HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-01-11 - Orange Coast PilotI
I
.JIUlll CUil
Lease
solution
urged
By STEVE TIUPOU
Of .. DellY,... IWt
Homeowners who live on land
leased from the Irvine Company
bav·e demanded specific
solutions, ranging from a freeze
on lease payments to an option
to p .. rchase their land with
no-interest financing, to their
dispute with the company over
land rent bikes.
More than 1,000 leaseholders
met Sunday and approved the
demands proposed by the
Committee of 40,000, a group
claiming lo represent the
approximat ely 4 ,000
leaseholders affected by the
hikes. .
The leaseholders also heard
details of planned legal action.
and an appeal for substantial
donations from each of them to
fight a legal battle over the
issue. Many left donations
behind as they exited the
~ overflowing main ballroom of
the Marriott Hotel in Newport
Center after a two-hour meeting.
The so-called ''Leaseholder
Bill of Right.a" approved Sunday
calls for:
-All leaseholders to be given
one opportunity to ne1otiate
their future land arrangement
with the Irvine Company.
Me1otiat1011S are to f~u,a on tbe
leaseholder's choice of
maintaining the current
agreement, negotiating new
leases either with improved
terms or equity participation,
purchase of land at a "fair"
1price or a special arrangement
I for financially pressed senior
citizens.
-Independent appraisals of
land values if Irvine Company
figures do not please indivldual1
leaseholders. Once a value for
tbe land is established
leaseholders can elect to sell the
property al that price, with the
proviso that the Irvine Company
must buy the land at that price if
it is not sold within 180 days.
-Land value to be
determined by a formula which
includes the replacement cost of
the buildings and improvements
on it.
-Loans provided by the
Irvine Company for those who
elect to purchase their land
during 11182. The loan! are to be
interest-free and payable in
equal parts over 10 years aft.er a
10 percent down payment. land
to be given tbe choice of two
rental plans . One would
establish 'new 55-year leases
' (See LEASE, Page AZ>
School hit
. by fire in
·e~tington
u ....
BRRRR -Lorey Tam of Essex. Mass .. peeks through a
clearing in a frosted window at Boston's Fanueil Hall
M a rketplace as the season 's coldest temperatures.
combined with numbing winds. hit New England. It' was a
scen e typical or the nation's northern and eastern sections.
caught in the grip of a severe cold wave
SA gang shooting
victim returm home
Xavier Amezcua returned to
h is Santa Ana hom e in a
wheelchair this weekend but
safe from the danger of
deportation.
The 18-year-old yo uth.
paralyzed from the chest down.
the victim or a gang-related
shooting, was discharged from
the rehabilitation unit at UC
Irvine Medical Center.
The youth returned home in
style. He was transported by
members o f the Santa
Ana-based Touch of Class Car
Club and with $2,200 raised from
the community for bis care.
Amezcua and his mother.
Christina Castro, say they are
seekine status as legal residents
in tbe United Slates and because
of their situation, don't expect to
rely on government aid now that
he is out of the hospital.
Last week, Mrs. Castro met
with U.S. Immigration and.
Natur!llization Service officials,
who took no action in their case.
The hearing was required by
Medi-Cal, which paid the bills
for Xavier's extensive medical
treatment . He had been
hospitalized since the July, 1981.
shoot in~.
Philip Smith. assistant district
director for investigations for
the immigration service, said
after the hearing that Xavier
and his mother don't have lo
worry about being deported to
Mexico, where friends say the
pair would be bard-pressed to
survive.
"He's in no immediate danger
of the immigration service
expelling him from the United
States." said Smith.
Fund raising for the youth was
organized by members of the
Ora ng e County Victim's
Assistance Office. Spokeswoman
Jos ie Montoya said efforts will
continue on his behalf.
. . . . . . '
Ylll 11111111 llllY IVll
Deep,. South chilled
by frigid weather
~
By Tiie Associated Presa
An arctic deep freeze that bas
killed at least 27 people and
c aused thousands lo suffer
pushed Into the Deep South
today with the coldest subzero
temperatures of the century in
cities such as ~Uanta.
With temperatures still well
below zero across much of the
nation, nearly 100,000 people In
10 stales were without
electricity and another seven
million endured brownouts
today as hundred~ were forced
to flee their homes when natural
gas lines froze.
A mlnus 26 reading Sunday in
Chicago was the coldest sincf
observers began keeping
records there in 1870, and
Milwaukee's reading of 25 below
lied the record set in 1875.
In Beulah, N.0 ., the wind-chill
index plummeted to 109 below.
Buffalo, N.Y., was virtually
shut down today with 20 inches
of snow falling during the night
and another root expected.
National Guard troops were
called out in Tiffin, Obio,
aceoNlng to Lt. Victor Dublna,
·'to puU people out of homes that
were wit.bout beat."
-It was 5 below zeto tilts
mornl.ng In AUanta and ! below
in Birmingham, Ala., with
Pensacola, Fla .• recording a 10.
The 15 at Houston 'Alas the
coldest there in 30 years. The
Atlanta reading broke the
record low of the 20th 'century
set in 1983.
Augusta, Ga., set ll local
record at minus 2 and readings
of 5 be low were po.led in
northeast Mississippi. I
Temperatures were-in the
'teens across northern Florida
and forecasters said ill will be
even colder tonight.
··People are doing a lot of
praying, basically," said John
L. Jackson Jr., an agricultural
extension agent in citrus-rich
Lake County. Fla.
Blowing snow and biting cold
forced road crews to give up
attempts to clear highways in
South Dakota, Iowa and Ohio.
A combination of the cold snap
and snowstorms have claimed 16
lives since Saturday.
Jeff Behrens. a National
Weather Service forecaster In
Kansas City , Mo ., said
temperatures in the Midwest
and East would keep
Talks stalled '
DENVER <AP > -Oil ,
Chemical and Atomic Workers
Union spokesmen reported no
proaress had been made during
a week e nd of bargaining
sessions with refinery officials
across the nation.
temperatures well below normal
through Thurs~y . He said
temperatures in the South would
begin to moderate Tuesday.
Schools and factories were
closed as far south as Alabama.
Most Iowa lawmakers decided
<See BITrER, Pa1e A.%)
Actor Paul Lynde, .,
master of wit, dead:
OE-AO AT 55 -Actor Paul
Lynde. 55. was found dead in
his Beverly H i lls ho me
Sunday night. a victim of an
apparent stroke.
BEVERLY HILLS <AP> -
Actor Paul Lynde, known t.o
millions of television viewers u
the master of wit on tbe
"Hollywood Squares" gam~
show, bas died or an app..._
stroke, his manager said todaj,
He was 55. !
The manager, Alan David-,
said Lynde's body was found iD
his Beverly Hills home about
9:30 p.m. Sunday by friend.a wtiO
were to have met the actor for
dinner.
Lynde, who was single, ia
survived by a sister, Helen
Lynde, of Los Angeles and other
relatives in Mt. Vernon, Obid, •
David said. •
Funeral services aJ'e pending.
Lynde also portrayed tJte
practical jotester Uncle ~·
on the "Bewitched" TV seri
from 1965 to 1972 and was one
the Kraft Music Hall Players
"The Perry Como Show" al
with such stars as Don Ada
and Kaye Ballard in 1961
1962. He starred in bis own
in 1972. )'
His first major role came "
1954 int.be Broadway producticm
of "New Faces". f
~
i. r ~ Clear skies due
in Orange County
Orange Countians can expect
clear skies through Friday
following Sunday ni~
showers which left a pl
.02 in an mch of rain ln .
parts of lhe county.
Patricia Rowe, of tbe National
Weather Service in Loa An1eles,
said Sunday's driule was
prompted by an offshore
condition in which unstable air
caused a scattering of showers.
She said skies will remain
cloudy through tonight, with fair
weatb~r Tuesday and clear skies
Wednesday through Friday .
There will be a chance or fog or
low c louds along the coast
Wednesday through Friday.
J . Sherman Denny. who
records rain statlsUcs from bil
Huntington Beach home, said
.02 of an inch of moisture
dampened that city late Sunday
and early this morning. .
"It wasn't hardly worth tbe
effort,'' the amateur
meteorol()fist said of the driule.
He said Sunday's raiaa
brou1bt the season total to 5.JI
inches -up from the 1.81 ~
be recorded last year at this
time. ' Inland teinperatures ate
expected to reach 71 on Tuesday
in inland portions of the c:oun~
dipping to .f.8 at n11ht. .
Beach temperatures w
reach a high ol 70 and drop to
in the evening and earlJ
morning hours.
Fire broke out at Stacy
Intermediate School in
HunUncton Beach this mornin&
shortly after classes started, fire
olficlala reported.
'The fire apparently started at
about 8:30 a.m. ln an awe or on
the rool ol t.be acbool, located. on
Larchwood Drive near
Sprln1dale Street, fire olfldals
aald. Wblle the school la ln
Huntlqtcm Beach, it la a part ol
the Wettmi.Dlter School Dlatrict.
Medical1Center, past a~d futur,e lllllil c• IUTlll
Partial clearln1 this
afternoon and tonitbt.
F&ir and mild on Tuesday
wlth Ultle temperature
change. Hl&bs Tuesday in
the 60s. Lowa tonllht 42 to ..
52. Chance ol measurable
rain decreaslnt to 20
percent this afternoon ud
t.onlght and near aero on
Tuesday. DetaU1 were sketchy early
today. Five fire en1lnea and
three trucU with firemen were
battlln1 lb• blaae at t a.m .
today.
"We don't know too much
from the offtce, rlabt now, but it
'°'1nda like it'• a pretty ltnlftl
fire," said Geor1e TruppUU,
deputy Gre.m.vsllal.
"W• baveo't bad any reporte of any lJUuriel," be said.
aopnlstlcated computerl&ed
tomoaraphy head scanntn1
device, or so-called "cat"
scanner, used to dlapose brain
disorders.
It ls somewhat dark and dank
in the old buildiR1, in contrut to
the interior of the 1leamln1
patient tower, where ll ia lltbl' and airy. _
Located between the two
atructuret la the main snedtftl
tenter buUdlq, opened iD •· Until &ut July, when tbe.,....
tower ,. .. opeHd. tbe aiilla
)uU-.,. die IPoR la~
the em1plex, well .talbla ti
motorl1t1 pa11tn1 '' on Ille ""'11ii1Ka Ana J'Nilway ·
01 •'"•Of ... ~ ......
represented a slpillcant step ln
the bist.ory of the medical c.ter
-and attempt.a bJ univenity
officials to up1rade the faclllti
heart ol the new structure.
Four treatment rooms are
de•i&nated ror trauma vlctlms
-thOH, for example, wbo have
Four treatment rooms
desi~ted for trauma vjptims
are
·)1111 11111
Nearl11 a ,.ar a/Cn Uwb'
rtltaH /rom lro11 tM SJ
/ormtr hottO(IH otc. ••UI
leor11t11(1 to Ho• wU~
me~. S. P.-At.
1·
l ~
I
I'
Woman crash-lands plane after husband passes out .
H&NDl:RSON. N.C. (AP) -A
yeU'Old woman untralned in ~flylnt kept a plant alrbomt uaUI abe ran .out ot f\lel, tbea
!'made a routh landlnc after her
pllot·huaband pu1ed out ancl lbe1
!waa unable to hear replln to her
trantlc radio calla for help.
, J anlce Gravely brolrt btr
~pelvla ln the landtnf, but
:a t r u 11 l e d o u t o t h e
;1ln1le-enatne plane and crawled :aoo yards to a farmhouse for
,help, authorities aald.
: Her husband, Edmur\d, tn,
•waa killed, although authortUes 1dld not release the cause of
:death or say whelher be died u
:; result of the Sunday afternoon
:crash.
' Mrs. Gravely was Hated lo ·~atisfactory and stable condition
-with muJUple fractures at Nuh
General Hospital in the couple'•
hometown of Rocky Mount, a
hospital spokesman said.
11• After she brought the Silver
Moonie 20 aircraft down ln a
clearing off an unpaved, rural
Yance COun(y road about 1:30
p.m., Mn. Gravely crawled to
tbe home of J .C. and Lovie
~ones.
' "She was on her knees and
trad her arms up on the porch,"
Jones said. "She looked mighty
tough when we first saw her. My
flrst impression was that she
was drunk. Her hands were
tfloody. She said she needed help
and s he was saying 'Thank
Jesus' that she could find some
kip."
• !. Mrs. Jones said Mrs. Gravely
"waa a fantutlc lady."
•'She wu never in a byaterical
atate. Sbt w11 ln complete
conltOI at aU Umes. Sbo aaid th•
knew her husband w .. dead. She
aald she kriew up In lhe air It
w u her and God. She had
falth."
Gravely and hia wife bad
flown out of the Rocky
Mount·Wilson airport at 10:46
a.m . Sunday and had riled fUfbt
plana for a non-stop .trip to
Statesboro, Ga .. aaid Tim
Trudaeon. an air traffic control
''She knew that her
/husband was
dead.''
specialist at lhti airport. I Gravely "must have known
something was wrong because
he got the plane turned around
and headed for home before he
passed out," said Lt. Col. Jim
Carr of the Civil Air Patrol.
Ernest Grainger, manager or
Columbus County Airport, near
Whiteville, said the woman
made a frantic call for help over
the radio. ·
"She said, 'Help, help, won't
somebody help me. My pilot is
unconscious, won't somebody
help me.' " Grainger said. "You
cou ld tell s h e was really
scared."
The wom~ apparently did not
hear the reJlies, because she
kept changing transmitting'
frequenclt1, said Ma.J. AJ Parker
of the Clvtl AJr Patrol.
Carr said Mra. Gravely kept
the plane airborne for nearly
two houra until she ran out of
fuea.
"She may not have known to
or bow to switch it over to a
second tank," Carr said. "Sbe
rode lt on down to the ground
and mana,ed to pancake it ii)."
S1t. J.W. Prather of the Van~
C}L101ty Sberiff'a Department
aal Mn. Gravely told blm .tter
lbt crub that ahe bad never
pl before. uctceon said Mrs. Gravely
• a rently new a lot with her
b and and may have learned
b •tcblN. ' rr Hid two Civil Air Patrol
pil ts left Raleigb·Durbam
Airport about 2 p.m.to search
for the downed plane and the Air.
Foree ordered other planes to
leave the area.
Police said the plane clipped a
pine tree, about five iDchea in
diameter, which sheared oU lhe
right wing. There was no fire,
said Sgt. W.P. Upright of lhe
state Highway Patrol.
T h e Federal Aviation
Administration planned to
investigate the crash, Upright
said.
Gravely was president of the
Chesapeake Storage Corp. in
Richmond, Va ., president of the
China·America Tobacco Co. in
Rocky Mount, and president of
the Virginia Gazette Inc. of
Williamsburg, Va .• a weekly
newspaper .
Arthritis victim beaten
~ash reportedly taken from Newport Beach woman, 62
'.i A 62-year-old Newport Beach
:o6oman, crippled with arthritis,
'Was beaten in the face this
weekend by a young thug who
fjtoke into her condominium and
~scaped with $2,500 in loot,
ji<>lice~d.
Aleen Welch, who shares her
l'l{ewport Beach residence with
~n 81-year ·o ld femal e
roommate, was in stable
condition today at Hoag
Memorial Hospital.
Police said Mrs. Welch was
sfeeping on a couch in her living
room in the pre·dawn hours
Saturday when the thug woke
her up.
The woman told police she
started screaming and was
slugged two times in the face by
the young crook.
She said the thug -described
,onJ y as having a chubby face -
kept yelling "Shut up, shut your
mouth.'' as he beat her.
Her roommate, Alma Gordon, ,
reportedly slept through the
incident.
Police said tile man grabbed a
purse containing jewelry and 8.!I
Jane Fonda in Newport
Jane Fonda will appear
tonight al 7 at Edwards Newport
Center Cinema for the Oranie
eounty premiere of her new
film. ''On Golden Pond."
,' The event is a fund-raiser for
Che Campaign for Economic
Democracy , the political
o rganization formed by Ms.
tonda's husband, Tom Hayden, rn 1976. ,,
··On Golden Pond" stars
Henry Fonda, Katharine
Hepburn and Jane Fonda, and
will screen at 8 p.m . From 7 to
7:45 p.m., Ms. Fonda will attend
an informal reception for
premiere guests, followed by a
brief address on the making of
the movie.
According to the Orange
County Chapter of the CED,
premiere tickets are sold out.
AP ......
FOLLOWING THE CALL -Dr. Billy Graham congratulates
son William Graham Ill and younger Graham's wife Jane.
after ordaining the 29·year·old William during a 11 2·hour
service at Grace Community Church in Tempe, Ariz.
anttqu'e condu ctor's watch
before he ran out the back door
of the Clubh o u se Drive
condominium, located between
Newport Center Drive and the
Irvine Coast Country Club.
Paramedics, who said Mrs.
Welch must use crutches
because of advanced arthritis,
treated the woman at the scene
before rushing her to the'
h0$pital.
They said her face was badJy
swollen and that her left eye was
completely closed due to the
beating.
From Page A1
BI'ITER •••
to stay hanfe' today and let the
few th>(" could travel to Des
Moines handle the formal
opening of the 1982 legislative
session required by the state
Constitution.
Water pipes were frozen from
Virginia to Illinois and.
firefipters wece hampered by '
frozen hjdrant.s from the Great
Lakes to Sedalia, Mo.
Chic•go kept its buses running
all nlght to avoid trouble
starting them this morning. and
Washington D . C .• kept 250
subway trains runnine around
the clock to keep them warm.
Thous ands of apartment
dwellers in New York Citf and
Chicago complained of no heat.
In Zionville, Ind., where gas
lines froze, authorities ordered
r esidents to abandon 1,000
homes and leave them unlocked
so crews could get in lo light
pilot lights when the gas comes
back on. Police Chief Phil
Parmelee ordered an overnight
curfew to prevent looting.
A shelter was opened at the
Zionsville Middle School for
refugees.
Natural gas supplies were also
threatened in seven
communities in Iowa and in
Atlanta.
Power lines, made brittle by
the cold, snapped in high winds,
leaving customers without
electricity for hours in Virginia,
Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma,
Arkansas, West Virginia,
Wisconaln, Illinois, Kentucky
and lndlaba.
The 'tennessee Valley
Authority, with seven million
customen ln seven states, cut
voltage by 5 percent today
because the demand CiJught the
utility' with three big plants
. down for maintenance.
"The bitter cold with 15-25
mph winds ls placing an
extraordinarily heavy load on
the TVA power system," said
Hu1h Parris, the utility's power
manater. "We have two nuclear '
units and one major coal unit
down."
All but mer,eocy uaffic was
banned J n Ive northern
iiiyfi1at CIHalfled edwefti .... 7141142·M11
AH olhef depertrMn .. 142-4121
Mlchia~tles. , "If keep roing the way
they are, can foresee ua cloeina
down everything," said Robert
Marsbail1 clirector of emer1enc:y aervlces ror Chippewa County.
Temper~res ·dipped into the
mld·2'19 early today in Florida'•
citrus eroves and many erowen
fired up diesel heaters to warm
their crop.
The New York State Thruway
'was cloted in the western part ot
the state .nd tbe lndlana Toll
Road wu abut down acrou tbe
nortbftn ~ ot the state.
J1mu lprans, Mllw1u.lttt
CountJ blcb•ar eqinetr, Mid lt
.WU tqo cold to DMll anow llDd
ice wltb aalt.
'
~"" ........ PROTESTERS More than 1.000 leaseholders
of Irvine Comµany land .1am the Marriott Hotel in Newport Beach lo demand solutions
to sk~ l'()('kel in~ 1>a.v men ts
From Page A1
LEASE CONTROVERSY • • •
with annual rent set al six
percent of half the land's fair
market valu~ the other calls
for a doubling or present rent
plus annual adjustment for
illflation and sharing or profits
from any increas~d value or
property al the lime o ale.
-A freeze on e · ting rents
for all senior c izens and
hardship cases, to remain in
effect until the property is sold.
In return, the Irvine Company
will receive 20 percent of the
sale price of the home.
Louis Scott, .a director or the
committee who has run its
publicity campaign, told the
crowd the Bill of Rights is a
"first step" in their battle over
·the leaseholds issue that "is
credible, has precedent and will 1 be fair.''
Scott described the last 60
days as a formative period for
the committee and said that the
introduction of the Bill of Rights
was the beginning of action in
the fight. He said the committee
has. achieved its early objectives
by bringing lease holders
together, publicizing t heir
dispute and putting the Irvine·
Company on the defensive.
Attorney Raymond lkola, a
partner in a law firm hired by
the committee to pursue legal
action against the I rvine
Company, said lawyers will file
a class-action s uit for the
leaseholders near the end of the
month.
Ikola said the s uit will contend
that the Irvine Company
breached its contract with the
leaseholders, failed to lake
improvements made by the
homeowners into account when
assessing the value of the land
and failed to consider the
residents ' "tangible and
intangible" contributions to the
community, and thus to land
vaJues.
He called large increases in
land rental being proposed by
the Irvine Company, which in
extreme cases multiply the
current rent 40 times, a "time
bomb" built into every lease.
Lawyers will contend that such
a "lime bomb" cannot b e
included in a lease unless the
lessor s pecifically informs
potential lessees that "the bomb
is there ticking year. after year,
after year ... Ikola said.
4 arrested
in Irvine
pot case
Irvine police have arrested
four people on suspicion of
possessi ng 150 pounds of
marijuana valued at $50,000,
police reported.
Narcotics officers say the four
~uspects were arrested al the
Federal Express Co. in Irvine at
10:30 a.m. Saturday after they
allegedly picked up a package
from Michig'n that reportedly
contained the pot.
Officials of the Federal
Express Co. had told police
Friday that the illicit shipment
was arriving. police said. Police
didn't say how the Federal
Express officials knew of the
shipment.
Arrested and charged with
felony possession or marijuana
with intent to sell were Donald
Tune, 47, of Santa Ana; Michael
Nash, Z7, of Huntington Beach;
Ri char d Walke r , 30 , of
Greenville. Mich.; and Clifford
Brainnard, Z7, of Santa Ana.
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ex-newsman
Tom Barley
dead at 54
Form er Orange County
newsman Thomas Barley, 54,
who was serving a prison term
following his conviction or
murdering his wife, died Sunday
at the University or California
Medical Center, San Francisco.
A spokesman at San Quentin
State Prison said death was due
to complications arising fr.om
injuries Barley received Nov. 19
when he was attacked by
another inmate at the California
Men's Colony. San Luis Obi~.
Barley had been hospitalized
since that incident, first in San
Luis Obispo and later in the San
Francisco Bay Area.
Barley was convicted in
Orange County Superior Court of
second-degree murder in the
May, ltn9, slaying of his wife,
Catherine, 46. At the time. he
was on probation for a previous
assault on her.
A spokeswoman at tbe Santa
Ana law offices of Barley's
attorney. Keit.b Monroe, said
funeral arrangements were
pend in~.
Barley was employed at the
Daily Pilot as a reporter at the
time of his wife's murder. He
a lso had worked for the Orange
County Register.
Whales towed
STRAHAN. Australia <AP> -
Fifty beached pUot whales were
lowed out to sea in a two-day
rescue operation at Macquarie
Harbor near this town on the
island of Tasmania, authorities
said today.
We're ExDeris on winter warmth
Fw fllow extra COkl-c1ay,, Hie folowllMJ occ•1torie1 _.. HCestfflff
G~es
A good pair of anti-fog goggles
not only allow you to see while
its snowing but also protects your
face from the cold.
After Ski loots
Nothing feels better than
a warm, oozy pair of
after ski boots after
a day of skiing.
~ Underwear
SUk, Wool or ootton
long underwear layers
underneath your
regular ski clothes to
provide extra warmth .
Mltten.s
With your fingers
together keeping
each other warm
mittens are much
warmer than gloves.
Wool Hats
40% of your body heat
is lost when your
head is not covered .
•
.............. r.-·· ... .... .,." ........... . Tea rift Iii ........... ...
from ......... ~ .... r•••r••4 101 11•·· •••• ,. •m•~tf ca .. 1 . Two art
'"' ........ for olllWrl8 . ••ff• -r eaiH llH untu Nttilw.la!__...n. A1'° IDe all\ .... Oocir' an
Hvta ••• aor ••tr&••c1" room• wnn patleat1 ••"
.u. .... -~ •••ll•Nd rouu...,....., la,_...,
aka tO! a cllit6r11 olflc• Mttlal. Tiier~·· •l•o a eepante •~.-Y ,.. for pediatric ·eu..
Durtaa ' ...i tow' ol lbe ~1 n.m oe a TMlday afternooi all wu quJet,
uncrbanet.llilUcally ao, medlcat,
~..w. . On a .._.DIDl Yiait, an a
l'riday Qlcbl. UM plcture wu far
cllfferent.
The ,,meraency room waa
teemin' with doctors, medleaJ
residents, nunes, paramedics,
ambulance attepdanta, law
enforcement officers -and
pattenta. The walling room waa nearly full. One Hispanlc coup!e
nonchalantly played cards.
Others filled out forms, or bided
their time watching an ove"1ead
color television. There were
fac~ ol despair, otpaln, anx.lety
and boredom. From a treatment
room, a child's scream of pam-
could be heard.
Marcia Shakespeare stood at a
three-window counter near the
door of the waiting room. She
was the evaluating nurse that
particular night, the first heaJth
pY.ofessional to encounter the
arrivals, regardless of whether
they were under their own
power or wheeled in on an
ambulance stretcher.
TACOMA, Waah. (APl -All
teach.Ing of theories about the
orleln of man !hs b een
suspended in Clov6r Park School
District because of a federal
court r:ufulg in Arkan.us a8alnal
creationism. -
Su p.er in t-endetl t Robert
Chisholm ordered the halt to
give school lawyers time to
review the matter. The district's
pollcy required secondary
students be taught the theory of
creationism alongside the theory
of evolution.
Kathleen Taylor, director of
the ACLU in Seattle, threatened
to sue if the district refused to
alter its policy, which was
adopted in 1977.
raewu. .. 11ne u ... aw Mli "'tM ,__. quarten .
DepHdlDI OD lb• •oath, bet•-5,000 ADd t.000 pertClal
come tbroqb tbe •••1.ney
room, autterm, ev•l'JtlalM from
bead eoidl to paeumoala, hm
small outa to .. ~ llmbl.
purtna bollday periods,
emer.-c1 room UM IM ........
Tb• Cbrlstm11-Hew Year'•
perlo4 ta tbe bu1f11t, Ka.
Boll ... said •
Tbe lecoad floor ol tbe new
patleat tow• II rNtrVed for
obatetrtca aad ., .. co&otleat
c ..... nu.•bedl.
lllcbael DebUeus, ualltaat to
William Gonaalu1, lbedlcal
cent ... director, MiCf t.be facWty
ta bandlln.r more· tban 4,000
de1ivetje1 anaU&lly. That•• up
from 2,500 blrtba anly ftve yean
a10.
"Al far u we're ooncerned,
there's a baby boom," Deblieux
•ald.
Medical center offlclala aod
Stanley van den Noort, dean ~
the UC Irvine Collete of
Medicine, point with
understandable pride t1> the
fadllty'a OB,YYN degJrtlllent.
'l'lte rate of stillbirths, van den
Noort said in a l'eeftt interview,
bas declined from 50 per 1,000 a
few years ago, to 11 per 1,000
today.
"We are a hlgb-rtak (patient)
center for dellverles fn the
county. We're kind of running a
Cadillac obstetrics unit." he
said.
Like all floors in the new
tower, the OB-GYN unit is for
movement of patients, the other
side for movement of medical
personnel -a layout designed to
reduce foot traffic and
commotion in hallways near
patients' room.
DISPARATE STRUCTURES -Recently opened
$15 million patient tower and aging. tri-level
building that once was county·s alms-house
form UC Irvine Medical Center.
It's not .freezing here
Cotutal
Extended
f orecaat
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• Orange Co..e DAILY PtLOT/Monday, January 11, 1112
LIFE-IAVING EQUIPMENT -Pat Bolleson.
head nurse in tt\e too.·rated emer~en~\' room
..., .... ~-.~O'--
al UC Irvine Medical Center checks one of
four treatment areas for trauma patients.
Three corridors link the
patient tower with the older east
buUdina. And though the main
building ls onJy llJ years old, one
sense~ a niebt ~nd day
difference when walking •11to it
after being in the tower.
In the main building si(DI of
age and use are evident. Much
of the "hospital green" paint Is
faded or marred. Trim and
doors are distressed. 'l'Jle Is
well -worn and cracked .
Quarters are cramped.
The main building is dut for a
multi-million dollar renouUon.
Five -bed wards wi ll be
converted into three-bed wards.
Operating rooms will be
remodeled; laboratory space
will be expanded. Pediatric
wards will be consolidated. The
work , which began in
mid-December, will cost about
$6 million.
All of this, officials say 1 will
improve and streamline patient
care and benefit a wide •ariety
or unique and special programs.
The medical center, for
example, has the only center ln
the county for advanced
treatment of bums. It operates
one of the county 's two
state-designated centers ror the
treatment or critically Ill
newborns, such as those Infants
born prematurely.
There's a cenler in which
sleep disorders are studied, a
regional poison control center, a
special surgical uqit for
reimplantation o( severed Umbs
and an artifici•J pancre,. unit,
one of the few i1' U\e u .S. '
·Early next year, construction
will begin on a medical library
for use by medical studmts and
the other health professionals
associated with the medical
center and the medical school.
located in Irvine 13 miles away.
Tt\e library, officials said, will
be (he first componellt in a
modular clinical facility that
eventually will include buildings
not only for patient services but
a I so for instructional and
research programs .
Reflecting on the a111ount of
ongoing construction and the
shift from the new, medical
center administrator Deblieux
observed, · · 1 guess you ~ould say
we're going through puberty
right now."
If that's the the case, the
medical center haa had a long
childhood. ,
Orange County government's
first attempt to care for the
impoverished oc:currff in 1891
when two beds ln the county jail
In Santa Ana were set aside for
those with no means or
providing for themselves.
Only uncemplicated cases,
however, were handled at the
jaiJ,hospUal. Persona requiring
more intensive treatment were
transported to a hospital in Los
Angeles County.
In 1885, two beds in a Santa
An a house were set aside for
county patients; in 1903, a
six-bed hospit.aJ was opened at
Sixth and Spurgeon streets in
Sa9ta Ana's old downtown. It
also was designated the county
almshouse.
Nine years later, in 1912,
leaders of the growing county
successfull)' sponsored a $60,000
bond issue for purchase of a site
and cons truction of a larger,
combined, almshouse and
hospital.
Later purchased was a 72·acre
parcel along what ls now The
City Drive near the
Orange-Anaheim boundary.
That site became the location
for tlte JS·bed column-frol'\ted
hospital building that remains in
use today.
County government by the
1930s managed to get out or
q operating a portion of thA
facility as an almshouse.
And, the county succeeded
later in getting out of th~
hospilal business. ·
In 1976, after more than two
years of negotiation, the Oraqe
County Medical Center. as the
facility was then named, wu
sold to the University of
California for $8 million.
The saJe, at the time, seemed
a logical evolution of a 1968
agreement whereby medical
students received training at the
county-owned hospital.
The sale relieved tbe county ~ a multi-million doUar financial
burden. More than $50 million ~
uncollected accounts existed at
the time or the sale. And
transfer of the center to ~
u n i v er s it y p u t a n en d f 9
repeated investigations of ~~
facility by-county grand juri~
-investigations that ofttP
resulted in harsh reporta ~
left county officials
embarrassed and defensive.
And, the university acquired
what it wanted -a teaching
hospital it could caJl its own.
{
Mike Wall<ice slurs
allegedly on tape ·~
LOS Al'fG~ES (AP> -~ SjlD Diego savings and loan company
allegedly has a tape of television
reporter Mike Wallace making
racially disparaging remarks
while interviewing an official at
the financial institution.
newspaper reports say.
Wall ace ls reported to have
made the comments while
talking about the problems of
low -income persons
understanding complicated
loans and lie~ according to an
article in th~ Los Angeles Times.
The show, taped in March and
aired in November, dealt. with
the problems of a bl•ck and a
Latino in California wbo faced
foreclosures after signing
contracts for expensive air
conditioners without reaJizln•
they had put their homes up for
collateral. san· Diego Federal made a
settlement for nearly $1 million
after a state attorney general's
complaint regarding the saJes
practices of Trane Co., whoH
contracts the loan company was
carr)'ine.
"You bet your ass they ( ~
cdntracta> are hanl to read . . :
. il you're reading them over tl\e
watermelon or over the tacos,'~·
Waltace reportedly said to a vice
president of San Diego Federal
Savings and Loan when C~
cameras were off. •l The bank, however, i~
reported to have had freelan~
cameraman Jim Schock of San
Rafael recording the interview.
for the bank. Schock reJ>Orted.'1
kept the loan company earner•
on during the incident, and th~
company is said to have ~
tapes ~r lock and key.
The newsman told tl\e
newspaper the remarks th
quoted Kim as sayine we
"close" to accurate a
captured some of the "flavor.''
"Look," be said. "I happen
have a penchant for obs
and for jokes , . . anybody wbo
knows me, J'm afraid, kno1"
that I do ethnic jokes and I do
obscenity from time to time. ·
He said that even thou8h be ia
Jewish be tells Jewish Joltes.
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We're Listening •••
'"""""' TllMeV.....,
Tllet'f'l\81 Ton-.
" . as s ...... n A
PAM AMllatCAN
Ac.,..1ee 14 n ..,..... "n ..,_.. 71 .. cw-.. .. 71 o.Mllla•• •1 • 0........ .. " Ml¥1M n., 11:.....-.. n ... .....,, • t1
MerlM II •
Mallk•otY n •
our hooded lambeuczdti
s~tshirt .. .'
..
Soviet Union'• Loov once p;in of near'bfl Polaial
-llMCW&NW-U ..................
LVOV. u.u.a. -TIU oN ..... putolMarbJ ...... --• ..,.., ot ,... to • ..... .
You CM 1DMt a joanWllt wtW
wUl I.at. ta. polltrJ ot Walt
Wlaitmm ad rud to JOU from a
MatorJ booll telUD1 bow tbe a ... 1w ,..,_. a deelalve role
la tbe U.S. a.u War.
Yoa ea walk up1tain It tbe
loeal "Offtnn Club," put a but ot Vladlmlr I. Lea1n. ud
.tew a lllm IMrt about a •
fellow 1'bo nluctutlJ NIU a
brot.bel ud pl'Oll DI• mant~e tq one of the women. Jt a
definitely not revolutionary.
You can walk into a cathedral
around tbe corner from tbe
.lfuaeum ot Athelam and watch
-.i old woman fold a copy ol a
newspaper extollln1 Soviet
President Leonid I. Brealmev.
Then abe puts the paper on the
ftoor ud lr:neela oo it to pray.
ID the cathedral, if -out of
habit -~ put your bands in
your pockets or link them behind
your back, a workman in bla
dirty cWhtn1 m.llht ato~ •inliDI
tbe Ht.any -everyone knows it
by heart -to tell you you're
be1n1 disrespectful.
' A larte lf'OUP of women and a
few men press their noses
a1a1J¥1t a store window to watch a new shipment of sweaters
being unpacked by a
.aaleawoman, surrounded by a
larse crowd atrainiDg to buy the IQOda.
tons Jines form in stores at 6
p..m_.eury Diehl as shoppers
line up for butter; there ls little
---
but ....._. in the state it.or.
aellln1 meat and by late
afternoon a vllltor to tbe ltete
ve•etable store flDdl produce very apane.
Aa In lloeeow, a far ~
variety _. ...... supply ol meat
ud ':.+ Pahlee II foe sale at tbe
farmers martr.t wbere proftta
10 to tbe power ot tbe food and not the state. .
Throqbout tbla old city ot
100,000 a vlaltor encounten a
curious fascination wltb and
auapldCG ol tbinls foreisn.
A Japanese camera b.anstnl
from an American's neck la the
object of lClftl, bard stares CG the
street. Teen·acen crowd into a
atate·run seeond-band stwe to
ogle Western cameru and llaten
to music blutlnl from a foretan
tape player. One aucn apparatus
was sellln1 for 1,600 rubies
$2,240, 80 percent of the average
Soviet worker's yearly salary.
Try to snap a picture of a
pedestrian and he's more likely
than not to tum the other way.
Try to take a photograph of
something as s eemin1Py
inconsequential as shoppers in
the farmer's market and the
policeman posted there will tell
you to put your camera away -
fast.
There is a curious mix of
warmth and suspicion displayed
toward foreigners as wen.
• • Wbat a Meuutul room/' a
Wet.._ Nmai'ted to a plump
ml4'd1•.,ed womaa ••..,,._
UPGD •~a C~le restaurant la Ua• local IMMI ~b1re a vl1ltta1 dele1at1on
•laJed. "And not mef" the woman r•poaded With a laueb.
Lats, tbe W•tera Ylllt.or aDd
two companlw strolled tM dt1
ud atiopped bJ ID olftc. .....
~ ...... buq. Tbe villl.on
were Mablequeatly introdueecl to
two 8oftet CtU.U, tre .... '° a rouad ol drlnU, takm to 'ft.Im
· tectm Ml'l• and tbeD ~ to
the bar for Jet another louM II
drinks.
T-e same Digbt, tblnl• were
leas frtendly. The vlalton were
followed by two men for more
than an hour u they walked
down dark dty streets llateDIDI
to tb story of a youni woman
en1,1ed in a bouaing dispute
witb local autboriUes.
Lqcal offlciala say dlaputes
hardly ever bappen in Lvdv. M
elsewhere in the Soviet Union,
much la done to impreaa
forelpers with the happy life ol
the local people.
Fqreip visitors can hear a
"bero worker" stand up at a
new• conference sponsored by
the local trade union and say ol
tbe years before Soviet
annexation of Lvov in 1939:
"11remember the days under
Poli~ domination quite well.
The Ukrainians are happy
peopJe, but I don't remember
anyone singing folk songs back
then."
Mq1t of the Poles ·vbo did not
flee do their -aingiftl in tbe
church.
HAITIAN CAMP -U.S. Sen. Daniel Patrick
Moynihan, D-N. Y., foregound center, Sen.
Alfonse M. D'Amato, R·N.Y .. second from
..........
right, and Mrs. D' Amato leave Haitian
refugee camp. at Juana Diaz, Puerto Rico
ctfter speaking to refugees about their stay.
Refugees get second chance
Poles living in Austria urged to seek political asylum
VIENNA, Austria (AP> -The
military crackdown in PoJand
bas given thouunds of Poles
living illega?ly in Austria a
second chance to seek political
The Interior Ministry reported
only 10• Po?ea applied for
asylum between Dec. 23 and
Jan. 3, a low two-weelr total.
Should I go back out of IUilt?
You cannoLe.at Ir.om. guilt. You
cannot work from guilt.
Finn's condition. exaggerated?
asylum.
Austrian officials are bracinl
for a Oood of applications from
many of the estimated 20,000 to
30,000 unreaiatered Poles livinl
in this small Alpine country.
"But when word gets around
more, the Austrians are •lain
going to have a 19t of asylum,
seekers on their hands," said
Ba?ko. .
Artur Smigielaki and other
Poles who 1athered at a police
station one recent morninc to
seek refufee status also
predicted large numbers would
do Ukewilein the near future.
"Word will get around more,
but right now a lot of us atilt
aren 'l so wi?ling to believe
Austrian announcements."
Tb~ military move in Poland
brought an end to a heated
political debate in Austria over
whether Poles fleeing woneninl
economic conditions at home
should be granted refugee status
and given fmanc'al support by
the Austrian government.
"The figures don't abow it yet.
but we expect them to be much
Invsco official says magazine article included errors
CHICAGO CAP> -'•Nu meroua er rora and
mistakes" appear in a Fortune
ma1u1ne article that reported
American Invsco Corp., a
Chlcaeo-bued real estate eiant. ·
was aellinc properties to pay at
least $20 mlUion in overdue
mort1a1e installments, a
company olftciai says.
The story exag1erated
American lnvsco's debt to two
banks and erred in reportiq
tbat one bank bad aasumeCI
manaaement of tbe firm,
accordinl to David Varner, vice
president of corporate
communications for the firm.
Meanwhile, Evancelloe
Gou?etaa Carey, wbo founded
the condominium-conversion
company with two of her
brotben in 1989, declared that if
she were ... running lnvaco abe
wou?d "sue Fortune" for the
article.
Mrs. Carey, wife of New York
Gov. Hugh Carey, made the
atatement Pate Put week just
before her husband gave a
speech to the New York State
A1riculturai Society in Albany.
In its account, Fortune quoted
"a Chicagoan close to tbe
company" as p?aeinc lnvaco's
mortgage arrean at $20 million,
and said the debt la srowinl at a
rate of $5 million a month.
lnvaco now owes its four
biggest creditors at leut SM2
million, Fortune said, includinl
$175 milllCG to $200 mllHon t.o
Continental Illinois National
Bank le Trust Co .• $100 mllllon to
Chemical Bank in New Yon, S30
mWJon to • million to Cbue Manhattan Bank in New York
and $37 million to San
Francisco's Bank of America.
The magazine said
Continental llll.nols, the nation's s~ventb-lar1,eat commercial
bank, has virtually taken control
of IDvaco and ls pwshlnl a p?an
that woold let lnvsco meet ita
debts oo an extended payment
schedule without filing for
bankruptcy.
"U Fortune is claimin1 that
Continentai Bank is running
American lnvsco, that's false."
Varner said.
In a prepared statement
released tut week. Varner Mid.
NEW MEMBER SPECIAL
m£•-l1Sl llM.llL.a.
e Rnl&T•
ilClldes:
• FIHAEmlCS
(DelipMfortM
~tureWoman>
• . lllt & lltrtlllul
ltlmn
• C.llvasclls FttllSs
"The company confirms that hi1her in the next few weeks,"
statement issued yesterday by said Gabriel Neucebauer, a
Contiaental Illinois BanJt that spokeswoman for the Interior
the amount of American MJnistry.
In v •co • s outs tan din I In a surprise reversal of
indebtedness to it is 'only a policy, the ministry on Dee. 28
small fraction of the amount waived the requirements lb.at
"I always thought I was 1oin&
to 10 back," said Smieielski, 28,
who bu been working ille&aily
in Austria for nearly a year.
''Now it doesn't seem sensible.
stated in the article.' Poles bad to apply for uylum
"In addition, .. he said, within the first two weeka of Bay of ~,.8 ve•.a ''Fortune also grossly their arrival. a. ae ~
overstated tbe corporation's "I'm urging aU Poles I talk to
indebtedness to Chemical to register themselves Open training
Bank." immediately," said Andriej A 1 pokes w om an for Balk 0 • direct 0 r 0 f t be MIAMI (AP) -Although their Cont~tal Illinois who asked Po?ish·American Emigration first attempt at an invasion
that her name not be used said and Relief Committee, wbicb ls fizz?ed on the shores of Cuba,
P'ortwle's figure of at Peut $175 s up p 0 rte d by the u . s . veterans of the Bay of Pigs
million owed to her banJt by government. fiasco have opened another new
lnvaco was "such a gross "It may be the only chance t r a in in g c a m P for
exa1geratlon that we feel they have to make their status anti·communist commandos
compelled to set the record legal." near Miami.
straight." But Balko said be interviews About a> men clad in combat
She flid the actual debt wu dozens of Poles daily in bis fatigues stood at attention as the
only rt small fraction of that cramped office, and moat of Rev. Jose Ramon O'Farrlll
amount, but refused to Jive a them take a "wait-and-see presided over a benediction.
figure. attitude." • The camp, one of six reported
Invaoo ls the nation's ?argest Some are waitinl to see what in the Dade County area, is
conve~r of rental properties to w ill happen in Poland, be sponsored by Bri1ade 2S06, an
condoilliniums, havinc sold exp!ained, while others believe organization formed by Cuban
more 1tban $800 million in t be Interior M in is try exiles who participated. in the
con4olllinlum apartments in announcement was a trick to Bay of Pigs landing in Cuba in
As increasing numbers of
Poles arrived in 1981, public
opinion began to tum against
them.· ·
Although Austria Is the
traditional country of asylum for
East Europeans, increasing.ly
bitter complaints were beard
about the thousands of Potes
flooding into the employment
market and the government's
es timate that the refugee
program w as going to coat $50
million this yeu:.
Austrian leaders, complaining
of a lack of beip from other
European countries in absorbin&
the Poles, imposed a visa
requirement on Polish travelers
for the first time in nine years.
The imposition of martial Paw
in Poland touched off a wave ol
s ympathy for the Po?es.
Campaigns to collect food and
other supplies for Poland were
started. Politicians said any
Poles who could gel out of their
country were welcome in
Austria. The asylum regulations
were relaxed. about '1' buiJdlnCa. fiusb them out. 1961. ~i"l!hi~~~~~-y-~-=-'~~~~~~~~~~~-
AS« fOlt:
:JENNIFER HEBNER wit(O.au TIONS MA.NAGER
1700 ADAMS A VE.
COSTA~A,CA
terrific Mvlnge on alt of our famoue bf'and ,...... Md
quattty eoc111cNe.
MDUC110N9 FROll 20~ TO~ ON IPOllT COATS.
E ILACU.•MYI. ewoTIM. NacK-
AND IHOll 'OR
MD AND WOMINI (Llldlel'
Nie ltema at our Mplna
1to,. only.) Your •~r-
chale may be cha to
your Garya Perwona Account.
Banllamerictlrd, Mater· CharQe, or, of cowrM, c.tt.
All Mlee are flnal. Our ltoret
wlll be cloeed on Monday, • the 11th to prepare for the
.,_..teventofth9Nn"Mrl
HOMI POR MNT -The owner or this mobile
home wrote "For Rent Cheap" on what
remained after the severe storm in Northern
Cali!ornia. It was demolished last w~ek in a
Ill
..........
mudslide in Soquel. The violent storm and
resulting slides are reported to have claimed
more than 25 lives, injured nearly 600 and
caused damages .estimated at $280 million.
Expert witness e~plftins films
S~xologist testifies for defendants at obsct;nity trials·
BIRK&LEY (AP) -TorUv"e
la a .. diMue" tbal * rea~ •Pldemlc proportloaa lD ao ..
parts ot. tbe world, a UaJvenity
of CaUt.,ma researcher aaya.
ADd ~ toriW'J u 1 a world bultb emer1eney may be
tM oa&J "~ to focus attenUoe
Oii UM prob)411D1 and a find a
cure, aald VUd Zuauneam. a
Uftareb 1taU1tletaa aad
1raduat. atud•t at tbe Seboot of
Public Healtb at Berkeley. ' Ma . ZUlunep.t presented Mr
flndln81 to tbe Hilb NaUcaal
Rustler
'j~tice'
I •
. de01anded:
POWAY <AP) -Cattle
rancben are anary over what
tbe.)' called i.a slap on the wrtjt"
alvea to-a man convicted of
rUJtllna a 550-pound black ~ belier named SuaJe.
Meetln1 of tbe Aa:aerlcaa 1D ttae ~ ol tbe y >. a a o c l a t l o • f o 1 t 11 e aoldlen or...UC.. 1'M6r
Ad• •• .. ••t of Sct .. ee la are r••••cked ••d f ea•t WaabtQltGG, D.C. oa Friday. membtrl are pulDed ulde.
"Rlpt now, torture ll what lh. Zu1une1ul utd ber
child abule used to be Uke," ~ reoordl lbow tbat aU tbe ~
•aid. were lteatft at aome po&Jlt,U'
••Nobody want. to talk about ElectrieltY, wu Uled to torture
it. ft'I bonii* to lbiU about. 7f perceat. of tbe Yictl1D11 wtai.W8
T ... r-.alt ll tbat liUle ta ~ 40 ,.rceat nre 1trete1Md, lc-6 t::~.to,:oa~~t~ ~9.:auon =~:= =: :•ed * Dc,
avaUable on the best way to beli> • Paycbolotical torture allo w.Jf...,t
vlctJma." common, wttb all tbe vletlaw
She baaed her flndlncs on bllDdtalded f« several da19 and
Interviews aud paycboloJlcal • lbreatlDld, denied pri~cy ~
examinations of 41 torture acceaa to toilet and b•Utlnftd victJms, moat of wbom were faclUt.lel
Jailed and tortured 1D LaUa Mo.t .W.foreed to undrtM -11 1 America between 1t7a and 1171. some point and w•re deaJed'1 .
Her work ls be1D1 coordiDaWd food, water ud sleep. 1 by the Amnesty InternatJonaJ The lludy lbowed tbat ~
Campaip for Uae AboUtion ol ball of the victim.a complained Of.d
Torture. More llaan 80 people beadacbea years after their'"
b ave been worldna on the ca ptl Ylty. Other problem.,d1
Pl'OJed for two years. -included back pain. bearfq1au'
"What we have found ii that 1011 of memory, lnabil~l[ ~ fcl>~
from the beginnina there la a enjoy life and relax, tJreaneer
systematic process of violence, and sleep disturbances.
de p e u on al hat ion and . ''The Iona-term aoal la .w~
dlsortentaUon," she aald. abollab torture," she said. "11'1
The study shows that moet should not be exist.lnl in ~8
victims are arrested at home or century." ·~
IT Aft• tbe verdict was banded
by a jury in nearby El C-.Joo'lut
fall, MmdcipaJ Juctae Eliza~ D • •
Rt1a1 put the man on ttlree .. str .. ct attorneys y.ears• probation and ordered ., ., '"
him to pay '800. Suzie's wortti on
the market. • • >-<
Ray Whltwer, who owned'the 01 nnose nom .. nat .. o..,.it> belier, said that be may have to r r ., . ., • ~o
file a lawsuit to collect the • · l<i moAe,y. Even madder wu a director of the San Dleao and M 0 N T E R E Y · ( A P > appointment.
Imperial County Cattlemen's Directors of the California But another Deukmejian aide, Aaaoeiatlon. District Attorneys AH ociation Steve Merksamer, said tha~1
"I tb.l.nk the judge was dumb, have voted to oppose , Gov. Deu!'::llan hasn't yet made up1t.
someone who just doesn't know Edmund Brown Jr. 's nomination bis oo bow be will vote u s
FRESNO <AP) -Loretta "Themoviewasanintereall.ng Supreme Court guidelines in what la eoint on in the of Appeals Court Justice Cruz one of three members of thed
Haroian offers outspoken phenomenon," Ms . Harolan pornography cases ambiauoua. backcountry," said Spike Reynoso to the state Supreme Commission on Judiciat.~
opinlona lo spectator-filled said. ''Why there was so much Juries are asked to apply Alford, "Tbat man should have Court. Appointments. st
coW'lrooma on a subject some flap was beCauae it was the f1nt community s tandards , bad to return the animal ... ·I A stroni majority of the Reynoso, nominated tOJ3
people prefer not to broach -film with explicit sex to run ln de le rm in e if male r la I is tb1nk three years of bard labor directors voted at a closed-door succeed rd.irtne JmUce Mathew
pomoll'apbj. your neigbbomood theat.er.'~-- -offensive and decide whether it on a roaa camp would have done session to o]>poee c<>nfirmation-Tobrlner, ha.a a liberal record inq
The Fresno psychologist and It was eventually cleared for bolds artistic value. the trtck." of Reynoso, the 1lrat .Hispanic criminal cues, and u dlrec:toril
sexologist testifies for general release. Herowndefinitionofthevalue Ted Gary Breshears testified ever named to the high court, it of Callfor:nia Rural Legal
defendants as an expert witness "The movie was just under of nudity has lllUe to do with the that be 10ld a black Aneus heifer was reported. Assistance a decade ago led
at obscenity trials. four hours long but bad only six sexual content. al a Hemet auction' after buying However, the association bas many succeaaful letal filhuI°
"l like to see what is made minutes of explicit liexuallty ~ "It is i ntended for the lt in Arboaa, but the jury fuled not announced whether it will against then-Gov. Ron al ..
andwbatpeoplellketosee.''sbe one of simulated se xual marketplace and it is produced ttwasWhitwer'a. speak agal.n.st Reynoso al hlL Reagan'swelfarecutbacks.
nplalned. "Observing othe.r violence," she said.• "It was an to make money.'' she said. "A The catUemen's association confirmation bearing Jan. 1JP The district attorneys bad
people watebine sexually incredibly violent film and that lot of lt doesn't appeal, in terms issued a formal press reJeue before the, .commiaaion on urged Brown privately not to\
explicit fUma and what they ll.Jte was obscene to me.'., of erotic interests, to women saying many of its members Judicial Appomtments. a pp o l n t Reynoso . Their
can give insight into their Ms. Haroian views the because most of it ii produced . "would have been delighted if The Sacramento Bee reported opposition is believed to have
fantasy world." evidence before deciding by men so you. get standard the rustlei' bad received the that the prosecutors were been important in prevent!Df b1I
Her most celebrated cue was whether she can defend it in male fantasies. maximum, penalty of three lobbied to oppose Reynoso by appointment to a previous ·
a modern-day teat of being court. '' 1 certainly don't think years in a prison cell." "Arlie lbe bead of Attorney General vacancy on the court. m
"banned in Boston." "J want to educate the Judie pornography should be Ber1man, the aaaocittion George Deukmejian's criminal But their public criticiam ~
"Caligula," produced by and the jury as to the value ol suppressed," Ms. Haroian said. president, said "many of my division, Robert Phlllboslan. him bas been relatively ~
Penthouse publisher Bob the material, altbou&b I'm only Jn fact, she believes women colleagues are outraged over He reportedly sat outside the since .the appointment, anl-1
Guccione with a script by Gore a amaU part of tbe whole trial.'' should increase their role in tbe this." meeting room urging district s everal prosecutors have'~
Vidal, was the subject of an she said. production of expltcit. sexual Judce Riggs d e ct'tned attorneys to "stand up and be praised bis integrity ancf
obscenitytestlnMaasacbµaetts. Ms . Haroian considers materials. comment. co unted '' against the temperament. m ~_:._~~~~~~~~~~~==~~3-::=======::::======================:;--~
COnstructiOn
ava'aat
lleritage Bank.
·Reskkndal \, commerdal Bulldlngs:
TakrA>ut commhmenf required
along wbh leases.
·Land LoanS up ao one yea1
SMapsnlAl
' If you don't want
to drink
That's our ·
business
MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Call 642-2734
Alcoholism Recovery Services
301 Victoria Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
Appr:oved. for Medicare
·-
• ..
Nows the time to join a
Holiday Spa Hf;alth Club, while
you can still ta.lee advantage of
our 1981 rates. '
Plus 1/2 otf on a short
introductory course, and dis-
counts on all our other mem-
berships.
You'll get all of this year's
facilities, for last year's prices.
Wtth separate, individmlly
specialized facilities aDd pro-
grams for men ~d women,
available every day. There's no
1/2 off short course not available
at Turrance or West Los Angeles clubs.
Cos&a Mesa 2300 Harbor Blvd., <Behind Thrifty
Drug), (714) 549-3368
Mission Viejo 24401 Alicia Pkwy. at San Diego
Freeway, (714) 770.0822
Ora nee 622 Eaat. Kat.ell a Ave .. West of Tustin
Ave., (714) 639-2441
Weatmimter 6757 Westminster Ave., at Golden
West, (714) 894-3387
C~hli ",.,nnl• c_,. o( /11Mric• ltHll
A
..d
tJ
TI
lb
q
I?
D
IJ
'.)
d
lz
N
.B
1
,.
~·
The troubled tenants of
Treaaure Island mobile home
park ln South Laauna have a
valid polnt ln their recent lawsuit
flied aaatnst the Oranae County
government. They al1e1e the approved
reaoninc for the site that will
allow a larae·acale time·ahare
condQminium complex to be
built. thUI d<>lnc away with the
curreat 286-space park, will
eliminate oraticatly needed
moderate-priced housina in the
coastaJ area.
They also claim that becaUie
the project falls under
commercial zoning it would not
be subject to th~ county's policy
requiring all new residenti..al
developments in the
unincorporated area to Include at
least a quarter of their units
priced in the "affordable .. range.
To set the record straight.
th~ project developers do have
plans to set aside about 60
separate apartment s for
longtime mobile home park
tenants. The exact size. design
and quality of these units is
under n~uotiation . Other
relocation plans 1110 under
conalderation call for payrn,nts
from 9',000 to $8.000 lo ten•nta
who wlll be forced out. .
Th.it proposed rel()catlon plan
has been bailed by the developers
as the most generous ever ln the
county, which probably is true.
But that lsn't to say it ls ad4t<1uate
In such a particularly sensiUve
situation.
The 60 units proposed for
lonatime tenants, for example.
were ffnt designed for people ·who worked at the complex~ ll
would seem a poor trade to l<>§e a
comfort.able beach home .
unattached and relatively
uncrowded, for an apartment
adjacent to a ...O·unit time·share
project. where the neighbors
change almost weekly. /
It seems to us, as it has all
along . that the current
Ume·share_project simply doesn't
make enough sense in South
Laguna from the community's
viewpoint and the' issue of
affordable housing is but 01u~
aspect that requires more
attention.
Registration proper
President Reagan took an
uhexpected but proper step in
continuing draft registration.
It was unexpected in that
candidate Reagan opposed the
process in his run for office in
1980.
But 12 months in office seem
to have sobered the president.
"We live in a dangerous
world," his statement said.
There were signs that the
situation in Poland weighed
heavily in his decision. This is not
t he time to give a s ignal of
weakness to Russia, and ending
draft registration would be sach
a sign.
Yet, we suspect there were
other factors. In his statement he
noted that in the "event of a
future threat to national security.
registration could save the
United States as much as six
weeks in mobilizing emergency
manpower.''
In his year in office. the
president has pushed hard to
improve military readiness.
including plans for a larger
Rapid Deployment Force. But he
also has learned that the United
States even yet cannot respond
quickly on a large scale.
Draft registration. by itself.
certainly will not upgrade the
RDF. but it will bolster the
overall U.S. defense posture.
And i n cont in u i ng the
registration program. the
president wisely offered a gr ale
period for the 800,000 young m n
who have yet to sign up a d
comply with the law. J
Lest critics seize on Reagan's
rl!gistration decision as ,a
Republican or conservative ploy.
let it be recalled that ttie
program was in reinstituted ln
1980 by President Carter. a
Democrat. after the Russians
invaded Afghanistan.
The registration program in
itself is not a draft. Congress
would still have to appro~
enabling legislation before any
drafting could begin. And thie
mood of Congress is anti-draft. t
We must hope a draft will not
be needed. But ev-ents in Poland
and Afghanistan prove again that
it is not a perfect world.
Se . 1 '· . d cun ty c aim misuse
A presidential order that
would make it easier for
government officials to claim
"national security" in order to
keep information from the public
was expected to be sent up for
congressional review last week,
but bas been held back in order
·to resolve some .. issues of
substance."
One of these involves a
charge by critics or the draft
order that it could be used to
exempt the CIA from compliance
with the Freedom of Information
Act.
That's because it would
permit withholding information
"relating to intelligence sources
and methods." Conceivably. says
Morton Halperin. a former
National Security Council staff
member. the ClA could claim
that almost all of its acti,ities
relate to intelligence sources and
methods.
This attitude, of course, was
what permitted the intelligence
agency to cover up so many of its
outrageous activities until
changes in secrecy classification
rules revealed them.
•
These came about after the
Nixon administration's misuse <>I
the "national security" ploy an~
established that in case of doubt
as to the need ror classifying
documents , they s hould b~
released to the public or given ~
very low secrecy classification.
The proposed new order
would reverse that by permitting
documents to be kept secret in ·
case of such doubt.
The draft also eliminates the
rule in 1978 secrecy guidelines
requiring that governmentl
secrecy be balanced against the
public's right to know.
While matters genuinely
relative to national security
obviously must be guarded, it all
too often has been shown that
government agencies and
officials like to tude U1elr errors
and misdeeds ,behind a veil of
secrecy. 1
Approval of Congress ls not '
required for a pr•ldential order
but on ~ntrovenial issues its
advice UluaUy i• sought. ln this
case·lhat advice probably wiJl -
and should -be to m•ke more.
not l~s information public, I
Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the O.lty Piiot. Other vlewt ex-
pressed on this pa99 are tbose ot their authors ano artists. f\•.cter comment Is lnv1t·
. ed. Address The D.aily Piiot, P.O. Box JS60, Cosi. ~. CA 92626. PhOM (7 U)
•M2i4321.,
..
LM. Boyd/Small heroea
Full suit.I of armor in tbe vartout
museums of the world indicate U..
tJPleal berotc knilbt of ....._. ..
Umes wu about tbe alae al w-.,
Allen.
Q. You aald UM army ol 91; Illa
i1auett ball' net.I to male eoldlen. Isn't ta.at the army that allo ... ued
corMta to IW mt0? . 1
A. NO, 1lr, .t( WU ~ lllU*'l&l Gena•~ al Wond 1'ar l tbat
...... cdrleta to ttl Gftleetl.
I •
Judges make:· their own law
W ASJUNGTON -Federal Judces are
a law unto thedlSelves. Appointed ror
life, they can be removed only throulh
the impoulbly cumbersome procesa of
impeachment. Barrin1 thia, the jud1es
are the arbiters or their own conduct -
and they have always shown a
cqmist.ent tendency to stick tocether In
ltie face of criticism.
Here's the story of David Sbuffman, a
young New York attorney who had the
cuts to wa1e a head-on challenge to what be believed was judicial
mlaconducl. The full force or the
judicial establishment fell on him like a
ton of bricks.
IN llf4, Sbuffman was his mother's
attorney Jn a clalm to collect money
owed her by Hartford Textiles Inc. No
one hu questioned the validity of the
debt.
But Hartford Textiles, represented by
the prestigious law firm of' Well.
Gotshal & Mances. filed ror bankruptcy
lo gel out of its obUgation.s. Rebuffed in
Bankruptcy Court, Sbuffman appealed
to the U.S. Second Circuit Court of
Appeals. He lost again.
Meanwhile, however, Sbuffman bad
managed to collect evidence o~
wrongdotnc by the federal bankruptcy
judge. He has documented his claim
that the judge, Roy Babitt. had denied
Mrs. Sbuffman a fuU bearing; that
Babitt had violated court procedure by
talltlq with Shuffman's adversaries in
private; and that a staff attorney for
the Second Ctrcuit later misrepresented
the case to bis bosses.
Shuffman, convinced that the "fix"
was in, had the temerity to lod1e
complalnta about the Seeond Circuit
and the adveraat)r law firm with the
New York City Bar Association.
The judicial establishment's response
was to try to have Shuffman disbarred.
Every active judge In the Second
JACI 11111111
Circuit rallled to fi1ht thl$ threat from
an impertinent outsider. They ordered
that disciplinary action be taken
against Shuffman.
· The Second Circuit's disciplinary
arm, the Committee of Admisaiona and
Grievances, enlisted the bar auoclatlon
to do its dirty work. Embarrassingly,
the bar association had already been
given Sbuffman'a allegations before
being asked to investigate him. The
association was in the middle.
THE JUDGES ordered the bar
association to report •'as expeditiously
as the circumstances permit'' on
Shurfmao's alle1ed misconduct -
though not on his char1es of misconduct
by a Second Circuit jud1._ The
Judiclary'a batcbelman, James Nabtit,
chairman ol tbe grievance committee,
went so far aa to suggest to the bar
association tbal Shuffman needed
psychiatric help. Like dissidents in
Russia, those who challenge the judicial
ayatem are evidently con.sidered cruy.
Shuffman asked for help from the
Senate Judiciary Committee. The
committee's chief counsel, Robert
Feidler, was persuaded. He asked the
bar association to clear Shuffman.
"Although it is possible to question
some or Mr. Shuffman'a methods,"
Feidler wrote, "I also believe tlaat be
has shown at least some basis for moet •
of these actions. A significant le1al
talent will be lost to the legal proleuion
if the committee exerts Its full
authority."
After 26 months or Inquiry, the bar ·
association cleared Shuffman of any
misconduct.
THAT SHOULD have ended it. But
the judges of the Second Circuit were
not through. They appointed a special
prosecutor to bound Shuffman all over
again.
Nabril added another touch of
ugliness to Shuffman's ordeal. When be
notified the youbg lawyer of the Second
Circuit's decision to punue a second
inquiry, he neglected to tell Sbuffman
that the bar association bad cleared
him. Shuffman was finally notified four
months after the association's dedsioo.
It should be noted that, while
Shurtman bas been investigated and
cleared. and is now being'tnvest!tated
again, his char1·u of judfchl
misconduct have yet to be looked into.
His mother still hasn't bad her day in
court.
• Alternative to building new pnsons
California legislators should harken
to the pleas of Chief Justice Warren
Burger before they embark upon the
costly prison construction program now
in the planning. Burger has been
advocating prison programs which will
turn rehabilitation from myth to reality.
Burger restated bis case recently at
the University of Nebraska where he
reported upwards of $10 billion in new
prisons are being planned by the
various states. Posinc the question as to
whether these will be "more
warehouses," he urged that these new
facilities be planned as "Factories with
fences around them."
HIS IDEA is to establish industries
where the Inmates can learn trades that
wlll flt them for work when they are
released. He contemplates the working
prisoners would be paid "reasonable
compensation" from which "a fair
amount" would be deducted for room
and board.
To extend that idea the compensation
could also be used to support the
inmate's family and to compensate his
victims.
Burger's ideas present a real
challenge for some new thinkine about
l-ll-l-ll--Tl-11--~
prisons. Those who have studied
penology know that the worst treatment
of prisoners ts enforced idleness.
Caillomla bas long attempted prison
industry programs startln& way back
with the rock quarries at Folsom and
the old jute mill at San Quentin. From
those It went to agriculture and
canning, cotton mills, furniture making
and a host of other enterprises. For the
most part they have all been colossal
Lesson ·learned too late
Tbe "new'' automobile model aeuoo
opened thia fall with a dull thud beard
all around the country. Americana are
simply not walking into showrooms and
buying cars. Between tke 1bocldn1
price• and the atac1erlna lnterelt rate.
motorist.I are cllnatn1 to their old can
far longer than ever before.
MMO' YBAJlS AGO, I auQestecftbat
the American auto companl.•, for one
tbl.ng, abandoa tbelr "annual model"
winter on ita heels, the fint ol the new
year would 1ive a more authentic
dating to the ~el. Aa It ls, If you buy
a car ln, the fall, and roll It out of the
• .showroom, it bu already k>lt about
one·tblrd of ill value -aad the model
yell' bu not even bel\Ul,
It ls a atupid and IJ'"dy system, ud
i\a ulUmate failure w.. predictable .
Besides, psycboloctcally, it ii far better
to ahoy a new car lD mid·1'intar, for
early spring dell very, when moat
motorlatl ... looklnl forwant to tbat
HUOD ol release from IDOW and cold.
MY 088DVAftON8 were~ with
SDMl'I OI' lton)' aUenff ftoCD Detroit -
whlcb al.lo ..-t.ed tbe tboulbt of small,
tuel-41fftctenl can until ltl back wu ttainat the Wall -ud it WU D0t watll
lite KGeOIDlc cruncb of a few ,..,.. aso
that the IDOUI' IDOIUll took a bard '-
at their pNductlon acbedul•• and
sellinj ttr8*l.-.
Now U.y are Pt1lD& UM price lD
bllllona fear r.toollc1, to mMt tbe
foretp ~allU. eut. Ilea .. bled up
. a quan. Ute domurJe man.t. ••
Ire Wit I ' ...... ., ........
Amenou p811e'1 a.ratu.-wltb tbe .......... ; •=wW ____ ....
a ear. a.. a .. ·t•-i. .W ad .............. 11 ....... ..
romaaUet•m :~•oUoe for t••· re•UU. "'-a. -.
failures in both the economic sense and
in providing work experience suitable
for outside employment. Ode prison
industry which has lasted over a loog
number of years is the maklnc of
license plates. Since the _ state is the
pu.rchaser there is no reason for the
plates to be manufactured al a loss. But
the program rails short in providing
training for out.side jobs.
One of the reasons for lack ol success
in prison industries has been the
opposition of both labor and private
business to competition from the state.
But perhaps the major reason ror
failure is the basic fact that government
just isn't geared to runnlna free
enterprises. What with cinl service and
budgetary controls. the flexibility
neceasary in private business is
completely thwarted.
BUT IT DOESN'T have to be that
way and some 1enius is just waiting
somewhere to show the state bow tt can
set up a workina prison which can lease
its facilities to.private operaton.
And the state might not have to
construct much of anything to 1et the
job started. Just u it baa been proved
that the COit.a of aew priaona can be
avoided by utUbation of discarded
mllltary bases, 10 might they be
avoided by adapUn1 lo an abandoned
factory or industrial site.
In that regard the plant at Fontana
which has been cloeed by Kaiser mlpt
be •orth the le1lslators' time to
investllate ill potentials aa a faetory
prison. Ideally remote fro• urban
populations and yet not too dlatant
Umewile from dowatown Loe Aaceles,
it could be a fortuitous solutian to the
state's prison aeedl.
ln any .event, bavlJI& ~ loacer
aen.tence1. UM ,ut•'• lawmaken lhoUJd
be atudY1DI "'1 bard "the -need for
worklal prilolDI a acalnat tbe plaln old
loek·up types where prtsonen are left to
debllltate ill &d.lene11.
Or•pge Coaf DAILY Pl~T/Mond•y. Jenuary 11, 1912
. . I
Ex-liostages liVe with memories ; · J
A year after tlleir releme from Iran,· 52 men, women have varied reactions •
( CDJTOft'I Narr: , •.• ..,,. OIW "°" ... CM
A"'tricml ....... C01M ...,,_to ca......,,...~
wleotnf. nu 9'orr rwport• °" M.o ~w cadtuted to ,.,...,,,. .. IOl'fw.)
•1 LOUllB COO& ._ ..............
Nearly OM yur aft•l' tbeir releaM from Iran,
tbe u men and women wbo were held botta1e for
••• day1 are 1tlll learntn1 to live wJtb the
memorlet of captivity and the 1pottt1ht ot
freedom.
Many are reluctant to talk, \ired of tb•
attention.
Otben, leas reticent, but equally weary of
p.-blldty, lay tbey simply want to put the ordeaJ
bebiDd them and set oo wttb the buatneu oi uvtna. "It'• hard to be a bostate. It'• euy to be
free," aald Frederick Kupke, M. a forelp service
oltlcv from lndlana -~o Uva in Arllnston. Va.
Most ot the 52 Amtrlcana who were captured
when lnnlan militants 1tormed tbe U.S. Embasay
ln Tehran on Nov. 4, lift, aay tbey have
readJUlted eMUy, althoualt IOllM an atill haunted
by bOITOI". There have been -qd still are -
'niabtmares, mental problems, aches ancf paiu.
Some former bosta1e1 find a reward for their
·"I try to put it behind. me
in many ways.''
ordeaJ in tbe response it brought: the natiooaJ
unity, the outpouring of love, the patriotism of a
aea of yellow ribbons. A few seek more tangible
compensation and are bitter that they have not
aotten it.
The 52 have reacted differently -to the
memories and to tbe apoWgbt.
"I've coped with freedom pretty well," said
Kupke, who bas been studyina Thai at the State
Department in preparation for bis upcoming
uaignment to Jlanakok.
Joeepb Subic, 25, a former Army sergeant who
sot married laat March and is a student at George
Waabm,ton University in Washington, says be bu
trouble with his eyes. "I alao sometimes have
sleeping problems and general aches and pains,"
be said.
Moorhead C. Kennedy Jr., 51, bas "an
occasional dream that the Department of State is
gotng to put me on a plane and send me back to
Iran and there will be the students waiting for me.
It's my only nightmare. 1 think everybody's
entitled to one."
Kennedy, who retired from the foreign service
last summer and is executive director of the Peace
Institute at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in
New York City, said that his 14 months in captivity
was "a liberating experience in some ways. It
gave me the chance to t.bink over a lot of things.
The feeling that you've survived something and
come out of it all right . . . is a iood feeling . . .
That feeling gives you a certain self.confidence."
Barry Rosen, 36, of New York City, also said
be bad a "greater confidence . . . a great deal of
ability to adjust to new problems."
Rosen, who is studying at Columbia University
on a presidential fellowship, said the ordeal left
him with stress-related problems, but added: "I
try to put it behind me in many ways. I don't live
with it in the sense that it's an overwbelmlnl part
of PU life. 1 can't live with bitterness."
Almost all tbe hostages sald they appreciated
the welcome home they got, but now want to be
let alone.
"I just want my privacy. That's alJ," said
Charles Jones, 41, now vice counsuJ of the U.S.
Consulate in Vancouver, B.C. "I just want a nice
quiet life," he said.
Jones and bis wife of 19 years are getting a
divorce. He did not want to talk about it other than
to say it bad "nothing whatsoever" to do with bis
being beJd hostage.
For Jones -and others -there bas been a
bright spot: "The reception from the American
people. That was probably the greatest thing that
ever happened to me -the love and affection."
. Jones, like Kennedy, said captivity gave him
"a Jot ol time to think." Today, he said, "I live
within myself."
Col. Charles Scott of Slone Mountain, Ga., who
retired from the Army on May 1, said be emerged
as "a stronger person." Scott, 49, also said, "I
''I just want my privacy.
1'hat's all."
A.t8*a. 'ilJ'bat •N oa.11 bleaUM I Ute tbe laland
iDd l UUd ... kidl;1 he •aid. .
9' ~-Col. ftomal Sdaael•, 51, an Air · P'oroe oftlc... Uvtaa la T•c:cMPa. Wub., apeakt an avtr•,. ol four llmff a week. Tb• 11&1bject:
· • ·copln• '#ltb Adveralt1." He HH the
• ...... ta u bla eltle clu&y. "OM doet fMl
ob l•ted to Nlpoecl to Wa otWWbelmiDC love and
aff ffUGD that wu cl1apjayed for ut. I feel we owe
Am.-tcalll tom.UUC ln ~ '' be uJd. lcbaefer 1ald that wbea he returned be bad
"pr9blem1 concentraUnc. makta1 decl1ioaa,
problema with crowds, too many people belnl
aro~." Anita, bia wife of a yean, helped him
worlt them out. "My wife and l found we were two
d1fferent people, but wt botb like tbe people we
turatd out to be," Sdlaefw aakl.
SCbaeler end Steven Lauterbach, 30, a vice
consul in Lyon, !'ranee, aald the bosta1e
· expeTlence helped them appreelat.e wbat they
have. Lauterbach aaJd It •rmade me appreciate
freedom more, and made me &":::bly le11
concerned about some of tbe minor ID Ule."
But Army Warrant Otftcer Joeepb Hall, 32,
said "tbe combined horror of the experience
haunts me aWI. l continue \o have the feeUn1 that
Imminent danfer lurlla nearby. I know bow
vulnerable my amUy and I are and I await the
next traeedy."
Among some of the hostages, there la boeWity
to the government over Washington's ban on
lawsuits against Iran by the former captives.
Thirteen hostages cballen1ed the ban which wu
part of the deal leadin1 to their release; a federaJ
Judge in LOI Angeles dismissed the suit.
John Graves, 53, who works in the State
Department's International Communications
Agency in Washington, complained that the
government and the news media have ignored the
"real questions" of the hostage crlais. "Why was
the embassy taken over?" be asked. "Why were
the Iranians so angry at America? Why was the
Patty'• .
charge•
rebutted
NEW YORK (AP)
F. Lee Balley bas said
Patty Hearst 's
accusation he defended
her incompetently was a
result of her being
brainwashed by the
Symbionese Liberation
Army.
Miss Hearst last week
dropped her suit against
Bailey, in which she
alle1ed that the lawyer
"'(._as more interested in a
bO'ok he was writing
about the cue than in
her defense.
In an interview on
ABC -TV 's "Good
Morning America" late
last week, Bailey said
Miss Hearst dropped her
c ase wh e n "she
discovered the book
w asn 'l even agreed upon
until after the trial.•'
•·Patty Hearst was
very. very disappointed '
in the performance or
the Apierican justice
system. In that respect,
I don't blame her," he
said.
Bailey said Miss
Hearst was told "by the
SLA. as part of the
brainwashing process,
that iI she returned to
society, there would be
no justice for her. She
was Patty Hearst.
•'I think she saw
enqugb of that , or
believed enough of that,
to attack the whole
system and the system
• •• abab admitted to tbe U.S. 7 . '' Grav• Ml
written a bQM about bia uperleoc.., "Maybe
Tonllht,'' but not found a publllber.
'fo tbe publle, lbe hoftaa• bleame a symbol,
a sroup. 8Ut tbe men and women polDt out tbat
they an lDd.lvldua.la wltb lDdlvtdual tbou&btl,
lat.er-.. and reactionl .
''To me at leut, ll there~ 1ucb a tblnl u a
'Ttllru ~e,' It ii tbat !Aef• WU DO "Tehran Syndrome•'' .tad Richard llortflaJd, 52, .wbO ti
currenUy Involved in a State Department trablln1
seminar and 11 tbtnktna about runA1a1 for
Conpeu from San Dle10 ne~ year.
Bruce LalnJen, 59, of Betbelda, Md., who ii on
State Department ualppient u vice praldent of
the NatkmaJ Defenae UnlvenJ~ in Wubinaton,
and ~ the reUred Army. Olflcer. abo are
taltlnl about settine into poUUct.·
"We're all different," Morefield 1aJd. "We all
reacted dlfferenUy, partly becuuae we were such
a disparate aroup ...
All but one of the members of tbe "disparate cn>UJ>" bad one thin& in common, however. They·
were liQ,ked, directly or indirecUy, to tbe U.S.
1overnment -moat of tbem u memben of the mllltary or employees of the State Department. .
Tbe exception was Jerry Plotkin, '7, of
Sherman Oaks, Calif.. who waa lo Iran on a
private bu1lneas project. Since be was not
connected with the government, be ll loeli&ible for
the compensation recommended for the bostaaea
by a presidential commission. The e:scluaioo baa
left him bitter, he says.
The commission recommended in September
that the hostages be 1i ven compensation similar to
that tlven to prisoners of war in Vietnam, an
amount equal to $12.50 a day, in addition to
whatever regular salaries they bad accumulated
during their captivity.
Some of the hostages, including Robert Ode,
66, of Sun City West , Ariz., said al the time that the
sum was not high enough.
They're39.
-·· ...........
FORMER HOSTAGE -Ex-hostage Moorehead
Kennedy stands in front of the Cathedral of
St. John 'fhe Divine. in New York. He is now
director of The Peace Institute.
They've opened IRA Plans.
. includes my,elf."
-----------------_; Bailey also rebutted
think our country has come out of it stronger than charges by Mias Hearst
we were before . . . I think it sort of brought the that she should not have
country 'together . . . " been put on the stand to
William B. Royer1 50, a program officer in testify.
the Eng.Uah teaching aivisioo of the International ••we needed he r
Communications Agency agreed. "It served a testimony. we needed
worthwhile purpose in unifying the country -'ber to explain what
bringing Americanism back to us," be said. happened in 56 days of
They could be millionaires before they're 65.
The past year bas brought some new careers torture in a closet,•'
and the resumption of old ones, at home and Bailey saJd.
abroad. None of tbe hostages bas returned to tbe H e d i s p u t e d b e r
Middle East, aJtbou1b several say they would not claims that be was
mind gol.ng back. drinking al the tim& of
Richard Queea, 30, said be bates the "religious the final arguments, and
re1ime" in Iran, but not the Iranian people. that be gave a rambling,
Queen, who wu taken boetase with the otben, p o o r l y o r I a n i & e d but was released six months earlier, on July 11, speech.
1980, because of an illness later diagnosed as "It doesn't happen to
multiple sclerosis, is in London as a vice comul, be true," he said. "lt
issuing visas. He bas also published a book -was the moat difficult
"Jnaide & Out -Hostage to Iran, Hosta1e to final argument I have
Myself." "" in lU • •• ven fny . e. ' The former hostages are atlll lo demand as
speakeraJ. at acbool• and before community
1roup1. :some. like Queen, are puttln1 their
experiencea on paper. Three talk about nmnlnl for
office. Tbere have been at lust four marria1ea, an
en1-.emeat and several divorces. "We're bavm. to reshuffle our 1ile," said
Wllllam Keouah, a school adm.lnlstrator who wu
at tbe U.S. l!:mbusy to pick \lP IOIDe papen en
route to a new job lD Pakistan. Durtq car.vtty,
be aald,, "we bad the feellns our 11 e was
WlrHell.iai. We're tryln1 to put tbe tbread back on
the spool."
1 Kec>UP, 51, now director ol loteraovernmmtal
servicee for the 0.partment ot l'.dueatlon, Hid tbe
attention be and tbe ot.ben sot If\..-tbeir rele_..
on IDaUIUl'atloD Day, Jan. JO,. mt, ''toot tome adjustment ... but It'• a aood WUltrllUae of tbe 1 fact tbat U.. public bad been ....,... tbroucb tbe boatmech-::---........ 11.Uldo, 11. of OIJpbaat, Pa., bail
bHa. J•ltlDI ,...••••lated •It~ Amerlea. M--. a ,...... Mntc. am.-now Mell
OftnlM elllmt iclaUnallr llw 1!!J apeat tiae 1um1D1r tiourtaS tM U .......... "It 1 ao lnl&e.
lt'• ••illaM .. 1 e• be nrt tJrteaJ about It," lae ....
119\rlallo la talll•t • eoarH la public
admt .. m.U. at Hananl UDlftDl.J'a .C.wl11 lelMol o1 ao..am.-aa camllddft. a. ....
.&1 -..-ell -to --.... oe ICOdlak blud,.
·Weeklies
.get postal
rate hike
WASHINGTON ·(AP>
-Pottal rat. for m&DJ
small, weekly
newapapera went up
Sunday. the Poatal
Sentce said.
Tbe rate for
"aecond·CIHI ID•COUnty
diltrlbutton of tb•
new1paper1 waa
lncre...cl from 1.1 cent.
or 1.1 eeatl per p&ece to
l .t ceeta or 1.4 aata pet
pleee, Poatat lenlct ~potetmaD Balpll aewart..w .
TIM aame maikn allO ~. 1ead up to 1,000 pieces outald• t~•
eoa.aty m tbe 1ame rm.;
be aatd.
So could you. Assuming that of Federal taxes until you
both of you work and that each start withdrawing. Any-
of you places $2000 annually in time between ages 591/:z
your First Interstate Special and 70 1/:z, you can take out
IRA Plans. And that the pres-all or part of your money
ent inte rest rate prevails: with9ut penalty, )Yhen your
13~ % annually, compounded tax bracket may possibly be
daily. Byage65,youraccounts lower than it is now.
should total $1,079, 718.68. The First Interstate Spe-
Very nice! cial IRA Plan is only one of the
And the re's more. As a investment options we offer.
couple under age 701h, with a ~~~~:-----.. ..;,J There are three others, some combined income in 1982 of '\ with minimum deposits as low
$50,000, you'd also save $1760 on your '82 as $100 . We do not charge a fee
Federal inc'ome tax. And under similar condi-for opening or maintaining your IRA. And
tions, continue saving taxes as long as you you and your spouse are each insure d by the
contribute to your IRA Plans. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation for
If you 're a wage earner, single or mar-up to $100,000. ·
ried, you're eligible for First Interstate IRA To get started on your first million,
Plans, even if you're already covered by your visit your nearest First Interstate branch.
company's pension plan. Both your annual The sooner the better.
contribution and the interest it earns are free n .
U ·l'let l:la& •11!111 Bank
Ar11 ~t1te Blt1'c<>!~ M1mbtr FDIC
'.
___ ....,.......... _.,. ........ ___ _ ~--~--------~--~---------------...
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday, ;tanua!'Y 11, ~ 812-~=
0
I
ll
l ..
t
L·
.---------------...
IRA
deductions
DEAR PAT DUNN: My employer lllu
bee• wt&laWdial leu taz•from my paycMell
la&elJ. Doe8 ddl meaa I alii lelal .. lilHe ..
paJ IDOl"e tuf Abo, wllat are IM clllu•ea la .
tile a-i ol eG11trlb•Ueu tlllat cu be made
to 1aA ucl Keop acCIOUta WI yeuf
J .L., a---Beacll Leu mooey Ls being withheld from your
. paycheck because tbe withholding rates
decreued 6 percent on Oct. 1, 1981, due to a
reduction in individual lneome taxes for this
year. 1bere will be 1reater reduction during
the next two years which will eventually
reduce tax rates by 23 percent.
Startin1 Jan. 1, 1982, you may contribute
the lesser of $2,000 or 100 percent of your
earned income to an IRA, for Keoch plans
the maximum has been increased to $15,000 a
year.
Rental complaint•
D.&A.a PAT DlJNN: I'" ..._ .. •1 ,...._.twice....., Uaat eenm ....-. 111e
•a .. a&&M ..... laar111%11Nallla.I ............. aalle ... repairs.,..
... .... die• fro• ., ..., ......
alrUI I may be Hided as a reA.I&.. WUt ..
, ................... ! c.s.,c..aa• ..
If you have complained about tbe
uninhafiitable condition of your apartment.
or have given notice requestiq the lucllord
to make repairs or you will deduct tbelr c:oet
from your rent, your landlord cannot evict
you, increase your rent, decrease your
service or force you to leave involuntarily
within 180 days of your actioo lf hia purpose
la to get back . at you for exerci.slnl your
ri1hts. Prior to Jan. l, 1980, you were
prot~ for only eo l!aya from this type of
retaliation. 1bia 180-day protection can be
used only once lo any 12-moolb period. If you
feel you have been unfairly treated after the
180 days, you should talk to a lawyer.
---'
• "Got o problem' Then wnle lo Pot
"'I Dunn Pot wall cut red lope. getting
' .J. the answers and octaon you need to
solve mequ1hes '" go~mmenl and
,.,
•
busme.ts Mail your questions to Pat
Dunn, At Your Sen.nee. Orange Coast
Dady Pilot. P 0 Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 As
mony Letters as pos!!ble will be ans!Df!red, but phoned
inquiries or letters not including the reader's full
name. address and business hours· phone number
connot be considered This column oppeors dally ez
cepl Sundays · ·
New leprosy
drugs urged
ATLANTA <AP> -The national Centers or
Disease Control bas predicted that the number or
leprosy cases will increase worldwide because the
skin disease is growing resistant to the drug
~ commonly used to treat it. f "These discouraging findings caJI attention to
the uuent need for development or new
anti-leprosy drugs and an effective anti-leprosy
vaccine," the CDC said in its Morbidity and
Mortality Weekly Report.
( Studies throughout the 1970s have shown that
between 3 percent and 40 percent of patients
~ treated with dapsone. the leading anti-leprosy
drug, developed a resistance to the drug, the CDC
said.
Many leprosy patients who developed that J resistance did not immediately notice their relapse t and transmitted the resistant form of the disease
to others who never had been treated for leprosy,
the CDC said.
"Until the problem of drug-resistant leprosy is
controlled, the incidence of leprosy can be
expected to increase worldwide, and the disease
will be more difficult to treat," the federal health
agency said.
Dr. Charles Shepard, who heads the CDC's
leprosy laboratory, estimated the incidence of
leprosy at about 11 million cases worldwide with
new cases reported al a rate of several hundred
thousand per year.
Leprosy is a communicable disease of the akin
and peripheral nerves characterized by
disfiguring skin sores, a weakening of muscles,
occasional paralysis and a loss of sensation in the
areas where the sores erupt.
The disease occurs primarily in tropical
climates, with 60 percent of the cases reported lo
South Asia, Shepard said. The researcher said that
immigrahta, includlna Southeast Asians, played a
role in the increasing number of U.S. cases.
Jn 1960, only 60 existed in the country. In 1981,
about 240 cases of leprosy were reported in the
Unlted States, up from about 220 in 1980, Shepard
aaJd.
Currently, amon1 the states with the hilbest
numbers of leerosy cues are California, Texas,
New York and Hawaii, he said.
A vaccine bu been developed to combat the
dlafilwina disease and bas been Uled successfully
with experimental animals, be uid. Researeben
Pfaa to test the vaccine on humans this year, but it
will be at least 10 years before they tnow whet.her the nc:dne can safely and effectivelf control tbe.
dbeue, Shepard 1aid.
ON AAU wrm nus AD
•7,l.95 • r.u. "". • IJO(~ ,.. ._, ....... . ....
M'VC-.LUlll"T ............
U1'00Uf -.MBICmn'
&lo;MI()
FLOATING PARKING LOT The U .S .S
Kittyhawk has arrived in Bremerton. Wash ..
where it will unde rgo extensive repairs that
will take a year to complete. The cars on
AP ........
deck of s hip belong to crew me mbets whose
families were transported to Bremerton . The
carrier is s hown leaving San Diego this week.
CHEYENNE, Wyo. <AP> -W1om1A1 bu become one of the beaJt.b111t places lD the world to
be a newborn baby. a state oftleial .. ,..
The 1tate'1 newMrn·lnfant mortallt)' rate,
whlch wu hither than 47 other 1tate1 Just a
decade a10. now la believed by state offlclaJa to be
amon1 the loweat in tbe country and t.be world,
1aid Dr. Lawrence Coben, Wyomln1's chief be-1tb
officer. Cohen said the death ra&e for newborn lnlanll
in WyomJne la 8.6 per tbouaud bJrt.bl. The rate la
baaed on infant dealhl durl.nt tbt tint 21 days
after blrtb; Wyomln1's lnlant mortality ra&e for
the lint yeu la 10 _.,ar thousand. .
Cohen, a ped.iatricla.n wbo bead.I the state
Dlvialoo of Health and Medical Services, be1an
atud)'lnl lnfant deatha alter WyomlnC ranked 4lth
ln ttr11 with 11.S deatha per t.boutand durin1 the
· first 28 day1 and 2'.S deaths per lhouland durinJ
the lint year.
Tbe doctor credill the turnaround to better
education and health care, better nutriUon, and
speedy transfer of 1ick babies to 1pecialllll in
Denver and Salt Lake Clty.
"All of these tbinaa put tocether have worked
to tbe present result.a,'' be said. "It Ls OQe of tbe
best feelings I've ever bad about tbe health
scene."
Uranium in water studied
Wyoming received a $400,000 federal arant for
Cohen'• stud.lea four years ago, and the health
officer was able to determine the state's hilh
infant death rate could be blamed on a
com bl nation of factors, including a high
percentage of premature births and a lack of
knowledge by doctors, nurses and hospitals.
The state fou1ht the lack of knowledce by
hiring a pediatrician to develop a special pro1ram
to train health care providers in handlint sick
infants. "We figured the least we could do was set
up an education program," Cohen said.
CHADRON, Neb. <AP> -Chadron State
College is launching a research project to
determine whether the presence of uranium in the
drinking water east of the Rocky Mountains may
affect humans.
A large uranium deposit has been discovered
in northwest Nebraska, and the researchers are
feeding uranium compounds to human tissue
•
than
cultures to determine if any defects occur.
Lois Veath, a veteran tiss ue culture
researcher who helped develop techniques for
diagnosing prenatal genetic disorders, said the
Chadron research is important becau.Se indications
are uranium migrates into water used for
irrigation and domestic P.urp<>ses. She is funding
the project through college sources and hopes to
obtain some private backing.
New York
Doctors, nurses and hospital attendants were
tra.ined lo spot symptoms of serious lllneu in
babies. His agency also provided a system or "lional
centers, both in Wyoming and in major cities near
Wyoming, where sick babies could be transfened
quickly for specialized care.
Plus great low fares to Newark, Philadelphia,Boston and Washington.
ToNewhk (JFK)
LE.AVE ARRIVE LOW AS•
9:00a.m. 5:05p.m. $195
J2:00noon S:OOp.m. 195
9:301>.m. 5:20am. 179
'JO Newark
9: lOp.m. 5:05p.m. $195
3:00p.m. 10:45p.m. 195
F111Code. YXNE. YE140
To Phhddphia
1..£AVE ARRIVE LOW AS"
1:30p.m. 9: JOp.m. $195
'JO&o.ton
J2:50p .. m 9:00p.m. $225 --· .. o.c. (Dalla)
8:45am. 4:35p.m. $190
1:301>.m. 9: 150.m 190
It's a long list of features that add up to a lot more than just a
great low price. That's why a growing number of people are
choosing the friendly skies to get them i:oast to coast.
Just make your reservations and buy your tickets at least
14 days in advance. Stay through the first ~ay or as long as
60 days. Be sure to pick up tickets by Feb. 28. Weekend fares
are slightly higher to New '\brk, Newark and Philadelphia.
· Seats are ltmtted.
Fares. restrictions and schedules are subject to change.
Just call your 'lhvel Agent. · Or call United at 973-2121.
Partners tn 'Jfavel with Westin HoteJ8.
r
i
,
... ~..-COMMENTARY -While lhird·graders learn the
Intricacies of leading and following and stag liners make
observations, rieht, al Balboa Pavilion. are Kathy Shuler
with dauihter Megan. 9 .months, and Linda Sliver
cons1denng Cotillion '91 '!
MONDAY, JAN. 11, 1982
CAVALCADE
COMICS
STOCKS
Getting • in
. "''1
I .. .. .....
·' ... ~ .
I
I The newest roommate on D
''Three 's Company''
• almost didn't get to move 0
in. See Page B6. I
~~I _ ____!::::::::::.....J
step with society .
I
.Another round of youngsters circling Harbor Area's cotillion floors l
• Round and round they go at
the cotllllon, not only the
dancers but also r ecorded
waltzes and social amenities -
even generations.
In fact, Kurt and Suzy
Martine, who lead the Newport
Harbor Cotillions, took over the
directorship from his parents
and are teaching children of
former Martine students.
Their monthly dances at the
Balboa Pavilion are just some of
the sessions led by the Martines
of Oregon who follow a circuit
through several states,
demonstrating to youngsters
how much fun it can be to dress
and act your best on the dance
floor.
Beginning at the third-grade
level, the boys wear dress shoes,
coals and ties. Girls wear short
party dresses, while gloves,
Daily Pilot
Photos by
Lee Payne
party sboes and socks, ti&hts or
knee socks. Membership in
cotUUons ls available through
the eighth grade with most of
each "class" continuing from
year to year.
Dancers also are put through
the paces of fox trots and
etiquette al another cotillion in
Newport Beach and similar
events in Huntington Beach and
Laguna Beach.
··At rirst some youngsters
may show a little disdain, but
once they gel here, they have so
much fun mixing with their own
age group in a special setting
that they readily admit they're
having a good time • " said Mrs.
Robert P . Warmington,
CO·Chaiqnan of lhe third grade
with Mrs. Oliver Crary.
The nervous excitement,
shown on th1s page, started at
4:30 on a Tuesday when about 90
Newport Harbor Cotillion
.members formed separate lines
• of boys and girls and were
paired off for the evening with a
tuck of the arms by Mrs.
Martine.
After preliminary instructions
the music started and Kurt
Martin e s upervi se d the
youngsters' early attempts at
mastering the intrir:acies of
leading and following. A few
winces and grimaCl'S covered
the di sco mf o rt and
embarrassment or stepping on
toes.
But mostly there were smiles
as the youthful partners
progressed throu~h two or three
traditional dances and eagerly
anticipated the ch~ ::~::
demonstration.
"Families are encouraged to
observe our parties," said Vic
Warmington, co-ordinator of
cotillions. "Siblings can . eve
p9'ticlpatA> in !he easidt d:;J or the evening ...
Indeed, there were a J
number of parents sitting a
tablei; around the Pavilion. !·
Their expressions were a mill:
of nostalgia for their cotillions ~
years ago, pride i n thelrf.
children. thoughts of futur~
cotillions for the toddlers oq:
their knees and gratitude that
thi s tradition remains as ~
steadying influence amid discd'
and punk rock music.
And the reward for corr~ctly
s h a k i n g h a n d s . d a o ci o 1-
s m oothly for 20 minutes and·
esc ortihg a date to the
refreshment table? ·
There's punch and cookies,
root beer or milkshakes:
WHITE GLOVES AND TIE Orcss111g up as
part of the Cotillion tradition Candace
Cht·~c·bro waits for the dance to start as Suzy
:\fartinc a~sbt"' Patrick Wt'rncr.
•w ••ION -Pope John Paul II 1tands in
front ~ the main altar with nine new bishops
of tbe Roman Catholic Church, includinl two
,., .......
Americans. The pontiff had just consecrated
them in a solmn Mass a~ St. Peter's Basillca.
I Al 1 FREE Smc*andln meeting we'll show yoo how. I I I
I Give us sixty minutes to prove that you can quit smoking. Forever. Easily. Without scare tactics. "cold I I turkey withdrawal", hypnosis. "climbing the walls". shock treatments. or willpower. I I That's right. You get to keep on smoking while you learn how to quit-painlessly. without gaining weight. I
I Right now it may sound too good to be true. But it is true. And hundreds of thousands of people all over the I
world have already quit smoking at Smokenders. I 1 -Hundreds of major corporations and organlzations-tncluding the U.S Public Health Service (part of I I HEW) have already chosen Smokenders to help their own employees put out their c1gare1tes for good.
I So join us this week for a FREE Smokenders meeting And bring your cigarettes. (You can leave your 1
1 willpower at home.)
I MONDAY WEDNESOO THU RWY I I Jnary 11 .1--v 13 JaMrJ 14 I I IScm1n;irs s1a11 11181 (Semin<11s .i111 1120) jScm1nars s1a11 1121) I I I I 8ulnl M 7:30 PM Long Buch 7:30 PM Newport Badl 7:30 PM I
HOLIDAY INN HYATI HOUSE MARRIOTT HOTEL I I 7CXXl Beach Blvd. 6400 E. Pacific Coast Hwy ~Newport Center Drive I
I (Fwy. #91. I Beach Blvd. Exit) . ~ ·-lnC 1171 (-"''' i '--------•CLIP AllD SAVE AS A REMlllDER OF DATE. TIME AND LOCATION•--------'
... and how does
your garden grow?
S11rgeries different
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I res~tlully
au11est you need to aet 1omethin1
atralaht. A total hysterectomy mean1 the
uterus and the cervix have been removed.
A sub-total hystereaomy meal)J the uterus
has been removed bUN.be cervix haa been
left in place. To. remove an ovary ls an
oophorectomy. To remove a tube is a
salpin&ectomy.
When "th' works" have been removed
lt is a total hysterectomy AND a bilateral
salpin1o-oophorectomy. To tell a woman
who has had a totaJ hysterectomy that she
has had both ovaries removed is
misleading. -M.D. IN D.C.
DEAR M.D.: At lealt Z, ... M.D.a have
written me to set me 1tralPt. I tlaaak you
all.
I named aa my comultaat Dr. Geor«e
Ryan. I aasure you that Dr. Ryan, who._
president of the American Colle1e of
Ob1tetrtc1 and Gynecology, uon what a
bllateraJ salplago-oopborectomy la. Tbe
goot was mlae. Obviously, sometlaillg waa
lost ID the translation. Next time l'IJ &,et It
la writing and not on the teleplloee.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a
compulsive liar. Usually I lie about things
no one cares about. But sometimes my lies
are a little more complicated, and I get
myself into embarrassing jams.
My parents took me for counseling
when I was 12 and again when I was 16. It
didn't help. I find myself lying more and
more and I'm afraid I will get caught in
something awful one day and disgrace
myself.
I know about Alcoholics Anonymous
and Gamblers Anonymous. Is there an
organization called "Liars Anonymous"?
Please help me. -A LIAR
DEAK flllEND: 8orl'J, ·1 bow of •
eelf-belp .,..,. for IJan. but I do uw• a
few M ...... M. Ftnt, people wllo .. a lot·
uaually talk a lot -a•d lftea Ulley are f aa
talkers. Slow down. Doa't feel yCMI •• coa.-• ewerytll.la1.
At tile root of moat Jylq II the feellal
of lueeurUy. Uara want to lmpreu ud
don't quite trot ttae truth to do lt, so they
magalfy, embellish and flaaJJy fabricate.
Wbea you elevate your level of
self·es&eem, you will no longer feel t.be
nee-t to lle. Make that your goal.
DEA& READERS: Thia poem .. by a
young womaa wbo worked la my office
wlae• I first started to wrtte Uie co1 .... I
bad not beard from her ID several yean. It
uugbt my fancy, and I'd Uke to share It
with you.
WORKING FOR ANN LANDERS
A low moan swept the country saying:
lam
I have
I mut>t
I want
I can't
I didn't
She didn't
They didn't
What do you think of a person like
that?
And where can I get one?
(Please excuse the writeing.) ( cq)
-BARBARA FRANCIS. Albuquerque ,
N.M.
Mom making waves
I 'm a mother who is a victim of
generation riptides.
I swim in the traditional waters where
a child is married at the age of 18, has a
baby at 19 and a life·constricting mortgage
by 21.
But a funny thing happened to me on
my way to the next generation . I
encountered a tidal wave of freedom and
independence that made sense. So, I also
support the current waves that question
why you have to be married before you're
30 or more .
I'm a cohtradiction and I know it.
WHEN MY GROWN CHILDREN can't
s upport a 7-year-old car and feed
themselves at the same time. I'm glad
they're not married.
When they blow a half week's salary
on a Rolling Stones concert. I'm glad
they're responsible only for themselves.
When they reach a new plateau of
accomplishment and realize they've done
something they never thought they could
do before, I s hare their pride.
But there are other days when they
have onJy to walk in the front door to know
on which waters I'm sailing.
"lli, Mom."
"It's the end of the month. Why aren't
you out shopping for a husband before au
the bargains are gone?"
"You always said ;o one was good
enough for me.'·
· flMA 80M8fCI
ATWIT'S END
"That's before I knew you. What about
that nice boy who ordered wine with the
dinner?"
"He was. shallow. insensitive, crude.
chauvinistic, 'fllarried and bragged about
setting fires.·'
"No one's perfect."
"He s aid you s hould lose about 20
pounds."
"YOU WERE LUCKY THE creep was
convicted. So what about the other nice
fella who loved Barry Manilow?"
··He thought ERA stood for Earned
Run Average."
"And that nice boy who lived at home
with his mother?"
.. He thought ERA s tood for a
detergent."
"Why are you punishing your mother?
Is it because I am short and you don't like
short people? Is it because I never got up
in the mornings to get your breakfast? Are
you persecuting me for post-dating checks
, for the tooth fairy? Why?"
"Let me guess , Mom. You saw
someone's new grandchild today, right?"
That kid's too smart to get married.
Gemini: Finish project
~
Tuesday, January 12
ARIES <March 2l·April 19>: Check
tendency to base actions on impulse. Aura
of deception exists -someone would like
to see you trip. Define terms. strive to
detect motives.
TAURUS (April ~May 20>: You'll
have added responsibility. additional
pressure, but you'll also gain support from
·persons in position to enhance your
security.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20 >: Finish
rather than initiate project. By so doing, ·
you'll gain wider audience and elevate
personal prestige. Short trip may be
necessary to complete assignment.
CANCER (June 21-July 22>: New
approach leads to profit, added
independence and ability to aet to heart of
matten. Cycle moves towards peak -
you'll make important diacove.-les and,
_could meet dynamic individual.
LEO <July 23-Aui. 22>: Look be·
·hind scenes for answers; aura of intrigue
dominates scenario. Cycle bilb, you'll'
re1ain MMe of directiOft and dilemma wilt
. be resolved through ''lntultlve nub ...
V.lltOO (At.I. D): Check diet. be aware~ n requlrementa and
adhere to res n1 re1ardlq reat,
-recreation and e l9e. You'll be ukecl to
· expr .. views controvenlal 1ubjed.
-•A.f • CSec»t. aa.oet. 22>: Crlticllm ot
elfortii iliil1 not be l'UIOll for .
Take a.waun la revillnl. reytewtna -4 ·
rebulldiaa on a more 1ultable 1t.ructure.
BY SIDNEY OMARA
SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov . 21>: Gain
comes through written word; accent
expression, creative endeavors and
willingness to move away from status quo.-
Gemitli, Virgo, Sagittarius persons play
active roles. Superior expresses confidence
and you'll have opportunity to advance
career.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
.Good moon aspect coincides with
'tong.range plans, travel, communication
and a spiritual revelation. Important
changes occur in domestic area -
·harmony can be restored on bomelront.
CAP&ICOllN (Dec. 22-Jan. JJ>: You
could be taraet for some0ne who .-S
aomethln1 for nothing. Protect sell in
emotional clinches.
. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18):
'Spotlisht on public relations,
accommodations with those whole views
'may not colncide with your on. Stress
! cooperation, h~1al papen ucl tax re·
jqutrel!lenta.:..
PDICD (Feb. 1 .. Marda •>: Y.lu·u be
rid' of unnecessary burden. a.ic:gan
·completed favors wm be ret aid
lncllvidual who aided you ln put t.e
lback on scene. Focm al8o on .,._ no
depend on you, pet.a and employment.
,_,, •-.-.-.,._, ... _,...._.....
"Tougheat ref in the league."
PflSOllAllTr Q.&A.
BY MARILYN ANO HY GARDNER
.
Star unaware
of own beauty ·
Add to Our List of Gorgeous Gals Who
Aren't Really Sure They Are: "WKRP's"
Loni Anderson ... I'm really insecure
about my looks." confesses the TV star.
"When I wake up in the morning. if I
look like Rosemary's baby, I feel very
insecure . . . In t his town." sighs the
buxom blonde. "if you just had to compete
on your looks, you might as well pack and
go home. There's a pretty girl under every
rock."
Q; o8r son will be making a business
trip soon to Nairobi -and of course I know
they must eat all kinds of strange and
exotic foods there. What is their most
popular food?
-Mrs, Hazel G .• Philadelphia
A: Believe it or not. it's not the roast
mbuzi or fried kuku which wins the
popularity contest. It ·s that exotic and
strange delicacy called the hamburger.
They have their hamburger chains -like
Burger Chef, Wimpy, etc. "And," says one
burger baron. "ha mburgers cut across
racial. religious and tribal lines ...
making it possible for nearly anyone to eat
out."
Q: Many years ago, when I lived in
Hollywood. the house that Charlie Chaplin
Uved in became known as "Breakaway
House.•• Any idea why?
-Justin L., Laguna Beach
A: Yes. The famous funny man was
also said to be tight with a buck. And when
he built his house on Summit Drive. he
used carpenters from his studio. For him.
that was the good news. But the bad news
was that s ince these m e n usually
constructed only temporary sets. no sooner
was the house finished. then it started
falling apart. A railing here -a doorknob
there. And so it was dubbed ··Breakaway
House." ·
5.-nd your queltiona to H11 Gardnn, "Glad You
Aiud Thai," in core of tM Daily Pilot, P.O. Boz
19621). Irvine, Calif. 92'114. Marilyn and H11 Gardner
will anawer GI many queitiona GI theJI can in IMT
column, but IM volume of mail maMI personal
replie1 impouible.
S1All DIUIUlf
AROUND THE WORLD
Ship whistle
• Jars memory
··A whistling girl and a crowing hen
Ah.ooys come to no good end."
Don't know who said lt but lt was
obviously some old-time male chauvinist
who didn't want women to compete with
men in the whistle department.
What's the movie where Lauren Bacall
telli Bogart if he wants anything. just
whistle? And adds: "You know how to
whistle, don't you? Just pucker up your
Ii ps and blow."
Both my daughters were mad to
whis tle. It comes on girls at about age 10.
All the neighborhood muffins asked my
help. Alas. I never learned that two-ringer
screeching whistle.
I said: ··1 haven't been able to do it
since l knocked out my front tooth." J
·wouldn't admit 1 didn't have the talent.
A su1p·s WHISTLE BLEW this
morning. Three deep blasts. Eacb one sent
a momentary echo off Telegraph Hill. I
suppose it was a fa rewell salute to San
Francisco. She had a fol'eign flag I couldn't
m ake out.
It wa s t h e o nly s h ip a t the
Embarcadero. The piers put the ir
warehouse fingers into the bay and there
are n'o ships alongside . No grind of winches
and shouts of longshoremen. It's a lonely
waterfront. A spray of white gulls on the
roors.
Sea commerce is glamorous. The black
freighters with a streak or rust at the
waterline that carried hardwoods from the
Philippines. Sugar from Hawaii. Sleek
Toyotas from Japan
Rain drifts over the gunmetal water. I
was 18 and determined to get tattooed.
T here were tattoo parlors just off the
waterfront. Along Mission. I think. I had
my eye on a place in Panama. The tattooer
was a black man from Jamaica.
"I MAKE VOU VERY pretty. m y
boss." he said in the soft island accent. · · 1
fi x you a loving hea rt with your
sweetheart's name ...
1 had in mind something a little saltier.
A dagger with a scrolled ··Death Before
Dishonor."'
Anyway I wasn't going to get tattooed
at home. I wanted foreign art work so I
could roll up a sleeve and say· · · 1 got this
one in Panama. Jamaican from Runawav
Bay has a place just up the street from
Kelly's Ritz."
I wore leather huaraches J bought in
Mazatlan. I smoked Queen Bee cigarettes
from the port of Amapala in Honduras.
The tobacco tasted sweet. J got them for
two cents a pack and they were strong as a
wire splice
"LET ME MAKE VOU A buttahflv on
the muscle. Mr Pilot." said the tatt00er.
··vpu say. ·Fly away, Madam Buttahfly.'
You move your arm and she lift her
wings."
I forget what he-charged but it was
more than I could handle. Otherwise rd be
a walking Rembrandt today. An <.1rt work
in the supermarket.
His walls were papered with designs he
could print on you permanently. lie could
do flags or a ll nations . lie could needle on
a treasure chest half but·ied in a line of
pirate sand. He was black as coffee and
had white hair.
Below on the rainy bay. the freighter
began to move backward. A strip or water
opened between the steel side and the
dock. Her flag blew out and 1t was the
starred fl~g of Panama
I slid open the deck door and gave her
a farewell:
· · Whooo Whooo. Whooo · ·
Medical term defined
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I've had a
heart attack. My doctor calls It by the
fancy name of myocardial Infarction. I've
been wondering Just what this means.
-MR.D.
DEAR MR. 0 .: Myocardial infarction
means death of heart muscle cells. There's
death or necrosis or heart muscle if blood
is cut off from an area for 20 minutes.
Myocardial infarction ma y be
precipitated in patients who suffer from
'high blood pressure, in those subjected to
emotional excitement or extreme physica l
exertion. Also in those who have
po1tsurgical blood loss, severe infection or
arterial spasm due to atherosclerosis.
In this latter condition there's an
'POT SI01S
BY ~SHLEIGH BRILLIANT
T rou1 HfAlTH
DR. PETER J. STEINCAOHN
accumulation of plaques or sort fatty
material producing thrombosis or clots. As
a result, the coronary arteries narrow and
this reduces blood supply to the heart
muscle. Then prolonged heart damage
results.
Most infarctions involve the left
ventricle of the heart. The pain due to
myocardial infarction may last for hours
or days (in severe attacks>. It extends
across the chest, into the shoulders. neck.
jaw and arms. Patient perspir~ profusely,
the blood pressure plummets. and the
patient has a sense of fear and doom.
Getting emergency treatment is
important. Approximately half of those
who die of a heart attack do so before
receiving any, medical attention.
Diagnosis is confirmed by ECGs and
examining the blood for enzyme elevations
(i.e . CPK ..:_ creaUn phosphokinase>. One
of the moit severe complications is a heart
. irregularity, ( arrythmia> called
ventrlculllr fibrillation. This must be
treated immediately.
During the first year following the
attack. there's a much areater than
average death rate. In the next five yean
the mortality rate falls to 5 percent per
year.
Orange Cout DAIL V PtLOT/Monday. January 11. 1982
"" ......... REFLECTION OF LOVE -Office worker
Lauren Scasney adjusts a window sign that
has been a mended to include U.S. Steel.
which began buying Marathon Oi l Co. of
Findlay, Ohio. last week. The heart-shaped
optical effect was produced by the refl ection
or a nother sign.
Pilot advertising
Is good business
for Sherman Clay.
"Our ad In your recent tablold
section pulled more business
than any slngle ad we have ever
run." Marty C. Flinn,
Manager, Sherman Clay,
South Coast Plaza.
~~rod ....
It is worth the price to have at
least one thing in your life that is'
absolutely perf ecl. Newport Floor
Covering is proud to be chosen to
introduce to your area R.S. V.P. and
all its richness, beauty and brilliance
unequaled ln any carpet. R.S. V.P. is a
classic European velvet and h as
pinpoint surface refinement and a soft
wool-like luster rarely seen in nylon
carpeting.
If performance is a consideration
in purchasing your carpet ... you owe
it to yourself lo see R.S. V.P. Fabrica
designed and engineered R.S. V.P.
using ANso ~ IV nylon . a fourth
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positive control for the life or the
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Most important. R.S. V.P: ls backed by Fabrica's outstanding
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CARPETING • DRAPERIES• LINOLEUM • FLOOR TILi • WOOD FLOORING • WALL PAPER
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• Serving Newport area for 28 years •
; I
r
t
°""" Oollt DAILY '9LOT/MOnd1y, -*'UllY"11.1llil . .,, .... ,_
"Why do al my stories ho¥e animoh in them?"
by Brad Anderson
I;//
"Move over! I've read this page three times
. and still don't know what It says!"
"I hat~ Mond1y1.''
Hank Ketchum
~
I '(;DGt; PARKER by Harold L~ Ooux
NOW, WNT A MINUTE ..• t
DON'T KNOW 'THAT 1 UKf
lHAT •.• n-.__-~
. ..
l
WELL. I'M OlAO YOU CAME TO
Ai, RANDALL
FO«&ES 00€5
TO LINDA MAY'5
~ROOM.
HE ~ P£RPUXED
&Y HER WPHOfUC
MOOD!
"//;~~
015CU56 5C1tlP'T CHAH6E5!
HAVE A !:If.AT, AANOAU.'
AC*>88 51 blCMld
1 LMglC '"'· 52 Docw .... 4 P'l U ' d 54 Hnn'I kt!\
• Mlr90l'll 51 "**"-
14 A-8 MOMr """ 11 Ur a:...... . CNrge ..... ., ... ,, ............
1tNOI °"" • GroMMlp 14 Ct"*1
21'*-" ...... 22_.._ 17T...,.
D ... HlfM•NAM .. -... ................
........ 10Gllw9pllt
-71CWW " ..... ·=-~ • ....... I... 11 'Mcllt'I i•--.,._ ......... .. ,._,. ....... -..... . ..... .... '* .,....,. .,. ........... . . ,..... ..... ,, ... ,.... ...... .....
• _.. .... ._.. MUllrl
-~-,,._,_ ........ .,_...
Woops .'
WH.ATWENT
WRO~?
·-.... .,..... ....... . l.r•• Fl ..... ..~ ...... , .......... t_.i~ .......... ... ..... ·-·-...... . ... t1 k&• .......... ...... ........._. ......... !-! ·--·--·-.I
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
HoW LoNG c,AN
A MAN BE
eXPECT~DTo
INHAt.~?
t -
,_,,
1'0 ~ ANVTMtH6 TO
•A ·~PWOH ...
TIJll8U:•D•
I QN1cX>IN1Ml!-~"'"1V~Yi M'f''D1NfAWK'S •rMt~v.
~l!P?
SHOE
.Of4,
Hl,NANCY·--I HEAR. REALLY?
A NEW' BOY MOVED
ACROSS TME STREET
Oil.SMOCK
F=ROM
YOU
, _,
6EE., t'MR\C.K ... ~ \..AST
1'1ME ~ 9\.W f<>Otm\.,
I ALMOS1 ~ tll'I
r----, r1.w.tR~
. ...
by Jett MacNelly
1
I
L..
11ERE
ARE
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I I Name ................................................. . I .
1 Address ...............•................. : .............•
I c·· . I ety ......••..••.•.•.••..•.......• Phone ••.............
I
--~---·---------------------· 111111 I ;~::!,( ! i
'"''*
BUSINESS REPLY LABEL
I or ..... CNst D•llY pt ...
· Box 15'°
Costa Mesa, CA. "62'
CIRCULATION DEPT.
UNIUOSUll!.J ------~
I
I
I
..-.. 1111,..., .... --....... ~ • ...... VMlllP"tdty ............. .,.....
.. .. 0 QI .... INlf'9
tltllle .. MMt tf\alr ........ ". ... (1) .... ........ ,..,,... .. ••Cl> tamGM.L.I ~ ...... ...,.,,. .. ............ ,.,.....
-..i P"lf'W" II a ~
-*and ........ to ._ .. .,.,
(l)MCMI * • "Tf\a Hollywood KMll*'' (ttell ~
WWM,T~O...Oll*'..,._. _ 111 ...... ,...., ........ --..,. ....... heVOO In~
.... to~ ..... doelno
ot "*' hllngout by .....
loClll llOnle --..oa..
MIOI\. '"'
HAUNT!D -Linda Kelsey as rePorter Billi~ Newman investigates a murder at
a so-caJled haunted house and Milton
Selzer plays a lawyer who claims ghosts
were to blame in the killinJl on .. Lou Grant" at 10 tonight on KNXT (2>.
-· (J) LOU 8'WfT ... ""'.~ ........... ~ur• whMa wor111nQ
Oft • ~ "°'*. ll'llK• .-··· .... IMOCK Ol1 THI NIW
''The~ Pw• '*"" Aol>eft HuQlla tr•
\1'111 1>«11 to the la1e
~wlth"1 vaat
.,.,... al lnwntlone for •
I006I at hOw .,, ...,._._,
..... rapidly cNnOlno W«td.
~-90~ ,.... fllll ..... ....,. ..... ~'°~ --~tarttle ...... ,..,.. .
I TIC TAO DOUllH
~I~
.-oRf
.GNAT •••ONttMCa "OW-In America: P_,.
Ttytof' I Thl.e MocMrn
Cle9llcl" The P-..1 Tllyklt
0.-Compeny .. ....
tur9d In periot••-..
tM 1911 Mwrtcen 0..-
FeeeMll Mid In °""*"· Nottti Cwolna. (J) , ....... Mnm
9 YOU A1UD PCMt 01'
~ew.d: . ..... Catdlee
King eotir.. Wftfl Hie a....
Hende" end •• ....,.,_
Noodle .. 1111 199'· ..
(C)MCMI
..... '"Tiie ... 8t8W·
-·· (1177) ~ 8111e1, Chrl11opller
""-··"~ .... m.ite .. 1errortad by •
~ kllet who lurtl9
In ltMt .,,._. ~
Ing .,. elegenl lftMl6on..
'PO'
(%)MDVII • * "hwlde ..,_... l:OO. (J) LR• A CIN:IU8.
CHAM.aMOWN
AnlrNINd. Snoopy, ltrtdl·
.,. with • bed -ol pup-
V'I iowe, NN ..., end
jolrle the '*-to be ,_
the poodle ol ..... "'--
~ B 9 UTT\.I HOtm ON
ntR llltlWNI
The lngele' MM) ad!csited
eon ,,_ NN --r from
IOM.(R)Q .WCM!
.. ~ .. (1977) Mec:Oonekl c:.rer. JoM Comee. •On.An ~
~ • b4lnd llgut'9
•-.: • plene cr.-..ng
1n10 • tiowe: .,. ~
tkln Into .,. ~ al
OM~.--. ....
·-.. Mtd k> be bur· led.
ecou.w
MIKE1"UU.
"Pee 10" Oregon S\Me va.
s~ ....... ~
A took et tM tnt lfte09-
dne cneted lor elriglee to "*' oltw elriglee: • top ltudlo ...., who bec:*e
141 .,,.. --.; Unda H9rnl
..... ~trip In
Fr-, Chef T.. rnella
fr..::h ...... .WCM!
··•·'The~~ .,d Hugha" (Pet1 1)
(1177) T~ LAe ~
Ed Aenderl. The lllgllly
vojetl6e end eccentnc mu1-
tlmllloMlre -....,., end~to~
Ille of'lbe9t 0 ~ I I r' CO .. end
~nigea.
·~HANNEL LISTINGS
e ICNXT ICBSI
e KNBC INBCI
e ICTLA (Ind.I
e KABC .IABCI
e KFMB ICBSI
e KHJ·TV (Ind.I
• KCST °cABCI
e KTTV llnd.I e KCOP.TV (Ind.)
•• ICCET tPBSI
e KOCE (PBSI
ca> On-TV
IIJ Z·TV
CID HBO
<tl tCinemaicl
Cl) IWOR) NY., N.Y.
@ IWTBSI
(!) IESPNI
Cl) (Sfiowtlme>
• Spotllgllt
• ICM>le News Nelworll)
• GNAT , .. ~ ·-o.noe In Amerioe: ,..,.
T tytof' I Three Mo6ern
0..-.'' The hut T9YIOr
OMoe Compeny .. ....
lured In perfofn-at
tM 1911 Arnenc#I 0.-
Feettvel ...., In °""*"·
Nor1tl c.oMn&. CHl MCMI
···~ ....... Mor1111t" (IMO) ldwerd WoodwWd,
~~·"'*,... w conecrlpled to llgtlt on
Englend'• tide In ..... Boer w., decide to fight the
'ao. Ql*llla on tMlr own
*"'-· i MCMl•p 11•1•119Car!TITl Y MANK
···~ ''The BleQ 8181· lion" C 1171) Kelly Reno.
Mickey Rooney. Alter
~~fromthe ~ on which Utey -• ltilpwl «*.cl togMher. •
young boy end • horM
becoflle lnllOl\led In the
,_ a1 the o.ntury. ·o ·
... ()) MJQ8 IUNN'rl
IMDWON.DCW
Ta.aV90N
Anlmetled. The bo«d of
dlrwccOR IC the QTTV .....
wottc, upeel -poor ret·
Inge. ... 8'9 Bunny to
bether,_~.
• ALL .. ntl 'NllA.Y
Archie beeomH
depl 111 I Ill efler teklng 8
ITllQllZIN'• .... upec:teney
·-lhet lndlcatee he will die wtlM he reecha 57.
• WON.D8"CW..
"Frllflll Terpll: eon-..ion.
OI A Oengeroue Men"
Rimed In a.lnlt, lntervlewt
wlltl T erpll, his f emlly,
ftiende tnd ~ -a.ta det.Jlll tlle ... end
CM.-al the '°"'* CtA
Ol>9f•tl..,. end fugitive
-rnercNrlt. a:a1 cm CMDi.a eo.G
t:GOe(J) u•A•e•H
Wtlle ~ end 8.J
-lebortng -• WOWlO-ed. ~ cow, H04
Upe~to
otlMMIM to ... 9IQlfty
....._, trtp to TOllyo.
•atMCME • • .. .. c...~ ( 1119)
l~ JoMeon, Rob-
by e.-. A poOi• ..... IO
young .... ... Ind
...., ~ find mlddM
-ll«CI to cope wfth "'*' lhe la~ to treln
-·~~ tlOn.J_R) •O MCMI "Vlctlma" (Plwniere) Kale
Nelllg.ln, Ken Howerd.
FOVt vlctlma al a r..,i.t )o4tl
toOM'* to trep tl*r
eC1aic*er en. ..... court•
Mt liWn frw, (Plnl'ltel ~
eretlon .. ed'llMd)
• ...VGM"P'IN
Gum!: Morgmn Felrclllld
• WONJ)8"CW,
"Fr..-. Terpll: Coo1t1•ID1t1
OI A OenglroU9 Men''
Rimed In lelNl, Int.,.,,.....
with Terpll, hla lemlly,
h1ende end~ -detae .... the .... end
eeteer of the IC>n"n« CtA
operative and fugitive
IW'IN merctlent.
(C)WCME ** "Phobia" (1080) Pmul
Mlcheel Oi-, Su.an
Hoowo-A group of mentel
pellent1 .,. mlM~ed
-ding to their lndMOu-
el !Mn. 'R'
(DJMCMI
•• "~"(1080)
T.,.,.._ Nekadal. A look·
.......... _Ind
~MCMI
*** "All Tllet Jui"
( 1t1t) Aoy 8c:t"60er • .-.
.. LMge. The~
-.... of • pre>Mel'o.lel
denoer la followed !Tom
~on tfle atege to S*'-* ctleu .....
.MOW • *" "Selem'• Lot"
(1179) Oe'M Soul. J-
MMOn. B8Md on lhe no...!
by Stephen King. A _,.
oaalul writer relume to hie
boytioocl home wtler• he
-. out to .cop • _...al
bizarre mteek1 on rlle
·~ by l'nlll• ~. IO';IO. NIEll!IW
WTWOM..WS
..... SWI
...,.. of lmmedlatf Inter·
• Ind ~ to Alnlrt-
cen foreign policy, lnclud·
Ing Allaelen Involvement In
the Middle Eat, .,. •xa-
rnlned.
(C)MOW
**'h "A OfeM'I Of P ...
lion .. ( 1878) Ellen aur.tyn,
M.ilN MWCOUl't. A Wi>lflM
Mio llJled II« c:NldfM Ind
ettemc>led ~ ...... ....,
llulbend left ...., -· en act,... who ~·t,....
.._. eetlnQ enda end Nie
~ In • Greek prlaon.
'A'
11:00eee(J)aa
NIWI
• MT\MDAY NIQHT
Hoet9: .... ., Co<* & OuO-
ley Moore. ou.t: Nell
SecfakL
I PAULHOOAH
.._,.. AVIATlOH
PWLL.owetwt
.IAN'ON>NC>IOH
Ffftd eoddentlly breakt
Lamont'• pcwOllaln end
vi-coMletlon.
• DOCCAVUT
~· Ktor J-CeMI.
(Pert 1al2)
·MYE'a~ nm CHU> ICll.UI'
HolC 8ob ftywt toon ..
the eylnC)t-. -end l~ of A.ye'• Syn-I
drome tnd the c:unwtt _,.,.., to Inform par-
ente end doc1ors ebolrt the
~of ..... ..__
~MOW
* *'h "Uttle Miu Mw1ler'"
11 .. 01 Walter Men.....,,
Julie ~ BMed on
..... Demon Runyon 1tory.
A QNf1, tt"'9Y 19308 bOOk·
le'• ... le twned wound '"'*' he acoept8 • ~~
old moppet • • martcer for a reclng bet. 'PO'
11:80. CJ) QUINCY
Quincy'• only due to the
IOcallon of • 1-.eger
buried ...... by kldneppen
leallalf...a.n~(R) •• THI!..,.""' CAMON
OUelCll: CMdlce 8wgen,
Mee o...te.. (R) •O MCNIWI ~ ·~GROUCH()
Wiiie end Terry we kld-
nepped end left In Ille deliltt witll no food, _.,
or hope of,_
I Kee'T..._,.T
CWl'T'IOMD MC ....
t1:41 (DJ MOYIE * * "Ceptaln Mldnlgllt"
( 19'0) T,.;y Sebeltlan. A
!Newest roommate almost didn't
a ,JEUYBUCK A~T ......... .....,.
!.OS. ANGEJ,..ES -Priscilla Barnes. the
a+west roommate on ABC's "Three's Company,"
a~ost didn't get to move.in.
· The N~W Co. was looking for a replacement
l~t summer for Suzanne Somers, who had left the
arlow in a salary diapute. .
"TREY TOLD MY a1eat I wu too
hiaticated,'' she aald. "Not many people hire a
~ e face like thia. I usually play ricb girls.
y woo'feven let me play prostitutes ualeaa it'a
a1•ery biib-<!lus pro1tltute.
.. 1.., ''Tbe audJence doesn't lautb at pretty fir la -,
umesa ebe'e the butt or the joke," the actreaa said.
''When I atar:tecr t only sot some ball-hearted
ltuabi uid l" wu gettin1 worried. Then the lau1ha
~IU to come. So lt'a wonderful lo play aaainat
ttpe." .
N .. w to H)', Ilise Barnes wu b1ted lo play
Terri jn tae comedy series now in Ila llxth Muon. •e J~ JQbn Ritter and Joyce DeWitt, ~. two
t'lmlllatq roommates, plus Don Knottt, Ric~
IW:ne ud Jenilee Harrtson.
"TBS 8801''8 ch•D.liDJ," abe Hid. ''I'm
ereUJ atrallht and not a caricature. I'm not a •mb bblde. Terri r .. cu lD a comedic wa1, but " •r• el80 ~ real way. 1 Wnlr tbeJ'" ~Jred a
...... l*'IOD. TM7're sWl do6111 llP\ .... w1 ......... llllo waua. but tt la cbutlnl .••
'' • • ............ prevjoully ~ 1D U.. CBS ....... ""!'be .American 01111" -blielly, u lt
=
out; ilDH tM lbow WU OG tM air only two
tM1 •9"7 fortuute,'' 1be aakt. ''lt'1 Yer7
tD pt lato a &bow or pt a Mow omo UM
· fte ~ Oirll' bad Gair a 11Mrt W.. So' ......_. 8tl.U, tt'1 not lille I Jult stepped otr
'
•
AP ........
ROOMMAT! ...,. Priscilla Barnes. as Terri,
is the newes t roommate on the A BC
comedy.· "ThrM's Company." The show
continues in the top 10 for the sixth year.
"lbe bul. l'v• bMD around for a wblle."
BelidM Mr prevloua Hrl•, lllN BamH wu
· lD "The Lut ManiM Couple in America" and
TUBE TOm:RS
KCOP e 8:00 -.. The Amat.Ing
Howard Hu1he1 ." Part 1 of movie starring Tommy Lee Jones.
KOCE 9 8:30 and KCET QI 9:00
"Frank firpll, Confeuion1 of u
Dan1erous Man." An interview and look
at the lifestyle of the former CIA
operative and fugitive arms merchant.
KNBC e 9:00 -"lee Castles." The
successful lce,skallng career of an Iowa
rarm girl is halted when she's blinded In
a freak accident.
KNXT 8 10 :00 "Lou Grant."
Billie h&s a brush with the supernatural.
See photo at left.
Yount dlec jodley llftdttlo
....... llNd "°"' ..... t9dlo
llatlcJ;n job end IM*lnCI
out al eoflOOI, taMe to
redlo ~o.dcM11nQ !Tom
Ille VM wfllie Gr\Mlng Loi
AngmlM aw.u ONeUng •
merry di... tor locel
auttiotttlle. 'PO'
. -Ml>NIGtfT-
1t:OO. lttA NA NA
Ouelt: l.alle Gor9.
e @MOW
• • "CrUll" ( 1178) Wll-
...,.,, Shetnet, Eddie Albeft.
The 1tory ol • jttllner'.
ctMti In Ille F1otlda Ever·
Oieda end t11e·r-of
13 of ltl 1)1111 lglll la
dr...und.(R)
-~ **~ "Pr9detors 01 The
See" (11177) Documentary.
Thim loOll 11 the verietlel of
1urvlvel technique•
~ by lnhaOftente ol
th• oceen '1 depth•
lnOadel loocege of .....
...... trOOOdllea end •
fight ~ • motlty ...
Ind .,, octopua.
• ..aOOUOlM
au.te: 8en Vereen, Feith
8roMI. ,... Z.00,-. Bob
Anderaon.
• trl IVfJMIOOV'I .....
DMOVIE * "Don't ,.,,_ The
Pllone" (1180) Jeme1
w•~. Ao Oen·
Ith. A ~th wltll
numerou1 peraonellty
quWtte COll'lmlll • --o4 ~ '""'Clert. 't:r~ Biiiy'' (11180)
Clint Ealtwood, Sondre
Locke. A tor.-ehoe
.....,,_. lrom New JerMy
reelizee ..... df.,,.. of per.
forming In e Wild W•t enow. 'PO'
1b)8 CHl MOYIE * * • "II To 5" ( 1880)
J-Fonde, Dolly Per1on
ThrM working wo~
,..,. agelne1 their aubju-
gatlon by • m8le c:NluYlniat
boM.. 'PO'
12:a0 8 9 TOMOMOW
0.-11: Joenne WOOd-
werd; former bo xing
ct..nplon Roeay GrOierlo,
mutllor I llumor111 Art
luettwWd. (R)
c•m1.....,.....,....._
llY" ~A .....
minded, !Ndcl'I IOld "*'·
llltlOM oNy ~ ot
Iha oul•ld• wotld 11 \ ""°"8h ~. ...
tr-dou• •-alld ~~Ui ..... ~..enano~-~ ....................
'PO'
1:001 ==Our
•• ''The~··
I 1156) Olenn Ford, F,.,.
L.ovefOy. AT-~
llnde rOIMnOe Ind ._,_
lute ..._., M anempu to
dlll¥lr prtm ln•wM bulle
to llnld. 1:ao•..,.
"In Old"°'' ... .,,..
2lDO. INTIRTANimn'
To.HT
An lntenlew ..nh Red
klflon.
1= * 'h "From The U19 OI The
Marlone1t•" ( 1180) A
mppei••ll)' mlld-mannered .
~rnurdermtfle
prOllltute ~ ha vlelted •=.:a"' •• 'W.. & Phil" (tNO),
MlcflMI OntkeM, Met90C
l(ldder. Three people
beglll • tl'lengulw ,_
In °' ......... v-. ltlat oont""-ttwougllout tfle "*'~ IOclel mllleu bl the '70.. 'A'
(%)MCMI
* * *'h ''The Perellu
View'' (1174) Wwren a..t.
ty, Peule Prentlila. An
lnvHtlgatlve reporter
at1emptatouncowra
nationwide network of
poltal .....eina. =1:--• * "Ptlobla" (19'0) PIUI
Midi... 01-. Suun
Hogen. A group al mentel
pet lent• .,. '""',,.,.,
~tothelr~
el!Mn.'R'
2:to8 MOVIE
•• "The love-tn1•··
( 1M1) ~ Mec:Arthw,
&..... ~. A oolege
profeaeor beooma Ille
"'OUN" ol In underground
~ ..... CUii. Mt(I) IHOM'a-.c>Q(
l::IO (I) CMI 11 IJ:R
T~ada,,'s
Da••l9"' ltlot11rs
tott(Z)•••·.4 ''1lle~
vi.'' (1t74) W-.n ....
ty, Peule PtentlM Alt
lnve1t1oet1va repotter
anempta to 1H10011« a
ne110nwtci. networl Of
~.....,,.. .. a:> •• ~ "Uttia Ortllt. ""-""'° Ooo'' A.nlmat«l. A CMllne a.pece .,......, end
hit two llutnln trlende
..,,.,__ nlel\y ••dtlng
~ • **"Young Md~"
Elle LM9on, I.A. Stain.
WMn tflG9dY foroa a
)'OllnO boy to join • -eon
train In ttle ruoged wat, he
IMllte • young Indian girt
Ind beglna a,_ lh. 'PO'
7:80 (C) • *. "Mo Hull•"
(19'0) ~ ·-· Croe«iy. Stllll & fleuh.
Footeoa al • _.... al entl-
nudler power QOnQertm
hekt In .._ Yortt City d<K·
lno September, 1179,
featuring the Dooble
Brothefs, Cwly Simon,
J-T aylot 91\d er,_
Springltean. II complled In
thle~tary.'PG' CHJ *** "Coel Mlner'1
Oeught•" (t NO) SIM)'
8peeell, To mmy l••
.ion.. 8ued on Lor.tie
l ynn'1 eutobiograpfly. A
young girt from • poor
,_,.... In n.wel Kentucky
mama • much 06der 1aea1
boywho•lgll-llwriee
to 111rdom In the rnue1c
lnduetly. 'PO.
....... UTiie BlllCk
Stalllon" ( 1971) Kelly
Reno, Mldcay Rooney
Alter being reecued from
, .... ~ Qfl ~ Ibey
--lhlpwreclled loget~
• • • young boy end •
horM become lnvotved In
Ille,_. of the century. 'Q '
l:OO (I) • "Double Troubte"
(1941) Herry lengdon,
Benny Rubin A plllr ol
lmmigranta go to work In •
~ fectory tnd lnedvert·
enll)' •lath • ...wu.t>le
breclllet In • cen of bes\I
...... ··big The! Uren!·
um" (195e) Bowery Boym,
Leo Ooroey. The eoy. buy
• urenium mine end t-s
W• to dalm their fortune. CC).*"' "Quentin Our·
werd" PtS6) Robert Tmy-
IOr, Key Kendall. King lou-
la XI •ttemclta 10 cr ... e a
netlonel 11818 out of I fw.
deley.tem. • • * •• "Seyonere··
( 1151) Metton Brendo, Red
Bultona. All American jet ...... ~,.,..,,,
............ , ...... ,..,
,....,, -.... Miry ~ ..... , .................. ,,..,
~ 9'ye11 ......... .......A .... . ---......... ._ .... ............... . n•Cl:l •• * .. .,...,.....
(1tl01 ....... .... er-, .... & ...._
~ ........... .
,...., pow. oonooft9
....... In .._ Yo.ti ~ dW•
ltlf ~·-...,. 1t1t, fHturlnt the Ooo., .. .,.,.....,.. Cerly ..._,
........ T~ end an,..
• ... 0 .......... "' ... ._..,._ieory,'N ' ..................
la" (ttl1) 1(-1 .........
....... Wooct.
...... ~ FfOl'll ...,..., ..,.. •• t t177) [)oo.
UIMllUWy •
® • * ... ''TM"""°'*
WOltW' ( t.n) l'eny Ouae
Aatln, ....... Giibert .
011 llld ..... Atttr//e ..._, .,... -.. .-....
*~to~
~---lludlm -the deaf, bllnd end "'°'• llsdHolioftic...,, •••• "The Hur!W''
(1t7t) .._ ~. El
Welled\. Aalpll "Pep1"
~ ...........
-... -• n\OdellHSey bounty hunter. 'R'
1:00 Cl) * "Double Trouble"
(11M1) Harry Lengdon,
Benny Aubin. A pelt o1
lmtNgr ..... 00 lo work In •
bewl fllCtofy end ~
enll)' llMh • velullJle
bteo.IM In a can ol bane. 1:ao (1:) ...... "Scarf-"
(1932) PIUI Munl, George
Rall A ~time hoo6-
lum riMe to the top ol ttw
hap clllMg Protllbltlon.
a.•***"AF-lnThe
CfOWd" (1951) Art6y Orif.
11111, Plllflde Neel. A derel-
ict ooa from • lall oell to
natlonel recognlllon on Ille
Wengtll al Ille "'-end
muek:el ....... t.
t:aO (%) •• * ... Atthur"
(1911) Dlldlay Moore, Liu .._._ ... .. ........
ettempta to force him Into
rnelllnQ • pr....,,engeci
,..,... he ~·t -·· • drunken, dleguetlnQly
nc:n ~ f• 1n io...
..... .,. aplrlng ec:1rwm
who ...,,., mMt """
eicpeetatlone. ·A'
.. CC> * .... "l.ltu. Orbft, The
Aslro OoQ" Ar*neted. A
~~.,......end
..... two """*' lnencll .,..,.,._ many uclUng
adwntura. t.:ao. '* •'h ''Men OI ~
Ind" (1171) nn. Aulnoftl •
Peter 8"-. Alter being
ClOi 1clemoed to deetll lor
hie alleged "plonege
actMtlel. a Germen d-
dler eeeepa Co Alriee
•lier• II• beeome1
lnvolV9d ..... • bend o4
Moroccan~. CH> • • ''The Incredible
Stwtnklng W-.." (1N1J
Liiy Tomin, ~ ~
din, A IUbWben ~
find• heroelf gecuno
----her ~ cernad llullbend looka on.
'PO'
I cmt&MITfl('(
Mll'•IDINT
NETWONC Nl!WI
(C)UOVlf * * ''The Lady Vllnleha"
( 19711) Elllott Gould, Cybltl
A 0e1er1111nff athlete
,.._ to let hie l'landleap
llold him beok from
beconflng an Olymple
c:flamplon.
wWI tfla ... peibn• of
• l'emed ~ edlnQ
compeny.
tctOO CH> • * 'h ''The ...
4:ao(C) •• ·~~ (1117) EMa ,,....,,
~Dey. A l'O'oW'O .,._
I... helren bee.om••
ettrKted to a '-
Ameran pop llfio-.
••••• "Anlmel
CrllCltert" ( 1930) MWll
Brotllera, Margeret
Dumont. Ceptaln Speuld-
lng. the Alricen 9'q)iorW.
retuma from a r-t
expedition to wrMll ,._
at a eoaety metrOfl'•
..... end petty. 'G'
Shepherd. An Innocent
men end • beeulllut wom-
en -.....,, Into • deedly upionege ceper aboerd •
&wopeen u~ tretn
trewllng lhtough pre-ww
Nail Oermeny. 'PO' I
&146 CHl MOYIE
·~. (J) MNAC8< &en.-i. lllred to find •
Greell c:f\elloe worth S 15
million thlll dleeppewed
from • clOMly guerded
room In• mu-.im (R)
12-M (I) MOVIE
***'It "Being Tiier•"
WE SHOULD C7c:> A
PIECE ON THE NEWS
A80UT~6' VIOLENCE, REED!
• move 1n
• *IA "The Oiltlld.,"
( 1878) SMrtnQ Heyclln.
Ct"elg W~. A young
ldeelllt .,....,. to Not1ham
Ireland •o join Ille '1ruggle
for lodepeodeooe. 'R'
(%)MOYIE
•• "Bronco Blly'' (1080)
Clint EMtwood, 8onOr8
Locke. A former · lhoe
.....,,.,, !Tom New JerMy ,..._ '* ~ al pet•
forming In • Wiid W•t
1"""6~0~T
IN F~OFTHE
5TA,,ON IHE OTHER
NIGHT!
"Sunday Lovers." Since her first role on an
episode of "Columbo" she's had numerous guest
star roles in various series.
ll does seem a contradiction that beauty would
keep an actress out of roles. "It can be a handicap
in certain roles," she said. "( know people are
going to read this and say, 'Ob, yeah. isn't Ute
tQugh when you're pretty.' But I've studied acting
and I want to act. And you're not lolni to be pretty
forever. The wrinkles will appear and you'll get
older.''
She was an Air Force l>rat and spent a lot of
time moving around the country unW her ram.Uy
aettJed at Edwards Air Force Bue at Lancaster,
Calif. She aald abe g:rew llP in a strict bouaebold,
where she wore white gloves to church.
"I DIDN'T WEAR my first Jeans until I ran
away from home," abe said. "Then It was .
corduroy and my motbe:r t.bouabt tt wu riaq~.
My father was like the Great Santini. He didn't
want me to date until J was 21. So I ran away from
home."
She moved in with a sister in Reno, went to
college and tried for a career in danein&. Later,
ahe moved lo San Diego and won tbe nm of many
beauty contests. She was a nmner-up for Miu
California. She was spotted by Bob Hope and
joined bit tto'lpe of performen entenalnln1 at
military bases around the country.
MISS BARNES SAID stK tees entertainment
retutning Lo the old values abe was ralHd by.
"Look at the rett1.rn of James Ga.mer and Robert
Stack;' abt aaJcl. "And tb9 l>OtMAlu1'1 of movl•
like 'Raiders of the Lott Art.'
"The movtes can't a« uy men •xplidt.
People have been aboeked eDOQlb, We can'\ IO
&n)' ftattbet~ l t.b1Dlt people ............ Med
acrlpte with meanln1. l \h.lnk peopl9 Med IMrMI. I
know they do.''
Bomb" (1080) Don Adem•.
SyMe Knltel Secret aoent
Muwell Smert I-hil
most dlll'lglrOUI ~
In en wen Ylllelrl who p111ww
to lalncll ......_ 111111 will
dlarQbe Iha entlr• humlln
popolletlon. 'PO'
(I) • * * 'h "The Elephenl
Men" (1080) JOhn Hurt,
Anthony ~Ins. A dedl--
eeled phy•lelan tallH
under hit wing • llorTlbty
deformed men whc»e 1119
1111 lhen had i-i apent In
e1'911P ltMI< HhlbltioNI.
·PO'
A 6-UY SNEAKED UP
&EHINO t.I'€ ~ HIT
ME CHER TH€ HEAD
WITH A ROL.J..£0-UP
NE'H5PAPER!
(%) *. "Bfonco Bllf'
( 1MO) Cllnt Ealtwood.
Sondfa lodle. A IOt1"11«
Moe .....,.._, from New
JerMy relllzem hie dreMI
of performlnlJ In • Wiid
W•t~'PO'
~
, 111111 Piiat
Classifieds
~~
6S y erta ~6 \{ ~~ra1\'
i"'"'ac(;opac. M f\\
\>ro"'1\. a\r . '-. 110w & ·
w\rC!I· \eC w11\<\ 3!1\CJ c ass·~v \O fo~ 4 ,pt\.
fac\ 1 "s ~iJ:J.'13 , vantar•v\>. 1\4 -~
''Sold thru Piiot In
2 days. R•n 1 week In
L.A. Times with no reauHa.
Very lmpreaaecH .,,.
g~f[@642-5678
charge It~-by phone
From South Lag.an• I North County
cell 540-1320 IOIMree.
I
a:r IOD. C. DON ... ..., ........
AD amb&UoUa proJ.ct chron.lellne tbl hlltory ol
t.h• natural world be1lm T\aelday tvtnlna with a
ll·part PBS Mrlt1 tlUtd "Llf• on Earth." The
1b0w pNm.l.,... on KCET Channel• at I p.m. and
alfO WW be lbown at t p. m. on KOCE Channel 50.
lf tbe ftnt ae1mmt ii a porteat ol Wna• to
come, tbe documeatary can exped lt'9dol for lta
exceptional photosraph1; taklna v.le~n to the
wflda ol AuatraUa, Malaysia, South Africa, the
United Stat.a, Kenya, Tan&anla and Japan.
FUmlftl took mc>re than three years at the
handa ot the BBC'• Briatol Natural H.ilt.ory Unit.
NarraUna the HriH ii David Attenborou1h,
an author and natural blatorlan who tracet the
bl1tory ol the planet t.hroulh blllloos ol years ot
evolutiae. The prorram carries the air of Carl
Sa1an'1 acclaimed "Cosmos" series. But
Attenborou&h saves hls viewen from starry-eyed,
narcilaiatic presentation that haa been a crlticlam
of ast1'on9.ner Sa1an's style.
Belinnlna with the 1lmple one·ceU or1anilm1
tbat developed from the rlcb protel.D 1ttw ot our
early plaDet'a blltorJ, "lJfe on Earth" ahowa how
natural aeleotioo """ the way for the evolution
of sea creat~ into l•nd·dweutna mammals.
Each ae1ment shows how dlfferlnt 1peclea
adapted to hanb envlronmenll, bow some met
with extlncUon and other pro9s»t;red t.brou1h lee
aaea, maaalve volcanic eruptions and other
worldwide cataclysms.
The first pro1ram ls Utled "The lnllnlte
Variety'' and takes us tbrouch mUUona of years ol
plant and animal development. The underwater
cinematography la especially spectacular as
Atlenborou1h explores the birthplace of all life on
Earth.
The eJisode examines Charles Darwin's
theories, wlth vislta to various altea seen by the
19th century naturalist during his voyaae aboard
the sea11r. "Life on Earth" ls presented by WQLN in
Erie, ffnn. and underwritten by Mobil OU Corp.
Billboard picks top weekly singles
BJ Tlae Aaloctated Presa
The foUowina are Billboard's bot record bits
for the week endin1 January 16 aa they appear in
next week's issue of Biilboard magazine.
HOT SINGLES
1. "Physical" Ollvia Newton-John CMCA>
2. "Waiting for a Girl Like You " Foreigner
<Atlantic>
3. "Let's Groove" Earth, Wind & Fire
(ARC-Columbia)
4. "I Can't Go For That" Daryl Hall & John
Oates (RCA>
S. "Centerfold" J . Geils Band <EMl·America>
6. "Harden My Heart" Quarterflash (Geffen>
NOW PLAYING
AllC ..... MAU .. mA f'WA llA Cln c:.11A Oraftge837 0340 lrt152t·533t Or1llge 63• 3911
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Scrczczn ComplczH
Coll 634 2553
Qapman 6 Sant. Ana Fwy
Meti-S.t. a Sun.
Showl•t 7:15 9:20
••1•0.SCRI Shows at
7:00 9:00
NoP-
7. "Leather and Lace" Stevie Nicka with Don
Henley (Modern Records>
8. "Turn Your Love Around" George Benson
(Warner Bros.)
9. "Trouble" Lindsey Buckingham (Asylum>
10. "The Sweetest Thing" Juice Newton
<Capitol>
11. "Yesterday's Songs" Neil Diamond
Columbia) ·
12. "Comin' In and Out of Your Life" Barbra
Streisand <Columbia)
13. "Hooked on Classics" Royal Philharmonic
Orchestra CRCA>
14. "Cool Night" Paul Davis (Arista>
~-.. ton-.
thla new Y••r the funniest ever!
~eti)'I~
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~~
Or1ng1 Cout DAaLY PtLOT/Mond1y. January 11 , 1882
*BARGAIN llArlN••S *
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Salem
4
SMOOTH LOW TAR 100s
J
•
CLASSIFIED C6
.
Costa Mesa opens
busy Sea View
week against ·
N eivport. See C2.
Montana drives to Pontiac NFL playoffs
WILD·CAAD PLAYOFFS
Su.day, Dee. H
AmertcH Coafereoce Buffalo 31, New York Jeta 27 49er quarterback hits Clark for Super (Bo.wl) touchdown . NaUoeal Coaferaee New York Giani.a 27, PhiJadelphla 21
CONFERENCE SE•lnNALS
Saturday. la•. %
NaUoaal Coofereece Da llas 38, Tampa Bay 0
SA~ FRANCISCO (AP) -Quarterback Joe
Montana wiU be leading the San Francisco 49ers, a
team admittins to delirious dlabeUef, Into Super
Bowl XVI.
"I don't know how I'm going to handle it. All I
know is that I'm not going to miss curfew in
Pontiac," said offensive tackle Keith Fahnborst,
one of the few old pros on 'ute team that ~t the
Dallas Cowboys 28·27 Sunday to claim the National
Football Conference cha mpionship.
"Joe will be getting most of the attention at
Pontiac, and be deser ves it," said Fahnhorst.
Montana directed an 89-yard drive against
Dallas in the closing minutu. He rolled to tbe
right and threw a 6-yard touchdown paas to wide
receiver Dwight Clark, who leaped hiJCh near the
back or the end zone to make the catch with 51
seconds rema1n.lng.
Coach Bill Walsh, the man w,bo calla the plays
for Montana, calle d it "one of the areatest
comebacks in National FootbaJl League history."
"That last 49ers drive for some reason was
unstoppable," said Charlie Waters, the veteran
lfafety wbo was hoping to make bls sixth Super
Bowl trip with the Cowboys.
The 49ers will be playing for the NFL crown
for the fi rst time In their 32-year history. They will
meet the Cincinnati Bengals in the Super Bowl
Jan . 24 at the Pontiac, Mich., Silverdome. The
Bengals whipped San Diego Sunday in the AFC.
title game, 27-7.
"There's only one game left, and It should
be a ~real JCame. It should be a great Super Bowl,"
said Walsh, wbo s erved elsht seasons a.a an assistant coach for the Bengals.
The 49ers' 13·3 regular season record was beat
In the NFL and included a 21·3 triumph over the
Bengals, who were 12-4.
"lt hasn't quite sunk in yet that we're goln1 to
the Super Bowl," said Montana. "Our last drive
was typical of the whole season. It was a matter of
us-!col'lng when we had to."
Amertea• Coafettace
San Diego 41, Mlarnl 38 loll
Suaclay, .laa. 3
Amertcaa Coafereace
Cancannatl 28. Buffalo 21
NaUoHI Coaferuce
The 49ers were 2·14 In 1979, when Montana was
a rookie out of Notre Dame, and both the 49ers and
Bengals were 6-10 last season. This year's Super
Bowl will be the first since 1969, when the New
York Jets upset the Baltimore Colts, that two
teams with no Super Bowl experience will be
meeting.
San Francisco 38, New York Giant.a 24
CONFERENCE CRAllPJONSHIPS
Sunday'• Scorea
American Coafereace
Cmc1Mali 27, San Diego 7
National Coaferea~
San Francisco 28, Dallas 27
''l'm just glad for my teammates, both ·the
<See SAN FRANCISCO, Page C3) ~
. SUPER BOWL XVI
Sunday, .Ian. %4
Cincinnati vs. San Francisco at Pontiac. Mich., I
.m 1Channel 21
·c~argers iced
Cincinnati • ID
Bengals ride icy blast to Super Bowl
CINCINNATI, Ohio <AP> -Old Man Winter shot an icy blast
at much of the country, but the
r ags -to-ri c hes Cincinnati
Bengals earned their first trip to
the Super Bowl by playing as lf
they didn't know it was cold.
Des pi t e brutal playing
conditions -it was 9 below zero
with a wind'chill factor of minus
59 degrees at game lime -the
Bengals played near perfect
football in beating the San Diego
Chargers 27·7 Sunday for the
Amer:can Football Conference
title.
C in cinnati 's 14 -year-old
expansion franchise, beaten 10
of 16 times a year ago, will
carry a 14·4 record against the
San Francisco 49ers, 15·3, in the
Super Bowl Jan. 24 at the
Silverdome in Pontiac, Mich.
Tbe 49ers defeated Dallas 28-27
S und ay fo r the National
Conference crown.
TO A MAN, the Be ngals,
playing be fore a Riverfront
Stadium crowd of 46,302, thought
the frigid Ohio weather worked
against the Chargers.
The San Die go player s
downplayed the poor conditions,
but it must have been a shock to
their bodies. They had played in
84-degree heat in Miami eight·
days earlier. It was a swing,
counting the wi nd-chill factor, of
143 degrees.
when I came up here to get used
to this cold," he said. "l knew
there was no way they could
come here in two days and play
their normal game. I knew <>Ur
ball-control offense had' ab
advantage over their big-play
offense." '
"We knew we had a feeling for
the baJJ in the cold," said D¥
Ross, the Bengals' top receiv~r
with five catches. "We dress6d
differently than they did. They
just had sweat shirts on."
THE CHARGERS, after
com milting four turnovers that
led to one touchdown and one
field goal, refused to alibi. .
"We were dressed for lt; thf
only people it really affect.eel
we re the quarterback.s -they
we ren't dressed for it. We have
no excuses," said ti&bl end
Kellen Winslow. who scored Saa
Diego's only touchdown. It came
on a 93-yard screen, pua from
quarterback Dan Fouts Ln the
second quarter.
"I can't imagine a windier,
colder day. We were just lucky it
wasn't wet," Fouls said. The
Cha rger s' quarterback, who
threw for an all-ti.me league
record of 4,802 yards during the
season, said his hands were
numb during aq
un c h a racteris tic 15-for-28 1 185-yard performance.
START THE PARTY Dwight Clark of th<.' S<in Francisco
49er s leaps high into the <.iir to sn<.1rc puss from Joe
M ontana <left 1 during the fin<.il minutc.•s of Sunda~"s NFC
ch ampionship gam e at Candlestick Park. M eanwhi le.
M ontana gleefully si gnals the touchdown but Dallas· Ed
"Too Tall" Jones doesn't feel much like celebratin)!
Perhaps Cr is Coll insworth,
Cincinnati's all-pro rookie wide
receiver from F lorida, best
described it.
"It took me a couple or weeks
''The two interceptiOOS' I threw
wer e the diffe rence," Fouts
said.
Meanwhile, his rival, Ken
Anderson, did not throw a single
interception and tbe Bengali
had one meaningless fumble.
J
Error only th_reat to Stadler
'Walrus' shakes off mistake to win Tucson Open
T UC SO N <A P > -C r aig Stadl e r 's
front-running, 3-slroke victory in the Tucson Open
was, for the most part, a nice little stroll in the
desert sunstu.ne.
It was interrupted by one. brief moment of
panic when the leader board showed that Bob
Gilder had tied bim for the lead.
came out and told me the board was wrong, that
he was really 9-under."
Gilder eventua lly finished fourth at 270 after a
65. J ay Haas was another shot back at 271 after a
169.
The group at 272 included Joe Hager, Andy
Bean, Leona rd Thompson, Peter Jacobsen, John
Jackson, Keith Fergus and Greg Powers. Hager
had a closing 65, Powers 69 and the others 67's. ·
''I wu just standing there saying, 'What the
hell is this','" Stadler said after his easy triumph
Sunday in the event that inaugurated the 10-month Johnny Miller, who made a hurried trip back
from southern Africa and his triumph in a $1
·• · million event to defend his Tucson title, finished
with a 67 that left him at 277.
American pro golf tour.
''Now that was some kind of pressure."
B';&t it really wasn't.
11' WAS AN error in the scoring. And that's
what it took -an error -to put any pressure at
all on the man the other touring pros call "The
W'8lrus."
Stadler. with early rounds of 6§, 64 and 66 had
staked himself to ' 7-shot lead going into the fin al
round, then bl.lilt it to 8. · "I kind of eased off and cruised," he s aid. He
needed only a final round of 1-over-par 71 to claim
the $54,000 first prize with a total of *· 14 shots under par on the 6,797-yard Randolph Park.
Municipal Cburse.
There was only one spot of drama -other
Utan the scorin& error.
~ IT CAME LATE in the warm. sunny day when
Stadler bogeyed the 15th alter misalnf the green. At about die aame mom~nt.' Vance Heafner
dropped a 10-foot blrdie putt on the 17th. It cut
Stadfer'• lead from 4 a'bou to 2. But Crall came
back · with a two-putt, blrdle-4 on the next
hole. That save blm 3 shots ln hand with lwo holes
to 10 and he ambled In to lhe t'ourtb victory of his
· seven-year tour career.
"Reat.stlcaUy. we weTe all Jutt playln& for
second," Heafner sald.
He aot a tie for tbaV~pottt.lon wllh John
Mahaffey at M . Eacb •ad~' a ebtn1 65 and
colleeted '38.• trom tb6 total IMll'M of '300.000.
No one elu re.a11J --dciii :_ ~R for the
lllualon created b1 tbe •Wini.,... T;
When stlldler was sta~ Oft the tlth tee, he
1Janced at the leader board sbOwina the 1tandin11 ot the tourmament leaden. He wu at 1.4 Wider
par, And the board suddenly showed Glider also at
t4 under.
"I IUD SEEN hf m at t.under jual a couple of
ltolea earlier and I was wonderinl what the hell.
waa 1"'°1 on," Stadler 1ald. "Then an official
Tired Lakers
how to Bucks
MILWA UKEE ("AP> -The Milwaukee Bucks'
eame plan was to try to slow down Los Angeles.
but they wound up running the Lakers into the
ground.
The Lakers, undermanned and weary after
three games in as many nights, spent most of their
energy cutting a 59-42 halftime deficit to 79--75 after
three periods Sunday night. The Bucks, sparked by
Quinn Buckner and Scott May, spurted in the
fourth quart.er and ran away with a 118-107
National Basketball Association victory
Buckner scored a season bigb 27 points 15 of
them ln the fourth quarter, while May add;d eitbt
of bis 12 points ln the final period aa the Bucks
broke a slump of three defeata in their previous
four 1ames. They bad lost rive of their previous
seven at h<?me.
The Lakers were led by Earvin "Maaic"
Johnson with 28 points and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar with 22, but sorely missed •win& man MJchael
Cooper, sidelined with a sprained ankle. Forward
Mitch kupehak, the Lalters' most physical pla:Yer,
la rec:overin1 from knee surcery.
"Th8¥ couldn't use the combinations they
needed," Buck~ said. "Wltbout Cooper. they
used a different kind ol rotation to aublUtQte and
they can't run as much. They couldn't do the
thlng1 they bad to do to 1et back ln tbe tame
quickly."
Abdul-Jabbar played 40 minutes. about six or
seven more than Lake rs' Coach Pat lliley would ·
like. I
LOOSE BAU. -San Die10 Cba.r1er runnlna back Chuck
Muncie (46 l loses control of the .football an.er being
upended by Cincinnati linebacker Reggie WllUams during
AFC championship game Sunday.
~ .
THE NFL'S MOST Valuable
Player in 1981 hit 1• of 22 passes
f o r 161 yards and two
touchdowns; 8 yards to M.L.
Harris in the first quarter to
give the Bengals a 10-0 lead, and
3 yards to Don Bass in the fourth
period.
"It was just a matter of
survival out there," Anderson
said. ''Playing in the Super Bowl
i s beyond belief. Maybe
somebody better pinch me. It
may be a dream, and I may
wake up."
Ci ncinnati cornerback Louis
Breeden, who intercepted one of
Fouts' pass es, thought the
Chargers' quarterback bad to
make more of an adjustment to
the' weather than Andenon.
· Schneider
shatters
swim mark
GAl~VILLE, Fla. (AP) -
Petra Schneider of Eas.t
Germany , ln a atunniDi
pertor-mance, stripped 20
seconds off t.be world'a•beat time
lo the 1,500-meter freestyle
Sunday nl1ht at the U .~.
Swimming International meet.
Schneider. 18, w-. cloeked ~
15 mlnutes, 43.31 aeconds, aa she
broke the 11:os.a mark aet by
East Germany's Ines Dien ,_.
tbla meet lut year and e&1'111ijl
her f ourtb told medal ln Ul.e
three-day competition.
Craia Beardsley of the U.~
national t.am Ht a Wol'ld'a·belt
in the 200-meter butterfll,
twhnmlnl Ute coune tn 1 :51.,9
to IHP die 1:51.11 mark Mt bJ
Swede•'• Par Arvldaaoa ~ AprU.
Tbe ICaat Oftrman womee'•
t • a m do m I n at• d t b,• comDetltloa takla1 11 ol .M
lndf vld1Hl 10141 ••••LA·
Schnelder led tbe ••1 b) wlnala& the a.meter liidl._..
medlef and Mttlnl ~
of a: 10.10 tn tbe 200·met-...
lndlvldul meclley aDd a:n.•ta
tbe 800-meter fneat.Jle.
f
ings look to minors
·for coaching help
From AP Dbpatd1ea
LOS ANGELES -Loa An1elea ~ Coach Parker MacDonald will be '
removed from the poaltlon and
succeeded by Don Perry, who has
been the head coach at the Kines' mlnor leacut
afflliate at New Haven, It was announced
Sunday.
MacDon a ld will become the Kinas·
assistant (eneral mana1er. a new position in
the National Hockey League
club's mana1erial structure.
a c c o r d l n ·I t o a n
announcement from team
owner J erry Buas in Buffalo.
where Los Angeles was
facing the Sabres Sunday
night.
MacDonald coached the
Kings against the Sabres.
Perry wilJ lake over the job
MMOCNtAU> within a few days, it was
announced.
T he Kings also announced that Brad
Selwood. Perry's assistant at New Haven,
which is in the American Hockey League, will
join the Kings as Perry's assistant. thereby
keeping intact the coaching staff of the -
Nighthawks, who were 20·17-4 entering a game
against Nova Scotia Sunday night.
Loe Angeles assistant coach Nick Beverley
will s ucceed Perry as head coach of the
Nighthawks, the Kings said.
"Don Perry is my staff's unanimous
selection," said Buss. "Because of the great
youth on our team (the Kings ha ve 11 players on
their roster who are 23 years of age or
younger), we believe that Don is the man for
the job because he is a teacher, a motivator and
a d isciplinarian."
Quote of the day
Art Modell, owner of the Cleveland
Browns, on the team's 5·11 r~rd in 1981
aft e r the c lub had won a division
championship the previous year: "There
is absolutely no truth to the rumor that the
Browns' highlight film will be a Polaroid
shot."
Connors outlasts McEnroe
"It was his strength against my m
strength," said Jimmy Connors after '
his marathon match Sunday against
John McEnroe. On this day, Connors was the
stronger of the two after his 6-7, 7·5, 6·7, 7·5, 6-4
victory in the championship match of a
Challenge tournament in Rosem ont, Ill.
Frequent disputes marred the match, attended
by about 7,124 spectators who braved the
Chicago area's sub-Arctic cold . It was the first
match between McEnroe and Connors,
c urrently the world's No. l and 3 players
respectively, si nce last
November .... Australian Rod Frawley won
his first Grand Prix singles title titer five years
on the men's professional tennis circuit,
defeating unseeded American Uoyd Bou.n1e,
2·6, 6·3, 6-2 Sunday in the finals of the South
Australian Qpen. The 23-year-old Bourne. a
psychology graduate from Los Angeles, was
under the watchful eye of two undercover
policemen in tennis garb all day after two TV
stations received phone calls Saturday from a
person threatening to shoot him.
lllEIBT 1110 TOO~
....al 111 -• •IEY • IEIL fSTAlE T-. DAYS? WE'IE ml
llUT ... Fm YDlll
MilOne liiill Rocket qo.meback • M•H• •••••• and CalYI• Ill Mar• comblMd for 40 NCCIOd·baU
polnla s.day DiPt to &elllll Hou•IOD
to a 111-lot victory over rtrUud la
the National Basketball A11oc:latlon. Tae Rockett trailed late. ln th• ftrtt ball, 50-11. but
came back to tie the same early ln tht third
period. Malone, wbo scored 2S of bl• came-bilh
34 pointa in the aecond ball, led tbe 1ur1e u the
Rocketa bum a nfne.polnt
lead late in the third quarter,
8'·75 ... Gre1 Ballard'•
three-point ahot at the buuer
-Wubln1ton 's third
three-point 1oa1 1n overtime
-geve the Bullets a 129·126
victory over the New York
• Knicks. Ballard, Jeff Rulaad
aod Frallll .lohDaoa each hit
SO-fool shots to overcome a
MALOH 122· l 18 lead by the Knicks.
Ballard finished with 27 polnll, Johnson hit for a
career-blgh 26 and Ruland 24 . . . Larey Blnl
scored a season-high 40 points and six other
Celtics scored In double fhrures as Boston held
off Detroit, 134·124.
Calgary puts clamps on Gretzky
Mel BrldgmH scored twice and ~·
assisted on another goal as the ' .
Calgary Flames defeated the
Edmonton Oilers 5·1 in a game that
saw Oilers scoring sensaUon Wayae Gretally
held without a point. The Oilers looked as
though they would be shut out tor the fln l lime
this season. but Jart Kurri scored al 17:51 or the
third period to ruin Pat a1111a•1 shutout
bid ... Bobby Clarke
scored the game-winning
gQal early in the third period
and assisted on two others,
as Philadelphia came from
three goals down to beat
Colorado, 5·4 . . . Ben1t
LundhoAm's second goal of
the game at 12 : 16 or the thfrd
period lifted Winnipeg into a
4.4 l ie with Mo ntreal.
n1Do~ Lundholm skated from the
s ide of the Montreal net and surprised
Canadjens netminder Rick Wamaley with a low
shot lo the far corner ... Doug Wllllams
scored a pair of SO-foot slapshots on separate
power plays to lead Chicago lo a 3-2 victory
over Vancouver.
Conigliaro's condition ·stable'
Former Boston Red Sox slugger
Tony Conl&llaro, stricken with a • serious heart attack, was reported
s emi-conscious. a hospital spokesman said
Sunday, but remains in serious tondilion in a
coronary care unit. "His condition is serious but
has been stabilized," said Martin Baader,
spokesman for Massachusetts General Hospital
where Conigliaro was brought Saturday
morning . . . Former Santa Monica High
football coach Michael Antboay Raymo will not
be retried on murder charges, a Superior
Court judge in Los AngeJes has ruled.
Television. radio
Following a,.e the top spo,.ts events on TV
tonight. Ratings a,.e: " " " " excellent : " " " worth watching ;"./ fair;" forget it.
[el 8 p.m., Channel 9 ./ I
COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Oregon State at Stanfo,.d.
Announcers: Mike Walden and Pete Newell.
The 17th-ranked Beavers will try to stay perfect In the Pac-10 when they visit Maples Pavilion. Oregon State ripped Callfo,.nia
Satu,.day 74·43 to imp,.ove its overall mark to
10·2. Guard Le~ Conne,. leads the Beave,.s; the Ca,.dlnals have been paced by freshman
forwa,.d Johnny Roge,.s and senio,. forward Brian
Welch.
RADIO
No events scheduled.
A. HOlUS NORTON
~ ,,_,._ ~,....,. ~ '"-'*' b.pett .,.,, AMfhOI ol ... •How IO ,,,_,.,, ""*' You.,.
ONlt /loot'" --....., "OHRT Q. AU.IN .... ..,, UCMW d
l.;/#IOlollllit ... , .....
~""""'·•,.._ ,.,.,_,,, ... /WI
E•IW flllll umt Ot .. Ho ....,., Oowft.. ,..
Whlle many uy, "It can't be done,"
t~ who'Ve learned the
MCIWta of ROBERT AU.EN'S
"NOTHING DOWN" are NOW buying profltllble reel eetate with
llttie Of no money down. Atryooe
who'9 lelfned theee slmplt ct98l1Ye
flnlndng techniques can safety
begin their roed to flnancllll I._
pendtnoe .. .aYOidtng tNI wrong
pn>pertlea, coetly mlataQI and ~ Cllh flows. The "NOllilNG , DOWN" l)'ltem of l""89tlng la a
oornplete plen deligMd for the nowtce lnwttOf whO wanta to 1i.t
wtth Nttle Of no moniy. lt'I I total ~that unitee you wtth othn fOr contlnuoua monthly ..aawic.
In~~ CIOllfl. Thoullndl hlM pnMf'I .. NOTHING DOWN"
worbl
lelm the "NOTHING DOWN"
methods In a short period of time
and they can ie.d you to we.Ith
and financial eecunty for life.
Thousands of people twv. '-ned
theee methoda and how to ptOepef' dur1ng a 19C88tlon.
Thent'a NO coet, NO obllQltlon to
team about the meet CtMllve, aafe
ll'Metment ayatem of the century.
"NOTHING DOWN" can 1'9YO!utlon-
lze your fl!Wlcial plans. You CM be
turned from a doubting novice Into
a confident expert. Thlee ioctic.i,
down-te>e91th methoda hll¥e been
teated, tr1ed and rl'OYed by thou·
.. nd1. Surveya o "NOTHING
DOWN" Qf'llduat• ell over Amet1ca prow rT WORKSI Take the time to
come to the FREE "NOTHING
DOWN" aemlrw '9blofuWy NO
coet ex obffgltjon~ It'• a nmeudou1 teaming expetlence, .cotttluct9d by • •CJOCtH•ftll aNOCM,. ol Rob9tt
Al,_, find Hol#I Notton.1. you•,.
EVER going to get on the raid to
flnlncilll l~ldlfioe, the time to 1i.t la NON
NO CHl~OlfEN UNOlft 10. l'f.IAU. .......... ..._
1.r.1.--Y.~ na
SOOTH CO\ff "AZA HOm IN Anton ~!Yd. (l...a5, BrillOI exit)
CottaM.-., .. __ ,,_.,.
MWll WMOn HOJll 700 W. Cofwtion Wey (off We9t St., ~'°"from ClfMntion Ctr) AMhelm
IP.&-I WI,~•
U• UllG.DY •• TI40 Lakewood llwd. (1·405,
HawthOml IW. •M) Lone IMch
•p blh6ndfowitr
By aooaa CA•LSON °' ................ Coata Meu H11b's Muatanp may be at the
cro11roada tonl1hl when they dutl Sea Vt.w
Leaaue buketbaJI rival Newport Harbor lo their
drive for the Utle and/or CIF playoff poulbllilies.
The third of four 1tra11bt encountert with
cootendera1 the Muatan11 O·U are up 11alnat the
6-7, 4-7 IOOk of 2·0 Newport Harbor. a team with
better board strenith and s~.
Other aames (n the Sea View Lea1ue tonijht
include Corona del Mar (2-0> at Saddleback (.0·2>.
Irvine (0.2) at Estancia (2.0) and El Toro <0·21 al
University O·l). All begin at 7•30.
AT COSTA MESA it's a colli1ion between
former Costa Me1a coach <Jerry De8111k> and bia
assistant (Tim YataefJ. The two have met twice in
the pa.st two seasons, and each time DeBusk and
his SaUofl used Mesa as a final tuneup before
league play with 25 and 12-point laughers.
"Tb.ls year the talent ls a little more even,"
says Parsel. "We r un similar styles and J'd say I
know that le4m as well as any. I'm sure Jerry will
have a couple of wrinkles for us, but we mi1ht
have something for them, loo."
It's a big week for the Sailors. too, with Irvine
Wednesday and rival Corona del Mar Friday.
"I'd be happy to go 2·1," says DeBusk.
The game features more than just a duel
between ex-coach and ex-assistant, it's a malchup
of friends.
"He knows what I do," says DeBusk. "I know
what he does. This is an emotional 1ame and it's a
year Mesa has some things lo prove and they can
doit.
"They're au good shooters with range and the
strongest rebounding team in the league."
THE SAILORS' CHIEF weapon is 6·7 Bryon
BaJI, who has averaged 18.8 poinU a game, and
along with 6·7 Joe Seager, presents a defensive net
around the basket within the Sailors' zone defense.
"They (Newport Harbor) like lo press and
run. We have lo get back on the break," says
Parse!.
Mesa's game centers around 6-4 guard Ken
Bardsley, who has averaged 18.0 points a game
and has already indicated he is headed for UC
Irvine following graduation.
But the Mustangs present more than merely
Bardsley. Really, it's a look of five forwards on ~e
Royals' Jones says
ice caused mishap
ROCHESTER, N. Y. <APl -Pitcher Mike
Jones of the Kansas City Royals said that ice -
not alcohol -led to the De~. 22 one-car accident
that nearly took his life.
''I'm just happ)' to be alive," he said. "I could
easily be dead."
The left-banded pitcher was released from
Stro ng Memorial Hospital Staturday. alter
suffering a dislocated spine and undergoing
surgery during ~ich _physicians fused two
dislocated neck vertebrae.
Declaring that his left arm is "Cine," he
added: "It's hard for me to Wt my right arm.
"I'm lUUng weights and usbli grip exercisers
to st.rengthen it."
The pitc her, who is awaiting a court
appearance Thursday. is slaying at the home of
his grandparents in nearby Penfield.
"They have me down for driving while
intoxicated. But I really don't think that's what it
was." he said. "ll was a freak accident. I was on
my side of the road and I hil some ice."
Wearing a neck brace and a waist-to-chest
cast. Jones said he olans to begin physical therapy
Wednesday
Oilers welcome Lane
Jim Lane, the 6-6 basketball s tar from
Huntington Beach High, who Jen lhe Oilers for
Laguna Hills then returned when ruled ineligible,
has been reinstated on the Oilers' team .
"We're putting whatever behind us," says
Huntington Beach Coach Roy Miller as he
prepares his team for the Sunset League opener at
Fountain Valley Wednesday night.
Lane averaged 16.0 points a game before
leaving Huntington Beach in mid-December.
"The problems we had were strictly a matter
of lack of communication," says Miller.
DUEL TONIGHT -Costa Mesa High
basketball coach Tim Parse! 1 leftl sends
his Mustangs against Jerry DeBusk ·s
Newport Harbor squad in a Sea View
League encounter tonight.
court, with John Rishebarger, John Strayer and
Jim Pelichowski also 6·4, along with !·2 junior
Dave Palmblade. •
T he Mesa zone offers few holes for
penetration, at Jeasl against teams without double
6·7S.
Costa Mesa is 6·5 overall, Newport Is 7-4. Eaeh
has beaten Marina, lost to Lakewood. The other
com mo~ opponent Is Capistrano Valley.
Newport Harbor won at Capo, 81·75, while
Mesa lost at Capo, 64·56.
llOVNDING OUT NEWPORT'S attack are 6-3
senior Scott Liner. 6-0 junior Brian Folk and 6-0
senior Steve Pelletier. Pelletier Ls the Sailors'
second leading scorer with an 11.1 average.
ElseWbere, Corona del Mar. Estancia and
Univenti1i1 loom as favorites. The Mike Hess-Chris
Lynch combo at Corona del Mar figures to atitle
anything Saddleback counters with; Jeff Gardner
and his Eagles teammates are 10·2 overall and are
expected to handle winless Irvine easily; and
University, which may have found a new battery
<Troy Larsen scored 23 against Irvine Friday> to
charge up its oHense. has the horses to deal with
El Toro .
Edison tops
basketball poll
Edison High's Chargers remain Orange
County's top rated basketball team as
selected by the Daily Pilot as they prepare
for the opening or Sunset League action
Wednesday.
The Chargers maintained their status
with an 85-76 non-league victory over Los
Altos last week despite the absence of scoring
leader Richard Chang, who was ill.
Tne l>~~ce o( the Top 10 was shuffl
bit with Brea-Olinda moving into s
place alter another two victories up
Wildcats' overall record to 14·2.
Qcean View dropped a notch to lhJ and
Fountain Valley fell to sixth after sp · ting a
pair of non-league games, while tancia
and Corona del Mar moved up a note or two.
the Sea View League rivals now at' o. 7 and
8.
This week's big game is Friday when No.
3 Ocean View invades No. 1 Edison for an
early Sunset League titanic.
Dally Pilot's Top H
Orange County Prep Basketball
Pos. Team Record
1. Edison 13·1
2. Brea-Olinda 14·2
3. Ocean View 9·5 •
4. Servile 9-6
5. Maler Dei 9-6
6. Fountain Valley 9-4
7. Estancia 1().2
8. Corona del Mar 7-2
9. Esperanza 12·2
10. (tie) San Clemente 12-4
Dana Hills 9-4
College basketball JOHNSON &'. SON
Presents ...
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~ P ete the "Greek"·
PETER
PICKS
THE 1982
UtCU
CONTUIJITll.
New Parts Depart.meat Houts
Now Open 8:00 am -l:OO ·pm Satilrdays
1' -c -0
1896 Harbor Boulevard, Coeta Me•
,.,.~ ..
NDllial .... IM9vll a leeiil, Wbo carrlt• four tl•ta fer II 1ard1 oa Uat 1am•-~ .......... "...,· ~-tlariel·"411n rw. •aM&f '?~ ='+. .. JC:"'i:ft .... kle tdi after '•.t•nbtnwa to. break .rr tie.
6.·I later, •bta DaUu quarterback o...-Wlal&a oomplee.I a pua to tM aen•
U·prd ..... tb• ctltltr.U•• IMmtd a bit
pre ....... OD UM~·_.....• HCondl on ... elocll, deftulve L&WHMI PUiera
•;rto OD1 U.w wut woWd bappen nut lD tut
llmt. hir 1ptctaton, it had to bl OM of the
lrtaWlt l&m .. tYtr," lakl J~ Jluao&dlt..~ 14·1.•ar-old Unebacbr wbo Wilt to S..per DOWl
XIV w6* Ult Loi Aa1elM 1Laa11.
"We made tbc tumov•l'I and won. l 1tlll don't
know bow we did Jt, •' he Mldtd.
. aaoW Wlaltt to f«ee a tumble &ad tbe .an· Jim
St1o1ck91 NeOY9nd the ball at aUdftt&d.
"Wt.. I aaw Ctark eateb t.Mt ..U. J wui*I
to aet up a.nd con1r1tulatt bl•· But I waa
paraly•ed. It waa Ju•t unbtllevable," •Jld Fahnborst.
. ,.
"It wu a do-or-die 1ltuatloa, and we wen
1o&n1 to do it," 1.td P)U•rt.
•....a •BU aren't a better team thu ua, but
the IUDt ellded at the rl1ht time for them," aalcl
DaUu Coaeb Tom Landry. . .
"I tb1nk the clilfereace ill tbll pme wu that'
we wanted lt more. Tb• Cowboys have been there
before, to the Super Bowl, and we haven't been,"
said Clark. .
The Cowboys, nicknamed "America'• Team"
in NFL circles, were playina ln the NFC title 1ame
for the ninth time ln 12 years. They ""''red a 45-14
reaular·seuon loaa at Can$ett1ck bUt went into
the rematch favored because of thelr pott-teuoo
-experience.
"I think tr we could have Just gotten 15 more
yards Qn the last drive we could have been in field
goal range and could ha,ve won it," sald White.
"We were i,uat a ff', mi$utea away from the
Super Bowl," Said Douf O.ble, the ti1bt end
wbqse 21-yard TD catch early in the final period
1ave Dallp a 27-21 le•d.
THE LEAD chan1ed bands f()r the sixth time
when Montana, who threw ~ad,ler touchdown
passes to Clark andTredd1e Solomon, bit Clark on
the game-winning toss in the final minutes. The
guartem.ct also was intercepted three times,
Registration today
Re«istralion for the Balboa Power Squadron's
spring plJoting clus will belin at 6:30 p.m. today
at the Newport Harbor' Yacht Club,_730 W. Bay St.,
Balboa.
The piloting class la free to all persons
interested in safe boatin1, whether beeinners or
seasoned boatmen. The 12-weeb course covers
such subfeets as handlinc under norinal and
adverse conditions, le1al requirements for safe
boating, rules or the nautical road, manners and
customs, charting and coasWne pUotin1.
All lectures are by aeasoned veterans of
boating who are members of the Balboa Power
Squadron, a unit of ·the far-flung United States
Power Squadrons. USPS is devoted entirely to
boating education and the promotion or safe
boating.
Colleaiate sailors were buy ove~ lbe boMdays
wlth two m8'jor re1atta&.
Eiebt •cboola patucJpated ln tbe Su1ar Bowl
Re1atta on Lake Pontchartrain near New Orleans.
Tile winner was Tulan• Unlvenlt1, takln1
advanta1e of local bowled,., but the USC team
WH a clOM aecond. TuJa.ne had a low 1eore of 46
points to 54 for use.
Trojan aklppen were Run SUvestri for the A
team and Peter Drasnln, 8 team. Crewln1 for
Sllveatri was Carol Mc.8ric1e, and handlinl the
sheets for Frunin WU Ann McBride. Draanl.D WU
low·POint individual scorer ln the re1atta.
~ Twelve West Coast schools partJclpated ln
Stanford University's Hancover Bowl r..e1atta Jan.
2.
The winner was Stabford wltb 61 points,
followed by Use, 65; Lona Beach State, 77; UC
Santa Barbara, 92, and U.S. Naval Academy, 98.
Stanford's Scott Merrill was low-point scorer
and wlnner of the B division. USC's Silvestri was
the A division winner.
Alaska Eagle move8 op
PORTSMOUTH, England -Alaska Ea1le, the
only American yacht in the Whitbread Around the
World race, bas moved from 12th to seventh place
on the third leg or the race which started from
Auckland,.N.Z .. Dec. 26.
After nine days at sea the fleet bad re·entered
the tumultuous Southern Ocean en route to Mar del
Plata, Argentina, according to the Royal,.Naval
Salling Association.
Latest report said the French contender
Gaulolses Ill was d ismasted in heavy seas,
leaving the crew safe but bitterly disappointed.
The yacht is beading for Tahiti or back to
Auckland for repairs.
Hinshaw-named commissiqner
Yachting As.sociation presents awards at meeting 7
Ted Wnabaw of Lido Isle
Yjtcht 1Club was awarded the
J • m ~bater Trophy for his
appointment as Commissioner
or Y acbting for the 1984 Olympic
Games.
Hinshaw was awarded the
coveted trophy at the annual
·Dark Star wins
Dark Star, skippered by
Randy Devore, Dana Point
Yacht Club, was the overall
winner Sunday in Dana Point
Yacht Club's Winter Regatta.
Second overall was California
Gold, Fred O'Connor, Dana
West Yacht Club, and third was
Valkyrie, Blll Murray, Capo
BYC.
Class winners:
CLASS A -I. Cellfomla Gold; t. Vellyrte; > Reollne, ...... ~. , .... IYC.
CLASS 8 -1. luftsltlne, Ron Mal-lly, O!"YC; t. Clalr9• L-, PIMll Frular, OPYC; J' E~ P• "-'!, OPYC; •·~.Ill• ~la<ll, OPYC.
HOH SPINNAKER -I. Oerll Star; t. ~ Tw, M-~. -"«-; 1. u1tim.. ,.,_
llM<Mtd, OPYC.
m eelin1 or the Southern
Callforrtia Yachting Auoclatloll
at California Yacht Club,
Marlria del Rey, Saturday nilht.
J erry Olson or Huntington
Harbour Yacht Club wu named
as the recipient or the Warren L.
Ewert Troph y for b is
outstanding activity in the
promotion or yachting by a
non-officer or SCYA.
Hinshaw is a staff commodore
or SCYA, sta!r commodore of
LIYC and bas held numerous
other offices in Southland
yachting organbationa. .
Olson la a staff commodore or
HHYC and treasurer of BOAT
(Boat Owners Associated
T ogether ) a Califo rnia
legislaUve group.
Taking office u tbe 1982
commodore of SCYA was Robert
S. Wilson of California ¥aebt
Club. He succeeds H. Doaald
Brown, Alamitos Ba~ ~acbt
Club.
Wilson is a staff commodore of
CYC , a staff commodore of the
AssoclaUoa of Santa Monlca Bay
Yacht Clubs, staff commodore
of the Southern CaHfornia
Cruiser Assc>ciatlon, and has
been involved in yacbtin1. both
sail and power, for more than 30
years.
Other flag officers installed
were Joseph Steele, Fountain
Valley, vlce commodore; John
Robinson, Balboa Yacht Club,
rear' commodore; Ro1er Wilson,
Los Angeles, secretary, and Jim
Nugent. BYC, treasurer.
The new board of directors are
Ardent Bryant, Southwestern
Yacht Club; Hoby Denny, Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club; Gail
Hine, Redondo Beach Yacht
Club; Adra Kober, Alamitos Bay
Yacht Club; Don Krebs, Mission
Bay Yacht Club; Hal r,taraten,
Silver Gate Yacht Club;
Barbara McCarthy, Dana Point.
Yacht Club ; Geor1e Nell,
Anacapa Yacht Club; Norton
Nelson. Long Beach Yacht Club;
and Tom Shadden, LBYC.
This Week's Specl~l
.._. __ _, insur.met agents
and brokers 1'7t CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE
Options include dual comfort seats, Cabriolet
top & cadillac wire wheel coven. (815WQ.V>.
, lasuranee -la rising? ~
Contact us ror competitive quotea
on Property. Liability. Dim cult
Products UabUlly. Commercial
'8795
Tea °*Pel• WauToC'lloele ft.-AtSlmUar Sariap!
CadiUac Value ProtrctWll ~ AgrHmftt A~
~ ....... ,.. ............ Ml,,.... .... f' .. U-
Auto. Group Ufe and Medical aa well as
Worker'• Compensallon Insurance.
1-
.... TllAT .-AT •M .m.m.· 111111 U11W1111 U1 Mift.· I
3931 fMcAlttv, News>9ft ~. (71,t) ,....,..
1
2600 HC:arfu 8tvd. Costa Mesa -------
• lmmtdate Allultl
• SaW ttw\ the aunl
• U.V.A.·Sunbedl •.Aeco11w1~ by Docton
& Nutrtt6on'8tl Wortdwldt
• All l)tl•m1 .. Certified Medloal
Dwa9 by the F.D.A.
(714) 540-1860 .
TIGHT GRIP -Trevor Johansen <21 of the
Kings has Buffalo's J .F . Sauve in a
headlock during Sunda~··s NHL game.
.., .........
Yvon J,..ambert < 15> of the Sabres is skating
in to offer assistance. .
Kings colder than weather
Another loss on the road prompts a coaching change
BUFFALO, N.Y. <AP> -The Buffalo Sabres
and t.be Los Angeles Kings were safely under t.be
roor or Memorial Auditorium well before blinard
conditions struck here, so they played a National
Hockey League game before a crowd or only 2,019.
The Sabres overcame the weather and a
sluggish first period and, with two-1oal efforts by
Gil Perreault and Dale McCourt, they topped the
Kings 6-4 Sunday nlgbt.
"The guys got down here e.arly so they dldn't
have any trouble. But they were worried about
their wives getting to the game and telephoning
home. We didn't have the usual pregame
Intensity," said Buffalo Coach Jim Roberts,
explaining the first period, in which the Kings
went ahead 2-1 on goals by Larry Murphy and
Doug Smith.
McCOUllT, WHO had two assists in the 1ame,
scored Buffalo's only goal in the first period on one
or Buffalo's three shots.
Jn the second period Alan Haworth broke In on
Los Angeles goalie Doug Keans and tied the game
at 2·2 with a wrlst shot.
Perreault then directed Mike Ramsey's long
shot into the goal to push Buffalo ahead.
The Kings made it 5-4 with less than five
minutes remaining when Greg Terrion and Jim
Fox broke away before Tenion shoved a shot by
Edwards.
Ric Seiling tacked on an empty-net eoal with
13 seconds left for Buffalo.
Meanwhile, it was announced as the came was
beginning that Los Angeles Coach Parker
MacDonald will be removed from the position.
Don Perry, who has been the head coach al t.be
Killgs' minor league affiliate al New Haven, will
be the club's new head coach.
MacDonald coached the Kings against the
Sabres. Perry will take over the job within a few
days. It was announced.
Gibson signs ~iger contract
DETROIT <AP> -Outfielder Kirk Gibson or
the Detroit Tigers said Sunday be baa signed a
one-year contract with the American League team
for the 1982 season.
The Tigers have a policy of not announcing
contract signinp, but, when questioned, General
Manager Jim Campbelf confirmed that Olson had
signed. However, the Kings' Dan Bonar swiped a
Buffalo pass and moved in for an unassisted goal to liiii.J;;;;;;;;;;;;;_'iiiliiiiiii .. ~--iiiiiiiiiiiiliiii .. ii1iiiiiiiiiiii0iiiiii
tie the game at 3-3 mid way throu1h the second • _.,
period.
4 EJUU.'S
Perreault notched the winning 1oal and "--.HUTIOtO
Mccourt raced in for a shorthanded goal ln the "";~:-;,:;re
third period to giv& Buffalo a S-3 advantaae. The s.,._-. s1 .... , v-0oot'
Sabres stayed on top the rest or the way. ' 1c00 s10 ..... •"•v-"'"''
CoeTA •u641•1219 _.._._
"AT 11lE STAllT of the game tile 1uys were .......,.~
still ~ about the snow storm. Talk about it ...,~~
and your mind wanders. But we rearouped and 1ot llm•cs• ... lll!!~m~m·l!l-llli!!ll~lli.!!·!!!!1 _.,
the two points, and that was the important thing,"
sald McCourt, who, like many of the otber Sabres,
spent the night at a nearby hotel iftltead of driving
home.
SeU with EASE I
lt'aaBREEZE _ Cluailled Ads 142-5678
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to41nt•h CAUPCNIMIA ._ •i:.:~ c-::-~
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hret and morel (Stk.
3089). CoQ4796) .
Utt Price $12.061
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paint, rear wlndo~ j wl per/WHher. all rt
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and moNI CBtk. l· i. (OH~ PllCI ' '
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M+1•. RECEIVING -Sell Olt9D, CN•I• .. ,..
Wl111-M1, Jol,.r 141, lroOllt 2·S, Slewrs
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MOAlrMI at C.--
S.O Dteeoot VMC-r
Weekend lr,inNCtlona ..oo-ruu. ~ ........ l.Nllle
CINC'INNATI 9ENGAL.S -Ac.tinted
GleM lkllftKI\. todlle. cou.aos
IOR -I. Sft911111 L.Hy, Joell Wl .. r f401tTHEltN ARIZONA -Homed A,.,.;
• IWYCI; 2. °"""" ........ rlon, Kris ICrl...,, lreMMI, ...._ UN, Ger-. 51\ow -
IDltYCI. 'MorlioftAIM:kll~feo«Mllc:ooc.ML
PHltF•A -I. W ...... 8etll9'1ord, Grol!t SOUTH& .. N CAROLINA -Na"'N M oM kofleld tkH'tC, l.9YCI; 2. HOite, ltkllard llell -~II coocl\. .SI ..
41 •
.
The marketplace on lht Orange Coaat
...
v~
E l~-
IOUITY SHAii Ill. tf.W buytr Ufl If·
f...SU.homt. Prlre~ht
Olly ... 000. Kathy, •Ill --VACANT
INTHllLUHS r.autil.' ltrm1-owner
will \'lrrf at 13.51 • or
will t'OOllder leaae op·
Uont Hlahly upanded
Triaa model. Oak plank· Ina Ind wood thutters.
New carpet! Only
M.llO. Call17Sa50
THF REAL
ESTATL!:RS ~uman s ·... = ~~~.!:'
' • 1• 3IDOllkSant1An1 Av. 'r · = Ptppertree He11bt• =1J:.'I w.
1
'. · · · 1• Featwa: 2 mstr bdrm• . .._.. .. .,....,.. = '11111 newspaper will not nlhedral wood beam =~, := knowinfly arcept any l'fllina•. ceramic tile In 1:...J.:111t"'* · = advert stna for re~I kitchen ' bath. dbl .._._o...t1.anw1 = tttate which Is In viola· shower in master bath. m'c~~ · _ tiGDoflhelaw. pllotltu 111 ranee/
1Meta......., -O\'tn. micro wave oven .
...._,, ... ~-'!"" ""l•-------•I dlthwuher. custom oak =IMl!elat-• -t:'lbs. auto aar. dr. '"*iif"ali -9IOIS: A~.,....,. opener. heavy shake
.......... ..... ~.....,.. roof. concrete driveway
AP__. =ti~ : .wl.. __, = tf'o and walk. 2 rar gar + 2 ....... ,_..\;al --r -._ ,,. E I EARLY HELMETS -Suzanne Nini w,re once offered at a price between Sl g t l;t::ro.," : "'"'-• · ·-urpanina. xtra arae • d $4 A od h I h h ,_,_ -DAILT .... OT •-• swim pool and spa. displays a chart showing the forerunners an . m ern e met, sue as t e T .. .._.u., -• ....._ for ..._ flnt From 1129.500 and P•Y·
of modern football he lmets at the one in the foreground. now carries a °'lfi"•"" -._., nYnts from 11060 ptmo. · t f bo t $75 =.,1111 : h•cerHct IHertl•• P'1 •Silverdome in Pontiac, Mich .. site of price ago a u · ~=:,·i;., : ..,. Couttes)'lo Rultora. ~~S_u~p_e_r_Bo~·-w~l~X_Vl_:__J_a_n_._2_4_._T_h_e~h_e_lm~et_s~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-1 a;.. ... S..Celtflfflty =-~ !: ~NOS Ut·'lt4
Basilio still llas courage
=:;:.... :: ........ w.
,......... 481 ••••••••••••••••••••••• E:J;[; § ~ .......... ~!~~ --------. =-= : 130/o
.... ... 11o .. : 117,000 DWM!
ROCij.ESTER, N.Y. (AP> -If anyone ever
questioned Carmen Basilio's courage, it certainly
wasn•t anyone who saw the little onion farmer
beat Sugar Ray Robinson in September 1957 (or
the middleweight boxing championship of the
world.
Nor when he lost it to Robinson six months
later in Chicago, bis left eye swollen shut, looking
like a plum, in a 15-round decision. l{e wept from
hls good eye.
He wasn't afraid lo speak his piece. He told
Howard Cosell in the 19505, when Cosell was a
radio report.er, "You can't intervfew me. I don't
like you!"
BUI' A SENSE of bu~? Basilio had 330
diners at a recent )>anquet of an aceountant.a'
group here roaring with laughter.
"This is our biggest crowd in 10 years," said
Bill Nealon, a public relations man for the IJ"OUp.
I a guy with a hernia in a weigh Wiling contest,"
Basilio told the.audience--
Elaborating on Cosell: "By the way, CoseU
and I have become friends. He's said some nice
things about me and I try to say nice tbincs about
him. But it's tough. He's so Ml of it.
ucosELL'S AN ATTORNEY, you know "
Basilio continued. "He interviews people like be
. bas them on a witness stand. Makes them look like
tools. Where you goin' without a seme of humor?
Without a sense of humor, Y.OU're notbine·"
On the serious side, Buillo says be feels
today's saagtn1 economy will produce some 1ood
young prize fishters.
"You're goin1 to see some tood youn1
fl1hters," 8ulllo said. "Huqer -for food u well
'"'money_:-made a lot of ireat fi~ in the okl days." His tbou1hta on today 1 bea.yweltht
scene:
..SS. IMST· BeTlf\'f ii! A runtush1· lllT n11aw homr with har~e II\ ini:
....._.. .,...,:.'-( -and ram ii~· arro. Bril·k
....... _._. 1119 f1n•µl u1·l'. :s unn>
---~·, w11 kild1m. 3 huitl' bdrm5. =-:-._ -= 2' J baths. Gn•ut rrnanl" =::::.~ :: illj(. 117.000 rlown 13'.
j UllllllCOIOTS, :':!1!~~~1,11{"" mori•
I POSllMS&
I llST&FMI . . .... c ...... .....,_
i..• ... -...._ •.
ilotWI,.._. ~·
. .. 11» -THE :REAL
ES TATER5
t: 0....AMXfOUS = !;~.~~i(1~1~L~~a~'ltu!u~·~
_ homr on l'Ul·dl•·sU1'.
Spul'ious mums. \'i1•w ur
1tolr 1'11Uf1'\' rrom µroµt·r·
I) Owftl•r .iss1 .. 11•cl
: ~rwrni: Onl~ Sl:l!l.~
1• { u 11 nu"·. !n11·63'i II
* ~
• •:-•t
00 •
·. . ... ..........
DOl0bout
Bay&Beach
Real Estate
ltEAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1141
COMI wnH UL •• TO llYM TlllACI.
Since the home setl the mood for the
day 1 the entire family will be happy in
thi1 spect-acular three bedroom,
family room home. The eve.r·cha~ging
harbor and ocean view 15 enJoyed
from the entire living area. Fee land.
Sl.~.000.
6Jl·7JOO
6
HAllOI YrtW llOADMOOI
~~-S&AMTTIMI
View of ocean, bay and Pavillion
lights from this prestigious home with
grand entry in Del Piso tile. 4 Br 21,;
Ba Family Room, 2 Fireplaces,
Community Pool and Parks. Ideal
f am Uy home in a /rime Corona del
Mar neighborhoo . Priced to sell
$329,000 Leasehold. Owner will help
finance.
WISUT M. TAYLOI CO .. llALTOIS ~ 2111S. ...............
MIWPOIT CIMTll. M.1.. H4-4t 10
SI 12,000 NEWPORT ICH! 1Wuu11ful uµl(ruded 2
Bdrm 2 bath 1·ondo.
Vuultffi 1·eihni:ed II\ mi:
room . bni:hl sunny
k 111' h l' n . " I t a I' h l' cl
1tarui;e Buri:uin «ash
out µn1·r (.'all ror morl'
details ~:!313
THE REAL
ESTATE~S
STIPSTOHACH
I 00/o FillaKilla A .. u Gorgeous • br aetailed
home 1 blk from ocean
on FEE land onl)
$299.000 759· lSOl or
~,7373_
llOD..,_
0c .. &ln•lew
CLIFFHAVE". Fan·
taslJl' \'leW (rom thil 3 br
extt'Ull\'t' home oo FEE
land! Perfet1 ror enter·
ta1n1ni: 1 $650.000 lt'X·
11--------•11·lusiHl 7St ·ISOI or -.ufff.-«IDUC a> 752-7373. I': n cl u n i I w ·i t h
µun11ram11· 8u1·k Ra~ .nl nii:r\t hi:hls Vww "I'm used to performing before sellout
crowds," snapped Basilio, 54, who is from
Cana.tota, N. Y., and now works for the Genesee
Brewery.
"Heel about as out of place on this rostrum u
Gerrj Cooney. "Tbe next beavyweipt cbaaip
-In M.areb. He'll beat Larry Holmes. U be'a
handled co.rreetJy be abould make a bundle. He's
6·8, oaly at yura old and a aood puncher. Holmp
la :w ani1 toO heavy."
=ALLSTATE. = RfuTOM -: llEDIOOM : STAITEI ...
3 Rclnns ond lar~· raml· .-
Walker & lee
Real I .>!Hie
' ( ~ = ~frl•lancl! Trin11 plan.
j
I\ room plWJ -tmdl-d -
iiat1t1 and lalh 1·0\ L•rl'd
i:unk•n. Just l"\'lfun·d lo 1•"!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'~
Bowl ·bid rule
may vanish
HOUSTON (AP) -!
The National CoUe~iate
Athletic Association's
Public R e l a ti ons.
Co mm l 'ttee
recommended elimin·
ating the rule that
prohibits the issuing of
bowl bids until the third
Saturday of November.
li"U8UC NCmC• TU•IDAY, JMNAaY ti, 1•
1:•~-....
COLL••• ~A•K •L•M•NTAaY
ICMOOf. Tll .. I, PeNllC AdvltorY C:-1-
mffllnt end e!KllOll I# Mdtlt.MI
me""'9n. ....,_ ""'"' 1 .. IM Coli... Park E""'911WY School .,... m.ay N
noMlnetff.
ColleotP•n
El_...,, ScAool
tao Notre 08me Rd.,
C-. -·CA tH1' Putlll ..... 0r8nge co.Kl O.lly Pllet,
J8ftu.ry ll. 1"2 let-«2
mncaotr ............. u.,.,
NOTIC• .. H••••v GIVaN tMI ....... ,,..., .......... ..._.....
fw tll'f ..... fir llteffftlla CMlr8CIM
by 9fl,_ ..... tllM MYMll, M W •ft« 11111 .... . O.ltd9"'Ml-OfJ_.,, 1-.
~ .........
... ~Aw. ..............
CtM"""8 '2IW7
PveMi.... ar-. c.oosi o.i1, ,..._ ,1..,. to. 11. 11. IC MG
Don Bryant, assistant ...X lllll NOTtC• OP
athletic director al the ·-----------.. T•UST••"S SAL• ,,. ,, ..... ~ University or Nebraska NOTIC.Ol'TaUSTla'SSA&.a SMI COftPOllATIOH .. h lr
d h .. ;rman of the T.o.HO.~IU·l~l 8flllltln1MT,,........,1M,..._.. an c a. Oii J_.y 2'. "'2 .. t:IS 4.M~ deter .......... lnlll WILI. S•Ll committee, said the Ull•AN llECONSTRUCTION 4T ~U•LIC AUCTION TO THIE current rule ''creates a CO•PORATIOH,etTN_.,.., .. HIGHEST •tOOEft l'Oft CASH
pW'WOnl to o.d of Tnat -Mo., (ptyttlta .. "-et .... 111 1twM hypocritical atmosphere 11, tm e..""" .., s-o~ _, ., tM Uftllad ~1 .. , •llM.
f II ·n whic h s.--NC..o.ct Mey u, 1m. Iii 11• ... ...,...~ .. .,..-e Ver Y a l ltoell lttOI, Pt99 1n t, of Otflcl•I Mid by \t ....... 90kf OtM of TNlt If! schools are ,held up to 11econ11 111 .,. offla et uw 11•orc1at tM "''""" ...... ~ d1tecr1Mt: ridicule by lhe1Dedia for of o ...... c-ty, CA11fon118. •1 lrMI TllUST~: 11.C. LUVUCWOllnt enlr•n<• le old Or•nt• C•""'" .., ~nwL ' permitting the rule lo be c ... rlllOllM, loceletl ... Seftl• "... •ENEl"ICl"llY: lllVINO 0•1•11 violated without fear of .,.,,d., 1 "'" .. " Syum••• •nd ..., CHAllL.OTTlf L. G .. Ett.11........, . I . arNctwnl. S...te Ane. c.111om1• • ....twtt.•JtMtlMMh. r e l r l b u l 1 o n . t l s w111 .. 11 .. pulllk 81Ktloll 1o """"' 11_.. J..., •· 1m .. !Mt• ..... virtually impossible to 11111*• '°' ~ ,,...,_ 81 11-.. •1S 111 ....., mo, .,... Met 0Mc1o1
f '' .... In l8Wflll _,, .. .... U11"9tl llKorfS "' .. otflce .. -... .,., _...,~......,u...-------iSlotfl) OUITSMAN & HUGH•S, INC. el Or•llflt c-ity; Mid ..., 91 1n11t
McCOllMICIC MOltTUAltlH
Laguna Beach
494-9415
Laguna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Cep1strano
495-1776
MAalOll U.W.._MT. OUYI
Mortuary• temetery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave .
Costa MHa
540-5554
• ' " 9 • n 1 for u II •A If deler-.ttwfol!owlnt..,_,.,: II E C 0 H S T ft U C T I 0 N Tiie .._..,n1'"1y llll.02 toet f/I Lot coaPORATIOH, T•llllH. SUI" New...,, ....... ,. Ill Ille Cltr et ~ Awe .. SUllt 2'0, Cu-City, N•wllOrl llNcl\, eovnt• IJf Of ..... ,
C•lllornl•, Telepl\one No. UUll SHI• of C•lllori118, H P•r M8P .,.~, Md 111t11 ""'"* oll rllM. recorded In 8ttll •. ~•t• IS, ....... "*"" ~ ...... -11111a1i-,_.., ..... ""k• ..
..... lty"......, .... 0.-111 • tlw ~ ~ ...... c-.tr
lilfwortY ...... lll•atyef E•c•ptl11t tlltrefrofl> ti\~ Mu•, 111 Hid c ... ,.,., Utd 11•1• N.,..,,s'8r1.,mtwt. A1toe11C8Pt1119
'"''.,. •: ' tMrefrem ... ..,. n'lffl-, • l"oot. Tiit ._. 11'1r SJ._.. 8f lllt Ulll ..,_...,._...._,a-ti,
NertltffMl'ty 114 Ml et UI ~ Ill Cellf9nolo'*I.
TrlKI No. IJt .. fl".,...,__ Ill "Ill o ...... ....._ or -8"41 IS, ~ ... ., Of Mltctl'-t •ulf118llett Is tllow11 &Mo, 110 M•~•. rec«• 8f 0••1199 c-ty, ••rr•:u., 11 t l••1t •• to It•
C•ll,.,.., ...-. .. ,..,_IM <tMPleil-.. ~IMM),u '"'11\w ... 1ylSS,.._ TM "8Mflc..,_, _Mid OM et
COMMON ~El!: MOt OfOltlll TNl1, 1ty ,_ tt1•11rNC11 or .,.,It AW-,C..MMA,._.."'21 Ill Ille ....... lllM NC..,... t_..,, ....... wlll .............. ._ lie ........ _..... ... ...._.. to
<O•Oi18M Of ..,.,lftty, UIWfll ~ -UMllJ ..... 8 wrlttMt O.CtorMIM l"'llMM.,...,..... tllle ,........., or ., Oetoult .,.. 0...... fw Sole, tll4I
•t1c11mlll'-••· to pey 11\t 11npelt1 WfitttftltOttc.8fif'MdteM8f•llellt11
prlll(I .... -91 Ille "°" MCWff lty .. <Miit 9W ........... 9"f .... Hl9 o.M, .. wtl: t.lt,12SAI, wlttt ...,...,...._ ...... , .... ~
NU9111
NOTa llWtTI• etDI ...................... rec9l¥M .. ... 9"tcie .... _ _,, .. c-ity
......... Olllrlct No. II lit ..... a NII
A•91N9, ~ V•lrf, c.llfwflla tt1tl .., or ....,.. lllt lttll ._., .,
-'-fY, .... et II:••·"'" M wtlkll 11-~ .. " ....... .,. ........... r ... 111 • ~ 8f tM -..n et
Olrtct•n •t I_.. Wiiis A••111te, l'-111 V81tey, c.1"°""6. for:
eoMTT..,_S ....
lt&ACMI
CC*"1lACT lllO.. IMN
•!ft ON ............ fW IM 9fl11A --Ottcrl ... MAlft. TM _. II .... .,_ Kcordlftt IO
tM .... -~lftc.9tleM M ft .. M I ... •Hke 8f tM s.c .. wry et 1118
Olatrlcl, •nd u ld pl•n• •nd -Hk.-.8Aby ,....,_ .,. ... 8
pert ....... ..UC.. ~••ns. 111«lflu111 ... 1 •11d otller .,........dlK __ ., ... um1-
•I 1118 Offke of lllt c:.w.ty S...IWtleft
01stt1« .... n .. ltlM au11 A-•
l'Wl'lteM Velley, c.i ......... ~ 91 IN ........ ~MlcMJeM _,, ..
oetafftM lft ..................... offlce
81 Ille t.llowlfll C-.. wllkl\ .... CMb
...... , .. f ....... i. ,...n11 ... •f I
wMtllff ....... --•iuu.. ••• •thr11et1: GeN•aAL ~•OYISIONS ANO STANOAllO
Sl'•eCll'ICATIOHS 1'011 COUNTY
SANITATION OllTll lCTS 01"
OllANGlf COUNTY, CAlll"OllNIA.
1'17 lf•ltM11. IC•r•e11t ••llle11 ...i1e ... to0110lslrlct,.) .. attM
-=~·~·~"~· ~18111 oM .-ClflUI'-Wiii ..
"'•lled lo 11'-tl•• 111--.n. If rlClllltlltd, ,., • , ... , u .oo
(llOIH ......... ) to -.. aoll 91 ........ _.._......
All 111•1 "'•II lie ,,. ••• Ill
K Cfftl8"<0, Mid tll 111 ... rt """'
CMl!tl'f, """ ................. *°' I••• ••llnlll• l ... ,. ... •Ml ••
tllf8(tM Ill .......... ..,..,., --...... ~ .I ....... ......., t'9tlltM ttltt
~ to ..,..,.... ..... L.Mer c ............. Ctllfonllo, ..
•••r• ti Dlr•clers of C••11t., ......... OlllrlctNo.llllel ..... tM ,,..., ....... , ..... ~ ............ ......................... °'"''°'" ................. ~to-
--to ..... .., .. ltctffty Ill Wllkll .. --.................. ,,. ,...,.._. """ tect1e11 1m ., ..
~~ .......... ~. 8MHltfllM"' ... tfflCotf ..
: Onl> $130.000! Woocl:c
-uncl stl'l•ams surrouncl
:: lhi11 1·harmini: l't1sl 11
-M1•1rn 1t:ircl1•n honw .
: •:nl'l11M'll µuho. J 1·11r
-1t~r.i1!l'! Sp;1rklirti: poul : fll•Xihll• h•rm:c. JuMI lisl-
: 1...t. l 'all &i3·~
a-.1 --·•-llfr•ttt ..,,,._ .. , -. ....... -.-1.--..s.: ~"-"· =::::-..:*" 1UISNITA1*
~ .. . l._.. ...... .. DorilWC.... ... t)dls. ....... .... _.... ...
~ ..... T.-=::i.v ammll£
-------------
1111 .,.
IUI
IUI -... ... -a-. .. :. •It' ~i.:i-... -~V-\ ··-....,._._II... -...... Un-.... -
'hwb -v-.... . ..... . -'--'· ...... -"-.......... ·-ams. llPllTO
1-91...... . -...........
Miil . ...... .. •.. ·""" Alellt-...., . . . . ...... -..... ,......... .... . . "" c.n ......... .... . "" ca:-'¥"""""'". ·"" Ctll ....... ..... . "11
THE :REAL
ESTATE:RS
lltdsed SI 00,000
SPYGWS
IYOWMEI
O:L•;m V1l'W SSiS.000
tibrl4'~ bu. 4100llll n SOUTHPORT MOl>1-:1.
OWNY.R FINANCINli
tuGHl.Y urGRAOl-:1>
<i lkn•xp1m1J an. 31
25 llocll'l!U Ruy
Cull ~·r 7S.S-0'137
COSTA MESA
STAITD
Onh· $125.000! A!lllUllll'
111.0oo in louns al SR.12
monlhly. OwnL•r will
1·11rry. Fumlly room
with t'UZ)' rireplo1'l' ! 3
luri:e bdrms. Spurklini:
L'Ondilion! Hurry. 1·ull
6'13-S5SO
THE REAL
ESTATERS = ::· .......................... ::::::::
Piii ...................... ·-OMTMIWATll a ........ : .. : ·::.'.::"· " = :IO', dOwll • lfl~r will ~:::::.::::::::JI ~~:.;11~1~~th! ·:i~i ~h··:: ·:::::: · ·= l'IU'h more. INCLUDES ~'.:::::::::·::::::::. :.:: LAND!ISSS.000. ~ ..................... ·"· ..... .., ,...,, ......:::·:::::::::::::·:: ·= .... . =::.::·. /::.::;:· ·=· d7'97060•
l"'t ' ~~.,~2-5200 ~~~~' '-"' I But·1'Ulu built home with j PETE BARRETI
REALTY
•
•
• ·•-•t
llouble rloor l'ntry : leads
11110 formal h\'lnl! room.
rormal l11 nin1t room .
,.__llllEl!&J!!l-l!Jllmll[lllll!l'I .. hu1w ram1ly room. stone 1• ( 1 n• µ I a t' l' • 1· o u n t r y 1---------. k1h'h1•n. 1\ll O\t'rlooks ~µt·l'lu\·ular pool und
spa Eki:ant mustl'r
su111•. J olhH lari:e
bilrm.~. plus a rl1•n 11. 11h
builtm bc.l0k1·.1.1sl'S. Trul~
(In l'xt•1·u1 h l' homl' for I unh $299.000 011.•nt•r 11.111
hl'li> with rinant'ini: l'all
nuw. 546-2313
UMIQUEIM
SPYtil.US
l\.•uulilul ~ RR. 3 Ra . 2 rph-'s. :;pa. !1 lln•.im , ________ _
huU!ll'. a~s um . fin .
$1iO.soo r l'l'
u,_.1001 ~Ifs
RL•altor1. 67~
s1s 1~~0 DOwM!
Ownt't' wi11 1·arry r.nunt" inil! Su~rllhurµ 3 Rdrm
2 bath townhortll' t•on·
do pool. 1aµn11 und spu .
Grt•al tL•rms ! G n•al
bar1t1ln !_ l'all now.
M&-231.3
THE :REAL
ESTATE RS
If you want your ad·
vertlslnl rneuai• to re·
arh more ~eople at lower COil. Cla11lfltd 11 t.bt way to (O! Call Now !
llGW
STEPS TO OCE,\N:
Suix•r duµlt•x 3 Bdrm 2
Bu. fil't'plll'l' & bt•1&m
\'l'lhni:s Just Sll'ps to
0t·can and onl\· 12 'rs old. Grrut in\·estm~nl
puten1i11I 1r ~umml'r
l'l"lllt'd. Ow1\l'r will 1·11rn.
s o m e r I n u n l' 1 I\ 1t •
S299.000.
COLI OP 1mW'PGllT
MAI.TOM .......... ..., .
0.... ......
11 .. 1111
P8CIMOTHllS
m&.MOADWAY
MCMl1UAIY
110 Broedway
Costa Mesa
642·9150
...,... ,._ .., 1; ""· -Ill .... ~ ................... .--.it to
.................. 8'1C ... If....,,~ ,,,...ny to MlllefT ............ ..
a.ere...., ttl lllo c:-tT ._. ... ._,
DlltrfdNo. tl9'0r .. ~.
aM:ll -.., -..1 .. lllMe Oii ltw
,, ...... '•"" ••rill•N41 • ., I ... '*"kt .. _..... Ill .. _....,..
~ .... ,,....,~. ·. '.'.:.:'.:'.'..'.; a:Mtd Ads are tbt i\/•/j/:::;= =·!01!r:~a1~~!1 • .................. '"' a better WU to till more ...._ ________ _.
............ ma •p!!!l!i!iiiilliiiiiiiiiiiii-•-111!1 ..
IALTZ .... °" s.ftN I 1UTHIU
~CHAPIL
427 E 1711'\ SI
Costa~ &48-137,
tltt '°""' f/I .... OtM, fwl, Cfltr'tft 1f1t1 ....,_IN ••rill!• H_. ... ,._.... .... Tnlltoo ... et tM .... ,_.. .. .._.. ... ....._to ..
u .. 11 c rett•• ,., wl• O.M. A ._... ----u , ""M "*·
,.._... ........ Ulb, ........... *71 "' .. Mia, ,... '"· .. .... --.... ""'° .. lilltltf .... OfflcAlll ..... ~---11•1.m.a. •• ......... ,....., Wt., ..... n. .... ,. .. • T.,.... .. ...,,.. w wettofltr •• ..,... • ..,.,1.....,..,,,,,,,~ .......... .-....... ..... ,.11 .... . .......... _,_ ... ...,_ ...... , ....... ..., .. ...........
~ .,, .....,. ..,.., or .,.,,..,_. U.-" lie,.... ....... "' tw .... _ trN4' llt ..._.. tf .... O...fllTl'llllt,.. ........ ltlll , ............. ~ ............................... . ,..............,__, .... OM, lty _., ___ ...... om• Tl"llll, _ ....................... ~ .... .,._. .. ... ''"••"•:c=•n• t_111n••· T.-.. •" .. ,,... c'"9M • _....,. _. ....__ ...... OM 91 T,_ .... -.. '9
.. u JI •s Elf I ....... DK...._ ..... °" "--"• ,_, "' -•
,. 0.-.. -=-........ •:• ....... " -~ ..... ........... ., ......... --.. ~~ ....... .. u.... .. .... .... ...o.Mlll A-.·-cttr ......,.. .. ~ ......... 11 .. ~~
............. •rl.Mll• M ................... 11 ... -.................... ., ...................... ... ..................... ~ ...... ltlMllC•-... ..........
........... ., .. ., .... OfftcMI ............. ~ ... ..
...--. • .,... .............. Clll9; ........
Dell. a..-t~-:• •••eMH 11 111,trl,tl 'fe ~•MvoHU.INC........... . • .... _,,
•
calAIM • •IWNIT•UCftON .... ; -=· r..lir: ...... Pnl.
llaiL4a:• •• n.Oaltt.=
,'&.&-,::~~ D.t"
........... .., .. Dlllt1ct ....... ..
tltttet .......... _... .. ~ ............... ... ,.....,, · 14,....tw.ttaa ..... . I $ 1•8' .... ...., ....... ,
i.11 _., llNCM-1 .... 0.kt ~._. .. __ ... I lt a• ... 111....,....,~1':',...... ................. .., ,....,. ........... ,....,.... .. .. --=.~ ............... ..
...... CtlNwNe ........... to ..,.., .... _._... .. ..
,..,, ... ......._ • c...wen ......... ,. ............... ~ .... , .................. .. ......... =-·---....... .......... .. _._ .................. ... ...,.., ............... . ., ..,...., cMca. ,...... ... ...
~-=.c:.-·· .. -~ ........ """--................. -.... ~"lC:J:" ........... ,_
"-"'·· ............ . ... r. ::::::::. :::. :::::.~ .. : = = ..................... . ......................
lfH•1 .. •0 .. •••• .. •···· =.:·:::· .... : .. : ...... .
om.&...... ........... ·-
c.aia..I """'""M""' -cw-IF·""""""· ............. : .. :-.·.-. .... ·: ...... , ....... ~ .. , .... ·-.. ... r. .............. -1.:)~:!i;·::t::.1
:L:rL.~:.:.::.:.1-····· ......... . ... ....
CHW••IDWUX +~MT Situated Belt Central Area COila
• ... lcllal For Oner ID One Unit . OtberlUaltl Help Miiie Paymeau . ORAITIC PRICE RJDUCTION .
OWNlll WW. ASSIST nNANCI.
'15'.~.
IUPll LOCATIOM IM
WOOllllD•I Ele1ant I BR
townhome. Customized den·IV.
bath. Up1raded carpets, drapes,
mini blinds • ahutten. Gor1eous wall eoverinp. Premium let with
lovely landscaping md redwood
deck. $167,500 Mack Ha.naon
551-8700 (PIO)
UNIA 1M1 IAYlllOMTS
Main channel view from • bdrm, 5 bath traditional home With pool. Sl,495,000.
t -Laree la,ooo view from custom &
bdnD, 5 bath, playroom, dark room,
den. $1,350,000.
CADtAllOM COYI
Spectacular bayfront harbor view
from 4 bdrm, • Nth, 2 boat slips . • $2.050,090.
Bl ! 1 GRUN UY. RFALTOR
THE REAL
ES'IATERS
ll:EAIRONT-SUPER AREA
.,..., .............. 4 ... 2 ........
.,..., ,..... .... 0..,. wll ..., ~.
SH0,000.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
REAL ES'r AT!
~. Rmlills, ~iv roe.""' ....... -.........
2436 W Cou1 t+.iv 315 M#b Aw Newport S..Ch a.a-lalifld
~I·•• '""' ..
SNC'TACULU OCWROMT
Cameo Shores. On the cliff over su.rf & sand. 4 Bdrms. each with
oh bath. Master suite features
spa, st.earn & exercise rooms.
New kitchen by European
craftsmen. Pool koi pond sets off
enchanting garden. Let us show
you this special home. $3,750,000 ..
lN'tlEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
'== ~\\~lA-4£~s· = ----Mio'~ QAY L l'O&&M . ._....... ........ " ... ,_ .,.,,..,.., ... ... __ ._'-.... ...
ZUGZEL I I J I' I r .
L--A,_E_L_A __ V -ti : 1· t l I . J
I ~;ll
I K =A S, N _
_5 I J r I
SlTMAO
I
'
CcM Q ., .....
WITH FIHAMCIM~
3 BR 2ba or 2+ cuest in
owner's unit · also 2
Bdrm rent.al rottage. All
la ~ ~ •/excel. loMhea. Owner will
carry tee 2Dd TD. Best buy In town for only
Sll0,000.
c:.1644-721 1
CDMDUPLEX
100 MARGUERITE
New cons truc t ion,
Medit. architecture.
3bd rm Ir 2bdrm . se.ooo. financing avail. Owner t Bldr :
(714 )675-9431.
Coet.Mese •••••••••••••• ••• • • • • •• ....:=-=:..::a=;:;:..;=-
FllB>OM HOUSE
3 Br. I Ba. large yard
'85,000 .... stl-0763, Agt.
E.SIDI CHAIMEl
Priced to 1,11 now !
Comp!. remodeled, Iola
kind + flnancln1.
646-SCllSKatAY, act.
OHL T SI 05,000
3 Br 1 Ba. Priced to sell
now . Unb.elievable
financing. Kathy, agt
646-DS
MUSTSIU.
Sharp Meaa Vetde-3 Br,
ram room on cul-d•11c:.
Seller will makeit easy
on terms. A super buy at
$17$,000. Call today I
RV1~~
-·-----
vu Catalina, rear vu park, 2
frplcs. elec. door gar,
wknds 848-7334. dys
213 /938-7271 eves
2Ute&Z·4956
W•toltedl 2 bdrm. 2 be, enclosed
IUDdeclt, fireplatt, 2 car
pr. ll50 per mo 642·8831
orl~
II& c.iuon lovely Dean -====~:.=..:....:::..:.....:=;:... built Dover model. 1
story, 2 Br. 2 Ba. Din.in& Rm. or Den. (Approx
IMO sq ft) outside unit.
SISOO/mo. 644-5742,
"'151M>706. i
BLUFFS. 3 Br. 2~ Ba.
F1un. rm .. pool Sl 100
•
mo. 1&0-8314, 115-5830.
2Wbtobtedt
2 Bdrm, l be, frplc In hv
rm. Gar11e. 1625/mo.
f\lm. nailable. Contact
Mra. Bundy. Bua; %13(683-7357.
..
I.
PAY THE POSTAGE ········•···ii
NO~TAC'i[
N£C,USARV
IF MAit.ED
IN THE
UNIT(D ST ATES
I I
I I • tl ,.
-----~~-
I
l
.......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Babysit, our CM homes, 1
yr Ii up, anytime.
642·84112, Ml·57S9
O.C.C. AREA Lovin& mother will babnil. fulll lme .
56-.s
..... ..=:;~=~:;.=-=.;;__ ...................... . Haul, cleanup, concrete 1...:.::::..:.:...=;::.;...;;;,._;;,_;;;.;.;;..;; __
rerroval. J>ump Truck.
Qulckwv. 6'J.T438
DUMPJOBs
&Small MoviniJobs
CalUllKE MH391
........ mi._ .. ,,.. ,. •ill SJHtWpWllled 71H w.-. 71Htw,W..W r 7roo Dlilli' 5131 .............................................. '" ............................................. .
......................
811CIWOll: Small Job•, Newport. CoJti MtU.r.. Irvine. Reh.
frS.Dlt.
•A-IMOVIM6•
Top Quh~~Lo Special Cll'f in &· 2S )'n exp. CornpetJUve rates. Noovertime. 730-1.W ·
STARVING COLLEGE
sruDENTS MOVING
CO. Uc. fT12H3' .
lnsured.141·8'27 WATCH US GROW!
STARVING A(:TORS
MOVING COMPANY
Fut Ii Careful. Lowest
Ratel Law Allows. M /C
Vila. Lie/I-. 3-0l53
,.,...
• •••••••••••••••••••••• ~GING $10/ROLL
LllK. on paper. Strip·
pin&. Scott MS·932S
PAITTIMI
a.tpm. !xpandina youth
COUDHllDI firm has
opmlnp for 3-S sharp
outaoina mature people
to motfvale ambitious
10.13 yr olds. Call 2·5pm.
642~1. ext. 343. Ask for
Andrea.
PUalC
lla.ATIOMS The Arben Companies
e11 Udo are lnterv1ewia1
Individuals who ••Dl to Think• Grow IUell. For =• lnwvtew. can
.. ,.
Or'MOI CO. ~LY f'tLOTh.tonday. January 11, 1112
;;;,;;~;;~;;~;~~~r~~~~;,;~·;.; .. ~ .. ~··~·· -................... ....................... ....................... In.. '" .... ---te I fitrt,,,. I ... I .... lUNO INNIRSPIU NG UlllNG l.IAll, quJt· ............................................. . . Mlltftlh' SICIDilY ..... " ................ UTIAl1D maltreM u. ......... lllo1out Btautlful Color TV, In "llPtuatot Moped. Xlta
~T ..... tt. • ateretarla poehloa tablatt. HU, Pore. ut.aadef.Nevtr twlllclUdlDa:. 141-1111 ICcltlD8tor11eror1yra . W•aMlll!fOM 0 p • 1l1 r -for a aMriHa Oak C11rio ~M\'tr .-1 WCMtJ1 AU. MIHli• aad flJ. wml1. rt_. delivery. Clt1a. P1rf1tt Cond.
.. ,..... w ••oTthad req11lrtd, llldMr-,,... baU. '119. quten 11 worth Dbplay eUtt, waJtlDI 25" Color TV. SISI. lt" Oafll AIUP · 1111 you.w '" a111l type th wpm. Oriental v•u Sn. •.eilll•y •. iuaclel. room chain, 8uut1 Color TV. '100. Both '75 Hood> MOC8, 1ood ,, :te111-:~ 1::,:i: '*"': &;5 PM. S&&arr l·aTI OtuaUxhon)e. 7M-1a50 Salon hatrdrytre .nd XlAt.182·1523 CCJndlUon $350.
'nnt tmllllUoo a.pt. ~abk. Rtrtrote1 ANTIQU£ CL CKS: a.~m .• Crib, Camat l\)'drauUc cb1lr1, mlr· 25'' TV, nice, wilnut, re· 831-5008 ftlld,,. IH ay ...,,. • retoaunendaUobl ,re-aume '500. Strike or fl iAI Table. szs lo nn. lbtlv111nd plant.I. m>tt, need.I color adj, ......,.._., S./ •ta..'" clm11.u. ~-':"~~~!a~l1~~ ai.sm fm.S»&m ~t::~ue::.•mpoo ~ s. W/Shr• ft6t
"1':M''0 ram urn P.O. Box lHO, ooati ..... ,. IOto Lady Enalander quten CaU&31.f754or ....................... .
1"' ... ..,.. • • HARBOR AREA med.firm . mu. '545. • ........ home, flllly aelf·CODl, ~bowtlll>rt Ulan ~taa~r~ .... aaf·058D •ouueenu• .. ••••••• br111 bed xlnt cond. altua •6808 ... ,....... 5 Chaul1 mount motor
tlCla ,1,n1oe APPUA.NCESERVIC! ~7571 l2 Ba,.cu. 811 M~ul ••••• .. •••••••••••n••• Jdlltcond. bettolfer. ••••••••I up .. ,,_, bm1p· Sec:teluy we~uaedappUaocea Gwrmet Potato Chi ... ._... tolO 541-f!T7/MT-"31
... tloa1 la tbtlr com· POlltioa Avallible ror -Wuellrecon4.,lu1r. IAl•IS detivered. IU-41S9 •••••••u•••••••••••••• ...... TNYtf tl70 lllT.AU14MT ._.... W1 pay hourly Lecal Secretary. SC !ftlitD£e1. 541-3077 llWlaanlnCfllt Dlninc Sett Elchaalve Tlfrany Club Wood 1klff 17', 6' beam. •••••nnn•••••••••u• ~ filh cook, .._. -+ ~ com. Plu1 Area. Experlence I IUY ... _ 1 ....... CIS llfSeat 18. Mu1t See to membership. No dues. nat bottom, ~merican ENT TRAIL.ER ror ~::l~~~~~:o'uc~e:::. ::::-:p:~rr!::~·: !!Q\ir«i.Clll641·8024 la Arl'"WAtS7.alJ3 =·at:i1.':: 8~~: ~J:;,ce . IS1 ·U90 ~1X>~&·u~~:~~~.· ~1m..~.~OD,
Moa.· P'Ti. m Ba71lde kaiCt for talklDJ with Relri\ frost free, eleui, 640-elO Eve aft 4 -AlR BOAT 1 h Ori ......_ •-h ~ talk to ... "'-··t SICUT.i.•y . Coke Machine · Used · in · 60 m pl r. S.,..~:i ve,'!!Tt..... ............ -a"""' -wor 1 1ood. USO ........__..,_•••-..... ~-:aord•r. u"/bst AJrplane eo1. Perfect ~•. Rataurant this creat p/Jlme OP· Type 10 wpm, 10 key Id· 548-8513. so .. e ....._ ---WWlWles "' _, ( d k • nJ t '~ ...
Ptr Dft. be1 .. needed, llOl'tlllUty. Call llon-rrt. der, reception, pbooe1 • .-..r. ias. clein, ~or"· Clrta 1800. Beautifully olr'Tf& 19 .'!,.,.U!C/bo~l4k ~1'8'n · ........... •••••••••••• call bet"'° t-ii AM 157·2381, eat. 1204. variety o( dullet, oo.n .... ,.. .. ... Han~ Carved Frame stamp c 0 II ec l i 0 n • f!WV ·
152-5.01 • Salel •m>ker. lll00/$1000 mo. good. SIS. &411•1513 or w/et11eUpbl.lhtchln1 =ued by Dave IMh.Power 9040 ATTIMTIOM PIOflSSIOMAl. CPA firm. CM . 7$4-1040 S41..-S Set.~ 080. Carolet. ....................... M45
L .,~st: at h ,....._,ALIS ~~~~~r,S:~~a: •• ~~~~~ ~~Aftfp'jS. M0.49lO •u p •IS!M-ll ~hi W It WH FOi BOATS OWMllS
h f II ti Ptovell oU rloaera only. 548-4485 SOFA C L b oN ep1 ac ne. or · SJL •ttl TONNEAUCOVER C.:.it~~wa':e. me · $1001• yrly potentlil. •SICUTAIUIS• Wh : ream, ' ape. I.DJ w/Drloking Foun--Fill MO'e,'71-'81
4'7-4403 U= a'1\ comm. paht Payroll R.E. $14,400. ~1~~abtoy~ide J~·~~t $500. Mor~2870 ta.in ' Coi.n Box. $.100 l~'_~aleRr. MHPLl. hCtr Never used, 175 · . Qutified Write-in Receot. T 55$12,009. . · 080. 973..QIJ38. 9·4PM \AllDUle. 1dio. I ts. lbrial3l·Tm Ive IDll
Sa.le&' · • .,,_.. Nwpt Bch T'10Dl'd. R.! $19,200. ~· Like New. S3SO. Bn ~ sedio1111. Good CUstom JOO Gillon Sall Cover. Anchor, Rails, ~!!!911!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!1!!!!
... AL SHOP• locatloo. M1Jor iocen· t Exp. c.onsultanl 01.lrs · 631.1508 quality, lib new Sl.50. water A q u ar 1 um . ~~v!';':i.~1a1.5. .,_.. _ Mottty!
live P,lana: new car, U&ReiodenA&y,lnc. . Ml6,~l-~ Complete w/cablnel, 1..;.::~~-...;.;;=-~..;;..;..:=--~7.S..Clll
Ji\lll • p!!rl tJme. Will Hawlilu vacation, yrty GOBirchEat'MEOE Refng $200. Free~er $200. Sectional Soraa, '250. Filter System . u v 28' Chria Craft. 1163 Fly •75 Pinto vs.· J.fost of lrlln. Pftr. exp. In retell bonuses. Ken Brown, Newport/833-8180/Free Wahr/dryer SlZ.S ea· Swivel Rocker, S1.50. Sterili1er. Decorations &r Brid&e S~ort Fisher. body Ind all engl.ne, in·
clothinanlet.C.M. 67MD. D!WJ!00.646-SMI Orbestolfers 642-9804 fuh.MustSee!973·0838. M~~tOfSel or Trade,. side p1rts ind uphol, ~ ~1821 Whirlpool F/F refrig, 22 Dr M h' ~ M ... e fer. 8¥-347' at .-=...;.;;;.; ____ ....;:;..;.:.....==-1 SALES ,llSOMS SICUTAJUES cu ft, xlnt cood, sacr esser w/2 ate IOI 5 seat.a, etc in good shape! ~IXTU SSS =:cwt'°e'!J:~~ [~! ~.::!tot~r/.e~rary Jobs f325.~7~afq. ~t,ts~sit~~:n N::.: Mn::~n:~~~ff:r:~t·~~ 40----. Owtns ___ T_1_b-it-ia_n_._li_v_e-~.~~gbfN5 ~ea~.0~~~:
Part or (l&IJ/tlme 11tea. freedom • unlimited VICKI HESTON Imperial Refrigerator 20 Stools w/2 m1tching orsol velvet Uners. 2S to •boa.rd slip avail. Ca ll, radl1tor, new trans,
All natural, 100'1o nutri · e•"'ina. Qtitalde sales & ASSOCIATES Cu n. Sid-by-side, good fcnrests. Never Used, SC>'/ft m~ Judy or Harvey 642·"44, whla fi tires. Part out or ·•--• .~. bl --ul\IUN\ cond._,, SlOO <Mt •cJIOI h · i:.wn.,9AMllSPM. repai'r Callforinforma ......... s-an ta et.s. Up c a n p r o v I d e . .,.,.,.._.,., ,,,..,.,. · -. ......., Newport Bear Tennis · ·
to 100~ comm. John $500 /WEEK. VERY &42·0638 Fabulous oak office rum. Club family mem· loats. Sall 9060 Um aft 6 pm or wknds.
lbnella,75t.I0'16. REALISTIC CO M· SICUTuYfUIC K enmo re . Lrg . 60" roll top desk benhip.$650,Ph83'1·~68 ....................... 1..:~~5844='-------
.,_,_ MIS,,ION. simple pro· -• lceMaker. 5 yrs old. w/chair . Lawrer's SAFE . UDO 14', good condition, Toycu ste&cup bumper. .....,,. Personnel/Adverti1in1 _,, ,,.,3-......., b .. r ll 2 door •mnght 4 SI 600 N-*""O 0 CiUATHOUIS 1ram-easy 11les. No f!:N·vt '™'' oo .. cases. nt ' ..... X· •, • · "'"_. apecial trainla1 or ex· Dept. bas openioa per Slcuture Upright cabi.nets, antique bench poai~on combo 6 4X4 • Call:631-6648 554-9145
tAM-JPM periuce required, ~:? ~r~I:! n8r~ freezer. SlOO. M1gic and upbol. chairs, etc. sacnf.Sl500.9S?·Ol3l 14'bo.tTrir
or Woman encouraged to Good typing, shorthand, Oief stove, elec. White. Wholesale prices or best Refri& dbl. dr. like new $15;0 673·0732
,...4'MotrM tlAlb'. C.U for apPoiat. exper req. Non-~moker . .dllltand,fUO.NWlM olfer.640-5798 ::·~~ w1ter bed, SABOT
J-•-tb Lo A 1 meri, Mon·Wed before Call 640-0123 between HOT Offlll Bentwood Rocker, dark,' 2MASTS&SA1LS ...., e s 0 &• ea 2. J!llja, 86Hrrn 't-2. beaut. c 0 0 d ! S7 5. uke Box. 1200. Pin Anti nfts Cin:u.laUoo Team COLD CASH! 536-6104 aft 6 qu~ PinBall Machine. l44-l405, ev S15-45l2
Ii adapt your work Sales TOIDtSOM Imported Repro Regency $200. Foosball table, $40. Pactflt' Seacralt Manah,
PORSCHE Easy credit·time
payments
Engine rebuilding,
restoration. RSR
714/542·9'223
WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FOIUSID CARS
ALAHMA•MOM
POMn.AC/SUIAIU
24MI Hartior Blvd.
COSTA MESA
549-4300 54'·1457
WEIUY
CLEAN CARS
AMDTRUCICS
COMM ELL
CHEVROLET
".._ 1 ! I I•• t
· r-. I \ \If ' \
546-1200
HIGHIUYEa
Top dollars for Sports
Cars. Bugs, Campers,
914 's, AU(!i 's
Ask for U/C MGR
JIMMAJUHO
YOUSW.AGEH
187ll Beach Blvd
HUNTINGTON BEACH
-..-aaa llarbor Hh·d
Costa ~t-sa ~ QJ30 ....:."'f.
Alfee. .... •rttd •••••••••••••••••••••••
.,
Md 9101 '
••••••••••••••••••••••• '79 AUDI FOX GTI, good
condition, 70.000 mi.,
sunroo(, am/fm stereo, ,
9'500. Tim (213l433-64S7 or mess. (714 JSJS-5203 • :.
1MW 9712 . •••••••••••••••••••••••
&
CREVIER BMW n. bcitiaQ '82
IMW's An Ften!
......
.. r
A few re ma 1ning '81
Models & Demos are
still available! We-'
specialize in : European ·
delivery Ind flawlHllJ pre-Owned BMW's
~r~~~or~o stfi~u ~ REAL ESTATE Sales SICllffAa·y CUSTOMHS Armoire Sl25 ; Pine Freez.er, $200 831-8613, 'J7' L.0 .A .• dbl ender, AMfol for Sale
day in a Times Circul1· are IOft now. Try a oew ~ort.aaae compapy in Get $25 for YOl.!f opera· table/benches S125 ; 67J..0168 cutler, great rrulse &
Uoo Hies office near field-·Energy. Ex· ewport Beach has bl~ ~d refngerator. metaldesk$75.640·l206 Aquanum ~gal, fresh live .aboard boat.
your home •have more panding company on opening for a Secretary· ll s rostmg you up to I NEVER USED Q waler. complete. operat· loaded 497-5738 evs;
• ••••••••• •• •• • • • • • • • • • --~•~4~2~· 2=0~0~0~ IMPORTANT
NOTICE TO READERS AND
ADVERTISERS
Wlltre Cuslonwr
Service Comes»'' Sales·Service·Lea~ing
208 W 1st, Santa Ana
(7t4) 835·3171
Closed Sun~J ti f r ·1 Li'do i'nter va·e-i'nc with good orgamutioo St44 or more a year in ~ ueen mg. incl 30 Tropical 675-S~dys me or your aai1 y, ~ stills, eye for accuracy et t · b'll , D bdrm SS40 bunks S200 studies or leisurely bright, auressive .peo. •-atteot1'on to deta1·1. ec nc i s. onatde ada/lov-.:at S300 &lass' fish Cost $700 sell S300 2 Brand New Wind·
Pie. For~on~I in· "' your operaltng secon """ · CM dys S45·26S5. eves surlers, S800 EA or 2 for periods, We pay hourly Non-smoker. salary rdri~eralortooneofthe lo9 dinette 12~. Mat· M6-8723
licocnmiuionl. t.ervier, 73·2802. tl,100-. Ca ll: Katie, rhanties listed below, tresses/box spnn~s: Qn 1-=~=------SID. 631.8029
The pril'e or items
advertised by vehicle dealers in the veh1rle
classified advertisin g
columns does not in ·
rlude any apphcable
taxes, license. transrer
feet. finance charges.
fees for air pollution con·
trol device cert1f1cations
or dealer documentary preparation charaes un-
less otherwise specified
by the advertiser.
&4G-93SO and be sure to mention SW. full $90, twin $80. Uruv. Club Mmbrshp. ')
LOSA.NGELF.STlMES ' Secraary SERVICE STATION AT· this special offer when ' MORE! TfO.CXIOl olf ukmg pnce S500 + ~l~~oci~c~·J::~t ~~tve, CM Girl.Friday/~ Desk. TENDANT. P/time. Ap· you make the arrange· TWOTWIN BEDS trans fee. 644-6249 Best buy ol •82 Ed Cox
II'.:.:! ~Y Employer 'I'yping, Phee Skills, 10 PlY Shell Station 17th & menls. Get a receipt. Xlnl cond. 160 each. ~~ard TDeab11te. B~ll!lcodrd Bkr. 9&t-6llO -=~-.;:;:=~o;;.L;; .... _="-"-'-="-'"""--1 Key. Small Busy Office, lrVine, NB. and Southern California 644·2026 wknds/evs. ... .... tom. a 1 1ar s.
SALD/INTDESIGN OC Airport Area . . Edison will pay you $25. Small English Oak LA. I PC Slate ~ ... X loah.Sllpt/ Self motivated, creative J100.•. Plus Benefits. Student or P IT 1 me Yow; donation Is tax de· Dresser. u25 Large 42 11" X 8 2" Di s · DocU 9070
indlv. for outside sales. llU-911311 employ~. room le board ductible., Free pickup ~Y Oak Dresser. S 190. ass em b I e d S 6 5 0. •••••••••••••••••••••••
llp'topp +salaryinexcbangefor thechanty Tt11sspec1al Larae Copper Lamp , 7SZ.2573 BOATSUPSFORRENT 4"-1481 SICllTAIY lift~ housework " ~.expires M1rch 15. «A.ILJIL7J'' S_1 __ c_ri_r_ic_e_!_2_B_e_l_m_o_n_t Npt BCH. 20" 25', 30'. For ea.ti Mesa CPA child care. Newport .._ ... ~..._....,-......... _.._...,..._____ ~·642~9·SPM. SALES Ftnn. Need person with Bch. Refs. lira. Colw~ll For details, phone: MOVlNG: Must sell. gold ~~6c ~~~~~s~h;~~o
Or1nre Co'11 leading general office skills, 644-2507or760-2E90 Calvary velvetcouch &rloveseat. Each. Drop Lear Ne01MN'fMorfH cuttom ~ rht&maker i1 lielt·statter, 1ood typing TE Ac H E R I n rant Lutheran Church game t1ble • ch11rs, K 1 t c h e n T 8 b 1 e Da, wk, roonth &46-05Sl 9520 lookin& for blab r roduc· a must. (714) 641.012$ Development Program, (714) 972-4687 maple dresser & desk fl W/bUlcher Blott Top. 2 WANT ED: Sh p , ex· laa_p~~•i.oo• sales SEC'Y / RECEP _ P/time . Mt>mber or Chlldren'sHosplUil +posterdblebedframe. ydlowChail'1,4 months change for use or •••••••••••••••••••••••
PIETT1EST
'S7T·llllD
IHTOWH!
penon. Mu~t.have 2 yrs Challeniin& opporturtity tramdisciplmary team. olOrangeCounty Xlntcond.&4%·890'1 • old .9614'1&3 maanH 47' cutter. expr. Position offers ith bus Lao Hill Special ed. & Spanish (714)972·~ Bedroom refri( .. 2 -=:u::==.::..:.=,__....,___ -=857::;.;..:·2894;;:;;;.;'-------
benefits, tor comm & Law oUlce . ..;:; pay~ important. Call: Jackie St Vincent de Paul T.V.'s. Like new, must Mbc•••MI B1lbo1 Coves. Power salary. Cal Mr. Con· benefd.5 l»6660 Pow,S46-S760 '714)63.1-9190 sell.Call <714>636·0329 Wlllhd IOll bolt slip for rent to 30'. IUTOffB! ((IOSUKZ) 1n1ec1fouppt.549.1.u · Tel Adv. Sales TheSaJvau~1~):~.os:u ~~'sJ. ;::_;,e.;, :Ct! ....................... _m._1_156~-----
-• , .... •. · ····•····· .......... : Top sports programs .. klllgMahriahl 025 54.5.cl9 WAMTIO 38' Offshore mooriog
THEODORE
Im& i.....edM; . .,...W.,.. .................... Kin& Size Bol,_Spring &r 11/1 .. orL-..r w/27ft '87 Sportcrafl
• • 1A1rport. G~owlA& firm MOWZScJFT Mattress, ho Ea AirC1 4re1.o; twin en(ines, many
ROBINS
FORD
: Sale.I • : needs 4 reli~ble people Redwood 2x6 b~cking, Frame. 125. Fantastic 536-9132 xtras + 19' endboard. WIW--~.makiog 4-3>' loag; abo redwood Cond. 642•1305 Wkdys, $24,000 Terms 080.
.. r. '<A~~oo Pl•D
(Q\!t, M!\A 1)1, ().OlC
1'ail hl&blY IUCCUSfuJ local Dhrlpaper has
111 opeDiDI for a tnloee in the clttulatloo· department. Buie skills will entail IU1*'rilioD ol 10 to 14 year old boy aod girl , :
home deUftl')' carrien. ~-ol svperviltoo 1 : Wilt .. 41111Y«Y celtectJons ... Ml•. • Select..s 1ppt\caot will rftelve liberal t: ~ utary, r'ffUlarlY ICheduled raises, • boH 110pportuallles and maay Cringe
llenefla such as COlllJl&l\Y ii..kf dental 1nd
beaJlh Dian. IJ'OUP life insurance, vae1tion ud Dci leave. c~~y veblcle is' furnlsb~d during ·~boun.
AppkaDta tnUlt be over U, U.e 1 good diivinl "1C'Ol'd and be neat aPDearina. Houn
a,.._...,.i.ty U AM to IPll;, ll09d1y lhni l"ttdit. Some 0terllme Is anuabat. If 10'& are 9oallfied aod illt erated in
the CU'Cula~ ~ ~lad the at mW..., 11 •. Calta lie.a before, or aft« 2 r Clally.
Alt for Dan WilliamJ er Ken Goddard.
ey. future : fencing. Lowest price Alter5PM WANTED: Two to Four m-9t79
steady employment. gua J 'm 0 Ke ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 1957 De Soto sta wgn SSM660 yt.r ~~ .. ,.,,,.,.r n Twin beds, new ma t-225/75·15 or HR 78· 15 '&at slip available ror up Classir. Needs some
TH ER AP l ST 'I r an une, ....., . .......,, ! tresses. headless/foot· used tires in gd cond. to 1.8 ft """"-boat. Call work, but worth it Runs n ant l HP Compreuor. raint less. SSO /ea. Early Abo Motorcycle Jarket 9l57{flOO,,__... well. /olr.494·9887 Dev~meot Pro1ram. pot, hoses_.&uns I A~r. dbl hide·a·bed. gd meJB.40. P/llme . ~em ber or OB0.543·21M5 slip cover, $75. 1 porta· C.11646-4629 Boat Slip ror Renl·Will Reutati•al
tranadisc1pliaary team ,.~ & ble typewriter 525 ~._~ --Take up lo 6S ft Shore Y.wdes 9530
NIYr &c feeding bkgrnd. '-'-,. 548-0ll6. ' ~...... 1013 power & Water Avail. •••••••••••••••••••••••
necessary. Spanish IEicpl,...t IOlO . -...-• mo 673·9321 '68 Jeepster Comma ndo.
helpfuL Call. Jackie ••••••••••••••••••••••• Waterbed mattrPss. hn· Vi••br•••••••••••s•••••••••• <&..-90901•by4. 34K mi. 2 new trs.
Popp 546·5760 WANTED: Used photo-in&. heater. new. never i aphone. 3 pds 3 Oc· ..... -...,... Buick V-6. S2500 Good w t ' /W t · gtaphic ligbun1 eqwp· been used, offer 5.3S·S7S2 taves. Good Cond SSOO ....................... Cond 11 en 11 resses. over me o t . s t r o b e s . 080. ~9873 497~130
18/yrs. Apply in person · photoflood reflectors G.'Cl9f S. IOSS ""ECTRIC GU IT R DRY SJQR16( El Mat ador 1768 ref1 b II ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""'-A · 2 ft 4WlletlDrhH 9550 Newport Blvd CM I ertor um re as. etc .. rlr cost <3' yrs old) pickups, like new $140 M thl b t Ir RV ..................... ..
' · Cal759-00&0~~ $350, Frig $7 5. 644-1405,ev67S.4512 st!~ge1or~~ysize.~ 8igtires,llxl5FlotTrac Waihr/W~1 Cats 1035 GrandmothersclockSSO, Offlc.Fw•••& hr secur ity, rree with hl5 c hrome
Graveyard shafts. Apply ••••••••••••••••••••••• recbner S2S Gd child's ~,.... 1015 launrhing &r washing spolttrs, little use. SJ()().
at. Charlie'• Chili. Persian Kitten Beaut. ckt.hes 10'-$$. crockpot ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• pri vileges. Newport 979-842$ Corliorateofrice,767W. Chinchilla w/green f!,Gas BBQ$60,M9·7608 ~Of'OH Dunes. llJl Back Bay -'-'-''-==------
19t.hSt.9osta Mesa, Wed eyes. Fem, papers S175. Abandoned household. 13"~ Dr. Newport Beach. 74JtepCherolitt thru Fri between lOam· 496-46.52 992 Camatioo Sat/Sun. a 644-0510 Mint corid, lo mi $3495
lpm. 543-22&4 2 Ped· Neut. Burmese M.16th.. & 17th. of Jan. $400orbestof er. 960-9742
W ...... ESSES Cals l male, 1 rem. nd 554·9145 ,.,,, Jeep JIO. stepside. Al I" Lots al (W'll, lOyS, Stereo Exper. 3/yrs . min. gdhoroe.Sus1n631·8062 ltllrey, T.V. radios tent Tr..,111.tHM. everyoption,$7750 orof·
r/lime avail. Apply in Persians,. 6 Month. M. bilce. ~Warwick N .B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• _fer.._. 642_......·""7866"'-'-.----
per.iOQ, Jolly Roger, 400 SJ.~. 2 Adult F. $50 Ea . ....__ 1060 AJrctaft 9 N O Neb '560
So. Coast Hwy, La&llDa :w&-9965 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,._ Btacll ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,..._.. W..ttd 81 FORD F-150 P/U. 302
....
~ --------Doip 1040 Portable corr1l, Santa c elec. ale typewnter. V8 A Tra &r o D X-IAY TECH. •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• Ana Hei' "hts area rl b 1 j " '171'210, loaded, OC AP . uto, ns ... "• KE~OND p AKC " • pe ect, et umpeu 500 hrs min. Call Paul or PS. PB. Ing whl base, · DENTAL or mED ups . · 34x24'. 5' high, will de· tract .548·'1234 Jim. 714·7S2·2266 or dual tanks. sUde win· 330 W. Bay Strett . Prefer CRT. Full time . Chs haomwp •.irep. Mv /tF.pPtety&. liver! $Q5. S&M837 ._..._ 1017 2l3.Q9..S021 dow, step bumper, AM. Costa Mesa, CA .. Nice surroundings . n... "" _.. Id ,..... al
Equal Oppo . Em 1 D N rt Be h 213/88'1·1345 alt 6 m DClut rilauy 5 yr 0 . • •••••••••••••••••••••• c1-1n It_._, Radi tires. 18K mi. 1 .• rtwlity p oyer ,. ays. ewpo ac ,,:.=;:.=.:-,-=:.;=-=::.:.:..i=.-lll Thorouibbred. Chestnut MJUTARY MACAW -·~· ., -owner MUST SELL! • . _d_c_.7_~_2SS4 _____ SfU.H TZU pups . Stallion.16hlt.Raceor .,....,., 'th OBO leilt 9124 S6500. (X48300 ) PP • c .............. n• ... ~................... . . • S2SO aoch,111. Ca.sh on Show. $8000. Mr. Good· • ..,_, WI cage. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• MS-1286 ..,.. _______ ....,__. ____ ...,.___. _______ ~I 6311·9308 man, Day,
558
.
2628
. Call64H085 6' camper shell, fits most 1-.;..;;;...;;;:=-------1
• • 1 Doxie mlQiature M le Y Eves,497·52'76 ,._l<>rg.u 1090 small PU trucks, '200
AKC Reg. Reasonably Purebred Arabian •••••••0 •••••••••••••• 080.8U-946J ~91579
Priced 545-ll380 Stallloo. An1mut son, ~ Classic 7' Austrian Motomecl Urn t 140 i-=;..;EI;;.;;..;.,; __ . ----
p ........ e, •rand•-r-erv--' Grind. Be1ul. Bu\. •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• '64 Canuno, 6 cyl .. 3 AKC Irish Setter up-""'"" o • ~.. cu t t a b I speed runs good pies. Show' Pel Avail. chame, halter classes. ernu · easona e . 77PUCHMOPIO 080 · 3-204
Shots. $125 to $350 . Forlrilocall96M271 642.W,642-l960 @XI 646·6706 M 5
581-8722 Yamaha 8·12 elec. organ · 14 Ford Courier. Must -:::=:-=:::-::-=:=:::::-:::-=::-llHl'tl111au•1 •1MaMW 4"odt 1061 walrU flllilh SlOOO. like '79 Peugeot, lood cond · Sell ! Cheap! AM IF M
GOLDEN RETRIEVERS ••••u•u•••••••••••••• new979-N2S runs &rHt ! S:ZSO. Radio. 4 Radial Ti~s.
WEHEEO
YOUlEXOTIC
&llmSHCARS rm
JIOO W Coast Hwy. Newport Beach
642·&40S
WANTED !
Late model Toyotas and
Volvos . Ca ll us
TO Y'!!
Top.Dollar
Paid
For Your Car!
ltl2MODELS
HEAE
HOW!!! Come See Us Toda} •
SADDLEIACk
IMW . ~,, 284Q2M1rguerite Pkwy.
Mission Viejo '
Avery pkwy olr l·S •
ll 1-2040 4'5-49..-..
Cloled Sunda s • •
"10 2002, Perfect cond 4 spd, AM /FM Stereo/
cass, rblt eng, must sell ASAP $3 200 OBO .
673-7852 -
'73 BMW 200'l. runs good, pen bod} & paint. new
trans. amlfm cass. s.1000
firm. S59·409S
JOHHSOH & SOH . '11 IMW 73 31 U.C• Mwcwy Silver. blue lthr, 4.000
21626 Harbor Blvd" mi. immar rood 529.000
Costa Mesa 540-5630 ~
..... Mew ·9800 ....... Mtw 9100. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Trucks, Vans & 4X4s
We're yotJf Ram-TOl.(h Tna r.enter1
•ao CHEYIOLET
PICKUP
57297
.. OTOYOTA
rtCKUP (,,...,.,
'7' FOID
IAMCH90
I'"'°"'
s5497
2AKC MALES Sl.50 d fashlooed claw.foot . ~ , 752.2573 971·2085 bath tub, "ood cond $125. Maso~ Ham It~. Ht. '79 p ol M Ped r>l\I\ 1-.i:::=-:=..:=----1
DOBERMAN PUPPIES D1ys 67$·8172, Eves Beawfully Refinished. or~fer. o-. _,,,
I t.lfr
·~ewspa~r
·earrifr:s ·1vr i'Outes
in· HUnti• Beach,
FOCJntaln \'alley & Newport Beach
' • !t ( .
FOR SALE 964-33'75 XlntTone. 846.8793 714~&561 h' 61S-7570 __ ....:..:..:.=..=...::;;:..:;.;:,, ___ 1EJtclusive Fine C 1na. Baldwin Piano. 1~
Afcha.n. AKC, fem1le, Cry1t1l. Fl1tware, old built cood to':i
blue 3 yrs old, all 1hots, llamladurer Prices to sz:ii>o $1 · ·
fenlle, weO-bebaved. )'OU. '300 to '800 Brideai tOO.M0-7762.
_150. 768-3838 Re&lster your Pattern• i-------•I ~;.;;.:,,,,;..;;;.;;;..=.-..._ ____ 1 witll me Is recleve Free Uprilht Piano, con10le
. frwto Yt1t 1045 Gifts. Call Moo-Thur.' mOdil, atti.ltnt condi· ........................ &Allto1JNftlllllll f4Z.et29. t1on.. S71t Call f15.Ql99 ky SbeJ>erd Mind. . =· -.__:._.._ M.GreatW.tehdo1t Jtwtlry 1070 ev .............. .
873·73S8 ...................... .
cond!
IOIO ~r:=nd~~•PS::a~= ................ ••••••• p . Tatef4!!. 4!!-Nl5. * * I BUY * * OeMne Brnillan Aqu. ..,_..73 8llO. 3 rail trailer $200 Good I.lied hn!lwe Ir ' Martnes onlr tao per · bath ~· rit.td5 Appll&IK*....OR I will 1 ! ..,,... .... 10t4
MllorSEU.forYou ........... , .... n•••••••n••n '74 ONDAXLUS MASTmS AUCTIOM ..,.. f Buutlflal Sate Pool Ti· J.1'10 mlts, like ne•
Hf Hit. DJ.ttJI ~ ....... ~!!.. =:r_~i:,gment. tsSO. ''""';;;.;...:;..;,,;;--~;:...;;.;~1
tMMMITVll ••MS•• • Lii ' 111-1.W , Save~ • mort cm "f:' ....... .
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,..r.\grgtY 1·'"' aPll~!"'t.' wm u....._,Mlli•1a11t llDMtwl•chlrs.blo .. 1 r-o6d-:~ AU.= aod rlx· 'a a.ntl GSlllOI IOOO . *'*'• ... 1ar. I===-I ... ' ' ... wii .. ••i*j t61I 1• ... ....._, c...., •altille .... ._ ........................ d 11lr1, leaatJ 1~==-~==~a...---4 1.-w.:a:.1------•a•• ·-· • ...._ ~..,.,. • ...... ~. .,,,.... ........ ~ """ .,,. ....... a ••l tiff. ·lf•nlco =·-·· ...., •• .,.., ... 1n•. i ._.. ~._,.. ••••II ..... IWTV -Call, ... ,, ...... ... •. • .....
1975 DODGE YAM
Tradesman 8100
Must tell. $2,100
'64-4112
-
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t7tJ SW. '720 l.clo 97l6 Miia••.._ 9740 Port4e 9750 T.,-9765 V.,,.o 9772 C--0 9917 ff4tfUll._ .. ................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ......................... ....................... ........................... --
-.... "ltO\TSUNllOW.\OON 'iii LOllll'll.I lkla llltlll •Ml,prifefo-·111 r 111"Mht• ttll M' >!lt>t• '19 TOYOTA l'OllUl.t.A. #I YOl"ODIAl.H 'QI Z2ll <lwd l'Ond Nd• is FORD LTD WAGON ·-Meat bctM.1 .a ")'I. 0U1omat11• tr11n• Hru~ 11 \\ h'.1th llll r illtdMff'Ctdts 011l1, w1111ln11.. ulll1•,1th1•r ,\ul 11n1u t 11 11 .111 M • INOR/\NCf. l'OllN'JIV 1 11111111 '3300 or ~111 orr VII. 111tom11tlt' trans.: fWtOfY_. 1 ir 1•01ut .• \-t FM ~.000 ma \11 tl"5t~iill to MW l'i '11 tm111 1H"11L111· 1•1·1111om11·11I I q I • ' · ('1111700~ 111r 1•onct, power 1tetr·
-..WPlt 1ll11a Or •h'rt'O ' h.1111111111• ru1·k t:mll ~·~ tf 1 Slll.71•111441 llllZ! 1~1i:hw. Mlhw t•xlt'l'mr & S"'LI S, SHYICI '111 Rt•rllnt'l ta.v 11 •r -r111, 11111 ' braku. Cr111t 1.o...:......c .......... 1t 1~1SEU1101W1A1 12w~ u-..a... 9731 . H s tt.\HI" 1:11:1:10111 "' .. ,1• 20K "·t t11mlly1·1r uoTMVf!> ~ -'MwOOort Rubln11 t'orrl ..__ l omp,ut• 11111~1• "' 1111 '61912Tarqa l'rh 1~I 1111h1 ut S:l!Hlfl AMDllASING "11. 1~11." mi "'011 Slil6 Thl'Odor' Robin ~ IMWll a>Ha1bor Bhtl . l'lhlU •••••••••••••••••••••••• 11011 .. l>l1t'l1 h··:M· ,11111 liO Ill'' ll111l11lt'4I v.lt h ull Thtnlu1,. llul1111~ l'onl ovt:HSF.Alil >lo:l.l\.'l:H \' Olh't" tis 451i2 Ford, Hll'bor Blvd . .. OrL..ete ,.,., IJH ooto or 81 RX7 GS "'"" M'tu11hl. 11'111"' lh1· ,.,,r,1M 1.0011.s :ll.u111,111"" llhil i ·u~tJ fo:x1•fo:lt'rS '1alt1 nl 11u10.11001ll'Und1 U.l• MeH M200tO or
JJ.Ow,.....,._I ~82\1 In IMM \l'l'l .. \Tt-: 11111 I> 1 •1 I 2 1 ·' " t I.II\ fo: N i-:w' 11 111111· M 1·~.1 t.U ou 1 o .,, 11111.St.295 s.t0-trllt · .. 1c.,.,_1333 -1111100 wuh t ~ ~111•1•11 w ~a:un:ofo:.I\ 1~ a1:1 1rr:12'.!11i.Wo1~111r1 11110 r.tUM'oltt EA.llLEIKI 111211111:.i ..
l :-, WAA: . ll OitaU1l 2llOZX.1•t1\lll\'I'. Imus ' 1111' rn'11tlilh1lllU•'. IH i i I u:r; x1:1:1 ·11 1111.s •'01111.. .··I 111 VOlVO ,.L._.............. 99110 a;i Palrlunt! 500 Sport
Ol .... ..-.1 , 0 L )l k 11 9, 90 0 nN • ... I , . " . . ' '' 'irl I \•lh'.1. ~ 11111•1"1. 1111 . """'".._.. • loullt' 2 tlr Ong Pnt. T -... COUNTY s Sll 900 x I 111 toll I ~Wll'Ulll, ''"' r.. i-1~ t t'lt II) Mii ,l(JIJI>. hlr. 1111•11 ('111111 Sltl,!11.10 1•1 I l'I~ Jiii r111. 1a111', I llWllt'I l!ltill 11.irlMir Hh 11 ....................... l:llrd Top SM v a Auto OLDIST m ;"18 7".A ........ t lol$M'llt• & UNI.\ lb.UOO ""'"'II 1111 .. ,,. ~uuruof. j t ~ 11:11 OlilCIC h 111111• *''I~ 114!1 ~llti roSTI\ M "'-"' \ ..., PB $700 •R• -·
& --~ """"""' nuk11 t "'"'' wll. ONI.\' 111.uh,1 w.111111 1111 1111 ~:!1:s>111"'111''11" .. 6•6-9303 540-946 7 •CHEVROLET ...... · .. '".""'" "1'18210. \lrll 1•lt•.i11 .:oil 11 SI 1.000 ol'rt·a r1t·11M' I .111 11\H' ~2.!11111 ~\2 i!tk.z ""• I 11'.l.I \1111 llHlll ' T'I\ T...... 97 6 7 HEW '"I '79 Ford F1tsta. dean, f aee il I S3ft•O D•" . I,, " . • .......................... 1!17'• \ I "· 1 I' I l.• uoc.wt ''ond New lire~,, • "' •'" l'Hlll )!S , ·70 MHZ 2110SI. Xlnl h1·11:l' ti!.: h1 11 1111 •"10'1'117 121\ nll 0 11 ·77 · '. 11 111 ,'11' '.'r' MONrfCAILO " ' · !. . 1~1J83 -~)9 -1 3 7 • rn111I SIK .11 11 0 l'h s11m1 ll!~IOli!I ~:111: N1•w t'lukh l11k1o :~~11t'.,~1~1,1r~~"'.1':'l1'1,:•:1 LEFT-OVlJt! hrks s:1100 640:1212
Salts·Sen·ke-Le111n11 7t 2l0hh'hbl·k. w shutl,• ... ~~~ 11~ 11e121n1.111Hlll1mo ,74911 SP ._ \I'. s1,.,1.11• x11 ,,,, \utu 1,,111., .uir l'tlnl1 t ·1i; f'mrlan~. Mood 1·011d. rr'1 r ._ °' ~n kit 11m•rm l'IM 17 000 _ -, ._11 . SI> .1. 1 \ orscwt 1-.1-1111 ...... 1 • ., ""'4111t·' Slli~1 '>t:. •t\711 lh 1 , ruru. must st'll, $700 or 1'./l ~V ~ ml $5000 0 80 $4ll 77711 ·-· ' aoo: 111 111· 111 1·1111111 n ·,l11t 1·1t. 1111111 "· ' '"'" "' \11 :t l~l.tll\ 11 t•r ''"' r.i' li.,,.t o(frr 848 2500 R:l.!SiO'l('E· l'\h WE'VE . l:1 .J\ .. 11. l',tr l'h 1111 llhr .. ,11.1 sr Fl.111·~ \u 1·;:1 St.11: 1·111111 N1•\\ "' '""" lluuutl II.id; (,ttfj!l~lll•t UiOl!lll li3 f'otdSt1111on W11n. ltAW t119 ZX .. 1111. ,11111111 1a"'· :.ol\ t.111111 l'\\r \\1111111\\,. l"11111 1·.q1111·111:.:!2111 11i.: l'I·""'' ,\II 11,.11111,11 OMlYS769t ~==-Whr', .. cl MOYDI ...__ !111 St:1 .. 1100 .\l1o11 ·110 .. 1111 . dt•d 11111 rur:. $.'llUI 1m1;.m1 (:1t•,11 lt1Hh Nut t'un HOWARDCht•roltt X.lnt runntnl(~ond , _____ ...._.;...... te Wi tt inllr 5 • .llMYrll St.11 \\'.i:11. hit.. '"·•llWt. alarm Mt· 11111 V•••-9770 11111 1· •.·,1111 •. ,, 111 1>1111• ~u:ulSh ~ 67340t9 1peed. 32,000 m Jt•11 "' ,1411ltlll' 1111 Suri :1111 • • . . ~-·· • ' · T • . 9720 -.,.. .... ,.. wkt•111'· .,_IY&-.... I .k .I . I 1!12 lll•lt•\l:!>l:ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• l!fi 1,1;,1 '11•.WPO Ht'.,\(11 U..C• 9945 ••"7iN vhr'°""1 • ~ .• ,..,. .... _, Mt' '\t•ttl. tun ot t'a"'' _ •110 'ff: \ w I •I •I 1 3,0555 •••••••••••••••••••••• 213-4111·63611wk 1la\S ~ACIUITI ~It\ 1111 52·1•i1•t •'Ii•, 1!l!rbl 1111111 1'111111 ' muh•r "·-l I#. 111:11 ·I.! ,,~111 ltd \ 4 ,1111 ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
f 2102d . -. ·, su -.. ,-... ,· ··· · ••n11111 $:!4.1u 1 1,111·111 1li•M. 1.I h•fl tlt~ll $.'>ll \I. '77 M.irkV Dt'511:n mdlc r 81 Maxima Sia \\ l.!11. • us ,,.,. ...,..'\ ' k I .,;.., 1'~10 • .. ... ·h W1·~h·111 '"It·~ hi ..... \ d 1 Lllll •111111 SEE us FIRST! F t. 11nrf. tOlll'Olld $6200
106 31• 14K ma. ull \ll'J~. $95!JO • fOa MIZ 210 SE 3.5 .: 1 ~' · • · -11111,. l11r Sorll'r ll1•t•f h• Sb~•1 I >.i.i' !N.ll l:!t..I W1• htt11· ,1 i:uud ~l'l,•1·111m E1 751 :l."19'7
, e1·~· IT l'f:: U•ll M111l1•I So"'•rh ,., .~ !Ill l'or"r.ht• p,1rl• ttr $:.!jli•,1 ~~Ill !Ii II 'j I \oh " \ 1111 I tltt•I II I NEW & l ' S •:I> 9950 .,., """z • · t" "'l••h· Nt•"' 'i I :! ti n•hll M1L't S.11 11l11 t· , ...... ~ .. "~' Mtrcwv
FOISA.LI 11' Pinto batr hback,
clean. 4 1Pff(f. 1141w tires •
lueaair r1ck.aood
trM1port1Uoo nr SlZOO
080
SU> l570J efr _qtTm llaria
V6 Pinto tl1lcbb1cll. WH
in wnr k. Body and
framr d1maee. All 'IH
OK V8 141.000ori& mil.
llt'W trans ' r1dl1tor,
pump. \'ery good whls '
tu-es. nu broken glHs
lntrrtor aood. Reds
anll A 11reat deal (Or
1lll'rharu1· or parts sales
Must !it'll aJI together S700. make orr Call
968-~4 art 7:30..J!m
·73 Pinto Wg n. xlnt
lrans1.1ortat1on. ne w
brakes ' radiator. StOOO ftrm Afl 6.1·a11833 :J.115 • II "1V • l(oud l'Ollll. Ill •• • ·r .1111111,. ol lh1" l'oll'I' I ,II w, I i i lk·dk Iii •••• 1111 \ltlt "'"'"'t\1'C.... • ...................... . t •• OE L side & out run I l ; ,.... ....... ""'''· 111·1u1 ,., '·" I · · 1.i.\ 11.111 Mutmni:' + IX ..., mo. · ~ pn \'t • • -.......... .h11h 1.12 1111:! '1·~"" S:!:\t•t "' 11,•,1 uf ·n Mum.1n·h Ghia. ~dr. Cap. cost '4964. Res 56.000 0 B 0 Da~ i. _ _a ~. 'iH :nan > lhl 1°111, \\ 111. "" 1.111 t~;Kt small\ 8. JUlti. Jrr p s 'i6 Panto Wa11on \'6. auto.
value 1241192. Total &1206,E1t·s.631 I~ 14n MISI tlSlltnl~llM \\hl"·'n1'f.\ll ,1h11•l t.111k 1r.t1 ltt 1:11\ u11 l11.111t~1 'i:!\WSuf'«1 llt•1•lh'.\l111 Autos, Used f ll. I' W Sll'rt'll. 62K AM FM . ntw taru. pm ts $5409 U Cos I ·77 zsoz \ t' 1 • •. • 11..,.i 11111·1 lh' •. t:! iii I •••••••••••••••. ••,. ••. S 2 .. , 1, 1, sth l'r & rl."d. p s $1700 It · · 'l • / · am 111 . , & hllt•r. :11n 1111 ~li,i:~1 1·tMkl. I 111\111'1 111111pl1•f<· m 1 · . II" .. ease $406.69 o takl' 1·ass. ffilll(S.1mma1·' lllu Moserati 9739 r.r;r~l:H 1·1 ~'2!111!111 n~•ll <'ns.: ,·iiit """' 1111 Cadi•oc 9915 1m 11;731322 f!.!.!<67!> 1579.675·0073
Delivery. Order Yours me 11 s H 11 o o ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·;11 !lllSI ' l.1•.1lh 11111 S<!" • 11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pt, ltlt 9960
I Today ! Wkncl~ t'\~i. a59ti!l113 ORANGE 'i.1 :!2011'! ~Int '111111 S11•1 \I'. ,111111 , • 1.~;'.:'.0%.'~a~l~:"' ·"" COMTEMPL .. Tl"'G iltM1w111•rarl11 S111I l'r. ~tClllC) 9952 ~ ............. .
•
da" 1213)1!17 ·211 St1t1ll•ol. ,JO lllltl! ~\.'l4lll .J I $.!I ~Ml "' " I 111411 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·-• I .. ,,~_ ' COUNTY'S !JiJ "'lli. l:.2 IM'4Ji ~l\\n•1111:~.:·~1;~1 'ill\ W 1'1111 'l'11tt l'.1 111p1·1 C ADILLAC? ,. ,,111 231:1 'ill Mu~tani: T·To1.1. AC. 19 \ oldrt' station \\flll. I fi6 411· sta wi:n l!tH•I EXCLUSIVE 1!1111 Ml'ITt•111•,. T11rh11 <:10 11•11,.:1111-. 1111 11111• h Wt• 'ii"' 1.il111 111 ''""I'" N1•"' Tu. RlJll Tr.ins. "'ood i:rain ~acle.s. ~lnl 1·ond1 nu hrnkcs hull 'ii 1•or,...t11· !l:!I. 111 $t1t•it1llt1~1-t:t :•oi~ '"' 1111• 1111,1111._, ,., i:I l111p.1l.1. 11•1.1 l'i•'.111. ~>OUO ~29463 1·oml.~ 9.!,_9;9789 f alt tires $800 510.53113 MASERATI l>•l'Sl'I W~n. 11 111" 111'"'· 1111!\',1 1:•'. \l'. \11111. 111'11 h1.11w,.. 111•\\ l1tt'' :-.; • r ·
1
-·--• 1·1iultl tr.uh· 111 f111a11n· 1 I. ii \'W 11a,.h1·1 W1111tll 1•••11111 •· .~ pnth';.,.11111.il Si' 1 toll Mu,.lani:. nt>l'<h 'l"ork. · ll't•lar or sale Chl'a11'
.... 9727 DEALERSHIP! s :rt.111111 ;1.11 :11111; ~,~,I~ ~·.~'111 11$~~":·1.;,·:,._ sr.1 Wi.;u "I" 111111 LcrCJ'Stlt ctlo11 •. ~ tM.i lllli 1\111.'> ..:ct S800 ifiU921\.1 'i8 f\Jn SIJ()rl l'OUl.lt'.
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1
w mlSS the employment s;m :i.12 lla111111•r llr Daily Pilot Class1hed \Iii·•,) .kl
H you're an the mar~tl
lor a helter rar. be sure
torh~k the many autos
advertised ror salt tn
Class1rled.
People who are sttkang
an apartment look rirst
1n ct11111r1ed Will your
ad be ther'? To plat'e
$1759. 857·9378. _ j Eves, f97·~6 !">57 0929 700.0049 colum~in ~laSS!fied. CM ~l!l ll'Ji:1 ! !!!J Oassahl."d Ads 642-5678 your ad. u ll 642·5678
• A Tl.AS CHRYSUR~ YMOUTH
2929 Herbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 546-1934. 3 block1
touth of Sen Diego Freeway off Harbor Blvd. Complete
t body 1hop. Sel... Service. Perta. Service Dept. open
Monday thru Frldey 7:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. end 8 A.M. to
5 P.M. on Seturdey.
• llACH IWOl'TS
148 Dove StrM t. Newport BMch. Tel. 752.o900 C.11 us,
we're the 1pecleli1t1 for Alf• Romeo. Peugeot. Saab &
M9eeretl.
• THEODORE ROllHS FORD
Moc»rn ...... Hrvlc., parts, body, paint & lire dep1s.
Comp9tltlw rates on le ... & deity 1'9ntels. 2060 Harbor
Blvd .. Coste M ..... 842-0010 or S4().8211.
Tel.
MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE
WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES
NEWPORT DATSUN
888 Dove Street. Newport Beach. Tel. 833-1300. At the
triangle of Jamboree, MacArthur & Bristol behind Vic·
tori• Station. Seles. Service. Leasing & Perts.. Fleet di.
counts to the public.
• HAIHS CADILLAC ,
2600 Harbor Blvd .. Coste Mesa. Tel. 54().9100. Orange
County's Largest Cadlllec dealer. Sales. Service. Leu·
ing.
• DAVID J. PHILLIPS IUICl<.roN1'1AC.MAZDA
Sales • Service • Leasing
24888 Alicia Parkway
Laguna Hills 837-2400 .. CHICK IVERSOH PORSC ...... UDl-VW
415 E. Cout Hwy., Newport Beach. 673-0900. The only
dealership In Orenge County with these thrM great
mak .. under one roof I
• ALAM MAG MOM rotnlAC.SUIARU
24e0 Harbor Blvd .. Coata Meiee. Tel. 5o4M300. S•'"·
Servlc., Laeslng.~'Mr. GoodWrenGh.'' ·
0 HOUSI OF IMPOl'TS
MllCMSl9CI
W..•hntee• ....... 8882 Mench .. ter Btvd.. 8uene Perk (on Santa Ana
Freew1y). Teke Beech BIYd. offremp -9Nrp right on
M9nchetter.
OW. MEA-OEDES (213 or 714) 63'7·2333
0 •
I 01 LONGPRE roNTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd .. Westminster. Tel. 892-6651. Orenge
County's oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Siles.
Service. Parts.
• SAIL CHEVROLET
900 South Coat Highway
Laguna 8-ch .. ~ ............ ,..1 ..
S1ALES HOURS: Mon.·Fri. !H, Set. 9-5, Sun. 10-4
4i4·1131 546-9987 . • SAMTA AMA DATSUN
2001 E. 17tl1 Street. S1.,ta Ana Tel. S58·7811. Your
Original Oed•c~ted Datsun Dealer.
• MIRACLE MAZDA
We've movedl Our new location le 1425 Beker Street.
eo.ts ~ Tel. 545--3334. Stop by & villt our brand new
showroom and ... why we're the 11 MR.de <feeler In
, Southel'n C.llfornle. Sales, Service, Perta end L ... ing .
AMMfllM MAZDA .. o.e,o.c. ..... ~ •• .................. c... ..
eo1 S. Anehelm Blvd., Anaheim 956-1820. Just north o f
Senta An• Frwy, on Anehelm Blvd. C.11 us llrstl
''WE ARE HARO TO FINO-el/T WORTH ITI "
•• 28402 M~~~~~A~,kwy.e1tlt
We offer whet n o leaH eompeny o r bank can. t . Ultra•tnodlfn Mrvlc:e dept, for 1st ctaea after ..,.
eorvlce : 2. Factory auth. leellitl• & body ehOp; 3.'
Ellmlnetlon of the middlemen -14•1ng deelef dlr9Ct.
131·2040 tMt4t
COSTA ..SA DATSUN
2845 Herbor Blvd., Costa Meee. Tel. 540-M10. Serving
Orange County tor 18 yura. 1 Mlle So. 405.
• SUMSIT FOID, IMC.
(Home of Wiiiie the Wh•le~ 5440 Gerden Grove Blvd.,
W•tmln1ter. Tel. 636-4010.
• RAMK PROTO UHCOf.M.MIRCUIY
Service and Part1 Department always open 7 deya •
~ 7:30 A.M. to 6.30 p M. 848-n39.
0 COHMB.L CHlftOLIT
.2128 Hatt>or 8tvd., Cotta ...... Oww 10 ~ _.,int
OrMge County! S•lee. -..ng, a.vice. C.11 ~1200:
IJ*ll•I perta llne; 546-IMOO; body ahop tine; 754-0400.
• ROY CAIV• RO&.U IOYcaaMW
1&40 JemborM Roltd, Newport IMch. f40.e444. ~ a.vie.. Pett9 And Leulng.
•
<
•••••• I
-mllll llllY IVll
OHANGt-COIJN I Y C ALIH)11 NIA :·~CE NT S
~ ... .
Goast educators back call for math emphasis
BJ PHIL IN&lOl:aMAN °' .. ...., ........
lcbool official• alon1 th•
Oraa1• Coa1t are 1upport1n1
Oov. Edmund Brown Jr.'1 call
for more emphula on matb and
aelenoe In blab school; but are
q\Ml&JOl1lni lf enouch money and
teaeben Will be avallatile to put
Brown's propoeal into effect.
In bla "State of the State"
addre11 last Tb,uraday, the
aover..-proposed that every
CaUfomla higb school student be
required to t.alte at least three
years of math and two years or
science courses to prepare for
Lease
solution
urged
By STEVE TRIPOLI ol Ille.,...,""' ....
Homeowners who live on land
leased from the Irvine Company
have demanded specific
solutions, raneing from a freeze
on lease payments to an option
to purchase their land with
no·interest financing, to their
dispute with the company over
land rent hikes.
More than 1,000 leaseholders
met Sunday and approved the
demands proposed by the
Committee or 40,000, a group
claiming to represent the
approximately 4 ,000
leaseholders affected by the
hikea.
The leaseholders also heard
details of planned legal action.
and an appeal for substant.laJ
donations from each of them to
fisht a legal battle over the
iaaue. Many left donations
behind as they exited tbe
overflowing main ballroom of
the Marriott Hotel in Newport
<;enter after a two-hour meetin&.
The to·called '• Leaaebolder
Bill of R.lahts11 .. pproved Sunday
calla for: -
-All leasettolden to be pven
one opportunity to neeoliate
their future land arrangement
with the Irvine Company.
Negotiations are to focus on the
leaseholder's choice or
maintaining the current
a1reement, negotiating new
leases either with Improved
terms or equit)' participation,
purchase of land at a "fair" i price or a special arran1ement I for financially pressed senior
citizens.
-Independent appraisals or
land values if Irvine Company
figures do not please individual·
leaseholders. Once a value for
the land is established
leaseholders can elect to sell lhe
property at that price, with the
proviso that the Irvine Company
must buy the land at that price if
it la not sold within 180 days.
-Land value to be
determined by a formula which
includes the replacement cost or
tbe buildings and improvements
on It. •
-Loans provided by the
Irvine Company for those who
elect to purchase their land
during 1982. The loans are to be
interest.free and payable in
(See LEASE, Pase AZ>
·School hit
by fire in
Huntington
B7 PATalC& UNNEDY °' .. .,..., ........
Investieatora are probing t.be
,.,oasibillty of anon in a fire tbat
started tbia mornln1 ln the
combJned Clen-staeey 1rade
acboola in Huntintton Beaeb.
No one waa lQJured and the
fire was confined to the
admlniltratiwe offtces and never
reaebed clUll'OOl!la.
"I suspect anon, but I haven't
• dl1proved tbat tbe fire waa
atarted by u electrical abort • circuit or a clsarette," aaid nre
• Inspector Ri~k Grunbaum.
Tbe ft.re al till Larcbwood
, Drlve, ~•t of WHtmtuter
llall, waa reported by a Janitor
at 7:20a.m.
Firefi1btera said tb• fire
traveled lnlide a wall up an4
lDtO the attic.
"W• nn lnv•U1auna tbt fin GD tM ll"omcl ftoor wblD ft
deed •moire eomtq from tbe wall," o. ........... .
Re u6d ~ N,. .. -...-.,..
HiUq ,_.. Ull dlleoveNd U.
~ .... --tin ud Galled ...................
On•beum '181 tbe nre w• ........ -o.m.,. ....
• C .. PIU; .... AI>
the comj>uter ase.
Brown's plan, which must be
approved by the Lestslature,
called for some acWltional funds
fof' trainln1 teacbers ln mat.b,
1cienee and computer
instruction and for textbooks
and equipment.
Area admlnlatratora pointed
out that man,y students,
particularly lboM preparine for
colte1e, already take more t.ban
the minimum nu'1ber ohcience
and math courses.
"I support the concept," said
Frank J . Abbott. superintendent
of the Huntineton Beach Union
Higb School District. "I believe
it'• a atep In th• rlsht
direction."
But he pointed out that II
student.a mu.st spend addltJonal
time ln math and 1eience
claaaes, "other areu auch u
vocaUoaal tratnlnc and fine art.a
wUI suffer.''
The Hunttncton diltrlct now
requires two years of science
and one year of math.
"If we went to three years of
math right now, we wouldn't
have enough instructors to teach
it," Abbott added.
He said many college students
with an apUtude In math or
science are being lured into
~...
llRRRR -Lorey Tam of Essex. Mass .. peeks through a
clearing in a frosted window at B<>ston's Funeuil Hall
Marketplace as the season's coldest temperatures.
combined with numbing winds. hit N~w England. It was a·
scene t ypical of the nation·s northern .md eastern sections.
caught in the grip of a severe cold wave. Story. Page A2.
SA ga,ng slwoting
victim returns lwme
Xavier Amezcua returned to
his Santa An a home in a
wheelchair this weekend but
s afe from the danger of
deportation.
The 18-y e ar·old youth,
paral~zed from the chest down,
the vactim of a gang.related
shooting, was discharged from
the rehabilitation unit al UC
Irvine Medical Center.
The youth returned home in
style. He was transported by
members of the Santa
Ana.based Touch of Class Car
Club and with $2,200 raised from
the community for his care.
Amezcua and his mother,
Christina Castro, say they are
seeking status as legal residents
in the United St•tes and because
of their situation, don't expect to
rely on government aid now that
be la out or the hc>spilal.
Last week, Mrs. Castro met
with U.S. Immigration and.
Naturalization Service officials.
who took no action In their case.
The hearing was required by
Medi·Cal, which paid the bills
for Xavier's extensive medical
treatment. He had been
hospitalized since the July, 1981,
shoolin~.
Philip Smith, assistant district
director for investigations for
the immigration service, said
after the hearing that Xavier
and his mother don't have to
worry about being deported to
Mexico, where friends say the
pair would be hard.pressed to
survive.
·'He's in no immediate danger
or the immigration s e rvice
expelling him from the United
States," said Smith.
Fund raising for the youth was
organized by members or the
Orange County Victim 's
Assistance Office. Spokeswoman
Josie Montoya said efforts wilJ
continue on his behalf.
.
en1lneerlns and other lllllb
technolosy Jobs, rather tban
teachlnc.
Still, Abbott aaJd, addJUonal
• matta aad 1eience la.at.ruction lJ
bein1 planned ln hl1 dietrict.
Soon, all students may be
required to take a course In
underatandlne computera, he
predicted.
In the Newport·Meaa Unlfted
School District, officials •tree
with Brown's calt for more-math
and science lnatruction, but are
wonderin1 bow to pay for lt.
District spokeswoman Jean
Harmon said a little noticed
provision in Brown's recent
addreu would further reduce
fundlnf to the financially
troubled Newport·Meaa district.
Jn recent yeara ,
Newport·Meaa, as a 10-called
"wealthy district," baa been
Umlted to a 2 percent annual
lncreue in state funds.
111. Harmon said Brown's
propodl calla for elimination ol
even t.h1a small increase. The
dlatrlct would receive onJy the
1um lt received the previous
year, even tbouah its upemes
are contlnuinl to rise, she said.
NewpQrt-Mesa now requires a
minimum or one year of science
ahd one 1emester of math lD
hllh acbool.
Ma. Harmon said district
of rt cl all do not dtsasree
pblloeopbically with Brown, but
added, "Tbla aeema to be
another instance in which the
atate tells us to do somet.bln1.
then doesn't give us the moaey
to do It."
In the Irvine Unified School
District, Superintendent A.
Stanley Corey said Brown la
"about two yean behind ·ua la
gettine interested in these
areas."
Corey said hia diatrlct has <See SCllOOl.8, Page .U)
CdM campus on hold
USC postpones plam fallowing protest by local residents
By STEVE MA&BLE o1 .. .,..., .........
Plans to open a University of
Southern California graduate
s chool in bu s iness
administration at a vacant
elementary school in Corona del
Mar have been postponed indefinitely.
Officials
queried
on Schmitz
87 IEFF ADLE& ..... ..., .........
Mailgrams demandins that
electe4 officials alon1 the
Orange Coast state their position
on the controversy surrounding
state Sen. John Schmitz.
R·Newport Beach, are expected
to be mailed today or Tuesday.
Leonore Penfil, foundia1
member of Women's Network
Alert, laid the "~aeea. are in
motion" for a matllne to local
pu.bllc officials followla• a
meetiq attended by more Uum
80 people at ber home S.turclQ.
Targets of the eampaJp wiU
include local mayor•. elty
council members, county
officlaJs and state le1lalaton.
Mrs. Penf'aJ said.
"We want to know where other
elected officials stand oa lbls
matter and what Uteir poeltlan ia
on Senator SchmJtz' remarks,"
she explained.
Mrs. Penfil said tllat tbe
organilatlon'a action la lntended
to "make it clear to eJected
officials here and in Saerameato
that a vast nuft\ber of hia
< Schlnitz') constituency do not
support him.''
onainally, the orgHbat.lon
intended to plan a campaip
aimed at ou.stlnc Sebmita from
office, but decided that that
would be ••very diffleuJt."
Instead, those atteodlnc the
meeli°' decided it would be
more beneficial to flnd out
where local officials, who have
remained largely silent on the
issue, at.and, abe 1ald.
Women's Network Alert 11 a
loosely knit organization wboee
mem~p spans the relilioUI,
political and professional
spectrum.
OrsanizaUons represented bf
the coatltion include: the
American Aaaoclatio• of
University Women, Had--. 1
Lea1ue of Women Votera,
National Council of Cllurcl•
Women, Society of Women
Endneen. Women In Bualneu.
Women Lawyers a;id botb the
fSee SCHMITZ, Pase AJ>
The USC cl8Sff8 were set to
belln today. use. which bas leased lbe
cloaed·down school for five
years, has set off a wave or
protest 1n Corona del Mar where
residents -complain the campus
will brinl in too much noise and
traffic.
But it was the state Coastal
Commission which foiled USC's
plans to open school today. Last
Thursday the commission
ordered USC to halt its plans.
The commission said USC had
failed to obtain a permit for
converting the elementary
school into a college campus. use officials responded that
they were unaware such a
permit. was needed.
MeanwbUe, lawyers for upset
homeowners and USC were to
meet in Orange County Superior
Court today.
Homeowners are seeking a
temporary restraining order to
block the Corona del Mar
eampua from opening.
OffidaJs from USC said today
they bad no idea their plans
woulct c:re•te suet\ a aUr. "We're -well we're juat
waltlftl.'' exptai8eclDr. William
Mann, pr'Ql'fam coonUnator for use·. onnae County extension campue.
He said his office was
searchins today for alternate
site.a in Oran1e County where
clusea can be held temporarily.
e>u.era said they understand
USC waata to scrap its lease for
Old AT 15 -Actor Paul
Lynde, 55, was found dead in
his Beverly Hills home
Sunday night. a victim of an
apparent stroke.
the elementary school.
Dr. Mann, who would not say
how many students have signed
up to take graduate courses in
Corona del Mar, said much
depends upon today's court
action.
To complicate matters, the
Newport Beach Ci~y Council la
set to take action tonight which
could further dim USC's chances
of coming into Corona del Mar.
USC has asked the city for
permission to make two curb
cuts at the closed·down school to
allow cars to get into a partdna
lot.
Without the curb cuts, UsC
orricials admit they'll hav.e
problems accommodatln,g
students.
The difficulties for USC be&•
last month when Corona del M• residents claim they first
learned or the graduate school plan.
Residents contend the
Newport-Mesa Unified School
District, owners of the campus,
failed to notify them of what was
happening.
Meanwhile, Newport City
officials •aid USC had to get a
uae permit from the council
before openlq the school
School trustees responded lo
this news by overriding the
city's r~uest for a permit, using
a state law which allows a
school district to exempt itself
from city codes.
Paul Lynde
found dead
in his home
• BEVERLY HILLS <AP>
Actor Paul Lynde, known to
milliOM of television viewers a.a
the master or wit on the
"Hollywood Squares" game
abow and as a regular on more
than 10 other TV shows, has died
or an apparent stroke. his
manager said today. He was SS.
Lynde's body was found In his
Beverly Hills home about 9:30
p. m . Sunday by friends who
were to have met the actor fQr
dinner, manager Alan David
said.
The friends had become
alarmed when the actor failed to
appear for the 6:30 p.m. dinner
date.
"They finally broke into the
house through a side window
and found him dead in bed,"
David said.
Med Center blends old and new llAICI CIAIT llATlll
Partial clearing this
afternoon and tonl1ht-
Fair and mild on Tuesday
with llltle temperature
cban1e. Hi.Sha Tuesday in
the 808. Lows tonisht 42 to
52. Chance of meuurable
rain decreasln1 to 20
percent lbia afternoon and
tonlsht and near aero on
Tuelday.
Thia ii tlw NCORd matall"""" in a
DoUr PfJM urW• e%Clmirdng the
finandal ~mo /aciftfl the UC
1"1fM M«lkal Cntn in ~·
The "IDOT o/ ego•" that ha•
fnlem4J«ed the po~ of biltl for
care to the ~ will ~ outUMd, r ... ...,.
BJ FREDERICK SCHOEllEBL o1 .. ...,.......... -
Tbe UC Irvine Medical Center
in Orance la a study In t.be old
and obeolete and the new and
atate·of.tbe·art, the put and the tuture. .
Not more than aoo yards apart
on t.be a.acre medical cenw 1lte an loea&ed two diapvat. ttructur. -a recent11 opened.
als·level. tll mllllon paU•
tow•r mil• acinl, tbrw le•tl build.lDI cmee tbt Oru .. co.t.r
IOY•l'DID•D\.owned alm•ltoul•
and bp111.a.
T .. at ol• Urueture, di•·
Ua1u.LIMd b7 lta tree·bkldea ....... ,_,, .... .....,.
~ ............. t .... .
sophisticated computeriaed
tomorrapby bead acanntn1
dev'lce, or ao·called "cat"
scanner, used to dJaanoae brala
dJaorders.
It la tomewbat dark and clank
ln tbe old bulldlnl, ln contrut t.o
the interior of the sleamlD1
patient tower, where it la lllbt
and airy.
Located between tbe two
1trueturt1 la tbt main medleal
'eents bulk11DI, opened la -· UnW lalt ,JulJ, wlMD tbt .,_....
lower wu opened, tb• mala
bUlldlal n1 tbt m09t famllar
at lbe compex, well vlalbM to
motorl1u paa1ln1 by oa &M
nearbJ 8Mta AU rr....,. · o,... ., tbt patient .....
representea a alplficant at.p la
the blstory oft.be medJcal ceeter
-and attempts by unl"'1tlt1
orrtclala to uw•de the flldlity
heart ol tbe new structure.
Four treatment rooms are
dealpated for trauma victims
-tboee, for example, who bave
Four treatment rooms are
designated for trauma vj~tinu
to a at.tun tomP'.Al'•bl• _.
other medical centen la t.M
unlventty 1y1tem. Otbtr
unlveralty-owaed medlcal
centen are located la laa
Dle10, Loa Aa1ele1. laa
P'raadMo ud Davll.
Tbt tower baa an '4·Md
capacity. Onl1 private a:M
HDJl•priYate l'OOIU _.. Mlllt
ln 'tbe tower, eo••are4 to
muJtl-bed wanll fCHIM ta tlle o1w .......... to UM.-.
Tbe baMm• of tM......,
aooa wUI bout• a 41ajiaOliUo , .. ..._ ..... 1Clt1llllil·to
............ Wb .. It~ .. tM ftiit IJOti!'' tbt' 111 ...
1uatalned major h•JurlH in
traffic accidents or violent
cri••· · Tiii• medical center 's •••raene1 departmeat h.. a "te..a Clee" raUq, t.M ~
'°"tble. Pour otber tra .. a ...,...:y roomt in u.. comty la••• "level two" raUa11.
tteca .. • tllle1 do aot offer Pf•e••ure1, ,., .. ••
relmplaataUoa of ll•~ ·
T .. • ceater•1 tr••••
ll'MllMlll l'OOIU art CJllll:lll 1 ti
. wltlt toPblltleatad Ille·••.., .... , ..... ni.n ..... .... ... ................ ._._ .
C.._ADVANCaD, .... Al)
.... ,
Neari11 o l/fGr oftn '"* rcltou trom lr4" tlw 5J
/ormtr llo1tao-1 ore aUU
lean•'"" to Ho• uiU6' ~1.S.PafleA1.
111111
•••••• Or•no• CoHt DAIL v PILOT/Monday, J•nuary 11 , 1912 .
'It WaS her and GOO' woman crash-lands plane after husband passes out . l
HENDERSON, N.C. (AP) -A
80·1ear·old woman \lnt:ralned ln
flyln1 kept a plane airborne
unUl 1he ran out or fuel, then
made a rouah landlnl after her
pllot·buaband passed out and she,
was unable to hear replies to ber
frantic rad.lo calla for help. l
Janice Gravely broke oer
pelvis In the landln,. but
struggled o ut o the
aln1le-engine plane and crawled
3QO yards to a farmhouse for
help, authorities said.
Her husband, Edmund, 61,
was killed, a1lhoueh authorttla
did not -release the cause of
death or say whether he died u
a result of the Sunday afternoon
crash. -•
Mrs. Grave ly was listed In
satisfactory and stable condlUOn
with multiple fractures at Nash
General Hospital in the coupl~'•
hometown of Rocky Mount, a
hospital spokesman said.
After she brought the SiJver
Moonie 20 aircraft down in a
clearing ofr an unpaved, rural
Vance County road about 1:30
p.m ., Mrs. Gravely crawled to
tbe home of J .C. and Lovie
Jones.
"She was on her knees and
From Pag e A1 .
.
had her arms up on lhe porctl.''
Jones eald. "She looked ml1hty
rou1h when we first saw her. My
flrat Impression was that she
was drunk. Her bands were
bloody. She sald she needed help
and s he was aaytoa 'Thank
Je1u1' that she could ftnd some
help."
Mrs. Jones said Mrs. Gravely
"was a fantastic lady.''
"She was never in a hysterical
1tate . She was in complete
control at all times. She said she
knew her husband was dead. She
said she knew up in the alr lt
was her and God. She had
faith."
Gravely a nd bis wife had
flown out o f the Rocky
Mount·Wllson airport at 10:46
a .m . Sunday and had filed nie.bt
plans for a non-stop trip to
51.atesboro, Ga., said Tim
Trudgeon. an air traffic control
specialist at the airport.
Gravely "must have known
something was wrong because
he got the plane turned around
and headed for home before he
passed out.'' said Lt. Col. Jim
Carr of the Civil Air Patrol.
Ernest Grainger, manager of
Columbus County Airport; near
Whiteville, uld the woman
made a frantic call for help over
the radio.
"She aald, 'Help, help, won't
somebody help me. My pilot· la
unconscious, won't somebody
help me,' " Grainier saJd. "You
could tell s he was really
scared." The woman apparently did not
hear the replies, because she
kept changin1 tranamlttin1
frequencies, said Maj. AJ Parker
of the Civil A.Ir Patrol.
Carr said Mrs. Gravely kept
the plane airborne for nearly
two hours until she ran out of
fuel. ''She may not have known to
or how ·to switch It over to a
second tanlt," Carr said. "She
rode It OD down to the around
and managed to pancak• It in."
Sgt. J. W. Prather of the Vance
County Sheriff's Department
said Mrs. Gravely told him after
the crash that she had never
piloted before.
T rudgeon said Mrs. Gravely
apparently flew a lot with her
husband and may have learned
by watching.
.SCHOOLS BACK PLAN. • •
Freezing
cold grips
most V.S.
minimum requirements of one
year each of math and science in
high school. But the district also
requires s tudents t o pass
minimum proficiency tests in
math, and beginning this spring,
in science.
If students don't pass tbeae
tests, t.hey ~an be required to
take additional years of science
and math.
Corey said he disagrees with
Brown's theory that simply
requiring more years in the
classroom will guarantee more
learning in math and science.
"His approach is to assume
that atlding more years of math.
and science will help," Corey
Wheelchair
lawsuit
rejected ·
A lawsuit by a former Orange
Coast woman who challenged
the right or the Orange County
Transit District to purchase 6S
new buses n ot equipped to
handle wheelchairs was rejected
today by the U.S. Supreme
Court.
The hig h court, without
comment, let stand a ruling that
Yvonne Bagstad Nau. described
as "mobility handicapped,"
waited too long to file her
challenge.
Contacted al her home in
Tarzana following the court's
ruling, Mrs . Nau expressed
anger and disappointment at the
court's ruJing.
"Damn . . . it was our last
hope," she said. "It's criminal.
as far as I'm concerned. I'm
very upset about it. I was hoping
right will out "
Transit district officials, who
were not aware of the ruling,
reserved comment.
Mrs. Nau. 52, contended that
the district· purchased SS buses
that were not wheelchair
accessible in violation of law.
Mrs. Nau claimed that the
transit agency was wrong in
failing to buy buses that were
accessible to passengers in
wheelchairs.
As another part of her
campaign against the buses, she
also attempted to prevent the
U.S. Transportation Department
from paying part of its share or
the costs to help run the SY.Stem.
Last May, the 9th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals turned down
her claims. ...
In February 1977, the Orange
Cou nt y trans it age n cy
announced that it intended to
buy the buses. Ms. Nau filed suit
in December 1978.
From Page A1
FIRE... •
estimated at $30.000. He said tbe
fire started near filing cabinetl
by a window.
School children who were
attending early morning cluses
were taken to the playground
area while the fire was burning,
school officials said . Other
youngsters were taken to outside
areas before they could enter
classrooms.
said. "Our position is to work
a nd test until the students
demonstrate they've mastered
the subject."
In the Laguna Beach Unified
School District, students now
are required to take one year of
math and a year and a third of
science.
But Superintendent Robert
Sanchis pointed out that Laguna,
like other districts, offers many
more elective courses in math
and s cie n ce . H e said
col lege·bound s tude nts in
particuJar take much more than
the minimum in these areas.
With its cur r ent teachers,
Laguna could meet the higher
minimum science requirement
proposed by Brown, but would
be a little short of teachers in
meeting the three-year math
requirement proposed by the
governor. .
Sanch1s s aid he hopes the
Legislature wi ll provide funds to
hire additional teachers if it
approves Brown's proposal.
If not, districts will have to
remove teachers from other
subject areas and re·train them
as m ath and science instructors.
which also will require some
expense, Sanchis said.
Freeway landing
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
civilian helicopter ran low on
fuel and made a forced landing
on the Hollywood Freeway,
temporarily tying up traffic but
causing no injuries, officials
said.
BUFFALO, N.Y. <A P>
Hundreds of schools, state and
county offices and businesses in
Western New York were closed
today after a blizzard packing 40
mph winds pounded the area
with up to 20 inches or snow.
Police rescued 18 people and
two dogs from stranded cars on
th e Skyway, an elevated
highway in downtown Buffalo,
and fretted that they might have
overlooked oth ers on the
snow-swept roadway where
visibility was only a few feet.
The New York State Thruway
was closed from Rochester to
the Pennsylvania border.
An arct.Jc deep freeze that has
killed at least 27 people and
caused thousands to suffer
pushed into the Deep South
today with the coldest s ubzero
temperatures of the century in
cities such as Atlanta.
With temperatures still well
below zero across much of the
nation, nearly 100,000 people in
10 states were without
electricity and another seven
million endured brownouts
·today as hundreds were forced
to flee their homes when natural
gas lines froze.
.A minus 26 reading Sunday in
Chicago was the coldest since
o bservers began keeping
records there in 1870, and
Milwaukee's reading of 25 below
tied the record set in 1875.
'
..................... "" ...... SCHOOL BLAZE -Firemen remove panel from ceiling of
offi ces for Ada E. Clegg Elementary School and Helen F.
1 Stacey Interm~diate School in Huntington Beach. They
discovered the blaze had included the attic.
O .. ANGf COAll • Diiiy Pilat Ct•Hffted ectY9ftfstng 1141142-5171
AR othr dep•t11Mnla 141-4321
From Page A1
SCHMITZ. • •
Democratic and Republicu
parties.
Schmitz bas been the subject
of controversy since he made ·
remarks that bave been
conatrued aa dlspara1lo• to
women and Jews.
• Demonstrators failed
appear at Schmitz' home
promlted UUt weekend. Lt. Gary Petersen, of the
Newport Beach Polite
Department, reported tbat
J ._with D•f•••• Lea1u•
demOMtraton dkl not pie-et t.M
Stbmlt.a bomt Sunday • •
Oelty"9tf'9ff .......
PROTESTERS More than 1.000 leaseholdt.•rs or Irvine Company lund jam the Marriott Hotel in Newport Bea ch t11 d emand sol11tior1:-.
to sk~TO<:keting pa~ mt•nts
From Page A1
LEASE CONTROVERSY AIRED • • •
equal parts over 10 years after a
10 percent down payment. land
to be given the choice of two
rental plans . One wou ld
establish new SS·year leases
'with annual rent s et at six
Ex-newsman
Tom Barley
dead at 54
percent of half the land's fair
market value. The other calls
for a doubling or present rent
plus annual adjustment for
mrtation and sharing of profits
rrom any increased value of
property at the time of sale.
-A freeze on existing rents
for all senior citizens and·
hardship cases, lo remain in
effect until the property is sold .
In return, the Irvine Company
will receive 20 percent of the
sale pnce of the home.
Louis Scott, a director of the
Former Oran ge County committee who has run its
newsman Thomas Barley, 54, publicity campaign, told the
who was serving a prison term crowd the Bill of Rights 1s a
following his conviction of "first step" in their battle over
murdering his wife, died Sunday the leaseholds issue that "is
al the University of California credible, has precedent and will
Medical Center, San Francisco. be fair.''
A spokesman at San Quentin Scott described the last 6-0
State Prison said death was due days as a formative period for
to complications arising from the committee and said that the
injuries Barley received Nov. 19 introduction of the Bill of Rights
when he was attacked by was the beginning of action in
another Inmate at the California the fight. He said the committee
'Men's Colony, San Luis ObisP'?. has achieved its early objectives
Barley had been hospitalized by bringing leaseho lders
since that incident, first in San together, public izing their
Luis Obispo and later in the San dispute and .putting the Irvtne
Francisco Bay Area. Company on the defensive.
Harley was con victed in Attorney Raym~nd I~ola , a
Orange County Superior Court of partner in. a law firm hired by
second-degree murder in the the .comm1tlee to pursue 1t:gal
May, 1979, slaying of his wife, a ct1on aga.lnst the I ~v1~e
Catherine, 46. At the time, h~ompany, S81d lawy~rs will file
was on probation for a previous clas~:aclton ~u1t
assauJl on her lkola said the su1i will contend
A spokeswoman at the Santa that the I rvine Company
Ana law offices of Barley's breached its contract with the
attorney, Keith Monroe, said le aseholder s. failed to take
funeral arrangements were improvements made by the
pending. . homeowners into account when
Barley was employed at the assessin~ the value of_ the land
Daily Pilot as a reporter al the and failed to con~1d e r the
lime of his wife's murder. He r e sidents ' "l'ang1ble an~,
also had worked for the Orange intangible" contributions to tne
County Register. community.
He called large increases 1n
land rental being proposed by
the Irvine Company, which In
e xtreme cases multiply the
current rent 40 times. a "lime
bomb" built into every lease.
Lawyers will contend that such
a "time bomb" c annot be
included m a lease unless the
le ssor s pe ci fically informs
potential lessees that "the bomb
is there licking year, after year.
after year." lkola said.
4 arrested
in Irvine
pot case
Irvine police have arrested
four people on s us picion of
poss essing 150 poun{fs of
marijuana valued at SS0,000.
police reported.
Narcotics officers say the four
s uspects were arrested al the
Federal Express Co in Irvine at
10:30 a.m. Saturday afteT they
allegedly picked up a package
from Michigan that reportedly
contained the pot.
Offit:ia ls of the Federa l
Express Co. had told police
Friday that the illicit shipment
was arriving, police said. PoUce
didn 't s ay how the Federal
Express officials knew of the
shipment.
Arrested and charged with
felony possession of marijuana
with intent lo sell were Donald
Tune, 47, of Santa Ana ; Michael
Nash, 2:7. of Huntington Beach:
R ic hard Walker , 30 , o f
Greenville. Mich .: and Clifford
Brainnard, 27, of Santa Ana.
We're ExDerts on wi.nter warmth
For flloM extra COll~clcrys. ... folow-, occnMrie• _... ..cessiffff
G~les
A good pair of anti.:fog goggles
not only allow you to see while
its snowing but also protects your
face from the cold.
~ Underwear
Silk, wool or cotton
long underwear layers
underneath your
regular ski clothes to
provide extra warmth.
After Sid loots
Nothing feels better than
a warm, cozy pair of
after ski boots after
a day of skiing.
Sde1 cmcl Repairs
2700 W. C1111 H~. ............ c.
714-6Jl·DI'
Mittens
With your fingers
together keeping
each other warm
mittens are much
warmer than gloves.
Wool Hats
40% of your body heat
is lost when your
head is not covered.
rooll\1 bave bffn prated lat.o
avvtee at the aame Umt, .
Ten addltklllal btdl, H...-.ci
from each other by curtlllDI, ve
rtttrved for l••• ••Y•r• 1mer1enoy CHll. Two are
tpeclaJly dealaned for obttetrtca
c11t1 -ca111 the center
refflvea in hl1b numbul.
AllO located on th• noor are
11ven "mlnor emer1ency"
room• where patltnts with
aUmenta or lnJ'U'les considered
routine are treated tn sometbln1
akin t.o a doctor's o{flce aettiJll.
There's also a separate
emer•ency room fQr pediatric
caaea.
During a recent tour of the
emer1ency room on a Tuesday
afternoon all was quiet,
uncharacteristically soi medical
personnel said.
On a subsequent viSit, on a
Friday night, the picture! was far
different.
The emergency room was
teeming with doctors, medical
residents, nurses, paramedics,
ambulance attendants, law
enforcement officers -and
patients. The waiting room was
nearly fuU . One Hispanic couple
nonchalantly played cards.
Others filled out forms, or bided
their time watching an overhead
color television. There were
faces of despair, or pain, anxiety
and boredom. From a treatment
room, a cblld's scream of pain
could be beard.
Marcia Shakespeare stood at a
three-window counter near the
door of the waiting room. She
was the evaluating nurse that
'particular night, the first health
professional to encounter the
arrivals, regard!ess of whether
they were under their own
power or wheeled in on an
ambulance stretcher.
Ma . ShakHptart wore a
1tetb01COpe. ~arby, •h• kept a
blood pre11ure "cuff" and a
thermometer wltb a dltltal
read.out dilolay.
Al pat{ent1 preaented
tbemHlw. at the counter, Ma.
Shakespeare checked thelr vital
sl,na, aacerlalntd their
dJf lculty and determined what
priority they should have In
receiving treatment.
There are three levels of
emer1ency patients -true
emergeocles. Intermediate
emergencies and so-called
non-emer1ent emergencies, a
seeming cpnlradiction In, terms.
The first group has priority. The
others can wall.
But Pat Bolleaon, emergency
room head nurse, pointed out
that waiting times have been
substantially reduced, in part
because the new emergency
Court nixes
origin study
TACOMA, Wash. CAP) -AU
teaching of theories about the
origin of man has been
s uspended in Clover Park School
District because of a federal
court ruling in Arkansas ag~inst
creationism.
Superintendent Robert
Chjsbolm ordered the ball to
give school lawyers lime to
review the matter. The district's
policy required secondary
students be taught the theory of
creationism alongside the theory
or evolution.
Kathleen Taylor, director of
the ACLU in Seattle, threatened
to sue if the district refused to
alter its poli'cy, which was
adopted in 1977.
faclUUee e three Umea t.bt 111,
of the f er quartera.
Oepe 1n1 on the month,
bttwee. 000 and e,ooo per1Cn.1
come Ch the emer1ency
""room , trinf everythtn1 from
head t.o pneumonia, from
amall t.o severed llmbe.
Dur I hollday periods,
emer1 'I room use lncreuea.
The rlatmas-New Year'a
perlo 11 the bualest, Ms.
Bolle said.
The d Ooor of lbe new
palle tower 11 reserved for
obste ca and gynecological
cases. has 30 beds.
Mic l Deblleux, aaaiatant t.o
Willi Gonulesz, medical
center ector, said tbe facUlty
la ha lini more t han 4,000
delive annually. That's up
from births only fl ve years
ago.
.. As r as we're concerned,
there' baby boom," Deblleux
said.
Me aJ center officials and
Stant van den Noort, dean of
the Irvine College of
Med ine, point with
unde andable pride to the
facili s 08-GYN department.
Th ate of stillbirths, van den
Noor Id in a recent interview,
has d lined from 50 per 1,000 a
few s ago, to 11 per 1.000
toda
"Ware a high-risk (patient>
cent for deliveries in the
We're kind of running a
c obstetrics unit," he
all floors in the new
the OB ·GYN unit is for
ent of patients, the other
movement or medical
el -a layout designed to
e foot traffic and
tion in hallways near
'room.
DISPARATE STRUCTURES -Recent!~· opened
$15 million patient towe r and aging. tri-level
building that on( was count~··s alms-house
form UC Irvine !\ldical Center
Coastal
POINT CONCEPTION TO THE
MEXICAN 80tllOER OUT 60 MILES
-light, vari.ble wlncb tllrovgll
ton'911t ._,. -to toullnont I to "
knocs um att--. wesi.r~ •-I• 1 IO 2 , .... &Komlng P•r11y cloudy
tllls •ll-Mldt..i9"1t
Showers
to Ille Me•kan -· and oul 60 mlln: LIQl>t ver.-wlnOl tllrOUQll
lonlQfll -...-to -thwftl from I
10 " knob 1111• ·-..... $catt9r«I llglll s11ower1, becoming parlly
cloud y lale lhh •llernoon and
ev.-.lng. Wntern 1-11 of 110 2 feel.
Extended
forecast
~ ..
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN AREAS 11------------Felr MIO loCally windy mainly In
U.S. summary
I
1 .
sclttered
Tiie •-n 1-ltllnll of the l\8tlon
ewoh to blttet1y celd _.,., today
es wlnd·clllll fectors ctropfl•d
Ille mountelns. Cllance ol early
mornl"9 109 or I-clOUdt near tlle
CO.SI In Coe.lei arus. lllglll In Ille
Mli. IOW1 In Irle 40i and I-50s
Mountain ~ • to n. loW1 In tt>e
10$ •rid lowW JOs.
lemperetw. lo et 1-•JO below----------
NAlf0N4\ WIAfMU \U Y•<t
HO&• U \ o._. .. <--... ._ uro from Ille upper-Mlulsslppl T ______ ..., ______________ ,
Tiie ..-.cury also remelned -II T El PHO , ., Plllsburgll 00 .(It Y•ll•y~tlleOtlloV .. ,..,. emneratures Is• ..
bel-xero ecroM Ille MIHourl Rlwr Ml IA Pep "•lrbenllt -02 .17 Pll•nd, Me 13 ·Ol
V•llo -Ille Central Pl•lnt, Ille Albany 07 01 Hal'tforct> u 02 Piiand. Or• J1 n
mld·•rld-·Mbsln ..... V•H•y.tlle Albuque so 17 Helen• 1l OS RapldClly .01 -n
01110. Valley. the ,_ G .... I IAkH Amarillo 21 02 Honolulu 11 73 tlleno 30 09
and p.,11 of New Englend. Ille Anchor-" u H-lon SJ 11 AlcllmOfld m CM
Nallon•IWHttierServluwld. AJll.,,llle Ot m 1nctnac>llJ -06 .,. Sall Lake 31 13
Trnel edv'-1 .. contlnwd lodey Atlenta 24 .OS Jac:Ullvlle !S 20 S .. llle 43 0
over tlle ""'9•·Mlstlulppl Vello Atlante Cty it ot J-•u u 24 SI Louis ·01 .01
•rid lllf'ou!ll\ fl"llld\ of Ille Gre., UkH 8altlmore ot 02 Kent City I -OS .Of SI p. Ta,,_ St lS region, Wlntw storm wemlngs •-81rinlnQllm 24 -02 LH VeOH .0 .. SI Sle Merle 1S 13
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We're LisJeni
What do you Mke about the
Call the number btlow and
tranecribed and delivered to lhllmc>Dr1ta·
Tbe same 24-hour anawm
ten to the edit.or on aay toplc. lbef r name and l~• nu cal a, pleue.
l'ell ua what's on your ml
Second 11"'1 11:Up.m. U
I TUHOAY
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 11, 1982 \ H/F
LIFE-SAVING EQUIPMENT -Pat Bolleson.
head nurse in the tOP.·ratc..•d l'mt-reencv room
.,...,. ..... ~ ~ Pall'tc• O'o-tl
al UC Irvine Medical Center checks one of
four treatment areas for trauma patients
Three corridors link the
patient tower with the older east
building. And though the main
building is only 18 years old, one
se n ses a night and day
difference when walking into it
after being in the tower.
In the main building signs or
age and use are evident. Much
or the "hospital green" paint is
faded or marred. Trim and
doors are distressed . Tile is
well -worn and c racked .
Quarters are cramped.
The main building is due for a
multi-million dollar renovation.
Five -bed wards wil l be
converted into three-bed wards.
Operating rooms will be
remodeled; laboratory s pace
will be expanded. Pediatric
wards will be consolidated. The
work, which began in
mid-December, will cost about
$6 million.
All of this, officials say. will
improve and streamline patient
care and benefit a wide variety
or unjque and special programs.
The medical center, for
example, h~ the only center in
the county for advanced
treatment of burns. It operates
o ne or the county's two
state-designated centers for the
treatment or critically ill
newborns, such as those infants
born prematurely.
There's a center In which
sleep disorders are studied, a
regional poison control center, a
s p e c I a I s u r g i c a I ~n It ro r
reimplantation of severed Limbs
and an artificial pancreas unit.
one of the few in the U.S.
Early next year. construction
will begin on a medical library
for use by medical students and
the other health professionals
associated with the medical
center and the medical school.
located in Irvine 13 miles away.
The Library. officials said, will
be the first component in a
modular clinical facility that
eventually will include buildings
not only for patient services but
also for instructional and
research programs.
Reflecting on the amount of
ongoing construction and the
shift Crom the new, medical
center administrator Oeblieux
observed, "I guess you could say
we're going through puberty
right now."
Ir t hat's the the case, the
medical center bas had a long
childhood.
Orange County government's
first attempt to care for the
impoverished occurred in 1891
when two beds in the county jail
in Santa Ana were set aside for
those with no mean s of
providing for themselves.
Only uncomplicated cases,
however, were handled at the
jail-hospital. Persons requiring
more intensive treatment were
•transported lo a hospital in Los
Angeles County.
In 1895, two beds in a Santa
Ana house were set aside for
county patients; in 1903. a
six·bed hospital was opened at
Sixth and Spurgeon streets in
Santa Ana's old downtown. It
also was designated the county
almshouse.
Nine years later. in 1912,
leaders of the growing county
successfully sponsored a $60,000
bond issue for purchase of a site
and construction or a larger,
com bined. almshouse and
hospital.
Later purchased was a 72·acre
parcel along what is now The
Ci t y Dri ve n ea r the
Orange-Anaheim boundary
That site became the location
for tlae 45-bed column-fronted
hospital building that remains in
use today.
County government by the
1930s manage d to get out of
op-erating a portion of the
facility as an almshouse.
And, the county s ucceeded
later in getting out. or the
hospital business.
In 1976, after more than two
years or negotiation, the Orange
County Medical Center. as the
facility was then named, was
sold to the University of
California for S8 million.
The sale, at the time, seemed
a logical evolution of a 1968
agreement whereby medical
students received training at the
county-owned hospital.
The sale relieved the county of
a multi-million dollar financial
burden. More than $50 milJion in
uncollected accounts existed at
the time of the sale. And
transfer of the center to the
university put an end to
repeated investigations or the
facility by county grand juries
-investigations that often
resulted in harsh reports th.at
left county officials
embarrassed and defensive.
And. the un1vers1ty acqwred
what it wanted -a teaching
hospital it could call its own.
Mike Wallace slurs
allegedly on tape
LOS ANGELES (A P ) -A San
Diego savings and loan company
allegedly has a tape or television
reporter Mike Wallace making
racially disparaging remarks
while interviewing an official at
the financial institution,
newspaper reports say.
Wallace is reported to have
made the co mme nts while
talking about the problems of
l ow -inc ome persons
understanding complicated
loans and liens, according to an
article in the Los Ansetes Times
The show, taped in March and
aired in November, dealt with
the problems of a black and a
Latino in California who faced
foreclos ures after signing
contracts for expensive air
conditioners without realizing
they had put their homes up for
collateral.
San Diego Federal made a
settlement for nearly $1 million
after a state attorney general's
complaint regarding the sales
practices or Trane Co., whose
contracts the loan company was
carrying.
"You bet your ass they Clhe
contracts) are hard to read . . .
if you're reading them over the
watermelon or over the tacos,"
Wallace reportedly said to a vice
president of San Diego Federal
Savings and Loan when CBS
cameras were off.
The bank , however, is
reported to have had freelance
cameraman Jim Schock of San
Rafael recording the interview
lor the bank. Schock reportedly
kept the loan company cameras
on dunng the incident. and the
company is said to have those
tapes under lock and key.
The n ews man told the
newspaper the remarks they
quoted him as saying were
"close" to accurate and
captured some of the ''flavor."
"Look," he said. "I happen to
have a penchant for ebscenity
and for jokes ... anybody who
knows me. I'm afraid, knows
that I do ethnic jokes and I do
obscenity from time to lime.
He said that even though he is
Jewish he tells Jewish jokes.
•
our hocxied 1arnbsu<l.d<z
S\Vtlatshirt ...
44 Fmhlon lala(ad • Newpon Beach • 714/ 644·50'10
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H/F • Orange Cout DAtL Y PILOT/Monda , Janua 11. 1982
t •
APW-......
on Tortuga Island to ,,,ark revolution
PORT·AU·PRIN , Halli
(AP> -The Halttan vernment a a.y a ll b a a r o e d the
vnt·pocket van' rd of a
31-man lnvuloo for of exlles
led by a flUlnc ataU operator
I rom Florida. Haitian aoldler cha1ed
several men Into t hlll• of
Tortusa Island, abou 15 mlles
off the northern co or the
lmpoveriahed Carib naUoo,
tbe 1overnment aal Sunday
nifht. It did not say l ey were
captured.
The invaders r orledly
landed on Tortusa S day to
launch an attempt t spark a
revolution against e island nation's 29-year-old lctator,
President-for-Life J ·Claude
.. Baby Doc" Duva r . They
reportedly came by at and
plane from the Bri h Turks
and Caicos ialands, bout 100
miles north or Haiti.
•·A small group or ple who
landed on Tortuga Is d in an
attempt to cause pr lems to
Haiti, following th r being
ordered to leave' the ks and
Ati.ntle OcHn
CarlbNan S.a
INVASION -Map locates
the Turks and Caicos
Islands. near Haiti. where
an attempt to overthrow the
H a i t I an gov e rn m en t b ~·
exiles was launched.
Caicos Island last week. He did
not take part in the Tortuga
landing, the sources said.
6,000·man Haitian army wu on
full alert and the U.S. Cout
Guard cutter that Intercepts
Haltlan refugee boats bouJ>d tor
Florida was patrolUn1 around
Tortusa.
In Washln1ton , Stale
Department spokesman Ruah
Taylor uid the FBI was
lnve11U1ating whether Sanaartcq
aqd hla men had broken U.S.
neutratlty laws. He said any plot
to launch an invasion from U.S.
shores would be illeaat.
Duvaller's government ls
considered friendly to the United
States. More than 200 U.S.
businesses operate in Haiti, a
Creole-speaking nation
considered the poorest in the
Western Hemisphere. Most of
the population of S mUUon is
Illiterate.
WHERE FOUR DIED A rescue team drag~
the body of one of four men who died after a
party of six people riding five snowmobiles
plunged into the icy waters of Murray Lake
Sundav. Sub-zero temperatures and a
windch.ill of SO below zero hampered l'{'COH'l'Y
efforts on the lake located about 20 miles
northwest of Grand Rapids. Mich.
Caicos islands, have routed
by the populace nd the
military," Informatio lrtister
Jean·Marie Chanoine ·d in a
brief statement.
It was not clear how the
British government planned to
deal with Sansaricq, who said he
would not return to the United
States. It impounded a planeload
or weapons and ammunition
carried by a chartered DC-3
from Miami that landed
Thursday night on South Caicos,
but let the three Americans and
one Haitian aboard return to
Miami with the plane.
Rumors of overthrow plots
have circulated before in South
Florida's Haitian community or
50,000 exile s . There ls
widespread hatred for Duvalier,
who s ucceeded his father ,
Francois "Papa Doc" Duvalier.
when he died in 1971.
Like his father. the younger
Duvalier has ruled by a
com bi nation or persuasion,
voodoo s ymbolis m and a
personal army of thugs called
the Tontons Macoutes, Creole
for bogeymen. Allies hack U.S. on Poland
Usually reliable so es said
the landing force was ade up
of four to eight men.
The invasion was di cted by
Bernard Sansa cq, a
37-year-old Haitian le who
owns a gas station n Fort
Lllllderdaa~ He claims have-a
force or 700 men t was
reported to have asse ed o!lly
37 for his invasion fore n South
Port-au· Prince, the Haitian
capita!, was quiet Sunday and
few people seemed aware of the
11'-o rtvga I atfd1 n f . NoT ma lTy
reliable sources said Duvalier
was in bed, seriously ill.
Sansaricq reportedly took part
in unsuccessful plots against the
elder Duvalier in 1963 and 1968 .
His picture was also on a shower
of leafl e ts dropped on
Port.au-Prince last October
calling for Duva li er 's
overthrow.
BRU~ELS, Belgium <APl -
The United States won support
from its European allies today
for the American view that the
Polish government's relaxation
of martial law restrictions was
insieruticant and inadequate.
However, Secretary of State
Alexander M. Haig Jr. told
reporters it was unlikely today's
meeting of NATO foreign.
ministers would agree to his
request to impose joint san8tions
against the Soviet Union and
Poland if martial law is not
lifted soon.
Haig called in advance of the
meeting for "a clear
condemnation" of the Polish
military regime and "Soviet
responsibility" for the Dec. 13
crackdown in Poland.
Court nixes death
for sex crimes
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
U.S. Supreme Court refused
today lo let states impose the
death penalty for adults
convicted of certain sex crimes againSl young children.
The justices , without
comment, refused to reinstate a
Florida law that allowed capital
punishment for people over 18
convicted for rape and other sex
crimes against children under 12 years old.
General kidnap
suspect grilled
ROME <AP) -Police are
interrogating a suspected
member or the Red Brigades
who newspapers say may know
where kidnapped U.S . Brig.
Gen. James L. Dozier is held.
According to reports in the
Corriere della Sera and other
newspapers, Franca Musi, 27,
had just returned from a
meeting with terrorist comrades
in northern Italy when police
grabbed her in a major sweep
against the Red Brigades last
weekend.
Gold prices sink
below $400 mark
lraniam in U.S.
I
linked to terror
WASHJNGTON <AP) -Iran's· diplomatic outpost here has
been used "to fund. direct, plan
and execute terrorist plots," say
top federal prosecutors who are
urging that it either be tightly
controlled or closed down.
The interest section, based at
the Algerian Embassy, has been
li,nked to murder plots. arson
a n d diplomatic violations,
according to U.S. Attorney
Charles F .C Ruff and his
assistant, Robert W. 0Rren. .
Ski mask rapist
begi.m life term
ANGOLA, La. <AP) -Jon
Simonis, the confessed ski mask
rapist who terrorized women in
12 states, was sent to the state
prison in Angola on Sunday to
begin what authorities :;aid
would be a life behind bars.
Since his November arrest,
Simonis, of Lake Charles, has
been sentenced to 21 life prison
terms plus 2,681 years in
connection with sexual assaults
in Louisiana.
Bombs explode
in Israel market
U .S . officials said the
Pola sends ~nvoy to Moscow
Phone serv· e restored in Warsaw but calls censored
WARSAW, Poland P l -major Polish cities.
The Polish governmen ent its PAP, the official news agency,
foreign minister to M w and s aid urban telephone service
restored telephone ervice was restored throughout the
inside Warsaw, but ensors country "in connection with the
eavesdropped on local lls and further improvement of public
long-distance service s sliU discip1ine and the observance of
suspended. martial law regulations." But
Soviet television owed there was no way lo conrJrm the
Foreign Minister Jozef zyrek report since it was impossible to
a r r I v i n g I n M o cow dial area codes outside the
Sunday and gelling em-capital.
brace from Soviet eign Callers said some telephone
Minister Andrei Gr yko. numbers answered with a
Observers in the Soviet pitat recording saying the call was
said the triP. might be i ded being "controlled." Martial law
to give the impression the authorities had said earlier that
Polish government was cails would be censored and
business as usual despi possibly interrupted "if used lor
imposition of martial a activity threatening ltte secj.lrity
month ago. or the state."
Czyrek, secretary o the The North Atlantic Treaty
Jozef Glemp, Poland's Roman
Catholic primate, John Paul
assailed the military regime for
requiring workers to sign loyalty
oaths and renounce members.hip
in the indepe ndent labor
federation Solidarity.
"Under the threat of losing
their jobs, citizens are forced lo
s ign declarations that don't
agree with their conscience and
lheir cQnvictions," the pontiff
told the Sunday crowd in St.
Peter's Square.
That· violation or conscience
doe s "grav e damage lo
man ... and is the most painful
blow inflicted to human dignity.
In a certain sense. it is worse ..
than inflicting physical death, or
killing,'' he said.
Polis h Communist Pa y 's Organization foreign ministers R hn . b k central committee, i be were meeting in emergency e qu.I8l ac ;
LONOON <AP> -Gold prices
sank below the $400-a -ounce
mark in European trading
today, hilting a ri ve·month low
in London.
highest ranking Pole to sit session In Brussels today, and h . d
• TEL AVIV, Israel <APl Moscow since martial la JlS the United States was asking its 8peec unprove
Gold was trading in New York Two hidden bombs exploded in a imposed Dec. 13. Foreign de European allies to threaten joint, w A SH 1 NG TON <A p 1 at $388.50. crowded suburban market Minister Tadeusz Nestor cz s anctions against the Soviet Justice William H. Rehnquist,
today, injuring an explosives went to Moscow last week d Union and Poland if martial law asking several questions as the
N ~r!day og~l: l~s~ ~·!° oo~ i ~; expert, a police spokesman said. obtained a credit or $3.86 b is not lifted soon. The ministers U.S. Supreme Court heard oral
The bombs. P res umably to pay for imp<>rts from et were expected to issue a arguments today, displayed Exchange, falling to $395 from · · f p 1 • t l orded condemnati'on Thursday's level. In later planted b y Pales tinian Union in excess 0 0 as s rong Y w almost none of the hailing and
Gold was down early $7 an trading at Republir National gue rrillas, blew up in the exports. or the Soviet and Polish slurred speech he has shown
ounce at the opening in London. Bank, gold was bid at $395.50, market of Petah Tikva, eight The restoration of telp e governments. recently.
Al mid·moming, the city's five down $4 from Thursday. miles northeast of Tel Aviv , service in Warsaw was ano r At lhe Vatican, Pope John Rehnquist was released from
main bullion houses fixed a police said. A member or the step in the gradual easin f Paul II made his harshest George Wahsington University
recommended price of $392 an Silver, too, was falling today' police bomb squad was slightly marli~l-law restrictions t condemnation to date or .the Hospital Jan. 3 after suffering
ounce, compared with Friday's Al mid-morning in London il hurt wben a second bomb hidden began last week with military crackdown in his withdrawal reaction when the
late rate of $400.75. The last time was quoted at $8.05 an ounce, in the same package as the first resumption or domestic l homeland. dosage of a drug he has been
gold was so low in London was compared with $8 .325 al the exploded as he was moving it, a service and skeleton airl Echoing a sermon in Warsaw taking for back pains was
close Friday. spokesman sald. service between the capital on Wednesday by Archbishop reduced Aug.S. il'$iiiiiO~tariiilWHinl~i1'C>.::-i~r--~t-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;rliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .---n;e ~rts
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Read all todays news ·
I 700 ADAMS A VE.
COSTA MESA, CA
· in the
January Sale bealn• on
12th and wllf continue
Janu1ry 17th. Specl1I
re hours for both The rlna and Newport Beach
atlone wllf be:
!S.,JAh.12
AM TO I PM
•Al!1 JAN. 11
AM TO I PM
JAH.14
AM TO I PM
I., JAN. 11 10 lllJ'rO IN
T., JAN. 1110'& TO I PM
N., JAN. 1710 All TO I PM
knOw you'll be pleated
he outstanding Mlectlon
erchandlae we are ting from our regulAf
k. Durlng theM incred· e aal• dlyt you'll find
terrific Nvlng1 on all of our
tamou1 brand names and
quality accenorl•.
REDUCTIONS FROM 20% TO IO% ON SPORT COATS,
IUITI, ILACKI SHIRTS,
•ELT9, SWl!ATeR81 NECK·
W1AA1 AND IHOEI FOR MEN ANO WOMINf (Ladles'
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atore onty.) Your 1ale pur-
ch ... may be chargeO to your Gary• Peraonal Account,
Bank1merlcard, Maater-
Charge, or, of course, Cash.
All 1al• are final. qur ator•
will be oloaed on Mond1y.
the 11th to pcepare for the
blggeat event of theNew'w'Mrl
-4111 ... .., • .,, _.... .. ...,. (rl) --~
'111, ..................... "'°"~ ~·· ~'-
..
Orange Cout DAIL V Pt LOT/Monday, J1nu1r, 11, 1982 H/F Al
,.. ...
•
Stars push nuke
1weapons freeze
BEVERLY HILLS <AP> -A
crowd ol Hollywood luminaries
that included Prealde'1t
Reagan's daughter, Patti Davis,
1ot tocether to add their names
to the list ol people puahin1 for a
nuclear weapons freeie.
parlor by deeldlnl th.at a ballot
measure to I•••._ poker oaly
needed apPfoval by a 1lmple
majority.
Saturday's action meant the
ballot measure -which wu
approved by 66 percent of thole
vot1n1 ln a apeclaJ election last
month -has puaed, maklfti
Cudahy the third Los An1eles
County community to le1alhe
poker. The other two are BeU
and Gardena.
The occasion was a peUUon
party Sunday at the home of
producer Bud Yorkin, one of
about 1,500 such parties
scheduled around the state by
Californians for a Nuclear
Weapons Freeze. The group ls
seeJtlnt to qualify a state ballot Bodies removed · lnitiat.tve demanding that the
United States and Soviet Union ~rom p/aru! wreck caJl for an "immediate halt to ... J i
the testing, production and
deployment of aU. nuclear
weapons ... in a way that can
be checked and verified by both
I 4
sides."
FRESNO (,\P) -The bodies
of Ronald J . Vau1hn and his
wife Lee have been removed
from the ~kage ol their light
airplane that crashed in the
Sierra east of Yosemite Park
last week.
Y PATTERN -A resident 0£ Anza. Calif .
to .; through a store window along state
highway 371 where morning frost has created
crystal formations . A drop in tempe ratures
has brought the frost to parts of SoulhPrn
Califo rnia .
Seal'ch
set for
3 boaters
LOS ANGELES <AP> -The
U.S. eo.t Guard prepared to
mount ua ocean Narcb at d•'Yft
today tOI' tbrff men mlatni on
a small boat alter nadln1 tbe
body of one· crewman ln the
waten ott San lllsuel Island,
oftlclala aald.
Cout Guardsmen plucked the
body ol Ysidro Mendoza
Ramlrn, rt, ol Oxnard, !roan
the water Sunday a llt\}e over
two hours alter receivlna a.
report rrom the fl1hln1 vessel
Pacl(ic Sun of a body noaUne In
the water, petty officer Tony
Chllelll.
Ramirez had been one of four
men aboard the private boat
Three Sisters, which bad been
reported overdue in Oxnard
Saturday morning by owner
Corey Keller's wife. Officials
planne<t a 4,ooO square mile
search for survivors or other
bodies today after finding
Ramirez floating amid debris
and oil three miles west of San
Miguel, Chilelli said. The coordinator of the petition
drive, Harold 'Willens, said
about 15Q,OOO signatures have
been collected , but the
organization nee<ls 346,119
signatures by April 23 to qualify
As the Mono County sheriff's
d e partment arranged for
helicopters to recover the dead
Orinda couple, Mrs. Vaughn's
son Donald Scott Priest. 11, who
survived the crash, remained in
critical condition this weekend
at Valley Medical Center. Doctors said there is a chance
that the boy's feet and part of
bi s legs may have t o be
amputated.
2,000 storm victims due to seek aid
for the November ballot.
Divers recover
more art objects
REDONDO BEACH (AP)
Divers have recovered more art
objects from the sea just
offshore where hundreCis ol
pieces valued al $500,000 to
$750,000 had been recovered previously.
Police believe the 200 or so
items found since Thursday -
including porcelain vases, jade,
silver, marble and brass -may
be amona the valuables that
Taiwaflese national Wellington
P . Cheng reported missing from
his Bel-Nr home Dec. 24. Cheng,
a real estate investor, said
burglars netted $4 .5 million in goods.
Police said the recovered
objects had been wrapped in
plastic garbage bags and
dumped in abou_t. 25 feet of
waler.
Bodies found in Ben Lomond slide raise Northern California toll to 29
I '
The boy was rescued after five
s nowbound days during )Vhich
he huddled in a sleeping bag in
the fuselage of the wreck at
11 ,000 feet. Or . Richard
Chandler said a fter examining
the boy that it was "remarkable
Donald's alive."
San Joaquin valley
hit by frost
SANTA CRUZ (AP > -At "The like lihoo d or new ror the s tate Office o r
least 2,000 Northern California mudslides in the Love Creek Emergency Services, predicted
storm vicUms were expected t.o area has stopped the search," about 2,000 people would be at
ask for beJp at federal disaster said sher i rr · s Sgt. Bruce the centers today and that more
centers today as geologists Simpson. "The land is very people would apply for aid on
warned rescuers to stay off the unstable with trees, roots and Tuesday," he said.
unstable muck that buried a boulders perched to fall." -According to Nels Rasmussen,
half-dozen homes at Ben The s torm caused an an OES administrator, 439
Lomond. estimated $300 million damage homes were destroyed and 6,023
The death toll from the st.orm · throughout a region stretching were damaged. Damage in this
that dumped up to a fool of rain
on Northern California a week
ago stood at 29 with the addition
or three victims whose bodies
were found in the Ben Lomond
slide over the weekend.
Officials expect to find at least
five more bodies before they
"The likelihood of new mudslides has
stowed the search.''
finish probing the thousands of 200 miles. President Reagan has
By The Associated Press cubic yards of dirt that slid onto declared six counties -Solano,
Frost touched the San Joaquin the homes. Santa Cruz. Marin, San Mateo,
county alone is estimated at $100
million.
Valley again early today, but However, authorities halted Sonoma and Contra Costa -
da ytime temperatures are the search when geologists said disaster areas. Gov . Edmund G.
expected to remain mild. the earth may shHt suddenly. Brown Jr. has asked that San
Fresno and Lemoore Naval They said late Sunday it could Joaquin, Santa Clara and
Air Station officially were the be days before the mud abqve Alameda counties be added to
take another week to bring
another 9,000 customers back on
line.
Southern Pacific Railroad
spokesman Henry Ortez said his
company hauled 100,000 gallons
o! water into the town of Felton,.
just north of here, where service
has been out since the storm.
··We' r e o n the r oad to
recovery here." said Simpson.
"We're over the shock of it, and
now we realize the task-we have
before us."
Officials in the San Joaquin
River Delta, east of the San
Francisco Bay Area, had feared
the weekend 's full moon
combined with the storm's
r unoff would cause new breaks
in fragile levees protecting ·
thousands or acres of fertile
farmland.
valley's coldest s pots this Love Creek Road setlJes enough the list. Pokerparlor morning, both recording Cor the rescue operation to Federal officials have set up 30-degree.lows. Castle Air Force resume. five centers In the hardest hit
Though the CTitical water
short age that ro r ced 70,000
resid e nts to observe strict
conservation las~ week has
passed, Santa C ruz -area
residents are 'still being asked to
cut their use in half while repair
work continues on a 24-inch
water line severed in the floods.
However, as the moon went
into its waning phase. so did the
threat of delta flooding, said
Buffaloe.
In Daly City, just south or Sani
Francisco, officials were
watctring three oceanfront
homes that were threatening to
collapse, according to city
manager Ray Letsinger.
backed in Cudahy Base and Stockton dropped to 32. The slide area is roped off and areas where homeowners and Tonight's lows wiU be in the the occupants of eig!:ll homes business people can apply for
Service for 9,000 Pacific
Telephone customers in the
Santa Cruz area is expected to
be r estored Tuesday , but
company officials say it could
CUD.\HY (AP )_ The Cudahy 30s to low 40s with highs have been ordered to leave, the low-interest homes and other aid
city c04U1cil has cleared the way Tuesday in the 50s to low 605, the Santa Cruz County Sheriff's in rebuilding.
for the community's first poker National WeatheT Service said. Department reported. Larry Buffaloe. spokesman ~~~~~~~~----r,e~~~~~===~rr
Construction money
available at
Heritage Bank.
. Resldentlal
• Commercial Bulldlnp:
Takeout COmmhment required
along with leases.
· Land Loans up to one year
50li appraisal.
If you don't want
to drink
That's our
business
COSTA
MESA
MEIYIORIAL
HOSPITAL
Now,s the time to join a
Holiday Spa Health Club, while
you can still take advantage of
our 1981 rates.
Plus 1/2 off on a short
introductory course, and dis-
counts·o n all our oth er mem-
berships.
You'll get all of this year's
facilities, for last year,s prices.
With separate, individually
specialized facilities and pro-
gram5 for men and women,
available every day. There's no
better time than now to give
Holiday Spa a_ try. So stop by
today for a free guest tour.
11::..~&:
for Men and Women
1/2 off short course not available
at Torr:mcc or Wc.-st Los Angdes club!>.
Costa Mesa 2300 Harbor Blvd., (Behind Tiyifty
Orugl. L7l41 549-3368
Mission Viejo 24401 Alicia Pkwy. at San Diego
Freeway, 1714) 770-0822
Orange 622 East Katella Ave., West of Tustin
Ave., <7 14) 639-2441
Westminster 6757 Westminster Ave., at G<>lden
West. <7141 894-3387
Call 642-2734
Alcoholism Recovery Servjces
301 Victoria Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
Approved for Medicare
lI 1V llOO'I 00! AVM. ANV
OUR 1981 RATES LOOK GREAT
t
.d·rneals.
ddeals. •
I \
.,,. .
YSE COMPOSITE TRAN ACTION
'
UOTATJO•H l..C~VOl lltAOHOtt , .................... -~ll'IC, , ...... ,0. .•• HO•• AND Cl•CINllATI noc•
XC••ltOll 411• H"911YIO •• t•I H•O ••• OttTOllf
.... •
* H/F •
Taxing
'the had guys'
It you had to 1ues1, what would you II)' Is lb•
moat heav1Jy taxed contumer product In tht United
Statea? 1be anawer. u many ol you probably know,
la booze. "Sinful" product• have always been
considered fair 1ame for the tu eollectort.
While the tues on liquor .,.. heavy, ral11n1
nearly f6 billion a year ror the Treuury, the atrUdn1
ract 11 t.My have not been cban1ed 1lnce Lm durin1
the Korean War. lndeed, that fact la ao 1trUdn1 -
afler au, .what else bu remained the ume for 30
years? -that a lot or people In Wa1hiniton are
ploltin1 to beef up the liquor tu, perhaps even
doublinalt. .
Traditionally, the federal excise tax on akohollc
beverages has been increased only durtn1 wartime.
There's something about being In a war that makea
drinking on the homefront appear especially 1inful to
the tax collectors. But wlth no new war In tight and
the Reagan udministraUon committed to balancln1
the budget, that bottle of booze ls looklng mighty
promliling as a way to transfer more money to
Washington.
Wh en the tax
was last boosted in
1951 . the levy went
from $9 to $10.50 a
proof gaJJon, which ls ·
a gallon or lOO·proo!
liquor (alcoholic
content : 50 percent>.
An 86-proor liquor lllOI .... nz
has a 43 percent alcoholic content; 80-proof, 40
percent. Since this tax is imposed at the
manµJ'acturer level, the price, including the tax, gels
inflated all along the distribution line, from
wholesaler lo retailer.
Impact, a newsletter of the wine and spirits
industry, has calculated what would happen to some
retail prices If the federal tax rate was doubled to $21
a proor gaJlon:
-A fifth or Bacardi rum now selling for $6.08
would go to $8.60.
-A fifth of Smirnorr vodka that now sells for
$5.86 wouJd rise to $8.38.
-A fifth of Seagram's 7 Crown now selling for
$6.28 would escalate to $8.80.
-A fifthJ>{ Seagram's gin that sells now for ~.58 would increase to $8.10.
-A fifth ot Johnnie Walker Black Label Scotch
that sells now for $14.28 would move up lo $17.06.
-A fifth of Baileys cream liqueur now selling for
$12.25 would increase to $13.34.
As you can see, the lower-priced brands would be
dealt a crushing blow. That's because the lax is
levied on alcoholic content, not price:' A $S botUe of
86·proof whiskey gets the same tax as a $10 botUe or
86-proor whiskey. ln s hort, the people likely to suffer
the most from a 100 percent jump in the liquor tax
would be those of moderate and low incomes, who
cannot afford Chivas Regal and Jack Daniel's, and
they are precisely the ones who need a drink because
or the Reagan cutbacks in soc:ial services.
Beer and wine are taxed at much lower rates
than distilled spirits, and some legislators are
mulling the idea of changing the rules so that these
beverages get hit with the san:ie levy that applies to
whiskey and vodka. If that were to happen, a $4
bottle of table wine would go to $S and a six-pack or
beer Sellin~ now for $2.25 would increase to $3.82.
according Lo Impact.
Keep in mind that the federal levy is not the onJy
tax on liquor. Since 1951, when the current federal
levy was adopted, state taxes on liquor have
increased an average or 75 percent. As a resuJt, when
you buy a bottle of whiskey or liquor, you're paying
anywhere from a third to 50 percent or that price to
the tax collectors, federal and state. Drinkers help to
pay the salaries 9f schoolteachers.
The federal excise tax. since in imposed at the
manufacturer level, turns the liquor companies into
revenue agents for the government, a role they don't
exactly enjoy. Take Louisville's Brown-Forman, a
"pure" wine and spirits company in that it doesn't
mess with anything else. In its latest fiscal year the
distiller of Jack Daniel's and Canadian Mist. the
importer of Bolla wines and the distributor of Korbel
champagnes collected a total of $768 million. Of those
sates, it turned over $268 million to the federal tax
collectors However , s uch is the profitability of the
liquor industry (Brown-Forman needs only 2.400
employees) that the company was still able to make
a profit of about $130 million on its operations before
paying income taxes.
W. L . Lyons Brown Jr .. president of
Brown-Forman, is naturally opposed to any tax
increase. He warns or a triple whammy in the event
the tax rate -is hiked: <I> low-income consumers
would be penalized, (2) production or moonshine
liquor would jump, and (3) sales might drop so much
that the "government might even experience a drop
in revenues," not to speak of what that might do to
Brown· Forman.
Gold metals quotations
Go/J.
By The Associated Preas
Seleded world gold prices today:
Loadoo: morning fixing $392.00, off $8.25
London: afternoon fixing $388.25, off $l2.00.
Paris: $396.23, off $10.17.
Frankfurt: $394 .02, off $6.25.
Zurich: Late fixing $386.00. off $12.00 bid; $389.00
asked.
Hudy" Harman: only dally qllole $388.25, off Sl2.00.
EageUaanl: only daily quote $388.25. off $12.00.
EaieUaard: only daily quote fabricated $407.66. orr
512.60.
Metau
NEW YORK <AP> -Spot nonferrous metal prices
t.oday:
•c.pper 79~·81 ceola a pound, U.S. destinations.
head 32.34 eenLt a pound.
Zlac 42-64 Cefttl 1 pound, delivered.
Tla $7.llMO Metab Wffk compoaite lb.
Al..._• 11-77 cents a pound, N. Y
Memary $415.00 per nut.
rtatJaum $379.00troy oz., N.Y.
L.M. Boyd inJortm
in the
, I
Malone leada Rocket comeback
Murflly combined ror 40 lffOftd·balf . .. .... •••••• and ·cahl• m·
polnll Sunday nt1bt to lead Houlton
to a UM08 victory over PotUand ln
look to minor8
·for coaching help
Frorn AP Dl1patche11
LOS ANGELES -Los An1eles ~
Coach Parker MacDonald will be '
re moved from the position and
succeeded by Don Perry. who has
been the ~ad coach at the Kings' minor lea1ut
artlliate ill New Haven, it was announced
Sunday.
. MacDonald will be.come the Kines·
assistant general manager, a new position In
announced.
the National Hockey League
club's managerial structure,
a c c o r d i n .g l o a n
announcement from team
owner Jerry Buss in Buffalo.
where Los Ange les was
f,acing the Sabres Sunday
night.
MacDonald coached the
Kings against the Sabres.
Perry will take over the job
within a few days, it was
The Kings also announced that Brad
Selwood, Perry's a ssistant at New Haven ~~ich is in. the American Hockey League, wili
JOtn the Kings as Perry's assistant thereby
keeping intact the coaching s taff of the
Nig~thawks. who .were 20·17-4 entering a game
against Nova Scotia Sunday night.
Los Angeles assistant coach Nick Beverley
will s ucceed Perry as head coach of the
Nighthawks. the Kings said.
"Don Perry is my s taff's unanimous
selection," said Buss. "Because of the great
youth on our team (the Kings have 11 players on
their roster who are 23 years of age or
younger>, we believe that Don is the man for
the job beeause he is a teacher, a motivator and
a disciplinarian."
Quote of the day
Art Modell, owner of the Cleveland
Browns, on the team 's 5· 11 record in 1981
after t h e club had won a division
champions hip the previous year: "There
is absolutely no truth to the rumor that the
Browns' hi ghlight film will be a Polaroid
shot."
Connors outlasts McEnroe
"Jt was his strength against my ~
s~rength," said Jimmy Connors after
his marathon m atch Sunday against
John McEnroe. On this day, Connors was the
s~ronger or the two after his 6·7, 7.5, 6·7, 7·5, 6·4
victor y in the c ha mpionship match of a
Ch allen ge tournament in Rosemont, Ill.
Frequent disputes marred the match, attended
by a bout 7, 124 spectators who braved the
Chicago area's sub·Arctic cold . It was the first
match between McEnroe and Connors,
currently the world's No. l and 3 players
re s p ect iv e l y, si nce la s t
November Australian Rod Frawley won
his first Grand Prix singles title after five years
on the men's professional tennis circuit
defeating unseeded American Lloyd Bourne:
2·6, 6·3, 6-2 Sunday in the finals of the South
Australian Open. The 23-year-old Boume. a
psychology graduate from Los Angeles. was
unde r the watchful eye of two undercover
policemen in tennis garb all day after two TV
stations received phone calls Saturday from a
person threatening to shoot him.
lhe National Balketball Alaoclatlon. The
Rpckets trailed late ln the flrtt halt, S0·3l, but
camo back to Ue the 1ame early In the third
period. Malone, who acored 23 or hts 11me·hl1h
34 point.a ln the second half, led the 11.arie as the
Rockets buut a nlne·polnt
lead late In the third quarter,
84 ·75 ... Gres Ballud'•
three·point shot al the buuer
-Washington 's t h ird
tbree·polnt aoaJ In overtime
-gave the Bullets a 129·126
victory over the New York
• Knlcks. Ballard, Jeff Ruland
and Fra.a.k JobAaon each hjt
MA OH 30·(oot shots lo overcome a '°' 122· l 18 lead by the Knicks.
Ballard finished with 27 points, Johnson hit for a
career·hign•26 and Ruland 24 ... Larry Bird
scored a season·high 40 points and six other
Celtics scored in double fiRures as Boston held
off Detroit. 134· 124.
Calgary puts clamps on Gretzky
Mel Brtd1man scored twice and ~·
assisted on another goal as the ,
Ca lgary Flames defeated the
Edmonton Oilers 5·1 in a game that . ·
s aw Oi!ers scoring. sensation Wayne Gretzky
held without a poml. The Oilers looked as
though they would be shut out for the rirst lime
this season, but Jarl Kurri scored al 17:51 of the
third period to ruin Pat Rlntn•s s hutout
bid ... Bobby C larke
scored the game·winning
goal early in the third period
and assisted on two others,
as Philadelphia came rrom
three goals down to beat
Colorado, 5·4 ... Bengt
Lundholm's s econd goal of
the game at 12: 16 of the third
period lifted Winnipeg into a
4-4 tie with M ontreal.
H100MA111 Lundholm skated from the
side of the Montreal net and s urprised
Canadiens netminder Rick Wamsley with a low
s hot to the far corner ... Doug Williams
scored a pair or SO·foot slapshots on separate
power plays to lead Chicago to a 3·2 victory
over Vancouver
Conigliaro's condition ·stable'
Former Boston Red Sox slugger •
Tony Conigliaro, stricken with a
serious heart attack, was reported
semi·conscious, a hospital spokesman said
Sunday, but remains in serious conditiQJl in a
coronary care unit. ··His condition is serious but
has been stabiliied," said Martin Bander,
s pokesman for Massachusetts General Hospital
where Conigliaro was brought Saturday
morning ... Former Santa Monica High
football coach Michael Antboay Raymo will not
be retried on murder charges, a Superior
Court judge in Los Angeles has ruled.
Television. radio
Following are the top sports events on TV
ton ight. Ratings are: ' / ' o1 excellent · " / " worth watching; / / fair; o1 forget it. '
[-) 8 p.m., Channel 9 ./ ./
COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Oregon State at Stanford. Announcers: Mike Walden and Pete Newell.
The 17th-ranked Beavers will try to stay
perf~c~ in the Pac·lO when they visit Maples
Pav1l1on. Oregon St ate ripped California
Saturday 74·43 to improve Its overall mark to
t0-2. Guard Le~ Conner leads the Beavers ·
the Cardinals have been paced by freshma~
forward Johnny Rogers and senior forward Brian Welch.
RADIO
No events scheduled.
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•
Mesa, Sailors clash
•
Full Sea View League schedule on tap this evening
lb 800£8 CAllLSON O( .. OMl'f ...........
Coeta Mesa Hl&b'a Muatan11 may be at the
crossroads tonlabt wben they duel Sea View
Leaaue basketball rival Newport Harbor in t.heir
drive ror tbe UUe and/or CIF playott poaalblUUes.
The Wrd or four straight e.ncounte" with
contenders. the Muatanga U·l > are up a1ainat the
6·7, 6·7 look of 2·0 Newport Harbor, a team with
better board strenetb and speed.
Other umes ln the Sea View Leaa.ue loni1ht
Include Corona del Ma r (2·0) at Saddle.back (0·2>
Irvine (0-2) at Estancia (2-0) and El Toro (0·2> at
University ( 1-1). All begin at 7:30.
AT COSTA MESA it's a collision between
former Costa Mesa coach (J~rry DeBusk> and his
assistant (Tim Parael). The two have met twice In
the past two seasons , and each lime OeBusk and
his Sailors used Mesa as a final tuneup before
league play with 25 and 12·point laughers.
"This year the talent is a little more even."
says Parse!. "We run similar styles and I'd say I
know that team as well as any. I'm s ure Jerry will
have a couple of wrinkles tor us, but we might
have something for them, too."
It's a big week for the Sailors, too, with Irvine
Wednesday and rival Corona del Mar Friday.
"I'd be happy to go 2·1." says DeBusk.
The game features more than just a duel
between ex-coach and ex-assistant, it's a matchup
of friends.
" "He knCJws what I do," says DeBusk. "I know
what he tfoes. This ls an emotional game and it's a
year Mesa has some things to prove and they can
do it. •
"They're all good shooters with range and the
strongest rebounding team int.he league .··
THE SAILORS' CHIEF weapon is 6·7 Bryon
Ball, w~o has averaged 18.8 points a game. and
along w1th 6-7 Joe Seager. presents a defensive net
around the basket within the Sailors' ione defense.
"They ·<Newport Harbor) like to press and
run. We have to gel back on the break," says
Parse!.
Mesa·s game centers around 6·4 guard Ken
Bards ley. who has averaged--?8.()-points -a-game-
and has already indicated he is headed for UC
Irvine following graduation.
But the Mustangs present more than mer('ly
Bardsley. Really. it's a look of five forwards on the
Char.gers greeted
by 13,000 fans
S~ DIEGO (AP) -The San Diego Chargers.
surprised 'l7·7 by the Cincinnati Bengals in their
National Football League playoff game got an
unpredicted surprise when they got h~me late
Su~day: A c~owd of estimated (by police> at 13,000
waited in ram for hours to welcome their beaten
team lome.
In contrast, a crowd of 4,000 saw the Chargers
of( last Friday when they departed for the NFL's
American Football Conference championship
game.
"This is unbelievable," Coach Don Coryell
s aid Sunday.
The stadium stands. where the rans waited up
to 6'i':l hours for the team. were festooned with "We
love our Chargers" pnnants. Said Ma yor Pete
Wilson: "I'm proud of this team. They're a great
team. They've made this city very proud of them.
They're champions -and will prove it next year.''
The Chargers were introduced to a deafening
roar, one by one. after the buses arrived with them
from the airport s hortly before midnight. hours
later than expected.
Oilers welcome Lane
J im Lane, the 6·6 basketball s tar from
Huntington Beach High, who left the Oilers for
Laguna 1-fil~s then returned when ruled ineligible.
has been remstated on the Oilers' team
"~e·re pulling whatever behind us,"' s ays
Huntington Beac h Coach Roy Miller as he
prepares his team for the Sunset League opener at
Fountain Valley Wednesday night.
Lane averaged 16.0 points a game before
leaving Huntington Beach in mid·December.
"The problems we had were strictly a matter
of lack of communication,"' says Miller.
/ ,~ 1[
I
.... "t'"" .. • .6 • ,, .. .
&' ~· • ..
DUEL TONIGHT Costa M esa High
basketball coach Tim Parsel 1left1 sends
his Mustangs against Jerry De Busk's
Newport Harbor squad in a Sea View
L eague encounter toniJ!ht.
C?urt, w~th John Rishebarger, John Strayer and
Jim Pehchowski .also 6·4, along with 6·2 junior
Dave Palmblade •
The Mesa zone offers rew holes for
penetration, al least against teams without double
6·7S.
Costa Mesa 1s 6'·5 overall, Newport ls 7-4. Each
has beaten Marina, lost to Lakewood. The other
com mot{ opponent is Capistrano Valley.
Newport Harbor won at Capo, 81 ·75, while
Mesa lost at Capo, 64·56.
ROUNDING OUT NEWPORT'S attack are 6-3
senior Scott Liner, 6-0 junior Brian Folk and 6-0
senior Steve Pelletier. Pelletier is the Sailors'
seconcpeading scorer with an 11.1 average.
Elsewhere. Corona del Mar, Estancia and
University loom as favorites. The Mike Hess-Chris
Lynch combo at Corona del Mar figures to stifle
anything SaddJeback counters with; Jeer Gardner
and his Eagles teammates are 10-2 overall and are
expected -to 1landle winless lrvtne easily;-and -
University, which may have found a new battery
<Troy Larsen scored 23 against Irvine Friday> to
charge up its offense, has the horses to deal with
El Toro.
Edison tops
basketball poil ·-
Edison High's Chargers f'emain Orange
County's top rated basketball t eam as
selected by the Daily Pilot as they prepare
for the opening of Sunset League action
Wednesday.
The Chargers maintained their status
with an 85·76 non·league victory over Los
Altos last week despite the a~ence of scoring
leader Richard Chang, who was ill.
The baJance of the Top 10 was shuffled a
bit with Brea·Olinda moving in~o second
place after another two victories upped the
Wildcats' overall record to 14·2.
Ocean \!.iew drppped a notch to lhJrd and
Fo.untain VaJley fell to sixth after splitting a
patr of non·league games, while Estancia
and Corona del Mar moved up a notch or two,
the Sea View League rivals now at No. 7 and
8.
This week's big game is Friday when No.
3 Ocean View invades No. 1 Edison for an
early Sunset League titanic.
DaUy Pilot's Top 10
Orange County Prep Basketball
Pos. T~am Record
1. Edison 13·1
2. Brea·Olinda 14·2
3 Ocean View 9.5
4. Servile 9..0
5 Mater Dei 9..0
6. Fountain Valley 9-4
7. Estancia 10·2
8. Corona del Mar 7·2
9. Esperanza 12·2
10. <tie) San Clemente 12·4
Dana Hills 9.4
COilege basketball JOHNSON a SON
Presents ...
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Hawaii r 1.000 ' 1 .Ill MlllMIOt.I I I ,.., ' 1 Ill
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W L l'ct. W L l'ct. • l l'ct. W L """-Idaho 1 0 I.MO II 0 l.000 r.,.,...._ • 01 ... • , ·''° THE 1982 10.hOSI t 0 IMO It t ... lSU 1 0 l.000 .....
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New Parts Department Hours
Now Open 8:0Q am -1:00 pm Saturdays,
JOHNSON&SGN
L I N COLN ME
8616 Barbor BoUlnant, Coata 'Meea
R C U
(714)~
R y
. ...
From P11gt C1~----r--~--
S ~FRANCISCO DUMPS DA~LAS • • •
ont1 here and ln ClnclnnaU,'' aaJ4I San Francl1eo runnlnJ back Lenvll El.Uott; a former S.naal, who
carried rour thaea ror 11 yard• on the
11mt·wlnAlna touchdown drive Sunday.
SUtteU·K&rved tlera rana, maklnt up moet
of I ~ CudMIUck Part crowd "' eo,us,
erupt.tel into a celebratJon of joy u Ray Werachln1
kicked t.ht extra pohlt alter Clark'1.touchdown to
break the temporat)l 21·2'7 tle.
A few 1econdl later, wb«\ Dallas quarterback
Danny Wblte completed a pa11 to the 49era'
44.yard llne, the celebrat1n1 aeemed a bit
premature. But on the next play, with ao aeconda
on the cloek, defensive tackle Lawrence Puters
sacked Whlte to force a fumble and the 49era' Jim
Stuckey ~overed the ball at midfield.
"It wu a do-or-die altuaUon, and we were
&olng to do ll," Sa.id PiUera.
"THE 4tERS aren't a better team than us, but
the game ended at the ri&ht Ume ror them," said
Dallas Coach Tom Landry.
"I thi11k the difference In this same was that'
we wanted It more. The Cowboys have been there
before, to the Super Bowl, and we haven't been,"
said Clark.
The Cowboys, nicknamed "America's Team"
in NFL circles, were pla)llng ln the NFC Utle game
for the ninth time in 12 years. They suffered a 45-14
regular-season loss at Candlestick but went into
the remat.ch favored because of their post-season
experience.
"I think if we could have just gotten 15 more
yards on the last drive we couJd have been in rleld
goal range and could have won It," said White.
"We were just a few minutes away from the
Super Bowl," said Doug Cosbie, the tight end
whose 21-yard TD catch early in the final period
gave DaJlas a 27-21 lead.
THE LEAD changed hands for the sixth lime
when Montana, who threw earlier touchdown
passes to Clark and Freddie Solomon, hit Clark on
the game-wiMing toss in the finaJ minutes. The
quarterback also was intercepted three times,
Registration tonight
Re~traUon for the Balboa Power Squadron's
spring piloting class will begin at 6:30 tonight at
the Newport Harbor Yacht Club, 730 W. Bay St.,
Balboa.
The piloting class is free to all persons
interested in safe boating, whether beginners or
seasoned boatmen. The 12-weeks course covers
such subjects as handling under normal and
adverse conditions, legal requirements for safe
boating, rules of the nautical road, manners and
customs, charting and coastline piloting.
All lectures are by seuoned veterans of
boating who are members of the Balboa Power
Squadron, a unit of the far-flung United States
Power Squadrons. USPS is devoted entirely to
boating education and the promotion of safe
boa\ing.
twice by rookl• Everaon Wall•. The 4$efl alao lot~
the ball three Umea on fumbles and drew 1oe yards
ln penalties. ·" ·
"No ooe knew what would happep next In that
1ame. For spectatora, It bad to bit one of the
1re1test 1ames ever," said Jack Reynolds, the
34-year-old llne~cker who went to Super Bowl XIV with the Lol·An1ele1 Rams.
"We made six turnovers and won. l 1Ull don't
know how we did lt," he added.
"When l saw Clark catch that pua, J wanted
to 1et up and congratulate him. But J was
paralysed. It was just unbelievable," said
Fahnhorst 11
College sailoi;s vie
• • 1n rnaJor regattas
Collegiate sailors were busy over the holidays
with two major reeauas.
Eight schools participated ln the Suear Bowl
Regatta on Lake Pontchartrain near New Orleans.
The winner was Tulane University, taking
advantage of local knowledge, but the USC team
was a close second. Tulane had a low score of 46
points to 54 for USC.
Trojan skippers were Russ Silvestri for the A
team and Peter Dras.nin, B team. Crewing for
Silvestri was Carol McBride, and handllna the
sheets for Frasnin was Ann McBride. Drasnln was
low-Point Individual scorer in the regatta.
Twelve West Coast schools participated in
Stanford University's Hangover Bowl regatta Jan.
2.
The winner was Stanford with 61 Points,
followed by USC, 65; Long Beach State, 77; UC
Santa Barbara, 92, and U.S. NavaJ Academy, 98.
Stanford's Scott Merrill was low-point scorer
and winner of the B division. USC's Silvestri was
the A division winner. --
Alaska Eagle moves up
PORTSMOUTH, England -Aiaska Eagle, the
only American yacht in the Whitbread Around the
World race, has moved from 12th to seventh place
on the third leg of the race which started from
Auckland, N.Z., Dec. 26.
After nine days at sea the fleet had re·entered
the tumultuous Southern Ocean en route lo Mar del
Plata, Argentina, according to the Royal Naval
Sailing Association.
Latest report said the French contender
Gauloises Ill was dismasted in heavy seas,
leaving the crew safe but bitterly disappointed.
The yacht is heading for Tahiti or back to
Auckland for repairs.
Hinshaw named • • comnnss1oner
Yachting Association presents awards at meeting
Ted Hins haw of Lido Isle
Yacht Club was awarded the
Jim Webster Trophy for his
appointment as Commissioner
of Yachting for the 1984 Olympic
Games.
Hinshaw was awarded the
coveted trophy at the annual
·Dark Star wins
Dark Star. s kippered by
Randy Devore, Dana Point
Yacht Club, was the overall
winner Sunday in Dana Point
Yacht Club's Winter Regatta.
Second overall was California
Gold, Fred O'Connor, Dana
West Yacht Club, and third was
Valkyrie, Bill Murray, Capo eve.
Class winners :
CLASS A -1. Calllornl• Go4d; t. Valkyrie; J Atdtlne, Ff'ld Peret, c-eve.
CLASS 8 -I. Suntlllne, AOf\ M•l-"Y. OPYC; 2. ClalN de L""9, Paul Frazier, Ofl'YC; J
El-IMra, Piii Heerft, OPYC; '-SUM-. Ill.
Po41a<ll, OPYC.
HOH SPINNAKER -I. Dark Star, t R-,
Tar, S.lew EC!Wlne, ..,..ltached; l. Ullll'llA, Fr-
llla...:lletll, OPYC.
meeting of the Southern
California Yachting Association
at California Yac ht Club,
Marina del Rey, Saturday night.
Jerry Olson or Huntington
Harbour Yacht Club was named
as the recipient of the Warren L.
Ewert Troph y for h is
outstanding activity in the
promotion of yachting by a
non-officer of SCYA.
Hinshaw is a staff commodore
or SCYA, staff commodore of
LIYC and has held numerous
other offices in Southland
yachting organizations.
Olson is a staff commodore of
HHYC and treasurer of BOAT
<Boat Owners Associated
Togeth er> a Ca lifornia
legislative group.
Taking office as the 1982
commodore of SCYA was Robert
S. Wilson of California Yacht
Club. He succeeds H. Donald
Brown. Alamitos Bay Yacht
Club.
Wilson is a staff commodore of
CYC, a staff commodore of the
Association of Santa Monica Bay
Yacht Clubs, staff commodore
of the Southern California
Cruiser Association, and bas
been involved in yachting, both
sail aoa power, for more than 30
years.
Other flag officers installed
were Joseph Steele, Fountain
Valley, vice comfl\odore, John
Robinson, Balboa Yacht Club,
rear commodore; Roger Wilson.
Los Angeles, secret.ary, and Jim
Nugent. BYC, treasurer.
The new board of directors are
Ardent Bryant, Southwestern
Yacht Club: Hoby Denny, Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club; Gail
Hine. Redondo Beach Yacht
Club; Adra Kober. Alamitos Bay
Yacht Club; Don Krebs, Mission
Bay Yacht Club; Hal Marsters,
Silver Gate Yacht Cl ub :
Barbara McCarthy, [)$na Point
Yacht Club: George Neil,
Anacapa Yacht Club; Norton
Nelson, Long Beach Yacht Club,
and Tom Shadden, LBYC.
This Week's Special
Zillgitt
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Products Llab11ity, Commercial
Auto, Group Life and Medical u well.a.s
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7
Orange Cout OAIL Y PILOT/Monday, J~nuary 11 , 1982 HI fl
TIGHT GRIP Trevor Johansen 121 of thl'
Kings has Buffalo's .J F Sauve 'in a
h eadlock during Sunda~"~ NllL gamt·
-~~
Yvon Lambert I 15> of the Sabres 1s sk :Hin~
in lo offer ass1stan('e
't
lf.ings colder than weather
Another loss on the road prompts a coaching change
BUFFALO, N.Y. <APl -The Buffalo Sabres
and the Los Angeles Kings were safely under the
roof of Memorial Auditorium well before blizzard
eonditions struck here, so they played a National
Hockey League game before a crowd of only 2,079.
The Sabres overcame the weather and a
sluggish first period and, with two.goal efforts by
Gil Perreault and DaJe McCourt, they lopped the
Kings 6-4 Sunday night.
"The guys got down here early so they didn't
have any trouble. But they were worried about
their wives getting to the game and telephoning
home . We didn't have the us ual pregame
intensity," said Buffalo Coach Jim Roberts,
explaining the first period, in which the Kings
went ahead 2-1 on goals by Larry Murphy a nd
The Kings made it 5-4 with less than five
minutes remaining when Greg Terrion and Jim
Fox broke away before Terrion shoved a shot by
Edwards.
Ric Seiling tacked on an empty·net goal with
13 seconds left for Buffalo .
Meanwhile. it was announced as the game was
b egi nning that Los Angeles Coach Parker
MacDonald will be removed from the .position.
Don Perry. who has been the head coach at the
Kings' .minor league aHiliate at New Haven, will
be the club's new head coach.
MacDonald coached the Kings against the
Sabres. Perry will take over the job within a few
days. it was announced
Doug Smith. Gibson signs Tiger contract
McCOURT, WHO had two assists in the game, DETROIT <AP) -Outfielder Kirk Gibson of
scored Buffalo's only goal in the first period on one the Detroit Tigers said Sunday he has signed a
of Buffalo's three shots. one-year contract with the American League team
In the second period Alan Hawortt1 broke in on for the 1982 season.
Los Angeles goali e Doug Keans and lied the game The Tigers have a Policy of not announcing t
at 2·2 with a wrist shot. contract signings, but, when questioned, General
PerreauJt then directed Mike Ramsey's long Manager Jim Campbell confirmed that Gison had shot Into the goal to push Buffalo ahead.
However. the Kings' Dan Bonar swiped a l:Ps;;;;i;;;;g;;;;ned;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o
Buffalo pass and moved in for an unassisted goal to '-' .. THE
tie the game at 3.3 midway through the second ~
period. EARL'S
P erreault notched the winning goal and "'-'*-·Ht"AT•Ha
Mccourt raced in for a shorthanded goal in the ~~.~.':::!.,.
third period to give Buffalo a 5-3 advantage. The ~ ... ,.,....,5,.,,,.,v..,..C)., .. .
Sabres stayed on lop the rest of the way "•"~ .............. v .......... .
COSf& wu641-1289 ,_,..__
"AT THE START of the game the guys were .,,0'°"~5-0401 still talking about the snow storm. Talk about it remc._c. __
1 come see us at our ~ , . new address
~t~~,,,.....
and your mind wanders. But we regrouped and got 11••00..-,...., ...... ...,,..,'
the two points, and that was the important thing," l!!lm!!!!!!!Sei!!!l!!!!lw=ith~E~AS!!l!!E!!!!==~ll
said McCourt. who, like many of the other Sabres. It's 8 BREEZE
', FAIMEIS llCS&llKE ..
441 ow....,.. .....
spent the night at a nearby hotel Instead of driving Classified Ads 642·~78 home.
W. Sii REPORT~*
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Snow deptb/lnc:bes Conditions
Mt. BaJdy
Sno Valley
Green Valley
Goldmine
Mt. Waterman
Mountain High
Snow Summit
June Mountain
China Peak
Mammoth
Badger Pass
2·24 hp
18 hp
10 hp
24·31
10
6-8
12-36 12-24~~
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
60-Tl pp
60-74 pp
124 pp
72 powder/pp
NOFTHERN CAUFORNIA
Alpine Meadows 94·168
Squaw Valley 60-138
Northstar 54·130
Tahoe Donner eo
Heavenly Valley 100
Mt. Reba 102-131
Kirkwood 120-204
pp
pp
pp
pp
Lifts/chairs 4L
SL
FO
4C
2-3L
SL
FO
4L
FO
23L
4L
10
Sugar Bowl 168-216
Conditions : hp -hard pack;
Lifts/Chain: L -lifts: C -chairs.
pp
pp
pp -packed'
21L
8L
FO
FP
-6L FO
6C
powder.
•
MtwportlMce..CA
ll-77 0
OUTSTANDINC
VALUES!
H 1982VW
OUAHTUM W AGOH !> spd. trans. air cond..
leatherette seats. radial
tires and morel (Stk
3009) (004 796).
Ll1t rrice S 12. 065
Dnco.t $1370
SALIPRJCE
s I 0 695
SCllOCCO
Cou pe . 5 apeed
trenamlaslon. metelllC'
paint. rear window.; w I per/waaher. alloy
whMla, stereo casse~
end mo,.I (Stk. ~)
(017785) SALi PllCI
5 10 695
..
~ .... EARLY HELMETS -Sutanne Ntnt
displays a chart showing the forerunners
of modern football helmets at the
•Silverdome in Pontiac. Mich .. site of
Super ~wl XVI J an. 24 . The helmets
.......
were once offered at a price between Sl
and $4. A modern helmet. such as the
one in the foreground. now carries a
price tag of about S7S.
Basilio stillhas co11rage
ROCHESl'ER, N. Y. CAP> -If anyone ever
questioned Carmen Basilio's courage, it certainly
wasn't anyoite'" who saw the little onion farmer
beat SUgar Ray Robinson in September 1957 for
the middleweight boxing championship of the
world.
Nor when he lost it lo Robinson six months
later in Chicago, his left eye swollen shut, looking
Uke a plum, in a 15-round declsion. He wept from
bls good eye. He wasn't afraid to speak bis piece. He told
Howard Ccsell in t.be 19505, When Cosell was a
--•111 -1ma1
DUNCAN
DORCYI'HY 0 . DUNCAN.
resident of Newport Beach.
McCObllal MOITUAl•S
Laguna Beach
494·9415
Laguna H•lls
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
HAalOa LAWM-MT. OUYI
Mortuary• C.metery
Crama1ory
1625 G11ler Ave . Costa Mesa
5-40-5554
rmctllOTMHS l&L"llOAaWAT
M0a111AllY
110 Bro.ct.vay
Costa Mesa
642-9150
IAlTl-.. ON
SMITMATUTMU
WllTC&.WC .....
427 E 11th St . = ... 71
radio reporter, "You can't interview me. I doll't
Jlke you!"
BUT A SENSE of humor! But.lio bad 330 diners at a recent benq•et of an eeeoutata•
group here roarina with laulllt.er.
"This Is our bl11est crowd in 10 19an, .. Hkl
Bill Nealon, a public relations man for Ute 1rou•·
• "I'm ued to pert.rmkl1 before sellout
crowds," snapped Baaltto, &4, wllo 11 frem
Canastota, N.V,, and now worka b the GelleMt
Brewery.
•'I feel about 'fS out of place on th1a rostrum u
a guY .with a bemia In. a welehlllltiDa contest,"
Basilio told the audience.
Elaborating on CoMU: "111 tbe way, Coeell
and I have become trte.cb. He'• RN .... nice
things about me and I tl}' to uiy n6ft tMqs aM>ut
him. But It's tough. He's so full of It.
.. COSELL'S AN A'ITO&Nt:Y, you ltnow "
Basilio continued. "He Interviews peo)M UM be
has them on a wltnest stand. Metes tbem loc* Ute
fools. Where you goln • witlloul a aase of bu.9or!
Without a sense of humor, ,_•re neOiB1."
IMmC•Of' -....~ .. un NOTICE IS Ha1taav GIVEN "* .,,. ..... ., ............ ,...,.,..,...
flW Mr .... er li.illtles ~llltr.: ..
11y 1111..-...,. IMft myself, 911 "" elttrtllls ..... O.t .. tlllll9ld9yOfJ_,-,, 1•.
~ .. .--... .. Edlftlitr ..... ........... a..cll
c..llfwnle 9IM1
,.,.., ... Or .... CoHt Delly 1"119' •'"" to. 11. 17. HG ~
.....
-~--
~IMll
ltt -tinlt ·tMaytr un •f· rn w. tiome. ,,.,._. it
Olly ..... K1thy. •Mt ....
·1cANT 1M 11.UffS Pant r ltnnl~wner .w <'llTY at u .1•,: or
wlll l'Olllllder lt11t op.
tlCJlll 'H\Jhly 11p1redtd
TM1 mDctel. Oak pllftk· In& and ftod 1luattfl'I. New earptt I Only
...... C.UfTMIM
1 H~ wr. p. .
1::..: l l J\' i. }.4 t.: . ) ...... : .. umm ~· '.:I /911IJ.I ,.a ....,C...t~h.
. · • .1• atlDO 8lk lent a Ana Av.
•
1
• ~rtr"Hel•hta U::~:M. .... ". · 5 Fe1tura: hutr bdnn.a . ....... 111..... • 11\il llfWIP•per will not ~1thedral wood beam ~~ . : knowlnt~· 1rrept aay cellinp. rer1mk tile In
1.t111ww. ,,:.:.r. -1dvertl1ln& for rut kltrhen • bath, dbl =.."::..l'tt.n .... ; est1tt wtiirh 11 In viola· lhower In muter b1th.
m. .:.i:•· . . = ""t:.=ICJ11;;-.;ol;.,;;th ... e'"'l""1""w'-. ---~~~l:i~J::,:::!,~ , ..... o..ffl ,. ,. ______ .. dilhwuher. c:'Ultom oalt
t=J:::~ • : ~ Ad•lfflMta r1b1. 11110 aar. dr.
Dalebouf
Bay&Beach
Real Estate
ltf Al. ESTATE E1CCIUENCE SINCE 1149
COWi wmt US. •• TO •vt .. THUCI.
Since tbe home sets the mood for the
day, the entire family wttl be happy in
th la spectacular three bed room.
family room home. The eve.r·cha~ging
harbor and ocean view 1s enJoyed
from the eatire Uving area. Fee land.
Sl,200,000.
•• 17 WllfCLlip DI. M.I. Hl0 7JOO
llftl.S ......_ ......_... ...._._.,. opener. huvy shake
- -_. roof. t'Orlt'rftl' driveway =~· : = .., -~ • u4Wlllk.2 tarau .., a HAllOIYllWUOA.DMOOI ~t-'11·~ • "*"' 411t!Wr.TM t1rparting.Elttr1l1rae YACAMT-SHAMYTIMI i::rw':' E N&TMOT-• swtm pool and '''· View of ocean, bay and Pavillion
T..-....11a1 : ...., ..,. "" Nat Frem 1121.soo •od P•Y· Ugbta from this prestigious home with $';.~ : IM•r«t ... .,. ... ~r' r~ 11980 pimo. grand entry in Del Piso tile. 4 Br 2in
~c.,.,... · ·: ..,. courtts)'loRealton. Ba Family Room , 2 Fireplaces. i:-7.:11 :_:'111 __ _. ... ___ s.. c:.lf IHlty Community Pool and Parks. Ideal ..,....._. 4• 146-5'05 Ul·'lt4 ramily home in a prime Corona del ~*:i... 4111 -.tors. Mar neighborhood. Priced to sell
,. __ • ..., : .................. •••••• 1 $329,000 Leasehold . Owner will help ='.;.'f:r::· .. ·-: ._... • 10t2 .----------, finance. =.::-'~ '.&:: ... •··~•n•••• .. ••••.. WISll'I M. TAYLOI CO .. llALTOIS .....,....... = 11.,-. 2111 ,.. .......... l ... !?.:.-: .. • : 117,IOO DWM! MIWPOITC9ft'B. M.1. 644-4910 llSllss, lftST &•Ti"'·e It! A (11tt1111i.--. n...( ' ht111ll' with luri:e li\·ini:
111U111 r"' arwt rumilr ureu. Brll'k =:=: = hrl'plHt>. sunn~· •-~·, MIS k1\l-hm. 3 hul(l' bdrms. =-:-...::.-.. = 21 i balh:I. Great r1nan1"
_,, . ...,. -ini.:. 117.0llO down. 13'.
ii ~1:sz•1·1EID•tt -lntrn'St. Call ror mon· •••-'"' dt>tall•. ~-7m
I PllSIUlS &
I LIST(flM 7 Ci E. P FI'· L. .... s r A ;~c-:;
CM"8 AMl'rOOS
tll•uutlrul. immu1·ulull'.
llll't'ly 1-Jnd!l(•lfl><'<I ~ Hr
-homt" on 1·ul·tl1• 11a1-. Svat•iuu.-< room.~. \' i1•w or ,..u ,,lUr'llt' rrom pro1>1•r·
,,. Own1•r ·u1111ii1 l1•tl
.. rino1ndni:. Only $ll!U'100.
:: t\•ll ••"'" m -s.no --... ~ -----------., -------------
tlll ltOI ---'"' lllt -----.. --... Ill
.AtJkt4tE
319100M STAITll .•.
Only 1110.000! Woo1li<
111111 11lr1•;imi1 :rnrrnu"''
1hi11 1'1111rn1ini: l'n11111
Mt>11u i:urtl1•n honw
t-:nrt11t11'll patm :I 1·ar
1iurJ1:1•' s.iurtd111i: 1111111
F1l'Xlhll'11•rm:1. J1111t li:cl
l,, l 'all lliJ·ll.'i.'111
THE ~~ l\L
E '";TAT ~·Rs
a..ctd s1 oo."' SPT6LASS ITOWNll
Ot·1•;m Vil'W l'\7S.OOO
111>r14•, b1. 4tl0itq n SOOTH PORT MOIH:I.
OWNt-:R FlN/\Nl'lNG
HJGHl.V ur<;RAo•:o
Ofkn•xpirt'll J un 31
2S Hock.:a Ra~ ~II owiwr 7»-0731
COSTAMISA
STAITll
... -Onh· 1125.0IO! A1111U!Tl4.' In.Goo 1n llNll\ll ul IK.12
monlhh'. own,•r will 1·urr~·. 'rum ll~· room
wilh l'IYlY rl~pl111·1•! 3
lul):l' bdrms. Sparkling
1-ondillon! Hur~·. 1·1111
873-&WI
... -
rHF. ~~P..,
}. ,·J\.Jk~. ----
* ~ • I t
00 •
= Q)
~
• >< Q)
•
= • I t
SI 12,000
MEWPOIT ICH!
Bttuut1ru1 upi:ratled 2
B<lrm 2 bath 1·ondo
\'aultl'<I 1·eilini.:l'<I 11\·ini:
room. br111ht sunn ~
k1t 1·hen At t;i1·hr d
i:urai:r Buri:ain 1·o1sh
out vnn' l'ull for murt•
tk1ails. ~2313
THE :REAL
ESTATERS
ILUflFS-«9UC ID
E n 11 u n I I w I I h
pannramu· Bal·k Ka)
and nl11ht li11bti1 \'ll'W
On r1'(• 11100! Tnna pl11n.
STIPS TO HACH
I OOfo R..cillq A •oil Gorgeous 4 br Cleta1led
home. I blk rrom 0t·l'an
o n FF.E land onl~
S299.000 759·1501 or
;52.1373
llOD'9'ff
0c .. & lav •i•w l'LIFFHAVE~ Fan
(asfo· 'iew from I his 3 br
exl'\-Ull\ l' holTll' on FEE
land! Perfe11 for tnlrr
ta1nini:' 5650.000 11.'X ·
duSl\'l') 759-1501 or
7!12-7373 ----
Walker & lee
Rnel f slate
~ q '
3 Rtlrm1111nd luri:l' fomi· .,
h· room plm rxll•nd('(l
Jl;illll aoo 114.h l'O\ t'rl'Cl
,:;irtk•n J .. 'lt rt'ttUt·l'tl to !~~~~!!!!!!!!!!~
1295.800.
60.&IOO
A PEH
BARRF1l RlAITY
MESA VERDE
EXECUTIVE! Bun'Ola bwlt honw \lo tlh
ltoubk door ent" . leatts
mtururmal h\llll! room .
rormul d1nrni: room . .._•••.-!1111111!111!11! .. -I hui:1• ramil~ room. ~tone• .. r1r1'11la1·e. 1•oun1 I'\ l•--------i k1khl•n ,\II U\ 1•rlouks
$11,000
DOWN!
Ownt'r w1l1 1·urn fmUOl"
mi:! Supt'r sharii 3 Hdrm
2 bulh townho~· l'On·
rlu pool. 1uunu u"i\d lll'U.
Grl'lll ll'rma! Gn•ut
boq11ln! Cull now.
M6-23.&3
THJ·: REAl
£~j f ATE RS
U yo11 want your ad·
v9tltlnf mea11t lo rt· ach mort 111oplt at klwtr COit, C111alfled 11
thtway to to! Call Now!
fG:D
Sf>t't't a1·ular pool Jnd
spa F.l1•1:anl ma:-.tl·r
>Ullt', 3 Othl'f l.llj(l'
twlrms. plus a cflon \lotlh
hultm book1·JSl'S T1 ul1
.in t'Xl't'Ull \ l' bOffil' for '
ooh 1299.000 O'Anl'r 'A tll
hl'lii w111\ fmanrmi: Ca II
llllW. 5-Mi-2313
tlliM1
STEPS TO Ol'E.\I'\
Su!>l'r dupll'x a Bdrm 2
Ba. rirt'plul'l' & bt•um
t'\'thni:s Just stt>ps to
0t'\•un and uni~ 12 ~ ri.
old. Grl'ul inn •stml!nl
polenllul if summ1•r
n.'flll'<I. Ownl'r will l·urrY
somt> f1nunl'ln11
1299.<KX>
CGU OP lllWPO"T MM.TOM
HtlLO.-Mwy. c-.. ..,
171·1111
•~ AUlJY·· ·-·--.... ---
IUPll LOCATION IM
WOOllllDel Ele1ant 2 BR townbome. Customised den·2~
batll. UMl'lded carpets drapes ,
mlnl bUilaa 6 ahutten. GOr1eous
w1D ccmrtnp. Premium tot with
lovely landlcapln1 and redwood
deck. '1f7,500 Mac~ Hanson
111-lfOO ( P50)
• TO IMOtl Split level 2 BR
COllllo. adalt Uvtn1. Pool, perk
1tttln1. eacellent invnt••t.
l~f. Nt~JH>rt Beaeh loeilt ti-.eeo Hein WOod 144~ (Pm
r I
I
Taxing
'the bad guys'
II you had to 1ueu, what would you aay l• the
most t\eavUy taxed consumer product 1n th United
States? The answer as many of YJ>U pt'OMbly know,
is booze. "Slntul't products Kave always. been
considered fair 1ame for the tax coiled.On.
While the tax~ on Uq'*°r are heavy• ralaloC
nearly '8 bUUon a year for the 1'~uury. the at.rlkin•
fact ls they have not been chanced atace 1951 dwin1
the Korean War. lndeed, that faet ls so ttriklDI -
after all, what else hu remained the same for JO
years? -that a lot of people ln Wasbin,u>n are
plotUng to beef llP the liquor tax, perhaps even
doubling it.
TradiUooaUy, the federal excise tax on al.eoboUc
beverages has been increased only duri111 wartime.
There's somethl.ng about being In a war that makes
drinking oo th~ homeTront appear especially sinful to
the tax collectors. But with no new war 1n sight and
the Reagan administraUon committed to balancln1
the budget, that bottle or boo.ze is lootin1 mighty
promising as a way lo transfer more money to
Washington. ~ When the lax
was last boosted in l} e»
1951, the levy went ~ · ,
from S8 to $10.SO a ...... LL?lf
proof gallon, which is ~
a gallon of 100-proof
liquor (alcoholic -1-1,-111 ... --._--__,--
cont.ent: SO percent). -II&
An 86-proor liquor
has a 43 percent alcoholic content; 80-proof, 40
percent. ;Sjnce this ta~ is imposed at th e
manufacturer level, the price, includin1 the lax, gets
inflated all along the distribution line, from
wholesaler to retailer.
Impact, a newsletter or the wine and spirits
indus try, has calculated what would happen to some
retail prices lf the federal tax rate wu doubled to $21
a proof gallon:
-A fifth o( Bacardi rum now selling for $6.08
would go tG $8.60.
-A fifth of Smirnoff vodka that now sells for
$5.86 would rise to $8.38.
-A ftfth of Seagram's 7 Crown now selling for.
$6.28 would escalate to $8.80.
-A fifth of Seagram's gin that sells now for $5.58
wouJd inc~ase to $8.10. · ~ ·
-A fifth of JobMie Walker Black Label Scotch
that sells now for $14.28 would move up to $11.08.
-A fifth of Baileys cream liqueur now selllng for
12.25 would increase to .34 .
. STOCIS IN THE SNfUIHT AMERICAN LEADEIS
UPS AND DOWNS
-\'ONI lolf'l -The loliowtl!O -...... ,_ YOft< 8'oGll (llCfW\t9 ----... -....... .,,. ___ ._ _ ....... ..,_,. .. ~,__.,, __
--..... '*"-·----.... ...-i..-................. ---
-... -c-. """'" -...... _..,...
..... I PSffld 4.1tll
t 5"111111 i~· s~"' 4 IM."'° ~~ .. .,, .~·.,
U
'IO 9-llld ,,,....., ....
2 o.w..Mt'
" "i.or ... flf 14~
'' v.aP 7 ... n= .. u • ., ~ UNoll ........ 21 T .... Corl> u MlttlQI"
Pel. UP 1LO Up t.I
Up 7.4
UP 7.• UP I.>
IJp u
Ult '·' IJp ..,
UP '·' UP s ... VP s.• UP U Up 5.1
Up S.• Up u Up S.A
Up u Up u
Up " Up u
UP u
Up u
Pct • °" IU °" i'' g: J °" .., Off t .I °" •.• °" .., °" .. , ()ff 1.2 °" 1.1 Off .,,,
Off 7.1 °" 7.4 Off I S °" 1.J Otf I.• Otf 7.4
Otf 14
Off I.• Ott l.J Olt I.I
METALS
C•'~' ,.._ . ., 01111 • pou"•· u .. Ott!ol\fl'-.
LH4I Jl•M c9"ls • .....,._ ZMc 42-61c.-ts• ...,...,,.,,...__..
TI9 $7AIMt-ts W .... C...,...,.,..111, .......... 1 .. nc_•..,....H.Y
Mettwy MIUlpet It ... l'le""-$l1t.OOlroyo~ .. H.Y.
SILVER
H•ndY & H.rmen. SL ... per troy_..
GOLD QUOTATIONS
~: rnomfftg tl•1"9 An.00, oft SLU.
\.e .. M I elle~ ll•f11e~.H. o
llLOO.
l>er'll: PM.ti. off '10. 11,
~,.....,., PM.OJ,offl6U.
z.ric.: Lete ll•I ... $a.OO, off Sit.GO utt .......
He•dy & H•r111e11: only nfly •
U..U, ofUU.DO.
• ......,., on1y c1eNy ...-aa.u.
•11.00.
........ , only clelly .-1...-k
M01.M, Ml SIUO.
SYMBOLS
VllkllM UO I 111 Sol ..... --....-.-W!CllM t .14 • ,. 1~ Ill WMlllw I.a I IS ~ WI