8lC E llD 8"aAL The ~. polltk:al end aodel lllte of ''Mlln- 11 r••t." America 11 ,..._., by '-'-&.en Stemberg Md Sentord lJngllr of NatlqMI Public: Rldlo'• nlOM'Y ~ line. 10:00. L»C>eCAPB OI HON Pullt.1er PrJze.wlnnlng altbor and ......... Aerie DubOI ....,. wlly he .. optimllltlc ebout the futur• of rnanlllnd. 10:IO. L,NC>IC• .. "" HON PulltHr Prize-winning .,,,.._ .aNf ldan1lll Alrw OMboe ...... wlly il9 II ~ ebout .... ""-°' mankind. • ANIGHT'lf~ A .. ~ PORT'Mlf OI ' CJIZZYMI F• One ol OllelPt'• _. ,..... _,tpOlltiol .. pro- ws. IN •-• 4'11 tor If! ~-...Into IN .. ol tfle ''Crown Prw. Of Ju.I." (A) .. (JI) awa.ac:itMJN: THIUTT\.I~ Holt Joel ~ chOllliCIM IN .-ty ~ ol Cflepln'1 carw wM • eot11111111 M of -of '* flrnOUI eltent•. lndudlnt ..,.,.. Trsnp," "The NM" end "~." Thursday specials JNl/AJlllf'( 14, -.., .... • SX-6~ . 45W91ts,_.dl. $27197 DlglhllT..-•••• 1425 PL-7Tw .. 111111 ·~w1mllfc 9wwwta&.odl DINct Drift .•...• '200 $-12797 ·AR.ANTIC'S JANUARY CLlallANCI SALlll LIST . SAU : y AMAHA: LIST SALi : INFINITY: . LIST SAU PRICE .. CAJOIO PRICE .. IS II (each) PRICE HERVIC: ... 1 Professional Quality Lite-Weight Headphone 1N) Mt BIC tlJC Belt Drive automatic turntable with 'Shure • magnetic cartridge (0 ) .... SZ2' $JAJI : 120 watt per ch. s37454 : Mirror Image s39700 u-· * integrated amp (0) ........ $100 Jt Column Loudspeaker (0) .• $450 .. . . . : :05!:tt per ch. $16514: JIL: : integrated amp (N)_ ....... $250 ,. :-sir • • 1 • • L-40 (each) sg·900: SO% : 10 inch 2-way(N) ........ $250 • ORTOFON; Off .• : All cartridges in stock . . . . . . : «ENWOOD: SHURE: : KEF: : 1e1-1oso ·s319 Ui'02 $'711 • I OU state--of-: 80 watt per ch. AM-FM & Stylus force guage (N) .... $9.00 ! the-art lloor standing $0AACG • Receiver. hkpeed (0 ) . · · . $660 it speaker system (0. each) $1400 9'"'--it it # .. U-701 DIX: ! CONNOISSEUR: : 80 watt per channe1 JI ... du _ 17224 Jt-ID-ID/SAN · •hi-speed Integrated s32414 unit (N) .................. SIOt : T".8nacriptton turntable s222• : amplifier (0) .............. S4H ' • with low mass arm (N) .... P50 it · • . . .. it ALL UNITS COME WITH FULL WARRANTY it ~-601 • $26290 TEC..UCS: it SOME NEW(N) SOME OEMOS(O) Jt-h1~peed 70 watt per channel ISM-205 ! MORE V Al.UIS AT A Tl.ANTIC ; Integrated amp (N) · · · · · · · · S3't · Metal capable cassette $ · 15; STOP IY TODAY!!! · ! IT-413 · $ · R• deckwithlOfenoid 115 • UMITED ~•ANTITllS • Autoecan,18f'VO IU.,. opentk>n (0) ............ $161 ' It ..,_ • lock AM-FM tuner (0) .... SZH . J.,. 5 :P. 2 < ,.- $ "Tl :l Q. Ill ::< c.. Ill :::> c Ill -< r:si .... ~ 1 . AMC-JEEP -. . . ·ORANGE COAST· · AMC_jEEP~LT 2524 Harbor Blvd: Costa Mesa -549-1023 SADDLEIACK IMW 28402 Marguerite Parkway Mission Viejo 831-2040 -49Mt49 ROY CARVER IMW 1540 Jamboree Road Newport Beach _:.'40-6444 BOB Mel.ARENS 1MW At Beach Blvd. & Whittier I.a Habra -522-5333 CREVIER .MOTORS . 208 W. 1st St. Santa Ana ..:_ 835-3171 CADILLAC .. NAIEiS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -540-9100 411 ~ CADILLAC-OLDS GMC-Del.OREAN ~ 28332 Camino Capistrano Laguna Niguel -83.1-0800 CHEVROLET . . . . CONNELL CHIVIOLET 2800 Hartxi Blvd. · Costa ·Mesa-.:.-~1200 .. .. CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH AnAS CHRYSLER.PLYMOUTH 2929 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -546-1934 MEWPOIT DATSUN 888 Dove Street Newport Beach -833-1300 . ' LINCOLN-MERCURY JOHNSON & SON UNCOLM-MERQllY 2626 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -540-5630 SANTAANA UNCOLN-MBtCURY 1301 N . Tustin Avenue Santa Ana -547-05 .1 I FRANK PROTO LINCOLN-MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd.,· Huntington-Seach · 841-7739 . -------- MAZDA MIRACU MAZDA 1425 Baker Street Costa Mesa -545-3334 -ANAHEIM MAZDA . 601 S . Anaheim Blvd. ,""alieim -956-1820 PEUGEOT . ,. ltACH IMPORTS · 848 Dove Street . Newport Beach -752-0tOO ' . PONTIAC . BOB LONGPRE PONTIAC 13600 Beach Blvd. Westminster . 892-6651 -636-250~ PORSCHE-AUDI CHICK IVERSOM. IMC. 445 E. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach -:-6 73-0~00 BILL VAN PORSCHE-AUPI 136-31 Harbor Blvd. Garden Grove-636-2331 SAAB BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street Newport Beach -752-0900 -~ --. .. TOYOTA --.EARLE IKE TOYOTA 1966 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -646-9303 'MAXEY-TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. . H_u.nti".lgton Be~~h 847-8$55 VOLKSWAGEN JIM MARINO VOLISWAC.91 18711 Beach Blvd., : ·Huntington Beach . 842-200Q ----- VOLV O ... --- EARLE II~ VOLVO 1966 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -646-9303 Friday sports JNfAJM'( .. - N'ILUIOC* l:IO. CROel ~ INTRV .. ~ "Double Pollng" The c1w..,.,_ ..,. l.-d to ,... mueclee Md gekl 'Peed Oft dowMll9 .. ~ onetnled. (A) 4:IO. NJN, AMII ICA. RUN Medloel euthottt• end common foll dlecl.-I tbe ..... 8"d beneftta of running. .... e:ao• NM MIKElUU CNc:ego ... \IS. Loe ......... .,.~NR. - Hoet9 Len o..ori end Nldt ~ sw-t hlghllghla of crltlcal -------~ dlctlalw °' upcorNng dM-- llONI ~"'IN NFL e 11N FOR THI mu A look bed! la tMen at the ~ .... .,.. .... who wll oompele "' the NFL ~todlM!n•ielNI ~· &..,. Bowl conw. t.nta. Saturday sports JNtAJNtft.- MDII•• 10:GO. (I) NCAA ~ s... Fr..-oo \IS. Soult! Cero9r'9 8CllOOUW IA8ICETUU. Virginie .. Nor1tl Carolna A.fib ICM* 1HO. (I). IMT.w.IT .... aMa Top c:ollaga ..-. from the~ oon..-...- "-hmhW.ln ... .,,_, c:ollaga ..,.. .. ... gllN (11¥9 fnJm Piiio Alto, Celt.). ecoc1811 IMICllTMU. WlillfllngtOft at~ .... CllCOl.l.W IA8ICETUU. UWl•Oobedose. u.1,--.... '*» 9 wmWON.DOP "°"'8 u.. -· °' tti. Hula Bowl (from Honolulu. ....... Q ... MDl•llOML ~TOWI 1135,000 ...., Hlgll Ute CIMllo , .. _ the .._... wk* WolldertlcMI In Ane- hallm, Celt.). -4:IO. eocc::a MAm .. --.wfY AlvlnllM ,.... New v one c-4:1D. MHL HOaCaY Loa ~ ~ \IS. Toronto ... l.ellfl t:OO. -= Mvmw NfD ,,.,,.. • eocc::a MADE If 8IMWfV Atganllna "'-New y °"' c-l:IO a ...,.., , PtW. .,...TOWI StM.000 ..._ High ute Clllal6c (from the en.. wk* Woilderbowl In Ar-. hallm. c.11.). IVBMG ... "°"'8 t.-ncA .. , .. , Hellon9' eyeing Qw1 .... 11Npe'\ 1•(D)Ol.YWW> "Tiie OecleNon" W(D)~l­ llMICDML.L uct.Aw.U8C weumDCM .. -Hald In nor'lti utan wta- oailllln, .... the latvaat ~ lid -In --~ ,, •• NR....,..,,,., ~ Sunday sports JN«JNf'/ 10. - MON•.a ..... (I) NR. POOT'MU.. NFC Chel1 .... iahlp oen- (Nota: .. SW-time, tne Hf'L Md nae ~ aet ttie -.Otllecllll1111.-kwthe pleyofta -the onfy lnfof • rnetton known la ttwt 1t1e NFC 8"d AFC gllN9 wll .,. ...._.by ca anc1 N8C • -•llcllng -.oftMdey.) (JI) .... THINR. Hoele Len ~ Md .. - SKATING HOPEFUL -Lynn-Holly Johnson plays a midwestern teen-ager. who grows up hoping to be a champion figure skater until she s uffer s from a pote ntia ll v catastrophic accident in "lee Castles" on NBC <Ch. 4> Monday at 9 p.m. NI<* BuonlQontl ~ hlOhllghl• of crlllcel ..-. ~end ... dlc1lona d llpCOflllng i:M- lklr* contlata In the NFL. 1* •• NR. fllOOTM&,.I. AFC CflMlpbiahlp PM (Nole: .. ll"9Dl time, ltle NF\. Md not ~ ..... ................... ~---~lnkw· ........ ................. NFC Md AFC ..,_ .. 11e ....c... by caa enc1 Costa Mesa's Only Complete Funeral Facilities . "Serving All Faiths .. 7 -~ N8C .. llOfMlOf ifllctlng .._ofthedlir.) .,.... "Mldlalob CMllanOI Of . °*'••T--"'' ... .-A1WT"°"'8 "Dollble Poi.ftf" TM ;r cNiieeo-.... wed to C1 ,... muaclM Md ~ ~ .-ton....,..ladlM- _.......(9') ;- LmlSlle 1:11e NM MllCllTMU. Loa~ UMn VL .......... ..... we O'CPI ~INTWY . ...,.,.. ·~ And DownllW' n. ......... of,.mg. ...... ._ .. Md,._ ~_._......_(A) 11:11 e "°"'8 NW.. Monday sports JNllAJl#('f tt, - ~ w•om•-_MlaTMl.L. "Piie 10" Oregon 8'* \IS. 8Wlb'd Tuesday Sl)OrtS JNaJNt't ti, - ~ 'W.MHLHOCaY Coa~~VL "°'*911C...... 7:11®~ LIMON'8Wtmd 10:IO. °"°91 COUNnW Wednesday spor!S N'ISllOC* dO. V.ICM .. -Hald Ill ro• Hllm W. oonmln, ...... the ..... Cl'~ 1111 -"' Nortfl~ Thursday sports JNaJNll'I M, -.... 1':11(Jl)-THI~ ..... &Ml ~ 9ld ............. .,,..... hlgtlttglll• or crlllc•I .......... Md ... ..... of~dM­ ...... _......ln .. M'\... wecoc•-• llMICDML.L Colcndo Stllee VL lM v~ l:IO (JI) .... nta ~ ..... .._ ~ end ... e-l6ooflll .,,..... tllghllgtll• or crlllcel .,.,,... ~ end .,,. ~ofupca•••~ ....,..cor--. In ._NFL Enberg win• another award NBC Sports' Dick Enberg, who two ween ago won bis first Emmy Award as television's Outstanding Sports Personality, bas been honored for the third consecutive 1Hf as National Sportscaster of the Year by the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association. Enberg, ~ho handles professional football, college basketball, baseball and ae1ect.ed events for NBC's "Sports World," will receive the award n AprU at the NSSA annual presentation on the campus ol Catawba Collete in Sallal>ur>', N.C. Selection for the 1981 honor wu baaed on ballotlne of nearly 2,500 aportacutera and sportswriters from around the country who vote in · both categories. ::> c Ill -< $» Ha·rbor LaW11 ·Mount Oliw Men10Iial Pam· Mortuary· Mausoleums -=- -Shif)m~t- ... l I !lnffdeTV ~ ·-• • ::s c • .., 0 if BLEAK UGHT OF DAY -Concern over the behavior of her son leads Lady Marchmain <Claire Bloom> to have one of her ··tittle talks" with his friend Charles Ryde r (Jeremy Irons> in .. Brideshead Revisited" on KOCE <Ch. 50>. ;[ I 'Brideshead Revisited' ready 81 IEPF PAU.Ea °' .. ~ ....... • 'Bridesbead Revisited," an eleven-part dramatbatlon of Evelyn Wau&h's classic novel publiabed In 19'5, will be1in on ICOCE Channel 50 on Monday, Jaa. 18~ The Wauch oovel ex91ored the lives of two youn1 men: the mapetic Lord Sebastian Flyte <Anthony Andrews> and Charles Ryder (Jeremy lrona), a struulina painter who becomes eotaoeJed in Sebutlao'a destructive family. Episode one begins In 1N4 with Ryder arriving at Brideshead, where be wu born. Also starring are Sir Laurence Olivier, Claire Bloom and Sir John Glel1ud. Tbe series was shown recently In Enaland and got rave reviews . . . Ann JUUan bu been aiped to play the lead In "Mae West." a two-bow' television movie based on the life ol the le&endary actress whose liberated life ~ue mAAMrl. and off ·.beat wit aboc&ed and detlabted auctienees from Broadway to Hollywood. Ma. Jillian has been recenUy seen in ABC's "Making a Living., ... To~eep you up on the peodin1 "N\Jbt of 100 Stars," ABC bas aiped Myrna Loy, Swian Anton, Gavin llacLeod and Danny DeVito to join ln the sbQ.w. Ostensibly the purpoH of the show is to 1et th~ "100 blaaest stars" together and raise funds for the Acton' Fund of America. lt ls :set for broadcast March 8 . . . Bergman, Stuart Damon, John Gabriel, Robin Mattaon and Robert S. Woods -will join Susanne Plesbette and Barry Newman in "Fantasies," a murder mystery focusing on t.he cast of a sexy, late-night soap. The program is set for Jan. 18 Joseph Wambaugb's chilling drama, ''The Onion Field," will be broadcast on ABC Jan. 17. Based on the novel about a policeman whose llfe is traumatized by the sb00Un1 death of bis partner, "The Onion Field" stars John Savage, James Woods and Franklyn Seales ... Kate Nellitan. the Canadian actress. wbo eave a memorable performance as Lucy In "The Eye of the Need.le," wlU star in "Victims" Jan. 11 on ABC. In "Victims," she plays a rape victim who is obsessed with capturin1 her attacker. In the filming ol this, her American television debut, N.elli1an remarked that American and British television methods were "very different." According to Nelliean, American methods are mor• improvisational and BliUsh met.6oCls are more prepared . . . "Crash," a television movie baaed on the smashup of a jeUiner in the Flodlla Everglades, is set for Jan. 11. William Sbatner and Eddie Albert bead the cast . . . Rabbit enthusiasts may be thrilled to know that the Jan. 9 episode of "ABC Weekend Special" deals with a rabbit thought to be a vampire. See ·Bridesheod: Page 21 Tbe 3tth annual Golden Globe Awards, presented by correspondents who cover Hollywood for the foreign press, will be televiled Jan. 30 on ~BS. The 1>11 Golden Globe Award, the Cecil B. De Mille Award, last year went to Gene Kelly ... -·~ d 11 Fiv~ popular soap opera performers -Peter . WO~ me 'Mr. E~' W':JS a palomiRQ, of course HO&SE OF ANOTBll COLOa -RecenUy my wife and I entered into a friendly bet about "Mr. F.d." I have a perfect recollection that the horse who played Mr. Ed wu a gold and white palomino, while my wife vividly recalls that the horse was pure white. The show was fllmed in black and white, of. course'-1n canvasslna our friends, we've come up with a apllt. And the loca.l library had nothing. So tell us, please! You win this one. The late Mr. Ed, who went to horsey heaven in 1914, was a palomino. NO UIATION -Duriq "Return of the Rebels," I noticed what a stron1 resemblance Chris Connelly bears to Charles Haid of "Hill Street Blues." Any relation? They do resemble one another, but' not by virtue ol famUial ties. Haid does, however, have a cousin in show biz: Merv Griffin. SMALL WORLD -Is Lisa Lorin1 from "As the World Tums" the same Lisa Loring wbo played Wednesday on "The Addams Family"? Yes. Miss Loting started out on TV as the ghoulish clan's youngest member. OLD ADDat:ss -I'm havln1 a diaaareement with a friend about the old aeries "Green Acres" and "Petticoat Junction." My friend thinks Hooterville was the setting for both shows, but I'm pretty sure she's wron1. "Green Acres," which debuted in 1915, two years aft.er "Petticoat Junction," also followed the example ol lts s\Jccessful predecessor by bein1 set on a 180-acre farm juat outside ol Hooterville, home of the Junction. Both shows were produced ~....!_h~ same comp...an.y. Snd your letten to Pepper O'Brien, United Feature SJlfl(licate, 200 Park Avenue. Room 602, New York, N. Y. 10166. ACROSS 1,5 Shown, stara on Tod~'s FBI 12 ActreM Moran on Happy Daya 13 -Faroas plays Huogy 14 Discourage 16 Kind of: auff. 17 Miu Novak's sign-off 18 IN's neighbor 19 Barry or Kelly 21 Mt. Elgatt 22 -Me Madam 25 Ro'9 for Robert Pine 28 A &e.ry 30 Begley 31 Patty-Astin 32 Huml<I 35 Mlsa Rolle'• sign-off 36 Actor Shaf'lf 37 Dllf'rent- 42 Photo 44 -In the Family .. 45 Le Galllenne and Gabor 47 That la (ab.) 48 -and My Gal 49 US power complex 50 Get- 53 Roi• fOf Robert Hegyes 6e Entertainer A«Wna 57 Stella-on Flamll\QO Roed 58 Acfor Wlll- DOWN 1 MASH member 39 -Dobtort pJays Shannoc'I 2 l.eprtcftaln country 40 ~~· ~ ~-~ " .. .., ........ ""'4ftl ~-·~Mell.,,~ .. ::: 4 Compaa• point 5 David C.fadlne role 6 Beginning 7 Unspecified degree , 8 -Trespassing 9 Switch setting 10 Role for Josh Taylor 11 My Three- 15 Mr. Ooulet's ins1gne 20 -Marshall 21 Mr. Elgart'a algn·ofl 23 Grant of TV 24 Los Angete1 cager 26 Start anew 27 Doc-of Gunsmoke 29 Great Amerlcan- 33 -Against Crime 34 Little House on the - 3'7 Geofo• Waahlngton- Hent 38 Miu LQ\llH'I handbag 10 43 O'Toole or Falk 44 Iowa City 48 Mr. Stallone's sign-off 49 Golf area 51 Nickname for Margaret 52 Fruit punch 54 Compass point 55 -set SOLUTION I " .. FromP~4 NO(lf)THl~TWM: _, •• P8lrtck 00..... .._. .. loc* .... MOil -... ~ ol tM pr.toul 10:GO ;ir--. 8erry ....... Ueeft lnNwlMd'*-T~ -811'°"9 the IMflY .... IMt\nd In ... ..,.., b..cl on hundl'eda of In.... conducted by jourN1111 I aM1or SIUds Tertcel EVBMG tO:OO CI> PAT cc. I ... THI .. HWWC>t•f Voll#ttMn lrOM tM Md- -l'9llpOfld conllcelly IO hypnoale 11.1ggHllon1 mede IO ltlerll by ttlil ~. 11• CID THI YliM THAT WM: ., P.utdl O'NMI ho9te ttlil look .. tM molt --..... of lle]lriMolit Y9S· • 11:11 (D) W MOOCI llm.1. ,.,_,THI 8C* IRMI Thie ..... tr~. oon.,_ end eneno- leeda .. ""°""' --nlng of ........ ''Slftc*e 0... In YO!ll ~""MyMmn ... Md "Street°' er.ma. .. 12:11 ()) WONCIN8 Berry &altwtc*, Deen 8r..-n end JerMa Tewtor . ::.::"""' .. :::: b.-.1 Oft ........ ol II• 1111 OOI • ... lillr jollrNllt I ..,._ 8ludl 30TH INRTHDAY -Chris Wallace. Bryant Gumbel and Jane Pauley (from left) raise tbm glasses to-NBC'a "Today,'' which celebrates its 30th anniversary Thursday. ''Today" is seen weekdays from 7 to 9 a.m .. on Channel 4. Tertl& Olsen plti,Tuwd business ca"l(eer , By JEaaY IMJCK AP'T........_W111w LOS ANGELES -Merlin Olsen and MOffl Gunn have their beads tocether in animated discussion as they thumb thrOU&b a rainbow-hued script ol "Father Murphy." They doa't notice the cbilly wind that sweeps across· the barren foothms and bu.ffeta tbe dresslnc room trailer. Outside, a youth pr8d.ic• on a bu1le in a group of children, parents, teacben, welfar .. workers and crew on the Slm1 Valley site northwest of Los Angeles where tbe NBC series is filmed. Olsen and Gunn are abeorbed in a search for the motivation that will mak& tbe action of Gunn' a character ring true. The two men, plua Katherine Cannon, star ln the show about a freipt driver ln the Old West wbo poses as a priest to hoodwink authorities into lettina them run a school for orphan children in an abandoned niinina c~mp. Olsen, the 8-foot-5, 280-pound former pro football lineman, plays John Michael Mu~y. "Father Murphy" was created by Michael Landon ol "UtUe Bouse on the Prairie" and may be the best new family 1how of the season. Like "Llttle Houle," 'Vht're Olsen spent four yea", it offers the 1ame homespun values, 1~t1eness and humor. "Fatbel' Murphy" baa a harder ed1e, however, and bu more of a aunestion ·or tbe problems and violence of the expandlnc Weal. Later, Olsen, ln bil rusti~ Weatern earb, is sprawled on a couch in bis d:nllaiq room. It baa all the apaclouaneu and lwnll'J of a ti.hotel room. The trailer, wbicb c:ontalm Mftral Gt'*' dreuln1 room•, tremblea eney time a amt ol wlnd bit.I it. He pew up lD Lotan. UtM. ud be not only never ~ed a caner lD adlnl. M didn't neti think ~ alMNt feo&ball, WW. a 1 .1. delne ill fluDce and a m ...... 'I In ~. M WU plan..., a carw lD bullHK. But lall tnap 1lae and peat .....,... ,..U.. ldlD oat.o tlile plQtq fteld~ tU& ............... wl ........ -.... lllft111tiB O.._ ._ .._ ..._ e.u.d -·~---"8:··-~.=..1 11D ~-· ,· t#. ........ from my mother very early on. I wu also awkward enouab and slow ~ and rebellious enough that I aot teued a areal deal. So I'd been at the other end of that in tenDI of pain. "So when I rmally arew coordiaated enoulh to catch up wttb tbe IUY• wbo bit aDd ran, I Clllly wanted to be able to say to tbem, neYer qal.a. I didn't have to beat up on tbem. J didn't have to prove lo them bow atrons I wu. And tlMn'• somet.hinc nice about bavlne tbal klDd of f..U..,." Olien tpenl lS years u a clefeMi'ff Haem• with the Loi Aqeles Rama, and be 'Ca lot ol that time thlnlr:in1 about a career ln••· Be says, "I alwar-bad jobs wttb lndultry, taeb • teachlnl .motivaUon. That wu my (allback. I always wanted to know that if I wu burt OD Sunday, and if I wanted to Soto work oo McmdaJ, I could pick up the phone." But a few years before be quit football, OlMD says, he realized he'd never be happy with a 9-to-S job. "I sat down and did some very serious tbinklnl about what I would do," be aa)'S. "And I decided I wanted to be an actor and broadcaster. I even wrote IDY own contract. I knew if YoU wanted somet.hin1 you'd better be specific." Olien siped wttb NBC u a sportscaster in 1977' but be bad a lute or the buainess before tbat. He bad done work for a local television staUoa and in 1188 be bad a role ln "The Undefeated," a John Wayne movie made ln Mexico. "I met Andy McLaalen, the director, at a party," be recalls, "and he 'was lookln1 for someone who couJd make John Wayne loolt small. There weren't that maay bl& acton around, and at that time I probably weilhed 280 to• po\Ulds. I could make John Wayne look small. ••Andy said how would you like to work lD a John Wayne ftJm ? I 1aid ls it fun? He laid yeah. I 1a1d does it pay ~.tty well? He aald yeab. l wu very practical in a seme." That wu bit lntroductklD to ad.lnl, but •v• tben be conaldered It DO more than a larlt. After be 1l1ned wltb NBC. tlae aetwork informed produeen tbat be wu available for =~-~···----~· .. I.•) doe~h " eH=weyel ........ ............. -.•>••db.~ ..... . ...-.,~-....... ~) ......................... a.+&rl _..,...._.,_:.~.....,.. a. 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CZ)MCMI ** "Wolfen" C1tltl Alber1 ~.ow.. v-,._ 1:11• CMATMTYwnH -.!.~ THE LOfT ANTIQUES • SPECIALIZING IN: • Professional Appraisals • Repair, Restore your furniture • Estates Bought and Sold • Management of Estate Sales on C.Ommissioo • Liquidation ' ·1121 Eaa c~ ~ CMOnO <kl Al4r, CA na5 (714) l'TUlll W cmhouae Loc:atioft 23112 VmlMQa Drloe ''C' LaguncJ Hilla, nm (,,_,.,.I "A Por1rlllt Of 1r----.----------------f ... Ang91au'' .,..,. ~ "'* bladl po.t Mc* lo "*' emell ""'-hom91own lo ~ "°" "*' ,,...,,, for eapreHIOn and ac:hla•-· -llhaped. ~MCMI * * * "Coal Minar'• °*"9t1t•" I tMOI 8INy Spacak, Tommy La• ~ --·Cl) ,ALCON CMIT Whlle ..peomg ,_ - ege, Cote lrbldy .... • Ind lMIC9 ,_ '° ~ .,.._, lgnof1ng ,,.,.,,,. •• ord«s and 19Clng hat wralh or hlllplng 1111 -In. • 8 .. ~ flMCINOT Two police lnepeclore IMrn "°"' !Mir .... __,.. lf\at rnamt-1 ol a fleder.. nercob egency -taking britMI. •a .,..... f'OfaE n. broetw ol • 11..,... * wtMI ... ltlled by ~ Strotlbar - to 1111 a cc,., a -untll Strotlber II ,....-ol cMy. • CNATMTY wnH -.!...,.,_ (~I "A Portr9ll Of Maya Angaklu" ...,_ ~ tfla bl-* po.t Mc* to "" 8l'Mll ~ hom91own to ~llOW'*~ for eapre111on • and edlle\91M111 -"'*'*'· (t,MCMI ...... '"Tlla Ngh4 PortW'' (tt141'*II8ogllt0.. Ctw- !Otte ~ (Q)MCMI ** "WOlfen" (tN t ) AIMrt ~. '*"* v.. ,._ 1:-UPAU~ *** "I To I" (tMO) .... FClftdl. °°"'-'On. ....... UNI .~·1 ... ivne.,..~ Qt>~ ........... Luit..-y "" .....,_'With the V~1and c.,..1i811t• of bhts LOUVER DRAPES THE NEWEST CONCEPT IN DftAPER1£S YM •T lml llArl ti llT ~MAHI • MINI BLINDS • SHADES •.TRANSPARENT SHADES • WINDOW TINTING CHAPMAN BROS. 893-0022 Git ~7221 • • ·IALL • CALL COUltl -. 12 . ;... ..... , Grid -----------· " ~ cti ~ ., KNXT KN8C KTlA KA8C ·KFM8 KHil . KC8T AM • D " • • u m La ..... La ...... La ....... La ...... ...... La ...... ....... ~ c ., ., r >. ., ,, ·c: u.. 1: Dusty's The Big Blue Super-Int•· Dlwy& The Treehoule F-.illtOllll Marble frllnds natlonel Goliath Alntalonea Mn Sl'l'Ufl Dr. Hllttl-Hour .. Sl'l'Ufl .. ISooao!a c:liffl .. .. .. 8' ..J ~ s: Popeyt .. lbe ~ ~ M<wle-.. . Allllmlfl ~& "Keep .. Twzan Kid Rat ~ Ten.an 'Em Kid Lone SilOll Patrol Lone I Flying" Super 0 ~ 9: Ranger Poww leave It Rlctlie ~ .. Poww How Tol!eM!r Rich .. Hour To Be Spldet-M.an Ome& Scooby To Be Mo¥11: Spldet ·Miii Announced .. Hlf'rlel Doc> Announced ''Seioa .. 10: Basketball Bataelblll Sha Na Na Goldte Basket .. AIRed Bllkelblll San North .. Gold San Al_.'' North Francisco Carolina America'• Thund.r Francis<;., .. Cwolinl Vs. Va. Top Ttn .. Vs .. Va. 11: South 'h~ TlflM Wtektnd Souto. Wild World Vir~ C..olinl .. Specill C..olina Of Animals .. .. AmericW1 .. Wild, .. .. .. .. Blfldll:md .. Wild .. KNXT KNBC KTLA KABC KFMB KHJ KCST PM • 0 " • 0 u m La ..... .......... La ...... ........... .. ..... ........... ....... . -00 Elsl·West Ballletblll LOii in .. East-Wiii West Sas6cetblll 1230 Shrine Arizona Space .. Shrine .. Colorldo Game SW. Weekend Game Movlr Sllte .. Vs .. Her• .. "Requiem Va. 1: .. . W~on The Wide .. F0< A lJlah .. Murmers WOttdOI .. ~ ..... .. .. .. F-Troop Sports .. .. .. " .. .. .. 2: .. TllkAboul Gillgan's .. .. M<Mt: The .. Pictures ltllnd .. .. "Speed Sleeter .. Agriculture Gllllgln's .. .. Merchants" Movie: .. US.A bland .. .. " "SelOI a: 2Wt111 On McMe .. To Be .. Grass" You Cempus "The .. AMounced .. .. MOYie: E~e A<MntUteS " " .. " "The Of " " " .. 4: EllVll()(" .. 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News Amlrtel'I News .. .. Nlwt " Tap Ten .. " .. .. ..... Seturdly Mo'lll: ABCNews Hews .. Sltutdly " I,_. "Rold\ McMe: " .. I Night 00 8emlby lM Hlgllllft "The Mcwlt: " Live l2ao Jones .. JericlhO'' Comldiw'' ··nw.. .. .. . " .. " .. FICll " .. .. " " " Wtat" " " - N SHOPPING, DININ~ ~ KTTV KCOP ., • La ....... La ...... TUfn-Pubic about Alfaln f.llrnentwy .. Newt .. McMe' .. "Utile .. Princess" .. .. .. .. V"dla Alegre .. Chureh In .. TheHome C..Care McMe. Central "Piiis W.'rt OfThe Mo¥1n' Saddle'' SoU ShowMy Train P.aple .. HalfMlle .. Music KTIV KOOP m Cl) .... ....... ....~ Movie: Adam-12 "A .. Streetcar Adarn-12 HllMd .. Desire'' McMe: .. ··eyTtie .. l.J!1IC .. OCTiie .. Sky .. Moon" µ<Me .. "Thunderbolt .. And ~ Ugh~' "Pony ~ .. .. " .. .. .. .. . . .. " .. M<MI Solid "Riot" Gold " .. .. " .. M<Me· .. "Mitter .. Rogers" .. .. Lawrence .. Welk .. .. .. " " The ~ ~ It 8MIAy " .. .. .. MatQIS .. Welby .. .. .. .. INNHlws .. " .. Newt Newt .. M.A.S.H Frrile .. Howttd McMe-OneStlp "Riot" 8'yol1d " The .. Rookies .. " .. .. . • . .. KCET fD La ....... Yoga F0< HM/th Human 8'ha¥Kw Clnto .. eorcsenines To Be Announced Tiie Gutt• ThisOld Houle WOC>dcarfllr' s Shop Cooking Mexican Juia Chlld KCET fl) La ...... OuiltJng Photo Show Por1rai1s In Putel Nova "A Toudl Of Sensi- trvtty" Wiiiis .. Avenue 28 Mundo Rell Preeente! .. Soccer Mlde ln ~ • OnceUpon AClasslc -·-Mes1ilo Magic Aled1 For TheSun Bluegrass At Waterloo ~ Odytlly .. " Who's l<eeoing Score? .. Score Folow-Up Ex~ .. .. ~ Pwtormance .. .. " .. KOCE m> II= va1.·1 Pipelilie P«11llt1 tnPutel American Sii~ Jldl -London KOCE ~ I a 0 .... Home ~ Home Glrdenlr WntingfO< ARlaon Writing For AAluon Whit's Left Of The Lett? .. PtrtOnll tllllla PtrlOllll Finance The Alla The Arts Socclr Made In Getmany -Sporls Am.-lca .. , . Matinee AIThe Bijou "King OfThe eor.tloyt" Si.- Pr4Mews Amerlcen Blttcet>elrllr ~ Miiiie "'-fin City Uml1s .. ~It· " .. Satunfays Details JNIAJNtf •• 11112 EWNNO ,_,. lllh'lrlWOfMAN CMc* Ven P8llen hG9t9 ttlit look Into the _... o1 lluman ballawlor and ~Into -ol tlle mora "8Clnatlng pll9nom- .,,. of human oulture-8 HOI OCAI llT-THE IUIN.rWOM GATM&t A LOOKMac Martin BalMm ,.., .... hlghllgllla ol the fOUt-dey Wortd Gatllerlng ol Jewiah Holoc:euat 8UMYOrS held laat"'-ln~. • LAWNNC:a MU< ''Mu:elcal Tour Of Big Cit· la&.U.8.A." • ••W.MIAT WATIN.00 YIJ.AOE A ~ ... turfng Ille b..i from .._ annual ,..,,. val at lllaloric w 11.noo lflt- tTt.. TIN& AT TlE alOU FMturacl: "IOng Of The ~·· (1$43) starring Roy Rogar9 wld Smiay 8uma11a; a 11M5 Clll'toon: a 194A SI\()(\ etanlng ~ Cegr'9y: and Ille flnal ~ cl "I.oat City Of The Jungle" ( 1944) ...,. ring Uonal AtwlS and ALJS-... ~. 9.,..~ Hugh O'&lan and K.aU.- rlna Justice ..., In the sto- ry ol • doc:1or who wonc1 In ltlll African bulll In order to regain tlil conllcMnce tiler • tragic s-t. a ... MUPPET8 au.ta: Sllleld9 and Y1o1- nall. (C)UOWE * ** "No Hukae" (1INIO) Jac119on ·-· Croeby, Stllle & Naell 1:aoe DN«:e~ Cefetlrtty judgae: Jimmy Wt/lllM, Jacklyn Zeman. Stave Oervay. Oueete: Gr9Q_ Kltln 8'ind. l:OO 8 Cl) WALT DllNEY NoMd pr*->r Ludwig YOnDfaM---ol tlil ~ lncludlng Donald Duck, Mickey Mot-. and Chip 'n' o.i.. to ....,... rntn'e llun"'1g lnetlnclt. •a~ w.NDMLL AND ntE w.JCJla.L..,.. Ouasla: John 8chi ..ioar. Ttm Gibb. (A) • MOVIE • •·• ''Tiie ~ From .... I.Ab" (1975) Jadl awn, Dub T~. e di ONNAU. ..aKT Tetf'/ ,_ a flGM wlttl Ocw- ' don and"""~ to wortr llt • Cl.apy old "'°'9l. ..... ..,,.'"' ITAT'-"' MOTl- Frtanda .,WS aaaodel• _,_ eo llonof ttie si..- lrotMra and .. ~ IMtort '° COUlllry enter• tallwMnt. ···-~ ......~O'thOltt See Saturday's, Page 13 '·A. fr l;NTERTAINMENT CENTER -. S&ICT ROM 500 I IMPOUID fTIMS NQMAUOVll THIWOILD FESTIVAL HAll GERMAN BAND ~S-.WP.M. ...,..su1ct•••su1 ---------------llA tRSIRl.AI U..Wat I 1 .. D.., \ 'Soaps~ hopping at Playboy H~tel By LYNDA.H.laSCB Harriet Epstein's Soap's Alive is coming to AUantic City ln the bi11est way pouible -by brin1in1 in Tony Geary (Luke of "General Hospital"> and Ruth Warrick (Phoebe of "All My Children"> oo the weekend ol Jan. 11/17. There will be a 1 o'clock show on Saturday and two shows, at l and-,, on Sunday. The evenflikea place at the Playboy Hotel and any a1e can attend. The kickoff will feature both stars in a queslion·and·answer period and doiq scenes with members of the audience. This will be followed by nine weeks of soap superstars gracing the Atlantic City Playboy Hotel every Monday, Wednesday and Friday afternoon. Stars for the 18th include Michael Forrest (Nick on "As the World Turns"> and Mark La Mura <Mark on "All My Children"). Wednesday wUJ have Judith I.Jght and Brynn Thayer, who play Karen and Jenny Wolek on "One Life to MY~ ... and Friday, Gerald Antbonf <Marco) and Stephen Fletcher <Brad), both on OLTL. Admission to the shows starting the 18th is free. Aside from eetting a chance to meet and greet tbe soap stan and ask them questions, attractions include such possibilities as love scenes with your favorite star, telling off your most·hated character, praising the characters you like tbe best and geWng to see a real live soap set which has been duplicated by the Playbqy Hotel staff. WHEN ALAN DVSAaT taped his last scene as Sean on "All My Children," he and Dick Shober&, who plays Tom1 had a bard Ume keepinl straight faces. Seerm some of the playful cast and crew decided to lower hacksaws, files and tommyguns as the character Sean was pleadin& with his brother Tom to help his escape prison. Followine his final AMC, for now at least. Sean. and bis wife Liuie packed many of their New York beloneinp and have decided to head for California - although they will keep the Manhattan condo they just bought. Taylor Miller, who plays Nina on AMC, decided to host a combination Cbrist~/going-away party for Alan. Among the guests were Peter Bergman <Cliff), James Mitchell (Palmer), Gillian Spencer <Dalay) and of course, the guests of honor, Alan and Liz. Also on band was Julia Barr, wbo played Brooke English, and Harriet Hall, who now plays the character of Brooke. It was the first Ume the two Brookes hadmet. In fact, when Harriet walked up to Julia, Julia stared for a few minutes and suddenly realized that it was her replacement on AMC. Seems Harriet appears taJJer in real life than she does on the TV screen. ON "RYAN'S HOPE" you can look for a new family -a posh, P-ark Avenue type -to appear on the show. Also, the role or Siobhan ts being recast since Anne Gillespie departed that show last week. On "All My Children," the cast list ls status quo for now. The big·event approaching ls the "AJl My Children" remote fl'om Switzerland, which will feature James Mitchell (Palmer>. Candy Earley (Donna) aod Richard Van Vleet <Chuck). Q: My motlaer recenUy brwt" IM>me a tablotd aewa..-,er wllldl dbnaed Ille romuee betweeta Ellubeda Taylor ud T•Y Geary el "General BoapKal." At ftnt I tltoap& It bd to be HUeue, but dlle artkle meaUoaed tlaat Taylor waa aow separated from lier •••baad, .lolua Waraer. So It aeem• to me tile atory'• lnle. Half of •>' frh.., believe It, •all of Utem doe't. ftkla aide II a1PlT -L W., Sula Aaa, CaUI. A: Tbe disbelievers are right. AccordJn1 to Tony, who sbeuld know, ••These pieces of Junk are trying to mike money off of us, with a lot of lies and garbqe." Tony and Taylor are friends; they do not deny their friendship. That's all it is. The ., most recent art.JcJe waa et~laJJ7 dtlhe1rtentnt because tt wu alm01t vkloua in lta appraisal of Liz being a much older woman wbo i• almost robbing tbe cradle with TOQY. Tony is upset beuuae it seem.a to be upeetdq hll fan.a, and t1lo f eela displeuure at belnl botbered by 1omethin1 th sn't lnle. Slf ....... """~· Tube Toppers KRJ IJ 8:00 -"Evening Wlth the Statler Brothers." The country music singers are hpnored by friends and associates. KTTV • 8:00 -.. Sleeping Beauty:.. • Mikhail Baryshnikov hosts classic ballet. K.NBC 8 9: 00 . -•'The Late Show." Art Camey and Lily Tomlin star in movie about an aging private eye who tries to solve the murder of his ex-partner. KHJ 0 10 ~00 -.. The Lou Rawls Parade of Stars.·· Star -studded spectacular benefits lye United Negro College Fund. --~----------- Prom Page 12 -Tc::tlelllow*y'e dMele b9- lllC .... from the Aoylll Opera Howe. eo-it a.,. den. Acdelmed d-. Devtd W .. llnd Merle Pn -f!Mtlnd. • MAICIN8fT ''How To &.NM And &II> oeed In The ·eo.·· FM of America'• m09t ~ ~---lbout ._ to twe .itn lnlleUoft. • OCh-1 "We Ale ....... u .. A _.. lndlM tribe Ml'O In. --MCtJon of ttl8 Amuon ,._ IMln .. lluclllld.Q ®MOVIE ** "Improper ~· (tN1} Alel\ Antin, Mlritltt• ~· {l)MCMI * •• ._. ··n. Elephant toMn"" (1NO} Jolvl Hurt. Antttolr'll/ Hoc*lnL • MCMI ***._. .. ......_ Mo<enl"' (1MO) IEdwWd W~. JD~ (%)MCMI * • * * · 'E•callbur'" ( 11111) Nlgll T wry, NICICM Wllerneof-. l:IO. 0 MMIM8 A l.NWCI ..... ..._.big,.,.,. ·~In WieclMlovt oflW~but ~ to pnimote • romance .,.._ h., brotMr llnd Dot. ·---~ Roger Siert and o.w ..... '**the.,...,..,.. of 1111, ~--­from .........., .. "Atllrltle Qty ... "Otlertoft Of l'lr9"' Ind '"f"\'tnee Of Tiie City ... e.ooe(I) MCMI ••• ~ "-(' (1971) Goldl• Hewn. Ch.vy a... eewovw * * •• ..,,. I.Me .,_.. (ttm M Clrftey. LIIV TCll'llk •• L.oitl~T Clpt.ilt 8MMne dewlope en ~ Nl•aneNp """. -...... newty "*'*' --,,.... up """ • -"°"' Hie or-'•s-t.Q • llWQ'9wart. MJ). Dr. ICler .. ...... ol ...... ...__ '° .. °'°""" roonw.-.·,..., . ..,.. .... IOOMT In IN ... of•'-' ..... ................. ol -ol ~·or-.. =+ rfa:..._ _ _.. nul'IOOfl@IUScf~· ... _, ... .... (1H7} !lvte PrHley. MMtteDlly. ... MMIM..U~ au.ta: T.G. Shepperd. <W DNee. Auzy Bell9y. ®MOVll •••~"Doctor ZNwigo'" ( f 1115) OeR9 IMtlf; Gerel- dllw Olepln. -.ea ,,,.,,,.., &AND A window ~ twinge hie f-"9 "*"*"*' to ... end • ..,,..,..,, ,... In io... .... • cfw9CW from •boc*.Q • TNILCUMWU ~CW8TAM Lou ................ lludded ...,.. epectacu.. ~ .., ~ "'9 United Negro COlleOe Alnd. .WH0'8 ..... IOOM f'OU.OW..uP Ellperte. ecMaton. lllM>- cetee llnd ~­-In KC£T lllllldloe tor a ~ofttie--. and....._ofMCT . • AUITIN CITY UMfT'I Enwe¥Ou Harrie comtllrl9 _.., ._... ...... ,_. .... end .. joined by eoi...-~CFOMI wtlo ~ hie '*' hit .... '"8tan On The w ...... (D)MCMI • • "Tll• lncr•dl-.1• StwWlldng W-'" (1MO) Lly T°"*'-CMIW Gro- din. •uov. *. ..Tiie High Country'" (11111} Timotrly Bott-. IJrlcM "'-'· -· IJIDUMM "'Unity In lnequellty'' TM WOftllflO and .... COfldlo tlOM ol teaecwy ----"' w... ~.Ff-. -end car.t ... .,. oomc-ed.Q (C)MOVll ***"4 "I.MC Tango In ,..,... ( '973) M9r1an ._ do, Merla Schnelder. Directed by hrNrdo Ber· loluod. (J)MOVll • '"TM ~· (1tl0) Mldll .._. OI Aogef'8. (%)MCMI . ........... tt.ee M•A•l•H .............. ~ ............. .._ .... .,... ......... •. __,.Mm .. ,.,. ........ ......,.. ................... .. a...·· w.,.,. n..... ~ .... ..................... ..................... .......... ,.,.. ,.,. ~----------------------..., Cameo Exciting . • • Cameo Provocative . . . CAMEO ESCORTS 714 -754-4471 M~ • VISA PERSONAL CHECKS CALL FOi YOUR PRSOHAIU ISCoaT ~ow THE BIGGEST GARAGE SALE ON THE ORANGE COAST IS IN THE DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIEDS 642-56!8 ,. M - a:l .... :'::'-'":..:...11 __ .,. __ T-. ........ 0 . I I \ I '"'-. M •nc'9fGrld 00 .. 9 30 Football NFC 10:~ KNXT • ....... 00 .. 1230 Toa. Amcuad 00 .. 130 t..as10t ThlWtld 200 lnllrlact 30 ............. 300 FICIThl Nltlon 30 McMI: "Front 00 Ptgt" 430 .. 00 .. 530 CBSNIWI 700 60 Mlnuta 30 .. 00 ArcNI 8 lkn• 30 OntDiy AtA Tlmt 00 Tr llPPlf' 1030 :;· OO Ntwa 11. =-= Aoc*1ord 00 Flltl 12. .. McMe KN8C D ... -.... Meee'Till PrtsS To&t Announc:ed .. . Pope)lt And His Friends PtrlOl\ll Dimensions Todey's Bit.Woman Villa Alegre " • Pinocchio'' Too KNBC D ...-.... NFl '12 NBCNlws HBC Movll: "W•, G.Gordon Udd'I" ..... • "Thi Gangsltr Qwoni:lel" Plrt 1 KTLA • LMA·9r Star Trtil lmplCt '82 .. KA8C • ... -.... Movie: "Vllev O!Thl Dolls" Codi Aid ABCMovit: ''Olamonds In f«l\W" Complete El!terlor Residential Servlca KFMB II ....... lttllw• 8t Light Family ui. Or• Roberts Football NFC Chernpioo- lhlp Gemt KFMB • ....... Hlllkl Of Truth Aobtrt Schlllllr KHJ D ....... To Bl Thi Annoounc:ed eaxw. MAS.H CBSNtwl .. 60Minut61 ArcNe BtMk• OntOty AI ATlmt lrllPPlf' John, M.D. Cull" H II Wrlntn WOf1d Tomorrow Dr. Cho Brllth Olllf• KC8T m .. ..... To Bl Announced KCST " ....... NFl '82 McMt: "Catlow" NBCNN .. Here's Boomer Her•'• Boonw N8CMoYll: ''WI. G.Gordon l.idd'I" N8CMoYie "Thi Glngattr Clwonldel" Plrt 1 . KTIV-•• ... -.... WOl1d Tomorrow M.A.S.H Hews .. McMI: "Pony ExJlr!"" KCOP • ... .... Ac!Mt-12 MCMe '1t Star1td In,.. .. Cnzy Cartoons And Funny IHNNtws McMt: "King Ollhl P9co1·· KCET ' • ...-.... Stume Strlll KOCE • '::I Oil Piioting Oil Ptinting KCET KOCE ID . '9 1.-Alfllll I= A"*lctn Govemment Amtric:an GowrNnent ui. Cross C1ry Around ua s-i School PMll Checking rme HOut Tutankhlmun'I Novi Eg)'PI "A Touch AVW!Ut OIS..- 28 llM1f' Novi Mts1erplect ''Selmon Thtttfl On The "Alme Tret1 Aun.. Of Thik• .. MasttrpllCI MoYie: Thettrf ''Thi "Rimi Treet U\tll Of TlllU'' Pr1ncea" Melling .. Of Minda " Streit MM: "That Night In Alo" ---- ·S.UNlay• Details JNIAJNlt't •• --N»8 8HIM'8BOOamt Boomer Md • INp'• QP- teln ~ long-b&.w1ed plr-. tr--. (Al 0 e 9 COOEMD A young glr'I r._ to 111¥1 '* borne In • , ... dentlel cenyon er•• d"ptte an evle4llllon order folowtng en llCddent wlttl tolllc ~ • IONN'I N#OCHIR Oueef: Jim Nebots. • NaVA ''A T ouc:h Of SeneltMt)"' ...., r-ui flndlngl on -~Md~ chclloglc9I ~ ol toucll In -._ --"**I. (Al Q (C)Mc:WIE • • "Oedl Ctr On The F,._.,. llltMOW * * * * "Eacallb141" ( 111 ti Nlgll Terry. Hk:ol Wllemeon. • B.8'tWff fWIT8 MtcllMI Neernlltl and ,,,..,.,.,. of the Pectic Arts Aeper\OfY CompM)' -teetured In thll ot1glrlll l)f"odudioft ol nolMltop leugtlter end mu8lc. (%)MOYIE * * •'Clmer's Wr{' 7::111 8 8 HERFS llOOtoml Boomer end • bMketbel IW(Nlp I 1\11~ boy.jAIO .. M08 (J) N04E .,.._.PUCI Arctlle ref-10 let Se.pNnle tty OU1 tor IN schoOI b•Nball team becaMe 1t .. • "boy'' -~QIN • Jon and Pondl -dr- lnto t11e middle o1 • pot- ll•lly dangerous feud ~members of. cs dub and two euto c:ustom- tmrs. e 111 TObAn,. Ben NII** .. meMet· mMd .,...,., .. """ ol ~~from• .... rNnUl8cMw .. • Europ191--twoll•. • MOVll * *14 ''Aloe" (INI) Gar'9 "9du'nan. Jim 8'own. • IOUDGOl.D Hollt: """"" Gibb. ~ ~ Mc:Coo. ~ Doc1i1 Weet, Eetth, Wind & Fire, ...... Oemond. SIM- iey Clerlc end 0-1141 °'*•· Don ~. B9b Weldl, Ouw1er Fllilh. • NaVA "Seilmon On The Aun" The ~ Md dellrrnlnetlon of Mlmol'I -C8C)tured In en eurnlnltlon of IN role of --wlld ""' In !tie oonltlc:t'*-~ growttl Md ~. iD MMIWIECE ntMTM ''Tiie Flelne T,_ Of TN- ka: ~ Wll ~ Anr- INna'' The Orwlts ,,... See Sunday's. Page JS I ' i ' i ' : I I ; 1 ( I ! ! .- Who-to see. thl~ weekeoct? FORWARD IN F-ASHION Few have the vision . . . and courage to go FofWard In Fashion . • . to wear the latest . . . FIRSTI Pan11ehe is IOf you ... daringly so . .. with the lat•t looks ... at re.ity reasonable prlceS. For Juniors and Contemporarys only. ·PANACHE ...,• 1(}5:30 221 MARINE BALBOA ISLAND 673·fi10 . ---~ . Dilly Piiat Classifieds . Steps to Bay: lBr, creat Patio, frplc, gar. $'35 winter, OPEN. 328Y.i Sapphire. 644.0000. . '' 'Fant••tlc reauttai We had over 1o.o calla .. ,'· . . . TUfieTOppen KOCE 0 8 :00 and KCET@ 9:00 - "The Flame Trees of Thikka: Hyenas Will Eat Anything." Part 2 of new series • starring Hayley Mills . The Grants meet their new neighbors . KNBC a 9:00 -··wm . G. Gordon Liddy." Robert Conrad stars as the Watergate conspirator. KTLA 8 9:00 -"Impact '82 : Child Abuse." Ways to try lo prevent child abuse are discussed in special report. KNXT f1 10:00 -"Trapper· John. · M.D." A doctor shoots hi s wife when he · mistakes her _for.~ bu~glar. from Page 14 .,.., ,_ l'Mligllbof'I Mio "9¥9 )u9t lln1ved from Eng- IMd. (Pert 2)Q ®MOVll ***" "The Elee>flenl Men" (1NO) Jotwl Hurt. AntflOny Hoptcin.. Cl)MOYll ***\.41 "ar.ek• Monint" (1lllO) ~d Woodwwd, Jedi Thompeon. • MOVll ** "MeMn And Howerd" t~~Pe&A l ...... ~ AoMrda. ... (I) ONEDl\YATA ,.. AM Md Fl'lnClne COl'llPM• for IN 9"ectlone o4 IN -.._,.. bedlelor. Ho. <I> Al.JC:. Aloe end her beet fnend end lll'Cllng P11rf1W trom hlgll ldlool -... to "9¥9. 1&-ye. ~. 88MOVll "Wll, 0 . Gordon Liddy'' ,,.,..,.,., Aober1 Canted, ~c--. ... ACT'RCM.0 --Tllll ....... dl9ol-. dtf. .....,. ~'°try end .,,. W9lt dlld--. •• lllOVm ••• .,,. "Dllfnondl Are F~' (1971) a-,~ nery, .. St. Jotln. .... HAW ~The~"-· ry ~. ln. 0.-81 ~Lelle ......... eMM1•a:a '"41ATM ''Tiie ,,..... T.--Of TN-, u: ..,_ Wiii &t ,.,.,. tlllng" The 0r.-,,.... .,,.., ,_ nelgllbota Mio hew iu.t 8fT1Yed rrom Eng- i.nct. (Pert 2)Q • lilOVm * •• \.41 ''The Utttl Prlr). . _ .. (1938) Shlr19y Tem- ple. Alc:twd Gr-. ~..av. -.... ~ c. Muf. der" (1911) Simone Slc>- noret, y-Montenct. 'f.~AtftV" (1081) ~ Moore, Uz:a Min-,.._ ;.:;30. Cl) TME .JU I Z •CINI One °' o.oroe·· ·-" cleetroyed by .... (D)MOVll * * * ._. "The Chine Syn- drome" (1879) Jedi Lem- ~. '*-Fonda, Mld\eel tOM=-~~ M.O. ~ One of T~a doctora ,.,... ....... lor. bur· P' end atloOCa '*· • a.ETlNGOF...,. St .. • Ali.n dlecuaa" relgloul lber'ty, teOelllon, ranatlclam end non- W>lerlce wfth Cet'*1ne IN ar.i. Otl"9r Ctomwell end Der'6el O'eonn.11. Cl>MCME. *** ''9 To 5" 11NOI Jel'9 Fonda, Daly Pll'ton. .MCMI * • * "lnelde Movee" (1NO) JoM S.V.0-. o.M ~ 1Ctt1(8)MCMI • ............. (11NM) Rlc:tlard 8uf1on. Pet~ O'Tod9. 10:a0eMCM1 ...... ''Thel Night In Alo" (11M1) Aloe F9Y9. Don Amec:M. • ~MCME •• "Aoedo-''(1081) l4aty ~ Jemie lAe Cur-. 11:00 • .-NC,,.,... Roger Ebel1 and o.ie .. Slllcer pick 1t1e beet mo111ea °' 1111, fMtuttng --from "Ragtlrfte," "Atlentic aty," ''OlatloU Of AN·· end .. ,,,.,_ Of The aty.'' Busey stars in 'Gwry Roa4' HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Gary Busey will star in "The Glory Road," a romantic drama about an evangelist who gets caught up In the business side of religion. Marjoe Gortner is the producer and director of the movie, which will be filmed in Dallu, New Orleans, Las Vegas and Los Angeles. The $10 million production represents the directorial debut of Gort.ner, an actor and former cb1ld evaqellst. ·. Busey, who starred lo "Tbe Buddy Holly Story," plays a cynical failed rock atert.alDer who accidentally becomes a celebrated evan1eli1t. Martin Sheen, Jane Alaander and EmWo Esteves will star ln tbe ABC movte "P'ony Daya for Daddy," from llOODli&lrt Productloaa and Film ways. Tbe tum ia about a tem-qe boy, plaJ*I b7; • -t I IJ4 HAVE ·you BEEM INJURED? •AUTO ACCIDENTS •CONSTRUCTION AOODENTS • PERSONAL ACCIDENTS The Law Offices of R. Steven Peters Emphasizes in the Handlipg of Personal Injury Claims that may be the Assuii oi Accidents. · We will Make Sure That you Obtain all That -you are Legally Entitled. Call for a FREE Consultation and Determine What Rights you Have agai n;t a!! Par.ties. Including ·Insurance Companie;. Housecalls or hospital visits can be arranged . Law Offices of 834-0133 24HIS R. STEVEN PETERS, INC. 601M.P..trC....Dr .. S...M9 EURllA AUTO REPAIR Foreign & DomesHc 0,..10.,.w ... ISat. & S... Too!J ......... ,. .. 15112 lolsa Clllce H•""91• IHda ltS.1192 --~~ lllily Piiat Classifieds ,, .... a: DI ':< <-1111 :J c ID ~ ... I . .. . KNXT KNBC kTl.A KA8C KFMB KHJ ~ IJ D " u a tJ '-...... '-Mlllll Ml~ '-Mlllll ....... &M~ 7: Wike Up Todlr, 700 Good MomlnQ The Club Morning News FrOOlles Morning .. " America " There ls News " .. .. .. A Way s: f• .. .. .. Sunup Jeclc .. .. .. .. Sen Diego La Lanne .. .. !lot • .. JUn " .. Fudae .. .. Bakker 9: One Day Regis Rictlatd A.M. OneOay .. Al A itrne Philbin Simmon! los Al A itrne .. Alice Bloc;k-Leawlt Angeles Allee Midmorning .. busters To Women " L.A . 10: The Price WheelOf Big Love The Price .. ls Righi Fortune Vallty Boal Is Righi .. Batttestars .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 1100 ~.The Password 8onanz.a Famlly Young And Movie· 1)1.oe .. F«ld The~ "Laura" < ... ~ I .1. J. 30 Y~ And The " Hjan's .. .. The Restless Ooc:1ors .. Hope .. .. - KNXT KN8C-KTU KABC KFMB KHJ P.M IJ D e D m 0 '-Mlllll a..~ Lee~ Lee~ ....... LM~ 12: " Days Of Twilight All My 1~. .. Our li\'eS Zone Chitdren .. As The .. TwilU."' .. As The .. World .. -W''' .. .. Zone World ~ ()() ~~IS Another Hour One Lite Tums News lso .. world M~ne To live .. .. Search For .. Search For Ironside . Tomorrow .. .. .. Tomorrow .. 2: au.dl!lQ Texas John General Gukllng .. light .. .. OaYldson H~.tal Light ' .. .. .. Ko~. .. .. .. .. .. .. 3: Aoclctord ~ .. Edge Of John .. Files .. .. Night uaYldson .. " Rlchard ~d\Jp/e·g .. MOV!e: .. .. Siml!l".,ifs Court .. "Predators 4: Barney Bob Emer.~ News .. OIThe Miller Newhart .. .. Su" News Enler-.. .. MASH .. .. taJnmenl .. .. .. 5: News News lltlle News ~ .. .. .. House .. .. " On The , .. World .. .. Praitie .. Of Love 6: News News Charlie's News CBS News Treasure .. Angels .. .. Hunt .. .. News Bullseye .. .. .. .. .. .. 7: CBSNews NBCNews Hll>P)' Days ABCNews Tic Tac You Asl(ed . .. Ag8ln " Ootioh For It 20n Famlty Laverne & Eye On PM Malen The Town Feud Shirley LA Maoazlne Game s: Cll&rlle Ultle MOiiie: Thafs Charlie Basketball Brown Hoose "Foes" Incredible Brown Oregon . ,:::v OnThe .. ,, Bugs Stile Prelrte .. .. Bunny Vs. 9: M.AS.H NBC Movie: .. ABCMOVie M.A S.H Stenlord "Ice .. "Victims" .. .. !louse cas11es" .. .. House .. Calls .. .. .. Calls .. io: Lbu .. News .. LOU News Grant .. .. .. Grant .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. " .. .. 11: News News Salurday News News Plllll .. Night .. .. .. Hogan Ou~. The Besl ABC News Quincy The !lest Of Carson .. Nlghlline .. OI Groocno 12: .. .. Sha Na Na ABC Movie; .. Movie: .. .. "Crash" .. "Predators 1 Benacelc Tomorrow 0-.. Banacel( Of Tl'I .. .. Autry .. .. Sea'" Coo~ing School MONDAY u !llMl\C I\. OELA'TTAIO ICE C:-liW MAJCCiA JANUAttV RIO ltOOOO HOf!DOOO Scheclule 18 CUISINAAfS POOO l'llOCE SIOtl IJU 2919 E. Coast Highway • C«'C!Dt.JW ... ~ '73·2:M3 <Nm to t1w POrf 1'Natrw J KCST Kfrv KCOP m .., • ....... IMMlllll la ..... -- ToclaY, Cartoon Bugs Town Bunny " .. Kartoon " .. Kamlval .. FUpper .. .. .. " Gentle Popeye .. Beil .. Donahue lloYll Romper " luay .floom .. Bewitched Movie: .. .. "Crazy Rlchard IOfeal!IOI OYer Simmons Jeannie liorses" Battlestara Ghost And Movie: .. M11. Muir "Dawn Password Super Rid«" Plus Pay Card• .. The News tNNNews Ooctl)f' .. .. KCST KTTV KCOP cm m m ... Diep a..-... Loe~ Days Of Movie: M<Me: Our lives "MaJO(ie "The .. Morningstar" Bachelor .. Party" Anottie' .. .. World .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Texas Opell Superman .. Liiie .. T~ Popeye .. Jet sons .. All In The People's Bugs Family Court ilun"Y Mary Tyler The Aedtle Moore Fllnts1ones & Jeokle Bob Bugs Bunny Kanoon Newhan PorkyPIQ KaflllVal The Tom& .. MupPetS Jerry .. News Brady The .. Bundl FlintS1ones .. Bew!lclled Scooby .. Ooo NBC News The Hew all .. Muppets F'tve-0 News I Love .. Lucy .. The The Jolter's Muppets Jtffersons Wild Famtty M.AS.H Tic lac Feud .. Douah Little PM Movie: Hoose Magazine "The On The All In Thi Amazing Prairie Farnlly Howard NBCMovle. Merv Hughes" "tee Griffin Part 1 Castles" ... •t I .. .. .. .. .. 1'ews. News -.. .. .. .. .. INNNews .. .. .. News MIS9ion San lord AvfatlOll &Son The Best Fellowslup The OI Carson Rookies .. Mike .. Oou~l.8$ .. Tomorrow INN News .. .. .. -- TUESDAY WEDNESDAY 12 13 CAL.LUI flt)ll CAT'£~1 KCET • '-..... - Business Report Y.oga For Hellth Mister Rogers Villa I Aleare Sesame Street .. .. Classtoom TV .. .. Electric -~ ~ i..eflfii - KCET m &M~ Dick Cavett OYer Easy Classtoom TV .. .. .. .. .. KOCE • II .!c'C Oil Painting Oil Painting Body Buddies Mister Aoaer$ 3-2-1 Contact Electtic Company • Edueellonll Programming .. " " --·-.. .. - KOCE ' m .......... ._.. GEO .. Statlonaty M Educational Programming Big Blue Mar~~ Guten T1g Mister Mondays Details MONDAY ~11,1112 EVENMi 1~ D YOU AIKB> fOR rr F .. tuted: "He C.tcflea King Cob<aa With Hie Bare Hmnde" and "J~ Moodie,. 1111 911' ." • THE J&ffMON8 Art.r we1dllng Geot'ge In l!Ction, Men:w bendt tM truth to wtn tM hMtt of a young lady. eOWRfMY "Car-Change"' au.t: P««o.n.{R)Q a UfTSn'ANefl' TOfmHf ~ Interview with Red &elton. Q!THE~ ~t: Marty Feldman. (Q)MOVIE * * "HMrtlend" {t9711) Conchata ~rtll, Alp Tom. 7:30 9 2 ON THE TOWW FHtured: a ptfvately- owned ~ -Cali.. toga In the ~ Valftey whlctl euppoeedly ptedk:U NtthQuall•; a look at the San Quentin 0-,..._. __ ...._ ~· ..... _.,..,..... totne •. .,.; jOClteye at redlo station KRLA whO .,. bringklQ Nc:k the ml.Ille: of lhe'llOL • LAVSNE & 8ttfll.EY &COMPANY .. , RoQefe ..._ dr-thet .ne and Shlt1lly ve 80 )'MIS old. Personal FinanCle OffMtll And Man 3-2-1 Contact Misler Aoaer$ Sesame S1reet .. .. &smess Report News .. OYer Easy MacNeil Ses.ame Street " .. 3-2-1 Contact Jadl London Electric Company ()ye(' Easy OtCk Caven Business Repon MacNetl Lehter Greal - 8 EYEONLA. Feetuted: • vl9it to u. llllancl of St. Thomas; a )GO« at ~ from ....... • M•A•t•H Hot llj)a' myateriou. dis- appeeranc:e 10 dtthlrb8 Frank that he shoots B.J while pteparlng to -Oh the juogte tor tile m!Ulno nurM. mJ GREAT PEAFOAMAHCE8 Lellrer Performances "Dance In America: Paul Taylor I TllrM Modern Ct8S9ics" The Paul Taylor Dance Company ts fea- tured In perlormanc:e et the 11181 Am41f\c:tin Dence Festival held In Durham, North C.VoOna. Great "Dance In Performances Amefica'' 1'0anceln World Amerial" Si>ecial World "Fran~ Special Ter~I- "Frenk AOanger· T • ous Man" A Oe11gef-Shock Of O\IS Man" The New Inside .. Iran .. Oiok Reye's Ca vet I Syndrome News Ceplioned .. ABC News EY91Ybody' s Business _THURSDAY . 14 9 YOU ASKED FOR IT F•tured: "'He C.tehes K'"O Cobfu With Hie Bare Handt" and "~ Noodle M.-11nger.'' CC)MOVIE **~ "The Spira! Steir· _ .. (1977) JacqueNne Binet, Chrlatophar PlumfMr. (%)MOVIE * * "Strange BehaVIC>f" t.1IO 8 (I) UR 18 A QACU&, CHAN.IE eROWN Animated. Snoopy. tllld!- en with a bad c-. of pup- py iov.. run• .wmy and joint lM c:lfcut to be ,_ the poodle of hl9 draama. .. Qt UTTl.E HOUSE ON THEPRAIRIE See Monday's Page 17 FRIDAY SATURD~Y .. "' 16 KHl!'E W{ SPECIALIZE S>WIPENING - ll'f FAESH FlRSf THURSOA V COffEE 81!ANS • Of THE MOHrn -' 23 !OA M Kl()S .(S COOltS IWIENSHEm ~ ~ FAS8El'I0'8 flt;SnYAl Olf.\UNll· rt• .. ,, . . . ll andicapped have their day Fro~~ degrading instit ution. Mick~y Rooney played the title role in what some consider his best all-time performance. ll was one of 191l's finest pieces of television drama and, if there is a God in Heaven, Rooney will win an Emmy for it. Then, on Monday, we saw NBC's "The BQY from Nowhere," ffie story of a Down's Syndrome child who learned to say ''I can" through the Special Olympics program. Written by former Laguna Beach resident Judy Farrell <who's married to Mike Farrell of "MASH"), this show focused on anothel' aspect of mental retardation often overlooked by dramatists -its impact on the parents (or, io lb.is ,ease, si.l\gle parent, played nicely by Susan Saint James). Beau Brid1es directecLa.nd stau~d as coach or the Special Olympics team, who taupt St. James that sbe could not protect her son or herself from Life's scrapes and bruises. The boy was charmingly portrayed by 12·year·old Ricky Witman, who really has Down'~ Syndrome. It was an excellent program, another banky·puller, that suffered in the ratings because of some powerful •competition -"The Elephant Man" on ABC. But ,retardation is not the only handicap to merit attention on the tube in the past year. Telefllcks featured a deaf woman who became a leading stunt artist and a parapleatc who learned to fly airplanes, amoq others. On the regular series, "The lncredible Hulk" (television's most persistent morality play) explored the problems of dwarfism and "Facts of Life" featured an' episode about a girl with cerebral palsy. AU this is good, to a point. The dan1er is that handjcaps may become a trendy topic, to be overexploited and then forgotten. (Remember when we were inundated with TV movies about dying youn1 athletes?) If that bappellS, video programmers are not as enllptened u they think. The real breakthrou•h wtU come when the handicapped begin to appear on regular series as characters who simply happen to be blind or. in a wheelchair or on Canadian crutches. Their disability should be peripheral or irrelevant to the plot, rather than its focus. That's the way it la in real life. We might call It the Benson Treatment. 'Soapa' hopping Prom Page 13 These articles you're going to be seeing, particularly since the Taylor-Warner separation, need to be taken with a grain of salt. Many publications take one fact and springboard preposterous storie s -for e xample, t he Geary-Taylor romance. ll's not lrue. If lt wer~. you'd h"ear it here first. Q: I wu read.bag to•lilat aoap "*• for a.e week and notlcect someU.lDg tbat I see quite ofte•. "All My Children," a M-mlnute allow, bas 18 la.Ma. ''Ryan's Hope" bas 13 Unes -If II a 3t·mla.c.e sbow -while "As the World Tunas," a •ma.Ide show, oaly bas nve lines. Doa't yoa feel aaytltla1 Is going OD OD "As the World Turu!" -L.V., Buffalo, N.Y. A: We think things go on on the soaps all the lime , hem:e the need for the column. But aome shows have more going on at different times, although ''All My Children" nearly always has a variety or storylines to fill a hefty paragraph. For awhile, "As the World Turns" was ln limbo due to a lack of head writers. This changes with the return of the Dobsons. · Q: 1bere'1 a $5 bet rldhl& °"you aaa•er. la the new Melanie oa "AU aty CllJldree" t•e old Heather from "General Hospital?" · -L.&., PalDeavUle, Oldo. A: The $5 goes to the person wbo doesn't think Melanie's being played by Mary o·erten. the girl who played Heather after Georgian• Lapiere and prior to &bin Mat.son, who's playing lhe part now. HaW a ~1tion about ~r favorite IOaJ1 <Jr aoQP .tar? Wrtu to. Lpda Hir1Ch , clo F'Wld Nh1_,,., S11ndicate, P.O. Boz JN20, Irvine, CalJ/. f27If. ~ Will o~r °' many q-..tffoM oa w emt ift INf' eon.nu\, but the v~ of ~ '"°"' ptrtollal r.,,U.1 impo1ftfH• . . ~----------------------------..... a KCOP m 8:00 "The Amazing Howard Hughes .'' Part 1 of movie starring Tommy Lee Jones. KOCE 9 8:30 and KCET@ 9;00 - ··F r ank T e rpit. C'o nfes sions of a Dangerous Man." An interview and look a t the · lifest yle of the former CIA operative and fugitive arms merchant. KNBC e ~()() -... Ice Castles." The successful ice skating career of an lowa farm girl is halted when she's blinded in a freak accident. KNXT 8 10:00 -"Lou Grant ... Billie has a brush with the supernatural. Mondays .Details From Page 16 The .,_.... riewl)'~ed -,,_ f'UM -"" "°"' ~(R)Q • MOVIE •••'A "The_~-~ llon" ( 1878) l(.ily Reno, ~~· uo. (I) IUQI IUNN't"t MAO WOflL.D °' ~ AnllMled. The boerd of Mow .... -..... ~ SAVE MONEY!!! Replace your old inefficent furnace with a modern PA YMI HIGH IFFICllMCY RllMA~t. SAVI I 0% on the installation of 1 new furnace with thia Id oflilr-12/11111 ~~ Pay r1e ~· HM,._ snctALlll JO% off -_,~cal. WI SHVICI M.1 MAKES. 9lc.e lttl 545-5542 '79-1770 OIAM&I COUNTY "kMI' (1t11) MecOoneld C..e_r, Jotwl eo.e.. •o'*n ....,.. c1rectore .. .,. onv net-, ___ _. ________ ...., _______ _ ~. upeM -,_ ,... Inge. l*e ... Bunny IO .,. ... ,..~. ~ • bind Ilg!-. -...r:·--~ ll'l40 • ~ ell ..... UOfl IMo ... "'ff/WY of 0. ............ ,..... t-.. Mid '° be but- led. • , .... MMJIZltl A tooei II tM llnt ~ .............. '° ,.,... Git.-~ • '°" .,. ..... .tlO .,... up ........ Linde Herria ... • m.rtlcMlt trip In ~a..re1.,._ ~--. • MCMI . • •• H'f'he Arnulng Hott- ... c1 Huo'-" (Part 1) (1111) T~ Lee~ EdAMderL .GNAT OBUOM&JIH09 '"*-Ill ,..._.. ..... Teyb I ""-Modem QMelce'' The ..... Tt¥Dr 0.-~ .. .... lured M perto.1Nnoe II .. ,.,~ca.- ~ ...... In Oumem. Nanfl c.rolna. ClllMOVm ***" ....... MorMt" (tllO) ........ Wooct.wd. ... ""°""*"' i:::C'l y ,_,. • ML•TMlfM&Y Arcltl• becomH dept Ult 1 ... takJne e ,,.... ..... expectancy .............. he ... ............... 51. • WON.OaNCIAL '"-* Terplt Ced 1 'c • Of A~....., .. Rllllltd In 9e6rul, ...... wllll ,.,., hie tem4ty. fl'lendl Mel~ -cia-. ..... 1tle .. Mel ~of1fle""-CIA 09*RllV"e encl tvgltlve -IMrdllnt. ... (I).,.,. ••. " Wflle ...... encl 8.J. -IMlottllo-. ~ ed, ~ COW, Hot Upe ..,,..,.. to -~ '° 1111 eeo-tY ...._9"ptoTCll(yo. eeuovm •• ·-c.I*'' (1t7'8) l~ Jollneon. Aob- 1 T"MCMI ·~H C"-'-l Kate Nlmflll, K.-i "-d. • .-v .... Ou9lt:.......,. Flhillld. • WCJN.0...-:Ml ''Frwlk Terpl: COi fllll • Of A~ Men" ""*' In 9llrul. COMPUTI GIOOMHIG ON THI fOUOWING DOGS I• AYIUGf COIHMTIOll ICOnll ... , W.HAt•flntt• YOKll eo•• . """- CA.... ~ WttTNeoMLANO OAUllAnoN 1.--. ... - MAlflll f'OMlllAMIA" LIA-= AN INTIRISTINO AND '910ftTAKI llOfUllON Al A OUAUPllD & Dl"•AKI AU -ID DOO OllOOMlll Psychic & Spiritual Readings bf 4- *AMANDA·* Licensed psychic with ~ yrs. experien ce . Personal & professional advice on all problems ; ceunlting the separated. One visit will convince you she bas the power! 673-0lli Jl ~ ~ .- $ "" ~. Q. ~ (... Ill> :::> c t» -< $10 I r ·I I I ' ' .l . - ~i . I I ' I I I 1- j ' EE , . HAS ¥OUR SEASON ¥1CKE~ .. r RCA 50'' dllgonll Projection Color TV wHh Remote Control You get a bright, movie-Ike plctwt and the conveuil.ace of',..._ Control wMtl ACA's new big-screen Pr*8ail fAlor TV. T1nl pttds: lon-allgned r tllbll produce •n .. of strlldna ~Md brlglltMla, Whlll ttte tu-tured SO'' diagonlJ screen gtVll the picture Its ll1'llke depth. Includes ......... tlabns: Full functfan ""'°" control. .. OF: FAMOUS IRANOI: • VTRS •TAPES• CCTV• • Adv9nt • Akll • 1DK WE~~ I CHOOSE ROI THESE llMES •VIDEO CAMER-Mimi::• RCA• t111C:N AS• Wl>E SCREEN TV'S• •.... ~ •JVC •Sony •----'1--t~SSOllES•RENTM.S ~JIQA •G.E. • Otew OPEN MOH. THAU FRI .. 10 AM-9 PM eSAT. 10 AM-8 PM •SUN. '2 NOON-SPM FINANCING AVAILABLE YOU'LL LllC• OUR """2B AT ••• Cable Toppers --HOME BOX OFF-ICE H>. INSIDE THE NFL -Hosts Len Dawson and Nick Buoniconti present highlights of critical games and predictions on upcoming division playoffs . . CINEMAX (Cl, THE ·ISLAND OF NEVAWUZ -In this animated comedy. the 'greedy J .B. Trum~horn crash-lands on the island of Nevawuz. - SPOTLIGHT <S>. RASCAL DAZZLE -The Little Rascals are featured in film clips and shorts. ·-CNN cC'l -Cinemax (1)-ESPN ·00 -HBO CD) -On/Select (I) -Showtime ·-Spotlight CJ) -Z Channel (!)-~OR (N.Y., N.Y.) (ll) -wres O\"tlanta. Ga.> -. ~ JANUARY 8, 1182 1 FRIDAY EVENING . 7:00 I 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 I 10:30 • f-~ s.cwts ........ ,......,. ~ .._ "Wiit Ol Alfn" c.r• ..._ ''Tiie .._. OI S.-Hlwls" ... "Tiie ... ,.,... Cl) ... c.r. s,.rtsC.... llsWlll: Cllillf1* Vs. Ol1fle <II> i.-efhtlfi I .io.: '1nctdlll ...... WoN!'. llOM: ''Cell .... DllfPtl(' cm llD*"lllltTo r ... • c-.11~ ... "Wollell" Cl> ... c.r. ...,.,....,. Mlt'5'-~ • T•FwT'htTllll ............ Cllllllllls •• ..._.,..Tor ... - CZ> ................. .......... Cl} llY~ 1 ... lllyoB ..., .. ~ .......... Ol~n-· e lllws .. ....,.- JANUARY 9, 1982 SATURDAY EVENING 7:00 I 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 • """ s,ons '1'as lol F,_. lllpafts """ St)ll CC> .... ,. ...... .. "DDillle lrM!e" ...... - CI> ......_ ..... Y .... Vl.W,.... s.wc.i. lllsWW' ~VI. Virpll <ID .... Colt'd lilDN: ,..,,., a..-is·· ._.,,_,~- cm ~ lllM4Wl WA Vs. USC ... ~..,._,.- Cl> .... Cell'. Mt'lil:"Tlle~llM" lllloM • .... c.t·• . .................. lllcMt: "Tiit ifiii! r.-try" CZ> --c.t·• ... "bcalillw" ...... Cf) w.tW:""' .., .. YI..,....... ,ia lllu1ICWotld lllcMt: '-SW., Watw" , al) .... Wo!tdMW• MofC "F•S.lt" JANUARY 10, 1982 SUNDAY EVENING 7:00 . 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 JANUARY 11, 1112 t -r MONDAY EVENING . 7:00 I 7:10 1:00 1:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 I 10:30 • r._ ...... s.wts ......... w.c.... .. ........... ~cm_ ... c.r• 1 .... '1't so~· - - ............. , .... (I) ....... cw. s,.tsC... __., llllMlllll: l.._ Teca YI.,_... CB> ... ....-c.r. ................. ......Mn.lim" CD> ... .,....,. .. ............... Cl> ......... l'w1ldlr r,.. ... '1111 ,...,_. KlllMJ" . • llMleColl'd .... '1111 .. Stlloll" .... -S..'1 lot" CZl .... ~ , ... ~....,... ... °'lictllltl-Tilllllt" (!).. ... Cell(. ...... lelillllll:Sllllll's}'s.V.-1 m ..... Mllr..., ........-Olfi•" JANUARY 12, 1912 •. TUESDAY EVENING I I ' 7:00 I 7:30 1:00 8:SO 9:00 9:30 10:00 I 10:30 • r-...,_ s.w . ...... W.c..t .. ....... .. CC) ... '1111 ,... CIM'd ... "Sc.1111ce" llo¥il:"Mo1Mes" (I) ...... e.r. s,.tsC... llllOllfl "" r • COMact 111ra11 CID m.ctu..n I ........ t-. ... ''llcttillllll siw-. WMM" 111111-. 1111 ...... CD> .......... f,..~ ............ Cl) , ...... s... .... 111111-. '1111 °"""" ... 1...-... • ..... c.r •. IM ltMI '9 Colqrt ..._ .. _,,.., .... CZ) ... c.r. I Stall&· ...._.. r:nts ..... "Al'tlllr" (!) ......... eo.r. RICilc .... ---.111 ewe..,· m , ..... Miii..., '*'-"'HilJl - JANUARY lS, 1982 WEDNESDAY EVENING 7:00 I 7:30 1:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 I l O:SO • r,_-..m s,.ts ......... . W.Colll .. ....... .... ' CC) ... c.ry ............... 11o¥11:-s-.11a.· (I) .......-: °""' YI. SOlllll ClrollM s,.tsC.. Wetblt. ~•YI. Syrlc .. CID .... c.r• , ........ v.,.. a.It ... °""-.... .,,._ ClllM*" , . .,.. CD> ..... "Walllll" ---a.ell I a..-1 Nat ....... Cl) E'flfliJ'trtMtt Biurrt ltff-1.Tllon l Wiftlen lllowr. • .,...., llotNt" ~ • ... r.o.t'. --"Slnll'' ....,., .,..,_.)t,c.· CZ) --"bclliiw" llo1ir.W Cl) ltldiefColl'• .... Me..: "OM! ' ... . m ..... MllFlllllly --..,. °""' .. ....,. JANUARY li, 1982 THURSDAY EVENING 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 l O:SO • r ....... -.w • "' - ' - • .. ll ... !:r -STARRING WPORTBEACH Prognmuiilng That Gets You Right Where .You Live! 1101'DAY 7:00 PM .. Newport Now .. 7:30 PM Live Newport Beach City Council coverage or ·'Citizens Forum·' (alternate Mondays' TUB8DAY 7:00 PM "Sound Off" WEDIU8DAY 7:00 PM .. Newport Now " Tll1JR8DAY 7:00 PM "Sound Off" 7:00 PM ··Newport Now" . . Our local programming lineup in- cludes the discussion series - . "Sound orr·. our intervi~w ~how hosted by Mayor Heather -"Citizens Forum,·· and live coverage of Newport Beach City Council meetings. Plus, we continue to cablecast our popular magazine format show "Newport Now." Our focus is on the issues that are happening atound you, and we feature p~e and places that you know. Your nei"ghDorhood and its residents are our stars. FOA PROGRAM INFORMATION CAll (714') 8"2-1797 ~ r- $ 'Tl .... a: Ill -:< f... • :J c Ill -< !» ... IS • • • l • 00 er.o., 9 AtATlml 30 Alice 1 000 Thi Price Is Algllt 30 .. Wlllll Of Fortune Battle&Wt 11 00 UpToThl Pmword Millllle -PU 30 Young And Thi Thi...... Doctors KNXT KN8C II 0 u.-... Lee ..... 12: .. AITht DeylOI <MLl'M Wortcl 1: Tums Selrdl For Tomorrow 2: Guiding ~ .. Ttua a: Rocklord Riii .. 4: Blmly Mk Newt 5: News . ,, s: ..... ..... 1: CBSNews 20n The Town s: Simon &Simon 9: C8SMoY!t- "Greued Ughlnlng" 10: 11: News Alice .. 12: McOoud . .. .. Tomornl'llf . KTlA D w....- KTlA D Lee ..... Twilgllt Zone Twllgh1 Zone Ended" Sh1NIN1 KABC II AM. Lot ~ Femily FM! Ryln'• KA8C D Lee ..... AIMy Children OntUle To l.l¥t Edge Of Nlgllt ~·· Court ..... .. ABCNews ~On LA KFMB D laDllp KFMB D IMDllp AsTht World Tuma MAS.H C8SNews " KHJ fJ &.. ..... YouAllted for It ~ Mo'lle: "MtnOI ~ .. KCST cm ...... Pusword Plus The Oocl011 KCST ml ..Diep DeylOI <MLl'M T .... Tomorrow KTTV m KCOP ., KCET ED Lee ..... La ..... &.. ..... Cartoon Town .. Flipper Gentle Bin It.ow Lucy BewltcNd I Dream Of --Glloet And Mn. ... Siii* PlyCltds News KTTV m Lee ..... Movie: "Bomber's 8-52" Bugallunny PorkyPlg Tomi Thi .......,,.. MAS.H M•e ~.- Bugs Bunoy Klfloon KltlWll ~ RomC* Room Movie' Th1t Urlnium" Mo¥I« "Dlw1 Ttlil"' ~ ...... KCOP ml Lee ..... MoYll: • 'Mystttill From p~ Bugs Bunny H«:llll I Jlckil Thi Flintstones Scboby Ooo Joker'• Wild TlcTIC Hughll" Plf12 INNNlws INNNews Classroom TV KCET m La ..... Oldlc Cawtt °"" Eley Cllssroom TV 3-2-1 ConllCI Milter To9e Announced (;(ouCtry. 5*1 SdlOOI KOCE m II d IP .... KOCE m ..... I .... ThlNew voe. Educalionll Pr 3-2-1 ContlCI Home Gwdlnlr Run" Tuesdays :Details .. -------- JN#AJNf't 12. 1tlt ...... r• e ..,.,.,., ~va MMe Fonzil'• dog Spunky .... up on Dr. Joyce Srotherl' coudl tor~ lherlCIY-• THIAJOESONI loulff dlecovere that 0-ge Na ~ ,ending pt-" Ind money to • -=:::::--"o.cw-ion" OuMla: ,.,.. b9fld-4rld ... -*'1111 .... ...._ Cronyn Md~ Tltldy. (R)Q 0 JOMWfCAIH YOUTH INCIAL ''Wtwe Haw Al The CNl- dfen Gone?" A p.Mttal· Ing IOClll Imo IN hOC* Md dreeme of c:Nldren II pt• aented. au.is: MilcNal Landon. Carol Burnett, Jlqf CWk. Chld &erl41. Dabtlle ~-Roger ~ .... Ind -Coaby. Qi)THIMUPNT8 oa-t: Cl9orge 8uma. (Dl..a. *. ''Thi Kid kont Nol· So-elg" (1t79) JaMINr Mctl ..... 1•• t ONTHI TOWN Feleur9d: • looll ... 4.2 mlmon dOl9f' t.Wlbll <*- tie: • pto9I of .leMllle .... ~ol IOOfU ~ ......... .....,. .... .»rry ._ .. ~ ganer1I ,,_... In ~ ry. .. ''Yllage ,.... •• lfled ..., "*"° lmaoa for i more r-* IOClll- • LA~&ltMLIY & OIJitll'Nl'f LMiny and Sqi..iggy ... up • ~ ped In Ille glrte' bullcq. • FtaONLA F .. tured: the Playboy 8'IMy Olymplca; • Loe ,.,....~ ..... • M•A•l•H The long4'10~ lwud ~ Hoe Upe and the ,..... In .. ~ ~to. heed ....,, • ooi""--of 1hem to ...... ~ITM9HO'-l'N ~UIM aooeCl) .... &..aM A..J. and Aid! ... _,,..,.. ~ lnvolwd '" • c:ount«flllt tlclcet -lfwoMnO • rod/ mUllc II . ., 8 8 FAnB MURPHY WIM le lodled In a Olller by his dtunllen lathat for t9fUllnO to ,..,.., ...... he tound.,..... of gokl. 0 • "'°"" "TM Dey T1IJle Ended"" • ..,.,.,., Do\Y9 Al ~-In • c:MI ttgll .. --iatretlon. and Fonzie 1ne11ts on )Olnltlg '*"·O • , .... MNaAZINE A Pfollle of actrw linger 8*nacMtl• Petet•: an ~ •trono ,,...,. .• See Tuesda 's. Page 21 all and put cash in your pocket! Special flat. rate ror non-commercial users offering merchan- dise priced in the ad for $800 or less. Cost is the s ame for 8 days or one. Minimum three.lines. Extra lines just $2.60 for 8days. For an EXTRA dQy, ·co11 today 6'2·5618 TM _rww Dolly Piiot 8·Day-9k tti o CklS5ified • BLOW UPON A BRUISE -Lord Sabastian Flyte c Anthony Andrews > announces his intention to join his brother and youngest sister at the New Year Me~t or the Flyte St. Mary's hunt. But on the morning of the m eet. ins tead or joining his f amily. Sabasti an rides off to the local pub to get drunk in PBS's "Rrideshead Revisited ... ... 'Brideshead' readied for KOCE From Page 8 "Bunnic ula : The Vampire Rabbit" 1s a "delightful" animated show about a family that adopts a bunny for a pet and comes to suspect that their furry new fri end as in fact a low-down bloodsucking verm}n or the worst imaginable sort Joel Grey will host KOCE's "To Hear," a one-hour documentary on sound and hearing loss, now filming at Ke nnedy Center and in San Fancisco. Funding for this program was provided by the Grace Foundation and the Corporation for . Public Broadcasting. . Also oo the KOCE docket are two "American Playhouse" productions, "The Shady Hill Kidnapping" <Jan. 17 ) and "King of America" ( Jan. 24). The former is based on a short story by John Cheever and the second is a look at the'" problem!t of Greek immigrants to America in the early part of this century ... "Marian Rose While" is the name of the Jan. 19 CBS Tuesday Night Movie and the woman on whom it is based. The real Marian Rose White, a normal person handicapped only by bad eyesight, was committed and spent 30 years in a mental institution before doctors realized she was not mentally unsound in any way. In the television story, Nancy Cartwright pl ays Marian and Katherine Ross stars as a sympathetic nurse .. The true story of stock car racer Wendell Scott and his fight to overcome prejudice and make it big is told in "Greased Lightning," starring Ri chard Pryor. Beau Bridges. Pam Grier and Cleavon Lillie on Tuesday, Jan. 12 on CBS Wendell is a naturol crowd pleaser and anal good driver -having ·once run moonsh1ne through the ~alls of his hometown area -but people who dQn't lake blark racers do their best to ke.ep him down Popular "The Youns and t.he Restless" actor Michael Damian recently ~•ed the "'Youtti in Film" in~ard for Be11\ Youna Actor in n Daytime Orama. The awarda wete pru eoL lo Studio Cl\y • Tube Toppers . -KNXT 8 8 :00 -"Simon and · Simon." Joey Travolta guest s ta rs as a rock performer. KCET D 8:00 "T he Infinite Variety." An attempt to explain where. when and in what order the Ear'.'n'!' more than 4 million s pecies evolv"-<i Jt .... ,,&• . KNXT fJ ~:OU '•Greased ~1ghtnin g ... Spi,&·it ~~ cast does a b1<?graphy on th'(: ~:1rst black racing car d~1ver. ~t.ar~. ttichard Pryor. Cleavon Little, Rw_ilie Havens. KABC fl 10:00 ··Hart to Hart." A stamp collector leaves an apparently worthless s tamp to the Harts. Tuesdays Details From Page 20 7111 birthday welgh!llltlng aiunt; Chef Tell p<eperea muelwoom crust qolc:M; Peu!a Nel9ot1 on finding ~kw~. • MOYIE ••• "The Amazing How- ard Hughes" (Pert 2) (1877) Tommy LM "-· Ed Flend«L • LHONEARTH ·(Premi«e) "The lollnlte Vertety" Oevld At19nl>Or· ough · ettempt• to explain where, wherl and In whet order the e.rth' • more then tour mhllon epedel r+'Ol\led. Q ID NOVA "Selmon On The RI.lo" The poweo-end detennlnetlon of ulmon .,. ~lured lo en eqmlnatlon of the ro6e Of I~ w4ld li.t\ In the conlllct '*--6c growth end con-.v•tlon ~MOVIE ...... "Searl_ .. (1832) PM MwW, George Reft (l)MOWE • * * ~ "The Elephant Men" C 1880) John Hut1, Anthony HoplllM O LOUMWLI .. CONCERT HO 8 l.AVUINE l IHlllUY Lenny rMet• " Qlr1 et the i.. El<M tar pita. .-idlng Squlggy ltlto • 11ete of jeelousy.Q • AU IN THE FAMILY Edith NM Into '-d!lid- hood -t'-1 whlle lo '-hometown tor • wed- ding. ®MOVIE * • "The locredlbl• Shrlnlclng Woman" C 1811) Lily Tomllo, Cherie& Gro- din. (Q) CZ> MOVtE **** "ArthlK" (1811) ~ Moore, Liu Mlo- nelll. HO 9 Cl) MOVIE • • "Greued Ugntolng" ( t877) Rlcllerd Pryor, 8-1 GT MET MAVERlae EN1em !Nnc:W lnl••t• try '° gllln oontrol of 8'#9etwatw .. pen of • town-b>(-town nMP of the W•I 8 THME'8 OCMl/flAH'f Mr F11tley lelle tor • wMthy ledy w'10 le play4ng up to him ~ of tw mlaulken belief that he .. Ille lluild>no -· 0 CiJ YOU A8e<ID ~" FMtured: "MlnlelUl'e Peo- ple Of Gw!Mn," ~ "9Wd Doctof Of Ttle &tr- ;-~· ..... QueeC: Timottly HIMtOft. ..... OM CPTernlere) "The Shedy H• Kldnepplng" George Grlr- urd end Polly Holld8y -In John a-·. ·~ etlout • .,bul"bwl tamlly wtloM wend la tumed~whlln the younoest member of the femlly v.,,.._ end IS believed to heve tie.I kld- oapped. Q Ci) LFE ON EARTH (Premier•> "The Infinite Vwlet(' DevlcS Attenbor- ough ettempla to explain whet•. when and In whet ordef the Earth'• more then ICMK mllllon epec:iel evollted.Q Ct MOW! * *'-' "Ode To Biiiy Joe" ( 18761 Robby Benson. Glynnla O'Connor. •..ao 8 TOO Cl.08E FOR OOMFORT Aprll an~ ,_ plans 10 -In with ,_ boy- friend, wtlo la lwloe ,_ CSMOYIE ••• "No Null•" (1880) .,...... Browne, en.try. Stltle& Natl. 10:00. 8"' 'MNGO AON> The com.opt Shettff Sem- ple. up lor ~Ion. lecee expoeure by editor Elmo Tyeon, end Field become• emotlooally Involved with • )'OUOQ r9Cl0r1er. 8 0 HART TO HART Shortty before he IS mur- dered. • 1temp collector leevee en epperently worth ... llemp 10 the Heru.Q ®MOW • * "Night Of The JUi>- glef'' (1NO) J-Brolln, Cllfl Gorman. 10'.aO ID JOHN CUMY IMTR "1'EA AHO THE WOl.F AND OTHER ICE OANCa 1871. Olympic gold medel- let John CNlty per10Nnl _., Ice ~· dloreo- grlll)hed by Curry and Pwler Martini; other lltll· 1ng wn featured lndude Jo Jo Sterbuck, Jectt Courtney end Petrlcl• Dodd. (A) wHAn UP AMENCA Avtlft totnr..Of~ ca'• blo ~ bMuty Mione and e k>o* II the ,_. --'· poto "*~ ... t t:OO 9 IA TUN>AV NIOHT Hoet• Liiy Tomlin OIMll: Howwd 8hOfe. . ,... ......,... Loui..'1 <Jonatlon to~ ~ ty mlelll 11J1o Mr M\ ftlltO " Oeorge't ''C4lntr1Du1Jon" to • ~ "°'911'1 ruin '*~ -~NfOec)N r-----------...._ .... _____________ 11 Low Back Palr.? There Really Is An Answer . CALL 645-5300 I For eo-.1•1•t•r C1n•llhatloa WE,STCUFf CHllOPIACTIC OFflCE Dr. a....... A. ..... Z04J W..tclff Dr .. W. I 01 · ... .,.,. .... ·-C.C•'• -, ,. ............ Most Insurances Aooepted GREAT GIFT IDEA Watercolors and Pastel Portraits from any sub1ect you desire by professional artist Call tor more 1nlormat1on MARCIA COX SOLBERG ILLUSTRATOR/DESIGNER 5052 BOXWOOD IRVINE. CA 92716 (714) 857·9499 PAM PORTERFIELD c1woprec11c Aas!Steol Westcliff Chiropractic Office • LISTEN TO YOUR BODY Pam between Shoulders Pa111 1n Ar l leg or fool er ... '+"~--~-~ Ill ~legs II sanething's eo1n1 wrona. 1t will tell you ,_ COM\ulT4noM '. I 'ft 'llfl fN l'llay Grw - 1100 UpToThe Minute 30 YoungAnd TheAlldlss KNXT II IAe~ . 00 It 1230 AsThe World 00. TIWM • 1 IO s-dl Fot Tornonow 400 Birney Miller 30 News 700 ces~ 30 20n The Town 800 =:u 30 The TllO Of US 00 CBS MoYle: 9. "WMhinglon 30 Mistrell'' 10: ·~ .. 00 ..... ll 130 WKRP In Clnc:lnnltl 00 C8SMcMI 12 "KlllrOn ao Baird" Pauword pq· The Doctors KNBC D La ~ Texas .. Bob NewNtrt Enter· telnment N8CNewt .. The Facts Of Uft Lowt, ~ Tomorrow KTLA It a..~ McMlt ''TiltWw Of The RoboCa'' Femlly Feud Ryan's Hope KABC D IAe~ OneUfe To Lille EdgeOI Nlgllt People'• Cowt ASCNfts Eye On LA.. The Fii Guy • Dynasty l.oo.ie BOii KFMB 0 ....... Young And The Restless KFMB 0 ....... AsThe World fume IA.A.SH C8SNewt .. Tic TIC Dough PM Maiwirw Public Alfalrt The Two OIUI CBS M<Mt: "W~on Mtslrm" News " WKRP ln Cincinnati CBS Mo"'9 "Killer On llOlrd" MOYie: "Bottom OfThe Bonll" KHJ 0 IAe~ WlndTo Jev1" Caner Country You Alltlld Fotll Maldl GMle McMI: "ThelWd W'rtllThe Crystal MoYle: "F* W'ltld To Jeve" KCST Cl!> ....... Password Plus The Dodor1 KCST a!) ....... Another World Texas All In The Family MlfY T)'ler Moore N9CNewl The Facts oc Ult l<We, IS!dnl¥ T~t Tomorrow KTTV m La~ KTTV m IAe~ M<Me . ''Tiit Landlord" , .. People'• ~ Flntttones The Muppecs I Love I LucY The Jlflenons lil.A.S.H KCOP Cl) IAe ...... M<MI' MThls Woman ts I Oanoercus" Pope)'W Bugs Bunny Htckle 'Jec:ltle Klttoon Ktmlvll The Flintstones Scooby Ooo Jolt•'• W'tld Tic TIC ~ Douafl News .. INNMlws INNNtws KCET m IAe ..... CllSsroom T\I 3-2-1 Contact Mister Rooers Sesame Street Speclll lll\dscapll Of Hope KOCE ~ ·"= 1 8ig ;:_• Marble KOOE ~ II :.::r~I The New Americans ._..sTo YourHelltll OnoeUpon ACimlC EGlcational ProgrlCJllTlinQ Tomorrow's Femilies Mister Roga-s 3-2-1 Contact American Blr1C*** LandlClpet OfHope A Night In Tl.llisll -· .Details 7:90 G . '(.OU AfKB> '°" rr FMlured: "EngleN1'• .,"'_ nlture Mualelan" end "A.Mltrie'a 8-' T oottl Klno." •n.a:aaDM --Oe«p end Lou6M - atunned by their landlord'• '*"' to evict "-"· • OYIRIMY "The Middle-Aged Chlld" GUMl: lemlly lh«aplat ~!Wr.(A)O a IHl'Bn'Meiefl TONGHT An ~ wllti Unda e....na of "OynM!y... • 8 THE t.U'PET8 Guele: R6dl Uttle. (D)MOYIE ** "Wollen" (1981) Alber1 Finney, Diane Veno- re. -4CUlAA ())-.... """' EVINMa .. CNr... Belly danc:ers. luooler .. . end denclng llof.-.. . ernong the eel.a In lhla -nlng of entertelnment ~ Cetny l.M Cn• by wllti Jim Petr)' end Fio- na Gordon. (%)MOYE • * * * "Excellbur" , (1981) Nigel Teny, Nicol ~. 7:t0 8 ~ON THI TOWN F•tw.d: two Lo. Ang9Mia boc*al-l'loualng • ,_ eolectlon of bo<*a; the men rMpONlble lot the current economic end polltlclll re&ldlonehlp with the 8o"'9t Unklft; • tioep.. tal In l.M v.-wNd'I .0-lleea lot~ • LAVMNI & IMN..EY &CO#l'IMV Anet peeelllg out •t • ~NWY per1y, 1..a-womee about her behav- ior . • IYEONLA r:.tured: • a.--ty Hills gun "'°Cl: • IO«* .. whet ~ ln10 ~­IMfCllll. jlngle9; • trip to Metlnet..and. e M•A•e•H P9)oc:Hetnat ~ Fr.6- --to the~ um 1e the ..on1t1 10 c:1ew hie heed end find• r..._ In lea unique form °' in-11- • NATIONA&. OEOQIWllHIC INCW. "The Shat1te" Extreordl- nwy underweter lllm foot· • of how .,,.,.. feed. ..... end '#tty tMy attedt prOY!dee .. -~ Ihle on Ihle feadnallllg end .__fleh.Q 9 YOU AllCID fOR fT ~: "Englend'a Fur· nllure Mualclen" and "AUltrle'a S-1 Tooth Klng." ®*Ml **""Ion v~ aw-.. lltown" (1979) Animat- ed. Ohcted by 8111 Melen- da t:OO. wtCNt IN CINCINNATI See Wednesday's. Page 23 all and put cash in your pocket! Special flat rate for non-commercial users offering merchan- dise priced in the ad for $800 or less. Cost is the same for 8 days or one. Minimum three lines. Extra lines just $2.60 for'8 days. ~~~.gm~ ......... .._ .. ~ I n. .w Daly PIOt e..oay 1"•k ~~ a Classified ~ ~ \Vhat is The Bottom Line? Dear Readers· The Bottom L1n£ 1s your health. There are times in our ltves when wt' forget that and worry about things that aren·t nearly a.s im- portant When you have your phylical and mental health. you have the bull.ding blocks w1lh winch lo face all the attendant problems of l11nng a full. challenging and rewarding life. Please remember that every day and thank God for II We believed m this idea so much that we started our own bUSiness de- dicated to health and named 11 The Bollom Line. The Bottom Line 1s an exercise salon where each individual recewes personalized alien· twn. Our 'goal is for each person lo develop lo their fullest potential mentally and physical- ly. Our aerob1c ererc1se classes are conve- niently offered 6 times per day. and last for one hour Our classes are designed to build strength. flenballty and endurance. We would like to invite you to a compl1men· tary class to see what The Bottom Lme real- ·1y is. %r 'q'lr, 7ctn [inr. __ 11_1•_1 1_se-_1•_se ::c.. 1550 S.ysidt Or. • Corona Del Mar, CA 92625 , SdUni ~hm, fnim mocorcyda !0~11'9~ MIU'f't ol peO(lk 10 dl«ardold ~-taM up---famlllea 10 mew~ _,,_ And lM ~-U\M _.,wci ,~ wdl autllw l~lr ..wfulMM TMl·• 191>od -for you wMn ~ln)'OUl llJt.-atca PIH'C'-Oft·-· a.c.ctt c:IMllllcd-11 ITWI)' mUe ,,_ Cl\anfe91 IKlle .,.,._ alfordable. KOCE IJ 7:30 and KCET QI 8:00 - .. The Sharks." A National Geographic special with extraordinary underwater film footage of how sharks feed and rest. and ~hy they attack. KTTV 0) 8:00 -··Los Angeles Film Critics Awards." Carl Reiner hosts live show from the Beverly Wil shire Hotel. KCOP ti) 8:00 .. Miss California USA Pageant." Seventy contestants compete in show aired live from the California Neva Lodge in Lake Tahoe. KNXT fJ 9 :00 -··Washingt on Mistress." Lucie Arnaz sta r s in this movie premiere. F rom Page22 ....,~ .. ...ittiy ..,. to • Mld-4 .... i(j perty tor poor fliendt of .Jdwtrrt"• ..,. ..,,,..... .,.., ... deelroyed their l'llllllan r-. 8 8 MAL NOf'l.I FNl\#ed: I IMNon lt\OW tor lrogl; IN WOf'ld' 1 IMI· -~~·­who H iit adverllelng .,_ on Ille beld ~; I 4CJ0..90Ufld oo-an -. • M0\111 "Tiie Ww Of Tiie Aob<Mt" • THIGMA1WT .,_ICMtaO A train cerrytno nuc:ii- _.. .. llijec:Ud, and " ..,,... lhel Aalprl, who .. ~ from emn..le. .. be uneble to oome to IN1'9eCUe. • M0\111 • • • ''The Bird With The ~ PlufMoe"' (1870) Tony ......_.., &gy l<en- dll . • LOeN*MI• ..... awncl AW,,,.,. UW ll'om IN a.-1y wf. -"*-ttcMI. wllll ..... ,... Cetl Aelrw and Auttl Bald*or, Ulla ec>eelal ll09t911dt~ ...... .. ..,~.~ 8 1r••P and 8ert1er1 ~. .0 ... CN...ofNA UIA,MllMfT UW ffOftl IN Callfotnle Nevi Lodge In Lake Tat-, Cellfomla. ~ly ~ .. COll'IP«• for IN tltte "Mlel Celflof • ni. USA," with IN theme ~IN 1940'1. • NA'nONAL GeOGMl'MO INCW.. ''The 8MIU" eiw-dl- nery Ulldel .... fllm foot. ageolhow1Mr1llteed • ..... and ~ ~ atl-* pnMdea. -~ u.. on thll ~and .....,.11111.Q (C)MOYll •••w. .. ..,_ .. {1971) Woody Allen, LOlllH ~. Cl)mNN "°"" 8yrW ....... }'OU INnp ..,,., Ulan trvttl. larger ...... and -- IMll ~ }'OU'¥9 --· .MCNll • *W. "S.W' (1NO) Mar· 1111 .... ~W.td. uo• MNIK MMl&.L W"""""°"'' '09 poltlclll ...... potl• Ml .. -~ --... -MOrtat ol IN *'I fnll'll ttle 8taee """° .,.,..., of .._ Vortl In lilf• ... Cl) .... •Oltt'lllU.T1 .............. ~ ................... ................ ;e toB WM MT Where to go this weekend?. .(1) PUotWeekender ENTERTAJNMENT MAGAZJNE Ne'! tookt New 91zel Every Frtday~ For home deltvery, caH 142-4321 '\ ' I I I I I I I ' t i ' I I I --.. 14 n-d~ Grid --·--I -rt6 ~ ::I c • ~ ~ • 'O ;f ~ .. 1: a: -~ 10: 11: PM 12: 1: L 2: 3: 4: 5: s: 1: a: 9: 10: 11: 12: -- KNXT • ... ~ W-.Up .. MOf'*'8 ..... " .. " " One~ AIAnM Ab " The Price ·~ ,~ Up To The ...... Young And The ..... KNXT II ......... " AITht WOtld Tl.lllS 8-'CllFor Tomllrt09 CWdlllg Light" " AOc:klord Riii If " llamey ... ..... .. ...... fl ..... .. CBS..._ 20n ThtTOMI ....,.,., P.1. .. Knob ~ .. Nur'M .. .. ...... .. Quincy fl If .. ThtSelnt .. KNeC D ......... l*! " " " " " II Regll Pltil llid- ~- WlllllOI FOl1unl llaltlllUn If PlllWOrd PW Thi Docarl KNBC D ......... ~Of o..u... II .. Motts WOtld fl .. T-. II fl " Ooniftll " .. II Bob Nlwlllrt ~- tlinmlnt ..... " II If ..... .. " .. . NBCNewt " Flfftit1 Fut F11n1 .. .. " Oltt'rtnt Sit<*• GlmmtA er. .. Streel 811111 " ..... .. Tonight " .. Tomorrow " ~~ --·fl'!~ --~..,,. ---r """::- - KTLA KA8C -KFM9 KHJ KCST KTTV KCOP KCET • • • • a!) m .., fl!) ......... ....... .. .... ......... ... ..... u....-......... ......... 100 Good Momq Tiii Toclly Car1oon """ ...... Ole Momr.g ..... FrOClldll TOMI Bunny ~ ~ Anllrtca .. Thnll " " ic.toolt Yogef« .. .. " AW~ " " Klrnlwl ......,. " .. ~ ... .. ~ .. ..... " " 8111~ LILIMI .. " Aoglrl Hoe . .. ,.,,. " o.1111 ~ VIII Aldal II " Bakker II Bin ...... AlcNrd A.M, One~ " Ooftlblt IL.ow Ron.-s-.. llmmcn Loi AIATM!t " " l.l&y Aool'll SW. t.iillt ~ Aloi Mldmomiig " e..iec:Nd McMe: II To Women " LA -" " "Aafllina If Big LOYe ThtPricl " Riclllrd IOrumOI Fooll'' Claatoom V*f ~ ls~t If Smnont .-,,,.. " TV " " Bettlestll'I GholtAnd MO'AI: " .. If " II .. .... Muir "'MNlll II 8on.m Fltlllly Y01.11QAnd ~ Pl&tWOf d Super Mzona Why In " FM ThtAeltlla ''Gllnbllr PU PflfClrds Slllll" ThtWOftd? " Aywl'• If ffom The .... INN,._. MICNlll " Hooe " Nltdllr'' Oocton .. " lAMr - KTLA KA8C KFMB KHJ KCST KTTV KCOP KCET " D 0 fJ ID m Cl) m ......... ... ..... ....... ... ~ ........ ........ ........ ... ~ Twilight AIMy ...... ~ " o.y.OI ~ McMit: Ole* law Chldr9n " .. OwU-"The "Dlld Cawtt Twllgtd " AITht If II Orglniz:lllon" ~ °* law .. WOtld If " ~ Heu Ontute Tl.ml ...... Ano4tllr " " cie.oom ~ ToUYt If .. WOtld • " .. TV .. s..'CllFor lronelde " If fl If .. --If TOll*1ow .. " .. " .. Jofwl Generll GuldlnlJ .. TtXll Open Supwmll'I " DMilorl HolPttl Light " fl Uni If " " KotM If The Pop9'Je .. fl " " " Jltlorll II .. EdgeOI Jolin " Al In The ,.. .. 8llgl .. Growing . ~ DMboll .. Ftn'ly Cour1 Bunny v .... Rlclwd ,.. .. " MoYlt: Mll'yTrtlr The ..... VO'fll!' Slmmonl Court " "VI¥• Moor• Flintstones &Jedllt ern..~IC) ..... " Mu" Bob BugeBunny ~ 3-2-1 .. " ff Nlwlllrt Porl!y Pig Klrnlwl Contect .. If M.A.S.H If The Torn& .. Mla1tr If If " If Muppels Jerry " Roan -., UIUI ...... INM. " ...... 8'ldy The Seurne Howl .. II . fl " 9uncll ~°"" $tree( °" Tiie " .. Cer1'r fl Bewlldled ~ If Prairie .. .. 'Country fl If Ooo " Chltle'• ..... 0 C8SNtwl TrMIUrt NBCHewl The HIWlll ~ Angels .. .. Hunt .. Muppet& ~ Report fl Hews ~ ..... I Low " Newt .. .. " .. Lut'Y .. .. Hlppyo.ys ABCNlwl Tic TIC YouAlked Look The JollM'• °* Agllrl .. Dougtl F«• ..... .Mfllr1orll Wld EM'/ l.Mml& E)ieOn PM ..... Flmily MAS.H TlcTIC ,...,... ~ LA ...... a.... FM " Ooudl Lllwtr McMe: Mort And M19un. Blllt«btll fllN PM ~ ThllOld "Stw Mindy P.L Color.oo " Magazine "Sttllylrd Holm ~· &tit OI .. Slate .. Al In The .,. .. Sntlk ThtW... .. Va. " Flmily " Prl'Alwl If llamey Knoll U.OI Dltt'rtnl Mlrv .. Slloc* Of .. ...., ~ Lii~~ Str<*el Ortflln " TheNtw .. Tul GlmmtA .. .. .. " .. " " er. " " .. ..... 20·20 Hur-. ..... .. ..... ..... U,S. .. .. .. " Streel " .. Qironcill .. " .. .. ..,. " IHHNtwl Cllbnil .. .. .. " " " .. Joumll Saturclly ..... ..... PIUI ..... Tiie Senfotd Oiclt ~ .. " .. Hoglrl .. Jellslorle &Son Cawt1 A8CNlwl Quincy &tit Of T~ Odd The ..... " I Hldllllnl Otouc:M ~ Rook* .. SNHINa V'lll! " ~ .. ... " ......,. .. " ''V!Ya .. DoulJ!-.. ..... McMe .. Tht89nl Mu" Tomorrow INNNewl " " .. .. .. .. .. I ReJuveMte Your IOtchen Clbfnets and Avoid the Cotttr &penee of Remc>M11no ... . Un to 500/o SA Vl'MGSI ..... ~ ....... ~ ..... _,..,... ... ..... '.• w .... .....,.,~w....-o..••.,..• .,.., .................. ........ _fllll!a.., ..... . KOCE ~ I I .. ' ..... OI Pllnllng OI P*lllnQ Body Buddlll ..... Aoalrl 3-2-1 ContlCt Elldrlc IComoenw ~ Pr~~ " " " " " KOCE ~ II.:.~ GED a.ditig EducYationll " fl fl .. Hlbllrnu ~ Hunwl llellM>r s-n. StrlM If If 3-2-1 Contact Homl oner. Elldrlc Colllpeny °* ~ Ole* CMt1 ~ Aepor1 MlcHtll IAfw• ..... .. Sntlk P...W... Portrllll In Pule! Mellerpilc:e n.tr. "Aimil,.. Of Tlllkl" ..... .. The LIWmlk .. lnlldl WllNnglon ClplioMd AllCNlwl ITbunday• ·Deta••• JNtAJllll'I M, -.... ,_. HA'PY D4VIMMt ,__~ ... ..,.,_.. • ...,."'°"' of How'd'elllwlloi .. • YOU Amcm POR ff ~~··ut. ...,.,. Snow Doti'' _, ~ .. My ... -·· .• THl&OLliC*I 0-0-ftrMllly per..- Uonel to J01n the temity ~ • CMRfA8Y "Lono· Tern1 Metrl904t" au.ta: '°""" c:Nld • ., Bonita Otmn~Wrether Ind ,_ llul*-1d T-°""*' Jeca Wr8lhw. (A) 9 lllTWn' ... " TONmfT "" lnMrMw with "'* Ctwtslle. ca>MOVR A • • "Thier' ( 11181) ~ c.n, Tu.day w.d. 1:11. I ON TMI TOWN ..... ured: Ind out .tty ttw. le no C01•••••101• tiw. e1Mlp tor lot ~ lee; ~ the Hencodt Pertl1~tl­lllllrl0 .,...., Amtricen ~ -tW.-to ecoonwnodat• Cellfonlle'• ,100,000 Al rrh~lng ~ • LA~& IHR:a't &OOtll'Nf'f ~end tiieycome to .. -""'*' L..-.y end 8ql:ilggy get *°" t.111>- • tv. ON LA. FeMurwd: -tor '** pain; • vlllt to the mud beCfl9 .. the o-1 Hol Scwlngl; • pr'Olle of • lot ,...... pollae depart· !Mftl'• s. w ,A.TI MM\. • M0 A0 l•H Sudden e,mptome of .. -"'Hol Upe Md In Col Pott•'• favorite mete Cm.IN COftCerft In tl'HI 40771h. 0 YOU AltCID "°" ff FeMured: ''Cenada'• ~ ...,.,. Snow Doge" Md "oan.oe le My Bual---(C)MOVm * * ... ''The Hell-. °' The a-.. ...... (1959) Rot>- '" T~, Unda Ctv1etlen. r:E::-:-* * "Wollen" (1981) Albert Flnnly, D6el'9 Vene- re. .. • (J) llWINUM, ,J. A~ tycoofl hne Megnum to.,,_.... the """of ..... oocMe. •• ,M9 Lydie end Coco cornp9tt lof • -'*' In an off· ..,.....eflow, ...,. .. ... ~. e9 MOMAND ...,, wtlll ...... ~ kit • .... Marti dlddaa to danle Mindy with • See Thursday's. Page 25 M.! 12 WlllS OHL Yi) s25 +PAITS • Mlmt~C... Wll ...,.., ,... Ur .. .,... ............... ... ••••••••· Ml•or er ............... Nik . NII $22.MJllr. + SIO ...... ----tr.lld-.... • • • For 8'okers and Salesmen • flWd ..t weekend classes ~·WM. ....._MOp "'-) • Texts, Practice Exams • COilege Level Broker bfification r.otrses ...... 7' .. 9255 ••1 •• , tw.-W ... prk" LLOYD SHOIMAKH IEAL ISTATI SCHOOL IMC. 1to1w....-.. .,..... ,._.C....,UH,11 tt ''· ~C:~ OOVE STREET . NEWPORT BEACH. (714) 833-13 LE PETIT Ca/ e Bakery & Catering * • For Breakfast •Brunch•lunch • Quiches, Crepes, Salads • Sandwiches • Fresh Soups Daily .. • Fresh Croissants and Pastries Daily • Gourm~t Coffees • Teas • Can.dies .Special Brunches Sat. and Sun. All Food Available for Takeout 514W.l•a•llY4 1•oaP1nh•d• 675-6135 7:00.l:OO T......S.. Ca...4 M...,.f What's happening this weekend? PIJot\Veelrender ·Tube Toppers · KCOP ti) 8:00 -"Steelyard Blues." A band of misfits attempt lo rejuvenate an abandoned airplane . KCOE 51 8:00 and KCET @ 8:30 - ··sneak Previews." Worst movies of 1981 are .selected. KNXT 8 9:00 -.. Knots Landing." Lilimae meets a conman who appears to be interesteq in her singing career. KNBC I) 10 :00 -"Hill Street Blues ... P ol i ce c orr up tion i s investigated. TbursdaJ• Details From Page 24 Motoccan ..... comiplllle wtttl IMilly U-. -~ ................. A oonetruction WCW1t• wtlo .. ~a Florida~ !Ml pat1l called ... ~ Conllnenl''; Or. W19CO on cuttlnQ llOaC>ltal co.ta; a.... w_... on ooi.- llctlllg kMc:Mn Oldgllta. • MIMI ·~ ._ .. (1973) Jana Fonda. Donald ~ . • TNI OlD "°'* Bot) VIia b9gll'le ,_ .. lloM on 1 '~tract hollM In a ao..on IUtlurb • INEM l'MVEWI Rogal' E.bef1 and CW. Sllllll a-tN -•t ~of1981. (l)MOYIE ••• ''The laland" (1te0) MlchHI Caine. David Wimer. .MCMI **~ 1'ha Hard Wey" (1NO) J>atrldl McOootlan, t.eaV111C..... UO. 9 _,.OF-THE WIST The notonoua guna11ngar IN Celoo Kid teeurne to ~ Ctellt to 90 IO ldlocll. • AU.lfTHEfMAY After .. llNlly ..,,..,_ ldlool. ..... ..,.. per- ~ioo. . ~ .. ,..,_..,.. ... ,. Aogar f.ber1 _, cw. 811*• a-.,. wont ,,_...of 1te 1 . • PQlmWT'llf ~AITB.I .. ._Shadow'. (ll)MCMI ***~ "The Elephant Man" (1te0) Jofln Hurt, AllttW1ft'1 Hopklnl. MO.()) tCNOTI LANDNa ~,,....a c:Nrmlno con "*' who ..,._. to be "*'-tad In her llrlQlng --llllt .. aetullly --.....,...... In IN Ewing ... Dl'P"l8T 8TIDC8 A young K-cftlld ...,. tMt Mr. Orumrnond II hie flllNr. Q •@~ ....... leme(a "*'go Mell Imo uniform for a daJ IO .. In -""' molt of .,. loroe ·-.,. -gaMla' exam. it..w ...... Gua9t: Sandy OUncefl • lttela{fl' THI NlW "The ........ ,.,... .... ~~,,.. ,,... beck to ... .... _.. ....... ... ,,,.., of ..... '°' • IOclllet._ .. ......... ... ,......~ ..... . I MMIUU IC• THMTM AIMaT,_Of_,. INlr .... Mlghbon wtlo """9 ~ wrtYad from eng.. land. (Pwt 2) Q (C)MCMI • ... ~ .. (197')' Devtd J111-. Donna ..... (D)MOW • • • ''Allll*M Count(' (1957) EJluileltl T~. ~Cllft. CZ>MOVll ..... "ThW" (1971) ~ ard er-. Attflia Olc:ilm-' H0.9 ... A-.NC Jule, ..... -not hello-ing ... tor .,. prom, go. out lot a ... and returne hour'l la._ with ttw man of her dr_,. In tow • •9 TAXI lobby return• to announce he'I landed a TV .....rola..Q .MOYIE ** ** "Kramar V1. Kt-" (1979) Oualln Hoffmen, Met)t 8treap. 10.00•<1>- Maty ~the red light dilttlc1 tor • ~ ptod- tuta auttar1ng ~om 111 llCM• ,_, ~ ""° -removed ~om the ~~her~. eatHLLm&T IU8 c.ptaln Fl#9o --.,. heel In Ill ..,, 1111,.Clot• of police COfruptlon, llPd Alf*o ataru a frwtllc .-di fof hie...,..,.,. •u.a.~• "HMglng On" .lift LAlww NIP0"9 on ,._ Yoftl Mr- bor .,._...,...and ...,._on .. ,._ and °"* ....... y --and pr'Olll9lnL (A) (I) MT CCJUae THE .. tfffWQ1•r Volunteat9 .,_ h .... ... l'9IPOfld oomlolly '° llypno111 1u11••Uon1 !Mdato--..~wa ...,...__ ... 1Mll.AMWCmW COfr~la l.lft4 WwtMlnw Md C4*la AoMrll Jc*! ..... Dulle '°' ....................... "*Y of~ ..... 11-··IA~YMmff Hott: Tad ICllllM-• 1"1& 1&40NI CJeotp and LAMla .... llufa llfl'lt on tlw daJ ~ .,. to .,. .......... Id ........... ........,.",_.. ...... • IAtd ON>NG-. Two ..... OCllMIO C'IJ .. M'nflUr9 .._.'1..s ...... on._ S':'a.wn a....: ...... ., ...... ,..,. ,., I) (C)MCMI . . ..,..... ... ,...,... ......... ~ . ...._ r FREE SPECfAL PRICE DELIVERY MGA -SQ'! Diapnaf . ·rv:·. -..-~ PROICTION COLOR 1Y JU~ nt1 ••1T1ST ... AIPIST CllAmlT PIC1WI AYAI ••• • Ill CMMe4a W-.UI ...ancdMnOl • JMOllLITO CMOOll fllOM OFFERm NOW . AT SPECIAL sam. I I ·.1 ! .I ·kNXT • ........ 10:~ 00 .... 12. ,..Thi 00 T11n1 l ao s.d!For 200 ='"9 ao .. 300 ='°'d ao .. 400 :: ao N9lll KNIC D ... ~ Anothlr Wottd .. KTLA " ........ Onll.11 Toi.NI KFMB II S.Dlilee YOl#lg And ' McMe: Thi AlltllM "Johnny ,..Thi Wottd T11n1 8-dlf« Tom«row MAS.H ""'*>" .. Distinctive Fashion Every S~nday KCST ·a S.Dlilee OlylOf Ourl.Mt N9lll ll.tM Lucy a.ltdlld . Ptop!t'a Cour1 Thi Fhtonll . IHH N9lll KCET fl) ... ~ a.room TV KOCE '9 ".!K~ GEO Statlonlry At1 Educational Progi llMli IQ !llglb w.ble s...m. Strllt 'Grease 2 ' • cast u IWW Set HOLLYWOOD <AP> -Sid Caesar. Tom Poston, Tab Hunter and Conole Stevens have been signed for roles in Paramount's "Grease 2," the sequel to the hit musical "Grease" ... John Carradine is the voice of the Great Owl and Hermotne Baddeley is the voice of Auntie Shrew in "The Secret of Nimh" ... Gene Evans and Harry Carey have joined the cast of MG M's "Endangered Species" ... Cliff Gould wiU write the pilot script for "The Texas Rangers," a projected NBC series from Filmways. Suzanne Pleshette and Gil Gerard star in the romantic comedy "Help Wanted: Male," which CBS will telecast on Saturday, Jan. 16. The movie also stars Bert Convy, Dana Elcar, Harold Gould, Carey Kaye and Ed Nelson. Miss Pleshette plays a magazin.e editor .. nd publisher who enters into a marriage or convenience with a sportswriter so that sbe -can have a baby. Automatic Garage Door Systems FOR SAFETY ... SECURITY ... CONVENIENCE Automatic Garage Door Operators by SAFIGUAID LOWEST PRICES IN ORANGE COUNTV "We Are Never Undersold" -~ Sprtacp • _.... DOOl"I • Repaln "L.i°adlng lnelaller of Automatic Door Opener• In Otano• County" IRVINE DOOR COMPANY By L"YNDA HIRSCH ALL MY CHJLD&J:N: Learning Daisy has lied about her gynecological problem, Palmer chases he r out of the house. Fear ing ror her life, Daisy g<>eS" to Nina and agamst Cliff's advice, Nina decides to confront her fat her Palmer and Nina have a fight and he pushes he r down the stairs. jolting his m emor y back to the present. Nina is rushed to the hospital with possible brain damage. After the Martins learn Jenny ts sllll working al Foxy's, they threaten to take Opal to court and she agrees that J enny can quit. J essie talks J enny into rel urnina to school and Greg defends het against taunts rrom the other students. When Roger begins to have bouts or d estructive depression. Sara puts him in therapy and blames herself tor Ignoring him. Rick assures Betsy he c:.aces_for her even though she won't bed down, but on the side he pursues Carrie. Benny's loni shot comes in, but he swears to Harry his gambling days are over. ANOTBE& woaLD: Cecille and her baby survive being fed poisoned mushrooms by Louise. Cecille 15 ua»et when she learns Sandy is belpin1 Larry with undercover druc assip.meot. Fearing Sandy wlU find out that she gave Jamie dn.lgs. Cecille wants him to quit doing the story. Cecille thinks she's lost the baby and people are just tying to her. After Sally tells Denny she'll stand 11p (or him a1ainst Steve, Denny lives her an en1a1ement rin1. James rlnlahes his novel. Marianne agrees to move in with him, and Rick promises her an uncontested divorce tr after living with James (or a few months she still wants to marry him. AS TBE woaLD TlJ&NS : Making a connection between the Plaka and Amigo Foods. the company which la the cover for the cocaine amunttng, Bob confronts Miranda, but she refuses t-0 discuss the matter and tells him to g« out ~ her lire LearnJng ~ irr~culariUes with Arni10 Foods. Nick orders Steve to st-Op dolng business with the company. Wblle handling the latest cocaine shipment, Steve aoes berserk and dumps the drugs aU over the warehous•. When Bud arrives he follows Steve and Ures a barrace of bullets at him. Barbara livid when she learoa James bought out C-Onnle's portion OI the fashion shop. Under truth serum, David reallies he didn't run down John Dixon. but cannot r•member wbo did It , 111111 VET 180 Programmable VCR "Select1Vlalon" •4u I * :.-,..·gt~ .•. • E11 ... tton1c O•g1ta1 ctoc~ t•m•f • A1mo11 p1t..11e contro1 ~ .... l • 0•01111 tape counter Rall SelectaVlalon VFT 190 SS8999 .ftllll SelectaVlalon VFT ~50 6-Hr. Video Cuseue Recorder with Picture SHrch, Slop Action & 14-day Electronic Programmttf '79999 t7 NEW DOCTOR ON-SCENE -Young, dastnng-Ur. eJr Manrung (Michael J. Stark.J gets a warm reception from his influential father, Judge Philip Manning <Alvin Epstein> and vivacious Nola Aldrich (Kim Zimmer> on "The Doctors" after he performs surgery on Nola's critically wounded brother ... The Doctors" are seen O!L~B~JCh. 4> weekdays at 11 :30 a.m. VFP 170 SelectaVlalon Convert.Ible VCR Syatem ...,. CC010 Color Video Cem.ra • 11.a ..;,. wijh 2~ 1:1 ~.r.oom DAYS OF ova UVES: Believing David d1d not shoot Alex and fearful that the bit men are sUll after him, Roman helps David escape. When David learns that a stran1e man jlmmled Scott's window and came Into the room. David decides he must abscond with Scotty ror Scotty's own 1ood. Val discovers David and Scotty's hidlni place and assures Tri.ab that they are all right. Stuart Wyland places a phone caJJ and says Devid must be killed before AleJt can be proved a liar about who shot him. DOCTOaS: Carolee is fearful about talklfli with Maggie since the main reason ror Ma1gie and Mates split Is Carolee's cousin M.J . Greta tells Billy if he's not a more attentive husband the marriage ls over. Althea suggests that Jefr 1erve as a mediator for Matt and Presser. Danny Is upset when he thinks Natalie has snubbed him mid lAlke for Jeff. Luke becomln1 upset by everyOIWt hovering over him. EDGE OF NIGHI': Sky tells Raven the ahoe found in his car was not Bobbi's. Believing his story, Rave·n heads (or Swi~rland with Sky. Jn St. Mori ts, Sky dectdes to allet'lce Raven permanently. Jullus tells Dee Dee U she marries him be will not take bis Ch1cago job offer. MJlea' !ffretary thinks Jlnx and Miles are an item when rt'a really Derek and Jinx. GENEIL\L llO$PITAL: like disowning her. At a' party ror DI'. Bradshaw a drunken Anne claims he caused a patient's duth. Noah persuades Bradshaw not to bring Anne up on charies but to accept a public apolocy. Following a rough interview with Miss Templeton, Laura beads for New York and Luke joins her, Jeavin1 Scorpio on bis owo. The liquor bust of the mob ls successful for the time beinl. Lee aware that t.be document Scotty sicned awearin& be won't contest Laura's ex parte divorce Is a paper that won't hold uP In court. flick and ~slle legally adopt Mike. Without Joe's knowled1e. Heather Is sollcltlrti legal business ror him. .,.._..v.._c-..__ ' . '-'""'-...... ::..;:: sg7goo • Elec1ronlc viewfinder · • Aulometlc fad4fCOl'llrOI • 8oon1 microphone s7~9· Sam struggles with her and Nico le falls from the balcony even tbou&h Sam tries to catch her. Before loaina consciousness Nicole tells Lucinda she wants everyone to know Sam pushed her, and Lucinda plans to go along with story In an effort to brine Asa and Mimi together with Sam out of the picture. Mimi tells police she saw t h e fall and lt was accidental, which clears Sam. At the hospital Nicole reealns consciousness and Pal bep her not lo ten Beau tbe truth aboat bis parentage. Beau cwerhea.rs t.------FMll ONE YUA MeM81RIHW-----........ ~°'*-11e,...._.,_,..._,_., I part of the con.eraatlon. WWl8T llCml8 acHIDULR '°" MUAa Fearln1 for Marco'• life, •rWllN .iAH. •wt t• Edwina catches up with • ...,.._.,. ......... __,~..,_,.n._•0.0..,_, him. She Is almost dnne _,.,..-............ Qs:;t .,.._,._ .... _.,... -·"< ................. w. ......... --·---away with but Marco saves l••••••••• .. ______ ._mi!•••'••-. her. Peter informs Jenny he bad ao uncle In San Carlos wbo was doing studies in criminal rehabilitation, but the uncle was emotionally Ill and killed ore bis subjects. Peter t.eUs Jenny that all the notes bis anc&e llept were 81derl. O:v-::-:1 j TAPE IALE 1 a.. 1111"11 INp I TK T-111 llC.Ull :i Ill ·~··· ....... I .,~....,.... I I ~13"-112" .. L........:!!'!:...--' L ... .,. I ----~..J &YAN'S HOPE: Faith.._------------------, dtscoyers secret paasace. LARGI teLICTION Of ATARt ANO but la locked lnslde and INTELLIVISION CARTRtOGES IN ITO~ rails down the shlrs. 1'1---------------------:. rendered unconscious. Ari Is tpuJted and taken to the l~---Wl~ .. ~ ... ft~-~==L/~-~llT~~-~.:CTl~IOM~":J-:----i b<Mipital. Wben be comes t-0 ... •.. -he soeakl oul of the WllOCASllnlM0'91'°9 hos_pltal to tc1 and find ...... wa .. oa&MllCW'T~ Falth. Hearin• Faith's ll---...~~~~~~~~~=:~-----1 cries, he rescUe'i her and ...... I O -,,.,, Cll6 c....-.., realizes lhe baa found the _..., Cl6 L. Giie OI Ow 0.. M Maril Kara shrine. loe •c.f t.• .._....._ cominuei to report Ari's actlons to Jhn Speed. E.J. catches Bft'bara walldn1 when ibe Hac:be1 for a folder on tbe ..._. ol her fireplace. E ."l . 1eta everytblnl' pp rum ltut Barbara dHtroya tbe ·- ti Friday movies JNaJNtfl.-.... ~ .. Cl> • * * '"llle Bectrtc > Hot•••'" (107t) Aober1 J-Aldbd, .._ Fonda. A - ... v..,.._... ..... 812 ""'°" .,_~ llot9eto---from- ~-·PQ· ll:80{C) *** ''llle ..... Of AIOIWI" (1H7) Yacaf s-1, ... Manin. ..,.. ..._.. • dllpel ... ...,,.. gle b' ~IOI from 1154to1"2. l'.a(D)••• ''tTor11NO>. ..... Fonda, Daly Par1on. Titr• -"lnO ~ ,.... ....... ~ !ion by a ,,.. ~ .,_,'PO' CI.I •. "HaarUlnd" ....... ''The lat Sun- .... (1981) Rock Hudaon. IOrtc Oouglaa. A -II ~by.,.,.. -.... 1ne1 • ~•T-cait- t1a ctrM. • ,. • "'The lnglortoul" ........ ,,.11)8o~ eon, ff'ad W..•-•· Two -'°"" .... unullMf fnalldlNp durtrlg "*' 8'b1ll to ........ ~ ............ ~ durtrlg Ula ----· ~ofWol1dW. .. CID••--n.a.a..,.. ............... ,,..1) ~ T..._ a.taa 0.. clft. A IUllurMn ........ find• ll•rMlf o•ttlno ......... _ _..... ........... loolla Oft. 'N ' Cl>•••·-n...._,.- (1NO) ..-... CalM, o..w-. Wtlll ....... ........ Niii f/l lfllp ..... BPSl•B•wlllttla.._ • T,...... •,..,,.,... ............ ., ....... .... ..,...411 oaeon, of ..-..w ••• -....... opw~ rt//11111' (1tl1) Mal Mdn. ........ .....,.,,. .... of Mt.MM_t ...... __ ....... _... ... .......... . .... _... ............. .. '°. ...... .. <l:l ••1' . .,,. ..... Of ,,..._ ........ ,,.., "'Mtt Taylor, LlftM ~wi.t·~ .................. eMc>. a cttwtar boat •kipper dlacovara a ....... .__,..1ratto a llldlllll ............. .. CI.I •. ''Wallln" (1tl1) ~~.~.,.. ra. .................... ..... -.cienuy,..... ,,... ..... ..,.._an ~ fll .... Ycwtl <*Y by••••' .... ..... "" .. ®•••·'Coal ..... ~ (1980> ~ 8jMMll, T-M~ LM .......... Lor9M L,._.'a ataa'ls-.. A fa'll'I J/llf ..... • ,.., ~ Ill ,... tcanludry ..,,.. • l'llUdl otdar looat ..., ..... ..,._.. .. ,.. ............... ,,... llldlllllrr· ?G' -a:>•• ... ..,,. ......... W'(1f74)CM ...... CMrtoeta ...._..A blUrre ratettoftaNp le I AENld .._ a .._ ......... ,.,.., • aefteeftttetlon ................ ..., ..................... ...... _..,.. ............ (_,, ... ......,._ ... ,., ...... ,.... ...... .. ·-;::: :.~ '"Cli ... 111111 ~- by ...... ·a •...., .... ....... Tol"(19IO) ... Fonda, Dae, PMon. Tllree .......... .,_ ........... ..,.. ...,,..,, ..... ~ .,_,'PC)• 11• CI.l ••• ... ''The ........ View'' (1174) w-..... ty, Paula PrallttM. M l111telllfatlv• reporter ....... to • ..-. ftattonwtda natwottl of pollllc* ....... 11:11 Cl> • * * ''The EJal:1rtc HolW•1" (107t) Robert Aadklrd. ,,.,... f'oftda. A u.-vaa-~--· 112 mllon ~ llof'M IO -'*" lrom 1111 ~-..•PO' 11:11 CID **.,.''The Nude lloltlb" (1MO) Doll Adami. ~ Kttalel. a.a.. aoant ....... 11"*1 .... "" lllOlll ....,_ ~ In .,_.ct .. 111116""-il(iina IO lauildi mll9llal tllet wll .............. .._ ~·PO' -· ....... (1112),...., Fiii, Martin Lendau. D**"B~"(1tee) Mel Ferrar, AoUllnl 8chltllftrlo. The fwnoua pelr"8r .. aided by "" lady !OW...,._'*" .......... '*'otto ~Niii--i.w . ~··'ffMn. Slayer" (1H1) Jac:k ,_,_, Jofwl Tenoy. M ~ youllCI -...... ... ... Of. band of -nor. to ..... "" ..,. unde, IN -*d wtM> ii-.. ........ and .. ............... ,_ r. .... "The Godaand" ,,..,~..._. ... ootra lloddlrd. ""' ....... .......... ~ ... .,.....,..._......, .......... -.... by, ....... to .. llll*IO bell¥ llit and 1 PSI El "I. ......... ......,. baNnd.. 1[ • •••• "MaNd ........ (1tt0) w.... Hun. .. .__ ...... -_...,.. . ...._.. ..................... ......... out of oantral 'A' -•Cl>••~· ....... en." ,.,., ......... .-.., ..._ c:.w.d. A fa'll'I ......, .......... .,, ................ .......... _____ ~ .............. Ill danger. "' tel ...... "leopl l..oc*I """" Lalllll"' (fNO> ,..... ........ ,.. WNNI. The ..... "' .. ~ ••• .....,,._ ......... ••• "f.,.... CllMlllar Of Dr ............ (1 .. ) ::~~ oounl ... "°'* '* Cllll>-.,. " • ......,,. Cll llOt· -1:•® .,. ...... The u.. Of ""' .......... (1MO) ~ MriDrn. aw-. .... ar Ni 8'lU•.-Y .............. ~ _ _... ......... .................. ,.... ~-"" ,. Cl)** "J'MHali; aa d ~ ,,.... "8bart Wllllll, T~ D9lma. Oft..._ .......... -.. ,... ......... ............ .....,. .................. .......... ., .. ........... --. -.1" .. Cl> .. ..__.. (1'111 Cllllt II I I • .... Lelllie. A .._ -...... SOMETHINO'S DEV!J.OPING -France Benard portrays S-young rogue accompanied by the governor <Logan Ramsey) on the way to the guillotine with the confident knowledge that his faithful girlfriend is to take care of the executioner on "Darkroom" Friday at 9 p.m. on ABC <Ch. 71. w.tlhOW.'PO' ......... WoMaraOf 1lle __.. C'telJ eo-. -...y. Nan8ead by .... ......... CC) •• "TM Ledy"-....... , 1179) Ellott ~ ~~.Alllnno­_.._.,... . ....,.. ----Into• daedly ....... c:..,., atloar4 a E11ropaan -SW-tr.in .,....... ............. ""'Qar. ~. ·N · • •• .,.....,oar (1911) Cerrel ...... 'Kart ~. A YcMuphlOll• YOUflt -aft wflOH ............ Man ......................... 10llwdaeti ..... 1oflllalr ......... ~..._.,.. .... ''TM M ~· (1111) __., eo... Ar#tottPt ....,.__ ...... ,.'-n.~' (1ffl) ,.,., CUtlll"f, a.111.-&..-.~ .... -• 4000 ,..,. old """'"")'. '"'' .,a ..... of_., • .., ~ .... , ....... .. ....... MAtMrieMd ~ .. (1MI) Hafwy ,......a..~ ""'p.1ld1 .... ..,...... --.. . _ ...... .... ~---....... . .............. ~ .. r..~lltMd" (1N0) ~-C91M. o..w.m..wt111...._. ....,,. • ,.. ol lfllp .. ..... -...... ~ ·~·....,.... ....... __ ...... .... ...,.., .... ~ .. --~:...,,.,.,... VlilW" (111'} ..... .... ty, .,.... .......... All , .. ,,... ..... .,. ,..,.., .............. .............. ., ~111111& ...... "~"""' 1118 ,..._.. C1'nl /W;. ...... E: .. c... ........ ,n-. (C)••1'"Aer-Of Patalon" ( 1171) Ellen .,,..,.,, ...... Mlroollr1. A -wllO kllad ,_ dlldraft en4 allta:' IE d .......... huaMnd "" .. iMala M. ...... w11o--.,,.... ... ...... and .. tlaglil8 "'·~~·w •••• ''The Hllrlear'' (1171)._.~a Waladi ..... "~'' ~ ........... . --··--.. -... lllountr ...,..,, .,.. ••CID*** ''Coal...,_.. C>ei iJ'*i H (1MO) ~ Specek, TOMl'll)' Lff Jona .... Oft ....... Ll'lfl'I Mcitll19..-,. A ~ -.,.. • poof ....., ... "'""~ ,,...,.... • ""°' ddar loclil boy""'°...,_. ..... IO ..00.:. Ill .. _... llldulery. 'PO' Saturday movies JNaJN(ft,- !N9919 ..... ,. ......... ..... •• (1111) .. .......,, ~T~.A~,_. _...,..IOptlw ...... ........... ,.... CCilllle ... *"'°"'-. .......... .... .... ,,.... ...., ,..... .,_~·A U.S. ...,, -00 ... ,,. "'!O ...... , "'' .. '""'",.. ....... .... ___. ... -Oft taoer.i aid lllr .... .... ...... ....... (I)*** ..,,. ..... . .......~(ttn) ................... ....._,,. ....... .............. .................. ~ ... -. .... ....... (I)••··~ _ .. , ... _........, .=::=:--.= ., ............. Illa ~-.......... .. ...._.... ..... ofllar ,..... IO clrMI t clMM ~·.-o· ............. ~ ..... ,,..,, Allfl Mdft. ................ of 1111111nctar1tandtno1 _ . ....,..,.,. Miapacl .... 8 BISI I Flllad --.. dllld --· -.. ·rir ••• ,. .. c.taa And WNapert" I tt72) Herri9I Andawon, UY \.Wl:wln.. ow... by ..... Barv- -. A ~ W01Mn. lier two ........ ~ _______ ,... .......,.... . ...,..,.... 10 OOIM IO ~ with -.it\. . 1'9{C)•••"No""*-" (1980> ""*-Btowna. Ctoaby, Still & . .._.,, Footaoa Cll ...... of ..... nuclear po-. ~ ,.... In New Yori! City dut· lftO hplambw, 111t. laet11rln9 tlla Dootlla 8'°"*'8, Carty Slfnon. .--T_..,, and Brwa lpr:tilM I I .. la_..,.... In 11111 docu •••laty. 'PO' ....... 'The~. F,_ .... LaM" (1176) Jedi Elam, °"° Taylor. TWo anllWopcllooy aw. danta nv.I IO IN ~ -~IO~for ·~,_,..,, <Bl •• ''Improper Qian. ...... (1111) AIFlll Mdn. ........... ,,. ..... of ml111nderatendln91 -e aodal w.tc.-IO Miapacl tflllt a I Pp I .... _.. .. CllM ..... 'PO' Cll•••1'"n. ....... ...... ,,.. ..... Nwt. Nr#totJt .....,._A ... catad ~"' tall• w.-.... -...~ ............ _.._ .. • ....,_fled .._. .... Iii dle8p ,,.. .. It.. .. .,~ .............. ........... (1MO) Edwsd Weal ad..._.~ ..... -· ........ _.. ad IO ..... Oii EflllMd'I .... Ill .. .,., w. .............. ~ Oft "*' OM! --.. CI.I • ••• MEllcelllllt'' (ttl1) Ngrl Tenoy, Nleol ~LThe ...... of l<lne Al1fu ...... pOMr and datlll IO .. Mlgtlea Cll 1118AoundTaillle.'A' ... • (I) ••• "Fclul,,...... (1171) Ooldla ..._, a-y a-., A M/flr lbt-*' ....... eldof .. ... ,.. ......... .. Mcoll.-llwoMd Ill • basre --of mwdera and tldt ,, ... .......,... ; •..... .,,.'-- .... '""' Ari c::.n.w, Uly TGlllllL A ...._, ,,,.,... . --· blactlm... and 1t111rdar ...., .. _..,.. out °' ................ - ......... IO M oflllelll ..... CileM. (A) <I:) * * ''Ooullt9 Trwtlte'' (1H7) €1¥1• ~raetey, __..~.A youllCI Mt· "lall llalraaa baco-• ---~· ....... ................ .. ® ••• ,. ''Oolllor a.. • .... (1tllt Olw .... ...... ~ .,_ ..... .............. ............... -.. ...... ..... ..... -<Ill** ..... , •• , . ............. ,*'J ~T ..... o.t111car. a..Atc•rr 11 ..... MN ..... ..._ .. .............. I'.....-:-.. ....... try'' (19t1) TilnoCtly ... '°""· Uftd• Pur1. An ~ .,... Md "" llendloepped glf1frlend, ..... to .. _....,. from aodllty. ..... dllclOa • ..., Mwe .... togaetwr .,.,. ba6ilO ceuaM by .... ........,'PO' -CC) ***'it "laat T8ft00 Iii Patti" (1173) Maf1on .,_ do. Marie 8ctlnal1Mr. Olrectad ~ 9amerdo ... toluocl. A middle rged """ .._ lnfllMlllul .... ,_,.,~ .... and an 1111111t11bllad JO'lflO woman meat and baglrl a compllcated affair lhrOllOhOilt wNcfl they remain namala9 lo MCfl °"*·'A' Cll • "The Chldtwt" (1980) M-11n Sllakar, GI Aoger9. A ltranQI rlldloao- IM doud tuma a or~ of ldloolc:t1ldr•• Into mur- darOIM iomblal with bladt fl:igarnalll.. 'A' CI.I •• ••a.ttan•• 11:80 •• * •. "'°'91 NlgM lo .Jarlc:ho'• (INT) Dean M•· tJn. o-ga ~, A town ~ .. cllall8ilgad by • tamale 1t1aecoac:11 -· ...... "Noe'' (1MI) Oane Heckman, Jim· ar-i. Al • plot lo -up 911 -.pa ..,.....,., ...... Iii a ..... ptaon liot. (D) * ".Jedi 'N' M ' ( 191'11) 8amantlla Foa, Jeck ~.A ........ ow- p6a .... dltlal8ad ... IOIM9e-lr'laldl. 1b•••••"111e~ _.. (1117) Elatlalll T.,_ kw, fllcNrd """°"· ..... '*""Ian ... .., .. .... of.__....111 ..... ........... .,..,.,.. ~.., ...... ~ -S**"..,,._F_ w.t''(1t40),,_.W ... llgrtd Gilrla. TM '*""*"' ol M ~ lloUll ... MI ...... ... ....,,.., ... ... .. ..,_ .. "" ....... unell ... ~ ... ··not llw'-olN.,..._. .. tolla. • ** ''Coalt To eo.t'" (fNO> o.ai cannon. .... art ltallla. A ,__, ~-·~ trucker llaullnt oettla C0811111'0--......... '*VII of • lllld ~ --*Y dla9a. 'PG' ~· *** '-nw. c.tMI _.. (1'72) Hal Hol- tlroc*, Hope Lanae. A ....... boy'• ._.. Cll "", ...... ........... ...., ... ~ .... ... ··~ Cl> ••• M.-. 11-.,EE Now"' (117') ..... ..,. do, Martlll ..... oer.a.d by Francia ,.... ~ An lnt ... te-ce 19Aftl ----Oft • ,,..,,., llP ,._ IJlllo ... ..,...,.._ ......-.. ... 1111. ,..,.._.. AWOl """'1 .... ""° .... foled .. ,,... .......... ..... ~·A' CZ) • *. ~ ''C:taa And .._.,.... (1172) Henteil ~ ......... UY~ Ohcted br """* ... "*'· A ~ WOIMft, ,_ ...... and.-.-. ..... .......... ... ..,.. ... -..... ........ to ... ... .... -®•*"'"llle~H • (tMO) ....... .... 0-,.. c. ...... .... ... , .......... .. t Jtlfltn,a~-. ......... ..,.,.., ................. ,, .. ......... ......... !!l ...... , ....... ... *•***"Clift ... ~~-~ ..... ............. FOR SAFETY .•. SECURITY •.• CONVENIENCE Automatic Garage Door Operators by Stanley LOWEST PRICES . . ·1N ORANGE COUNTV "We Are Never Undersol_Q" -::::::::~~::::::: r ---FREE extra transmitter with garage door opener StllnJey OlgTtat "High Security" Radio controls -three signals ~. "I . , . f' Dey or NigM Prompt, courteous • . conscientious service. S TANLl Y s,r-..• Doon•lep•n --• j ,, •. _,. '. "Leading lnate#• of Auto,,,.tlc Door o,,.,,.,.. In Otaf1119 County" IRVINE DOOR COMPANY Sales & Service BEASPeRT! The Newport Beach Tennis Club Is the lite of such prestigious eYents as the 1977 Davis.Cup, the Annual Pacific · Southwest Seniors Tournament, the Orange County Adoption Guild Touma. ment and others. Members. however, seldom find lhemsetYes waiting tor one of the 19 courts. The Club also boasts o Junior Otym~·size pool, Jacuzzi, dining 'room, and bar. . Members frequently take ad\lantage of the aftracttYe facllttles for pt1Yote parttes, wedding receptions, etc. Other soclaf acttvtttea Include br1dge, back- gammon and scrabble. A Mmtted number of Regular, Corpo- rate. SWtm, Associate. and Junior Execu tlY8 Membefshlpa a~ now available; plus our new '~NUAl. MEMBERSHIP". and "JUNIOR MEMBERSHIP" (12-% yn.). For mol8 informatton pteo• ca• our Sales Director at 644-0050. I /f~~~t!!M 260t EASllWFf DRIVE. NEWPORT IEN:H, CALIFORNIA 92660 ~--------------------------~--------... ·JoaNB1.osSBB ·ca~·<b ~Thei:>ldest Floorcoverirrg Retailer in Southern California --T'" -- . ·Family Owned ·~ S~rving California. \!I) Since 1879 • .'Ung/ ~~orinij anJ . WooJ Partjtu1i Conlracl • ComnNl'Cia/ • R.6uJ.niia/ -COSTA ~MESA .. " ::2 ~ ~ r-tS ~ ............. iiiili .. ililiiliiliilli~---~ ... ~ ... lll[lli------~!!!!B • ~ From Poge 23 . -, -~. A grOup of NI 0 if F-oMom'8 ....... ... ... rotallon ..... .......... ~., "'* _, ....... ..., .. "°"*"to -died• .... (C) * .... "Sllant ..._._.. ,,..,, ~ INlclng. ~ o.c.to. a.-111 college etuclerlt• lake ---tn·•~--­llol.-...... grtlly end .. unaoNed ,.,.,,., --·-.ct.-.. ..... .... t ........ "UnflilttlM Wit•" ( 1Nt) 8teplla" AudrW\, ..... 8ouqult. ........ ....,..., .. _ ........... ~ ... ..-. murdar ..... -~lllawlewllh .,.,.__ • * * ''Ccull DraQAa" ("71) ~ t.. Hllrtlllrt Loni. 11.-d on 1tl8 .-oiy by ..... 810ker. A _,.,.,.. ....... pttlf upon Mno .._.to ...... .. _ .... • ** ''T-OfTenot'' ( 1972) 8'ay "-11111. Fr8M ~.A...,_ and a ...... .....,..,. to cMCll • ......... loo. •• glrte' ICltlod. ....... ''The~ ..., .. (1llO) Johll Hurt, IWlltOtfr ......... A ~ wlli/...,,.... '°""' -............. doo-'°' ~ ,__. '*" lrom ... -• droue ....,_ ~·PG' (%) ...... "'The~ Of Wlldc!M" (1t71) ._.. .. F--. In tunMlf .. oeneury Auaerala. • )'O'lrl8 "°"*' "°"' .. Ouetaedc ... ~.....,.., .. ....... prclllfllly of -.......... ICltlod. .. (C) **""Happy ....... •• o-lnl" ,,..,, ..... Ina 1CM1n, Rita Mof9fto, A "--'d ........ ..,..,. par'Y .... ~· '°""' Phlladelplll• bome ai-w ... ~·IQ eocpertaiioa tor .... ~ I tJC 'W t:9 (]I) * * "Nlgflt Of TM ,,.,.,,.,.. ( tllO) ........ 8"lln. Cllf ~.A fol'· -polloeoMcs ~ • ct.eperate Harell ....,. .. ..,.... al .... y Oft! City '°' .... ........,. ~.lf .......... kJO. napped by•~ Cftnllr*. 'R' .. Cl) •• .,... Olllhn" (1llO) ...., ..... GI ............ ~ ....,. doud ..... l'OUC> of ac:flC l:tMM _. --.__... .. .,... ~·w •• .,;.~Im YfNI ~ .. (1tll) .... H1119r, ,.., Att9ll-Alt ,,._..,., ., .................. ................ ,...., 111•ew••.,... .... l .. DA .......... ........... ............. .., .......... (ttllllJt Joeeptl CoMn. ,_, e..art. A Of1ppled ~ ...-....... ,.., ..... •... .._. a.. ..... (.,, ... ...a.. ..... ..... .,. ...... ....._. __ .................. .......... ... (I:) • ·~ "OYlll*I Our-~·*" ...... T .. ... tc-r ....... Kll'I ..... llJO ........... .-• .................. ... ~ ... a-. ,,,,,,. ... .. Mlllll, .............. ,. ..... ..... ,, ... ., ........ . _ ........... .. ........ ,_ 4:41(%) •• ...,_..,.. (1NO) Clint EMtwood. 8ondr8 L.ol*e. A fofms .._ ....._ '""" .... .__,,..... .... ._ °" ........... "' • Wld W.llllOw.'PG' Sunday movies JNIUNNtt,- N'iL IOON 12lll. fl* "T ...... HldOan Junglle" (1916) Ootdon Scott. v.. ..... l'*> -............. .... r._ .......... .,. .... of .. ........ Cl>**** ·~v .. Kr-" ( 1•19) Duatln HolhM, ~ Slreep. A -bettll8 ..... Illa --... tor ~ al "'* young aon ...., Iha_.. out on U-. 'PG' • * .... "Snowbll !xpr_.. ( 1172) DNll ~ ..... Olaon. A .... v._..._.,. 11911 .... to .. Aoc*iea "' ., ...... eo......,lltie• ftlS!lfl ,.,...... .. lnlwftad. 'O' (%) * ** "Tlle ew. .,...... (1171) ~ ~ U1e &cHlom. A W91N1Y ..... ....., ........ '° ............... _. ,,. ""° -~ .... Ing • .., to Cllltl In on the clan'•.,,.... t• <C> *. ""°9110.-" (1'11)..., ic.dl. ..... .... CW9I. Alt eooallMc trucker, • beautlful 1*Hlllar" MCI • ~ .,... der.,.,,..,. .. .... ,....-~ 91"19 ..,, .. Md ....... 'PG' (]I) * * "l.OoptloW' ( 1NO) ...,.~~,. Mfl. T91181on bllldl eo • ........ ca.--ie .. _... al • 911111 ..,_...,,..'°_ °'* ............ .,.,. "**Y .,_ .. ...... .,.. ...... a1i.- dln. 'flG' ,.. **"6 ''The V*'t Of ..... .. (1Mlt ,,_.., Ft•idl: •·Ola GalM. A prelllatorlc 111o"ater ..... llaiwoc Oii • ..... ......__town Ul'llll ... .... ~~ ....... ..,.." (1111) ............. o.Ad ·- ""' A I J!lll I 4lcl dlllllo-.._ ...... . ,..,.... ............ -... ....... dMll\. ... * ............ "' ....... (1tl0) ..... LoNn. an a... Att A-lc•n lawyet ,.Ct wt~ llM!Md...,. ....................... ................ ................. (I)•••· .......... our(_, tcaM ~ ..... ..,,.,. Wllafl • ~~ ...... ..... , .. _.._. ............ ,.,, .__, .. , ,_. ... .................. ........... 111 ... ~. <Z>••••"lll'lwt" (M1) DMeilr .._., Lm ............ ~ ....... ............. ............ ,. .... _.,....,....., ..... .............. ... ...., ..... _ ............ ....... , ....... • 118 L"' .. • ·~ "VIiar Of Tiie o.IW' (*7) ..... ,.._ • ... ..._ ..... ,,... ...... -~ ........ GETIING EVEN -Robert Conrad stars as con victed Watergate conspirator G . Gordon Liddy. wh o continues his penchant for making waves when he challenges the prison warden's operating guidelines in :.'Will : G. Gordon Liddy," a fact-based World Premiere drama on NBC <Ch. 41 Sunday at 9 p.m. Jta~ Jal'ltyS MEN'S TRADITIONAL WEA.a for thoee who shop for Quality Pat Marley Is "How best to get more" out of your 1982 fashion budget ... for our unparalleled tradltlonals wear on forever! We have ;tl8 correct fit ... handsomely' detailed. successful look you'll want to go alorrg with your 1982 Income projections. SUNDAY EVENING, 7:30 P.M. January 10, 1982 -- MUSIC FOR GREAT LOVERS The Pacific Symphony turns to thoughts of 1o~e In a program of music Inspired by history's greatett lovera, hlgflllghted by a rare performance of Schoenberg's Romantic maaterplece, Pelleas and Mellaande. The cone.rt open1 with the classical beauty of Gluck and Include• R.vel's tar ballet suite. • . . ---• ROOM ADDITIONS -REMODELING $OLOO AS LOW AS ~0--A MONTH• THERE HAS· NEVER BEEN A BETTER ;--' TIME TO ADD ON THAT EXTRA BEDROOM 1 . • ~~ ~ARTEHJ A't~ J\~~E'C19..~f ;T~ Af~} L ~If 8~E~ ~ AND BATH REMODELING . 1~ : CALL NOW FOR A FREE ESTIMATE OR~ VISIT OUR St-«:>WROOMS AT = ~ 2tJ WISTMIMSTH MALL ~~ ~ ~ IU,,_ LIYa NIAi SEAi SJ :rlJ ~ 1 oo.% PERFORMANCE BOND -a ~COMPLETiON DATE GUARANTEE -LIEN~ ~FREE CONSTRUCTION. ~ ;J'J . 71.ut4-f17'-714-lfl·4•11~ ~ LAMO m I ~ CONSTRUCTION ~ ~ *BASED ON SAL ES P91CE OF S6.000 ~ (;;'10 · · 19'1.A.P.R.0 .A.C. • • m (~ 81-373261 r:::i. ONE WEBC lntroduc~ Offer JBL P~IGES NEVER LO ; "lUiOA ~~·110. . r.JW "17 ... ;,; Ir.. .. 5... .."a.."llfJr~ '250. $'50 ... NUW 4140 ... ,..._ . -------1 i t 1_ 51 ! Movie Gulde for the Week ~ ----------------------- Cll :> c fi'rom Page 30 ~ -pro blllllf!MI ~ • >-....itly. 'PO' 111 1:00 (%) * * "Btonco 9llty' · -g (1ff0) Clint Eutwood, u. Sondt9 Loella. A lonner Cl etloe ulellmen from .._ O ~ rMl!ne hie ~ ...J of performing In • Wild ~ W_. etlOW 'PO' -0 2:00 CC> • * ~ UThe Herd Wey" (1NO) Pelrb McGoolw\, ci: Lee Ven a..f. A hired ......,, llae to nwik• one mont NI ~e he c.n retn. 'R' • *. ·~ . .,,._ Upe. Thoee Ey.e" (1880) ~ Langella.. Q¥lnl8 o·eon- "°'·A Aemboyem -etodi ldor. 'WM ~ ol Broadway atardom, ...,. en Incompetent, ~prop boy and ptomottl,.... ,_with a dlorua girt. 'R' l:OO (%) • * * ••Jhe Euro- .,_. .. (1919) Lee Aemlck, UM BcHlorn. A ...ithy eo.ton family prapene to W9loome two vlaltlng coue- lna ~ •• ectuelly .... lng a wey lO CMfl In on ttle oe.tl'• IOr1Ufl9. a:ao CC> * * "Sleaping Cet Mla-ciar" (19M) a.n- SignoNt, y-~ Occupenta °' • train -per1rllent .,.. i.rgM:a '°' ...._ .. 1t'9 herldl of • ....... 1199. 4:00 (JI) ..... "Sidney SNt- don'• ~·· (1979) N.ittJJr"t HtlpDum, Ben Oa:r--~ '* tau-dlaa, • -lnMrtla -ol the wottd'• ........... OOI'• pclfllMoN _, ~ ..... °' .. acNn*lg ,....._, ....... -ol .,._la a muniar9r. 'A' •**''*"Y..-eE\4'' (1NO) I'm ~. Kip ...___The dllc ~ ... ~ rum c:1u1> ,......,_ • --of pflOl'9 Qlla ,,_. lllr'O "* -.. be murdaNd In her ~ _., how .,.._ 9:00 and mtdnlGflt Oft New v..-a&a.'W .... CZl * .... ··c:eoa.er Wal!Nd T,._.. ( 1Me) ~ ~ A1 u.llllf.. °""'II Wortd W• •. a_. -naM ,... c::a.ctl .__ ............. • ""° ~ .. ""*--.._ lonO ....., '° blow .. •German-• .,. Monday movies JNllJNtt it, - ~ .. (JI)** "Xwwdu'' (1MO) OMa~ca.ie ~-A~--.a ~,,...1nc1 • ...u. ....wl ~ '°"' ..,_toGPM upet.aga ..... 4800 ........ 'fllG' .......... .._. .. (1MO>JGM ....... 1>1Md MofW.Ar--totN. e-ci of....,.... et an Olldand'Mr .... "* .. ~-~ ... ~ .,... ~ ol beOO!Nrig • PfO.,.....,.. ~. rellty. 'PO' Nll<D>••"~ ,,..,., OonoMla ,.,_, ,..., Torn. A moo-of aT- ~ g1r1..-11..----..-.---· """' ... r9nCMr ... ... ,_., ... end -~,,.,.. ..... PO' ,.~ ••'4 ""'-..... ...._.., .. 17)....,.. ,,... ....... Cllit..,.. ,....,.,,A..,......_ -la tlmWtmad by • ...,.... ....... ...... Ill ......... .,,.,... ..................... '"' WASHINGTON LOVE AFFAIR -Richard Jordan and Lucie Arnaz star in ··Washington Mistress.·· a new ·tele\'ision motion picture Wednesday at 9 p.m . on CBS <Ch. 2l. Jordan portrays an ambitious married lawyer who becomes romantically involved with a United States Senator's aide. played by Miss Arnaz. (%) •• "8"ange a.ha¥· kW" ... "foea'• ( 1177) Mao- Doneld Carey, John eo.e.. ••• * "The Amulng ~ Hugffae" (Part 1) (1117) TorMIJ lM--. Ed fllndaN. The hlQhly voletlle and ~ ,,... .,...,... -• Wllllllfl and """-to Indulge hie ol'lbeat ~ and c:unoua raga <B>•••'Ai"a..k• Morant" ( 1NO) Ectward WoodwWd, Jacll n.omp. 90!\. AulttllMI __,.. ed to llglll on Engllrld'e l6de In .. 8cllf War ............. ~ Oft .,. -"'""'-····~"The lllac* ltl!Mton" ( 1179) Ketty ~. Mldcey AOOfley. Al* being r-.cuact .,_ tfl8 lllland on wtlldl n., .... ahlpwr«bd togeeh- ••• ,... boy end a .... ~ lrwOt\llld In .. ,_of the oanll.Wy. 'G' ...... ''IOec.1111" (1t1t) lym-Holy JoM. ._, Robby '..,_.., A p10!Mallig youtl9 ..,... .... and .. ~ lnd......,~Nrd to cope ......... le ~ to .,. •for • ~ ~ OClflllP l'llichl. (A) •• ""YlceN" ~ .... IC-. ........ ic.. ...,._., FOUT vldlllll of a ...... IO(i\ ...... to lr1IC> .............. court• Mt "'"' ''"· C"arenta4 dlactetloft 11 acMeed) CC) .... ,..,.... .. (1NO) Paul Mlclla.. GIH•, ._ Hogln. A group of """'* pMlantl .. --.,.. aoooi •ICI to their lndMdlMll ...... 'A' CD>••"~" 11"0} T....,. ........._A tootl ............. ··-_, cantee °"' ... ,..... ..,...... of • ...,.,_. ~ ""° --~ ....... In --to .., ........ ........... .................. ........ '" . a11<I>•• ........ ,. ,,...... t:t0 Cl) * * "The HOllyWOOd Knlgtlts" ( 1te0) AoOar1 Wllfll. Tony Dania. On ~ e-i .W 1n 1"6. a rOWftt lllgll achool gang ..... --In ~ Hiia to ...... the dolllng of .. hMgOut by ... local home --a.od-etlon. 'A' ~(JI) * * * "All TMI Jen" (1971) Roy 8c:Mldar, ..... .. Lange. The tumultu- -... of • pr°'*"'6oNll dWICS le ~ from -on IN ltage to per'IOfW crtaaa. 'A' ...... ''Selem'• LAlt" (1179) OMd .... ,,_ ~.....,on t11e novel by ...... Klnf, A- ~---,.unato .. ~._. .... .... .. °"' to llop ....... of ........... °" ... tGwrilJIQllll by ....., ---. .-CC>**"'"A~Ot Pualon" ( 1971) Elleel 8lnl)'ft. ...... Mscourl A -wfto ltllad lw cHldf9n and ..,.,,...,.... .... .,. .. ~ laft ,_,,....an-*- .tio doeM't ,..._ whar9 ICtllle _,.and .. .,.. In .... prtlan. 'A' 11:00 ()) ...... "Utt1e Mies Ma111•" (1NO) Walt• Mat1lllu, ....,.. ~ lleMCI on the DMtOft ,_,.. -.y. A l'Ulf, ..... .,... ........ .. ....,.. ....... __, lie ...... ..,.,odd IMO-,. ....... ..,, . ,.. .. • ~Mt.'PO' 11l41 Ca> * * "~aln Mld-nlgllt" (1MO) Tracy labea- tllft. A ~ dllc ~ 'hllllo ......... hlft llla nllllo ...., )ob _. ...... out ol llClloot. ti*• to radio broedc:Mt· Ing ,.om hie """ while orv-lllng Loe Al'Ollal ..,... -.-no • rrtlfJ'fY ~ kif IOOll~'PO' 1.-eo••"<:r•" (1171) w-. ...,,.,, .... AllMrt. The ltory ol • ....... ... In .. "'°'* lt'twl'lfll ..... ,_ .. ,. ..... ~ p••-5 1"' ••• ,.~I, II '°' TheS-" (1977) ~ taty. ~ IO«* .. tM _,.. ... °' ...... ...,,..._ ~ bylrnabbnta ol the ocean'• depth• lndlld9a tootage of .... .... Cl---and • llgflt .,.._ • ,,_., ... and an~ •• "00ft'1 ~ Tiie pt\_ .. (1910) J-• Westmor.-nd, Ro Gen· leh. A ~ wtltl nurnlf'OUI peraonallty ~ COflWllll.a • --Of ~..=:--811(' ( 1NO) CllM Eaatwood. 8oNlra ~ A tor-ms ...,......_,"°"' .... ...., .......... .._ '°' ........... In • Wld ' W... .,_,'PO' -®***"IT06'0 11MO) JaN f'onda. Dolly '8rt0ft . Tilree -1Qng -,... ... their~ gMlor\ by._.. dlalMnlll .,__'PO' tl:te~ * •. .,,. Lady v- ...... (1tl'I) Elloct Gould, ~ ~ Alt lnnc>-_.. -...... ...,.,. _ ..... Into. ~ ......... CIC* ebdard • european .,,.. trllln "~ .,...,....... .... 0.. ~.'"G' 1e4I ()) ···~"a.Ing.,,.. .. (1tftt .............. ¥.,......A ..... ......... llllddal ... d flllf\ .... onty kllOWllldp ol ... °"'"" wottd .. .... ~.-. tralNftdO. fw and power~~­ ... ~ Ind poltlo- Cllrw ..... .... le • O*fllul. 'PO' . ,.-. •• "Tlla AmertcMo'' (1116) Olefwl Ford. Fm L~. A T-c:owtM1y flrldl ,_ and __... turewMrlhe~to --prm 8li:fllM bl* '° ..... , •• "In'* MorltMy" 1:00 (JI) *'A "Jrorn The UM Of The Maloi.-.." (1tl0) A """81'91.ety ,,.,._.Ill eel ..--··· ,._,,...,."" ....... ""°"'lie ..... ' ~·---. .. :-...,,... • (1980) Mlctl89I Ontkean, Mwgol Klddsr. Three peo- ple beglrl • t1'angulat , r-In Graanwldl Vl-'>G• that continue• throughout the in.curial • IOdll mlleu "' the '70.. ·R' (%) • * •'h "The Parallu vi.w" (1974) Warren Beet· ty, Peul• PrentlN. An lnveallgallve report•• a11empta to uncover • netlonwlda netWOfll of politlcel uuaalnl 2:IO CC) •• ••Pflobie" ( 19801 Paul Mich eel Glaaer. S.-Hogaon. A Qfoup ol mental pau.nta we rnut· dered according to thelf lndlvldual fe¥1. 'R· :taO 8 1t * "The L-lna"' (1M7) ~ Mac:Ar111Ur . &.... Ollller. A eollege pt'Oleeeor beGoi'Ma the "guni" of an underoround c.moue hippie cul\. a-M® ...... "The Outlldar" (1978) Sterllng Hayden • Cr9'g W-A young ldaellal trawl& to Northern Ireland 10 join the •truggll tor lndeQendence 'R' (%) • * "Btonco Blly'' (1980) Clint Eutwood, Soodra L.odla. A lorn.' ltl09 NIMman lrom ,.._ VWwy r...._ hie dt- of performing In a Wild W•Uhow. 'PG' 4:11 (C) **'""The Spiral Stairceee .. ( 1977) ~ tine BINet, ~oph« . PlurnrMr. A~ deef· mui. le terror1zed by • ~ llller'WtlO lur1::• In the afladowl _.,.oun0- lng an alagant manelon. 'PO' Tuesday movies JNl/AJAll't 11. - ~. l:OO CJ:)*** "The FOW.:' (1111) Sancty Dennie. Keir Dullaa. 8aead on the etcwy by O.H. t..wr.,_ The .~...., .,.._ two laeb6afl io-.. r..._ • c:rtdcel point .._ • hafld.. -·ano-~at tMlr rsrnote Canadian fwrn. .......... ~Mcwte" ( 1979) Documentary. .... by ... OldWd. Archival film footage dw01*'8alM~ol the U.8. ~ p«IOl'Wft, tocuelng on ltla dramMlc: Apolo 11 moon ~ 'G. r• (D) * * 0'1lle IOd Ft0m Not~" (tl71) Jan. nllar MoA•1U • A 12-yeat· oN girt .......... In and out ol troub6I .... """ '*"' .. ·-... 1peper. 'G' ... "The DI&' T1IM Ended" ~ •• '1M AIMdr'9 ~ Hllghaa" (P-1 2) (1977) Tommy Lee.--. Ed RMd9rs. The hlaNr 'WClatll9and~ ...... tlrnmO!llllre -....... ; and.,.__to~ 11111oMi.-ct1111': •and Ollftoul,..... CC) •• •14 ......... ,,_, Paul Munl, Oeof99 Alft. A .... *"8 lloM- .._,.._to tlie top°' .. .... c111ttr1t 9te II It Ille ;, Cl> ...... ''The.....,_ ...... ,,.. ~ """" Anthony Hioc*lna. A ..._ cated phYl'eJ•.n taltaa under Ne ~ • horribly ...,._, """ --... Ill .._ ...... ~ .,..,. In c:t-.> hall llllM:llllona. 'PO' uo® • • "The .. o.-.. 8hftnklng W-" (11tt) U1Y Tomlin. Chw1al Gro- din. A MlbUrblln "°'--"' find• heraelf ~utng _..., .. .... ""°°'1• °"'*' hulblnd tool:• Oft • .,.. <D> (J) ...... Mhut'' ,.,, DlldllW ...... Ula Mlnnell. wtllM .. famlly MWnpll to tonie ~ Into making • Pl'..tr.noed IMniage he doean't want, a -dnllllten, dllgUIUllOly r1cll plllytloy .... In low -"ti an~ ad.- wtlO ~·, meet tl!eif ~t•Uona.'R' t:OO 9 Cl) * * "Grff.141d Ughllllng" (19n) Richard Pryor, 8NtJ BridgN The lrue ttory of aloc:k ear racM Wandell Scon and hla flgtli to OYWCOIN ptej- udb 10 make It 10 the big time la tOld. (R) O••'h "OdeToBlly Joe" '19781 Robby Bens eon. G1ynM o·ConMt. Saeed °" the song by Bob- bis Oentfy. A tormented t~• .,... Ul*i- encee compllcate hie IW.t 1tue rOINnOL 'PG' t:t0 {C) * * * ··Mo NIA•" 11eeo1 ~ er-. C<oat>y, Stllll & Muh. Footage of a_.... cf Mlll- nuclMr po.-~ held In New Yonc City duf. Ing September. 1979, lealurlng th• Oooble Brother•. Catty Simon, J-T9)4or end Btuce &pf'loiog• • • '· i. cornpMad ... tHe~.·PO' 10:00 (JI) • * "NlgM OI The Jugglef'. (1MO) J- Broln, Clrf Gorman. A lot· mer police ollloer ~ a deaperate aearch ttvough ttle ltrMll of .... v one Qty tor hll rn1ae1ng dalgMar. ~ k.16- neoc>ed by.~ c:ttMlnal. • A' , 1:00 cm .... "The 111o1at1on °' Clludla" A )IOUflQ wtfe, lgnOr9lf by .. o6dar ,.,. bend, lum9 to a MW line of _.,,.., ...... la~ IJI hlr ..... lnatNCtof. 'A' (%) • * .... ''Criea And WhllS*'I" ( 1972) H#'rieC ~. Uv Ulmann. Olractad by Ingmar a-v- man. A dy4rlo -. her two ........ _, • OOl'l!p89-"°""" ._..... girt recall ttlelr pM9 .... ~ to -to grtpa 1llltl daMt\. 11:ao(C) ...... "Silanl ScNMI" (1N0) Rebecca 9aadlnG. v--o.c.to. 8-Wll coMege atudent• tue rOOIM In a foleOoclf ICI old !IOI.-..... .,..., end ... urllOhiad ....... -OOMll' .... )l9lf9 ..,..,. (1) ....... , ..... Now'' (11791 .....,..._ ... do, .......... Dhcteel by ~ Ford ~ An lntell~ eteflt ~ on a ""8:rkWI 14> ,._Into the~ juf9a to Ind and kll • ~ AWOl Arrlfl/ oftlcs MIO .... talecl al .,,.... ......... at ,. ~·w 11)41(11) **" ..... ___ .. (1111) 8-Amid. TOll'il'll'r Lee --.. A 11oo11.r end 1 dow:_..,.... lum ~ ...... Md head .... '° Ind ......... g9lle up '°' ~._~ ..... .. 1 •• ~......_°' .... end" ( 1t7 t) T1na Allfllont, ....., • .._. ,,,.., IMill'I COliClllllllUed to .... tor ........... ~ ..... •• GIUnMn .. ----to Nrtoa wlteN h• becOM•• .......... ... bendd Mot~~ • •• \.\"Holl) wood ~ .. (1971) CendlOe AWllon. Didi ..... FNaf\ "°'" ....... • ~ ...,iring ....... ~ ln~lnareel~ "* ... "**' le pert. of her mo"'9 de0ut. 'R' 11:19. • "Attecll Of The Monat•n" ( 1tll) ....... ~aw.. pt., Mllr""1· The lntlabll· .,,.. c4 the ,..._ "taro ' tflr•.._ Eatlh with .... '°"°"-See Moa:M. Page 34 COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA 92827 PLAYROOM ··-:.-.z.: ' • •.• • • • • ·•·. '•' •• '!" ·' • " " .,. . . . \' . ' ~ . . . ,. ' f. ~ . '\ \ ' . ~ . ·:·. A title on the door ... rates a Bigelow on the floor. When you've got Bige1ow helping you hdJd down the fort, that lived-in look can be a beautiful look you can be proud of. Bigelow is tough enough to take anything the little darlings dish out ... from food spills to visiting cowboys. For every Bigel6w is engineered from high-performance fibers for long-lasting beauty,and protected with Scotchgard® to make cleaning a cinch. Come in today and _. : look over our beautiful Bigelow carpets. You 'll find colors and styles and patterns galo~e. all with the long-lasting good looks Bigelow is famous for. -· . . j t. . • I . I I I I I ! 1 _ . . .I ! : . i l ··· .. ~ • r j Pilot TV Log, Frjday, January 8, 1982 :-i i . . 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(II .. ,. .. '< OC'D>ro ' . i I i i i ~Cil·~IDOg1 111 i'1!1 a;'~!! 1n:!~•n~!Ii1 p~11I!iI~i~H1 ! i l~!f t l ! ii'~!~ l ! ~!J ~~~!Ii 11itli1 11iUPd.t-,;1m'1!!Uh1,1:i 11Hiif ;,:l;?mP!f ;:d-,;, i!lh . ~!i ~i "I-:: :•l.l~fs ~!> J 1t1f Sl '~ sgit~ -4 !l 1A1~~ fi. f••' !r!J-:: o ~c:C'D5 f,Ji i~fi$J Jlf!Sj Ji.I,~ lfi~J tfir.~f 0 I lcsf J ii!ift ft.fl ~ o!::a. ~ ' . -· I I .. ; . I I I I ; i. ; i l i .. ii· 11•!1••11~~ i ·1 ~~ ;~Iljfli!fJjll'f!'·1111?t'~!f it~ti•~~ijljfi~1;1 1E~!~l1i 1~~111~!!!t~;11 1l?~11 1~i!i!~~11~~1~11~i~~ ldi!!l 1 :!1 1l1 i , ~·i 1'".!t'1.·1 :i'.iihl!b!~!!!~:rk1!~il '1l1,;:u1i.[IU~!1 !JU UH1j1H1!1f 1iatm ;, !hi11}hii :m;!111 1:1r . . l1iJI it ~ , -~' t t J1 .11111l1 • ~,i~ Sl ·~11 ,~~l!Ili~fl~, ifJ::~ -~ sf = tt·I~·-;11 11(" ltlf>~ ·i 1 tJ1~ 111~ · . : J. J-. !t.. · ·i Jit.I ' li!i.l' lif1l il!rf{j ' f1.t• ·I~~>· · o~!llif Jilfp lifoj ;J~o~. ~ ~J; ~i!.>! Jzrf~ J ·' 1~ :: . i i I I I .. I . i i l!'f'li!litltf~!J!f'(J~11~~tllflj~1111~~l)lif ~1'IJ i~l~fl(1f1~~fll($~si)f lif~~f!(ij!}Jl~lffj~fj~~fi§Pf~il!~!~fi~iiljl~Jl • I~ •. I:• ~Jt 1' •Jc fJ-. .s '' • if!·J1-~ •·f'• -· • -••1 i·· t11•1·~·1 "f' itf1J1·1t. t,t··if···a~ ~i i~~;i~!~1.!!I ~1 !!J1l~!i·!i!iil!!!~!!~i!:jjiJfi11~11i!~~li 1 ll;:1111!!!!i .!i~11 i";!1~!i'!i · Iii lilli!~iiiil'~!i!!!l!;·1 •iH ~wm 1hiih nd; u.~1 11u~ i~lF .HUH lrn ·~t.Jnn ut ~ .l hH ' I M~t,~ ;:;~Jw thr I IRVINE DOOR COMPANY Sales· & Service 552· I 41 I Insured: Bonded & UcenMd Contr. No. 312381 SELF-DEFENSE INTRODUCTORY COURSE . ·3 * PRIVATE lESSONS * 'Gift Certificate * Available Private lessons are verv lmPOr- tant to beginning students. We feel t~t 1 private lesson Is worth 3 or 4 hrs. of mass group Instruction. Learn self-defense.fr-am Cham- pion Black-Belt Instructors. Bob and Barbar.a White have been teaching Karate In Orange County· for over 13 vears to men, women and chil- dren of all ages. Get into good shape and learn self-defense at the same time. LASESl-SIDOP " ·. _W~~~.-AFTER \/¥EEK . _ . f . _w_e "make-each day a treat·. ---- CARWL . ICE CREAM STORE No. 2187 ALPMAIDA SHOPPING c:eNTER 21311o.lrtlleDI _ AtW~ _ SANTAANA 751-4771 RESH .. . .... -. &A:t'URDAYS • SUNDAYS . . LUCKY'S SUPERMARKET C!NTD 115718olu Chica ~­--AtHell HUNTINGTON BEACH..-. 140-1370 .. eekender Y< H 11{ ( ( J\lJ>l.l" IL ( ,l :1 1n : It l < )i{ \'.\( ,!-: t C l.\Sl l ll\'IJ{S!( l\:~ •Jan~a!Y 8, 1982• Jonathan Farw_eu..-- and Linda Thorson star in SCR's 'The Play's the Thing' ' ·His iype's the thing By JIMMY JOHNSON Delty ..... ~ ..... ·--Not only is the play the t.blq, but u far u actor Jonathan Farwell is concerned, tb~ pJay is the'Ollly tbinl.L Farwell; who -wm play Sahllor=- Turn a i in the South Coast Repertory's production of •'The Play's the 1binL_" is the flfst actor the company as gone lo search ol in New York. "I .would11"t"" say it waa me, Jonathan Farwell, the actor they were looking for," the handsome staae actor wu sayina durin1 a recent interview. "lt was more a type ol actor, something specific the role calls for. "The role calla for a suave, upper clau type ol character who can be very British. I've done a lot of that - and I'm suitable for the part. • • ActuaUy,'' Farwell continued, "Lee Sballat, who is dlreclin& the play, was in New York for another reason. And since they had not been able to cast the part of Turai in L.A., she decided to bold an audition in New York. "She had seen me at the Seattle Repertory, knew me as an actor. We bit it off very well. I had ataae and classic experience, aomet.hlnc inany film ac:tors do not have, and that's · something this part calJs out for." Farwell baa done commercials, televlaion daytime drama and recorded taltin& boob for tbe blind tbroulb the Library of Consresa. but he's primarUy a sta1e actor. He bu performed on Ital• at t.be Ahmamon, the Mark Taper Porum, tbe Seattle Repertory Theater, ~e (>.ages • With her,-the dream's the tiling By JIMMY JOHNSON Deltr Piir"................ ' Actreaa Llnda Thorson baa clothes and furniture scattered from here to Loodoa, but when her dream comes true that will all be cbaneed. Thorson, 1t1rrln1 u Ilona in South Coast Repertory'• new produc· tlon of "The Play'a the Tbln1," hadn't planned on.doin& 1 pl8J w 1be came to California, but abe beard ao much about SCR temptatiGD 1ot the best ol her. "I came to California to do film and televiaion," ahe said over lunch the other day. "I've done 1 couple ol thin&•· I did not want to do a play. If I were IOinl to do that I'd 10 back to New York, but from what I bad beard about South Cout Rep, I de- cided why not? "And t.be part I play is perfect for me." Tbonon ii the only female in the play. She portrays a ptjma donna See Paget • I • I I -I I l I --- - ----------------------- ~ Eail~d knight battles technological dragons c !! l ~ JEFF PARKER thinJdnc about them. He makes th1nls ba~n by •Mir,.....,.. not lhinkinl about them too: II ax's subcomCloua ln "Modem Problems," Chevy Cbase plays is a launcbinc.i>ad for reveqe-tar1eted teleldnetJc ~ Max, an air traffic controller who is so recuJarl)' · miuiles. Nobody knows qui~ what to do. dumped on by things mechanical that be can't There are touches of brilliance here, but u a muster lbe strength bnteml 'With tbe people ta-bis-whole. "Jloden Proltlems" doesn't wort. K life. Wblle Max returns home after a tone day or Shapiro, wbo ~rected and co-wrote il, bu. a sharp wosk a trailer in front or him spews chicken eye for the kinda of contemporary follies that feath~rs on his new car, the cassette tape unreels tM:fall Max, but doe~~.seein to lcnow,,what to ~o in his lap, the sun.roof crank comes off in his band with them .. As in ~ ' ~roove Tube, Shap~ s and a piece or metal sla.abes bis door wben be ~~ength here is ~~ individual scenes. Bu~. unlik,e parks. lnslde bis New York City apartment, Max <?ro~ve Tube, "Modern Problems lsn t can only get bis answerinc machine to runction ep1~c -it n~ to build: The film is. abort, long enou1h to learn that bis 1irlfriend and runnm1 Just 91 nunutes, and it leaves us with L1?e roommate, Darcy (Patti D.'Arbanville4 bas tired reellng that something bas been ten out. Max's big of his indolence and jealousy and moved out. revenge scene -a spoof on "The Exorcist" - Darcy comes bac1' to apoJo&ize for 11ot s~in1 doesn't carry the kind of weight yo~ need to feel at goodbye in person -an obvious ploy to 1et Max to the ead and .the subseq~ent reumon. w'i~~ -Uarcy talk about what is_wrong between them -oufli'"e comes too soon. Th,e mam problem w1lb Modero -wotrt take the bait. He's paralyzed with the bad Pi:obJems" !.s that tb~ script ls lbJn -even at 91 luck in h\S We;· as someone later points out, he's a mmut~ you can still see the stuffing used to prince who thinks he's a frog. .6tretch it to feature length. Chevy Chase, as usual, ls great run to watch, He looks heavier, sleepier here than in bis other movies and the loot is right for the anestheUzed state that Max is in.during the first half of the story. He doesn't look like he's having much fun though- maybe it was the material or maybe it was the severe electric shock be sustained in one or the fantasy scenes, after which be wu boapltalize8 for rive days. CHEVY CHASE as a victim of our times. "Modem Problems" ls a fairy tale where tbe dragons tre machines -cars, tape decks, telepbooes -and the lmigbt is a man who wastes all bis time slayinc them. By the time be r~elves the ultimate modern insult (a truck filled with nuclear waste spills it all on his car' while he's drivin1> Max Is so plugged up with an1er be can b..-dJy function. The waste first turns him green then turns him telekinetic: he can make things happen merely by Table to Table Patti D' Arbanville is the bilhli&ht or the show ·as Darcy, whose compassion for Max is rtnalJy stronger than her revulsion for him. D' Arbanvtlle has a pert race and slurs her words in a combination of seductiveness and capituJation. · Her role is written with an intelli1ence and care (as is 1be role of Lottaine, played by Mary Kay Place> that D' Arbanville supports beautifully. Brian Doyle-Murray brings a comic, bard-ed1ed warmth to bis role as Brian, a disabled eubllsher; and Dabney Coleman bas a few fine moments as a self-improvement author whose greed is nearly as big as bis ego. At a time when "big" movies receive multi-million dollar promotion campaigns no matter how bad they are, it's a bit of a shame to see "Modern Problems" get almost no promotion at alJ. ll's a modest little film and it bas problems, but at least they're honest ones. • HISTORIC AH-CHOO -Film historians say this is the first close-up movie ever shot. It s hows Mechanic Fred Ott. famous for W sneeze throughout East Orange. N.J .. domg his thing before Thomas A. Edison's prototype movie camera. The date: 1894 . ------------------------------------------------ A few surprises at Newport's Paradise Cafe By MICHAEL DOUGAN But the food's tbe thing and there, too, Hogan cooked according to our specifications, was dry Of .. .,...,,........ and master chef David GroU seem on the right and not entirely satisfying. ''I'd Uke to bring someone here for a business track. The menu ls predominantly American, but In addition to a choice of rice pilaf or baked dinner," commented my companion aa she popped not without its exotic aspects, and the appetizers potato. all entrees are accompanied by a heap or a piece or calamari into her mouth al the Paradise and deserts make Wlique rmds for the Jaded diner. fresh sauteed ve1etables. Cookin1 them that way Cafe. ''But J wouldn't want to come here with a After serving lee water with a slice ol lemon -allows the vegetables to retain their crispness, Jover." a simple ,but pleasing touch -Our waitress giv1ng pleasant texture to an otherwise ordinary Indeed, this tbr~weelt.old eatery at 800 0 . brought us an appeti&er or fried calamari. It was, side dish. Newport Center Drive in Newport Beacb could not couervatively put. delicious. At M.95, U1e portion The Paradlse Cale is one ol thole ratau.ranta be described as iJltimate. Rather it la an airy, seemed Calr. (We p assed over lbe cheapest where you want lo eat dessert no matter bow htll spacious place with a moderately festive decor -appetiser, pate at Sl.15, and didn't order the you feel. 'Ibere are four cbo6ees -Haagen Dau the kind or environ where part.lea ol 1ix can "Puedile Potato Stint" -CGDtalnlnt caviar and ice cream, ehoeolate mouue, chocolate fondue ucbuie gre1arious touts and Jauch bUt loud. served with sour cream -)»eeauae 17.95 seemed a a nd, our selecUoo, berries Romanoff. In this cue, Tbe scheme, accordinl to co-owner Mike bit mudl to pay for a ftnt course.) it wu strawberries, with lee cream of the nme Rogan, ii intended to recreate tM atmolpllere o1 Next came the 10Up1lu JOUi-on tbil nllbt, an flavor noat1n1 •n Grand Kamler and topped with claaaie San Francisco and New York cafea duriq ucelleat cream o1 muahroc>gi puree. My friend · the freshly made whipped cream. We loved it. America'• blt11ed a1e of lnnoewe -U1e 19309 opted f« 1alad with the-house dressing, walnut oll The boule wiM ta Robert Mondavt at $1.15 a and early '40s. bl tlaat, there ta a me•ure or and French r~17 vtnecar -with berm. As glus, but the Paradise Cele bouts an en.Urety suece11. taatalllinl u that ,ICNDda, It tuted no diffenbt Of reapeetab&e wlDe lllt with pl'.tee1 ranlin1 from BrllhUy colored neon Itri.,. 1W'l'OGDd tbe better t.ban any •taad*N oll a YiMIU' topptq. .M.50 (f« Mid._ NM) to '55 (cabernet aauvtpoe buUcllaa-and a Utbt-bearted .... alp l1'ffll FCll' the main coune, we ............. ol from a.,. Lap Cellars> a bottle. diaen at u. eatrwe. ,,.. •toot bar 1a aa ':;.':rJ*'~~ _la .... ~ 1a.. wl Tbe crowd llOD11a1 ll60t wu 1m.U. but._ andelue Mk reproduetioe. Tiiie eetlmp are biCb 1 wttb ~ ...... , at ,u.• Ud a thi• restau rant baa bee open only ·~• u d table• woll·1paeed. Floral pattorHd StO.• -.--··-· -mld·-bor end - -eorly. We -earpetiae, Beatwoed chain, sreea •elftt·eo•end ac .. p& ~ .-t tead4il' It lkaaefted • that wont will set aromd IDd tbe Paradile c.te booth• a=.Q;~booaboaee llahtllil nn~~ coa .. ~~'";-A:n.-u ....-..~ ~ cWm a we11~_a1cbe .. ~~~.l_lf~~ ., eompl* It. lrJ>t•I tit~~' mt11: • 1,;,,t~ 'V .... lllll1o_{J!fi•l10 ~~~ Jls:utO .a1!tl·1iJl rr.uf,,H '>\1i . ~ . - 3 Literati --------------------- UCI prof chronicles Pasternak's travails ..,, .. ~ W beo Stalin roae to pow~r , i however, cultural and artistic ~ censorabip beaan to take ita toll. ;- By JOEL C. DON °' .. .,...., ......... Tied to bis country by the umbilical cord of language and a rich literary and artistic history, Boris Pasternak suffered persecution and censure llll for love of Mother Rusaia. The poet and novelist, who died at age 70 in 1960, left a literary beritace behind him; a prolific collection of poetry and bis controversial and most popular work of fiction, "Doctor Zhivago." The novel earned Pasternak the Nobel Prize for Literature which be later was forced lo refuse for fear of expulsion from the Soviet Union. The cootributioos of this literary eiant are chronicled in a new biography by UC Irvine professor Guy de Mallac tilled "Boris Pasternak: His Life and Work" <University of Oklahoma Press). The biography· bas been bailed by critics and the New York Times called it "the first full-scale biography of (Pasternak) in English." De Mallac, professor of Russian literature, spent nearly two decades on and off researching the life of Pasternak. He gained access to numerous letters written by the author and pored through thousand.a of bibliographic references in Russian, English, French, Italian and German. He also held interviews with Pasternak's two sisters, bis, brother, widow. sons, a niece and others who knew the author. Finding no comprehensive biography avaifable, de M allac set out to write an exhaustive review of the life ol this m uc b-celebrated author. The 450-page book is divided in ball; the first s~on dnoted to Pasternak's life and the second a critical analysis of the writer's works. De Mallac traces Pasternak's life to his upbringing· in a well-to-do Jewish family in Moscow, where be was introduced to some of Rusaia'a prominent artists, writers and musicians . His father was a well-known artist and illustrator and· his mother a professional pianist. During bis teens, Pasternak befriended noted Russian poets and novelists and gave up a music cveer Deltr ................ O'.._. LITERARY SCHOLAR -UC Irvine's Guy de Mallac spent twodeca es st-udying life of Boris Pas ternak. for literature. He was exempted from World War I military service for a ctlildbood leg Injury and focused all bis efforts on.the wrltten word. · ~·Except for a very brief spell io the early '20s, he bad no major employment in a oon-1.iWary _field," de Mallac said in a recent interview. Like the character Dr. Zhiva10. Pasternak and other intellectuals at first embraced the Bolshevik Revolution as a cban1e in a political system that no longer worked la the 20th century. Life following the 1917 comm uni s t takeover .was economically strained, but Russian writers and artists remained free to express themselves through the '3>9. Intermission "It was safe to aay tbat the E problems began in the, '30s," be said. ~ "Io tbe late '3>5 it was becominl somewhat uncomfortable for writers ~ because the system waa going in the se direction ol greater control." KS The First Congress of the Union of Soviet Writen met in 193' and the concept of social realism betan to replace free expression. Pasternak continued to publish poetry and fiction and was a sought-after translator of wotb into Rus$ian. He also turned bis ~gbts toward a novel about the events ~urroundlng the l\u.ssian Revoluti<m. "Doctor Zhivago," de Mallac noted, was written over a period of decades. What started out to be a work in pralse of the demise ol the czarist monarchy eventually turned into a bitter criticism of Stalin's re.pression. 'In the '30s he <Pasternak ) indicated be was going to write one of the big novels with wide breadth and dimension to it and significant scope and depletion of the revolution," de Mallac said. "In the. '40s be became aware that be was writing something about tbe evils and the dehumanization of Stalinism. ••When Stalin died in 1953, Pasternak told bis wife a terrible man had died who shed blood all over Russla." Soviet publishers delayed the release of the book. An abridged version was bein& prepared when Pasternak arranced to have the manuscript published in Italy in 1957. With that came immediate condemnation and expulsion from the Soviet Writers' Union. Membership was necessary to be paid for works published in Russia. The award.inc of the Nobel Prize created an international furor, with . the Soviet's alleging Western meddling in the country's affairs. "Pasternak-struck tbe first blow by publishing the book abroad despite the fact be had' not planned it that ·way." de Mallac aaid. "But there are only a few paragraphs in 'Doctor Zhivago' that are anU-Man:ist." See Pu&enak'•· Pase s -- - - ---- ---------------- - Ainorous_ co01edies arrive a t Orange Coast theaters By TOM Tm.JS Farwell and of.Jnda Tbonon O•te ol TV's "The Performances will be given Thundaya through °' .. ...,........ Aven1en") bead lb._ SCR cut, with Michael Saturdays with an 8:30 curtain at the playhouse, Comedy la ltingm Costa Mesa next week u the Keenan, Robert Machray, Nicholas Walker, on tbe Orange County Fairgrounds via the city's professional and community theaters turn John-David Keller. John Ell1n1ton, Bryan Arllnttoo Street entrance, tbrou&b Feb. 6. Call their attentions to a pair of plays depictln1 Rasmussen and Robert Crow completlnc the 754-5159 for reservations. amorous misadventures, both.of which will be new company. to loc•1 audiences Delayed a week by the bospilallu.Uoli of leading ~ · "The Play's the Thine" ................... h Feb. P, At South Coast Repertory, Ferenc Molnar's ·-..... ..,... " lady Brenda Merriam, "Angel Street" opena "The Ptay's the Thine'' opeos Tuesday on the with curtain at 8 p.m . evenin&a except Vondaya Friday at the IJwitlngton Beach PlA¥bouse with mainetqe while Bernard Slllde'a "Fliq" arrives and 2:30 for Saturday and Sunday matineel at the Wehdy Webber uddentuctyiq the keJ'role. <>then Thursday at tt,, Costa lleaa Qvic Playhouse. For Fourtb Step Theater• W Town Center Drive, In the cut are Randy Keene, .__. llllll, Charles those wbole tutel teDcl toward tbe more aertoua" Costa II ... Tlckeu may be .....-ved by caJJIA1 Taylor, J.-ri Sellen and Pattrtc: Walker. fare, there's "Aqel Street.'' openlftl PridaJ after ll?e box olftc:e aU57-4033. - a week's postponement at tbe 8'mtlqtoa Beacb• At tbe Qvie PIQbouse Pili Tuubellhal beliDa Phil de Barros la diredin& the staie version of Playboule ber lltb year u Nlident dtnctor .-u. tile 0r..,. t.be morie "Gaslllbt." wbidl wW sQ1 ll'rtd&JS and Lee Sb&tlat lJ direetiDC UM Molnar pla,, a CowatJ premt_.. of "l'llDc." a comec1J bJ tbe SaturdQa for five wMklDdl ratber t.bu tb• revival •adapted by BrtU1la bamorl1t P.O. author ol ••SuM~iiai:-Ye.r." Comllrilbll one: ~Se alxlltr~ J'eb.:, ·~= Woclebuule wblch toe.... cm bMbtlP batrtpe tbe COlllPU1 ere -. lob~ CarOl = , ae ff eea ·~ UDOQI .............. vo...-...J&"'..... ~-G~Sllt ~'M'"'""~.,~r ..,,,,,} .... ~~-A.!~·..a ~U~T5Itm (\' tbe IWlaa Rt~tera. G••t-ar1£iu loaalhu ore . •, -· ----• - ·' ! ... With Linda, the dream's · really the thin f From Page l 1 ~ who encounters an old lover. Her an actress it was either Actors Studio in New York or the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arta in EneJand," abe. said with happiness dancine in her eyes. "I thought England, now that's for me. up to me," the pretty actress con- tinued. "He told me that Diana Rieg was leaving the popular televtalon series, 'The Avengers,' and they were looking for a new leadine lady. ness, although he's beginning to show his age," she said. "When he first came on the set he didn't know his lines, but by the time we started shooting, he knew every word. He's a real pro. · flancee overhears a conversation i;' between the two, and were it not ror :g some creative penmanship of a u. playwright friend, love might have ~ been lost. "g Adapted for the stage by P.G. .: Wodehouse, "Tbe Play's the Thing" I also stars Jonathan Farwell aa San- ~ dor Turai, Michael Keenan as 0 Manky, Nicholas Walker as Albert, &: John-David Keller as Dwomitachek, "Along with SSS other girls 1 ap- plied for a scholarship. They took on- ly six of us. At the end of the three years of study I was tbe only one without an atent. I didn't know what to do. "Hu.st.on tot me in the door, but my talent and skills aot me the part of Tara. Kina. 1 stayed in Eneland and spent 2\Ai years making 33 episodes of 'The Aveneers.' ··A t.elevision series is hard work, probably the hardest there Is, but I'd love to have my own series bynext fall." and John EJllngton as Mel. "Al a result," Thorson added, "I.stayed 00-io Entlan4 to do a play for Michael Wells. Wblle I was doing the play 1 went down to audltlon for John Huston, who was casting a film called 'Sinful Davy.' "It was a wonderful experience for me. 1 was only 19 years Old -just a kid from Toronto -when I got the show. --ft waS' the class-show of English television at the lime. Everyone wanted to guest on it, so I got to meet a lot of good, professional actors." If she could gel her own television series it would be a big st e p toward that dream she so ardently clings to. Thorson dOeS not come from a family of actors, but she bas known she wanted to be an actress since she was 3. Her grandparents were in the Canadian opera, but ber dad was a professor of mathe matics at the University of Toronto. By the time she was 16 she had him convinced that the stage was definitely for her. • "HusUlll cast me in the UJm, but ··My dream,'' Thorson said with a smile, "is to have financial securi- ty so that I can have a ,house so mewhe re in the m id dle of America. "He told me if J was goine to be a while later he called me back to say that Johll Hurt had been cast in the male lead and that I was too tall to cast opposite him: ~Haston-nid be would make it Unlike many stage actors, Thorson openly admits to loving television work, and was recently seen In the new James Arness sen es, "McClain's Law." "J enjoyed working with J im Ar· "Right next door would be a thbater where we would put on plays every night. And once I've achieved this financial security, I'd like to find someone. I admire and respect and have a child with him." Johnny Cash sets Ariahebn StadillDl appearance -.. The Johnny Cub Show is scheduled to perform Jan. 23 al Anaheim Stadium. In addition to "the man in black" himself, featured performers wiil include bis wife June Carter Cash and the Great Eigtities/8, Cash's back-up musicians. . •cash bought bis first guitar while stationed in Germany during the Korean War and it was there that he wrote one of his best known songs, "Folsom Prison Blues." When be returned lo the BOUll 1 APAISSE . NEWPORTAISE & Sebastien,.._.. "Y" VOUVRAY ~ Slfl-fEindri£ter ~~r.mt Distinctive Waterfront Dining Oyster Bar· Cocktails 3333 W. Pacific Coast Hjghway, N.B.• 642-2295 -----Opening January 12th! United States, Cash enrolled in r.adio school and began to record for Sun Records. By Che mid·1960s, be was considered to be a country music superstar. Cash has composed more than ·1,000 songs and sold more than 50 million records. Re's recipient of three platinum and 10 gold alboms in the United States alone in addition to four Grammya and four- Country Music Awards includin& the CMA Enter· tainer of the Year honor . June Cart.er Cash has been performing since 20% FOR LUNCH: OFF WITH TlllS AD s,.cWKtt ot .... ..-. SALADS • sours FOR DINNER CHOOSE FROM: SPANISH• LATIN AMERICAN• JAPANESE •CHINESE• 155"79 Brookhurst, Westminster 531-1630 lFYOU have a &el\ltce.to offer or, ~to seU, place an ad tn the Datly Pilot Clalaifled Section ... Phone 642-5§78. childhood when, a long with sisters Anita and Helen and her mother Maybelle she appeared on radio stations throughout the South. -Mainly. s he was an instrumentalist a nd singer, but, as she grew up, she also became a comedian. She appeared for many years on the Grand Ole Opry Show from Nashville and toured with the Elvis Presley Show. June began working with Johnny Cash in 1961. Tickets are available at the box office and all Southland Agenices. <;;;olden ~~~ . ·~~ .Sl:;;ragon ·--- r.ENUINE CHINESE MANDARIN DISHES Specializing In Chinese A Lo C.Orte Dishes .• Lunch Dlnrter DallY • Food To Take Out 4711C ....... •OltMI .JOJJ...._lt.,& 750-7171 • 7~ COSfAMISA ............. 642·71'2. 631-ttl I • • 5 - • • • With him, the play's the only thing J! ~ ~ l From Pag~ 1 Washington's Arena Stace and wu staff director and actor at the Cleveland Playh~e for five years. He has been intensely successful on the staae slmply because be has been willlng to go where the work i.s. He has been steadily employed since getting out of school. And the fact that be is a leadin1 man type probably has a lot to do with it. ''It's ironic," be said. "Success in lhis business depends a lot on what you look like. There are a lot of talented people who should be working, but aren't simply because they don't have the looks. since then, because I've made it a point to go where the job is." Ria willinsneas to go where the job . is landed him at Waabin1ton's Kennedy-Center not too many years ago in what turned out to be his most barrbwing theatrical experience. "I had auditioned for 'Night and Oly' at out-of-town tryouts in Kennedy Center;" be recalled. "There were some kind of problems with the leadini man. He got huffy and was let go on the day the play was to open. teach a youn1 talent sometbini. "One of the fun t.hin1s on at.ace is when an actor breaks up when he's not supposed to," be s aid. "I remember I was doi.ne Noel Coward's 'Blithe Spirit' with Mar- garet Hamilton, who was the witch ln 'Wizard of Oz.' ' "She played Madam Arcati and during the course of the play she is suppoaed to come out with lhll Indian love· call. There I am trylnl to be very British an.t cool, and when she does this blt I crack up. ••She takes m e backsta1e,' · Farwell continued, "and says to me 'You aren't supposed to laugh.' I say, '1 know, but J couldn't help myself.' &. We spend the next hour rebearaini ~ doubletakea for me that will keep me :,, from laulhina. Tbe leuon took. It ~ was the old pro tellin1 the ereenbom ~ bow to cut the mlaatard. c_ Ill '' ll was a wonderful learnin1 i experience for me. When the old pro ~ takes time to help the younc actor 1t IP can be the best experience ol your i life.'' IC> And all th1t experience will be brought forth when "The Play's the Thing" opens Tuesday nilht at SCR at 8. The play will run lbroulh Feb. 14. "Many parts call for a certain look," Farwell added. ULike the part I play in this play.> It calla for a specific type and a short fat person would never be able to carry it off no matter bow 1ood an actor be a.." "I 1ot a call at S in the afternoon telling me I would be going on at 7 in the b1ggest role I bad ever played, opposite Maggie Smith. And I hadn't bad one rehearsal. I bad been watching and doing my job, but it was sWl pretty scary. .•• Pasternak's life told Farwell knew almost from the start that be would be an actor. His mother was an actress and b1a father a com~. so the staie wu in tbe bloocl. He .was the last of slx children, but recalla bow bis mother woula read Shakespe.are to them in Lansina, Mich., where be wu born and grew up. "I made an attempt to do the straight things," Farwell said. "I went to prep school and college, but after a tour in the Air Force I went to graduate school and became an actor. I've been steadily employed "It was a m0&t nerve wracking experience, but I sot through it well and Maelie Smith was pleased. •'But that experience paid off for me ," Farwell said. "My next Broadway show was with-the aame- P"d~ as standby for 'Mornings at Seven.' . :·1 was standby for three men, all between the ages of 80 and 70. Durin1 the 'run I was able to play all three men in varied type roles. 'Ibat wu a v.ery 1ood experience for me." • Experience rates high with Farwell. A good actor will be able to do many varied parts and do them well. But the beat kind of experience is when an old pro takes time to ·. •From Page 1 Castigated by Soviet authorities, Pasternak nevertheless Aid not choose to leave Russia as his family bad done-yea.rs bef Ol'e. "It wun't easy to be transP,lanted to another nation," he said. • Russia was a highly ~ticated C~'!tt· •'I woUtd say that lb.is baa not changed. The key reason why Ruasi&Q writers have been unwilling to leave is the tiea with their audience." Of Pasternak, de Mallac reveals a man beset by health problems - especially severe insomnia -and one who w.S moved by puri>O-and loyalty. "The feeling I got WU be WU a Russian wbo .had ~ butc quallt1e1 of great warmth and.~Jllt:r to empatblze llDd -relate to people," he said. "He was very tenerous-witb friends and had a faithfulness of feelings. But be wu aJao a man of great weaknesses. "His impre11ionability wu 'IO great that it amounted to a lack of will P.Ower. But this told me something about the artist. He was someone who was very sensitive to the oat~ of people and could never say no.'' nial lest 1111•tte ~;t#lttn In To• A\.I. ~~ .. DANCE -• . ·-1 . ·~ ae..1. ... ,.1 *·*OPEN lMYS llEEI ** ·la .. Ml .. ll.Sll.11111.t~PI IBlfAST • .., --·-9IDl.S ..... ,., ... cw I sta o3'i] JAtt.12·FEB..7. the KruSh /'!! w -SUSHI BAA TEAHOUSE & TEPPAN·YAKI OPEN M.RY NtGHT AT 5:00 PM LUNCHEON• MONDAY·FAIDAY 11 :30AM·2:30 PM ENTERTAINMDT a DANCING IN OUR EAIT·WUT LOUNGE .CALL (714) 77f:.7127 FDR REIBVATIONSI A VERY SPECIAL JAPANESE RESTAURANT Award winning traditional Japanese cuisine and superb western-style 'Specialties. Your favorite seafood, chicken, and steak. Delkate soups and delightfuJ salads. Impeccable service In a most beautiful setting. Discover Yamato ... a very special dining experience. (or just listen) FANTAZIA January 4-Pebruary 13 ... creates a musical fantasy of favorites for you to listen or danc~ to. Monday through Saturday, 9 p.m. 1:45 a.m. ' I . . r ML()()~ \111 THE RF.GISI RY HOTEL 18800 MacAnhur Boulevard, nU777 .. . Peter Nero slated Piaoist/compoeer Pets Nero will perform in concert with the Master Symphony Orchestra al 7 p.m . Sunday at Donald R. Wasb Auditorium on the campus of Garden Grove Hilb School. '( e concert, sponsored by Santa Ana College, .-will feature selections from Nero's repertoire or ""Jan, classical, contemporary and rock compositions. Nero has received lntema~clalm for his control of the keyboard and for his composing, conductine and arranging.. For tickets, call 83S-5971. Symphony .concert Thr. Irvine Symphony Orchestra will present a concert at 2 p.m. SUnday at Turtle Rock Communi- ty Center, l SunnyblJI Drive, Irvine. Tbe concert, 1or which admlsskm ranges from SS to"18, ls a bellfiht to raist moay so the aym-;phon)' can provide ,. Hr.f«manees._ lncluded in the pteaentaUon will be a soloist's ~ fee&uriq ~ c1-iMtlst Thomas Wll aeeompuled by pianin lfanelte Nowe&. \Vorlm by Berg, BrablQ,a, StravtDSky, Poulenc and Odec~d will be performed. . ca• A TUITI~ ... • One ef '°""*" ~-. Award Winning Reetaurantst "Early ..... S,.Clar' .-MondltY·thru ~riday . ~ 5:00-7:00 p.m. v..Ws•c"-ef...._I A..vlltlonf SUggetted. lllb l11111A intaarut 37 FASHION ISLAND ,JIEWPORT BEACH FOK AESFA. • • • Brass Quintet Course offered Courses in beginning acting, audiUoninc, voace The Empire Brass Quintet will perform in con· and an Artists in Action seminar are offered by cert Swlday at 8: 15 p. m . in the Laguna Beach High Sou lb Co.ast Repertory Evenini Conse~valory. School Auditorium, 625 Park Street, La1una "Artista in .Action: Production at SCR" offer· .Beach. · lng an in-depth exploration of the complexities or The quintet is made up ol Rolf Smedvig and stalfng "The Play's the Thing" and "Henry IV, Charles Lewis, Jr. on trumpet, David ObJDian on Part I." is offered trom 7 to 10 p.m. Mondays . French horn, Donald S11nders on trombo11e anct-"Voice Training for the Professional," de- Samuel Pilafian on J.uba. signed for all public speakers, is held from 7 lo 9 . -· -p. m . Tuesdays. " Tbe IJ"O'.-dea.u&.cl ii\ C~~ H.U if 19'76 ~tlo,.. .. -"'1ao meets flltlD 1 to 9 p.m. ""'ll\d went on lo make ~ree-W:~ tan and Tuesdays and often a special Mries ot technique& perform before Queen Ehzabeth. 'nleyiaave seven to showcase the performer and his 1cttng abilities records and three of its members are performers during auditions. - with ~e Boston Sys;nphony. -"Beginning Acting," offel'St froaa 7 to 10 p.m. Tickets are praced at $10. For more lntorma-Wednesdays, concentrates on cnatloa of char· lion call 49C-2822. acter. ~ • Jazz and tea dance A series or Jaz; Concert/Tea D•c• featuring the music of the Johnny Anello Band begins at ·2 p.m . Jan. 17 al Turtle Rock Commwuty Center, l Sunnyhill Drive, Irvine. Sponsored by the City or Irvine, the dance is the first of five lo be t}eld this year . ..Anello's repertoii'e includes old standards, sw- ing and jazz. A native of New Jersey, be has been · a professional muaiclan for nearly 40 years and is a professor of mu.sic at the College ol tbe Desert. General admiuion is $3, student tickets are $2 and senior citizell prices are $1. Mel Torme due Vocaliat llel Torme will perform at 8 p.m. Jan. 23 in Plummer Auditorium, 201 E. Chapman Ave., Fulleitcn. Torme, who ha• been a professional entertainer for more than SO years, will perform as part of Cal State Fullerton's celebrity series. The singer will be accompanied by ·the college's 20-plece jan band. Tickets are $12.50 each. For information, call 773-3371 or 773-3347. ~ General $5, Sr. Cit., UCI Fac/Staff/Alumr\J & Student $4, UCI Student $3. Tickets availabl• at the ASUCI Box Office, Mon.·Frl. 9:3'0am to 4 pm -833-5549. For further info, call 833-6379. . Classes are small and are taught by theater professionals associated with $dUth Coast Repertory. . For enrollment in.(CU'maUon, call 157-2602. AU-classes begin the week Of Jan. 25. Committee for Arts Presents Ellen Kogan Solo Dance Concert_ · · cc:.111•1111or"91•••--••lllll1N1~ .., uC'a s ....... ,,...,, J I t I -.... -Coacert Hllll - The. !'!!8!.~ at. ~/J!ho, • Safwc19y, Jm vj t;:. ... -C•;~~.~ . The New York Chamber General $5, Sr. Cit., UCI Fae/Staff/Alumni & Students $4, and UCI Studenta 13. Tickets IYafi.bte at the ASUCI Box Office, Mon.-Fri., 9:30lm tO 4Pm -833-5549. For further info, call 833-e37'0. ABSENCE OF MALICE: Rated PG. Paul Newman and Sally F\eld. A carerul study of the power of the press and its conaequences, neatly executed by Sidney Pollack. The PG rating is for adult lanauage. . BEAU PERE: Rated R. a French adult comedy written and directed by Bertrand Blier The R rafina is for adult situations. BODY HEAT: Rated R. starring William Hurt IS a bungling. lovestruck attorney and Kathleen Turner as \he rem me "fatale. This sexy. devious mystery takes _place ln a fi~l,itlow; Florida town so hot that people in cares order iced teas two at a time. Directed by Lawrence Kaadan as an homage to Cilm noir. the R ratin_s comes from brief nudity. sail)· Janguage and a general air of steaminess. . , BUDDY BUDDV; Rated R. with Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau An encounter between a suicidal network censor and a mob hilman. filmed in Riverside. The R rating is for language. · CHAJUOTS OF FIRE: Rated PG and starrin& Ben Cross and Ian Charleson as runners In the 192• Olympiad. where they l'lln races for different reasons but manage lo win just t.he same. Big on scenery and moral elevation. short on plot and development. A rousing aynthesizersoundtrack by Vangelis The PG rating must be for its lofty themes: there is no nudity. no violence and very litUeolCensivetanauage. THE FRENCH UEUTENANT'S WOMAN : Rated R. stars Meryl Streep in the role of the heartbroken and he-artbrea:klng-French CTeutenant's woman and J eremy lrons as the Victorian gentleman who gambles his love and reputation on her. The Victorian lov~ story is intercut with another plot: the modem day film cr~w malting a movie of "The French Lieutenant's Woman" bas its own romanUc dramas and downfalls which are meant lo compare and contrast wllb the Victorian sequence. but we're never sure quite how. The R rating is for aduJt sexual situations. GAU..IPOU: Rated R, stars Mel Gibson and Mark Lee as two young AustraUan soldiers who fight ln the tragic baWe at Gallipoli ln World War I. Peter Weier, an Australian director, has taken a turn from his metaphysical film making to produce what is bis best work to date. A simple. great mo\lie. The R rating la for language and violence. GHOST STOt't: Rated .ft, sta.ra Fred ,.Mtalre. llelvyn Douatas. Douetas f'alrbal\U Jr. and John Houseman. The R rating Is for nudity and adult situations. HEARTBEEPS: Rated PG, 5lars Bernadette Peters and Andy Kaufman as futuristic: lpvus In a robot·heavy world. The PG raUng is for adult situation. MODERN PROBLEMS: Rated PG. stars Chevr Chase as a hanMuck air tramc controller who receives telekinetic powers wtten naclear waste is spilled onto his new car. and Patti D'Arbanvllle as his girlfriend who sees him through these trying Umes. The film is uneven under the direction of Ken Shapiro. Ouctuatlnf between scenes of brilliance and 1a1s fbal <fon't work. D' Arbanvllle and s upporting performers Brian Doyle-Murray and Mary Kay Place are particularly good. The PG rating is for language and adult situations. "NEIGHBORS" -Stars Dan Akroyd and John -'Belushi. NEIGHBORS: Rated R. stars John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd as a mismatched pair of neighbors on what begins as a quiet suburban street. Aykroyd'a Vic Is a pathological liar and cheat who drives the conservative Belushi to violence. The R rating is for lan1ua1e and adult situations. . PENNll.8 FaOll HEAVEN: Rated R. stars Steve Martlft and Bernadette Peters in a throwback to 1930'• muslcals. Set against the depression, the story is serious, even a lltlle black. The R ratin. ls ror adult situations. 7 l Jl 2 r Cl t :" .,, ~ a: RAGTIME: Rated PG. is an intelligent screen ~ version of E.L. Doctorow's uns novel, which weaves c.. historical characters -Harry Thaw. Stanford White. ~ Evelyn JIJesbit. J.P. Morcan 1-into the Uves of what trlet £i very hard to be a typical American ramily Elizabeth ~ McGovern Cives a wiMlng pe~ance as the dreamy m eyed Nesbll and Howard E. Rollins is commandin& aa ._ Coal house Walker. a black piano player who Is abused by le bi&ots and bure•ucrats alike. The director. Milos K'S Foreman, l\ad a difficult task In cutUQ& the sprawllna boolr lnto"t\trn shape, and he's done the job admirably The PG rating Is for nudity and S<'me violence. REDS: Rated PG , stars Warren Beatty as J ohn Reed, the American Journallst. and Diane Keaton as Louiae Bryant, who becomes bis wife. This film runs weJI over three hours on a budget of over S30 milllon, and the loving care of Beatty. who also produced and directed. shows. But there's a tameness lo it loo; you don't walk out thinking you've seen a areal movie. The PG rating Is for language an(\ adult situations SHARKV'S MACHINE: Rated R. s tars Burt Reynolds as a tough cop caught between a corrupt department and ever.present bad guys The R rating Is for violence and language. ROLLOVER: Rated R. stars Jane Fonda and Kris Kristofferson in a tale of intemallonal intrigue and paasion. Not for those who expect heavy action or violence. The R rating 1s for adult siluaCfons and vulgar language. TAPS: Rated PG. Is the unlikely tale of a group of military school cadets who arm themselves and occupy the campus to keep it from being sold and turned fnto -:condominiums. Timo(hy Hutton leads the kids and overacts nearly every scene. As General Sage, Georfe C. Scott &ives an inadvertantly funny performance that we're not supposed to laugh at. The PG rating is for violence. THEY ALL LAUGHED: Rated PG. stars Audrey Hepburn. ~n Gauara. John Ritter and Dorothy Stratten in a romantic comedy set in Manhattan. Peter Bogdanovich directed from his own script. The PG ratJng is for adult situations and lan1uage. . . A KITCHEN SO NOW YOUR'S FOR PREVI~"#_ OR PURCHASE NIW•HMS MAGNIF/CtNT SEVEN MAN OF LA MANCHA MARCH OR DIE THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING, THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING LOGAN'S RUN , •EM.r..•-MIS,,_ c... ..... ~.-11 (714) ..,, .8rt)I' ., (7 "' f,J,.,.., M:wou """'AAUfl'S BEAUTIFUL ~our friends will hate it I ~ Dlft:rslonsi I !:_PLAYS------------::-=--=\,:: ...... ~= .. -~ ~ ''WHAT.ARE YOU Doing In My Life?," a ~ comedy starring Vivian Blah'9 Is In Its world LL. premiere at Sebastian's West Dinner ..: Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, San Clemente. Plays ~ nightly except Mondays at varying curtain J times. For tickets, call .. 92-9950. ~ "THE SEVEN-YEAR ITCH," George Ax- ,; elrod's comedy about a middle-age man who ~ falls for a girt half his age, opens tonight at Westminster Community Thea.ter, 7272 Maple St., Westminster. Curtain Is 8:30 p,m . with performances Fridays and Saturdays through Feb.6. "THE PLAY'S l"HE Thing," a comedy about the thHter, opens Tuesct.y South Coast Repertory, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Performances nightly except Mondays at B p.m. and 2: 30 weekend afternoons thfou,Qh Feb. 1 ... For tickets, can 957-.t033. "ANY WEDNESDAY," a romantic triangle comedy, opens tonlgt\t as the first produdlon of the new Garden Grove Communl- t y 'Qleat•r ·Jn the city's-Eastgate Park. Performanc~ ..au Fddays and Saturdays at 8:30 p.m., SUndays at 2:30 p.m., through Jan. 23. For tl~kets, call 893-0806 o_r 893-~. r.-GellOl'ge C. Scott·lft "TAPS" (~) "TIME B.A~DITI" CPO> II. Ill. ,..,. "h••rtbe•p•" "ARTHUR" PM "ONLY WHEN I LAUGH" (R) ., 11u111rasrn11u1m nm r11 a·"~ Erxll 1.sc~oo •• fmfms · IJWI lmM •l•lllMIS ~ ~ IKBH lllfR ~lllld lct•~l I OOCWDP*d~ll1~ -~ ~~ ~~•m••PMllm _....-.-.,_.. ...... ~ ...... --. NOW PLAYING -DANCE----- A FACULTY DANCE Concert featurlog guest artist Jeff Stayton wlll be presented at 8:30 tonight and Saturday at Orange Coast College Auditorium, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Admission Is S.t . ELLEN KOGAN Solo Dence Concert and Modem Ballet choreogr~ by advanced UC lrvlne dancers Is at 8 tonight In Fine Arts Con- cert Hall, UC Irvine. General admlsilbn Is $S. BELLA LEWfTZKY Dance Company performs at 8 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday -Jan. 1 .. through 16 -In Fine Arts Village Theater, UC lrvlne. General admlsslor. Is $5. . -CLASSICAL: MiJslC--- "AN EVIE NINO WITH Lerner and Loewe" will be presented at I tonight and Saturday by the Long Beach Symphony .P,-chestra and wllf feature the Long Beach· Symphony Chorus. Included will be selections from "Camelot," "Paint Your Wagon," '~Gfgl," "Brigadoon,' and ~Y Falt Lady." For tlck.ets to the-- production at the Terrace Theater, Long Beach, call C213) ·"36-3203 or C213) .t36-3661. "Ma:sterf~l" -L.A. Times. Shella Benson "Wonderful" -Newsweek Magazine. Jack Kroll A LADO COllPNfY,,., _,..Ill 8A()IS. ML1A11 , .............. 0 • .-..c_ • -~ ... _._ ............ r._.. ........ --- EDWAIDS CINEMA HAllOIAT ADAMS COSTAMUA 546-JIOJ "THE AWAKENING OF Sappho," a chamber opera by Wiii Ogden, wlll be present- ed at 8 p.m . Saturday In Fine Arts Concert Hall, UC Irvine. General admission Is $5. "THE NEW YORK Chamber Soloists: Telemann Three-hundredth Birthday Celebra- tion". will be presented at 8. p.m . Monday In Fine Arts VIiiage Theater, UC Irvine. General admission Is $5. LAGUNA BEACH CHAMBER Music Society presents the Empire Brass Quintet In concert at 8:15 p.m . SUnday at Laguna Beach H lgh School Auditorium, 625 Park St. The pro- gram ranges from original Renaissance works to a Gershwin suite. Tickets are $10 each. For Information, call .. 9 .. ·2822. MUSIC FOR Great Lovers, an all orchestral concert devoted to works Inspire by classical sweethearts, wlll be presented by Orange County Pacific Symphony at 7:30 p.m . Sunday. For tJckets, call 773-3158. The concert will be held In Knott's Berry Farm's Good Times Theater, Buena Park. PIANIST PETER NERO Wiii perform with the Master Symphony Orchestra at 7 p.m . Sun- day at the oonaro R. Wash Audttorlum, 12211 See Diversions, Page 9 9 ·01werslons ':l! ·9: :~ ----- ---------~-'1 : From Page 8 Stanford Ave., on the campus of Garden Grove High School. Tickets are $10-$13. For informa- tion, call 835-5971. The performance is sponsored by Santa Ana College. AUDITIONS FOR Saddleback Concert Chorale wlll be at 6: 30 p.m. Tuesday in Room 101, Fine Arts Building, Saddleback College. A desire to si ng as well as reading ability ts re- quired. Previous experience unnecessary. -POil, JAZZ ANlt COONTRY MUSIC~ "NO MOTHER BUT JAZZ-A Tribute to Cole Porter'' opens tonight through Feb. 6 at Gem Theater, 12852 Main St., Garden Grove. MTwo hOllS of non-stop thrills." -FBcfml im-NOW PLAYING ttRIMI ... TWCGUf PUU ........ "-•• $owltl Ce151 l'lu' ~ ,_.. '-" .. •aun -f-VllJr(lltt* -W.1 .. -....... Wlllll~IHI nuw-. .. "'""' SSt OISS 0<"'91 639 1710 -··-•D MMf mllAllll U110UUC11 .. WAYJlllltft>• fl Tn Sit *O w_.. "' l6U •ai;._. •• YOUf card will edmlt )'Oii • end I O~I lo mny l*formance Warren Beatty · Dianne Keaton REDS (PG) 5'\ows •t 5:00 9:00 No Pesws No Economy Seating John Belushi •EJSHIOM(R) &:~~fbToo ~,._ Burt Reynokb ~~) Steve M.rtin Pe•IESFR• HEAVEtl(R) &:cfr2'8foT1s hul Newmlfl A=IF (R) 6:&rf:Wfo130 RewoMiONfy CINE·fl SO\IND at Driw·i1t W.W Vo"' AMC• .. edoo ,. your ...... iw. It no AM Cir fMIO with ..,,,..,., -•v po111oon, b<•nt vou• own AM ,onabte Geo1ge C. Scott TAIS {PG) rn11 ''Rllll(PO) Chevy Chase in mDERa PllOllml (PG) ... TeFilm (PG) John Belushi •EJ&ll•RS ( R) T_ ..... (PG) Lu is V1tdez zoorsurr CRl Aho- l1•m• ...... (R) ;;.-Ferd liifiill~~E • Alto Playi"t fWll .... (PG) . The musical review plays at 8 p.m . Wed· nesdays through Saturdays and at 7:30 p.m . Sundays. For tickets, call 636-7213. -ETC.------ THE 17TH ANNUAL ANAHEIM Sports, Vacation and RV Show continues through Sun- day at Anaheim Convention Center. Show hours are 2 tb 10 p.m . today, noon to 10 p.m . Saturday and noon to 8 p.m. Sunday. "BAVARIAN EXfl&RIENCE," a color film produced and narrated by cinemato- grapher Dick Reddy, plays at 7:30 p.m . Tues· day at Plummer Auditorium, Fullerton College, 321 E . Chapman Ave., Fullerton. General admission Is $3. • ASK ANYONE WHO HAS SEEN "TAPS". GEORGE C. scorr ·TIMOTHY HUTTON ·.TAPS "THE ETERNAL RETURN," a film by 5. Jean Cocteau, vintage 1CU3, and "Hiroshima c» :"' Mon Amour," a film by Alain Resnals In 1959, ..,.. play at 6:30 and 8: 15 p.m . respectively Satur-:!. day In UC Irvine's Social Science Hall. g. General admission Is $2. For Information, call ':< ~6379. ~ :I -IN VEGAS------~ ''I LOVE MY WI FE,'' a comedy by i Michael Stewart and Cy Coleman, continues at iG the Union Plaza Hotel . FRANK SINATRA performs at Caesars Palace through Wednesday. Tom Jones opens Thursday through Jan. 27. See Diversions. Page 10 Chev'J has the MR~ to make .this new year the funniest ever! i .. l :f• • ~ 1 '~ ' _.., A SHAMBEAG GAE!SMAN1Plt0MTION ·A KEN SHAPIRO FllM CHEVY CHASE .. MODERN PROBL.EMS PATii O'ARBANVILlE·fJARY KAY PlACE lllllAN 00'1\E-MIJllAAV NB.l.CAllTPl#CllOABNEY COLEMAN! Eitecut1ve Producer DOUGLAS C. KENNEY Produced by ALAN GREISMAN ond MICHAEL SHAMBERG Written by-~ SHAPIRO & TOM SHEROHMAN & ARTHUR SELLERS - .. 01rected by KEN SHAPIRO Music by DOMINIC FRONTIERE COlOll ev puuxt• .. ..: From Page9 DIONNE WARWICK AND Joan Rivers continue at the Desert Inn througtl Saturday. "Best Little Whorehouse In Texas" opens Tuesday through Aprll 4. ~ TONY ORLANDO and "Rainbow Fan- e tasy" open tonight at the Hiiton through Jan. .= 2S. f ~ Ir RICH LITTLE AND Lynda Carter con- tinue at the MGM Grand through Wednesday. DON RIC:KLES performs at the Sahara through Wednesday. THE STH DIMENSION and 'Howard ltzkowltz continue at the Sllverblrd through Thursday. • • "FABULOUS FOLLIES" continues at the Dunes. ;'CITY LITES" Is presented at the 'Flamingo Hotel twice nightly. "BEYOND BELIEF" conti nues at the Frontier Hotel. "LATIN F"'RE" continues 11t1he Hacienda Hotel. "WILD WORLD OF BURLESQUE" con- tinues at Maxim. "LIDO DE PARIS" continues at the Stardust. L.A. ALL ·LAliGHEDI -nmvmr,vm•n ANDICAN COJIEDY IJllYBA119.• -LoeA• ... ••W~ ~ mEAL JIOVIE TO CHASE AWAY JIOUDAY DOLDRIDIS." -LoeAw .. le1TI 11 -nD! BEST PICTORB OP THE YUll,N0110NG BUE COJUS CLOSE." EDITOR'S NOTE : Live Gigi ii a complete lilting of Orange Coaat raighlclub! o/fering live entertainment. Acta are iub;ect to change wit00ut notice. AIRPO&TEll INN 18700 MaeArthur Blvd. Irvine -833-2770 Entertainment & Dancing Nightly ALISIO'S 1870 Newport Blvd. Costa Mesa -642-8293 Dancln1 Nightly ANCIENT M,UllNER 607 W. Coast Highway Newport Beach -646-0201 BAXTER'S 14346 Culver Drive Irvine -857·2103 BAXTE.ll'S ST&EET '647 MacArt.bu.r Blvd. Newport Beach S.0-2475 .. BEACllBAIL 2118 Ocean Front "' Newport Beach -673-5894 Stan Orlow BILBO BAGGINS Meaa Verde Shopping Center Coeta Mesa -54>1718 Live Contemporary Rock BLACK ANGUS 17920 Brookhurst St. Fountain Valley -968-4477 Dancing Nightly BLUE BEET CAFE ' 107 21st Place Newport Beach -675-3333 Entertainment Nightly BLUE PAllllOT South Coast Plaza Hotel Costa Mesa -54Q.2SOO Dancin1 N11btly BOARDWALK 1516 S. Coa.st'Hlgtiway Laguna Beach -494-8588 BOB BURNS 37 Fashion IsJand Newport Beach -644-2030 Musfc Nightly BOBBY McGEE'S 353 E . Coast Highway Newport Beach -673-5380 Dancin1 NlghUy BOOTLEGGERS 18528 Beach Blvd. Huntineton Beach - 962-9010 DaMinC Nightly to Cmlntry CALABASH lANDtNCO 179 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa -642·9855 CALIFORNIA SUN 19070 Magnolia St. Huntington Beach - 963-2078 Country Rock Dancln1 CANNER'W 3010 Lafayette Ave. Newport Beach -875-5777 Mu.sic Nightly CllA.ZY 008SE 1580 Brook.hollow Drive Santa Ana -549·1512 Top Country Artists CAPY'S 114 McFadden Place Newport Beach -675-1094 Music Nightly CllOSS llOA.DS 18050 Brookburst ~t. Fountain Valley -963-6711 Dancing Nightly CllOWN llOVSE 32802 S. Coast Highway La1una Niguel -499-2626 Music Nicbtly ca YSTALSALOON 1700 Placentia Ave . Costa Mesa -646-7571 Dancing Nightly to Country DANA T&ADER • 34150 S. Coast Highway Dana Point -493-2603 DE IA VU 2285 Newport Blvd. Costa Mesa -833-1160 Rock -Dancing Nightly DELANEY'S S30 Lido-Park Drive Newport Beach -675-3145 Honey Bees FI VE CROWNS RESTAURANT 3801 E. Coast Highway Corona del Mar 760-0331 ¥'1ry Lou O'Toole Showcase Singers FOXHVNl'E& 17927 MacArthur Blvd. ~< Gigs. Page 11 ''A roller coaster ride from one breathtaking sequence to another." -ana..,-..,119 M=r=Los. .... .., .. _. n fl clff Birt ..., ........ . .., ...... . ........ ......., ......... , ... ...... Wlll'll 111 .,.... Eftlllltl1•~1bll." --OM! AIWI. HEWSWE9( MfASYAll» Emllll.llrt = ... ....... ~-··· .... ,, ... -Jenee......,_ 1EW WJIC TKS UT~. •• SHARKY'S MACIH' ALWAYS LOOKS AUVE. •• AVIDISLY PROVOOOIVE llVERSIJN.• -Gaty AmGld. WASltNJTC»il POST "IT NEVER STIFS· 'SHARKY'S llACllNE' IBJVERSTIE aooos.· ·--·-"9Wlf(Y'S ~....,. YmOI> ~·llWf KEITH• OWUS IUNMl·fM. IOJ.MN·llOINIE rAStY ·tff«Y U IWlfM. tO*H ·ADM> l.&RTINl•lfOll. WW>a,....... -..-.-.. SN.If GNIR£TT o.a11,....Ml.IM4 A. RW1ER. ASC -..1tGEMD ll Pm> ..,_ .. •1tWl.1M OOl .._..1tlW« flO;JdM ~1t!UT 11.YNl.m ~ ,,·. ...-.. .. •::l "lr~ ..... l ~ , iiiS.::"~ .. From Page JO Dana Point -493-2933 Irvine -S49-8728 HOTE L LAGUN-' Dancing NighUy -\ 425 S. Coast H11hway Vulety Laauna Beach-494-llSl THE GM.LEY HUNGRY nGf:a 34734 S. Coast H!ghway 3201 E. Coast Highway Capistrano Beach -Corona del Mar -675-7575 661-6243 ICHABOD'S GOLDEN BEAR 18582 Beach Blvd'. 306 Coast Hl1hway Huntington Beach -Huntlniton Beach -~1-6331 • 536-9600 IVY HOUSE BAllPOON HE~RY'S 384 Forest Ave. .25062 Del Prado La1una Beach -494.9491 Dancin1 Nl&hUy Comedy Sta~ Ni1hUy J ERF:MJ.\ll'S STEAKHOtJSE "901 Wamer Ave. L-'GVNA &'TA& ~SCO 1164 S. Coast H!gtiway Hunllnlton Beach -Laguna Beach -494-8514 8'8·2662 Music NlghUy MARa1orr H<n'EL Newport Cinter Drive J.P. MAC'S • 10142 Adams Ave. Newport Be1cb-640...000 Entertainment & Huntington Beech -Dancing Nightly 963-7829 Couatry Rock Nightly McCONAJIAY'S 725 W. Baker St. lAFFSTOP 2122 Bristol St. Costa Mesa -540-5061 Disco Dancint Santa Ana -751·7867 McCORMICK'S LANDING 'iHE FINEST AMERICAN MOVIE OF 1981 :· -Gert-_,.,,...°""" - "ONE OF THE YEAr?] TEN BEST:' STM MAAllN In •..enntes Flt<Xn HflOYen., \ stornng BERNADETTE PETERS -· -.,_ _ • ._..._.-c: ... U TOM "'*TI8ITOll IEACte CMWlll Saddleb.1cll Cinema Cinedorne 58t 5880 848 0388 634 2553 ctlTA llOASou1ll CNst Plala Town Centei (71<1) 751 4184 --· "IMAMY'l llCI•• ... , ..... ._ ... _ 3180 Airway Ave. Newport Beach-546-9880 Rock'n RoU Dancing t<li&hUy ME DLEY'S 18744 Brookhurst St. Fountain VaUey -963-2366 Dining ud Showcase Entertainment 7 nights a week lllSSOUaJ COMPllOMISE 23020 Lake Forest Dr. Laguna Hills -~ MOO NBA.KER ,. ••a ••I ilrlfl ANAHEIM OlliVE IN ·--"-~"­.,....'° •U.MM•C.-.. . .-n "TitE ,otM MAIOMI" .,.. -"INC>lds LOW'' .. ("I • Cllll " IOUllD I' ., ...... BUENA PARK u~ •I 1,.. , .. . . Ht WAr 3g "" 11 .. t , I '"" ..... ."'9 ''STIR CllAZY'' .. Cllll·fililiie 18542 MacArthur Blvd. Irvine -833-9800 MVLDOONS 202 Newport Center Drive Newport Beach -640_.110 MUSTANG llANCB 428 17th Street -Costa Mesa -631·2331 Dancing NiibUy Country Rock ~WPOUER l?llN 1107 Jamboree Road Newport Beach -644·1700 See Gigs. Page 12 ,--·-·--"AaleNCa Of' flML.a" (N ) -"STIR e..Arr• ... -~!'~------.... -... "llAN&AC MANltON •• Ill -''UVINQ NIQHTllAllr' t11t C.·"MlllllO --· ''llOOMN "'°91 _.. tNI -...... TOP1Vr•11t --·--... ·~Of'TMHOl'f AM" -''llU9H oo.ow·" C-.·11 -----------.. -. -"MANIAC lllAHIM>N" ... -"UVINO NIGNT'lllAM" 11t 111111·11-, -8.llen·---.. ,~ ... ''"'CAWUL IWH" .. - c !-AN(.,. F I .. • I .... U · ll ~ -~ ! :l ci CD ::' ~ :J. ci I» ':< ~ DI :l c ~ !» ... ~ .. .. ,... ·-:. .. :::=·11 ......... 1: •• 1 .... IATJIUN. 11:•, t:•, ._ .. l:IO, e:.. 1t:• SHAH KY'S MACH!NE STUDIO CAFE 100 Main Street Balboa-Peninsula - SWIZZLESnCK 19022 Brookhursl St. HunUnaton Be.acb - 96&-5022 TEaars 2901 Harbor Blvd. Fountain Valley -754·"83 '' ___ _...._ ........... _,__---· WASIUNGTON tAP> -The nation'• \l.Demplo1ment rate aur 1ed to 8.9 perc~nt Jn December u jobleasneu amons adult men, blatorie1lly the most stable elemeQt of the labor force, set a poet-World War 11 record, the Labor Department reported today_ The Bureau of Labor Stalbtics said the half-a-percentage-point jump -from 8.4 percent lo 8.9" percent overall -left close to 9.5 million Americans out of work as the economy plunsed I f: 1 l JI\ r JI\ N l 1 A H Y H I ' H\ . \nto a deepenln1 receaslon. Tbe agency aaJd the number of "dlacouraged workers" rose by about 150,000 In the fourth quarter of 1981, 'to 1.2 million, the highest level recorded since the government began keeplnl those statistics In 1970. Discouraged workers are classified as those who report to government surveyo~ &bat they want to find work but have given up the search in futility. Discouraged workers are not counted in the department's WINO DAMAGE -Heavy winds toppled a 40-foot sign advertising the Huntington Center Car Wash late Thursday night. No injuries were reported. but damage was overaU0unemployment ncure. The rate in California also wu up 1l1nlflontly, from 8.2 percent to 8.9. Black unemployment reached 17.4 percent last month, another post-war record. Department analysts said the overall jobless rate lut month approached the 9 percent hllb ln Mar 1975, toward the end of a months-long recession brought on by the Arab oil embareo. If Ynemployment exceeds • percent -as many private economista predict It ' will UUJ year -It will reach the hllftesl level since the to"VerQment began keeping month-to·month rt1urea in the late UMOs. Al the White House, deputy press secretary Larry Speakes noted that the administration ex pected a rise in unemployment but added that "we anticipate that at the end of t he second quarter our programs will ·belin to work and that we will see an upturn in the overall economy." ...................... tr .... estimated at $10,000. Car wash is located at 16061 Beach Blvd .. in Huntington Beach. Strong winds rip roofs, twirl cars High winds-to ease,oncoast By Tbe Anoela&ed Presa Cold winda strong enough lo twirl a car around on the freeway and rip roofs off several houses continued to blast through Southern California today, but forecasters say they expect the gusts to ease tonight. The National Weather Service said winds were up to 75 mph this mornint at Mt. Laguna, above Pt. Mugu Na11al Air Station, where President Reagan takes off and lands when he ts visiting his Santa Barbara County ranch. Winds up lo 60 mph slashed through Riverside and San Bernardino on Thurs day, ripping the roofs off several houses and shat~ring windows in a wide swath. ''They will be al strong today," said Pal Roe, weather specialist with the National Weather Service. "In San Diego County, they will be even stronger than they were yesterday. It will be very dangerous for vehicles in some. areas.'' As two more semi-trailers "'qverturned on 'ln!,erstale 15 north of }'ontana fliis morning, the California Highway Patrol began stoppm, trucks travelln1 tb .th~t direction and detouring (See~~. Pa1e A%> Trees hit, signs toppled, fires fueled by Santa Anas ChiUy Santa Ana wind4 that snapped trees, toppled signs, fueled fires and caused a rash of power outages alohg the Orange Coast Thursday are expected to let up late tonight. The brisk winds, gusting up lo 30 mph along tb~ coast and reaching speeds of 50 mph in canyon areas, are predicted to diminish and give way to fair weekend weather. In Mtsslon Viejo Thursday evening, firefighters said the stiff winds hampered efforts lo extinguish a fire, In a two-story commercial structure. The fire , they reported, caused $350,000 in damage. In Huntington Beach, a large sign outside a car wash near the intersection of Beach Boulevard and. Edinger A venue was toppled by the chilly gusts. Workmen in nearly all of the Orange Coast cities rtpor,ted .trees had been snapped by the winds. ... In Hantingtoo Beach, city' workmen said several 30.foot trees were uprooted in the city's Central Park. At least two other trees were snapped, falling on cars. '"there wasn't any substantial damage," observed Daryl Smith, 'Huntington's superintendent of city landscaping. .. A few bent hoods and a little scratched paint." A two-car accident on the 'Santa Ana River bridge between Huntington ·and Newport Beach also was being blamell on tbe wind. California Hi&hway Patrpl officers said the Thursday morni!V( accident was caused when a U-toot-long board was blown off a pickup t-ruck, landirtg in front of an oncoming car. The motorut, 20-year-old John Anastasakis of Costa Mesa, bit his braltes lo avoid slamming into the board ·and swerved in front of another car, driven by 29-year-old William John Vasko of Newport Beach. Anastasakis s uffered head ·injuries and is reported in good condition at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Vasko was tre.ated and released from the hospital's emergency room. Southern Cklifornia Edison officials, meanwhile, reported the gusts caused a sprinkling of power outages throughout the county. Along the Orange· Coast, Edison officials said the outages affected few customers and power was restored quJcltJy. No power lines were downed, they said. Jn Newport Harbor, where the winds were clocked at 30 mph, several boats were swung free from their •moorings but were quickly retrieved. The brisk gusts, the National Weather Bureau said, have been chilled by a cool air mass that has shifted west from the Rocky Mountains. . Temperatures along the Orange Coast .have b een reaching a daytime high of about 60 and dropping into tbe low 40s at night. Jn the canyon areas, weather officials said, the mercury dropped into the upper 30s Thursday evening. Mom thanks friends of mo-ped Victim By PIUL SNEIDERMAN of .. DMly ...... IUff I Department, Ronald Scott Thomas, 16, Is listed as the city's 28th -and last -tralflc death ol 1981. But in the memories of the family and friends who loved him, Ron Thomas wlU always be .a kind-hearted teen-a1er who had a eood sense of humor and loll of friends, wbo prelen'ed athletics to schoolwork and wu cood with cbildren. His f amlly was moved when 450 people c'rowded Into a service for Ron on Wednesday at tbe Bethel Baptist Church in Santa Ana, lncludiq about 250 youn1 people. The funeral pr~entoo waa aald to have been a mile 1on1. "They all tojd me they loved . him,'' aakt Ron's . mother, Jan Tbomu. ''TIM turnout WM 10 unbeliftabk. I'm tWl In altodl." Tbe c ... ol Roa'a aeddeat remalM a m,._,. PoUft Mid the tnack driver •• laOt at fault. Hta family aaid,._u:: • mw ............ ..... .... era1b ocetb"NCl. "W • doll 't know if Ile Jail coulcbi't lltop," bil lboUler ~. "He bad to&a mJ MD·ln·law bl.a mo-ped'• brakes werea't worklnc well. We doa't •"" now If be 1aw tM tr'llH .•. " Roa wa1 aot wearlDI • llelmet, aDd Illa famllJ ud frlead1 1a1 It llad •••tr oeoarred to tJaem tlaat aoa ( ... .,...., VICftll, ... ~,. h ............ ~ ... ~ ... -.~.._J.., .. ~; 4 ..... ., .... He aaJd the admioialraUon bu confidence "our pro1ram1 will work." In the past, admlnlstralion officials have said rising unemployment ls the price the nation must pay for briqin1 down double-diett Inflation. Since July, the department said, more than 2 mUUon Americans have been thrown out of work and the unemployment rate hAll shot up almost 2 full percentage points. In December 1980, the --~-- • unemployment rate Wal percent. •• The hl1hest post-Great Depression annual rate of unemployment, before moadlb figures were compiled, waa a t.T percent jobless rate in 1Ml; which eased substantlata,1 during World War II. ••• ., The all-Ume blah waa t.be a&.l percent annual rate of unemploym\nt re&istered .. 1933, during tbe depths ot ta. Depression. AT&T antitrust Stiit settled after 7 years -. \ ' .. . ~ 'I 1F WASHJNGTON <AP> -The Justice Department ann<>Unttd today a settlement of its 1.year-old antitrust suit against American ·telephone & Telegraph Co. that will re.quire the telecommunications giant lo give up its 22 local operating companies within 18 months. The agreement forbids the local companies from discriminating against Bell competitors in providing equipment , services and plannlne of new facilities. The seWemenl allows AT&T fo continue lo run its nationwide long-distance telephone service. The Bell System also wilJ retain its main subsldiarler. Bell Telephone Laboratories and Western Electric. The agreement also allows AT&T to provide telephone equipme nt for customers, indudJna that now furnished by loeal .._..companies. In advance of the announcement~adlng in the stock of AT&T and related companies was baJi.d on the New York Stock Exchange. Trading was also baited in the stock of International 8us1neu M-acblnes Corp., the target of the federal government's other major pendlhg antitrust cue, immediately prompting speculation among analysts that a development ln that case might be imminent. IBM spokesmen declined comment and the exchange said it did not know the nature of the pending development. Sources al the company said a major development was immlnenl. In New York, the Justice Department and IBM were granted a bearing at l p.m. today before U.S. District Judge David Edelstein, who was hearing the case. Assistant Attorney General William Baxter, in charge of the department's antitrust division, and AT&T' Chairman Charles Brown ~cheduled a n·e·ws conreren ce to "discusa developments In the case." The depart~nt declined td say In advance of the newL conference what the substanti- of its announcement would be. ~­ . But one official said it woull'" be "very important." The adminktration dileloee4 Dec. 31 that It was ne1otiat1QI a settlement with Bell Telephone. A major antitrust suit to ~ up the Bell System WU rued ~ the Ford administration i• November 1974, and the trial ia the case, in recess over t11tf Christmas-New Year's bolidar, had been due to resume Tuesday. · The Justice Department"l disclosure Dec. 31 that ll wM see king a settleme&l rei>resenled a sharp chanp from the department'• poslU. immediately after Prea!deat Reagan took office a year qo. •• The depart ment bad abandoned previous nesotiatioql begun by the Cartet administraUoo and Butel' sail he intended to pursue tbe ea.e • court "lo the eyeballs/' .• However, officials In ~ departments of Commerce · Defense reportedly urje Reagan lo resume neeoti~ because th'y felt that b~ up AT&T would hurt the nation'• cqmmunicallons system l• wartime or national emer.-ci. .. Also, the Senate bas ~' bill, endorsed by AT6T, tp require onJy a limited breakup of the Bell System. On the side of the telapaaoM company, there have beea reports that AT&T was worri4l4 it might lose in court and be forced lo divest Itself of majoi' portions of the company. , There bad been reports ~ the' Justice Department ~ pressing In its negotiat.iom convince Bell Telephone to ofr some local operatla c o m p a n I e s a n.d a b a r; Lon.g-cdistance facilities witb J~ , growing number of competi~ ' •' l .. . ' ,, t •I . . . -. '· '• . . I ~! ....., ............. GANDIDATE -Maureen llea1an brought her t · a m p a i g n f o r t h e Republican senat.orial nlr'MlnatiQD to Orange t;ouol)'. BY GLaNN 8COTT of ..... -...... Several Hispanic specialists in the Roman Catholic church said Thur~ay they will soon send a letter. to U.S. Attorney Geoeral WUUam French Smi~bjecting to new, more acgressive federal deportation policies for undocumented workers. Tlle policies come from the federal Immigration and NatUJ'albation Service, whose depvty district director, Omer Sewell, was quoted this week u aaylnc hil workers will double their raids on So uthern Callforma factorie$. Sewell said his staff assigned to workplace raids will increase from 18 to 40 or 50 officen by l'ebr~y. A national directive requires hatr a district's investigative staff to work street duty. "We have been picking up about 20 or 90 illegal aliens ~ day in the last several months and now we expect that to ao up to maybe 75 to 100 a day," he said. · At a news conference called to respond to SewelJ's statement, 1tbe directors of Hispanic Ministry ln Orange , Los ~ngeles, San Bernardino and San DMao dioceses called the raids alrrcnts to human dignity. A pelter pinned to the wall at the pn11 eonference lent a dramatic touch to their conceNI. Jt read: "Jesus, Mary and Joseph were aliens, refu.-md migrants too." Tbe "directors, including Fa ....... Mtan Deck of the Orange l)iOHM, said they object to all of tbe raids and. spot checks ag alDlt Hispanics as d61criminatory against those "bo aN lfllal residents. • '7hll policy, in addition, ls an "ttack upon tbe unity or famllles," they said lo a writte.n slatement. ·'It means quite Uteull)t that children will be comlnt home from school in c;ommunltles all over Southern California to find that their fat h er or mother was disappeared." Thoee parents probably will return, tbey added, but at a price of perhaps $250 to $300 paid to a smuater. Father Deck said bis group .,n 't apeaki.nc on behalf of the ll'6man Catholic Church as a whole, but rather the four dioceses, which represent more tban 2.5 mllUon ·catbolica of Hispanic ortcin. Re said the e bjectlana are baaed lo tbe moral teechlqa of the.church. He uld the directon plan fo draft the letter to the attGl"Dey tieneraJ today and' send lt OlldQ. Tbe attorney 1eneral'1 offtee Ot•Hel the acilvities ol t~e lmmigratlon service, he ald .. Deck aald about one of every of tbe more than 300,000 ••le people In Oran1e at1 are undocumented., ~that their participation in lie local workforce la essential .... resloo'• ftDendal bealtb. P..._ Patrick> Guillen ol Su ' hram'dlnq said be would like to ._. =atioa Ian cb•pd tD pnM t sueb raidll .,almt wbo a.ave no ritbtl to ~-.. l'nd tbelnMl"9. •••• jmt ... to .., .. .. :ltallfl!nld," be aid ..... dcm't '°be.,... .. and Ill.at." "I wu aupporUn1 suppl1·.scte economica before David Stockman ever met Arthur Laffer." ahe qul~. She bu workta the paat four yeara for Sell Over1e11 America, an American export aasoclatloa she helped atart. Durtn1 that Ume, abe also remalned an active RtlpubUcan, althoue sh4t bu never beld an electeCI polltlcal office. Ma. Reagan points with pride to the campalp.ln1 abe carried out on behalf of her father, and claims she'll work just u hard lf not harder lo her own race for the 111l beld by incumbent 8.1. Hlyuawa. "Tbeh lan't anybody runnina on titbit aide ol the allJe 1Wbo can campaJsn any harder.than I can,·~ she aald. Her remark.a were directed to meqiben of the County Club, an exclusive OOD·partltan sroup of polltlcally aetlve rt1ldtnt1, many ol whom are known u some of the lareer oampal1J1 donors. The club was formed by s outb county rancher and Democratic party or1aniaer Rlcbatd O'Neill. Ms. Reagan aatd alter her apeecb ahe didn't cb009• the economic laues because ol tbe apecillc: crowd bu' beeaue a.be .... I\ u tbe primary Jtaue Of the decade. • Her ~mlc plan, she addeci, won't be effective Wlln1 people also accept a 1reater reapoaalblllty la tbelr commuaiUet for tatln1 care of the dlald\tanta1ed. Dur4nt the put 10 years, much 4llcuuion bu focUJed oo clUzena' righta and privlle,es, she sak!, addinc: "We've spent damned little Ume talking about retpobllblllty. • • Ila. R4acan ackoowledttd tbe ino•t pronounced ,PbUOMDblcal dllfereoce ahe hu witb fa&her Aould Rqcan ll OVff pall .. e of the propc>Md Equal JUc:bU Amendment. Sbe aupporta the amendment. "We don't dlaagree oa the fact there oeedl to be chance, .. lbe aaid. "We Ju.t dlaa1ree about amendln1 t.be federal ConaUtutJon.'' A Loi An&eles resident. lb. Rea1an ll married lo Denoia Revell, a former Orance County resident. She bu c~eo to keep her fatber's name, however. Cleanup begim in Santa Cruz Earth-moving machines dig homes from mudslides• NEVADA SANTA CRUZ (AP) -Huse eartb-movin1 macblnes were attacldnl mudslide• today after slippery, debris-laden mud proved too bil a job tor backhoes and hundreds of rescuers trying to unearth roads, bomea and victims buried during a 2~·ch•Y klller storm. Recovery work was complicated in Santa Cruz and ita-surroundine bills by a critical water shortage. Tb~ water system serving 70,000 people was shut olf Thursday night to give crews a chance to repair leaky, storm-damaged pipes and pump water Into a storage tank. Santa Crua County, along with "Marin, Contra Costa. San Mateo and Sonoma counties, was declared a disaster area by President Reagan, makine them eligible for federal help. Damage fl-om the storm is estimated at more than $280 million by state and local officials in those five counties and three others -Alameda, Solano and Santa Clara, which Thursday asked Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. for emergency help. The devastation "is al..,ost indescribable," said Dan Forbus, a Santa Cruz County supervisor. F.;leven of the 24 conrirmed storm-related deaths occurred in Santa Cruz County..-Aboul ioo homes were wrecked, 300 more damaged, 1,800 people displaced a nd 40 roads closed or "impassable all the way From Page A1 \ through," Forbua Hid. Power for 50,000 customers was out for ~ hours, and 4,000 atill had no electricity late Thursday, "People don't reaJUe just bow 'devastated lbls area ls," said Carl Kent; a ftre captain in the state Department of Forestry who worked Thursday in Ben Lomond's Love Creek . section, where a massive mudslide er ashe,d onto _canyon booiea, burying as many as 20 people ill their homes. "The slide -250 acres or mud from the ridge top of the creek -took everything in ita path," be said. "1 saw a car that bad been folded in half like ao .envelope. , .A couple of boulel look like someone beat them into little tiny pieces .. _ "We know where the roads used to be, we don't know where they are now. We know where the residences were, now we're not sure," Kent said. "It's the most awesome thing I've ever aeen in my life." Officials estimate it will take days, perhaps weeks, to bulldoze into the slide, clear the debris and unearth victims. Above the corQmunity of Scotts Valley, "the mountain ls sitting there where J arvia Road was," Forbus said, describing a 100-yard-long mudslide. "The backhoes moved part of it, but it was too big a Job. They were slipping." In Santa Cruz, leaks in an emergen cy bypass pipe MO-PED VICTIM. • • should have one. They did not believe a mo-peel traveled fut enough to cause serious injury. Ron bad been ridin1 the mo-ped for almost a year, ever since he had received bis driver's license. He bad purchased it with money he earned working at a Carl's Jr. restaurant. But Mrs. Thomas does not blame the two-wheeler. . "With the faith that we have, we believe God bad this predestined," she said. "God knew when be was born that he was going to lake Ron at 16. "It could have happened even if be was just walking to the store. We really don't have all the answers. . . " Ron's itrlfrieod, 16-year-old Jade DeWelles or Fountain Valley, said she bad known him ever since the two were sixth graders at Nieblas School. "He was a kind person, very sweet," she said. "He never wanted to hurt someone's feelings." • She said be enjoyed giving her presents. After bis death, Ron's mother found a box beneath bis bed contai.nlnc a necklace. It was a Jate Cbriltmu present be badn'~ bad a chance to give to Jade. "He alwaja aaid be loved me, and I think be really dtd care,'' Jade said. "Over the summer we broke up for three weeks. But be came back to me and said be miued me." Another friead, Oscar Munoz, al110 of Fountain Valley, said be • 4d known Ron Tbomu e'ver 'lince the two were 8 yeait old. In fact, be believes Ron saved bis We. Wbm the boys were about 8, Oscar ree·a11a, tbey were playtns ill a dratnace ditch when several leeD·.,... armed wUb a ~et PD belu ehutnc tbem. Tbe mon athletic Ron euily 1ealed • fence to 19eape, but Oscar N1I bt couldD 't make It. .. I yelled lw Roa and bt came back ovw tM feee, belped push ' .. me over it, then climbed back over himself," be said. As older classmates, the two frequenUy played basketball at Fountain Valley Recreation Center ;dter school. Oscar said Ron planned to try out for varsity football next fall and had a good chance of making the team. •'The second 1 heard he was killed, I started crying," Oscar said. Ron 's mother said her religious faith and the show of support from Ron 's friends helped ber cope with the loss. The morning after the funeral, sbe awoke at 4 a.m. and could not return to sleep until she bad . composed a message to Ro.o's friends. lt begins: "Thia letter ls in no way adequate thanks to you for all you've done to comfort us and to show your love for Ron. "It is our attempt to share with you not only the grief we feel , but the joy that is also in our hearts. "Some or you may be shocked when we say the word joy, but• you see, we know that Ron knew the lord u bis personaJ savior, and that he is with our lord now. "God only lent Ron to us for 16 years, and now he's called him back." Sad welcome to California SACRAMENTO CAP) -A newlywed couple who traveled. from Vermont to California in a rental truck with all their belongings lost eome •10,000 ln valuables when the vehicle wu stolen from a motel parking lot . Dana Dunn. 22, and bis 21.year·old wife Kat-by Dunn: t.old Sacramento County aberifrs depuUet tbe truck wu driven awey from the motel near lnteratate 80, wbere tbe couple bad been au.ytnc aft.er; arrlvinl ln Sacram~to. "It wu a nlct welcome to CaJlfornia," sald Mrs. Dwln. "We've never lived ln a blc dty before. We came from a place od 10 acres where you could leave your doon Wllocked ... to a pJace where·• t~ck la stolen ptirked under a bri@t lilbt lD front Of a JDOtel wberel everybqdy can see it.'' .• Thursday jeopardised tbe dwindling water supply, said city manager Richard Wilson. Taps went dry for three hours Thursday nict\l in a drastic conservation effort whlle repair crews tackled the leaks and pumped water into a storage lank. · Residents were urged to draw up to two gallons of water for drlntPul or cooking by 8 p.m. to ~see them through the night, Wiison said. Conservation was workine "quite well," he added. All acbooll were closed, and most buslne11es, res taurants and industries abut down voluntarily . ......... "So far we've manaeed to take care of the hospitals," Forbus said. "U people don't take baths and don't flush toilets . . . and we get time to bring the water supply back up, we'U be in good condition.'' Tbe •torm Sunday through -Tuesday pummeled a 200-mile stretch of Northern CaWomla from Sonoma County north of San Francisco to Santa Cruz on the Monterey Peninsula with up to 15 inches of rain in a 24·bour period. At its height, 320,000 uWity customers bad no power. EARTH. WIND, FIRE -Map locates arieas of California damaged by storms in the north and fire. fanned by high winds. tn the south. From Page A 1. WINDS TO EASE. • • The Golden Gate Bridge bu been closed twice this week, durlng the downpour Monday and for 20 bours beginnln1 Tuesday night, when a muaslide u ndel"mi ned Highway 101 leading to it. Radioactive material cleaned up THERMAL CAP > Radioactive cargo was receovered from the wreckage of a fatal Southern Pacific freiabt derailment today, and health officials determined it was safe enough to continue its trip by truck for delivery. A Mexican national was killed and five olber men were hurt, one critically, when 14 of the train's 55 cars derailed Thursday night in the desert south or Palm Springs. Railroad orticials s aid the five-gallon canister carrying radioactive Amerlcium-241 · ·would be trucked to Los Angeles for trans-shipment to a Ventura oil-drilling operation. ·'The packaiing is in perfectly good shape to be forwarded," said Kim Wong, senior physicist with California Occupational Safety and Health Administration. "It doesn't look like there's any danger at alJ." them from southbound UM at Devore, in the mouth of tbe windy Cajon Pass, to surface streets. Near Fontana, a moving car was whirled around by wind Thursday and the driver was killed when another car smashed into it. Northbound lanes are not yet a _problem in that area of San Bernardino County, the CR said. In the Los Angeles area, several thousand hou.r-long power outages were reported for Department of Water and Power customers Utis morning, said s pokes woman Elizabeth Wimmer. Meanwhile , in Ventura County, widespr ead power outages were reported throughout the Oxnard area, and Southern California Edison officials were bard pressed to keep tabs .on the situation, said area manager Orace Racicot. Trees were reported down on highways 101 and 126 through the county, although no accidents were reported. Police in Ventura reported that a store window at Newberry's department store bad been blown out by the wind Payoff blasted TEL AVIV, Israel <AP> -The Israeli governm ent's $262 million payoff to Jewish settlers in the Sinai Desert drew heavy c riticism today, with newspapers calling it robbery and treasury officials warning it would fuel inflation. ACCESSORY SALE ALL CUIS.NART PARTS ANO ACCESSORIES 20% OFF 3 days onlyt Sale thru ~. J•uary I 0 1 PROCESSORS Lilt Prtoe DLC 1 • •••••••••••• 130.00 Dl.C ••••••••••••••• 185.00 Dl.C 11 ••••• : •.•••••• 260,00 Our Price ,. ''·" 14t.tt '''·'' • and merchandise was being blown through the streets this morning. A 400-square-fool section of a Kaiser Foundation Hospital under con:struction al Fontana was blown orr. Classes were canceled at Cal State San Ber nardino, and Fontana -junior and senior highs because of railing trees and damage to school buildings. * * * 32 vehicles collide on foggy r:oad DELANO (AP> -At least 32 vehicles slammed into each other on foggy Stale Route 99 today when a truck jackknifed intb a minor collision on an icy bridge, authorities said. A man jumped off uie bridge when a boat exploded. He landed on a dirt shoulder 35 to 40 feet below, said Delano Police Det. Sgt. Ron WUllams. About 22 people were taken to Delano Community Hospital, and one man was reported in critical condition at Kern Medical Center in Bakersfield, hospital spokesmen said. No deaths were reported. ''There were quite a few trucks, small cars, big cars, cars pulling trailers -a little bit of everything," said Delano Fire Chief Willard Swarts. ,"........_CROWN HARDWARE EwryttNng YoU W11nt In a held~ etore : All llCMW open 7 dlyt ....... !J.Ys ,_,open Thurs. tit I PM a~~4:Z:::::~~i+;;;::;::;::;:;:;:==; W beD •&e~ael Ca raff i •iiiilli ~--~ deelded to propoit to • ..., Jiii Be~ SeMc:al, he did lt with a AP ........ AO!AL PAIR -Thailand's royal princess Cbulabhorn and her new husband, flying officer Virayuth Didyasarin. look up at a large group of people outside the palace at Bangkok after the wedding 'Thursday. 1'0·square·foot plea aplubed acrOll..Jl downtown billboard In Syrftuae. "lt wasn't a complete aurpriH -l mean lh• idea ol 1etUn1 married -becauae w .. d talked it over,'' said Caruao, 28 ... But the billboard wu a ~al aurpriae. lt 1ave ua a memory to atart with." Ml11 Senecal, 25, aald the ofter wu an• she couldn't ref\lle. They are plann1n1 a .1uly weddlnl. Caruso said he got the Idea while handling advertising for his family's restaurant, Aunt Josie's. The -sl1n. reading "Beth, I Love You! Will You Marry Me? Michael," went up near the restaurant. Composer A.adre Prevln may -be making plans for his fourth honeymoon. The director o f the Pittsburgh Symphony, who divorced actreas Mia Farrow in 1979 after. nine yea.rs of marriage, applied for a license to marry a Britiab woman, an otficial says. Miss Farrow was Ptevin's third wife. Rl&a llue, an Allegheny Dimeyl.and trip irupired boy ---County r-egialNU'; ~firmed Fran1le Geringer, a 9-year-old South African boy aged by a rare disease, went to school tor the first time, bis self.confidence bolstered by a trip to the United States and to Disneyland. given Fransie much more self-confidence. Before leaving this morning, be seemed apprehensive but he is not as shy as he once was." she said. th at the partner on the marriage license is Hea&kr Hales, 33, who has been escorted by Previn, 52, tor nearly three years. She listed her occupation as "making designs on glass." Fransie returned home from bis three-week trip in 1981 determined to attend school, according to his mother, Magda Geringer. ''The trip overseas has The town of Bonham, Tex. toasted the tooth birthday of a political giant -the late House speaker and homet own h ero Sam Raybara. Lady Blrd J0Jtn1oa, the former first lady, led about 1 ,100 people in th e celebration, which featured birthday cake and punch. The boy, who is bald and wrink l ed because of progeria, an aging disease, will be allowed to wear bis hat in school to cover his head. Lyndon John son said Rayburn "walked through the Capitol and district like a man driving a wagon - pulling up the reins to talk." The widow of President World Airways is struigllng through bard time , iays-President Edward PaJy, so Daly says "he'll struggle along with it. Daly said he'll return half bis annual salary of $52,000. Rayburn beeame one of the most powerful figures in congressional history in his 18 yeats as speaker. He was elected to the House in 1913 and served until his death in 1961. Tba(won .. t mue much of a dent in the "6 million &oss that World sllff ered during an 18·month period that started in January 1980, but, said Daly, "An example must be set at the top." ALTAR BOUND -Andre P_re-vin. Pi-ttsburgh Symphony conductor, has applied for a mal'rlage license lQ wed a Britis h woman, Heather Hafes. Previn has bee n divorced three times. Winds decreasing Coastal Smell crelt edvltory In elle<I eMire -. L.oul -1,.nt to ••• ....... u lo u knob wlUI •l:rofleer ' .-U end l to S loot ,... dKrMSlft9 lenllltl. IE.1..,.._e w._ ...,th_ le -•I I .. IS llftOtl In •It-ft. Wean<ly ._.11 to 2 Ifft Ci.« 1111es. 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Tell td what's on your rnent. , Full extent of lobbying not reported, documents say WASHJ.NGTON (AP) -CIA Jlitectof William J . Cuey fall.cl to report the f\ill extent ot bll JobbylAI ot Tre&1urr and a.i. Departrnem olficlall oo behalf of lndoolll• LD im. cevemment documenta ahow. The Ju1Uc• Department'• crlmlnal dlvtaloa ll revlewtna the matter to aee lf Casey violated federal law by fatllna to r•1i1ter as a fore11n a1ent. Department offtclal1 say that in the put, criminal cbar1es bave been brou1bl only when a foreign agent tried to conceal bis work. In a revised disclosure staterqent filed with the Senate lnlelli1ence Committee last September -two days before the panel ended its active lnvestiptlon ol Cuey -the CIA director acknowledged he had one meeting at Treasury and two meetings at the Internal Revenue Service ln 1976 while representing Indonesia on a tax question involving that nation's oil industry. Casey did not say with whom he met. He aubmltted 1 JeUer from bla forme r law firm, Roten • Welll, wbJc:b deaertbed tb• two HHlona at IRS aa "inlormatJon meetln11." But lRS documenta obtalaecl by The Alaoclated Presa llhow th•t Cuey a1ao contacted t.be State Department. And both documebtl and Ute recolleeUon of offlclala who were then lnvolved with the iuue lndlcate that Caiey also · contacted Charles M. Walker, U\e ullltlnl treasury secretary for tax policy, and possibly Treaaury Secretary William Simon himself. Tbe documents and interviews show that Casey was lobbying adminiatl'ation officials outside formal cha.noels to chan1e U.S. tax rulings on a matter of importance to Indonesia. Asked about the matter. the CIA sald Thursday, "Rogers & Wells made a good faith determination in 1976 that no registration was called for. The firm ~ontlnues to believe that deteillbination was correct, and Newport Center ride panel formed A 20-member advis ory committee has been selected to help develop a share-a -ride program aimed at reducing traffic bound for Newport Center. The share-a-ride program was one of the conditions imposed by the Newport Beach City Council last AU&Wl when it a.pproved the Irvine Company 's plan for expanding the shopping and professi&nal center. The expansion project, the subject of a referendum, calls for a :JOO.room hotel. new offtce towers, two restaurants and condominiums. The Irvine Company has agreed to bankroll a share·a·ride program for the entire center until the program becomes self-supporting. Firms with representatives on . the advisory committee include Paclf1c Mutual , Avco and Price-Waterhouse and Co. The sbare·a·ride program has been nicknamed "Centerlde" and a Cincinnati firm, ATE Management and Service Co., ' bas been hired to implement the program. At this point, Pacific Mutual is the only Newport Center firm with an existing ride sharing program and It involves fewer than 20 people. Dan Carlsson, an Irvine Company spokesman,. said the principal tooJ that will be used to persuade persons to use the new ride sharing program is money. "Money is the incentive," Carlsson said ... People can save up to $2 ,000 a ye ar by car pooling or talcing a share·a·ride van." He said the first step in launching the program will be to determine wher e Newport Center employees live and then match individuals with other center employees who live nearby. He said car pools will be established and the11 vans purchased to take over transportation responsibilities. It is projected the "Centetide" program will ~e fully operational early In 1988. Mr. Cuey COQ.Cun." The ..-ne1 d•UMCI. to anawer a.oy qunUcnJ. . On July t, 19'18, Walker IRS Commluloner Donald Alexander tbat lndoaHla b hired New York le1al cOUllMI beip 1at.n a private tax known in the JBS u a tax "J 111ume that, lD va.w ol tremendoul importa.nee ot matter, tbe fonbeomua, request wlll be exl*tlted your office," Walker wrote. In an lntervl«tw, Alexander said , "I recll'I Treaaur~' interest In this matter, an Treasury Is not normally a pa to a letter rullne. Tbla wasn't tM kind of case they got Involved Ii normally." n A memo by l RS attorne~ St.even Hannes showe he w~ called by Arthur Dornhelm of the State Department'); Indonesia Desk on Sept. 1 and~ 1976. According to the memo, Dornbeim told Hannes that Casey had informed him the IRI had refused to issue the tal lette r ruling and Dornhelm asked what lRS would need lf make a ruling. d The contacts are significant because they eall i&to questi°'lt the defense raised by Casey fO( not regist e ring . Casey 's defenders have saJd he did not• have to register because the l/l~ exempts attorneys doing legalJ work in established agenc11 proceedings, like the I RS taxi letter ruling process . u But IRS had not even begun as process, officials said. 1 USS Fanning ~ shipmates ~ • reumon set ' , ., Former crew members of the~ U.S.S. FanniQi. a World War 111 era destroyer, are searching Con their shipmates in hopes ofr organizing a 1982 reunion. i" The Fanning was com missioned i n 1937 ancl. de commissioned in 1946' following service in the Pacifio: during World War IL 11 Former officers -and crew:-. interested in finding out more about ttre proposed reunion are-t asked to contact Fred Winger1 ; 712 Hewlett St., Bakersfield, CA;& 93309 or telephone (805) 323-'1013.,-, The reunion is scheduled r~ June in Des Moines, lowa. .~ CM slaying for jewels alleged •I Prosecutor says hairdresser murdered by pair ~ An Orange County prosecutor Ana industrial area near Lawson's jewelry was round or{~ ha s asserted that a Edinger Avenue and the him . f' 25-year-old native of Lebanon Newport Freeway. Conley saJd he would preseni1 participated in the killing of a Darwiche's lawyer, Ronald two witnesses who saw the fight: hairdresser in COsta Mesa last Kreber, claimed in his opening take place in Lawson 's car at' April to gain possession of statements Monday to the jury JoJo's and who provided police valuable jewels the victim that it was the defendant's with descriptions that matchec!'l regularly wore in public. roommate, Sam Monsoor, 20, both Darwiche and Monsoor. ·,:. Deputy District Attorney John who attacked Lawson and shot Kreber said his client fled witb:! Con I ey to Id a six · man , him in the front seat of Lawson's Monsoor, who turned himselh six-woman superior court jury car as i• was parked at JoJo's. · in to police and awaits trial later .. t hat murder defendant Rami · Kreber said Darwicbe, wbo this ·year, because he believed) Darwiche helped his roommate liad been asked to go along with he was implicated In the killin'1 shoot and rob baJrdresser Carl the others for a drink, was in the by hls presence in the car . •!• Lawson lo the parking lot of back seat of the car and saw JoJo's Restaurant on Harbor ' Monsoor allegedly shoot Lawson "He felt he must be Involved. Boulevard. in the chest with a handgun. He was there. And that was hi!, Darwiche, who lived in Costa The defense lawyer said there reasoning in not going to thl" Mesa._ is standing trial in Judge had been no indication that police at that particular time, ·•l W i lliam W . Thomson 's Lawson was going to be . Krebersaid. courtroom on murde r a nd attacked. Lawson, who was a custoir;; robbery charges stemming from Following the killing, both jew.eler in addiUon to owning an., Lawson's death on April 13, l!Ml. Darwiche and Monsoor fled to Anaheim hairdressing salon,1' The hairdresser's body was the Eas t Coast. Darwiche was known to wear as much ~ 1 found the following day In .bis eventually was 'arrested ln El $60 ,000. in jewels in publlcH car, which was left in a Santa Paso, Texas, a nd some o( authorities said. 1~----------------------------------------1~------------------------------------~'I It's Time to· Celebrate! * We'ye Got UnbelleYable snow & fantastic siding!!! * _Mannnlth 97" Pd City 84" Vail 81" Sun Valley 73" .. \ -=-~--:--~-~~D~aft .~vaders ey:eil . , ~RISONERS PROTEST -Six of nine Americans are among 17 foreign prisoners on a hunger strike at Lurigancho federal prison in Lima, Peru. They are from left. Daniel Avelino Carreira, Vicente Arias Vaquere, Michael W. Cayne and Richard Mayer Stein. The strikers say they will continue their hunger protest until demands of being released or transferred to prisons in their own countries are met. 'Louis Masse, Kayden Brandenburger. ~Medicare pa~ment t :changes proposed ' W ASIQNGTON (AP) -The Reagan• administration is • considering a requirement that Medicare beneficiaries pay 10 percent or their hospital charges up to $2,500 for stays longer than 'one day, its chief health spokesman acknowledged today. Richard Schweiker, secretary or health and l\uman services, described the proposal and others under study at the White House in remarks prepared for delivery at a national policy conference on competition in health care. General kidnap mission 'failu~' ROME (AP > -U .S . Ambassador Maxwell M. Rab& said today the Red Brigades kidnappers of U.S. Brig. Gen. James L. Dozier have "failed in thei'r objectives." ·'This event has not altered in the least the closeness of ' relations between the United States and Italy," the envoy said .. in remarks prepared for a dedication ceremony at a home for the elderly near Udine in northern Italy. New truce broken in Lebanon claah BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP> - Warring pro -Iranian, communist and pro-Iraqi militiamen exchanged machine • gun and mortar fire today: shattering a new cease-fire just hours after it was imposed, a· police spokesman said~ There was no immediate report or casualties in the latest spate or street fighting that has lefl 14 people dead and 53 wounded in three days . Slaying puzzles Philadelphia cops PHILADELPHIA (AP> -A reputed mobster gunned down in an "organized crime ttit" hadn't said anything about beini in danger, his lawyer said, ancl the slaying left police confused about who runs the mob in Philadelphia. Frank "Chickie" Narducci, 49, was kiJled by at least 10 gunshots Thursday evening shortly after be left a rederal courthouse where he was on triaJ with seven other men on charges of loansharking and racketeering. Jury selection began Mo..nday. France to train Nicaragua troops WASHINGTON (A P > - France will train 10 naval omcers and 10 pilots from Nicaragua, in addition to sending ''non-offensive'' military equipment, French Derense Minister Charles Hemu disclosed Thursday. Angry Pentagon orflcials who declined to permit use of their names denounced as a "slap In the race" the announcement earlier in the day in Paris that France would" supply military equipment to Nicara-gua. Britom 8tymied by cold, snow LONDON (AP) -Arctic cold and snow in drifts up to 8 feet whipped through the British Isles today, creating chaos for commuters, marooning at least four towns and transforming the flooded English cathedral city or York into a skating rink. At least eight people were reared dead, including five duck hunters whose boat was swamped by a bliuard in the Irish Republic, two motorists kllled in southern England and a fisherman in England. · Broadcasts upped WASHINGTON (AP) - Polish-language broadcasts by the Voice or America have been increased to seven houis daily, the U .S . Inte rnational Communications Agency announced today. Despondent man faces stamps f rand MINNEAPOLIS <AP) -An unemployed rather who wrote a letter to an Iowa newspaper threatening suicide on New Year's Eve so his family would be eligible for welrare has been charged with illegally collecting rood stamps in five states. Lester J . Williams, 36, or Des Moines, was Indicted Thursday a nd surrendered to federal authorities to face the <!barges. Williams' anonymous letter,, wbich appeared In the Des Moines Register Dec. 30, drew orfers of a job and expressions of sympa thy from across the nation and touched off a frantic search for him. The letter said WiUiams' family couldn't collect welfare under regulations scheduled to go into effect Jan. 1 1 because he was able-bodied and ltving at home. Ho.t.1rs before the 11 : 59 p. m. New Year's Eve d eadline, Williams turned himself in to a legal aid orflcial, saying he had changed his mind about suicide. Williams appeared before U.S. Magis trate Earl Cudd in Minneapolis to face th e complaint. Cudd released him on his own recognizance after Williams said he had no money. Williams said in court he is now working after two years or unemployment. "I have to have that job," he said. "If I stay in jail, I'll lose that job." Williams said be started work Thursday at Cheney Carpet Mills in Plymouth. Minn. A company orrlcial said Williams is working in shipping and receiving. The company offered· Williams the job after bearing of. his plight., Williams also said in court that he has seven children depending on him for support. In his suicide letter, he said he wanted to make his wire and two' daughters eligible for welfare. Robert Oberbillig, to whom1 Williams turned after changing bis mind, said Williams told bim·1 be had four children by a previous marriage. Grace period allowed as Reagan reverses atti tude WASHINGTON (AP) -The Reaaan admlnl1tratlon, optln1 to continue draft re1l•trat1on, la vowloa to prosecute the more than 800,000 young men who have failed to re•IAter unless they sign up durina a temporary amnesty pertod. In a sharp reversal of his campaian statements, President Reagan said Thursday be was retaining drall registration because it would save up to six weeks in mobUlzjng recruits In an emer.cency. Violators of the law -who could face a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $10,000 fine -will be allowed to sign up without penalty durlnt a 30 to 60-day grace period, the administration said. Details on when the 1race period starts and how long it will last are still pending. Presidential counselor Edwin Meese Ill expresaed confidence that most young men would register now that confusion about the future or regisLration has been eleared up. And those who stm refuse? "Under the law they have to be prosecuted," Meese said. However, he suggested that extraordinary steps will be taken before the 1ovemmtnt moves .a1aiMt vtolat.ora. "There are several enlorcement slePt before ' proaecutlon la Initiated.'' Meese Hid. ''They are counseled, they have people come t.o their home and talk t.o them about the law and explaJn the law carefully t.o them .. " Defense Secretary Cupar Weinber1er said today that "lt'a a considerably more dan1erou1 world" than when Rea1an opposed draft re1l1tratlon durin1 the 1980 presidential campalgn, and that the Polish crisis was flfured In the president's declalon. Interviewed on ABC -TV's "Good Mornln1 America" show, Weinberger aald the primary resaaon for Rea1an's chan1e In position was a new finding that re1lltrallon would save six to seven weeks in the ever.t of an emer1ency manpower mobilization -not the three to five days be said was the Selective Service's elltimate in 1980. Leaders of the anti-draft movement denounced Reagan's decision as hypocritical. Sen. Mark "J Hatfield reminded the president of tlis 1980 statement that the chief objection to draft registration was on moral grounds, and that the program was morally unjust except in a severe national emergency. Loyalty oaths denounced By Tbe Auoclated Preas Poland's Roman Catholic primate denounced loyally oaths the martial law regime is extracung from workers, uncensored reports reaching the West said. But a censored dispatch today quoted him as offering absolution for those who signed. In other developments: -Radio Warsaw said farmers were holding back grain from sale because of expected price Increases, and that the 250-300 tons they were selling dally fell "far short of the country's requirements." -The French newspaper France-Soir quoted Polish government spokesman Capt. Wieslaw Gornicki as saying all militants arrested since the Dec. 13 crackdown would be freed eventually. But be said Marian Jurczyk, a Solidarity vice president, would be tried for allegedly declaring "it was necessary to hang the members ' of go~mment and in substance that those governing in Poland.were Russian, or in any case traitors." Gornicki was interviewed in Copenhagen. Uncensored Teports from Warsaw said Archbishop Jozef Glemp. spiritual leader of Poland's 32 million Catholics , charged that more and mOTe workers were being required to renounce their membership in the Soliqarity labor federation to keep their jobs. "Extraction or such declarations is unethical. There is a clear principle. also respected by our civil code, that declarations made tinder coercion are not vali<L_" he.told 3,000 people jammed.into.st.. TonnTs Cathedral in Warsaw for Mass Wednesday evening. However, a dispatch from Warsaw subject to military censorship said Glemp offered absolution for Poles who had renounced Solidarity, and quoted him as saying some people may lose "face" by renouncing the union but that "only people with true character have moraJ conflicts." In the uncenso~d dispatch. the archbishop criticized conditions for those interned under martial law and expressed regret at the growing division of Polish society into "authorities which order and coerce. and subjects who are silent and who hate." But he stressed "revenge is the worst way of righting wrongs" and repeated his previous call to avoid bloodshed. "It is more heroic sometimes t-0 live for the motherland than to die for it." he said, quoting his predecessor, the late Cardina l Wyszinski. Deputy Minister Boguslaw Stachura told two parliamentary committees 5,906 people had been interned W1der martial law, but 839 were released ror "humanitarian reasons," leaving 5,067 still in detention camps around the country, Radio Warsaw reported. e axe falls! Hundreds of imported accents, gifts and furnishings must go as we race toward inventory. Choices are incredible. Resist no more, these values say give in! DOORS OPEN 10 A.M. SHARP. flRST COME flRST SERVED. SALE UMlllD TO n.ooR STOCKS ONLY; F.NDS JANUARY 31. 25-50% off reg. Golden rattan. 16 x 16 x 16'' and 20 x 20 x 20~ Reg. 79.99 & 99.99 Chests ......................... 54.88 & 74.88 Wide selection of sizes, colors, varieties. All silk flowers . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . 25% off reg. Wide selection of colors. styles. From the Orient. All decor ceramics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30% off reg. There's a bubble in the heavy base. Reg. 1.99 Hlball glass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.28 Used on Japanese trains in days of steam power. Reg. 2.99 Teapot . . . . .. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.88 Decorative and practical. For tabletop and fireplace. All matches ................. : . . . . 30% off reg. Gelsha.s, children, ducks, etc. From Japan. Reg. 2.99-14.99 Porcelain flgurlnes ........... .-...... 1.88-9.88 For adults and children. Pamily tun. All toys, games .................. : 30% off reg. Camphorwood. Birds and plutntree handpainted. Reg. 249.99 Chest ................................. 198.88 Handpainted on delicate bamboo slats. 2 x 36~ Reg. 2.99 Sc,roll ................... , ............... 1.99 COSTA MESA -!'119 Barbor Blvd. M0·733'1 11z.24n ~ffi~t 3,000 stranded in sn.Ow Emergency declared in area south of Tahoe; man missing SOUTH LAKE TAHOE (AP> -A state of emer1ency has been declared In an Isolated area south of Lake Tahoe where some 3,000 .,,ople are believed to have been stranded in their homes at.nee &londay nle~t by this weelr's huee snow storm. In addition, a rescue team with dogs wu searchln1 for a man believed burled nearly three dan 'by a snowsllde near the lake's west shore. El Dorado County supervisors declared a state of emergency Thursday after snow removaJ crews working 20-bour days were unable to churn through up to 8 feel of snow to reach people in areas along U.S. 50 and Calilornia 89t in the Meyers and Christmas Valley area. Reports from those areas said people were runnin& out of food, but there were no reports of any deaths. To the north, crews were sear~g for Everett L. Piner, 23, of Apple ValJ&y, woo was swept over California 89 by the slide early Tuesday. The road has been closed by snow since last month. At nearby Meeks Bay, a house was destroyed by fire wben fire trucks were unable to reach it. Two houses in the Fallen Leaf area aouth of Lake Tahoe reportedly had their roofs cave in under the wei1ht 1of accumuJated snow. El Dorado Supervisor Thomas Stewart called it "a very serious situation," saying that if another storm hits the basin betore the crews can gel through to the stranded .. people, they wur be "afloat without a paddle." Clear weather ls predicted into the weekend, but Stewart said ·a storm as late as next Tuesday could spell diHsler. The extended weather forecast calls for a chance of snow by Monday. The Lake' Tahoe Airporl;- closed alJ week by U~ storm, has been turned ,nto an emergency shelter for people who have been without beat, light and waler since Tuesday. Temperatur es pluneed b_eiow zero early Thursday and were predicted to do so again Friday. Sierra Pacific Power Co. crews, a lso slowed by the snow-clogged roads, continued restoring service to some SOO c ustomers s till w"hout electricity Thursday. At least 8,000 customers were affected at the heleht of the storm . Hlshway crews are worklne t~o 10.hour shifta dally with two hou ra b15tween shifts for equipment mainte.,.ance. Tbe crews have been able to advance less than one mile per hour because of the deptb of the snow and the laree num~r of abandoned vehicles on the roadways, includlne four-wheel drive vehicles wllb chain.a lhat could not operate in the extreme storm conditions. Because of the depth of the s now, blade-type plows are useless and in some places, the s now is too bigh tor rotary plows. El Dorado supervisors asked S<rtllb Lake Tahoe and adjoining Alpine and Placer counties for any assistance they could give, particularly with rotary snow blowers, but those areas are bard press.ed to clear their streets and-highways. Supervisors also were attempting to gel the California Department of Transportation-to send some plows reportedly sitting in a garage In Stoc~. -~ .......... GROUNDED Pl.ANES -Travel came to a h~lt basin. Air travel resumed on a limited bas is this week at Lake "(ahoe Airport a fter winter on Thursday. storm dumped eight feet of snow on the . Speech short on specifics But governor's State of State talk draws praise SACRAMENTO <AP> -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s final formal addr.ess to the Legislature is being praised as one of his best -not so much for what he said, but for how he said it. Brown's State of th& Slate address Thurs day to a jolnl session q f the Sen ate and Assembly was s hort on specifics. .. He made only one new proposal -to require three years or mathematics and two years of science classes for all California high school students. But he backed the proposal with no specific dollar amounts. • Brown also said he opposes any new taxes in 1982. But he said if the state does not recover from the recession as quickly as predicted, he will join with legislators looking al either new taxes or program cuts. He also referred in general terms to his endorsement of p otentially controversial proposals for a one-time speedup of tax receipts as a stopgap measure to get through his final year without a general tax increase. · But unlike his previous seven formal addresses to the Legislature, Brown devoted better than half of his 1982 a(ldress to a mor'f philosophical look at California's history and future. He quoted a s ixth-grade schoolgirl's letter, quoted his great-grandfather's diary. recited part of Gov. Peter Burnett's first inaugural speech 132 years ago, and even praised parts of the gubernatorial record of President Reagan. Referring lo the eleg~nUy · restored state Capitol, where be delivered the speech, Brown conceded that he h ad been "skeptical" of the $68 million restoration project. But he congratulated the lawmakers for having "the vision lo invest in a dream" such as the ' restoration project, which he predicted would be an inspiration to futur~ gen er at.ions. Ford stre·et nalne issue Golv.ed RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. Palm Desert had balked at (AP) -Former President renamina Country Club Drive in GeraJd Ford wlU have a street · Ford's hopor when the public named after blm, but it won't be protested that the name sbould Country Club Drive. be preserved because of lta • The City Council reacinded biatoric~J 1&1nlflcance and Thuraday nl&bt an earlier because of tbe]ondominlum declaloo that named COUD\rJ developments al lt. Club Drive after the former' The county aai lt would live pre1ident. Ford la a Rancho Palm Oeaer,t nd Rancho Mira1e resident. T h e c o u D c i l v o t e d Mlra1e JO dQI resolve the unanilDOUMy to caU A venue • eontmera1 over the renamiac Gerald R. Ford Drln, and 1a" of CounttY Club bftve. Country Club Drive back lta A rte11 ll1tenln1 to four orlliUI aame. speakers oppoeed \o uy ebanle Avenue • 11 entirely wttbln ln the~ Co.lntey Club Drt", Rancbo :!t:fe'• bouDdarlel. Councilman c. ~ HubbArd Tbat a c:ontn>Yeru tn wbo be beeD ~DI tbe lclta, wbicb Rancho llJra1e, Palm pve ln. Deaert ud Rlveralde OMIDty Hubbtu'd made · a moUOll to bad ben tr1ln1 to a.,.. to reatore Country Club Drtve'a aame UM aame ltl'Mt an. ume and~·•• M la _ _.._...__Old. ,..-.... ,,_-=-"',,.,.behalf ol tl9e ftii m41t Pl •ldint. One television commentator described it as "an Inspirational s peech," a nd even the Republican leader of the Senate. Bill Campbell of Hacienda Heights, described it as "the best speech he has made since he became governor." "It was upbeat. It was a repudiation of the last seven speeches," Campbell said. Brown received his sharpest criticism from a somewhat surprising source, slate schools· chief Wilson Riles, a fellow Democrat who said Brown's proposed 6.9 percent increase in school funds is inadequate. "J wish this governor had bein giving this speech for eight years and following through on it,·· Riles said, adding that it does little good to talk about added emphasis on math and sciences when schools do not have the money to attract or keep the best math and science teachers. Tbe speech was as noteworthy for what Brown didn't say as for what he did say. -There was no mention of crime, an unresolved issue which B row n and the Legislature gave a top priority last year. -There were no specific solutions proposed to meet the state's severe budget pinch, either specific new taxes or specific budget cuta. lpatead, Brown's program conalats of hopes for a quick economic rebound from the receaslon, plus accelerated tax collectlom to squeeze throuah the next few mon\ba. -There WU DO loq .,.nda of lelialatlve priorttles for lJG, Tbe fiat bad Just one ltem on lt1 the new emphull on math ana science in 1cbool1, wltb fewt apicllic• bow that would be aecompliatMd. Moat reaction to· lb.e1 Democratic 1overnor'1 M1c1r9i ••• predictable u moat Demoera&a p:-alMd lt uMt mo1t Republlcam were critical. Aatemblyman Rober\ N&1&or of Menlo Park, who ii •lated to a11ume tb• Reaublle1n leadenblp lD tb• low• -.. nut ~_,~Md oom=ta 1tmtt•to_........,_,, . Orange Cout DAILY Pll,.OT/Frlday, January 8, 1882 .. We think there's going to be a lot of excitement over all of them. Because $59.99 for any all weather coat In this special collection Is something to act on now. Even if It doesn't look like raln ... today. Our pl~d poplin trench shown, khaki or beige, cotfon/polyester shell with nylon lining, 5 to 13. JWR JR'S, 37. To order, call toll·free 1·800-3-45-8501. H/F ... . . • ,. ---------------- ..., ... FRIDAY, JAN, t, 1912 I Are career women giving lllTlllTll lllCl/FlllTlll lllllY STOCKS COMICS GARDEN BS 86; 88 greater thought to snaring husbands? Colunist Bob Greene thinks so . See Page B2. HUntirigton seeking to cOnsolidate elections setting up precincts, paylDI ! precinct workert1 couatint I ballots and publisntn1 balJot1 statement.a and lnformaUon. 1 By PAT&ICK KENNEDY °' .............. Huntln1ton Beach officials have decided to ask voters to eliminate separate city electlooa and to consolidate municipal ballottn1 wltb June state primaries held every two years. If approved, the consolidation la expected to greaUy increase the number of voters on city iaaues and reduce the cost of city District wants tenant Fountain Valley School District officials, now settled into Jl new headquarters in what once was McDowell School, are now looking ror a tenant to occupy the district's former central offices at 1 Lighthouse Lane. District trustees Thursday authorized their administrators to begin advertising for a tenant to occupy the' 15,300-square-foot building on a one-year lease basis. Assistant Superintendent Jack Mahnken said the district hopes to secure a one-year tenant as soon· as possibie . More long-range plans for the property wilJ be studied during this 12-month period, he said. The district currently bas no plans to sell the property, be said. Because the land was acquired and the building was constructed with state funds, any windfall realized from such a sale would have to go to the state, Mahnken said. Tbe property is a corner site bounded by Newland Street and Talbert Avenue and is zoned for commercial-professional use. Mahnken said 75 percent of the funds derived from leaainl the site could be kept by Che district for maintenance projects at Fountain Valley acbools. Signups set for courses by Coastline Registration· by mail is under way for more than 70 different mini-courses being offered by Orange Coast College's Community Service Office this spring. The courses begin in February, March, April and May, and range from three· to etg~t weeks in tength. Costs range from $3 to $45 each, with most in the $20-30 range. Courses include ballet and dance training, training for office work , beginning photography, effective lime management, calligraphy, human sexuality, law, jewelry malting, painting, puppetry and many others. People may register by sending a check, payable to Orange Coast College, to OCC's Community Service Office, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Registration also is being < conducted on campus and at the door on a space-available basis. elecUona by about 50 percent, accordlQI t.C? municipal olftclals. On a ._3 vote, l.be City Council has a1reed to put the conaolldalion proposal before voters this November durln1 the 1eneral election. The upcomlnt municipal election ln April for four city council seats and city attorney won't be affected by the proposal. CouncU members favorini the comolldaUon cite creater voter, turnout and cost aavln11 u the · foremost reasons. OpposinM · council members said the non-partisan city electiona could , 1et tied up with party poUUca lf conaoUdated with primarles that deal with statewide issues. Opposing council members also speculated that many voters in _prima~y election wbuJd be uninformed on local iaauea and would cast b•llots indiacrimi"-tely. "We have more voter turnout and of course it would aave the city money by consolldat.iq," said Councilman Bob Mandie. "I think that the people who come out lo vote are conscleoUous enough to flDd out about the issues on the ballot. So the .additional voters are welcomecl.'' In the April 1980 city electlon, only 13,'1!5 -15 percent -o( the HunUngton Beach voters cut ballots. By contrast, in the 1980 June state primary, more than 50,000 of the city'a 94,000 registered voten cast ballots, accordin1 t-0 Orange County offlciaJa. City Clerk Alicia Wentworth says tbe city will spend about $50,000 running the munlclpal election this April. Costs biclude If the future election• are consolidated with tbe Joe· primaries county officlala Would i· charge the clty about $23,000. That charge la baaed on a t 25-.cent fee for each recl.stered voter and is used to cover the · cost of adclltional paperwork, say county officials. Jurors told , :::_phon.y evidenc~ - deal offered . By DAVlD KUTZMANN Ol_O.ity,....IUff Jurors in Willie Ray Wisely's murder trial heard testimony Thursday about a purported deal to offer phony evidence about the suffocation death of Huntington Beach truck driver Robert Bray last March. The teslirrlony came from Los Angeles County Jail inmate David Lewis, who said Wisely and jailhouse informant Robert Kish, the prosecution's key witness, concocted evidence together that was later to be used in Wisely's Orange County Superior Court trial. ~ FIRE RESULTS -A Huntington Beach garage (above> and home were gutted by a fire today that started in an enclosed patio and caused $60,000 damage. Eight dogs kept in ..., .......... ""*"*O'o-11 the patio perished in the bla-ze. which apparently started when wind blew over a heat lamp. Lewis said Wisely had offered the s~me deal to him -turn bogus informer and win concessions in his own case - but tumed down the Hunlinit.on Beach man's ofrer. "l told nim it was kind ol crazy," said Lewis, a convicted robber. "I didn't want not.bing to do with it. I was too involved in my own case." Evidence gathered in Irvine sex case By RICllAllD GREEN o{ .. o.My ........... Checks, credit card receipts and ledgers found In an Irvine house in which prostitution involving a 15-year-old Tustin girl alJegedly took place may be used in an effort to prosecute male clients, said Irvine police Sgt. Leo Jones. "Prostitution is obviously illegal, but wnen you're dealing with a 15-year-old, they (clients> could face additional charges of illegal intercourse with a minor ana techriically contributing to the delinquency or a minor," said Sgt. Jones, who led tbe Tuesday niglll raid on a house al 6 'Crosskey in the Northwood area of Irvine. Arrested in the 11 :15 p.m. raid were the owners or the home, Steven L. Daniels and Emily Alice Delgado, both 31 ; Chafie Mustapha Habbas, 26, Tustin, and the girl, a«ording to police. Sgt . Jone s s aid representatives of the Irvine Police Department will be discussing possible prosecution of the male clients with i:epresentatives of the Orange t;ounty District Attorney's office. He said that police estimate about 50 acts or prostitution took place in the Crosskey house since the girl became involved about a month or two ago. Jones said that, according to statements given by the girl, other prostitutes conducted business in the house, but Jones sald there is little chance the police· will be able to find or prosecute these women. He said police learned of the operation Tuesday from a lip by an anonymous caller who told pollce of an ad in a "sex magazin e" offering companionst)ip for men who called the telephone number of the house on Crosskey. Jones said an officer found the ad, called the number, was solicited and a $120 fee was set for the '··companionship'· services Tuesday night. Tuesday night , the plainclothesman went to the house, went upstairs with the girl and arrested her after she went into a bathroom to change her clothes, said Jones. ................... .._ perform Ulla month at the annual conference of the Southem California llualc lduc:aton Auoclatioo. Ableat from photo ta fourth member. "9an Ramlre1. · . • • Wind blamed in Huntington fwme/ire A fare at a Huntington Beach home was started when a beat lamp used in an enclosed patio to keep a Golden Retriever and her newborn pupa warm apparently was knocked over by a gust of wind, say fire officials. The retriever and her seven 2-week-old pups died in the blue at 7:50 a.m. today but the four human occupants of the home at 20182 Harbor Isle Lane escaped without injury. "It appears a gust of wind knocked over the heat lamp onto some blankets used to keep the dogs warm," said fire Captain Roger Hosmer. ·'The blaze apparently got a good start and was fueled by occasional bursts of wlnd." The home, located south of Adams Avenue and west of Bushard Street, was rented by Roger Lackey and three friends, Hosmer said. The patio is located behind both the garage and hJ>use, be said. The garage was destroyed and the damage lo the house was estimated at about $60,000, Hosmer said. The blue was controlled within 20 minutes, Hosmer said. He saJd the occupants were awake when the fire broke out, but weren't able to save the dots because the patio was qulckly en1ulfedin names, be said. Asked by prosecutor Ed Freeman why the defendant would otrer aucb an arrangement, the 22-yea-r-old. Lewis saJd Wisely merely told him Ile wanted to cause delays in an unrelated robbery case In Los Angeles by drawing himself into the Huntington Beach murder investigation. Wisely, 29, who ls acling as his own lawyer, claimed in an interview Thursday that he did make such a deal at first with Kish , who was supposed to testify at the preliminary hearing and then "fall apart" at trial. In testimony last week, however, the mustachioed Kish steadily told jurors that Wisely admitted to him that he killed his stepfather, Robert Bray, when the ofder man found out his tractor-trailer rig was being used allegedly to smuggle drugs. Bray's body was found pinned beneath the 2,000 pound, tllt-away cab of his truck last March 9 oo Springdale Street in Huntington Beach. Police al first believed the truck driver's death was accldentaJ but took Wisely Into custody after investigating the claims of Kish, who called investigators. Kish, Wisely and Lewis were all inmates together at Los Angeles County Jail last May and June when Kish claims Wisely confessed to him and Lewis says Wisely offered him the.deal to inform. Lewis testified Thursday that Kiah told him he had several plans to keep himself out or state prison, one or them being the scheme to pose as an infortl\er. Kish had been convicted of multiple counts of armed robbery, burglary and uaauJt Post Qf fice ready Valley residents benefit Beginning' Monday, Fountain Valley resident.a will be able to take care of tbeir mail chores at a new local post office at 17227 ~ewbopeSt. Earl Butcher: Industrial entlneerin1 mana1er for the U.S. Postal Service's Santa Ana Sectional Center, al.kl wtndow HrYlee It the pnMDt poll ~ at 10301 Slat• A..ue (aCl'Oll from Clty HalJ) wl!l contlDM t.broulb noon Saturda1. He laid tQuipmtDt t.beD will be mo,.... to tbe Newbope poet otnce fol' lalUatlola ot ...-.Me llODde . 1.nei... said "8ldtn'8 \Mn will bl alllt to &DDl7 fw ..-.& al poet orttee 1oek -bnn. nt N ....... lite la eqm,ped wttlt 1,IOO --. ~ u.aa twiee tie number offered at the Slat.er buil4il\I. Current box holders and those on a waitin1 list wlll be accommodated first, Butcher said. Postal offlclala bad hoped to open t.be new bulld.in1 ln Ume for tbe holiday ,ma.U naab. But postal aervtee real estate and bulldJnc offlelals refused to ace•~ the 1trveture from the' COil'-' ador until eddltlonal work WU completed. , Bu~blr. 1.ud tbe ~:f now ~-.... b'm.UJ -. Tbe aew pol\ otnce, Wblcb coat 11 .e aaUUoa for land ACClUl•ltlon, d••••· ••4 coutnldloe, will baft tlMliir aeeeM for IDOtortltl • _.. parklnl .,.._, pGltal ome... . .,. and faced lime in slate priaoo. "Kish told me be felt be bad enough information to get his. deal (and) get his time cut down. so he wouldn't have to go to the joint," Lewis said. . Wisely has maintained throughout b.i$ trial that be ba(( no involv e ment in bii" stepfather's death, wblch b.i Insisted was accidental. : If convicted of first-de1ree murder with special circ umstances, however, be could be sent to the gas chamber\ at San Quentin. : . ! School chief backed Carrying picket signs 1n s upport of embattled W es tminster School S uperi ntendent Kenneth Ricketts, about 2S area studeata and parents demonstrated outside district offices Tbunclay night. The five-member Westminster School Board asked Ricketts to step down from the district's top position foUowing an execuUvel session Dec. 28. Trustees cited philosophical, differences. . 1 Ricketts. who bas declined to comment on what he terms°4 "private matter," has ref the board's request. . , F o 11 owi ng f h e b r i e fl demonstration, the picket attended uie board meeting and a spokesman addressed the! board in Ricketts' behalf, according to board president Margie Rice. Mrs. Rice said she will meet with attorneys from the Oranie County Counsel's Office next Tuesday to review options for removing the superintendent from the post he r efuses to resign. Stop-smoking clinic slated in Huntington; The American Cancer Society . is sponsorin1 a stop-smokin1 clinic at Pacifica Hoapltal ln 'Hunlinlton Beach. Sessions will take place Monday and Thursday evenlnp, from 7 to 9, Jan. 11 through 28. They wlll take place ln tbe Carmen Yuppa CQnterence• Center, 18819 Delaware St.,' across from tbe 00.pital. The claslfea att~mpt to help smokers idenilf:l and deal wldl their individual •motl.nl habits.: To teglster, call 752-8800. A $1~ donation is requested. .Valley bloodniobile vi8it..eCheduled H/, Oranee Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday. January 8, 1882 Bconomist cites government financing needs " :JOllN CUNNDS upward aaatn before mldyear," 1ald Kaufman1 the llliiiiiiiii..._---cblef economist ot Salomon Brothers, a skuntltt Mn YOU -Heary Kaut.Du bu done lt firm. By the end of the 1ear, he warned, 11atn. He bM nmtNhcJ ua, II be doll eacb 'JUI', "lon1-term rates wlll probably be thre1ten1n1 tbat f.....a eovernm•t tlDaDclDa Medi wlll ,put their 1181 bl•b." tb• cnaib an otMr borrowen, 1uela aa MID.... Kauhnan seldom baa very 1ood newa to ud evea COMWll•rt. deliver about interest ratee, lMlt tbat probably Isn't Tbere was 1lmo1t ootbtnc new In tb11 hi• fault, at leut over the put 15 yean or ao of bl1 -lmOlt ':TOM wbo e.u add a federal deficit -deficlta tbat mutt be tlauced In ::~~':::at n"n'.':'::Sa1C':ro'I:~ the marutplace Just like IDYOfte elH'I debta. but you mlfbt have tbou&bt IO Well, with one bil dfffe.renee: l'ederal debt tU11 becau.e 0 the Impact. The priority over yours; the federal debt, you may be sure, gell financed, even U to do ao meana paytnc stock market, for example, wu extraordinary interest rates. Jo l t e d as a ever el Y as a Aa a reall.lt, Kaufman knows that tbue bis daydreamer wa.lklna oil a curb. government borrowln11 can't be t1nored, and that This la the service that an inevitable conruct ls batched when business at K a u f m an Perform s : ff e the same time needs tQ raise larae amounts of reminds, investors and tbe cash for enterpmee such u, for instance, the public ln &.eneral, that they much publlci&ed relnduatrialhaUoo or Ameri~•· ·~"" caanot live a daydream, that Under such circumstances, sometbini tiu to they can't wish away the bll federal deflclt1°4 give. Interest rates have to give, aays Kaufman. w~der about aa if all was well. Too much demaDd; simple aa that. "A confrontation between tbe credit needs of. It's been 101.na on for a Iona time too. James the U.S. Treasury and tbose of business w. Cbriatian, chief economist at the U.S. League corporations is shaping up for 1982," declared of Savina• Associations, looked up Federal ltaufman in bis analysis or "1982 Prospects for Reserve Board fiaurea on the subject and fairly Financial Markets. 11 well documented it. Only a limited supply of credit is ever In the years 1950·1954, be found, the federal available aa any borrower ls well aware, and government took only a 9.1 percent share of funds when tbe'demand ror those funds rises so also do raised in credit markets. And In the years Interest rates. And that, Kaufman forecasts, is 1955-1959, the percentage fell to an almost goin~ to happen again. minuscule 1.2 percent. "lnte1est rates will start. to trend irregularly Even as recently as 1965·1969 the federal -....:.....--------....-----------.,government's wedae of the credit market.pie was only 6.9 percent, compared with 46.3 per~ent for .,..._c_dt.,..u.a.._CT_Ott_s""'co.-•-,.-.-....... ~ non-financial businesse3 and 10.7 for state al\(i . _,.,,..-_ I I ts OM11a..SMA Ml-CLtut oca govemmen . 94IY ... Krveerr.-.-.is .. ,u• It all changed i.n the blg deficit years of the Mffle LNh .-.is MIJ.11 1970s. In the rirst five years of the decade the SO,.._ MtUS "91.!f 'to% snwr.... .,... • .,.... federal share rose to 10.4 percent, and in the next ,_=::::111..,. five years to 23.3. By 1980 it bad reached 24.6 Show. HuntinatOIJ Center mill today thru Jan. 1 O ... : OUR~198lGIMARION The Mfance to Save Energy llas prepared a brochllf8 that cont81ns 12 Slmple. mexpenSiVe mMWf8S to take which can cut down your home enerf1t use by 25%. Thar in tum can Cut down the amounl of money )'OU pay for home energy (For example: Did you know that electrical out18ts "/eax " heat? The brochure wt* tel you now ro preyent,, and save.) The brochure will also tell you IJbout easy things to do to chimneys and flies, to ppes 11/'JtJ dllc1s. to shoW he«J!. to elec;ttfcat out· 181$. to~ machines. to <1oofs and...,,,. dOws. to water heaters. Do them al, and cut your~ use by 25%. The Orochure percent. No mere coincidence, it would seem, that inflation and interest rates also rose during that decade, when it was still believed that government could provide for everyone with a minimum amount or pain. Now, we have the pain. There may be reasons for it other than federal debt, but nobody reaJislically ignores the likelihood that debt has something-to do with the econottiy's problems, for its hypertension, its high temperature and its tendency to forget. Kaufman doesn't let the patient forget, though that seems to be the patient's desire. Better, he seems to think, to face the facts -to be jolted at the curb than to be confronted In the street by a car. He fore<:asts a record high federal budget deficit of S80 billion, a "tug of war between business and the federal government,'' and a return to soaring, and maybe even record- matcbini interest rates. China wants tourists . PEKING CAP> -China is sprucing up its ancient capital of Xian for a steadily increasing flow of tourists visiting the famed 2.000-year--0Jd pottery army and other attractions. the People's Daily reported. · In the first 11 months or 1981, more than 57,700 foreigners toll.red Xian, 75.5 percent more than in the s ame period in 1980, and they spent more than $13.5 million, the Communist Party paper said. More than 10 million Chinese visited the city, it added. ccntains accurate diagrams and easy to follow directions. T axe our advrce. Send for our free brochure. "The 25% Solution." It C8() S8WJ you plenfy of money. T1te A*nct fD Saw Enwgy eox snoo, .....,.,,,_,,., D.C. 20031 Pl&BseWW1meyourft1efgy·S111111Q.~1oW19bloctH.lfe HAW t STATE % ' AMAWANC~ TO SAVE ENEllGY MERGER PAPERWORK -Staff members of Bankers Trust. banking agent for U.S. Steel Corp .. make preparations in New York prior to issuing checks to people who have ........ tendered shares of Marathon Off stock. The steel giant took control or Marathon for $6.2 billion. Reagan eyes productivity hike WASHINGTON CAP) -The Reaga n a dmln htratlon ls r~lyina QO a team ol scbolaIS, corporate executives and labor leaders to find a solution to the perplexing problem of s~eadily declining U .S . business productivity. Once the most prodigious manufacturer of goods in the industrialized world, the United States has fallen behind several oth er coun tries. Presid en t Reagan, lamenting the decllne in productivity. said there can be no economic prospe rity OVER THE COUNTER unless this trend is reversed. Reagan gave a pe p talk Wednesday to members of a National P_roducUvity Advisory Committee, which he hopes will explain why American business production has deteriorated and now trails that of Japan, West G e r m a n/ a n d o t h e r industrialize nations . Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said Reagan t old com m ittee me mbers that solving the productivity problem "requires NASO LISTINGS M ... 1 20.2' 20.10 llW Stll 17.'9 10.H Miii! lld 5.20 NI. In" Set .. 24 .. 11 Fktel 17.S4 NL In" V• I.to l.IO Ovt Sec UJ NL 11\" l'IHll a.AO e.11 Hllnco 7. 17 NI. lltet :It.,. NL ~: ~:i ~~ :t ~..,, :~ ~= ,r;; Purlln ltM NL JP llKO LG 7.42 TIH'lh I.ti NI. J-1.17 NI. NL Hencock: ~ • tUSIU2 Orw111 '·" 1'.n US Gvt 1.02 L11 T .. Ell J.lt I.• *"'n I.GI NL t""'9r l'Ufllft: 1ncorn 1111. 1.n ~rv1e1 tn 'tf. l11tll'd 11.N l:US Mllft • s... • .• Ol'tn '2 ... tUI bipartisan cooper at.ion." ''The commission ia vitally i mportant to the country," Speakes quoted Reagan as s aying. "We cannot h ave econ omic prosperity - sus tained growth ..w ithout inflation -unless we have better productivity growth." The chief executive told the committee the nation "doesn't m~ed another study, another re port. What we need are con crete s ug gestions and specific recomm endations." - H-. O~rSl. Am em lnTot 1#1 lnltlo 1 IRE Fn AUtrAlr rn~ o ... 1e wt N..,..S I TernMln o TomlO 1#1 UAmEn wt Momtva CMSI"' c ........ =:.:i 5'1'1COl'I ~ .. s.-i10 Thortec CnlPVkl AwlafGtl "" ~ .~ J • " 5" + I ... ,.,. ~ + "" '" + ' .... + " '"" + , 12"' + '" 11... + 1\11 • + YI J + ~ I + I • + '6o ~ • I" "'·. I ... No + " 2" + " 2" • " "" + " t + I 2"' ..... -+ "" -+I" M + \It JO + I 2Y'I + " .. ~1. Up &I Up 2'.J Utl 2" Utl •.O Up It.I Up lt.O Up 11.t Up 11.0 Up 11.7 Up IU VP 1t.J Up tt.i UP 14.l Up u..J Up 11.7 Up 11.6 Up tU Up 12.J Up lt.J Up IU Up '2..S Up tU Up H.1 Up 11.7 Up It.I UP 11.1 Up 11.1 Pel. Off 11.J Off .. .l Off tU Ott IU Ofl IU Off 11.S Off "·' Off 10.S Off I0.2 Off 10.0 Ott 10.0 Off 10.0 Off lt.O Oft u Off 1.1 Off ... ~ tt Oft ... °" J.t °" 1J Off 1.1 Off 1.1 °" 1.l Off 1.2 I I I Trading in your home If you must sell your home ln today'• depreaaed real estate market. why not crab all the adunta1e1 of a "trade-ln?" It's commoaplace ~'If• wltb the famlly car, IO why not wltb the tamUy bomet Under tbil arrancement, a ~er bu)'I your bouM, thus Civin& you the equlty to buy another boae. S1Dce the sale and a qulck buy rHlly combln.e two lranaactlona, many Umtn1 problems uually aesoc:iated with houae1 are eliminated. For all concerned, a t.rade·ln can blave many advantages. In use are three dllferenl type1 of trade·ina: 1) Under the "outrlaht trade·ln,' · the broker buy1 your house outright, and you apply the equity from the sale to buy a replacement bQuse. T hi , Js li t-e • an exchange, since the two transactions are completed simultaneously. For the seller, it's the best arrangement; you're relieved of owning two house9 at.the same time. From the broker's viewpoint, an outright trade-in is the most risky; it' should be used only in a much stronger market than today's, when the broker won't be stuck with the house . If the property repre/ents a &ood Iona-term investment and the broker is willing to put money into the house, this trade-in is attracUve. New-home builders also may like such trade-ins, since tbey are prepaJ'ed to.-earry an inventory of houses anyway. 2> Most frequently used is the "guaranteed trade-in" plan. The broker is given a specified time period in which to sell the house at an agreed-upon price, explains Prentice-Hall. If the broker is successful, the homeowner gets the entire price, less broker's commission, even if it is more than the price agreed upon. If the house ·doesn't sell, the broker buys it at a slightly lower price to compensate bi m or her for the risk and expense or carrying the property until it finally is sold. . For you, the homeowner, the deal works out so you are assured the minimum price for the house by the time tiUe to the new house must be taken. TbJJ, )'.OU are relieved of some of the pressures or timing. the broker assumes 11 conditional obligation, but ln most cases will not be asked to fulfill it. If you, the homeowner, need immediate cash, the broker can arrange to advance the guaranteed amount (to be repaid with interest). Jn thJs way, you are actually in the same position as if there had been a direct trade-in. 3) Ttte ·•contingent trade-in" combines an option agreement oo the old house and a conditional sale or the new one. The two contracts or sale are executed simultaneously, with the contract for the purchase or your n~w home conditioned upon the resale or the old one within a set period. JC the broj(er ia unable to complete the resale in time, both contracts are canceled. Since the broker doesn't hJve to tie up any working capital, the arrangement ls beneficial. The sueeess of a -contingent trade-in depends on the willingness of the seller of the new house to tie up bis or her capit.al !or the option period. But as Prentice-Hall says, the seller of the new home can limit bis or her oblieation to keep the property available by providing that the conditional eoolract may be terminated upon so many days' wi;tten notice. Whether an "outright," a "guaranteed" or a "contingent" trade-in, all are aimed at helping you keep your capital as liquid as possible -and euine the problems that almost aJwaya a.rise between t)ro.ker and homeowner on timing of oripnal sale, replacement, etc. While the outright trade-in is the most advantageous to the home seller, the guaranteed does appear the most equitable both to you and to your broker and therefore is the plan you both should weigh first and most carefully. Trade-ins make eood sense. --------------___ ...,=-;i,...;..;~....;;;...---'~~~~~~~~~~~~~----- STOCKS IN THE SPORIGHT, 09!.J!!~. !!!~ •va NEW YORK (APl -s.Ms, '"-'. price or Tllut'ldey, J-.. 1 . .._. Ml ~ fl h m._,_!JMal ecti... STOCKS \.8W <:-. ,... Yn ~ Eac"fl'Ot I~ ~ Incl ~ .. m. ISl.22 •1.11+ fl lrlldlfte NtlOM!ly et _. !Mn t l. 20 TNI ... 0 Jl'OM M.40 M.-LIO -.ii • 1,011.a UVt -,_ It Ull "1.'2 IOl.21 10U6 lt7.l1-a.t. ::=,.,,,., 1~... = .:.: · _-. 6S Siii MUI Ma. .. D1 .oJ MD.JS-0.11. b-. -::. .._ 11\dUS ...................... .., ... . EIP•to Co SO.Ml ~ ···-Tran ............... ...... '.Mi!-!! .u.r TOT •A Jl\lo • " UUlt . . . . .. .. . • • . • . .... ; ... s;iiiii Teftlly 1 41't,• ~ : ._ Siii . .. ... • .. • •• ... .. .. .. • . 6,M - ..... t.f'elftd I .... 3 -" MGIC llW .... Ml -+ '-~~ = ~ -141 "''"'-q:l,lllll 11141 ~1" warnre.m JN.• sn. + " f.aJI K..-,,.... 72" + 'Ii Seit¥ CWp .... 17-+ " • WHAT STOCKS· DID I NEW y()M( (AP) Jlltl. 1 ...,_.., r-.z, !De<lllled 1't .Unc1t....-m jTotal I-1m j ..... """' s .... .._ .. ~T AMUm> lilEW YOtlllC (APl JM. , Tode2' IM .. 1$3 1 16 •8 \A ,. 10 cU c N 111 •Ii r l l 1 I I I I I l • l ·- Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/Friday, J1nuary 8, 1982 "'' ourt denies plea woman '1aras~ed man into deal SACRAMENTO (AP) -A tat.UDeala~bar•~ Yubl Oouoty man'• com_p.lalot at UM woman wltb whom he hed bad na11ed blm Into 1r..in. to dlvlde aome real tat• wlth ber. A unanlmou.a three-member aael ot the ~ Dtat.rict Court ot ppeal uph.eld • 1171 written rHment between Barbara .ale1d aDCI Mortoa Scbmot to Ylde a parcel of property they cqulred earlier. Sehmoe contended be wu the ictlm ol undue influence in lanlna tbe-aereerpent. wiau. tbe 1wt wu ptnMna. the 1*r moved back to1...,, and ln October 11'18 they and their lawyers alPed tbe written aareement to a1vide tM r-eal eatate. the court aald.. Schmoe later uked a Yuba countr Superior eowt Juda• to cance the aareemenl, bued on atatementa of ttve wttneuea. Summariaiq tbeir testlrnony. the appeals court said they alleaed that Ma. Sbuflteld ~•curaed, hara1sed, na11ed, badf ered and otherwise did everythlnc in ber power to make life mlHrable for Scbmoe untU he a1reed to alan the stipulatk>o. '' rejected Scbmoe'a coroplaiat ot udue lnflueec.. Th• appeal• court a1reed, Hlln1 tblt both aid .. knew a 1ult waa pendln1 aod bad lawyera read and 1t1n the qreement. The court a1Jo noted that the clalm ot undue lnfloeoce w11 made nearly two yeart after the -ireement w11 alped. Scbmoe "may have had second tbou1ht1 about 1lantnc the atlpulaUon but tbls of no Import; feellnss ol rearet cannot be equat~ with notlona ot undue Influence," wrote Justice Robert Pu8lla. 8/iNX Con I Ht IM DAIL V PILOTWll .... IMllon ,...., ....... ......, r•t1ulro"'on11 for u1lnt • Plolltloua lu•.,.._,.._., Mz..4121 DT.IU __, ...... ..,.,. .. CM.I ..... "! ..,.., .. ....... CMll ..... c I' 171.AMfT ,__..., TtTU 119 •9M. ll'tlW911TY tlONeY Wltll, ltOllltT C •• LUNOIOOllt _.. !CAI KOJIMA a IHClllM't .t tlM ...... -' M.M. ... .,..,............ .... L&AIOlt ... llOMlllOV AUOCIATl11. INC., e ,.,,.,.._ NTalt TINTu•1N ... WIUA TINTUltlN, JACIC A. LOHO, MAltOAll•T WOOD MAITINOI, llKOMI ,,.,.,. .. TY AUOCIATCI, AltOAltlT HOWi, IAltltY V,, WI INITOCK, el.Miit •OJt, WllTHllMllt • COM,.ANY, e ------------eHrel Nrl•ernl,, "· lltlLt.J C ~........ C:ALl,Olt•IA JtlUL UTATtl~ .._.._.... INVllTM&NT TltUIT, • "91Mtt .=:.-::.. ~~:.~~ .. r..a .. ~ .. • .. ~ .U,.\t l _................. MIOICAL COLLICTION ....... ca.....-AU«IAT~ lff(;, e <efl!W .... •OTICllWflUllUCMU•IH ••• ALLITATI ,.,NAHCIAL 1W llltVICll, LTD., O.C. S«ltVICll ~0•11111 1PG COltll'OltATION, ""'IT CITlllNI ............. IA•K & ~ltUIT COM,ANY, CU.W ........ a.y IAlllAlltA JUDY, •Ile IAltlAfA ........ ,.,...., ... I JUDY. oe IOllAtf ... , ... 4lltle_,. el ..... freftl tM CATltlCONI. S.J . OAVll, Miit.iT u,,_, ..._.9"*..._.~t CONSTltUCTION COM .. ANY, It ,, • ......., ~..._ .. IW e lfet.._. LLOYD'S ~ Ofl' CALllJO•UUA. • •ell11le•t Ol1d1er .. elllnlMttle• •r eerellen, OUAltANTl 1! lyttefft __ llWM..., .. c.el ........ COLLICTION COM,.ANY, • lt .. l.MIW.-WQuelityQIM,..a.er«. <tf',.retlM, M • M ltl"°"TINO Tbe coart aald the couple tarted Uvina together ln 1'76 d aplJt up in March 1978. Ma. buffleld then 1ued over an le&ed oral agreement to divide roperty. But the Superior Court Judie ruled that tbe 1wo wer .. not la a relationship of lnlJtC"tbat wu prone to abuse when tbe al{reement wa.& 11aud. anJ He also said the fact that tbe two were living toaether didn't oec-eaaarUy mean they were ln a · 'confldeollal'' or . truallng relationship that was prone to undue lofJuence. ' Se11te AM ....... ( ......... ..,_,, ANO tte,lltltAL SlllVICI , INC., ... •...;;;;..;;;.=~Na=....;;W.=----------....;;llll;;;.;..;;&..A~ .. =;;.;--=-.. O~ le ... 9" lfl t"9 ,,.)ect. tfllt •u M<CAUL•Y & MANNINO, NPDU,.,Wt,_. .. ._......., .. Ct.IN IE ·aUcKN I!•, INC., • .DEATHS RSEWHERE PRINCETON. N.J. CAP I Elmer G . Homri11teuaee, 81. dean emeritus ol theit Princeton Theological Semi.nary. dfed Monday. WASHLNGTON <APl -Biii Crewford, 68, a n award-winning editorial cartoonist w~ work was widely publis hed in newspepers and magazines across the country. died Wednesday. DULUTH, Minn. cAPI Mer1arec CuJkln Banning, 90 , an author whose writings were distributed wo.rldwide and included novels, short stories and articles, died Monday. Her most rttent no~I. ..Such Interesting People" was published in 1979. Vandals spill wine stock WOODBRIDGE CAP) -ln a scene that mltlll have been played on televislon'a "Falcon Crest," vandals broke into lbe Turner Winery and spilled ,about 270,000 gallons of red bureundy and zinfandeJ wine. The' wine, which bad a value of several. hundred thousand dollars, belonged lo. the C. Monda vi and Sons winery in St. Helena, Calif., bul, was being stored at the Turner Winery in the San Joaquin valley. "I don't know who did this or why," said Pet.er Monda vi. Levees repaired STOCKTON <APJ -Workers from the CaHrornia Conservation Corps are pat(.hlng levees in the San Joaquin R1ver Delta in the hope of preventing high tides from flooding rich farm land this weekend. Officials said Thursday the tides, combined LOS ANGELES <API 11• 111111 Character actor Hervey , I Lembedt, 56, who appeared , _________ _ i n both the film a nd Broadway versions or the Wo rld War 11 drama .. S tel ag 17 ." died Wednesday. ............. CHARGED -Claus C. vonBulow. right. arrives at a Newport. R.l.. courthouse for a pre-trial hearing into charges he attempte<! to kill his wealthy wife with ins'!!in inkclions, 1111 .11111:11 RACKER January 7, 1982 al 7 OOPM al ORA J . RACKER. aSt.Johnthe Baplist Cathollc n1·tlme resident or Church and Ma ss or the ewport Beach, Ca. She Resurrection Friday , me here in 1919. PassedlJ anuary 8, 1982 at lO:OOAM away on January 7 1982 in at St. John the Baptist N ewpor t Beac h Ca Catholic Churc h with Survived by her son Walter interment at Good Shepherd ~. Rac ker of Newport Cemetery. Services under each, Ca., dauJhler Betty the direcli~n or Ba lt z 'Connor or Costa Mesa, Bergeron·Sm1th & Tuthill · lso 6 grandchjldren and 11 WHtcllff Chapel Mortuary * e a t -g r and c ._ i I d r e n . or Costa Mesa. 646-9371 . raveslde services will be CUNDAU ldonSaturday,January9, NEVA L. CUNDALL. a 1982 at 1 :OOPM at Pacific resident or Newport Beach. View Me m orial Park. Ca . Passed aw~y on Newport Beach. Ca. with January 6, 1982. Survived by t astor Herbert G. Johnson. a son Gary Cu ndall or Yue.ca Valley officiating. Corona del Mar. Ca. and acific View Mortuary Herm and Calley Cundall of 'rectorf Costa Mesa, Ca .. daughter, CAMPANOZZI Nancy and Wayne Rice or MARY T. CAMPANOZZI. El.sl.nore, Ca .. 2 brothers sldent of Coste Mesa Ca Wi lham Moore or Redlands. rea for 20 years. P~ssed Ca. and Rober! Moore or way on January s. 1982. R edlan~s. Ca. and 6 he is. survived by her gra!'d ~h1ld re~ Mass of uaband cl 55 years Rocco. Chr1.st1an Burial wi ll be er dau"titer Rose Sn de of r e e 1 led o n Sat u rd a y . • L Y r January 9, 1982 at ll:OOAM e~r1to1 and daughter at St Joachim's Catholic h1lamlna Cornln or · hlttiet", ea. and son Frank Church, 1964 Orange, Costa Hun_tlngton Beach, Ca. ~::~ricctiel~te~~!~~I=~ SAN FRAfllCISCO CA P I -Leslie w. Hllls, 85. the son 11nd [\ephew of Hiiis Bros. Coffee Co. roonders. died Thurtday. He retired as vice president of HJlls Bros. Coffee in the early 1970s but remained a company director until 1976 when the bu5ines$ was sold to Copersucar Teargas • seminar planned The defensive use of tear gas, a two-hour seminar intended lo teach individuals how lo protect t hemselves against attack, will be offered at Orange Coast College January 16. The seminar. which is scheduled to begin at 10 a .m . in tbe college's Science Lecture Hall 102, is certified by the slate Department of Justice. Participants wlll qualify for a certificate and a permit to carry tear gas after training has been completed. d Joe of Hawth<?rne. Ca., 2 Park. Friends may call el rothers, 3 sister s. 9 Pacific View Mortuary on reodchil~ren a.nd 1 Friday, J anuary 8, 1982 Tear gas can render eat-grandchild. Recitation from 4:00PM to 9:00PM . an attacke.r helpless in the Rosary on Thursday, Pacific View Mortuary just one second from up ~p;;:=;;;;;;===:;;;~ directors to eight feel away, bul COIMICIC MORTUAR•S Laguna Beach ·494-9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan ~p11tr.ano 495-1776 HAUOI LAWM-MT. OLIYI Mortuary• c.eme1ery Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave COsta Mesa ~$5$4 . ,_Cl lmOTMIRI l&L•OAeWAY MOllTUAIT 1108'~ Coeta Mae ~9150 - M&.TZ ..... OM SMfTH .. nm&&. ~CHA ... 427 E 17th St CostaMeu ~937' RECKER w i I I n o t c a u s e W l LL I AM. ED WA RD permanent damage. Use HECKER. resident or Santa of the gas could ilve an Ana, Ca. Passed away on · d · id I January 6, 1982. He worked ID IV ua up to 30 for the Costa Mes• School minutes to get to safety District in the maintenance or summon help. department for the past 10 . years. He is survived by his Registration for the wife Doris, son Rlchard;$20 course wl I l be grandson John, brothers .conducted at lbe door. David ol Monterey, Ca. and Per s o. ns wisblna to Edward of Memph is. pre-re&ister may do 10 Tennessee. Services will be at the OCC Community held on Saturdey, January 9, Service Office in tbe 1982 at. lO:OOAM at Harbor colleae admlniattation Lewo llemorlal Chapel with build' .... bet a the Apeat.ollc Church oua ween a.m . offlcl•Una. Services under•nd 1 p .ril. Monday th• direction of Herbor through f'rlday and Lawn-Mount Olive Mortuary Sat.urdaya, 8 a .m . to of eo.ta Mese. 540-5554. ., o o n . F u r t h e t , information may b e State Bar :::_a;=.' by tetepbon1na lcbief set BVY~M SELL 'EM TRADE 'EM aENT 'EM witb runoff from last weekend's storms, could push delta waters over the levees by Sunday . Bill England, assistant director of the emergency opera.lion, said 190 corpsmen are already reinforcing part.I of the J.,100 miles of delicate levees. Another 1,000,000 worken are uailable. he said~ Klamman candidate FONTANA (AP) -The leader of California's Ku Klux KJan says his mayoral campaign will "get the apathellc voter out" in tbia San Bernardino suburb. ' Georee Pepper, self-proclaimed Grand Dragoo of the Invisible Empire of the Kni&bta of the Ku Klux KJan, says be "definitely" intends to run for mayor In the April 13 elecUona. HU aonounce~ent Thursday prompted reatrainfd reaction from other contenders. Workers take cuts LOS ANGELES CAP> -Faced with fourth.quarter losses of an estimated S60 million, Western Airlines has won tentative agreement from five unions for its workers to lake cuts ln pay of 10 perc.?nl to help bail out the air carrier. Western spokeswoman Linda Dozier said Thursday that two unions -the Air Line Pilots Association and the Association of Flight Attendants -signed tentative a1reement.s on the cuts, pending approval by their memberships. She said "understandings" bad been reached with the other three unions although details still were being worked out. Cop dog 'tease4' SONORA (AP> -A 20-year-old Sonora man who allegedly taunted. the police department's only canine corps member was taken into custody alter refusing to sign a Ucket. RuaseJI Ron McBride became tbe first person to run afoul of a new ordinance that mates ll a misdemeanor to tease a police dot in Sonora when the dog is on duty. The department's canine corps conslst.s of one dog: "Sarae." • Police said McBride made "loud, barklnc animal noises at Sarge," was warned to stop but later t.old another officer he planned to have bit dog kill Saree. W el/are stalemate SACRAMENTO <.AP> -Senate and Assembly members tryine to reach a compromiae on ftelfare cuta are still stalemated oo whether atrlkers should get lt'ellare. The two-bouae conference commtttee, composed of three aenators and three aaaemblymen, met for more than aD hour Thursday bul could not resolve the two-month di•pute. · Dynamite detonated GLENOALE (AP> -Ralf a eaM of old dynamite that bad been llttlna In a prtvac. 1ance for two years wat trauported to a remote dumpalte and detonated wttbout lnddent. • . Tbe exploet.on Thunday at t.be Brand Park landflll in the V.nt.a10 Mount••• ,...Niia came after autboritie1 nacuated w IOO PWIOllll from bulldinp witbln a bloek of tbe ,_..,. w...,. lt bad been lt«ecl and _. deand lll·flrW aJaq t.be C.1-!Dlle ~ bttftell tbe _.. aDd lbe dump. • Ooin flip tlecide•. LOS a·ANQS (AP> -Two to•paalH 1ubmlu.l U. aame btd to nDO'IN Ute IAI 9iil9 ,aewa1e lNabneat J)l•nt. io tM CllJ CouDcU fllpS*laaaaao ......... u..._.. ''Tbe a.It WQ to MUM tlail~;ls-bf lat or 9'i chance." Qty Attone, o..1111 OerialDo ........ tWtOundl. • ••-IM•lllllraUM_.. .. ,..._... •llM,..QOl.OW..1.1.t... aNt~EA • I, ,._,, C 0 M .. ANY, SAM M Y L I I , '"• •oer4 •l•llH •••••••• ltOIALINO LEI AHO •"4 Mltl. lftf-e!Mft .. _.... It 111 ......,,.... IHCHA•O IMAGAWA, OltANOI tllewe ... 41ecNr•~ ............ <;OUNTY TAX COU.ECTOll, ITAT• 10r 111111 ,...,_..., wtll Mid e ..... le. Of CALlll'OltNIA EM .. l..OYMl!NT .................. , oave1..0P ... NT OIPAllTMINT, OATE:MWdllt,.lta ANO ALL OTMElt .. IRSONS TIMl:t :»e..m. UNKNOWN CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, 1'1..ACE:GllY C:-M Cllemllen, 11 TITLE, ISTATE, LIEN Olt felr Ori .. , Celle IMM, GellfomY. I N T I! It Ii IT I H T H IE II I! A I. lnlOrff(ect --· .... 111vlled .. •llOl'EllTY OESCRl••o IN THI •-.. -tNlr ¥Wws .. tt. C 0 M PL A I HT A 0 VE II $ I! T 0 HOTIC• OP Hll'AULT ln11e4I ret.U119 to t ......... •-PLAINTlff'I OWNEllSHI .. Oil ANY ANOIUICTIC.IT'O d ltc ller 9e. Perao111 rnekl119 CLOUD UPON l'UINTl!ff"$ TITLE HL&.uHOelt ..... ,. .... Oft. "'°"'d conflM tllelr THllll!TO AND ~s 1 THROUGH D••o OP T•UIT tule<Mftls .. ,,. ........... ··-· 10. INCLUSIVE. ~tt.. ~.... ........ Of•I ................. __ ,., w.... PlelnUH• ~· of ~u T.1.. .... 1.... Ille e cc11recy ot tlle recor•, ell 1W11nH 11ere1ft, -ell -,.,._. "IMll'Otl'TAlfT eeonca~ llftperteftl IHllmelly 111011141 II• 1111.kno-Cltlml119 Ml'/ rlfM, lllle, IF YOUll .. llOPl!llTY 1$ IN wtlmlttect In wrlltfte, Ofel ale...,_ll Hlete, lllft M llllM"I In tlle r .. 1 FOltlECLOIUllE aECAUSI! YOU "*'Id lie brief IO el-ell lfl..,._t.ecl jWeperty dHUltlect llereln ..,,.,... .. A It E a I H I N 0 I H Y 0 U II ~11 ..... llD M ,._... ....lfltlffl• -tfllp er c-l-119 e PAYMENTS, IT MAY aE SOLO Tll• r-r1 el •Hie 411K ... , ... clOll4upe11 ........ ltfftlllt .. __ " WITHOUT•ANY COUltT ACTION,...., ··••led .. -•• feet ~-..... of tllern -lot It• ._ flt eet~ YOU mey hiW9 Ille i.e-1 r19M to flwlft9 ... rd'I ..,_.... ,...,,_,.,.,,.., ...., el .... 1:' Y'""' eccOUflt In eoec1 1te"4l119 !ly ell <--.Is -..... ,_ r--I PlelMlfls $'*-'I w.hJ, ..,.._, C. peylft9 ell•.,....~.,. .. .,......u ,..., lie l-19CI -,....,.. et "-Lende11•r end 11:•1 Kollm• •• Phll -milted , ................. 11 .. 1-._. oHIQe, ... llldleM uec11IOfl ol Ill• E•t•te of M M. wlt,,,,,_,,_.,.f,_,"'9 .... tllla Aven11e. Suite 201, Rlvertlde, MOSELEY ere 11\e ow,..,. ht lff Mtk eofdllf--recorded. C elllor 1t le tHH·UH Collene lllrnp .. of IMC cert.Ill reel ,,,_rty Tiiis-' I• 1617.00 es of J -ry 11........_, .._.,.. t.oun oft:• 11t.,.*' lntM C-...tyof Of.,.., ,.....e 1, ,..,, ... wtll ~ llMIJ -··"'· -•:Ot p.1'11., .,,.,....., tlWwt" oertlc....,,.,dlftcr1111d••felMwl: ec,_I ~ awrfflt. You mey Frldey "Lott 11 -1t '" Block 2S4 of 'Leu not "•"• to pey ,,.. entire W\"9111 PIHM !wine ttw lor-1119 to -Trecl, __. ... ,.; In Ille City of Portion el ,,_ ec:c-1, even ll\outll ettentlOn of -!let -• •-n to TOii Newpo'1 a..dl. C--ty of o.91191, ,...,_,_..._.... W you must ,.11o w_lle.__lntN~rnener. $1•1• of Cellfor11le, H por Mep ,..,.,...,..........,_. l"wllll_C. .... C.•I Deity l'Uot, recordN In B•Ok • •••• It. ot Alt., llW• .._...from UM dele • J.,.. I, tta l...Z ml1ull_, -. Ill ttw ofllc.o ot reco;'delllll tf tN9 eoc-t hmldl ' • • "" c-., R«or-of Mid C-y." del• of,_.......-·~->. P9JC l9TIC( c llereln referred to •• '"• ""........................... ..,. ..... ,,.,..,. -..,..,. • ..,,... _kid. .,... "!W ,. ....... tnovs au•••••• r. At .. , time• ,..,.111, l>f•l11t11tt on~ ttlt f-.al fltllt to •lot> ,,.. "'' .. -$141noy Wein. Roe.rt c . .......,...., terecloa11r• llY peyln1 tl\e entire lllAMll ITATW ... NT end Kol Kojlme _. CIUly ..,.,n_ .,.._,...........,...,.,_creditor. Tiie follewl119 ,..,_ I• .. Ing -Ktlfte-.<.-n of Ute Et9'e of To find°"' .. -' TOii....,.. IMnl-•· M.M. Moee...,, -e ll 9'11 -.1n pey, ~ .. WT .... far,...,,,_ le llClp 001..0EH ARROW OAS ENl!ltOY _,.. -wttf1111 ttte ac-. -cou,... ...... -. • ., " .,.... pr_.rty •• co .• »01 '"" Hiii A-. SulllD IOS, of IJMlr -•IV •• """ e ........ 111 IMfec....,.. lot e11Y ...., ..-. ,..,,.,"' •. c:.w MMe, CA ma. T,,. ,_.., c-1 of ttw c:-, of COftlkt SKI .. ltUEOIR .... oaANNA JAMES H KITCHINS, 1QI $. Of• .... -MICllDrtzect -~of llUEOl!lt. Jll ,.re11•ll11 Orht, TNrdA-,Arcedl•.CAt.._ tllltl.wMltrypl....Uffl.. "l •C•llll~. Colll•r•I• ... ,.; Tiii~ ........... It ,_.... 11¥ ... J. T ....... _it& Cle .... -.. _, 714,,,...,... lllddlv~. lHld lnWtlt In ttte l'nlptrty -.. to II vov ,..,,. eny .,e•U.,.J, yov J-M K"c""" plelfttlffs. ~ -eeell -ell 11te11ld ce111ec1 • •••v•r er tlto T"I•,........... -flted w1tf1 "'9 ofll\efft-MrleM,Ut•,....,..,1..,. .... ._... 9'11MY -It -y Mve (euMy ~ .. Or .... C-V Oft J ... W lllleAlt-lfl tllt ~~T Of lllWrM.,... -•• 1'81. ... ., -1 ...,.., wMcl\ •• _... .. lt•"'•M .. r, YOU MAY 1..0IE Pt-tllotof,...in(lffl. LIEOAl. ltlOtfTS "' YOU 00 NOT P"411111Nd 0...,... C-1 Delly Pllet. • Tiie 4\lelendenta ... rel11 ebeve TAKE~ ACTION. JN. t , IS. 22. 2', "" • ltaa -............. ----Ill ........ to "'9 •-4 aa.tec1 • • • clellftlft9 My ntN, lltle, .--. 1 .... er ........... ...., ertor te-. lllft•, or P9JC l9TIC( lfttereu tn IN,_ PttlllWtl ...,...,. t• ••t11Mllre11c .. •• .. 11n-.11e111 or otolntltft'-llllpor ..,Y cloud-~ ~ ---(al ot•lfttlffa' title ....... -o.t t Ml'lllm'*1 ........ 1 .. -.•wlM-NOTJC&Oll'TllVP••'ISA&.a ~It.Int-.,., we -.. •• c11rt4I e1 e <olldltle ll Of T.S........... -'_,...Rfi:°Seicl .......... e!ICIM<hef ....... leswM. NEWPORT PACIFIC ll'UNOING, IMfft c ...... -rleM. Vile, llllete. NOTtctl II HERllY GIVEN; ,_ INC. • cMT _._ T,..,,._ .,....,. 11911 or I ....... lft IM P~y -.. ANN. N, llot4 ESCROWS. INC. la tlle fol'-'"tl ~ .... of tFWt ~ ......... ..,_. _.... -..W clelm •11ty ........ Ttllflooe -.... WIU. Sl!U AT PUauc AUCTION or cl••-<a1.iltut• • ,_ 11pon ......... ._... .... elttwl. TO THE HIGHEST 8100Elt ,.Olt otelMllfl'lltle-.... . TRUITOll: ltOll!llT JOS•PM CASH CINYMI• et t.lfne Of .... 111 S. TllO clelrn or c101m1 ot H <ll ZIN08Y en• IAltaARA llUTH l-l1>l-yof"'9Uftflled5'Mell ell ci.f...-....11 ....... to8ftdlnlerlorto HNOaY ............. wtte. rloM, tHle .... ...,_ _,,_ Iii ptel11tlffl' _....,of u. ~rty atNUICIAllY.;. SIO~ JIUEOEll M4 _,_Id '1 lllllMIW .... 0.. elf ..i tM <M ~---.-. -,....,. .. DE,.,.. RUIEOIER, ~ .... Tr1111 Ill lite pr ... r1y ltor•IMnff ., clellftS of af•ldenb ---- ..... -41etc, .... , • --· -....... tiffl' ..... ·--llec•r .. .._ ...... , n . "" .. TltUST~: llALl"M ... Rl!OA ........ •rise lr•m t"• lec u •11d .... r ........ ll!t .. IOflt, .... 1. MARI.ENE RIE°"-...,_.. ........ clra.Mac-... ,,.11..tterel ...... " Offtcllt .._.. i.. .. effke ., ttw • i.IM-•· °" or -Octolter •· ms. • ~-Or .... c-oty; ........ aENEll'IC IAllY · MAROLD J....,,__.,...,.....,...Olerle9 •I lr111t .. acr111 .. tll• f•t1-1ne 1toaa1NS, T.....--· O.Cler•t-c . k "leOlll .,,,, MelY "-Sdt .... t In ...-tY: 9'Trvtt ...... My16, t• fevor el M.M. __..y 111 Hect- Ut 1'1 • trect 1161 • ,.,. ,,... Recorlllll J_.., f , "'1 M IMtr. Hlfflect ~ -...., v ~ o . ~ "' ............. " .. » .... '"' ........ 1"'7 .... ,.. .. ~ ....... LAa,....... 5-lw 111£1 ..... ., ......._ ......... Offlcl ........ "' I .. ofllee ...... Co\111 Actlelt .... c ,,. "'· 1 .. efflce tll .. ~'I r--.r ef 11_,.,ofOr .... c-.ty; ......... 7.Cl\M'tftO.Sc ...... 1-MervU.. NI-ClfWltY. Seid .... elf U'll9C -•f lr111t d•1crlbe1 11\e followlno Scltl•e•I -•• I,.. owMu of ,,,. urtelft .......... 111£ ........ -..... ,,-.ertT. Pr9"r1Y ,,_. Oc~ •. lt1S. i. ,. .... _ .. .,,..... .. •• , .. , J-ry "· ''"· Tltet Ille MMfldel ........ ~ Lot•OfTteclHo.7 ..... ,._..., t . Pu..-lo COur1 °""" .__ 1wc11 .., of tndl .,.. • 41Mlee4*" • ma., -•n MOit *• ~ I to Ocl..., '1. 1m, In IN ectloll .,..Hied _11, .. ...,...,, . ., • .,_uy ,,.,. try • Of M'-'-~. rectrdl, of Sidney w.tu, ek., et el. vs. Cllerlft O. llte 11udlr1119M41; .,_ e IWeecfl of, -or.,..~. Cellfwllle. Sc111eoe1, OfeftOe Co111tlY lw .. rlor ..,.,,." lfl, ti. .,.,._..,. tw w111cft Percel J: eo.irt Ho. ~7 ...... IM ~ .,.,,.,., tllCll .,.... of trwt 11 -"Y llH No1t·•a<l11""• •oounenant ,,.., •writ of •M<ulloll 1,,..,. to - ou11rrec1111 IMI .,...,...... ._ - -H-..ti tor 1,. ... ,...., --over Slterllf oA Orenoe Couhty Nltorldfto -of: privet• areets • Mt "'111 In ~ -dlrect1n9 ltw .... Of -P.._rty Tiie IAltell ....... flt lnW..t wM<lt ,.,t.111 4le<leretloft1 ef CO• .... nt1.1"1rtOIOftofll\ej ........... ll1C•MCtJt llK•me -..._..,., n, 1411, -ell ceftdlt'--restrk tlof-4 recorded Sff Ml lo'111 Ill ,..,_....,. • ........ ..,., .... .,..., 1M1e11-. of 1n1er..e. ""'" •. m1 In llooll '*• .,.... "'2 of •· Ott or -o.c-r t, 1m, Otllnci11encl•• on •prior Olllcle l Record• end recorded ourwenttoNkl-ltllleSl\erJffof.,. eltCurnW-, H .. .,. o.tl.,._m rffl NevemllW IS, ltn In llooll IOC27, -Co;inty of Or ..... levlff 11-Ille estetei.-,11....,. 00 et Olflcl•I Reco rds end rlellt, tltte-lflt-1 et a.... ... G. Tltel lly reeton tllereef, Ille eme11_t...._ Sclll ... l endMMyLAlllkllteoelln h u11dersl911M, orHonl 11011•flclery 1Eaupt109 t,,.rltfrom ell oll, oll Pre1>9'1y. Ultdtr l«ft died of l""I· .... UKuttol rl1lll•. rnlM r•I•, ... 1 ... ,.. ........ 10. On J-y IO, 1'1t, IMSllerlff .. Md dll._.. to Mid ..iy ........ 11ot11r e l 9ea rl9llll e11d •Iller Ille Ce.,..ly of Ore1190 sold Hid Tni•tH. • wr1tte11 O.CIMetl-ef lly41rK...-. try ....,,_ .. , ,....,. '"-"" 6o ,..i..tlfh tor ti. ....,. of 0.f ... 11 encl OtmMC1 fer .... end .... k-._ -llt wttttlft W -Ille ..... 00. *tlotlled Wltl'I Hid $ily o,..i111ect per<el flt ................... delcrlllecl, 11. Ott FetlrWrf 5, t•, , .. Sfttrllf TNll•. tllCtl ... flt lfl• eM ell .... IMr wlffl Ille ~I rltlM ef of Ute ~y of Or .... recoi'\led 1"11 dec11menh evl .. ncln9 o1111 .. 11 .. a 4lrllll111, m l11l1t1, •••l•rln9 •ltd Dff<I. • ~ of -"k" I• •ttectte41 tKIHWl......,,MclhMdeclwed-_ .... ....., -...,Ille In -ller eto •• Ealllltll 00 A" .... -IW'"r declero ell ,_ -IH'ed .-1119 .. -"-" NICI IMd ., '"'"'"°'.._.,_...,.•reference. tllertby lmlMlllellDIY - -pey .... MY OCller ..... 111£111411118 Ille/'..,.,. llD 11. .....,._ llD Se<llOll '14 of tlte encl * IMcted ...., dDet lier..-, -t n ... IO<ll er tllrectloNlly drlll -Cetllwllle C-el CMI p,_.. .. •c-tNtr'lllt,.....rtytolleaeldto mlM ,,.... 1...a etMr t-•-N•""'"' 11, "'sen •ktrect of 1etl1ly Ille •llll9et10111 H <llrtd l"•••l11ebew -<~lllieel, oil or .. , l..,._1 _,rec_,..'",,,. c-.ty .... ,....,. -111, tiftWll ...e .,...., 1 ..... ......_ of or..._ er&lft9 Ollt of tM ,_....,,. Oeted O.C-r JO, 1•1 or ecr-IM ~ec• of tM •-Ill Lot ......., s.erlOf c-'t C... Slltp 11 ....... ~elN-.W .._,.... ..... -He. IJt "'-A CllPY el MN .. tree I It o.-.. .,..... •11<11 •htPttocll .. er elrecu.,..11., enee,... ...,... • Eattltllt "B", - PWJllflM C.-OMll DMl'I' .. lie(, 41rllled ...... .._.._,. IMfll~ 1Mer.....-i11we11t..,......_. ,Ml .•• IS, n . "· "" • ....., ..... MnMlll ., ...,..... Ille •ICtwlw u . TM ..... ,.. <l•lma ..... """" ....,.., .., • ..-111. r....-1. defe11•e11n c .. c.,1 111e C-ty ot ...,._, -"'bl11, ,...ir, ............. Or.,.. ... Ille SUI• .. CMlfwlllel -role ...., ICll wellt ~ mlMa, ~It et tl-.....Y ..... Msllle ffMI wtti-t. ..........,, "'9 f1eM • 41rlll, ellatrecu •f Juctornent reur••d ..ones T'OC1t•0tTCH1I mlM, uere, u•IOfe eftd o"ret• •11rs11ent lo lecllon 674 of ..-11. OP~ TltANSll'e• 1"'°"8ft .. -1.ce W .. .,..._ -Cellfof'llle C-et CMI ~ elj , .......... U.C.C:.I '"' •• llW •lflllwrfK• °' .... .... of wtlldt _.. ............... snl ~ Hetic. 11,..._9'¥91 I• cl'Mlten ef ,.,., ....... ...,,..._ • ,_,... lft u. ...-,ect "' LAa AftlitlM s= .,. •ltfllrl --.,..........,. tNt ..... Deed,,... ... '"""'~ CWrt c.. .._ ,,. s,.,. Wiii Ir...., It _,. te lie ...... 1111 N<tf'de4Mwcl\1', 1914 In bootl UW, herete .. bllllllt "I ". ~elfltlftt' lie!\ pereonol pr•perty "•••l11etter .,...1J11t110fllclelRe<onlll. l11U119rtwlo .... eleil,Olf91-=~ •tcr...._ JO l11rfllft9 T'" ...... N....,-1 ,..._flt h ,,_ .._... ... TM -... ...,_ ...... of 8"<;11, CA. .... trect .. ~ ettecMd tit• l11le11•e• tre111fer•rt It: "Ill• ... ,_ Mldrftt M -Mlalllblt'0a". CHARI.TOH llOYO I NTl!ll .. lllSES, dHl111otl•n It 111ow11 et>eve, H 14. Tiie clelm1 flt tho C-Y o INC. lat ,_t Ave•11e, L•lllM werr•nlY tt 9he11 e1 le lh Or .... c-'91 .. ,....,..,., lleM • 9Mdl,CeMfwllle...,I ,.,.._..._ ., corndlleul.'" Tiie ru111t or t"• r•cord•tl•• •f TM tec.etMrt lfl CM!fwlll• 9' tlle bellffkl!Hy ...., selcl °"941 tf Tnoll., ~lleu..fllell.., 1M TOii cetltc'9r dllef eKKlllM _..Ice ~ "'"'""' try -"• ~., ....... lft ........ C-'Y flor -llf'ed bul•u• office of tll• l11t•n•~• o•llt•tlon• Hc11r•• tll•••lly, •••• -..,. """"'.., ~ o 1r_.... ... ...,... ........,. •lllKUIN..,. ...,_...a. 1c...._..., a , .,.. .... ....,en All etl\Or lllVtlMU nem .. eM tM d ll•zA • wrl11911 0.Clllntt.I ,.......,.. ...... """8 H E •HrHMd --,., tlle l1tt•ll ..... o.flMllt -0-....-.. Sele, ... • ..... tr.-.,.,wttflliUlww_..letl ..... wrltt.ll!ltltktetfllttltll-ofetecthlt 11. TIMI ctelm et lite State e .. ,., .. ~ ,. tM ... , ........ ,_ ...................... (Altl ..... _.... ... ~ treMf!HW -......,.._ Treftl • ,...,.rty lie Mtl.,., MIMI llltl1t4l1 a. .,..._ "-e ~llkMI ,.._. 111'1 c;et,..,....,.......T--. • ........, .. .._ ...... ~ °'"'" •• IEn•rn,....., llle ......, -._... ...,_ el .... "'9ICll" WMdl ......... 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U wu reported in this column more than a month ago that such a move was imminent. The only mild shocker wu wbo went and who remained. When Malavasl first expressed bis feelings about the staff, everyone -with the exception of Dan Radakovich Coffenaive line) and Jim Vechlarella (special teams) -was to get the ax. After an appaffflt change of heart, howeveT, .,,. Rada kovich went too, while Herb Paterra (linebackers), and Paul Lanham (quarterbacks) joined Vechiarella on the list of fortunate survivors. Fortunate? Well, maybe stretching things a bit. One coach, in fact, feels his discharae may be a blessing in disguise. "To get fired from any other pla~e might have been disastrous," said Bud Carson, the team's former defensive coordinator. "but everyone knows what a kooky organization the Rams are. "Actually, they did me a favor." Carson isn't bitter, he's tnore r.elieved than anything else. This past season bad been quite a strain on the man who developed the famed "Dollar Defense" (seven defensive backs>. which helped t~ Rams beat the Dallas Cowboys in the NFC playoffs en route to Super Bowl XIV. Georgia: Rams not for sale TORRANCE (AP) -Georgia Fronlier e, owner of the Los Angeles Rams. has denied a published report that she is considering selling the National Football League club. • The South Bay Daily Breeze reported in its Thursday ediUons that Mrs. Frontiere was wllling to sell the Rams and has initialed discussions in that direction. Mrs. Frontiere said the team · "most certainly is not" for sale in an interview with KNXT-TV. The Daily Breeze reported ' lbat two source-s have confirmed tbal there have been preliminary discussions between Mr s . Fr ontiere or her represent.alive and an agent for St e v e R o s e n bl o o m , M rs . Frontiere's stepson and the son of former Rams owner Carroll Rosenbloom. . The elder Rosenbloom drowned in April of 1979 and left 70 percent o f the Rams· franchise to Mrs. Fronliere, his widow who later married ' composer Dominic Frontiere. The remaining 30 percent was I ert to Rosen bloom's five children, but ultimately was purchased by Mrs. Frontiere. Steve Rosenbloom was fired as the Rams' executive vice president by Mrs. Frontiere just prior to the J,979 season. When he later sold his share of the Rams to Mrs. Frontiere, the sale reportedly includeci the right of first refusal to buy the Rams if she sold . That right or first refusal reportedly still Is in effect. IPO"TS COUJMNIST . JOHN SEYANO Carson probably knows defenses and defensive schemes as well -if not better -than anyone else in the NFL. Unfortunately. Malavasi felt Carson pOsed a tbrea~ to bis power, subeequenUy shackled him throughout the season, and finally alleviated his !ears at the end. Of course, Carson was not alone. Malavasi felt a number of coaches were trying to undermine his operation. Thus, the head coach did a little house cleaning. "Sure I feel bad about letting somebody go," said Malavasi, "bul that's part of my job. I let them go because there was a difference in philosophy and that's the truth." • Added Carson: • 'Th.e easiest ~pie in the Ram orgamzaUon to fire are the assistant coaches. We're sort of the bottom of the ladder in Los Angeles. "They're screwing us because we're the easiest guys to screw.·' .,...,. .......... ,..... "She,'d probably start out asking for something like $45 m illion,'' the Daily Breeze quote d a source as saying. "What she would accept is hard to say, but it might be in the n eighborhood of $40 million. depending on how hard a bargain she wants to drive or how badly she wants to get out or the public eye ... However, an employee of Mrs. Frontiere expressed the opinion that sbe ~ouJdn't sell the Rams being quoted as saying "I would be very surprised if that were the case." ALL IN THE FAMILY -The Leach family of Laguna Beach just can't get enough tennis. From left. sitting are Jon, 8, Mindy, 11. and father Dick Leach. the USC tennis coach. Standing, from left. are 19-year-old Tammy. 17·year·old Rick and their mother Sandy. Only Tammy h?sn't joined racket. Canon bu a polnl. It's a belluv• lot euler to eet rid d five coaches than it la '5 players. .. Ray forfeited all our privllegH to 1et a new contract last haaon," 'aald Canon. "All the players 1ot a big raiae, but the uaiat~t coaches dldn 't get anythina. That wUI tear the bell out of a coach'll mora.Je." Carson went on to say that llalavasi wasn't alone in his exodua plot, that ualata.nt 1eneral mana1er Jack Faulkner, a dote friend of Ray's, helped maatermind the operation. "Faulkner -is more powerful than a lot or people believe," offered Carson. "I'm sure he's calling some of the shots." To which Faulkner replied, "That's not even fair to say that about me. I had nothing to do with those coaches getting fired." · Disclpllne, added Carson, was Malavasi's major ~wnfall this year. "Ray never really stood firm to anyone or made a tough decision.'' As an example~ Carson cited one coaches meeting where the subject was Dan Pastorlni. "Ray asked us to vole on whether we should bring Pastorini in or not," Carson explained. "I raised my hand along with ooe other coach. My feeling at the time was why not, at least he's worth a try." Malavasi, however. seeing lhe majority vote against such a move, reportedly said: "Good, becauseJdoo'lwanthim." · "Anyway," added Carson. "he came back the next day after watching him work out and acted like we had all voted to bring him in." Was Malavasi running scared this season? Did he panic? Carson wouldn't go as far as sayln1 that, but he did add the head coach became too conservative. ''Every week Ray would come into the meetings and say he didn't want any changes made. He wanted to keep things simple. Well, that violates everything I've ever done in the past," said Carson. "You have to be able to innovate. "In 118>, on Ray's suggestion , we put in a <See RAM, Page C2) - A family racket Tennis keeps Leach household busy By JOHN SEVANO Of .. Dellf ........... It's not easy trying to coordinate a tennis family. Just ask Sandy Leach. Take Monday, for instance. Her husband Dick, the men's varsity coach at USC, was just returning from Palm Springs, where the Trojans were competing in an intercollegiate tournament. Meanwhile, her two youngest children - lllndy, 11, and Jon, 8 -were restless. With a light mist falling outside, there were no tennis court.s~to pi:actice on, plus Mindy was comJ)lilning. she was going to be lale for her basketball practice. . Finally, her eldest son Rick, 17, was trying to hurry back from the airport after spending the tut two weeks in Florida and New York, where he was competing in a pair of intemationaJ tournaments. ONLY IN TAMMY the eldest 09 years old> and the token black sheep of the family, was there relief. Tammy is the one member or the family who doesn't play tennis -but she's dabbled ln just about everything else including singin1. dancing, cheerleading and cooking. The Leaches are a tennis family, though, there's no mistaking that. The hardware the family possesses in terms or trophies could build an entire naval fleet. Sandy, in fact, can 't even remember the last time her family spent a Thanksgiving together, or a Christmas for that matter. because there was a tournament to attend. or course, as far as the Leaches are concerned, all the apparent disorder is wort.h it. You see, this Isn't your averaje tenms family that plays for the social aspect or the recreation the game provides. This is a family laden with both talent -and potential talent -starting from the father and working all the way down to the youngest member. "There's a common interest we have, and we au eitjoy what we're doing," says Dick. who started playing the game at the age of 12., Now 41 , the father or four never turned pro himself, although he was good enough at one time to be ranked among the top 10 in the United Stales in doubles. Today, Dick and his son Rick are the No. 1 ranked father-son team In the U.S. NATURALLY, DICK'S background is tennis oriented. He coached the tennis team al Arcadia HJgh (be also C.Qached the "B" and "C" basketball teams to a league championship) before moving on to San Marino as the club pro there. He then got interested in private development or which be stiU retains a portion in the Racquet Club of Irvine and the Ojai Racquet Club. Throughout all this he has introduced and coached h!s children in tennis; especially Rick . who he usually travels with from tournament to tournament. ·'Tennis ls a game or such skill that you have to play it all the time," says Dick. who adds a serious player will work almost ~ out of 365 days a year. "Witb.in a week. you . can lose so mueh. Tennis is not a seasonal sport -it's daily.·• And that's how the Leach family, who reside in Laguna Beach, approaches the game ... on a daily basis. "I feel all three 'of the kids) have tremendous potential," says Dick modestly. I've never forced my kids· - to do anything. If they want to quit tomorrow. that would be fine with me. -Dlcll Leecfl ''AU three can be ranked internationally. It's just a matter of who wants to work the hardest.'' SO FAR THE FAMILY'S biggest success has been Rick, but then he has a rew more years on the others. "It's all up to me," says the lefi·hander, lhe only southpaw in the family, "as long as I work hard." Does he feel any pressure? "Well, dad wants me to win ... bul he just tells me to do ltiy best. It's nice because he's always there with me." Rick, who attends Laguna Beach High, and his doubles partner Tim Pawsit. recently won the Rolex international doubles championship in New York. In April, the duo will play J ohn McEnroe and Peter Flemina, the No. 1 team in the world, in an exhibition in Phoenix. Says Rick. "All I want to do is not embarrassmyserr." He's -done little to embarrass himself thus far. Last year he toured with the Junior Davis Cup team , one or only three 16·year-olds lo make the squad. Io fact, to illustrate just how tough the odds were, only • ·32 players were Invited to camp with one·fourth of that total staying on a permanent basis. THE EIGHT-MEMBER TEAM VISITED 12 cities throughout the summer, playing In various national tournaments with the final stop being in New York for the U.S. Open. "Doing something like that really makes you want to s ucceed," Rick contends. "It also showed me I wasn't that far from being there ." Neither are Mindy and Jon who, despite (See TENNIS, Page C2> The Rams earned a berth in the Super Bowl following the 1979 season and went 11-5 in 1980, but were eliminated from the NFL playoffs in the first round. During the past se&!OO, however , they were 6-10 and missed tbe playoffs for. the first time since 1912, Montana hopes pressure is on Dallas Dodgers deal Castillo · LAKERS SEEK WINNING WAYS CHICAGO -The Los An1eles Lakers return to NBA action here tonilht a1ainst the Cbicqo Bulls, and the blg quesUon it whether or not' ttie team c~ return to its earlier style of play -chfracterized by wlnning - with center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar backJn the lineup. Th.-7-2 veteran center milled ab games before ret~ to u.1 Uneup Sunday nt1ht a1alnat ScatUe at the Porum, but bll ablen~e did$l't aeem to affect the Laken ln t.be lou column. Loa An1elff rattled off llx 1tral1bt vlctorlea wltbout Jabbar San Francisco quarterback will try to. do his share to apply the heat lb T~e Associated Press "Preslb.r~" seems a comfortable word ln Joe Mc>ntana's vocab1tlary;. "The basic thing we try to do is always keep pressure on the other team's defense," said Monlana, the San Franciaco quarterback who'll lead the 49ers into Sunday's National Football Confer"1c• championship game against the Dallas cowboys. "If you've got a JUY six yards down the field yoo throw ,to him and let bim pick up the six, maybe break tac.Idea; you never know what mi1ht happen," sald Moot,.._. "That keepa ~ presaure on the defen1e. lf you keep tbe ball tn play, 1omebody~1 eoin• to make a bl• play sooner or la~ · "If you have to throw JO.JS yardl d."\wn the field. it'• a questlOftable t.ype ~w. lt mt1bt set ln Ule.-e and it mlpt DOt. • Of another klnd of preaun that wUI accompany Sunday'• 1ame, Montana said: ••1t•1 fUn to play ln 1ame1 ll.lte thla. This one and the next one . . . 1 hope there's a next one." · Montana said be ill uaed to bie games becausF of bis coUege career at Notre Dame. "'I'here was a lot of pressure to belnt the quarterback at Notre Dame," be. aald al tbe 4lter camp. shifted to the Rama' facilities beCl\IH of heayy nlna in Northern California. "We played .lb a lot of big 1ames -;-the SouttMm Cal 10ie, usually a boi¥l 1ame, a lot of otben." A thl'ee,year NFL veteran who ju1t completed~ first fuJl aealOll u the &r starteT. Montana blouomld thi. year. with Coach BilJ Watah be.lptnc him to develop. The e-2, · IOO·DOUDCI quarterback was the NFC'• top.raakecl .,......, edliDI Dalla•' banny White. Montana ftailbea tbe regular MU91\ with 111 eompleUoDI la 419 atlempt1 for l,HS 1ard1 aad lt touchdcmaa, ·~be wu l~ 12 timff. · Montana had ooe or his best pro outings, connecting on 20 of 31 throws for two touchdowns and 304 yards, h1s first time over, 300. Montana admits he ls a lltUe a\lrprised he'a come alont so fast in tbe Job, but said : "U. baa a lot to do with Bill's teachlne. A lot of it' bas to do with hit offense and a lot baa' to do with bis work on fundamentals with tbe quarterbacta throughout the season. "You work on YOW' drop, bein8 in the pocket, beln1 forced out ol the pocket, au the time. Svee now, we •till IO tbfoulh lh01e bule drill.I durina practl~:" '11ontana amUed as be •JM*• ol OM UllM be for1ot ooe of Walth'• batlc1, an lntereeptton be t!lrew in the playoff lame a1ainat the Olanta. "I threw tbe bell under dunu," be tald. "I 41dn't tat ....... oa it. I lboulda't Mft tltld ....... ~ .. ball, I ....... baft du'owa It awu. I tried to m.a the ptu Ud tlWM._. f•m 1UU 11•'·•·" LOS ANGELES (AP> -The Loa Aneetes Dodgers announced thursday that they have traded pitcher Bobby Castillo and outfielder Bobby MitcheU to the Minnesota Twins in excbance for pitcher Paul Voi1t and catcher Seottl MadiloD. Voigt, 23, will be usJped to the Dodaers' ClUI AAA farm club at Albuquerque of the Paclfic Coast L••IU• wbllft Madison, al10 aa. wHl be asslened .. lbe D a ... ,. Clua AA club at San Antonio ol tbe Texu Leap. . VoJtt. a S-foot-2 rt1bt-bander, led the Calllorll.la Lea1ue 1n victories laat year u @le compile• a 11-T record at ViuUa. He struck out 1'1 blttm ln lM lnDbap IDll Wad ea~ run a.,.,. ... of ~.a. l ..... bit .• ·-,..,. --•• bomwa IDd uo rw ........, .. at VlllML Iii etnaok 4Mll Jtllt a .umalD..._.. .. ~..._ Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 8, 1982 Lakers bo.SketbaU RerMlnlnta home ~hectvle Jon 20 New Jer,ey; Jan 22 Detroit· Jan 2e -Mllwaultee. Jan. 28 Phoenix: Fe~. }eb N~:' vor:~rc:,~· ~~.45 Sa~ ~~i10•16 Seattle: Feb. 19 fiolden State; Feb. 23 Denver; Feb 26 Ph\111delphia; Feb. 28 Cleveland. 2 p ~~rch 9 -Kansas City . March l2 Chicago M.arch l4 Dallas, 7 p.m .. March '30 San Oieio; April 2 Phoenix April 4 -Portland. 12 30 P m 1 A ril 9 • Denver: A1ml 11 -Seatllo, p~m.; April 14 Utah; April \6 Golden Stale I'' II All games played at the orum games ut 7:30 pm .. unless noted Tlcttet lntOJmatlon d T 'ckets are pr\ced ai Sl2.50. $8 50 an $7.do. FOf' more information. call l2131 674·6000. Bob by Sox reg's.iration Lfl&una Nlauel Bobb to bo ht'ld Saturday •t J.1 ~" realstr•t1on nn Crown V•lley p k.P a Betu murkt!t • Nl11irnl from 10 •.m. 10•2 wuy In Laguna Lt••111w Ji; for girts P~m llhould bring • l'ertlli~ 't> Be~ 9-15 Girls rt.4alstruuon •rtb cert1f1cute to S1anu11!) wm als b Jun. 2a and ao durln~ the held Saturdays, f'or more ln/orm e same hours Strunsky ut 49$.5365.atlon. Phont' Cornlyn Globetrotters play The llarlem Globelrolters make their annuut appearance ut the Forum 111 Inglewood Saturday , Jan 23 al 2 p.m . and Monday, Jan 25 al 7 30 Pm. Tickets arc priced at SS 50, $7 511 and S9 SO. Childen under the agt• or 12 receive a $2 d IS('OUllt Clambake Week So~th~ll lfo•pltal 's 552 Club ho1t1 72 22 29 rn California amateur &otlt!rl J Pro /:ir flthtb ann ual Crosby Soutll::n Country C:luoburNnament ut Irvine Cont ·r · l'WJ)Ort Beach fJurm1men1 11 hi hll h Week whJch also Jncl~de: l or Clambake n In e .~~alae 1~~cl~er~ HlJlnx. an unueual "hilarious and har ouro~y featuring und high handl rowing holes for low six.sumes. Entry fe~af99P{'9r~s playlne in Run I ' " IO kilometer0~u~:•i. flve·kilometer and !lollg Hosp1h1I. E;1:h bc~ef1ts IOlnJ to includes a T shirt. Y fe~. S7.SO which Walk for Hou c Entry fee sso w lk g , or non·runnors brunch a't lr~1n: c;,!s7''b be treated lo aCterward Awards II bountry Club walkt·r~ ., · WI " givt>n to Roast, Toast, of Or • Senator Dl'nnis C· 11nge County toasted by . · urpenter He 'll be Salata, amon~a~~~~r ce.remorues Pllul be held at Marriott J~icle.I $75. It will Beach. 0 c n Newport Call 642-1463 c or-more information world Masters Marathon Tenth annuul World Masu·rs Mar~lhon and lO kilometl'r run i;et for Jun :11 In Orange Deadhnc for enlne~ is J an 25 Entry rec S4 or S8 "ilh f r amed certificate of parlic1pa~1on Late entrv fe~ dd t'onial $3. Check or mom·y or<lrrs ~~:uldl ~ made nut to Cit~ of Orang~. Add1t1onal inrormat1on, phont' 532 ~ , Mustangs face test Mt. SAC, Grossmont favored . CdM offers challenge By ROGER CARLSON CM ._ Dlllly ,. ... SMft There's been a lot of noise coming out of Costa Mesa High, thanks lo what appears to be the best basketball team since the dynamite 1966 team -tonight the scene s hirts to Corona del Mar High, wher e the Mustangs invade for a duel with the Sea Kings in Sea View League basketball action. The second of four slrajght encounters with contenders for the crown. Costa Mesa 's credentials will get a stern and multiple test. It starts at 7:30. Awaiting Costa Mesa are O > Coach Jack Errion, (2) standout guard Chris Lynch, who has averaged 32 points a game in his last two starts, (3) tough man-to-man pressure with a legitimate press, (4J the home confines of Corona del Mar. IT'S A COMBJNATION that not many have solved and for the Mustangs, who were 57-40 winners at University on Wednesday, there's no chance to look ahead to Monday's game with visiting CHRIS LYNCH Corona del Mar 0.~ange Coast picked to finish · fourth in South Coast basket ball race E ver s ince I boldly predicted the Cleveland Indians would be in the 1981 World Series, my role a s a sports forecaster has been on thin ice, to say the least. But l must admit, I'm much closer to the community college basketball scene than I am the Cleve land Indians, thank goodness. With that thought in mind, here 's a look at the South Coast Conference basketball race this season: 1. Mt. S•n AntonJo, Coach Gene Victor. a Newport Beach resident, doesn't mind that lengthy trip up lb~ Pomona Freeway to Wal nut when he knows his Mounties are awaiting him. Mt. San Antonio boasts a 12-4 record, and most of the Mounties' s uccess revolves around a talented center by 'the name of Derek Moore. It's surprising that the Mounties boast the record they do, especially with the loss or the two players who sparked them last season -Paul Perkins and Mike Kearse. Pe rkins, the South Coast Conference player or the year fast season, moved on to West Texas State, while Kearse, only a fres hman las t set1tson, defected to Riverside CC -which is one..,.eason why Riverside CC is so good this year. Still. the Mounties aren't perfect. Dons reeled ofr 11 straight victories earlie r 10 the season. Most impressive was a 97·96 verdict over Rivers ide CC. However. the Dons have also fallen upon hard Limes. losing four straight before opening conference play with an 89-76 win over San Diego Mesa Wednesday night. The Dons have lost to East Los Angeles, Dixie College of Utah and to Saddleback twice. Todd, for one. figures this year's r ace will be close. ·'I think the team that can win consistently at home will have the edge. Last year, Fullerton won the tiUe with three losses and three ·or even four could win it thJs season, .. Todd predicts. team shooting percentage in 16 seasons. "We're nol shooting as well as 1 thought we could and I f e ll we would be con sider a bly str onger ins ide," Gillis points out. On the res t of the league. Gillis s ays : .. Everyone is looking for Cerritos and Santa Ana lo be the teams to beat. but I think Ml. San Antonio is going lo be very strong, and I'm very impressed with the way Grossmont has been playing lately.•· s. Fullerton. The Hornets improved their r ecord LO 8-8 with OCC, and 6-6 freshman forward Dan Wright and 6·4 sophomore forward Andre Smith have been the catalysts behind their sporadic success. Wright leads the Hornets both in scoring <17.9 aver age! a nd r e bounds (8 .4 averageJ. Smith came into the league with a 16.8 scoring average "Andre and Danny have both done a great job for us. picking up the scoring slack. But in this conference a team with jus t two players is not going to win it," concedes first· year coach Roger See. "In the first 15 games we've committed 35 more turnovers than our opponents and tha t's why we're 7·8 instead of 10-5," See adds. • Ne wport Harbor . DAVE PALMBLAOE Costa Mesa Earlier in th~ season, Orange Coast - then on a roll -ripped Mt. SAC, 75-48 in the championship game of the Miles Eaton Invitational at OCC. Guards Willie Patterson and Greg West lead the Dons in scoring. Patterson carried a 17.4 average into the conference play while West is at 16.0. In addition, Santa Ana is receiving excellent board work from center Robert Guslaivis and forward J oel Washington. Combined, they average 14 rebounds per game. 6. Cerritos. The Falcons may be the early favorites in the conference, but their non-conference perform ances were n't tt}at thrilling. The Falcons are 8·8 after thtir Costa Mesa attacks with a unique setup -there is no legitimate center or guard -they're all 6-4 senior forwards, except for Dave Palmblade, who is two tnches shorter and a class behind, but still another forward \ype. It provides Coach Tim Parsel's Costa Mesa unit with balance, but It has its disadvantages with the fact most teams are going to field taller front lines and quicker backcourts. Each is l ·O in league play, along with Estancia and Newport Harbor. Costa Mesa is 6-4 overall, Corona del Mar is 6·2, working on a six-game winning 1 streak. CHANCES ARE IF you make 50 points you'll win. Corona del Mar bas not allowed its six victims more than 47 points and only one (Katella, 75-70) or Mesa's list of losers bas managed over 50 points. It's two different looks -Mesa defends primarily with a zone (which may be to Lynch's advantage with bis ran.ge), while CdM disdains it. Errlon once called the zone "Un-American." Elsewhere in the Sea View circuit It's El Toi o (0-1) at sizzling Newport Harbor (1-0), University (0·1) at rival Irvine (0·1) and Estancia (1-0> at Saddleback (0-1), all at 7:30. Irvine will try to snap its seven-game losing streak against 6-7 Brad Guess and Co. and Estancia takes it..s running game to Saddle back, where the Roadrunners await with a potential stall. WHJLE THOSE FOUR are in the second of 14 rounds, South Coast and An1elus League action begins tonight, which includes Laguna Beach and Mater Del, respectively. Laguna Beach, 7-6 overall, hosts one of the favorites for the title, San Clemente. Nell Riddell paces Laguna Beach with his 22.7 scoring average, but blue chip quality seems to end there, with no one else averaging in double fiiures for the Artists. Mat\ Beeuwsaert pace& MateT 'Del with a 19.2 scoring average, while Servile counters with one of tbe better polnt cuard.s in Orange County, 8-8, nm ' Os•ood. On the non-league scene, the big one is Verbum Del at Ocean View. Other games involvin& Oran1e Coast area : • teams I.Delude Long Beach Wilson al • Marina, HuntiQlton Beacti at Millikan .and Woodbridge at Magnolia. ., Verbum Dei operates with a 6--6, M " front line, backed by the quick.Dea• ot 8-2 Donald Brown and 6·3 Rlcbard Townsend, w.bile Ocean View ti led by 6·9"4a 'Jrm Usevitch and hts 21.0 average. •• JIM USEV1TCH Ocean View NEIL RIDDELL Laguna Beach MA TT BEEUWSAEAT M•ter Del Lakers rated loss to Mt. SAC . 2. Grossmont. No, rm not smoking any of that stuff. The Griffins or Coach Rick Wilkerson are ror real this seuoo, thanks to seven players who are 6-6 or taller. 4. Oran~ Coast. Des pit~ the loss of· 6· 7 center Frank Luongo who quit the team for personal reasons, and the lengthy ' absence of 6-5 forward J im Baldwin with a bro ken nose. Coach Tandy GilUs' squad refuses to give in. _ The Pirates (9·8) were not impressive in a 73.52 defeat to Saddleback and a 66·50 loss to Santa Barbara CC in the Saddleback Tourna.ment, but they did bounce back lo score tough victories over LA Valley (42-40) and East Los Angeles < 62·61) In two of their final three non-conference ~arpes Their victories include wins over their alumni team. that awesome quintet from • the Azusa-Pacific J V team, and gOQ:d ol' Camp Pendleton. The Falcon losses include setbacks to Sa n Joaquin De lta, Santa Rosa and Glendale, Ariz T h e G r i ff i n s ( 1 2 · 4 ) boa s t s 1 x' sophomores, a 51.7 shooting percentage from the field and a talented sophomore· f o rward ill 6 -6 Mike Whitmarsh . Whitmarsh averages 19.7 points per game. and hauls down 8.5 rebounds per coolest. His supporting cast includes 6-6 forward Keith Jones < 11.4 scoring, 6.5 rebounds> and guard Brian Garadonna who carries an 8.0 average Talented sophomore guard Chr: In Cerritos· defense. the Hornets did hand Cypress one or its most convmcmg defeats -a 53·46 decision Dec. 5. And the Falcons have played both Golden West C 13·3 1 and Long Beach CC on even terms before falling. Grossmont captured championships or its own tournament and the San Diego Mesa tourney and jumped out to a 5-1 record. However the team was hurt by the loss of point guard Keith Hill who was ruled ineligible because or a transcript problem after the Griffins' 5-1 start. Beasley has led the OCC scoring in all but two of the Pirates' 17 games, and the 6-1 standout currently averages 20 points per game. "I guess I was too optimistic before the season started," Gillis says. "Things haven't gone quite the way 1 thought they would." OCC, before Wednesday night's 70·59 defeat to Fullerton, was tutting on just 42.3 percent or its shots. That's the lowest occ Also in support of the Falcons. all but two of their non-conference games were played away from Cerritos. The Falcons' top s corer is Tim Kuyper who has led his teammates in L2 games a nd boasts a game-high 26 in helping Cerritos stun Riverside. 76· 72 3. Santa Ana. Coach Rolland Todd's W ringout set fo r S atur day Six c lasses of sail boats, rang i ng from J -24s to Performance Handicap Racing Fleet yachts will see action Saturday in Huntington Harbour Yacht Club's Winter Wringout Regatt11 to be sailed over ocean courses. One or the highlights or this annual event is the video·taping of the racing which can be vi e wed by s kippers a nd crewmen at the clubhouse after the races. Lido Isle Yacht Club will stage the first of its three-race Adtlll Sabot Series Saturday. Racing will be over bay courses starting from ln front of the LIYC clubhouse. ' R ustler s travel to Santa Monica SANTA MONICA -Golden West Colle1e. stunned by LA Southwest ln lta Southerb California Conference basketball opener Tuesday nt1ht will try to bounce back tonight when the RusUen tangle wltb host Santa Monica cc. SllEIUIA NIEVAOA Here ate -Ill• <"""II tons fO< Thu•Sdo u .... ~...--no now. -1 '"'·po--pecked _..iw, 3surt•u 11tts.. a.,..1 -No now, 120-1'4 lftCh MM, maclllN fl'OOM4IO -PK•.O ~ .... JIW < ... ,,, d .... two CM ll'I al n!Qllt 0•-Sill a1111<1t No NW, beH •t2 Ifft. machine or~ and -n powder. 1-cllalr 1111.l. SN8 s..-1-.. -No new, beH 11·U fHI. -"''ne .--.:i --n ~r two ,,., .... S..-r a.wt -No new, ll0-7• tnc""· -- •no macnlM P«llld ~. "'' .. cllelrs. T• .... o.owr -NO new, .,. .. s 1 .. 1. ~. mllctllN oroomed and peeked PO-. •-cl\alr1. ,._ Ster -No NW, MM S• Inc ............. t• lnc!Ws 81 llW 109, mechlN oroomlld, P«lllld powcler,e1\1114 c"8tri A1""8 llM-ws No new. I 1 .. 1 Ill lodge, 12 feel •I u-r mounl•ln, ffl•chlne oroomed, Pftktd ..,-r, llw clialri, -1urlece Ult. " .......... -NO new, S'fffl ., ...... '1 .. 111 IOP, ~ 8nd m«hlne groomed, ,_ chairs, ,..., ""'90 ""J. S.U• vatt.., -1.200 •tat. no ...... .._ 111'1 feel, powder •lld P•<Ud powoer m.c11111e •-"-<AIOI• coar, IJO'ICIOI• end 11 clwtlrs. Al 4)00 I .... no-. beta S feet, PO-,,_.._ SM>Wd••, meclllM groomed, llve -·· 011e trlpla, -....... lllt. 7. San Diego Mesa. The 01-ympians are 1-12. Need I say more? T•-1111 ... 1 No new, bese .. ., IHI, -lier -,,_htne ~11.0 .,.,_,., two CIWll,., OMl·be< H11v1111y Valley No now, I V. beu, powder Ind m1Chlne t roomed packed POWOer, lull -r•llOn Siii llKI ... -No ,.,. • n lftCf\H •I ""· "° '"'-"'' at botlom. powder .,.o ma.;hlne tl'OC>fTMCI po-. sh chairs. Mf. a .. e -No flew, 11 ... 1•·•• Inches, maclllne oroomed end open po wder, lull -ration lie ... S--t -No new, bese •12 IHI, po- •...,P•<kecl llOWde•. t_c,..ln ........ 1111 •a.ell -No now, -111 lnclwl, "'"°9r -,,_.,,,,. 9"-CI. l'#o OOUl>le Cl\alr\ Kll"llWMlllll -NO now, belt 10 1 .. 1 al bottom, 1S.17 , .. , •I ·~· po-and CMIChd powcler, el9fll lllft.. Mr. II--New 2 lnche\, beH 10._, '"' al lodge, Ill'> IHI at top, POWder ano pec•td _.,.,, .ia cllelrs DM .. It._. -No new, S.. 1 .. 1. Po-encl pe<lllCI powder, four d..irs.. CIENT .. AL CAUP'OaNIA hQw PWI -CIOMcl. ,.,._..,.. -..al11 -No Nw, bese 101.'o feet, PKkff ..-wllll .. p POwcler, , t-bers, , ..,...1., -llOMa. 14 cllltlrs. ,_ ......... -No-· S l•I MM, -- llld pack.cl _.oar. lour cllllri. ClllM,.... _No re-t. OUTSTANDING VALUES! EW SCtROCCO Cou pe 5 speed· transmission. metalllcr paint. rear window· wiper/washer. alley· wheels. stereo ceuett- and morel (Slk. 3235) co1nss1 · s.u r11c1 5 10 69 NEW YORR' (AP> -Tbe Conairs outacored Eut T h e L 0 s An 1 e l e 5 Lo• Anaelea, 106·91 in lhtlr Lalters-Phoentx Suns openerL~ are 11·6 on the year. 1ame last ()ec. 2$ drew OWC, -t>I, Wa4' banded & tt.ea the larfest audience In setback by the upstart Cou•an t b e n n e y e a r a o f Tuesday It borne. Chrtatmu Day J111Uonal • I A COld MeOad half, in which B&1ketball Aasoelatlon the R..uer. eoaneeted on JUlt H aamea on CBS., the • of at lroaa the floor<• perffnt), I • a I u • a ft no u n e • d led to CIWC"• demtle .. alnlt LA Wednetday. Soutl!Wtlt. -- ( • ..... . .,..._ The marketplace on the Orange Coast CLASSIFIED . · 1NDEX Tt ... , • ._,Cal 642·5&71 IN9USH a.ar~ oo a I iovety tr.tined 1treet, .Uf11W r=~........ := &:-.~ "" IQUAI. HOUllNQ . .S pride Of ownenbJp ~bortlood. 3 Bdrm, -.. wallt iD cklMU, I bid!, •IUUIY breakfut noot, domed celUnted llvlnf room, lot• of dW'm. Only SUM,llO. -.1m ...,. : vertlud In th l1 HC ....... 0 ... 1:: . !· 1:1:~~~:.;;~d:' IH9UI* 11111t • .. ~ 11 aubject to ~• " ~ • the redera.I Pair HOUI· lln&iUuJ J BR • den, A Division of *ag:~-=-· := Ina Ad al i• whlch cUJtomlied Aucuata Harbor Jnvestl'ftfftt Co. £.":.ca.,_ l5 = ·~~e~!o::: ~ DN, eqtlit)' lbare, i.t model. '31t,000fee. l!!!!!!l!l•••ll!!!!!I!!!!!!!! .. ..._ • llmlt1t100, ·or dl1· time-.... sbd.,lba., u.-.IOOf tt()AtH v•c•MT == : crhn.lnatloa b11ed on anlY ...... prtn. only Reakon, 17MOOO YA A ..,.._.Wt •• rue, tolor, rell1lon, ~Clfl~a!!!.:;l.-S!!!!.!K~•!!!th!lY:..!•!IP!!.!l~. l!!!!!!!!•!!!!!!!!!!!•!!!!!!!!I IMTHI 11.UFFS IUl man la, or natroul orlcln, 3 llDIOOM , ..... Fllltaltlc ter~ner "°""" ...... T .tat or•~ to m1ke UT'll:. •7• will eany at IJ.5'Jror ~~':'" !e rl~l~~~o~.re0re:e3j,•: Only siao.ooor Wood• A~c" SBdArmU, ! .. will COlllicler leue oP-~ ~ •• ~-•-.... •-.. llld •~ams 1 .. ..-•• d " t.ian! HIChJy upcraded c...ttWPNtrtr "".._ ... •v.... atory home w Ith 1 Trina model. Oak plank· c • ·, ·-'*-'I: · thla charmlnc Co1t1 '!!fi;irlcent II vine. inl IDd wood 1huttera. °"9111111l u•w.. •• 1llllbfJWSP1perwlJlnot Meu carden home. f area. Fireplace. New carpe t ! Oply =~.. : imowl.UJy accept any Enclosed patio. 3 car country kitchen. 12~ h,IOO.CaUl7Nllt =-'~' 11tt advertb~ln1 for real garqe! 8Parkling pool. financina available. Call ....., iu. Tnr l'rh : fllllte which II ln viola· '1ex:ible lerma. JU1t U.t-tor more d e ti I la, THE REAL ESTATERS THE REAL ESTATE RS -....._~a.-i -Uanaltbelaw. ed. CallmlSSO 5fl6.Z3LS ~~: ! _ .,._ t141itl1 ~~ .. ~ ,,. BTW ..... ~........ OW.. ANXIOUS f"ll ____ iiiiiiiiif fordthla bome. Priced a.t ---- =~ =· ~.-.. ~ Beautiful, immaculate,•• llSTYALUE ~OOO. Kathy, •ct l-4:"1!::':'~ 1u•.•-OT~· nicety landacaped 4 Br in SpycJU1, this 4 Bd c , ·' '\hot = .,_;,""' --• home on cuf-de-uc. home on choice corner COSTA MESA ~~ ! .:~· : ~ fw ... tint Spacious rooms. View or lot. Mollv1ted seller STAITll ~,.,,, -htcerrect l•Hrtlo• Coif course from proper· llYI "1ubmit 1U orrers." On!y 1125.000! Auume =.uot · = ._. ~:.-~wn~1~s,s38lt~ 1525.000. al.OOO in lo1n1 ll $832 ~=:u., : c.u-::~m.~01 • .-.. monthly. Owner will -A carry . Family room == -...._ fwW. L . with coiy fireplace! 3 g-v-'~ :i ....................... LSTA TE larae bdrms. Sparklln& _ -coodlllon ! Hurry. call THE REAL ESTATE RS ='t.8:!:: : ~ IOOZ REALTORS -AFFOID---A-'ll;....;;;;E=-m«l60 ::...,~ 5 ..... "1:110········---DESllTED-------· PIJY ACY! ..,_ I~ 6GJ Secluded 3 Bdrm 2 balb. _.. _...., : •· -,o MESA YEIDE! hardwood noor home. -RMa . -Terms! Noquallry1111! A ODIY Jll'l,SOO _har,aiJlt Famil H-'-llSllSS,MEST· fant•1tlc 1trord1ble Vacantf Owner wa nt.a brick }!~i::e~'~!:.~ I•-------• BT f'IMC( home witll privacy. Cov-out! Quiet lree-lined tic 1pa. 128.000 down. llYMTalACI ~~-=:'· eredent.ry, formal livlne .. -. 3 Bdrm 2 bath. Great r1mi•~ ., ___ on --dd d 1 · 1 .......... 13.S~ iAtereat on loans. ., ""''"" ..._ -... room. • e 1m1 Y flfnily room. brick Call ror more details. YEE tamer location, 3 ==' ., room with brick fireplace. Walk to all bedroom, formal livin& ._ .. ._ --~e. 3h111e bdrms. ~ ~-11 for more 541-ZJl.8 room-plus l•""e famil" .._, - 2 balhl, Y~private re-· '-4' ·• ~ ..... .-!.~ _ d . 546-2313 room. patio for enter· --ar yar . rice only .. :--nt n.. •• 1--' l "I lJlllU11£rllnnS, ., ... -.... 71.71 ww.u1., • v~n <:CU, I e l.IKJlll -noor. double 1arage fUSIUlS & with buillln st.once and THE 'REAL ESTATERS LIST & W la•ctd SI 00,000 worbbop. Seller will as· SPY&LAS S ""In rUWlcln1. ,,. IUI ------. -- : 112ML TOOCIAM = ONLY'11UOOI -2 Br 1~ Ba eoado in aecurlty t!:'. comm. -,._ • poob, ........ EZ flJllDC· bl&. Teri Marquez. •&t -'fS.12Zl. Re/Mu . "" , .. tr.de :roar old atulf ror new coodiea witb a = a..trled ad, "2-51111 ., -------El -Im .. -------* LOAN ASSUMPTION : CDM duplex with good flD&Ddng. Each urut has I 3 Bdrm 2 Ba, ramily room. Close to evH · Jtbin& at M29.SOO COU CW ....alT MM.TOM lltl .. c..t ...,, c.r-...... Ua-5111 . COtlBCrAL IYOWNEI ~eu View SS7S.OOO s br/4\-\ ba. •1001q n OWNER .flNANClNG HJGHL Y OPGRADEQ Orf er expires Jan. 31 '15-341 t 2SBode11 Bay -~Cal~Jo~wne~~r~759~·~07~37~_I,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' mE llDUI ILlllS CD. OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE M CANYON -YllW! ----~ 2 1lorea. 1 block to I ocean. 25'l> down. Owner will urry b1l~nce . . -..ono . Beautiful Versailles Model. Quiet Cul -de-Sac. Winding Staircase. Marble Entry. Spac L.R. Elegant Features. Garden Kitchen Den W /Frplc, Huge Mstr Suite. Htghly Landscaped. Paddle Tennis. Great View ! Special Financing. $875.000. ... -------- ftlt ---.. fllt --... -= ----- • I t 00 • ~ Q) ~ •• >< Q) • .... ..,r.-o, . ..... •671-1160• CAPISllllS NEW LISTING! Rare ~Rory 3 Bdrm COD· do Ill lcwel'y 11rden set· tine. llove in condition. 114.5.000. Ca II Eileen Dinwiddie for details • 642-5200 j PETE ' BARREn REALT Y Tt> place your measace before the ~adiaJ-public. oti:°Pilot Cluaified, 642-56711 --....... ,_ .. NEW BUSINESSMEN Contact lM DAILY PILOT for Information regarding u'e county requirement• for uafng a Flctlttou1 8ullnen Name. 842-4321 EXT. 332 A MIWLY C0114PU11D lmt CIMTUIY CLASSIC ClUlic dne story equestrian estate, over t,iOo aquare feet. six bedroomt, five Uld ODe·half baths, IWeepinl "°lid mabolany atalrcue, second service 1tatre111 bnathtakiq cmtaJ and brau chandelier ta eatry baJ~ five_...~•· lUaruy, ewtom 1ourmet klteb-n, iJhlte -~~ eatry.1.. peat apartmtnt wlU. own ldtebtn, plUI m!Mll1 mare. ranoramlc view · ~·•ore lot. Cuatom pool 1pa, ..._,and eomplete landlc1p1D1 lnehaded. custoai bail =Omltrlctloa. By 1ppo1Dlment. OFPERID AT~ · (OlDlUeU.. BAN~r!R ~' :.:::::r:.:-:::r - \ ... , . . Male jobless .-ate at p~st-war high WASHINGTON (AP) -1be nation's unemployment rate• 1ur1ed to •~i percent tn December 11 jobleuneu atnona adult men, blstoricalJy the mc.t stable element of the labor (orce, set a post-World War JI record, the Labor Department reported tQday. The Bureau ol Labor Statiatlcs said the halt-a-percentage-point Jump -: from 8.4 percent to 8.9 percent-overall -left elose to 9.5 million Americans out of work as the economy plun&ed lnto a deepenlnc receaaloo. The a1ency said the number of "discouraged workers" roee-by about 150,000 in the fourth quarter of 1981, to 1.2 m,Ulloo, the highest level recorded since ·the government beaan keeplna those statistics In 1970. Diacoura1ed workers are classified as those who report to eovernment surveyor• that they want to find work but have given up the search 1n futility: Discouraeed workers are not counted in the department's overall Wlemployment n1ure. The rate lo Calllornia also wu up algnlficantly, from 8.2 percent to 8.9. Black unemployment reached 17 .4 percent last month, another post-war reeord. ' Department analyst.I aald the overall jobless rate lut month approached the 9 percent bieh ln May 1975, toward the end of a months·long recession br~t on by the Arab oil embar10. If unemployment exceeds 9 percent -aa many private economllta predict it will tbil year -it will reach the blahest level since the aovernment be1an keepin1 month·to-month neures in the late a.oa. At the White HoUH, d~ preaa aecretary Larry Speakes noted that the admlnistratioo expected a rise in unemployment J>ut added that "we anttctpate that at tbe end of the aecond guarler Qur proaram.S will bealn to work and that we will see an upturn in the overall economy." WIND DAMAGE -Heavy winds toppled a 40·foot sign advertising the Huntington Center Car Wash late Thursday • night. No injuries were reported , but damage was ..., ......... ., .... ,,._. estimated at $10,000. Car wash is located at 16061 Beach Blvd .. in Hunti111ton Beacb: , . Str~ng winds rip roofs, twirl cars By The ~la&ed Pttu Cold wind.a strona enoucti to twirl a car around on the freeway and rip roofs off several bou.ses continued to blast through Southern California ,today, but forecasters say they expect the gusts lo ease tonight. The Nationai Weather Service said winda were up to 75 mph' this morning at Mt. Laguna, above Pt. Mugu Naval Air Station, where President Reagan takes off and lands when be ls visiting bis Santa Barbara County ranch. Winds up to 60 mph slashed through Riverside and San Bernardino on Thursday, ripping the roofs off several houses and shattering windows in a wide swath. "They will be al strong today," said Pat Roe, weather specialist with the National Weather Service. "In San Diego County, they will be even stronger than they were yesterday. It will be very dangerous for vehicles in some areas." · As two more semi-trailers overturned on lntersurte 15 north of .Fontana thls mornina, the California Highway Patrol began stopping trucks traveling tn that direction and detourin& <see~. Pase Ai> .11Mlf1-lfATlll East to northeast winds 15 to 90 mpb ln and below· coastal canyons dmlnilblq tonight. Lowa toni&h~_IOI Jo low 40s . HJ1ba Mturday, 86 atone beach, ~ inland. · ·11_.11 TllAY . High winds to ease on_ coast Trees hit, signs toppled, fires fueled by Santa Anas Chilly Santa Ana winds that snapped trees, toppled signs, fueled fares and caused a rash ol power outages along the Orange Coast Thursday are expected to let up late tonight. Tbe brisk winds, gusting up to 30 mph along the coast and reaching speeds of 50 mph in canyon areas, are predicted to diminish and give way to fair weekend weather. In Mission Viejo Thursday evening, firefighters said the stiff winds hampered efforts to extinguish a fire in a two-story commercial structure. The fire, the) reported, caused $350,000 in damage. In Hunlineton Beach, a large sign outside a car wash near the intersection of Beach Boulevard and Edinger Avenue was toppled by the chilly gusts. when a U-toot·&ona board was blown off a pickup truck, landing in front of an oncomtnc car. The motorist, 20-year-old John Anastasakis of Costa Mesa. b.i1 his braltes to avoid slamming into lbe board and swerved in front of another car, driven by 29-year-old William John Vasko of Newport Beach. Anastasakis suffered head injuries and is reported in good condition at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Vasko was treated and released from the hospital's emergency room. Southern Cllllfornla Edison officials, meanwhile, reported the gusts caused a sprinkling of power outages throughout the county. Along the Orange' Coast, Edison officials said the outages affected few customers and power was restored quickly. No power lines were downed, they said. In Newport Harbor, where the winds were clocked at 30 mpb, several boats were swun1 free from their moorings but were quickly retrieved. The brisk gusts, the National Weather Bureau said, have been chilled by a cool air mass that has shifted west from the Rocky Mountains. Temperatures along the Orange Coast Juve been reaching a daytime hi~b of about 60 and dropping into the low 408 at night. In the canyon areas, weather officials said, the mercury dropped into the upper 30s Thursday evening. Workmen in nearly all of the Orange Coast cities rtporJed trees had been snappe;d by the winds. In Huntington Beach, city• workmen said several 30-fool trees were uprooted ln the city's Central Park. At least two other trees were snapped, falling on Mom thanks friends of mo-ped ·victim cars. By PHIL SNElDERMAN 0( .. Deity""' ..... "1'bere wasn't any substantial darn age,'' observed Oiryl Smith, 1 Huntington's superintendent of city landscaping. "A ff!w bent Jt was the tut day of 1981. hoods and a lttlle scratched Ron Thomas, a 18-year·old paint." Huntington Beach youth, wu A two·car accident on the awakened al 8:30 a.m. by a 'Santa Ana River bridge between phone call from bis CirlfrieJM\, Huntington and Newport Beach Jade DeWeUes. I beln bl ed ...... th It wu a school holiday, and a so was g am ..,.. e she urged him to visit. But be wind. told her be wanted to spend the California Highway Patrol mornin1 looldna for a job or officers sald the Thursday pickinc up a new brake cable for mornioi accident was caUled . bis mo-~. An1way, the two would be Repaf,•r WO •k · toaetber \bat nllht, celebratlnl • ' New" Year'i Eve at Knott'• 1 _ Berry Farm. to CIU•e r~mp He WU cleanlna bb. room that . ..., mornlne when h1a mother left• Caltrans officials have ,. • trip to the post office. Wt.a Un d I th she returned '5 minutes later, ,nno ce rep a r1 on e abe learned be wu dead. southbound Santa Ana Freeway o ff r amp 1 e ad l n I to t be Accordlnc to police, Roo wu 1 o u th bound Co 1 t a M ea a ridU.1 b1a mo-peel ln tbe ralil Freeway will caµae the ramp to aoutb on Beach Boulevard near be eloeed to lraffic durin1 Garfteld Av•ue·~t 10:30 a.m. evenlq t.ln. Ollken ulcl be ~dded bM A Caltram 1pokQman aald tbe side of a 1ouU1bouad work woWd ~ Jan. 21 and1 uactor-traUer rta, felJ blneat.11 contloae ..w April a. The ramp1 tbe truck wbeel1 aad died wUI be cbed between the boun Instantly. of I p.m. and 5 a.m. weekda'8. ID a matter Of mom..u, a. Wort erews will be lmt.allinC Tllomu, a eop..aar Poatata ••• barrier rall aad alao Vallq Hiib leioal J..._. WM wldenlnl tbe ramp. Colt of &lat lo.tel to plar video 1••• Alid project II •·•· ~ wW au trpe1 of 1port1 ~t be Ht ap a1oac N~ aBcl' b•1•1.11;~Ud beeam1 a etlillltle.' llePaddeli nenun wben Ute I• tM ,._. boob o1 tM ramp 11.-..... HuaUa1toa Btaela Polit• . Department, Ronald Scott Thomas, 18, Is listed as the city's 28tb -and last -trafftc death of Ul81. But in the memories of the family and friends who loved him Ron Thomas wJU always be .a klnd·hearted teen-aser who bad a food aenae of humor and Iota of friends, who preferred atbleUcs tA> schoolwork and wu good with cbildren. HJs family was moved when 450 people crowded Into a service for Ron on Wednetday at the Bethel Baptiat CbJlfcb in Santa Ana, iDcludiftl about ZIO youna people. Tbe funeral c::e11lon was said to bave a mile lone. "Tbey all told me they loved bJm," aakl ltoll'1 . mother, Jan Tbomu. 11Tbe turnout was IO unbeUevable. I'm .Ull ln lbock." Tbe came of Roll'• acddem remllal a m,ate'J. PoUce aald tbe tnlek drint waa not at fault. Illa,......, Mid..= do DOt bow wbere be u DI wMD tbe~ crulloeeuned. "W• don't kDow if be l:J couldn't 8'0P." bla a.oUMr : "ff• bad tora my ....... )aw .. mo-£d'• brat•• werea't wor well. Wt doe't n.. now" ... the truetr ...... aoa WH ~ft weart•1 a latlmet, •id "11 famllf aH ... , ...... , " ....... ,. ot1• ...... ·:IO t1'1a Ua•t a .. c ... -~nm .. ~~ He 11ld the admlnlatratloo baa confidence "our programs will work." In the past, administration officials have said rlaln1 unemploymedt la the price the natioo must pay for brtn&inl down double-dlait lnfiallon. Since July, the department said, more than 2 mUlion Americana have been thrown o..u t of work and the unemp&o)tment rate bas shot up almost 2 full percentage points. In December 1980, the unemployment rate was T.4 percent, The bi&hest post.Great Depreaa)on annual rate o, unemployment, before mODtblJ figures were complled, wu a t .1 percent jobless rate lo lMl, which eased substantially d,uring World War II. The all·tlme high WU the If.I percent annual rate of unemployment reeistered la 1933, durine the depths of the Depresslon. AT&T antitJ-usi Suit settled after 7 years • ·' ! WASHINGTON <AP> -The Justice Department announced today a settlemen~ or its 7·year-old antitrust suit t1ainsl A m e r i c a n T e I e p b o'n e & Telegraph Co. that will require the teleoommunications giant to give up its 22 local operating companies within 18 months. The agreement forbids the local ' companies from discrlminating against Bell competitors ln providing equipment, services and planning of new facilities. The settlement •atlows AT&T to continue to run its nationwide Iona ·distance telephone service. The Bell System also will retain its main subsidiaries; Bell Telephone Laboratories and Western Electric. The agreement -also allows AT&T lo provide telephone equipment for customers, lneh~diM that now lumilhed t>y local Belt companJes. The Pacific Telephone &c Tele.1r•pb Co., wblcb senea parts of tile Oran1e Coat, wu amon1 the companies alleeted. In advance of the announcement, trading in the s tock of AT&T and rel1~d companies was halten" on the New York Stock Excbanfe. Trading was illO nalted in tbe stock of International Business Machines Corp., the tareet of the federal government's other major pending antitrust case, immediately prompting speculaUon among analysts that a development in that case might be imminent. IBM spokesmen declined comment and the exchange said it dJd not know the nature ol tbe pending development. Sources at the eompany said • major development was imminent. Assistant Attorney General William Baxter, in cbar&e ol the department's antitrust division, and AT&T Chairman Charles Brown scheduled a news .1 conrerence to "discual' developments in the case." The department declined to say in adv;tnce of the news conference what the subs~ of its announcement would be. J . But one official said it .woui1"' be "very important.·: The administration dlscloaecl Dec. 31 that it was negotiatiq a settlement with Bell Telephone. A major antitrust suit to ~ up the Bell System was fiJed by the Ford administration in November 1974, and the trial la the case, in recess over the Christmas-New Year's hollda1, had been due lo resume Tuesday. The Justice Department'• disclosure Dec. 31 that it wu seeking_ a set.t:Jeme.ni represented a sharp cbuq from the department's posltiQi immediately after President Reagan took office a rear qo. .! The department bad abandoned previous neaoti•tionil be I u n by t be Cart et administration and \Baxter 1Ud · he intended to pursue tfie cue la court "to the eyeballs." ,._ However, orricials In ui• departments of Commerce aDll Defense reportedly ur1e• Reagan to resume negotiaUom because they felt that breald..q up AT&T would hurt the natioa'1 CQmmunications system ID wartime or national emer1eocy. Also, lbe Senate has pqsed a bill, endorsed by AT•T. l• require only a limited breatu,., of the BelJ System. . . On the side of the telephone company, there have beel( reports that AT&T was woniedi it might lose in court and be forced to divest itself of m~ portions of the company. _. There had been re.porta that the Justice Department wa-.. pressing in its negotiatiOlll ~' convince Bell Telephone to~ off some local operatlD(. c o m p a n i e s a n,d s h are long·<ijstance facilities with id • growing number of com"Uton. l> .. . ... ............ ROYAL PAIR -Thailand's royal princess Chulabhorn and her new husband. flying officer Virayuth Didyasarin, look up at a large group of people outside the palace at Bangkok after the wedding Thursday. Du~yland trip inapired boy Fraa1le Geringer, a 9·year-old South African boy aged by a rare disease, went to school for the first Ume, his self-confidence bolstered by a trip to the United States and to Disneyland. . Fr ans le r eturned home from his three.week trip in 1981 determined lo attend school, atcording to his mother, Magda Geringer. ''The trip overseas has The town or Bonham, Tex .. toasted the tooth birthday of a political giant -the late House speaker and hometown hero Sam Rayburn. Lady Bird Johaaon, the former first lady, led about 1 ,100 people in the celebration, which featured birthday cake and punch. The widow of President World Airways is g,tr-u"ttling tbttough hHd limes, says President Edward Daly, so Daly says be'U struggle along witb It. Daly said he'll return half bis annual salary of $52,000. given Fransie much more self-confidence. Before leaving this morning, be seemed ~prehensive but be is not as shy as be once was," she said. The boy. who is bald and w r i n k I e d b e c a u s t:. 0 f progeria, an aging disease, will be allowed to wear his hat in school to cover his head. Lyndon Johnson said Rayburn ·•walked through the Capitol and district like a man driving a wagon - pulling up the reins to talk.•' Rayburn became one of the mos t powerful figures in congressional history in bis 18 years as speaker. He was elected to the House in 1913 and served until his death In 1961. That won't make much of.a dent in tM .-$46 miUion-k>M that World suffered during an 18-montb period that started in January 1980, but, said Daly, "An example must be set al the top." Wbao Mlclaael Caru• deelded to propoeit to •MJ Betit 8-eeal, he clJd It wltb 1 HO·aquare·foot plea apluhed acro11 a downtown billboard In Syracute. "lt waan't a complete surprise -J mean the idea ol cetttnc married -because we'd talked lt over," said Caruso, 28. "But the blllboard wu a real surprise. It 1ave us a memory to start with." Miss Seneca.I, 25, said the offer waa one sbe couldn't refuse. They are plann1n1 a July wedding. Caruao said be got the idea while handling advertising for hls faqdly's restaurant, Aunt Josie's. The sign, reading "Beth, 1 Love You! Will You Marry Me ? Michael," went up near the restaurant. Composer Andre Prevln may be making plans for his fourth honeymoon. The director of the Pittsburgh Symphony, who divorced actress Mia Farrow in 1979 alter nine years of marriage, applied for a license to marry a British woman, an official says. Miss Farrow was Previn's third wife. Rlta Kane, an Allegheny CC?.unty registrar, confirmed that the partner on the marriage license is Heather Hales, 33, who bas been escorted by Previn, 52, for nearly three years. She listed her occupation as "making designs on glass." ALT AR BOUND -Andre P .r e v i n • · P it t s b u r ~.h Symphony cond_u~or, has a pp 1ed for a marriage license to wed a British woman, Heather Hales. Previn has been divorced three times. Winds to wane Coastal East to ~I wlncn U to JO mflfl In -be-coast.at canyon• Cllmlnl~ ton'911t. OtherWIM letr • llvoutft Satwdey. Coastal •-•-«>s. Inland JOI c;e.i.1 M91t io. *· ..,._ 10. w.e .. J$. Extended forecast COASTAL AHO MOUNTAIN -.REAS -Sundey tl>rouvfl Twtdey mostly l~r but 1-clouds In coastal arus clvrlnv late nlont and early mornlno "°"" ttW ""' of ttW wffll Warm•• nlet>U. tn Coa~t .. -valley areas hli!M In ttW 60I -~ In ltW o to S2. tnmountalM tows 10 loU a1--.. -II crett aclvltorf In ----------en.ct l'lltlA ...... &st lo -II rrrr:D wl-IS '° JO knots wltll 1li;on9ff ..... -• • ~foot -· ma'"'Y T emneratures NI.. cenv-CIKr .. slno tonight. "I:' • OtllerwlM, llglll varl•llle winds 119comlno....,.... to MUll>Wftt ti. U llftots. Wlllft erou M<Of\'11"9 -tlY llgM 9fMI vwlMI• lOl\IQllt and Nrly s.u.y ..,. IOUI"-' • to u llMb Salurday .ner-. wes..,ly -'1 t to 2 left. Mostly C!Mr lolelff tlnutll Saturday. Albany ,.,.,.,_ Amarlllo Anc:llorage Asllnll .. MATtO. HJ u ~ n 11 SI U 22 ,. 11 0 .. 11 Reno ' --.... " J 21 • ----------Attitnta ., 21 .17 S2 26 Het-HOflOluh1 H-ton 1nelna9111 Ja<llMWI .. June.., l(aMClty LAIS Y99111 lllt .. Roell loulnllle Mempl>ts Miami Mllwaull" Mpts-St.P HaJllvlll• H-OrW-H_Y_ Horlolll 04lla City OmaM Orleftelo 27 D 1• n n 40 JI I 11 6l .It Sell LAika .CM Seattle St Louis • 33 " ' 11 ,. U.S. summary P'•m of ....,,.m Flol"klll -.,,. -'-"_,.,..._Atlantic c_t _,.e I e a II t d II 'f S II owe r I a n-cl tll1lftderstorms today, whit• snow 1"'9erllCI over a 1 .. SPOts 111 Hew Yortt, P..,,.yllfan141 -MkhlgM. Snow lll9w In on 1trono no'11'erty wl"41• Mer Ille Grut LAkn, elld -wes alto rllPOl'1ecl In nentiem ~ ~ ~, IMnort!Mrn Roclly MDuftUIM -11W Pacific ~ ~ •M ,__, later In N Clay OVOf' ,,_.of Ille notion. but - WH upect.ct ac:rou the nortllem 1tat11 enCI rein wes upaclect to <olltlnue •lofto IM WMhlngton coest. ScattorllCI llMHIC,.nllOwen were ~re c at. across tlle Florld• Te llluret ewty ,_,, rafltlld 11'9m 12 dittrMt In HlilC>lng lfllf Tlllof RI,,., Fells, Minn., to 7t -.rMa In K.., West, f<la. 'Califom/-a Trenlera ••~llOry few '"'" ---.. .......... mffl '" tlle ......-....... ..,.,. .... wltlft 9ecrHelfte Ill Velttl¥t -'MSlal I -W-•"Yt.Offrlolelft. , """'Ill Or .... ClNltY .... ., .... ... YllPM CM ..cf llWll 11'1 llM .... ""'as•e. HttMlll._.........., .... s. •tt»~.l..MIS•U. 9"rtflen1 ~ 111.-..... .....,, .... U ...... ,. i.-t M .. ... ..,...,,. ....... llllM ..... --. ..... n ..... ,,"-•• Alletltc Cty Baltlmore 8 lrm I ngtwn Bltmarelt lolw n ,. .OJ •7 21 1t .. 7 • u 11 u ,. ,. 1t 40 12 f06 St P·Tempo .01 St5le-le 5'1otl•no •Tulle 14 ·IS .26 1J 20 u • u " '""'°" lrownsvl .. 0 10 # as1111191n Wlclllta S4 11 a ., ,. 11 lvfla1o CllartstrtSC Cllarl1t11 WV ClleyeMe Cllkaoo CIMlftnell Cltt•l- C-otvmtlul Dol-AW111 O.nvor 0.1 Molnn Detroit Ovlutll Ef PHo Falrt>et*s Harff- JO I " n St " ·°' 27 ,. I .. ,. ' n • .02 19 10 40 1' )2 u • -2 27 I .01 ·2 ·12 .CM n 22 ... -4.J 41 10 \ ..... 1 ...... PllOonl• PltlMMll'fll Pll•ncl,Me ptlancl,Ore Rat>ICIClty " 10 ,, 74 , ·• 1 ,, S1 21 a u 4j u .. JS 27 u 12 7 12 JI •7 u " •2 ... 12 ~ ta JI 19 22 s CAUl"ORNIA lallerslletd Blytlle Eurolla l'rnno I.Mc••• lMAnoMel .21 1Mry1111tle Moflter.., NMClln OMll- Pato RM!n RU lluff Reclwood City S.Cra,,,_ Sellftn Seti 0 1990 San Fr a11e IKo Sent•B-a ;.-..;;ins ...... ~u ....... R_f R_IP_DR_T Santo IMrla StoclllOOI T11erme1 Ukiah larJtOW llOS... lltllOtl Cat.Una lont llffcll MoMO\lla Ml.Wiiton NewportlNctl TitW What do you Ilk. about the Dall1 Pilot? What don't you like? Call tM namber below and your mnaa1e wlJI be recorded, transcribed end delivered to \be appropriate editor. The same M·hour an1wer1n1 Hrv6ee may be uaed to rtcord let· tera to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributor• muat Include lbtlr name and telephone number for v.rtfic:atloa. No circulation calla,,.._. Tell .. what 'a on your mind S2 21 54 S2 .. 44 6l S1 M 46 S1 Jt u SJ 46 St M n ., .. SI so -.. It n .. ., " -.. , Orangt Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, January 8, 1982 L Full extent of lobbying not reported, documents iay WASHINGTON (AP> -CIA Director Wiiliam J . Casey falled to report the full dtent rA bl• ' lobbylQa of Treuury and state Der.artment otrlclala on btbaJI of ndooella ln une. covern1Mnt documeotl ahow. 1 Tbt Justice Department'• criminal dJYi1lon ii revtewtn1 the matter to aee If Ca1ey violated federal law by faiUn1 to regllter u a foreign aient. Department olficlals say tbat ln the put, criminal chartea have bten brou1ht only when a foreign agent tried to conceal his work. ln a revised dl.scloaure statement filed with the Senate tntellltence Committee last September -two days before the panel ended Ha active inveat{gation of Caaey -the ClA director acknowledged he had one meeting at Treasury and two meetings at the Internal Revenue Servjce In 1976 while representing Indonesia on a lax question involving that nation's • oil industry. Casey did not say with whom he met. He submitted a lt«er from bl• formtr law fl~m1 Ro1er1 • Wella1 whJcb descrtDtG ttle two seaelona at IRS 11 "lnlormation meetln11." But IRS documentl obtained by Tbe Associated Preu show that Cu~y also contacted the State Department. And both documet1ta and the recollection of offlclals who were then involved with tbe laaue indicate that Casey aljq_ contacted Charlea M. Walker,lbe uaatant treasury secretary for tax policy, and possibly Treasury Secretary William Simon himself. The documents and intetviews show that Casey was lobbying administration omct.i1 out.llde formal ch&Mel.S to chance U.S. tax rulings on a matter of importance to Indonesia. Asked about the-matter. the CIA said Thursday, "Rogers & Wells made a good faith determination in 1976 that no registration was called for. The firm continues to believe that determination was correct, and Newport Center ride panel formed A 20-member advisory committee has been selected to help develop a sbare·a -ride program aimed 't reducing traffic bound for Newport Center. The share-a·ride program was one of the conditions imposed by the Newport Beach City Council ' last August when it approved the Irvine Company's plan ror expanding the shopping and professional center. The expansion project, the subject of a referendum, calls for a 300-room hotel, new office towers, two restaurants and condominiums. The Irvine Company has agreed to bankroll a share·a-ride program for the entire center until the program becomes self-supporting. Firms with representatives on the advisory committee include Pacific Mutual, Avco and Price-Waterhouse and Co. The share·a·ride program has - been nicknamed "Ceoteride" and a Cincinnati firm. ATE Management and Service Co., has been hired to implement the program. Al this point, Pacific Mutual is tbe onJy Newport Center firm with an existing ride sharing program and It involves fewer than 20 people. Dan Carlsson, an Irvine Company spokesman, s aid the principal toOI Uual will be used to persuade persons to use the new ride sharing program is money. "Money is the incentive." Carlsson said. "People can save up t o $2,000 a year by car · pooling or taking a share-a-ride van.'" He said the firs t .step in launching the program will be to determine whe re Newport Center employees live and then match individuals with other center employees who live nearby. He said cllr pools will l>e established and then vans purchased to take ove r transportation responsi bi Ii ties. It is projected the "Centeride"' pro g ram will be full y operational e.arty ia 1983.. I llr. CNe)' COOCW'I." The •• decllned to anawtr any que1Uona. On July I, 1976, Walker IRS Comml11loner Donald AJexander that lndoneala b hired New York lefal help gain a priva e tu · known .in the IRS as a tax I ·'I assume that. ln view ol tremendous imponanct or matter, the fortbcomtnc request will be e~pedlted your office," Walker wrote. In an interview, Alexand s aid, '· J recall ·Treasury's interest In this matter, ~n Treasury ls not normally a p to a letter ruling. This wasn't kind of case they got involved iJl normally." I A memo by IRS attorner ' ·Steven Hannes shows he wat called by Arthur Dornhelm ol th e State Department's Indonesia Desk on Sept. 1 and 2, 1976. According to the memo. Dornheim told Hannes that Casey had informed him the IRS had refused to issue the l~ letter ruling and Dornhelm asked what IRS would need tO make ii ruling. r The contacts are signilica.rit because Lhey call into q11estioh.. the aefense raised by Casey fol not regi s tering . Casey' defenders have said be did no have to register because the la, exempts attorneys doing leg¥ work in established agencx proceedings, like the IRS laJ letter rµling process. , But IRS had not even begun 1J process, offi cials said . USS Fanning~ hi n s pmat.es ~ • reUDJon set ' Former crew members of lbn U .S.S. Fanning, a World War q era destroyer, are searching for their shipmates in hopes of organizing a 1982 reunion. The Fanning wal) com missioned in 1937 and decommission e d in 194.li following service in the Pacifu; during World War 11. ., Former ofrictts and crew interested in finding 011t mo~e about the proposed reunion are asked to contact F.red Winger, 7i2 Hewlett St.. Bakersfield, CA, 93309 or telephone (805) 323-?0t.a; The reunion is scheduled fOf June in Des Moines, Iowa. ., CM slayirig .. for· 'jewels allegea · Prosecutor says hairdresser murdered by pair An Orange County prosecutor bas asserted that a 2S-year-old native of Lebanon participated in the killing of a hairdresser in Costa Mesa last April to gain possession of valuable jewels the victim regularly wore in public. Deputy District Attorney John Co nley told a six -man , six -woman superior court jury that murder defendant Rami Darwiche helped his roommate shoot and rob hairdresser Carl Lawson in the parking lot of JoJo's Restaurant on Harbor Boulevard. Darwiche, who lived In Costa Mesa~ is standing trial in Judge William W . Thomson's courtroom on murder and robbery charges stemming from Lawson's death on April 13, l!Ml. The hairdresser's body was found the following day in his car, which was left in a Santa Ana industrial area near Edinge r Avenue and the Newport Freeway. Darwiche's lawyer. Ronald Kreber, claimed in his opening statements Monday to the jury that it was the defendant's roommate, Sam Monsoor. 20, who attacked Lawson and shot him in the front seat of Lawson's car as i-was parked at JoJo's. Kreber said Darwicbe, who bad been asked to go along with the others for a drink, was in the back seat of the car and saw Monsoor allegedly shoot Lawson in the chest with a handgun. The defense lawyer said there had been no indication that Lawson was going to b e attacked. Following the killing, both Darwiche and Monsoor Oed lo the East Coast. Darwiche eventually was arrested in El Paso, Texas, and some o( Lawson's jewelry was found o~ him . 1 Conley said he would presen~ two witnesses who saw the fighl take place in Lawson's car a~ J oJo's and who provided police with descriptions that matched both Darwiche and Monsoor. i Kreber said his client fled witij Monsoor. wh o turned himself in to.police and awaits tnal_ lalef this year. because he believeq he was implicated in the killinf by his presence in the car. l "He felt he must be involv• He was there. And that was his reasoning in not going to tht police at that particular time, r Kreber said. ! Lawson, who was a custom jeweler in addition to owning an Anaheim ha irdressing salon', was known to wear as much as $60 ,000 in jewels in public~ authorities said. 1 lt'·s Time to Celebrate! * · We've Got Unbelievable snow & fantastic siding!!! * Mammoth 97" ParkC~ 84" Vail 81" Sun Valley 73" SnoWliitd 130" Rental a . ' ----·~-------- lAllll IEICl/llm 1:1111 . . STOCKS COMICS GARDEN 85 86 88 .Are career women giving-:=~i4 greater thought to snaring husbands? Columnist Bob Greene thinks so. See P,age B2. Th;ree Laguna inc11mhents may skip electiQn By STBVB .. TCHELL Of~._ ........ One councilman 1ay1 be definitely will not aeek re--eleetiOll. A second aaya he'• not inclined to run again, and a third aaya whether he'll appear on the ballot dependa on bia new job. Voters ln Laauna Beach will 10 to the polls AprU 13 to elect three council members. But there'• an Outside cbanc• t.be fleld of candldatH wlll not loelude lncumbenta, bHed on interviews with councUmen BW Wilcoxen, Howard Dawson and Kelly Boyd. • And all three men say tbe current climate on the split panel is, or will be, a determining factor In their declalona. Wilcoxen, who waa appointed to the councll tut summer to replace Mayor Wayne Ba1Un, .w..bo left-fOF-Saudi Arabia, Hid WHAT HIGH TIDE? -The tide charts scheduled a 7-foot surge for this morning, but a look at Main Beach Park at the appointed 7:23 a .m . hour shows the . boardwalk well County loses bid for cilrUs park Orange County officials plans to locate a state citrus heritage park in Irvlne or San Juan Capistrano have failed. They learned this week from the state parks and recreation depattment that a 370-acre grove and lake in Riverside County's Mockingbird Canyon bas been selected for the park. "I think we were led down the primrose path," said Peter Herman , aide to Countv Supervisor Thomas Riley. County open space Chief Enc Jessen said some political issues may bave been involved because state Puks Director Peter Dangermond comes from Riverside County. "It wu apparent to us he was interested in doing something for bis neighborhood," said Jensen. Temple Hills Drive to be ·resurfaced Commuters from the Top of the World community in Laguna Beach are belng asked to avoid Temple Hills Drive Monday while the winding roadway is resurfaced. Ao lncb and a half of aapbalt will be poured on the road and · motorists are advised to use Park Avenue to get to and from , their ho'mes. Orange County , wblcb carried the dubious advantqe of its .name lnt.o the aelectloa process, had proposed to locate the state park either at a 300-acre grove at Sand Can~ Road south of the Santa Ani Freeway or a 200-acre arove north of San Juan Caplatrano,. about a mile from the miaaion. Both of Orange County's groves are of Valencia oranaes, the kind normally used for juice. At Mockingbird Canyon, the oranges are Washington navels, or table oranges. Jessen aald the navels probably seemed more attractive because touriata could pick and eat them more eully. The Riverside site had other advantages. It was surrounded by 6,000 acres wbicb ·voters bad elected to preserve in five to 10-acre citrus ranches, so state officials knew the park wouldn't be threatened by encroaching subdivisions, Jessen said. Also, the grove ls lntenpersed· with windrows of mature palm trees and bu a backdrop of undevelaJ•• 111118. "Visually, it'a a very attractive site," admitted Jessen. What irked Oran1e County officials, be said, was· that talks about making Mockincblrd the site apparently took place before other counties were solicited to propose entries. So far, the county hasn't received official word altboucb coo(irmation of the selection waa made to a staff worker over the telephone. he does not intend to aeek a four.year term ln April. "A number of people have asked rne (to seek a full term) but I never intended to be a candidate,•· the longtime Laguna Beach attomey said. He said the time commitment required by council duty "ia a lot of it." but added the curTent counclJ makeup !Jia pretty detrimental to solvlnt real problems In this city." Specifically, Wilcoxen pointed to what be term• the "neaatJve ldeoloay" of Mayor Sally' Bellerue and Councllman Nell Fitzpatrick, often on the toeing end of 3·2 votes In Laeuna Beach. "Since I came on the councll lo late July, Sally and Nell have voted a1aln1t virtually every development proposal that's come before us," he said .. "And that inc hades propoealJ lbat meet our ienerat plan and ou-r-very rrestrlfllve ordinances. DMty ........... .., above the water level. In fact. there's enough · sand for strollers on a chilly winter morning. .,.., ................ SWINGER -Nicole Desmit. 6, doesn't need a push with all the. high winds as she swings at Bluebird Canyon Park in Laguna Beach. 'Deal' revealed at trial By DAVID KUTZMANN Of .. Dllltf ........ Jurors in Willie Ray Wisely's murder trial heard testimony Thursday about a purported deal to offer phony evidence 1 about the suffocation death of Huntington Beach truck driver Robert Bray last March. The testimony came from Los Angeles County Jail inmate David Lewis, who said Wisely and jailhouse informant Robert Kish, the prosecution's key wilneaa, concocted evidence together that was later to be used In Wisely's Orang'! County Superior court trial. Lewia said Wisely had offered the same deal to him -tum bogus informer and win concessions ln hia own case - but turned down the Huntington ·Beach man's offer. "I told him it was kind of crazy," said Lewis,.a convicted robber. "I didn't want not.blng to do with it. I was too Involved in my own case." Asked by prosecutor Ed Freeman why the defendant would offer s uch an arrangement, the 22-year-old Lewis said Wisely merely told him be wanted to cause delays in an unrelated robbery case in Los Angeles by drawing hlmself into the Huntington Beach murder investigation. Work crews will resurface Graceland Drive, Browncroft Road, Griffith Way and l(ansanlta Drive on Tuesday,. accordlna to.city officials. TboH road• will be posted to alert residents to not park on the atreeta. On Wednesday, the upbalt coverln1 wlll be applied to HWedp Drift, Blumont Street, La Vllta Drl.e, and portiona of Leston Street and Cliff Drive. Safe foils burglars at Laguna school Wisely,~. who is acting aa his own lawyer, claimed in an Inter-view Thursday that be did make such a deal at first with Kish, who was supposed to testify at the preliminary hearln1 and then !'fall apart" at trial. In teathnony last week, however,, the m\lltacbioed Kilb ateadlly told Juron that Wllely admitted to him that be killed Ill.. stepfather, Robert Bra1, wben tbe older man found out. bl1 trlld.ol'·traller rla wu benc Uled a~ io imut'1• druel. Laguna Greenbeh founder due honor Tbe Lapna Greenbelt will 1poaaor a dinner boDoi'tnf lta fouder, Jim Dllly, Ju. 12 at tbe Cottaa• Reataurant In LquuBudl. rte_.. are SlO per perjeft, .................. of ...... Tbe ......_ wW be from l:IO p.m. ~m. TM re.ti_._ la . at -Cout Rlcb•AJ. J'or, reHrYltlODI eall 4 ...... 1, .._,..or -.1'7'!1. For the leeond Ume lD twd weeka, bur1lara attempted u.ntucceutully to opai a aafe ln tbe actlvttl• omce at Lapna Beach ffltb School. Pollee aald today the latest break-In, wblcb occurred · aometlme Wedn•aday or Tbundlw, wu "• am8'1mrtlb effort," bi t.b8t tM ............ unable to break lJlto tM llDaU' tafe. Sehool oftlclala .. , tbe ..,. contala1 onl~ dl1trlet doeulima, ud II -e-. .................. -:~;.lift HidtllelutaJlhFI ....... .,. ......... -.... Jlllb .. tile ....... die,. = aotlileJ..W~U. after acbool hours. Tbey broke the dial .and handle to the aa(e, aqd UDIUC:eeufully pried at t.be door of. tbe aafe wltb a claw-like instrument, police aald. What led omcen to tuapeet tbe effort WU by UDHUOIMd tMn• wa ta. faet they left belilnd wood drill btta, witb wblcb tbey may have tried to open tbe metal sate. A 1poke1man for tb• blab lebool ._, tldftil at&ilmpted to ............ dwtaa die CllrtlDiii iia114Qa, A MeNW7 Nici IM....S .......................... fOiiill4 ...,,.. tiiiid HIDOYlit U. ...... ,... . Bray'• WU found pinned beneatb the 2r~oo pound, Wt·awa, cab of ma truck l•t Marcb t on Sprtnsdale Street in HunUQstoo Beacb. Police at flnt belle .. cl tbe truck drl••r'1 deatll WH accldmUI bUt took Wiael1 IMo cuatodJ .,._ 1Dnetl1•tbll t:.. claim• of Kiah, wbo called lD•w.l1tkn. ltlM. ..., IDd Lewis ... . all l ... &eil to1et1aer at JM ~-~ .l.U .. ...,. ~JUDI wbeD &!Ill ol~ ... .., ...... '° bllli..' ... lAwll .,. ....., ......... u.-.. ....... It's very hard for me to get together with that degree or negaUvism." Da.waon, who la wrapping up his flnt four-year term on the council, aays chances are, he won't be running for r e-election in April. "At the moment, I'm not inclined to run again," the sU>ck brokerage mana1er said. •'I ran (lout years ago ) thinking I could make a contribulton t o Laguna,'' Dawson said. "But I don't feel I've been very effective." He also blames Mrs. Bellerue and Fitzpatr ic k for •'close· mindedness'' regarding development, and said the pair's negative voles on many proposals were unfair. "I'm so damned old-fashioned, I believe in the ConstituUon and inctividual rights. But I reel outmoded on the council," he said. He said the constant battling over developments and the lack of s urporl for elimination of iUega (bootleg) rental units in town have j11St about worn him out. "It's also taken a lot of time from my work," Dawson said. Councilman Boyd aaya be.atW hasn't decided whether he'll seek a second term or not. He said a m.Uor fact.or wUl bf his new Job in restaurant management. He la currently taking management tralnlnl for a large restaurant chain. and says he might be transferred.to a restaurant out of the area at the end of that tralnln1. But he says he too bu "not been happy with the attitude1t ~ two c ouncil memberJ," suggesting Mrs. Bellerue and Fitzpatrick "are totally a1atnat development even if someone comes up with a good plan." · He says he wants no ~part of such a city council, adcllnl "lf the city wants that kind of coun cil, the y'll have more' lawsuits than ever on their hands." M a y o r B e ·1 l e r u e a n d Fitzpatrick will have two yeari remaining on the panel after tbe Apr il election. Qoth wo n overwhelmiDI victories in the 1980 election, basing their joint campaiin on limiting the town's population to 20,000 and keeping a cloee watch on new development In Laguna. D9lty .... """'" ............. GUTTED -County fire men investi gate the charred remains of a two-stor y building in Mission Viejo. The blaze. second in three year s. caused $350,000 damage. $350,000 damage cited in Mission Viejo fire For the Se<!Ond time in three y.ears, fire s wept through a · c~m mercial building at 27324 Camino Capistrano in Mission Viejo Thursday, c ausing an estimated $350,000 in damage, according to Orange County Fire Capt. Sharee Bunting. Mrs . Bunting s a i d 40 firefighters were called to the three-alarm blaze, which began at about 6:50 p.m. in a business suite leased by WTI , Inc., a Crime meet ·set for LB ph o t o graphy e quipment company. She said the cause of the fire is under investigation. There wen: no injuries to either fire. personnel or occupanta of the building. Mrs. Bunting said the fire wu . the second blaze in the bulldinc, owned by the Andrews Family Trust of Fullerton. She said a blaze in 1979 caused a total cl $125,000 in dam~ge to the buildin.r. Mrs. -Bunting said fire crews were hampered In t.belr efforts to control Thursday's blue because of 30 D)ph Santa Ana winds which fanned the flamet. She said the fire WU broulbt under cootrol at about 7:10 p.m. Seven encines, two trueb an4 one medic unit were eaUed to the scene, abe aaid. Damage wu estimated to " about $250,000 to the 1lnldun. and $100,~ to eon~ta. ---------~--------_... ...... _______ _ FRIDAY, JAN. I , 1912 STOCKS BS COMICS 86 GARDEN 88 i\r-e career women giving greater thought to snaring husbands? Columnist Bob Greene thinks so. See P,age B2. / Chamber chief raps lease fee .protest BY 8'fl!VE 11AaBLE o1 • ...., ........ bualnesamen aad entrepreneurs," 1111 WoGd of the protestinl bomeoWMrs. "And now they'r• 1oin1 around acting like profit is a dirty word and 'power to U.. people' and all that." The Corocla de.I Mar broker, relattonsbip with the development ftrm. Tbe protelt &1alnat increasln.C ·land leue fees has been led by tile Committee of ,,ooo, which claJl'DJ to represent many ol tbe disgruntled bomeownen. The committee plans to sue· A1 lease• come up for readjustment, bomeownen Hy they're belnl socked witb ree incre~ up to 4,000 percent. One reeldent aays bJs annual ree bas gone rrom s1.eoo to "7,000. Jim Wood, a real estate broker and president of tbe Corona del Kar Chamber of Commerce, says tbe group protestln1 skyrocketlnt land lease fees in Newport Beach and lrvipe ts actint like "a Jane Fonda creation." ''The only difference from a Jane Fonda meetin1," Wood says of the eroup's protest rallies, "is that they're held In yacht clubs." Wood suggests that homeowners upset with spiralling l'°d lease payments they must make to the -Irvine Company were ''caught with their financial pants down" and now want to blame the lrvine Company. "The only difference from a Jane .Fonda mee(ing i& that they're· 'held in yacht clubs." · "The truth is," Wood says, "lt appears people lacked financial foresllbt and because of that, they attack the Irvine Company." He says be once lived in a house on leasehold property and was well aware that the lease would be readjusted one day and that b1B payment. likely would shoot up. "These are people who pride themselves on being good owner of Unique Homes, sa7' the Irvine Company -0W11en ol land leased to routbly 4,000 homeowners ln Newport aad Irvine -is a member of bis chamber. But, be adds, bis comments were ~ot colored by tbat UNWELCOME VIStTORS -A group of mud hens has taken up residence at Mason Regional Park, in Irvine. Park employees, who say the hens are eating the: grass, roop; aM the development firm. Affected residents own thelr home1 but lease the land under them from the h vine Company. The leases call for residents to pay 6 percent of Ute appraiaed value of the land to the Irvine Co~pany on an annual basis. He says others should have reallied the same thing. ·'These people knew land values were going up, tht!y knew the leases would be readjusted and they also knew the lrvine ..., ............ ,,......O' .... all, hope that the birds are in for a temporary stay and not permanent residence. Jury told of p~ny evidence bid Purported deal described at murder trial of Huntington man lb DAVID KUTZMANN o1 .. o..r ........ Jurors in Willie Ray Wisely's murder trial beard testimony Thursday about a purported deal to offer phony evidence about the suffocation death of Runttnaton Beach truck driver Robert Bray last March. . The t"'ltimony came from Los Angeles County Jail inmate David Lewis, wbo said Wisely and jailhouse informant Robert Kish, the prosecution's key witness, concocted evidence tog~ther that was later to be ---- used lD Wlsely's Orante Couaty SW>erlor Court tril•I. Lewis s&id Wisely had offered the same deal to him -turn bogus informer and win concessions in bis own cae - but turned down the Runtiniton Beach man's orrer. ·'I told him it was kind of crazy," aaid Lewis, a con.tcted robber. "I didn't want notMng to do .with it. I was too in•olved in my own case." HunUngton Beach. Police at first believed the truck driver 's death was accidental but took Wisely into custody after investigating the claims or Kiah, who called invealigators. Kilb, Wisely and Lewis were all inmates together at Los Angeles County Jail last May and June when Kisb claims Wlaely confessed to him and Lewis says Wisely orrered him Ute deal to inform. Lewi.I tesUfied Thursday that Ktatf told him he bad several plans to keep himself out of slate prison, one al them being the scheme to pose as an informer. Kish had been convicted of mu ltlple counts of armed robbery, burglary and assault and raced time in state prison. ··Kish told me he felt he had enough information· to• get bis deal <and) get his time cut down so be wouldn't have to go to the joint," Lewis said. . Wisely has maintained throughout his trial that he bad no involvement in his stepfather's death, which he insisted was accidental. If eonvicted of first-degree murder with s pecial circumstances, however, he could be sent to the gas chamber at San Quentin. Company bad been aold," Woocf continues. He says be question• the inte1rtty of the protest 1roup. The Corona del llar realtor claims there· are advantages to Uvln1,..on leasehold land that have been "obscured" by the protesters. • He 1ays the leasehold system bas allowed many persona to purchase homes at cheap cates and to lease Ian~ until the readjustment date, at a fract.loo ·or its present day worth. Also, be says, the Irvine Company bas an interest in preserving nelehborboods because it own.a Ute land. "They (the proteatera) have ' tainted the word leasehold,'' be continues, "and their ranting and raving bu started to affect the real estate market.·· He says sales have dropped off because customers come into Newport Beach with a "bad taste in their mouth for leasehold property." Dell, ......... .....; CRITICAL -Real estate broker Ji.m Wood has criticized protesters of spiraling leasehold fees in Newport Beach and Irvine. Irvine officials get training -t-·· toxic spills • ID By PAT&JCK KENNEDY Of -Dlllf'I ........ l ( . 1 nformaUon on the lateat.s methods or handling toxic spills. I in bu f ffi Although pr1vate .companies rv e pu c sa ety 0 cers specialize 10 to-xic cleanups. are learning the latest techniques to handle toxic Huggins says public safety; chemical spills ln the event of an oificial.s need to know bow to earthquake, transportation quickly recogniz.e a · baurdoul id t i d t i l t spill and when to call fOI' ad ace en or n us r a s orage evacuation of nearby resi• leak, say city officials. "Before the year's out, Irvine dents. · · will have put more emphasis on He said Irvine offic1aJa have,.. toxic chemical cleanups than talked with a Long Beacb·baNcl' any other city In Orange company about estabUsbinl a County," says Harry Hugins, contract for cleanups or rouible admlnbtraUve assistant or the future chemical spills. city's public safety department. ijuggins says that federal I Huggins says there's never transportation authorities have been a major spill or toxic m a odated that· all truck1; chemicals in Irvine, but the carrying dangerous chemicals possibility would increase in have identification numbers~ case ol an earthquake. Police and fi.re department "We have a lot of industry in officials will be given boOklets the city that utilizes various Thursday that list identification chemicals and we need to slay numbers of various chemicals, on · top of -how to handle an he said. accident before it happens," he 8 y c a 11 in g a federal said . "Hazardous chemicals "c h emtrac" telephone should be treated like gold, very extension, public offi cials can carefully." immediately get expert advice Huglins says in Irvine there on the seriousness of a spill~ are pharmaceutical companies, whether evacuation is required. p I as tics manufacture rs. Later this month, Hugsi electronics firms and other says a seminar for city safet corporations that use and store officials on "Earthquakes hazardous chemicals. Hazardous Spills" is scheduled. Toxic substances for industry Two state officials will dilcuu are brought into lrvi.ne by trucks safety measures at that talk. and train, Hu1tina said. The · "Although we've never bad a increased safety program will toxic chemical accident hl include identifying all huardoua Irvine, we've seen what cu cargoes and the routea they happen by the expeflences of lake, be said. Huggins speculated that toxic other areas," Huggins said. spills could occur in a truck or "ln Santa Clara County there train accident, or from a leak at was a cherrucaJ 11re that bu.med a factory that uses dangerous out of control for three days. U substances. they had gotten quicket On Thursday, police and fire infQrmation on the cbemlcall department officials, as well as involved , perhaps the blue representatives from Newrort cou ld have been put out Beach, Costa Mesa, Tustin, immediately." Mobile arts stage sought for Irvine Asked by prosecutor Ed Freeman why the defendant would off-er sucb an ~rrangement, the 22-year·old Lewis said Wisely merely told """ ;" QM~ t~ ~a,, .. ,. tl~lava in an unrelatearoDflarnR 111 Los Angeles by drawln1 llimaelf into tbe Huntington Beach murder investigation. Wisely, 29, who ii actiat as hla own lawyer, claimed in an interview Thursday tbat be did make such a deal at first wttb Kish, who was supposed to testify al the preliminary hearing and then "faU apart" at trial. l ----· -·-6~•:(l-;ir-----~O~r~a~n~g~e~Co;un;t~y~a:n;d~th~e~s~ta:te:_-t.~H~e~.al~so~s11~d~a recent chemical C t d@PWIM&i(t al liliilt end Glime Oun Y Oses l participated in a workshop 00 len •' a Ca.cl.OU in nearby methods of cleaning up toxic Tustin cost that city $81, spills. clean up. · Irvine Community Services commissioners have recommended that the City Council allocate $80,000 to purchase a performing arts sta1e that could be moved from one city park to another. The 38·foot stage could be bou1ht with interest that bu accrued on '1.5 million that bas been set uide from the 1t7' Sl6 million Park Bood Act for the ••entual development of a perfonnlna arta theater in the clty, commluioaen 1aJd. Community Servic• D~ Dee llmalnl 1ald that the staie wouia: · -.lie Uled for' s\f'cb actlvttlea as dance , drama , and 1ympboalee. . -Provide a meana to build laterwt in t.be petfonnl111 art.a prior to the actual cons~ of a cltJ performlnt art• tbeater. -Be UHd by varJoua e om m.u nit 1 1 D d e>t b • r fOH1"1111MDtal Ol'f Ulbatlollll fOC' •••~ ••ont1 01 I~ Jlanell ........ la Ute . TMdtJlau.... I ........... ,...... leaell for GH la tbe uaul 8anen PHU•aJ, Hld ••· .......... . In testimony last •eek, bowever, tile mustacbloed Kilb steadily told Juron that Wlaely admitted to him that be ld1Md his stepfather, Robert Bray 1 when the older man found OUl. hb tractor-trailer rif wu belat uaed allegedly to smuule drup. Bray's body wu foa.d pUlned beneath the 2,oot pouad, tilt-away cab of bls.,.tnack laat March 9 oo Sp~daJe Street lD Reading lab toopendoon Saddlebuk' Community · Collep Dlltrict ~deetl .,. 1Dria.a to an~---el tM coU•1•'• rea41at lai. '•· 1J from e:IO p.m. to 1:• p.m. Ill tbe South Campae la Mu.a. VleJo. The lab la ope to ..-d 11 .. el the di*tet • -............. ·Dtapaltlc f.eD an_........• ......... ~pnllhaa·liad ua. pablle mQ ... hiftl .. •••rove rHdl•I .,...r ... eom,....._.. -"-'-""-~~ fi ·• t k The closed workshop , "We have as many chemicals or ci rus par sponsor4!d by the California being used here as in other Highway Patrol, was held at areas in the state and we need to Turtle Rock Community Park. It be prepared for an emer1ency, Orange County otflclala ,plans to locate a state citrus herita1e park In lrvine or San Juan Capistrano bave f aUed. They teamed tbia week from the state parka and recreation department that a S'10-acre fron 'and lake in Rlvenide Cou'Dty'a lloe!ldntblrd Canyon bu been selected fM Ute part. "I tblnk we were led down the prlmrose path," said Peter HermJn, a.Ide to County · Sua>;ervllor Tbomu Riley. COUDl7 open space Cblef Enc JMHD aald 191D9 political ill.a may have been lD~ved because •t•t• Parks Director Peter . Dan1ermond comes from RlvenWe County. ''It wu •PPA"Dt to ua be_ WU llltel'•ted in doln1 IOIDeWq for bJ1 nelfbborbood, •• 1aJd Jeu.. OraQI• Count1. wblcb catrted ta.. dub6oua advantase ol lta ...... ha tlM •ll•dioe f"OC•· Ud ....... to --tb• 1tate park eltla•r at a ........ 11'°'9 at .... c.,. ae.41 ...a. Of tM .... Au WI'~• aaot;~ .....-Of .. ,.. c • ........ from tbe • Both of Orange County's groves are of Valencia oranges, the kind normally used for Juice. ~Al Mockingbird Canyon, the orantes are Wuhinaton navels, or table oran,es. Jessen said the navels probably seemed more attractive bec:aiaae tourists could pick and eat them more eUil)'. The IUvenlde site bad other advantages. It wu 1urrounded by 6,000 acres wblch voten bad elected to prese"e In fin to 10.acre citrus ranches, IO ltale olflclall knew tbe pal'lr wooldn't be threatened by encroacblnl subdlvtmooa. Jeuen aald. Also, the rrove is tntenpened wtU> wiDdrowa of mature palm treea and bu 1 baekdrop ol undeveloped bill.a. "Vlauall)', It'• 1 very attraetlTe atte, .. admitted J•HD. •O•t lrked Oru1• Coanty offtelU., e. lald, wu•tbat ta1b about~ llockiqblrd t.be 1ite a toot place before other eoam'IM were IOllctted to ............... . lo far. tll• COUDtJ bHa't ....... oftldal word alt.boulll eO~ ., &ate "*"- .......... iUft,WOfk• °"" t.Mt .......... included slides, films, ledures. es o e c i a &I y l n case of an p a m p h l e t a a n d o t b e r earthquake," Hull~ said. . tT.S. Rep. .Robert Badham la firmly opposed to lbe idea of movlnl the llarlnes out ol El Toro and Tustin , a rec:ommeadaU. tbat is beint 1dvanc:ed by the county'• Blue Ribbon Retlonal Airport Committee, ..W an aide tot.be Newport Beaela Republican. ''lt Juat doesn't seem like t.be blue ribbola panel tboutht the w~ ole tblDI tbrou1b," Hid Ro•·ard a.lye, Rep. BacUlam'• 1lde. "Tb• SI Toro llarlne Corp• Alr Statloa flf urH promlaent11 Jn tile' wbole utloeal defwe 1ellleme. •• ~Mid that &ep. Bldb•m llu met with memben ol tlM panel lliil t.iild tlaem titat lar I •arlMr of r•11oa1, tb• air _.._ • .._.._ llTaro will nmlllil --. u., .,.. r. the, ...... fuhin. ' - . .., . If you mutt tell your home ln today'• Mpl'eued real ettate merket, why not arab all tbe advutaa• Qf a "trlde·ln1" lt'• commonplace procedure with the family car, to wby not wftb tbe family lrloaMf Under thia arranaement, 1 broker buyt your bouM, tblll ctvtnc you the equity to buy another home. SIDce the aale and a quick buy really combine two transactions, many Umlna problem• uauaJly usoelated wt&h boules an eliminated. For .U concerned, a trade-ID cu have many advanta1e1. In uee are three different types of trade-lna: 1) Under the • 'outrtaht trade· In,·· ~ the broker buys your house outri&ht, and ' • ,. you apply &he equity ~ from the sale to buy n··· P.11111 ~· 'P ;-a replacement'hoUJe. Lllll _ ~ Tbls is like an exchange, line~ the two transacUona are completed almultabeously. For the seller, Ws the best arraniemeot; you're relieved 9f owning two houaes at t.he same dme. From &he brol(er's viewpoint, an outright trade-in b tbe most risky; it should be used only ln a much atroo.eer market than today's, when the broker won't be 1tucJ1 with th~ house. U the property represents a good lone-term investment and the broker ls wtlling to put money into the house, this trade-~ is attractive. New-home builders also may like such trade-ins, since they are prepared to carry an inventory of houses anyway. 2) Most frequently used '-ttie "guaranteed trade-in" plan. The broker is given• specified time period in which to sell the house at an aareed-upoo price, explains Prentice-Hall. If the broker is successful, the homeowner gets the entire price, lesa broker's commissioo, even if it ls more than the price agreed upon. If the house doesn't sell, the broker buys it al a slightly lower price to compensate him or her for &he risk and expense of carrying the property until it finally is sold. For you, the homeowner, the deal works out so you are assured the minimum price for the house by the time tiUe to &he new house must be taken., Tb.as, you are relieved ol IQJJ'le of the pressures of timing. The broker assumes a conditional obli,eaUon, but in most cases will not be asked to fulflll it. If you, the homeowner, need immediate cub, the broker can arranae to advance the 1uaranteed amount (to be repaid with interest). In th.is way, you are actually ln the same position as if there had been a direct trade-in. 3 ) The "contihgent trade-in" combines an option agreement on the old house and a conditional sale of &he new one. The two contracts of sale are executed simultaneously, with the contract for &he purchase of your new home conditioned upon the resale of the old one within a set period. If &he broker is unable to complete the resale in time, J>otb contracts are canceled. Since the broker doesn't have to tie up any working capital, the arrangement is beneficial. The success or a continaent trade-in depends on the willingness of the seller of tfte new bouse to tie up his or her capital for the option period. But as Prentice· Hall L~. lbe seller of th~ new bome can limit his or her obligation to keep the property available by providi.q that the conditional contract may be terminated upon so many daya' wrilten notice. Whether an "outright," a "guaranteed" or a "contingent" trade-in, all are aimed at helping you keep your capital as liquid as possible -and easing the problems that almost always arise between broker and homeowner on timing of orleinal sale, replacement, etc. While the outright tr,de-in is the m()st advantageous to the home '4Uler, the guaranteed does appear the most equitable both to you and to your broker and therefore is the plan you both sbou.ld weigh first and most carefully. Trade-ins make good sense. ----- STOCKS IN THE SPORIGHT 09!.J!~~P) !!!!& ... • AMERICAN LEADEIS 'NS'W ~I( tA .. I -Salft, 'llMln.. Ill''« E~ ... .=-...-· ·= NICllMlly .. ---"· lllfl ..... '"' + "' .m ... l!lle-:· m:: 5-~·: "" . in·-.... --RC-• is..-17V. -_, : .....onrr .... a;-. • ,.. T........ I -*-=:• IM :.:·-. ~ ~-~ =' .. UPS AND DOWNS tor Tllurldrl, J ... 1. TOC•I . "I:. .. ~Jt ~ c. flt -..aiiO:io-..aM.-M 1111'.'2 -.21 ,.... MJ.JI.-Lii· Ml.11 SC.• 111 A3 Mo.1~ t.a, ...................... .,, ..... ................. .... ,.,,..,. Ullla ...................... -.-Mii ....................... 6.MS.IDO WHAT STOCKS· DID NIW YOlllK CAPI J ... 1 ' ~ . ' "'"· -:r.· 11 ,. .. • .. "' w. -. .. ---------____ ....,.._ ---- ; I -Are career women giving STOCKS 'COMICS GARDEN BS B6 B8 greater thought to snaring husbands? Columnist ·Bob Greene thinks so. Se·e P.age 82. . . :Chamber Chief raps kase fee protest . . By ·sT•v• llASBLE Of .. ..., ....... Jim Wood, a real estate broker and president of the Corona del Kar Chamber of Commerce, says tbe 1roup prote1Un1 1kyrocllet1n1 lana lease fees ln Newport Beach and Irvine b actin1 like "a Jane Fonda creation." ''The only dlffefeftce from a Jane Fonda meetin1,". Wood aaya of the 1roup'1 protest rallies, "b that they're held in yacht clube." Wood s uggest s that homeowne r s upse t with spiralling land lease payments they must make to the Irvine Company were "caucht with their financial pants down" and now want to blame the Irvine Company. ~.:'These are people who pride themselves OD being COO~ bualn e a a men and relattonsblr;> wltb th e entrepreneurs," aaya Wood of development firm. the protattn1 homeowners. • Tbe protest acalnat increuinl "And now they'r e 1oln1 ·land leue fees hu been led by around acting lil~e profit .II a the Coauiilltee· ol 4,000, which dirty word ·and 'power to the claims to 'hpresent many ot the people' and all that." diacruntled homeownen. The Corona del Mar broker, Tbe._com.mlttee pluus to aue · "The only difference from a Jane Fonda meeting is that they're held in yacht clubs." owner of Unique· Homes, nys the Irvine Company -owners ot land leased to rouebly 4,000 homeowners· in Newport. and Irvine -is a member of hla chamber. But, he adds, b1a comment.a were not colored by that the development firm. Affected resident.a own their ,homes tMlt leue the land under them from the Irvine Company. The leases call for residents to pay 6 percent of the appralaed value of the land to th& ll'Vine Company on an anp!.l&l buia. Al leases eome up for readjustment, homeowners say they're beinl aoeked with fee lnereues up to 4,000 perceot. One reeident says hb annual fee baa gone from $1,800 to S67,000. · "The truth la," Wood says. "it appears people lacked financial foresi~t and because of that, they attack the Irvine Company." Be says he once lived in a house on leasehold property and was well aware that the lease would be readjusted one day and that hla payment likely would aboot up. Company bad been sold," Woocf conUnuea. . He says lie questions the inte1rtty ot the proteat 1roup. The CortlDa de! Mar realtor claims there are advantaaes to Uvin1 on leaeebold land that have been "obscul'ed" by the protesten. He says the leasehold system baa allowed meny penona to purchase ho.met at cheap rates and to lease land, until the · reacijuatment date, at a fractioo 'of its present day worth. Also, be says, the Irvine Company baa an interest In preserving neigbborhooas because it owns the land. He says others should have realised the same thine. •'These people knew land "They (the protesters) have· 1 In th ...__ tainted the word leaaehoJd," be va ues wece go g up, ey M.l'IC'W contin"-.. d th-' tin the leuea would be readjusted ..... , an 11:1r ran • ~d-tbe.)'-allo knew-th& Irvine. -.and .raving bas &tarted-to affect the real estate market." . * * * ..., ... _""' CRITICAL -Real estate bro ker J i m Wood has criticized protesters of: .spiraling le.asehold fees in Newport Beach and Irvine. * * * Irvine Co. to aid in lease land buy ..UNWELCOME VISITORS -A group of mud hens bas ta.ken up resldence at Mason Regional Park, in Irvine. Park employees, who say the hens are eating the gra.s~ roots and Evidence gatherN in Irvine sex case By RICHARD GREEN O( .. Detty .......... Checks, credit card receipts and ledgers found in an Irvine hous e in which prostitution tnvolving a 15-year-old Tustin girl aUegedly took place may be used in an effort to prosecute male clients, said Irvine police ,Sgt. Leo Jones. "Prostitution is obviously· illegal, but when you're dealing with a 15-year-old, they (clients) could face additional charges of illegal intercourse with a minor and technically contributing to tbe delinquency of a minor," said Sgt. Jone_, A:,., '-:! ... '! Tuesday night raid on a house at 6 Crosskey in the Northwood area of Irvine. Arrested in the 11 : 15 p.m. raid were the owners of the home, Steven L. Daniels and Emily Alice Delgado, both 31 ; Chafte Mustapba Habbas, 26, Tustin, and the girl, accqrding to police. about a month or two a go. Jones said that, according to statements given by the girl, other prostitutes conducted business in the house, but Jones s aid there is little chance the palice wiJJ be able to find or prosecute these women. He said police learned of the operation Tuesday from a tip by an anonymous caller wbo told" police of an ad in a "sex magazin e " offering companionship for men who called the telephone number of the house on Crosskey. Jones said an officer found the a d. c alled the number, was solicited ano a U2V 1t:t: was :;et for the "companions hip" services Tuesday night. Mesan gets · sc~~larship . A 19-year-old Costa Mesa S g t . J o n e s a a i d woman baa been awarded a representatives of the Irvine vocational tedmical adaolanblp Pollce Departme nt will be ·from Pbillp Morrla Inc. to d.llcuaslnc possible. prosecution pursue a career in faab.lon of tbe male clients with· deslp 1 repr~ta~ves of th..!.. Orang~ lJaa Zvanl will ban a eba6ee '"C"ounty District Attorney's of enrolliq in a 'QIM or two JUI' Qfflce.,_ vocatlonal Jll'Oll'l'ln u a wtm.- Be laid that police estimate .AL.the Ull Pl,\lllp Morris about !O acta ot proaUtutlon toot V o c a t I on a 1 / T e c b n l c a fr place in the Cro11key house . Scbolanblp. · · ·' 1lnee the glrl became involved· 1 Sbe t. the atepda.apter of Gerold~ u , • ..,_ · M~an. c.ite.d . . .. \, . uaconte•t ot Jack Raub Co. in Coeta -._. a aubsldlar)' ol Pill.Up Monti f lne. . ...,"9.-......... ..,...aO' .... all, hope thafi.he birds are i.n for a temporary stay and not permanent residence. The Irvine Company, under fire from homeowners in Newport Beach and Irvine who lease land from the firm, today announced lt will help resident.a purchase their leased property. Company president Peter Kremer today said a plan bas been developed in which the firm would lend homeowners money at a variable interest rate. Kremer said bis firm is willing to finance up to 80 percent of the vaJue or the leased property. · Affected resident.a in the two cities own their homes but lease the land under them from the Irvine Company. Residents have the option to buy the land or continue leasing it. Upset homeowners, many members ot the Committee of 4000 protes t gro up , have complained that lease fees are skyr~"KefiDg when the leuea come up for readjustment. Many also have complained they are unable to buy the land tbroueh conventional financing butitutloos. The new Irvine Companv Pian, Kremer explained. will offer a variable rate loan with interest rates ~usted twice each year. There would be a ceiling oo the rates of 18 percent and a noor of 12 percent. The loans w,ouid be good for seven years but amortized for a 30-ye ar period to keep loan payments low, it was said. Kremer cautioned that loans will be subject to review of a borrower's credit quallficatiom. Also, he said, his firm is now determining whether it mU.t1 obtain any government approval' to offer the loans. The financing plan follows a previous Irvine Company ofter of letting affected bomeownen to defer up to 50 percent of their annual lease fee. ''With the addition of the· financing plan we believe we~ have now respooded to the IDOlt immediate of the Jeuebolderl' concerns," Kremer remarked. He said the lo.,, otter will remain in effect during.1982. ''The plan permits the inier.t rate to float downward in the event rates decline and provides a ceiling if escalate. "Also," be continued, "it permits replacement and payoff of the loan at no cost." -Bl/ STEVE MARBLE Mesa rezone ruling appeakd San Jose fears decision on Arnel case sets precedent --LEASINO?-·John Nicoll will present plans to lease 47 acres of district property. The San Jose city attorney plans to file an appeal today to the state Supreme Court over an appellate court decision that invalidated a voter Initiative reaoninl' 68 acres in north Co.ta Mesa. Although San Jose has no development faclng rezoning by initiative, city attorney Robert Logan said be was concerned that th~ lower cburt ruling could set a precedent throughout the state. Tbe action by San Jose comes two days after the Costa Mesa City Council voted 3·2 not to chaUqe a lower court ruliq that invalidated a 1978 initiative used to block the development of more than 850 homes and apartments near South Coast Plaza. "Everytime the San Jose City Talks due on school lease Newport-Mesa board to review four proposals Plans to lease •T acres of valuable property owned by the Newport Mesa Unlfied School District will be dlseuued Tuesday by the school trustees. Superintendent John Nicoll said the board will review plans from various 1roup1 for the development -0f the site at Jamboree Road and Bri1tol Street. The now-cloeed Bay View Elementary Sebool uaea 11 acres. Tbe property WU purcbaMd ln 1115 for t.be coaatnaetioa ot a blab acbool by "bat wu then tbe Newport Harbor Union mah Sebool Dlltrict, aald NleoU. But decllnln1 enrollment• bave left the '41atrid wtt.b no need for a ne• aebool and 41 acres ot valuable land Althoulb tbe diatrid bu come up with no plan of its own, several groups have been meeting to disc uaa the development of the property: -Tbe county's Specific Plan Advi*Y Committee, 1n charae of coming up with a plan for all ot Santa Ana Hei&hll, favon a eomblnatioo ot commercial and residential ·development with a two-story belcbt limitation. -ABCOM, made up of a 1roup of Santa Ana Helthta realdenta, 1upport1 • plan drafted bJ architect WIWam Picker that calla for aome reaidenUal development and commerdal develotlaept with a 10·•lor>' bei&bt llm•tauon. . -Tbe IrviDe CompaDJ. OWi*' of ao aerea adjacent to the. propert)t, hu no plan for tbe 4T acrea, but favon blO cl..._, residential developm.ent on 12 acres of their property. The school district would ratber lease the property because of a current law requlrln1 tbat money from ·property sales be used for construction and maintenance only, said Nicoll. Altbouab the property la DOW 1oned for school Gae, Nicoll estimates it would be worth $10 million it loned for commercial development. "We're definitely leanint toward commercial,." aaid Nicoll, "I would aee it pertODally .-a mix o1 bcMJatna , and commerdal or otllce UM." · 1 Tbe. IC.boo& board will meet 1 .Tuesday at T:IO p.m. at the Harper Communlt7 Center, Q5 I:. 18tb St., Ccsl• Mesa. Co uncil r ezones property it wo uld cr eat e innumerable problems if that property were subject to the review established by tbe appellate ruling," Logan said. Logan pointed out that it wu. the second time San Jose bu filed an appeal to the state Supreme Court regardln& the property owned by Arnet and South Coast Plua. San Jose wu joined by San Francisco and Alameda in lrrt when the fl.rat appellate ruUna was challenged in the state Supreme Court. Ttae Supreme Court overturned the appellate ruling in April, 1980. ~ The ease waa then retu~ to the 4th DLstrict Court of Appeal fo r further consideration, that ruled Dec. 1 that the initiative ordinance discriminated acainlt the developer. If the state Supreme Court a~rees to bear tbe case the initiative reaooing the property to single family development will remain in effect unW a ftDa1 decision is made, said ca.ta Mesa city attorney Tom Wood. Wood aald be b concerned tbat the city's poslUon in retard to • $10 million lawsuit filed by Amel could be weakened if the eua continues mucb loncer. "The IJOnaer time it takea the 1areater the potential ot cSQi..-- tbe develeper could seek," aald ·Wood. "We would be foollab to close our eye1 to it." . 'Dial-A-Bide fare increases aUtlWrized · · But county transit district officials -hesif3:11~ about implementing bOosts~ r f H I() I\ ( . 11\ N ll I\ H '( 11 I '111. ORANC.ECOUN TV CAL lfORNIA 25 CENrS \ • . Male jobless rate at post .. war high WASHINGTON CAP) -The nation's unemployment rate· 1ur1ed to 8 .8 percent ln December al Jobleuneaa amOC11 adult men, bilt.ortcally the moet stable element of the labor force, set a post·World War II record, the Labor Department reported today. The Bureau of Labor Statlatics said the half.a.percentage-point jump -from 8.4 percent to 8.9 percent ~erall -left-close to 9.5 million Americans out of . work as the economy plunged into a deepenlna recession. The aiency aald the number of "discouraged workers" rOle by about lS0,000 in the fourth quarter ol 1981, to 1.2 million, the bl&hest level recorded since the government began keeping those statistics ln 1970. Discouraged workers are classified as those who report to government surveyors that they want to find wort bul.hava etven. up the search in fuUlity. Discouraged workers are not counted in the department's WIND DAMAGE · -Heavy winds toppled a 40-foot sign advertising the Huntington Center Car Wash late Thursday night. No injuries were reported. but damage was overall unemployment fisure. The rate In Calllornia al.lo wu up significantly, from 8.2 percent to 8.9. Black unemployment reached 17 ·' percent Jut IJlODth, another post·war record. Department analysts said the overall jobless rate last month approached the 9 percent bip lo May 1975, toward the end of a months-long recenion brought on by the Arab oil embareo. If unemployment exceeds 9 percent -as many private economlJlts predict 1t wlll this year -it will reach the bilbest level alnce the eoveinment be&an keeping month-to.month fleures in the late lNOa. At tqe White Houae, deputy press secretary LarTy Speakes noted that the adm(nlstratlon expected a rise in unemployment but added that "we anticipate that at the end of th~cond quarter our programs will begin to work and that w~ will see an upturn in the overall econ')my." ..., "" ..... .., PWtdl O'.,_. estimated at $10,000. Car wash is located at 16061 Beach Blvd., in Huntington Beach. Strong winds rip roofs, twirl cars High, windS to ease On coaJJt lay Tlte Aaaoda~ Presa Cold winds strong enough to twirl a car around on the freeway and rip roofs off several houses continued to blast through Southern California today, but forecasters say they expect the gusts to ease tonight. The National Weather Service said winds were up to 75 mph this morning at Mt. Laguna, above Pt. Mugu Naval Air Station, where President Reagan takes off and lands when be is visiting his Santa Barbara County ranch. Winds up to 60 mph slashed through Riverside and San Bernardino on Tbu.rsday, ripping the roofs off several houses and shattering windows in a wide swath. •'They will be al strong today," said Pat Roe, weather specialist with the National Weather Service. "In San Diego County, they will be even stronger than they were yesterday. It will be very dangerous for vehicles in some areas." As two more semi-trailers overturned on Interstate IS north ol ..Fontana this morning, the California Highway Patrol began stopping trucks traveling tn that direction and detouring (see -WINDS, Pase At>--. ~ -. . -- t J --• Z -, r lmlfCUIT 1111111 -~ ., ........ , a =w.ta=. II ............. A .... Trees hit, signs-toppled, fires fueled by Santa Anas Chilly Santa Ana winds that snapped trees, toppled signs, fueled fires and caused a rub ol power outages along the Orange Coast Thursday are expected to let up late tonight. The brisk winds, gusting up to 30 mph a long the coast and reaching speeds of 50 mph in canyon areas, are predicted to diminish and give way to fair weekend weather. In Mission Viejo Thursday evening, firefighters said the stiff winds hampered efforts to extinguish a fire in a two-story commercial structure. The fire, they repo rted, caused $350,000 In damage. In Huntington Beach, a large sigJl outside a car ·wash near the intersection of Beach Boulevard and Edinger Avenue was toppled by the chilly gusts. Workmen in nearly all of the Orange Coast cities rtpor).ed trees bad been snapped by the winds. I n Huntington Beach, city• )VOrkmen said several 30-foot trees were uprooted in the city's Central Park. At least two other trees were snapped, falling on cars. "'there wasn't any substantial damage,'' observed Daryl Smith, Huntington's superintendent of city landscaping. "A few bent hood s and a ltttle scratched paint." , A two-car accident on the Santa Ana River bridge between Huntington and Newport Beach also was being blamed on the wind. Callfornia Highway Patrol officers said the Thursday mornlni aceldent was caused Repair work to cw•e ramp Caltrant offici als bave announced repair. on the southbound Santa Ana Freeway offramp leadin1 to the southbound Costa lleaa Freeway ~ Cl\&H t.be ramp to be closed to traffic durln1 eventns boun. A Caltrana apolteamao said work would bealn Ju. 25 udl conUnue unU1 April 2. Tbe rampl will be c&oled between~ boun · of I p.m. and 5 a.m. weekdays. Wort crews wW be lnltallinc new barrier rall and alao widealal tbe ramp. Coat of U. project la •• ooo. o.to.&ri ril be Ht up aloq Newport and1 lld'adden avenuea •b•n U..1 ramptldoMd. when a }.)-loot-tong board was blown off a pickup truck, landing in front of an oncoming car. The motorist, 20-year-old John AnastasaJds of Costa Mesa, hit his brakes to avoid -slamming into the board and swerved in front of another car, driven by 29-year-old William John Vasko of Newport Beach. Anastasakis suffered head injuries and is reported in good condition at Hoaa Me morial Hospital. Vasko was treated and released from the hospital's emergency room . Southern Cklifornia Edison officials, meanwhile, reported the gusts caused a sprinkling of power outages throughout the county. Along the Orange-Coast, Edison officials said the outages affected few customers and power was restored qulcldy. No power lines were downed, they said. In Newport Harbor, where the winds were clocked at 30 mph, several boats were swung free from their moorings but were quickly retrieved. The brisk gusts, the National Weather Bureau said, have been chilled by a cool air mass that has shifted west from the Rocky Mountains. Temperatures along the Orange Coast Jiave betn reaching a daytime high of about 60 and dropping into the low 40s at night. In the canyon areas, weather officials said, the mercury dropped Into the upper 30s Thursday evening. Mom thanks friends of mo-ped victiin By PIDL SNEIDERMAN O( ... Delly ....... It was the last day of 1881. Ron Thomas, a 18-year-old Huntington Beach youth, wu awakened at 8:30 a .m. by a phone call from bis &irlfrienc\i Jade DeWeUes. It was a school boUday, and ahe urged him to vialt. But be told her be wanted to spend tbe morning looking for a job or picking up a new brake cable for bis mo-ped. Anyway, tbe two would be lo1ether \bat ru.-it, celebrattns ·New· Year'i -Eve at Knott' a Berry Farm. He wu cleanlna bb room that morniq when bJa motber left GD a trip to the poet oftlee. WI-. she retuned '5 minutes later, abe learned be was dead. Accordinl to police, Ron wu rldtna b1a mo-ped lo the rain · south OD Beach Boulevard near Garfield Avmue at lO:JO 1.m. Offleera Hid be skidded into lb• tide of a .outbbound tract«•traller rt1, fell bmeatb the truck wheels and di~ lutantly. ! In a matter of momenta, ._ Tbomu, a =r routU. VaU.1 lllCb J_.. w11o loYM to plaJ Yldeo lllDel iilll all ~H of •Porta •: b... bed beeoln•... . ID the record boob of tlat ffu•tl•1toa Beaell Polle.- Department, Ronald Scott Thomas, 16, is listed as the city's 28th -and last -traffic death of 1981. But in the memories of the family and friends who loved him, Ron Thomas wUI always be .a kind-hearted teen·a1er who had a good sense of humor and lots of friends, wbo preferred athletics to schoolwork aDd wu 1ood with children. • Hla family was moved when '50 people crowded into a service for Roa on Wednesday at tbe Bethel Baptist Church ln Santa Ana, tndudlng about 850 youn1 people. The funeral proc:eaalon was aald to bave been 1 mUe Ion&. ''Tbey all tokl me they lowd blm," saSd Ron's . mother, Jan Tbomu. "The turnout wu so unbeUevable. I'm 1Ull ln lboct." Tbe cau1e of Ron's acddent remalm a mystery. Pollet said the truclE drlff!' was not at fault. Illa family aakl the)' do not know ~•re he wu beacllq when tbe crub ocewnd . "We don't know lf be Jutt couJcm"t stop," bla motber U.4: ••ee bad tofcl my soo=tn·law 1da mo-ped't brakes weren't worklDC <-•ell. We doa't e-.en lmOw if be ... tbe truck. . . It Ron WH aot wearl•• a ...... , Ud Ill• f .... , ... frtenda ••1 U laad aeyer occuned to tit•• lllat Ree ( ... SPD YICl'I•, ..... He said the admlnlatraUon bu confidence "our programs wi1I work." In the past, administration offic ials have said r iain1 unemployment ls the price the nation mu.st pay for bringing down double-digit Inflation. Since July, the department said, more than 2 mllllon Americans have been thrown out of work and the unemployment rate hAs shot up almost 2 full percentage points. In December 1980, the unemployment rate wa1 percent. The hlcheat poat-Great Depression annual rate of u_nemployment, before maatbl,.- figurea were 'complied, wu a t .T percent jobless rate in lMl. which eased 1ubatantlall1 durin1 World War II. The all·time bJ1b waa tbe M.f.: per cent annual rate o unemployment reelstered la 1933, during the depths of tbe Depression. _ AT&T antitrusi 1 suit settled after 7 years •• WASHJNGTON CAP> -The Justice Department announced today a settlem e nt of its 7-year-old antitrust suit against American Telephone & Telegraph Co. that wj lJ require the telecommunications giant to give up its 22 local operating companies within 18 monUus. The agreement forbids the loca i co mpan ies fr om discriminating against Bell competitors In providing equipment, services and planning of new facilities. The seWement allows AT&T to continue to run it.a nationwide long-distance telephone service. The Bell System also wlll retain its main subsidiaries; Bell Telephone Laboratories and Western Electric. The agreement also allows AT&T to provide telephone e quipment for cus tomers , including that now furnished by local Bell comp..-.I•. The Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co ., which serves parts ol the Oranse Cout.. was amo""c.~ companies affected. I n a d ·v a n c e o f t b e announcement, trading In ·the sto~ of AT&T and related companies was baited on the New York Stock Exchange. Trading was also halted in the stock of .lnternatlonaJ Business Machines Corp., the target of the federal government's other major pending antitrust case, imm edi ate l y p romptine speculation among analysts that a de velopment in that case might be imminent. IBM spokesmen declined comment and the exchange said it did not know the nature of the pending development. Sources at the company said a major development was imminent. Assistant Attorney General William Baxter, in charge of the department's antitrust division, and AT&T Chairman Charles Brown scheduled a news I co nf e r e nc e to "d iscuaa developments In the case." The department declined to' say in advance of the news conference what the substaDqt . of its announcement would be . ..; . But one official said It wouJt be "very imPOrtant." The administration dlsclOMd Dec. 31 that It was negotialinl a settlement with Bell Telephone. A major antitrust suit to bl'ealD up the Bell System wu flied by the Ford administration la November 1974, and the trial iD the case, in receaa over the Christmas-New Year's holiday, bad been due to resuine Tuesday. The Justice Department"i disclosure Dec. 31 that it was s e e k i n g a s e t t I e m e Q-t represented a sharp ch101e from the department's poaiU. immediately after PresideDt Reagan t90k office a year qo . .-.\ The department bad abandoned previous nuottatW. beeun-by the CarteJ adminisU.tion and BUter said be intended to punae the cue a court ''to the eyeballs." , However, offlclala Jn th• deparlmE!ftla of Commeree ancJ Defense reportedly ur1ed Reagan to resume negotiatiom because they felt that brealtlJaa. up AT&T would hurt the natioo'a cQm municationa system la wartime or national emer1eocy. On the side of the telepbooe company, there have ~eeD reports that AT&T was woniecl it might lose in court and 11@1 forced to divest itself ol major portions ol the company. Tax break ruled . .; BULLETIN WASHINGTON CAP> ~ Internal Revenue Service p1.,. to allow lax-exempt at.atua i, private schools tba~ discriminate aeatnat blacka, according to governmen~ documents filed today with • , Supreme Court. Or9f9t CoMt DAILY PILOT/Friday, Janual)' I . ~182 UP. 4.75 If you mUJt sell your bome in today's depreued real est•te market, why not srab all the adv&otaa• of a "trade-in?" It's commooplace procedure with the family car, so why not with the family bom•T Under this arrangement, a broker buys your boule, thus Civinl you the equity to buy another home. Slnce the sale and a quick buy really comblne two transactl1>ns, many Umin& problems usually associated with bomea are eliminated. For all concerned, a trade-in can have many advantages. Jn use are three different types of trade-ina: l ) Under the "outriebt trade-in," ~ the broker buys your house outright, ·and you apply the equity •. ':" ~r~~,~~~~:t ~o!>::'. IYlllA Plml ~~ This is like an .;J.. exchange, since the two transactions are completed simultaneously. For the seller, it's the best arrangement; you're relieved of owning two houses at the same time. From the broker's viewpoint, an outright trade-in is the most risky; it should be used only in a much stronger market than today's, when the broker won't be stuck with the house. Jf the property represents a 1ood long-term !nvestment and the bi:oker is wUµog ~put (Doney into the house, lhis trade-in Is attracUve. New-home builders alao may like such trade-ins, since they a.re prepared to carry an inventory of houses anyway. 2) Most frequently used is the "guaranteed trade-in'' plan. The broker is liven a s~ified time period in which to sell the house at an aereed·upoo price, explains Prentice-Hall. If the broker is successful, the homeowner gets the entire price, less broker's commission, even if it is more than the price agreed upon. If the bouae doesn't sell, the broker buys It at a slightly lower price to compensate him or her for the risk and expense of carrying the property unW it finally is sold. , . For you, the homeowner, the deal works out so you are assured the minimum price for the house by the time title to the new house muat be taken. Tb.as • • you are relieved of some of the pressures of timing. The broker assumes a condlUonal obligation, but in most cases will not be uked to fulfUJ IL U you, the homeowner, need immediate cub, the broker can arrange tO advance the guaranteed amount (to be repaid wltb. interest). In tb.b way, yoa are actually in the same position as if there bad been a direct trade-in. 3) 'nle "conttnient trade-in" combines an ~lion agreement on l.M Old hoUR a.Da,.a. conditional ule ol the new OIMf. Tbe two contract.I ol sale are 41xecuted simultaneodSty, with the contract for the purcbaae ol your new home conditioned UPQ(l the resale of the oJd one within a set period. It the broker ia unable to complete tbe resale in time, both contracts are canceled. Si.pee the broker doesn't have to tie up any working capital, the arrangement is beneficial The success of a contingent trade-in depends on the willingness of the seller of the new house to tie up bis or her capital for the option period. But u Prentice-Hall says, the seller or the new home can· limit his or her obligation to keep the property available by providing that the conditional contract may be terminated upon so many days' written IJOlice. I \