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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-01-13 - Orange Coast PilotJUllll ClllT . WEDNESDAY J A N UAR Y l J 196/ HAPPY 75TH -Sam Miller and his wife Flo beam as they accept the tributes of many ......................... friends on his 75Ui bll1.hclay al Dlllman's Restaurant in Newport Beach. ,~. BalbOa restaurateur feted Sammy Miller celebrates milestones By STEVE TRIPOLI Of .. Dellr .......... Sammy Miller has spent almost all of the past 46 years in what be calls "the lousiest business in the world.'· But he stays because to him it's the best business. Tbe business is restauranting, and a couple hundred friends s--bowed up at Dillman's on. Balboa Peninsula Tuesday to help Miller celebrate some persona l and professional milestones. Invitations to the celebrali9n listed the milestones best. "You are invited to Sammy Miller Night," it said, " (celebrating) 22 years at Dillman's -45 years in Balboa -75 years of Uving." Though the main event was Miller's 15th birthday, the other two milestones help explain why the crowd was so large. Mlller, a Los Angeles native, bas been a restaurateur continuously since 1935, except for a five-year stint in the Army during World War II. He got started in the business, be said, after being in the film industry during the 1920s and a clolblni manufacturer in the late 20I and early 30s. He did "a little bit of everytblag" in films in the silent film days or the 20's, mostly film ed.ilin&. Then came the t.aWes. "When Al Jolson opened bis big mouth On '"The Jai'i Singer," the first laJldn& movie> he put me out of business,'' Miller said. After several years in the clothing business, be came to Balboa for the first lime in 1935 when friends Ed and Claire Allen bought the bankrupt Balboa lnn Hotel. "I looked around t.ere and it looked like nothing to me then," he said. He worked here several years, went back to Los Angeles briefly (but long enough to own one restaurant), then signed up for officers' training and the Quartermaster Corps in the Army. Even though be was in his mid-305, a desire for action in the milltary led him to ask f9r active duly, be said. He got what he wanted -a stint in the infantry that took him to France and eventually Germany. On his arrival home in 19« Miller went back into tbe Los Angeles restaurant business, owning in quick succession the Cove, Rocket Room and Salem House restaurants. But then be "just wanted to come back" to Balboa, so be packed bis bags and did so in 1941. He basn 'l left again. Miller was owner of a restaurant/club called the Vaux, which was localed directly across the street from where Dillman's is now. When he sold· BIG NIGHT -Sign outside Dillman's restaurant announced the big bash inside. out in 1959. it was just two weeks before fledgling restaurateur Max Dillman o pened an establishment across the street. The U.min8 was rl&bt, and the two joined forces. Mlller ftnt worked as bar manager and bartender, th.en became malt... d' at the restaurant. He's a natural at the post, Dillman says , and bis connections bring in lots or customers. "He's got lots and <See SAMMY, Pa1e AZ> • * * • * • Ylll 11101111 IAllY PIPIR ORANGE COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS I • ·cold wave deaths .. increase to 130 81 fte AaedaW PNM A wints 1torm th1t left the Deep South frozen ln sleet and up to 1even lncbe1 of snow puabed Into the bl1 cities ol tbe Northea1t today a1 the nationwide death loll from a five-day cold wave climbed to 130. Hundreds of tbouunds or people were left wllboul electricity today across the South 11 heavy ice pulled down tree limbs and poweT lines. Tbe record cold that bu set 15 low-temperature records since Saturday devastated Florida's billion dollar citrus crop Tuesday, ralalnc the pouibility or biper prices for orance Juice, and storm clouds flun& 1leet, Robinson, Aaron join Fame list H&W YORK <AP) -Haak Aaron. bMebllll'1 all·Ume bome run kin&. and Frank ftohi....,.. tM 1ame'1 flnt black manqer, were~ to the Hall of Pame today in lbeir first year of eUcibWty. Aaron, who hammered 755 career home runa, 1batterln1 the record of 114 held by Babe Ruth, received 408 votes of tbe 415 cut by 10-year memben of the Bueball Writers A.aosiaUon of America. No player ever has been a unanimQus choice to the Rall. Robinson, the only man to win lbe Most Valuable Player Award in both the National and American Leacues, and, llke Aaron, one of bueball's most feared 1h111en for two decades, received 370 votes. A player needed 312 for election, or 15 percent of the votinc board. Aaron and Robinloa became the 12th and l3tb memben to win electi<m to the Rall of Fame in their first year on lbe ballot. Both retired followlnc the ms season. Aaron and Robinlon will be inducted into the Hall of Fame al Cooperstown, N.Y., Au •. L A1ron'1 408 votea repreeented the HeODd bl&beat vot• total ever and tbe 1econd b•at elecli<m pereentqe. On1J WWI• Maya, with 40I or a poalble m in 1979, "*** ... .... Only Ty Cobb, wttb a~ of 11.2 la t•, 1116 a blabir perceataae tbu Aaroa•1 tr.a. Cobb mliled beiDI uua ... by only four ballotl, rectli...._ 222 of the 211 cut lD IM anow and rain from Arizona to Georcla. Sebools closed in Wasblnatoo, Baltimore and Philadelphia today 11 the storm moved up the !!aat~m Seaboard with up .to 10 inches or snow forecast in the 1uburbs of New York City. Alabama Power Company said al least 250,000 homes and businesses were without electricity in that state today and it may be several days before full service is restored. About 16,000 homes and businesses were without power in Mississippi with more freezing rain in the offiD1. In the predawn hours, about 30 truck ri1a were stranded on Interstate 55 between Grenada and Winona. Central Indiana got up to seven inches of new snow durinc the night and roads were slippery from a fresh snowfall across Michigan. Up to five inches of sno• accumulated in northern Georgia by today, and some parts of the state had freeiine rain. New snow, in many cases accompanied by sleet, piled up to seven inches in Arkansas and a foot in Arizona. Miles of icy highways were closed Tuesday throughout Dixie, and other roads were clogged with stalled and abandoned cars. Thousands of people stayed home from school and work, <See FREEZE, Pa1e AZ> Huntington man I stabbed to death Police are investigating the apparent murder of a 56-year-G&d salesman who was found It.ebbed to death Tuesday in tbe bedroom of bis south Huntington Beach condominium. The dead man was identified aa WiWam K. Norman of 8877 Tulare Drive. Huntiniton Beach police Sgt. Ed McErlain said a business associate became concerned Tuesday when Norman failed to keep an appointment. The assodate, whose name was withheld, visited Norman's residence, located in the adulls ·only Huntington Landmark Community near Edison High School, and saw through a window that the man's refri1eralor d oor was open, McErlain said. The associate voiced concern lo a security guard , who s ummoned police, McErlain said. He said officers found Norman on the floor of bis bedroom, c lothed, stabbed once In the cheat. McErlain said there werie signs of a struggle and some ransacking in the home. anf! Norman's 1980 Datsun auto was discovered miss'ing. : He said officers are searchinl for that vehicle. described as an orange two·door B·210, license number 692-ZYS. • Police belie ve the stabbing occurred at about 1 a .m . Tuesday. Mcfi:rlain said there were no signs of forced entr) in the residence. Norman was said to have been employed by an out-of-slate firm as a saJesm an of promotional materials. Police said he lived alone. Verdict to improve divorce settlement determine how much Janel Sullivan is entitled to ror supporting her ex-husband whUe be attended UC Irvine Medical School. The Sullivans were married ~ 1967. They separated in 19'7!1. During most of that time, Dr. Sullivan was a student while his wife worked at various jot». _County medical isues frustrate Mostly clear skies 1 through Thursday. Highs In upper 60s to low 10s. 1 Lows of 42 to 48. Local , gusty northeast winds 15 1 to 30 m.p.b. this afternoon below coastal canyons, decreast.na tonight. By F&EDl!RJCK SCHOEMEBL of•Dtl!Y ....... Editor'• Note: Thi• •• the concl""°" of o four-port DoUJI PUot 1me1 ~ Orange Count¥'• muUf-millfoft dollar dUtmmo of papant /ur lwallh core for the poor proo•ded at UC Irvine Medical Cnater. Treatment authorization requel\I ... ell&iblUty work.era • financial 1creenln1 . ffpolkl . \ . Cao people who are ~r IDd itck let help without belnc hu1led ln Ule ·· Oren1• Count1 t1xpayer-Uaeaced .,atem ..., ~ detlped to milt tllllmt, For all the lhelorlc to the contrary, the impression that is left is wl'at really ls Important to the 1overnment admlniltratora is not so much who ii or isn't treated, but bow much it will cost and who will pay. If this isn't the case, why do the University of California and Oran1e County aovernment spend about $3 million yearly baaclin« over a contract under which health care LI provid9d for lndlpnta at the UC Irvine Medical Center in Orance? That clilpute la centered on the county's ·contention that tndt1enta for wbicb lt h financially reapon1ible under 1tate law often 1et too mucb care It tbe univerally medical center. TM county ...,p1oy1 dodon. who dtlptte no lmoWtedae ot tbe partlculf p1lieall otber' tlaan 1111 llllllll what they &lean from medical records, alt in Judcment of the university's char1ea. Tbe docton red-pencil cbar1es with which they don't acree. TIM county then refuses to pay tbat portion of the bill Oa lb• other band, tbe ualvenlty baa a larc• 1taff ot clertcal workera occupyl.nl tlae noor ol a hllbrite Wldln1 wbO do notblnc but proc-clalma to the county. So nervou1 aba9t thla operation 11 UM uni= that it retenUy refUHCI to a newapaper pboto1repber 1ccea• to the blll proceu ... CfDtel'. tbe county' 1 practlc. of dlaal~ CMtalD portlw of bills hM been IOlnl on for yeara. TM bU.11 number ln UM teftl ol · thouaandl. More eome Ja •.eh day. About ta mUllon ln payment.a have been Mid uP • th• ...,..111 .. c1reaec1 oe. And J't!t tbe !Qh·Mlarled ii8d •ell-eclueawd tldininlltraten - botb lb• co~aty•1 and tbe unlvenltt• -tine fellM to .oa .. u. ..... TIMJ .. , UM)' are "-r:f oa It, 1M at•• .._. to ,;, ¥.t r"ulb nea * · a .eaotlatora meet oal, octukmlllJ. I I ·~ .. R e1ldeah of a Bal~oa ,~MIOl-liJll CIGIDplta IN1I OD D HYOQIW9:!Ttr~..:-= . '*did thillr upmoat to turn olf mUlle. -" leaut wa1 a plan for a 1tauraal feaharlnt live ttrt•lnment. T~• protettt Mooday . came ar1ety from resldentl of the en-~t._O'llt condomlnluma, oca\491 .-... the 1treet from be pl11111ed restaurant and ocatede tbe.alte of the former utlc IDd dance ball. t ''"be 1bo9t of stan Kenton la UU ......... Balboa " quipped oUMl~l Ma~rer belote the :.eoun~ll unanimously (ipproftd Uae restaurant plans. 1 The ,...aurant -· 11 yet win•med -II to be located at :lot Palal a bd wUJ dilplaee an ~XJatlq fleer bu and a UDy shoemaker abop. . Applicant Dou1 .Cavanauib; who said be founded a almilar . r11taw-ut on Nantucket laland off tbt coaat o~ Cape Cod, explaiDed &bat M bOl*I to Mlp tbe 1hc)em.tlrer relocate to C.ta ...... One critic ol tbe plan, Robert Duff, reported bll Readetwua condom.lnlum ll leu tftan t& feet from the pl'OpOled 1lte and that music will make It "unbearable and lmpouJble to sleep." Rendeavou1 resident Ed Lynch, who carted in a televhloti and video tape cassette showlnt tbe nel1bborhood, aald he doesn't want the area "to become another Newport Pier with bikers.'' .. 1 'm not a1alnst a 1ood restaurant," Lynch aald, .. but I'm worried a~t wba\'1 IOinl to happen down the road." Several prote1ter11 su11ested that if Cavanau1h wanted a restaurant then there was little reason for him to keep the place open to 2 a.m. College senate reprimands Schmitz FoUowin• the le,d of their olteaaues at Saddleback olleae, members of the Santa a Collete Academic Senate av~ . ~rlmanded state Sen. obn Scbmitz for recent public mJU'b. . Tbe. Academl~ Senate, Which epru.,ntl' the 500-member Eta Apa Co1Je1e faculty, voted officially reprimand SChll).ltz, o la a political science feasor ·at the stbool, but stopped short of censwin1 blm. Last Friday the Aettdemlc MiGs found .. near. Havana • WASIUNGTON <AP> -U.S. intelligence recently dlSCOVfred aix to rv~tes of new So~et planes -·~~leld outJlde Havana, ·WUhlnltoo' l>dat said today. I . The oewapaper. quoting unnamed "offlcl"all" and "sources/' HJd U.S. ~-= have nows enr Cuba 1! devic:H to detect nu~l•ar weapoill llllll bllve fUond n~: But Ule "°8t sa1.i. neltber s a tehne aor t-PJ plane pbotoer~ bu provided my lndicaU.,. whether the new Soviet alrcnfl are equipped /or offensive opef"iltions in violation of the Sovlet-Amertc_an •'•understandings" that ended ~e 1982 mllllle cmis. Money found •CARSON (AP> -Campus police aay they have theories &bout how a bag with $120,000 · stolen from a sllfe at California· State Unlveralty, Domin1uez Hills, turned up hours l"ter under the deak or the university , president. but they won't reveal taem. Senate at Saddleback Colle1e. where Schmitz has also taught, issued a resolution "deploring" the· senator's recent scathing attack on foes of anti-abortion legislation. In a press release, Schmit& characterized opponents of a constitutional amendment bannin1 abortions as "bull dykes" and "queer groups." At a Los Aruleles bearing, Schmitz said be looked out on "a sea of bard, Jewish and <areuably> fernate faces." As' a result of bis comments, Schmitz, a resident of Corona del Mar, was stripped of his committee assl1nments in the State Senate. ln addition, he was removed from the s tal e Commission on the Status of Women. Senate President Pro Tem David Roberti and Sen. Alan Sieroty, both Los Angeles Democrats, said last week that a censure resolution qainat the Republican senator would be lntroduced Oft the Senate noot because ol bll remarks. UCI police discover body UC Irvine pollce dilcovered a dead body tble JDOrnlna in a car parked lri a lot Just .Outh ol the medical 1cboot on the Irvine Campus, laid UCl public information officer Hilary Kaye. She aald no foul play is suspected. Presumably authorities think the death was due to either suicide or natural causes, she said. The body hadn't been identified at press time and no further information was available about the matter. "I'm not a drlnldnc man,'' reaponded Councilman Maurer, "but l be..-that bars carry a reataur.t, tlnanclall)' apeaklftl. And I'm 1lad for those that carry the restauranll 1 like to eat at." Mayor Jackie· Heather wondered whether the restaurant would be any more dlsturbln1 than the nearby Balboa theater that haa re1utar mldnl1ht 1howlo11 of the • • Rotlry Horror Picture Sbow. •• That movie, which has become a cult rum. often draws loud audlences, sbe explained. The council unanimously approved the restaurant on the condition lt close by 12:30 a .m . on .weekdays and 1 a.m. on Saturdays. Council members also inllsted that the restaurant's live entertainment be non-amplified and quieter than the Big Banda that once performed at the Rendezvous Ballroom. From Page A1 SAMMY • • • lots of friends,'• Dillman says. Miller says he retired once, after hip surgery in 1972, but he didn't have enough to do and soon went back to work. The diminutive, silver-haired fixture of Balboa life doesn't have any plans to retire again at present. Miller still works four to five days a week, usually the brunch shift on weekends plus Tuesday and Wednesday nights. "ll 's the lousiest business in the world, but it's still my business," he says. ··People are always complaining 'my steak's not done, this is not done, that's not done,· but you meet so many different people every day of your life. They tell you their history." A big part of Sammy's history is bis wife Flo, with whom he's s hared the same Balboa apartment for 27 years. His wife, brother and other family members from the Los Angeles area joined the celebration Tuesday. As he sat next to his wife the two clasped hands like youne lovers. At the table were a tree made of dozens of greenbacks and several other gifts . A three-tiered birthday cake sat on the other side of the restaurant. Chef Rene DeLounge expre11ed the prevailln1 sentiment of Sammy's admirers 1athered at the party. "He'lt' beautiful people," be said. "It's like going back in the past the way be treats everyone." Death probed SAN FRANCISCO <AP> State safety officials are investigating the death of a veteran mechanic who fell 10 feel to the tarmac al San Francisco International Aii-port while changing the oil in the engine of a DC -10. William Sibert, 60, had worked for United Airlines for 21 years. .......... Fla. The name Neelo, which means "a beauty in blue," was chosen· from thousands of suggestions submitted in a contest. Ole81111dedli ........ ~ ....... , ..... ....., . -~ -..':; . -. ...... ; ...... -. ~ Ohio burned by witerr CLEVE.LAND (AP) -Tbree aces came up and the 1tate ol Ohio wu $1,902,105 In the bole . "We really look a Ucklnl," lottery spok11m1n ltobert W alc:sak Hid Tuelda1. • ID ill daUJ lotMey 1ame "Tbe 'N.am~1u. number 111 ea.ae .ap II Dlallt -U.. lltb c1a1 Of the ftnt moath of Uae ,..... 8o ......... WHEEEI -Bo Sartain. 13 <left). and Sophie. his 15-year-old sister. take to a slippery Dallas sidewalk Tuesday. using cookie sheets as sJeds on a sidewalk made slick Crom a winter storm. Woman died saving girl from tinibers SANTA CRUZ CAP) -As Northern California recovered from the worst storm in memory, firemen said a woman 'who died as a huge tree crashed down on her Aptos house used h e r b o d y t o s ti te l d h e r 15· year-old daughter from deadly falling timbers. The teen-ager, Sheri Sheridan, was discharged from Dominican Hospital in Santa Cruz on Tuesday and, according to the hospital, immediately flew to Redding to be with her father and recuperate from a broken left leg. Fire Capt. Philip Scofield, who led the rescue effort, said be bad little doubt that Carole Seagrave, seeing the house start to collapse, used her body lo deflect falling debris from Sheri. Savage winds and rain punished Aptos, 10 miles south of Santa Cruz, the afternoon of Jan . 4. Inside a $110,000 two-story wood frame house were Mrs . Seagrave and her daughter. · 'll was approxim a tely 2 p. m ." said Aptos Assistant Fire Cheese recipients recall depression WASHINGTON (A P> -One woman complained that il smacked of bread Unes in the Depression·. and others grumbled about spending two hours standing in the cold to get a free five-pound block of cheese. But most of the nearly 600 people line up al the First Rising Mount Zion Baptist Church oo Tuesday were simply grateful ro r the gift o f processed American cheese, worth up to $15 at store prices. Chief Al Forbes. "A large douglas fir, about six feel in diameter and 150 feet tall, fell across the house." At the scene, Scofield directed the rescue effort, wflicb included paramedics Richard Rubin and Floyd Redmon. ''The tree had come across two houses, severed them. taking off the faces of the houses and extending about halfway through the str uctures ," Scofield said. They were trapped with a.. section of tt}e front wall on one stde, and the. second-floor joists and other members, including 2-by·12-incb planks , around end on top of them. Scofield said he went through a "tunnel of d ebris" several limes as rescue workers dug to get the girl and her mother out. Several times, he said, the girl sobbed, ·My mother saved my life.' "She was aware of the fact that her mother was dead," said Scofield, '\vh~ described the young viclim as going into shock a nd already rec eivi ng intra venous injection to bring back her blood pressure. Rescuers, Scofield said, tre ated Sheri as s he lay "cuddled into a fetal position belweeo two 2-by-12 planks that had held up the floor." He s~d they toiled for more than two hours to rescue Sheri, ke epi ng her s pirits up, convincing her that she was going to live. As Scofield related: "We bad to establish rapport with her. She was calling Rich and me by our first names ... we told her, 'Hey, we'r e it. You've got to trust us ... you• ve gol to have confidence in us that we're going lo get you out'." • • u1s1na FREEZE ••• 4 water pipes bW'lt and electric aervtce wat disrupted as lee caked power lines. Commercial fll1ht1 were canceled and public tranaport.alion froUDd to a bait lD 11(..iutppl and tbe Alabama le1islature canceled a Joint a111mbly Tuetday nt1ht. "We were 1cared to be too alarmJn11 but apparently our wor1t rears were even conservative " said meteorotogut Max Blood at f.be National Weather Service office in Homewood, Ala. At tea1t 25 states have reported weather-related deaths slnce Saturday. There were 18 deaths reported in llllnola; 13 in Pennsylvania; 11 in North Carolina; 10 in New York; nine in Texas; eight in Alabama; seven in Iowa; six each in Michigan, Ohio and South Carolina; five each in Indiana and Wisconsin; four each in Minnesota , and M issiasippi ; three in Wes t Virginia; two each in Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, Louisiana and Tennessee, and one eac.h in N e b r.a s k a . Con n e c ti c u t . Oklahoma, Florida and Virginia. Two others were missing and presumed dead in Virginia. Snowplows in AUanta-were unable to reach some areas blanke'ted by snow Tuesday night because thousands of cars were still bumper-to·bumper on the city 's freeways near midnight. This morning, court officials canceled today's se1Sion in the murder trial of Wayne B. Williams, charged with killing two of 28 young blacks who were slain over two years, because of conditions. Louisiana Gov. Dave Treen called up one unit of the National Guard and ordered all state agencies to be prepared for a disaster. The biggest hospital in Louisiana, Charily Hospital in New Orleans, sent many patients home , postponed elective surgery and discouraged visitors, in part because water pressure had dropped as honaeowners left their faucets on to prevent pipes from freezing. Most commercial flights in and out of Jackson, Miss.~ were canceled Tuesday due to ice-coated runways. Weather officials said the most bizarre aspect of the storm in the Birmingham area was isolated thunderstorms that were accompanied by brief, colorful lightning flashes and the s now and ice storms . The weather service said the lightning flashes appeared to have color because they were reflected through ice crystals in the atmosphere. Was slaying victim friend? ATLANTA (APJ -A woman says she saw Wayne B. Williams with one of bis alleged murder victims nine days before the. young man's body was found , although Williams said last summer he knew none of the city's missing and murdered black youths. Margaret Carter testified Tuesday that she saw Williams, 23 , a bla ck free -lance photographer. sitting with Nathaniel Cater at a picnic table in a park across from her apartment May 15. eater's· body was found floating in the Chattahoochee River on May 24, two days after Williams was stopped near the Jackson Parkway bridge in the pre-dawn hours after a police s takeout officer beard a loud splash in the river. Demonstration Saturday, January I 6 I 0:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m • Ctlhll.t t:oodProc ....... .... HW ........ feed ........ .......... PROCESSORS List Price DLC I• •••••••••••• 130.00 DLC • •••••••••••••• 185.00 DLC 71 •.•.•.•..•... ,. 260.00 Our Price ''·'' 14t.tt ltt.tt . GROWN HARDWARE Everything you want In a hardware etore • All etor. 099" 1 day. a Wfftt, Wlltcll" Ot)ef\ Thurs, "' 9 PM man1;rpPI• laad picked U.. Uane .... -..11 .... 111 ....... ·tt•-·~..:J·~b-'!il""'--~ tlu& & e Uale ••It PIJ '1,Tto,171. OD.I' 'I'•"°•• Mt on the drawtq. / · , found ~t eould -. caUM two precunora of llfe , th• compoundl formalchbyd• and bydroten c:1ulde. mdence of the H•hteat of tbeH, •lJClnt, and lt l1 very likely we wlll tl.Dd others once we can Identity them with radlo;a.l19eOP91," be 1ald. .... TOLED01 Oblo (AP> -Al> Htrophyalclat 11y1 there la 1rowln1 aeceptanee of the tbtory that cometa "•Mdtd" a barren Eertla bUUODa of yean 110 with tM lnaredlenta for llle. Dr. Armana Delttmme, a proteuor at the UDlveralty ot Toledo, Hid that durl61 a meetln1 tut week ln Mountlln View, Calif., a conaen1u1 of 1cientl1ts al1'ff(I that the theory la irowlna u more UI learned about the "rich" cheml1U')' ln outer apace. 118tarUa1 wltb only tbtH tltrH maleeul•, we can make all the amino ackla whleh are the ~c tt.oDM wltb wblch Ufe ll built( De1HmmeHld. · Tht at)'• lint adialal lD UM chain, he Hid, la llnit,Dt ttM · moleC)ul• to tbt develotment ot life on Earth and, per •Pl. on other planet.I. Dtl1tmme Hld that &1 tbe JCarth Wltf d1velop,ln1 lt wa1 ' perlodlcally "aw•Ot • by comeu• tall•, which left coemlc dutt Uaat ht beUev• carried the elemeata b11lc to life. Al10 beln1 aou1ht, Delsemme said, are method• to detect whether amino aclda Ulemaelvet exist in apace. "We have found DeUleDlmt and other 1clenU.t1 speculate tbet the duat aceowtll for the &artb'a crust, which la rich In nltroaen, hydro1en and other elements eHentlal to a1rlculture. He aaid the meettn1 at the N atlonal Aeronautlca and Space Ad mlnlatratlon 'a Amea Research Labol'atory ar1ued only about bow -not whether - the "seeding" took place. "Essentially, the elements ln our bodies are of the 1roup lncludin1 hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen and oxy1en," Delsemme said In 8Jl intervJew Monday. "The same elements are found in the aea, but they are not fqund lft the Interior of the E•rth." County joins suit on laws funding •'The · question is, how did these elemepts get to Earth, where they clearly are in abundance? Where did the ocean Itself come from ? Through research in astronomy, we have found that all these same elements ... exist in outer space, and that with these fundamental elements we have the bulldln1 blocks of life itself." He said astrophysicists have detected 52 I nters tellar molecules of organic compounds in space. "In addition, we found that there are huge concentrations of water in space. ln addition, we .. . Otanae County is one of 38 California•counUea to have flied suit agalmt t.be state, cbaraing that California bas uncomUtuUonally ~fused tapa_y the cost of enlorcln1 neyi laws. The 1uit filed in Sacramento Superior Court earller thla week cites 23 statutes, ranginl trom Callfornia's tough new drunken-drivin1 law to oblcure bills, such as a requlreme.nt that stray cats must be kept 72 hours before they can be killed. Placer County Supervisor Terry Cook. president of the County Supervisors Association of california, said the counties are not uJtin1 the court to order Rulings on airport 'not conflicting' A lawyer repr esenting county lawyers COQtended it Newport Beach says no legal may conflict with federal court conflict exists over Orange Judge Terry Hatter's decision in County Superior Court Judge September, in which he said the .B r u c e Su m n er ' s r u Ii n g su per v ls ors can Ii m It or prohibiting more than 41 in~rease daily flights aa a aver age daily jet departures condition of controllln1 noise from John Wayne Airport. from departin1 aircraft. L a w Yer Er I c Go 1 d m an They say it la possible Hatter claimed Monday that Sumner's will allow more flilbta and ruling will stand and lan't ·at Sumner prohibit them. odds with a position taken . previously by a federal judae on Goldman explained, however, the r elated issue of airport that Hatter did not rule access. ' .. .,piectficaUy on the number of Sumner ruled a week ago flights, only on the accest plan. today the Orange County Board But the lawyer said Sumner did, of Supervisors can't Increase thus h.is word wiU be final. daily rli9hts from the airport County oft I cl a Is have u n t i I m o r e c o m p I e t e menUooed they expect to confer environmental data is compiled with Sumner to clarify the to accompany the board's implications of his ruling, but mas ter plan for expanding Goldman said : "I don't think opeqaUOM and facilities. that's going lo be the real In reviewing Sumner's ruling, issue.'' the state to pay them any specUic amount of money. Instead, she aald, the suit only wants the court to rule the 23 ta.in. "lnvalid, unconatitutlonaJ or unenforceable." She aald that would relieve the counties of responsibility to pay for their enforcement and send the Legislature a messa1e to provide adequate funds for future new laws. "We are not suln& for money. We are not challenging the merits of the bills,'' added Marin County Counsel Douglas Maloney, who said the suit is Intended as a "deterrent" to the Legislature passing future laws requiring counties to perform additional tasks without providing the funds. In a news conference, the county officials said they did not know precisely how much money is at stake in their suit, but Ms. Cook said over the years it would be "b undreds of millions" of dollars . Maloney said the counties did not want to be viewed as opposing any of the laws In question, which he said in most cases they supported, only to get the stale to pay for things it orders counties to do. For •'8JDple, be aald the new drunlte•·drlvln1 blll1, which took effect Jan. 1 requlrln1 mandatory 48-hour jaU terms for drunken drivers, could cost the counties millions ln jail costs. Another law challen1ed by the ault w&S cited by Contra Costa County Supervisor Sunne Wright McPeak. That is a 1978 statute that stray cats may not be destroyed for 72 hours after they're captured by local orri ci als. The Legislature htlmated the cost at $90,000 statewide, but It cost $58,000 a year in Contra Costa County ~lone, she said. Winds forecast Coaatal Niwtll lo Mrtllaut •Inell 1t to • knot• In ar••• lltltw cany•11• lletwun S...ta -.tea and s.nu hrMr• contln<IMo tflnMll'I _..,.. .... .-. ..... In .,_ --.. nortMoest IS le ts •ncm. $H1 In wlncty •r-• .to • '"'· Westerly -lls 2 to I ..... Vlrlal>J• <loudt llec°"'lnt ....... Ycl•rtoday. California Motll' <IHr t"'°"9fl Tllur,..y. Nortll to "ortlleest w l11d1 I" mountains. daHrlt and lltlow tMYonl -.,.._ In ,_.., ••Ml lllf'h911 ton191'11. WlllCN clecrffSlftt Tllunday. Wemwr deys. or...,. C-h <Ml ·-• 1s-u ~ w .... _ <Mlyoll ...... """" In ._., ...... tow 10a 119"9 days. l_ • ., .. .. Vall•'l"I Qn ~winds U-40 tnllll In '4tflyon ....... .,...., HltM In , .. ,Ol.~111 ... .... Movflt.IN Wiil hew w"'-s I0-4S ,,... ....... • ••..._y, .. ton U.S. 1ummary ri:=·.i:.i;..-::....u-nm1111. HertMtft ......i llltftl • to •. lows l'••Hlrtt rain •nd ""' 111re..S M ..... ......,,, detert lll9M 62 to •tent muc11 of u.. 0..11 CMSt ... 11.i.w.a .. a TWtel•Y end -._.... fl'-.. Nortllant and Central Ce llfornl• .~ lh<klu 111ro11111 lft• 11ortlltrft ,..II.,. fl«......,. T"""*Y •11<'94 Allenta llo\lnl11l""I Valley, but Kies ...... for ,._,.,.,. foe NII tide of SIMI ~Y llWOUll> mucll of Ille rest Of ,.. J.._... V.....,. Nortllef'IY winds In ••ltlmon MtllMI. _,.__,......_,, .. toll Tiie fr••l"I rain -•IMI w.. .,_..,VIM lll•••Y '" soma ••••• fr•m ----------luff•le -'11-<IMltral T-Into tlle M1UtMn1 Cllluee M lululppl Valley, and Ill• Smo• ~= Pf'UIPll•llon ··--In Ille " _, .. ,n ff'lfttit of IN r .. lort. II •IN Tiie Air Qwallty Mafta .. ment ~~ 1110 .. 11 from Illa 11\termountaln Olsttkt pndk11 .... air .,..tty fW ~ r•elon, tll•Ovtll Ille untral •ftd • .,..~In tt. 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JO ...... 11e111 -OS ·II a.rstew ., n ...__.. : : ··--• 17 ,,_ LIM41t1W • l1 Lattt 9Mctl ... us ... .............. It .. ...,.._..._,. .. .. O!Mr• \ 11 ................ ,. n ,......_ ........... leer__. lel!Mt ........ .-111en1...w,. .. ... Ml ..... Vall9y ... IN -1Ml'll 1191f tf IM AllMtk ~. w.-. 9"" .,,,......, ...... MUltl. lllf llPllT ...,.... Sllll'HlltllQ T.._Y...., T'W!'MI "'"-..... _ ............. 04olf CIMtt .... Ill -..-.nt Altalltk .................. ~ "' mut '' c•nterlll• lftd Ill• .. ,_.......,.. .. ~ ... ...,...., ...... 1o •• ... 11111111 • • • • ... .... 11 II It It ............ ... ..... .., t t SW ' ... I I WM I I WIW We're Listening ••• y- 11 2• 61 IS • n ,, 0 21 " " 27 n °' OI " IM 10 .. u • ,, ,. •• 12 12 Orange Cout DAILY PILOTtNtdnffday, January 13, 1882 . .,..., ......................... PATIENTS START HERE -Once past this entrance, indigents proceed through a maze or financial screening and contested bills at UC Irvine M~dical Center in Orange. From Page A1 QUANTUM ST E P SUGGEST ED . .___... -...,.- confusion and complexity. Meanwhile, people who by all statistical measures aren't well educated or sophisticated, are s huffled around in a ystem that ·is suppoeed to be helping them. Some of lt1e stories about the hassles, more than illuminating, are frightening . In one case reported to the Orange County Human Relations Commission, a San Clemente woman who complained of headaches and numbness in the arms and neck traveled to the medical center's outpatient clinic only to learn that she wasn't eligible for state-funded Medi·Cal and that, unless she paid a $137 deposit, s he wouldn't be seen by a doctor. She didn't have the money. No one knows what would have happened to the woman had she not read a filer encouraging people having trouble getting medical care to contact the commission. Fortunately, she did make the call and was told to go to the medical center emer1ency room, where, despite the previous denial at the nearby outpatient clinic, found she could qualify for Medi-Cal. She was treated. . How many are not? Where do they go? Unfortunately. the question doesn't lend itself to analysis by the statisticians' sllde rules and calculators. There hav e been other rep()rted cases -women denied pre-natal care late in their pregnancies because they could not pay deposits and persons turne~ away from .outpatient clinics only to end up in the medical center's emergency room several days later with more severe complications. Medical center officials deny t here is a problem, regardless of what is said by the county Human Relations Commission or the Orange County Legal A.id Society. But those same medical center officials conceded months ago that their new deposit policy would cause some problems . And they are adamant the facility had no choice but to take steps to improve finances In light of tbe county's withholding or the $8 million. If the past is a portent, the situation in the future will worsen. The state ii moving to tighten Medi-cal eligibility; the Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES ~rtifi«l o,mo14*ut, AGS MODERN EQUIPMENT -Terry Walker. associate chief or UCIMC computerized tomograph~·. operates scanner county, which Is bitterly complairUng about the lack of money It receives to cov'er state-mandated programs, isn't likely to come up with anything extra. Charity car e, by which hospitals or doc~ors provide care llWI llllYlll . at no cost , i s virtually non-existent. Care has and will continue to diminish. The university has stopped see ing county-responsibillly patie.hs at an outpatient facility in Anaheim: it intends to hall such care at a busier clinic in Sa nta Ana in July . Most physicians In Orange County have given up seeing Medi.Cal patients. What seems critically needed from our government agencies is an attack on this diminishing level of service -not an attack of words, but of action. The county has· taken a step, however tentative, in this re1ard. It has ordered a study of its responsibilities to the. indigent and needy. But county studies have a way of beinl produced at high coat. accepted. -and shelved. Better it would seem, that the county and the university take the quantum step to forgive eacb· other over the past and rework the existing system so it works. Just such an 'approach has been recommended by the stale Department of Health Servicee in a recenL ~nalysl• of th& county-university dispute. H representatives of both- sides are truly committed to taking care of the less fortunate -as they maintain they are - that step would seem to be the easiest to take. To that end, perhaps the negotiations should move to a higher level, one in whlch members of the Orange County Board of Supervisors and the UC Board of Regents -instead ol their lower staffs -participate. If such a 11tep is not taken, oae can only conclude that ail lbe right-sounding words about concern for the poor are ~ea. Stunning gold with quartz ....., ... racy, bY Omega. mega'• 133 .,...,.. of legendefy dlelgn eiccellence ii 9'11t· mlMd in thl• eholca ol auperbly thin and elegam men'• uaru tlmlpieca One Is framed with 44 brillient dia· monc.. Nd'I ~ 111101..:t fof cut end quellty. The oct'9r It a ""9t•,.,lece of fOld ~. Both.,.. noed by 14K gold meeh bracelets. And both have '• unique tlmeeettir"G fMlore which eltowt you IO me "°"'without 1o11ng a eecond monda. 1 CK gold. . /- 'I 'action comes a1atnst a l • of opposition to the dealtb from critics, many of em conservatives, who say the design reflects the war that was fought in this country over the war, rather than the bravery of be soldiers in the field. ~ Watt originally approved the design in June, but he told monu ment sponsors that ,_piodiflcations had beent made and said the final version 'required bis approval. " At the .same time Watt raised t his caution flag, 27 Republican congressmen denounced the ' I view, a comervative ma1U1ne, said the design "Immortalises the antiwar alanal" and ca.tied It an "outraJ(e." The letter by Republican con1resamen, written by Rep. Henry Hyde, R·Ill., assures that p<>llticaJ considerations shaped the monument plans. The dispute has plun1ed into controversy an idea which sailed through Congress, hailed by hawk and dove alike. It was the ·brainstorm of a wounded infantryman, Janr Scruggs, who buttonholed congressmen to set aside land between l~e Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial for a Vietnam memorial. Scruus formed . the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund, which has raised half of the needed $7 million from the public. Ground is to be broken March 1 and the monument dedicated next Veterans' Day. BURNING ISSUE A District of Columbia firemah douses burning effigies of President Reagan and · Judge Marion Callister in Laf avetle Park. cross the street from the White House. The demonstration was he ld b~· .......... a group protesting Reagan's opposition to the ·Equal Rights Amendment and Calliste r ·s recent opinion str iking down extended ratification deadline. ~design in a letter to President Ee.&l•D as "• politlcal tc"rnen:t of ,._ame and iati'onot" and asked that another design be selected. And al)other critic, Texas corilp-uter milllonaJre ff. Ross Perot, said be ls going to have a survey conduc\ed in the next few weeks by a reputable pollin1 organization at his own expense to see ii most Vietnam veterans share his repulsion over the design. Latin plots hatched Florida • ID Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans map plans to free their homelands If they do, he says, he is sure the project somehow can be redesigned, aJthou1h be wu not certain bow . that could be brought about. Perot called the design a "tombstone" and a "trench" and said delay would be preferable to the erection of a monument abhorrecLby those It is intendedcto h0tp0r.- "People leel lite its a slap in the fac:e." he said in a telephone interview from Dallas. The design is avant garde -a far cry from the customary warriors' monument of gleamlnt mJrble. M IAMl (AP> -Like Paris of the 18209, Miami buizes with the plots of exiles scheming to reclaim their homeland. In that Paris of Iona ago, the talk was of restorl~g Czarist Russia and the Austro-Hungarian empire. In Florida, the topics now are Haili, CUba and Nicaragua. In both lands and both times, fact la hard to distWl from rumor. On Sundaiy, the Hahlan military 'said It routed the tiny vanguard of an invasion force on the island of Tortuga. On Tuesday, the Haitian government ·said that 40 more invaders had landed. J orge Gonzalez, known as "Bombillo" or "Lightbulb," bas ·been rUMing thre~ Everglades camps for nearly two years. Gonzalez, a 48-year·old Cuban, said bis group hasn't received any direct aid from the CIA or ether U.S. government agency, said recently that the Reagan administration's attitude toward the groups is "the same as the last admin!stration -make sure the law ls obeyed. But you have to understand that prosecution under the NeutraJity Act Is very difficult. "It's only when they catch you. . . t hey can show t hat you are carrying out. an invasion." but feels it enjoys the support of the administration because of President Reagan's tough stands against the Soviet Union It calla for a monument of' polished black granite , descending 10 feet into the ground. Two waUs are to meet in a wide V, with the names of 57 ,692 war dead and 2,500 still listed as missing chiseled into the walls. In the Florida Ever1lades, an ''Inter-American Defense Forc e" that includes Cuban-American teen-agers. former members of the Nicaraguan army and veterans of the (ailed 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba trains in commando tactics on weekends and claims to stand ready to . and Cuba. "You can train until . you're blue in the face, but it's only when they catch you at the seashore that the government can show that you are carrying out an invasion," Frechette said. Some critics think the "V" stands for the peace si1n that used to be flashed by antiwar roteaters. T he National re: . ignite revolutions in Nicaragua and Cuba. · Semi ·Annual CLEARANCE SALE Starts T hur sday, Januar y 14th SPORTSWEAR WESTCLl FF PLAZA Newport Beach 548-4121 HOURS: MON .. TU~ •• WED .. FRI.. SAT. 10 . 6 THURS .. 10 · 9 lrvlne'--Newport 64Z-.WI • "The principal aid we have r ece ived h as been the declarations of the president," Gonzalez said. "It's not weapons we need, but freedom of action." Myles Frechette, head of the State Department's Cuba desk. In Miam i, the veteran anU-Castro1 organization Alpha 66 claims to be carrying out its year-old "Ma.ximo Gomez" plan for Cuban insurrection. Last July the Cuban government reported the capture or five Miami-launched commandos on a Cuban beach. Alpha ~ aJso has a secret training camp in the Southern California desert where it trains 20 Cuban men and women, as well as a dozen Nicaraguan exiles, to prepare for Invasions of both countries. Such groups invariably claim unofficial U.S. government sup port and widespread underground support within the target nation. The U.S. government has consistently deoied supporting any of these would-be invasion forces. Bernard Sansaricq, 37 , a Haitian native who owns a gas station in Fort Lauderdale, claimed to have landed several hundred armed men on Tortuga, off Haiti, over the weekend. Haitian government officials said several of eight rebels were captured and the rest chased into the island's hills Sunday. ~ Dlf'OR ' & NOTE Tlal fmpotilbt of martial kuo Dec., IJ hat forced Polea to adopt uw 1trate~1. ~ conceanou Md fmprovt. to med Uw cltal,_,, of , daflM life. TM following ~ch ezomfntt ~ o/ tM change• that have taken plact under milUatJI rule. WARSAW, Poland (AP> -It was a gOOd ,,Pollah weddin1. with scores of gueata, a 1ood supply of vodka and plenty of food. But half the 1uesta left before 11 p.m . The guests, hurrying into their coal.I and disappearin1 out the door into the cold, snowy nit.ht. were not leavin1 because they wanted to, or because they weren't having a good time. They were rushing home to beat curfew. Living under martial law forces Poles to make concessions, and to improvise. The Dec. 13 declaration has led to a travel ban, splitting s ome families d!Uilll ibe Christmas holiday and sending oth ers info a fit of worry because they had no news of their mothers, fathers, daughters and sons. Family visits are replaced by vi$its to friends. Without pbooes until last weekend , people traveled by car if Uley had fuel, or by foot, taxi, bus and streetcar to leave notes on peoples' doors. "Social life bas been curtailed · by martial law and a shortage of vodka," one Pole said. "Still I attended a wedding that lasted until 6 a.m. ' "And it was a secret bow the hosts had plenty or ham, carp, pork and even salmon," the reveler said ... And we tlJld beet root soup at 3 a.m." But most parties now end earlier, ot don't take place at aJI because of the 11 p.m.·5 a.m. curfew. In some cases, the situation bas led to unemployment. One family, supported by a husband who danced in local clubs and restaurants late at night, is now living from savings. The dancer is now fixing up his apartment, visiting relatives and spending a lot of time at home reading books. In another instance, a woman whose husband was abroad, isn't expecting to see him for a long time. It's not that he couldn't come back, but he wrote to say he wouldn't until the situation was "back to normal." Polish officials said Tuesday they would like to end martial law by Feb. 1. But the most optimistic among ordinary Poles are saying it will last three or four months at the least. The pessimists are saying a year. and some are saying forever. .. ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT,Wednttday, January 13, 1982 s ~· . SChool payments to be blocked? Controller says state has borrowed beyond means, urges passage of 2 bills SACRAMENTO (AP> -State Contro ller K e nnet h Cory , claiming the state has borrowed beyond Its means, warned he may not pay $657 million to. California's school districts unless the Legislature passes two new revenue bl11s by J an. 26. Cory told the Sacramento Bee that the recession caused a drop of $300 million below expected revenue l eve l s during December. He said that Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's proposed 1982-83 $27 billion budget would have the stat e paying $23 million in interest over the next 18 months on funds Cory must borrow to pay the state's billa. Aides to Cory said the state will have fl.l billion in unpaid debts by he end of January. borrowed from a variety of state accounts to cover cash flow demands. Cory, who runs a distant second in polls for th e Democratic nomlnatlon for governor , said he met with Brown late last month to warn the governor of the state's fiscal problems. ··Right now, the slate has borrowed as much as it can bor row witbou\ those bill• passing," Cory said. "I am not going to violate the law ... " Cory said. "We need those bills by Jan. 26 or the schools wl11 not gel their $657 million apportionment payment." He added that a $229 million state payroll is malled out the next dip'. Jan. 27, and that will take precedence over the school apportionme nt payments. The two bills targeted by Cory h ave been introduced in a special session to head off an unconstitutional budget deficit. The deficit has been estimated at about $367 mllllon for the current fiscal ye~. One bill would ralse interest pe nalties on late payment of personal and corporate income taxes; the other would speed up the state's collection of workers' withholding t axes retained by employers. Cory said Brown has told him he would sign those bills If the Legislature passed them . Brown has already ordered a 2 percent across-the-board cut and a fr eeze on n ew s tat e construction to avoid the deficit, leaving a bare $10 million in state coffers. Alien w ho helpe d police gets reprieve Deportation proceedings delayed for man who aided in Ril;>icoff case ........... GOING AP£ Rick Bendinelli of South J.,ake-Tahoe doesn't monkey around when it comes to pulling his pickup truck. but after the Tahoe Basin got 5 to Ill feet of snow. he went a little ape. Actuall)'. Bendinelli works for a singing telegram LOS ANGELES <AP) -Oscar Benitez. an illegal 'alien who faced deportation after he helped police chase down the killers of journalist Sara.i Ribicoff in November 1980, has been given a six-month reprieve from immigration proceedings. Benitez' plight, Omer Sewell, deputy district director of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, sa id the INS had delayed deportation hearings to give Benitez a chance to seek resident status and perha ps someday citizens hip. Police say Benitez has helped t he m solve othe r cases and would be a model citizen. So a few hours arter learning of Benitez, a chef in a Venice restauran t near where Ms. Ribicoff was slain, was caught • an a random INS raid last Emergency Plan sought SANTA BARBARA CAP> -The Oiablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant s houldn't go into full power operation until a nuclear emergency and evacuation plan has been prepared for Santa Barbara County. the board of supervisors said. With the emergency plan scheduled for completion in late June. the board voted 4-0 this week to present the resolution to the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission at its J an. 19 meeting in Avila Beach. The Diablo resolution was sought by two women. Mary Jones and Ann Wie<Jerrecht, and was supported by arguments from six persons, including a nuclear physicis t from the University of California al Santa Barbara . The resolution was opposed by Pacific Gas and Electric Co., the project's builders, and by •representatives of local construction trades. PG&E nuclear engineer John Sumner called the resolu~ion a "political gesture and a delaying tactic," and said that it could be construed as lack of support for the controversial atomic plant. But Supervisor Robert Kallman responded: "We're not in any way saying that we're for or against nuclear power ... We wish to ensure that our emergency plan is ready to go at the same time or sooner than Diablo begins to operate. That seems to me to be reasonable." JANUARY SALE featuring ... Save 50 % on these three engraving dies ordered on Crane's Fine Papers From µnuary 4, I 961 lhru r l'bruary I l , I 962, you woll wve SO'~ on tN! ptlCl' o( tilt' abovl' l'fl81avong do.-s ~ Ofdered wolh rngrned Clint' Sl.ltfOnt'ry al tht-regular ptlcl' An excellen1 opponunoty for you tu onv~t 1n an engrav111g doe which tTUy bt> ~ept fur luture ~atoon..·ry order~ When wll'(t1ng vour statoon!'fY, .111 onk ll•I•"' are• interchangeablt' on your cho•cl' of Cran .. p.JPtl\ enabling you to reOec1 your own 1ndiv1du.il ta\11' f RANCI<£>-0RR fine stationery corona del mar rnr MEDICAL CARE CENTER TUATMBn FOi: • INJURIES • 'ILLNESSES • ACNE • AllEllES • llET • CllCl.UPS Medicare and MediCal accepted 11172 a.llvi ....... ,._ Octobei:. He was originally g r a nted a delay In h is deportation hearing so he could testify in the Ribicorr murder trial of Anthony La Quin McAdoo and Frederick Jerome T h omas . H owever, hi s testimony was not needed and deportation proceedings were to have moved forward. M s . Ribicoff, a H erald Examiner editorial writer and niece of former Connttticut Sen. Abr aham Rib1corr. was fatally shot Nov. 12. 1980, as she and a compan ion left a Venice restaurant. Benitez and brother-in-law Antonio Folgar were working at a nearby restaurant, Hearing screams, they gr abbed kitchen knives and r&ced after the two men they saw rteelng down the street. ·service and the ape costume •~ his working attire. 642-5678 Put a few words to work for you in the Daily Pillli E~ress yourself for lesson •tedS Friendship Exp(e~! United's Friendship Express is off and rolling full steam ahead. So hop aoocird for some of the lowest fares you'll find along the Coast. Right now, San Fran- cisco is as low as $36 on selected flights, $59 oh . all others. Portland and Seattle are as low as $99 on selected flights, $119 on all . others. And every day Unitecfs · Friendship Express talces off with 3 flights to Phoenix and Reno. There are no advance-purchase or length-of-stay restric- tions at all. And best of all you won't just be fly- ing United for less, you'll be sitting pretty on the Friendship Express. Fares may change on January 21, 1982. For reservations, call ! your 'fravel Agent. Or call United at 973-2121 Partners in 'fravel with Westin Hotels. I: \Jlrl''' to ~l'itltk -8: JSa.m. IO 45a.m 2· lOp.m 5·00p.m 7 30p.m 9-00p.m. 8: lSam. '41:30 a.m. 4: lOp.m. 7:00p.m. J0,43 a.m.'_. 1: 13 p.m 4:35p.m. 7:25 p.m. 9:55 p.m. l t:22 p.m. •• 10:30a.m. • 1t42p.m. &:20p.m. 9.; lOp.m. •• 15 ruwts daily. leaving every hour froin ~:00 a.tn. to 7:00 p.m .. plus' 9•00psn. and l 1:05p.m. • •Excepc Sundays ••Eiroept Saturdays fidie men.41Vskies of Utiited. Call United or wur Travel ~nt. - \ r prano• Cout OAJLY PILOTtwednffday, January 13, 1982 Mandrell tops 'worst' Ii.st Designer Blackwell takes his annual pot shots at celebrities . ~ LOS ANGELES (AP> -many Umoa that ahe'a now destined her weddtn1 1own, New York's Hell'• Kitchen and Country aln1er Barbara formed a whole new 1roup Elizabeth Emanuel, on bit played ln the "Dead End Klda" Mandrell, dttcrlbed u uy\lkoo called "Who CouJd Belltve It!" wont·dreaaed Ust commenUnc movlea. ln later years, he was Sally playlnc UM Alamo," bu Blackwell, who hu been ln tbe that the 1owo reminded him ol an actor's agent, a railed been named 11 the worat laahlon lnduetry 25 years, said, "Cinderella'• atep.slater walUnt matinee l do l , radio and drtued woman of 1111 by "It wu touch to llolate Ju1t 10. I at Lhe paJace 1ai.t." televl1lon personality and fuhlon dealaoer Mr. Blackwell. could have had a U~t ol 400." Other "fabulous faablon patron or the arts. For the 22nd year, t.be acerbic He noted Lhal bis criteria for Independent.I" be compUmeoted and controversial Blackwell the list are his "own standards." were Prlnce11 Yasmin Khan, presented his list of the 10 worst The deatsner. commentin1 daushter of All Khan and Annowicer Al Mallic o at dies a t 57 dresaed women al hia Tudor about his reeenl facelift, sald be actreu Rita Hayworth; ice house ln Hancock Park. compiles the list every year skater Dorothy Hamlll, sinter He described Ma. Mandrell on because "when people stop Lena Horne and actreues Tuesday as "overly besaued, caring about themselves they Catherine Oeneuve, Zaa Zsa WORST-Barbara Mandrell topped Mr. Blackwell's "worst dressed" list fol' 1981. bejaued, bejeweled and are done ... The list reflects GaborandGlortaSwanaon. over-sequined.'' Blackwell, dreued in a double-breasted blue blazer and crisp White shirt, awarded actress Lynn Red1rave t.be No. 2 s pot on the list wltb tbls description: "ln knickers her Lynn Redgrave: "In knickers, her knees look like knockers." LOS ANGELES (AP> - Popular Southern California radio announcer Al Mallicoat died Sunday evening after a. lengthy llln~ss. He was 57. DROPPED Doll~' Parton slipped from first· to third among Blackwell's bombs. ~~\ . ~'"' knees look like knockers." Country singer Dolly Parton, who was No. 1 on the list in 1978, was named No. 3 and was described cattily by Blackwell as "an atomic jelly bean explosion.'' ''I think she needs a designer who deals with everything above the table," the rashion designer s uggested. Another well-known member or the 10 worst dressed club is actress Elizabeth Taylor, who made No. 4 on the roll with this description: "She should give up looking ror a designer and find an architect." Blackwell said the famous actress has been on the list so '· fDRTHf . 11RHI Births the totaJ contradiction the world or fashion is trying to tell ... Blackwell, whose real name is Richard Sylvan Selzer, quipped, '' l think I say out loud what most people whisper." But the event was not filled only with acid comments. The wavy.haired designer and one-lime actor said ,that in his opinion actress Diahann Carroll was probably the best dressed woman of 1981. "She has a sense of perfe<:tion that is unbelievable," he said. He also noted that Princess Diana of Britain "will be gorgeous as time comes on." Bu~ be put t.be woman who .~ Landlord MOAG MaMOIUAL HOl .. ITAl. PaHaYT .. llAM _,, Mr. •11d Mn. MICllM I 2•1•1101. H11ntlf1910n llHcll, 91rt won't pay DEAR PAT DUNN: Wbea my brotlter moved oat ol bis apartmeat -after priag Illa ludlord a moalll'a DOdc:e -lte left It uadamaged and lmmaealate. Abo, IMi t.ad paid all thereat. It'• bee• more tllaa a moatll aad the land lord atlll woa't rel-• •1 brott.er's security deposit. Wt.a t'• tlae highest amout he CH aae Ulle ludlord for la Small Claims Court? P.E.,B ....... Beadi ~-Mr. anc1 Mn. OoNld Mell•. Costa IMw. boy Mr. anet Mn Abclallell H•r-ke. C"1• Mew, elrt Mr. 8nd Mn. JoN> Apoien. lr•I,,., 9trt • ~1 Mr. and Mrs. A•vmond 1Cln9, He•DOr1 llM<ll. 9lrl Mr and Nin. J-Gou. -por1 ... , ... tloy Mr • ..., Mn Aaron AllMI. lA- Nl9 ... 1, tloy ~· Mr. •"4 Mn. Vlnce111 Stqlleno, H1111tl ...... llHcll. tkl Mr. •lld Mn.~ Mee.Uy,~ IMWI, boy ~· Mr. and Mrs. G11rta•o S•IHer, trvlne. llrt O..-W4 Mr. end Mrs. Oewtd Le111nn1, c.ptttr-IMKll. llrf Mr. eflO Mn. Jafln HMW«, Soutft L..-. ... rt Others on the worst-dressed list were: -Actress Bernadette Peters, described as "a kinked and cu rled kewpie doll on a hayride." -"Dallas" television star Charlene Tilton -"Looks like Mt. St. Helens erupUng." -Country stneer Loretta Lynn ..:._ "up the music charts, down the fashion charts." -Actress Jane Seymour - "fashions by med.flies." -Rock singer Sheena Easton, ··a London roadrunner dressed for the log." Blackwell. who reruaea to -reveal bis age, spent bis youth in Mallicoat's career spanned 35 years of program music and news. He worked most recently with KABC as a staff announcer, M alllcoat was one of the first physically handicapped to be hired by any major network radio station in the country. He was stricken with polio in 1942. "He was widely acclaimed as being an exceptional, astute and talented announcer in terms or presentation and n ews releases," said his brother Dan Mallicoat. Mallicoat is a lso s urvived by his mother, Gladys Reid, and two sisters, Donna Amen and Billie Mattingly. Section 1950.S of the California Civil Code says that you can sue your former landlord for the amount of any deposit she or he hasn't returnea, plus $200 in "punitive damages" for the landlord's "bad faith" in tryin1 to cheat you. Small Claims Courts may award these punitive damages. Of course, this total cannot be more than the $1,500 limit. Mr. elld Mn. Oefwlll l"H-. C.la MeM,glrt ~· Mr. alld Mn. Cl'alt LArwn, Coale MeM,9tn ~· ~lways. a complete selection. Add Warlords and Asteroids to your library NOW and SA VE ! Refund date extended DEAR READERS: The state Board of Equalization announced recently that new legislation <SB 492) bas extended the three-year statute of limitations for mobile home owners who wish to claim a refund on use tax overcharged al the time of purchase. 'fhe new riling deadline is Dec. 31. The refund is limited to purchasers who bought a used mobile home for which registration was transferred between Jan. 1, 1977 and Jan. l, 1980. It is intended to reimburse an improper use ta.x charged on items that are not part of the mobile home as. a vehicle, such as awnin1s. stirUn1s. carports, in·place location value, and other items not normally a part of the coach itself. Purchasers who bought a mobile home during t.be period specified above from a dealer acting as a broker and not 11~lllo1 on the dealer's own account are the ones entitled to the refund. To file a valid claim, the purchaser must submit a claim for refund in wrtt1o1 to the Board of Equalization, P .O. Box 1799, Sacramento 95808 by the deadline. Claimants· must provide necessary documentation to support the claim, includinl a copy of the purchase agreement and signed acceptance by the former owner, proof of payment of tax, and a description of the coach and accessories purchased. Shirts missing DEAll PAT DUNN: I retaraed two altlrU to Joeepla Ban.ks CtoU.Jera ID Baltimore last April to be exdaaa1e4 for a lar1er the. I laeard DO&hla& and 1eat several leuen •lkla• If the padlaie had bee• reeetwed. It WH 1.D1ared, IM9t I can't me a c:lal• ..W I taow lf It was delivered. Caa you ftDcl CMll tor me! P.A., Newport Beacla No record or your order or correspondence can be located by Joseph Banks Clothiers, accordin1 to Pat Wat.son of the consumer service department. Ma. Watson asks you to send Iler proof of paymeot and a copy of your ort,aul order. In the tneantJme1 )1Ml can (lle a e~ on your post-1._ tmurance because the l\t'Sft baa no' reco.:Wol receivinf a pack ace f~oa. ,. Mr. a1141 Mrs. Mk-I 9,.., COiia -WI.boy Mr. •nd Mrs. Maril 1t1111, Sen ClemM1'9,llOv ~1 Mr. •lld Mrs. AlelUNlder Gr•lldv•. N-por1 tleecll, Doy Mr. •nd Mrs. Sem11•I B111man. H1111tl .... a.Kii. girt Mr. e1141 Mn. S.m,..1 Townte1141. """' ......... hKll. 91"'1 Mr. a11d Mr$. Herbert Le11, Hu11tl1191Gn llNCll. 9lrt Mr. end Mn. Robert JOM!lfl. COiie '"'-WI, gin Mr. and Mn. DouQl91 Greff, lrvllle. girl f'OUMT.AIN V.ALLaY COMMUNITY HOSPITAL ~,. Mr. allCI Mn Allller1 Rewotln11ll. H11ntln9'o11 a.Kii, boy ~·· Mr. and Mrt. llollerl 811rnllam. FC111ntaln Val .. y, lloy Mr. and Mr1. Barrie Poet on. Fountain V•ll9'1. boy Kevin Bruni and Kally aruno, Fou11tll11 v .. tey, lloy Dec...-rl1 Mr. end Mn. Jolln Domenic!, Hu11Uf191on llHcfl. glrl Mr . and Mrs. Pedro E 1plrlto. Hunl"'91on &Mch. boy Mr. a nd Mn. Odl• Coffey, H1111tlnvton ISHch, lloy .,..,...,ll M t . and Mr1. Robert Lewi•, H""tlf1910n &Mell. girt Oa11let -k -OelllM C-r. HuntlnQton a.Kii, 9lrl DecalNIHU Mr. and Mrt MICllHI Bullard, Huntington &Mell, boy D«...-w!A Patrick EH lln •lld A1111a Marte Tllfom, Hllftt""'°" &Mell, 9lrl Ct••rw•w. Hu1111n91o118..c11. 9irl ~H Mr. •llCI Mrs. Ronald Co•, Huntington 1 .. ch,boy D«....._16 Mr. and Mn. Pait~. """'1119ton aeach,91r1 Mr. •net Mn . Jame1 Lene, Coste ,,.. ... boy 1t .. 1n H8clfleld -Paula &09nl9, H Ulltlngtol\ llMctl, girl toUTit COAIT M8CMCM. CaWT•a ~,. Mr, a1141 Mn. ltkll L..8fnllMll, CGr'- dtl Mat. fltl ~,. Mr. ond Mn. Holtlo P. Alte r. Coplstr-liMtl!. tlrt Mr. ofld Mn. J-It-. ~ llff<ll. girt --....Wtl Mr. •nod Mn. Onld f'. Marrlftff, L..-llMdl...,.. --....Wtt Mr. Md """" ...... """1. Oeno ....,..,.., .......... 11 Mr. afllll Mn. ~tell J ....... IOlll· J.-'-"* ... ..., Mr ........ °"' Mttt-. 0-. .......,.., ......... Mr. oflll Mn. ~ 8. NewflOM, u.----.-• ...... a..w-.~ ....-.... IM~NTII •••W..,..PITAL ......... Mr .......... MICllMI Ortoto. c .......... .... ..._,, ...... .,,, """' ........ J-c.I* ....... ... ......... '*· ......... 01111•111911 ...,.,.,., Selle......~ ....... '*· ............ '"""' .. .,_ ~c.... •• .... .,.... .. L"'* ._....., .. J .. c ... ..., ......... ........................ c.......-...., ................. ,... ..... C..,....,..,. I D I ~ ATARr "Zipees'• Skates Sturdy plastic. Indoor or outdoor "beginner" skates. Reg. S.99 1•• Selection of our 6 w...;.r'l best sellers. 42 H ~,wing span. 21 n tail. Reg. 1.69 as· Tough elastic cord. Indoor- outdoor fun. Reg. 69' f'ainbow pattem vinyl coverina. Safety hinges. "·•· )9.99 MOST Elizabeth Taylor. a perennial finalist. is number four this year. BEST Diahann C<irroll was singled out as the best dressed or the year. Big Ben Puzzles I 000 pieces. Scenes from around the world. 26"x 20" Reg. 2.49 Muppets, Peanuts. Farm Scenes and more. 24 to I 00 pieces. Reg. I . 99 1•• 4!! Assorted titles. Easy to color with crayons or paints. Jones, R ic hie, Lennon Tiead Grammy list LOS ANGELES (AP) -QuJncy Jonea, Uonel Riehl• and the late John Lennon bave emeried u top nomlneea for the 24th annual Grammy Award1. Jones headed the Uat Tuesday with el1bt IM>minationa, lncludinc album of the year, producer of the year, and beat pop instrumental performance, beat rhythm and blues performance by a vocal 1roup for his LP "The Dude." Riehle followed with six nominations, most of them for the song , "EndJess Love," his duet with Diana Ross, and Lennon came up with five nominations for the "Double Fantasy" album released just before he was murdered In December 1980. The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences awards, to be presented in a Feb. 24 CBS telecast, cover records released in the year ending Sept. 30. Christopher Cross won five Grammys last year for his debut album, emerged as a co-nominee for record or the year and song or the year as a c~author and vocalist ror "Arthur's Theme (Best That You Can Do)." .. Endless Love," which was the theme for the movie of the same title atarrlna Brooke Shield•, popped \IP in the aame two cate1orle1 for Riehle - wlth Miu Roll' 1harin1 In the record of the year nomination -and another tum therpe, "9 to 5," 1ot a son1 of the year nomination for son1writer Dolly Parton. IUcbie b also lead vocalist with the Commodores sln1ing group. "Bette Davis Eyes," Kim Camea' scratchy-voiced hit, earned record or the year and 1on1 of tbe year nominations as well as the female pop performance entry for Miss Carnes. "Mistaken Identity," the album which yielded the song, also earned an album of the year nomination. Nominations in the best new artist cate1ory ranged from British costume rockers Adam and the Ants and the Go-Go's -an all-female Los Angeles band -to soul singer Luther Vandross, Sheena Easton and James Ingram, who earned other mentions for his vocal work on Quincy Jones' "The Dude" LP. . Lennon received nominations as artist and c~producer for album of the year for "Double Fantasy" and as artist and co-producer for record of the year for "Just Like Starting Over." Hispanic bishop named Son of i llegal alien to head diocese LOS ANGELES <AP> -The Rev. Manuel D. Moreno, named by Pope John Paul IJ as bishop of Tucson, Ariz., was the son of an illegal alien who had worked as a field laborer, picking oranges and walnuts In Southern California during his childhood. Moreno, born ln Placentia, lives in Ventura and remained isolated on a retreat when it was announced Tuesday that he will be the seventh Hispanic bishop to head a diocese in the United States. Moreno , 51, has been auxiliary bishop of Los Angeles since 1976. His appointment was announced in Washington, D.C., by Archbishop Pio Laghi, the apostolic dele1ate to the United States from the Vatican. No date has been set for Moreno's installation. . "My father, God rest him, was a wetback. . .one who came under the wire," Moreno once recalled in a speech. Moreno attended Chapman Gra- m a r School, St. Mary's .Par- :>chial School and Fulle'rton Union High School before entering UCLA. He wa s one of 11 Mexi · c an -Americans on campus , Moreno told a congregation in 1978. "There were many doubts about faith and religion and some fell away from the faith because there were no priests of our own at that time," he said. "There had been only six Mexican-Americans ordained in Los Angeles. I wonder why. ''I investigated the need for priests and got the idea of the priesthood," he said. "I entered the priesthood with doubts and fears. The studies were difficult but God's help was great." Moreno wiU be the fifth man to head the Tucson diocese, and the firs t of Mexican extraction. He replaces Bishop Francis J. Green. who resigned in July. Green said the fact that the bishop has roots in the Mexican community was an important step. Green said a survey of priests and sisters in the diocese made more than a year ago, when he began his retirement process. showed that Bishop Moreno was the most popular choice of possible candidates to s ucceed him from among those who already were bishops. Moreno studied at Our Lady Queen of the Angels Seminary In San Fernando, St. John's Seminary ln Camarillo and was ordained in 1961. He did post-ordination studies in the graduate division of the North American College in Rome. In the Los Angeles archdiocese, Moreno served as associate pastor of St. Th<wias parish and of St. Vibiana'll'Cathedral in downtown Los Angeles. He became parochial vicar of St. Vlblana's when he was appointed bishop ln 1976 and be also is spiritual director of the Spanish-s peaking version of the Christian Family Life movement. Doctor opts to repay town CHEROKEE, Okla. (AP> -A doctor whose medical school bill was paid by local residents in need of a physician says he won 't be moving to Cherokee after all -but he'll repay the town. Cherokee citizens wailed seven years for Or. Mark Cameron to finish medical school and complete his residency in Bartlesville, footing the $18,000 education tab with donations if he would practice in the northern Oklahoma town. But Cameron decided a few weeks ago that he won't be moving to this town of 2.119 residents. "' Jllle shoes 40-601!1 .... .........,. ... ,. .................. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, January 13, 1982 NOMIN EE Christopher Cross is a co-n o minee in Gram m y Awa rd competi t ion for record H E AD S L I ST Quincy J o n e s r ece i ved e i g ht n o min ation!-. f o r .I Grammy Awards STORE HOURS: DAILY 10 AM TO 9 PM SAT 10 AM TO 6:30 PM SUH 11 AM TO 5 PM £'· oUR POSTHUMOUSLY The late John Lennon received fivl' nom1nat1on!-. for · ublc Fant a:-.~.·· SOUTH COA ST ·AT PLAZA 1''1 COSTA M ES A Bomb factory project approved No bombs built in facility TUL.SA. Okla. <AP> -The Navy bu approved $14 million In renovatlona to an 11-year-old, S62 million, automated bomb factory, but a bomb baa yet to be built there, accordln1 to a published report. The McAlester tacllity was first run by the Navy and then turned over to the Army, which has refused to operate lt "until Ute Navy gets It working," the Tulsa World reported. The newspaper quoted Lt. Cmdr. Ronald Marchetti. the Navy's cootracUna officer. as saying lnJlatlon and new safety and environmental regul ations have boosted the cost of the project. / originaJly intended for use during the Vietnam "ar. Jl said he approved two change orders tolahng $14 million within the last year. r --en ---ui:------~ -,.... < en ,.., ~ ~ SUNFLOWER AV. BAKU ST. NOT HIN& HELD BACK ... N I ... ) • ; t ' • • • ' . • l I l I . , I ' I ' f ' ~ALL SALES FINAL NO AEFUNDSOR EXCHANGES Aa Orange Coaat DAILY PILOTtWednHday, January 13, 1982 Granny busted for pot LA JOLLA CAP> - After poUce round a crop ol 56 planU u high aa 10 f·eet tall In her b.-ckyard , a La J olla 1randmother h as pleaded guilty to cultivating marijuana. The raid took place on Jane Hadden Schimpff's expenslve· ocean-view property Aug. 10. In her plea, the 55-year-old woma n sai d s h e understood she could be sentenced lo a maximum three years in jail. A probation hearing 1s set Feb. 9. ~· .. THE ' EARL'S l'\.'-"0•,_...11HO u., Wet., Hee11~ S• l.,. 1t16S~ ' -, .. ,..,.<• ,..,. 5,,.,, '' • ""' ()n., .. IC•41 sww~ ""N!.,.,,~ Vf')wf ~ff••! I. COITUIHA641-1289 1ue--11111s1CJH vivo49S-040, 1 tm! c. ... c. ....... "° • ,. ... Dliteit'"" ., ••• ,, ~·-~ • • Turnyour • unusab1es into e usable e cash.Call e Daily Pilot • classified 642-5678. I \t.f,&c·JilI ~ FASHION ISLAND r..:J_l PllJ.a ~ NEWPORT Cl:NTER 2 FOR 1 CHEESE SALE ~~.~-~.~~·~················ 2/2.29 ~~~~ .. ·.·~.~ ................. 2/3.19 =..·:.;~ ........................... 2/2.29 ~=~OL•l••••••••••••••••••••••·•••2/2.29 Goed ..... ~ 24, IH2 ff ickor1 Farms (/I 0 1110 FASHION WESTCLJFF ISLAND OPEN PLAZA 'eW1>0f1 Buth DAILY 11\lt-ln-llM'. 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Effectl•• 1-11-1912 Rate 1s effective for entire 18-month term annual yield current rate 15.540% 14.250% VARIABLE IRA/KEOGH RATE* Rah Effec:tl•• 1-2-1912 Rate is subiect to change on the first business day of each month for the 18-month term · annual yield current rate 14.607% 13.450% ., ... jfl•t t4 ... u.-.,. t. .. ·.1 • t 0 0 0 f'" o•J'o A •"" "IA.t ~1t t',, ~A \• S ,,,.....~, .,.,,,,,. t 'f'"' t '' J~ I',, ~ r•·lll ti''" 0 Now is the time to open your IRA/KEOGH Account for the 1982 tax year Stop in TODA y1 Flhd out how you can get an 1mmed1ate $2.000 deduction on your Federal income tax and pay no Federal tax on your earnings untlf retirement. with an IRA Account If you are self-employed look into a KEOGH Account With this special account you will be able to put as much as $15,000 away annually for your retirement and pay no Federal Income Tax on this money until you retire. ====·•-==== FAR WEST SAVINGS and Loan A••ociatiOn HUNTINGTON BEACH 19114 Magnolia Ave. Huntington Beach, CA 92646 (714) 983-2900 • NEWPORT BEACH 4001 MacArthur Blvd. Newport Beach, CA 92660 (714) 833-8383 DANA POINT 24501 Del Prado Dana Point, CA 92629 (714) 661 -3356 e OPENtNQ IOON e • Laguna Hiil• • H•m•t • Mlalk>n VleJo • • Gay lilieration statue to he Offered to SF PIG SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -San Franclaco, the clty known for It• homosexual population, may be fi•st in the naUon to have a work or publk art dedicated to the aay movemeqt. Supervisor Harry Britt and friends ot the late Supervisor Harvey Milk said they will ask the city to accept a $150,000 bronze sculpture entitled, "Gay Liberation," for display In the Harvey Milk Plaza at Markel and Castro streets. The work by sculptor George Segal portrays two women on a park bench lightly touching each other. Two men stand in front of the bench. One wears a small earring and has his arm around the other man's shoulder. N1m1roV1kl aald they do not object to placlnc a 1culpture wlth a aay theme In the plaza. ·'The statue will have to go through all the processes to· get approval as a work ot public art," Feinstein said. "If It's good art and it's appropriate for public viewing, I wouldn't have any problems with It." Nemerovski called the statue "terrific." ··As long as it looks good in the proposed location, I think it's Cine," she said. Segal dad the work for the Mildred Andrews Fund, a private art foundation. A cast of the sculpture was to have been placed in Sheridan Square in New York's Greenwich Village. But the work was criticized by public officials opposed lo the theme and by gay radicals for its failure to depict ethnic minorities. "1 think the statue will be a wonderful tribute lo Harvey, · said Scott Smith, Milk's business partner, former lover and executor of his estate. "ll's a monumental work." 'OUT ••. AT OUR GREAT · SPRING SALE ... SAVE 25°/o-50°/o-6 75°/o &.MORE! ·i) Special SS. -$10. -$20 racks! OP Sandals -25% off! Sale Jewelry -SO% Off! & much more! NEW! Fish Sandwich Platter $1. 99 You'll love our crispy North Atlantic fi~h fillet on a warm bakery bun with shredded lettuce! Complete with fresh cole slaw and golden fryes. it's great for lunch or anytime! Try our Chicken Sandwich Platter. too! P•OT•CT YOU• YAiU•D Poss•ss10•• & 1•v•••r•••r• Safe Secure Convenient Confidential PROTECTION For Your Valuable Possessions • Safer Than Banks and Sa_\(ings and Loans • 24 Hour ARMED Guard Protection • Electronic Entry SYSTEM • Largest Safe Deposit Boxes in Southern California • 24 Hour Access • Tax Deductible • Insurance Savings . HONORED -The ,late Roy Wilkins. executive director of the NAACP from 1955 to 1977, has been honored by the Defense Department for his ··40 years of devotion to the cause of equaJky in the U.S. armed forces .'' .Wilkins ' widow accepted the medal at ceremonies in New York City. Marryin' preacher sUccumbs VISTA <AP> -The Rev. James P. Sandefur reportedly tied the knot for 240,000 people in his lime. He married them in the aisle on buses, in Army recruitin1 stations, in an airborne blimp, a boat , a mountaintop. A couple were uni\ed alon1side the railroad tracks ,at San Pedro, another in tbe middle or the desert, another at the beach. Not all were of age. A clerk in San Diego Superior Court sald Sandefur helped under-age couples aet their blood tests and papers. ''If the couple were very much in love, and they had their parents' permission , he wondered why should they have to wait until they were 18," Virginta Sandefur said after her husband's funeral. "He believed in marriage." Mr. Sandefur died of a heart attack at age 66 l ast week after performing hi s 120,oooth wedding. He averaged nearly one every hour and was known throughout Southern California as "Marryin' Sam ," after the -.... preacher in the Li 'I Abner comic strip. 'Worst cities' listed BOSTON <AP> -Are Lawrence and Fitc hburg the worst places to live in the entire United States? Residents of these cities would probably disa1ree, but that's the conclusion of a published analysis called the Places Rated Almanac. The study rated 277 metropolitan areas according to nine categories -climate and terrain, housina. health care and environment, crime, transportation, education, recreation, Jlrt and economics. The Lawrence · Haverhill area was ranked dead last at 277th, while the Fitchburg-Leominster area came in just behind at 278tb. Pine Bluff, Ark., ranked 27stb, but next came the Lowell, Ma11., area at274th. Boston finished 18th amoo1 the cities. The winner? Atlanta. E v e n tho uah the report was bard on Ma11acbuaetll, U. was complied by two Bay State resident.a -David Sava1eau, an executive with Robert H. Davidson A11oc1ates ln LexiDston, and Richard Boyer1 a Concord novelist. Savapau 1.nd Boston came ID 1.-b ••use tt ii "lifted wtu. ealtaral and artlltlc amealda, wltb Yf!r1 ftlle eOue8doa ID1UtuUoa1 and wltb 1 uperb bealth care f acU1tle1. Everythln1 eile ll De1atlv•." A1 k 1d WbJ Law rence·Haverb lll .__.. ....... n-l~:~·.•t nr!-:'~ an~.··. Orange Coaat OAILY PtLOTIW•dnelday, January 13, 1982 COLUMBUS. Ohio <AP> -An Aml1b community ln northeast Oblo bu woe a battle with two utllltlet to keep a 150·foot·wlde corridor of eJeetrical power Unet out of lt1 old ·h•bioned community. The Ohio Power SiU01 Board waUlmoully r•Jected a propoeal by two PoWW ~pal11 to buUd the Une tbrou1b she o .. u1a County townships, lncludinl an • BAVEllO• • SUAVE ....... ~­... For sltklet. shinier. lovelltr hair Amish Httlement of 4,000 people at tbe center of the county. A spokeaman for one of the utlUtlea 1ald it may appeal the decisil)D to the state Supreme Court. . The Amlab, members of a relt1loua aect who believe la lollowin1 tbe ways of tbflr anceston, do DOt uae electricity. Durin1 a lix·week heart,... tome a r 1 u e d Ute s 1 • m It e • ) o n I , h'-h·volt•I• tran1mluion Un" would naln farmland tbey depend upon for thelr Uvellhood, "Tbe land IJlUff&e ls oa for tbe Amlah," saJa Charles White, chalrmaA of the Committee to Preserve Our Community. "Tbe fabric of Arnilh life la 1tewardah.1p of the land. U be lONt the land, be '°'" hb war. ol life." A mlsh a ao .. id they teared erection of the pe>Wer llne would end thelrwtvacy ud cauae many ~mish to leave the community. ·•We eould, u a n•Uon, extermlnat. · the AmJsh without reatJy trylnt." Dr'. John Hostetler, a profeuor at Temple Unlvenity, testllied durin1 the heannca. In ';ke' the proposal from Ohio Co., aad Ctave1-Dd Electrics lllumlnatln• Co., the board did not question the need for a Ude, utd Lee Balltf, CEI spoketman. . "Tbeir doubt wu that the UM would be 1oln1 tbrou1h Amilb farm• and would be uuetUlnl to their llleaty~." Balley sald. 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Assortment of Weights .. . · Marines put a lid ~n airport pr.oposal The U.S . ~arlnes h·ave spoken and the message was clear: The CQrps Isn't tivjng up Its air installations in Orange County as part of an overall plan to develop a new regional civilian commercial airport. This message was delivered this week by Brigadier Genel'81 ftlchard Cooke, commanding general of Marine Corps Air Station. El Toro. His message shouldn't he surprising. The Marines hav~ never taken kindlv to suggestions that they move from the county or agree to sha1·e th eh· facilities with commercial aviation interests. Cooke called the rare press con rerence in the wake .of suggestions of Orange County government's "blue ribbon " regional airport committee that the El Toro base and its sister helicopter installation at Tustin be moved. RelocaUon. the committee said. would 1·elieve airspace congestion s hould a regional airport be constructed al Santiago Canyon in the Santa Ana Mountains or the Chino Hills north of Brea. Both sites are ultder consideration bv the committee as locations for 'a new airport. lf neither site pans out. the committee also said the El Toro base should be a \•ailable ror purchase as a commercial airfield. . C o O·k e d i s m i s s e d t h e suggestions in an even-handed manner. pointing out that relocation. among other things. would do damage to the Maa·lnes· mission. Even if relocation were viable from a stra tegic standpoint . the general · cQntinued. the cost estimated between SI billlon and S3 billion -would be pt'Ohibillve. It ls dirficult to believe that the high exec utives and industrial leaders who served on the regional airport committee were unaware of the Marine C~rps"Objectioos tQ uprooting and relocating their ~ll\ inst1dlations. Further. the s uspicion i& rathe1· strong that once the ,committee recognized the full scope of the 1·egiQnal airpoij quandary. the members also recognized they had been handed a task that has defied solution in Orcirrge Co\Jnty government circles for perhaps the last decade. Therefore. it was likely that in proposing the closure ot El Toro and the Tustin helicopter facility. the committee had deliberately once again drawn the anticipated Mal1ne Corps n•s portse. That response should la~· to rest any question of hitchhiking a ci\'ilian jet superport dream on propet'ly now controlled by the l' .S . milital'\'. That set a s ide. cou.nt ~ government can perhaps nCI\\ focus its futurC' airport J?Oals elsewhere Expanded horizons The explanation for one trip. a,s voiced by a congressional Sl> o k es man . i s ··to obtain additional ins ight regarding u l'Jlnge of issues confronting the committee and the Congress ... That should cover just about ciny of the congressional excursions currently taking more · than 50 members of the House and Senate. their aides. and occasionallv their ramil\' members. to Europe. the Middle East. th~ South Pacific a nd South .~merica. Taking advantage of their midwinter rece ss. the availability or Air Force planes maintained for VIP travel. and th e convenience of U .S . embassies and consulates for travel assistance. the lawmakers lnnually seek l<> broaden their global horizons -al taxpayer expense. of course. ' This season's exodus includes ~ 12-member delegation to ~elgium and the Netherlcinds to iliscuss trade and other i5SUes: a month-long trip throughout the Middle East by Senate Foreign Relations Chairman Sen. Charles Percy. who wi ll m eet with Mid east leaders; two delegations \o the South Pacific to check out tonditions in U .S . 'Tru st Tl•t-ritories and compure thC'm with lir e in British Commonwealth islands : and two delegations to South and Central America. one headed bv Senate Re publican leader Howai·d Buker and Sen. Paul Laxall. the other includ.ing six members or the II o u s e A r m e d S e r \' i c e s eommittee. Beyond doubt. many or these excursions truly are "Working trips" and probably benefieiul in giving congressional leaders a better insight into conditions that pre\'ail in countries that could be affected by future U.S. actions. In a shrinking worhl. it is not healthy for leaders to remain isolated. However. one is impell(td to wonder just how man ~· members or Congress really need to ~o spinning orr around lhl• globe in thi s manner . h o\\ mu"t'h duplication there is in their search for insight. and whether smaller. less costly delegations could not share their "education" with fellow members. Anet . noting thl' we at her reports from the East Coast. it might also be obser\'ed that at I e a s t f o u r o ( t h e c u r l'l' n t expeditions are headed below th(• C'quator. wherl• il now is su mm~r I . Pf/ and running? L AlanCranstonversusRonald 1n front or the cameras Reagan for the presidency in Cranston. on the other har\d. . t884? wou Id have to put on some the senior citizens would be pounds to get awa~· from his orn as to wheth~ to vote for ~aunt. runner's look . ~ranston . who would be 70 in This paper has long opposed une !984. or .Reagan who would the cost and time involv~ In the e . d1plomat1ca lly. older than race ror the presidenc~" Perhups. that. . in a Cranston-Reagan race. we . Georg~ O_rw~ll even m his could dispense with the political ildest p1 ed1ct1ons could not necessity of campaigning in each ave conJur~ up s uch a match of the 50 states and instehd or.that magic year. simply set up < 11 a race or on·e Cranst on. of course . mile and (2I a wood-chopping nnoun~ last week that he. the S c . enior .senator from California. Is contest. The uprem.e om t ormlng a committee to consider could decide the ~hit d event he presidential bid. needed to break the tie. We always knew that The senator said he probably ~ranston. a faithful joi{ger and won't decide whether to run until printer. was running (or' after tllls year's congressional omething. bUt never realized it races. We suspect the timing has as the nation's top office. nothin1 to do with politics. It's t The irony. perhaps, ls that jllst that Cran1ton wants to be a Oil eandklates for ofrice have little olmr before he (ormall~· • lose wel&ht to appear just right announces. l • lnlont t>eprtSMd ln ~ speee ~.,. thos! °'the Oally 'Piiot. btMr views H· 11Hd on this Pave are those of their authors •net artr1ts. Rtecter comment 11 lnvlt-' . Address The O.lly Piiot, P.O. lo• •~. COSlt Mesa, CA f26a6. Phent (714) ·4321. Cuts increase consumer risK WASHING TON -As president, Ronald Reagan has moved with determination to keep his campaign promiae to "get the government off our. backs.·• But when applied by bis enthusiastic budaet cutters, the 1lo1an has been translated into that old catch-phrase or the corner·C\ltllng buslneasman,."Let the bu}'er beWa.re." As a slariog eumple, the Wblte House warlted to abol(lh the Consumer Product Safety Commission. But' alter outcries from members of Congress, the. administration settled for "only'' a 30 percent budget cul. WHAT CONGRESS seems to understand, but the White House chooses to itnore, h that the commission is as popular with the public as It Is unpopular with profit-hungry manufacturers. A recent Roper survey showed that product safety is among the best understood of any government function. What's even more impressive is that 41 percent of those poUed felt that the asency wasn't doini enouih to protect the public. Despite the lack o( any mandate to get the product safety commission "off our backs." the budget cutlers have ignored warnings that the 30 percent cut will mean a corresponding increase in consumer risk. Here are just some of the effects, gleaned from internal documents by my associate Tony Capacclo:· -In 1979, there were 70,000 fires involving wood or coal s toves, factory-built fireplaces. furnJces or venting components, resulting in 200 deaths. In 1980, the number of s uch fires ·Jl£1 11111111 had risen to 112,000. and the death toll stood at 350. Now the budget cuts will effectively stop the testing of these increasingly popular products by the National Bureau of Standards. -Faulty clothes dryers, electric light fixtures and extensions caused more than 23,000 fires in 1980, leaving hundreds dead or injured. The budget cuts will eliminate several on-going investigations in this area. -Inhalation of toxic fumes from plastic and cellulose products found in homes causes .about half the annual death toll in fires. The budget cuts will restrict the commission's investigations or these materials bj 50 percent': ~ Chainsaw "kickbacks" caused some 24,000 Injuries in 1980. The lndustry has been working on the problem, but the budget cuts will prevent the a4ency's experts from properly evaluatm1 the results ol this effort. -THE AGENCY'S Chemical Hazards Section is one of the hardest hit by the budget cuts. For example, the commission will be unable to maJte sample checks of homes to determine the level of asbestos exposure rnullin& from deteriorating pipe insulation. Yet the National Academy or Sciences reported recently that this could be a greater hazard than the much-publicized problem of asbestos exposure in schools . Asbestos is a known cancer-causing material. -The agency's effort to look into the dangers of "plasticizers" used In such baby products as rattles and pacifiers will be hampered by the budget cut, though 13 million pounds or one plasticizer alone. DEHP, are used annually in these products . -The commission's primary function of encouraging and monitoring industry self-regulation will be made virtually impossible by the budget cuts. There si mply won 't be enough personnel to review the thousands of pieces or information that help the com mission spot potential safety problems. Schmitz punishment sets a precedent Although their hasty action may have enhanced their standings with some fringe groups, Senate leaders were woefully lacking in statesmanship in dealing "punishment" to Sen. John Schmitz. Schmitz Is the Orange County rigbt-wing member of the John Birch Society wbo was stripped of bis committee chairmanships for using language offensive to pro-abortionists in a press release issued following bearings he had chaired last month. In Archie Bunker f ashion be characterized some or the "pro" witnesses as lesbians, queers, bulldykes and "Jewish <arguably> female faces." EVEN IF his utterances warranted some action by the Senate the proper procedure would have been to t'Nail the convening of the entire Senate and conduct a fair bearing at which time Schmitz could have had the opportunity to defend himself. The fact is that Schmitz did not intend his remarks as a slur on the Jewish community of the state and could have produced many iQfl uential Jewish leaders to prove be Is not anti-Semitic . Worse than the unfairness to Schmitz is the scary implication that.the current leadership intends to impose censorship on the public s tatements of Senate members. For, in admitting the action against Schmitz was unprecedented Senate , . llll llTllS I President Pro Tern David Roberti was acknowledging that it was est.ablishing a precedent. Granted the remarks or Schmitz m ay have been In poor taste ,and offensive to some groups, it is a fact that legislators emotionally involved in issues often become abusive and offensive. On a scale or one to ten of abusive and intemperate language used by legislators, Schmitz' rantings were below a ltve. But had .they been a ten the Senate action was improper Barring conviction of a crime, the legislators are on thin ice when they act against a fellow member. Certainly it Is not the business or the Senate to impose HoW. to cope with titles We haven't had a quiz column for many moons. so here Is a different kind I've devised pn "lilies of address." Not that one Is likely to meet many of these grand persons, but if it so happened, how should they be addressed, by pen or happened to meet a surgeon. how would you address rum? 8. What was the title used by Gen. Franco as head of the Spanish state? By Mussolini as bead of the Italian state? 9. What is the title given to Arab c htefs who c l al m descent from Mohammed? .10. How is a hospital nurse addressed in England? 11. What. ls \he difterence . between someone called "Lady Jones" and sorneone called "Lady Mary Jones?" 12. How were the rulers of India destanated until the 1 lon1 Moniot line was overth.rowh? ta. How did °" early settlers ..Sdresa the chief or a North American Indian trtbe (before they dl1poase1Hd them>! 14 . How la God addreued by Unitarians? 15. What la a wldely uhd &lterrtatlve title to the Japanese Sboc~? .ANIWSU: l. "Your Grace.•· 2. A countess. a. "Your Excellency." 4 . "Your Holtqtu." 5. "General.'' t. ·•Mr. Justice." 'I . "Mr." standards as to what a member may say. Such sanctions are nothing more than intolerable censorship. For each member is elected by a separate and distinct constituency for the purpose of representing their will. Who are the other senators to pass judgment on whether or not Schmitz was properly representing his district's views? Only the voters or that district have such authority which they can exercise by initiating a recall or turning him out at the next election anytime a sufricient number are dissatisfied. Jn the past 50 years only two other Senators have sutrered removal from committee posts. The most recent case was that of Sen. George Zenovich. who, ironically . was "spanked" for attempting to do exactly what Roberti did when he wrested the leadership post from Sen. James Mills. THE OTHER instance was in the early '50s, and involved the late Sen. Jack B. Tenney of "Mexicali Rose" fame. A super patriot. much like U.S. Sen. Joseph McCarthy, Tenney was obsessed with the notion or a Communist takeover. As chairman of the UnAmerican Activities Committee he indiscriminately accused scores of citizens, labeling them "CommunJst.s," "Reds" and other derogatory terms implying disloyalty to the nation. No thought was ever given to removing him from •hts position or power for his utterances. It wasn't until he overstepped himself by attacking his fellow members in a publication in which he charged most or them with being Communists or "fellow travelers" or "dupes" that bis colleagues acted. Not only was bis c hairmans hip forfeited, he was removed from the committee. Even ,after this notice of disapproval Tenney continued to make speeches and statements which arew more and more intemperate. His excesses led him to attack the Catholics, Masons and Jews all in the same breath. Cornlnl from Loa Anaeles it wasn't the pollUc thine to do as the voters showed him by defeating him at the next election. CompUter Balance Avalabl• FIB•RGLASS B•LT•D WHITEWALLS Ow Reg '2 91-A78x13 s32 Plus F .E.T. 1.69 Each KM . SPORT RADIAL STEEL BEL TED RADIAL WHITEWALLS Ow Reg. 44.97 -155R12 s3& 'Plus F.E.T. U1 Each DHipedfor lmportl And l motl Can SALE ON HIGHWAY RETREADS Sole Price -A78x13 16.88eo PIUS F.E.T. Each SOie Price '68 IC MOit' ffOftt Dito lrolc• lpeolol F0< many American cors light trucks and Imports hlghef MOtltonof OO'lt OAO ..,.,1c.et wfte:ft l'ftOY 09 ne.cM0 GH QI •••o cow ---••o ...... s13 Eo Mqnro-Motto • Shock Absorber 1 3/16' piston. monv U.5-. foreign cors Sole Price s22 Heovy-duty Arrfftor • MOUNTING INCLUDED NO TIADE·IN IHlUlllD Larger Sia" Sal• Pftced Tread Design Moy Vary All Tires Plus F.E.T. 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'( . ule subjeel to merchandise in stock unit as shown. iow x 10'h' modular unit in one. two or three cushion js adaptable to any room size • matching tables available • also slHper • variety ol fabrics • now on sale• contemporary furniture decorator service available 1931 newport blvd. costa mesa, ca. (half block north of 19th st.) 548-5518 store wide SALE anaheim area toll free 546-1262 barzllay, glenn callf design cardinal, motif david page unlfactor, tomes charlton designskill glass arts custom style design trends artisan house san dlego design hlatt plycraft yellow tag SALE entire inventory reduced! 100.'s of values! we also have 1n uten11ve aelectron of decorative acceu oriea A.e lltuetf819d •• x 11' " .. ' pc. modular .-c•tone1 ..... Olk ""*' woodUnt ... ...at11-...1noomer """" ....... & ottoman • In ..... .. 11ctton of ....,... -• ) *• WEDNESDAY, JAN. 13, 1982 A career woman tells why she gave it all up to be a housewife and mother. Read Bob Greene CAVALCADE COMICS TELEVISION 82·3 84 1;)6 on Page 82. New York's port of hope t6d8y ghostly ' But plans are under ivay to renovate Ellis Island NEW YORK (AP> -For half a cenlury. the Ellis laland ferry carried the tired, the poor, the huddled masses from what European immigrants called "the Isle of Tears," where an inspection station ~ed the last obstacle to a new life in the New World. Today, the is land's immigration center, which once processed up to 12,000 people a day, is a national monument with only 12,000 visitors a year. Many or today's visitors are immigrants who arrived years ago and who return for one or the National Park Service's least-known and most disturbing tours. They find a ghostly wreck, for when the government closed the center in 1954 the vandals and the elements took oveT. The park service halted the deterioration and started the tours when it arrived in the mid-1960s. However, the agency lacked the money to reverse years of neglect on the 27.5-acre island. Now that may change. The park se rvice has announced a plan to enlist individuals, businesses and private organizations in a multimillion-dollar restoration of the island. Park service officials say private developers would be allowed to restore the island's buildings for use as offices or shops, as long as they conform with the island's history as the spot where 16 m i llion immigrants entered this country between 1892 and 1954. When Esther Bugajsky Sherr arrived at the huge, towered palace of an immigration building in 1921 she was a 9-year-old refugee from the poverty of a rural Polish town with neither electricity nor indoor plumbing. ·'It all looked marvelous then, especially after Europe," said Mrs. Sherr as the ferry carried her closer to the island in New York Harbor, just north or the Statue of Liberty. "It was so big, so new." But al the dock a park service ranger warned Mrs. Sherr and other tour members lhat the immiaration bulldin1 was now a dilapidated shell with broken windows, peeling paint and cracking plaster. That, however. did not prepare Mrs . Sherr, now of Englishtown, N .J ., for the s ilence; a room that once reverberated with tne babble ol a dozen languages now was quiet, except for the echo of footsteps. The ranger explained that Ellis Island was not a required stop for alJ newcomers. "If you came first-class or tourist we trusted you because you had enough money for a ''This t h e government decided whether they wanted you is u where s or not. '' ticket," she said. .. But 1r you came third-class or steerage, we had questions about you: were you a lunatic or a pauper or a criminal?" The tour moved further inside the building to a reception room where Mrs. Sherr was once led ("This way. move along!" the immigration ofricers bad snapped ), where private concessionaires had offered to check immigrants' baggage. ·'In this room yqu first had to decide, 'Do I Ci'ust Ameri- cans?'" the ranger said. For some. trusting would have been a mistake : items disappeared from more than one bag. And on occasion the currency exchange dispensed candy wrappers in lieu of dollars. . After that Mrs. Sherr walked up the broad staircase to the second floor . where fates were determined in the Great Hall. She and her family had made a big gamble by coming to America -a ticket cost a year's farm wage -and this is where they learned whether it bad paid off. Mrs. Sherr took a seat on a long wooden bench like the one on which she sat years ago while waiting to join a maze or 1nspection lines called "the cattlerun." She could see the Manhattan skyline through the hall's wide arched windows. ''This is where the U.S. government decided whether they wanted you or not," said the ranger, sweeping her arms toward the great room's ceiling three stories above. A doctor nicknamed "the six-second specialist" bad.given Esther a quick check for heavy breathing, limping, coughing, l a .in b a i r a n d o lb e r manifestations of disease. If the doctor made a chalk mark on her coat ( E for eye, L for limp, and so forth> it meant he had found a symptom worth further inspection. But he made none and she moved on for part two or the exmination. in which immigration officials cross- checked information collected by the steamship companies on which immigrants booked passage. At some point during that process. Mrs . Sherr's maiden name , Bugajsky , became Baglinsky. Another member of the tour, Pearl Fis hman, an noun ced that her grandfather's name. Topilov, turned into Topilorr. and her father-in-law, Fishcov. became Fishman. Legend to the contrary. most immigrarlts passed through the Isle of Tears with ease; although 20 percent were detained for further examination, only 2 percent or those who came were turned back. More than a third of the people living in the United States arrived via Ellis, or have relatives who did. Hours after they entered the building, Mrs. Sherr and her family were en route to a meeting · with her father. who arrived a year earlier and settled in Paterson, N.J . They were In America. "ISLE OF TEARS" -This is Ellis Island from the air. For a half century. it was entry port of "the tired. the poor. the huddled masses" .. ~-..... or Europe and elsewhere. Now it is a poorly attended national monument. • ID U.S. cities continues its upward spiral By tbe Auoclated Press Jostling aboard a crowded bus on New Year's Eve. a San Antonio, Texas college student and another rider argued briefly over whether the student should say "Excuse me." Moments later. the student lay # dead, shot to death. The homicide was a grim and fitting final statement of the growing violence Cn 1981 in San Antonio -where the 182 murders last year were the most ever. According to an informal Associated Press survey, murder totals in many major American cities were the same or higher in 1981 compared with 1980. Officials in most of those cities blame murder on drugs, liquor, prostitution. family arguments and handguns, but grope for explanations of why homicide rates go up or down from year to year. "I don't think there's a trend.',. police Capt. E.H. Watson said in Greenville, S.C .. where the murder rate nearly doubled last year -from seven to 13. "These people just happened to get together in a pool room or liquor house and got mad," he said. Final FBI statistics will i ndicate there were 25,000 murders across the country last yea r if the trend toward increased violent cri me continues. In 1980, there were more than 23,000 murders in the United States -one every 23 minutes - and the FBI said the nation's murder rate increased by 4 percent during the first six months of 1981. Dade County, Fla. remained "Murder Capital, USA," with 621 homicides during 1981. The total was an increase of 48 murders over 1980, when the Miami area led the nation with 33 murders for every 100,000 people. llUflDIR VICTIM -Ambulance attendants ----Brooklyn home when a reputed crime hood the body S/I a woman k1Ued in her and hia aon ~1ht refu1e from 1unmen. 1 Nationally. the FBI says, there are about 10 murders per 100,000 population. FBI statistics say that three of four murder victims are male, more than 40 percent are black. and more lhan 60 percent of all murders are committed with guns, usually handguns. More than one-third of the people convicted of murder are between the ages of 18 and 24. Murder totals for 1981 were up in New York; Boston ; Chicago; San Franci sco ~ St. Louis ; Baltimore; Las Vegas, Nev.; Jacksonville, Fla .; Baton Rouge, La.; Norfolk, Va.; Columbus. Ohio: Providence, R. l .• andGreenville.S.C .. New York City's 1,833 murders, the highest total in the country, included 21 cab drivers, most or them slain in robbery attempts. Murder figures remained about the same in Denver; Pittsburgh; New Orleans; Jackson, Miss.; Topeka, Kan .. and Mobile, Ala. But homicide totals dropped in Los Angeles; Detroit; Atlanta; Philadelphia; Salt Lake City; Indianapolis; Nashville, Tenn.; Little Rock, Ark.; Omaha, Neb.; Portland, Ore.. and Oklahoma City. Totals were up in Houston but down in Dallas, up in Columbus but down in Dayton, Toledo and Cincinnati; up in Syracuse but down in Buffalo, N.Y. "There's no answer, any mo~ than a couple of years a10 when lt went up,•· said Joseph McCarthy, a homicide offtcer In Buffalo, where the murder rate , dropped by nearly baJf. In Miami, authorities said the lncreue in crime -blamed last year lar1ely on the lnllux of Cuban refugees -baa been hei1btened by economic conditions. ••With the unemployment, there's a lot of robberies - armed robberies -and a lot of people are killed ln robtMry attemptl,'1 Jobn Joaea, a D8de County spokesman, said. In Hou ston, another f aal·•rowtna ctity wblcb laat ,ear WU HCOlld only t.o Miami in per-capita murder rate, Pollee Chief B.K. Jolmloft 1ald tbe 10 perttnt Increase In bomiddll la 1111 ''ii a reflecUon of tbe IOClet1 we live ln. T!MI more people you ba•• ~tauana,tlle •• • Murder Rates Climb--------. 1.821 1.833 LoaAnoeles _.028 Chicago -- 863 174 --~ Hou a ton . . o.c»County (ll&Mni .,.., ~73 --._..121 Detroit --~2 1980 ~7 -1981 Delle• -= St. Louis - 42 272 Sen Antonio _._171 -.112 JKkaonvltle Fla -I~~ Boston -191 100 • Unofficial Totals A ' t .,. ... :I CLIMBING -Table s hows murder rates are the same or higher in major American cities. according to a survey in1 1980 and l981. more violence you wlll have." Even in New Hampshire, where the murder total for tbe whole state was 25 in 1981 compared wj_th 20 ln 1910, authorities blamed the increase on population growth. But in Los Angeles, where the 898 homicides last year represented an 8.5 percent drop from lB, authorities said the decrease was due to better assignment of police ofricers. William Booth, spokesman ror Loa An&4!les' pollce, said the chpartment increased the number of offlcen aaalped to a proaram aimed at controlllna street •ani• wblcb were res ponsible ror one of five homicides in the city in 19'19 and 1980. In Cincinnati, police Detective Tom Burke said the city's 1981 murder decline was due to an empbasis on suppression of drug trade, prostitution and liquor-law violations. Murderers and their vie~ are relatives more than hai the time, but Larry Gray, be of the San Francisco cpolic homicide detail, aaJd there ls growin« trend toward viol in casual meetln1a lnvolvln• prostitution, druas --or a above on a crowded bus. Crhnelawtoughen~~ BO~TON CAP) -Anyone bouslq coau>&ex ror the eaderty. ~onvJcted more than once ol ••iolent crlmea a1aln1t. people o.ter 85 will be aubject to a .mandatclq pltlon term uDidlr a bill l&ID8d bf llauacbaetta Gov. t:award J. Kina. i "Ot1r elderly are •titled to Wa apedal protection•• Kbal· :.1ald in lipln1 tb• bill at a Orange Cout DAU.;Y PILOT!Ntdnetday. January 13, 1982 •ANN LANDERS •BOB GREENE •HOROSCOPE Wedding a 'mockery' .,, ......... ALL SMILES -Former Pres ident Jimmy Carter and his wife Rosalynn smile as they pose with Atlanta's new mayor. Andre w Young < rightl , after they paid a visit in his office this week. Civil rights leader Rev. · J esse Jackson is in the background. ,...-~~~~~~~----,r---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_;_~--. frOM babv11tting to window woshing tht douified s.viclt Dnc1cry ... you fllld hllp. eon.At fht S-0. Dirlctoly Ill tht..Jlosslfltds Of fht I -1.rnqau.11 • CATl!IUNO • COCKTAILS TO OINNElt • PICNICS • O"'ICE PAltTI l!S • CLAM8AKl.S • OAAND OPENINGS • WEDDINGS • SHOWEil$ • 9Alt ~ITlVAHS Serving all of Southern CaUfoniia AFFAIRS UNLIMITED DAN MAACHEANO 1714) 531--0891 I At a FREE Smokenders meeting we'll show you how. C'.,,,,,.,,~.,,,,..-"-I._.-.....;;,.._........., I I Give us sixty minutes to prove that you can quit smoking. Forever. Easily. Without scare tactics. "cold 11 I turkey withdrawal ". hypnosis. "climbing the walls". shock treatments. w willpower. . . . 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 I world have already quit smoking at Smokenders. I Hundreds of ma1or corporations and organizations-including the U.S. Public Health Service (part of I I HEWI have already chosen Smokenders to help their own employees put out their cigarettes for good . I So 101n us this week for a FREE Smokenders meeting. And bring your cigarettes. (You can leave your I I willpower at hOme ) I I ~aoo I MONDAY WEDNESMf I I January 11 Jlfllary 13 Jaruwy l4 i s.;:·;;:"";~~M Lono=· .. ;;·;: • ...;="";,;,M ! HOLIDAY INN HY ATI HOUSE MARRIOTT HOTEL 1 I 7000 Beach Blvd. .6400 E. Pacific Coast Hwy. 000 Newport Center Drive I I ~e~~h 71~d. Exit) J '----------cuP AllD SAVE AS A REMINDER OF DATE. TIME ANO LOCATION.:.;.--:;.:.:~-.:.:, Metropalitan Opera National Council W~stern Regional Audi t i ons ORANGE COUNIY DISTRICT · Newport Harbor Htgb School Saturday, January 16, 1982 10:00 A.Me -Public Invited - A P\lbllo Sertlc. 8p0neorthlp of tfte Orange Coatt Delly Piiot DEAR ANN LANDERS: l have been Invited to the weddlng of a couple in their late 20s. They have been living together for four years. The ceremony will be in a church. The invitation reads "formal, .. which means white veil. long gown, all the trimmings. The reception and dinner dance following are sure to be elegant, with champagne toasts and a seven-tier wedding cake. I am annoyed by all this Cakery. If aJI they want is to make it legal. they can go to a justice of the peace. The planned extravaganza makes a mockery of virgin brides and decent people everywhe re. What a cheap way to get dishes and appliances. When I told my husband I refuse to attend this fiasco. he said he would go without me. Since you are a person of high moral standards. I hope you will support my position and print this letter OLD-FASHJONED IN SYRACUSE DEAR O.F .: I ha..-e said repeatedly that living together before marriage is a ~mmer. However, I have no wish to punish those who do not choose to live according to my guidelines. I have attended some or tht> "mockeries" and had a wonderful lime. I hope you will do the same. ( P.S. I suspect a couple who have been living together for four years already havt> dishes and appliances>. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Mv husband is 53. attractive. intelligent and s uccessful. He has had a roving eye for the last 20 years and bedded down dozens of women in our social ~roup. as well as wives of his colleagues. This "original thinker" ins is t s marriage runs counter to the instincts or the human male. and r e ligions that promote monoga my are har mful because they produce guilt. He claims the sex drive is God·given and was meant t o be pleasurable. and anyone who doesn't use it for that purpose is missing the real meaning of life. He also believes women were intended lo be monogamous because the~· bear the children. so they should STAY AT HOME and take care of the brood. l 'vc learn~d to live with his fooli shness. and it no longer bothers me that he has s lept with hair the country club. But, frankly. Ann. I think he 's nuts . What do you think'? WESTCHESTER Wl'FE DEAR WIFE: Since you have learned to live wtth his f oollshness, does 11 matter what I think? You say be•s nuts. I won't argue. DEAR ANN LANDERS: In August 1980 I weighed 350 pounds. I am in my 30s. 5 reet 4 inches and today I weigh 190. I have been under a doctor's supervision. My weight has remained at 190 for several weeks because I can't stick to my diet. My doctor suggested a therapist. After several sessions at a FREE mental health clinic. I learned that deep down I am afraid to be thin. The fat provided a protective wall. With thatl>rotection falling away. 1 feel naked and defenseless. Now that I r ecognize my true feelings . m y therapist and l are trying to gel to the cause or the rear. 1 hope all you fatties out there who get stuck as I did will cons ider counseling. M)· goal is 130 by s ur:nmer. and 1·m determined .to make it. -TRENTON. N.J . DEAR TRENT : Your therapist's theory has been scoffed at by some experts, bul it is. I believe. valid and I hopt> the fatties listen. POT SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT Wife prefers her role ··who says il 's exciting to work in the business world? Maybe on television or something it is . But all it was was s pending ti m e with people who we ren 't very interesting. Their big deal was the sales meetings. where they'd all want to go out and drink afterward. Is that what I wanted to s pend the rest of my life doing?" The woman talking is 31 years old. She was an advertis ing e xecutive with a manufacturing firm until s he was 28: then she got married , and no w s he as a housewife with two young children. My previous column was about how large numbers of women are deciding that they would rather have marriages than careers: today this one woman will talk about the decisions that led her to her new job as housewife. "Basically. l just didn't want to have to go to work every morning." she said. "I had to do it then. I was just out of eollege. and all of these opportunities were opening up for women, so 1 had to come to the city and get a good job. It was expected of me: 10 years ago l was one of the few women getting a business degree at my university. .. EVERYONE WAS SAVING that it was so great that women now had the same chances as men. But what was the point? What was the big deal to taking the bus through the sleet and the rain. wearing your overcoat and boots, seeing the same jerks and saying hello to them, sitting around the office . . . .what's fun about that? Trying to gather some people to go to lunch. or putting 50 cents in the machine to get some yogurt to eat at your desk. then riding the bus back and It's dark when you get home ... · • >.$ soon as I had a husband I knew l didn •t want to work anymore. If someone told you that you didn't have to work. would you? Tell me the truth. 1f someone told Y<>U that you got to stay home for the rest of your life except when you didn't feel like staying home, and you got an allowance ... wouldn't you take it?" She said that she is aware that she gave up a promising career in order to be a full-time wife and mother. She sajd that she does not reel she cheated herself in any way. "I knew ex-.cUy what \he situation was,'' she said. "They Uked my work a lot at mr company. It was made very cle•r to me that ii l worked hard, I could be my boss tomeday. Well ... who wanted to be him?" SHE SAID THAT ONE ol the major alle1ed reuona for remalnin1 a slnale career woman -the av1llablllty of 1 attraet!ve men -dtd not appeal to her: at all. , 0 1 c' ··1·m Just ao 1lad I'm not alnlle. I HY that to my husband and he Just looks at me. 8ul I think about all the time that alnale women apeDcl in ban and ln other places tryt to meet m,... I think you'll 808 Glffllf have to agree. there are more neat women than nt>at men. Most me n are jt>rks: the occasional man is neat. but most are jerks. You're so lucky if you find one you can marrv. ·:Being a single woman . you dress up. you wail for a man to show up at your apartment. you open the door. and there's another complete jerk waiting for ~·ou . Why do you do it'? Because people tell you that you have to be going out more. They say to take the date with the Jer·k because maybe you'll meet someone else nice while you're out. "I'm 31. and I'm gelling crow's feet. Those little lines around your eyes? I'm glad I have a husband. Who wants to date an old bag?" She laughed. "No offense to me. But who does'? At least your husband's stuck with you." She said that when sbe runs into contemporaries. and even younger women. who are single and pursuing careers. she detects a note or jealousy on their part that probably wouldn't have been there a decade ago. "I TALK TO WOMEN OF 26 or Z7 who say lo me, ·J don't think I'll ever have a baby.' They aren't going with a man. and they're figuring the timing of the whole process ln their minds -first they have to go with someone, then they have to get engaged. then they have to get married. and then they have kids. I see the most successful young women. and I can tell that they feel they're running out of time. ·· 1 know that when I was working and single, I was jealous of my friends who were married. I'd go home at night after my day at work and fix myself a C'-P of soup ... and then I'd go to my marrled friends' houses. and there would t>e yelling and screaming from the kids, but ll would be kind of nice. When you're sin1le you can. have a perfectly beautiful, perfectly qui~t. apartment. But the onty noise in the whole house is yours. "I see these girls on the street all made up, and we-arin1 tlaese hi1h. uncomfortable heels. trylna to look preU~. l don't have to do that. I can wear ftat shoes. I'm so alad I'm not tbem. They talk about their Jobe. and the men tbey're dating ... and I know that they would be me if they could. . "Basically I've dedded that what my mother had wasn't so Md •ft• an. It sounds sort of queer to.~,••1 you're a hOusewife. but I love it. I eOuld be at wOrk thls afternoon, but do r.ou know what I'm 1oin1 to do ? I'm 10 n1 to walda. ·11r. Rosen' NellbborhoOd' With my cblldren. We alng alonf." ~ :.. • t , b ,,,__ - /·13 ....... ,_.,.,...,...,..,,...,. '1'1 Uk• to lbtnk we would have met even ltlhere hldn·~ been a Barker, Findlay, Farblns. and Cardle merter! '' lnject~ons hard to give DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I have two reasens for my anxlety. Ttae first and most lmporant ls that> my husband bas lung cancer. That ls worry enough. But be bas developed compUcations in hls spine whlclJ ca-..se severe pain. Tf.Jerefore, his doctor has prescribed morphine which I administe r by hypodermic when the pain gets bad. This is the second reason for my I a-.xlety. Jt takes a tremendous amount or willpower on my part to give him bis I injections. The reason is that I have t always been afraid or the needle. Giving .. m hls injections for pain almost makes .,ae break out in hives . l Is there any other way? It breaks my ••rt to see hlm suffer. I'll keep on with b,ls l.pjectlons of morphine as necessary. After au, my concern ls of minuscule Importance as compared to what he is (doing through. -MRS. T. ' I , DEAR MRS. T .: Refer vour husband·s *ctor to a report in The· New England JPurna1 of Medicine <Dec. 3. 19811 by Dr. ' T .D. Walsh and associates of Sydenham. England. They call it Oral Morphine for Relief of Chronic Pain From Cancer. . They be I i e v e t h a t r e.p e a t e d administration of oral morphine even· four hours is the treatment of choice for severe c hronic pain in advanced cancer: that morphir e given by hypodermic is necessary in only a s mall minoritv of patients. · The doctors base their conctusions on treating 1,772 patients since 1977. Cancer pain. they believe. is the only type of pain for wbich prolonged opiate therapv is appropriate. ~ith th~ oral type of therapy. chronically ill pat1ent,s do not require repeated intramuscular injections. As I suggested. Mrs. T .. take this up with your doctor. FOR MRS. Y.: The benzoates vou re:.id about on the labels are preservatives for such food products as jellies. baked goods and others. Dr. Steincrohn welcomes reader questions but is sorry he cannot answer personal mail Letters of widest interest will be answered m his column. Send your questions to him in care of the Daily Pilot . P.O. Box 1560. Costa .Mesa. Cali/. 92626. 0 Variei¥ ~pices reading taste SAN FRANCISCO -Those of you out there who have been so fortunat.e as to see the silent version of ··Ben Hur'' with Francis X. Bushman and Ramon Novarro. or the more recent version with Charlton Heslop, already know what the word desultory means. and why. In the fa med chariot race scene where the young Jew Ben Hur vindicates his honor. as I recall it, there was a lot of leaping from horse to horse. These chariot jockeys were called desultors. Thus the present meaning of .. jumping from one thing t<> another: without rational or logical connect ion. rambling. hast)-. . loose." The perfect example of the desultory is a barroom conversation. · Therein the connection becomes looser and looser as the spirits flow. J'HE OTHER DAY I heard a bunch of the boys range from Ronald Reagan. to the marriage or Joe DiMaggio and Marilyn Monroe, to WilJie McCovey, to what gin was made of. and on into tbe ni ght. Batting averages, the casting of movies. and the names of horseowners figure largely in these discussions. . ~h~se discuss ions are utterly mfur1atmg lo those who are li stening in. involuntarily: but they seem to serve some importance to the participants' some felt need . I think. after hea ring hundreds of these exercises in m y time. this need is lone liness. The rattling away of trivialities is the sam e as women talking in a market place. save that it is not rich in the gossip of the day -j us t desultory bits or information . I ONCE HAD OCCASION, a s a reporter in New York. to be assigned to the job of WCJtching the great actor John ·Barrymore for a number or days. Actually I was spying on him because the publis he·r o r my paper thought Barrymore was playing Romeo td one of his girls. This turned out not to be so: but in the process I became quite friendly with the actor. He was a great reader of books. of which-he had a complete set . as Irwin Cobb remarked in another connection. He would sit in his suite in the Whitehall fiotel in upper Manhattan with maybe IO books spread out in front of him on the floor. He would devote 15 minutes to one. five to a nother. an hour to a third. This interested me greatly. for I too was a desultory reader. even in those days. Right now my bed is s pread with about 10 books. into each of which I dip for short periods of lime. The only writing I am about to finish is a magazine article. or a thriller from whose seductions I cannot tear myself. TIUS IS THE RESULT of having a rabbity rather than a concentrated .mind. The American critic Van Wvck Brooks has something good on this s ubject : ··Whoever is accustomed to r eading with a definite subject in mind cannot long endure desultory reading. A s ubject acts as a magnet attracting. in all one reads. the facts and ideas that are relevant to it. and this creates an excitement in the mind that makes all purposeless reading tame and insipid. And yet what a pity this is. for it is d esultory reading th.at devel9p·s one's taste. It is fortunate that when we are young we are unfocused " Taurus gets results 4 Thursday, January 14 ARIES (March 21-April 191 : Job gets done ; you could receive special commendation. Accent on basic issues. unique accomplishment s and a re-evaluation of goals .. '.fAURUS <April 20-May 20 >; Direct approach brings desired results. Accent on romantic involvement, creative endeavors. dialogue with children, speculation and new start in new direction. GEMINI <May 21-June 20>: Focus on do mestic environme{lt. security measures. hpme and older family members. Learning p,ocess is stimulated by teachini. sharing ~~ow ledge. CA.NCEll <June 21-July ~2>: Some relatives are confused. highstrung and' Wbuld like to involve yQu in what amounts tb a foolish dis pute. Know it. maintain t>"lance and sense of humor. 1 LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>: Financial roadblock could be removed. You locate m la1lng it-ems and I ind ways of iJJcreasing Income potential. It will be nec~aary to .~orce policies and to revise materlat J 1 VllGO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22>: You'll be at right place at cruci•l moment. Sense or "rception la hel1htened; Inquiries will r,a ult in favorable re1ponae1. Take IJalUatlve, make ehan1es and analyse ~atertal. UBllA (Sept. 23-0et. 211 : You're on bt\nk ot •m~ant dlteOVery -f amlly Mid bi Involved and 1tian Aft blaefttl. You oliWcl be V.ated to a '90UMIMt dinner. BY SIDNEY OMARA Focus o n art, luxur y a nd s pecial accommodations . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 >: Aura of romance and illusion tend to dominale scenario. Some prom;ses, made in all sincerity. may lack substance. Know it: protect your own interests and .clarify position. . SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22-0ec. 21 >: Focus on business. promotiona l activities. sales meetings and positive opportunity for career advancement. Your theories · are tested, you •could prove a major point. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan.' 191: Focus o n potential, long-range plans, communlcatlbns from those in other geographical areas. You aaln spiritual inal&hts, you learn which people to trust, ~hlch penons to vlew with Jaund~ eye. . . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb . 18 1: Maintain Independence, steer C!-lear of involvement wltb tmotional lndividual who would have you aet on lmpulle. FOcUI alao on financlal 1t1teinent1 and &be u1eovertn1 of lnformatlon prevloutlY ooacealtd. PllCES (Feb. ttoM.nh IO>: Follow tbroillll on buach -.-of dlrectlaa will be r.ed. Accent on cocatraeti. lepl rt1bt1 mt pmntdtMll. lftdtYllUI WhO akled ln eat wll onee •••ln ~ available. Orange Cout OAJLY PfLOT/Wednelday, JanuW13. 1912 IT'S SUMMER SOMEWHERE -Sunbathers ' headed for the beach Tuesday in Sydney. Australia as hot weather bakes the country·s east coas t. It's been hot for several davs in the Sydney a rea. just the opposite oi the United States. on our entire stock of fall & holiday dresses & sportswear. Sale starts Thurs., Jan. 14th. Outstanding broker opporbinity in San Clemente. 21h% commission plus $2,500 to selling office. Get all the details when you join us at The Pinnacle for a Broker Open House Tomorrow, .January 14th from 2 to 5 p.m. Visit Orange County's flnest coastal residences and learn about our superb financing that almost makes these homes sell themselves: • .30·year flxed rate loans at • f'lnancing for buyer of current home 12~% (1.3 APR) • 2nd trust deeds • Guaranteed trade-In • Equity loans ... ' S-gn up for our broller drawing and you could win one of three $100 cash prizes. Only 6 homes remain In this llmlted edition community, which offers exquisite views from quiet cul-de-sac streets high ~bove the sea. Homes have 2 bedrooms or 2 bedrooms plus bonus room, with elegant Mediterranean styling. soaring cathedral celllngs, spa·llke master baths. Indoor atrlums. and so much more. • -ll!ICMfl9 .... • t "He IS saying goodbye, Grandmo, but he's just waving." MARMADt:KE by Brad Anderson "Hold your fire! It's Marmaduke with a convoy!" Jt:DGE PARKER ,.,, ''George, when n you gcMng to atilt tlllJng youqett Mrioualy?" DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum . ~ NANCY---THAT'9 A STRANGE-LOOKING GLASS --~-OF WATER ~~ 1-15 GOaDO ·~s TAl<l~'A MlH." THERE'S RANDALL ... JUST LEAVING l.INOA MAY'5 DRE5 51NC:, ROOM• by Harold Le Ooux I DON'T TH~ HE'~ 5E£N ~! :.IU&T A MINUTE AND I'll 00 6ET HIM. Ml50 SPENCER! GARt'lt:LD 51 Lagend 52Cellndlr lbbr. Ft:NK\' •INKERBE"N 0 1aL. ME. I WHA'T MAKES c.)00 1'41NK ~'RE Q(WJFIED 'I> BE AA AIR 1MFAC. . ~R~ by Jim Davis r.'fl'l~~-- (:it)()() E'A:t&l~b. "IR.~! I .JOs1' WA.&1'£.0 'fo1tU. ~ ..... ~ .... I ~ I Ol'1to&'l ~"E. -.00. i)) 'f~ 1\l~E. WI\..\.~ ~ ME'tECR S~lt I~ 'f~E. ~~~ 9'\ES ~1' ~Uh ~~ '4<X> ANt> ~ ~\. .. ..ioot.O CJll~f. 10 · JOtM -. 1tl o&stlY\NC:. ... ! ' by Gus Arriola -, ----ft# ·by Tom Batiuk - J ----------------------.. '6lobe' nominations made • BEVERLY HILLS, <AP) -Two lntah period pl"GducUOm -"Ract.lme" and "Rtdl" - nceivecl MVIG eomlna~ons each u tbt mQvle kudoe Muon ktcked orr with the announcement ot the Hollyweod Portico Prea AaaoelaUon awarda COAtenden. F0Uowto1 cloeely ln the 39tb aMual Golden Globe fllm nomlnatlona Thursday were "On Golden Pond" with aix nomlnat.lona and "Arthur" with nve. Awards will be presented ln a CBS telecast Jan. 30. The m.ior film nominations: Molton olcture-drama -"The French Lieutenant's Woman," "On Golden Pond," "Prince orthe C1ty." "Ra1Ume," "Reds." Motion picture, comedy or musical - ''Arthur " "Four Seasons " ''Pennies from Heaven:" "S.O.B . .'' "Zoot Suit.'' · Actress, drama -Sally Field, "Absence of Malice"; Katharine Hepburn, "On Golden Pond"; Diane Keaton, "Reds"; Sissy Spacek, "Ranedy Man"; Meryl Streep, "The French Lieutenant's Woman." Actor, dram a -Warren Beatty, "Reds" ; Henry Fonda, "On Golden Pond"; Timothy Hutto~t."Taps"; Burt Lancaster, "Atlantic City": Treat wilUams, "Prince or the City." Actress, comedy or musical -Blair Brown, "Continental Divide"; Carol Burnett. "Four Seasons··; Jill Clayburgh, "First Monday in October"; Liza MinneW, "Arthur"; Bernade~te Peters, "Pennies from Heaven." Actor, comedy or musical -Alan Alda , ''Four Seasons"; George Hamilton, "Zorro the Gay Blade"; Steve Martin, "Pennies from Heaven"; Walter Matthau, "First Monday in October"; Dudley Moore, "Arthur.'' Supporting actress -Jane Fonda, "On Golden Pond"; Joan Hackett, "Only When I Laugh," Kristy McNlchol, "Only When LLaugh," Maureen Stapleton, '·Reds"; Mary Steenburgen . "Ragtime." MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE REIJS IPGI At 8:00 NoEaanomv~ No,_ ~DFRml HEAVDCPGI Shows et 7:15 9:20 llESTJUCTEO Shows It Il l NIEMll•DMIRI Uncll< l71eq .. r"octomt>Any1n9 7 :00 9:00 ,._1 °' Ad\111 a.-o..,, No P- AU. a ID AHO mi Flt.MS llECEIVE llif SEAl Of' TliE MOllOH PICTURE COOE Of' 8EL' ll(GUUI TIOH rol le·rskates • walker~ .oys •wcpoons•••• scooters*hot rods*coupes• trailers*hard tops*convert- lbles*motor homes*lawn mowers* I imos •corparate headquarters •garden carts Model A's•••• •typingtables· wheelbarrows• recreational vehicles *golf carts*model trains~bikes If it's got wheels you'll move it faster ina Daily Pilot classified ad.Call 642-5678 and a friendly ad-visor will help you turn . your wheels 1ntocash. l c::z:::. :;.;CE~OF~:::ml llllU.ICE (PGI Shows It 7:00 9:20 T 1mo~t~y Hutton T#SIPGI Cennonbalt Run (PG) John 81lu1tt1 NEIGll.,_ I RI Tim• .. ndlh l"GI .,,,.., I c~:;:,M in ..... BR IPGI c::N:1n:1:T:o:F:iv~•=l=PG:l::::~t I Luis V11dez' ZOOT a.HT IRI Boulevard N19hts (RI ~" RAIDERS OF THE UST MK CPGI & '"'"" Qorelon (~) Wilt D1snrt01 CIMJEMU.A CGI& Swi•hmily Ao ·nt0n IOI .., ........... A quaint castle on the Italian Riviera 11 the locale for this witty exPoM of the theatre. Thia laugn+mlnute romp, full of frivolity and ribald repertH, is ... comedy for ttleltr.i<Mtna. ......C MOW Pl.A YIM6:..-- -,_. 12 ..... ,. 14 . Mainstage Curtain Times: 'Tuesd$Y-Saturday at 8 p.m. Sunday at 7;30 p.m. Sat. and Sun. Matinees at 2:30 p.m. Limited Se8ttng Still Available ... SuP,portlnl actor -J a met Coco, "Only When I L1u1h ·: John Gktlaud •• .,Arthur"; J1ct NlcholJon, "Recla": Howard E. Rollins, "Rastime"; Orson Welles, "8utter0y." New Star of the Year -Ella&belh McGovern, "R11time": Howard E. Rolllna, "Ra1tlme"; Kathl n Turner, "Body Meat'" Raebel Ward, "Sharky'1 Machlne"; Cral1 Wa11on, "Four Friends"; Pia Zadora, "Butterfly." Forel1n rtlm -"Atlantic City" <Canada-France), "Tbe Boat" <Germany>, "Chariots ol Fire" <Great Britain), "Gallipoli" <Australia), "Pixote" Bra Ill. M.ior TV nominations: Drama series -CBS' "Dallas," ABC's "Oynuty.'' .ABC's "Hart to Hart," NBC's "HUI Street Blues,'' CBS' "Lou Grant." Comedy or musical series -CBS" "M·A-S-H.'' NBC's "Barbara Mandrell and the Mandrell Slaters," ABC's "Love Boat," CBS' "Private Benjamin" and ABC's "Taxi." Actress, drama series -Barbara Bel Geddes, "Dallas"; Joan Collins, "Dynasty"; Linda Evans, • "Dynasty"; Morgan Fairchild, "Flamingo Road"; Linda Gray, "Dallas"; Stefanie Powers. "Hart to Hart." Actor, drama series -Ed Asner, "Lou Grant"; John Forsythe, "Dynasty"; Larry.· Hagman, "Dallas": Tom Selleck, "Magnum 1 P.I. ";Daniel J . Travanti, "Hlll Street Blues.'' Actress comedy or musical series -Loni Anderson, "WKRP in Ci ncinnati"; Eileen Brennan, "Private Benjamin"; Bonnie Franklin, "One Day at a Time"; Barbara Mandrell, "Barbara Mandrell and the Mandrell Sisters"; Loretta Swit , "M-A-S-H." Actor, comedy or musical series -Alan Alda, M·A·S·H"; James Garner, "Bret Maverick"; Judd Hirsch, "Taxi", Gavin McLeod, "Love Boat"; Tony Randall, "Love, Sidney" Mini-series or motion picture for TV -CBS' "Bill," ABC's "East of Eden," ABC's "The Long Wa y Home," ABC's "Masada" and NBC's "Murder in Texas." .Humor and eroticism in a tender and enta1aining work~ I. Geaorge C. Scott In "TAPS" (PG) "TIME BANDITS" (PG) ll. Plus "heartbeeps" "ARTHUR" Plus Ill. "ONLY WHEN I LAUGH" (A) NOW PLAYING AMC.-MMl ...... ,.WA OrlftOll37 03'0 llrt1Uts339 •lllJAMI UIO ua ClllOllA Newpon 8Ncft 873 8350 WHuntnll• '93 0548 EDW••• IOVTM COAIT rwa uac1nCM11A 0r.,. 634 3911 IDWAllDI WOOOlllllMH Irvine 11u1 551 oes5 T ... CDfnll Cl•MH Cos1a Mesa (114) 751 4184 F4=--=:~~-:.=:..:.:.:::-.. J ::.'=:.=:"..:n Che¥v ..... tomlllle thl• new yeer the funniest everl Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/WednHday, January 13, 1982 -=· -~ -- . *BARGAIN MATINl!l!S * MDnday thru laturday All Performances before 5:00 PM (Ea~pt Speclll Enpgements and Holld1y1) '" Mtkf OA MA,l M11000 ol 10 .. cront LA MIRADA WALIC·IH 99•·2•00 -c.~·---"TAPS" - ................ .__ ••f\AIDl!lll Of THE LOST AllK" ·-·----................. --~--°"---------..,-,_.., ...... :--+----- -":::':'::' :i..--c :-.::..7 "llEOS" ..... ·-..... - ,MA-•·MUf~ "dUNCt Of' MALICE" IHI ·----- LAKEWOOD CENTER WALK IN ..,.......,.. ............. "NEIOHeOftS" "-I ,..._t::M..~ .............. ---· ··1HAllKY'I MACHINC'' 1111 , ............... ~ .... Focuny or Con<ll•wooo 213/531·9110 --·--M.1.81 -.. ~.--­"TAN'' -.-. ......... ,_ I .. RAIO«lll Ofl THE LOST UK .. LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAl~ IN -----"C:MAIUOT8 Of' ...... "' ..... _ ........... . tJl<.,UNJI .... ___ _ c··auOOV, IUOOY" lllll ·-.-.-.. ,ATPNTY"' .. ........ so COAST W ALK IN Soulll Coo11 Hlwoy al lf~woy 494-1514 ·=.l(:.~~.:.r~ __ .... "THE OAIAT IANTlNI .. ----MT.--_.,.._ __ ---·-·-"NllOHeC>ftl"' 1111 -·---"''·----·-·- .... .., •. ,..., o..-e·15 "' \••6:00 , .... ,".,. .. e·•s IMPORTAlllT NOTIC(' t tm30nREN UNOlR 12 FREE! " ........ w ......... ,~,. '" 5· • Sal h• ""' 4:30,. CtNf..A $OOOIO • TOU41 ... CAii llAOIO 1$ l'OUll $l'tltll(ll 1• "° Uf CM IWllO wlTlt CHl"OI ACa:SSDllY IOSITOI --"" l'Qll'lllll.l 1• 1tU ~ 1J11W1.as a~""' MOO ANJll<fll\A ANAHEIM DRIVE ·IN ''**"'°' fl 011 .... on St 179-9150 --·-~ .. T~ fOUA SUSONS" -~ .. "ENDLESS LOVl:"ge (A) Clllf II SOUllO eu' ...... PAP~ BUENA PARK ORIV( IN l•ncOlfl ,.,,. w .. 1 Of •non 1214070 ~ ........... lr.M,,L., .... .. ABSENCE OF MALICE" (PO) -"STIR CRAZY"' I'll Cllll fl SOI.I ttO ~.-... ..,..,. "'MANIAC MANSION .. flll -.. LIVINO NIOKT'MARE'" flll c .... ··~11~ --· ··MOO«llN ,Rotll.Olll'" ... -.. NINE TO flW" 1111 . ~Ill NA I .. W. LINCOLN ORIVE·IN Tie Tml --TOn&.L ne , ..... .. OHOST ITOllr 1111 -L•ncoln JI•• We" ot Knou .. THE CHANOELINO"' flll 121·•070 I 81.lllJll"" ·~=c~:.~::-... Son 01900 ffW\' ot "°911""'11 (So I f61•2 .. 1 CtN( JI SOIJllO .,.,. '"°;;ti;;f --I --·-M.L.I• '"' .. 1111:.;1" 1911 "llAIDllll OF THI! LOST ARK" --"ITlll CRAZY .. 1111 "fLAIH O°"DON" -Clllt ·fl 10U110 Cllof 11 sou-<> __ _ AMllllCAN QRJOINAL -ICMYA191D\' .. ZOOT IUIT" 1111 .. MANIAC MANSION" 1111 --"IHARKV'I ~" 1111 ··uv1NO NIOHTMAlll" t111 Ctlll •11 CM fl SOVllO " ... ~ .. LA HABRA 11~·1vt 1N --c. .-n. -llllmMI "TA,.H,,. ----o _."" a -"" "THI!. CANNONMU llUN'",,. 17MNI -~-~ ~ - t.. ,. ~.. t OJlANGE Ol>!Vf I~ ., .... MISSION (JQIVf IN 'ortto Al"tO ,,.... •Slot• COl••~ 551·7022 --·--.. T .. flquR~"" . . -"INOUll LO'tl'' • ·==:::::..":~•"'!-::! =:.:u..:.= C" '°...., ..0 , .... J ACCl.,,-t••a. 1 ..... ........._ •• , ., l . ................... •A ... ol ...._...,. .................. .... " ......... Mo .......... "" (IDlllMI :JUBE. TOPJERS II al lfttlMd ....._ .. .. ........... o10... .,. ...... 1 ...... ~EVENIG-. .. IE=· '"' ......... au.t;~ .... I HA.WAI PWS.o ·--·~ ' l**OAWff ~ .,..,, llCtOf ,.... lao..cm._.. MC._.. .., .... . "'* llWAT\N .. •zrm ~ I f U>WLUC\' kQrrNatlllAT ·--WORT ..... o~~ ~MCMS •• .. ~ c.,, .... def'' (1MI) 8'nlOM Slo- nOfet, YvH Mon1and. Oooupanl• ol • 1Teln - pat11nant er• terv-1• for deltb at the Nlnda ol a 1----· 7:0o '*NIWI N9CNBWI , ~~YIAGAIN MCNBWI YOU MICmD "°" rr ~: "Englend'• Fur· ntture Mualolan" and ··~·a Sweet Toottl ~." • THl&IU40. I. .IC*IR'8 Wll.D OV8'~ "The M~Aoed CNld" o-t: tam11y ther•pl•I K.eU11Mn Kerr.(AIO • MAOB-/ LBtMR MPORT Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH 0 ENT'PTAINMIENT TONIGKf An Interview with Unda e..-o1 "Oynaaty." 8THIMUPNT8 0-1: Rlcti Uttle. cm..,... • • "Wollen" ( 1981) Albert ~. Olel'9 Veno- ra. Modem pollce ~ ogyMd~P9Y­ ~ attef'llpt to •oe> an .,_..,., ol New Yori! City ~ IUl*-intellglll'lt ...... '"' Cl)INCTACULAI' ~ .. CAIM) a.-y dancer-. Juggitera. and dancing ~ .. M'°"O the ac:11 In tl'lle -- nlng of en1artalnmenl IMluriag C.tlly Lee Cro.- by with .J4m Pwry and Ro- ne Gordon. CZ)MOVW **** "E11callb•r" (1981) Nig9I Terry, Nicol w..,_.The~ol > Kint At :tM.w bftng po.- 111'14 ~ to the knlghtl ol ... ~Tlltlla.'R' ,.. ION THI TOWN ~tured: twO Loe MgelM boOll9t-tlOUllng • ,.,.. ~ ol boOlta; the -l'-c>OI~ for the current economic and pblltlcel r.i.tlonlhlP with . the SO'llM Union; • hoa91o- lel In LM Vegea wNctt .a-tleealot~. 18 fAMa.H'lllO ·LAVllllNI & 9MMJ!Y &COl#Ntf Aftet ~ out at • ~ party, Laverne worrlea about ,,. behav- klr. • EYIONL.A. FeM\red: • ~ Hiiia gun 9b0P; • looll .. whet goea Into ,_dlnO com- ll*clll llnglas; I! trlO 10 Martne L.Mld. I tMTCHGMa y•A•t•H ~ Major Fr..0- men~tothe~ tllet 1a the 40n111 to o..r Illa ~ and ftndll ,.._ FINE ROMANCE -Betty White . portraying a muc h-married soap opera writer-producer . romances Tony Ra ndall in .. Love . Sidney" ut 9 : 30 tonight <;>n KNBC <4 >. In ... """"9 '°""of~ i nDTACOOl* ~, ....... ~ • MT10NAL ~8"CW. "The llwtul" hlraotdl- nery uridel ..... lllm foot· • of lio. INrtla ...... ,. and wlty tfley .... prOYldee • -l*'tpeC> tlYe on IHI e.cinattno end ._._111111.Q Cl) ....... MMAZINe 0 YOU AIGD '°" rr FMt"'9d: "Engi.nd'a Fur· nlture Uuelclan" -and "Auetria't SWMI Tooth KJno." ®MOYll ••\t "Ion vav-oe. Char· .. ._ .. ( t97t) Animat- ed. oncted by .. Melen- d-. Snoqpy end Woo6- etock follow ••cllanoa ltudenta Cllartl9 8rown, Peppel mllll Pet1y, Unul end Mercie on WI edven- tur.flled lOllr of &lglend andFranca.'O' ... Wt(llP .. CINC8NNAT1 JennNer lnYtt.a her~ fl'lenda to • fun6..rllWng l*1Y '°' poor frtenda ol Johnny'• ..,. llomelMa .,... ... destr~ their mlMlon~. 8 8 MAL "°"'-I Fe9Nred: • fealllon lflOW tor frogs: .. wortd'• fMI· -~~•men who aant adv.,llalng ..-. on Ne bllld '-d: • ~ge><lr1-. . ..,.... "The wer or The Aobot•'' • THI GMATIST Mtll IC.tM HMO A nln carr)llng ftYCIMr ...... ,._ed. 8f'id It ~ tflal Ralph. wl'IO .. auflwinO from amneala. • be unable to come to thereec:ue. GMOWE • • • ''Tll9 Bird wtlh The Crystal P'tl.lrNga" ( t970) Tony .._,,., &my IWn- Clall Aca.t9ad ol ~ murdwa, • men --. lh• rHI peyc11opaU1lc --· • LOe.,....,. "LM awnc8 AWAlllJ8 LM ~ the a.-ty Wf. .... Hotel, 9flfl gwsl h09t.I c... Reill9r ~ Ruth BatcMlor, tllla tpec:lal lloeta aucll -ci wlnnera .. Burt LMICtlller. Mertl Streep end Batb..111• ~-• 0 aMec.AUPOMIA UM P/llM/tMf U... trOfn IN c.tomle ,...,,. Lodge In L•k• Tllboe. Callfornla. -ty oonteatant• wll QOfnPtll• for tll9 tlda "Mlaa Celflor. nla USA... with Ille theme being Ille 1lMO'a. • MATIOMAl ~8"aAL "The Sllarb" Extttlofdl· N1Y 111ld9iwe'9r flllR tool·· • of how lllWtt• r.cr. rett and M1Y ttiey ettec:k ptcMdel • -penipeo. 1M on thlll tManattno and *'-"""·O ~;::;:; ARNM •••'h "S.-" (101t) Woody Allan, LoulH L.MMr. A product t_.,, bOrecl ...,_ .. ~ roullne, oo-lo • anlell LMlft AIMftclan CCIUfrtty and beoonlm a *'8tor during • pollllOal ._.,... 'PO' CllllZNN Jotlrl ~ .,_ you ttllllQ9 lll8llg9r than ttu111, ..,,.,, "*' ..... and zanier than enyttllng you've - Mel\, .MOYll * *'h "lerlal'' (1080) Mer· ~ Mui, T~ Weld. A happlly married Matin ~-~ by "'* ~ Migtlbon Into 9lqlllot(ng atwnallYe ....,.._.A' e:ao I THI two"" UI MAMNllB 1 W~on'I tQll pollttc8I utlrlllt polt• "'" •• malor ...,.. and ,_. atorlea of ttie ay from Ille State UN- vwalty ol New Ycwtc In Bui· felo. Cll Wt(llP .. CINC8NNAT1 Jennltw lrwttel her~ lrlendl to • l\Jnd-ralalng l*1Y lor poor frtanda of Johnny'• left "°"*- aft« ... dealt~ lhelt "*"°"~· ())~THON A oomedlan 1-c end tour comic cont•tW'lt• wno compete egalnat one MOtt. -IMtl.nd In 11119 ..... -ed comedy o-ne --· ,... (D)Cff'f wour l:OO. Cll MOYll "WUhtn111on Mlllr ..... (P,__el L.uda Arna. Aldlerd Jordan. Art ernbl- tloua C019..icwltll aide .... In low --• mented W~l-.yw. 8 8THI 'ACTa Of UFI Tooele gllta the pert In the achool I*)' 1hat Nalaie WW!ted. • THI 'ALL OA/'t HowtelMeaOftMllPI*'• entty ..... -"'*" ---.... Coft In )all and..,.......,. two In deadly lnterftellonel fntrtOue. (Pait 1) e liWICll II I l Walllllrlglon'a top polllcllt ..... poltel"" .. ...... --and-...... ol tM *" "°"'the l*9 ~ --ofNewYortilllW. '*'· .ALLTI49M CC.-: I & INCIM. The economic, pollttcal and aodel ..... of ........ •treet," America I• ~ by ..,... ~ Stamberg and 8ent0fd Unger of Natlonal Pubic R9dlo'• nlglnty-..... :Me, ®MOW •• """9roper Ct\annelt" (1981) Alan Aikin, Merlette Hartley. A _.. ol mleun- der1tandfnot cau-• aodel wcrter 10 wapect tflat • aaperated ooupla _dlil't......_'PO' (l)THE WACKY WOM.D Ofl JONATHAN WINT'IM OU.: t4-d CoMll.. .... LOW. ll>NIY 8ldlleY '"""'-ltle ~ wnter ol the aoep opera tllet L-'e ~In - tor .... • P.M.MWZIM CHANNEL LISTINGS An lntenltew with ~ hOld hlnla ~ Mary Ellen; mutt~ al a tNndy NM Yorti pat Mlon: fJ KNXT ICBSI D KN8C IN8CI 8 KTLA (Ind.I e KA8C I ABCI 0 K FM 8 ICBSI f) KHJ·TV (Ind.) •KCST IA8CI • KTTV !Ind.) ., KCOP·TV (Ind.I • KCET I PBSJ •KOCE I Pjm 0 On·TV tZl Z·TV H H80 C IConema.) I IWORl NY . N Y QlJ IWTBSI r) IESPNI rs1 (Showtlme) • Sl)OlhOl'lt e IC.ble News Network) Merta Stwtv. mNta a top Holiy.ood ball.,; Or. Otanldl on evoidtng mert- tal money,_.., eAUTI49M OONlllMB>INCW. The econc>fTllc, polttlcel Md 80Clel ., ... of .. ~ 1tr•••." Arnerlca 11 ~by hoata s- Stamberg and 8enford Unger of Mllllonill Publlc Aldlo'• lliglltly -... ... (t)MOYS •• "SuMv.I FM!" (1N0) '*** "ONMll A"d CllOAI'• Neat ........ (1tlO>NaMnl '~" ....... ,...... OMRf. Two ••tll .. dt flovo .....,._ llNll ...... ........... ,........ .. ....... '-~"' ...... ., ... .,.,... ~.;:. ... ,. ............... . 11 ......... w. .... .. """' ~ ,,.,.,. ........ tlO ...... Oft ............ In .. ._ W• ....._ tlO "81" tn. ._...-"'.....,own ....... ~~Id" -··~ Qlllfto¥ ...,.__ tOf • llelldgun ..... -1-.d In __.. apcJlt"~ lllV9at· edarif!IM. II~ ,.... ,..,.... the !Ire ... onoa ..,. tor lier, wNle ... ~ ...... apperent lnfldellty to rolnMOe~and Fel­ IOn lftOkM e declaion abO&lt .. ,...,. .. icy. • u.NDec'NI Of HON P11llt.Hr Prlae.wlnnlng author end aolenttllt "9rl9 ' Ouboe _.,...,. M1Y 11e 1a ~ llllOUt the fUt\ft of manklncl . .MOYIS ..... "Holtywood Boi-. vwd" (1878) Clll'ldloa ,...._ eon, 06c* Miier. F~ from lndlena, • Y<MIO aeplr1no ....... ~ lnvoMld In • ,..., robbety that ... ltllnkl .. pert ol ,_ lllcMa del>ut. 'A' 10:a0eN1m•W NltWOM .... • LANDIOH•Ofl "°" P1111tzer PtlH·wlnnlng llllttlot end adentlat ... Ouboe explalna .ny ,. .. opUmiltlc abOUt the lutul-a of rnenklnd. • ANMIHT .. ~ ,. .. ~ POM'Mlf Of DIZZY Qll I ,. One ol a._..·. ,,_. ,_ oompotltlone pro. llldaa.,. ~ tor 111'1 entertaining ~ Into the ... ol the "Crown ~Of.JuL"(A) ' ®MOYll * "llood ..,.,..,.. (1M0) ' Telly SavelH , Eddi• Albert. A border pottolman lrtaa 10 bttftg .. ..__.. wl'IO tnfflc In llagal ...., ~1ojulltloa. 11:00•••000• NIW8 • Ml'UfD\Y N9CIHT Hott: ......... I PMA.HOMN lMR JU IE 40MI Loume ,,.,. Oeorve ftnd the...,_ lie -II.-. • .,....., 11116) 80N Grady gee. lirwoMd In • c.-ol ..... en~. e l**CAWTT Ouaat: ... Ktot ..... Coe*. -~ ,..._ '"""11 .....-.: ....,..., Of' All AllllNo .,....,M The ....,... ..... of ,.... ......... and ott. .............. by tfl9 u..a. ;a •••II In "-tte0a .. _ ....._ Ct>..,. •••• ''l11e Uon In Mt- ..,... (1"1) ..... O'Tode, ~ HlpOurn. &io- ...... tong H9nry " -- en l90ftl*lll cladeloll - ....... ,1 ----~ .. •• 11111 lllOtmy .... r1ilp to .. MIOl'll stied Eleonor of~ 'PG' 11.-CZ) MOVIE .... ..,_ My'' (1NO) Olm IE.aMwood, Sor*• Lodte. A '°"'* .._ ~ffomNew~ ,...._ Illa ~ of per· tor1M1g In a Wld W• etlOW. 'PO' 11:11 ca>..,.... • * "Th• lncredlbl• StwW11ng W-'" (1MO) Uy Tomlin, CMrlea Gro- din. A ~ flndl M herd to oope ""*' .. ~ntnUlnlllllL 'PO' 11:11 e WICN' 1Ul9ICll .. T1 The Wl<AP ...,. dlaleriga tM ...,, of IM!I ,..., .... tton WP10 eo e eoftbell ~(9') -·~ Hoat: JOhnny Carton au.tt: ltllW!ll ~. Oharial Grodin. e&MC .... ....,,,.. I ..,.. ""eRCJlllCHO lMaODO CCUl\a • N>Oma I KiClft' .. , 11 l'T CAl'T10le MIC ..... ~~WHJTamoAN •••• "RMuneotlOn" (t080) Bien 81nt)'n. S.rn KOCE 9 7:30 and KCET rJI 8:00 - "The Sharks ." A National Geographic SJ?eclal with extraordinary underwater r11m roota1e or how sharks feed and rest . and why they attack. . KTTV • 8:00 -"Los An1eles Fllm Critics Awards ." Cart Reiner hosts live · show from the Beverly Wilshire Hotel. KCOP tit 8:00 -"Miss California USA Pageant.•' Seventy contestants compete in show aired Ii ve from the California Neva Lodge ln Lake Tahoe. KNXT 9 9 :00 -"Washington Mistress." Lucie Arnaz st a r s in this movie premiere. INptird. After. -.... Mo eooldent. • -llllda tNt "'9 llM the ..,... ty to Ntil °"*9 bUt II per. _,.., beoaMe of '* . ,-.... to Clllill'I • ...,. ...__.'PO' .MOYll .... "~ Channllt" (t981)Alen Min, Marietta Hatu.y. A_.. of lftleun.- .......... aoolel wottter to bele"9 that the &.,...,-otd daugtnor ol • ...,.,Med ~ .. t,,. ~of Cflld ..,._, 'PO' 1l:OO. IHA N4 MA Oulietl Dion. eo LDW.oAT A~-·• ,.,..,U tty to br• up Illa relatlOft.. .,,_, with • ;111. and 111'1 old· .,_,~toarnudl ~ -rneM•. ~Illa own ege. (A) • MOYll ..... "'* Wtnd To Wla" (11U) Ffed Moc:Murr9'. Ven AllltQn. An~ -.... group of plr.eee ,_ to volCen6c l<t9k8loe to Clllill'I • .... enclory ~ In dle- monda • ..... DOl*AI Ccltlc*: Joel Qrwy. au.ta: Jadry Went. MkUy Katz. Ktlly ......... e rra .. 11.-.,.•mvil900'f.xw" .. 1 ···-~=-'WOMAN ···~"Doctor ?Nveoo" (1916) °"'°' ltlertf. o.w. dll'9 Qlepln. T-..,_.. m.we ernldll the ..,wit ... pol9IOIW ol .. ~ *'~· ·1HI. MCWW • • "Kller On Boerd" (1111) ca.m AltlrW. .... tftoo 8"lgllt. A ~ ............ ._of orulae ... ~I II .,..(A) --··~ OUMt9: torrner pret6dM- ,.., ,._ -.tary .)otJy Powell: muelolen ~ ~~Jeer! ~: 4111111« l(ltty Kt119r.(A) . ...,..,. * ''Oalltt'oy All Monlll«a" ( 1111) Aldra l<.\IM, Jun T......,, MonMer9 herded ..,...._ on en llMnd on E.ar9I -"'-' by .... and boglr'I to delltray .. wortd. ...... W' .mwoM .... 1•• lllCMI ...... ...,. Pwrlpea" (1"1) AoMr1 T..,,, Aofl Randel. An Armt ollloer .,.. to keep Illa m9lary unit Intact ..... '*" ol ,.... AI01111illltn ~· .. and ........ renaocka Ille oountryl6de. • MOYll ••• "uabon" (t958) A8y Mmend, Oleude Reina. A lflll>'• capUlln la llnd to ,_ • -·· t.»-band from Cornmunlet 1:10r- "h9mp OlefnOnda" 1:•!= •• "Aoed 0-" (1981) Stacy ~. Jamie la9 Cur'lla. An ~ tNOlt· .,, • ~ lllU:H*er and•~-.. t~ the --route -~a--torllta end d!IMtl. 'PO' Cl)lllCMI ... ..,... ..... ~ men" (1t7t) AoOert Aed- tofd, --Fondl. A LM Vegoe oowtlo)' ..... a S12 mMlon ~lloree to MW IWll from Illa ~-·PO' 1••111CM1 * * * "Altered Stat•" (1MO) Wmlam Hurt. Blllr lfown. A aolentt.t con- Clueta • blZarra uperi- _,. upon llWMolt .tlic:tl ~out ol control. 'R' t:00 • INTIRT......,. TONIGHT Alt ........... with Linda EllWlt ol "~ ... HI!= • • • "The EuropNne" (1979) ..... Aemlcll. ...... Eldlhom. A ...itlly Boa- ton tlllNly ~to .. OOIM two wteiarlg _..,. who.,..~ --ino. ~ to CMfl In on IN den'•ton~. a:u1 NBWI l:tO MOYIS *'h "Deed MW'l'I Eyee" ( tt44) .._ Clw1ey, Jaen Pettier. In order to .,.._ • murderw, • bind ertla ~ thet hie llglll hM been ... Oted through --.. , .... ll4t .... .. ...,..,. "T errttor1e1 Man" ( to 78) Blend• Vaccaro, Ron Sable. A tocel renchet runt tM town'• acftoOI boerd Md .... to""' ... -Md lrio/ ectlOOI '9edler. l:CIO. MOYIS *. * ''The Cour1 Mettllll Of .., ........ (1M5} Gery Cooper, Cllatlet lk*bd. A man la put on ttlol ~ "° ..... ,,.. tary br-In order to ~Wor1dWer ll. (t)MCWW ** "Olal.a'Clf*lll" (1NO) Robby ..,_, °"'* Durl*lg. A aoo,..wttlng call ctrMr II aided by a -1 montley In pr<Nlng lllmeelf ""-'t of • mwdet dlfrOa. 'PO' a:ID®~QWl&JN: THIUTTiiTMW HoeC ,,_ ar.y .cfttollidM -~,.,.o1~·· carww with • complatlon of -ct Illa ..,_ lltentt, lncludlng "The T,.,., .. "The Rink" end ~ ... lr:IOCllM0!19 • • "lomaib)' And ..... (1977) Sid c-. Jullel --.,. A CU1a.. cuddly koela beS .. ,_,.... .. the ltory a1.,, Auetralen 1wn11y. ·o· ....,..,. • • "Mounlaln Men" ( 1080) Cfwtlon Heaton. Brian Keith. Two fur ~ enjoy Ille Ir-. dorn of the ....,_ In the .... ,.. ~ before lhe-~of~ DlkJfl. 'A' a:llCZ)MCWW .... ~My'' (1NO) ant f.Mtwood, Sondra L.odle. A former .._ ~from .... Jerwt ,...._ Illa dr.-n of per· '°'"*'II In a Wlkl WMt .,_,'PO' T•11ndaw'• .. ,,, ... ,, . .,.~. ....... H.,,..,11" (tMO) DerNn ~. Aotlett Vaut,JM • ...._,.. ..... ~~-" .......ion..._.....,,_ --°' .......... eud· --~·'PO' .. CB> ..... "PNtlelllft Grand Prtlie" ~. NIM Ille cor ._,, la ~byanu~•. a t>rllllant mechanic ~ to bulld an -..... ractno IMCNne and compN ...,.. Ille ,,.,.,,...., ·o· 7::IO CC) * ........ The Stayer" (tH1) Jack P91anoe. Jotlrl T wry. An .oventw-'°""° man .... the aid of • bend ol -nor. to fight hit rA unde, the -1ord wl'IO died 1111 tllhar and .. hOldlnO 1111 ..,.,_ tor ,.,,... -· l:OO (I) * * * "The I.Mt Time I Saw Pene" ( 1954) EJlra. beth T~. Van~ S...S on a atory by F, 8con FltJQarald. 8roUn r--and ltlaCterad lndMduele populate P""9 o11t1e and of Wor1d w er H. •••• "Sirnon"(1N0) Alall Atkin. AY9llll ~ ton. lclentll9 at a~ ly ,.... **' tNnll ..,. ~ • bllmOlng oolo .... profeMOf ttiot lie .. 111'1 ~ lrOfl'I outer ..... '20' ..... "Agtrttng Foola" (1Mt) 8-y Boyt, Lyle TelbOt. Ct> •• "Superdome" (1078) David JW'ltten, Ocrww ..... A f-'lc .. atop .. nottllnO to keep • >footbel teem frOfl'I ~ Ille Super lowl. W.®••• "lneldeW-" (1N0) Jofln Sllvaga. David MorM. A -to the ll'ouc> ol ,...,.. .. 111'1 Olkland ber ~ ll06d the 11.ey to rneklno IN ~ dar'tdrWMlof~• pro .,._ .. bell pleyer • ....-My. 'PO' ••• "Paper Tlger" ( t078) David Niven, TOINro ~ A tutor or the 11.JdNiC)ped eon o1 • Jap1ne1e amba1Hdor ~ po4ltlcM terronam .tlert lie KU °"' many lalaa ol •otarn ltlat Md grMtty Imp! 1111 1 the boy . 10!IO ..... '"NMth Mione • Sid•" (11134) Jofln Weyne, 8MMa Terry. A cowbOy trtat to ,_ • young Indian glr1 from It~ wl'IO -.,. her Inherited ...ith. 11:00 ...... ''The Oamtllar From Nat~" (19154) Oala Aobertaon. OeOr1I Paoat. A men •YeflOIS Illa tathlr'• ,,_. by lellow gam- blan. 11::IO Ct> ..... '"The .._ Of The 6-\ ~·· (1058) Robert Taylor. Linda Qwiatian. WNn. ~ ger la louncl deed on Illa alllp, · a cllerter bo•I alllpper dlacovera • stranoe map that IMdl to • hldder1 Hui for1une. 12:00 ••••• .,,. Organtu- Uorl" ( t 071) IMdney Poitier. 8ert>era Mc:Helr. A lumi- t\#9 compeny manager lunW up dald .,.., • tot· 1\#M In heroin .. atolaft., from him. •••• ''OeedRlngar'" ( 1M4) ...... Oovta. Kart Maldll\. wtw'I ,_ •-lowr bn>tfler-ln-W ..... ...,. em_ k .. h« "'*'.,._ ter and a11umee her WMltll end poaltlon. ®i•••"hdlllt" (1M4) Aictiard aunon. Pel• O'Toola. tong Henry ~ . ····~· ...... Morlfll'' ,,.., ..... W--.cl, Jedi t,_..: "°"· ----_...,... ... '° ..... Oft .......... . e10o lit .,. ... Wt1 ... to..,.. .. ._ ......,. on !Mir own --· <%>••\t "~ W..-TraN'' ,,... ow.... by Jlrf ...... °"'1n8 Wor1d Wt1 II, e ... ~ MM )'OW'f o.dl .__._ . .,.. ......... ., who forgM.a Illa ..,.., .. uont tone -. '° b60w ~ • German 9f'INl••1• train. 1:00 a:i •• ''The lAdy v- ..,_,. ( 1970) Doet GoYld, c~~c1.Anm. cem men and • .,...,..... ---.....,. lnlo • dwlly ....... GIP" abo ard • luropean upr... 1ra1n travellng lfWough ~ Noll Got· many. 'PO' Cl) * • * "The Laat T1me I Sow Parta" (10M) OZ. beth T eyt«, Vlfl JoMIOft. 8MOd on a at0tY by F. 8ooct FltzOetllld. If~ ,_and ..... lndMduoll popultSe Peril • 1M end ol Wortd Wer II. 1:80(%) **"Wolfert" (1081) Albei1 ~.Di.le v-- ,.. Modern pollce tecflno6. ogy and 2()th.century peyo- Clflology atternot to ~ an lnvelkln ol ,__Yori! aty by..,.,~...,.. 'A' l:OO ••••• "The Saptlan1 Man" ( 1080) JoM Hun, ~~A_. cated pllyalc:lan tuN under ..... wing • horrlbty deformed men -'-... "" then NICI beM1 epant In ~ ~-eidllbltlona. 'PO' 2::IO ® ••• 'h ''The Elaphant ........ (t080) Johll Hurt, Anthony Hopklne. A dedl-- cated pllytlct•n tell•• under Illa "*IV • llon1bly dalomied man --.,. prewtoulty Md been IC*tt In ~-exhlbltlont. 'PG' • S::IO •••• ''Viva Mu" ( t089) Peler U1tlnov, JoneU\an Wlntert. A growp of Mexlcant ,..,,.,. Ifie Alamo In pr_.-day TU- M. (I) •• "Bam•by And Me" (1077) Sid c-. Julet Milla. A cute. cuddly koala beer .. ,_,., ... ttle alory ol an Auatr...,, ,.,.,._ tr:._'0 ' (I)****" "The Paralu View'' (1074) Werren &Mt· ty. Pwl• Prantlu. An lnveetlgatlv• reporler ett.mpta to -• nationwide network ol polltk:al ......... 4:00 Ct> •• 'h "Dot And The Kangaroo" ( tt78) Anlmat· act. Dlrect«I by Y or em Qro11 A young glrl ~ io.t In 1119 Aut- lrallan butll and It beft•~ by • kangaroo wtlO glvaa her • lift In Ill pouch. 'O' 4:IO •• ·~ "Improper Cflen.. ,..... (IN t) Alen Atttln. Mariette Hartley. A _.. ol ml1undera1andlng1 teeda a 10CW wor1l• to beliew tl\et the g.,._..(lfd daugtlW ot • .,......., ooupla la the '+'lctlrn of c:Nld .... 'PG' ~CB> •• ·~ "Plnctldlft Grand Prize" ~ All• l'lle eot dellQr'I la alolen by .,.. -~·· • brllllanl mechanic deddaa IO bulld 111'1 - better racing macHne and ~ with ..... ,_._.. ·o· 1:18 (%) ..... "Sr>owbel Eal)<HI" ( 1072) O.an Jonaa. Nancy Olaon. A ...... Yori! eccountant tra- ..... _. to Ille Rodi,.. In an ettemt>t 10 modernlm • dllllpidatecl Ml -1 lie Wleritacl. ·o. 1:ao CC) * * "Hewll The Slayer" (1981) Jacll .....,_, John Teny. Ari adventurous young m-i ..... the aid ol • bend ol werr1ora lo fight Illa evll unde, the ~ who IUlad ..... fatner end .. lloldlng 111'1 lltlbaaa tor ,..,,.. aorn. JOHN DARLING by Annstrong & Batluk WE:VE SEEN O\JT HERE ALL MORNIN& IRYIN& "ID GET SOMETHING ON IAPE FOR ou:t GANG-VIOl..£NCE SERIES." ANP SO FAA 11'6 BEEN A "TOTAL 9U5T I I ~:;:;:;;:;:;:~-iirrt:l!TTI J i~~~W"AI I P.liliiiilil . .. .., 'Atomic Veteran' airs tonight oll KOCE Former soldier recalls participation in exercises at Nevada test site By JOEL C. DON Of .. Oaltr,.... .... Fearing a nuclear war with the Soviet Union, military authorities in the 1950s launched major prepartMtness exercises for more than 250.000 co~bat troops. The soldier• were to exptlf'ience an acomlc detoutioo bud._. In trendM!a -w 1rittdn a mile ol pou.ad ,.ro. Twenty yean later, some of these llO-Called atomic veterans believe ph1ilc'll an,d psycbolollcal Illnesses the)' now 1'1ffer 111ay bave resulted from eJU)Olure to rad\•UOP from exercltes conducted at Utt Nevada Test Site. • One ot tbOle soldJera wu Nlct Maaauco, who partldpaMd in 11 aboY•·sro-d M .. ta lD 1155. At oae te9t be w• potlUoa~ In a tnioeb a.M yards from the audear ~-Tbe fornaer Army aoldier deacrlbea bl• e.xperiencel ad bll lean ·o1 -. da) lderi•I Ulneaks trom them ln "Nick Mauuco: Blof1:•pby of an AtGmAe v.uran." a1rlQI al 11 tonllbt oa llOCE. Ol.anel 50. Tbe balf·bom' narraUon, 1pllC9d wtlb rum cUpe of tbe military WIUnc propam, la mon of a diary UWl a bard looll at U.. pltOl ol atomic Yttel'Uil I and their effort to gain special medical compensation ror illness \bey Unk to the teatl. Mazzub> relies more on impressions and emotiona than on bard evidence in maJdnc a crse for lbe atomic veteran. The government, after a aerie• or con1reuional bearinas and review of the atomic·tesUdl prOIJ'am, hu been at odd.I with the atomic veterans. While admittJn1 a amall percentap ol toldlert may have recelvH radlatlon UJOIW'.9 la acea of 1alet1 Umlta, military au~tl• claim th vut maJorit:J of indlvidual1 were subj~ '8 • mueh ·udlaUon per blul u a cMlt X·ra,. at lbolt. But in U.. •ake of U. nuclear accident at Three Mlle llland, the antl·nuelear lllOftlMM ud the Un1erlo1 reminder of the 1urvlvor1 of Hiroshima and Nacaukl bomb blutl. atomle nteran1 fear the eumul.Uft etteeta of t.beir low-level ~ radlatioa apGl1U'9. Mauuco doesn't autfer ffionl cancer or oUter at101enta lbal atomic veterau eta•m were bolat.nd b)' tbelr ...,_..,..to at.om.le llomb bllltl. Rather, be fura for bll fUlbn and UM pol9lble eff ecla hll upoaUN ma1 have on bll on.prtna. .. . ' Some of his testimony ls damftlng: TTOOps were someti111es placed so close to 1round-1ero that their trenches collapsed on them. Tbe soldiers weren't issued protective clotbln& or breathint devlce1. On tome exercises, 10ldlera marched co lfl'OUnd·sero u part of mWtary maneuvers. When they left the tell site, \hey were ,&becked wllh Gel1er cou.nten and broom1 were llled to bruab the dult from their f allcua. · Fllm bacl1e1 luued to each IOldler measured radlatJoo upoaure. However, Muauco tella of belnl able to ... lbe st....a 1\nleture ot one of b1I buddiel and th• bones wttblD hll own bad. n.t tesUmonlaJ ripe a larse. '°"'' ln h1a 1tory1 ta.c. moet radlolotllll would .,,... that 1vch extmne expo1uN would ban ld&led blm. M11aueo•1 atory 11 oae amon1 maa1 reeol.lectlonl, lmpresalona w1 oplnJom barbOrid by the atollllc: vtteran. But even If tbe 1ovemment 11l11flet U\e veteran• tbat tbttr eapoeuN waa mlnlmal, m9dicaJ adeace wW debate tbe loat-term effects of low-level kmldnl radlatlcm for tome time to come. "f o 850 SPY er· k mlnor enalne s~~" LoOk• n\ce. p.p. _!!O·OOOQ. ''Sold first day · to the first person that calledJ, ~~fi@642-5678 charge It~-by phone From South L•gun• & N~rth County c•ll 540·1220 tot~tr ... '• .J ---------- Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT,WednHday, January 13, 1982 Brash lawyers fought A'F&T -.. 7-year battle ends with breakup of huge monopoly .. ! America's ambition doubt,ed WASHINGTON (AP) -'?My were a 1roup of youa1, Inexperienced lawyera w6o brashly ouUltted themaelv• _. summer ln T-1hlrt1 adorHd with the Bell Syat.m loso and the caption, "e.ach out, reach out and cruah someone." Expert questions desire for economic turnaround AT&T J , l al JORN CUNNIFF ............. NEW YORK -A• a turnaround situation, a term aecurltlea analyst• use to describe a company 1eekin1 to reverse bad Umes, the United States· hu aome ln~redlenta for 1uocesa but may lack tbe determJnation. . , "There's 1rowlng evidence tbe admlrtlatratlon baa failed to take t.he neceuary att.ions." says Donald Blbeaull, a young turnaround manager who Is aldln1 a troubled manufacturing giant return to profitability. His verdict: "Wh en Congress and the administration are wilHng to tolerate $100 billion-plus federal ' deficl~ are not w.ll.Ung to take ~ steps to divest unnecessary forelen policy commitments cu10.11"" and to cut back unworthy domestic programs, the r e does not appear to be the necessary Ingredients present to effect a national economic turnaround." Bibeault, who has succeeded with several troubled firms, believes that government can be likened to a corporation, the president as chairman, Congress as directors, and voters as shareholders or maybe customers. He believes the president's administration is "weak-kneed/' Congress "obstructionist." and voters perhaps not highly motivated to endure pain thkt comes with the course they mandated the president lo pursue. . "While the jury is still out," said Bibeault the other day from his San Francisco home, "it appears that the direction. magnitude, and speed of action is far less than necessary to achieve a turnaround." In any turnaround, he said, at least four ingredients are required: A management and board willingness to take drastic action, a viable core to strip back to, availability of bridge financing, and motivation -motivation of key personnel right down to the firm's smallest unit. The viable core is there, Bibeault believes. By almost any measure of well-being except the obvious problem areas, he believes, there is a solid core. The country, he said, is well endowed and able to produce. Bridge, or temporary, financing is available too, but with problems attached. "Government has a source of financing greater than any company," he observed. It Is, of course, the taxjng ability. Taxing, however, is also a source problem. Still, financing is available. The remaining keys are management and motivation, and it is mostly in these areas that Bibeault, who is a Ph.D. and author of "Corporate Turnaround'' <McGraw-Hill ), expresses reservations and frustrations. "America's tangled and overextended foreign commitments tax our financial ability and damage our domestic economy," he says, .AMC announces · rebate plan SOUTHFIELD, Mich. <APl -American Motors Corp. said it will offer up to $500 rebates to buyers who trade in their old cars for new 1981 or 1982 AMC models. The plan, to begin Thursday and continue through March 31, will give $500 to buyers who trade in 1974 models or older with lesser amounts allotted for more recent models, said David J. Van Peursem, AMC general marketing manager. AMC, which termed the incentive program its Old Car Retirement Plan, said it is meant to bring in old-car owners who may be delaying purchase of a new vehicle. cdu..a.CTOrs coa11e• Mt41 OeH C._.._. SU,,., Cl. M.1' ..., Sell 11'7 .. ,...,... ~ LMh ,., .JS .-.is . so.._ Wt.JS .-.11 90"J'S.tl-Be9t .,._. pm.• S...c-tPt-.V....-Cnt) .... ----- ( )epanfront Lots The final 30 ocean front homesites. A walled and gated private residential community in San Cleme nte. Private beach a nd priva te Swim a nd Tennis Club. Interest only financing available (714) 498-2830 or C213l 277-9470. compartn1 lt lo "corporate over·dlveralflcallon .nd over·leveraclna." Oome1Uc:ally, he malntalna. the abundance of 1overnmeat aoclal and economic pro1ram1 ia similar tq tbe _proUf eraUon ol producta in troubled corporations. Reaources, he·~. are squandered, wasted. "To top it all off," be conUnuea, ''the country has not lunded these pro1rama with current Income," an unreallstlc Lechnique he baa seen brina once healthy corporaUona to the steps of bankruptcy court. Needed, he says, Is "tou1h presidential leaderabip and a mandate from Congresa to do what Is needed to cut pro1ram1 and bureaucracies." As a hardnosed turnaround mana1er, BJbeauJt eyes defense spendlna. Europe's defenae should be1on1 to them. he says. "A hard analysis ot Amel'fca's needs should be to reduce NATO expeodJtures ~billion." He feels another $20 billion could be saved on Japanese defense. He contends "the Japanese are using the surplus derived from America's protection to revitalize and modernlle every aspect of their industry while our own industry is becoming more aged and less compeUU ve." He cites many other lnstancea of where he says cuts can be made and contradictions ended so as to stop the bleeding. Plowina deep into t.be bureaucracy for personnel r eductions, for example, and endJng certain a1rtcuJtural support pro1rams, and slutiing paaaed Medicare bills. Does the motivation to do so exist? Bibeaull doesn't despair, but be isn't optimistic either. The job can be done, and might sometime be done. but it isn't beine done. and motivation is a reason, he said. Voters gave a mandate, he said, but seem reluctant lo take t.be pain. Pressure groups have compromised goals, and Congress and the president, "have fallen into the trap of taking petty actions that make t.be basic thrust look confused and inhumane." They -the Juatlc• Department's trial ataff for the antltruat suit a1aln1t the American Telephon e • Telelf'•.Ph Co. -worked in a dln1Y aet of of~ea with frayed carpell, peeU.na wallpaper. roci posters on the walls and -often -no beat. For seven years tbe croup labored agai n s t all the high-priced legal talent that AT&T could recruit in Its defense. And, In the end, they won. Laat Friday, the Justice De-partment announcea a settlement In which AT&T agreed to what the eovemment lawyers had privately called. "Re1'ef Plan A,'-' requlrlng the company.Jo divest itself of its local operating companies, with assets ln excess of $80 bUllon. In dollar terms, it was the largest antitrust settlement In hlstol')'.. Experts in the field bad to reach back to the 1911 breakup of tbe Roc_kefelJer fa~·a Standard Oil Co. for a case f similar magnitude. '• e got everything we asked fo . " said Peter 8 . Kenney Jr., who joined the department in 1977, one year out of law school, and has been worklne on the AT&T case ever since. He became the deputy director of the staff, which bad 40 lawyers at its peak. Kenney and bis colleagues were slttin1 Monday afternoon In their cluttered office• over a 1r0t:ery store three blocks from the maln Justice Department bulldifl8. Few neckties were in evidence. Everyone wore sweaters and coats because tbe heal waa not. worklnc and the temperature outside was about 15 degrees. The atmosphere was one of qule.l 'lut Intense satisfactiOl't, ting~d with sadness at the knowledge that,Elnevitably, their determined band would be breaking up. Some will be shifted to other duties In the Justice De partment. Some probably will l eave the government after a while to entw private practice. But they realize they are unlikely to find anything to work on like the AT&T case. "I don't anticipate ever working again with as many people that I respect professionally," said Ann Blair, 36, who began working on the case in 1978. "You put aside hobbies, vacations. It dominates your whole life." Some were having problems Tax Savings Today, wlthdrawin1 ft'om the work pace that often bad them ln their offices 70 or ., houn per week, preparinl voluminous, technical araumenta to meet the strict series of deadlines lmpoeed by U.S. District Judie Harold Greene. '·How do you adjust? I felt jumpy all weekend. I felt like I s hould be preparin1 for cross-examination in court t.bia mqrning," saJd Pbll Saunt.ry. 38, the veteran of the staff who started on the case in 1'75. Sauntry was the only one present who expressed any dissatis f action with the settlement. He felt that if the trial had continued to a conclusion, Greene would have ruled that AT&T had broken ll}e law. :. ·'I wanted to see them held up by the lapels by Judge Gr~ and told they had broken the law," Sauntry said. "When the trial began, they acted like they were offended we could h"ave brought the greatest busineaa enterprise in the world Into court." . . . -Retirement Savings Tomorrow. Now any wage earner can have his own Individual Retirement Account. With Heritage Bank's new IRA, you pay no taxes on the money invested or the interest earned until beginning withdrawals. IRA SAVINGS CAN MAKE YOU A MILLIONAIRE. Start your Heritage Bank IRA now and save the max- imum amount. For virtually every working adult that's $2,000 per year ($4,000 for a working couple!). And any wage earner with a nonworking spouse may deposit up to $2,250 annually. With the maximum contribution, you can accumulate Mvings of well over one million dollan by age 65.• Withdrawals can begin as early as age 59%. Of coune, the funds you withdraw are taxable but uaually at a much lower~.•• SAVINGS WITH HIGH Y.IBLll Heritage Bank oft'en you high rates that are extremely competitive. Plua your IRA account can be tied to eev- eral cllft'erent investment vehicles with flud interest rates or varying maturity terms. And all interest earned ii compounded daily. ~ HERITAGE BANK An example of one of our investment vehlclee: Term 18Months 1At~2S 15.312 Current Annual Rate Annual Yield SIOO minimum clepodt. Substantial In.._ penalty for_.., withdrawal. I SAVINGS WITH SAFETY. You can ertjoy a tax shelter now with your IRA savings and a large retirement income with the comfort of knowing your investment is insured for $100,000 by the F.D.I.C. SAVINGS ON ADMINISTRATIVE FEES. Many IRA accounts have yearly maintenance and ini- tial set-up fees. But Heritage Bank charges no fee! Because we want you to ertjoy the maximum savings possible. HERITAGE BANK HAS AN IRA PLAN THAT'S RIGHT FOR YOU. The new tax laws allow many different IRA savings plans. We want you to understand and take advantq'e of the full benefits of an IRA. Benefits gained now and in the future. Stop bl your nearest Heritage Bank aoon and discuaa the details with one of our Customer Ser- Yice RepneentatiYes. •Baaed on~ lnter'Mt rate ~DftllftdM daily. ·~bject to penaltlee for eiaijWithifaWala. Orange Cout DAILY Plt.OT/WednMday, Januar, 13, 198.2 ., .,... AMMt-.. Pnu Tb• federal budaet culback la ca-.1IDI atatH tq cloae J9b pl,cement cent•ra and trim ••ploym•nt ofllce payrolls at t .. 1 1ame tlJnt that YMm.Pl~meot la rialn1. ••We have a 30 percent lncreue Jn elalma load with a 25 percent r.ducua.i ln staff and it'• pure beil,'' 1a1d Aay Thome, director of tb e Orecon l:qiploymtnt Dlvl1lon. "We•re not servinc people ln the manner . • . ln whlch they 1houJd be .. rved.'' I An A11oclated Press spot check showed atmtlar problems ln othe1" areas, includln1 Alaska, Alabama, Wublnaton, Kansas, New Jersey, Texas, West Vir1inta and Oklahoma. The cuts generally have hit hardest at state employment offices, but some unemployment lnsurance services also have bffn affected. The Labor Department said last week the national unemployment rate rose to 8.9 percent ln December. meantnc nearly 9.5 miUion people are out es ot work. A day earller, th• department'• Employment and Trdntn1 Admlnlatratlon reporied that there were 711,500 new clah:m for unemployment benefit.a ln the week that ended Ote. as, 1981, an increase of atmo1t 10 percent rro.m the prevlour week and up ahnoet 29 percent from the aame period a year tatiier. Jack Ha1blan of tbe employment and tralnln1 unit s'atd federa.I ald to states for job and unemployment aervice programs for fiscal 1982 -the year that be11n last Oct. 1 - wlll total just over Sl.9 billion, down about 8 percent from last year. Hashian said final appropriations figures have not been determined, but he said that aid for job services will bear the brunt of the cuts. ··Employment service is taking a hefty whack," he said, "but the unemployment Insurance service is remaining intact." Many state officials say they are laying off staff because of the cutbacks. "In \.he lut year, we've laid orr 300 of 1,000 employees. lncludJn1 95 on Dec. 31," said Jack Canrteld, employment securlly commissioner for West Vlr1lnta. Canfield 1aJd: ••When you caU an em\>loyee workshop these days, It s to tell your employee• how to draw unemployment benefits. They're 1tandln1 on the other alde of the counter for the nrst time." Arizona haa closed eiaht Job placement offices. Thomas L. Vaughn, actin1 administrator of the Unemployment ln1urance Pro1ram. sald the closin1s will affect unemployment benefit.a as well a.s job services. Vaughn said many job service personnel are "bumping" workers at unemployment centers who have less seniority. "The ones more used to working unemployment Insurance will be out on the street and we'll have Inexperienced people workfng unemployment insurance," he said. The Alabama Industrial Relations Department has made Tax law has many reforms New category of stock options created to encourage buys By LO&IAN PETRY Since the tax act of 1981 covered such a wide array of topics, it would be impossible to cover each in detail. The last column focused on changes in capital gains rates and lower rates assessed on unearned income. Both reductions are critical to anyone investing in the stock or bond market. One change in the tax law which is not directly related to capital gains may still lower the rate paid on all gains. Jn addition to lowering the top tax rate on all income to ~ percent from 70 percent, the new law immediately provides for lbe phase·in or a multistage, acrOSS·the·board reduction or individual income tax and wilbholdine rates. The intent or the tax cuts is to provide more incentive to save and invest. Individual tax a nd withholding rates were reduced by 5 percent on Oct. 5, 1981, and will be further reduced by 10 percent on July 1 and another 10 percent effective July 1, 1983. "nu Because each year's percentage cut is fieured against a lower set of tax brackets, the cumulative cut over three years equals 23 percent. not 2S percent. When all the reductions are implemented, marginal tax rates will range from 11 percent to 50 percent verses 14 percent to 70 percent under the old law. Lower tax brackets therefore mean that taxes paid on a given amount of income will be reduced, making the taxes owed on all capital gains slightly lower. Beyond this across·tbe·board rate relief, taxes ·Will be indexed or adjusted for inflation starting in 1985. lndexin1 may well turn out to be one of tae I ·most important changes in the new law. At that time the government wiJl no longer be able to Big depend on inflation to bring ln more revenues to finance new programs. Instead, the federal government will have to seek legislated lax increases. The new tax act also encourages the use ot stock options for key executives by creating a special class of stock options caUed incentive stock options. These options will now receive t&x·favored treatment similar to that accorded them prior to 1976. Under the tax reform act of 1976, when an executive exercised a non·qualified option and bought a company's stock, the difference between the option price and the actual market share price was taxed as ordinary income. The employer usuatly deducted the same amount as a business expense. Now. with incentive stock options, no tax is owed on the stock until it is sold, and then the difference between the option price and the actual stock price will be taxed at the lower capital ga'ins tax rate if the stock is held for at least one year after exercise and two years alter the originaJ granting or the option. Employers generally receive no business expense deduction with incentive stock options. This revised tax treatment of stock options generaJly applies retroactively to any options granted after 1975 and exercised after 1980 or still outstanding at that time. There are still certain maximum amounts of s tock that can be exercised by any individual in a single year. Next, new interest and dividend exclusion limits, public utility reinvestment programs and gift tax cuts will be written about. Each ..of these changes will probably impact you directly or indirectly in the near future. f Lorian Petry is on occ:ount ~cutlw at the Santa Ano off&ee of Merrill L11nch Pierce Fenner & Smith. J Small1 Price. -Unnee<fedlfems talililg up place in your space? Sell it all and put cash in your pocket with the new Daily Pilot 8·Day Week. We can put you in touch with more buyers because our classifieds have an extra day lo sell every week. Get results wt.th the ads that last longer. Get the 8-Day Week special classified rate. Call 642-5678 today! For an EXTRA -clay, call today 642·5678 . Open a to 5:30 Mondey-Frtday, I to noon Saturday. TM new Dolly Pilot 8·Day Week it~ a· PLUS • rises • plana to clo1e nine unemployment offices. That me4lnl some people may have to travel farther to claim benentt and wait loncer once they aet there. U nemploymenl benefits are paid for by a combination of federal and state taxes on employers. In most atatea, offlciaJs sald the funds were financially healthy, but there were some problems. Ohio, for example, already has borrowed almost $600 m ii lion from the federal government for the state unemployment. Gov. James A. Rhod4!s has requested an additional loan of nearly S308 million for the first three months or this year. William fapier, director of research and statistics for the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services, sald there were. 47 ,930 new claims for unemployment benefits in the week lhal ended Dec. 26, up 52 percent from the comparable week in 1980. He added, however: "No one in Ohio who is entitled to benefits is going to have those benefits curtailed or cut off." Staff rather than solvency ts the biggest problem for most states. Kansas has closed 30 of Its 49 job services centers, which serve both benefil·seekers and people looking for work. Art Zillig, director of employment security in Alaska, said, "We •viii not be able to operate all offices even at a reduced level." Officials at the Texas Employment Commission said that federal aid has been cut by 30 percent, meaning the possible layoff of 1,200 workers. Six hundred positions already have been eliminated ; another 600 may have to go later this year. Commiss io11 o fficials have proposed closing 59 local offices around the state. bVER THE COUNTER. • • • l'.J f AA'f · youc. Ot-.lt.. v E---~~~t-.:(£ ••• ;..\ ....... ~MPl-0¥Mo..n ~J:K~ ~ Utility test looms CONCORD, N.H. <AP> -The s tate Public U tilitie s Commission has s aid it may pressure the utility that is building the Seabrook nuclear power plant to delay or cancel part of the project if the utility's financial health does not improve. Service Co. of New Hampshire, accompanied an order that the utility reduce its ownership in Seabrook from 35 percent to 28 percent. The commission aJso told the utility to sell its 3.9 percent share of the Millstone III nuclear power plant in Connecticut. The w~rning , lo Public NASO LISTINGS Jlli't 31"'-St..,dyn J1V, •'4 .,._ O StdMlcro ~ 6Yo .~~ .~~ ~:::~r ~"' ri-UPS AND DOWNS t:Z I~ ri~:!~I 2~ ~ NEW YOllK tAPI -Tlw lollowlllO 1111 iov. -Swb.tru H 'M >S¥i t llw Ow< 1--C-t \<o ""'S-rEI '"" 1'n 90<h -W9rr ... IJ , ... , ....... -"" tO'h ttli't sykH , uY> u lie most --lfle ..-1 baled on """ n TDK t JI._ JI"" rcHtl of C-. r~dlHS of volume tM '"'TIME 0C IV. 1\IJ or Tuesdey " tr,-!2~ Tr •• m,.m•, J2V. J2-No M< .. ltlft lritdlno e.1ow u ••• ln<I· w ..,... nclm U V. 2~ ded Net --Uftt-<'*'Vft .,. -1~ U TK..,.,P •1'n '3 llt•rtrKt -the ""'vlous < ........ JI JIV. TetcmA , ..... I~ bid o•lc• -TUft '• l•SI Did t><l<e llV. ll'W. T..,...I • 3111~ !?'n Ul"S ""°' S.W. TuAB t --46.,., 41 Tlorery n,.. 21"" N...,. l.HI C"O I I"' TomlOll 404 '°" I MOfl!Col S'llo + W. ""' w. Toyole ·~ 0,\1,, 2 us l!nr ... • I'> JIW. :n 'rrlcoPd 13 l•W. J 1n1tlo • •Ill • ..., »>w. 21 TytonFd 121/. 12\1. 4 Yor•Rlh JV. • V. IW. It\ UnMcGlf 10 10"' S FelrT• l.. • \lo ,, UV. us e... "' .... • Oioc II.. • IV. IJW. JI US S..r It 11\11 1 Ntwp"" 6"-+ ... IJW. IJ us Tro ~~ ~ • CeMbt• '"" • v. ,...., 17 ~V•:sh tw. t•/, t MllE• ..... ~ • YI ,:~ J"' u;~.~J 1,..,. 11,,. 10 oe1,,.,, w. + ,.. 2A t•li't VNI R •tW. 6211. 11 NwPtl cvpl 1\11 + "' 27 2111. VelNU s tt\lo ~ 12 Mall!1p 4\11 + -~ J)V. V.,_011~ I .... 11 1l .. ntPI 2 S-1• • >-1' U 2• V.Ccre 14'o 1~ 14 M_.., >Yt • 14 •v. '"" Vlclr•SI "' ... IS e-pl JV. + "' ';.... ':"" ~~m ,·~ ,;: :; ~\~~" :: : ~ lf" .,.. W•hEnr n IJV. 11 Micron WI Mio + W. ~ 2t W•ldlm VII 4\lt 1' Orf9MI 1 17 + IV. = ~V. ~~: 30'.'i ~ 10 Unlmd s 101,j, + lit .,... 41 WmorC :f"" ;o::; ti CnllnfS I • \II 11116 12 WherO n V. ~ Z2 Me..-.E • Sito • ... 1'W. 2'v, Wl..O wt ts i..... U P•tton lli't + Vo J2._ J3\lo Wol¥Alu ~ 1 14 J•'(1t11 ,,._ • -,...., ~ Womet ""' • lJ AM9dAtll 1\11 • Vt 11.\lt 121i't W-Lol l4\I> l5 26 C•ndoWn 7\11 + Vt n111 W" r~~~:"': J~ ~~ " lnToll un ~ + v. U 1~ n.• · ~ol llOCllkel>lo N...,. ~NS C"9 MetroTtt 2'"' -'Wo Em.,.., un 2"1 -..., Sesco I -ton • NHIE" J\;i -'- S s .. on • 111o -1~ • AIDIWG JV. -Ill I HISloy .., S -'II. I GvtE WI '"' -IV. ' Pyr....oil Jiit -'n 10 8 1'"""' • 1V. -1 11 En .. rSy µ,, -..., 11 Contlnm 17"--JV. IJ Colby 2 -\lo 14 FlclMd un 4 -\II U GdTeco 4 -YI 16 WllM'ld 2 -\lo 11 OcelOIB O ,..... -J 11 STSC .... -"' It AOI El 1111 2~ -Vo 10 HIStoy JV. -"" 21 AdYComl> J\lo -\lo 22 A90il WI 114 \lo U AutoFlm J\lo -V. 24 00C I 4\lt -.... u Enolhc 211o \lo 1' Fcwmltll 2"' \lo 71 Gdhco ...., '"" Vt P<I VP U.O Up 12.t VP 12.S Up 12 J Up II .. Vo 11.0 VP IOt Up 10.S VP 10.> Up t,7 Up t.7 VO t,I Up U Up a.1 Up l.J Up l.l Up U Up LO Up 1.t Up l .t Up 1.1 Up 1.1 VO 1.1 Up 1.5 Up 11 Vo 7 I Vo 11 l'<I Off H.O ()fl 16 7 Off IU Off 1J.• Off IJ.4 011 IJ.J Off IJ 0 Off Its Off 11.5 Off 12 I 011 II I Off 11.J Off 11.1 Off 11 I 011 ti I Off II.I Off IU Off lt.7 Off 11.J ()fl 10.J Off 10.0 Off 10.0 Off 10.0 Off 10.0 Off 10.0 Off 10.0 Off , ... - ,,. • 1'' • n '. I ;;;;~~===~========~··· STOCKS IN TH.E SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES I •• ·: NE NEW VOtUUAPI FIMI Oow..J-Mo-.' W VOllK CAPI· = Twn . ..-ke tw T__., JM. 12 -·-,,,. ~ MIV~·~:-E.,_;-1 --'STOCKI • • I r.~·"' _._ .. y 1 r -... ..._, . 1114 cz::.. :r., ~ fa,._~· ... · ,.,,._, Ta.T 1'0td:S S7YI + : n Tm m.J115l.IS MUP JSUt-Ul Enon • ··21~ :--~ s Ull ios .... 105 ... 1CN.M 10U7T-o.JV! W.,Meom SW-U-. : ~ t~ DU1 JIS,JJ DU2 DUI-1 .•. PllllltH,... 4tt.-,_ 4' Tran .... · .... ':s;· ldOlllncl ' •11t + .. H S~ " .. "' .... " ....... . iotl.lndl* • B 1~1* = ... Ut\1 .. • . . . .. .. • . . • .. .. .. • I, •• , •• est ICocllll 7ll't _ v. · · ........ · ·. · . .. . .. 1.1•.JOO• e·~.,, c m: !i WHAT STOCKS DID "91NHJ S Jitl.J!IO 1t -_, NEW VOtlK CAP) Jen. 12 l4!.!!!!ldl •.AID JM -.. ~I ... ,. lftli T-y ' ,,.,_ "" :.:;~ MYM<..i m OecllnM lb AMERICAN LWEIS NEW VOltlt CAPI· $el", Tues . .n<e ~~~"'; ..... -·= ,,..,,.. ftlltloNlly .. ,_.."': 11. • ~· 2111,roo 1~ + l't ;;;;i,;;' UJ. -r + ~ ~=.. ::: ,:: ~ :: W .... llE 1a..-ll114 -\'I ~~· 1a,roo >1 +1 Doi t 121.1• '~ --u--121,IQD 1J -.. ._.. , .... tl\lt ... 04'lte-e 11.-IJYt + l't u~"•,..s ,., Tot.I ,_ lfrl New llltN • .... tows IU -TAMUOO NEW VORK IAPl J M. 11 SILVER GOLD QUOTATIONS ,...., "' Pr9fn.1. u J ~., ~'1 ,.,,,,. ... -. J .. ~ u.s ; ' , ~: morlllna flal"9 $89.U. 141 Sl.40 ~: .,__ flal"9illt IO, 141 to.Ii ~erll: PW.IS. oll 11.a. Fr--.: Ptl.00, off JJ 02 :l•rkll: ute 11.1,. uaao "" n ao bid· Ptl.00•-· • . Ne1u•y & Hat1'11a11: on11 Q lly quoit '31t.OO. 141 SO.I). · .... ....,.., °"'' oe11, ~ uet ao. "" •. u. 1....-..: °"''dally quote flll<l<.Cod ... .U,upS.7'. SYMBOLS ROYAL "CONTEST" ...... Prince Andrew Is the latest member of Brit ain's royal family to enter its privat e hood ornament derby. 1 Andrew enters snail 'Father Foxhole' succumbs OCEANSIDE <AP> ....:.. Monsignor Francia W. Kelly, the ··Father Foxhole" of World War 11 who insisted on frontline duty with Marines, has died in a hospital at age 71'. Kelly , who died Salurday, was a Navy chaplain with the . rank of captain in both World War 11 and the Korean conflict. In World War U. he shared foxholes with Marines on Guadalcanal and other l9lands in the Pacific. In the book .. Guadalcanal Diary" by Richard Tregaskis, he was mentioned frequently. Kelly. a native of Philadelphia, was awarded the Legion of Merit and Purple Heart. He was named "Citizen of the Year " in Oceanside in 1976. The Rosary for Kelly. who said Mass in r~ent years al St. John's Roman Catholic Church in Encinitas, -waa recited Tuesday nigtlt at San Luis Rey Spanish mission with a ffQulem Mass today. Burial wlll b-' ln Arlln1ton NaUonal Cem~inVl a. 'WTILUllO" .... ·"·"·IA. flAlWAll 3 ' I Ol.lolity 1tolnl"' fOI 1tffl, Ilg volwe. .... ... .._ ..... .1 .. 11 Sl¥LE HAIR SPRAY FOi LONG . LASTING HOLD REG. SI 1.54 YOUI CIK>ta Reg .• Super. Unscen•ed 8-o~. , IAlll IOWBS SllMG I AllOllUIT 2 PLY • 102 Slllm ~~·-s1 EA .... I\ 9rMt .. 11y. St~ up now I SMACK RAMEll OllENTALmu INST ANT NOODllS S 'I 6,o• 3·01 Wh ile 1tock1 lost FIRESIDE SALllllE suacuca11S IN 4 SINGLE PAW SUPE•2SI PRICE FOi 16-o:r. whlle 1tock1 lo~t. UM' ".CUSTOM•· HElllZ OSHER DILL WHOLIPIQLI FAYOllTIS :~s1 UMIT 6 ". QISTOMlll 46-01. While 1tock11011. CllCKEll REAIY CHICIEM SPllAD SUPER Piia 3!1 Nflllll . WEDNESDAY, JAN. 13, 19'2 OUT OF THE KITCHEN SLIM GOURMET SUP.ERMARKETSMOPPER ce · C9 C10 FAST ANO DELICIOUS Micro waved m eats can have a cooked-in-the-oven look -with a special browning sauce. Hot ideas in kitchen remodeling By MARY JANE SCARCELLO DeHyP ... P.-•.._ . For cooks who coped with outdated, poorly lighted and inconvenient kitchens during the holiday entertaining season, a total remodeling might be at the top or the New Year'll rl!SOlution list. Before taking the plunge, however1 they may heed the advice or Danny White, designer for Euro-American Kitchens and Baths in Newport Beach. "When people come to me with an old kitchen in need of ·work, it's like putting together the pieces of a puzzle," he says. "They usually don't know what they want, so I listen a lot, trying to meet their needs with what's available." Newest in cabinetry, he says, is the sleek look or plastic laminates, sometimes accented with natural wood, rather than the all-wood construction of recent years. · ·'It's a European style, but Californians like its easy cleaning ~ smooth look," he says, notinl( that doors without handles are especially popular. Hoods over to stove tops Ult out for action, camouflating themselves as an ordinary cabinet door when not venting cooking odors . ''Too many Cans In old kitchens are under powered," he says . "The s mallest I 'd recommend runs at 300 cubic feet per minute <CFM>. and they can go as high as 1,000 CFM. Bil ones can be mounted on the rool to avoid noise, with the controls inside the hood." White plans kitchens around the work triangle or sink, r e frigerator and ran1etop, noting that even a larce kitchen should have an efficient floor plan. "The oven doesn't have to be close," he says, "because you walk there to put sometbinC In and leave it for a long Ume." Other extras located away from the acUon can be a kitchen plannin1 center and an entertainment area with a wet bar. "The blcgest complaint In old kitchens ls lack of storace space and counter apace," be says. "Sometimes we can len&tben counters by bulldin1 in an exlstina microwave or com binin1 the stove t.op and oven. J:ach or those equals another r7 inches or so." White deaigna for an open look, notln1 that California kitchens are unusually amall. "I like to add extru," bt 11y1, "auch u 1la11 or ttalned 1laa1 cabinet doora, 1Udin1 tambour dOon, wine racks and open display abelvea wbea ll)8ee allows." Some out -of ·•l&bt convenienctl include 1Uclin1 · 1b•tv• In baM cabinet.I amall .pull-out pantries and tilt-oat atainl ... 4...a tray lD fl"Ollt of the sink to bide sponges and cleaninl tools. Garden windows, with shelves for planta, open up a kitchen and 1tve the effect of more eounter space. A look of continuity la achieved with built -in appliances trimmed to match the cabinets. White'• company doesn't sell appliances or countertop materials but is happy to provide tnformatlon about them, especially the new developments. Hou.t idea in coottnc ts a cool aurface, with ener1y m11netJcally transferred from _below only to wlMre tbe lron or atalnlesa steel cooldq pot stta. It can be installed aa a separate ranee top or u four (or more) tll• incorporated Into a tile counter, White 1111. For cuatomera wbo don't want tile, be 1u1aeat1 Corin, a man-made material reaembllq a veinleu marble. lt com• In lar1e abeeta and can be cut and edled like wood. Unlike older plutic surfaces, lt'a beat rnlatant. But u milht be expected, the c01t of elecance can be hip. Wblte'a deSlp cbar1ea apply toward the price of-the cablnetl, wbicb baft a wide ~rice r.,.... "We dealped one ltltcben where tbe man bou1bt .apt cabinet• and IHtalled tbt• bim1tll, so It oaly colt blm t100" he 1111. ''By eoatrMt, anOUaer client la payln1 tD,000 J••t for cablaetrJ In u t by_ 12·feot ,.,.,.., .. \ Wttb aumben llkt that, no_. 11 H~ely to ar1ue wltla t.ta plalloaopby. "The kttcben, •• Wiatt• H1• wltla a• atr of ftaallU, "II UM molt ttpeml" ~:fDtllle ... Stay afloat in a potato boat . . . C7 Speedy 1neat dishes show versatility • • f t • [ . Ask any homemaker which appliance she'd most like for he( -kitchen, and if she doesn't own one already, chances are she'll ~ quick to say, "A microwave oven." ' These relatively new, speedy and efficient cookers ar arowinc in popularity ; it's predicted few homes will be without microwave oven by the end of the decade. • But after buying one of these kitchen marvels, all too mani homemakers use them far less often than they had anticipa~t Instead of capitalizing on the microwave oven's ability to ~ foods quickly, the appliance is often used only for such tasks ~ bolling water, reheating casseroles, and defrosting meats. r Why don't more cooks use their microwave ovens fol preparing roasts, chops, meaUoaves and hamburgers? The answer is simple. An invariable complaint is that mea ecLpoultry cooked in the microwave emerge gray. raw-looldn and altogether unappealing. After all, if the finished dish will be scorned by the family, i doesn't matter how quickly and easily the homemaker can cook ilJ This need no loneer be a problem, for now there is a way t produce beautifully browned meats and poultry in your microwav oven. Microwave browning sauce is available in three varieti~ for beef, pork, and chicken. A thin coating, brushed on meats or poultry prior to cooking ass11res an attractive brown appearance that is virtually indistinguishable from that of meats and poultry cooked iq conventional ovens. . And the browning sauce helps seal in natural juices, resultinl in a moister, more flavorful dish. t The microwave oven can finally be used for more than simpl! reheating chores. With microwave browning sauces, you can coo~ an attractiye pot roast that your family will love. Or you can fix a fancv meal for JtUests in a jiffy -golden Roe~ Cornish hens make a dish you'll be proud to bring to the table Even quick-cooking pork chops emerge as gloriously brown as you could wish. RUMP ROAST WITH WINTEll VEGETABLES 3 pounds boneless rump roast, rolled and tied 14 teaspoon onion powder I/• teaspoon garlic powder 1h cup waler Browning sauce for beef 2 cups rutabaga, peeled and cut in V..-inch chunks 2 carrots, cut in l ·inch pieces 12 small white onions, peeled 1h teaspoon salt Sprinkle meat all over with onion and garlic powder. Pour water in 3-quart microwave oven-proof dish; place meat in dish. Brush meat with browning sauce. Microwave on medium power 10 minutes; tum meat over, microwave 10 minutes. Cover edges that may be browning with thin strips of aluminum foil. Continue to micfowave 20 minutes longer, turning dish and meat after first 10 minutes. Add vegetables; sprinkle with sail. Cover with plastic wrap, turning backt2 inches at one edge for vent. Microwave on medium power 10 minutes. Turn meat and stir vegetables. Recover; vent; microwave on medium 10 minutes. Remove and let stand, covered, 10 minutes. Yield: 6 servings. STUFFED DOUBLE PORK CHOPS 3 cups water ~ cup seedless dark raisins 3 tablespoons butter or margarine 1 cup packaged stuffing mix 8 rib pork chops (about 1 ~ pounds} cut V..-inch thick Dried leaf sage Browning sauce for pork Combine water, raisins and butter in an 8 _by 10-inch microwave (See 'Microwave,' Pase C4). r I I 1 .. I. Ora,,. coat DAILY PILOT,Wedneaday, January 13, 1912 Som• day ln the not both rnethodl. Wb 41atat future, your CHOCOLATl·PEAa tntlre kltcbo may be VPllDS DOWN CAKE computerlaed. Even Topplq:_ to d a y , mod er n I tabltlPOC)ftl butter. technolo11 mallea lt or martarlM poutbll to produce ~ cup U,ht brown dellclou1 lfteal1 ln, 1qar • literally, mlnutea -1 can (l·pound> pear than_ka to 'the ma1lc of a halves (about• halves) microwave oven. V. cup chopped nuts I( you own one of these Maraschino cherrlu oven1, )'OU know what a Cake: .Jllarvellou.a, versatile 1 cup un sifted ;'rool It ls. Amon1 many all-purpose flour "advantaps, clean-up ls 1 cup sugar educed, your kitchen 'As cup cocoa doesn't beat' µp and Jesa 'H teaspoon bakin1 ner1y is consumed, soda h i c b a ho u J d b e IA teaspoon salt eflectecUn fuel bills. ~ cup butter or To make the moat of margarine, soft.ened y-0ur microwave, just 'H cup sour cream emember a few 'Simple 2 eggs ~ 1 reaspoon vanilla ps. For example, to avoid Heat butter 30 seconds ook. b k food in a 9-inch round or ~e~c d ~':e en :Cs s . a~ 8-incb square glass· dish. inimu_m Ume; always Add brown sugar; mix otate diahe11 when well . Spread evenly over tirring· 1-o'l practical; bottom of pan. Slice on• t ovetload yoUl' ell ch pear half into 4 ven ;' anew cooked sections; place in a oods to stand a few sunburst design over tlllnutes before serving mlxtu_re in pan. Arrange o that beat can nuts and cherries ln enelrate fro m tbe ·decorative design. Set \ltside.toJ.he center. for aslde. • ven temperature. Combine flour. sugar, ~ Uniform cooking and cocoa, baking soda and ~eating are important salt in large mixer bowl. ~or best results. And this On low speed of mixer s especially true when blend in soften_ed butter. t comes to desserts. sour cream eggs and ~ Following are two vanilla. Beat 2 minutes It.reals worth eating your on medium speed. Pour ~vegetables for. Both batter over fruit and !;feature· tba\ favorite nuts in pan. Microwave tflavor choeolete. on higb 8 to 10 minutes. Beca--U.,,'re inau r o t a t i n g d i s h htsi na .•. thae of t.ne -quar.ter turn ~n s weet"W coco••.· lalfway through cooking ~hocola'*':fft •• more ume. oncelitr.._. fonn, eacb it~emove from oven is extra rtdi, moist~ net "fteft cake appears set uscious -in fact, ·but ls stiO moist on top. uper·c~ey. Let stand 10 minutes. W he 1' l.1 Jl in e a Cake should pull away compl~ ~. ft'• a rrom sides;' cake lester ood · 'idea to (>repare Inserted in center comes rdessert first -for out clean. If necessary, · n s t a n c e . return to oven and hocolate.Pear Upside continue cooking, Down~: checking at 1-minute If there's a bot dessert intervals . Invert onto n the mtiiu, such as s erving plate. Serve hocolate-.Rum Hot warm or cold. 9 to 12 udge Pudding, do it servings. asl lo insure it will be C 0 NV ENT I 0 NA L iping. Excellant results OVEN : Bake al 350 re ea a y wit b a degrees for 45 to 50 onvenUoPal oven, too, minutes or until done. nd reci"9 below give Cake tester inserted In DESSERT IN A HURRY An upside down pudding bake quickl~· in a microwa\·e oven. c.enter comes out clean. Immediately invert onto serving plate. CHOCOLATE au• BOT FUDGE PUDDING . 1 c up uns1rted all.purpose flour ~cup sugar 3 tablespoons cocoa 2 teaspoons baking powder 'fl teaspoon salt •h cup milk 2 table s poons shortening, melted 1 teaspoon vanilla ~ cup chopped nuts ~ cup packed light brown sugar •.1.a cup cocoa 1 cup boiling water •1.-cup light or dark rum• Rum Whipped Cream (recipe below> Combine flour, o/4 cup sugar, 3 tablespoons cocoa, baking powder and salt in large mixing bow I. Stir in milk. shortening, vanilla and half of nuts. Spread batter in an 8·inch round or square glass dish. Combine brown sugar, •;.. cup cocoa, remaining nuts, boiling water, and rum in a small bowl. Pour over batter in dish. Do not stir. Cover dish with paper towel : (Secure towel with tape.) Microwave on high 9 lo 11 minutes. rotating one-quarter turn halfway through cooking time. During baking, cake rises to surface and sauce forms in bottom. Let stand 10 minutes before serving. Serve warm or cold topped with Rum Whipped Cream or ice cream. •If you wish to omit CONVENTIONAL OVEN: Increase water to 114 (Ups for Chocolate Rum Pudding; l'h cups for Chocolate Pudding. Bake at 350 degrees for 35 to 40 minutes. -Nffclepotnl, btocldog · CLASi end •IM•lll,1 · . 1~.l..TRUCTION 4tU 77 ')AN :..dMl:Nl t LA . "* •' ,., //& • ",. Jo (1 • ~ J t '.,. .. J rum. substitute 11.a cup , bot water. ' come MM us at our R U M W H I p p E D g_;!-.· new address CREAM: Combine 1 cup :f -f-..$ INSllUla heavy cream , 1 , .. tablespoon rum and 2 441 ow.._,.,. .,...4 t a b I e s p o o n s Newport IHdl. CA confectioners' sugar in Jl·77 o s mall bowl; beat until ~----.....-...... ..._.-... ___ 1 stiff peaks form. ~ YES.DETERGENT'PLUS FABRIC SOFTENER " New YES deans and softens your laundry ... for less! You don't need to buy a separate softener! Yes cleans, softens, controls static cling, leaves everything with a rainbow -fresh scent. And just a 1/4 cup is all it takes. Get new YES . ., and save! -. t• STORE COUPON • • Get into a new stew High nutrition beats winter blahs The bolldays are over. You've worked hard ln the kltchen preparlnc banquet-sized meals and you 've probably over-lndul1ed In all aorta of dellgblful treat. and goodies. Well, ll'a January, and the party's over. Time to get away from frivolous food and be1ln a nutritious and alimmin1 pattern of eauna. And what better way to do this than to prepare a bot, savory stew for a cold, winter nieht? Here are recipes for savor.y stews that are low in cholesterol and calories and will help keep y~u and your Timily neallhy' slender and warm during blustecy winter months. VEAL STEW WITH MUSHROOMS 1 pound boneless veal, cubed 11/• cups water 1 small onion pierced with 5 whole cloves y, teaspoon salt 1 bay tear- .,., cup sliced carrot 2 medium onions, cut into wedges l'h cups (5 ounces) sliced fresh mushrooms 1 teaspoon lemon juice 1 p a c k e l butter-flavored granules mixed wtth ~ cup hot leaves, crushed water 1 tab I e 1 po on l e11. beaten ve1etable oil In a laree sauce pot or 1 cup sliced freah dutch oven, combine mushrooms veal, water, onion with l lab I esp o on cloves, 1alt and bay leaf. chopped green onion, Cover and simmer untll including top (scallion) meat ls tender, about 1 14 cup liquid buUer hour and 15 mlnutea. subatltute Remove veal from pot; ~ teaspoon thyme set aslde. Strain broth; leaves, crushed pour broth back into pot. 1'11 teaspoon paprika Add carrot and onion 1 t e a s p o o n w e d g e s ; s l m m e r , cornstarch covered, about 10 2Lableapoonswater m i n u t e a . A d d 11, cup dry white mushrooms: continue .to wine simmer, covered, unUl \4 cup low · I at vegetables are tender, Imitation sour cream about 7 minutes . Cul each chicken Remove vegetables breast into atripa '1'1·incb f r o m po t : a d d to wide and 1 ~ lo 2-lncbes reserved veal. Transfer long. Sprinkle chicken broth to a large skillet: with salt and sa1e. In a beat over 'medium-hl1h large skillet, beat oil h e.!J l until broth is until hot. Add chJcken; red\Jced to about 11.s to "'2 brown on all sides. Add cup, about is· minutes. mus brooms, onion. Add lemon juice. liquid butter substitute. butter-flavored granules thyme and paprika ; and egg. Heat over low saute until mushrooms heat, until mixture ls are lende r . about 3 slightly thickened. minutes. Mix cornstarch stirring constantly. Do w ilh water; add to n o t overcook. Add skillet. Cook and stir reserved vegetables and until sauce is thjckened, veal lo sauce. Heal until -about-3 mjnut.es, stir-ring hot, about 3 minutes. Qo constantly. Stir in wine. n o t b o i I. M a k es 4 Cook, covered. on low servin11:s. heat, 3 minutes. Stir in QUICK CHICKEN sour cream , mixing STEW thoroughly. Heat until 3 boneless, skinless bot, 2 minutes. Do not c h icken breasts ( 12 boil. May b,..-served ounces) plain or over noodles, 14 teaspoon salt rice or in toast cups. v. teaspoon sa1e Makes 3 servings. r.-=.'1.'!'':-llllS 278 011! j 2P ' ~-----------~------------0 .. ~--aWldwldal · PROVOLONE CBEl'JIE Rlcba'IUty . TURKEY PASTRAMI $2.791b. HlllahlreFarma BRAUNSC,_,aw~EIGER $1.491b. Imported Danish DANBo-w,...1-TH- CARAWA.Y $3.291b. Deuert 11me Favorite. TAPIOCA PUDDING Orange Coul DAILY Ptl..OTf#ednHday, J1nu1ry 13, 1982 Irvine Ranch · COACBftl.1,1\. PIN.K GRAPEFRmT .. · 4 FOR $1~00 Premium Baking 'l'ANGERINE ~JV BONANZA.I Such Favoi:ftea u DANCY ROYAL ALGERIAN KINNOW ORLANDO SATSUMA MINNEOLA RUSSET POTATOES 41 ... for 59<: lb. 39l; lb. 7-BONEROAST $1.491b. BONEl.138 aR.isKET ROAST . ~­ BONELESS · SHOULDER CLOD ROAST $2.291b. Lean GROUIVD MEAT $1.491b. $1.19 ·1b. 25l; lb. . $1.00 -~-iWll 49(; lb. Lean MEATY SHORT RIBS Vie De France BATARD LOAVES ..,. n.-.w FIWla ...... producied.,,. .... Frmch bMer8 ...... Ide Freada OW!Dlwtdl die ftDMt .......... AD Vie De Fnnce prodDcta se delheted frelh dlllly. An lntne Randa Farmen MM'k.eta adl"'Yel 8GIL .... 79~ Elmer's Gold Brick CHOCOLATE PECAN TOPPING ................. oltopplncln. pmol warm Wllk!r and pour owr )'OUI" fa~ Ice Cftlmlll 4 GIL Rec-$L39 $1.25 ..,,.cbeMea. 41/1 GIL Rec-$L39 $1.25 lbDemede lrvlDe ReDch FaalMnMarketa APPLE COFFEECAKE · ~ ·-$1.99 . Ston Hatm: IO • to 6 pm. ~ DttJll . Rllw 81JNFLOWER SEEDS ...... I.SO s1.·1s S.IM81Farma UllKETCBIJP Ma .... 171 ~ $1.35 WHOLE WREA.T STIJPFING SJIELIS 12 ~-.. • .:.-99l; ·Jolmaon'• SPAGREttl SAUCE SZ GILW..82.99 $2.25 Goldnuth Buttermilk or Whole Wheat Honey PANCAKE MIX Banamtlk or Whole Wheat Hbaey. 2lor. Rec-&2.&8 $1.99 $1.491b. SIDEOFBE~F . $1.291b. lllNDQUARTER OF BEEF CarobFmctoee $1.691b. P'NUT BUTl'Ell BAR $5.00 OFF ANY 50 LB. PAK $ $10.00OFFANY100 lB. PAK Carob Coated RAISINS WboleWbeat FIG BARS Raw Hulled CORNNUTS 3.49 lb. •t--10_.,..%_0_FF~ANY"'=""'...,...10~1B~. S1EAK~~BO~X~ $1.891b. $1.291b. $1.391b. -- Whole COOKED CRABS $1.981b. CALAMARI STEAKS $2.98lb. HALIBUT STEAKS $3.981b. MAHI-MAHI $2.291b. Whole COOKED LOIWTERS $5.981b. I "' ' . I thtrt'I DO way \0 om1l tely ellmlQtte Hlt ~adnela, bul •re, • few tricks OU y lO l!Yke ttbat *"" day a Utt.le , .... ualDI. Ch.ICkt!ll and rice, that f amoYI combination, ca11 btlp oo a buy day. 1 Chicken Overs cook ln ~uat a matter of minutes nd chld:en can be ook'ed in ldvance and µse tender cooked meat ~.an be f~oaen or refrigerated and ready to include in many ~lfferen$ recipes. , Rj,e alao cooks qulcll)' . . . and it, too, ~an be prepared in ia d a n~ e a n d refrigtrated or troaen ~nd relldy to be heated ~t a ~ent's notice. If yo• are making bicken liven, the rice an '* 'cooked at the ame time. He~ .... two ucipes-~ o u 'll want to keep ~eca~se they're taaty •nd~'ck. ~HI BN LI VERS , R~NGO L~ pounds chicken Uver• l. teaspoon salt ~ teaspoon easoned pepper I .. esJJ>flour 1 2 tabla.poons butter 'or martarine l 1 cup sliced onions f 1A cup sherry ~ 1 can (14 'h lo 16 1ounces) tomatoes <2 cups> 2 chicken bouillon cubes 'h cup water i,; cup sour cream 3 cupa hot cooked ,rice Cut chicken livers in halt.· Wash and pat dry. f>lace,,tlour, salt, and pepper in bag. Add live...-,.a. few al a Ume, and .._..to coat. Heat 1 butter il'l a large skillet. 'Saute livers in hot butter, turning to brown evenl~ ~dd onions and sh~rr·y; stir to loosen brown particles. Add tomatoes, bouillon icubes, and water. Bring t • OFFER LIMITED TO OF ONE COUPON , QO llAMNOO -Chicken Livers busy day. to a boil; stir to dissolve bouillon. Reduce heat and simmer 10 minutes . Remove from heat and stir in sour cream. Serve over beds of rtuffy rice. Makes 6 servings. CH I CKEN LIVERS MARENGO ( Mkrewan-Metlaod) Place butter .fn a shallow 2·quart mlcroproor baking dish. Cook on High CmaJdmum power) for 1 minute or until butter melts. Add Jivers and turn to coat all aides with butter. Cook on High 3 minutes. Turn livers; bring those in the center lo outer edge. Add onions and sherry. Cook on High 3 more minute s . Drain tomatoes (reserve juice for another use). Add draiaed -tomatoes and bouillon cubes. <Omit water). Cook on High for 5 minutes, stirring after 2 minutes. Remove from oven and stlr in sour cream. CHIC K EN FWRENTINE I package < 10 ounces> frozen chopped spinach ~ teaspoon onion powder 3 cups cooked rice 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 3 tablespoons flour 1 teaspoon salt 'h teaspoon seasoned pepper 1 'h CUJ>S milk ~ cup half-and·half <cream and milk) 'h cup grated Parmesan cheese 2 cups coarsely chopped cooked chicken Paprika Cook spinach with onion powder according to spinach pack,ge directiollJ; drain well. Mix with rice; turn into a g r eased s hallow 2-quart casserole . In saucepan melt butler. Blend· in flour a nd seasonings. Gradually ad d milk and half-and·half. Cook , stirring constantly. until smooth and thickened. Add half of the cheese and chicken; continue cooking until cheese melts . Spoon o ver spinach mixture . Sprinkle with remaining ' I By LOUISE COOK ·---"'-• .... Con1um1r1 ire 1tertln1 the new year with encoura1lq 1l1na at lbe aupermarket. An AJsoclatld Preas marketbaaket 1urvey abo•n 1rocery prices roee only 1)l1htly durina the lul mooth of tbe old ye"r, and economlata are predictina conth)ued moderation durtns 1982. The survey covers 14 food and non·food products, selected at random. Prices were checked on March 1, 1973 at one supermarket in each of 13 citiu, and have been rechecked on or about the start of each slicceedlng month. The survey results are not weighted to reflect seasonal influences. Nor do the results take into hafpened ln 1980 : Su1ar pr cea went up and when 1u1ar ••• included, marketbqlcet blU. roee 14.5 percent. Wben 1u1ar wa1 removed, the averaae lncre11e wa• only 8.2 percent. Prlcea rose because worldwide producllon was not larce enouth to satisfy the world's sweet tooth. As sucar became more ex pen sive, however, cons umption dropped and prices followed. Over-all food prices had been expected to rise sharply in 1981 because of the effect of the drought of lj80. Enoqh rain llell early last year, however, to nurture the importa nt winter wheat crop. There were buruper harvests not only of wheat, but of corn aa well. The U.S. Department of A1ricl&ltuH llYI the final increase ln food prices ln 1981 wlll be about 8 percent -far below the 15 percent once talked about. For UJ82, the USDA says, the i norease should be between 5 percent and 9 percent. The AP survey s h owed that the marketbaakel bill increased last month at the checklist store In se v e n citie s and decreased in six cities, for an over-all increase o r tWO ·t e nth s o r a percent. Ourlnl Nqvember, the marketbuket rose an avera1e o r half a percent The Items on the AP cbeckUst were: chopped chuck, center cut pork, chops, frozen oranae juice concentrate, coffee, paper towels, butter, Grade·A medium white eggs, creamy peanut butter, laundry detergent , fabri c softener, \(>mato sauce, milk. frankfurters and granulated sugar .. The citles checked were: Albuquerque, N.M., Atlanta, Boston, C hicago, Dallas, Detroit, Los Angeles, Miami, New York , Philadelphia , Providence, R.l ., Salt Lake City and Seattle.· • account what portion of a family's food budget • · •• Microwave · c ooking · goes tor a particular d 7 . t broth, ona·on and ,.._ item. From Page Cl uncovere , mmu es. ni A sharp rise or fall in oven·proor baking dish. Turn dish. Microwave t e asp o on po u 1 tr Y the price or a single Microwave on medium on ll)edium, uncovered, seasoning in an 8 by product, therefore, has pow e r 1 minute . 7minuteslongeroruntil 10-inc h mic rowave ..more· imp~l on the upa Remove. Place• slurring chops are-done. oven-proof baking dish. and downs of the AP in small bowl; stir in Yield: 4 servings. P I a c e h e n s cheese and paprika. m arketbasket totals raisin mixture. Place 4 breast-side-down on rice Bake at 350 degrees for th 't d n r eal pork chons in baking GOLDEN HENS WITH mixture. Sprinkle with 15 ml·nutes or unt1·1 hot an 1 oes 0 " I •L family spending. dish, arranging chops HERB RICE remain ng n teaspoon and bubbly. Makes 6 In l981, for example, with bones in the center 4 Rock Cornish hens poultry seasoning. servings. ' the AP tound steep and of the dish. Pl.ace 14 cup < 1 pound each) B r u s h b e n s w i t b C R I C K E N steady decreases in the stuffing on each chop; Sall browning sauce. Pierce FLORENTINE i f Th se top with remaining 2· cups packaged skins with fork: cover (Mierow.Ve Method) pr ce o sugar. o w ,· th w a x Pa Per . d e c r e a s e s w e r e chops. Lightly sprinkle pre-cooked rice In a mi croproor lbl r tr with sage. Brush with l '"i cups chicken Microwave on med!um 1-quart dish. cover and respons e or cu mg 7 · t T marketbaskel totals so browning sauce. Cover broth power manu es. urn cook spinach and onion that at the end or the dish with plastic wrap, 'h c up oho pped h ens bre-ast-side-up; P o wd e r on High th b'll t th turning back 2 inches al onion cover, microwave on (maximum power) ror4 year e 1 s a e o n e edge for vent . .., 1 teaspoon poultry medium power 7 minutes. Mix with rice. checklist sr~e: were a~ Microwave on medium seasoning, divided minutes longer. Turn Tu rn into a shallow average 0 · pet'cen T f hens breast-s1·de·down, lower than they were at power 7 minutes. urn Browning sauce or 2 -quart microproof theendofl980. dis h . Microwave on chicken reversing outside edges b aki ng dish. 'Place When sugar was m e dium 7 min'utes Remove giblets from to inside; microwave, butter in a deep 1-quart removed from the list longer. Remove dish hens) reserve giblets for uncovered, on medium bowl or measuring cup. and the marketbasket from oven. Remove another use. Rinse hens ; power 7 minutes. Turn Cook on High for 1 to l 'h 1 1 I t d plas tic wrap. Turn drain well and pat dry. h en s breast-side-up, minutes Or untl.1 butter tota was reca cu a e , h .d ed the AP round that chops over and c ange Sprinkle cavities with reversing outs1 e ges me lts. Blend in flour. grocery bills r;-emained po s itions, keeping sal't.Tietbelegsofeach to inside; microwave, Add milk gradually• almost stable during the meaty areas to edge and he n togeth~r loosely. uncovered. on medium stirring constantly. Cook year, dropping by half a bones lo center. Brus'h ' Turn wings under. power 7 minutes longer on High for 2 minutes. percent. with browning sauce. Cover legs with foil ; set or until hens are done. Sli r . Cook 3 minutes Exactl Microwave on medium, hens aside. Mi x rice, Yield: 4 servings. more. stirring at 1 ~~.::.:.~L....:::.:.::.....:::.!:..!:.::.:.:.:.:... _________ _;_ _______________ .......,.........,.......,......:... .......... == minute intervals. Stir in half the cheese. Add sauce to chicken. Spoon chicken mixture over rice . Sprinkle witb remaining cheese. Dust with paprika. Cook on Higb ror 10 minutes, rotating dish ~ turn after 5 minutes. Let stand s minutes. I on 39 oz. 1lze MJB I Premium Flake Ground CoffH 40500 102864 Big JI• says ..• We are opening Ja n uar~ 18th ·FREE DRAWING s150 1st Prize -Steak and Meat Pkg. s100 2nd Prize -Steak and Meat Pkg . s 50 3rd Prize -.Steak and Meat Pkg. BIG JIM'S 9UALITY MEATS & DE,LIC~TESSEN ~~!zwporl ~:.. ~!!f!.f'A~~~!i:! ------------------------------~----------------~ - ~SAYE~ ~s ,._._ -------------__,....- Orange Cont DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, January 13, 1982 .. -------------------· --------------- c.oflee.mate makes coffee great. I ( '1) Coffee with Coffee·mate has a deliciously I rtch. smooth flavor you're sure to love. Because Coffee-mate non-dairy creamer gives coffee a creamy,. f ull·bodled taste I 1 that's uniquely satisfying. But don't take our word. Let the great taste convlnc~ you. I Try your next cup of coffee with Coffee-mate. Tasteit~ I The Gl8at Taste of Stew C~PCo 19'2 ~ -- SAVE 40t Coflee.mate NON DAIRY CREAMER on 16 or 22 oz Jcu 50000 109418 DINNERS, ENTREES OR MAIN COURSE COUPON EXPIRES 2nol82 51000 34:J037 mEj SAVE ~-._..,size ~---·-... -.... _.. FRO·.,,rN ___ ,.. _____ ...,. ~ =--=~-=--":'.=: .. _ ... ,. ~· . OOROOl ~---·-·-... -.-;--------.. -··------=-r:.--·--·-.::::· PRUtTPUNCtt ---··:=:=.-;,_= I -tu----·----,..._ 1 .... ____ _ Eir::· u.C:-'00..0-0..PI. ~ t1 A~llAN PUNCti I ... COJO,M.fll ,_,_ ...... ~ .. ---.. ~ .... ._.WCMM ... lllM• ...... llllMl• .. _ ...... _ .... ,._ -·---PO e.1\1 - ~••CIN'l't ....................... .. ... ., .. ,.. ............................... ~ -ltn4 c:... ........... ~-·-·· i ......... ..-..... ,_...QCM ..... ~,.. ~ u on any size I CHUCK WAGON • --------··-f:-: ............. ~ ...... ·---·-· .:.=:.-..-=:= ... =:.":l.~s . 'f~,:: I ---.----c---112.0tll" ~ 11<-DogFood l _,W_l'l:•-AS'"ClllEOOlllll(IM:IOJI• -.,,, US( 1(11 tollSISllOl Mlll lll(a ll-CllllSmUllS I 11AUO A11D llAY ~ •u (QIPOl1S ~I lfO JOll lllllltrTCll COUPON EXPIRES JANUARY -31, 19'3 ·---------------------.. -------------·-FreC mini-football with Two Proofs of PUrchase •.. from Celeste. Enjoy the flMI momem. of the footbltll MMOn with Cel1~the "abbondanu" pizza- made with en abunctenc:. of good Ingredients. And get • frM mtnf. footbell from c.teste, too. Detal • on order '°""9 lft ... frHlft feoda MOt1on o1 rour .eor.. 1111111 Announcing New Log Cabin· with even richer maple flavor. New Log Camn Syrup tastes even better than "bd'ore because it has twice as much o~ that good old maple flavor. And its thicker, too! New DriP:-:F'ree Spout. And our all-new cfrip- free top puts all tliat richer maple flavor right where you want it. Save30' • ! - Orange Cont DAIL V PILOTN1ednt1day, January 13, 1882 Guidelines for l!oasting • • m m.1crowave ovens •1 DOa&rHY WENCK Jual aa tone to cook rtce m lcrowa ve la very w aa h It. However,, any murk on the white persimmons, but they Wu there a ml· In the microwave aa It dticlenl at reheatlna sometimes allk ls fabric then you can frustrate me when I try cuwavt oven under doea on top the atove? cooked rice and puta labeled "dryclean only"• safely wash lt. Waah by to prepare them. your Olrlltmu tree? U -A. When rice (al)d products. when it could be hand, uslna a mlld 10, you're probably pasta pl'oducta> are washed. If you want to detergent (for example, -A. A homemaker tryln1 to learn all you cooked, the action that -Q. I received a 1Uk teat It.a wuhablUty, try , h a nd di 5 h wash in 1 offered this Idea: Boil can about eookln1 with takes place la an blouse for Chrlatmaa thla color fastness test: d et erg e 0 t > a n d the whole soil· rl pe YOur new equipment. absorption of water by and am wonderln1 tr I Wet a amaU piece of the lukewarm waler. Rinse persimmon, skin and lt'1a1oodldeatotry lhestarch.TbJsproceH canwuhltratherthan fabric Jfor example well , sq ueeie out all,lnwaterforaboutlO cooktnc all different takes the same amount have lt drycleaned? from an lnner facing>. surplus moisture by minutes. Then chill. The kinda of foods In your of tlme regardless of the -A. It the care label then lay it on a piece of rolling In a towel, and heating sets the gel so new microwave to aee type of cooking method on your blouse says white material. Press it hang lo dry. that th~ralmmon can which ones you like used . You will find, "dryclean only" then with a warm iron. If it -Q . Our family be p e6.ed and s liced cooked this way and ~h~o~w~e~v~e~r~.:..._!t~h~a~t;__!t~h~e~y~o~u~p~r~o~ba~b~l!y~1~hou~l~d~n~o~t~==================================~le~a~v~e!s~no~co~l~or~o~r~h~a~r~d~ly~1~e~njj~oJYc...!.S_.!f~r~e~a~h~n~e~a~tl~y~.~~~~~-­which ones you'd rather .- cont 1 nu e to cook conventionally. Keeping a diary of your results -wlth cooking speed, time, and comments -will help you remember what you learned. You might keep notes on recipe cards, one for each food. Generally, meats - beef, pork, lamb -are the foods that give people the mo s t probl e m s when a microwave is used to cook them. There are severaJ reasons for this: First, mic rowaving causes protei n s to toughen. so tender meats may become tough; less tender meats may not e_et lender as they do in long, slow. moist heat cooking by traditional methods. Second, microwaving tends to cause greater moisture loss than traditional cooking method s . Thus , microwaved meats. particularly reheated meals, may be too dry . Third, meats cooked for short periods in a microwave do not brown and develop the flavors and appearance associated with browning that takes place in traditional roasting and broiling. Fourth, larger cuts often do not cook evenly in a microwave. Some parts of a roast may be underdone while other parts are overdone. A "rare" rib roast might be rare from end to end next to the bone and weU done from end to end on the outside. Thus, serving well done and rare slices from the same roast would be difficult. A fifth prob l e m , _related to uneve n cooking, i s that of cooking pork to a uniformly safe interior temperature. Underdone pork can be a source of trichinosis. an illness caused by the trichina parasite. The most popular and successful meat items cooked in microwaves a re those that are already precooked and s imply need reheating. For exam ple , you might pan fry pork sausages on top of the range, making enough for several meals. The leftovers can be quickly reheated in the microwa ve with excellent results Expe riments s h ow that the mos t tender. best tasting meat results when the m ea t is microwaved at the low power setting. As t he microwave power setting increases the meat becomes less tender. The fl avor is bes t when meat is prebrowned be fore microwaving. The best choice of meal cut s for microwaving are those that are tender , boneless, compact and uniform in shape in the 3-to-5 pound range. Here a r e so me guidelines for cooking roasts in a microwave oven, based on results of numerous tests: l. Place meat on a rack in a dish; do not addliquld; donotcover. 2. Use low to medium power; never high power. 3 . Turn the roast during cooking, add rotate the dish during cooking. 'r 4 . Sbield speclfl'c areas <thin, bony, faUy areas, for example) with small pieces or foll. 5. U• • microwave tberomM.er to measure lntedor temperature of t be meat and al low for temperature rise· durlna the atanclina time after eookln&· Cook pork to internal temperature of 170 dqreee. 6. WbeD rebeatin1 · roast meat, prevent dr1nt11 bJ coverln1 meat .Uc:et wttb lefover ·srav1 or broth or • 1mall 11DOUDt of water. • • • QUSSTIONS WE ARE ASK&J>~ -Q. ft)' doel It take » > I You Always Save At Stater Bros. I You Always Save At Stater Bros. I You Always Save At Stater Bros. I I But To Assist Yll/ --... .......,Al& -. • • • --.. 111~ 15 17 18 18 20 • 18 110 TABLE BRAND MIZ'1.n Slleed "'•1.11 Baeon l.•z.21 $9 S9 1.ozu •1.21 & LB ' LB .... SltlllJT -LMIM-•mm ... --... Slm.BmMS -~--.. TfmMS ... •SltAIS • l.l •1.11 l.l •z.• l.1 •1.11 l.l •z.11 l.l•z.11 IUl'CMUCll --llAST· --~ .. llAST _,~..,.o •llAST . ~---Slm.BllAST -·llOl*O--.. Tfll&ST ' l.l •1.21 l.l •1.71 l.l •1.11 l.l •1.11 l.1•2.u -B SIWfll flllTS l'llOllll lOllt CVT ULllTSlUIS Hl'Wle•••U ..... _ .. .,....,.,.., -CIUSUI ·-CllllU Cll£S( IUC8DTO-. llAST-IUJ ----.......,Al& -l.•1.u l.1 '1AI l.•2.11 ...... uc 'loll 11.11 'IU •1.11 ' lllOULNI °" 'UNCIOFTOD TRASH, 1.1 Ml IMAAU.Ott DIET IWTI °" lllAAOAlllNE STICKS FllOZEH WHOlOUN F1'0tll FlOlllOA DID SHASTA 1.0ZCANS FINAL TOUCH GLAD BAGS 2IKT R.C. COLA BLUE BONNET 11-0Z I ORANGE JUICE 11-0Z '' frosen 1,--------------~ LARGE SWEET SUNWORLD ·=II 75c j TIRlovAILMEANRoAIRl1NsE ::-:-:-:-LMys~llasll~:::--. ---....... ___J'l.13 ' WYO t..-,.., '1.29 ~o~.~~~ ILUllEllllY1 !.._RAA, COllN Ofl ""°"" MUFFINS llEQ. l'tt UMys S., Jll = • _... '1.11 lilly ... = I -'lAI l»Js Plllll lat -32' LI~ Yima SllSap t C..'I Cit It .:. t flttll:lll C' ... 15' l~m CUAHEft K4Z sl.19 t _ .. Z. Sllkist Fnit Im :::"""' I -'1.11 :l!'· x~ §;] "'" 1111• Zilpn a:. • -• -t----It Cl.UllDI Lim .-i P/M.~Af-tlANttt7ltiMSflllu.5aJHM IWCll . ..... ·--• I I SALSA SUPREMA ' l.U-IOY La Victoria .................. 12-02 99° CWID _ac POTATO CHIPS 3 VARIETIES lllty Zilpn I 11 I Bell Brand ................. TWINPK 89° lllStlssTwtmln ··--... • lllStlss TWll*ia I -'1.21 I La PlnaFlour ....... ~Le •4.69 llhllltllllll !F-' I ·-•I I PealiUt'Butter H •• 28-0z •2.ssl:i 1 ... u ..... $2.29 FACIAL ll8IUI MIORTEO COlOAS OR WHITE A 11 ..... ==-• ..,,.. '1• I Kleenez ............................ 200-CT 78° lll*lst hi' Siila .--t -•1• R.C. OOlA '00 Oft } mv .,_ ., ... I Diet Rite . . . . . . . . . . .,,2-0ZCA•• •s.49 t • ew1 s1 83 MnAMAAtelNE QUAAT!bRI CORN OtL Cl£Alll . . .. 11oi . • I .. .. ............... 1&-0?79• }~~-=-~.---....;;...;;.... °"olOY ~u· 11 ac1 ... - I ar e re ................ MJZ 77• 1111 a TM b dl ~ l'LONOA . ..,.. .... ~~ralt .JUI~ .. 12-0z 93' ..,....._______._----.....;~~....__., I Blz ............................ ~ ......... .ai 'Z.Z7 . ' • •· U I NO I 111.D M»[ POTITOEI 'llHCT IOIJO ORUH HlAOI ClllllE iiiiiEr ~·vu· L.21c ;un beer wine 8 llquoi SCll.ITZ Im ::!t-.. t -...... '1.8 TAYl81•S EF'-... I ·~U ... IUSSE Y• t .... '7.19_ • "" '11.41 -..r. < Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, January 13, 1982 Cooking for one becomes easy and convenient Somehow )'OU tbou,ht repper. Add potato, beaten medium heat. Drop tuna llvln1 your own I re una, onion, c arrot. 2 tableapoona finely mixture by heapln1 w o u I d b e m o r e celery and oUves: tots chopped onion tablespoons Into sklllet; 1lamoroua. It only you to mix well. Chill. To 1 table s poon flatten a llghtly with d I d n 't b ave to be s er v e, 1 po on o o to chopped parsley spatula. Fry until colden bothered with petty lettuce-lined serving I/• leaapoon paprika brown, turn, brown details -paying rent, plate. Yield: 1 servln1. 2 tablespoons butter other side. Repeat with cleanlna house, fl1urln1 POTUNIA C.RJSPIES or mar1arlne balance of tt1e mhcture, the math of cookln1 for 1 can < 6 \.1t or 7 Drain excess llquld adding more butter to one. ounces > tun a In from tuna. Combine skillet it needed. Serve Solo cookery doesn't veeetable oil or water tuna, mashed potatoes, with heated chlll sauce have to be a hassle. \.1t cup mashed wheat germ, egg, onion, or tartar s auce, If Think it over. There are potatoes parsley and paprika ; desired. Io a d s of opt i on s . v. cup wheat germ mix well. Melt butter In Y I e I d : A b o u t 8 _________________ ,, SOLO OR DUET ~ Speedy Tuna Spud • Boats make easy cooking for one or ' two. _____________ ., 1 , ., , especially if you stock 1 egg, s Ii g h t1 y I a r g e ski 11 et o v er pancakes. uponasupplyofcanned r-~~~~~~~~~~.......;;;.~~~~~~~-=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ tuna and baking potatoes. Tuna goes with s o many things besides salad fare, and it's so convenient. Here's the how and wherefore of one of the ways to keep starvation at bay. Call it "canny" cookery, If you like. That's the name of the game. For all its eas e and c onveni e nc e <and modest image) tuna is one of the top-notch complete protein foods. And because It comes already cooked, It takes v e-ry tittle time to produce cold and even hot dishes with it. Let's talk about tuna and baked potatoes. Any evening after dinner. pop two or the potatoes into th e oven . A toaster-oven's p erfect for this kind of cookery. Next day, when you get home from work, take one of the potatoes, cut it in half lengthwise and scoop out the pulp into a bowl . .Mix it with half a can of tuna, chopped tomato, grated Swiss Cheese, s ome mayo and seasonings. Spoon this m ixture back into the potato shells and top each with a bit more grated Swiss. If you have an unexpected guest, you can fix four Tuna Spud Boats with both potatoes and the whole can of tuna -and still have room for them in the toaster-oven. But if you're. dining in solitary splendor ·that week , use the other half c a n of tuna and the extra potato for a lip-smacking One-Potato Tuna Sahtd the next night. And, last but not least, to complete the trio or tuna-potato "eas ies," there's a recipe for Potunia Crispies. SPEEDY TUNA SPUD BOATS 1 baking potato VJ can (6 'h o r 7 ounces can> tuna in vegetable oil or water v .. cup chopped fresh tomato VJ cup grated Swiss cheese, divided 2 table s poon s mayoMaise, divided dill 'Iii teaspoon dried Pinch salt Pinch pepper Scrub potato well ; dry, and prick with fork . Bake in 425-degree oven 55 to 65 minutes, until soft . Cut in half lengthwise; scoop out pulp into medium bowl. Add tuna, tomato, 'r'J cup gratt:J Swiss cheese, 1 tablespoon mayonnaise, dill, salt and pepper . Mix well. Spoon mixture into potato shells. Top with remain i ng mayonnaise ; sprinkle with remaining cheese. Place in oven or under broiler to warm through for 5 to 10 minutes. or until cheese is bubbly. Spr inkle with chopped pars ley, if d e ~red . Yield: l serving.r ONE-POTATO TUNA SALAD 1 baking potato l tabfespoon ma~onnaise 1 tablespoon mustard 1 tea.spoon sugar 1 teaspoon vinegar Pinch salt Pinch pepper Y.a can C6Y.a or 7 ·ounce can) tuna in vegetable oU or water 1 tablespoon grated onion 2 table1pooos crated carrot '4 cup diced celery 2 t.able1poons slice, pitted, ripe olives LeUuee Scrub potato well ;. dr1 and prick •Ith fork. Bak• lD -..,, .. oven s.s to ea mlnutee, untll aoft. Cool aUlbtJy; peel and cut into amall cubea. tn small bowl, com blne mayonnalH, muatard , 1u11r vJn•s~r , 1a1lt and. YOft$ LOWER PRICES JUAtt SAVlttGS GUARAttTEED ·oriELESS~1· .. · ROUND STEAKS TABLE KING BE.EF-FOU CUT LIMIT 2 (Purc:ha~ OVt"r llmit·reg. price lb. 2.08) LB SLIMPRJCETll\ SWEET PEAS 16-0UNCE CAM PRODUCE ""''~ Ruby Red Orapefrult '1'JO II51 I 0 TOlM Hlo'()llff( DISH Ureen & Yellow Chllf "'"-'ltltO TWICf !!UL.• PfntoBuns EA .·29 l •• 19 l & .29 lll .29 l&.49 l8 .29 DAIRY PRODUCTS ~~~geJulc:e 149 ~~ .59 16-0l (l!'O r-•-LOW ,..., __ ~ 97 Knudsen CottaGe Chee.le • L ~~Soft Sprud 135 HEAL TH f, BEAUTY ~~Ruor .99 I )Ol WO lUl.-PllC!H""°" 60llfCL 115 Arrld Roi-On Deoc1or9nt ioorn 'l O:l-UA Qll li.(µI~ JnlrmlKk 5hmp. or Cond. ~Toothpute 258 199 SERVI CL Sf AF OOD ~~fk UI J89 LOS HERMA.NOS LIGHT CHABLIS l~R U'\IT 2 (Purd'lll>e att< lime reg Pfl« ) 79) MEATS • llllll,.,... ecu l!Ot<l 1 \5 10I' li()(Ji'ID ] 9 7 London Broll Steak 1 e IAlllllllClt!l'll-f[~ l• } 97 Bottom Round Stuks D ,.,_, llf'IG (I .. ~.Cl/I Beel Chuck Steaks tl\ljj I •l"I(, i!O"fl£~ Lean Stewing Beel L8 259 lll 2 48 I.I! }69 Lii ) 99 $1<Cll!V""'°l(fD--~ } 29 Farmer John Hams •B ~~;;H;;:.""' lB ] 39 ~Qt"',:;' ... 79 ~~"'~'',..."'"• -..-.nfll';'41t LIQUOR ~Uebhumlkh 419 ~-ci:t>a.~ll05£ 289 ~Club Whisky 729 ~ Amiret.to di Saronno 1229 re~ 599 ~Qin 899 ~tolO.m 899 VONS B/\Kl HY GROCERIES mllOnu A tcakSauce .98 l~CN< Vons pine<:h .48 ~ h HalYes .58 s=c~--S t raptfrult Juice .89 '"l~;r, cr<H Com n /'l\lx .26 16-0I~ Sim e "" Fruit /'l\lx .49 ~{~lf'.;he><V" 111 ~Beef8tew }52 ~~oStk:k }29 DELICATESSEN f-T P.cJI ,.._ C~IO• ~ ... Uf 2 1 9 Longhom Cheddar Cheese111 • ~~ llO'I Tl< ...wt<HO Taco hells .69 8~-"41('!'0 lVW IH•I Rich s Turi<ey Boloena .55 ~ ~ 'tl'.fl>l-.XH'-C.O ft Amertc:en Cl}eese )59 Vc'l't\G -~rCi ons S Beel laml .99 ~.~ibd~ .39 UOl --llll!OllQll-~, ClluNCn Koaher Plcklu }19 'HOT . H/\KLRY C.lomiaSquid U1 .59 ~~DOUOll .39 &:=~~Loll 149 WE.LL DOUBLE THE DIFFERENCE OUR OOARANTEE OF VONS LOW PRICES 10 c:onvlnce you ol Vons comm~ to low pricn , we rt-mltklng this ollt'f. f )'OU c:en find lower prices OYenill this Wttk at any Olht-r tupelTTlllri<rt, Vona will pay you double !ht-ddf«enee Just lhop et Von1 Buy 25 dtffermt urns wontr_.20 c:x more Compert Pf1CeS ::in !he same ltMis at an)' ocher supt'f11\llrtll!t •i' thelt total ls lower, bring your ltemlz.ed Vona rKelpt and !he oeht'r marl«!t's pricn to Vona enc1-·n p;I)' you double !he dlffen!Oet-In cash. VOO$-l.ow pnc:es )'OU can be- 1i-1n. VO APPLE SAUCE e IYlC.J ~CE J-.1!-QRA VENST'EJ; U"'lfl 1 ll'urcn&M <M!f Mn>• ff9 ~ 991 VONS HOT 000 BUNS Ii ft•1A #l~li•X•l •1'. .. FROZEN FOODS .89 111 101 l'-<:•.,,I ) 99 Oregon Farms Carrot Cake ~·""' Oh Boy Oar1k: Bread .79 Xl~MC-WHOU Vons 5trawbcntes Ma~~&~ VONS LUSH GREEN PLANT SALE Assro • TROPICAL99 PLANTS e 4n(Hfl('JT HANGING ~99 6 TROPICAL .iril .. r~!~o .. BLOOMING COLORFUL A 95 CYCLAMEN .. UPRIGHT TROPICAL PLANTS 2 SETA SMART TABLE ]29 ]19 )49 ~~ ... u.391 ~OI 138 ~ca.~ 6 ,..69. "oaaa:eANTOllllDlllGllTATWTSIW8 ...._ ~ -_ _,,JM, 1410.M.30. llG. CAU.QIJU31400 l'Oll 1.0CAT10ft Of' ITOllC ~ VOU. l'tOT AU. ltfM MD l'MCQ W. THIS AO El'RCT'M! AT vont. )"4 W. ITM tt~ llOO W. f'tCO a'°~ IPI W, lnMIT~LOe----iMCil!iiO »l'ICM~-IM.Dl'I ~ QCWf"'1ll Ol'LY. _,.,. STOMI ~ a11410 ,.......,, Dt\'fS A-. • • Fount .. n Velley .............. "" Ht2 I..._., a.,,.,..,... Cetta .... 1M I . 17'tl ltrfft and Oraft19<AW.. Hunttr'llon ltecfl -1U.m• • left ...... c., .• .,.... . .., Camfn«t C......,_ft4L.A De~ I IMne '730 l1rr1nca Ad. ..... ..OOl~nellvd 1'~t HartMH a lclfttef Cap11trano 1 .. ct1 s•1 Qofltnr Peril Of. a vic.or11 ~ ,.-....v •. ·' 11"0Ma1: 111& ~ L.....-""'9 "~, ..... hftlwaf "" " ·. ---··---··-~-........ -~-- Orange Cont DAILY Pll.OT/Wedne1day, January 13, 1982 DATING GAME A nutr itious salad starts with dates and cabbage. Make a date with a salad Juat becau se somethlna is good for you dGelD't mean it bas to be dull. Quite the contrary. Combining various ingredients in salads with an eye to nutrition can be both exciting and gratifying. Ta te dates, for instance. Few people realize that dates are not a dried fruit, but are picked from the stately date palms at full maturity and briefly exposed to steam to plump them up before packing and to enhance their fl avor and appearance. They are very high in potassium, iron and niacin. · Combined with other fruits and vegetables containing good amounts of Vitamins A and C, dates become an excellent rounding-out for a nutritional-salad. The natural s ugar In dates also contributes to the energy level which we all need. Cabbage and dates are two of those natural nutrition&! partners. DATE AND CABBAGE SAlAD 2 cups shredded red cabbage 2 cups s hredded green cabbage l cup dates, diced 3 tablespoons lemon or lime juice 2 tablespoons honey ~ cup salad oil 'tii teaspoon salt Mix cabbage and dates in salad bowl. Bl e nd r e maining ingredients In a blender or shake well in a jar. Chill in refrigerator. S h ake again before tossing with cabbage and dates. All Big Deal products are ma&· 111d1 d1cji11t .. "'f tl(J/llflll ingm:lients. and flt.1tlfrjida/ (iVltfffli..VN.'l"S tV /'l~'fltlllll'S ft'alf ,.,,,,.U Difl'Ct/y fivm our nc).{ di.w b.lkt.·r_1: wuh die w;111.1/ supcrmarkc·r shcj/ /!fr. Slon· 111.11111ti/{l · ~1/io p11ni11.N: St.em.rm Otadattd mcrrhancfisc x"Yt.i ar 51. ) .. 1t'r nnc\tf the llSU1.ll IC'ratl pncc. 111· nnv1ur1cnc( /h:.-m 'ttYf{!;\0 Cheesecakes (rl'Jm~ rkh plam Chec~>tclN.· .mJ~~u L1'\Tl i\1ocha Kahlua. Muffins l..t'rroi1 \l~hun. C.trr(ll. ,1nd '1 \<lt ll'l\ l'I 8«111 muffins. ~ Snacks fl1dge Bl\.1\\1lie~. arJ d tllOU!h \\'<llL'ntl\.! (lff(I\ of iooi\'idually-;,rar~x.\J ~nach L<tk>s. · · CookJes The bl'SI 111 to.\TI. riw ll<t\L1fS UllluJu~ l'W famcxas Chc('olatr Chrp. cakes U.1llf Caks. &1001 Cakes. and luscious Lcl\\.'r G:1k-; Salad oreSsings A ddicious ctriu· L~ Mavonnaisc. Bk'u C~. TI)..'4.1Sand lslaoo. Cesar. Oil & \1negar. Lenn1 Drll . .---.:; Lime DUI, fn.>nch. and Ranch. Specialty Breads -OUr uniqlr \ \itcle Grain~h. plus Com R)~. \<\ihck Wheat. and f\Jm'Seed Pletzele. all \\ilh rolls to macch. Big Deal Bakery SUrpius Store 2915 S. Bristol St .. Costa Mesa. 0\ Cf262.6 714 ·545-<;006 Open Mordl{y-Salunlqy JO<JOam-6:30pm ,--------, : ~ thisooupon ~ I -its worth I :~ ... ., : I i )WT ttXa1 purchase I ~ -pd until Ith I. !Cm J , ________ , . \ Running a kitchen witli9ut machines By MA&Y .IAN£ SCAllCEl.LO DeH~fltleotfl-'llllMf Household nppliances, llke children, always choost: the worst Umes to act up. The washing machine overflows or sits ~ullenly muttering to Itself j ust afte r the famlly has returned from two weeks of backpuking in Yosemite, forcing you lo go out and buy a clean set of underwear for everyone even before the unpacking is complete . Dryer s die oo the second day or a record·breakini rainstorm when the repairman has 47 famlltes ahead of you. "Maybe I can get to you a week from next Tuesday." he announces lacooica.lly when you call , "but you'll have to check back with me." Like some medical specialists. he would prefer an appointment a month in advance. Meanw hile , the fa mily discove rs it's possible to dry clothes In the oven, but the synthetics tend to melt or catcb fire. The dishwasher is a goner when you've just prepared and ser ved an elegant sit·down dinner for 12, complete with butter plates, soup bowls and every fork you ever owned. After guests have left and every surface in the kitchen is littered with debris, wis ps or smoke drift from the faithrul electric servant. When doing without a dishwasher, a cook realizes an important fact: half the beauty of PMth llacle Sho .. lder ,~149 the machine Is In provldln1 a hldlna place for dirty dhsheis unlll enough have accumulated for a full load. Coffee cups and plates from breakfast go Into It, and lunch dishes discreetly join the crowd. Old you bake cookies in the afternoon? No probl em to cover the sticky evidence of mixing bowl and cookies sheets. Not only are t he dishes cleaned while the cook performs other vital chores (s uch as OUT If THI llTCHll taking a nap), but the unsightly mess iJ out of the way in case your mother or the nosey lady down the street drops in. Even in the modern world of machinery, cooks may throw dirty dishes into the oven to tidy up the place, but it's possible to bake the whole mess into something much harder to clean later. IC your beloved dishwasher grinds to a hall, one-dish recipes take on a whole new aura of respectability. "Never mind how it tastes," the cook snarls at the family. "The dishwasher's broken. and t his stuff only gets one pan dirty. Save your torks, too, becau.ac you won't e~t a clean one for dessert." Y Here's a one·pan recipe that's eaay to make -assuming the oven as still functionl ne -and tasty , loo. Serve with r ice and a fresh fruit or vegetable salad for a winter meal good enough even for your mother or the nosey lady down the s treet, if they drop in Just remember to get the laundry out of the oven before selling the temperature control to cook . BEEF MUSHROOM CASSEROLE 2 pounds lean stewina beef or round steak. cut into l·mch cubes I c an cream-or mus hroom soup, undiluted 1 package dry beef·m\Jshroom soup mix :i.. pound mushrooms 11'.i to 1 cup red wi ne Arrange beef in oven·proof casserole dish. Pour mushroom soup over and sprinkle with dry onion soup mix. Cover and bake in 225·degree oven for 2~ hours . Stir mixture and return to oven for l hour. Blend in mushrooms (sliced or quartered, as you like) and wine, cover and bake for 1 hour longer. Serve over rice. MaJces about 4 to 6 ser vings Star-Kist Tuna ::t79o 6~~1. Moiher' s Cookies :=.-:.""ct., I r ~--~:--1 • 0.tmeol W'ffAt •Moce,._ (llO(M.Atl ... ...::=.11 .... ""-.._.._ f'tc9 . ....... ,,,. ~ 2 ........... 0... 1M11t •• SI It °"""'"" GROCERY & BAKERY DAIRY AND FROZEN Whole Fryer Legs F<n11~~-0:.... 111 c =: Mr Jumbo "iu',,,!;~ ~~49c --..... Lucerne Cottage Cheese Navel Oranges S..nldtt 22 :1· : ... 'i) lb. $ TomatMs :: 69C ..... ef .. Extra Large Navel Oranges Bean Sprouts =: Fresh Red Beets Crisp Cucumbers o:w.. Russet Potatoes ~~· Chop Suey Mix .. - Butternut Squash '":..""'"" Bulk Almonds and Walnuts • 4 ' • 49• _59• ..... 35• .. 35• ;.: 69' • 49• 69' Drumsticks or ThighsF .... r:i~~~atn ,oS1°9 ~Libby Tomato Juice 4t: 79' Best ofFryer 1=~=:i:r;, lb ggc ~Cheddar Cheese=~ 'D s199 Fresh Chicken liver r .. ,. ,..,,,, 10 ggc ~ Buttertop Bread ..... Wriem , 2~: 79c Lamb Chops USOA~~icaii 10 s 199 ... -t, Raspberry Rolls Scolcll ...., ~\ ggc Beef Oxtalls O:.:ci ._ s1 19 2¢ En lish Muffins !~....,. 2":?: 99' Bananas 29c Crisp Fresh C-arrots Fresh Jlcama t: Fresh Pack Orange Juice Tangy Lemons .:'r. Tender Sweet Corn Sunchokes =:. Bareroot Roses c:t.. 6 Inch Crotons '=' 2:.. 55• • 49• 0:. •21s • 49• 2. 49* s Coffee ~ ... •229 Can LIQUOR AND WINE ~ Rlunite Lambrusco ..:.C. 7.?'$279 •Aolt ztScotch Buy Wines:=. 2u14.ss7oo ~Villa Banfi Asti Spumante ~ s4 99 3¢Gln or Vodka w~~eu, . 17S$699 U• ~Cutty Sark Scotch • :•ass l'!OOI allo Spanada or Tyrolla . ~.~199· Lit et --~ Lucerne Sour Cream i ~ *299 12 ~~:. ,.,... 2 • ........_ o... """"' ... a ""' 110. HEAL TH & BEAUTY AIDS ~Oil of Olay,: ~s3s9 ~Colgate Dental Cream ~ s119 •oental Floss s. ........ 100 s129 ·-•-t Mennen Speed Stick 2~$161 •sayer Aspirin Tab lets ... s119 .. 100 SAFEWAY .1 LAIGEMEIT SPECIAL S" x 7" 89C ........... 11" a 10" s1•• ..-dalll:.---........... .. lrifl9 .ilf c.--Wetli ............ ~ teywt'*t ..................... .... eet • s·· 111 r• e1.-..._. ._ ... • ..... 10" .............. , ... ....,.1.4"1 SAFEWAY f • • • , Orange Cout DAILY PfLOTNVednnday, January 13, 1912 , 878Aa&\MGl880NI blender -whipped call ror buttu or cream < 25 per Omit butter, It Isn't -On rlce: Use so Some thln11 you'd part·akim ricotta cheese ahortenlnc. Reduce t"• 1111 l•IO tab lea/.oon >, 1ou r nece11ary . Use hot • a u c .. < l O P e r bet Ur know about (20 per tablespoon>. Or amount of butter or ~ haH·an ·half (20 per unsweetened applesauce tablespoon). butter: cook the veaetablea wlth 1bortenina caJled for ln _ _. .... ._____ • t • b-I e • p o o n > , (5 per tablesfoon) or -On noodles: Add 1. Butter la 100 your meat or poultry buttercalle batters. In chive-seasoned plaln warmed fru t Julee Uttle paled cheese and, calorlH a tablespoon. maln course. add-your-own-butter per tablespoon) for -·on baked or broiled low·fat yo1urt (10 per concentrate as a syrup plain low-fat yo1urb FewfoodlorlnarecHentl -lnblacults,mufflna, buttercake mixes , butter. fish : First moisten the table~poon ), mashed <apple Jul c e <comb l n at Ion aremorefattenJnathan qulctbreada : leave simply leave out the -Onlobeter,ateamed flsh with lemon Juice, avocado (25 per concentrate. 30 per approximately 15 per, that It'• because b tt butter out of the batter, butter. You 'll be ahellflah: Steam •he t h e n r o 1 l l n a tablespoon>, shredded tablespoon). tablespoon>. Or toss · · u er oTreducetheamountto surprlaed bow llttle shellrtah ln a amtall comblnatlon of equal CheddaT <SO per -On~: Toes with blender-whipped! It moetly fat, and fat la f 8 11 ....... ~-· ·• cottaie ci.-~-(lO s;,,' the moetfati.ninl thlnt one-half or one-quarter dlfferenceitmakea. amount o water .. o parts of seasoned tablespoon), low-cal the fresh-popped corn ·- there la. of what the recipe calla -In fro1Un11 and down the liquid and breadcrumbl and 1rated creamy blue cheese wltb butter-flavored salt t a bl e 1 po on > o 2. Butter ta mostly for. Use butter-navored lcln11: simply leave It combine It ~th lemon Parmesan cheese (25 salad dress in 1 or crated Parmesan or part-skim ricotta (20 pe 11turatedfat,theklndof aaltlnsteadofplalnsalt. out. Oraubltltutecream juice and only one calories per tablespoon (approximately 30 per Romano cheese (each tabl~apoon). Or sen fat that tends to raise -In cakes : Make c h e ea e < 5 5 per· tablespoon of butter ror each). tablespoon). c h e ea e , 2 5 p e r past~ with plain tomato cholesterol levels. a n 1 e I c a k e a .or tablespoon) or low fat a dipping sauce. Or omit -On baked potatoes: -0 n pancakes , tablespoon) and Italian 1 a ti c e ( 5 p e r 3 . I r y 0 u • r e s n ecakes that don't cream cheese (under 30 the butter atto1ether. Top the m with sour waffles, rrencb toast: herbs. tableapoon). , calorle-countln1 . ~~~.;;.=~-=:.;:;.;;.....:;.;:;;;.;...;__;_;_...;_~----;._---------------=-----------.:_..:..::..::..:.:.::. __ ~~:..:..::~---..:..:.....:.:..:._..:..:...:..:..:..:.:..~.:.:..:~-----------------------=----,:__-------- margarine ls not a diet-sate substitute ror butter, because margarine baa the same calorie count: 100 per tablespoon. However, sort margarines made from corn or other polyunsaturated oils have been advised as a butler subsUtute for heart patients because of the cho - lesterol-lowering tendencies or polyunsaturated oils. If losin1 weight is your main objective, • replacing butter with margarine won't save you any calories. 4. Diet margarines are half the calories of butter (or regular marcarlnes> because Lhey're half water. There's no sucb thing as diet butter, but you can make your own by whipping equal amounts of soft butter and lee water toaetber. But dlet margarine and homemade diet butter are atifl 50 calories a tablespoon, about the same calories as jams or sugar. 5 . Butter contains vitamin A, a vitamin you can easily get at a far lower calorie cost from yellow fruits and vegetables like peaches, cantaloupe, pumpkin, carrots, yellow squash and also broccoli , spinach, etc. The best way to save butter calories is simply not to use it . . . or use less ol it. Here's bow: (Calorie counts follow' Hsted alternatives.) -On sandwiches: Use light mayonnaise or salad dressing s (approximately 30 or 40 ' per tablespoon ). Add moist fillings like sliced tomatoes (5 to 10 per slice). Use less fattening condiments: mustard or ketchup ( 15 per ,tablespoo,n) re!isb ( 2.<> per tablespoon). ' -On toasted English muffins or bagels: Use low-calorie cream cheese (50 per ounce). Neufchatel cheese ( 70t per ounce), farmer cheese (40 per ounce). Even jams and jellies are less fatle'11ng than butter (55 per tablespoon>. Better yet, use low-sugar ·jams or jellies (25 per tablespoon >. -On cooked vegetables: Simmer the vegetables in chicken or beef broth . . . no butter needed. Or toss hot veggies with bottled low -calorie salad dressing (approximately 30 or 40 calories per tablespoon), or sprinkle them with a little grated Parmesan cheese (2~­ per tablespoon). er make a cream sauce with skim milk , cornstarch and herbs <•Pf roximately 10 per tab eapoon). Or toss cooked vegetables with plain low-fat yosurt < t<> per tablespoon >, half-and -half sour cream (20 per tablespoon>, •tcre Breakfa1& ..-. Auemble these breakfut treats and - u needed -microwave lndlvldually ao they'll serve up bot and delletoua. For each,. Jilhtly lluU.el' acroM the center al m .. lneb flour tortllla. JPoDow wltb a 1pread of marmalade, tbea layer of 1llced baDana. Sprinkle wttb chopped ........ Fold ID two .. and roll up to coatata ,it• filli•I· Plue 09 a ,..,_. towel or 1apkla. Microwave .......... = .. w.....on Tlaat iatp Iii tli• air •l•••l• a ••••i for Wartier_ . ....., .... ud paaeoea are a11ell • raw~ hr a daaat•. tr1 •••••• •tdham d•oned w•au and whole ktnatl eon to JOUr bMlc belt.er. Coall u ua.i: -~Utr IDd ..... 11"1f· I USDA Choice Beef Boneless Top Round London usoA Broll cH01cE USDA Choice Frozen-Defrosted Baal cH01cE Back Ribs T~ Pink or White Gr1p1frul' Juice · Frozen-Defrosted Northern Halibut Steaks Extra Fancy Washington Rad Delicious !Pl.las f ... Orange Coeel DAILY ftU..OT ,Wedn"'9ar, January 13. 1812 ~ Resolutions fo10 -Eefuilders ·mea~ more sa:vings B1MAaTIN8LOANB ,. lttep lt wlth 1lmll1r wetlt1 to recelve each 11ucer.Therel1nollmlt the form , two boJC to the full purcbate ofthemrromclMamon WHEATIES save •i 1•1 wu a Sood YHr cuh·off coupon• -refund. on the number of bottom1 and two front price. Send the required flavor. Thl1 offer la not Offer Receive four for coupon cllppen and beverace refuod olfen The folio,;:& refund aaucera you can obtain. labela. Explret May 81, refund form, lh• apeclal valid ln Ml11ourl and U ·c•~t coupon• for refund•ra . Mort wlt.b beverqe cou.._.,, offen are IU.t). Ex1ireaAprlUO,l882. 1982. proof·Of·purchaae teal Waahln1ton. Expires Wheallet Send the eoupona, more refund for example. Thl1 ~·, otten have ThtM offer1 require CURITY, The Kendall from Kello'*'' MOit and June 30, 1912. required ~efund form off.,. and hither valua a total vahaeoUll.71. refuJld forms:. Co. Receive a baby the repter receipt with BABY WET ONES and three Unlveraal bave meaat more Start collect1n1 tbt Bor,Ju1I Thl1 offer AUNT JEMIMA 1hlrt. Send the required lht price circled . Free Offer. Receive a Product Code aymbola 1avln11 for 1mart needed proofa of doesn't~ulreafol'JD : Refund Offer. Recelvea refund form and the ExplreaM•rch31,1982. couponwort.buptoSl.35 from any Wheaties •boppen. purchue while Jookln1 KSLLOGG'S Raillnt, refund ot •1 or $2.20. For ln1lde end flapa with the LIFE CEREAL on 40-eheet Baby Wet Expires April 30 um · But u we be1ln the for the required refund Rice ud Rye Saucer $1, send the required color keya and aerial Refund Offer. Receive a Onea. Send the required • · new year, we ahould f o r m 1 a t t h e Of1.tr1 P.O. Box 5021, refund form, one box numbera from two boxea refund of 75 cents or refund form, the entire Here la a refund form make thue Important 1 u per rq a r It et • l n Kalamuoo, Micb. 48003. bottom from any QC Curlty Cloth Dlaper1. $1.50. For 75 centa, send yellow cap atrapa cut to write for.: Free Reach reaolutlona that will new 1paper1 an d Receive a Ra&alna, Rice 2·pound or lar1er Aunt For two ahiru, aend the the required refund rro.m three 40-aheet Toothbrush Offer, P .O. keep the savlnca comln& ma111ine1, and when and RY• Saute1. Send Jemima Pancake Mix form and four end flaps. f o r m a n d t w o package11 of Baby-Slze B 0 x 8 5 5 , v 0 u 0 1 in our direction. tradln1 wltb friends. two proof-of-purchase and one front label from Expires June 30, 1982. proof-of-purchase seals We l 0 n es and the America, Minn. S5399. -We should be falr o ffera may not be aeala from aide panels or 24 ·· or 36-ou11ce Aunt KELLOGG'S MOil 100 from Life Cereal. For re1l1ter receipts wllh Reques~ for this form wlth our fellow shqppera available In all areas or Kellon'• Raisins, Rlce Jemima Syrup or Lite Percent Refund Offer. $1.50, send the form and the prices c irc led .. must be postmarked by andlivethemanequal the country. Allow 10 and Rye for each Syrup. For $2.20, send RecelvearefundequaJ threeseals,atleetone ExplresMayll,1982. Marchl,lS82. opportunity to Clnd refund forms . This means that when we find a pad or refund forms on a supermarket shelf, we should take j ust two -one for ourselves and one to trade. We shouldn't allow temptation to turn us into 1reedy "pad grabbers." -We should handle coupons properly. They s hould be cut out carefully, and the explraUon dates ahouJd be circled In red. Of course, coupons should be used only ror the products we have purchased. -When we send for refund otters, we should al bde ·by the valid restrictions that appear on the refund form. This applies especially to of(ers that are limited to •'one refund per name, family or address." But New Year's resolutton. should not be one-sided. Here are a few we would llke to h ea r from t h e companies that make the orrers: -We will see that refund requests are processed promptly. -We will identify our refund checks with the name of the offer. -U our offers have geographic llmitations, we will print them on· the r efund form. -We will put expiration dates on all refund orrers so that requests are not returned to our customers marked "box closed." -When refund offers are mentioned in our advertisements, we will give shoppers who can't find the forms an opportuaity to write in for them. -To help our cu s tomers. s ave on postage we will keep our required proofs or purchase simple and small. -We realize that requiring reetster tapes causes shoppers a variety or problems and will refrain from asking for them as a proof of purchase. In 1982, let's keep the fun in refunding by using our money-saving skills with a sense of fairness. CLIP 'N' FILE REFUNDS . Breakfast Prod•d•, Cere ... , ,Baby Prod•cl• (Ftle l> Clip out this file and Culinary award P hil Crowley , mana1er of Five Crowna restaurant in Corona del Mar, was recently inducted Into the Chlline des Rotlaseu.rs, a aelect group of 'teataurateura and culillary speclallsts. It is the largest gastronomic or1anlzatlon in the world and can lay 'Claim to being the oldest. Begun in Paris In 1248, over 40,000 persona parti~lpate annually Jn Its actl'ritles lncludJn1 crowned heads of Europe. Crowley bu a broad b a c lttl'ound l n all aapecta of reataurant m1na1ement. He bH beeb mana1er of tbe Five Orowm for thr" years. Prior to Jolnln1 the l'l ve Crown1, Pbll mana1ed the Ben Jon1on ln Saa Franct,,co , owned a reataurat deltcn ftrm, and wM 'rice pnUdeat and 1eneral man11er for a cbal1> of r•tamaDtl. He wW WiaC to tM ct.al• ._ Rotlueun o • • r 11 1 • a rs o f. ,... .... pert .... t'•. llla•trate bh .. ,.,.. .. , ......... , .............. u GS!.= CANNED & PACKAGED ~~~.?~!~ ............. UOI'~' 1.17 INSTANT OATMEAL 98 CllMK. sv-•lff .................... WOZ NO • ~~~~. ~~~ ........ nonw 1.19 !2!~~~,-0 ..... 1fOZnu 249 SPAGHETTI 89 Oi.liic. . . . . . . . . .. .. . . . ........ JJ oz -• ~~!~.~~·······• WOllM 1.45 ~~.~~'~.~~.~ ....... MOIUG 1.45 CLINC 59 ~~~E~ozcai • ~?~~~.'~~ ............. JJOZIM 1.09 1000 IOX 1.29 TEA BACiS ~TAQ.IU ......... . KIDNEY BACiS . 39 ....-••••••• 1 ••••• ••······•'··''Ole.Me CORN CHIPS • • 59 I _.. ....... . . ............. 1ooruo. ~~Y~S~~····· ........... 11SOZ -.68 BROWNIE MIX ' 98 CIMlllC ............................. tU ot -• LONDON BROIL: _.....,.., GENERIC COFFEE All PurPQM Q1nd .... ~ 169 PANCAKE & WAFR.E MIX 75 -......................... not NC.• CORN MUFFIN MIX 23 lllMllt. • • .. .. . . • . .. . . . . . .. .. . . . • . n oz '" • ALL PURPOSE R.OUR 79 -............................. uau.c;. APPLE PIE AlllNG 97 -............................. ?10I CM• -:.• SPACHETTISAUCE -....................... .. FROZEN WAFR.ES -................ .. UOl lM 1.07 .. 01-.69 ~Cy~~ .......... IO'-'L(IW 1.29 UNPEELED APRICOTS 59 ~-.. .... , ................. JtOl CM • ~E~NE ~~~~~~ .... nm c .... 63 FRUIT MIX 73 ~ .......................... ,,.,JIOICNI • MANDARIN ORANGES 42 ~·····•····'····••·•••••···•••• 110ZCMe SIRLOIN TIP STEAK .. ..... lafldlll llef, ltOUnCI £2~~E~~~.c.~K.'.~IL .. m •n 1.39 ~~~.~~.1~~.~~~'.~1~ .. 01 1n 1.47 GRAPE JELLY Cttlll WITH BEANS --............ .. J:LSOW MACARONI CIUmllll; ............. .. LUNCHEON MEAT -............. . GENERIC MUSTARD MACARONI & CHEESE ---...... . SALAD DRESSING 1101..-1.06 t\OlCAA.59 um-.89 1101CM 1.09 .• JUOl IM•65 11\0l I0••25 CENERIC 33 PEAS 1uoz cai • HOUSEHOW & PET FACIAL TISSUE 49 Cifm1(, ' •• • ••• ,., ••••••••• ,, •• , •,,,, 100(T ,.0 • PAPER TOWELS 59 -.t t'lY ............ -...... M l"'"1l • TOILET TISSUE 69 ~1t'lV ,, .• , ................... IOO<T IOlO• TOP SIRLOIN STEAK ...... IOndld '-'LOln CROSS RIB ROAST ~ ~ ........ --~ From the supermartcet that flrst brought you dlscooot, come Gerierlcs! MOre than 1 oo different Items you use r.1erv day, priced to bring you conslstent1y greater savings than any natlonal brand, Every Item ts guaranteed tor your satlsfact1on, or your money back1 LOOI< for the bright yellOW packages In our new oenertc sectlOn and stock up at greater savings today! · Gen«1c Cut .... ~.29 LIQUID DETERGENT IJOl ITl .59 U WlllC.UQ<Toun , •• GENERIC BLEACH ~nw .69 COFFEE 129 ~AMER22oz w FABRIC RINSE Cll-. 100<1 ,.; .99 PAPER PLATES ...--TltlllC>o . .100<1 NI: .61 PAPER NAPKINS CA:NlthC . f.. . . . TRASH BAGS VECETABLE 169 OIL Genet1c 48 oz 8tl DELJCATESSEN ITEMS GENERIC FRANKS BONELESS RUMP ROAST IOndld ..., fOUnd. Si1oll'I alt WHOLE BEEF BRISKET .... ......... HU& CREEN CABBAGE SOlld. flllWOr'flll RED POTATOES There are all kinda or waya to oouot calorltt. One ol the .eulesl la by cookln1 low calorie meals ln a microwave oven. Calories can be kept to a minimum because rood will cook ln its own juice and rich, calorie-ridden sauces can be ellmlnated. An excessive amount of fat can be avoided in cookln1 beeause it is not needed lo prevent food from · sticking to the dish. HAM-ASP A R AGUS WI CHES (Yield: 4 sandwiches) (Calories : · Approximately 175 per aervlng> 2 teaspoons prepared mustard 4 slices whole wheat bread, toasted 4 thin s lices smoked ham 1 (10 ounce pkg. ·frozen asparagus spears or c uts, cooked cooked 1h cup shredded Swiss cheese 2 tables poons chopped onion 1 tablespoon chopped pimiento Spread mus tard on one side of each slice of toast. Place ham slices on toast. Arrange asparagus on ham. Toss shredded cheese, on ion and pimiento together in small bowl. Sprinkle ove r asparagus. Place 4 sandwiches on plastic rack or paper towels. Heal ln microwave at half-power for 4 to S minutes, or until cheese is melted. LIGtrr REUBENS <Yield: 1 sandwich) <Ca l ories: Approximately !30 per sandwich) 1 slice rye bread 2 teas poons low-calorie thousand island dressing 1 slice turkey 3 tablespoons sauerkraut, drained \.2 ounce Swiss cheese, sliced \.2 medium dill pickle, sliced Spread dressing on rye bread. Top with turke}. Place sauerkraut: over turkey. Top with cheese. Place on plastic rack or paper towel. · Heat in microwave at half-power for 21h to 31h minutes, or until cheese is melted as desired. Top with pickle before serving. OPEN-FACE CHJCKEN SANDWICHES (Yield: 4 sandwiches) <Calories: Approximately 155 per serving) 2 teaspoo n s cornstarch Sugar substitute to equal 2 teaspoon dry mustard 1/4 teaspoon salt •;..teaspoon cayenne pepper 1 egg yo lk , slightly-beaten \.2 c up skim milk 4 teaspoon s vinegar \.2 cup water · chestnuts, drained and sliced Paprika 4 slices whole wheat bread 12 s lic es. cucumber, ~-inch thick 4 ~lees chicken, cooked Combine cornstarch. sugar, mustard, salt, cayenne pepper. egg . and milk in l ·quart casserole. Cover with plastic wrap or glass lld. Cook in microwave, covered, on Full Power for 1 to 1 ~ minutes, or unlll thickened. Stir halfway through cooklng time. Stir In vtneear. ChJll. Roll edaea of water cbestnuta in paprika, tla desired. Spread one-fourth cup fillinl mixture on each slice of bread. Top each wltb three 11lce1 cucumber, cblcken and water cbestnutl. PIZZA 8ANDWICllS8 <Yield: I RrYiaP) (C al erlet: Apprnl•a&elJ Ill ,.r ~.lea n 1round bill 1 cup tomato Julee t tablHpooa cornat.arcb '4 cup cboppecl onion ! t1blHpoon1 -~ ... ··-·~···~ Orange Cout DAILY PfLOT/WtdnHday, January 13, 1982 1rated Parmesan cbeeae v. teaapoo" parsley fiakes 14 teaspoon bot pepper sauce Salt Pepper 3 plain ba1els. spilt IA cup shredded Cheddar cheese substitute Place ground ~r ln 1-quart casserole. Cover with plastic wrap or 1la11 lid. Cook tn microwave, covered, on Full Power for 2 to 2~ minutes, or unUl beef It no loncer plnk. Drain. Stlr ln tomato Juice, cornstarch, onion, Parmesan cbeeae, ore1ano, parsley Oakes and b.ot pepper aauce. Season with salt and pepper, as desired . Cover wllh plastic wrap or 1laaa lid. Cook in microwave, oven, Red-X Produce Prices covered, on Full Power tor 3 to 4 minutes. or untll thickened. Stir halfway t.hrou•b cooklnl time. Place 6 batel halves on paper towels orplasUc rack. Top with tomato·hamburger mixture. Sprinkle with cheese aubeUtute. Heat 6 sandwiches on Full Power for '5 seeonds to 1 minute, or until cheese is melted. Red-X Grocery Prices Red·X Grocery Prices ~ lltd .39 (IMWel 35 Off lattll '4·01 ID ~, .... , ..... , Yam s .. fl! Downy Fabric Sottener 1 . 98 ~ Top Ramen Noodles4 :;~~1 .00 B! Juicy 4 :. .79 Navel Oranges !D Slut11a1 Silt Bell Peppers " • 69 . ~ us ... I .. 2 .99 Bare Root Roses Cost Cutters Save Up To JOun x C"t~ .19 Tomato Sauce ... , Clft x Cfll C11111< • 42 Margari ne 16·11 pkg °" CHI Cvn.1 '"" C!Htt .65 Sliced Peaches 79 • ., ct ft ' I•• ... Gilel. !let Or ~llCel .49 ~ ......... ~ Green Beans 16·tt Ice ~re.am 111·9111 49 can cln • ..... 1 .61 AutrlM Fllwtrs .39 Ht Biz Detergent 1~ .. , ft! Esprit Yogurt , .. , •kt , .. ~ luldy llelli-•M 0t 1 .03 ~ c0«;9;cileese .85 ~Spaghetti 1 ... , 16 .. , --· '"' Discount Liquor Prices Discount Wine Prices """"' 4 .99 llMle MeclM lleu ... ....., O< Clfllltt 1111~ 2.99 H! Seagram 's -7 1SO ~ Almaden Mt . Wine 1111 .. ,. ... 4.97 SptnJ111 O• ~s 2 .19 ~ Scoresby Scotch ISO m Tyrolia Wine ml °t_ Cost Cutter Beer 6 1J:!! 1 . 49 ~ s'ti~~lr;· ...... 911 6~~1.38 ;JANUARY WHITE SALE! DUR BUYERS HAYE SCOURED THE NATION FOR THE BEST WHITE SALE BIJYS TO EASE YOUR 1ST OF THE YEAR BUDGET CHOOSE FROM AN ARRAY OF TOWELS BLANKETS. PILLOWS. DISH CLOTHS. POTHOLDERS ANO COMFORTERS ~ CUntft Ttwt!S 0.11fnl ly f11nc. OllfMltt 111a ltnll OI latdfy SllMll• SUI 3 99 m-Dish Cloths II 1. 49 B! Pillows 11 • C.-T .-.is. Dnl1111 ly f ranct. IOIClltft °",.... !l! Hand Towels .. 1 . 99 ft! Face Towels Altltn S-11111 ~ Kitcfien Potholder _ Ar-.w ..... .. 1. 39 ~ Kitchen Towels SI Mlffl Allt~ftlft ..... Ot SPflftt ftftf m Pattern Blankets l«Clly .. 1. 99 H! King Size Pillows SANDWICH SPREAD -Sandwiches get a new treatment in a microwave. DETAILS AT STOllE I9 LB. Red·X Meat Prices .......... "'" °' ~ Po~kct;~p;I-lb 1 .19 !l+ Sii'c;'(i' ~con "1.29 ... fll111nd8..,...u ~ Sirloin Tip Roast lb 1 . 98 .. llllll ~ Porterhouse Steak lb 2. 38 Red·X Meat Prices Cultf Cul H+ Smoked Ham Slice s lb 1. 98 OOOl ... \ft1 s1 .. u wu•,..••-.SN1t frn~ Htl Gotdtn Ch1Ck1n 0111, !}! Fried Chick en 15 ,.:::.k 5 . 9 9 m F~f~h "c~ttis h lb 1. 69 ) .. .. .. Cl 8 Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/WednHday, January 13, 1982 Mort and more qrmar1arlne h o u a e b o l d 1 a r e 1 medium red apple, dilcoverlnt 1omethln1 coredandcutlnwed1es r"tauran&a have known lp1ck11e(10ounces) I o r • o m • t I m e : froaen New En1land or hmtcrowne ovens can PeMaylvaniaDutchstyle e I P Yo u c r e a t e veaetables with sauce •rnbltloua-lookln1 apd1 andtoppln1 taatlq dlahea In less. Place bratwurst slices time than cenvenUonal' around outer edge of methods. 2 • Cl u a r t s h a I l o w tn microwave oven and cook 2 to 3 minlltea. Add ve1etables, cover and cook 3 to 4 minutes. SUr, cover and cook 2 to 3 minutes lon1er. Let stand' covered lot 2 minutes. Sprinkle. with topping . Makes 3 servings. NOTE: To prepare in conventional manner, brown bratwurst in butter ln large skillet. Add apple wed1ea and saute until tender and lithtly browned. Add 2 tablespoons water and the ve~etables , reservln1 packet of toprlnc. Brina to a fuJl bol over medium heat, separatlnt ve1etables with a f'ork and sUrrin1 occasionally. Reduce beat, cover and simmer 3 minutes. Sprinkle with topping. POPEYE oe&.IQHT - Spinach becomes a super supper when baked in a pie. Another great· non -metal casserole: shortcut. wtth or without place butter and apples microwave, ls planning in center. Cover, place meals around frozen prepared vegetables I--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-:-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ with sauce. Here the two team up and turn out super supper dishes that need little else to make a meal. They are as long on taste as they are short on time. Spinach Beer Pie is an . inspired meal·in-a -pie that feeds six using only a half pound of meat. Microwave makes it quick. Frozen creamed spinach in ooilable bag makes it delicious. And more than delicious, the frozen vegetable is · 5o easy lo prepare. You just pop it in the microwave, pouch and all, for three minutes thawing lime, and then proceed with the recipe. The result is a prize package with an unusual rice crust and a flavorful ground beef and creamy, custardy spinac.b filling. It's a supper dish suitable for family and party guests. Bratwurst and Apple Skillet is another one-dish marvel that is particularly compatible with microwave cooking, although it tastes every bit as good cooked on a conventionaJ range. The secr et t o its success ls frozen prepared vegetables with sauce and t opping, either New England style or Pennsylvania Dutch style. When you try these marvelous dishes, you'll be convinced that super suppers are, indeed. the wave of the future. SPINACH-BEEF PIE 1 package (9 ounces) frozen creamed spinach inboilablebag 1 'h cups packaged enrichedpre-cookedrice 1 'h teaspoons butter or margarine 'h tea.spoons alt 'hcupsboilingwater 1 egg,slighUy beaten '4 cup grated Parmesancheese •h pound ground beef lsmallonion,sliced 'hteaspoons alt !,ii teaspoon pepper 'h tea s poon Worcestershiresauce 3eggs,beaten Place vegetable pouch on non-metaJ plate: cul 1-inch slit near center. Cook in microwave oven for 3 minutes. just to thaw . Measure rice, butter and 'h teaspoon salt into 9-inch glass pie plate. Add ooiling water and stir. Cover with aluminum foil and let stand 5 minutes. Stir in 1 egg and the cheese. Press into oottom and up sides just to rim or plate. Brown beef well with onion in s killet, adding 'h teaspoon salt and the pepper. Remove from heat. Mix in spinach, Worcestershire sauce and 3 eggs. Sptead in rice-lined plate and sprinkle with additional grated Parmesan cheese, if de&.ir~cL Plac.e in microwave oven and heat for 15 minutes, or until set. Let stand at least 5 minutes before cutting. Makes 6 servings. B&A'l'WUasT·UPLE . SIUUET l pound bratwurst or frankfu rters, cut In dlaconalsllces 2 tablespoons ijutter 'Cla&ses set P .u&E&O'S ln Corona del Kar will offer a cla11 in F r e n c h 'prov~ cookin1 at 7 p.m. Tbunda,)'. l'ee la $18.50. and informaUon la available by calllq 7D·2M3. Wlu.IAlll·80NO•A I ln 8ouUl Coat Plua wUl offer • etcbt-~rt baalc Hri• ol, eook'DI elaues be1laal•I Jan. 25 on MoadaJ ....... tlMlrlllOHTS•-NO SAltrO~IAlotMlllSOI wttOUSMlllS. SCMI IOll _, NO! AYNVollt IN~· COUNTY Th11 od on..., eff.nNe ot ~ El -onc:ho ond Hugt-lido WI wa.cw FOOD nw1111rrm1 PORK· LO IN ROAST ~ . FRESH . FrHh Eollttrn Armours Venbesr-9onelen 3 49 PORK LOIN ROAST te • Fr~1h Eo1t Armoun V11r1be1t. loon Ctr Cut 2 79 PORK <;ROWN ROAST LB. • Fr~1h Eo1tMn Armour1·Center Cut PORK LOIN CHOPS lB.1.9, FARMIR ITYLE mnRK SPARE RIB FRESH I 29 EASTERN ARMOURS VERIBEST I.II. • Q;!4s 101&•,tn,;;~---.. LisTERINE 2. 19 Oooclof_t, •-v s..pe. 0< Svp.t PIV' 78 I PLAYTEX TAMPONS 1 ..... PE.AAS SOAP ..... 2.71 ...• 89 lwyl Y1t C )()() '"9 200'• C... I lo"le ol IOO't Ft"k., 49 NATURITE VIT. C . . . . .V• EASTERN ARMOURS VERIBEST LOIN END AV. WEIGHT 3-4 LBS. • FrMh Emtern Armo<ir1 Ve<•be<it, Stvffed, 0.ftsinQ, V:' PORK i.OIN CHOPS tB . .89 Fr11.h Eo11ern Armoun for IC-9ob1 loin Cut 2 89 BONELESS CUBES OF PORK LB • f'ro1\h Ec»terr• Armoun For SwHt & Sour, Chop Su<!)'. Chow Mt'1n loin Cut BONELESS CUBES OF PORK LB 2. 79 El Roncho R.\NCH STYLE BACON IB 1.29 l11onestGround8eef Doe\ Nor Eaceed1 SO.,,Fot2 49 CHOPPED STEAKS LB • &ul~ or Pott1M, 0ol'1 Not Eacffd ?2% For 2 19 . LEAN G ROUND BEEF . .LB • E R. oY<!n lleody W 1Fre1h E9111 •.. LB. 1.29 MEAT LOAF El Rancho Fre1h PORK SAUSAGE . LB 1-.89 --~~~~~~~~~~~~firM1~~~~~~~~~~~~- F R i SH RED SNAPPER l8 5 1. 69 Northern Center Cut. Fro1en/Defro1ted Fr,.\h tB 2.89 MONTIRIY SQUID 18 .69 LB 2 .99 HAUBUT STIAKI .. Cod•toil Size. Froien/Defro11ed f r1>1h, No Collar COOKID SH•IMP . .. . tB 3. 99 SKINUIS CA TRIH HEINZ KETCHUP We19h1 Wotchen, Diel Cup• 1-LB. MARGARINE 16 oz Corton HUGHES SOUR CREAM 2-loter II~ Diet. lote Movnlo1n O..w PEPSI COLA loy1. Rutf~. All Vor 8 ·01 POTATO CHIPS Purplf' 40 01 8o1tl11 WELCH'S GRAPE JUICE 32-0Z. BOTTLE UMn2 .69 .89 1.39 1.09 1.65 .99 N 1\\1n 3 0 1 A\\t Vor 1~t1~\ .25 TOP RAMEN NOODLES 6 Poe~ 17 01 Con' Suqo1 F,,.,. DR PEPPER•SQUIRT•VERNORS 1.89 Denn11on Hot & II~ W/8eon1. 15 or .85 CHILI CON CARNE 1 4 or Pocko11ed lloce MINUTE RICE ......................... 1.49 6-Pock 12 or Con• Sugar Free 1 .99 TAB• SPRITE e FRESCA For Whiter Clothe1' Gallon S"e =~:::: .................... 69 16-01 !leg., Whrte/Wheot, Sondwt<h White/Wheat VAN DI KAMP 69 I-LB. BREAD ........ e RED DEllCIOUS APPLES WASHINGTON EXTRA FANCY 9!. f"f)f)CS fJf' r~£' ''~£C'(t' Y-Fu M••f'I Ctw••.n or IHf 3--01 "9 t'111 ~ NISM f'llOOUC'f °''' '-"•10'-o A~O\t!Mlv\t. I 01 lof'dl RAMEN NOODLES S "'' '1 PICKLED RED PLUM WHITE SOY BEAN PASTE Mo.""'90. 10 ).;,a l'\t TOFU 14-oa .. UvM & Critpy 1.25 .SS FRESH NAPA • I 9 ta VAMDIKAMP · :=um••-U••u••ul.89 19-oa.c ...... CHEESE PIZZA ............................ 2.29 Yom.-otoyo'""' V.•mo!C1'o. 1611"9 loo TEA BAGS lolo•o 7JO ml lotlto ... 1.09 .79 tO-o1. ~-& IMlfnetioflol 9 BIRDSEYE VE GET ABLES ................. • I l01b.Dolry~Au1trion 2 9 SLICED SWISS CHEESE.............. • 9 19-01. ltownift, 14-oa. Carrot Colt• SARA LEE DESSERTS ................... I • 79 20-e ..... ORE·IDA CRISP£ . f.oa, Slk9d JONES LIVERWURST. ..................... • 99 16-oa. Cr.-y C11eumt>.f 808'5 SALAD DRESSING ........... 1.39 FrMh Eo•lern Ar moun Vet1be11 Whole o• Rib H!!Jf PORK LOINS te 1 •• 9 l ..... _. llo~od"' •• 0 foe1h Eo1tern Armour1 Thie~ Cut PORK LOIN CHOPS U S D A Gr A For Roo111n11 lor9e fryer l8 2 .09 18 .79 STUFFED CHICKEN U S DA. Chok11 Beef 6oneleu, loin Cut NEW YORK STEAKS . . ..... te 4 . 99 BONILEll BllF NEW YORK STRIP ~•5o?c~ t~~~ LB. 3 e 99 12-01. Con1, 6-Pock lle9. SCHUTZ BllR 1.69 ll1un1te. 750-ml LAMBRUSCO . .. . .. ... 2 . 99 Plain Lobel, 1.7Hlr BOURBON....... . .............. 8. 98 ............. EA. .89 ..... ••1cnv17 DAYI ...... ; lllUllS., IAM ••• ...,. .,.. IAM.10, 1981 We auep,t ALL coupon• from other lul'-•nn•rll•I• COUPON AUl(S 1.~..-----t ~.,...._,.._,,,_-~,...et<..-4 > Oolr _, f I Pl-tlllOteri.._w ....... • ~ .. ,_..,.-'-<-\....,_ .................................................... ., ........ ,.... ... _ ... .... ....... ~ ........................................................... , lleoet ...... , ..,,....... ....... I ........................ ~f0h ........ IA .... -.to,1flt. . ~ • --~_...-•. -...... ... '!'IL~~----··.:.1; ....... I DlllJNlt · WEDNISOAV4 Jan. 13, 1912 CLASSIFIED 06 Area baseball stars weren't overlooked in Major League baseball's winter draft. See D3 . It's fOotba.H's niost unstable job Playing quarterback is glamorous if you win, Anderson says By WILL GRIMSLt:Y A~S..MlC-1•1 f I Imagine being the star quarterback of a Super Bowl football team, young and handsome, thousands of throats sc r e aming your name from • crowd.packed stadium, the center of attention of untold millions of eyes glued to their TV sets. Football League a realistic altitude of just bow durable his glamor is. It's a fragile quality. ''They gave me a real roasting at the start or the year -the fans a.s well as the press." said the season's most decorated football star. "I had a bad exhibition season and in the opening game against Seattle .I was terrible. Super Bowl Jan. 24. Schonert Is third string. Midway in the game, Anderson was benched. • ''We re you injured?" somebody asked. "Naw," he replied unflinchingly. "I was jerked. I was so lousy 1 got the hook. Thompson happened to be hurt. Schonert came in and won the game. He losers dominate their respective conferences. It's the first time in the Super Bowl for each. The 6-3, 208·pound Anderson, whose 98.5 quarterback rating led tbe NFL, also became the darllng of the revived city of Cincinnati, whose populace went deliriously mad over the Bengals, painliog s tripes on everything from their faces and storefronts to their wames and scrambled eu s. Tttust be the most glamorous role in all sports. "Only if you win,·· Ken Anderson of the Cin cinnati Bengals said resignedly. "It's the most demanding and the most unstable job in the game. "l think I completed about two of my first 14 passes. Two were intercepted. One was brought back for a touchdown. On the other, the guy returned to our five. was terrific." · "Winning is everything. If you win, you're a big hero If you lose, you're a bum. You'd better s neak out of the stadium through the back door." • "The crowd got really hostile. They kept yelling for Coach Forrest Gregg to take me out. They w anted Jack Thompson or Turk Schonert in there - anybody but me." Anderson was in New York to receive another of his escalating awards -lhls one, the Schick Trophy voted by the Professional Football Write rs of America to go to the NFL's Most Valuable Player. Anderson earlier had won Associated Press Awards as MVP and Offensive Player of the Year and actually was ever y body's All-everything in a topsy-turvy season that saw two chronic "It would have been different if we had lost." the Bengal quarterback said. "No, I never worried. I couldn't let it bug me. It's just the nature of the game." .. Quarte rbacks, like coaches, are natural targets for the head-hunters, he said. TOUGH ROLE Cin cinnati Bt•ngals quart e rbaC'k Ken .\nderson s ays the job is the m ost demandin~ in football. Eleven years of exhibiting his talents before fickle crowds has given this 32 -year-old veteran of the National Thompson is Anderson's backup on the Bengals. the new AFC champions who meet the San Francisco 49ers in the He's UCl's quarterback ; Rainer Wulf gladly accepts his role with Anteaters By JOHN SEVANO 01 tlle 0 .. 1, ~ ... Staff Before the start of the UC Irvine basketball season, forward Rainer Wulf carefully chartered his predictions on a UCJ pocket schedule a nd placed it in his wallet. At the conclusion of the Anteaters' preseason, 12 games later, Wulf pulled that schedule back out. "I was only off by one," he said proudly Tuesday as the Anteaters prepared for the start of the PCAA Conference race. "And, we're one game ahead of what I thought we would be." THE ANTEATERS ENTER their conference opener against Cal Stale Fullerton Thursday night (7:30 ) al Crawford Hall with an 11 ·1 record. Wulf figured the Anteaters lo be 10·2. "This is the greatest year I've ever had so far,'' said Wulf. "To be 11·1 at this stage of the season, I think that's awesome." Wulf is one of the primary reasons for UCl's success. Although his name doesn't prominently appear game after game at the top of the scori"" charts, it's bis unselfish manner on the court that has garnered the respect of his coach -and his teammates. "If people get off of him he can beat them with his outside shot." praised Coach Bill Mulligan. "and yet he's given up h is shot a lot; he's sacr ificed himself for the team ... "Rainer is probably our steadiest player." UC/REPORT added Kevin Magee. "He knows hi s role isn't as a shooter and he's wllling to sacrifice himself to get the ball to the open man. "He's like a quarterback on ou r team. He stabilizes our defense and will do whatever it takes to win." Wulf is the team leader in assists with a 4.5 average. ranking him third in the conference. He also averages 8.6 points per game and is third· on the squad -behind Magee and McDonald -in rebpunding. Wulf is also one of those individuals who believe UCl's success the past two seasons is no fluke. "You have to remember that when most of us came here two years ago, we never knew how bad t hi ngs really were around here," he said in explaining UCl's poor success at the Division 1 level. "When • knew we had the talent to be as <See UCl'S Paice 0 2) Wilkes defense gets 33 poiitts RICHFIELD, Ohio CAPJ -Los Angeles Lakers Coach Pat Riley told forward Jamaal Wilkes to concentrate on his defense -so Wilkes went out and scored 33 points. "He's had some bad games offensively, but when you stress defense to rum, the offense comes naturally." Riley said after Wilk es paced the Lakers to a 114 -100 National Basketball Associat.ion victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers Tuesday night. The victory was the second in five games for Los Angeles, while Cleveland lost its seventh straight and the 14th in its last 15 outings. "Coming off the Ne w Year, there were a lot of parties, you know." Wilkes s aid. "It was just a matter of getting back to basics." HOLD HIM BACK Montreal C'anadien s· Doug J arvis C21 > holds back lht• Kings· Marcel Dionne from S!l'tlinj? a _re bo und in Af'_...._... frnnt of Montrt•al goalu.• Rick Wamsle~ Tucsda~· night. To SC'C' how th{' Kin~s ran·<! unde r nc•\\ C'Oach Don PC'rr~-. Sl'l' Pag(' D:i "l'VE NEVER REALLY looked at him in any partacuJar role," admitted Randy Whieldon. "You have to be able to do a little bit of everything in this game and that's what Rainer does." Earvin "Magic" J ohnson tossed in 25 points and Karee m Abdul-Jabbar added 20 for the Lakers, who improved to 26-10. The Cavaliers, whose cellar-dwelling record /1 dipped to 6·28, were hurt by the absence of center James Edwards. out because of a muscle problem' in bis back. Sailors' Cochrane resigns It isn't that Wulf can't put the ball in the hole. In fact, he's the fourth best s hooter in the conference with a .592 percentage. But when you have the likes of Magee ( .706), Whi eldon <.652> and Ben McDonald ( .619> on the court with you al the same time, the need for Wulf to shoot isn't that great. "With James in there. they probably would have been a lot better," Johnson said. "Their defense is hurting them a lot because they haven't played as a team that much ... Head football coach steps down after three years The Lakers led just 85-81 entering the final quarter, after Cleveland 's Kenny Carr scored l~ third-quarter points to help the Cavaliers reduce a 60·51 halftime deficit. By ROGER CARLSON Of Hie OMty ...._.Slaff Hank Cochrane has resigned his post as Newport Harbor High football coach followi ng a three-year tour. "We're going to open up the spot within the Newport-Mesa District," says Attllelic Director Bi!l Pizzica. "Hopefully we'll settle it as soon as possible." Cochrane , a r eside nt of Fountain Valley, has been with Newport Harbor football since the Don Lent era or of the early 70s, and along with ex-Magnolia High teammate Larry Doyle, served as a right hand for Lent and Pizzica before taking the r eins in 1979 a fter P izzica stepped down. RlllGNS ftOlt -Hank Cochrane has res if ned as Newport HarbOr: ootball ., coaq.. . • do something to hire teachers, to get coaches on staff.'· The honeymoon didn't last long. Cochra ne 's three-year record (6·21·3> followed a nine-year span which produced a 62-31 record. Including three Sun set League titles and back·lo-back CI F Big Five Conference playoff berths. As for support, Cochrane says t he community and boosters have been there when he needed them. "They were fantastic, always willing," said Cochrane. ·'They raised $1 5.000 for lockerrooms at school. Of course, a player like Wulf is a coach's dream. The 6·7 200 pound senior is the type of player who doesn't do anyt.hing gre.l, but does everything well. "We originally recruited him as a sub," said Mulligan, "but ever ·since he 's been in the lineup we've done well. "He''S" really what college baskelbaH represents. He's the real athlete/student-type you always heat:. about." But Mike McGee hit his club's first three baskets of the fourth quarter to put Los Angeles up 91 ·84. Another McGee basket with 6:29 to play gave Los Angeles a 101·88 advantage, representing the Lakers' largest lead to that point. In 1981 the Sailors went 1-9. During Cochrane's three years the Sailors upset Edison ( 17-13> in 1979 and de feated rival Corona del Mar twice. "But yeah, there was a lack of support. I feel that way. I think you assume , and may be you shouldn't, that there will be a certain amount," said Cochrane, alluding to the administration and district. Wulf openly admits his role, and accepts it without hesitation. Wilkes then scored seven of Los Angeles' final 13 points to seal the triumph. Cleveland Coach Chuck Daly said the nast~ weather that has plagued the Midwest has no• helped his struggling team. "Under the circumstances," says Cochrane, "I ha ven't been able to do the job the way it should be done." Asked if there was a way he could, he responded: "Yeah, I'd "Some people might think I'm crazy t.o leave now with the sophomores going 10·0 and the <See SAILORS, Page DZ>. "Sometimes my role is not as a shooter, It's to get it inside," he said. "It's not like nobody notices what I do. I'd love lo score 20 points every nlght, but if we were 8--4, well ... let's just say the bottom line is winning. '·Everybody has thei r own cate(ory and that's why 1 look at assists. At least that way I'm contributing and I'm doing something worthwhile." "You run into problems with snow al this time of year," Daly said. "The guys run into a ditch and can't make a practice. At least now we're going on the road and we'll be together. Maybe we'll be able lo get some practi ce in." Carr led Cleveland with 21 points. Georr. Huston added 18, and Ron Brewer and Bobby Wilkerson had 17 points each. Clout is preposterous for baseball commissioner Buzzle Bavasi, a renowned dispenser of opinion, is asked lf a baseball commissioner Is really necessary. "Som eon e ," Buzzie replies unhesitatingly, "has lo make the decisions.'' Research Indicates that the last time Bowie Kuhn made a dedalon he was at lunch with National Lea1ue president Chub Feeney. Tbe commissioner carefully contemplated the lobster thermldor versus the veal plccata and fellucclni Alfredo. A decision is now pendln1 on the part of a speelal t>aseball blue ribbon commiuion as to whether Kuhn should be thrown out on hla lnatrumenl of hearln1. Ku.bn would be replaced, accordln1 to those In favor, by a bueball commlaaloner with aome dltnity and clout. • Dlplty 11 not lD the lMlt out ot the quesUon. Clout la prepoet.erou. The commilllcner ot baMball la tbe owners' man, appointed ad 1U1talned by tbe franchise proprteton. 'Tbenfore ' anJWnl reaemblln, lwa ol actioa ti a baurd. -i I SPORTS COLUMNIST BUD TUCKER However, it la possible lo place a man ln the czar's chair with an iota of charm, wit and understancllq of public relatl9ns .. The sportln& public ls such that at must be re1aled, at least i nlri1ued . This can hardly be accomplished by an lndlvidual whose likeness belonc• with the •wtnaen on Mt. Ruahmore. Thia is, ol coune, a11umtn1 baseball reall)' netdl a COQ>mluloner. The Inept quallUe1 of Bowle Kuhn were dramatiald lut aum.-when the players went oa atrfke and bueball endured lta derkeal hour, indeed fta bleakttt 1ummer:No one apeeted tbe commblkmer ot bueball to -..1a ud rttOIH the IHUH end avert '"' tr•ltfiY, bUt Kulm lt11l bu aot uttered a word ln regard to the strike. ll ls not out of t he question the commissioner was under orders from the owners to keep his mouth shut and his eplnion to himself. If so, this would s erve as further e vidence that if baseball ls to have a commissioner, it should be one who at least can be trusted to be vislb&e 1n times of crisl•. Without arrlvin1 al conclusions u to the brilliance and lote1rlty of Pete Roselle, lt must be concluded that professioaal foc>tball does lbe beat job of all the 1ames In dl1playin1 a c ornmlaaiooer with a decree of charlsma and a meuure of ablllty to function in tbe public eye. Roselle la a hall fellow well met. He 11 a auperb tladhand.er. IJ• bancUee the media wiUa q\ilte Mm• •xtenl1 ud I have aever beard a reporter 1a ... t that tbe NJl'L comml•IOMr ll *'liar and/or a boob. Roul&e did not nee .... rily wta tM ....... C>Ulud'• Al .,. ... ~ tbe 1...a ..met Mtw .. t1ae RMderi :\ aad tbe .Nl'L l• Loa ~•lel· .lut • summer, but Pete did an excellent job considering the facts 'Of the matter. ~ For instance, Rozelle was forced t ask the universe to believe that the NFL franchises are a partnerabip sharing equally 1n love and revenue. A the time the commissioner spoke, b~ was 30 miles down the freewaf from ~ NFL operation which skims '4 mllllolt off luxury suites al Anaheim Stadiura and shares this windfall with no one. I · fact, the Los An1elea Rams wer reluctant to share with Orange Coun~ which char1ed non·pa1ment o~ aomethlna like "50,000 ln certalD tuee. Roselle 1rew up tn profe11loaal football, which the NFL owaera conaidered deairable at the t.lm~o Pete'• appointment u wbat wu at the time the eompromh commilllone.r. Bowle K8D 19 • t.WJif. which la a quaUfleatloD deemed neceuary by the baeball 111 4dll1*t. So be It. but I woUI Uta .. WI tO ban the man haDCIU.1 ., liftfft MlUelMftl. I ' ~~~~~~~=~~~ \ Reld.Malone~Rpcketa ~~·~· :j: I ):~ . • ~e..~~~::i!::~ • .ftl"'1:ts :.s ooa. again 101 ·106 Natlon•l 8a1ketbaU ~ ~!:::::t~: •. ~~ti);r .!i:~ ~!~ ~·~e0bc>u~~: Hamera' s resignation leaves football void from 11-.1 Malome . • • ln other 1amt1, 1uard Oetum ,,........ acored ze polnta and forward La aoblMM added 2' u Phoenix McEnroe is named top male athlete Fr .. M' .... teMI NEW '"\'ORK -Winner of m Wimbledon and the U.S. Open, John McEnroe capped off his rise to the top of the tennis world Tuesday by bein1 Mmed Male Athlete of the Year for 1981 b1 The Associated Pr,as. The 22-year-old left-hander from New York City received 72 votes in nationwide ballotJng by sports writers and broadcasters. He easily outdistanced Dodger rookie pitcher Fernando VaJenzuela, boxer Sugar Ray Leonard a~d hockey star Wayne Gretzky. Valen.zuela finjsbed with 56 votes, while Leonard, the world welterweight c hampion, had 36 and Gretzky, the high-scoring center of the Edmonton Oilers, finished with 3l. Mixing tremendous tennis with temper tantrums, McEnroe ended Bjorn Borg's five-year reign at Wimbledon. whipping the Swedish star in the final. He beat Borg again in the final of the U.S . Open, becoming the first man since 1925 to win America's top tennis tournament three consecutive years. McEnroe, the first player ever lo be ranked No. l In the world ln both singles and doubles on the Association of Tennis Professionals computer ratings, is the first tennis player to win the AP Male Athlete of the Award since the legendary Don Budge, who captured the honor in both 1937 and 1938. The year belonged to McEnroe. He posted 10 tournament victories in 18 outings, winning 67 matches and losing on~y seven. He also led the United States to the Davis Cup title, participating i.n al.I three. matches t~e U.S. won against Argentina m the ~inals. ~ut h~s victories bad to share the headlines with his on·court displays of temper. . Quote of the day Cheree Gillespie, a cashier at the Clemson newstand, after the Tigers had been voted No. l : "Now when 1 go up to Yankeeland and tell them where I'm from, they won 't say 'Clemson? Didn't they used to have a football team?" Third-ranked Virginia rallies Jeff Jones scored five points in m overtime and helped tbird·rank.ed Virginia rebound Crom a 12-pomt deficit to beat Maryland. 45-40 Tuesday night in an Atlantic Coast Conference basketball game. The Cavaliers are now 13·1 and 2·1 in the ACC . . . At Houston. Texas sophomore -Mike Wacker scored a career·high 32 points to lead the 19th·ranked Longhorns to a 95-83 Southwest Conference victory over Houston. The win snapped a JO-game Cougar winning streak . . . Center Wallace Bryant hjt a baseline jumper with 27 seconds remaining to lead seventh-ranked San Francisco to a 57.55 victory over Notre Dame. , ·1cored a 133·121 declalon over Golden State lulhaa Brvl•t scored 26 S>olntl, lacludinc a field 1oal with 45 H conda remainin1 whlch wrapped up a 95-92 victory for Phlladelpbla over Wuhlncton . . . San Antonio's lllk.e MltcbeU and Geae Ba.U acottR! 2S points apiece u the Spurs breezed tt11D to a 127-109 victory over Dallas DH l11el and Alex En1ll1b combined for 57 points to lead Denver to a 139· 126 victory over Kansas City. It was the Kings' seventh straight road loss . . . Mycbal Thompeon scored 22 points and helped shut off a late Indiana rally as Portland topped the Pacers, 105-93 . . . Mldaael Ray &kbarclso9 scored 26 points as the New York Knicka disposed of Utah 129·121 . . . Jolla Loa1 and lalab Tbomas combined for 2S points in the fourth 9uarter to lead Detroit to a 122·111 win over Chicago. Austin is top female athlete NEW YORK -Tracy Austin, fD who came back from a debilitating back injury to capture her second U.S. Open women's singles title, today was named Female Athlete of the Year for 1981 by The Associated Press. John McEnroe won Male Athlete of the Year honors, marking the first lime that tennis players have captured the AP award In the same year. . Austin, a 19-year-old from Rolling Hills, sat out most of the first half of the year with a sciatic nerve injury after winning the Colgate Championships in January. But when ~he rt:turned to the courts, she won four consecutive tournaments, including the Open, the country's premier event. Her dramatic domination was rewarded by the nation's sports writers and broadcasters as she polled 99 votes to win the AP award for the second time in three years. Second was last year's winner. Chris Evert Lloyd, with 95 votes. The two tennis s tars, whose styles are almost identical, finished far ahead of golfer J a n Stephenson, who was third with 10 votes. Garnering nine votes was dis tance runner Allison Roe while tennis star Martina Navratilova a nd swimmer Tracy Caulkins received eight votes each and golfer Donna Caponi and s wimmer Mary Meagher had seven each. · Paterno not interested in Pats Penn Stale Coach Joe Paterno • has informed the Ne w England Patriots that he no longer wants to be considered for their head coaching job. the NFL team reported Tues day Veteran quarterback Ke n Anderson of Cincinnati received tbe..1981 Most Valuable Play~r aw.au! from the Proressional Football Writers of America. Television. radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: Ski Report -Snow conditions in Southern California mou.1tains, 9:43 a.m ., 12:43, 3:43, 7:43 p.m .. KNX (1070 ). Vikes invade Edison • Ill Sunset Estancia goes for knockout tonight at Costa Mesa By ROGER CARLSON !' CM 1M O.lly Pllet Slaff Edison High's Chargers, the favorites for the S1Jnset League basketball title for the first time ever, put their No. 1 Orange County and No. 2 Cl F 4·A rankings on the line tonight against the Marina Vikings as league play begins. highlighting a nine.game salvo of games involving Orange Coast area teams, aJI starling at 7:30. Coach Barry Leigh's Edison quintet enters-with a 13·1 record, but the C harge rs aren't operating at 100 percent according to their coach, who says UC <Berkeley> ·bound 6·6 Richard Chang will play with a case of tonsilitis. In other Sunset League openers it's Huntington Beach (6-7 ) at Fountain Valley (1().4> and Ocean View (9 ·5> at Westminster <2·9>. Round Four is here for Sea View League types and it couJd provide a knockout if Estancia's 11·2 Eagles. ranked No. 7 in Orange County and No. 4 in the CIF 3·A rankings, puts it to host Costa Mesa < 1·2>. whic h is reeling after two s traight defeats. Also in action are 0·3 Irvine at 3 ·0 Newport Harbor, 0·3 $addleback al 2·1 University and From Page01 SAILORS • • • In GOLDEN BEAR -Edis<. High's Richard Chang has verballv committed himself t 0 t h e U n i V e I' S i t \' 0 f Ca lifornia under Coac h· Dick Kuchen. 3·0 Corona del Mar at 0·3 El Toro. Laguna Beach < 1·0> takes its South Coast League hopes to ().1 Laguna Hills, a team ranked No. 4 in the CIF 2·A with a 12·2 record. while St. Paul (0.-0) Is at Mate r Del <O·l) in Angelus League play. Marina Coach Steve Popovich has an easy solution to upsetting Edison: "Shoot well," he eays. Popovich h n't qwte that light·ilpped about lt, however. He expands: "We bave to control the tempo. We usually Uke to nan, too, but we need to take Edison out or it.a rhythm. "We can't let them eet into the game they want to set into lnd we haw to do a 1ood Job on defense and an exceUent Job on the boards.•• The VikJnp .,.. a form•ctable outfit detplte an a.s overaJl record. Aaalnlt lM Lakewood; the CIF 4-A'• No. l rated waaa, the Vlk• were up by 10 Ill tile n,.t ba1t befor• f allinl In the flnal •t..AI ...... ............................ ........................ UMm Utmd r 111M ud ... some easy shots inside," says Popovich. ··But Edison is a better s hooting t ea m and well balanced." The Vikes figure to make an adj ustment. too. with Greg Chomik (6·2> penciled in to start for Mark Tandy, who has been ill. Andy KJussman will move from forward to center in that case. "They (Marina) beat us last summer," says Leigh. "Marina is a little guard-oriented with <Scott Filipek > and <John) Berry and Rick Smith Is a quaHly player. "They rebounded right with us and Klussman was tough on the boards. They match us as well as any in size an<t Quickness.•· Al Fountain Vall ey the Barons, led by Jeff Hughes, are up against the rejuvenated O ilers (with 8·6 Jim Lane returning to the fold ), and Ocean View is a prohibitive favorite at Westminster. Despite their record l 11·2) and status, Estancia Coach Larry· Sunderman says he has deep concerns about Costa Mesa. "lf we're golng to think about playing Costa Mesa we had better start thlnklng about doing so me r e bounding ,'· says Suriderman, whose team has a decidedly handicap in size, but a 'definite advantage in Qulcknesa. OCC, Gauchos on the road Both Oranfe Coast and Saddleback colleges lake to tbe road tonight in community college basketball acUon.(7 :~). Coach Tandy GU1ls' Pirates, 0·2 after a bitter 8t-M overtime dereat to Santa Ana Saturday nl•ht, will travel to Cerritos where UM Hornets <Mt await. Saddt"9ck, meanwhlle, blt8 oe road for a Miulon Conf•r.nce ouun1 wllb San Bernardino Valley. The lndlana are 2-0 ln COl\ferenC'I Pla.J'. Coaeh BIJl Brummel'• Oaudlll an l ·l ln t'Cdll'eDCI •• O •OJ'I~ ,Tarner paeu tb• ledcl .... •l~ ... Coach• com• and ao. but few accompllah 11 much and leave H quleUy aa Latuna Beach Hi•h'a Walt Hamera, who bas real1n1d hi• poaltJon u varsity football coach for the Att11ts. Hamera handed lD b1I reslpaUoa Dec. I and ll w ,a formally accepted tix days a10 after • four-year tour produced an 18-18-1 overall r•cord and a South Cout Leaeue champlon.ahip. "I knew lut summer the oddt were 50·50 that this was mY lut year,'' aald Hamera. "You need youth, enthusiasm and the wUJlnpeaa to c.:ommlt a lot of tilne." Hamera'1 decision leaves a void at La1una Beach, which most likely wlll be titled by a walk-on coach because of the lack or teachtn1 positions. It's a s chool loaded with ex-coaches, apparently none of whom are willln1 to return to the scene, al least not in a bead coachin1 capacity. "That's one of the problems I've created for myself," says Hamera, the athl~.Uc director. "Now I've got to find a replacement. • HAMERA ARRIVED at Laguna Beach eight years ago as an assistant to DeMls Haryt·ng and after four years. replaced Haryung prior to the 1978 season. From Page 01 UCl'S WULF. • • good as we. are, and I knew t~at Mullig~.n was a winner havmg played against him before. Wull played two years at Citrus College before joinh1g the .4nteaters, where be was a first te~m All-Mission Conference selecUon after averagmg 19.5 points a game and 6.2 rebound• bis sophomore season. He also attended Bishop Amat High, where he was the recipient of the Pat Raden award. annually given lo the school's best student/ athlete. "You know, everybody talked about what a great season we had last year," Wulf went on, ··when we finished with a 17·10 record. Well , most or us felt we snould have won more than 20 games and been in the playoffs. · · 1 think if you went and asked the players they'd telJ you they were disappointed because we knew our capabilities and we lost to some teams we fell we should have beat." • UCI HASN'T REALLY run into that problem yet this season, although the Anteaters' only defeat at the hands of Arizona State was one they'll tell you shouldn't have happened. ··we got to a point where we fell we could go through the motions and still win." Wulf said the UCI's 88-73 loss to the Wildcats in the first round of the Milwaukee Classic. "Well, we paid for it." Wulf a lso Cell the team showed a lot or character the following night by winning. ''We showed we had the ability to come back," he said, "and we did it without Kevin Magee for the last 13 minutes of the game. ··we know we can..win andw_e'U oe.v.er give up. We have a lot of confidence now in what we can do." · Wull also possesses a lot of confidence in himself. • "I like to think I'm a conscientious person and player," he said. "l care about how other people view me as well as other players. That's important Pe@PSPORTS ROGER CARLSON "I won't be returning to pumplna 1as," 11y1 Hamera J<*ln1ly. When Hamera wu hired at La1una Beach tn 1974 he wu workin& at a 1u station, tryln1 to get by until he could land • teaching posltion as an English teacher. So, the Artist.a are back to square one in their constant dilemma or coacbln1 personnel without a teaching vacancy .. "It's a July to December job, plus the off-season weight·llrting," says Hamera. "You have to be independently wealthy or a fool Lr you're going to live on a coaching salary tabout $1 ,000 a year> alone." The Artlsts·were 3·5·1 in 1981, Hamera's worst won·loss record . Maybe some pressure by the old grads? "Pressure? Not hardly," says Hamera with a laugh. "No way." That's the way It is at Laguna Beach, the pressure is finding someone to take the job. Then to keep him. • • • HUNTINGTON BEACH High baseball coach Mike Dodd is featuring a baseball clinic Jan. 30 at the Oilers' gym. 1 The four-hour session begins at 8 a.m. and among the speakers are Golden West Colle1e's Fred Hoover, Don Rowe and Doug Mansillno, Long Belch State's John Gorualves, the Dod1er1' Mark Cresse <formerly or Marina High> and Dennis Phelps o! Sports Medicine A 1c. · . The $4 fee goes to the Oilers' baseball fund and anyone interested should contact Dodd al Huntington Beach High. • • * FOUR OF THE SIX recipients of the 1981 Orange County CIF Most Valuable Player awards, who will be honore d Feb. 4 at the Sheraton.An aheim Hotel. are from Edison and Marina high schools . They're all pretty predictable -Dave Geroux, the running back, Ken Major, the quarterback, and linebacker Rick DiBemardo from Edison; Quarterback Ken Laszlo of Marina. Also chosen to be presented awards by members of the Rams are La Quinta High defensive back Vince Lopez and Craig Rutledge of El Dorado, also a defensive back. Among the people at the front table wiU be Ray and Mary Malavasi and Phil Olsen, Merlin Olsen's brother. Ken Kingsbury of the Teen He1p-Youtb Service Bureau in Fountain ValJ'ey runs the show. This is the second year Kingsbury and some very dedicated persons toward the area's youth have done this, through the nominations of coaches and voting of s ports writers . Those interested in helping honor some outstanding athletes should contact Kingsbury at 557-1000. to me." 8 k lb II So is the PCAA season. 88 e a 8COreS "Realistically, I'd like to win our conference and make a good showing in the <NCAAJ Coll•g• regionals," he says. "l hope it's televised, too, by usF 11. Noe ... ~:!. ss NBC or CBS so it will be shown nationally and WHlmont "'· Southern Calllorn•• either AJ McGuire or Bill Packer will mention my c":.'z. :!.., • .,.LA 8-s>11,, .. name." AlUW Pacific SI, Cal l..ulher.., 0 Wulf's last comment put a grin on his face s.uurw..1 from ear lo ear. It was the only lime during the =~<':':is~.~'~s!AntonioJt whole interview he showed a litUe selfishness. Tuaw tS Hoonlon es ANTEATER LICKS -Both UCI contests this ""-,_.1,,,~--::,1• week agmnst Cal State Fullerton ana UC Santa El•t Barbara at Crawford Hall are sold out. There are Am ... icanu11.1..1 s.11.n Yat• ... ArmyU no tickets available. UCl's next home game is 8ostonu ... Ho1vcroun against Long Beach State, Jan. 30 at the Anaheim 8uc•11M1t •• N1•11•••. Pl>d .• •o -•ll••r Co nvention Center. Tickets for the game against co111e1e u ,u..ionn the 49ers can be obtained at the cashier's office "....-'*"s1.Co1umaa43 inside Crawford Hall on a daily basis Crom 9 . ~:'.1'o!!.i-:O: ~-~~ n a .m .·4p.m .... The UC I media will face the s..... Fullerton media In a pre liminary game Thursday 111.c .• wn"""llt°" •2. "-11e:111an l 5 30 St •. S1 a : p.m. M .... 111>11 SI. 107, Clll<lllftlll H College basketball Tonight'• gamH ...... Wyom'"9 al Air Force Okla,_.. at Color.00 ~ llall SI. al Miami, 0. KOfll SI el llowtlftl Green Campliell et w. lllll!Oit E. Mk l\l9M al CM. Mklll~ x evt«. °"'°et c1t ... .-s1 Soutll cerolN el O.Pevl I-ISi.MK-Si K•-lt Neb-Miia Ollt......,,. St. at Mluoun N. llllftolJ el W. Mklllllan Toledo et OlllO u . Wul Vlr9ff\I• •I YGUnlP-n St ,... LSUalAl-Utke el Ala.·91r"""'9flam •ul:Mlrn al V -..blll 8ap11ll at SE l..OUIJllftl E. hnM-Sl.etTlleClt.otl l"urman et Clet'Mon DWI!• .. W.U Forest Geor9'1 e4 MISlbtlppl SI. 1'1991., .. o-,i. hell H,C • .cNriott. .. JKk ..... vllle KOflNckY el Mlubtlppl l..eultvllle el Soutll A'-a Nenll C:-INI et NOt1ft C-lin. SI. Otf~etYMI .. ,_... .. St. et S. 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Vlr9lllle 4.S, Maryl-..i Coll SW Loul~ 113, Pan ..... rlcan t9 Community cotl99e ~Cllc.tw.c• EHi l..Ol 4"9"1tt ... GolOtft Wttl .. Cy pr HS 77, l..O\ A1'9elH CC Ml Sanla -<• t~. I.A H-r ll A lo H-a . LA Soutllwttl IS w..-.MMec-1w..ce Sanl• 8-. TJ. ~rll 6' Gleftdolle n, WKI LA 67 Olllla rO et. v..,1ura '2 Compton IS. Canyons 62 Anl•'-Valley I~. Tr-Te<ll 'M Women HIGHSCMOOL '-"'~ E OllOft SJ. MetW JI O<Hn VI-Sl, Wfttmlf>\1 .. D Fountain Velley ~. Hllfllln91on 8eacll 41 ~CNltL.Ntm 1..1911111 8Hcll ... ~ Hlllt 1' ...... LN9111 Maler oet o . 81"'°1) 4lNtl ~ JOHNSON &: SON Presents ... NFL's ·Picks Of ·The Week . PETE PUS SAN FUlaSCO All THE WAY! New Parts Department Houn Now Open 8:00 am -l:OO ·pm Saturday• '( • Orenge Cout DAILY PILOTN/ed~ttday. JanuarY 13, 1982 ~iddJing nets with Riddell Artists' star clicking at 22.2 per MONTREAL <AP> -De1plte a 2 • l 1011 to the Montreal Canadlen1, Coach Don Perry was happy with his National Hockey Lea1u• debut behind tht Los Angele1 Klo11' bench Tuesday nl1ht. Mitrlo Tremblay'• 1oaJ 1:57 htto the third period lifted the Canad.lens to victory, but Perry · was pleased with the performance of hls players. "I WOULD have been happier If we had Ued or won," said Perry, 511 who replaced Parker MacDonwd. who wa.s relieved of his duties earlier in the week. "I can't fault any of our players. I thought our players played the man very well. I didn't see any performances I did not like." Perry, a career minor.league coach who most recently had coached the New Haven Nighthawks of the American Hockey League. came to the Kings along with Brad Selwood, his assistant at New Haven. Selwood wlll assume a similar post with the King~. Perry didn't officially accept the cQ.Bching position until late Monday nieht, after receiving "certain assurances" from General Manager George Maguire. But if Perry was at first reluctant to take the Job, he had no qualms about making his initial appearance at the Forum. regarded by many as the shrine of hockey. • "It's got to begin someplace. It would have been great If we had been able to pull it off and we came awfully close." MAGIC BASKET -Lo:-. Angell's Lakl•rs g uard Magic .John son flit·~ bl'l\\t't'll Clen•land 's Reggit• .Johnson 1left 1 und .Jamt•s Silas Tut·~d~1~ ni ght t•n routt• to l''" points . l.ukt·r~ \\Oil. I 11 ·11111 .Johnson fin1sht•d lht• l'\'t•nin)! "ith ~.') pc_Ji_n_h_· ____ _ _Tanabe, Edison impressive By &OGER CARI.SON Of• DllffY ~ ..... Laauna Beach High basketball coach Jerome Karp 1ot a tel"phone call the other day from someone, who Hked, "Can you give me the balance of your home achedule? "Alter that game with San Clemente I'm not going to miss any." It's indicative or what's been going on at Laguna Beach. where Karp and his Artists are busy upsetting the odds In a manner onJy the Artists know how to do. The center of Laguna Beach's e mergence in South Coast League circles as a title contender lies with 6·1 senior Neil R:ddell, who has clicked al a 22.2 scoring rat~ through 14 games, scoring 20 or more on 11 occasions. One of the few times he hasn't hit 20 was against San Clemente Friday in a 56-55 upset victory over what was the No. 6 ranked team in Orange Co unly. Riddell scored only 17, and that may have been the key to the upset. "He looks for lhe open man," says Karp "He didn 't take a . s hot in the fourth quarter because he was aware of the double coverage and he's smart enough to pick it up.'' Instead the Laguna Beach redhead pumped in three or four from the free throw line in the last two minutes and finished a defensive effort that held San Cle mente's James Hill to eight points below hi s normal average out of the Artists' box · and one defense. "We were really hyped up for San Clemente," says Riddell. "and yes. we think we're a AN ARTIST Neil Riddell as La guna Rc-ach 's leadin~ s('on•r this st·uson been s mooth in his sudden takeover or the Artists and one of the things he has inserted is a matchuf> style or his own against what the opposition provides. .. We· ve taken certain players and moved them into different roles," says Karp. "I'm a strong believer in matching up against certain players. But Neil , Johnny <Mann > a nd Rudy c Dvorak> are in there most of the time " So, the Artists continue their dizzying ways tonight at Laguna Hills where another favorite awaits Laguna Beach. Montreal's Pierre Mondou picked up a loose puck inside the Kings' blue line and fed a cross·ice pass to Tremblay who blasted a 20·foot slap shot past goaltender Mario Lessard. A crowd of 15,975 braved minus 20-degree temperature to watch the game, which brought the Kings' winless streak to nine. ~eahawk s, Barons, Artists, Mo n archs pick up wins contender <for the league title>. GWC loses we have as good a chance as Edison, Ocean View and Fountain Valley high women's basketball teams kicked orr the Sunset League season on a winning. note Tuesday night, while both Laguna Beach and Mater Dei also registered league-opening victories. Chase scored 20 points while Webb added 19. Teammate Pam While chipped in eight while Laura Simek contributed six points . anyone else. But it'll be close." Riddell has pumped in as third 8trS1wht many as 35 points in a game and --e The victory was only the second in 12 tries for the Seahawks. his jump shot can be described • nf as picturesque. and along with I D C O erence hi s fluid moves, makes the • Westmont stops sec SANTA BARBARA Westmont College broke open a close game in the second hall and went on to defeat visiting Southern California College, 94-70 Tuesday night in the NAIA District 3 basketball opener for both teams. The Vanguards of Coach BIU Reynolds , fr'esh off a 10 ·2 non-conference e(fort, trailed 39·38 at the half. But Westmont used a rugged zone defense and a high-powered offense which simply wore down sec. Guard Rick Schultz paced the Westmont attack with 23 points. For the Vanguards, Brad Carson scored 22 and Rick Porras had 15 before fouling out with 10 minutes remaining. Me a nwhile , junior Mike Roberts, who re·injured his fool in a game against the sec alumni last week, managed to score just eight points. sec ( 10-3). returns to action Friday night (7:30) when the Vanguards travel to Azusa Pacific. Here's how the action went· Edison 53, Marina 31 The Charger women improved their overall record to 12·3 with the win as Kim Tanabe pumped home 17 points in the game al Marina. Edison jumped out lo a 14·6 first·quarter lead WOMEN and then opened a comfortable 30·12 halftime advantage. The Chargers also received 10 points from Janet Bittner and nine from Tina Den Heyer. Marina's 'top s~orer was point guard Sandy Corbett who finished the evening with 12 points. ''They just hammered us on the boards tonight," admitted Marina Coach Dave Thornton. ''They were getting three shots to our one. Edison just wanted to win more than we did tonight." Fountain Valley 54, Huntington Beach 41 The Barons improved their overall record to 8-6 with the win on their own court. Leading the Fountain Valley charge was 5·8 forward Therese Puch&lski who scored 19 points. Senior Deanna Davis added 11. The Barons outscored the Oilers 16·6 in the third period to break open a close game. Huntington Beach received 14 points from Tammy Buckels while Tracey Clinkenbeard added six in a losing cause. Ocean View 53, Westminster 33 The Seahawks benefited from the one-two scoring punch of Karen Chase and Tammie Webb. Westminster could muster just 10 points in the first half, but played Ocean View on near.even terms in the second hair Stacy Schlange had nine points· for Westminster as did teammate Debbie Eastin. Laguna Beach 49, Laguna Hills 26 Coach Mike Roche's Artists started the South Coast League season orr on the right foot with an easy victory over the host Hawks . The Artists, leading 28·17 at the half. outscored Laguna Hills 10·0 in the third quarter lo put the game out or reach Mater Del 45, Bishop Amat 43 Alonda Varisco scored 17 points and Kathy Gorman chipped in with 13 as the Monarchs improved their record to 5.7 and opened Angelus Leal(ue play on a successful note. Gorman added 14 rebounds and hit on 5 or 6 free throws as Mater Dei won a tough game on the road. Oiler soccer team nipped Huntington Beach H1 gh's soccer team saw its record drop to 7-3 Tuesday as the Oilers dropped a tough 2·1 decision to visiting Mission Viejo Cory Swick scored the lone Huntington Beach goal. In girls' soccer action, Ocean View whipped Fullerton. 6-0 as Mary Castro and Lorna Orr each scored a pair or goals. Karen Batt and Julie Ratzlaff added the other tallies. The win improved the Seahawks' record to 1·2·2. driving shot look easy, too. Since Karp took over the reins when Craig Falconer resigned after two games in December the Artists have favored a zone defense ror the mos t part, occasionally going to a box and one against ~ hot shooter ··We're not pressing with a full court press and in many ways it does help us <the zone/, because it's more like a matchup zone anyway," 'explains Riddell. There's no gunner syndrome a t Laguna Be ach. des pite Riddell's flossy scoring average. ··He doesn't overshoot to get the points," says Karp. "They're high percentage shots and he's a team player , looking for the open man. "One of the things I've tried to do, however, is give him more flexibility. He operates to the right or left at the point of time and he's able to adjust to where he feels he is more effective." This is Riddell 's third year on the varsity, but he's hardly a one-sport star. Riddell is one of '1.h e mainstays of Laguna Beach's always.powe rful volleyball program and will be stationed as a middle blocker in the spring. Karp says the transition has Astros draft OCC's Sliwinski From AP dispatches NEW YORK -Kash Beauchamp. a slugging center fielder and son of a former major leaguer. was the first pick in baseball's annual winter tree agent draft Tuesday. He was chosen by the Toronto Blue Jays. JC. Walling is also a forward on the Dons' basketball team. The Angels dratted right·hander Jay Lewis, from Easle.rn Oklahoma JC, in the first round or the regular phase, and made Brian Phillips, another right·hander, their second pick. Phillips attends Oiablo Valley College. W. Sll RIPDRT ;w~ Beauchamp, whose father, Jim. now manages Toronto's AAA farm team in Syracuse, N. Y .• said by telephone from his home in Grove., Okla., that he dldrl't think be would be drafted No. 1. "I'm super excited and kind of in shock," said Beauchamp, a 6·3, 165-pounder who just turned 19. "This is kind of llke a dream come true. I always wanted to be a pro ball player." The 26 major league teams. choosing in reverse order of their finish last season, completed two rounds of the regular phaae or the draft on Tuesday and the entire secondary phase involving players previously drafted but un1l1ned. The draft was conducted by telephone hookup to the commissioner'• oftlce in New Yorlt. Of 52 players dr afted l'n the regular f.hase, 27 were from 'eatifornia Junior c«>lle111, ~ludln1 llicbael Alenir, a catcher from Palomar Colleee picked No. 2 by the Chica10 Cube. Amona the cotnmu.nity collqe aelectlona was Oran1e Cout Colle•• aop~n)Ol'e Kevin Sllwln!kl .tnd Saddleback CoUe1e'a Oou1 Sbeetl. ' Sheets, a pitcher, wu cbolen by MiMeaota lo t'1e second round of the re1war phase. I Sllwinald, an oulfielder, was aeleeted by Bouaton on UM 22nd pick of the aeeoncl roudd of the ~egular pbue. \ · The Ansell selected a pair or rl1ht·banded pltchen and shortstop Ken Wa1Un1 ot Santa Ana • The Dodgers made right-handed pitcher Michael Kolb and left-hander William Wilson their first two picks. The Dodgers selected Kolb of Sacramento Community College and Wilson of San Jacinto CC 1·2 in the regular phase or the draft. Kolb is from Elk Grove, Calif., and Wilson is from Las Vegas. With three picks in the secondary phase. Los Angeles selected catcher Henry Gatewood of Sacramento CC, outfielder Derril Lewis of San Bernardino Valley CC, and Bert Elbin. a right-handed pitcher from Louisburg JC in Pennsylvania. · Yankees name Vernon NEW YORK CAP> -Two-time American Leaaue batting champion Mickey Vernon was named battinJ( coach or fM !qew York \'ankeea on Monday. \ The ell·yeal'·old Vernon bat been battin1 lnatructot for the Yankees' minor leaiue operation alnce 1919. H1a place will be taken by former Yankee lint bueman Joe Pepitone. Mr. Baldy Mountan Kigh Holiday Hill Snow Summit Snow Valley Goldmine SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Snow deptb/lnclte1Condlllons 12 hp 3C l "4.1 12-18 hp 18·36 12·15 hp 2·3 CENTRAL CALIFORNIA 52-72 June MolUllain Mammo\h Mountain China Peak 105 49-58 hp Dodge Ridge 66-90 hp NORTHERN CALIFORNIA Llfta/Chalrs 2.L 3L 2L FO FO 2C 4C 19C FO FO Ml. Reba 60-100 7L Sierra Sid Ranch 109 FO Kirkwood 120 FO Heavenly Valley 1 hp 21L Tahoe Ski Bowl 9·11 pp 2C Ski Incline 44·58 pp SC Donner Skl Ranch 86·144 hp FO Alpine Meadows 84·144 hp FO Suaar Bowl 13·18 pp 4L Condtllons: hp -hard Pttk; Pl>-packed powder. • ·unstchalrs: L -lifts; C-chain: FO -rull operation EAST LOS ANGELES -East Los Angeles College snapped a four.game losing streak at the expense or Golden West College Tuesday night, as the Huskies handed the Rustlers their third s trai g ht Sout hern Ca l Conference basketball setback, 96·84. G WC, which posted a 13·2 non·conference mark . has dropped its first three conference games. Tuesday night, five East Los Angeles players scored in double figures as the Huskies won their first sec j{ame or the year. The Rustlers' Truiett Hatton scor ed 25 points to lead all scorers. and teammate Darin Bowen added 18 points before foulm~ out. However , East LA. which op e ned a 48 ·36 halftime advantage, al one lime led by as many as 20 points in the second half. Dantie Miller scored 20 points to lead the Huskies. while Keith George added 19. Wayne Aubert chipped in 12 points and Mario Navarro conlrl buted 11 for the Hu skies. 1'82 vw OUAHTUM WAGON !, -spd. Jrans, air cond. leatherette seats, radial tires and morel (Stk. 3089) (004796) List Price $12.065 Diieo.i SI 370 SALINICI s I 0 695 scaaocco Coupe . 5 ·•P••d tranamlulon, metall\c paint. rear wlndo~ w iper/washer, allcty wheels.st**>~ and mol"91 (Stk. 32361· (011'6J.. NICI . 5 10 695 NeA WllTtl •N CON,••·~· f'ICIHc OfvllMtll L.Mwt Stettte f'llatnla Goldt11$ta• W L flct. •• ,. 10 m -,, " ... , '"" ro 14 ·• s It IS .t.St t ...,"'"" StflOltto It IS .SJt • •U~.51' Stfl An19111o' Otnv•r H-IOfl Ulall KtMt$ Cltv Ottlts ...._...Olvlt._ 21 11 II " .. " 11 t2 11 n ' 2S .•1• -,JOO • ,4$, """ .1$3 11 .... """ . m ,. IASTlltN CONl'•ltlMCa ... , ... l'Nlt4ttplllt N_Y.,. WHlllnoton ..... Jtney Mll•tulltt Alltntt tndltnt c111c•oo O.troll Clovet•ncl AllMekOIYlollall 2' I 2' ' II 11 " " " 21 C-alOM11M9 ,. " " " " " u 20 IS 21 • n T..U'(tk- Ltlltr11U, Clevet-100 Mllwtuk• et Atttnea, ...i •• ,_ Pllll-.iNt tS. WHNnet..,.t? Detroit 122, Clllc ... I I I H 01oton 107. $tll Oltoo Hit Stn Antonio UP, Otlltl 11>' Oe11ver IJf, ltaMt.t City 12' P-..la IJJ, 0-Sltlt 111 New Y'ortc 11', Ultll 121 Potlltncl IOS, lncllen.t '3 TMit1M"1G-A1ltnlt ti BoslOft Mii•-• ti PNtamtc>Ne Stn Dlaoo et D•ll•• Cleveltnd ti l(tmtsClty llljlltMtlSfftlle Dtnver at Golden Stete ,., -,,., ..... •.JOO ' .... , ti .a m .. .... -.JOO •I'> .... ' .. ,, ' .•11 "" 115 ""' Lekers 114, Cevallera 100 L.OS ANOat.IES -WllllK :13, llrtwtr J, J•bbtr 20, Nixon 12, E. Jolln'°" ts, Mc"'- •. Mc Gee 10, Rembls o. Jordt11 o 1.tMMroe< '· McKenM 0 Tott••· .. n·tt 11• CLIVl'l.ANO -It. Jollnto11 •. Cerr 21, L.•lmbeer 17, HUSIOft '*· A 8rt••r "· Aesltnl 1, Wiiker-. 11, Siie• 1, Oltlerct O Tottlo: J1i..n100 k-~o."'" L.OI Anetlet .. 1'I JI U tt -114 Cltvelelld 21 2J 30 1' -100 Fouled out N.,... Total foul• 1....- Aneetes "·Cleve•-22 A -l ,2St. COLLEGE Weatmont IM. So. Cal Colle,Ae 70 SOUTHa"N CAL cou.aotE -l;-.t• •• Ptulmer 1, Porres IS, c er-. 22, Aoc:,,. 13, CMsl I, HotwnaM 2 T Olth · 2' I 2· IJ 70 WISTMONT -Tewll$bllry 1. J011nto11 •. L.evender 1•, West I. ScllullJ 2J, Ett... t, L.arson '· TU<.ktr 2, Merldelll 2, Krtclllet J, Crotllly 2. Toltls ll 11-2• '4 Httttlm.: lnlmonl. ,,.,.. Totet loU!s. Soutlltrn Cttllornt• Coll- 1', Westmont ts l'ouled out: Porres CSoulllem CtllfMlllt Collf9tl COMMUNITY COLLEGE EHt LA 91, Golden Weal 14 OOLOIH ••IT -Dt•ll .. Hatton u . Durr.em •. l(lnt 12. -... 11. E..,.m...t 1, Myt" 2, Jtcobl 1. Revis J Toltto: » 11-2' 14. IAST LA -AllOer1 12, Tiiimon t, Miiier 20, Neverro 11, Geortt 1', A<MI• 10, Slltnlls I, Gla11<tsprol, Price 2. Tott ls· U 10.IU6. Httlll-; EtstL..-A-fel.•3' Tot•• fout1 Golden WHI 21, EHi L...- Aneettt 1S. Fouled out: Miiter IEul LAI 11-tll IGoldtllW"t). ' Southern Cal Conference L.t-0-tlt W L W L. Stlllt Moni'a ) 0 I) ' Cyorus J o 11 s L.ASout,,_., 1 I I Rio H...-1 11 1 EHi L.ot Anveles I I 10 Lfl Aneeles cc I ' • Golden West o tJ s L.A Her-. 0 .) 4 12 "'*''' o ...... .,,., L.A Ht,., at Goldlon Well Cypress et I.A Soutllwest Rio HondO el Stnlt Monlct -F:Hf\.0.Aneef"eui loSA,...ion CC ..... ..... t•Ml"I• Cl, .... ... ~, . .,. ..... t.Ln.....ittHI M ....... u-.o .. ,,, ............ ,~,, .. 4, LMt 9M(ll ll'oly C tt•al 4t S. Crtt411Cl .. tl H 6, Vtttluft\ Of! llMI Jt J.Oc-vttwC•N tr I. Miii ... 111 II U t "tllifll Hlllt CMI 20 tt. lflfltwatf CNI t Ol!Mn: w..t Tona11<t 110.Jl, Atlltfflllr• llMI. MtW Otl Ctt...i), ,_.. ... Vtllty C 10·0 . 11 Afltllt11y ft·O . tl•llot Matl....-V C 11 .. ), ltfYM CNI c•••• I. St •... _.d CU.Jl tt I. St11 OotVG111o CIS.Ol ... I. L.• AllOI C t+.al to .. l•'-'1111-11 ... J, Hor'Vl, lti-.kle Cit-JI Jt •· Hoo.,., Ill• 11 U 1.C-WIMtl'Ce.11 U I 80.KO Ttc:ll C ... I It t. lt•d•tndl cu...i1 11 IO. Wtrrall CHI t OflMra: Dllmltfl 110.ll, Cte,....Oftt, IWI. Rlver•ICI• Pot11 C 11·0 . Pomon• Cl ·O , Ly11WOOC1 llM>. Wttl CovtM 110.!tl. C" l>A I ere..ottlldt OHi " 2. Lt SarN llS.11 ... >.Eur ........ CM I '9 •. Lt9UN Hlllt C 12-21 '1 S. VICIGI' Vtlley Ce..Jl U •. C•tlf«ftt OMI J2 ' Ctt•I s.r. CleMtftw 112...i1 • L.t Htllrt C ti.JI JO •. Clltl Hert (11...il 1 R ..... tttef.JI ' Ott.en· Mayfair t 1Mt, Soll«• CMI, 0- Hltts (Ml,_..... .... (10.JI. Mo<'-V•li.y CHI. Cll' l•A t. Senta Cltrt CMI 2 Wllltt~Cllrlllltn 11MI J lla11nl,..CWl • 111•1 SI. ......... C1f·JI etrp111terlt CIMI '· Ptrrl11-..1 1. Clltmlndtdl l .. Sl I M _ _. lt:l·ll • T~Palms l t•.OI 10.ltlo -IMI c., ""'" Scllee41 .. u ., ., 41 " n 21 II " I, c..-trt 110.2); 2. Wn•r .... C~t J Hell" C•U; •· Sliver Velley 11•11: S. Ctmp ...........,..., 111-11 : Cec>IW-Vtl .. y Cllrlsll .. (M l; --....11 CMI: 112-21; •· CeplSlreno Valley Cllrhtltn U ·O ; 7. Mtnllett 11•Sl; I. Avtlon CMI: '· Lu~en Ortnee O·ll, l'll11trlclQt 17-<ll HIGH SCHOOL WOMEN Edison 53, 'Marin• 31 IDISON -Kruptc• t, Houtc 2, Uclll•-2. T e11ellt 11, 0en11e.,.r t, Trepl s. lllllner 10. Clltvts 2. Totell: 20 tl-20 "· MA"INA -Smellwoo<I I, L.onre •. Hower<! •. Cor11tn 12. L.ove 2, Herne11<1u 2. 81tflemy 6 Tottfl· IS l·S JI k-..., Oliarun Editon 14 1' 11 11-SJ Merln• 4 4 • U-Ji Toltl toul1 E<llSOll 1, Mtrln• IJ Lag. Beech 49, Leg. Hiiia 2t LAGUNA llEACM -L.ttcls 12, M<IC- 10, ltuyper 2, AlslMll 2. Smllll 10, Htllltrt I, Wll"•m• 2, M<Cteme11ts 4. R°'9rlto11 • Tottts· 22 Sot 4t • LAGUNA MILLS -Slltelltn I, MtlllOfe< t. Autll11 I, Clltlft o. l(ewaoe 1. I(""'" 1 Tot et•· 1 IMS lt. k ... ...,o...,, .... L.•eun• 8*ec:11 12 •• 10 u.-L.tQuM Htlll 10 1 0 t -lt Total fouh L.tgune 8eKll fl, L.eeune Hlth 14. Fowled out· ltuvoer IL.tgu11a 8eeclll. Ttc:Ml<tl: L.tQUN 8eacll 11tnc,.,. Oce1n View 53, Weatmlnster 33 OCEAN VllW -Clltt.t 20, W .. lt, Wtlllt I, Slmell t, Ger,,_ 0, GtelltllO 0, Giii 0. Tottls: n M4 Sl. WISTMfNSTllt -Fouum s, ~ •. S<lllt91t t. Etstl11 t, Gllllltr .. 2, Jet•11 ._ "--..., °"'"'" O<ttn Vt-1• IS II 12-SJ Wntmlnt"' 6 4 IO 1~ Toi .. fowlt: Oc:Nll View 12, Wfftml ... ,. Fountain Valley 54, Htn. Bel\. 41 HUNTINGTON •••cN -Cu r • CMdov• •. T-4, Cooper'· Mtfldou I, llU<Mtt 14, 0"*-d 6.. Toltls: IS 11·tl 41 ,OUNTAtlf VALL•Y -Hlslll 2, a.rtOftt, Pucllttslll It, ArttOgt J, awcll I, GIMWrt i.. Dtvls 11. Tott11; 201 .. • J4. Sc-.~ o.wttn Hu11U119'0fl 8Mdl I 1' t 11-41 Fou11ltl11 Vttley IJ I I 1' 14-S. ,. Totat1 loutt: Hu11tt11eto11 11••<11 20 0Unltl11 Vtllay It. fCoultcl out; Gt.,..,; lt'ou11leln Vtlley), Mt""°lt IHUlltl,,..Oft Betclll , Ctlnfl-rCI CHuntlfltton llttclll. Mater Del 45, Bishop Amat 43 NIA-l'•lt OU -K. 8tfltr >. 1(-ff I, T lletcer •. Gormen U, G•oit s. Vertw.o 11 Toltlo: It IJ..214S. llSHO• AMAT -o·s .. 11 1ven 12, Tevl,..ston I, ~r 11, Behr •. l(tl" 4, 0 '8rltn •· Tolels: 10 ).11 4). sc ... ...,o.ri.n Met et' 0tC t 12 IJ 11-4S 8hop Amel t U 10 t-..J Tot .. louh: Mtttt' Otl IJ, BIMloP Amet 22. Fouled out. ~· 1111-p Amell. aMtt< ~ ....... ·AMMl. Tedw>icetr-&llllOfrAmtt COKh A,,..C #'{, •. .:c.~ .. tOO-R•lll CW>_._., ..... II. 1'7 -1-*ltMI• ur-11-. IU -.......... I (W) •· Otthte, l i41. 111 -lllttllar CW) I" tl .. 11, J:~. 1'8-YeMlllWt CM! p, 0-, S:tt. 1$4 -Hot1IOn CWI " Llll'llbrllnt, '"' ue -sit~ •M dtc. H.,.., .. ,. U1 -C\lff!Nft IW! p , Atll, l:J1. 1$1 -'-CMI dtc. '-lltter, 1 .. 1. ltt-1( ... (M) dee. PtntalN,t-2. 111 AllCIOtl (WI p, •ettelo, S:U . 100 -NIUtl CW! -Illy Iott.II Mwt -"-' IWl -Illy lw .. lt. Winter tree eaent draft "eouuutl>MAH l'lrat ·-t Torento L J""" IC"" keucr.emp, el. 8K-JC. Grove, °"''· t . Clltc-CutK -Ml<llett Afefllr, <. Ptlomtr Col•-· J MllllW90lt -Kirby P\aclltlt, ol, Trll.., JC, Clllc990, 4. Sen Oieto -J-Yowltr, o. llalenelt JC, Wntvllle, N.J s. Sttllte -Wrey llt<'Qltfldthl, o. Cerritos Collitee. •· New Yon Mell -TlrnolllV M<Mtr-., p Coll•Ot of So.1111tr11 IClallO 1 Ant••• -J•v L.ewtt, p, Etttern OllltllOfN Stele JC I. PlllMllWQll -Clltrtes Cunnl119htm, a.>, Cumtiert-JC. COtPUI Cllrt11I, Tun. t . lttnws Cttv -R-r1 Rtltloft, 29, ClltbOI JC. 10. Alttntt -J°"""Y Httcller, ol, Jevtt* Collegt, Wltlltm•, Arlr. 11. Clewl-Tracy E<llOll, ot, So O.KtlbJC. 12 Sen Fren<IKO -Mk .... t J~. ol, Arvonl•, Ve. 13 Cltlceeo Wlllte So• -Aodnty M<Crty, ol, Senta -..tu JC. 14. Plllledetohlt -Jtm" Kine, n , Cotor-Scwil!Qs. ColO IS Taus -J-AMI_., p, Modesto JC It Houston -""-" a-, p, -Geel Colleoe. I,. 8MIOll -Mk l'lffl Aoclltord, P, SMtt l'e CC, S 8urt"'91on, VI. 11. -.. 1 -Tr,,., Mcl(ey, ol1>, 0.. Mol11et AruJC. It. Oel"'4t -T"°' E00-11. p , l'llltert-JC.. 20. L.°' A119tlt1 -Mlclltet Kolb, p, St<re~CC. 21. H•• York Ya1111.ee1 -Georee ,......,.,.,p,l'r-cc. 22. $1. L.aull -n..m.. Mw<ll, af, Mt. S... AlltOlllo Gtlt .... n. ae111-. -,,.,..,.., o--r, Sell - JC. 24. CIMIM•ll -~alnt Hitt, of, 1os Aneet"CC. U . Mt-.. -Otrell T.,_, p, AIM, H-tll. 2'. Otllltnd -Ric""" Het~er. P, c.I .... of Mtrlft ........ I . Toronto-"°",,....._·"· Piere• JC 2. Clllc ... CAlll -A ........ r ~Id. p, Yev-.at JC. Mne. ArlL J. Mlaatttlt -Ot 1tt Sllttlt, "· ' ....... C!19tet. •· S•11 Dltoo -Jemes. 8t11tdtct, Los Ant1tl"ValltYJC. S. SNlt .. -Ktvlfl Roy. p, U-JC, Myr1M c..-_ 0... •· Hew Y'-Mtb -8-v Ettreda, p, S.11 Jtclftto JC. 1. \A11991t -8rlt11 Pllllttpa, o. Dltblo VtlltY JC. I Plllsburth -De1111h woods, of, Soertt11bure Mttllocttll Cotltt•. No Clltneston, s.c •. ltt11"s City -Ertc Scllmldl, p, A11lel-Velley JC 10. Au-. -L.trry Rlcldt•, o. Alvln JC. Pttrttnd, Te..._ I I. Cltwltlld -J-. JtfforlOll, P ........ llot<ll JC, West Petm eeecll, l'tt. 12. Stn l'renc:tw.o -Otlt Gellrtneer, 1111, Pierce JC. -u , Clll<qo Wlllte -SO• -Stt~n C-nts, p, COii-OI Marin •1cr·1nous ... ,,w.ss' •ICTITIOUI 8USOIHI .. ... -" NAMI ITATSllqNT ICTIT10US IUIOtats NAMaSTAT8MaNT Tiit loll-l"t ,...S41M ere •ol"t NAM•ITAT8 .. NT "CTITIOUS 8UStN•SS llAM& STAT8MllNT Tiit ftllowfflf pttMlll ere dolllt bualflt""' Tiit follo•l119 person I• dol111 lllnlMHts: CAl.·WUTIEltH ac>AT C:O .. US2 !Mnl...Un: 80H TOH TRADING LTD, lte Giibert ~Ive, H""lllltlCMI ••tell, TOPICAL.$ INTEl"IATIONAL, H••Port Center Drive, Newoort Celllomla'2149 1726 Sllyl.tl l..tnt, "-r1 .. tell, ... <II. Ctllfol'fllt~ U11l11ttl-t c.,,, • C•lllor11lt Ctllfomlt..,. Acllttlt Heddtd, 4 SH ltlt nCI corporello11, HU Glllttrt Drive, Rotien M.. Sul .. Y. lnit Sllyltrll Drive, Newport htcll. Cet11or11t• Hwntt,,...,, a.Kii, Cttlfomf• ftM9 Lent, N-1 lltedl, Ctllfon>lt .... ftMO Tllla .....,,,... 1M <~-by e This !lull-It ~ttd by tll Oy11t eon-,, L.td., SCIO _ _, Corp«ttltfl lnctlvlOUtf. Center Or he, Newport 8tt<ll, """'-llontl Corp, "-rt M. Mlty Cttllornl• ~ M..C. °"'· ~ Tiii• Slllttrntf!I WH "'"' with llM Thi• ....i .... I• <Mdllcttd lly • Tllll ......._. -nit11 wtltl -c-ty Cterll ef Ore,,.. county Oft .....,o1 ..,_. .,..,. c-ty c1er11 of 0r.,,.. c_, Oft J•-rv 4. ,... Adlltte Htclaecl Otct...., ... "" ,,,_ This stt-•• ltttct wtlll !tie l'tnMI Pt1llll""" Drlll!Qlt Cotti Dally Piiot, C°""'' Glwk of ~.,... County Oft ~ltNd ~ Coest Oelf'f •llM, Jen.•. 13, 20, 27, t• 10>-n. Je-ry 4. 1"2. l'I_, DK. 21, JO, ltl1, Jiii. 6, IJ, ltll SS..1 PUbtl!Nd °'""" CotJt Otlty Pilot, Jtfl, •• IJ, 2111, 17, tm 104-42. • l'tCTITIOUI eutflf8M NA.MalTAT8M91fT 1 lie foll-1119 "''°"' ., ......... llU&lfltlAa: AL.llMIR COMPAl'l't, LTU. 201 Newport Ctt1t•r Drive, Sulit >DO, 1"t•p0rt 8Mcll, tAlllMfllt t)MO Mtrellalltil Atetallt, 2' f'olflt Loma Dr1v•, C.orona aet Mer. CtlolMlll•n.25 NlttllNlt Ftfllmt AleWN, 27 l'olnt Lome Orl11t, Ctro11t dtl Mer Ctll•fllt "'25 ' Atlrort Al.itllt, S .._.. !My, Cwone dll MM, Ctfttw-~ Mollt"""td ""' Altltllt, 27 POlnt l..Omll Dflvo, c«-11111 Mer, c.tt llOtlllt .,.,, Httrlfl A .. l.tftt IHOS1tl11lo11nl IS -ttrey Circle,~ dtl Mer, C> mu lhtt -1 ..... a It (.-Clad O'f t 90fWJ••I pertntrlhlp Mlr-..1•1 A .. I ... , •. ~ .......... -v ...... c.1-.,. c. ~·•• JC..Olhlt. IL T ... '1 LMrY llllk\.111, a, .. ~ JC ........ c. It ......................... .... J•cc. 11 • ...-Clittl• It....,, •· ,w!HtM Jc. It Mtfllttll -Intl "'ld.•U, '' I ~IMtJC.IC ...... 1.,0. "· DeCtlllt -~ .-....... ._._. «. .._-.111. •·IM~ -w111i-.,._. •• 111111 Jeclll .. CC. ti. Ntw "'•" YMlltH -Cll•rlat H•r .. ldl, •• Melllll Oll;,e c;(, WIM!I~ H,C. • it. ''· '-""• ~ o.wi. ............ ..... City J(. u ........... -OIMlt ~-.... Ye¥tNIJc. u. CIMl1111au -Oltflll s.~··· .. '""•rt.nJc. "' Mii..._ .. Utry JacWNft, af, Tl'IWI Jc. c lftc "-II. "· o~ -..rt ,...,_., '" ~ ~II JC. Will talfll ... II, f'la. HC:ONDHY "9.Ua ............ • I. ltMMt (lly -OtflflY Jacll-, t . T rlfl!4H JC. Alltw-, c..M, 1 ..... °'991 -Sc.n ,., ......... Mi.ml U11lwrslt;, Llvlnoftllfl. H.J. I. Sttttlt -Clw'lat lttrl .. d, •· Y tv._.i JC. ..... t~ -''" ~ ... t ..... Otlln. !.. ltltJlllOl'9 -JoM 1.-"· •. 0.-. .... t. MOflu.tt -Otvi. Akli"ff, p, 811111\ JC, ••vtt1.nus. 1. Ml-..U -Mtr11 Marti•. P. Cul-City, I . Stn '''"''KO -Ewr.tt, Gr.....,, ff, Ltulabll(f JC, Clltrlottt, N.C. t, Hew Y"11 YMll'" -OcNllle McOeweft Jr,. of, Mlttnl 0.-Nor111, Holt~., ... 10, Att...tt -Al._. CtftOtlttla • S.. J-cc. ' • I 1. ClllcteD Wllllt St• -" ..... 12. L.os AllOl!ft -.....,, Ot-. c, 'otertmtrlto cc. IJ, ••IDn -.... ""'""' •. Sem•-IC, Semi ...... Otllt . u . Cl11cl11111t1 -"1<111• Certer, 01, UmP<111t CC, HMO Rlwr, Ort. IS. TMOftlO -hnelolpfl "OllltgM, p, IMftfl RI..,. JC,~ Tr .. , Pt . 16.. f'N~t -JoM MKN11 Jr, '· A"'tl" CC. CtrroltOll, Ttut • 11. Cltvtltftd -Crtlt HolllltW•, ot, tlrultt Memorl•t H.s .. Grand Ju11ct1 .... ColO. 11. Hew Y•' Meta -St•...,. Oey, p, Gr"" R1..,. cc. M11p1e v .. i.v. waa11. 1'. Ttut -Cllrtttoplltr Jotll11, '· Hlll•llorouttl JC, OtllWI, Ml<ll, to. 5t. Lau!• -lracltev Ar11t111er9, •· Mtr<tcl JC. Madfonl, o... 21 Mltw--Curll• Z..cco, •· Mt. 011¥e JC, Otlmonl, Pt. U. ....... -Kewllt lllw!Mkt, tf, cw-.. c .... c ...... . u. oaa ..... -0.vld L.tlper, o. ,..,,..,_ JC. 2•. OW<.eeie c.. -Jeff """'· •• ,_ JC, A..-te, L.t. U . Ottrolt -Dtllt Wllllamt, u , l11terPtlw JC, """'le, Ala. 16 .\J9K -Kendell Wtttlt19, u , SMIA AMCol ... s..-1t.-. t. It.,_ City -Demon Ftrmer, of, - L.M""9tietJC 1 Sell OMto-OMft All!My, p, 8•111"1"" cc. 11•-•'fll ,_, Md I. Sttllle -RlchtrCI Rosemu1, p, Ll1111·8tfltoftCC, ""lltM, On. •. Pit ........ -.... tlo Dl1tet-. IS, AMII CC, 8roatY11, H. Y. s. 8ttll..-e -Manuel Mani•-. ''- Mltml·O.-North. Mltml t . ""4Nlt.--Marll e.lltr, p, Ptlm a..tll JC, Royal Ptlm 8etcll, "'· 1. Ml-. -J-llrt.-tl, of, Senft AM c.i•eee. I S•11 l'rtflC.IKO -KtnMltl L.yftft, D, Spert-t Mtlhodl•t JC, Gr"" $.C. ' New Y-VtnkMS -1(4"WWlll Rffcl, p, Crowder JC. Ho lA..,..llCt, Ollto. 10 Al....W -Mtl't< Wt,,..,, of, Amtrktfl ltlvtf'JC. I 1 L...-Af91K -OtrrM Lew••. p, Sen 8«11en1lno v .. lty. 12. Bost ... -NHed ... Clnd11Mll -AOlltld John\011, Of, Ort(IOft t•. Toronto -Norm•n Morion, p, MltmH>-Nortll, Hoth·-. l'ft, I Kt-Cit) -AIC:lltrll Slnllll, p, 01-Valley JC. 2. Stll 01'90 -l(e1111e111 lltt1der of Ct11trtllt CC, Tecornt, Wttll. • ' a_ Stttllt -Vlflctllt 0.8-, •• OtMM JC. • PlltJllUrtll -Tlmollly 8tf'hr. ~. Semi .... JC. AMrdttll, N J s.attu ....... ---. •· Montrut -Dtvld l'teuwv. p, •-State. 1. Mt11natolt -Adrlt11 Pertcl111, of "I<"'"°"°-. •• S.n l'rM<IK• -AOller'I --· ot St<r •"*"°CC. t . Hew Yorll Yenllttl -.... -. 10. Atltlltt -peHtd. 11. L.ot A119elu -8trt Ellll11 •• L.oul-. JC, WM'forcllllurt, Pt. ' It, Clnc:lflnttl -K...,.ltl $t11<tetr, "· ,._ YwtlClly. J~J. Toronto -OtvlCI Elcllom, p, c.rttto I• ................. -Crti9 FIUpttrlcll, p, Kotlut-., -· . IS Cltvet--"~ Gllcllrlst, p, Stnelllilly, Ollto ,..:!·.!-:c. Y-Mtb -Marvin Ptrtc ... c, 11 T•••• -Mlcllttl Wl11bu1h p Wl111ton-Stlem 51 . ' 11 SI. l..oult -peutct, It, Mllwtutc" -"""" Murrero, o. Mtemf·Dedt Nwth, Mlemt. ,,_._ I lt._CllY-N- 2 Sen Olit90 -Jeff Seiner, e. Loa A""ttt v .. t.v JC. J. Sttltle -PeHtcl. ............ "' -ptt- f . -~ -~ • M l......C. -P1$11tC1. ,ICTITIOUS 8USIM•ts lfAMI ITAT•MllNT Tiit fot1owl111 oerso11 It dOlllt bvsfMUH: .T°ll• lof'-"'9 ,.w-... '°'"' llutlfltH•; 1111• ,,._ ..... ..., ••lll "" COUllty t."'11 of Otenee C.0""'4y on ,,.,,-------------' •ICTITIOUS 8USIMIESS ·-· STAT•M•lfT Tiit fotlowt111 perto11 It dot111 ~·-: CAI ECONOMY Ol'l'ICE IOUtf'Ml!NT 181 SOUTH COAST Ol"l"H:I IQVIPMINT, IO' Soulll !>tend A-. s.in. AM, Cttttor..Ct ft PIS • ... a.a ~ .• Ctllfonll• ,.....,...,,_ .. 11111111 Grtlld, Stntt AM,Ctl ...... trNS Ttwt lallllMSt I• <-ltd by e C001*al"91 .... c....o.-. J.C. DM-. ..... llltftt Tllll ..__.,. -ftltd WOii tM C-fY Cltrll af Ofaftll9 ~y 111 0ec.11. '"'· ..... ....... Or .... (Miii Deity ....... JM\. 11, .. ,,, .... .. ... ,..,, ..... lll.IGHTPATMS. 000 Campus Or Ive. Sult• Ill', Newport ••tell, ColllMnlt tJMO ,,_II 8. Jee ....... , 2tU AllA Vhtt Drive, H••port •••<II .Gtlltornlt -..O ' Tllll Mltlffl It condUctH by "' 1Mlvt4lutl AaLI MA"IHa MAINTbAHCE. at ~ I~ Drive, Ht.._.,r1 eeecll, Cat11or11I• n..1 8rfllfl L.M L.ewrlcll, • S...111 lrtffwey, G•tt MtM, GallfOl"lllt .,.., loovemlltr 12, 1'11 . "'Mil HUNT•" & VOU A::;::ecuw ...... ~ ...... 1. .. .0. ... "'" ,,...,c..mu PubllllltO Or ... (.OHi Dally Pltot Otc. •• ltl1, JM.•, II, 20, t• Jto..ti t' ••• J ... Tiiis ......_. -ft ... wttll Ult County Cltrll of Of.,,.. Count; °" •Mttt OeNtll i...-tcll, * ...... aroa411w•y, C.Ott *"• Catfftnllt flW l'flls tow ..... Is <~ ... ~ t I ..... O.Cemw tt, ''" ""'"· PllMlltlM Or-. GMM D•lly P1to1. OIK. U , .. ltl1,Jfll,, 6, 11, HC ... I. 111'111 ............ . .....,,1.-'<11 Tllla......_.. ... ,, ..... ._ c-ty Cltr1l tf OrMet c-.ey ell Otc_.., n. '"' p.,.. ""'" ... Or ... c... °""" ....... ---PIU---llta-----• l>'t'· n.• ""·"-.'· 11, 1•N1H1 NUllta •ICTlTtOUI •llNeM .... .,..,.. .. ..,. , ..... ,r .... _ ....... ..u..,....._....., •c•.,..._...,.._ tt.t ...... .... 11. "::::"'' ...... . 11.c -....-, ...... ver11 ..... ---.. i• . .,. __ ..,......_c...._10.-.._.,,.....,_., , ............ -..... ..... ._ 1,a.011tit-....- t.T .... ---- LAIAaeftllloe t TVatoa\"1 .-1M1Lft ................................... Pl•UIM:8.W't'Wdi. Miss JK111M c..,., St .• It• .... ..,,,. .. ,, o. ewer•> 10.. u• WIM t "911<¥ CHtrtl 1tf AIH rec••: Hfff!Nllf oeu ... O••k """'· Olkllttl• C>rttm, ,.,.. 9M 1-.Y, Cllt Cllt 8" Miio Sha, Oonvtt O,..m, Tlmt. II.It. u ••An• n• "'"""·•·· saeotto •AC•.•..,.,.._ ._ .. Cl!lctc CGtt .... I 12 . .0 .... 1.• ~IHtent Ptfky (Mlt<lltll) &.• ... ~C.ICOMllllOWtl ,_. AIM r-: laulllll' ... Y', t'tttCy V .... , RtplClo "CKlltt, J ...... Pley, T'tefflc Trt\#t, Time: 10..Jt. TH1.-o •ACa • ._ ,.,.,. Kt,,Cy VIiie CM91rt U.4' S . .O U1 He Ooft ll EH'f Cl.Moy! I.. lM Sprint '"'' CCtedN.al 4 • Also rectct: l"f'l4t of Rey, H• can "'"" l!tly T-., Of• Mell PlllltlN. Sllwlfllt .... Oktceyt"-· Time ~., U UIACTA C>ll pelCI W 4'. l'O\l "T'H ltACI. "° Y•rch. Go Noel-• Stir CW•rdl • 40 uo uo EtrlhOl*le JOiie C Bttdl J.eo I.• Miu L.ove L.tt'k ""'"..,I JM Alto rKtd: MyrtJ Crtrt l..ttt. L.t .. t Belle, Oflflelt. A,_I Ftll DOMt Bodi. Velltlll VIOtt, S....u A .. i . Tlmt: 1e.a. U a•ACTA Cf.71 INiet UI .0 "'"™ ltACI. lfO yercts. Too Tkl't' Sit (Ward) 3 20 2... uo Wllltll"t SI• ICreaoer> .... t ... L.1¥ely But IH¥tl • UI Alto "'"' Jtltortf'e, l'weete GMlt. tmtt•ffl1urprl1t, Meer.er Amlo, '''' l'rlKO, Mllllll Mlutte, A Zure Nlto. Time: 11.00, U UtACTA c.i..7) NICI 111.00 SI• TH "ACI. "O ytrft t(lltlefi ltopy. Routlll V•ll•nt l'telr 18trdl 'Ned Htneer I Arm11tonel 1.tll S.20 UO 400 )00 2"' Alto rtc..i: -No More, Center, Oii Cl\tr111t Ollly Go Rev Time 44.SI. 51EV8NTH "ACI. !tfO ver<11 """"*"' ftp Y-Htl IT-•I l IO 2 60 J.eo 811• en A<fl (8-dl J 00 , .. Prl11ce Ctm (8'oOfoM t 40 Also rt<t<I: EHY D ... HoOl<ed Deep, Ntillvlllt Ntwa, Truell.el to Me, 111 Pty, Another Venl, Im Y-Boottemen Time 21 • .,, U IEXACTA lt.31 Otld l U n •tClt SIX ll·J.2-<l·M I ptfcl u,•22.00 wltll 1la wlnnl119 tlcut1 Cit• "°''"I S2 PIO $1~ COlllOl .. lorl H id S.1.20 with 110 wtnnl119 ll<kets (ftw '-""l EIGHTH ltACIE. 400 ••reh Cllurp N Go C Hartl 1.00 •.to JAii Raymon<INoc:llt°"C8•rdl ll . .O 1• Gollt Go Effy IWt<<ll S • Alto rtctctl Soncllo, Mtllllln, T eh Five Too, Jetty Jtou.,, Olten 1tto111. EHY M•n•uver, For.,., True.kin Tlmt 20.11. NINTH ltACE. JJOv•reh Werdi TIN<.er IT-•I 21.IO 11 00 1M Euy llr-(CtrOOUI 10.00 1 00 Milo RtOIWtf'dl > 00 Alto rtctd: Furtny Too, Rullln1 Soe<ttl, ~:: o'!:f.!~l.;..~"''"' Jet, Relt.t en O•. Time 11.3'. U I XACTA 11·11 peld •tll 20 A lltndallc:w -S.104 Hf9h 9dtOOf ....-v1o,.a.M........,._111 Hun11 ...... 8ttc11Korlno: SWl<tc I. Minion Viejo Kort119: Scllroe<ler I, Mtdlttlll, Women MIOttSCMOOL Ck-v1ow• ... ....._. Ocetft View w.wtnt. Cutro L Orr L aen 1, ltellltft I Hlatl scttool soccer MtOlf SCHOO\. "ANICINOS Cll't.A I, Soutll Torra11ce; 2. Cltrernont, .J. E_._; • West Twronce; s Sarlt• Monlc.t, •· Simi Vtfley; '· DOI ........... t . Arc..ie; t . CtllYOll CAntlltlml; 10. Sen Gtbri.I. Cl••A 1. ~tit; 2. NOit•; J. 8-o Tedi. 4 M ... te..,let-Jr. Oi-ot;--.. C-t :-1 Monte, .. ,, I. 8ofllte; ' Ptlm s..nnos. IO Stlll• Merla- NHL C~l&.4.C:O..•l•INC.a , ....... tall c ..... , V111cou-••• C.rtdt ......... Nll1111t..U c111, ... WIMI .... Tartflte Ottrplt ....... DI.,,..._ W L T ... OA ,.._ l1t11t•t .. •I 14 It 10 "' ,., • 14 tt • I .. , ... ti tt J tn 211 It 10 11 • IU -It .,..,....C>MtlM 20 It • , •• ., ... U II U tn , .. '4 11 16 t IU Ill 4 ,, . ' , .. ,., .. U It II 111 tta • UUtU2lll• WALHC0..•1•1..ca •etrkllOlv....., NY l•I•'*'• U 11 S 1'1 UO $$ l'Mttdtlpftje • 1' IS 1 IU ttt St •llU.Wtfl " " • ... IM .. NY "tnllH\ It ti S I It ... .. Wttlll"910f1 U ff 4 '" 111 • -'--Olv'91ee autltto ....... Mo11trHI OutM< Heriford 2• 11 I ,.. ID S6 u n s 111 , .. ss U 10 II 200 IM U u " ' tol ,,. " 10 n • 143 1• " .,. ..... , •• Sc.tr. Montrffl 2, It .... t T ........ _ lc!Monton ti Wtthllleton Clllueo ti 8ull•to ColortdO •t Twonto NY ltMgtnetM~t OvttltC ti St. L.oult PltU-tlltt WIMIPtt ce11arye1v~ Cenedlens 2, Kings 1 k-~~ .., .... """" 0 I 0 0 1 I NOiie. Pen•ltlu -W•ll•. L.A, 2:0'. T ur1111Vll, I.A, t u ; L.t1i...,, Mo11, p .o, Htfltll-. I.A. tt: IS; Alton,-· 11 1' .... ~ I MolllrNf, N""9r 11 CPl<trdl, ' 00, 1 . L.O\ AngtlH, DI-it ITtYlor), IS:I~ P.,.•llln -Wells, L.A, J·OI; t.ewla, L.A • 17 CM; H ..... leWll. I.A, 11 •> ~f'wltf J Monlr••I. Tremlllty 10 IM011dou ltuellllnl. 1:57. "-111tt N-. • Sllob on OCMI -Ult Af!Otlff MM·?1. Mo11trttt .. 11+u Goetln -L.H A119etu, t.euerd Mo11lratt, W-'I'. A -IS,"S Women's tournament CttCIM:MMtU .. ..... "_SMtle Ptm ca. .. def If.tie L.tlllem, ._O, ..,., Jotnne R_.t Otl. Y-VtrmMll, f·S, 6-2. Ba .... t Poller Clef Dul< Htt L.te, M , t-4; Sylvia H'"lllt Clef, Ptm TM11tr.,.,,, W . •·I; Tr KY """'" def. Jul.It H•rrlnet .... M . • 1, e111i. Jetn Kine c11o1 1tme1v11 ,.,,,,..,. . ., , .•. lnternattonel tournament ••• AIKtr~ N-Zttl•IMll ''"'"-~ Tim Wlllll-. dlof Olctc ~tr, •·> . ._,, l •rry •-Clef S-W Kruttvlu, M , .,,, Cllrlt Mt ...... lt Otl. JOftell*I Smllll. • I, M . A I( ll•rd i.-1• def Olw'ly Par...,, S 1, '"· 12 10; Ketty lv•rfldon def. Oevld Scllntlcte< , .. , t.J, Maritn Devis clef. Otvlcl Mw•tt..i' ~ J 4·0 .Fleld hodcey IE._4,MtriHI E<lhon l<Ml119: L.lto Boer 1. Cttlly 5ottU1 I, IClm Holtr I. Ulll~ J.G ..... G,....t I Ulllven.ltv tcerlfle· "-"• I J-1, Gt11111. Tuesday'• franaactlon• 8ASIHAU 4-'<MLHt-e DETROIT TtGE"S Sl911ed Den RtHme, D<l<,..r, to a lllree Yff• 'onlrtcl MtllMMLt ..... MONTREAL. EXPOS Sle ne<I Cllrll Stleter, """1st...,, lo • ftlrff·Y•tr conlrtcl Oulg11ttt0 J erry Minuet, l1101tder, for ••Slgrwnent MOCCaY HAATF~~~~YS ~~""" JOlltl GtrrtU, ootflt, lt IN °""9< Nordlq""' tor Mlcllel Pltue, e ot tle, 111• fulwre < 011•IC1eret10111 Rtctll•<I Miiie Vest or, toetle, ~-111 ........ ton ot Ille Am«k'" HOCkOLe ....... C:OU..IGa COt.OAIM>O ... ~E -N•moo·Jollll Ollede -Tflft o.n..lton 1111-lootlltll <otCMI. •ICTtfla.IS 8UltlfHI N..._ITATaM4llfT ) Tiit fot~no --• tro dal11e llWIMU .. ; OAOAL MOTO"$, 2,JJI Ctfnll!ffet Ctft .. t ~t.,., 5-t I , Lee-Hiits, CA "'5S. OAGAL $.H.M., t Ct llltrnla <w..-reUoll, ZllSS1 C--ce ~ Drive, Scla<t I!, .......... Hiiis., CA "'"· Tiits bwilflftt t1 <OftdU<ttCI by t , ........ ttafl. OAGAL S.H.M. ~ID MC>ltTAZAVt, ' ........,, I Tllll 11-...-t -rlltcl •1111 r c-ty Cltrll ot 0r..._. county Otc. ,., 1tl1. MICMAU. ... oeaMO, HK .. . ......,."" ........ c.ltl' °""""· ..... .._..... .... ,CA_.. , ... Cf ... ,.... .._.....Or ... C:.... Delly Pl Otc ... ""· J111 ••• 11, •• 1• • 0 \I Orange CoHt OAtLY PILOTM'edn .. day, January 13, 1982 •• NCAA nixes ·· ~=:r r._. ,..,_,"' ,., .... , .,. -.i ... lltrtiTMWt IU ... 111 NAMalTATaMllfT Tiit 191te'l!rlll.I W-IA MWtt Ml110111t1 ,~!TI~.., ....... NAM91T•TIMl•T ninth coach Freshman redshirting OK'd HOUSTON <AP> -For about 15 minute1 Tuesday, the coaoblna staffs at the nation's ml.lor football colle1ea were increased from el&ht to nine full-tlme aulatant&. Many school• have been aeeklna 1uch an increue alnce they were limited to el1ht full·Ume a11l1tanll by the National Colle1tate Athletic A11oclation'11976 convention. BUT THEIR WISHES were fulfllled for what tumed out to be only a very brief time. The 1982 NCAA convention, whlch held tu business session Tuesda)', was uked to reconsider and s ubsequenUy rejected the increase. In other football action, the delegates c hanged the earliest possible day for iaauln1 bowl bids from Nov. 15 t.o Nov. 19 and passed le•ialation which would have permitted the redshlrtlng of freshmen without the loss of a year's elilibillty. • And in a mo-ve that could have far-reaching effects in the future, they passed a rule permitting an athlete to transfer schools and remain eligible without having to sit out a year lf bis institution is placed on pro,bation that would preclude his participation it\ postseason competition for the remainder of his eleglbillty. The coaching staff legislation would have added a ninth fulltime assistant. while eliminating part-lime coaches except for two graduate assistants who would have had to enroll in a graduate degree program and take at least SO percent.of a normal work load. The legislation was passed in Division I-A by 68-66 and rejected in Division I-AA by a show of hands. Part-time coaches currently are listed in a variety of outside jobs, both on and off campus, but the jobs are merely cover-ups and they are, In effect, full-time coaches. "ANYBODY WHO DOESN'T think that's going on only has to check around," said Joe Paterno, head coach and athletic director at Penn State. "The intent of the legislation was to give coaching staffs enough full-time people to do a g09d job and to eliminate abuses. There are guys who have been on coaching staffs for 20 years and all of a s udden they're listed as part-time coaches." However, s hortly after passage, the convention was asked to reconsider by R.J . Snow. faculty representatieve at the University of Utah. The motion t.o reconsider passed 70-68 and the s ubsequent vote wiped out the ninth full-time assistant coach 71-64. •'The intent was to stop some schools from using part-time coaches in inappropriate ways," s aid Snow, who originally voted in favor of the legislation. "But the effect could have been to force some schools to hire a ninth full-time coach and that would have had a negative impact oo some budgets." The bowl invitation date was changed from the third Saturday in November, which could be as early as Nov. 15, to the Saturday after the third Tuesday, which caneiot come berore Nov. 19. That date would prevent the bowls from issuing formal invitations before many of the traditional late November games. Bowl committees and schools have been abusing the bowl date for years without a satisfactory solution. DON l\llYANT, assistant athletic director at the University of Nebraska, said bis school• c linched the host spot In the Orange Bowl a week before the 1981 bowl date and "received more than 4,000 ticket requests from an opponent (Clemson> which could not be contacted until a week later." The transfer ·rule waiver applies to all sports, although it is not retroactive and will not affect any probations meted out prior to Aug. 1, 1982. However , to prevent outright recruiting of athletes from penalized schools each transfer case must be a pproved by t h e NCAA 's Committee on Infractions, as well as the NCAA Council. The delegates also pass ed legislation encouraging members to Include in coaches' contracts a provision that employment may be terminated if the coach Is involved in violations of NCAA rules. They rejected a proposal to increase the maximum grant-in·aid allowance by adding either $25 or $50 a month for incidental expenses. w.1.-... . ""'-'" H. CAHt.ITON MANAGWMINl co~'"""'· .... ~ .. a.-, C'a&t M9M. CellNtlli• .... Oy..i a11u1v cor~,.u..,, • C:.llr.'1\le l.,_.._, a.. c.1eir-1.-. c. ... -... C..llfiWlll• ... Tllll lllnlllftt It COflClvCIM ltr e ~·Kell; °""' 1--. .. °""' ..... ,_.,pf\ ... c.u ...... Vl(t """'4llet Tl\lt ....,._... -fll• wltll ,,,. Cow11ly C"'11 el Or•" .. Cellllly tfl Jln1Hry 11, IC. ,,.11 PllMNflM Or.._ CMll Delly 'ltot. Jin IJ, to. t1, F.0. >, 1'11l .._.,, ,.~----~~-~-~ ... 1u .. a•10ttc~•TOll CALl,CMINll COUWT\' O''-°' A ... alH CAlll N«t. '-''"" Cl~ATtOfl ........ .._ ......... ~--~ CABAlllOC*MINTI (1111. AOOll'TIONI 111 lllt Melttr 01 MAl((IESHI OllllENAI: MATTHEWS, a minor, 1 MfMft ..... .,_., ..... ,., "" ,,.,,. "" ,........, Mii t_,... ...... ,.,."''· Tl S\'t.VHTl!lll CAlllll t-olblt .,...., ~ felNrl Wiier•-. IHlll-Mii .. Oii ,..._ clelmlftt i. 11e tlle le!Nr °' ~ o1 .. Id miller .,.,_....,.._,,..., ly oreltf Of !hit COllrl yow are llerelly Cited -r-.ilr941 IO -·· ••l•t• Ille J114lt• Pruldlnt '" Dt,.rt-JM. .__, NII of lht ellove enlllled court, located al Crl,.,1nal Cowrta 81d9.-210 Wut Tem,lt·l.oa ~ Cellfonlle tOOU .., l'tbNetv 22, 1"2 at 1:00 e.m. ot 11\el dtY, tMf> arlCl !Nrt to atww e-lf an., you Nvt, wlly \aid 11tno11 NK>llld nol be dl<le.W fr" from lllt control of lltr -enta accordlftt to tllt .......... on IW. lleteln ,.o, 1•11..,. to atlltf!d • .,.,. .,..., 11it dffntff euffty ot o cont....,. ol c-1. You .,. ,,.,•tty noll ll•d ol lht pnvltlelnl Of Ovit Code W .S wlllell prowlcle .,,. Juote tl\•11 tclvlM Ill• ,,,,_. IW>d .. _...,b, II -t. M 1 ... rlth4 to ..... c-1 PAMftl, Tiit CGllrl mey-1111 c-1 lo,...,. ...... IN mlllOr -..r or not IN "''"°' 11 •lllt le.,._ c-. -II tlleY Wt -· to elf9nl <-'• tNll .,....nl COVllMl to ,__t tfl<l ... Af\11 Tiie petltleo\ fl ... ,_,.Ill IS tor tM ?II•-of l,...lfle Ille Sl!Ole<I Clllld lot ol•c:em..,.for~. DtlH: ~ U, l tll JOllll J. CorcMen, County Cler• ly A. IC11nloo, Oepvty . ,,..., ... ...,...~c-• Maril• &. WMlln, ~y c-ty c:-•·••CrtmlMI C-..... ...._. lltW.T .... Sl. ._...,...._,ce.tttt1 ,,....., A-nwc-.. .. L• ....... 0•1,._t .. ~ P11bll.ited Or .... Cotti Dally PllOI 0.<. U, JO. 1"1, JM, 6, IJ. 1"25~1 M.C. l"Alll'TY 'llOOUCTtOtilS, m ,evt1rl11e, All Ne "*' Catt Ml .. , ce11i.,111 • ..-''"'' Hullerl Mt1llr11cUt, HJ ,..,,.,.... ... No ...... (Mio .... C•llfOf'NetU Tlltma• "•trlell C11rren, t9JU .,,.,., Avenu•. Oer••n Ore••, c1111en11e .... Tiii• '''"'"'" I• tenlluclH •Y • 11tn11111 ........ ..:.... ,.,."~"' Tht ltlll•lllt HtHfl 11 dtlftt .............. ; 't.OWlllll 6 COLlaCYAllll, ... 1 W-*ntl, HllftllnttOf\ .. t<ll, c111 .. ,111.,.... ltlll -"'·"n l'trtlltY. tOl W••ll<ttU, Hu 1111 .. ,, ... •••ch. Call19tnlan.M Tiil 1 lilullften 1, Cenfu<led b\I en lndl•IWel 9"11 LYM llortl\ty Tiiie tlM-1 w•• fllw wllfl U.. C-ty CIH'll ti Ort,..e CoYnl'I' Of\ J•-r1 11, 1.:t Tiii• ~ •• fllef wtltl \lie (Ollnly Clffll ol Or~ Cw11tv Of\ ,l•tt ....... .._Or ... Oatll Dall y ....... ,,, ... JOf\. ta, M, 11, ,..._ J. 1"2. 0tcem11eru,1•1 Pu•11.-Oreft91 CMtl Delly Pitt\. J•" 1a. to. 11. 11.0 J, 1m nt-tt NO'TICI Oii A,.f'LICATIOtl TONU.. Al.COHOt.IC HVaaAeH To Wllem 11 M<IY c:.ncwni HENaY H, ll!l.l Jiii, It -lyl119 lo Ille 0.Nft,,_.111 Al<tMlk .. ,,., ... Conlrtl tor "41" Ofl ........ , & WIM t P"b eet P11 to utt &Jco.hottc M¥•••Ot• et "°' Hernllton Avetlue, H11nttngt0n &Mc:ll. C.llhlrlltt. Publllhed ()rtnQt COHI Oally PllOt, Jan. U , 1ta UWt. 11tcnnCM1t •u•o•H• leAM9 ITA HM4UIT ,ICTtnoutlUMNl8& Tiit lellewl"t .,., .. 11 II dolnta----~:--------MAMll UATatllllMT ....,_ •. CO.UT CIOMMUlttTY , ... lellOWlftt .. , ...... ,. 41•1119 ov•"'""UtT DIVILO .. MENT COU..01. OtlT•ICT ""'1:'!'w"T: Ill ... ,..,. ..... ~.. I COM,ANY, •1 Oowr or1... • .. MOTICW 0' lALI .. • ""' ...,., "' w N-~ llMc::ll, c:.tlfol'lll• "*' OP NllllOMAt. PllMl•TY Dtlwe, ....... "'·,.....,, .. .,,. CA J•M c ..... ". JOU ICtw•m.. TOHIOHtn ••001111 fl*. • I lCHlll , .. Ortvt, C-lief Mef, C.llfornle NOTICE 1$ HE'll!BY OIVIEN lllal 'AUllN,. L. U • tM2S _99 .... 111c1t wlll 1M rteah>•d tor Alie'-, ..... t.iMll, CA f'Jw.I. Tiiie -·-It c-t" ~ .ii wl• 1o ,,,. hlOIW>I bldOtt(t) OI "" l . MAlltl "01101!. 11 MOl'lllftl "'-'"MNel totlOWlllO ...... ff\llj);Nnl whl<ll lie\ O.W, l,,,....,CA.715. .HIW\C .... ry betn OHlared bY Ill• Board of flllt ""' -11 <Ml!U<ted •v • flll• ala""-4 w• flied wllll -Tr1111 ... to be surplu• lo llW Coett ttMt•I,_-....... County Cl<lr• Of 0<.._ C""nty Oft Comm11nlty ColleO• Dhi ri<! UI ,....,. L 8UIC-!)Ke..._ 14 t•t S A I L B 0 A T S & S A I L I N 0 Tlllo ... ...,_. -lllecl wltll... ' 1111181 !EQUIPMENT , ELECT RICAL C-1~ Clenl Of Or-(Gllllly D1t 'llC>lltMdOr.._ GMlt Dtlly Pilot. EOUIPMEIH . AND ASSOllflE D Dec. !t, ltlt, Dec. JO, t•1,JM.•, tl.I0.1ta.S~I ITEMS. '1"°9 Stlt blO. wlll be _.,.d -put>llcly MN·-717 'lilllltMd 0reft91 C-ll Dally ,.,.., -fl' •""£ rud ••OUd •or ,.,.,_,.,.. """' " -Dec ••• 1'•1. J91\. •. 11, lt;tta 5'11•1 ~ ,.. 1151.0 Oft Ille II"-IO<m •I I lO NOTICE OF DEATH OF p,,.,. Ftkley, M.erch j, "u In tht J OHN D. PRINCE AND Nm.IC lll)C( ,.CTIT10USaUllNIH Dlllrlcl AOmlnhlrellon Bulldlno, U/O OF p ET IT f ON TO NAMllTAHMUn Ad•m• Avenu•. Co•h Meu , ADMINISTER EST .. TE Tiie fot1owt114 pe"on h dotno Calllornla. All bid• mv41 be dellverao .. 'ICTITicMll •UllNaU 1>111lneu as. 10 lhe office Of the PurchaJlr19 Aoent •• NO. A· 111665. NAM• ITATIMINT f Al JOLLY KNIGH f PARK 181 tlle abOve add•Ht prior to'"" 11,.,. wt T O a I f h e I r S , Tiit lollowtne P•rton h oolne MIKE MAMELLI INVESTMENTS, tor 111• ~nlnQ 10 lie tliQlbl• '"' b<ltlnautt: 47H Barranca Parkway, lrYlne, <Ol'ISl,.,.tlOf\ beneficiaries, creditors UHIVER5AL AUTO BODY & ca111ornla'211• Propose• 10•1YU •nd tomP••t• and contingent creditors of l"AtNT, ,,,. Newp0r1 Bou••••1d. Miil• MJ1me111. •fU .Jl•rr•n<• 1MtnKt1CM ,.,..., o. -..1...., ., '"" J 0 h n D. pr I n c e and .C•l<I MetA, Cellfoml<l 9»27 ParllW•Y. ,,.,.,,., C.llfornla lV•• PurchHl"!I °""'"ment of'"" Ollltkt Mic-I 0t¥1d 0 ... rarol, l•tU Tiiis bll'lntsS Is <ondUCled bY an at Ille abOw -rHs, F"' ad<llllONI persons WhO may be Handlna Avenw. P9rrls, C•lllornl• lndlvld ... t lnlorme11on or lnsP•<l lon otherwise Interested in the ttt10 Mlk• Mamet•• •l>POlntment, 011 G••nn A. F•"'"' will and/Or estate: Thlt Dus ..... s Is CondUClltd by an This sl•l-1 w•• llie<I with 1111 11141 SS..!17!·•· A petition has been ffled lncllvtd.,.t: C0<i11ty Ctt<k ot o .. noe County on Bid• mutt be a<com11<1n•eo 11., • Mk"-i D•vldGfterMdl Jaf\IHtY 11, 1912 " 11 CE RTIFIED CASHIER'S QjECIC 011 by Jack Prince In the Thia "atenwtt Wft 111.0 wllll ... Publlsllad Or.w\OI Coall Oelly J'!'lto1. PERSONAL CHECK m-payeble to Superior Courl of Orange county c1ar11 ot °'41"99 co..nty on Ja" '" 20, 11, Ftci 1, .,11 n1 ,, 111e cont Communlly eo11eve OlttrKt, County request In" that o.o ... -21.1•1 °"'•111.1n anamoun1 no IKathan tO'I. w Pt,... -II' •""( of Ille lot•I bid. O.•sonal cMckt ue Jack Prince be appointed P111111.iwci 0r.,... coast Delly "'lei(. ,..._ '"' a<c•ptabl• uo to u. _, ot a.u oo as personal representative o.c. n. >0. •••. J.., •. ''· 1..,utS,.1 O.PC>ll~ of '"Hos1111 ~rh> w111 to administer the estate of Ptcrmous au11N1u be •PPll.O 10111e purct••u 11<l<e Ott••• NAME STATIMINT dtpoall cllt<lltlor <••II wlll lie John D. Prince (under the Tiie 1011ow1no Ptrton h do•no retu,...., .,.., ""'Board of Tr<ntM' I n d e p e n d e n t bllSIMU at. acceplanc• ot high bldlsl •hie!• wlll Administration of Estates Na.IC llT1C( WORK FUSION SECRETARIAL beonM•rcll l0,1"2 ........ , NOT"91 M ..Ult.IC IAt.I NOTICE 15 HEltlllY GI VIEN tllat Of\ , ... """. J_,.., "· •"2. •1 11·00 a M at 1602 Anl'-Y Avt-, 0.r-Orove, Cellfornla, ti. ~lluned wlll wll <II .... k ...c1IOll M the ftltMOI C>IOder lot CMll al lht time of ut•. wl!llOlll wttranll .. OI !Ille, Ill""' or rnerc11e"ta0t11tv. lflll In •«9'0.,.o with k<UOf\ t'°4 ot the Calltornl• Com mercl <1I COO •, •nd Oll>et apptlcallle •-. ell el IM r IQllt, nlle -Interest Of 0 H t. A llWknlrlft, lllC., allO clo4ng -lneu at H t. W Cht,.,lc al, D•btor 1111der th• Del-cltacrlbao _.,,,,,, ...,...,,,.,,,, •ncl lh W((~ -., .... ,.If·"'· In •"d to the m•cll lntrv ano 94111.,....nt clet<rl-In Mid -urHy •or .. rnen1 Seid 11<-rty bel"O '°"' con•tlluttt collaltr•I under lhal etrlaln -urlty -or .. ....,., tlllll .. d 'Lo•n end Security A9reerne11t," detao JM>Uary n, ,.,, by D H t. A lnd11tlrles, Int . aho doln(I butlnau as H & W Chemlcal, •• "Borro-r'' and Oelltor, 1no the 11nder1l9ntd u "l •,,.,.,.. and Se<11rao P.,,., ,_.,,., wllll •nr rlOen, mOdltkallon end •m•ndmenu tll•r•to and ollltr •oretmenh wlllCh may llt In talslence OATEOOt<emberJt, 1'91 NATI ONAL AC.CE PTA NCE COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA By VOLK. NEWMAN, GllALLA t. l(ARP A PrGlftllOftel CorPM•tlon 8y CHRISTINE S. UPTON Ill AUi-ired AQef\ls •nd A1torney1 P"bllsllad Or""llt Cooat Delly Piiot, J•n ll 1'82 24'-t2 Act). The petition Is set for SE RVICE. J02 Vktor la, 203·8. Cool• All ---ot Ur1--remo••• -\a, Calllomle mi. ue Ille r.-1blllly 01 Pvrcll.se<lsl NW.-.S hearing In Dept. No. 3 at NOTICIOPINTl!NTION Joyce Fumi.o Holwo )01 6'0 sales le• wlll ~·-to •II NOTICICWTllUITlll'SSALI 700 Civic Center Drive, TO IMOAOI! tN Vktorla, 10J B, coot•-... c•111..,.nl• amounts ""'"' •••Id re1a11 WIH tu NO. P·IQa W t • th C't f S t THISALl!OI' 9'•1' permll c.,d.ccompanlHC>ld On F-...0"' l, 1"2, al IOOO•m .• es • m e I y 0 a n a I ALCOHOi.iC ••VlllAOllS All property .... .., Nreln Is ofltrt<I lmpetl•• Corpo<lft!oll ot .,.,.,,ca, as An a ' ca I i f 0 r n I a 0 n 12•1Mt .~~·.'o..r::s••••U •• conduct.a C>y •n fQf sale .... h, ..... ,. ... -Wiii-• duly •PC>Olnlect Tru•IH u .... , .,.., February 3, 1982 at 9: 30 ToWl'lom llM<ly Con<ern Jo't'O F Holw•y recoyrse e1141ln•t Ille Oistrocl Tl>• ours11•nl to O...S ot Trvst , .. or~ a .m . S11blt<I to 11..-<e ot Ille 11< ... M This sl<lt...wnl wo 111.0 with the Olslrlct ma ••\ no gyerantee, Junt 20 lt17. •• Instr No. ll7U, IF You OBJECT to the •"9ll•dlor.nollcels,,.re11Yol.,...lllel Covnty Clerl 01 Ortnoe county on w•rr•nt• or ••P'tltnl•lton , t>oo~ 12'50 P•te 12'5 of Offlcl•I the u11dersl9Md propos .. to ••II J•nuary 11, ,.., oprt5sed ..,. lmptltcl. wilt> r@9trd to Records, Ot<Ylt<I by RYSMI C 8 granting of the petition, •kohollc tie""r<19ft at tht pr...,,,,.., ,., ... ,, <Olldlllon 01 property or rltn•u ot l<•rlen •nd Jtt>I• K Karlen, hllslWlnd YOU Should either appear Otacrlbeel ••loll~. PuC>ll"'9<1 Or-Co.st O•llY Pilot, P•OC>•rtY IM .,,., UM or PV<PCl\e No •nd wife, M l~!Of'S In Ille olfl<it ol "l the he"rinn "nd st.ate MAU, Y11·ler, 1tJO West Cout Jen U. 20, 17, Fet>. l, 1wt 21M1 <l•lm will bt ccw .. 1oer1d IOI' •llowance lht (OYnly Recorotr ot Oranot "' "' ,. " "' Htollwey, .._,, fkacll, Calllornl• or adjustment Of' roclulon of llM wit Co11nlY. State ot Celllornl•, WILL your Objec tions or file Purau•nt 10 such 1n1enllon, tll• Piil.iC llTIC( l><IHd on l•llurt ot Ille 11<ooerty 10 SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO written objections with the undtraloned •• •PP•Y•no 10 tht comp1e1atv MtlMv ti.. -cl>tier in •II H 1 GH EST B• DOE R FOR CASH court before the hearing. ~;:.~~:":'o:''.as~•~0':,';"!n B.~~~lrc NS.tt11M ~~~~:· .~.~ ::11 :,:• ,:;;:;:i~. r,r;: C::~.,b•:, ~:,.·•~,: ~~~"1,n :,•w,•~ _D_l_l_J_H __ l_DT __ l_C_l __ I Your appearance may be bevtraoe Ileen .. ,..,. 1111 .. Pttmlitt •• l'ICTITIOOS IUSINIUS •nv accldtf\t Cl< ln1ury fffllltl"Q from North front entrance ot ,,,. Coun4• in person or by your lotlow\ NAME\TATU.-IENT purchawol-rtyonMle. COYrlllOllW. 700 Civic Center Drive tt "•1· OH SALE BIEER •WINE Tiie tollowlno por•on h <101no Pevmentlntunm~t bem-wllhln wu1.5.m.AN1,C.lll..,.nl••ilrlQ111, a orney. (PUB EAT PLI C>uslnHSH ten ceieno.r days •lier notice ol lllle •ncl Interest ,_\'ff 10 •nd now SPENCER JOHN tJACK> STALEY SP ENC ER. resident of Balboa. Ca. s ince 1952. Passed away on January 10. 1982. He was a member of the Cement Masons Local !J523 since 1935. A member of the Newport Harbor Elks Lodfe 11767 for 25 years and a member of the Laeuna Hi tis United Methodist Church Survived by his wife Dorothy Lou Spen cer. l cranddaughter Deborah Sue Hanrahan of Bellingham. Washington . 2 great-grandsons, also 2 brothers. Fred of Tacoma, Waahinaton and Tom of Portland, Oregon. also 2 sisters . Mrs Tena Craigmiles of Crestline, Ca .. and Charity L yons of Portland, Or'!gon, also 2 step·son!\, 1 step·daughter. 18 grandchildren and ;real-grandchi ldre n :remation with burial at 1ea. Memonal services will >e held on Saturday, lanuary 23. 1982 at 11.00AM at Laguna li d!!. United Method1i.t Church, 24442 Moulton Parkway. Laguna Hills. Ca The fam ily requests m heu of flowers donations be made lo the Amer1ran H eart Association LIVENGOOD I F Y 0 U A R E A Publlsllad Or-Coe•! Otll'r Piiot, PROPERTY MAN AG EM ENT •werd, •nd lh• 11em(sl mu\I lie llclld by 11-. wlo OMo of Tr11\I In C R E D I T O R o r a Ja" 13, 10, 17. twt 741~1. SERVILES. 791 s_ lutlll\ Ave'lu•. removed lrom tllcl Oi•trlcl IM:lllty et lt>e proi-r1Y tlh,.1.0 In wld Count¥ ti t d 't f th Or•no•. C•lll.,,.nl• 91666 11me ot 11111 peyment D•POSll ot -Sltt•-r1bed M COn ngen Cre I Or 0 e W•r.-F 8<111, ltl6 ~ot>er• Une succtulut hlOh bidoer(I ) m•y lie "AllCEL 1 deceased, you must fil e NIUC .m Anah•lm,c.lllornia9'902 •POiied 10 t>Un:heW price. How•wr, Unit No. 9, •• ~n •nd dH<rlbao YOUr Claim With the COUrt Tllll l)vslMji Is conducted Cly tn OepO>ll of WC<H•lul high C>IOdertsl In the eon-ninlum Pietl rKMOOCI on 0 r present It t 0 the '1CTITIOUS•USIHIH lndlvldu::.,,"' F a.11 wtll bt con1ldtred IOrlelled ti ~"::~~c:::~~~r~ :.·.~'i..,..~ personal representative NAMESTATaMllNT This, ... ,_, w .. 111.0 with 111e ;i;:~'1.;'1~~~.:;w:;.i;:1:.;: ':11;.~,,"":;":.! 1n111e c••vot 1rv1ne. appointed by the COUrt 1111:1i:.:.;:~lowlno person h dolno Coynly Clerk ot O<•'lllf CO<lnty "" llmll\ SOt<lllt<I Olllnc1 re~ lht An undlv~!!Ct~lf•ll\lrd lllUI within four m.:>nths from ALLPORT IMPORTS NfiWPORT Decem ber JI."" ,., ... 1 '1~"' '0 ~ • ......, ... ~~~ i;:1:;1~1\•> ror lnterHt "• i....nt '" uwnmon in 111e the date Of first iSSUanCe BEACH, 2524 Unl¥t,.lly Orlve, Publl'll*! Oranot Coast Dally Piiot, wTth~~'!oo:.~~ •n accM~e with lee Intern! In encl lo Ille Commo" of letters as provided In N••r,0" B••cll, Celllornl• •7..0. Hn " 20, 21. Ftti > •• .., 111•1 Section II.WO. tl4'1, •nCI IU50 Of .... Aru ot L.ol I of Trecl .... H ,.., map II "9 ~. a51 Blrc:ll SlrMt, 'I • • Section 700 of the Probate 54111• 120. N-1 B•ech, Calltornl• Celllornl• Edllcatlon Code • 1•d In -311. P•ltfts 1• 10 i.. C d f C II, I Th ~ Ml.IC .TIC( JSI NORMAN E WATSON lnc111slve, of Mlscellanto"' Map\ 0 e 0 a Orn a • e Secre\MY, Board GI Tr~I~ r..corda Of Wild County, H WCI! term IS time for flflr\9 claim s Wiii Unlv~~~.~~·D~lve?':.'::.~:19.1.~~·. coul community Coll•o• dellned In 111• Arll~•• en11t1ed not expire prior to four alll0f'f11<1'2MO ~ ·'~';~~~~:::::s Olatrlct "0.flnll'-" of the Dt<larallon °• months from the date Of Tllll WS!nftl Is Conduclf'd bf an Tll I 11 I I d I Publl"'9CIO'ef'191'(0 .. t DeilyPllOI, Cov en•nU , Condition• ano I ncllvkluat· bllsl~s :s.o• ng Person s o no J•nu•rv ll& 20, 1"2 ,....., Restrictions recorded on Oct_, 6, the hearlnQ not Ced abOve. 'stuen E c;r......... INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT .. ,. In book , .. ,.. o•oe 1111. Of YOU MAY EXAMINE Th~ --•• tllect •Ill>, ... GROUP, mo M<ln St-t Sll1'1e llO PVIUC llR:f ~~·.~·r:::.r of wld Counly ,_ the flle kept by the COUrt. ownty C .. '11 ol O<anoe COYnly on Hunll"91on8each,Calltornl•t16.. Exceptlno tr..refro"' •II oil oll If you are Interested In the ....... ,,, 12, tt12. Glen J Pl-. 1"°' M•tillm• Cl' .. 1DU 1 ·•ohts, miner ala. mlnar•I rloM•, estate, YOU may file a P111774 L•n•. H1111tl"Q1on Beach, Cal1IMnl<1 T.S.No lf•*°'JL nat11ral oes rlghh, •nd Olhet I th t t Pullll.., Orenoe Co.est Dally PllOI, m4I REF n.c>s .. lO'IOSll hydro·carbons Dy wfWllsoe••• ne,.,. request w th e cour 0 an "· tO. 27, f'ttl. l , ,.., lJH2 Tllh DuSlneM Is condUctao by an T R us T 0 Rs J 0 s IE pH c I known. QeOlhtrm•I •Item. •nO ... receive si>e<lal notice Of lndlvid ... I ARENSOORF ANO LINDA c prO<lucts Ot•l••d from any ol , ... the Inventory of estate PllJC mTICl This \latG~i ':!~r ... wllh '"' AllENSOORF '"'9901"9. 11\al may be wllhln"' u-· assets and Of the petitions, Co..nty c1.,.1o, of Of-Cornnly on NOTICEO,TRUSTIE'SSALI[ tl\e percel of ••nd hertln <1bove Ot1 FRIOAY JANUARY 1t 1"2 •11 described.,_.,,., With, .... perpo1 ... 1 a cc o~nts and reports NOTICE OF DEATH OF J•n..ary 11. 1wi ,.1 ..... t :U A.M. LOS ANGELES TITLE ANO rl9M or drllllng, m1n•"9. uolorlnQ, described in Section 1200.5 J E S S E T H 0 M A 5 ""°''-0r...-eoest D•"• Piiot, TRUST-,.OEEO COMPANY •• duly •n<1 _,...,1nq "-'•'°' -tt"'1"0 In f th Ca'lfor la Prob,.te _.,.... 1 1~ T~~1 .. under •nd -·rw•nt """'*"-1"9 lht...,. from ta•d ••nd O e n ., CALL AW A y AND OF J•n. 11. 20, n. F'eb. a, t"2 !Mii~ "990 n -·-· ~-..,. any o111er 16no, 1nc111C11no 111t rlQl>t Code. p E T I T I 0 N T 0 to 0 .. d of TNsl r..corded March ll, lo wlllpotock or dtrecta-ny drlll and .-JC '9TICf 1'90, ts Inst No Jn?•. In -IJSS. ,,,In• lrom ,.,,.,, other ll>•n lhOW Th 0 r Pe. SU 111 Y " n ' ADM I NI STER ESTATE -, .... ot Ottlcl•I Re<Ot<IS 111 hereln•Do•• dt!SC•llleCI. Oii qr o•• • 0 A o I I I < ~ o I I II t C o u n I ., w tis tunnel• •nd llwllts Into 11><~-1> W k & Th P ~ ·111739 R•c order of Or •no .. (o-.;nty • • . • -w or man ore, . . . NOTICEOFDEATHOF -•lllorno•WILLSELLAT PUBLICor ecrou lheS-r11Keotlhe l-Attorneys at Law, 4th T ~ .a 1. I he I .r s • p A u L E D w A R 0 AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIOOER ht<elnaDOw cllHCrlC>e<I, •ncl lo bollom Floor, 900 Wllstllrt Blvd., benef1c1aries. creditors w AL KER AND 0 F FOR CASH (pay•bl•-•• llrneot wle In such whlpstoc:ked or dlrecllonally Los Angeles, ca. 90017 ,· and contingent creditors of P E T 1 T 1 0 N T 0 1ew1u1 _., 01 '"" un11ed s1111tti or111ite1 -•s. ,..,,,,." •"" '""11• 11-J Th C II MONIES MUST BE TENOEREO IN and benMlh or beyond IN uterlor tel: (213)6'0-9948 esse omas a away ADMINISTER ESTATE CASH. CASH1E11s CHECKS OR t1mltst1>e•to1.anoiorf'drn•.•etunM•. and persons who may be 0 A1117 6 CEATIFIEO CHECKS AT THIE e<iulp, ~"'·'"· ._ .. deepeft end Publllhed Or-C.oHI Delly Piiot Otherwise Interested in lhe N T. O 4 1·1 h e · S FRONT ENTRANCE TO THE OLD oper•tt •ny suth •tlls ol mines Jtfl ll. U, .,, !tit ,.,_., Will and/Or estate: a I .r • ORANGE COUNTY COURTHOUSE. wllllOUI, -ver. Ille rlQlll to orlll, A pet'itlon h. as been filed beneficiaries. e re.di t or s LOCATED OH SANTA ANA BLVD . mine. •tore, up•or• •nd 004,.t• d ti e t c ed to s of -.ETWEEN SYCAMOR E STRE ET llltOYQll , .. wriac:• O< .... -'°° • by Bank of Am e r ic a an con ng n r I r ANO BROAOWAY, SANTA ANA, ::~.~~=!ri:.,·· of'"• land ---P-,-,-T,-T-100-,-.-u-.-,-N-t""S.,..--Natlonal Trust & Savings Paul Edward Walker and CALIFORNIA a11 ••0111. 1111. •nd ,.AllCELJ Assoc'atlon 'ntheSuper'or p e rsons who may be IMeres1c ..... .01o .nc1now 11e1dbv1t •nee·-it~i ..... , .... -·--· Gali ded WANDA JEAN 0 e tra Neotime Society LIVE NGOO D. age 40, NAME STATaMaNT 1 1 1 otherwise interested In the und•r u ld Oud of Tru11 In 111. ov~r '""-pr·~,.·.,,~dri;es .:.11~7n 'i~;i b11!1~:.::~•,owt1111 '""on '' oo1n11 Court ~f Orange County will and/or estate: oro..-r1v ...... ,eo In Hid c.,....11 •"" ''°' •• "' rnep rneo tn -lit. ASSOCIATED BU ILD ING reque~ting th~t Bank of A petition has been filed Slal•dft<rlbedH P•O .. 10 to 11 intlu•I .. of HARTFORD, Conn c1t1'Minc>t1 au111ALAlSu resident o r H untington <AP) -The Hartford . 646-7431 Beach, Ca. Passed away on Whalers Tuesday traded ,Our llterfture tens in•· January 10. 1982 Survived :complete story of our; b y her hus ba nd Tom . veteran goaltender John ~~ietv. · d a u g h t e r s . D e b b i e Garrett to the Quebec ca11...,.1,..·~·· Livengood or Anaheim, Ca Nordiques or t h e 1•11n... c. .... ,..,,. and Jody McFarland of National Hockey League ~----.,,..------Fallbrook, Ca .. son·in·law for goalie Michel Plasse Ray Mc Farland, parents a n d f u t u r e Curlis and Verna Hall or con siderations. Hemet. Ca. brothers, Jack McC~ MOITU.UIH Laguna Beach 494·9415 Laguna Hills 768·0933 San Juan Caposttano 495·1776 HA.laol l.AWK-MT. OLIYI Mortuary• Cemetery Cre"-tory 1625 Gosier Ave Costa Mesa 540-5554 rtlllCI llOTNHS l&L•OAO•AY MOITU.\IY 110 Broadwaf Costa MeSI 642-9150 IALTllM ... OH IMrTW & 1VTHIU WHTCL.lfl CHAPa •27 E t7fh St Costa Mesa e•e.9311 ,..c1~nm1 SM'TMI• NOllTUMY 621 Main St Hun11ng1on Beach $36-6639 Flowers shaNhow much you care. Since.) 1910 Helping you say it right. and Bob Hall Fun eral services will be held on Wednesday, January 13, 1982 al 2 :00PM at Dilda y Brothers Chapel. Interment Good Shepherd Cemetery The family requests donations be made to the Orangewood Children's Shelter. 4440 Von Karman. Ste. 300. Newport Beach. Ca 92660 Directed by Dilday Brothers. Hunt1ngton Beach. Ca Beach and Talbert 842-7771 MOSES ARCHIE OLEN MOSES. resident of Balboa, Ca. Passed awav on Sundav. January 10, 1982 at Hoag Me m orial Hospital. Mr M oses had be e n a self -e mployed barber ror more than ~ years. lie was a member of B.P .O.E. Elka Lodge 11167, Newport Beach. Ca. Beloved husband or Lois Moses, beloved rather of Wayne Moses and Clinton Moses or Balboa. Ca.. also surviving are a brother Vlrl Moses of 11-------------Ar liona. 2 sltlters, Helen BUY 'EM S£LL 'EM TRADE 'EM RENT 'EM To plac. .rour ad bl °"' cellllllft can z. MUler d Teicas and Geor1ia Crowley d Whittler, Ca. and 4 arandch.lldren Frlends ma1 call at Pierce Brothers Bell Broadway from l2:00 no o n to 9 :00 PM on WednetdayJ January U , 1812, where runttal ltf'vica wt It be conducted on Tbunda.Y, January M, 1912 at lO :OOAM with Pastor Tony Qato o/ th• Plymouth Con1re1atton•I Church omcraUq , Interment will be In Pomona Ctmeter1, Pomona. C• Ph(U Brothtri Btll Broadway Mortuary~ M2..f150. • MAINTENANCE CONTllACTOllS, Amertea Naltonal . Trus by Wendy Lee Walker in Loi m °' Trect No. Pit. In ,.,. Moscell•neou• M•P•. ncords ot 11M2MacArltluf'Boutevar<1,Sull•200, & Savings Association be the Superior Court 6f cuyolCMtaMeM.C.ounty o•Or~. orenoecoun1, c..111orn•• Slate ot Callfo rnl1 •s per mto ,:AlllCEL • '"''"'•;:·=.!."~~. "° t..wls, appointed as personal Orange County requesting recorded In -so H9t• n to )6 Eatemenll•I .. such uumenlhl lrvlne, Catlfoml• n 1u r e p re s e n ta t I v e t 0 that Wendy Lee Walker be lnc111slve Of Mlsc•ll•-· M•P•. In l•l•t• C>a"llt11tarly ... lor111 In .... Tiiis blnlnns •• conc1ue1t<1 trv.,. administer the estate of appoi'nted a s p e r sonal 1,,. otfk.e °' "-COU<llV Rt<Mde• °' •rt•<•• ... 1111.0 "Ease,,_ts• o1 ,,.. lndtvldual Mldt-1\' O~C l•rallon undtr lllt Stcllon llobL-.:!Volpe Jesse Thomas Callaway re Present at iv e to h<•PI •II <"'* oll, petroleum. " .. "no'" In_.. Artie•• .. 1111.0 •s This stat-I WM tiled with.,,. (u nd.e~ the. Independent administer the estate of .... brN, •Sfll\allum and ... kindred lollows. "Utllllles," 'SYpPOrt •nd c°""'• c1er11 01 Or•"tt COYnlY"" Admtn1strat1<?" of Estates Paul Edward Walker subst•ncH -°'"'' mlnerels u,_, s.111emeftt." "Encroac11men1" •nd Oecemw 1'. 1•1. Act) The petition Is set for •"" •n wld i.nci exciopt ._,,. ''0""0 u,. "Common"'" E._...,,," Ptnta · (unde r the Independent •nvPOrt!ollott~sur1aaot•nelend ""11c1Ls l>l*ltMdOr-c-Detty l'llol, hearing In Dept. No. 3 at Adm'i·ni'strati·on of Estates tor drl111no -••llon•, m1n1no or EeMtntnlfll .. such .. ,.....,nthl -...-700 Cl I C t D i quarrylnQ GI •II kinds lr>ellldlno blll o.c.11.J0.1t11,J.,,.•, u.1taS4t!M1. v c en er r ve, Act) The petition ls set for not u ct1KI of oH -11 dr1111-o11 is1ar• P¥11<.,,.,,,, "' tori11 in '"' West in the C't of Santa · •• ·~· Artie•• -•tied "E-ts" o1 111e PIC'TtTIOUS aUStltlSS NAMI STATWMaNT Tiie lollowlne person Is dolno bllSIMUH' FA5"10N NAll.S & SICIN CAllE, uu Hewp0r1 eo11t••••d. N•-·• BHCll, Cellloml• '2t4J llt<b-ICI"' Thi urn nos VIC~le . <In.,., • •. Venkt. Celhcwnta '°2tt 'Tlllt -•nett la c-utlecl llY tn lnCIMdvat. Becfl.ltlm Tiii I.am This statement WM 111.0 wllll tl>t CovnlY Ctef'll of Or•noe COll"IY Oft Jenu•rr •. ,..,_ l'!ttu PYbllshtd Or.enot Coast Oelty Piiot. Jaf\ ll, 10, 17, FM. J, 1"1 ,,._., ' t y hearing in Dept. No. 3 at devt1opmen1. m1n1no operations, Ot<1ara11on ot Cownants, GondlttoM An a . ca 11 I 0 r n i a 0 n 700 Civic Cente r Drive IOQetller wllll Ille uw of ..... sur1•Ct •nd llHtrlctlons recorded on J-'· February 3, 1982 at 9: West. in the City of Santa for oll welts, tanlls, tunnel•. mlnlnQ ,.,. '" -""' .,_ "°' ofOtflCMI a m •U•v•llons or Shafts provlO•d, RKordS GI ... d County (Ille "M.Hter • 1 F. YOU OBJECT to the Ana, Cal.ifornia on Feb. 10, 11owevtr. 1111 seme shall not II• Oecler .. IOf\"I 11,,.,., Ill• Stell•" 1982 at 9 3() a m COf\strued to orohlbll slant drllllt19 Of" heecllr>Qh) In tuell Artl(lo lr>lllled •s oranting of the petition, IF Yo'U OBJECT to the wcllol--•1-wllkhlnnowey lotlowt· "OwnH• lltuM• -CMlft YOU Should either appear grant'tng Of the pett'tt'on, .,,. °'" In any wey •lf .. I ti. •ur1ece Utllltl~t at1d C•llle Ttlevlslon.': tl(ltlll ot wld •-. end whkll 00 not "Utlllllts .. "S--rt -S.llltmeftl .. at the hearing and s tate you should either appear enter salO 1eno •I a t>Olnt tess than soo "E c ~..,,,..., ... ,.., "Communiiv Your objections or flle tH110111dsur'fac•.•srewrvee1 1n1,,. n' .. • at the hearing and State detd from Edna Pt ce Co ron, Fe<lllll .. E...,_I wrlttenobjectlonsw1th the your objections or file rKordtCIFM1Nervl,111U1n_2_ ""ltCU• court before the hearing. written ob1'ectlons with the Pt11•0t Oft•ci.1 RKonh E•se,,,.,,,s "" dn•n-PVr'llOW' Your ann.arance may be cod.·tS<I06 on•·-·'"'OllOh-•<rouLoisA ....,... court before the hearing. Par.cat·ll~Stt-os enc1Bo1Trc1 .... n-m111>t11e<1 1n In person or by your Your appearance may be The \lrul addreu •nd olhtr boOk ltl, 0909 12 to" ln<h61W ol attorney. In person or by V our common dMtgnallon II •"Y ot Ille Mhcell•n•o111 M•P•. rtcorda of I F Y 0 U A R E A . rul P•VIHl•IY duc~ll>ff •~ove Is Ortf\09 c->l'I. Cellfcwnle, .. tor "-1 c R E 0 I T 0 R 0 r a attorney. p11rporttd to be : l06> Monro••• -c-...ilnlfed t-,, .. _ ov ... I F Y 0 U A R E A Avtnut, C:oatHl\tta, Callfomte '2•21. u,,,.r · lllnlUQll -tcroff I.Al O ot contingent creditor of the C R E 0 1 T 0 R 0 r a Tiie und••••oned dlac•••ms •'\Y Tr•<t tu:> ... .,... tN9 111ec1 "'Doot< deceased, you must file 11a111111., .., .,,., 1nciotr.c1Mu GI "" 1u. 1t•o .. " to " 1nc1.,,,,,. 01 your claim with the cour 'ontlngent creditor of the ,,, .. 1 -·•n •"d 01119, cOft'lmon Mtstt11eneo11• M•P'· recoro of d eceased you must fife on•9"•tton uany ~ ... ,..,,, O,•noeC-'Y,Ct111ornt• '1CTIT1ou1eu111t1Hs or present It to the ""•' ~1<1 .... ·.,111 .,;maow ..,1•11"°"1 Th• ur••• adoru• •nd .,,.., N&lldlTATUilNT personal representative your Chnm With the court cenna111 or weru1ftty.' noreu or tommDlt ......,.11.,., II ally, Of IM l11• toll•••ott "''°" ts d•lno ppoloted by the court or present It to the trnplled, r..-'d"'9 ttttt, pouenion . ., ru1 P•oMrty 11ttcrt1>td •M•• h bllsln-••· lthln four months from personal representat Ive 9llC11"'4ll'encn, to NY tlw r...nalftl ...,,..,, ... to lie t l'Wtll (eve, '"'IM· PAM itHTIERPRtSIES. ion 1 t d b th 0 rt 111<1,.t..,,, o1 ti.,....,,, -CA•tJt•. U c••••'''' C:lttle, Cati• Mn•. the date of first Issuance appo n e y e c u •• Mid °"'of Tn.st with lnl•rtt Tiie ....,..""41G T ........ el•Cl•I"'• ca111orn1em. f fetters as provided In within four months from 111e,.....," llf'OV..., ..; "" -<•>. eny ll•bWty fOf' MY tMer..cli.u ot sm::.i;i1:: 'c:a~~ •• ~'d~.~: · ,:,:,~~ ctlon 700 of the Probate the date of first lssuan'e ::;: ; ~;. ": ~,.=.,:: ::.i~":"'°"~:. :::.:::,.~ cetKtrnia.-ode of Callfornla. The of letters as provided In ••fltftM• °' tM +NJ-. _, .. "" s.111 .... w11111e IM*, wi wm-1 Tlllt ""'""" ,, ctftd\lcted .,., ... time for flllng claims will Section 700 of the Probate tnnl• ~.,., .... Oetd .. TNll, uveftofll Of ··~•MY, .. _ or 11Wtlvkl ... 1: ot expire prior to four Code of California. The .....,II!.,.,,*~ ''""''"· ~ 11t1e.::u1111oi .. • Tiii .... !~Jwo~o.111'!'! ••--months from , .. e date of time for flllno claims wlll Tiie Mftlf1t1arv l#ldlf' uld ~ flf _...,.. ... _...•NY -.1111111 • __ ., --~ ,... " f Tr11•' 11uotefere tuc111u a111 prlftttflll -Of ti. ,....<11 _..,. c ... 111y c"'" of~-COU111r efl the hearlr\9 noUced above. not expire "f)rlor to our _.,wt9d .... 111•a1ti• • ••''*' 1rt Mid o... e1 TnMt. "'"11 •11t-1 .1-rv•.1•. YOU MAY EXAMINE months from the date of o.c1eretloft e1 DtfOlllt Mll 'DetneM t11e,....., •~,.."'Mid Ntithl, ,.111111.,., 0r..,.. c..tt D•1t~':1!T, the flle kept by the court. the hearlno noticed abOve. ~,,s ... ~':·.:;'E~f/C~{!'~~ :_~1·~·,: =-=:, ~ "':, ~ Jwi 1s •,, F.-a,.._ ,..., If you are Interested In the YOU MAY EXAMINE .. nc1., .. 1t11tC1 uutld uold Hotk• °' ·u11911• flf""' TNNlt -°'""' · ' • • • state you may file a the flle ker,t by the court. o.1ev11 Mii 11e<11e11 ..... , .. 11e ttwt~ ,,.... .., 11141 ~ e1 Tr\ll\J equest with the court to If you are nterHtld In the ~· .. eeuMv....,....,.,.... !:'-!:'* .. % ,...,._..., f'ttllMt• ecelve special notice of estate, you may flit • :~ .!:... ~-:9.,:,!;.e:: Tiie llleftlflt•. '* o..r o1 be Inventory of estate reque1 st with 1th1e coutl rt to, Trw•., ....-~ ..... " !:.~!·...:~·.:,r'• • •0~·~:: ssets and of the petitions, rece ve spec a no ce o I.OS AMO«l.ts rm.• AND TlllUn oe<ter•"" °' o.t..,. _. .,..,_. ccounts and reports the Inventory of estate 0110 COMJtANV AS r.-unH av ,., l•I• _., .,, ... ou •f s'r&btd In Section 1200 s assets and of tf\e petitions, ~~c:"~':'.~T:·:i .. ~"..~! o.11utt '•M ll9'Ut11 .. "'"· t11e the Clllfornla Prob1tt accounts and reports'*'·"~ =-.:~':: ~~ .. ~.:'':: ode described In Section 1200.S o.· ~•. "'' rec..-111 .. ~....,..,.,.... · 'of the Clllfomra Protwlte ,._. '°''"" c. ""•"'DOI'" "*"'Y 1e ......._ ANO LINOAC:. AUNIOOfUll OATIO °"""*9flll. ._, PetMMy & ~. J• Code. u1UHOCLDttTL• 1,...,a.11c...w....,..,&"'"10 '""J Attwffr • I •••r ~. "''"• .. , -..c>HUSlOllO ohelfl,.... aw U i Via L do AUerney •l LIW...l 114 ~~~SO-~TIO'f "' •r.~--,..-. • ...-.-c. -: ...... o~ ...... .... . ;:=-... w llU11•a 671-nil . • m CA 90211; e.ilR9o......... W ..... CA•"9 ..-w-.~ (7'41 .... • DltlW ............ C_. Olllt¥ ._ ~ 0-.,... CIMI OMl'I ....... JM. O,;t'4.• Die ... ""·"-•. u. ,. • .... ; Jefl.6, 11,..... . , .. , -. -l --.) Orange CoMt OAl~Y PILOT/Wedn•day, January 13, 1882 l-.aiww... .......... " A'fNi.AftlAUI -.MW-, ... .....,._~., ......... ca11~ •=c-t• •• " .. ........... .. ....... .. ooN~••Y TCHI•.~ .... It• •• Mf•'( elweft •ll•t tM I •ir-:.=..• .... llfl.,... ..... .. .. _. .... ..._,, Mlllte<I .. , ..... ,, ........... ~-c-t. Ill ., ................. J-ry. "" •• Ill• •lllet •f •OH w I AMltOICllt, 10 fut ,.tlmftle tlv• , "•llftftle, Ctlllll'( el LU ,,........ .... el c;..Jltofflle, t ll tM rltlll. Ullt 111• lftttr•ll tf t•lf 41K....-• .. time ff .. .,. Ml e ll ........... .._. ........ , ... tM ................. llttK ... ..... ~ ... ,.,.,. ................ Oll'ltr 111911 ., '" ...,,,.. .. tut Of \tlcl ~ " tllt '""' .. tleettl, '" Ml \t tll .. qr\lltl l'MI ,,....,,y tlMIM lft , ... C-Y "' Oun ... 11•1• "' Ct1119f'lll't , Nrll<wltlly defl<rlblcl •• i.lleWt, tHl!li I, Uftl_. ..... reel ,., .... ,ty 111 O,."•• C-ly. Ctlllornl• more Nrtkwl .. ty 41itKtlllN at: Tiie l_.\llel .. "9n_l .. tf IM ........... I' ti .. Soutll \lo Of L.ol 4 '" •lltCk It • ., Trect 16, "Cotti l•ultvtrf flerma" •• per mo re<tr .... ltt .... 10, pegea IS encl M Of ""-"-~ ,_., Of Mid ~IY. "'9Mlllr wlU. t ll NMfMfl4J ltf """"-trld lot ltYlftf e mt l'!ltl11l119 PIPtllne In over e11d ec.-.. .., ..,.. 111Blod1~11.11. It e11d 20 111 w lf Trect U or tllt reaullclhlUIOft lll•reol lleretolore <rttltd tlld llOW ••hll111 for Ill• ""•Ill OI Wld ltnd first tllo•• *-crit.id. t. Unlmpr~ reel Pf'CllM'1Y 111 Ille Cou11ty of Ore110•. Calllor11la, •scrllleel •: Tiie W.t_.,.tt of the HOt111-1 ~~fl/I._ So;it-.t CllN(1., of llM South \l'J of LM 4 In Block "· Trect t4, Cout louttv.,cl Ferm&, Co..n4y of ~!ESl41a of C.HfOf'l\lt, ts per .... Ill._ 10. PMaS u encl aet ._~recordsof Ore11k' y; '-'"'' Wllll •II .. ..,,. •• ,.....,.... __. -for leyl..._ IN ............ olOtllllH Ill, -r elld' KrMs -I-II\ 81otU 11. II. 1' end 20 lleretolot• cr .. ted •nd now nllllllo for the -Ill of Mid lend flrtt...,... dH<rlbed 3. u111mpr.....i ,...1 .,,_..., In the County of Orange. Cailfornl•, dH<r llltd M: Ttw HOt1Mnt \<o ol the Sou-ti "' of IN ~ .... of Lot 4 Ill 81«-1' of ~r.,_ ~ <!Nit Mut'ev-l'erm• In Ill• Ce11nt~ ol Ore11oe. $1•1• ot Ct ll,or11te, H per lftAll tllereot rec~111.-10,,.....as-i.o1 MlscellM-..s ~. r«0<d• of Hid Ortj191 CO\#llY: I-Iller with all NMftlef111 for strMI PWpDWl -for leyh)8 lllld m.llllellllftO "'"""'' 111, over tnd '"'°'' ot!IM -In Blotllt 11, II, 1'-201n Mid Trect ... or el\y ruwbdlvhlOft thereot, heretofore creeled -llO• e•htl110 for th• ll•ll•flt of said 1e11d llrU ebove cletcrlbed. Term• al Wle ca~ In 1-ful "'°"'Y of Ille Unlteo SletM Oii cantlrmetlo11 of ule, or pert <••II and b•la11ce e vlde11ced by note ••<ur•d by Morto•o• or Tru•t D .. d 011 the property M> told Ten '"ru11t of amo..nt bkl to be clePOllled with bid. Blcb qr olf.,s lo be In •rltlt111 -wlll be r~ et the efwewld olfk• et .. Y 11-an.. tl'lt llnt putllk etlon llereol -befw• dale of ..... Detect tlll• 21111 day of December. "" OoMt J. Enlled Admlnlstratrh• with ·Wlll·Alvle .. d of Ellete of of Ille Mid dK .. Md fl05S W. AMS'°"E a ,., ............. Bl...t. ............ Ct.ftSJI t•lt4M111 ""'"'9ytfer .,._f//10...Herry nMcMr,DKNtH Publl-0r"'llt COHI Dellv Pllo1. Jtll .•• 1. 13. 11112 111.., •onca ffllVITI ... BIDS BIO ITEM fllO. m NOTIU tS HUIEllY GIVEN Ille ,.•led .,,_._ wlll be rec91"'d by the City of Coste Mew, to wtt: The City COWICll, P 0 Bo• 1200, of IN Ct Df COit• Mel4 Callfomle. °"or Ille l)our of It :00 a.m., Oii Tllurlday February 4, ttt7 II ,,,.II be Ill r-llblllty of !tie -r to deliver Ills tltd to U. Oty Clerll's Ofll<e by pr-r _.., llf'M Blcb wlll publlcly _,,.., alld reed •loud • 11:00 e .m .. or n -,...,.. • .,.r • ptt<lkable on Thundty Feiw-y 4 t"2, In the Coun<ll CMmbeu. City Hall, 77 Felr Ori••. Costa Mes•. Celltornta, tor Ille Fur11l1llln9 o ELEVEN (Ill EACH PREFABRICATED BUS SHELTERS. Addition.ti -of the -lflcttlons mey lie otlttllltd el the Offke of Pvrclleslne "991'11 et n l'•lr Ort,.., C.te IMM. California. Bids "'°""' retu"'9CI lo U. Attontloll of Ille City Clertt. 111 • .... .., _._, ldltfttllled 011 Ille outside with Ille Bid II..., Humber -ti. °'*''llO 0.1• Eacll llld \lltll •i-clty etcll a11 every ll•m •• HI forth 111 Ille se>e<Mlutlons. Ally -ell nceotlOft to uw -ttlctlloM must be <l .. rty Jle!H 111 the llld, -ltllure to tet tortll •11y 11em 111 u. •o•<ltketlOM Stlell lie ~ tor rej«llon of the bid. Each bid &tlall tet tor111 Ille lull Mf'lleS -r..ioenca. of ell ""°"' encl pertlft Int-led In Ille pr_,.I tS ~lrl<l"9f~ Ill UM of <°""'lllOM, Incl... "" --of .... ""'"""''· Secntery, TrN...,..., -~· Tiie City Council of IN City of COit• Mew ,......, IN r'9f'll to refect .,, ., •11 llldl. VerHIOf' ""'" lie ,_Ired to <~Y wltfl all -'lttllle E-t Emofoylntnt ~ .. .__,~ TlllSC-..... 11 ~ ... flMnclel enht•"<e contract lltlwu11 Ill• Ortt1ge COunly Transit Dlsltkt and Ille U .S . Depa rt111e11t of Tr~ All bl*"" wlll be required to certify llltt they tre n•t 011 the (Gmp4rofler Gerlffel'• 1111 of IMll9lble COlltrt<ton. Ort11 .. C-ty Tr.,•11 District ,_,,_,, ........ ell biddt~ ltlel II Wiii efflrmttlWly I-• IMI In r...,d to ""' COfttnCt ~.., lllto .,.,..._ to ftlll ~...,....., milloflty booslneM 111ter,.rl .. •Ill be efftrded full lllOOf1Ulllly ID l\llll'nlt -I" rflC)OftM to 11111 111v1tetlon will 11et b• -.Cr~.....,...,. ... .,_ :' .. ~::; .. c::'~':..::::1 ort9'11 In ~T•D: OecemllerlO, tWI. ........ Or.,. C-1 Otlly Piiot, Jllfl .• , u... tS1• • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D/ 6 4 2 • SEIYIC£S NO DN. equity share. 11t tune buyers. 3 bd., l b& .. only S!M,000. pnn only ,.. Call 631 ~Kathy agnt :: OWHll ANXIOUS :: Beauuful, 1mmarulate. -nicety landK1ped 4 Br i.e1 home on <'Ul·de ·S&<' Spacious rooms View or -got! l'OUrse from proper· ty Owner-assisted finanl'ing Only Sl39.500 -Call now. !n9·S370 : ALLSTATE = REALTORS -~ -------mu -.,s -----.., =· ----... -------- ..... eo.fort t when you set lh1s 3 • Bdrm + den house I You'll want to itel t·o1y ID (ronl O( the big • f1replart Only 20' • I down a.nd take advan 1age ol an effecl1\·e rale of 12.l '. Pr1red at Sll6.SOO. 7Sl ·3191 Fw M Actil1 .. The marketpl(ice on the Orange Coast ... 642-5678 REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 11'9 COMI wnH us ... TO COIONA oa MAI. South of highway. Two story, two bedroom dollhouse in front. One bedroom unit in rear. Two car garage. Flexible terms. $299,500. 1617 WISTCU" DI. M.1. Hl·7JOO I WtliH.c) For A ilaraofR This <'OZ)' 3 Sd 2 811 ~ fam rm In Harbor View near comm pool has llood usumabll' loans and is pm·ed to nil. $237,950 .. RCletvlorCo ; ' mE llGlll ILlllS CD. OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE HOISi PIOfBTY Dramatic Home -Approx. % Acres -4 BR ·-Pool -Spa Remodeled Recently -Park 8 Ca rs + R. V. -Great Location -Can Keep 3 Horses, Maybe More. On Your Own Property. Only. $289,000. 75~9100 uc.,. ....... ........ HOt. Remodeled, decorated 3 bdrm, 3 bath. mstr bdrm, ocean view $425,000 . West Bay bayfront. SUpe for 2 boat.a, remodeled 3 bdrm. 3 bath Sl,200,000. Ocean & jetty views . Marine room, 4 bdrm, 3 bath, 37001q.tt. $1,385,000. UDO ISU Hoe. Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + rec. rm. beam ceilings, $4.20.000. large I.NA ISU IAYPIOMTS Main channel view from 4 bdrm, 5 bath traditional home with pool. $1,496.~. Lagoon view from € bdrm, 5 bath. playroom, dark rm, den. Sl,350,000! CAINATIOM COYI Spectacular bayfront view 4 bdrm, 4 bath, 2 boat slips $2,050.~. BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR ~ • f I ' • • • I ' ) f) ' ti I \\ t ,_I t '1 '. TAYLOR CO Id:\!·: (ii\'-, ' It. !~H I llG CAHYON AHIST CUSTOM A UAL AICHfTICTUUL IUUTY Elegance .& dignity in this fantastic Georgian Colonial located on the 8th green of go~( course. Top quality craftsmanship thruout with finest ~oods. imported marble. crown mold · mgs, 6"'1 baths, air cond .. 3 wet bars + more. Luxurious mstr suite plus 4 other ~ms with private baths. ban· quet s11.e DR, fam rm and billiard rm. Call for appt to see or a colored brochure. $2,150.000 including the land. WISlEY N. TA ROI CO.. IULTOIS 2111 S. ....... H.lood MBfW.Ml'flOl ...... IT... CIMra. M.I. 644-4t I 0 C..Qerwr ..... • wnM AMAHCIMG S BR 2bl or J.+. IUHt In owner'• unit · alao 2 Bdrm rental cottage. All I.II sharp rond. w/ut'el location Owner will <'•try lae 2nd TD. But buy In town for only rz:ao.ooo e.1644-7211 COM DUPLEX 700MARGUERITE New ronst rurt ion. Med it. arr htter t urt. 3bdrm 4c 2bdrm . S481,000, fina1mng avail Owner /Bldr ( 714 l67}1M31. BY OWNER CdMDtlplex Pride ol ownership, xtr1 wide lot, best IOI' Flu terms Prtred unde r market SJS9 ,SOO l ·tt2·8580 CottoMtio 1024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FIHDOM HOUSE 3 Br. l Ba large yard _lll6.000 _ ~1·0763, AJI OWHEIWILL AMAMCE AT 12% Wilh 15', down for 10 years. 3 Bdrm. 2 bath. great t·ondit1on with many exlras. A C Wted for ift..low qtrs. ~dosed patio. !'Orner lot with R \' a1·1·ess Ask 1ng $117 ,SOO. For an al' pointment to !\et. 1·1111 540-11.51 MHAYEIDE 3 bdrm. 2 balb. fr,>k. dbl garaae. A I rond $134..500. Owner will as Stst in fin1nl'ing loy Mc~. IUtr. 541.77zt ·--........... " Mt.,.;tC.,.._. HiCJll lolec• As-'»MLOGll ---------Beaullful one vear ne~ U.S TO HACH family home near South UMlqelflH MEWPOIT HflGHTS Olihomr in super area. beamed ceilings, 2 BR 4c den. rpk. 211 ba 4c good assumable loan. Sl!n.000 fee U~IOOI. t1()1'tf.i Realtors. 675-sooO ledilc.dSI00,000 SPYGLASS IYOWHEI COIOMA DR MAI! Do you want IQ li\'e ln and enjoy u Corona del Mar home and al thl' TRY C R EAT I V E same tune rollert 1n FINANCING CDM C'Ollle from the alwa_yi. duplex with i:ood rinam· I rented units .plus swim ini.: Ea1ti unil 3 Bdrm 2 1n your own pooP I &, fam1I) room Clost Propeny 1s located on a toeve~·thini: at $429.~ street Uned with trees. rlosetooctan and shops Please r ill if you would like to see this home COL.a Ol1 ~ pri1-ed 11 S32S.OOO. MAL TORS HULc:.-tltwy. C-MI._ 975.551 t 675-3411 IFYOU have a M!rv1ce to offer or . 1oods to sell, place an 1d SELL idle items wllh • in 1he Duly Pilot Daily Pilot Clusiriedl Clusified Section .. Ad. 142-5'71. Phone 642·5678. -I IOo/oAlimtcRMaA•oil Co ast PI a z a . 4 Gorgeous ~ br oeta1led bedrooms. 2 1 ~ baths. home I blk from cx·ean formal 11mmit room . re on FEE land onl) lallnit famil~ room. $299.000 H9· l~OI or . warm & t·oz,v r1replate 7~·7373 P r o f e s s 1 o n a I I )' 110Df9"" Oce91 & toy •lew CLIFFllA VE~. Fan last1c-view from this 3 br exe1:ut1\'e home on FEE land! Ptrfect for en1er ta1n1ni:! S6~.ooo <ex 1·l usl\'e) 759 1501 or 7S2·73'13 Walker & lee Real fstete • \ Q '\ 'l 1 landst-aped lot Idea I for the ,vounie exe1·ull\'I! Owner will 1·onsidt'r helpll\I? with fmant·1n1t $204.!KJO Call for coore deta1ls loda> 979.2390 TARBELL~ ~REALI OR_ SHAIP USTSIDE 6PLD OHL Y 15% DOWM Owner will r1nan«e lo •llllllll•~llll---.i quahfitd buyer Well -localed. good lookmi: 6 LA(iUMA HILLS Nelhe Gale Ranrh 4 Br units + 4 rar )Car + am pie parkini.t Below 11 times gross. CAUTODAY 644-7211 """'"" .... Call a Dill Nit U.YISOI &42·5171 Ol'elfl View '575.000 6br/41't ba. 4100 sq fl SOlfl'HPORT MO DEL OWNER FIN~NCING HIGHLY UPGRADED Offer expires Jan. 31 4 Ba. t·ustom. 180 deierel' view Bnieht & C'heery. loads ol Greek marble. pool size yard. 4 r ar - garage. 5650,000 Jensen _&Co _159-0706.! 644-574!-_ /Jn NIG(L GAILEY 6, ASSOCI ATES ~·-I f!IO ~~----· ~ ·.hU:. -H-.s.lo 11"4 '* r.-..Tn... ''" 1=."=i.n. = AllTllOllU 0-al . """'-·Clautn !l«rt..-Vtluclot ~~.:od• T' ..... v-AlllO IA-A-W•-UTIS, IMPOIT(J C:-aJ All1"-o " ... A..wH .. 1<1 uw c.,., ·gf;-·, Dela•. rm an tut ....... ,_ ,_. ~¥Gllu =-.. ....-.•.. llG llCI Upol PUUr• ....., .... l'wt<llf llftooll .... ..., .. lle.w Sut. -.. ~ . ..... ::::... v-....... Vdlft ~o o-.1. . •ie -· .. -= . .,. -- - l.ookin& for I home of YOW' own? You'll find maQ)' homes 1dvertiaed for sale in Classified everyday. ZS Bodega Bay Call owner 759-0737 ACIOSS TO BEAClhUPORT 3-ttory .._ wllt .._YU"-"'"Y roo•. Cirttt l••Ht•Ht -H•· mr/.,,,., NllW poulllt. Slts,000. WAT£RFRONT HOMES, INC. llf.Al£STAn s.n. ........ ~"""'•"··· 24.Ji W COlll Hwy 315 Marn Aw Newport Buch 8llbot ltland 611·14M 67U,_ PIMSIMSULA TIUST SALi I Immaculate 2 sty w /3 BR + 2 BR guest qtrs, 2 fplcs, lg mstr suite, spacious llv rm w/terrazo floor. Secluded patio de ck. $350,000 incl. land. Dick Halderman 642-8235 CP52) A SOtteslT DANIUIY MOOR. · In Woodbridge. Highly desirable 3 BR. great location near swim club, tennis, & park. Beautiful ceramic tile in entry & kitchen fl oor. Tasteful use of wall covering, upgraded carpet & fireplace. micro mini blinds . Loan is assumable. $127,900 Marian Frizzell 551-8700 CP53) i:~::.' S<C~4llA-aiq.s· ::: Blllfs. Lease option. 2 br. wide greenbelt $139.500. Bltr. 644·O134 $115,000 -------•! E.side CM. 2 8d + 1 Ba. THEllUFfS Extra large 4 bdrm ron· do in pnme Bluffs IOl'a· Uon. Low $299,500 L.H. price with terrifi<' terms Just 10', down, 12' ,, i interest. 30 years. o.k floors, frpk. 1 car gar. lrg lot Owner will finance or VA terms Call Curt Htrberu 11. 631 12166 RVM~ IO°loDOWM I l 1/2CV. IHTlllST MO QUAUFYIMCM! 3bdrm. 2ba, 1600 sq. fl . remod~led klll'hen, l/yr A Otvi~aon or old r1rpet throughout. llubor lnvei;tmt'nt Co S00,000. OWC AITD for 4/yrs 11 Sl520t mo Demand E Side area nr .... l"-d I006 S.A. Country Cl ub. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• J_eff <a l: (714 )493·3116 llACH HOUSE ........ ltod1 I 040 ..... c ....... ! ...................... . ..... TRY Sl2.500 DN Only 111 perfert shape. Only Sl25 900 buys this 4 homr on Island under bdmi. best area, shake m>.ooo,., ..... 7 roof. SIOOO 's under .,.~ nartlet. Bltr 148·0708 .,.. 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 12% ~SUMABLE 4 + bolwa rm. pool •ad Jacuw. Owner will htlP finance. M$·tm / OP! I• H , ,/ Rt/HI f DISCOUIA~ED? DENESSED? DISAPPOINTED ? 1lunk you'll never f1od that 3 bdrm home you reall)' wanl at 11 prH·e you <'&II afford? Don't d1spart, we have JUSt what you're looking for Ill SW.000 It 'a '" a l'On· veruent l0t·atton. Htghl> upgr11~ed. Owner offer· 111g generous terms to help ~ou purrh11se -Law or no down <'ondo m So Cst Plau area Great assumable In ~JI T1m~A,gent ~·~ IRVIHE CONDO •• REDUCED $5000 As· s umable lo.a n At $100.000. th1$ 1s absolute· ly your bl'Sl bu) in In 1ne Bea utdullv t·art'd for I bdrm end l'ondO With I IC'W of hills .. hi!) •l's own pri\'iltt' 5la11"#3} to entl) . .a lo'· el> ll\inR room with r1rl'pla1·e. d mtnjt area w1lh \'le~. all tile k11t·hen wllh eating area U\"tnl: room and ktlt·hen open onto larl(e 13xl3 dHk . roomy masler bd rm has ltl'lll!l'OUS walk·m d oset E\e~ room 1s hJtht and au) and tasteful!> de 1·oratl'd in wh1tl' and nl'utrals Total Sl7.300 dO'ATI to assumable loan or selll'r will l'Ons1der JO'. down Call Mona Chesh1rl' lo see =72 l.;ikepmes Open Sun da\ I 5 · l'hesharl' R<'alt\ 759 187i . 1041 .....................•. OCEANFRONT Modular T>pe Homes. 24 hr set·unl~. 1 ~ m t I'\ t b1·h + f1shmi: 111er Cedar l'otla)!e I~ P<'. redwood dl•c·k. 11001. ~uarded ~ute. adlts uni) No tl~s. ~.900 499·3816 200/o DH/ 120/o IMT. 3 br, 2', bil. fam rm . cl1n rm clbl i:ar w upenl'r. ~tamed !(lass. frnn>C1. 01 l' Jn ' u 52"-S.000 49i 105 I NO LEAS ~:HOLD l'ro blems hrn• Custom 3000 sq ft home with ~l'at· white water \'1ew~ from most rooms Com l'ltte ~ ilOOI and spa Owner fin;in a\·ail SS89.000 LCllJllllGYllogtLE 497-1761 -ALot - ForA Uttt. I aere + bid!! site. i.tent ly slopin..: part·el short distanre from tennis & bt'ath Ownr has in· duded plans for 1·ustom \'1lla. Sl75.000 Spl'l' ta<·ular v1tws • MISSION REALTY -_!.94·073_1 L01J111o ..,_. I 052 • •••••••••••••••••••••• AIUOCUHYU 3 BR 2ba Townhoust Exel'ut1ve li\'ln~ $234,950 67$-1171 ___ ........ N11<utl Shores twnhsf:. ~st model. ocean vu. remod int S289.000. '!93·94.l.!_ --- •te wporl t.octt I 069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLIFfDI. VIEW AlllS. ISO r ....... : _. ____ ..... ~ QAY t. '°""" -........................ ,_ _....... _ ... This stW\nlna 4 Br home has II panoramic 'vu of ~lJ BUJI part & orean Alao ram * *•u . rm w/Fr. doors leading 4 Bet detachtd Broad· to pool arH. Offers ever· moor home In super )'lhlng! sszs.ooo. Call ror .Woodbridae! Owner will •PPt .................. "" OMlillM . • . • • • .. .. • ..• " .... llU ea-. ..... . ······ . 1111 ~ ........ -~········ ... ···-~·!::: I::::::·:::: ~ ..... ······ ·-~···· ····-M'."'''"'''''''''''''-iiifirii,i:::: ..... : ..... :::= u.. .. ., .. :·: .. ,· .. = ... ..... ··-................ - • f I'''' -·:-. .::: ..... :: ...... -.. , ............ . ··············~·.,• .......... AESIOJNTIAl N:Al f!STATf savus .. JOU'U. PALL .. LOYI It H'llOI YllW You won't be able to resist the 1orteoua gourmet kltchtn with all new appliances, derorator wall cov· erln&* & matching draP.ea. Great 1:1rclt U>eated in one or Newport'• nneat ramily nei&hborhoods. ' Bdrma. for Sl14.900. · '°" IO ferM four MP'9 -· IOJJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• JPllMIUM DWLIXIS 2 Bel + 2 Bel. 1tep1 to buc:h. A.uume sno.ooo in loul. Altlq SJll,000. 4 !Id + 2 Bet, newer bids, So. ot Hwy. Anume SM)1000• Altln11441.000 3 8d + 3 Bet, quality un· lta. AllUIM AI0.000. ~ •• 000. C:O.t•d 0 ln'tll Puh, •£.for I' ' ~ '• • • ' RE:!V1~ C:MT)' YI of eq,ulty ! Won't PHI A VIEW! lut .. uk for P'ttd. SH tht ortaa from this sm.ooo "*"' tn-tever homt. 11 l w.........11..u-hH 4Brfr1ll •menltles. .,..,,......... Onlysnt.$00. lclkt I .. -11<1 ~:.-lnlM. OCIAMYU &POOL L h •••· Ira 4 Ir w/boau rm Oal7 --.~ 11.1·~. Clll l'lllkk T~ ... -- UMDll COMSTIUCTIOM OM UDO Unbelievable but true with 120.000 deposit. owner will provide wallpaper and decorat· ing service at cost on thl.s3 bedroom gem. The lime to b"I)' Is now ! ·~ . A PETE BARRE TI REALTY IEACHHOME $174,500 FEE 2 Br+ bach .. lrg assum. loan. Chuck Splner, agt ;1( ••• R&IM~ 714 641 0763 2925 College A' e Cos1a Mesa. l'A,. "~ . f, [J 'JL T . . L Iv I IJ (. • I & 11111 h1IO Apia • Dlshwullels & 880'1 • Pool & Rte Room • Gardin landscapt11g • Jog 10 8t.ch & SllOps • Securily Giles . . .. , . . . . . . . &..J-•~ 1141 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Bdrm loft apt. Frplc, stove, re!rig, dl w. 2 bib ocean. lit/last + ~ util. /rm. 4!M·7222. lbdrm. view. wlrrplc, $6001 mo Ca 11 dys : 67~. eves· 499-1735. Lrg 2br. lba, ocean vu w/gar, wlk to town; bch. $675. 114 High Dr. 499-S022. 2 atudi06, nr Main Beach good kitchens, utlls incl: p!5. 4jM. :io.4 OC~NOMT Moat elegant apartment build1na In La4una Beach Finest location in t~wn. Breathtaking Views All blt·ins, heated pool . subt . garage, eleva1or. Lease only. eo • llP 330 Cliff Dr. *-IOB3. Elchaaive CUfrhavtn 1 bdrm apt with spet· tat'War view. llOO per mo. Avail Feb l. lllZ da. 112-MIO, .. 142-1114 ~TBLUPP spacious lbr. pool, patio. alnt view. Siacle adult. DO pell. pz5/rno.144-47f1. NEW·8£AOON BAY tc-&MI ...Mct1 ..... SinlcM . • ,... .,_,.. ..... ............. , ..... , ..................................................................................................................................................................................... . allyoonti,'Cl\oknow TllOMPSON'S RfSID/COMM'L Put 1 Worry to Reft! ~UPYOUIACT Uty Work, Deptnda· c..e-,..... •8RY~NT'S• l._bttRoolln1t·11lltyvl'• ~ ~1~k!~~I.'}'_. t•llll C'ONCRtTf!CONS1'R. I> )'fl HP.· Do my own Wike Up ' Reminder TObAY! Yardt saraie e, Ref1. Call Pam ' 25 111 t•P· Ut. 40\le4l.. .''f1~!:.,enna Remoul ~w tl!\'11\'tr~ll't·ka · .,/_,·I~ Ul· _ 642·Mlt .~d "'s.8· le Call.a! Mornlo1 After tin· , etc. l too tnidi. BobDwl l m-7tl2 BoOded Ina. Refl Color _N_~·· fU 1341 I.ii' •411*'2 ~ 9134 CONt!llTI IJC'D EL£CTRIClAN noon Evenln1 '28.00.l>er . • 11.1 !ffhl'!) HMio:CLEANING ex . 1 DI .....,.JaeMlr Tit ••••u•••••••••••u••• ~jtraq n t Quid work Re11. rate1 Mo. For 1nrorm1t1on, HAUUNO 'nlorowlhly done. Wash t,J.8 PAINTING ••••••: •• ;r.-.-•••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -~·SOH Brjc·k ~or . m.9027 fret>Ht. 831.:~~ ~t!'·r·RTelephone Qulckcleaoupyd •i1ron.Rer1.835·9042 SPF.clAL!JNT/EXT. Pl.ASTERPATCHINC TIU.:INSTAl,L£0 Bulldtra Slnre lH1 ,.--"-Tit -.,._. Doert POumBo r_ H equeat7 to Free est. Kris &.11·°"3 M-drywall Lllrry 845·9383 ReithK'rot Int /ext 30 All KindJOu»nntrt•d Acldlt'---"' d fl --__ x __ , 9284 I .. ••1 """"" , -~ ~ . -11 Neat. PaulS45·2f17 n..1 J-.. """'3 1--1 "----l\llY •rvmo e n11 ••••on••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••0 tt••••• c .. ...,........., •••••••••••••••••••••••I m Small-My prlttl --~· uun,.. '!"-uuura, windows..._ P»llo Hansen'sC.ramlc·Tlle •FRENCH DOORS• H.._• H1ulln1/c1eao-up, dirt, BRICKWORK; Sm11l are email! CdM. NB. Nealpatrhes•tuturtt Custom<:framh•T1ll' i'O'ltrt f'reeeat ""1 f1oors ·1110wtr1 ·Tubl 10 panes \nstalled, II' ..... t ................. 1hrub/tree trim, etr. Jobs. Newport, Co1t1 Exe'd. Ron673"'47]___ flt._ lfl·14Jt Promptserv Pn't'nt U,_.Jl~ S49·21'70 'llaii lme9'12·'839 &llder~ln1.S7SOcom· Cuptntry Muonry Junlt,trash848·4984 Mesa, Irvine Refs. GL.uan( p ti ED'SPLASTtRING Chlll•k675H08 ROBTSTEINBRONER, ~ filunp1lnted)G40-106S Rooting Plumblna -67S317$ . .. UD 11n Oji -GEN'LCONTRA<."JIOI\ Ca.tr.don. GtNr.. Orywa1r.Stucco . Tile HAULING -Student has · Cuat wor . Uc 0&178 ~ lnt. or Ext . T'"Strrlet . ·~ w 6460 ....................... Gtr•-.., Remodel. J .B. Mll·9990 ~n.tek. Lowest rate:. All Types ~11onz Ina. Free est. 731.112a1 Reatuccos ...................... . .... .41.-llt --H-·~ •u•••••T•l••E•E••S•••••••• General Malntalnance Thpt. Call 159·19'16. Very reas. Ur, bon ed. All P1mtln1: int $450 ext PLASTER' STUCCO ·c~.!rTt·1ra·tel .~.rnudn~~::Sc• ..... ~ ...... ~-;1 ........ exper. Fret' Ht' adv1c~ Topped /removed, rle1n • alit •Ra 640 5l'4 TREES/SHRUB TRIM CU.tom Br1rk M1aonry Pree'5l Refa.1151 7292 MS-4203/645-4199 Sttvirn 957_· - "' Mella-All ph~. lit'. bonded, Repalrdcl>Koratln1 I ant you, John. BobS48-1650/53U90S ~. Neat' complete ~an. NoJobtooaml .......... ...., ... Cabaoeu' Carpentry Alim Const tMlke l 1418. Cen~es repaired ' Oar11e & Yd Clun ups Compl yud conatrur Pll •I Small lobs& Rep.1lrs 497.53221499.4863 installed. 751.3476 HOME IMPROVEMENT ·Free t 557·8271 ti . I 11 k i, CUSTOM INT/EXT ~1 LI Freeeatmates. 6-45-2003 -~= ---Repair-Maintenance es · --·-on, poo '1ec 1 EXPERTSERVJCE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4cc ---~· Gardenin1W1nted Heating, carpentry, H~ enrlotures. LOcal refs. LOW RATES DraiosrlearedlromSIO ••IXPEIT• • TUISRVIC:E ;.;;~:? ............ IC.tl'IMNlhlf' ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• Mowin&. ed&lna. nklna. etec. tile. Free est. No •••••••••••••••••••••• ~12 , . NU-BROOK S4H.!!!_ Plumbing Repairs P/R QtrUet, WJs, Fin ••fi;tEFINl.SH.WORK•• COIPOIATIOMS swee pln& Free r too small. 6-45-2811 WantaREALLY CLEAN You save. Bf'!t k, blO<'k, NELSONSPAlNTING Frtt~.MHU4H033 ******* Stmta. Complete Set·uP Remodelln111Doors hun11 'PARTJ'o'ERSlllPS esthnates. 845·072 or M. --HOUSE! Call Gin1ham ~mert. B~ Job-day-hr Int /Ext ResidfComm Di1hw111her disposal•. ~•••1!!!!!!11!!1!!!!!!1'!!~ ••49).2220• * , Serv_ Rua. S40·5834 RllMly '720·la80 CdM Forml'd by Attorneys 00-5737. l bid alljobs. lge/sml Girl. Free est. 845-5123 ~ te 0 · 631·3859 Acoustir ceilings. Reta. toilers & iaurels, re· JAYE TREE CARE ..... G W. VANDERVORT Reas. rates. M7-S700 WHY NOT ONE OF Quality. ex per, He'd. ROBIN'S CLEANING m Ur'd. Free e1t. 837-2637 paired or repl•ced. 11 Complete aervite llnd ....................... CONST LOE /SMALL c... Wooctworti-, THE BES1 ! Simmons Dave 1·894·9798 Servic a thorous~ly •••• ;-;:................ PAINTER NEEDS yrsexper. Jim 631-teee stump gnnding 10 yrs Drivtw1y1, parking lot 1173-1745 uuueuuuuuuuu Gardenin&,646·11684 Europe8!1Crartsman.All rleanhouse. 5-4 ·0857 •ABC MOVJNG·E~p.. WORX~30yrsex .Int PlopcftrM•a91•• ~~lru.640·9308 - rep1irs, seakoatin&. -----"-~ -Cr own mo u Id in g , Gardening w1nted. by ex· Jobs B1L or Small. Call Expertise Housekeeping prol iJow r.ateasJ~c~. /ext. A<'ouslir reifings. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wllldo C:~ roaring repairs. Lir'd. Senlct mabn1tlu. will units. ~er . hliort 11r u It u ri st Alter4P . 964-5231 TrusSutpplirthes rurni9s5h7ed 8003 cu-e ... 1seMOrv1cVel . ..,,;_ 1 Davis Painting 847.5186 rtlOPEITY ....... "! .............. . ~Asphalt 6JHl99 0w:c:;:c~ic1~~~~~~u ~uti':!!'to l~~wg~~ ~~ad!~ nmp!•r~ 1 ~ · PROFESSIONAL wo y, . -·-•-m• * HOUSE PAINTING-MAMAGIMIHT "Let the Sunshine In" AUSJ'ATE PA IJING Steam <·lean & uph~ls. blems. 63l-IS28 Greenhou v t bl HANDYMAN AT W~t Co~st Maintenan~e Top Quallty: Sperl al Collegestudenl, exp'd. Oran~e Co area IS yrs Call Sunshine Window Sealroatina . Striping Truck mount unit ---gardeninsg~s'or~~fd: : SENSIBLE PRICES. 2S ' o((. New Yr Special care in hand Ii!!& 2S yrs Low tilts. Dana 646·1869 expenence Call for info Cleanu!&._Lld. 548 8M3 Repairs. Cornm./Resrd Work ••• 3716 "--al h 979,ms on House Cleaning • exp Competitive rates --. nd l ------Ur. J3873&2 645.8181 __ g_u~a_r ......,. ...,.. ot er exo11r plants R . & 1 11 . 1 631•211891640•6681 · Noovertlme. 730-1353 Painting's the Game, a ra es. •RF.slDENTIAL• ... ....__ ampoo & steam dean. 0 DRYWALL7ACOUSTIC• 7l4-49'1-4279 p~b.ra~~t8ry: e er. WEEKEND/WEEKDAY STARVING COLLEGE ~edersen'stheName ! --tjl-tll2 ~gJh~Y ~Jr:ivg 2 sty --·---r• Color briahteners, whl 14 yrs exp. Fully lir'd & K & D Lndspnt /Maint 541-8844,· eves770·8777 HOUSECLEANING STUDENTS MOVING Ur. 239S34 S4Z·.Q86Z D....Aw. --· 5 8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• crpts · 10 man. bleach I ured R-ld/Comm lea --._,""f Do.Al w· dow Clea 1 ° AGGRESSIVE leaal Hau, liv/dln. rms m : na . 532·5549 Yuta li a ·548 ... n~p. H.*oodRoon 551·6443 CO Lir.#Tl2H36. P..,t.g .... E•••••R•s•••••••••s•s••• ,.f; :n I nn,. ~talion. law of· avg room S7 SO; rourh DRYWALL TAPING u n . ,.,..., euuuuuuu1uuu• Qu Ill H 1 -. -Insured. 641-11427 ••••••••••••••••••••••• R PAI FOR LE eees •qua Sl.'rv rices,>tbn.~'422 SIO, clarSS Guar ehm Alltexture.s&aeoustk Clun·ups Sprinkler HARDWOOD FLOORS wi~hf Pe~~~leT~~~t WATCHUSGROW! HANGING SlOIROLL Shingles, flat 30 )rs . .!r:Rae __ 675~1 -petodor Crpt repalr. Freeest. Kevin675·9088 S>:slems. General Main· Beautifullyrleaned Beth5S6·0IS6 STARVINGACTORS ~1sc. on paper Stnp· -~Freeesl 770~25 ClearV1ew Windows .. ,....... IS yrs exp. Do work Duiftihg Ser.Ices l1mance. •645-7287• and waxed. _832·4881 Good Wi;:-oe ndabl; MOVING COMPANY puig. Scott64s.932S __ Roofing Fast Scrvi«c! Xlntserv1re, free est &b;,it.•:;c•M•h~;e·s~·.-®Self. Rers. 531·0101 ~ ...................... Gt.rd S..-.lcH tt.iftcJ Refs Call .Emave Fast & Careful. Lowest UC. PAPER HANG ER Xlnt Refs. Free ~t IS~ 673Jl0t8 yr~up.anylime. NoSteam/NoShampoo EM Design & Cherk ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 673-2SM • Rates f:.aw Allows MIC Bonded & guar. No job 494·9~ 642-8482. 646-5759 StainSperl11ist Fast Pa r k a g i n g I S H Tree T r1 mm Ing & Haul, cleanup, i·on1·rete Al HOOSECLEANING Visa. Ustlns. 673·0853 loo sma ll or too large REPAIRS ONLY! dry Fteeesl 839-1582 MTL/PCB Harvey RemdvaJ al Reasonable reml?val.Dum11Tru<'lt LADY.XLNTREFS P-.....g Freeest.Tony898-272!_ _AllT)J>eS~6463 O.C.C. AREA Steam Clean for the Hanfuon. S45·3701 Pnres. Hauling, Odd rk serv~7638 Call Lynne. 839·30S3 ......... ~ .............. Custom '"'.allpaper1ng BALBOA ROOFING CO Lov ing molher will Holidars ! Best rates for 8tctri al ---Jobs, Clean · ups DUMPJOBS ----Flnepalnun11by R1rhard Salisfact1on Gu11ran · Theonl oor th ~it , fulltime the big dates! Call ...... ~ ................ ~":;~~~~9041 3 .... &SmallMovlngJobs COSTAMES.l, Sinor.Lic,ans.JJyrsor teed. S. L. Sherlin, tonslr~/uo~n~~baf;5 646-4733 ELECTRICIAN prit'ed ~ ~"'DI w .... a ~all MIKE 646·1391 MEWPOIT, lltVIHE happy loral customers 77~14 _ 673 6743 673.8229 lnlant Care; F/T, S.50 a nghl, free estimate 00 ~PilotClwltledAd HAUUNG&DUMP Wonderful~ererenres Thankyou. 631-4410 SELL idle items with 8 --;a.:.; -. - For Clusified Ad ACTION Call a Daily Pilot AD·VISOR 642.5678 wMI. 3-10 months. My large or small jobs. !5 I slmple matter . . . JOBS. ask for Randy. Call Sioux WANT ACTION? Daily Pilot ClusUied Have ~methmg ~o sell' home. C.M.631·1880 I.Jc. 1396621 673--0359 j\lltca11 &42·$671. 64l·8427 83S·9306 Clwlled Ads&42·$678 Ad. Classified adsdott well. ~======~ ,...... 5350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• For tot1I relaxation wath a professional musage. Steve 10-6, 548·2817 Lonely TO'nlght? Need Company' Call Mon ica _953-1822 COEDS.would Love To Party with You' Call Leslie or Syh1a _Anytime. 761·9036 Linda & Vicki's •ESCORTS• BACK & BETTER TIIAN EVER! 24 HRS 669·0207 tOutralll Flnanrn11ly secure single male. mid JO's. seekin~ f1nanc1all> secure female 2S·SO ObJer l matnmony' Send bnef resume & photo. Box #944, Daily Pilot. PO Box l.S60, CM 92626 Strong pro( man desires prett) sensual lad) 18 35 ~ s nales 720-0296 GOING SKIING? $a\·e money. ha\'e fun take \OUr 0"11 anstru1· tor Children. adults groups. da> s. nights. ett· Mu·hael Kane 552·3448. ----_.,.--Wh ite M. 47 . Prof Emplyo Sttk.s While F W Happ) Heart for TLC 754·9904, 955·0095 PROF. ESCORT ]'rish. ~9·8096 aft 7pm WANrED Female crws 1nl( t'Ofllpanaon 2S·3S ) rs. Ha~·a11. M11·rones1a w~inJ;. Feb_I, &46 3708 Tl"Cl¥tl 5450 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Fly for pme o( I' PA Coupons 13 Countnes• ..$40. 631·36m FREE e\·ening of South Seas films & info . Jan 14th 7 10 pm Zonia Oubhouse. 2101 15th St. N.B Learn how you l'an sa\·e 60', on fares to S Pacif1 r w r Pati (1 r Skytralls Travel Club nes673'8766 llmllOVtl•• & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sdlooh& ,....,_tiOll 7005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TUTORING Available for your l'htld. Call Mrs Rw. 631·5006 HeadsUrl free pre Sl'hool, low 1n t om1• families 3 to 4 ~ ri. ~3233 Jobi W..ted, 7 075 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Young marnt'd man "'OUld lake odd job!I t\ t'!I & wkendi. Can do ., \'anety of hand~ man jobs. m.9525 t'\ t'S, ask for Bill. A·I House Cleamnl( lad~ all worit by the joh. ha' t• worited an the IK'st o( homes. Ha\e xlnt ~r Call after 5:30pm till ~:30pm. S41·2434 UOUSEKE EPF.R Prel hw 1n EitP'r. xlnt rer. neat, sol><'r. pleaunl. po11lh e, rt'hablc. low~ thildrcm. Do drl\'l'. <.:1111 bri '!00" 631-14 27 ... Al!J'OMOTIVE PA.ITS COUMTRMAM Dealership or foreign auto parts experience 1 preferred. Call Glen for 1 an aPPotntment. IOYCilVEI IOUSIOYCI AMO IMW You won't have to take 64CM444 • 1 Ume olf work. Just call -------..-....---'--'--'----Carol Thuyns. 830-8800. Al!J'OMOTJVE I &lfll arrange a Saturday P.+IC1•l•r•1 interv1ew. Come and ex· AMDri .. r pl ore ca r en op · Automotive experience po rt unit 1 es with pref erred. S day week. Eldorado Ba nit. Sala!)' commensurate to expenence. Call Gree Dualdln/Parta Dept. at San Clemente Ford. 4tM HO . We oHer top pay. beneftta •working con· ditiOlll. We are one o( the rutesl crowing • sucffllfW lnckpendenl --------banks i n Southern AltomoUve Californla • are looking for ~ea wbo want ~~i~ ~ E.O.E. M-.y,MM ..tJKll •MECHANIC • Mn.t YOU SUPPLY THE SKILLS, WEUSUPPLY THE CARS! Pep Boys is everything a mechanic wants in a service garage! We 're clean. rut and pro- fessional. We offer an excellent pay scale and a benefits package that includes discounts, bonUHS, paid vacations. medlcal and life Ins .• pensions and mo re! LET 'S GET AQU,\JNTED! Apply in person at: ' PEP BOYS 15J21 IHdl ltYd. W11I J .. .,,CA. Equal Opportwlity t mployer M /F U JCN'n DOt readioJ. lb• liU1e adl ID Claulfied, yoo're misliD& a lot ol · newa1 laforma Uon a• ftll • IOlne 1reat buys. I Daill Pilat ..... : ............. \ ~ Exper. n~~~~penon ~ • • handle key accou_nta for OrlDll C.Out : Daily Pilot. Salary." ~mi11ioo and , excellent bendita. Growth oPllOf'bmttiet • for person with carter amMdom. Send • complete resume •o Muil r.del, PO .~x 1561>.-~osta Maa CA.'-. Nop~ calls. please . An Eca••I Oppor· tunlty Employer. ORA NOE COAST DAILY .-eLOT . . 330 'It. I AY IT • .L.• COIT.A~· CA. t2l2t • •, AIUOUAll1f'~TUlllNi~lll : !.t···--·············.············· ... ······t-llihl Pillt ...................... : . •1 . . . )> . . For Clueifted Ad ACTION Calla DaUJPUot AD-VlSOR eo.n 1D.lEI •Minimum 1 Yr exp. '-"*' ldmlnl•r•tt•• palition a\lallablt. Phall tftktlnearJ•w_,... Airport 1hr· aot '*"'•fY· Wll trdt. I llllll be ablt to l)'ft 1 M~m . I aterte ti 11 i-= ......... =--...-. ... ,::~rr· Htf•ltarttr. a ll'Y ..-. TM for II· ........ .._W.W . tltO ....................... Wl._YOUI GOOOUS9CAlt A QYthbla (CU dertd i llTTW\11.MO :·~·i •---=--"""'"'-----I • ' I c •··~c..ty-29Z5Harbor Blvd. COST~MESA ...................... & ...................... ltUMOl&I ... NOWUt Coo.ll S.. Ua Today I r t)NNfll . •H •11<-l I' ·, 'b· Ii.,() ~---~ '78 Mclllle C1rlo &uf, Cr, lOwhtt. 541-%373 '740 ,.,... '761 ''7 awiv Malibu m Good nl.JCMO ••u•••••u••u•••••••• •• .. •••••••••• .. ••••••• tr1n1port1tioa. $350. CloeedSUndaya '?$ ~llca. S apeed, air, CaU"""""7'""" ' •Ml.,.....,• amtrm, ta~. I owner. _.......,,........_.. ..... -______ _ nt Mo.t bdHIM) .H ~ 12:S. 6'5--S9ll '73 Malibu sedan, auto, PtrtOf Yow to•MW '78 Celle• GT C"", air, air. xlnt coad. Jl.000. IMWPwc ..... Or ~If 7 ..-881·7alaf\.1:30PM. 1 ~-,,.. ........... It M ltereo, s IPd. 1lnt cond ! ·• Blacar.e ate win --Q>ni ome or Im· ~.Mf.~eves ' i Mc ..... IMWU ports Direct lease and 60 427-1 ry • raoa good . .._ mo1. unslble fymta. r.-... '767 /OBO. M2·7702 ..., OrW.. 0 I a I 2 1 o r ~;;;;i;~ .. ••••••••••••• 64 Chev~ ton. Gd work iv0W ....... '9Gal 714/MERCEDES ls 213 13 Sta& Convt. New trurkSUOOOBO 1714) 522·5133 or714/837-2333 Plint, Capri eng, 22mpa. 646-S587 ~.417-M94. • •••••••••••••••••••••• 48 Stiver Streak w / xtru! Sl.500/080 ......... Ca~ma...-..ro._._8 .... cy'"'"1-,-u-to-, -red-•, ___ S48--.·=S9 .... lC..;__ Interior/exterior, &ood '78 Phoenix. air. pwr c:ond. ll ... 142-8614 steerinc. braktt. bud et '68CAMARO teats, 12195. 982·4315 m. Vl.lll00/080 "101.t MIDISta Wga 350 673-174$ \'.a. Trlr Pk&. SIOO Firm ... lf11"8tMttl V8, automatk trans. • HAPPY 75TH -Sam Miller and his wife Flo beam as they accept the tributes of many ............................ friends on his 76tti birthday at Dillman's Restaurant in Newport Beach. Balboa restaurateur feted Sammy Miller celebrates number of milestones By STEVE T&JPOU Of .. ...., ...... IUfl Sammy Miller h·as spent almost all of the past 46 years in what be calls "the lousiest business in the world." But be stays because to him it's the best business. The business is restaurantine, and a couple hundred friends showed up at Dlllman's on Balboa Peninsula Tuesday to help Miller celebrate some personal and professional milestones. Invitations to the celebration listed the milestones best. "You are invited to Sammy Miller Night," it said, " (celebrating) 22 years at Dillman's -45 yean in Balboa -75 years of living." Though the main event was Miller's 75tb birthday, the other two milestones help explain why the crowd wu so large. Miller, a Los Angeles native, bas been a restaurateur continuously since 1935, except for a five-year stint in the Army during World War 11. He got started in the business, be said, after being in the film industry during the 1920s and a clothing manufacturer in the late 20s and early 30s. He did "a little bit of everything" in films in the silent film days of the 20's, mostly mm editing. Then came the talkies. · "When Al Jolson opened his big mouth (in "The Jazz Singer," the first talking movie) be put me out of business," Miller said. After several years in the · clothing business, be came to Balboa for the first time in 1935 when friends Ed and Claire Allen ~ought the bankrupt Balboa Inn Hotel. "I looked around here and it looked like nothing to me then," be said. He worted here several years, went back to Los Angeles briefly (but long enough to own one restaurant), then signed u~ for officers' training and the Quartermaster Corps in the Army. Even thougb be was in bis mid-309, a des'ire for action in the military led bi m to ask for active duty, be said. He 1ot what BIG NIGHT -Sign outside Dillman 's restaurant ann-0unced the big bash inside. he wanted -a stint in the infantry that took him lo France and eventually Germany. On bis arrival home in 1944 Miller went back into the Los Angeles restaurant business, owning in quick succession the Cove, Rocket Room and Salem House restaurants. But then he "just wanted to come back" to Balboa, so he packed bis bags and did so in 1947. He hasn't left again. Miller was owner of a restaurant/club called the Vaux, which was located directly across the street from where Dillman's is now. When be sold out in 1959, it was Just two weeks before fledgling restaurateur Max Dillman opened an establishment across the street. The timing was right, and the two joined forces. Miller fll'St worked as bar manager and bartender, then became mail.re d' at the restaurant. He's a natural at the post, Dillman says , and b\s connections bring lo lots of customers. "He's got lots and lots of friends," Dillman aaya. Miller says be reUred once, after hip surgery in 1972, but be didn't have enough to do and soon went back to work. The diminutive, silver-haired fixture of Balboa Ufe doesn't have any plans to retire again at present. Miller still works four to five days a week, usually the brunch shift on weekends plus Tuesday ·and Wednesday nights. "It's the lousiest business in the world, but it' 1 still my bua""-8," be say. ... People are alwayi complaininc 'my steak's not doM1 thil is not done, that's not dollll, • but you meet so many dilferent people.every day of your life. They ~eU you their history." A big part ol Sammy's history is bis wife Flo, with whom he's shared the same Balboa apartment for 27 years. His wlfe, brother and other family members from the Los An1eles area joined the celebration Tuesday. At. be sat next to bis wife the two clasped hands Uke young lovers. Al the table were a tree made of dozens of greenbacks and several other eifts . A three-tiered birthday cake sat on the other side of the restaurant. Chef Rene DeLounge expressed the prevailing sentiment of Sammy's admirers gathered at the party. "He's beautiful people," be said. "It's like going back in the past the way he treats everyone." 'Elephant girl' O K . PHILADELPHIA (AP) -A 21-year-old victim of "elephant man's disease,'' has been · released from the hospital where she underwent radical s urgery lo correct the deformities she said made her life miserable. Richard Gross, a spokesman at t~e Hospital of t.be University of Pennsylvania, said the woman, whom they idenUfied only as "Lisa H.," was "in IOOd condition ~nd in very 1ood spirits.'' She was released Tuesday and "her recovery is proceeding well," he said. ••• •.•I Cold w a ve d eaths increase t o 130 81TM"-date4PnM A winter 1torm that left tbe Deep South frosen In aleet and up to aeven lncbe1 of snow pu1bed in~ the bit clues ol tbe Northeast today u the nationwide death toll from a flve·day cold wave climbed to 130. Hundreds of thousands of people were left without electricity today acrosa the South u heavy lee pulled down tre' llmbe and power lines. The record cold that bas aet 75 low-temperature records since Saturday devastated Florida's billion dollar citrus crop Tuesday, raising the possibility of hilher prices for oranee Julee, and storm clouds flung sleet. Oil leases seen/or SD coast SAN DIEGO (AP) -Offabore drilling leases will "very~kely" be approved soon fbr oil exploration off San Dleco County's coast, says Interior Secretary James G. Watt. "We need to explore and inventory, as rapidly u we can, all areas of t.be United States; we cannot be too aeeresslve in inventoryinc and exploring those areas," Watt said Tuesday after addressing 7 ,000 persons attending the American Fann Bureau Federation's national cooventloo. Exploration would occur at 28 nine-mile underaea tracts between three and 19 miles off shore, be said in an interview. The two sites are west and northwest of San Diego, off Point Loma and the north county coast. ·•We're su11eat1n1 that basically all of the outer continental shell lands abou1d be made available to industry," Watt said. "That's a billion acres, half of It off the coast of Alaska, I might add. Let the market place determine where those most attractive areas are." Earlier, Watt told the farm group : "Friends, we 're vulnerable; we:re vulnerable to a natural resource war. Change must come ao that we can manage our resources for the American people.'' Surveys by the U.S. Geolotical Survey indicate that the 26 tracts would yield 30 million barrels of oil and 45 billion cubic feet of natural gas. In 1979, then Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus exempted the San Die10 County tracts from a aeries of scheduled lease sales. California bu 3,500 offlbore wells, 3,000 ol the ril• within three miles of the cout. They make up about 10 percent ol the domestic oil p~u~~· Slanlftcant oU aptlll have been rare, Watt noted. fa 199, an Atlantic Rlcbfteld CompUlJ ril blew out in tbe Santa Barbara Channel, but "there wu ao luUnc damqe to the aestbedc:l1 the shell flab or tbe lln ftlb, and no reuon to believe tbere is lln1erin1 environmental degradaUoa." IDOW and rain from Arizona to Oeorsta. : School.a closed ln Washinctoo, Batt.lmore and Philadelphia today u tbe storm moved up the Eastem Seaboard with up to 10 lncbea ot snow forecast in the suburbl ol New York City. Alabama Power Company aald at leut ~.ooo homes and businesses were without electricity in that state t.oday and it may be several days before full service is restored. About 16 ,000 homes and businesses were without power in Mississippi with more freesing rain in the offin1. In the predawn hours, about 30 truck rigs were stranded on Interstate 55 between Grenada and Winona. Central Indiana cot up to seven inches ot new anow durina the ni1ht and road• wert slippery from a freth aaowfalJ across Mich11an. Up to five incb~ of snow accumulated In norUter11 Georgia by today, and ao~• parts of the stale had freeai.q,C rain. New snow, In many cuea accompanied by sleet, pUed up to seven inch• in Arkansu • a fool in Arizona. Miles of icy h11hwaya w~ c losed Tuesday tbrou1houJ Dixie, and other roads wen clogged with stalled an4 abandoned cars. Thousands of people stayed home from school and woi'k.- <See FREEZE, Pa1e A!) Huntington man stabbe d t o death Police are investlgatJng the apparent murder of a 56-year-old .salesman who was Jound stabbed to death Tuesday in tbe bedroom of bis south Huntington Beach condominium. The dead man was identified as William K. Norman of 8B77 Tulare Drive. Huntington Beach police Sgt. ·Ed McErlain said a business associate became concerned Tuesday when Norman failed to keep an appointment. The associate, whose name was withheld, visited Norman's residence, located in the adulll·only Huntington Landmark Community near Ediaon High School, and saw through a window that the man's refrigerator door was open, M~Erlain said. The associate voiced concern to~ a security guard, who summoned police, McErla.Jn s aid. ; He said officers found NormfD on the floor of his bedroom, clothed, slabbed once in tfie chest. : M cErlain said there wete signs of a struggle and some ransacking in the home, a4d Norman's 1980 Datsun auto wta discovered missing. ~ He said officers are searcbitl for that vehicle, described as tn orange two-door B-210, llceose number 692-ZYS .• Police believe the stabbing occurred al about 1 a .JD. Tuesday. McErlain said there were no signs of forced entry in the residence. Nornian wa~ said to have been employed by an out-of-slate fmn as a salesman of promotional materials. Police said be lived alone. Candidate filing to begi n Thursday By JEFF ADLER °' • ..., .......... Orange Coast politicians are busy plotting their 1982 campaign strategies as city clerks in five area cities - Huntington Beach , Laguna Beach, San Juan Capistrano, San Clemente and Fountain Valley -gear up for a first round of candidate filings which opens Thursday. City clerks in the five cities explain that ftJlng for office for the April 13 election opens Thursday and runs through Feb. •. unless. an incumbent candidate decides not lo seek re-election. In that case, according to election officials, the filing deadline ls extended by five days, unW Feb. 9. While the five cities are cearlng up for their local elecUons, however, one Orange Coast city, Seal Beach, is readytq itaeU for a March 30 elecUon, accordlng to City Clerk Joanne Yeo. Allo, tbe clUes of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach will elect city council memben Nov. 2, while Irvine is looking toward its June 8 council election. Mrs. Yeo, SeaJ Beach city clerk, said filing for the three ol five city council seats being contested opened Dec. 31 and will close Jan. 21, unless an incumbent fails to file. Candidates must be registered voters in Seal Beach, file nomination papers which include the signatures of not less than 20 and not more than 30 other local registered voters, and post a $25 filing fee, sbe said. Already, five people have filed for the seats being elected in districts l , 3 and S. Besides etecting four of the seven at-large councilmen in Huntington Beach, voters there will be selecting a city attorney in the April 13 election, City Clerk Alicia Wentworth saJd. As in the other ciUea -1th April elections, candidates seeking office muat be registered cil)' voten and mmt submit nomination papers which include not less than 20 and not more than 30 signatures of other local registered voters. (See CLD&. P.,eAJ) County medical issues frustrate U.S. housing funds increase for coun t y In an unuaual development, Oran1e County 1overnment officlals have leamed they will receive more federal funds this year than initially expected for houtlnc prosrama. l lAICI ClllT WUTl ll Mostly clear skies through Thursday. H11bs in upper 60s to low 10.. 1 Lows of ~ to 48. Local I gusty northeast winds 15 to 30 m.p.h. this afternoon below coastal canyons,. decreasing tonight. I By FREDB&Je& SCBOEMEBL o1 .. .,.., ......... Editor'• Note: Thfl i• the ccmclu.fton o/ a /""'1-parl DoU11 PUoC _,.., ~ ~ COWllJ(1 multf-mllUOft Uor dUemmo o/ pormnt /or MoUlt core tor tlw poor provtded at UC Innn. AledU:al Cfttln. Treatment authorisation request. ... ellatbillty workers ... flnanclaJ sereentn1 ..• deposlta ... Can people wbo are ·~ ..a ilck •• belp wftlMMi( befn1 baialed bl tlM · Or~• CountJ taapaJH'·fl•••eed 111i.m ""l oledl1 deslsMd to r•u..m ·• For aJl the thetoric to the contrary, the impression that is left ls what really ls important to the government administrators is not so much who is or isn't treated, but how much It will coet and who will pay. U this isn't the cue, why do the University of CaUtornla and Orange County government spend about $3 million yearly ha11llnl over a. contract under wblcb 6ealtb care is provided for tndlpata at tbe UC lntne Medical Center ln Or*"I•' That dilpute is centered on tM county11 collhntlon that lndt1ent1 tor wblcb lt ta nnanclally respon~ible under 1tate law often set too mueb eare at the uniYerthy medical ~· eomtJ emplci19 •doctGn, who dtlplte DO knowledae of tile parUcular plUtatl otMr Uau • what they pean from medical records, sit in judgment ol the unlverslty'a cbar1ea. The docton red·pencll cbar1es wUb which tb,ey don't aaree. The county then retuaes to pay that portion of the bill. On the other band, tbe unlveratty bu a lar1e staff of clerical workers oceup)'inl U.. n~rola~8hrlHbuUdblcwbo do noUQa but ProeeM clalml to . tbe count.1. So Hl'YOU abcMlt Wt operaUon is tile -~ that lt recently r9fuHd to.,.._ a ne~upaper plloto1upber acce11 to the bill p~e111., ceaw. bUis hu been aotnc on.for yean. The bU1s number ln the tena ot t.bou1andl. More come in each dlay. About fl mllllon in payment.a have been beld up u the dispute bu dra11ed on. I And yet the h.lab•lalaried ud well·educat.ed edmlnistraton - botb the countt'• and the university's -bave failed to solve the ~pute. Tbey say tbey are wortinl on lt, but it's bard to 1et fut rQ&alll wben tbe ne1otlatora meet only occaalonaUy. l"Vtber. tbAI .... eor,I ol admlnlm.-ton and attol'IMJI baa failed to deYiM a pll•' 11 k telllA• wbo la .... ,_. .... -wbat under tti• eoatract .. 1 a1nemmt. TM 1M1t of _.. a bandbooll llia1 led, •••~••HIHJ, to amblpltJ, '( ... ..,ANnJ .... A*) .. I: The county received tentative commitment this week of an a~dlUonal $759,000 in federal ~oualn1 and comm unity development fu.ndl, said Bruce Neatande, chairman of tbe county Board ol Superviaon. Tbe count1 already baa received about ... 7 mUUoa for uae In boaainf rebabllltatloD pro1rama, ,..n., aequtlltlaa tor boullnC and J)Ubllc f acWty lmp"'""**· Tbe lat .. t crant ll • lt Plfteal lnct'MM. Tbe new fundl were left °"' fJ'OID ..... not ..... by ...... a1eacln aad were Hiit to Or .... OoUDt1 beea ... el 1&1 boul ......... a&dHel& .... . Tb• ••~ora ~•Y• ....... ., .... ud AprlJ 'J to IODllder bow to . aUOt .. ,... ' ,, •• ,, ........ -Doalld Scott Priest, 11, wearing an ~tap givea• lllm by players Rickey Henderson Norris, is 'Wheeled into Stanford University er. The )OllDISter, who survived a Sierra plane ~ ~e his feet to frostbite. , Three men were convicted of Orange County Superior Court firsl·degree murder in two juries. Two of the defendants separate cases Tuesday by face the possibility of the death 11 • penalty. ~ The three convicted men are: b ___ driver -Dwayne Otis McKinney, DUS who was found guilty of killing a ; · 19-year-old manager of a Burger iL.._ha9aed of King In Orange . in December II~ 1980. McKinney, a 21·year-old ~ • Ontario resident, also was tee•1·.. convicted of robbery and assault I ,. '· •1 with a deadly weapon. The death ~ A Coatt 1ranlll 'lldalt:; pbue of bis cue besim ~~l driver has been/Jan. 20. ''arre cion of raptni...--Thomas Luparello, a 14-ye aboard bis bus 3 0 · y e a r · old Sa n t a An a wtlile, cle was patked chiropractor, who waa convicted near ~ · gton Beach City of hiring another man to kill the P.iet ..... ~. "·~ h u s b a n d of a f o r me r ,. Polafti Tom Patton said tbe receptionist. Luparello, also dri~k Mitchell Porter, convicted of couptncy, wu $t, .~ei$1, waa placed Jn cleared~ 1peda1 clrcUJD1taaee dun Beach City Ja11 in allegatiom that could have led lieu ,000 bail. • to 1 mpoattlon of tbe death ~. PaUQI llld the eifJ, a Buesaa pualty. • Park .. ¥9iicfiGt who h~ boarded """" Carlo8 Orduna, tbe hired lbe bus b:a ~t city, told olftcen killer. in the Luparello cue, ~ the -toot ptace at S~IO was convicted of flnt-dear-p.m . when abe •• tbe murder and eomplracy ln the last ·aboard u tile bus slaylni ~the 21-year-old victim. 'toppe~ Oil Pacific Coast Ui&h•a, at Late Street. Harrah's robbed John llelde, a transit district spokesman. laid the OCfD bu tteen IDIOrmed of the rape aUec•t.l!h,. Be said drivera ""'PidM Of criminal attl.tt1 trac1ltldtlll '1'e suspeod,.s ont.U the resolved. STATELINE, ~ev. (AP> Sheriff's lnvesUgaton reported lltlle progress Tuesday In their searcti for a gunman who robbed Harrah's Tahoe casino of $80,000 in cash. nu.-~ an no maadatory ftllq ,.., eadldate1 lntenlted lD publl1hln1 an opUonal ca.od.ldate'• 1tatement mu.at po1t a depo&lt with t.be city derk. La,.a Bucb voter1 will tie electlDC three of that city's ftve 1at·l•r1e councilmen In the :election, 1a1d Vtma ROlllqtt, city clerk. · Voten tn San Juan CaplatrmM) also wlll be aelectlnl three people to alt on that c!lty'a five-member e<»mcll, which ll elected at-larae. Memben alto 1lt aa the Oranae County Water Works J)lltriet Board No. 4, Qty Clerk Mao Ann Banover Hplatned. Besides electlna three at-larae memben to the five-member San Clemente City Councll, voters there will be asked ·whether to change the election day date from April to the 1tatewlde election day which falls on the second Tuesday in November of even years, city officials said. The ballot measure, which would become effective In 1986 if approve d , ls a result of legislation recently pasaed by the state Legislature, permitting cities to change the date of municipal elections. Voters In Fountain Valley will select three at·large city councilmen to join that city's five·member panel, City Clerk Evelyn McClendon said. Councilmen-elect will be sworn into office at the April 20 council meeting, she added. Ir vine City Clerk Nancy Rowland said filing for two of that city's five at·large city council seats will open Feb. 16 and clos e · March 12. The municipal election is set for June 8, Ms. Rowland said. M ynicipal elections are scbe4uled Nov. 2 for Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, city officials in those two cities report. , Newport Beach voters will eh.~ct four clly councilmen, from districts 1, 3, 4 and 6, to the seven·member council. Filing for those seats opens July 12 and closes Aug. 6, City Clerk Warida Andersen said. Costa Mesa's city clerk, Eileen Phinney, said filing dates for that city's municipal election have not yet been officially scheduled. Ms. Phinney reported that two of the council's five at-large seats will be up for election. Cop helps nab brother DEHVllR <AP> -Patrolman Edward Brooks' pleuure In a "fine piece of police work" was marred when be learned one of three suspected bank robben be helped capture after a fUDfilht and chase wu hU older brother, authorities said. Tbe officer did not know that William Arthur Brooks, 46, was arrested in the robbery Tuesday until the men were brought to police headquarters an hour after their cqpture, said Police Capt. Don Mulnix. ........... Fla. The name N~elo, which means "a beauty . ·in blue," was chosen from thousands of suggestions submitted in a contest. ct•-•d ......... 11UG""11 All ...... ,.,.. .... MloUl1 Cheese recipient& recall depreuion WASJUNGTON <AP> -One woma'n complained that It smacked of bread lines tn tbe De p reulon, aod ottlera 1rumbled about 1pendln1 two .hourt 1tandinc in the cold to aet a free flve-pound block of ~. B•t 1D01t of tbe neara,. IOO people llM up atl tbe Flrat...., Mount .ZklD Baptl.lt Cburelt OD 1'11•.S., were llmPb srl&llul for tb• 1Ut of proeHHd Ametteaa •1•1. ~ 'IP to •"-•t ..... Pfteel.. • '!" FromPegeA1 ,.FREEZE. • • . ........ WHEEEI -Bo Sartain, 13 (left>. and Sophie, his is.year-old sister, lake to a slippery Dallas sidewalk Tuesday, using cookie sheets as sleds on a sidewalk made slick from a winter storm. < Related photo. Page A4 1 • Woman died saving ' girl from timbers SANTA CRUZ (AP> -As Northern California recovered from the worst storm in memory, firemen said a woman 'who died as a huge tree crashed down on her Ai;tos hou.se used her body to shield her lS·year-old daughter from deadly falling timbers. The teen·aaer, Sheri Sberk!an, was discharged from Dominican Hospital ln Santa Cruz on Tuesday and, accordlna to the hospital, immediately flew to Redding to be with her fathe.r and recuperate from a broken lefl tea. and other members, including 2·by-12-inch planks, around and on top of them. Scofield said be went through a "tunnel of debris'' several lime$ as rescue wor1'en dug to get the &irl and her mother out. Severai times, he sajd, lhe girl sobbed, 'My mother saved my life.· "She was aware of the fact that her mother was dead," said Scofield, who described the young victim as going into shock and already receiving intravenous injection to bring back her blood pressure. water P'Pll bunt and electric service waa disrupted 11 lee caked power Unet. Commercial m1ht1 were canceled and public transportation lf'C)UDd to a baJt In Miululppl and the Alabama le1l1lature canceled • Joint a11embly T\aelda)' nl•bt. "We were scared-to be too alarm.lq, but apparenUy ow' worat fears were eveo c o n s e r v a t I v e..i ood• ' •a ld meteoro&olf.ll Miil Dl 8' tbe National Weather Service oftke in Homewood, Ala. At leaat 25 statea bave reported weather-related cleat.bl since Saturday. There were 18 deaths reported in Jlllnotl; 13 In Peruuylvanla; 11 in North Carolina; 10 ln New York; n1ne ln Tuu; elabt ln Alabama; seven ln Iowa; six each in Michigan, Ohio and South Carolina; five eacb ln Indiana and Wl1con1ln; four each In Minnesota, and IUssi11ippl; three la West Viralnla; two each ln Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, Louialana and Tennessee, and one each ln Nebraska. Connecticut, Oklahoma, Florida and Vir&lnla. Two others were milalni and presumed dead in Vir«ioia. Snowplows in Atlanta were unable to reach some areas blanketed by snow Tuesday night because thousands of cars were still bumper-to-bumper on the city's freeways near midnight. This morning, court officials canceled today's seasioo in the murder trial of Wayne B. Williama, charged with killing two of 28 young blacks who were slain over two years, because of conditions. Louisiana Gov. Dave Treen c alled up one unit of the National Guard and ordered all state agencies to be prepared for a disaster. The biggest hospital in Louisiana, Charity Hospitai in Ne w Orleans , sent many patients home , pos tponed el e ctive s urgery and discouraged visitors, in part because waler pressure bad dropped as homeowners left their faucets on to prevent pipes Trom freezing. Most commercial flights in and out of Jackson, Miss., were cance led Tuesday due lo ice·coated runways. Weather officials said lbe most bizarre aspect of the storm in the . Birmingham area was isolated thunderstorms that were ac~ompanied by brief, colorful lightning flashes and the s now and ice storms. Fire Capt. Philip Scofield, who led tbe rescue effort, said be bad little doubt that Carole Sea1rave, seeing the house start to collapse, used her body to deflect falling debris from Sheri. Savage winds and rain punished Apt.os, 10 miles south ' of Santa Cruz, the afternoon of Jan . 4 . Inside a $110,000 lwo·story wood frame house were Mrs. Seagrave and her daughter. College se:itate reprimands Schmitz "It was approximately 2 p.m.'' said Aptos Assistant Fire Chief Al Forbes. "A large douglas fir, about six feet in diameter and 150 feet tall, fell across the house." At the scene, Scofield directed the rescue effort, which Included paramedics Richard Rubin and Floyd Redmon. ·'The tree bad come across two houses , severed them, taking off lhe faces of the houses and extending about halfway l hr o u g.h t be s l r u ct u res, ' ' Scofield said. They were trapped with a section of the front wall on one side, and the second-floor joists Following the lead of their col leagues at Saddleback College, members of the Santa Ana ~Uege Academic Senate have reprimanded state Sen. John Schmitz for recent public remarks. The Academic Senate, which represents the SOO·member Santa Ana College faculty, voled lo officially reprimand Schmitz, who is a _political science professor at the school, bul stopped short of censuring him. Last Friday the Academic Senate at Saddleback College, where Schmitz bas also taught, issued a resolution "deploring" the senator's recent scathing attack on foes of anti-abortion legislation. In a press release, Schmitz characterized opponents of a • • u1s1na constitutional amendment banning abortions as "bull dykes" and "queer grou~." At a Los AJ\2eles hearing, Schmitz said he looked out on "a sea of / hard, Jewish and (arguably) female faces." As a result of his comments, Schmitz, a resident of Corona del Mar, was stripped of bis committee assignments ,In the State Senate. lo addition, be was removed from the stale Commission on the Status of Women. Senate President Pro Tem David Roberti and Sen. Alan Sieroly, both Los Angeles Democrats, said last week that a censure resolution against lhe Republican senator would be introduced on the Senate floor because of his remarks. Demonstration Saturday, Jan~ary 16 I 0:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m • c.blr.t 11.oodProcffMn ........ ...... d feed ........ ._. ...... PROCESSORS Litt Prle9 DLC I OE •••••••••••• 130.00 Dl.C ••••••••••••••• 185.00 DLC 71 .•••••••.•••• •260.00 Our Price ''·'' .••.• , '''·'' ·CROWN ·HARDWARE Everything YoU want In a hardware store • All atoret open 1 daY9 ...... w.tcllft open Thurt. tll I PM TOLEDO, Oblo <AP> -An 11trophytiel1t H11 t'•r• ii 1rowln1 •eCN•t•ff• of tile tlleory tbat comeu .......... a bar.._ SU'tla Mill-ol,..,. a10 wttb IM ::f•llll•ta for life. Dr. Arman O.&aem••· a prOfeuol' at tbe Um•......, o( Toledo, Hid that du~ mfftm, lut week In• View, Calif., • CODHDIUI of aclentlatl all""d that tbe theory la 1rowtnc u more la learned about the "rich" ctt.mlstry in outer apaee. He Hid the meetl.n1 at the Natlooal Aerooautka and Spaff Administratlon :a A.mea Research Laboratory ar1'*9 only about how -not whet.her - DelMmme and otber acJeatJlta apeculate that tbe dual accoqnta for the Barth'• cruat, which la rich iD nltrocen, hydro1en and otlaer elements euentlal to a1riculture. the "aeedlnt" toot plaH. "Euentlalty, the elementa in . our bodies are of tbe froup lncludlnf bydro1en, carbon, nitrogen aad oxygen," Delaemme said in an interview Monday. "The same elements are found in the sea, but they are not found in the intefior of the Earth." County joins suit on laws funding "The question la, how did these elements 1et to Earth, where they clearly are in abundance? Where did the ocean itseU come from ? Through research in astronomy, we have found that all these same elements . . . exlst in outer space, and that with these fundamental elemellta we bave the buildlng blocts of life ttaelf. •• He said astrophysicists have detected 52 interstellar molecules of organic compounds in space. "In addition, we found that there are huge concentrations of water in space. In addition, we ) Orange County la one of 18 Calllornia counties to have IUed suit aeal.DAt the atate, charalnl that Ca liforala has unconatituUooally refused to pey the cost of enforcing new laws. The suit filed in Satramento Superlot Court earlier this week cites 23 statutes, ran1in1 from California's touch aew druaken-drivtna law to oblewe bl&, suca. as a reqwremenc Utat stray cats must be ktpt '72 lilouts before they can be killed. Placer County Supervisor Terry Cook, president of the County Supervisors Association of California, said the cowiUes are not askin& the court to order Rulings on airport 'not conflicting' A lawyer representin1 Newport Beach says no legal conflict exists over Orange County Superior Court Judge .B r u c e S u m n e r ' s r u 11 n g prohibiting more than 41 average daily jet departures from John Wayne Airport. Lawyer Eric Goldman claimed Monday that Sumner's ruling wiU stand and isn't al odds with a position taken previously by a federal Judge on the related issue of airport access. Sumner ruled a week ago today the Orange County Board of Supervisors can't increase daily flights from the airport until more complete environmental data is complied to accompany the board's master plan for expanding operations and facilities. In reviewing Sumner's ruling, county lawyers contended it may conflict with federaJ court Judee Terry Hatter's decision in September, in which be said the s upe rvisors can limit or increase daily flights as a condition of controllin1 noise from departing aircraft. They ·~ it is possible Hatter will allow more m1ht1 and Sumner prohibit them. Goldman explained, bowfver, tb al Hatter did not rule specifically on the number ot flights, Ollly on the access plan. But t.he lawyer said Sumner did, thus his word will be Baal. County o ffi cia l s have mentioned they expect to confer with Sumner to clarify the implications of his ruling, but Goldman said : "I don't think that's going to be the r e al issue." the stale to pay them any specific amount of money. lnat.qd. she said, the suit only wants the court to rule tbe 23 laws "invalid, unconaUtutiooal or unenforceable.'' She said that would relieve the counties of responsibility to pay for their enforcement and send the Legislature a message to provide adequate funds for f\ltun new laws. "We are not suing for money. We are not challengln1 the merits of the bllla," added Marin County Counsel Douglu Maloney, who said the awl is intended as a "deterrent'' to the Legislature passing future laws requiring counties to perform additional tasks without providing the funds. In a news conference, the county officials said they did not know precisely how much money is al slake in their suit, but Ms. Cook said over the years it would be "hundreds of millions" or dollars. Maloney said the counties did not want to be viewed as opposing any of the laws in question, which he said in most cases they supported, only to get the state to pay for things it orders counties to do. For example, he said the new d.nanktn·drlvina bUIJ, which took effect Jan. l requiring mandatory 48-bour Jail terms for drunken driven, could cost the counties miWons iD jail coets. Another &aw challenged by the suit was cited by Contra Costa County Supel'Yiaor Sunne Wrifht McPeak. That ia a 1971 statute that stray cats may not be destroyed for 72 hours aner they're captured by local officials. The Legislature estimated the cost at $90,000 statewide, but it cost ssa.ooo a year in Contra Costa County !lone, sbe said. Clear skies seen Extended forecast iComtal I souTHuN· c ALIFOlllNIA • COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN AllllEAS Mostly c l••r •lll•l t1ire11911· _ f'elr -IK•tly •IMJ '" -Tllurw..,. Hi911s lft ~ .. 1111 ... ... .......... S... wty _...,.. 11111 7's. Lows d 42 lo .. ~ l'"'tY et I .. cMudt ftHr 1"9 <NII. 111 Mr1"9•SI WWII of 1S to 2' m.p.11. "' < ....... _...,..u IO n ~ ... •ftd bt lO• CeftJOfU lff•Y · .. --... ....... is. lllws lft T e m per• I 11 re I I ft .. efld ..... .... 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PATl!NTS START HERE -Once past this entrance, indigents proceed through a maze ............................. of financial screening and contested bills a UC Irvine Medical Center in Oran1e. From PageA1 confusion and complexity. Meanwhile, people who by all statistical measures aren't well educated or sophisticated, are shuffled around in a ystem that is supposed to be helping them. Some or the stories about the hassles, more than illuminating, are frightening. In one case reported to the Orange County Human Relations Commission, a San C lement e woman who complained of headaches and numbness in the arms and neck traveled to the medical center's outpatient clinic only to learn that she wasn't eligible for slate-funded Medi-Cal and that, unless she paid a $137 deposit, s he wouldn't be seen by a doctor. She didn't have the money. No one knows what would have happened to the woman bad she not read a flier encouraging people having trouble getting medical care.to contact the commission. Fortunately, she did make the call and was told to go to the medical center emergency room , where, despite the prevloua denial at the nearby outpatient clinic, found she could qualify for Medi-Cal. She was treated. How many are not? Where do they go? Unfortunately, the question doesn't lend itself to analysis by the statisticians' slide rules and calculatora. There have been other reported cases -women denied pre-natal care late in their pregnancies because they could not pay deposits and persons turned away from outpatient clinics only to end up in the medical center's emergency room several days later with more severe complications. Medical center orficiaJa deny there is a problem, regardless of what la said by the county Human Relations Commission or the Orange County Legal Aid Society. But those same medical center officials conceded months ago that their new deposit policy would cause some problems. And they are adamant the facility had no choice but to take steps to improve finances in light of the county's withholding of the S8 milllon. Ir the past is a portent, the s ituation in the future will worsen. The state la moving to tighten Medi-Cal eligibility; the Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES C•rtlfid G•m•i•t. AGS MODERN EQUIPMENT -Terry Walker. associate chie or'~ UCJMC computerized tomograph~-. operates scanner. " county, whic h is bitterly complaining about the lack of money It receivea to cover state-mandated proarams1 •• ~~·t likely to come up with anyuung extra. Charity care. by which hospitals or doctors provide care 1111 llllYlll at no cost, i s virtually non-existent. Care has and will continue to diminish. The university has sto pped seei ng county-responsibility patients at a n outpatient fa c ility in Anaheim; it intends to halt such care at a busier clinic in Santa Ana in July . Mo st physicians in Orange County have given up seeing ¥edi·Cal patients. What seems critically needed from our government agencies is an attack on this diminishing level ol service -not an attack of words, but of action. The county has taken a step, however tentative, in this regard. It has ordered a study of its responsibilities to the indigent and needy. But dM&nr,, studies have a flay of .f>etnl pl4oduced lat' high cos~ a~ -and shelved. · · Beller it wouJd seem, that the county and the wllvenity tak'e the quantum step to forgive eaclt .. other over the put and reworlr! the existing system so it works. · ~ Just such an approach hu been recommended b)L the stat. Department of Health Services in a recent analysis of the county-university dispute. • ~ If representatives of bot~ sides are truly committed 1' taking care of the less fortunar.. -as they maintain they ar"' .l.J that step would seem to be the easiest to take. • To that e nd, perhaps the negotiations should move to ~ higher level. one in whlc members of the Orange Count Board of Supervisors and the U Board of Regents -instead ,. their lower staffs -participa~ If such a step is not taken, ~ can only conclude that all tb9 right-sounding words abo-.t concern for the poor are Ues. Stunning gold with quartz ~ ... racy, by Omega. WASllm'GTON (AP> - Muntdpel reeuJatlon of' bualneta enterprises 1ucb u cable TV 1y1tema la not exempt from antitr1111t attack1 tbe U.S. Supreme Court ruleo today. By a 5·3 vote, tbe court decided that the city of Boulder, Colo., is subject to antitrust •ittaek for a moratorium it Jm,.._. ln im on new cable TV . Jteonltructlon by Community •'to~munleationa Co. Tbe ~mpany baa a permit to run ,f.abte TV service within city r~·~j· orritlqte aclwol J.~i,.,. hita •nag WASHINGTON (AP> President Reaaan's call for leslslatioo to deny tu-exempt status to private scboola that discriminate racially may embroil the admialltratlon ln a constitutional argument even aa it tries to solve a sensitive political problem. A case before tbe Supreme Court raises the question of whether denial of tax-eHmpt status to schools that claim their racial policies are founded on religious beliefs violates the Finl Amendment. Judge wo1ft nix AT&Ttnut.U.it WASHINGTON <AP> -A federal judge says be won't dismiss the government's antitrust suit against the American Telephone & Tetearapb Co. until be reviews the settlement proPC>Hd by tbe two sides <Related story Pase B7). U.S. District Judge Harold Greene, ruling Tuesday after a 35-minute be.aring, said he can keep the 1-year-old antitrust case alive under terms of a 1974 law. More exile• land 011 Haiti ulantl PORT-DC·PAIX, Haiti <AP> -About 40 moro lavadla1 Ratu• nu.. are reported to • bave ludM oa Tortut• llland, and U. .,..,...eat •aYI dine lnvaden captured earlier "clled of u.. ---.. ·· BUI•; a l'WI 1potdman to · lltaai1i..'~o .. r Blamby, dl•· jia\ld ... aovernm•t clalma alllhl tba dea&U, aaytna be bad .,........, 1poken Tunctay vla "telepbolle communications" wittl tbe three IDen. GM pact aaving• going to buyen DETROIT CAP) -The United Auto Workers and General Moton Corp. have agreed to paaa along savln11 from ' contract conceaalons directly to buyers, but the 1overnment cut a shadow on the conceaalon talU, predicting a mauive loss of auto jobl. Tbe union and tbe naUon's bl11est autoqiaker a1reed -Tu .. day that any ~t aavinp that result.from union sacrifices to make domestic vehicles more competitive with forei1n modela would be applied to car and truck prices. Reagan vows lid on bureau leala WASHINGTON <AP> Frustrated by news leaks, Presldent ~eaaan la vowtna to use "all legal met.bods" to fenet out loose-Upped bureaucrats and curb their contact wilb repon,n. Rea1an , who claimed unauthorized disclosures of classified material have become a "problem of major proportions within the U.S. government,'~ • l11ued a statement Tuesday spelling out ground rules for meetinp with reporters. GOP chief admit. loan delinquency WASHINGTON CAP > - Republican National ·Chairman Richard Richards and a partner ln a Utah health spa have been delinguent in repaying about $300,000 ln federally guaranteed loans, a spokesman for Richards acknowledged today. Spokesman William Greener Ill said the facts contained ln a story published in the . WaaJUncton Post were accurate. ~--.~~~~~~~~~--~ Semi Annual CLEARANCE SALE .... Starts Thursday , January 14th SPORTSWEAR WESTCLI FF PLAZA Newport Beach 548·4121 HOURS: MON .. TUES .• WED .. FRI.. SAT. 10 · 6 THURS .. 10 · 9 . CAR f. Pt.OW? -Motorist maneuvers road in Fort Worth that appears more as a freshly plowed field. The phenomenon was created when sand was spread across the road to help ........... melt ice caused by 17-degree temperature. The ice began to melt Tuesday when the high reached 33. .Court to hear love argument. Was affair behind attempts to poison heiress? NEWPORT, R .I. (AP> - Claus von Bulow's affair with a former soap opera actress was the motive for bis alleaed attempts to fatally poison bis heiress wife during visits to their mansion on Newport's waterfront, the state prosecutor says. Prosec utor Stephen Famiglietti s._id Tuesday the state has no eyewitnesses to back up its claim that von Bulow tried to kill his wife with injections of insulin and barbiturates during Christmas 1979 and 198>. But the state's case of circumstantial evidence "ls every bit as substantial" as direct evidence, FamlgHetU said. Martha "Sunny" von Bulow, wbose estate is valued at up to $35 million, bas been comatose in a New York hospital since December 1980 and is not expected to r ecover. She ~fers from hypoglycemia, or low blood S\llar. The defense cont~nds sbe induced the coma herself by eating sweets and drinking· alcohol. During questionine of potential jurors, defense lawyer Herald Fahringer said testimony wW prove von Bulow, a Danish-borp financial consultant, bad an affair while married to Mrs. von Bulow. He asked three prospective women jurors if that would make them think von Bulow immoral. Four potential jurors cleared initial examination• Tuesday. A fifth candidate for the panel was dismissed by Superior Court Judee Thomas Needbam after saying he was acquainted with several people on the state's List of potential wltneaaes. Jury selection i.a expected to last at Jeaat wiW Friday. Neither Fahringer nor Mistress a divorcee , socialite. Famiglletti named the woman with whom von Bulow allecedly was involved, but prosecution records identified bis mistress as Alexandra Isles, a New York divorcee and socialite who once appeared in the TV soap opera "Dark Shadows." According lo prosecution documents, von Bulow met Mrs. · Isles, 35, in a party for a play he was backing financially. She ia the da\llbter ol a Danish friend from von Bulow's youth. Von Bulow telephoned Mrs. Isles at ber sister-in-law's Watch Hill home shortly before and after Mrs. von Bulow's December 198> bospltaliaation, and the two vacationed toaet.ber in tbe Bahamas the followina February, according t<t atate documents. Fahringer repeatedly uk-ed prospective jurors if they harbored anY ill feelings against rich people or N~wport's wealthy summer colony, of which the von Bulows were active members. He also as,ked lf they would bold it against von Bulow because he remains a Danish citizen although he bas lived in the United States for 15 years and resided in England the previous 25 years. The jurors said neither fact would influence their decision. News service seeks profit, tax break WASHINGTON <AP> -The E.W. Scripps Co. is considering d o n a t,i n g U n I t e d P r e s s International to the non-profit National Public Radio and claiming a charitable tax deduction, according to the president of the radio network. Frank Maniiewicz said Scripps, which owns 95 percent of UPI, and NPR have been exploring "for months" the possibility of such a transfer. Edward Estlow, president of the Scripps, said the company has been talking to NPR "and other organizations'' about taking over UPI. UPI bas said it has been losing money for several years and reported a $10 million deficit in 1980. -·- WA&SAW. Poland CAP> Poland'• Communl•t Party broadlaod &ta cam~ aplalt tbe Independent labor movement to Include tb• Solidarity labor federatlo.e'• a1rtcaltural atablemate, 1Rura1 Solidarity. Trybuoa Ludu, the part1 new a paper, char1ed that the private farmen who produce IO percent of Poland's food kept badly needed food oft the market aa winter approached and 1borta1ea iot worae. "Promllea to solve quickly the moat urcent problem• of agriculture claahed brutally with a reality tbat wa• deteriorating dally wltb tbe rural market reportlna shortages of virtually everything," the paper aald. Poland's 3.5 million private farmers -tboae outside 1overnment collectives -own 75 percent of the farm land and account for about 80 percent of tbe food production. Rural Solidarity, legalized last February after a lon1 stru18)e with the government, claimed between 600,000 and 1 million members before it and Solidarity were suspended µoder martial law. Radio Warsaw reported that the party Politburo met TueM8y and discussed "the socio-polltical and economic situation as well as the tasks of the party in present c~ditioos. ·' The Politburo asked party members to give money to flood victims in Plock, so miles northwest ol Warsaw, when an icejam on the Vistula River raised the water level nearly 10 feet, collapsed dikes, flooded farms and threatened the oil refinery at Plock a nd the pipeline from the Soviet Union that supplies it. The army evacuated 8,000 people from their homes, set up soup kitchens and dropped emergency supplies by helicopter, Warsaw radio said. The army was reported ma.king plans to dynamite the icejam. Deputy Premier Jerr.y Ozdowsld told a news conference Tuesday the government would like to end martial law by Feb. 1, but the realization of that 1oa1 "depends on the situation." Ozdowski and government spokesman Jerzy Urban told reporters Solidarity leader Lech Walesa, held incommunicado under house arrest since the proclamation of martial law Dec. 13, would have a place in the future labor movement, "be is such a personality." But they said they didn't know what that place would be. ·ofiicials identify mudslide victims SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -A famlly of four may have been burled aHve alont with three others ln a fearsome mudallde tha\ rushed down 300 feet upon seven houses in lhe Love Creek area north of Santa Cruz. aheritt'a officials say. John and Lynda McCluskey, both 32, are missln1 and presumed dead, as are their ions Trevor, 7, and Kelly, 5, beneath the tons of mud and d e bris that washed down a steep, 700.yard-wlde slope Jan. 4 during the worst local storm in a quarter century. Jloters to get 'bottle bil(' SACRAMENTO CAP> - Killing legislation to require deposits on beer and soft-drink containers has a lmost become an annual ritual, and this year Is no exception. But this lime, the supporters of the legislation promise that the voters will have the last word. Tests slww PCP in Settle~' body LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tests by a USC professor reportedly have abown colle1e football player Ron Settles had traces of the haUuclnoaen PCP ln his blood and urine when be died. Dr. Perrts Pilla, a profegor of psychiatry at USC, WU Uked lo run the teat.a because the dlltrlct attorney's office questioned the findings of the county coroner's office, the Los An1ele1 Times said In today's editions. Insurance firnu def eat meaaure SACRAMENTO CAP) California insurance companies have defeated a measure to prohibit setting auto insurance rates by neighborhood, sex or age. It was one or four measures backed by consumer groups that was rejected Tuesday by the Assembly Finance, Insurance and Commerce Committee. Panel approves bills on crime SACRAMENTO <AP) -A "use a knife, go to prison" bill and a measure lo let prosecutors squeeze profit out of organized crime have won 11tate Senate. Judiciary Committee approval. Dolphin rescuers to depart today? SAN PEDRO <AP> -The Sea Shepherd II, a boat run by conset"valionists who want to save whales and dolphins, is scheduled to leave today after having problems paying $4,000 in dock fees. The 18C>-foot trawler, docked in Los Angeles Harbor since mid·November, was scheduled to leave Monday for lki Is land, where 25 -conservationists will make an attempt lo stop Japanese fishermen from killing dolphins. The fishermen claim the dolphins are a threat to marketable fish, said Paul Watson, 30, head or the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. But there was one problem: $4,000 in dock fees. However, the Los Angeles Port Warden's office said Tuesday that it is not going to collect the fees right now and will allow the vessel to depart. .. They owe about $4,000 ... said Marty Estrin, spokes!"an for the warden's office. ''but we are not gomg to legally prevent them from leavin1. However, we will pursue collection of the fees later." The crew hopes to save as many as 7 ,000 dolphins by blocking Japanese fishing boata and slashing nets, despite warnings from Japanese orficiaJs that they will be severely dealt wllb If they interfere in Japanese waters, Watson said. JANUARY SALE featuring ... Save 50% on lhest:> three engraving dies ordered on Crane's Fine Papers From lanuary 4, I '!82 thru fPbruary 1 ), 1982, you will save SO'l on the price ol the .ibove eogriiv•ng do~ "'hen orde.-ed woth engr<ived Ctane st.tioner~ •t th.-regular pric!' "n e•cellent opportunity (or you to onve-st on an engraving die which rNY be kept f0t futurt' st.i111nery 0<de~ When ~lee tong your \ldtoorwry. all onk color. are interchangeable ·1 on your ch<llct' of (rane pape" t'nablong you to r~ect vour own I ind1vodu<il i.•tl' fRANCI~-ORR fine stationery corona del mar HOUllS: tAM • fPM DAYS-~S-W-84DS TIU MEDICAL CARE CENTER taATMIMT FOi: • INJURIES • IUJISSES • ACNE • Al LERGIES • llET • CllCK-UPS Medicare and MediCal accepted 1:11111111111 SACRAMENTO MP> - Caltran1 Director Adrlana Olanturco 11y1 the 1tate abouldn't 1pend any more t.ban nece11a6 on brtd1ea or other projec~- Whlle belng 1rllled for nearly four hours Tuesday by four atate senatou on the brld1e controversy, Ms . Glanturco said, "The issue ls 1oldplaUn1 proJecta -apendJnf taxpayera' money to buJld projects that are bl11er, more elaborate and more costly th.an neceaaary lo serve transportation needs safely." Ma. Glanturco, head of lbe state Transportation Department, testified under oath before the Senate Select Committee on Southern Ca lifornia Transportation Problems. The controversy involves a bridge located in Mendocino County, 400 miles north of t.be Tebachapls. Ms. Gianturco has been criticized for authorizin1 a width of 32 instead or 40 feet. But the discussion ranged from specific freeway gripes by the senators to general transportation philosophy. Committee Chairman Paul Carpenter, D-Cypress, defined "the ultimate issue " as "whether Caltran s ls now involved in a program whereby the builders and users of California highways are being punished for their choice of transportation modes." Carpenter repeatedly read to Ma . Gianturco a news paper article quoting her boss, Gov. .. -·-----·------------·. Or1nge Cout OAJL Y Pl~OTM'td"11d1y, January 13, 1982 H/F Al &dmWMS Brown Jr., aa al)'ial 1be had blocked urban f ....wa11. Carpenter l1 runntn1 for tbe Democratic nomlnaUon for the U.S. Senate, which Brown al.lo u aeektna. Ma . Glanturco readily admitted that ahe thinks maa1 transit la preferable in cities. "I don't believe the aoluUon to tranaportaUon problems In built-up urban areas la eight-lane freeways,'' 1be 1ald. But she denied accuaallona by Carpenter and other aenaton that s he has blocked any freeway~ by sta llln1 environmental impaet reporta, or had caused California lo lose any federaJ highway funds. And, pointing out tbal 91 percent of the CaJtrans budtet goes for highways, she said ahe "has never advocated a policy of Inconvenience or jeopardized public safety as a means of ·p~nlshment' for the people or this state who use the highway system." The controversy began last fall over a remote bridge on Highway 162 near Covelo. The existing 1923 bridge ls 20 feet wide with a 6·foot wooden add-0n for pedestrians and bicycles. It is being replaced for structuraJ reasons. Caltrans district engineers recommended it be made 40 feet wide, including 8-foot shoulders on each side for pedestrian and bicycle traffic. Other engineers and Caltrarus officials, including bicycle experts, said 32 feet, with 4 feel on each side, would l ........... UNDER FIRE Embattled state transportation chief Adriana Gianturco, right, answered a barrage of questions lobbed at her about her department by Sen. Paul Carpenter. 0 -Cypress, left, and other lawmakers during a $enate committee hearing Tuesday. be sufficient. Thirty·two feet is the stale minimum width and would be $50,000 cheaper. Mrs. Gianturco, who is not an engineer, made th e final decision -32 feel. Two top Caltrans engineers resigned in protest, although they were merely transferred to other Caltrans sections. Carpenter called the hearing, sayinJt the reduced width could subject the state to expensive lawsuits. Ms. Glanturco stressed lb.al she had .. never, in my opinioo, made a technical engineeril\I decision." , In making management decisions, s he said , she considers "not only the technical advice ol engineen, ~i also critical economic, social and environmental factots." E~ress yourself for lesson · d' Fri ~~·m E SM' te s. elllm p xpresse :., United's Friendship Express is off and rolling full steam ahead. So hop alx>cird for some of the lowest fares you'll find along the Coast. Right now, San Fran- cisco is as low as $36 on selected flights, $59 on all others. Portland and Seattle are as low as $99 on selected flights, $119 on all - others. And every day United's · Friendship Express takes off with 3 flights to Phoenix and Reno. There are no advance-purchase or length-of-stay restric- tions at all. And best of all, you won't just be fly- ing United for less, you11 be sitting pretty on the Friendship Express. Fares may change on January 2L 1982. For reservations, call your 'ftavel Agent. Or call United at 913-2121 Partners in Thlvel with Westin Hotels. 8: 15 a.m. 10·45a.m 2: IOp.m . 5:00p.m. 7:30 p.m. 9:00p.m. 10.43 a.m. • l· 13p.m. 4:35p.m. 7:25p.m. .9:55 p.m. 11:22p.m. •• HH11g1lts daily, ~ ' every hour from 1:00 a.m. ·to 7!()() p.m., plus 9!00 p.m. and 11:05 p.m. ~:,memend"'skiesofUOitat · • ,~,.-Call United:;~ ThMl ARent. .. ! , Fare Code VIK ~· H /I' Orange Coa1t DAILY PtL:OTftYednMday, January 1S, 1982 Granny buated for.. pot LA JOLLA (AP> - After police re»nd aa crop or 56 plant.a as hl1h aa 10 reel tall ln her backyard, a La Jolla 11randmotber ha s pleaded 11ullty to cultivating marlJl'.lana. The rald took place on Jane Hadden Seblmpff'a expensive ocean-view property Aue. 10. Jn her plea, the 55-year-old woman said s he understood she could be se nt e nce.d to a maximum three years in j ail. A probation bearing is set Feb. 9. li·. •THE " EARL'S ' l'\..._NO•Ml.AflHO ...., • ...,"••""'t : <t1 l•C 7l16~· \ ' ~f>fw<t' r~ ",.,.,, •f vex,, 00111• tCan St0t" NfJ.t,HI VO\# Atul . cosu .... 641-1289 ,.,..._..., lltl~ \'IC.,.495-040, I t.ac.-c-........ • II•• Dlo9e ,,.,., .. •• .. •• , I I • Turnyour unusables • into e usable e cash. Call e Daily Pilot e classified 642-5678. FOR CHEESE SALE l~.~.~.~~.~~ ................ 2 /2.29 ~·,~~ .. ·.·~.~ ................. 2/3.19 ~=d·:.;~ ........................... 2 /2.29 ~=~'"! .......................... 2/2.29 Goodttww~J4, ltlJ ff ickor1 farms FASHION ISLAN D 'iewport ~oth QI n H/fl WESTCLIFF PLAZA g:rc~ 171b and lrYtne, Nf'Wport BHth 642-0972 TWO INSURED PENSION' PLANS Roy Rogers & ... ONE JUST RIGHT FOR YOU Dale Evans Far west Savers FIXED IRA/KEOGH RATE* Rate Effectl•e 1-11-1912 Rate 1s effective for entire 18-month term. annual yleld current rate 15.540% 14.250% VARIABLE IRA/KEOGH RATE* .. Efhcti~• 1-2-1912 Rate 1s sub1ect to change on the first business day of each month for the 18-month term. · annu•I yleld current rate 14.607% 13.450% •r • fl It ,.., " I'~ 11'\ t \1.;0'\f;t I tt ' '#" IJ• .. t fll I • o\ Of J' IA .J tfl 0f•f'll tl".11 t" ~ ''""~' .,,,.,,. t , •. ,..,I' r J~{ l t ~ '°'' t• 1t tr '•'• I Now is the time to open your IRA/KEOGH Account for the 1982 tax year Stop 1n TODAY' Find out how you can get an 1mmed1ate $2,000 deduction on your Federal income tax and pay no Federal tax on your earnings until retirement, with an IRA Account If you are self-employed. look into a KEOGH Account With this special account you will be able to put as much as S 15,000 away annually for your retirement and pay no Federal Income Tax on this money until you retire. FAR WEST SAVINGS and Loanllssociatian HUNTINGTON BEACH 19114 Magnolia Ave. Huntington Beach, CA 92646 (714) 963-2900 NEWPORT BEACH 4001 MacArthur Blvd. Newport Beach, CA 92660 (714) 833-8383 . DANA POINT 24501 D~I Prado Dana Point, CA 92629 (714) 661-3356 e OPENING SOON e • L•guna Hilts • Hemet • Mlulon VleJo • . --... .....,,.,.....,... . Gay lih~ration statue to he offered 1·0 SF PIG SAN PRANCISCO <AP > -Ian ¥ranel1co, tbe clty known ror lta homosexual population, may be rl•st In tbe naUon to have a work of public art dedicated to the 1ay movement. Superviaor llarry Britt and rrtends of the late Supervlsor Harvey Mllk said they wtU ask the city to accept a $150,000 bronze sculpture entitled, "Gay Liberation," fer display In the Harvey Milk Plaza at Market and Castro streets. The work by sculpt.or George Segal portrays two women on a park bench lightly touching each other . Two men stand In front of the bench. One wears a small earring and has his • arm around the other man 's shoulder. N1m1rovek! 11ld they do DOt object to pl1cln1 1 sculpture with a 1ay theme In the plaza. "The statue will have to 10 through all the processes to get 1pproval u a work of public art," Feinstein said. ''If It's 1ood art and It's appropriate for public viewing, I wouldn't have any problems with It." N&merovs kl called the statue "terrific." ··As long as It looks good In the proposed location, J think it's fine," she said. Segal did the work for the Mildred Andre ws Fund, a private art foundation. A cast of the sculpture was to have been placed in Sheridan Square in New York's Greenwich Village. But the work was criticized by public officials opposed to the them e and by gay radicals for its failure lo depict ethnic minorities . ··I think the statue will be a wonderful tribute to Harvey, · said Scott Smith, Milk's business partner. former lover and executor of his estate. "It's a monumental work." 'OUT ••• AT OUR GREAT SPRING SALE .. SAVE 25o/o-50o/o-6 75°/o & MORE!'i) Special SS. -$10. -$20 racksf OP Sandals -25% off! Sale Jewelry -50% Off! & much more! NEW! 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Read Bob Greene on Page 82. $500,000 ill school · budget cuthaCkS detailed BY 8TSV& T&IPOU ii .. ...., ......... A reque1t to cut spendina by S500 ,000 i n tbe 1182-83 HuoUnaton Beach Union ffllb Scbool Dlatrlct bud1et was unveiled Tuesday by d11trlct Superintendent Dr. Frank J . Abbott. The request includes a plan to char1e fees to athletes. Chief among tbe proposals was a recommendaUon to cut 16.5 positions from the district Education Center for a · projec ted aavin1 of '310.000. Speciftc positions to be cul have not yet been. cletermined by Abbott. The superlntenden\'1 packaae also calla tor: -A cut of three man aaement/ confidential posltlons in the Education Center for a projected savina of $116,760. -Elimination of the athletic trainer program in tbe district for a projected saving of $100,000. -A reduced work year for all district mana1ement personnel except a select group by two weeks per position, for a projected savina or $55,000. The reduced work year would Supervisors aim for water plan By May, members of the Orange County Board of Supervisors expect lo have a better idea about the adequacy of future water supplies lo the county. Supervisors ordered analysts in the county 's Urban Monitoring and Analysis Cent.er Tuesday to prepare tbe first of three proposed reports on what they called a counlywide water plan. When the study is completed, officials should have enough information to coordinat e conservation and, if necessary rationing plans and have a Video game firlll seeks rule reversal Representatives of a ·video game arcade firm will ulr the Fountain Valley £1.annint Co mmi ssion tonight to reconsider its reluul to allow a P . J . Pizazz restaurant-arcade to be opened in a local shopping plaza. Clly planner Don Contraman sai d the co mpany , Sega Enterprises, wants lo present new information concerning the co.m bination pizza parlor and amuseme nt center . The company wants to open the business al 18030 Brookhurst St. During a Dec. 9 hearing, the com mission denied a permit to Sega after nearby business p eople and homeowners comp l ai n ed t h at the restaurant ·arc ade could promote c rime ·a nd traffic problems. Contrama n s aid tbe commission can set a new bearlog on tbe proposal, Instruct tbe planning staff to meet with the developer a nd concerned community members to seek a compromise proposal, or send the company's appeal to the City Council for its decision. The commission meets at 7: 30 p.m . in City Hall, 10200 Slater Ave. better understanding of bow to create a dependable water supply, according to the center's analysts. However, the supervisors' decision lo order that homework bas concerned leaders of some local waler districts. Dennis MacLain, general manager of the Municipal Water District of Orange County, told the supervisors Tuesday the districts could save the county tbe trouble. •' ln short,'' he said, •'there is not much more that can be done locally that is not already being done." MacLain said conservation and water reclamation programs already are being handled by the districts, and if rationing becomes needed, It probably will be coordinated by the Metropolitan Waler District. Thal district is the parent organization tbat oversees water distribution th~hout moat of Southern Ca.Ufornla. . M acLain suggested that the sup e rvi,ors might be more constructive by publlclting the need to construct the Peripheral Canal ln the Sacramento River Delta to increase supplies of water available to Southern California through the state waler project. In other matters Tuesday, county supervisors: -TRAUMA CENTERS: Approved a new evaluation of• the county's five·hospltal trauma system by the American College of Surgeons. -COAST GUAKD: Ratified a new one-year lease giving the U.S. Coast Guard rent-free use of pier a nd office space . .Jl county-owned facilLty al 1911 Bays ide Drive in Newport Beach, continuing an agreement begun in 1953. -ENERGY: Directed the county Administrative Office to examine the pote ntial of constructing in Huntington Beach a facility to convert refuse into forms of energy. (nvolve a reor1anbatioo amon1 tbe district's 17 assistant prlnclpala and would not lpply to the superintendent, assistant superintendents, principals, director of alternative education and six of the 17 assistants. Under tbe plan lbe 17 uslstants, or all of them who are Interested, would apply to the superintendent for new aas·ociate principal positions. Six of the group would be chosen and would then be considered heirs-apparent for principal posts at their schools. Their work years would not be cul. Abbott stressed that the six asaoclate principal• may not come from all six achoolJ. Each school in the district cul't"ellUy baa three a11i1tanl principal• except Ocean View Hilb School, which tiaa two. A fee for participation lo district-sponsored atbletica, projected to add S125,000 in revenues, alao wu propo1ed. Under the recommen.datlon students would be charted $25 each per year per sport to participate, with a maxlrpum charge of $50 per student and $75 per family per year. . A $25 annual fee for uniforms for all band partlclpanll, a1aln with the family maximum ot $75 per year, also wu propo1ed, but lt la to be used solely to NP&ace uniforms ii approved and lbua wotild not affect the bud•et- Abbotl projected a $1,089.229 surplus above tile projected tce.4 million lo expeodltur• IOI' the 1882-83 year, plus a $1.14 million aavtna from reductiom in penonnel caused by loa of atudent population, for a total surplus ol *2,229,229. He swd be is asking for the additional $500,000 in cuts, however, because "major SUA~LUS CHEESE -Huntington Beach volunteers Karl Cornell <left l and Mike Rodgers take a look at a five-pound package ..., ................. or processed cheese. Distribution or 3 ,000 pounds or the federal surplus cheese began Tuesday in Huntington Beach. Charity cheese spread Refrigeration sought as Huntington giveaway slow. The much-heralded federal cheese giveaway got off to a slow start in Huntington Beach Tuesday and volunteers worried that ·the supply might mold before it would be distributed. "We've got to find some place to refrigerate all this cheese or it's going to go bad," said Karl Cornell, chairman of a senior citizen committee distributing the cheese at the Senior Citizens Recreation Center at 17th and Orange streets. He was in the r ecreation center kitchen s t anding by slacks of five-pouifd packages of tbe federal surplus processed cheese. Distribution volunteers sat at a table idly taJking. "We have nearly 3,000 pounds of cheese here a nd only 80 people have showed up who were qualified lo receive it," be said al noon , three hours after distribution started. Only persons on Medi-Cal or receiving federal supplements to their-income are qualified for the cheese, Cornell said. Mike Rodgers, a board member or the city's Council OD Aging, says the city ls stricUy following the low-income rule and that some people were turned away Tuesday because they didn't qualify. unanticipated expenses, u well as coall lncurred tor any aa1ary and beneflt lncreues ne1otiatec1 ln the lmmed1ate future, and loss of revenue usoclated with a potential state abortfall (lo· reimbursement.a to the dhtrict) must be financed . . . by tbe difference between 1982-83 projected income and expenditures." Tbe cuts would ensure "that s uch expenses may be met w i tbout jeopardhin1 the (trustees') primary objective to assure academic opportunities," Abbott said. Mobile • zonmg approved A growing dispute between owners and tenants of a Newport Beach mobile home park boiled to tbe surface Monday when city council members approved the city's first mobile ·home park zone. The mobile home zone would give tenants protection against owners wishing to convert a park to a different use. An attorney representing owners of the De Anza Bayside Village, a mobile home park Jwit east of the Upper Newport Bay bridge, protested the zone and char&ed De Anza tenants have lobbied for its creation. ''This essentlally Is a request for the city to get involved in writing our contracts," su1gested Thomas Peckenpaugh, a Newport attorney. He said tenants al the park are currently embroiled in a dispute with owners over leases and rent hikes. Art Sullivan, a spokesman for the tenants, said Peckenpaugh bad painte d an inaccurate picture of tbe problems at tbe mobile home park. He said tenants need the added protection of a mobile home zone because they fear park owners hope to convert the park to a different use. De Anza leases the property along the upper bay from the Irvine Company. The lease runs through 3>13. Peckenpaugh pointed out tbat no tenant al De Anza has a lease running beyond 1986 and ·"we can't guarantee this wUI remain a park to 2013 -we can't see that far ahead." He didn't detaiJ any specific conversion plans. The mobile ho m e zone requires that owners of a park wishing to change use must come back to the city for permiss ion and mu st compensate dislocated tenants. Although lbe council approved creating tbe zone, the zone has not yet been applied to any of Newport's 13 mobile home parks. ~' -~ Huntington citizenry proves beautiful TOAST OF THE COAST: News reports recently have chronicled the great pride of many Huntington Beach citizens who have donated hard cash toward beautifying their city. It's worth notice along our entire coastline. What h ap - pened was that in Huntington , ther e was a proposal to create a bluffto p park that would overlook Bolsa . -~ ~\' Tll lllPlllltfi4 Chica State Beach. .,. and the sea beyond. This just happens to be a bluff sector that was blighted by old oil pipelines and assorted other machinery of the boomtown era in Huntington Beach when Oil Was King. . The idea would be to bury old pipelines still in use, clean up the blufftop and plant it with shrubs and lancscaping a la Heisler Park in Laguna Beach or the clifftop park at Corona del Mar .. There was only one real problem with the project. It's called money ~ · POMIBLY YOU'VE HEAllD of the problem yourself in reeent Umet. Current economic conditions considered. the 1tutf ttn't really jUst fioattq around in the slreet.I. Anyway, the call went out to Huntin1ton Beach cltluns w'hO would be wlllnl to ctonate money to create the p~. In the end, 900' reaklent1 and buaineues itonatecl more than A0,000. ArnAnoU, USA~ Inc .• the city's major oil producer, pledged to match all donations up to $25,000 and Sber·Westem, Inc., owner of the Five Points Shopping Center, kicked in another $25,000. By the time the dust settled, Huntingt-0n Beach's park fund stood at more than •1.000 and all the dust hasn't really settled yet. City officials report donations are still coming in. ML OF THIS REMINDS you that it wasn't too Iona ago that the federal 1ovemment commiuloned a couple of inland eabeads to wander up and down the coastline and rate various communities according to their beauty. The real purpose of this exercise. it was suspected. was to find a couple of ·•non-beautiful" places that could be scapegoats a nd offer an excuse for placing offshore oil drilling platforms at that location. When the beauty survey results came in. as you might expect. spots like Carmel. Laguna Beach and Newport Beach were given rather high m arks. Huntington Beach found itself on the low end or the beauty totem pole. In the view from this corner. such s ubjective foolishness was an outrage and an insult to the good citizens of Huntington Beach and the enormous efforts that have been put forth in recent years to improve the entire municipality. EVEN IF YOU JUST take the coastline proper. it's fctlly to attempt to assess the "beauty" of rocky shorelines with landfalls, such as you find in Carmel. Laguna or parts 'of Newport, and co~pare these areas to the grand, open sweeping sands that grace the Huntington Beach shoreline. Some people are turned on bf rocks. Others prefer the wide open spaces. Each has Its own brand of beauty. The real capper that points to the yahoo t,Mocy of these ~auty ratings, however. is that which la Hppentn1 in Huntingtdn Beach today. The civic pride of dOaatiDa thousands in hard-to-come-by cash shows lbe pride ~ community and what the clU1enry really feels in wantlnj to make their city a better place in which to Uve. So double-drats on wate!f-eyed survey teams from et.ewbere. And at foMbe 10iM1 cltbenry or Huntlnstan Beach, God bless them, every OM • I , - STOCKS IN THE SPOTUCHT D!J! J!~~~ ~~~~ ~ i • tor T~. J ... 12. 'STOCKS • lftd er:. :r., ~fa~~ ~ lO Tm lSl.52 J56.lll NU7 .,._ UJ u vu m .. m " 1ou.t tM.11-on U Sta Dl.61 iJS.D at• ltl.01-I tO ~I •.••••••••••••••.••••• S,2J7,«IO u~ ::::::~:i::::::::::: 1C u $411 ••••••••• ,......... ••• 1.1•.• WHAT STOCKS Diil Haw YOltl( CAP) J .... 12 ' WEONESOAY, Jen. 13, 1992 CLASSIFIED 06 Area baseball stars weren't overlooked in Major League baseball's winter draft. See D3. Aaron, Robins~n gain HaH of Fa1ne Home run king, slugger elected on first ballot by writers NEW YORK <AP> -SJuaen Henry Aaron, delayed by travel problems In Aaron, who bit more home runs than any Atlanta, was not on hand for the man In blalory, and Frank Robin.son, the announcement. only man named most valuable player in Robinson, baseball 'a rlrst black both teasues, today were voted Into the manager and now pilot of the San Hall of Fame by the Baseball Writers Francisco Giants, recalled the first time Association or America. he saw Aaron play. Both men were elected in their first year "He looked like a skinny kld, easy going, scouting report he would live a pitcher preparing to work againat a bitter like himself. "Don't try lo intimidate bim," be said. "Don't get bim upset. Give him your best stuff, but don't rlle him. Don't wake him up. He'll do whatever be hllS lo do to beat you, so stay on your toes.·• of eligibility, the 12th and 13th players unemotional, not flashy," said Robinson. · chosen on the first ballot. "That's the way be was as a youn1 player Robinson said that bis trade from ClnclnnaU to Baltimore when be was 30 years old bero~ the 1966 season was a turning point in his career. Aaron, who played most of bis career for and as an old player. It always seemed to the Braves ln Milwaukee and Atlanta, me I bad to work hard, and be made it received 406 voles of a possible 415, look so easy." missing by only nine of becoming the first Aaron ftnisbed his career with 755 home unanimous S'eleclion. Robinson, who runs, shattering the record or 714 set by p layed mostly for Cincinnati and Babe Ruth. Robinson bit 586 home runs. "I was hurt and angry," he said. "I believed I wasn't an old 30. It drove me. 1 knew l was still a good player." Baltimore, received 370 votes. To be "I tried to learn from everv player I ELECTED Hent"' Aa1·on 1 ted did t eded 7" t . ., .1 e ec , a can a e ne ., percen , or played against and with," Robinson saJd. That season, Robinson won the Am erican League Triple Crown, leading the league in batting, home runs and runs batted in, and winning his second MVP Award. He also was the MVP in 1961 with Cincinnati. SELECTED Frank Robinson. an MVP in both le agues. wu s named to has{.'balrs Hal I of Fame t oda~-. was named to baseball's 312 votes. ''Aaron was a wrist bitter. People say J Hall of Fame on the first Pitcher Juan Maricbal, who starred for bad quick wrists. J thought I had fairly ballot s ince he b ecame San Francisco, finished third with 305 qulckones." eligible. votes, seven short of election. Robinson was asked what kind of ~-=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ He's UCl's quarterback Rainer Wulf gladly accepts his role with Anteaters By JOHN SEVANO Of tlM Dally 11'1 ... S~" Before thP. start of the UC Irvine basketball season, forward Rainer Wulf carefully chartered his predictions on a UCI pocket schedule and placed it in his wallet. At the conclusion of the Anteaters' preseason. 12 games later, Wulf pulled that schedule back out. "l was only off by one," he said proudly Tuesday as the Anteaters prepared for the start of the PCAA Conference race. ''And , we're one game ahead of what l thought we would be." THE ANTEATERS ENTER their conference opener against Cal State Fullerton Thursday night (7:30) at Crawford-Hall with an 11·1 record. Wulf figured the Anteaters to be 10·2. "This is the greatest year I've ever had so far," said Wulf. "To be 11·1 at this stage of the season, I think that's awesome." Wulf is one of the primary reasons for UCl's success. Although his name doesn't prominently appear game after game at the top of the scorinll charts, it's his unselfish manner on the court that bas garnered the respect of his coach -and his teammates. ·'If people get off of him he can beat them with his outside shot,·· praised Coach Bill Mulligan, "and yet he's given up his shot a lot: he's sacrificed himself for the team." "Rainer is probably our steadiest player." UCIREPORT added Kevin Magee ... He knows his role isn't as a shooter and he's willing to sacrifice himself to get the'lball to the open man. "He's like a quarterback on our team. He stabilizes our defense and will do whatever it takes to win." Wulf is the team leader in assists with a 4.5 average, ranking him third in the conference. He also averages 8.6 points per game and is third on the squad -behind Magee and McDonaJd -in rebounding. Wulf is also one of those individuals who believe UC l's success the past two seasons is no fluke. "You have to remember that when most of us came here two years ago, we never knew bow bad thi ngs really were around here," he said in explaining UCl's poor s uccess al the Division I level. "When 1 knew we had the talent lo be as <See UCl'S Page DZ> Wilkes . defense gets 33 points RICHFIELD, Ohio <AP) -Los Angeles Lakers Coach Pat Riley told forward Jamaal Wilkes t.o concentrate on bis defense -so Wilkes went out and scored 33 points. "He's had some bad games offensively, but when you stress defense to him, the offense comes naturally,'' Riley said after Wilkes paced the Lakers to a 114-100 National Basketball Association victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers Tuesday night. The victory was the second in five games for Los Angeles, while Cleveland lost its seventh straight and the 14th in Its last 15 outings. "Coming off the New Year, there were a lot of parties, you know,'' Wilkes said. "It was just a matter or getting back to basics ... HOLD HIM BACK Montreal Can adiens· Doug Jarvis < 21 l holds back the Kings· Ma reel Dionne from getting a _rebound in -~~ rront of Montreal goalie Rick Wamsley Tues day ni gh t. To see how the Kings fared under new coach Don Perry. see Page D3. "l'VE NEVER R tALLY looked at him in any pa rticular role." admitted Randy Whieldon ... You have to be able to do a little bit of everything in this game and that's what Rainer does." Earvin "Magic" Johnson tossed in 25 points and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar added 20 for the Lakers, who improved to 26-10. The Cavaliers, whose cellar-dwelling record d'pped to 6-28, were hurt by the absence of center James Edwards, out because of a muscle problem in bis back. Sailors' Cochrane resigns It isn't that Wulf can 't put the ball in the bole. In fact, he's the fourth best shooter in the conference with a .592 percentage. But when you have the likes of Magee (. 706), Whieldon ( .652) and Ben McDonald (.619) on the court with you at the same time. the need for Wulf to shoot isn't that great. "With James in there, they probably would have been a lot better," Johnson said. "Their defense is hurting them a lot because they haven't played as a team that much." Head football coach steps down after three years ' The La.ken led just 85-81 entering the final quarter, after Cleveland's Kenny Carr scored 15 third-quarter points to help the Cavaliers reduce a 60 -51 halftime deficit. By ROGER CARLSON Ol llM DMttt ...... ,._.. Hank Cochrane bas resigned his po,sl as Newport Harbor High football coach following a three-year tour. "We're going to open up the spot within the Newport-Mesa District," says Athletic Director Bill Piuica. "Hopefully we'll settle it as soon as possible." Cochrane, a resident of Fountain Valley, bas been with Newport Harbor football since the Don Lent era or of the early 70s, and aleng with ex-Magnolia High teammate Larry Doyle, served as a right hand for Lent and Pizzica before taking the reins in 1979 after Pizzica stepped down. "lllQNI '°IT -Hank Cochrane baa resifned as Newport Harbor ootball cqach. do something lo hire teachers, to get coaches on staff." The honeymoon didn't last long. Cochrane's three-year record C6·21 ·3 > followed a nine-year span which produced a 62-31 record, including three Sunset League titles and back-to-back CIF Big Five Conference playoff berths. As for support, Cochrane says the community and boosters have been there when he needed them. "They were fantastic, always willing," said Cochrane. ·'They raised $15,000 for lockerrooms al school. Of course, a player like Wulf is a coach's dream. The 6·7 200 pound senior is the type of player who doesn't do anything great, but does everything well . "We originally recruited him as a sub," said Mulligan, "but ever since he's been In the lineup we've done well. .. He's really what college basketball represents. He's the real athlete/student-type you alw,ys hear about." But Mike McGee bit bis club's fU'St three baskets of the fourth quarter to put Los Angeles up 91-84. Another McGee basket with 6:29 to play gave Los Angeles a lOl-88 advantage, representing the Lakers' largest lead to that point. ln 1981 the Sailors went 1·9. During Cocbrane's three years the Sailors upset Edison ( l'M3) . in 1979 and defeated rival Corona del Mar twice. "Under the circumstances," says Cochrane, "I haven't been able to do the job the way it should be done." Asked if there was a way he could. he responded: "Yeah, I'd "But yeah, there was a lack of support. I feel that way. I think you assume. and maybe you shouldn't, that there wlll be a certain amount," said Cochrane, alluding to the administration and district. "Some people might think I'm crazy to leave now with the sophomores going 10·0 and the (See SAILORS, Page DZ) . Wulf openly admits bis role, and accepts ll without hesitation. "Sometimes tny role is not as a shooter, it's t.o get it inside," be said~ "lt's not like nobody notices what l do. I'd love to score 20 points every night. but if we were 8-4, well ... let's just say the bottom line Is winning. ··Everybody has their own category and that's why I look at assists. Al least that way I 'm contri buling and I'm ·doing s omething worthwhile." Wilkes then scored seven of Los An1eles' final 13 polnt.s to seal the triumph. Cleveland Coach Chuck Daly saJd the nasty weather that bas plaaued .the Midwest bu not helped bis struggling team. "You run into problems with snow at this time of year." Daly said. "The guys run into a ditch and can't make a practice. Al least now we're going on the road and we'll be together. Maybe we'll be able to gel some practice in." Carr led Cleveland with 21 points. Geoff Huston added 18, and Ron Brewer and Bobby • Wilkerson had 17 points each. Clout ·is preposterous for baseball commissioner Bullie Bavasi, a renowned dispenser of opinion, is asked if a baseball commlssloner Is really necessary. •·Someone ,•· 8 uzzle replies unhesitatingly, "bas to make the decisions.'' Research lndicatw:tbat the last lime Bowie Kuhn made a decision be was at lunch with National Lea1ue president Chub Feeney. The commissloper carefully contemplated tbe lobster thermldor versus the veal piccata and fettuccini AJfredo. A decision is now pendina on the part of a special t)aaeball blue ribbon com mission aa to whether Kuhn lhould be thrown out on his instrument of bHrlna. Kuhn would · be rfplated, accordln1 to those in f ayor, by a baaeball comml11loner wllb some diinttJ and clout. · l>llnlt.Y la not in the lUll out o1 the que1UDD~ Clout" pre~. Tbe comml1a&ooer of bulba11 ll lbe ownen• man, appomted &nd a.talned by lb• fl'ancbl.M proprliton. 11Mretore an)'tbAal ,.....bllnl ~ 9' eeht 1i a~unt. ' SPORTS COLUMNIST BUD TUCKER However, it ia pdssible to place a man in the czar's chair with an Iota or charm, wit and undentandin1 of public relaU~. The sporting public la such that 1t must be re1aled, at. least intrlaued. Thia can hardly be · accomplished by an Individual whoM likeness belonaa with the awincers on Mt. Rushmore. Thia is, of course, assur.ninl bueba.11 really needs a commJasloner. Tbe lnept qualltiea of BoW'le Kuhn were dramatised lut aumm• wheD the playen went on strike and bueb&ll endu~ ill darkest hour, Indeed ltl bleakelt 1ummer. No oae ~ tbe commlllioner ot bueball to atep ia and rHolve the laauea and anrt tbe tra1ed1. but Kutul ltlU baa not uttend a • word in regard to the strike. It is not out of the question the commissioner was under orders from the owners to keep bis mouth shut an~ bis opinion to himself. lf so, this would serve as further evidence that if baseball is to have a commlasloner, it should be one who at least can be \rUJled to be vlslb&e ln Umee« crisll. Without arrlvln1 at conclusions u to the brUllance and inte1rlty of Pele Roselle, it must be concluded tbat professional football does the beat Job of a 11 the games In dl1playin1 a c-om mlsaloner with a de1ree of charisma and a measute of ability lo fu.nctiob ln the public eye. Roselle la a bail fellov well met. He is a aul*'b 1ladbander. He bandl• tbe media wttb quite aome dui.it.J and I have never heard a re= ....,_t that tbe Nn. commlu ll-a liar od/or a boob. Roulle did DCJ1 nec ... arllJ ~-tM.' debate wt~ OattaM•1 Al Da~ ftital" lb• ... .a ..ru~ ..... "" .... a.Adlri •nd U•• 'NPL la Lo1-1 Ani,w ~fut • summer, but Pete did an excellent job considering the f~cts of the matter. For instance, Rozelle wu forced to ask the universe to believe that the 28 NFL franchises are a partnerabJp, •h•rinl equally in love and revenue. At the time the commluloner spoke, be was 30 miles down the freeway from an NFL operaUon which aklma Si& mllllon off luxury auitee at Anaheim Stadium and shares tb1s wtndlall with no one. In fact, the Loa An1ele1 Rama were reluctant to abate witb Oranae Count.J wblcb charaed noa-paymeat of aomethlnl like '850,000 lD certain taut. Roselle •r._ Q tn. profe11lonal football, 0whl~" tl• Nl'L owneu conaidereci desirable al the Ume ol Pete'• appolntm•t u whll WM ealW at the ti me the eomfromll• commJaaloner. Bowie Km II a la~ which la a qualification t ... id DffUW')' by the ··-ill ,. ..... liila; So be it, bul I wOUkl Ute Mb Ml It have the mu baniU.1 181 di_.. 1.Wement. -' Freshman redshirting OK'd HOUSTON (AP> -For about l~ minutes Tuesday, the co1chin1 r t.rte at lbe natJon's ml.for football c:olle1ea wel'e lncre&Hd from etcht to nine fuJl-tJme ualatanll. ----- Orange Coast O~LY PILOTM'ednelda~. January 13, 1982 •• llfCTITIO&tt llltt• .. ....... ...,I'.., ..... , Tiit ........ "' ~ .,. ••1111 .... _ .. : M.C .. 4 .. T'f '"00UCTIOHI, ut ,._,le<IM, 4"C No. w-.. C:.ta Meu, Celllerflle t11• "•111 "*'t Mt•IW'wc-tt, UJ 1".UlvlM, Alie Ne "*• Cat• Mete, c .. 11 .... 1 .... Tllo~t ... lrlO (Wfr&ll, IOJtl leflnr 4011111. Oer•111 Oravt, C&lllWftle ,.... Tiii• ...,..,.. .. II <-Cl•d llY • "flUel~. ,. .... H~ .... Tlllt ~ "'* 11 ... wllll ... CWlllY Clotnl of o ....... c-IY ell "tc'nTlci.lt w11a.1u MAMll ITAHMl•T Tiit lelf_I.,_ """' It .. 1111 llutlllHt•; ,1.0WllH & ..01.1.eCtAaLH. t.01 W..-Crttl, HUftll"tlOll let<ll, C.11"1111•-- 1•111 "•'"' ,..,, ... Y . ••ti Wooocr .. 1. H11Nt11111011 l1ec11, Ctlllvflle nMt . fllh 111n1 ..... ,, ~·-Ill' ... IMl•ltlWtl letll L.,.,.. l'tt"tl"" fllll ttM-1 *&.t lllW wllh IM C-ty Cltn Of OrMoa CO\llflly 1111 J•-1r11, 1tn DIC.em• I•, 1'11 .., ... .. ulllltllld OrMtit c-1 0.lly fJllOI, Pl1-Jiii\, IJ. IO, 27, l'M, ), UIJ ltH2 I ''*'"*' °' ..... c.tt 0.lfy fJllOI, Jell. 11, 10, ti, fie!!. a, ,, Ul.Q PIUl9Ta lllCTITiout auta•• .. MAllMI IT4'8MCNT ~ICTITici.#1 9VllNett NAMetT~TIW .. T T ... f ......... ..,.,_ ...... 1 ... ....,-··· llLeCT .... 0 .. UITlll. JlllO ..., ... , ltwltv•r•, , .... MeH , ....... "'-... . Vl•ll• C•r,. , • Ce111er1111 (tf'fer•flell, 11• .. _ ...... "'"· C:.11 ..... c:.lffot"'• ••» Tllla """""' I• ttw••i<-llY I ("-•tlOOI v~ow .... ,....,A VfettO.l"rftl9tnt Tiiie --11i. With n. c-111 Cltt\ et 0reft91 C:-ty 011 JeMM1r,•.1te Many achoola h ave been seekinl such an lncre'°" since they were Umited to el1ht full-time •11l1l.t.ntl by the NaUonaJ Co1Je1iate Athletic A11oclaUon'11978 convention. l PIU Illa .• .~~~~~~~~--- Tiit tollowl110 H fMfl 11 001110 ~··· COAJTCOMMUIUTY • .... tfATIMa•T ov••Tk•VIT 01 llLO .. Ml!NT COUAOI OltT•ICT .. ...,., •OTIC9 Of' ll'Ull.IC iAU NOTIC• It HlllflY GIVl!N IMI Oii Two..,., J.,._,.ry It. lta, et 11.00 a,m ti 1'°1 Alltlltfly Aw-. Ger"" OIOYI, Cellf«lllt, ffle 111\0tr """° wlll Mii el pulllk •..Ctl_, to 1"9 111"'41tl lllelder lw C•ll •I Ille time o4 , .... wltflout w.,rtllllh vf 1111•, '"""' 01 mer<ll•llllOllll'r, llflcl In •«trdtft<t wltll St<UOll "°' of lf\e Celllornle Cotnm erclll Code , tfld otller -ll<tllle l•w, ell Of Ille rltllt, tltlt BUT TBIUa WISHES were fulfilled for what turned out to be only a very brief tlme. The 1982 NCAA convention, which held iu business session Tuesday, was uked to reconsider and subsequently rejected the lncreue. lu ....... C'OUltf O' CA~l POtt •., cou....,... o,r "°'A ....... , CAM ieo. •-n1n CITATtON ,,....,,_,._ a... ... c..... IAaAHDONM•NT) <•L ADOPllOHI 111 Ill• Melter Of M41CEESH.I' D•l!NAE MATTHE'Wi, e 11'111'414', • ptf'Mll -........... dlcl•red , ... .,_, 1111 CwelelfY -<Alltrol et !let _ .. In other football action, the deleaates changed the earliest possible day for lasuin1 bowl bids from Nov. 15 to Nov. 19 and passed leaislaUon which would have permitted the red.shirting of freshmen without the loss of a year's eUgtbillty. And in a move that could have far-reaching effects in the future, they passed a rule permitting an athlete to transfer schools and remain eligible without having to sit out a year if his institution is placed on probation that would preclude his participation in postseason competition for the remainder of his elegibllity. T1 SYLV~tTER CA•• (llOUlble •ll•llG Nlwel fehr) WhenMloub .,..._.,. ..... ,.._ clelmlfll • IM "" fetllw er mt4llor Of Mk1 "''"°" ___, ...... ,..,.. The coaching staff legislation would have added a ninth fuJltime assistant, while eUminating part-time coaches except for two graduate assistants who would have bad to enroU in a graduate degree program and take at least so percent of a normal work load. 8y order Of 1111• Courl you ••• lltf'ff-; CllM -,941111,... IO ..,._., ... ,.,. '"' Jt1dt• ..... 1<11110 I~ O.pe11..-™· ,._.,. 7411 Of tllt tbotte 1nllllld co11rl, loceted el Crlml11el CtllrlS ••dt.·210 WUI T•m•le·U. ~ CellfMftlo t0011 Oii Ft..,,_., n, lt12 11 l ;OO a.m. Of IMI dey, ltll!l lfld ltle,.. lo-... ceuw, If •1111 ., ... M••. wlly $&Id PlftOfl "'°"'d llOC be dlclencl ,, .. '""" thl COlllrOI ot lier -•• oc:cordlng 10 thl llOlJllOll on Ille....,,,.,,, '•r ltllwt I• ..,,.,,., you mey • jleeffteO 9llllt\' of e Ctfll""'llC of COUl't. Yow ••• hlrtOy 11ollll1d ol 1111 .,rov11i-Of CMI C.-t».5 wlllcll .,rovldt lfl9 1""9t ..... II adVIM the f\11--tfle ~. II -t. .t t11o rtollt to ...,.. counwt _..,,1, TM Tbe legislation was passed in Division l·A by 68-66 and rejected in Division l·AA by a show of bands. Part-time coaches currently are listed in a variety of outside jobs, both oo and off campus, but the jobs. are mere'y cover.ups and they are, in effect, full-time coaches. cour1m..,.~l~to·--· IM ml11or _..,. °' fltC ... minor It 1111• to .,..,. ~•. eM If u.y ere \lllebtt IO....,,,c;_I, SIWll ........ NI c-wl to,..,_. Ille ,..,_b, Tiie ~ Iii. "'"Ill la tor Ille "ANYBODY WHO DOESN'T think that's going on only has to check around," said Joe Paterno, head coach and athletic director at Penn State. "The intent of the legislation was to give coaching staffs enough full·Ume people to do a good job and to eJlminate abuses. There are guys who have been on coaching staffs for 20 years and all of a sudden they'r e listed as part-time coaches." ... ._., f,..1119 ... -lee• <11110 '°' llf•cetntflt tor .... loll. D•lld: ~IS. 1•1 J otln J. corcore11, Count .... Clertc • y It. I( wntpo, °-"" ,,_ "· Urm., c-... C:-1 Marti• e. •Mil•, ~Y c_, c:-M•C ......... I~•--. uew.T..,....st. ........... c .... ., ,,.,.., However, shortly after passage, the convention was asked to reronsider by R.J. Snow, faculty representatieve at the University of Utah. The motion to reconsider passed 70-68 and the subsequent vote wiped out the ninth full-time assistant coach 71·64. • ......,.._c-.,o1 ._......,....o...,_ ., ...... Publlllltd 0.-Coell Delly Piiot O.c. U , 30 '"'·Jen.•. ll, 1"2 S~l Sell! SeU! SelJ! And tel c lassified help. Call 642-7667 DEATH llTICll MOSES ARCHJE OLEN MOSES, resident of Balboa, Ca. Passed away on Sunday, January tO, 1982 al Hoag Memorial Hospital. Mr. M oses had b ee n a self ·employed barber for more than 50 years. He was a member of B.P.O.E Elks Lodge #1767. Newport Beach, Ca. Beloved husband o( Lois Moses. beloved father or Wayne Moses and Linda Moses and Clinton and Earlene Moses both of Balboa, Ca .. also surviving are a brother Virl Moses or Arizona, 2 sisters. Helen Miller of Texas and Georgia Crowley of Whittier. Ca. and 4 grandchildren. Friends may call at Pierce Brothers Bell Broadway Mortuar y from 12:00 noon lo 9:00PM on Wednesday, January 13. 1982 where funeral services will be cond ucted on Thursday.' January 14, 1982 at IO :OOAM with Pastor Tony Curto of Plymouth Congregational Church ofCiciating. Interment will be i n Pomona Cemetery, Pomona, Ca In li eu of flowers the family requests donations be made to the Pulmonary Unit or Oncology Unit at Hoag .Memorial Hospital, 301 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach, Ca. 92663. Pierce Brothers Bell Broadway Mortua r y directors. 642-9150. FOSTER ALLEN A. FOSTER, JR .. a prominent Newport Beach buslnesman, age 68, a 16· year resident or Newport Beach. Ca .. passed away on Services under thtt direction of Harbor Lawn-Mount Ohve Mortuary or Costa Mesa 540·5554. SMITH CARRI E B S MIT H , resident or Santa Ana. Ca. January 11, 1982 of a heart attack. Mr Foster was the owner and pioneer or 2 hi gh l y success ful bu s in esses . Allen-tel Products or Santa Ana. Ca , supplie r of Telecommunications equipment on a domestic Passed away o~ January 10, and international scale 1982 Survived by 2 Included in products h~ daughters Beth Griffiths of tnnovat.ed and designed are Ana~e1m . Ca a nd Sue armored cables as used on RaH1lt of F'londa, I son pay station telephones. used Lloyd K. Smith or. Santa and seen in our everyday Ana , Ca . I sister Fern l'f nd I Green of Oreg o n , 6 1 e: a te ephone ~eadsets. g r a n d ch 11 d re d 8 which are seen in many n . an athletic contests. He also great-grand c hildren founded and developed Ser vices will be held on American Kleaner, Inc., of Thur~day, January. ~4. 1.982 p i c 0 R i v e r a . c 8 • at 11 OOA~ at Pac1f1c View manufacturers or mdustnal Chapel with Rev Bruce steam cleaning equipment K u r r I e of r • c •.a t • n g . used by private. government lnurnm.ent Pac1r1c V1e_w and military establishments M.emoraal Park Pac1f1c on an international scale View ~ortuary • Newport Mr Foster was born In Beach directors Marshall, Texas. and was STRONG f o rmerly a Pasadena DECIA STRONG, resident res i dent . al tend Ing of Costa Mesa. Ca Passed Pasadena City College He away on January II, 1982 at was a member of the Shark the age of 69 Beloved I s I an d Yach t CI u b . mother of Marie Moody of U.S.I T.A .. C.l.TA .andlheCosta Mesa. Ca . and C.E .M.A. Association He is LaVerne Strong of Santa survived by his wife Wilma Ana. Ca .. also survived by 2 of Newport Beach, Ca .. sisters, Cynthia Falt?S of daughters Nancy Kiger of Battle Creek. Michigan and Newport Beach, Ca and Glenna Rose of Coldwater, Betty Boyce of Costa Mesa, Mi chigan, 2 brothers, Liston Ca .. sons Norman Fosler or Church and DeWitt Church Hacienda Heights, Ca and both of Battle C r eek, Garey Foster of Silverton, M i c h i g a n a n d 7 Oregon, 10 gTandch1ldren grandchildren Funeral and 1 grut-grandchild. also ser vices will be held on a brother Tom Foster or San Friday, January 15, 1982 at Bernardino. Ca. and a s ister 2:00PM at Pierce Brothers Beulahbel Newhous e of Bell Broadway Chapel with Solana Beach, Ca. Memorial Rev Douglas M. McKenzie services will be held at of Harbor C hristia n Harbor Lawn Chapel at Fellowship 0U1ciat1n g . ------------.2:00PM on Friday, January Interment al Rose Hills McCObllal MOITUAlllS Laguna Beach 494·9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495·t776 "4UOa U.WK-MT. OUVI Mortuary • Cerretery Crema1ory 1625 Gosier Ave Costa Mesa 540-5554 ,_ClllOTHIH 1&.L llOADWAT MOITUAU 110 Broadway Costa ~es1 642·9t50 IALTll••ao .. SMITM a TVTHeU WHTC&.W CHAPIL 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 846-9371 15, 1982. ln lieu or fl owers Memorial Park. Whittier, the family requests Ca. Friends may call at th contributions be made to the mortuary on Thursday, American Cancer Society or January 14 , 1982 from the American Heart Fund. 4:00PM to 9:00PM. Piere Brothers Bell Broadway · N-e-!nhm..,.-.e_So_c_le-t'""y~Mortuary directors 642·9150 cu'Mlno;-...au•1•L •l su 646-7431 J·our literfture 1errs tn•1 DEATHS complete story ot our IOC~~. ' ' ~"""~~--f'"_·~_.::., .. _,. 1 ELSEWHERE Flowers sha.vho.v much)OU care. Slntt.1910 TOKYO <AP ) -Hakuoh Mauumoto, 71, a leadinf actor In the Japanese traditional Kabuki theater who wa.s best known for bis role aa Oishi Vuranoeuke ln "Kanade Chushingura." a play known to Westernera 1 as "The 11 Ronin." died Tuetday. CLEVELAND !AP> - Newtoa Diehl Jt.aker IU, 74, bualneu execuUve a nd aoo of World War J Secretary of War Newton D. Baker. died Saturday. MONTPl!:LJER, Vt. (A.Pl -Ste.ft 0.~llUd, 38. fo•nder of International In• and C\lrrency whlcb markets coin• and colletwbla, died Tuesday. EA81'80URNE EntJaftd <AP> -8r1tlab MIJ. Oen. &r • eci-1 11, who •H cblaf lnt..e1h1ence ittT' '° Oen. Owllht o. Shenllowar In the Umac'l.lcJ•&n of World War II, ell Mondaf. TM lelltWlft9 DIUOfll tre '°""t COMPANY •1 0.-r 1)11,,. • 14 lllOTlCI 01' ....... lluMNM .. : N-JllO" .Mc11 C.OfWflle~ 0, .... IONAL .. ROfJl•T~ p & w TIV10INO,,.. ~ Mltwl JOhfl c . .: .. , .... :tou K ••• ,,,.. TONIOMllT 1100•• =· W.. W . N.....,n leecll, CA Drive, G«0111 del Mer, Cotlltr11l1 NOTICI! IS HEAIUY GIVEN 1NI f'IUS tt0•..itttc1 bldl wlll ~ re<tl....cl '°' llAUl.INI L. •UTCH•"· ... Tiii• bwtlllna I• <-Itel Dy ....... to the lllgl!HI t>IOm•l•I ot 1111 Allel-• ...._ lalWld, CA 92662. INlttkl..., fOllOwtno \!Md equ1-1 w111ec11 "" L. _. .. II! '°ROI. 11 ~ -C .... lry b .. n OtclereO lly Ille IOl•O ol O.w,l"""'°,(AfttU. l11i. Mt-w• flltd wltll ... Tru'I"' lo be _.pf.,. lo Ille COHI Tllll 111u.i,..._ ll COllO..cte41 by 1 COllflty C .. rk Of Or.,..a County Oii Community Coll19• Olllrlcl· UI ...... , ~. December,., ,.., s A ' L B 0 • T s & s A I L I " G ......IML8'*"9r ,.,,._ EQUIPMfNT, ELEC Tlt lCAL c!~~" ~=-.:: ~~..::. .... c::., ': l"vOlltntdOfOftOICoetl Oelly Piiot, EQUIPMENT, ANO ASSORTfO -11\ltr'ftt of 0 H ' A ln....,lrtft, Dec Jt 1_, Dec.90.1''1,J-6,U,20,1"2.S5'U1 ITEMS MN.I07•7 ' • ' l'tnot Stle lllcK wlll be --9ftd -41<ty -II' •T1C£ , .. 0 ti-IOt Mf' ... llO ll""l I\ NOTICE OF DEATH OF '""4>1111NO Ol'Met CoeM Delly "'lltl. r-.... lllleci °" 111e ""_..., form et 1·ao Int., t lllO Oolng -ltWH H H & W Cll•"llC ll OtblO• u"d•• Ill• blf-·Oet<rlbeO M<llrllY agr..,..e11t, "'4 ltt ~ -<KilOl'll. H lft'f, In 111d 10 Ill• mecllfnery •~Cl ~wl.,..,onl cltKrll»cl In wld aocurll\o "''"monc Said P'-r1y llelllO "'Id co111lllulH coll•l••tl ullcler 11111 ur1tl11 wcurlly 19r"m"'1 ontllled "Loen and $ecurlly Ao••tment," Oiied J ...... ,., n. '"' bv 0 H A A '"<IU•lrltt, Inc ..... dolftO IMIMMU., H & w c ...... 1u1,., "8or•-•r'' -Oe111or, 111d Ill• undtr•lonao u "l..tneler" -S«urtd PM1y ICJGtlllet wllll env rlcltrl, mOC11lk•llon ono •mtlldmenu lllereto •lld Olller •Orttmtnls wll l<" mey bt In n lltence. Oec. », Hl l, J.,., 6, U, 20, ltt2 tt11•1 pm . F1101y, Mtrcn S, ltet 111 llle JOHN o. PRINCE ANO "'ICTITIOUS IUSINISS O"l•l<I AOrnifllllrellOfl 8ulldl .... IS70 0 F PETIT I 0 N T 0 "AMESTATEMINT AU ml Ave1111 1, Co•I• M•u. ADMINISTER ESTATE -"" ·-r111 followl"O P••so• fl dolno Colltor"'•· All bids mvi1.,. oellvertd No A ,11 .... 5 r-1-blalMu•• tolll•offl<eof.,,.Pvrcllttlno A~"'" • • -• IA) JOLLY KNIG .. T PARK 181 U>etbow-•eHprl0<IOthell..,.MI T 0 a I I h e I r S , "CTITIOUSIUllNaSS MIKE MAMELLI INVESTMENTS, tor Ille -nlr>Q to lie ollglblt 10< beneficiaries. creditors NAMaSTAHMe .. T .,,, Ber11n<• P.,, ... , 1rv1ne, con>tc1ere11on. a nd CO ti t dlt f Tiie lollo•lno ponon i. oolno Ctlltornlo'771• Propoul form• •nO compl tl• n ngen ere OrS 0 !Mlsl~tti; Miile Mtmelll, 4111 Btrrenct lmlru<tiom mey M OCllllllOCI t i lf\e J 0 h n 0 • pr in Ce and UNIVERSAL AUTO BODY & Perll.woy, lrvlne, C..lllO<nte•77t• Pur<nutno Oepert,,_I 011r. Ol•lr9'1 persons WhO may be PAINT, U34 NewPorl 80uleverd, TM' bullt>Kl ll <ondU<ltd by tn ti Ille tbo .. odd•tH For .odltlonel otherwise Interested In the ,Co.t.Meu,Cellfomltf»77 lndlvlOu&I l ntorme tlon o• lnu.cllon i 11 I Mlcll .. 1 Otttld Ghertrdl, 24 ll! Mill.I Mt ..... 11 •POOl,.lmenl, CAii GleM A l'•rmtr OATEOO.Ctmbtr2t, 1'e1 N"'TIONAL ACC EPTANCE COMPANY W and Or estate ; Narodlno Av-, P9rrl•. Ctlllorrol• Tlllt •i.1-1 woH llltcl wllh Ille C1UI H6·S7S.0 A petition has been filed tu10 Counly c1er11. ot OrenQP County on Bid• mull 11e M:<ompenled llY 1 by Jack Prince fn the Tlllt buMneu It <°"°u<lld by 1W1 Jt nuery 11, 1"2 ,., ... 11 CEllTIFIEO, CASHIER'S CHECK Olt Superior Court of Oranoe lncllvlcl ... I f>ullllW.O Or~ COHI D•llY Pilot, PERSONAL CHECK m-PIY•blt 10 OF CALIFORNIA h V<XK, NEWMAN. GR"ll.A 'KAltP Mi<l\etf D•YIO Gllererdl Jt n ll, 10. 27, Fee. l, 1'91_ 211 11 , ... Coetl Community Coll-Olstrkl, County requesting that Thll •t•-· •• lllld wlll\ Ille orCHll,lnen1moun1 no1es1 llltn lO,. Jac k Prince be appointed Co•mty c1er11. of Orenoe couro1, .,,. NU •11C( OI 1111 toltl 111c1 ,..,_.., <lll<k• .,. A Proteulonel Coroor•llon By CHRISTINE S UPTC>fol I b AutllOrlreo A9f'll• I t t I De<emllor 21, "" o<<ePt.bl• uo 10 ttw .,._I Of tlS oo as persona represen a ve .,.,.,. 0.t>OJll• of wcceutu• blCIOllrc11 w111 •no Atlott'tys to administer the estate of Publl•MO Orlfl90 coest 0,11, Piiot, l'ICTtnous 1u111tns 11e •111>lltc110111e purc111u P'I<• °'"'' John 0 . Prince (under the o.c. u . ». ""· Jtn •. u, 1t12s4fl.e1 "AMEJTATllMINT depo•ll <h•ckSlor ... 11 '"'" b• Publl-Orf119e Cotlt D•ll• Piiot. JI" IJ, 1982 1*"2 I n d e p e n d e n t The lollowl"O Pl••on •• dotno rtlur...O .,,., -&otro of Tr.nl .. ' Administration Of Estates bu•ln"" •\ t<ttPllllCe OI high l>tOUI !"l'ICI> wlll PlllUC •11CE WOllO FUSION SECRETARIAi.. lleonMorch2•, 1"2. Act). The petition IS set for PlllJC llT1C( SERVICE, l02 VklO<I•. :I03 8, COiie All ••-Of <ert--remov11 hearing In Dept. No. 3 al Mo•, c1111om1e .,.,. .,, 111• ,._lbjlfl'f o1 """""H~UJ Nw...u 700 Cl I C 0 I Joyce Fumiko Hoh .. ,, J02 6% Hin 11• wlll lie •-d lo ell .. OTICEOl'TRUSTIE'SSALE v C enter r ve , "OTICE OI' 1NTINTIOff v1c1orl•, :I03·B. COii• Mesi. c11110<nl• •mounll ...i-.. 110 ,.., .. , ..... I•• lfO, l'-11m West, In the City of Santa TOINOAGE tN .,.,, """" c...ooc:c-1 .. 11td °" Fet>ruar. 1, 1t12 ... 10.00 1.m . A n a , Ca I I for n i a o n THE SALE o, Thi• """"""' I• c°"°ucte<t by '" All P<-1Y 1111t<1 ,.,.;11 •• ottereo 1mperl11 COtPOt•llor> 01 Amerlce ... F b 3 1982 t 9 30 ALCOHOLIC IEVIRAOES IMlvldual tor Hie "ll It, Wl\lre I•,'' _.,O wolhout duly •PPO•"le<I Tru\t .. under eno e ruary • a ; 12·1H1 .Joyct F Holwey ttcourw •0tfnsl ll'ot Ol•lrlcl T~t llU"uenl lo OeeCI Of Trilli rt<oro.G a .m . To Wl'lofnllMty COllCtrn Tlllt •lllln-1 .,._.Ille<! wllh tlle Olslrlcl m•••s no ow•ranlee, June 20. 1'71. H Instr No JJ1'S, IF YOU OBJECT to the Subj.ct 10 l•wtnt:t ot 1111 11un .. County Cltrll of Oran99 County on w1 rrenty, or repr .. tn111 lon, book 122so. P•oP 120, ol Olflcfel grant Ing of the pet it Ion, •DPlleo '°'. notice h hertt>y 01.,.., ""' J•nu••Y 11, 1992 npr .. ..ci °" llTll)lled, with tt91rd 10 Reco•O•. oecu11<1 by Rusw• c a Ille unde,.lgneo propoH• 10 u11 .. , ... , condlllor> of P'0"9•1Y or fitness ot ICerlen -J.,,IS K K••len, 11 ... ......, YOU Should either appear llCollOll( -•191l •I ti. P<tml .. 1, Publls...., 0r"'911 Co .. I Otlly Piiot. P<-ly IO< .... UM Or C>UrPo ... No tnd wile, ti lrvston, f" !he office o1 at the hearing and State deK•l-.. IOllOW\ Jen 1l, 20, 27. Fell J, 1'82 210.tl Cl•lm .,.1111» ConllOtrtO tor ollOw .. lU Ille County Recorder of Oronoe your Objections or Ille MAU, Yu·Ter. 2tl0 Weil Coo t or•dfuSlmtnt0tr1tKln lonolllleWlt County, Slllt Of Ct lllornlt. Wll..L •tt j · I Hlghwo y,Newport8ocll,C.lll0<nl• MJC M0Tll'c be..O Oii ltll11re Of ti. pr-rty to SELL AT PUBLIC •UCTION TO Wrt en Ob ect10nS W th the Pursu•"1 10 \UCh lnltnllon, Ille lllK completelyWllsty lt'oePUr<.lltH•lnt ll HIGHEST BtOOER FOA CASH COUrt before the hearing. U"dlrllgned ll 1pplyl110 to fl\t N~tlJN rup1Cls. No relurns •llowod. Tiie IPIYtblt at Um. of .. le In lowlul Your appearance may be Oepertment ol Alcollollc Btvtr•o• l'ICTITIOUS IUSINISS 01\lr lct $1\111 not I» ••-•Ible tor money Of ti. Unlltd Stein > ti Ille in person o r by your Cor>trol '°' l•w.11<• ot '" •lcO'>Oll< NAMESTATEME"T •ny e<.cldefll 0t lnlury rewltlr>0 1rorn Nor111 front tnlrence ot '"' Covnly bevere99 llctnw for Ille .. premlM• •• C>Ur<ll•.,. of prooerty °" Wle. Courlllou.,., 100 Civic Ctntu Drive attorney. IOll-s bu~l~:s;:~•.owlng penon of dolnO Ptymenl fn lull mUll Mm* within w .. 1, Stnlt Ano. C.lll0<llla ell right, I F y 0 U A R E A "ot'· ON SALE SEER & WINE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT l•n etltndtr dtyi tller "ollce ot lllle tnll l-r .. 1-,..i lo"'° 110W C R E 0 I T 0 R 0 , a IPU B EAT Pl) twtrcl, •nd Ille llemltl mull llt MIO by It -MIO 0..0 of Truu Ill ' Publlllltcl Or-Colll Otlly Pllol, SE It VICES, m S Tu•Un Avt"ut. rtl'llOved fTOm file Olllrkl lt<lllly 11 Ille pr-r1Y \lluattd on .. 10 County Contingent Creditor O( the J1111 U , 10, 11, 1"2 ,..,_.,, Ollr>Qt, C.lttornlo•2-tome of lull Ptyment . OtPolll ot •nd Slote dlttc:r11»d es deceased, you must Ille A,..:.T~~it~~·~~Ro0ert une, 1ucce u1 u1 111oh blooorts> mo .,. ,.A•cEL 1 your claim with the court T 1 '""11" 10 CIUfCM.w p•k• Ha.ever Unit No •. "-.. .,,., ~,,,_ t · t t th .... II' __.[ lndl~l~u~~· h '°"°ut:le<I 11' •n d-11 Of wccesstul llfQll 111-r(I) In Ille c..-...1111um Pl.,, re<ordeO on Or presen I 0 e r•-"9111. W•rrtnF Btll Will be considered for ltlltd It Oclober 6. 191•. In -t1•r., -personal representative Tiiis t!ettmenl WH llltCI wllro ll'oe melorlolll> •w•r-erenolremo.,.d 1 ... 0IOtfkltlRt<orchot .. iOCounty, appointed by the court l'ICTITIOUSIUSl .. ESS Coullty Cltrll. Of Ortr>Qt Co•mly °"from Dlll•l<1 prwml•• wl1'll11 lime onlf\eCltYoflrvl,,., Ith• f th f .. _I STATEMa T Oecembtr Jl, 1'1! llmlU W»Cllltd OlllrlCI ,..,.,., .. Ille PARCEL 1 W in our mon S r om .. 119111 lo te·ldver11 .. meterl•H•> tor An uncllvl-on. lwenly·tlllro (till) the date of first Issuance T "" 10110•1"0 PHson 11 ooino "1 ... 1 wl• or w11 to nu1 hlQll l>iclOt•Ol 1n1 .... 1 ~ • _, 1n common '" 111e . • llulll\9l\" PUl>llS/lld °'"""' c ..... O•llv Pllol, Of letters as prOVtded in ALLPORT IMPORTS NEWPORT Jtn 1l. 20. 27, FM> l, l'82 ?JI ll7 Tiii• notice IS on 1<<0<cltnc:e wllll '" lflltr"KI 111 -lo Ille Commo11 Section 700 of the Probate BEACH, 2U• Unl ... ••lh Drive, _.,. llft'nl'.£ ~~:::;-,,,•~:;,:~~~~~'°" 01 1"' ~;:: ~',.L:.:,..of J:i':'~:,",f9;0m::, Code of California. The ~·•t>Ofl8eocll,C•lllO<ftltt1MO. ....._ '''"lllo /t./NOfllMANE WATSON lnclulln, ol MIM:elleneow• M•Pl . time for filing Claims Will Slutrl E Gremwtll, ?SH S.Cretery,BoorOolTrUlleH r.cordlOIWIOCountv.euu<llterm l• not expire prior to four Uc:1"111"10'rn"l111!,.2!1ve, NtWPort Buell, P'ICTITIOUSIUSINISS CoHI Cornrnunlly Cott eoo defined '" lhe "'rll<lt tnlllltd ,._. NAME STATEMENT Olllrlcl "Oellnlllont" Of tJ>e De<l•rtOor> ol months from the date Of Tllli bu<lflft• I• Conclu(led by tn Tiie tollowtno penon ll dolnQ Pullllstltd 0rMMJt Cotst Otlly Pllol, Covtftt,.ll, Co,.dlllo"' t nd the hearing noticed above. ncllwldual !Mlllnessts J•nuery IJ~ 10, t'lll2 14U7 ltn1t1Clions rtcllrOld °" 0<10bt• 6. YOU MAY EXAMINE Tiiis st•~=1£.,~~:;11..,.11h ,,,. INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT ~:~,!~ :='!o~'!;'~f:i·~:!'t~ the file kepi by the court. ounl .... Cl•rtc ol 0••"90 County on ~~~::.:;~1:::.·~~:=~i.~ llO, rutue NOTICE "De<ltrtloon' I. If you are Interes ted in the •nuw1112. ,,., GI"" J P•-. ,_, Mt•tume E•cept1no 111tr•t•om •II oh. 011 esta te, you may flle a 1'1•'74 ~~~!· Hunllnqton Bet<ll, Cllllornfa C .... lZHJ -j •IQhU, mllltr•li, ml,.ertl rlgllh, Pullllshocl Ort-Co .. 1 O•lly Pllol, ,,_ TS.No 11·*' JL nelurtl Ott rlgllll, tnd Ollltr request with the court to •n 1.i. 20, 21. FM> 1, 1w.i ,u..1 Thh '''"""u " conc1ue1e0 by •n REF 21..,5._._ hydr•<•rbonl bv ..,..,"",.., ,.,,.,. receive special notice of 1noMdua• T 11 us To Rs Jo s E PH c •11own. 990111erm11 ll .. m, •rod •II the inventory of estate -"" •nc£ GlenJ.Pl-r AR ENSOOltF ANO LINOA c. P•OdUClt derived trom •n• OI Ille nlaA Tiii• •111..,_1 "'" Ille<! wllll Ille AAENSOORF loreool"O. 11\11 mt'f llt wlllll" °' _, assets and of the petlt ions, c..,,.111 ci .... 11. °' °"""" C•rnttl• on .. oTICE 0 ., TAUSTEE'S SALE '"• per<•• 01 ''"d 11ue111e11ove accounts and reports J1nwrv11 ,,., on FRtOAY JANUAltYtt ,,.,,,,e1ucrt btd,1aotthffwt111111e,..,.,..1 ... 1 described In Section 1200.S NOTICE OF DEATH OF . 1'1-•:IS A.M. LOS ANGELES TITLE ANO rlolll of Clrllllng, mining, Hplorlno. of the California Probate J E S S E T H 0 M A S Pu1111-OrMOt Cot•t 0111y P11o1 TRUST OEED COMPANY .. ou111 •ncl -r•ltno ,,,._•no t1orlr>0 1 .. Code. CA l LA WA y AND 0 F J111 IJ, 10, 27, Fett. J. 1'1112 . 101.f1' eopol111td Trust""''""' 1no C>Urwonl eno re..-lno Ille,,..... lrom w1c1 11no to Deed ot rrvs1 r..:cwded Merci\ 11 °" eny otl'er 1-. l11eludlr>g Ille rlQlot Th 01 p e, s u 11 iv a*', Workman & Thorpe, Attorneys at Law, 4th Floor, 800 Wllshlre Blvd., Los Angeles, Ca. 90017; tel: ( 213) 680-9'4C P E T I T I 0 N T 0 -II'__.£ l91C,l, es lnll. No. J7t14, 1,. -1us.'. lo whlpstOGk 0t dlre<ll.,.,.lly d<lll -ADMINISTER ESTATE nJ-nu1111o -2M, ot 0tt1e111 1t«0<cn '" 1 mine trom '°"°' 0111•• 1111n 111ose NO. A·111l3'. o I f I<• o 1 1 11 e c 0 u n 1 y ll"eln•bove 0.Krlbed, oll. or ou NOTICE OF DEATH OF Rt<Ordu of Or t nQ e Coun ly ..... ., l....,.ls -"""' lnlo, lhrou(lll T 0 a I I h e i r S , -tlllornla WILL SELL AT PUBLIC Pt' tcrou ,,,. lubturloce ol ,,_ ltnd beneficiar ies, creditor s P A U L E D W A R D .l'UCTION TO HIGHEST B•DOER her•ln111o .. c1n<r1bfocl. •no 1011011orn and contingent creditors of WA l K E R A N O O F FOR CASH tpey1111e 1111me 01 ... 1e 1n •wc11 •"'P•tooeo 01 01rec1oo"•"v Jesse Thomas Callaway p E T I T I 0 N T O lowlul money of Ille un11t0 StalHI drllleo -"· lunnell and $1\tlb u..-MONI ES MUST BE TENDEltED IN Ind benettll Of' l»'fOl\cl ltw Hl.,.ior and persons who may be ADMINISTER ESTATE CASH. CASHIERS CHECKS OR 11m11s.,..f!Ol.-1ore<1<111,re1,._1, PullllllltclOr-Coell 0.11, Piiot otherwise interested in lhe NO. A11t746. CERTIFIED CHE CKS AT THE equip, mtlnlll,., ·-'" .,,,_n Ind JMI 12.t>.lt.ltn ,_, wlll and/or estate ·. T 0 .a'· I h e I.r s . FRONT ENTRANCE TO THE OLD optrel• •nv •well ....... ot mlnu ORANGE COUNTY COURTHOUSE, wHhoul, -.. , the rlOlot lo drlll, A petition has been filed beneflc1.ar1es. c r editors ~OCATED ~SANTA ANA BLVO , m111e. •lore, up•o•t •nd o~r11e • by Bank 0 f America and contingent creditors of BETWEEN SYCAMORE STltEET lllrouoll Ille surfo<t O< .... -~ ---------.,,....--Nati·onal Trust & Savings Paul Edward Walker and AND tROAOWAY SANTA ANA 1"1 01 111e •ub•urteu ot 111t lano P'ICTITIOUS IUSl•ISs CALI FORNI A •II ~IOlll llllt tnd Mrtl,,.,bo¥e clHcrlbtd N-ISTATUo11INT Association in the Superior perso!'s .who m a _y be 1n1er-.tc.,,...ye0 1o1nc1-11eioby11 "A•CELJ Tiie f1llow1110 P••Hn is dolno Court of Orange County ot.herw•SE interested in lhe u,.d., sold Deed 01 rru•t 1n 111e A" ••.....-1'°'1rio'"' •ncl t9"" bullf\ffsas: requesting , .. at Bank of Wiii and.tor_ esta te: . property sllu&lecl In Ulcl Counlv •ncl o~·· ,,... prlvll• drlv" w11111 .. Trt<I ASSOCIATED BUIL OI NG 11 A t t h be f Slaleclescrlbed•s t30I u per ""P llled 1" -ai. MAINTENANCE CONTRACTOltS, America National Trus pe I ion as en ti~ Lot l2I Of TrKI No 1112 '"!he P•ou lO to 11 Inc lusllrt ol , ... , MaAl'ttMir ._...,..,_Suite 100• & Savings A'!>soclation be by Wendy 1;-ee Walker in Clly 01 COit.i Mitse c~ 01 0,~ Mh<•ll•neou• M•os. records 01 lni!M,Ctl~'271S appointed as personal the S uperior Court .of Sl•le ol C•lllor~I •. u per mep Oreno•County,C..tllO<N• 80f> ~rel Volpe, 'O Lewl1, Orange County req est r..:orcled In boOll so P09tl J'2 to )II .. ARCEL. 1,.,,1,,., c.111orn11 m1• r e p r e s e n t a t i v e t o u mg 1nc1u11ve ot MIKet.._, MIPt in Eestmel\lhl • suc11 HS•me"thl Tiiis bull""' k cone111<tte1 oy .., administer the estate of that ~endy Lee Walke r be t11e ott1ce of ine C-1y Recoroe' of •• ,.,. Ptrtku1 ... 1v s.1 I"'"' In tlle 1..ci1v1e1 ... 1 Jesse Thomas Callaway appointed as persona l wld county ' Artie•• ent1n1c1 "E-ments" of 111e Bot>Le«>trdVolpe (un .. er the Independe nt re P.r .ese n tat Ive Io E11<"9! oil crudo oH, Petroleum, Oeclarollon unde• tlle Secl lon Tllk si.1-t WIS fifed wllll -u d Oil b•N ~llun'l •no •II ~lnc!red lletdlnol•l '" WC.II Ar'lklt «11111.0 .. cou"t" c1ea o1 0.11\0e cou"l:Y .,. Administration of Es tates a m1n1ster the estate of w..;t•ncH •""°'""'ml,,. 11 ,,.,. follows 00u1111ue.," "Supp0n ... o O.cem11or11, "''· Act). The petition is set for P a u I Edward W a Iker ano In wto •-ucept 1.,. .'io:i ~o u.; s.111em..,t;' "Encroec11....,.1" •110 ,,,..., (under the I n"~ndent .,,, PO<ll011 of ine surtece 01 111e ••no "Common.Are. E....,_1" Pvtl41_ 0r_ c.... oau, ,.11ot. hearing in Dept. No. 3 at • . . ~" tor 0,1111"0 _,.110"'· mi .. ino 0, "A•CELS Oe<.U.JO,tt11.Jen.•.u.1t12s,,,..1 700 Civic Center Drive, Adm1nistrat1~n of. Estates quarrying of •II ~•no• tnc1uc11r>0 1>111 EawmentCs) es •u<ll •tt•me,.ICs> "CTITIOUS IUllNUS NAM• tTATIMaNT Tiie lollowl119 perso11 I• Oolnt llusl"'H ••· FASHION NAILS & SKIN CARE, >•U NewPOrt 8owltverd, l!ewpert Btoc:JI. C&flforn'9 tH6l B•c""Klm Thi Lim nos Vkto<i• tenue. S •, Vonlct, CelflOf'nl• "291 Tllla ~ 1$ <Oftdvct.O by 111 INllvlouet· Boc.._l(lm Thi Lem Tlllt sl.ttemenl ... flltcl wllll Ille Co1111ly Cler' ol 0<•1191 County Oii J111111ery •. ttn I' ltlSJ P\11111-""' Or-Coetl Delly ,.hot, Jo,., ll. 10, 27, Fell, l, 1"1 ,,,..,, West. In the City of Santa Act): Th~ petition IS set for not ne1...iv1 of oo _ .. O•llll'!ll Oii .. , ... 1)41<'tlculerly Ml IO<lll In Ille An a . Ca I I f 0 r n I. a 0 n heann.g .1n Dept. No. 3_ at development m1 .. 1no oportll~n' Ar11cl• tntlMd "E-ls" ol -700 C C t 0 l09«tlltr wllll ifll u .. ot w lcl surtect Decl.,etlon of Coven..,ls, Concllllons F ebruary 3 1982 at 9·30 1.vic e~ er rive, for 011 _,,. t•nl<• 1unne1t mlnlr>0 ono Reur1c11ons •KO•-"" June '· a m ' · West . in the City of Santa ucevttton; 0, siitru p,"ovtdeo "" '" booll 111 ... N9e m. of owci.1 1 F YOU OBJECT to the Ana, California on Feb . tO, "•••ver. '"• Hm• ,11111 ,.01 llt ltecoreb"' ~-d Coutity ,.,. "Muter grantlnn of the petlt'1on 1982 at 9:30 a .m . COflslr-to P<'Olllllll ...... drllllllQ O< Dnltr•llor> I wnoer .... Secllon ,. well otlltr Ojleretlonl which In no .,.111 Mecll"Oh) In tue:ll 14fllcle .. 1111ec1 u you should either appear I F '(OU OBJECT to.the u .. or"'.,., wey •fleet,.,. Jvrtoc:• too_, "Owftert Rl<lflh -Outlet. at the hearing and Slate granting Of ~he petition, rlgllll of sold 1-ef'd wllkll do -UllllllH end Ceblt Ttltvl•IO,.," Your Obl·ecti'ons or file you should either appear •nte, .. 1c1._1t~p01ntltMCllonJOO "u111111a.""~-Sett•...,.111," '"I lo wlcl -1tce es reMNecl 111 Ille "Encroeclltnelll" •nd "CommUfllly written objections with the at the hearing and st~te ouo from una Pou C•11•011 Foc:i1111" E-.. court before the hearing. your objections o.r file •eco•c1eOF~>.1.u 111 -2..; 1tA1teA• Your a""""arance may be written objections with.the 11e11e02.0fflc111 Recor'dl. E•se,...,." tor 0re1 .. 191 C>Ul'POMl ,,.... bef C-;IJ.«lt ove•.-,tllrougll-oc:rou Lob A In person or by your court ore the hearing. Perc..i·i1s,s11~ onoa o1Tra1 ..... n,..rm.,111ee11 .. attorney. xour appearance may be Tiie strul t ddreu end otller -•1. l>OOt 12 to 1' 111<1...iw Of I F y 0 U AR E A 1n person or by your comm011 <1n19na11on, 11 •ny, 01 1ne Mlscellaneowl Meps, records 01 tt ,.,, o•-•t11 described ellOve '' O<ono• C°""'t· Cellromt•. n tor .-t c R E 0 I T 0 R 0 r a a orney. owrpor1e0 10 II• 20U Mo11rottl• -<oncentrottd ,_ ••"99' ........ contingent creditor of the I F Y 0 U A R E A Ave,_, COl\t Mew, c •Hon11& nu1. ....oer, t7lr'OUlllll -ocrou Lo1 o ot d d I C R E 0 I T 0 R o r a Tiie u11C1er110,,.o olutelml ... v Troc:I tin," per~ fllecl HI -ecease , you must f le 11111111111 IOf ...., •nc:-111en .,. u;t )U, P•oes ,. to ,. 111e1w,1n •' your claim with the court contingent creditor or the ,,, .. , _'"' end 01..., ,...,,,..,. MIH•ll•"""' Men. ••ce•d~ •' f'ICTrnoutevt1••u r present 1 ~ t 0 the deceased, you must file c1t-t11netl0fl, 11 '""'· "'°""''°""'· O•tn9t<:own4Y. c.eotom10 NAMtUTA.,..,. ... , personal reprefentatlve your claim with the court !..tla wte ••11 be"""*· bu1 w11110U1 Tll• ,,, .. , Ud••u •11d otner T111 1011owt111 PtrH11 " dol11o ppotnted by the court 0 r present It t 0 the cove111111 or • .,,..,tv, •1111,..u or comm°" dft19M11 .... If .,,,, ot t11t tlllltl-••: I I IM.,19",,.......,.,,. lftl&, ....,...-.. or rHI .,,_rty descrl._. • .,..,. h PAM e .. TER"'"su. 1001 lthln four months from per$ona representat ve •11<111'1\twt11eft."' 11e11 tt. '"""""..._ .,.,,""..,lobe:• Hen!! c.we. 1rvlfto, 5•<••terta1 Clrc••· Cotta Met•, the date of first Issuance appointed by the court rtrtt:i,., Wiii ot"" "°''"' wc~ei CA tuu. C•lifor11••ttt» f letters ..... provld--" In Within four months from .., ulCI °"" °' Trwt, w1111 int-. Tiit .,,,,..,........, Tnmee •tc1e1 ..... P&M•I• Jo DtltON, tOOt .,,. ""' th d t f fl t I tNf'eofl, "_._ lft "'° -1•1. aflY lleblllty ._ ..,., '"'orrect111t1 ot iecnt•r••• c1,,1,. Cott• M .. •. on 700 of the PrObate e a e o rs ssuance .... _.., " -· -"" term• .,. 111e -...,_, • ....., cc"'""'" cetlf0mlet21ttt of California. The of letters as provided In 111e Deec1 o1 Tnnt, '"'· <...,.., •M •t1t.i191,1t.,..,,tMM1,,...lfl. Tiii• ..,..,.. .. I• c-t.o w flllnn claims wlll Section 700 of the Probate 0 "111 .. o1 ._ '""''" -ot "" s. .... will.,. ..,.., 111u1 wit111ut llldl ldllel • .,,, ... c..-.i"" Mlle °"".,. TNll, ,.,,.lllllt or WlfH111\>, Hllr•&.e ., " ~-••J•o.tten Ire prior to four Code of Callfornla.'The -11·141,i.s.o., ,,,..., ... .....,....am..~.or Tiii• ,.....,,,. -fllH w1111 .,. om the date of time for filing claims will T111 '*"'1<1to' ...,., .... o..o"' tfl<'llf'll11t111Ce1. • ,..., tt. ,_....,... c:e1111ty eltftl of °'""' ~1y ... hea n"' noticed abo.,e. not explr'! ·'Prior to four Tr11•1 '-•t etoten ... cwtu u• "'1"'1"' -.,. ltw M19W ... ..,... • 1tll. • '" '9tl...,.. • h......,..,.., • wrlttefl "" aalo OeM flt '"'"' Wlel ,.....,... J-rv • ,., OU MAY EXAMINE months from the date of o.c1.,..,." o.t...,1 Md~ 111e,_, .. ......,... lfl .. i. -"'· l"Wlttfllll °""'* c;...c 1>e11r :::_ he file kept by tht court. the hea,flng noticed above. ,., 1111, •M • wt1tte11 Ntt1u •f Mir°"'", If•· lllMlll' ~ """'' • ""'·'*·'°·"·'-.a.11112. 2.a If you are Interested In the YOlf MAY EXAMINE 0tfe1111 _. •1.a1"' .-s.11. Tiie wN °""""'--...,C'Mralt..,. state you may file 1 the file kept by the c:ourt. """".._. ~ .... Nttk• " • .,..._ ..... T,_. .... ., "" reques{ with the court to If you are Interested In the ~ :-..:= :,:•:,_eo~ ~~~'=":= .::1.!:' tcelve •ftArl•I notice of estate, you may file • ,...rty •• 1ot.a1M.'N-. ,.,... ""'1 ••• ~ • t\Hrttt afMI ,...,.._ .. Wl'IW flt Tiii ........ twy....., .... 0.. II ll1CTITiout•ut1•HI he Inventory of estate request with the court to Trvflltt,, ~ ttfl!Mtll!t .... 11 Trvat 111retefor·• , .. cvtH ,,.. •AMtlTAnMSWT ssets and of the petitions, receive special notice of "°' ANOll.&S TITLI MO nun *""''""._.llMllr....,awrt""" ~::••1111 "'""It d•111t ccounts and reports the Inventory Of estatt ~~~D =--~~.:..~=T~=~ e'f.:;".,: ~""'_,"=:-: .... oDuc• CITY, ,,., ""~" scribed In Section 1200.S assetit •nd of the petitions. AVDUI UHO' CAL"O"HtA 0.fllllt 11111 ll•dltft ..... I. Tfle or••-· 1e11ta AM,~"""' f the Callfomle Prob•t• accounts and • eports t\DI 11~ """".....,. ~--..,. .... 1e ... •1111. described In S.Ctlon 1200.s otie: ~•. ,., °''"" .. .,., .. 1• "'' " • '"""' ...... K~, 1"''""" 'ot the Cellfornla Pro"-t• "-.:...~~ c. A"'"'°°"" =::.::.r ........ ,.., c~·~'::'9" PtnMY & Penney, J•.n Godt. AlfOLl~~~i.'1 oAnoo-.,.,a"". ,,..,.,141M1! • Penney, AttorMf •• ••1•r A. Netttan, .-oTttunono ~'::!:'~"~· Tllll 11 ~.."::te,.':i""" h a w, JC71 Via L •o, AtttrftU el L••.i 1140 w=~TIOM ~ .,~......_ c11111ty Clot-.. On111t C11111ty """ lelclt ca. '2MJ• West o~ •lvd., -• . ............ .IMMfYU,tm ,_ : (714) m.11n • ::,:& CA "211; ::.=-v~ === ......,.,. °"""9 ~ o.ety ""· a. Cllllt °"'' ~ .... llM&Ortlllll 0.. Dally..... ~-J'111. ti.• U, , .. ,, ,. .... -o.w..... ....~-~-'· .. u .... 111'941 ...... ,, .. -.ca.. .... = \ Orang• Cout DAILY PILOTJWildnuday. January 13. 1912 ---taL:e .,.uL ..... " ... ,. ... ftlo\U .... ..,_ , ... .._.., CIW\""" ..... " = ...... , ... CH!ll'I •• &.•• ..................... ..... ~"'4ATCW4&91,~ .... -. .. ~ .. _ ... " .. ---................ "'¥Mt ... . ·--~ ..................... . •c•~tf .... ._.•~. tll ., ..... -4ley " ,_,. • .... .. .... •lfl<e •• "011 w. AMl .. OICI", t4a IHl ltlllllnfel• 1¥e,, .... ftl .. lt, Ct1111ly et LH ...... c.i .......... •11 "'9 rlt I, llllt 11141 l11•trHt ti 11i. ~et IW ti-fl -..ii""' all .. ,.... ....... ....,... --. .... ........... ~ ...... ,... " .... ,.,.." ... ., ..,,.,.. ..... ~ .... ., !ft ........ tetMl .... .. ............ '""' flf '"'"· Ill Ind ............. ~y ...... ... "' Ult """"'" .. OrMtit. " ... .. c.ltfltf..i., Mrtkvlllll' •tc,..... •• ............ ; I . Ull._,. .... , .. , 'ftjltrll' Ill 01111~ c;tv11ty, Celtlornl• more .. lcl!Wty ...,, ... •! Tiie laM Yi If Ille Ner111Wtll1 14 of .. IMl4'-' 14 .... l6wCll .... ol .... 4 Ill Ii.di It, of Trect 16. "Co .. 1 ''"lever• """''" •• per "''' l"tffrlltll !ft ... 10,,..... u -»of l!lllattll~ ~ recoros of u• c-1y . .._... w1t11 ... _..... tw ltiW\ ....,_Md tor leyt111 ""1111•1111111 plpellM In ovtr end e<,..U odwr ,.,. '" a1ocks 17, ••• " 111f H In Hid Trect •• or Allt flt.,Mlvhltn theretf .,.,elolore Crteled end ,,_ ••1111119 f or Ille t e11elll of H id 1e11d llrs1 ellovt *"''--· t. Ulll~""'" l"NI ,,...,., In - Co""'" el Ore119e, Ct11for11le, dttcrlti.1h e: ' The w.t-"tlf of the Nof'tllWff ._,., .... ~-1M of u.. Sow\11 V. tf Let 4 If! 9IOCl 1t, Trer;I 16, Coul .......,.,, Fermi, C<Mlnl., of Or~!AM of CtllfOfnle, " per ,._ lllaoOlllO,Mtlt•U-» .. ""--rec.oreh of ore...-~y; toVtl.,.r with all .. _... fti etreet IM"llOIO• Alld for ,..,,,,.,. .... 1Mintellll119 .,...lllltt '"· -•ftd ac,_ OU.. ltndl 111 Bl«ll 17, 11, It lllCI • llOretofor• (rffttd ...0 llOW Hltll119 for the -flt of Uld IMd first ..... dtsc•lbtd. l. U11I~ ,. .. ~_..,., In tht Co1o111t., of Oreno•. Callfornl•. OH<• lllecl as: The NOt1Mnl 14 of IN Sout,,_11 14 91 the Soult! \'I of Lot 4 In 8IOCIL It of Tre<t .., C:-1 Bowltverd Ferm• 111 Ille CM111ty el Ore11110, Slett ol C•llfor11I•, •• per mep thereof rec....., Ill ...., 10, peg.91 as tllCI 3' of MIK•ll-,,._, raordl of uld Ore11t• Co""'" lottlher with •II ffMf'l!tnll for it,_ putl)OStl tlld for ltyl119 -meklltllll119 pipellntt 111, owr elld tr;f'WS -lllldl In 91«U 17, II, It elld 20111 Mid Tr at ... or.,.., ruubtllvlslOOI tlltrtOf, lltretofort c rtoltd t11d llOW ulltlno for Ille lltntlll of uld 1a11d tint ollove dH<•lbtct. Term• of WI!• cev. In 1""1111 mo11tY of Ille United Siiia ""canflnntlloll ot Hit, or ptrt ce1h and balonce ovldenced by note 1tcured by Morlt•O• or Trust 0Hd on the property t0 1old. Tt11 percent ol •-I bid tobe--lltd Wllh bid. Bhb or offers to be In wrll1119 - wlll lie reoel"" 01 tht •-kl office et any time tfl., ,,. flrtt p;illlletlloll hereof -bttOtt dtt• of sele. Otled lllb 21111 de., of Oecomller, "" OoMtJ. Enlttd Admllllstretrla wllll ·Wlll·Alvwudof Ell.._ of of lllO Nici dKHMld •oss W. AMSl'O« If• tall ................ .......... c.e.mtt lm>MMlll ....... "' .. a....elO..Herry ~.OtcetMd Publl-OrllllOI Cot1t Deily Piiot. !'"· •. 1, 13, '"1 111"2. flOflC:C INVITING .. DS 91D ITllM NO. m NOTICE lS HEREBY GIVEN llwl Mtltd ~ Wiii lie r«tlvtd by tllO City of Colle Mese, 10 wll: Tiit City CO<#ICll, P.O. Boa 1200. of the City of Coste-.., Cal-Ill•,°" or-.. llle -of 11 : 00 .. ""· Oii ,.,, .... Fellrwery 4, 1tt7. II th•ll lie I fttCIOll•llllllty of lllt .,._,to dell,,., 1111 bid to 1110 City CltrlL'l Office by _, -time Bl<K wlll p1tlllkl., --tllCI rud •I-a 11:00 a.m .. or ff _, ,.,....,,.., • pre<lktllit Oii Thunmy F-ry 4 1"2. th IN C-.Cll CM~. Cl Hall, 11 l'elr Orlve, Coste Mesa, Ce llfor111a, for the Fur1111111no of ELEVEN (111 EACH PRl!l'AIRICATED BUS SHELTERS. Adclltlontl ..U of Ille -Hlctll ma., lie CltlUllMd at lllO Office of P\lr<hHlllt "9tnt et 77 FaJr Drive, Coste MHI, Ctllforlllt. Sidi -..id .,. ret....-lo the Attnloll of t11t Cl Clerl, In • ...... ...,,.1ope, lclenllflld 011 the 011tsldt with tllt Bid 11 .... Number tlldlftt ap.n1ng Oete Etell bid INll IPK0Y •tell 1n every ll•m .. HI '°''" In Ille -lllceuar.. ,.,,., end all exceptlan~ to the ~lflcttlonl m1A1 lie clearly llttad Ill l'llO bid, -tall"" to Ml for1h tllY ll9m 111 .... lPKlfketlons 511all lie ~ tor relt<llOll of lllt bid. EHll bid tl\tll Ml lortll Ille holl 11tlnff and rtllOtncet of ell ptf"IOlll and parlle lllltrt-In \he ~-Ml ft prl11<lpat1. In cew of ,.._....uons. l11Cllldt ttw """" of tllt P~t. Secretery, T-. --.,... The Cli., C-.Cll of the City of COiia Mew rtMNtt Illa r19111 to reject 111y ortlllll•. Vendor wlll lie required lo comply wllll all ..,,ilceC>le E-1 Ernptoy,...nt °""'1WIMY lewt -rt911ltlloM Thll cOfllrect b Wbje<t to• 1111t11e1a1 enlsttn<t (Ontrtct Hlw••n Ille 0r ... o• c-ty TrtMlt OIJlrlcl ...., tllt U .S . Oeper1me111 ol lraMOOr•IClll All bidden w lll H reqwlred lo cer111., tllet they tr• 1101 011 tllt Com~roller Gener••'• 1111 of lllOllOll>lt colltrllctors. Ore1199 C_,.ty TtOOltlt Oltlrlct ,,....., ,.."'" all biOlltn 11\tt 11 wlll 9fflr.,,.Uwly l..wrt ttlll Ill r-d to ..,., COftlrect entered 111.lo ~to 11111 ..,,..f'ti ... tiatlt, "''-'"' ~ e11tarprlse •Ill H elfordtd twll opponwnfty to Wllmll llklt 111 ,_ to lflll lnvllet1011 wlll 1101 II• dltcrlml....., .... ,., Oft the ~ of rec•. color, or ...tlClllel or19'ft In CClllJidff .. I., for tll-lfd. OATl!O: ~'IO, 1911. Pt*,__ Or ..... Cot1l Dally Piiot, J811. '· IJ, "" 157-41 .. " .. ........,, ... 'I' 11 F 31" .. .-w~mew ••1 -~ Tiie felle•I,._ •toe111 lltwt ............. -..... "' ...... .............. '11Aaff .... Cl)MIU&.TMtTI. 141' Vt• o rw••1 ...... ,. I H d , ~--•.-rt O ......... 1• V"9MU ........ ~--..~ .... .... ,. .. , .... ""· .. ,. ..... u..~...._, ~ . . ~~---... . ·~ ..... _,..,.....__ ......... ·~~ .. ~c-it¥-0.CI l lt,"51 • ,_. ..... Or .... CllHI·:::: ............ "",Jat. ta.• I ...... ' 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642 -5678 tte....., w. i ...... .., w. . I ............... '-... w.... •• ....... .., w. ~ •••• ~~ ••.•.•• ~.~.~ ••••••• ....................... .... . ........................ . e;;;;,;;u• .. ••••'j'••• ........ 1001 .._... llH I 00% C... .. Mw I OZZ lnW I 044 ....•......•....... ~ ....................... ...••••................ . •••••........•.....•.........••••.................................. SERVICES '-"'l('t Otr«tor) DIPlOYllDIT & rtlPAIATIIM ~ l..U...l .... J•'ll41Aif'd• ltrit>•-..... lfllCtlAMllSE (;fl'W't'1I ~)buWMror~ ........,,,.,_ '·"""' Bo.t• ,.,..H no.o"t111 r ... n .. , Boob boll -."""" '-'' -.s,...i ..... INe..SLwacr TUMSPOHATION A;rrrat\ ulftl'!Pn ~ """ OH<ntC.n ..... C)Ue.s...t ... • ....... Hm>.!>llr H•OI ThiltnTn•tl !:,..~!'.'"~on. AUTOM081l£ Uffot.i • AMlqW> l:IM'Ut. ~ llo<rt~ VtllH In S..1rh M .... Mod .. 'Wbffl Ur"'" TruOo v-A-IAUIAC A-ilrUl>d AUTOS, IMPOmo C<Mr•I Alt• Rociro \11111 "''°"'" ue.tt) llllllr C•pn ~ 0.lu.n vrrr.n t)ol ......... J.c .. , J-· t<•rmi..nn\ilU• ~ •••• lilrfU"ftn •a• lit. MCll l)prl PM'lt~•• t'°NA;"" ~.,, .. iw N.n•ul1 HUU:\ Ht)f" 11 .... s. •• t:: ... TOl'IM Tn ...... v ........... v ... i.w l:all l»ol l!W ll<ol JU lM llUI llW ...... ?Kii ZlDol UN llOt aot -- ,... ...... Moffce: All rul utatl' ad 1·trtisl'd In this newspuper is subjetl to ' the Fl'dtrlll F111r Hous init Act of 1968 whlth lllilkt'S 11 1llrl(11I to ad \l'rtlSt' "anr prererrn1·t . llm11at1on. or d1i1 1·r1minatton buect on r111:l'. 1·olor. rt>ht:ion. sex. oc nattonal on1un. or 11n mtenuon to milke any surh 11n•frren1·e. lim1tal1on. or di:. mm1no111on ' nus newspapt"r will not know1n11l~ ant'pl an' a1h·ert1sin11 Cur real t'State wh11•h is 10 nula 11anohhtl11w = 1--------·1 2* Dalebout Bay &Beach Real Estate REAL ESTATE EXCEL4EHCE SINCE .19'9. COMI Wmt US ••• TO COlONA DB. MAI. South or highway . Two story. two bedroom dollhouse in front. One bedroom unit in rear. Two car garage. Flexible tenns. $299,500. I 617 WISTCU" DI, M.1. '31-7300 Walt*JFor A loracNA Tius 1·ozy 3 «tt 2 Ba t Cam rm 111 Harbor Vl1•w neur 1·omm 110111 ha:- 1t001I llSbUmJ bll' luani. and is llrll'l'll tu srll SZ37,950 ... IM.t.A HOttm Remodeled, decorated 3 bdrm, 3 bath, mstr bdrm, ocean view $425,000. West Bay bayfront. Slips for 2 boats, remodeled 3 bdrm, 3 bath Sl,200,000. Ocean & jetty views. Marine room , 4 bdnn. 3 bath, 3700 sq.ft. Sl,385.000. UDO ISi.i HOMI Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + rec. rm. beam ceilings. $420.000. large IJNDA ISi.i IA YFIOMTS Main chaMel view Crom 4 bdrm, 5 · bath ~raditional home with pool. $1,495,000. Lagoon view from 6 bdrm , 5 bath, playroom, dark rm. den. $1 ,350,000! CAINATIOM COVE Spectacular bayfront view 4 bdrm . 4 bath, 2 boat slips $2,050,000. C..a..tr O..le1 WITH AMAMCIMG 3 BR 2ba or I+ auest In ownt'r'a unit also 2 Bdrm rental C'Oltage All l.n sharp eond w/rxt•el lot·ation Owner will t'arT)' lge 2nd TD Bt>st buy in town ror only ~.000 c.1644-72 11 /Jn ~l[J, lir.1u, & A'J~U(I A1£.5 COM DUPLEX 700 MARGUERITE New 1·o nstru1·h on. Ml'dll an-h1lt'l'IUrt'. 3bdrm & 2bd rm . $4111.000. Cinanl'lnlt avail Ownl'r Bldr 1714167~ 9431 BY OWNER CdM lhiple1 Pndl' of ownrrsh11>. xtra widc lot. be:.t IOI F'lt•x term:. Pr11·l'd un1li•1 ma rkl'I $3~9 .f.00 1·942~ CUSTOM W /VIEW One 1s easily 1·11pli\ atl'd b~ this Ol·ean 11nd bu~ 1·u hon1t' atop the BluCCs m lnineTt>m.11't' ldr11I for attl\e fam1I~ ll\·11111 or i:ra1·111us entrrtamtni:. lht' hon~ hosts 4 Bdrms. 3 Ba. pool. J!UU rml'I lllOIS: Ad•trtiMn k1h•hrn anil has ultra ll• .-clchtclatheir ods mocl1•rn applla111·1•:1. :: dally tmd ~ er· brid' Cloori.. 11ak l9 ron -.di.Jtfy. Tit. l'ab1nl-ts and ha1 and = DAILY PILOT os.-s S\'U \'U bn·ukfast· art•a. J.ll:> labilty for th• fi"t Pri1·t• S97S.000 and you 5 l1corn ct iuutio11 ft:~~~·. land Owna will 5. wt· IOGEIS REALTY RCTaylorCo .: ~, Lole somethio1 valua ~! Plat'e an ad 1n our Lost and Found col· umns. That '1 wherl' peo- ple look whl'n thty've found In stem or VIII!!:_ BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR . : ~"~y<.rJ,(_, •' ~.'" ti!) til6: \l, l-.'-'I I \ \ Costo MHo 1024 .•......•...........•.• FIHDOM HOUSE 3 Br I Ba lari:t' ~ ard ~.000 . 641 076:1. J\gt OWMHWILL AMAMCE AT 12% W1lh 1$'. down for tu >ears 3 Hdrm. 2 hulh. ,:n•al rnndit111n w11h man~ 1·xtra!'. A l' Suited for -.&ow qtrs . Erwlus1~t pal 111. turm·r lut with R \' ;11·1·1•i., '"k mg Sll7.!'>00 Fur Jn J)J 1)111nlm:n1 lo M'l'. 1·Jll ~1151 =------------1111!1111._ ... 6.1~ .. 23.'.' .... u.w 1-TAYLOR CO. H L:\l.'IOH~ "11111· !!HI> = HousesforS~• .......................... .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• u. U» -~ •!IW we -- Gewerd I 002 I ·······················' Find oul ahoot lh1· h1i:h ' l!E 810181 ILlllS CO. , llG CAMYOM ANEST CUSTOM cJmm,i n•JI l'Stah· :.ah•:. I 1·arerr upportunll H•S With THE Rf:AL I ~:sTAn:Rs l.11·1•nsmi: -S(·hool f{'('l. 1·ompll•ll'I~ ::t rdundabl1• 111 s1·hool or ' -\OUr 1·ho1n· Ex\\'nsl\ t• = salt'S tram1ni: f"or 10 -formation. rall 751 til91 OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE HOllSE PIOPHTY Dramatic Home -Approx . % Acres 4 BR Pool Spa A IEAL AICHrTECTUIW. IEAUTY Elegance & di1;nity in this fantastic Georgian Colonaal loc·ated on the 8th green of golf course. Top quality craftsmanship thruout with finest woods, imported marble. t•rown mold - ings. 611;,! baths, air cond .. 3 wet bars + more. Luxurious mstr suite plus 4 other bedrms with private baths. ban- quet size DR. Cam rm and billiard rm. Call for appt to see or a colored brochure. $2.150,000 including the land. ~HERITAGE REALTORS NO ON. eqwl~ i.hJrl'. Ii.I lllTll' liu' 1•r:.. J hd I hJ . onl~ SS:..ooo µrin uni~ siw Call631 4().15 Kathy ai:nt suo i.a. l.:J)> lbi }O(Jj )<'" OWHY AMXIOUS llt'aot1ful. 1mmu1·ulatt'. ru1·ely ldnilscaJk•d 4 Hr home on 1.·ul de s.11· Sparn>U.~ rooms \ 11•w or ,_ i:olC l'OUtst• from prop1•r I\ 0'.ll nrr a:-•ISlt'd rinannn1t Only $139.SOO lllll C<ill now. 979-5370 Remodeled Recently Park 8 Cars + R.V. -Great Location Can Keep 3 Horses. Maybe More. On Your Own Property Ooly $289.000. 75l9100 •2c.,. ...... Me..,.;tc..- WESLEY M. TAYLOI CO., REALTORS 2111 S. ...... Hils Rood MIWPOIT CENTEI. tU. 644·4' I 0 STIPSTOIUCH : ALLSTATE , __ _ :!~ REAL TORS Ol~,_}J· p. h I. I COIOMA DB.MAI! 875-5511 I 0% ""-ciftq Av oil t:<1t J:<11U.' 4 hr ill'IJ1h•1I h<Hlll• I hlk lrnm 111·1•;in 11 n P 1-: t; l.1n11 11 n I ' S299.000 75!1 ·~Ill Ill j~i37:1 Du yuu want tu "' l' in .i111I \'t\JO) a tornna dl'I / -· 1 • Mar honll' anil at 1h1• TRY CR ~: \ T I \' E ~a!Tll' t1mt• rnlll•11 in f'l:oiii\Nl'INC: l'l>M -Nm -- MESAVEIDE 3 bdrm. 2 hath, frJllr. tlhl r.: ,tr a I: 1• i\ I 1· o 1111 $L'l-UOO 0'.llnt·r '.\Ill :I' ~bl in CmJn1•m,.: Roy McCordle, Rltr. 541.7729 HHJhlol-.ce ---Wcat.COMfort I when IOU St'l' thtl' 3 Bdrm · + ct en houl><' I You 'll want to l(l'I to1~ Ill Cronl or lh1· hl,:i C1repl111·r Onl~ 20 ' • down 1md tukl' Jct\ an I tai.:e or ltn l'fr\'('11\'\' rail' or 12 1'. Prtn•d at Sl.36.500 i51·319l l,lfnl. frum lh1· alwa~:-1luplt"'1 Wllh l:IMld r1n,1nr I • n'lll1,1 units plus :<w1m I mi: f:1wh un11 :i H1lrm 2 10 ~our uwn 111101 • t\J. fum1h rtM>m ('!,..-,. Pruiit·t1~ IN lol·ah~l on J toi'\t'f'lh.ini: .11 ~2!1.5410 stn't1 hnt'<I w11h lrl't'i., llODeqrtt 0c._ & loy view l'l.l fo'f"ll i\ \' E~ t'an lai.111· \ ll'W Crnm lht' :1 hr 1•\1,·Utl\ 1· horTI(· un ~·~: t: lal"MI' P1•t1l·1·t for 1•nh'r I ,llnt0~ I $4)50.000 (l'\ dusl\1'1 i5!1 15111 or 7~ T.173 .As-bMLoe111 &·aullful uni' ~ 1•ar n1·~ fam1h honlt' nt•:or Soulh I..' 11 ,1 'I I' I J I J I bt'rln,.im~ 2' Ii.1th' form;il 1hrnn,.: n~1m r1· l.tx1ni: fJntlh nwm 14arm & 1·1111 f111•11IJ1 1• I' r " I 1· ~ ' 1 11 n a I I 1 IJllCbl'Jpt~I 1111 l•l1•al 11ir lh1• \llUnl( t'\l'l'Ullll' Owm·r wdl 1·11n~111t-r hdp111~ 14'1lh I tllJllt ini: $21)1.9.IO l°Jll l11r 01011· 1k1a1b Inda~ 9i9 2J!jCI ----a'!) llWll --IOU -ti#! ------ ,.;nu _, ... --llO!Q ...,,. --.... tt• tllO mt '''° •lla tl!lt - -••• -... •U ltlt --------*' 1•kltl4.• to on'an a nil shop~ UM9tJE IM P1ea5(' 1·:111 1f 'ou woulll NEWPORT HEIGHTS hkl• to M-l' 1·h1s hom1• COLS~ NaWPORT CllthOllll' In SUIJl'r /,lrt'U. bt-alTll'1l 1•e1lini:i.. 2 RR & 1len. fpk. 21~ bu & ,:ood as.~umable loan $197,000 fl't' lll"ll't'CI Ul ~.000 MM.TORS HllLC::....Hwy, c-.... -e75·551 1 ------1u,...1001110 .. 11 MUL TIPL! CHOICE! Low Dow. P~M! MoDow.P~M! Or Yoe Tel Us! Rc.oaitors. 67s.ti000 67~3411 IFYOU ! . Walker & lee Real Estate TARBELL" REALTOR~ SHARP £ASTSIDE 6 PW OHL Y 15% DOWH 7S91S01 <>wnl'I' will fmann· 111 quahf1l'!I bu' 1·r W1·ll --------111 I01°<1kd. i:uod l1111k1nr.: h UGUMA HILLS urub + 4 1·ar ,:Jr + Jm Nl•lhc Gale R11nt·h 4 Rr pie parkm,: Hl·lu~ 11 4 B.i 1·ustom 180 clt'r.:rl'l' 1111ri. r.:ros:. , 1\'w Bnr.:ht & 1·h1·l·~ . CAU TODAY NE WPORT BEA CH sharp 2 story townhouse 3 bdrm . 2'' bath. fireplact. patio plus 2S · BOAT SUP' SELLER WILL LISTEN' S28.s,&IOO! lltedltc.d SI 00,000 SPYGLASS BY OWNER -, luadi; of Gn•rk marlil1•. 644-72 11 pool Siil' ~ ard 4 .-ar M.111\ ' i:.irar.:1• $650.000 Jensen1 have a service to off tr or goods to sell. place an ad SELL Idle items with a in the Dally Pilot Daily Pilot Classified' Classified Section Ad. 00-5678. ~-~II._ '*"'hJProp. ....... *67~7060• <A-t>an \'1ew S.SiS.000 6br141' ba 4UIO sq ft SOUTHPORT MO DEL OWNER FINANCING HIGHLY UPGRADED orrer exp1res Jan 31 25 Bodega Bay Call owner 7S9 0737 ~-- ACROSS TO BEAC~EWPORT 3-llorf t.o-w• -... VU tro. ••try roo•. Gr••t l••est•Ht -n •· ._,..._.,.... po11111t. Slts,000. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. 111ALESTATf S... Rtnt• p,_.,, ~11•11t 24.16 W COUI ti""V 315 Mlrww Ave Newpoft Bteth 8elioa Wlftd .,..... .,,..,.. R£SIOfNTI~ ~l !STAT! SERVtefS YOUU FALL .. LOYI .. *llOI NW · 1 & Co 7!»9·0706. 644 5742 I I \ • . Bhlfs l.t-ase option 2 br ' ~ Wldt' l!l"t'l.'nbt>lt $139.500 I PI HSIMSULA TIUST SALE! Immaculate 2 sty w/3 BR + 2 BR guest qtrs, 2 (pies, lg mstr suite, spacious liv rm w/terrazo floor . Secluded patio deck. $.150,000 incl. land. Dick Halderman 642-8235 CP52) A SCMi8SIT DAHIUIY MOOR. In Woodbridge. Highly desirable 3 BR, great location near swim club, tennis. & park. Beautiful ceramic tile in entry & kitchen floor. Tasteful use of wall covering, upgraded carpet & fireplace. mi cro mini blinds. Loan is assumable. $127 ,900 Marian Frizzell ~l..s700 (P53) ':::' ~~~lA-4i.~s· -----...... CIAY I.,_,... ____ _ •............... cl ... ._ ..-...; ..... .... .. ._,_.....,_. S U N M I 0 R I D F 0 Bkr.644·0134. $ 115,000 E s1dt' l'M. 2 Rd + I HJ THEILUFFS oak floor~. frpk. 1 1·~r F:xtra h1rl(l' 4 bdrm rnn l(ar. Ir,: lot Ownt'r ~ 111 do m pnme Bluffs IO\'ll Cmam I' or \ \ lei ml> lion Low S299.500 L.li , Call Cu11 Ht'rbert~ 11 pr11·e with terri fH·1 6311266 tl'rms Just 10', down. 121 ! • mtl'rest. 30 ~ carb 100/oDOWH 131/2%IMTEIEST HO QUALIFYING!! 3bdrm. 2ba. 1600 sq fl . remxlt>led k1tt·hl'n, I •~ r old 1·arpet lhrou11hout. A I>" 1s1on o1 soo.ooo owe At TD ror llJrbor lme:-tml'nt t'o 4 n s al SIS20· mo Demand E S1dl• arta nr SA Countn Club Call ....._ 1119d I 006 JeH caJ(t 1 · 1·7141493·3116 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lliCH HOUSE ........ °"leach I 040 A A--' C.....&J:-1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -"""· TRY Sl2.SOO ON Onh In perfect shape. Only S12S 900 bU\S lhts '4 ~000on Island under bd~. bt>st a·~ea. shake · 9·6• 11 .. 7 roof S 1000 i. u nd 1•r ... .. market Bkr 848 Oi09 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lPUMIUM DUPLUES ...... 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• **GREAT BUY! 4 Bd dttac·htd 8ro11d moor home 1n supl'r Woodbndge! Owner will l'am 1 i.of equity! Won ·1 lasl .. a.'l.k ror Fred. 1189.000 ''"'\' = You won't be able to resist the gorgeoll.$ gourmet kitchen with all new appliances\..~~rator wall cov· erinp 'ft matcrung drapes. Great yard! l-Ocaled ln one of Neww rt's fiJietl ramily nei1hborhood1. 4 Bdrms. for $274,900 . I I r I 2 8d + 2 Bd, altps to btaeh. Assume 1270,000 inloana. Asking '399.000. 4 Bd + 2 Bd, newer bld1 . So of Hwy . Auume '140.080 Aslllna 1441.000 3 8d + a Bd. q1.11Uty Ull· ltt. A11ume $210.000. Alk1M •••. Cootatt Damll Pull, •at for ~#.)A .. .. --..... -. .... -......... = 0 R 8 E P I I I I T ROOCH I I I I I' . ...... 12* ISUMAB[E 4 + bonus rm. pool and jaeu:uJ. Owner will help fll\llX't 645-1 Ill / OP~N H " .,, R!A1' r DISCOURAGED? DEPRESSED? DISAPPOINTED! 1l11nk 1ou'll never Crnd that 3 ·bdrm home you r\'1111~ want at a prit',e vou ··an arrord? Don l d1ware. WI' ha' e JUSl what I OU re loolunjl for at S~.000 It's in II l'Oll· H'Tllent l<k·auon H11thl> upr.:radl'd Owner oHer m1t 14enl'roui. lerms to hdp 'uo µurl'hase liiw or no do'.lln •·ondo m So r,1 l'la1 .. Jn·a Gn·al .111:.umabll• In Call Tim. 1\1(\'nl 9f~; ~JS IRVIHE CONDO Rt:oun:o s~ooo i\11· :.umJblt' loan At SIOO.Wl. th•~ " abi.olull' I~ 'uu1 h1•:.l hu~ 1n I " I"\' H (• J u I I I u 11.1 1·an'\I for I hdrm t•nd 1ond11'oll1th 1 ll''oll of hill:.. ha• ti• 11~0 jlrll:.Oll' MJINa~ 1111•01~. J lo' l'I\ l111n~ roum with l1n·µIJn'. 1l111mi: .1rt·J 'o\'llh 111·~ Jll lill' ki lt ht•n ~It h t•Jl1ni: ah'J l~\lni: n•1m aml k111·h1·n lljll'n unlo lari:1· l:.Sx 13 11\•t·k r oo m ~ mJ:-l1•r hdrm has i:i~wrou:-'.ll alk·in l'loi.t'I t:\\'n n•1m •~ hi:hl Jnll a1n Jllll l,1\1\'fulh 111· norJh'd 10 '.llhlll' .in1l 111•utr;1b T11ta l Sli.300 '"""' n to ·"'umJ bl1· 10 .. n ur '>t'il1•1 '.\ 111 •·11nMd1•r Ill', down l'all Mona l'h1·:.htr1• Ill M't' :j2 l..ik1•p1111·~ 0111·n Sun dJI I ~ l'h1·~h1rt• Ht•Jll I ;59 111.i lGIJlllMI leoch I 041 .......•..•....•••••••. lln: \;>.;FHOt\T Mudular T\lll' Home-.. 24 hr ~"·unt~, 1 • m1 II' I h1·h t r1~h1111: 111\'r t'l•dJr r u11.ir.:1· I~ Pl'. n·d'oll IMKI 1h·l'k. 1111111. 14u,orrh·rl j;Jll'. Jtllh unh !I\ II 1l1>i:~ W!.!IOO ~99 311 lti 20%DH/12%1MT. J hr. 2': b.1 Lim 1m 111 n rm d b I i: ,, r .. ll!Jt.'lll'r. ~1.11n1'(I i:IJ S>. ll•On'(f, llt't'.Jn I U ~-l'J 00.I l9i 1115 l :-.:o u : \S~:1101.o 11rn hh•m.' hl·n· ru~·om :11)00 "I It h11nw '.ll 11 h 'llJI 14 Nh' 14 Jh•t \11'W' 111101 mo~I n111m' l'umpll'l1· '.\ pool JIMI '"" 0'.ll Ol'f llOJO J\ Jll S.\119.000 LCllJIM Vi"oge R.E 497·176 1 ALot For A Litffe I dt'rt' + bldi: :.tit' ):t'nl h sloVmi: l'Jtl l'I short 1hs1am·1· lrom h•nms & h\•a1·1\ 014 nr ha:. 1n .1ud1-d plJn~ for 1·u~lom '111.1 Sli~.000 Sp1•1· I Jt·ular 1 ll''oll ~ • MISSION RE.\l.T\' ~94 0;31 LCllJIM Higitel 1052 ...•....•...•.......•.• RIUOCEAMVU 3 BR 2ba To11.nhouw ~=Xt'\'Ulll t' 11\ IOI( $234,950 6i~ 1771 N111url Short·l> twnh1>l' l,,Ki.t mod1•I. <X'1•an 'u, rc·moct 1n1 $2K!I 000 -193 9-111 Newport leoch I OH ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLIFF DR. VIEW Thts stunnin~ 4 Rr horn\• ha.<; a 1ianort1m11· \ u or tlllrk & un•un .\l~o ram rm w•f'r OOol'll ll•ad1n11 lo pool :m•a Offl'rl> ~\\'r \'\hinit' 562'>.000 Call for ·~ PEEIAVIEW! ~ llw Ol.'l!iUI rrum lhh n.tMk tn I~\ t-1 h1)1n1,• It ha• 4 Br l 1all 11mc n1ti\'s Onl)' S21t.500 . . R&M~ - ' .., ........... I LAGUNA VISITORS -Yukiyo Yasun'o <left> and Naoko Tada.. of Osaka. J apan, are'"working as volunteer teachers' aides at El Morro Elementary School. Youngsters are being taught the customs of the women's country. Japanese ~itors enrich Laguna kids .., By JOHN NEEDHAM CM .. o.ty "*Si.ft First, second and third graders at EJ Morro Elementary School in Laguna Beach are learning first hand about the culture and people of Japan from two visitors. Ytikiyo 'Vasuno and Naoko Tada, both from Osaka in centraJ Japan, are working as volunteer teacher's aides at the school for the 1981·82 school year. Both women graduated from universities in their country in 1980, and for a year worked two jobs in order to save enough money to 1 i ve in the United Stales. They plan to remain in this country until August, and then will return to Japan where they say they hope to obtair. jobs where they can put their English language skills to use, such as a tour guide or airline stewardess. Miss Yasuno and Miss Naoko, who grew up ~gether m Osaka, the second largest city in Japan, said they are enjoying their stay in the Art Colony. ..., ..... WEDNESDAY, JAN. 13, 1912 CAVALCADE COMICS TELEVISION 82-3 84 86 A career woman tells why she gave it all up to b·e a housewife and mother. Read Bob Greene on Page 82. • Laguna, Newport map oil fight ·Leaders of both cities prepare arguments against off shore drilling plan Laauna Beach and Newport Beach officials will be planning a strategy to convince the federal government that oil wells aren't needed in the coastal waters off lbe two cities. Laguna Beach Clly manager Ken Frank said today that following a meeting of ofncials of the two beach communities Tuesday, a dele1ation of Newport and Laguna officials wUJ prepare a summary of the issues involved. The federal government Is expected In February to decide whe ther to lease Southern California offshore waters, including areas as close as three miles to Laguna and Newport, for drtllina and production of oll and au. Earlier thJs month .Laguna Beach Mayor Sally Bellerue fl red oU a Jetter to the Department of Interior termini as "insuUlclent " •n environmental Impact report on a proposed off shore oU leue. The letter, endorsed by the City Council. souaht deleUoo of possible sale next month of tracts directly off the coast of Laguna Beach. In her letter, Mrs. Bellerue said the department's environmental impact report ••gave insufficient consideration to the sensitive and significant nature of the Laguna Beach shoreline." Superoisors aim for water plan By May, members of the Orange County Board of Supervisors expect to have a better idea about the adequacy of future water supplies in the county. Supervisors ordered analysts in the county 's Urban Monitoring and Analysis Center Tuesday to prepare the first of three proposed reports on what they called a countywide water plan. When the study is completed, officials should have enough information to coordinate conservation and, if necessary rationing plan.s and have a better understanding of bow to create a dependable water supply, according to the center's analysts. However, the supervisors' deeialoa to order that homework bu concerned leaden of some local water districts. Dennis MacLain, general Q,1ana1er of the Municipal Water Diatrict ol Oraa1e Count)', tpld the supervisors Tuesday -the dlatricts could save the county the trouble. "In short," be said, "there is not much more that can be done locaUy that la not already being done." MacLain said conservation and water reclamation programs already are bein1 bandJed by the districts, and if rationing becomes needed, it probl\bly will be coordinated by the Metropolitan Water District. That district is the parent organization that oversees water djstributioo throughout most of Southern California. M acLain suggested that the s upe rvisors might be more constructive by publicizing the need to construct the Peripheral Canal in the Sacramento River Delta to increase supplies of water available lo Southern Califor~ia through the state water projeci. In other matters Tuesday, county supervisors took the following actions: -T&AUMA CENTERS: Approved a new evaluation of the county's rtve-bos pital trauma system by the American College of Surgeons. -COAST G\JA&D: Ratified a new one-year lease giving the U.S. Coast Guard rent-free use of pier and office space at county-owned facility at 1911 Bayside Drive in Newport Beach. -ENERGY: Directed the county Administrative Office to examine the potential of constructing in Huntington Beach a facility to convert refuse into Corms of enercy. USC delays plans/or CdM school The University of Southern California bas agreed it will not proceed with plans to open a1 graduate school at a vacant Corona del Mar elementary school campus until a legal fight with upset homeowners is setUed. Corona del Mar residents and USC officials are scheduled to meet in Orange County Superior Court Jan. 25. In the meantime. USC administrators said plans have been approved for holding several business admirustration graduate courses at Corona del Mar High School during evening hours. Classes were to have started Monday at vacant Corona del Mar Elementary School;" leased by USC from tbe Newport-Mesa Unified School District for a five-year period. Commission officials have blocked use from starlin1 classes, s aying the private university failed to get a coastal development permit. · She warned of tbe poaaibJe adverse impact an oil spill wou Id have on the city's intertidal aone, not only on the city's tidal pools, but on its to:lrlst and recreation ln,come. Since Laguna's economy rellea h eavily on services to visitors, MN. Bellerue said oftahore dri1lln1 could cause merchants and the city serious economic harm. Newport Beach Mayor Jackie Heather has proposed that her city back ab effort to cut its yearly energy consumption equal to the amount of oil and gas that ls expected to be derived annually from its CANDIDATE -Bobbie Minkin has announced she will campaign for a seat on the Laguna Beach City Council. · Ring stolen from Lagunan A Laguna .Beach .woman told police that when she returned home Tuesday a diamond ring worth $16,000 was missing from a bathroom cabinet. Annette Meade s aid the ring cont.ained a 4.45 carat diamond, surrounded by four smaller diamonds. Police said the burglar apparently entered the unoccupied home through an unlocked front door. Niguel car victim listed as critical A Laguna Niguel man was listed in critical condition today at San Clemente General Hospital after being struck by a car Monday at the intersection of Pacific Coast Highway and Del Obispo in Dana Point. Officer Dick Van Cott of the CalifomiM Highway Patrol said Roy Woodward, 24, was crossing Pacific Coast Highway. proposed oil and 1u fields. She said tf the enerty savtni program were succeasful, it would demonatrate to federal official! the new oil well.I aren't necessary. Laguna's city manaeer said city personneJ in both Newport and Laguna would be workinc to prepare written information for the public on the proposed leases during the next two weeks. "By doil\g this we hope to get the publit" involved," Frank said. "We're putting together materials that wlU explain the situftion and what ls proposed with a goal of having the leases d e l eted by the Interior Department." Candidate announces in Laguna With the Lacuna Beach City Council election still three months away, a second city resident has announced she will seek one of the three seals available in the race. Bobbie Minkin, 45, who has lived in Laguna for h years, ·said serving on the council seems to be the next-logical step following several years of civic participation. Mrs. Minkin is currentJy vice president of lbe North Laguna Community Association, and a member of the League of Women Voters and the Laguna Greenbelt. She said s he has been an officer of the city's Summer Music Festival and Chamber Music Society, and is currentJy vice president of tbe Orange County Music Center, Laguna Chapter. Mrs. Minkin said she and her husband. Or. Richard Minkin. have lived in the Art Colony since 1971. Their two children have both attended Laguna Beach schools. Three Ci ty Council terms will expire in April. Incumbent Bill Wilcoxen bas announced be . won't seek election to the post. Councilmen Howard Dawson and Kelly Boyd are undecided if they will seek re-election. Another announced candidate in the election is Dan Kenney. 40, a pharmacy director for various Orange Co unty bos pitaJs. Kenney is currently a member of the city's Design Review Board. Nomination papers for the three council seats may be t.alten out beginning Thursday at the City Clerk's office. The papers, containing the signatures of 20 registered Laguna Beach voters; must be returned by Feb. 4. 'However, if any of the three incumbents decide not to run, aJl candidates bave until Feb. 9 to return papers. ~\ . -a\1 Huntington citizenry proves beautiful TOAST OF THE COAST: News reports recently have chronicled the great pride of many Huntington Beach citizens who have donated hard cash toward beautifying their city. It's worth notice along our entire coastline. ~ ' Wh at h ap - pe ned was that in Huntingto n . ther e wa s a proposal to create a blufflop park that would overlook Bolsa /."-\ -Tll_l_l_RP_IH-11~'> Chica State Beach, ~ and the sea beyond. This just happens to be a bluff sector that was blighted by old oil pipeUnes and assorted other machinery of the boomtown era in Huntingt.On Beach when Oil Was King. ~ The idea would be to bury old pipelines still in use1 clean up the blufftop and plant it with shrubs ana lancscaping a la Heisler Park in Laguna Beach or the cUfftop park at Corona del Mar. There was only one real problem with the project. It's called money:.. • POSSIBLY YOU'VE HEARD of the problem yourself in recent times. Current economic conditions considered, the stuff isn't really just Ooatin1 around in the street.. Anyway, the call went out to Runtin1ton Beach clUiena who ·w0tj1d be Wiling to donate money 'to create f._be park. In tfle end, 800 residents and businesses . donated more than $.10,000. Aminoll, USA, lnc., the city's .. ' major oil producer. pledged to match all <tonations up to $25,000 and Sher-Western, Inc., owner of the Five Points Shopping Center. kicked in another '25,000. By the Ume the dust settled, HunUn1ton Beach's park fund stood at more than $81,000 and all the dust hasn't realty settled yet. City officials rePort donations are still coming in. ' ALL 01' TRIS •B•IND8 you that lt wun't tool~· aro that th~ federal 1ovemment commluk>ned a couple o inland e&abeadl to wander up and down the coastline and rate various communities according to their beauty. The real purpose of this exercise, it was suspected. was to find a couple of ·•non-beautiful" places that could be scapegoats and offer an excuse for placipg offshore oil drilling platforms at that location. When the beauty survey results came in, as you might expect, spots like Carmel. Laguna Beach and Newport Beach were given rathe r higll marks . Huntington Beach found itself on the low end of the beauty totem pole. ln the view from this corner. such subjective' f oollshness was an outrage and an insult to the good citizens of Huntington Beach and the enormous efforts that have been put forth In recent years to Improve the entire municipality. EVEN IF YOU JUST take the coastline proper. it's f~ly to attempt to assess the "beauty" of rocky shorelines with landfalls, such as you find in Carmel, Laguna or parts or-Newport, and compare these areas to the erand, open sweeping sands that grace the Huntington Beach shoreline. . Some people are turned on by rocks. Others pref er the wide open spaces. Each has its own brand of beauty. The real capper that points to the yahoo idiocy o( 'these beauty ratings, however, is that which is happening in Huntington Beach today. 'lbe civic pride of donating thousands ln hard·to·comt-by cash shows the pride of community and what the cltlienry really feela in wanting to make their city a better place in whlcb to Uve.* So double-drats on watecy-eyed survey teum eltewbere. A!\d as for the 1ood cltlsenry o( R Beach, God bless them, every one . ' r HAPPY 75TH -Sam Miller and his wife Flo beam as they accept the tributes of many ...., ... ,......, ....... a...- friends on his 75th birthday at Dillman's Restaurant in Newport Beach. Balboa restaurateur feted· Sammy Miller celebrates number of milest~nes By STEVE TRIPOLI °' .. ...., .......... Sammy Miller bas spent almost all of the past 46 years in what be calls "the lousiest business in the world." But he stays because to him it's the beat business. The diminutive, silver-haired fixture of Balboa life doesn't have any plans to retire again at present. Miller still works four to five days a week, usually the brunch shift oo weekends plus Tuesday ·and Wednesday nights. UHANGI: COUNTY CALlf OH NIA ;>5 CENTS . Cold. wave tleatlis • tncrease to 134 BJ Tiie Aueeialed Prnl A winter atorm that left the Deep Soulb frosen in aJeet and up to seven lncbea of anow puabecl into the bi& cities ol the Northeast today aa tbe nationwide death toll from a five-day cold wave climbed to 134. Hundred• of tbouaanda of people were left without electricity today acroaa the South u heavy ice pulled down tree Umbl and power lines. T.be record cold that baa set '15 low-temperature records since Saturday devutated Florida's billion dollar citrus crop Tuesday, raisin& the poaslblllty of bl&ber prices for orange juice, and storm clouds flung .sleet, Oil leases seen/or SD coast SAN DIEGO <AP) -Offshore drtlllne leases will "very likely" be approved soon for oil explorat'lon off San Diego County's coast, says Interior Secretary James G. Watt. "We need to explore and inventory, as rapidly as we can, all areas of the United States; we cannot be too aggressive in inventorying and exploring those areas," Watt said Tuesday after addressing 7 ,000 penoos attending the American Farm Bureau FederaUon's national convenUoo. Exploration would occur at 26 nine-mile undersea tracts between three and 19 miles off snow and ram trom Arisona to Georpa. Scboola closed in Waah1nctoo, Balthnore and Pblladelphla today aa the storm moved up the Eaatem Seaboard with up to 10 Inches ol snow forecut in the 1uburbl of New York City. Alabama Power Company aaid at least 250,000 homes and businesses were without electricity in that state today and it may be several days before full service is restored. A bout 16,000 homes and businesses were without power in Missiaalppi with more free&ing rain in the offing. In the predawn hours, about 30 truck rigs were stranded on lnterstate 55 between Grenada and Winona. Central Indiana eot up to aeven inches of new snow dWin& the ni1ht and roada were slippery from a fresh aoowfall · across Mlcbiean. up to five lncbeJI of snow accumulated In nortbern. GeoTgia by today, apd some parts of the state bad freealnl raln. New snow, In many cues accompanied by sleet., piled UP. to seven inches in Arkanau anCI a fool in Arizona. Miles of icy bi&hways were closed Tuesday tbrou1boo\ Dixie. and other roads were clogged with s talled and abandoned cars. Thousands of people stayed home from school and work, <See FREEZE, Page AZ) Huntington man stabbed to death Police are investigating the apparent murder of a 56-year-old salesman who was Jound stabbed to death Tuesday in the bedroom of his south Huntington Beach condominium. The dead man was idenWied u William K. Norman or 8877 Tulare Drive. Huntington Beach police Sgt. ·Ed McErlain said a busaness associate became concerned Tuesday when Norman failed to keep an appointment. summoned police, McErlaln said. • He said officers found Normin on the floor of his bedrooro, clothed, stabbed once in ttie chest. : Mc Er lain said there wer,e signs of a struggle and so°'e ransacking in the home, .. Norman's 1980 Datsun auto w~ discovered missing. He said officers are searchidg for that vehicle, described as 4n orange two-door B·210. license number 692·ZYS. Police believe the stabbing occurred al about 1 a .m . Tuesday. McErlain said there were no signs of forced entry in the residence. The business is restaurantin&, and a couple hundred friends showed up at Dillman'• on Balboa Peninsula Tuesday to help Miller celebrate some personal and professional mileslAloes. "It's the louaieat business in tbe world, but lt'a atUI my bualmu," be says. "People are always c6mpJaining 'my steak's not done, tbla hi not done, that's not done,' j>ul you meet so many different people every day of your life. They tell you their history." , ... shore, he said in an interview. The two sites are west and northwest of San Die10. off Point Loma and the north county coast. The associate, whose name was withheld. visited Norman's residence, located in the adults-only Huntington Landmark Communit.,Y near Edison High School, and saw through a window that lbe man's refrigerator door was open. McErlain said. Norman was said to have been employed by an out-of.state firm as a salesman or promotional materials. Police said he lived lnvitation.s to the celebraUoo listed the milestones best. "You are invited lo Sammy Miller Night," it said, " (celebrating)· 22 years at DUJman's -45 years in Balboa -75 years of liWig." Though the main event was Miller's 75lh birthday, the other two milestones help explain why the crowd wu so large. Miller, a Los Angeles native, bas been a restaurateur continuously since 1935, except for a five-year stint in the Army during World War II. He got started in the business, he said, alter being in the rum industry during the 1920s and a clothing manufacturer in the late 20s and early 30s. He did "a little bit of everything" ln films in the silent film days of the 20's, mostly film editing. 1ben came the talkies. . "When ~l Jolson opened his big mouth (in "The Jazz Singer," the ftrst talking movie) be put me out of business," Miller said. After several years in the• clothing business, be cante to Balboa for the first time in 1935 when friends Ed and Claire Allen ~ought the bankrupt Balboa Inn Hotel. "I looked around here and it looked like nothing to me then," be said. He worked here several years, went back to Los Angeles briefly (but long enough to own one restaurant), then signed up for officers' training and the Quartermaster Corps in the Army. Even thoueb he was in bis mid-308, & desire for action in the militar, led bjm to ask for active duty, said. He got what a>l &BDE&JCK SCROEMEllL CM"..., ........ ditor'• Note: Tht• i• the ~ of G four-part l>oUv Piof ... ~ Or~ Cowdw'• muUl-tnlUfon dollar dUfmmo of parmftt for ltfoWl core for tlw poor JWOOUMd at UC lrvhae Altdkal Cnttr. __..:._ ' Treatment autborluttoo request.a . . . •llClblllty worten BIG NIGHT -Sign outside Dillman 's restaurant announced the big bash inside. be wanted -a stint in the infantry that took him to France and eventually Germany. On his arrival home in 1944 MiUer went back into the Los Angeles restaurant business, owning in quic.k succession the Cove, Rocket Room and SaJem House restaurants.. But then be "just wanted to come back" to Balboa, so he packed his bags and did so in 1947. He hasn't left again. Mi lier was owner of a restaurant/club called the Vaux, which was located dir'ectly across the street from where DiUman's is now. When be sold out in 1959, it was Just two weeks before fledgling restaurateur Max Dillman opened an establishment across the street. The Urning was right, and the two joined forces. Miller first worked as bar IJ)anager and bartender, then became maitre d' at the restaurant: He's a natural at the post, Dillman says, and bis connections bring in lots of customers. "He's got lots and lots of friends," Dillman says. Miller says be retired once, after hip surgery in 1972, but he dido 'l have enough to do and soon went back to work. A blg part of Sammy's history ls hls wife Flo, with wbo,m he's shared the same Balboa apartment for 27 years. His wife, brother and other family members from the Los Aneeles area joined the celebration Tuesday. As be sat next to bis wife the two clasped bands like young lovers. At the table were a tree made of doiens of greenbacks and se veral other gifts . A three•tiered birthday cake sat on the other side of the restaurant. Chef Rene DeLounge expressed the prevailin& sentiment of Sammy's admirers gathered at the party. "He's beautiful people," be said. "It's like goiilg back in the past the way he treats everyone." 'Elephani girl' OK PHILADELPHIA <AP> -A 21.year-old victim of "elephant man's disease," bas been released from the hospital where she underwent radical 's urgery lo correct the deformities she said made her life mlse:rable. Richard Gross, a spokesman at the ffolp6tal of the Univenity of Pennsylvania, said the woman, whom they identified only as "Lisa H.," wu "in &ood condition and iJl very goocl spirits." She was released Tuesday and "her recovery ls proceeding well,'' he.said. For all the thetorie to the . lf11 AMAl1Jlll contrary, the impression that is IUIRI, left -ts what really la important to tbe sovernment • adminlstraton ii not 10 much what they slean &om medical who ii or tan't treated, but bow records, alt in judsment of tbe 11\UCh It will coet and wbo wUl untverslty'a cbuaea. The pay, docton red-peMU cllarses .ttb If um lao't the cue, why do which tbey don't asrH. Tbe the Unlvenity of California and county then refuses to pay th.i Orange County aovernment portion of the bill. spend about *3 millloe yearl)' h•Ullnl ~-a. contract WMlm' wblcb iealtb care ii provided for lncna-tl at tbe UC tm.e . Jledlcal Center In Oranae? That dispute la centered on tbe countr'• contention tbat lndl1•nll for which lt ll flnanclally re1poa1lbl• under atate law often cet too much H.N at U. uniftrlll! llMidlcal ~-· .. ~ ..,. ...,.0,. ..... who .._. no Dowledle of tbe partlealm' pau.ta .... ,_ On tbe ~tber band, the uatventt¥ .._ a Iara• ltaft ol elerical WGrhrl s.:tbe Ooor of a tQbrlM wbo do notlUI but pc-oe• to the CCMab. So ..,.... about dlll operation la tbe -== thal lt ~Y Hl\aMd to a ne'Wapaper pboto1rajb•r acee• to the bill proc ...... eeater. ''We're sug1estin1 tbat basically all of tbe outer continental shelf lands should be made avaiJable to industry," Watt said. "That's a billion acres, ball of it off the coast ol Alaska, l might add. Let the market place determine where those most attractive areas are." Earlier, Watt told the farm group : "Friends, we 're vulnerable; we're vulnerable to a natural resource war. Change must come so that we can manage our resources for the American people." Surveys by the U.S. Geological Survey indicate that the 26 tracts would yield 30 million barrels of oU and 4S billion cublc feet of natural eas. In 1979, then Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus exempted the Sao Diego County tracts from a series of scheduled lease sales. California bas 3,500 offshore wells, 3,000 ol tbe ries with1n three mlles of the coast. 'Ibey make up about 10 percent ol the domestic oil p~u~on. Significant oil spills have been rare, W~tt noted. In i•. an Atla,nt.lc Richfteld Compall)' ri1 blew out in the Santa Barbara Channel, but "there waa no Jaalina dama(e to the aeatbetlca1 the shell fish or the no flab, and no reuoo to believe there la llngerlne environmental degradation." The associate voiced concern to. a security guard, who alone. Candidate filing to begin Thursday By JEFF ADLER °' .. °""' ........... Orange Coast politicians are busy plotting their 1982 campaign strategies as city clerks ln five area cities - Huntington Beach, Laguna Beach, San Juan Capistrano, San Clemente and Fountain Valley -gear up for a first round of candidate filings which opens Thursday. City clerks in the five cities explain that filing for office for the April 13 election opens -Thursday and runs through Feb. 4 , unless an incumbent candidate decides not to seek re-election. In that case, accordlrt'k to election officials, the filing deadline is extended by five days, until Feb. 9. While the five cities are searing up for their local election.s, however, one Orange Coast city, Seal Beach, is readying itself for a March 30 election, accordlne to City Clerk Joanne Yeo. Also, the cities of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach will elect city council members Nov. 2, while Irvine is looking toward its June 8 council election. Mrs. Yeo, Seal Beach city clerk, said filing for the three of five city council seals being contested opened Dec. 31 and will close Jan. 21, unless an incumbent fails to file. Candidates must be registered voters in Seal Beach, file nomination papers which include the signatures of not less than 20 and not more than 30 other local registered voters, and post a $25 filing fee, she said. Already, five people have flied for the seats being elected in districts 1, 3 and 5. Besides electing four of the seven at·large councilmen In Huntington Beach, voters there will be selecting a city attomey in the April 13 election, City Clerk Alicia Wentworth said. As in the other cities with April elections, candidates seeking office must be registered city voters and must submit nomination papers which include not Jess than 20 and not more than 30 aienatures ol other local registered voters. (See CLEJUt. Pase AZ> IRAICI CUil IEATlll M oally clear skies through Thursday. Highs in upper 808 to low 70s. Lows of 42 to 48. Local gusty nortbeut winds 15 ~o 30 m.p.h. this afternoon . below coastal canyons, decreping tonight. •. I t I ............ ROSTalnEN. Donald Scott Priest, 11, wearing an akland A 's cap given to him by players Rickey Henderson nd Mike Nor,ris, is wheeled into Stanford University edicaJ Center. The youngster, who survived a Sierra plane rash, may lose his feet to frostbite. inen convicted coultty deaths . Three men were convicted ot first-degree murder in two sep~rate cases Tuesda1 by Orange County Superior Court juries. Two of the defendants face the possibility of the death pe,palty. The three convicted men are: Bus d~v·er -Dwayne Otis ·McKinney, a. .a whb was found guilty of killing a 19-year-old manager of a Bureer 8CCUSed Of King in Orange in December 1980. McKinney, a 21-year-old • Ontario resident, also was apmg . teen convicted of robbery and assault . • with a deadly weapon. The death An Orange County Transit 1J811i.lty phase of his case belins istrict bu!t driver bas been/Jan. 20. ·arrestedonsuspicionofrapinga -Thomas Luparello, a 1'-year·old girl aboard bis bus 3 0_-y e a r · o l d S a n t a ~ n a while the vehicle was parted chiropractor, wbo was convicted near the Huntington Beach City of hiring another man to ltill the Bier. h u § band of a former ~Police Lt. Tom Patton said the receptionis t . Luparello, also driver, RObert Mitchell Porter, convicted of conspiracy, was 34, of Anaheim, was placed ln cleared of s~ial circumstance Huntington Beach City Jail in allegations that could have led lieuof $25,000bail. to imppsition of the death Patt.on said the girl, a Buena penalty. Park resident who had boarded -Carlos Orduna, the hired Ule bus ln that city, fold officen killer in the Luparello case, ~ the assault took place at 5:30 was convicted of first-degree p.m. TUesday when she was the murder and conspiracy lD the last passenger aboard as the bus s laying of the 21·year-old victim. a.topped on Pacific Coast Highway at Lake Street. H ah; bbed •.John M~ade, a transit dlstrict arr 8 ro spokesman, ·said the OCTD bas· b'eeo hfformed of the rape allegation. Re said drivers suspec\e(! -of criminal activity traditionally are suspended until the charges are resolved. STATELINE, Nev. CAP> Sherifrs investigators reported little progress Tuesday in their search for a gunman who robbed Harrah's Tahoe casino of $80,000 in cash. • • 1 aw\aa. Ulli'e.,. DO mandatory .,... ~,,c.edaW. lDi.r.tect la publl1bt•1 •n optional cand1date'11&atem1nt muat post a depolil wttb the clty clerk. Lapna Beach voten will be eltcUoc three ol lbat cJty'a nve ·at·lar1e couoclhnen in the ·election, aald Verna Rolllnfer, city clerk. . Votera lD Su Juaa CaplltrMO al10 wlll be aelecUDJ tbn• people to slt on that clty'a five-member council, wblcb 11 elected at·lar1e. Members al.lo sit aa the Orance County Water Work.a Diltrict Board No.•. City Clerk Mary Ann Hanover explained. · Besides electin1 three at-lar1e members to the five-member San Clemente Clty Council, voters there will be asked ·whether to chan1e the e1ecUon day date from Aprll to the statewide election day wblch falls on the second Tuesday ln November of even years, clty omcials said. The ballot measure, which would become effective in 1988 lf approved, is a result of legislation recently passed by the state Legislature, permlttin1 cities to change the dat~ of municipal elections. Voters in Fountain Valley will select three at-large city councilmen to join that city's five-member panel, City Clerk • Evelyn McCleodon said. Councilmen·elect will be sworn into office at the April 20 council meeting, she added. Irvine City Clerk Nancy Rowland said filing for two of that city's five at·large city council seats will open Feb. 16 and close March 12. The municipal election is set for June 8, Ms. Rowland said. M 1.1oicipal elections are scheduled Nov. 2 for Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, city officials in those two cities report. Newport Beach voters will elect four city councilmen, from districts l, 3, 4 and 6, to the seven-member council. Filing for those seats opens July 12 and cloees Aug. 6, City Clerk Wanda Andersen said. Costa Mesa's city clerk, Eileen Phinney, said filing dates for that city's municipal election have riot yet been officially scheduled. Ms. Phinney reported that two of the council's five at-large seats will be up for election. Cop helps n ab brother DENVER CAP) -Patrolman Edward Brooks' pleasure in a •·nne piece or police worlt" was marred when be learned one of three suspected bank robbers he helped capture after a eunfigbt and chase was bi3 older brother, authorities said. The orficer did not know that William Arthur Brooks, 46, was arrested in the robbery Tuesday until the men were brought to police headquarters an hour after their capture, said Police Capt. Don Mulnix. ~ ........ ME WITH PORPOtR -Neelo,. a newborn lpbiri, swims wjth hia mother Mich at the ark Continent at 8 \lldl Gardens in Tampa, FJa. The name N~lo, which means "a beauty 1 ·in blue," was chosen from thousands of suggestions submitted in a contest. Cheeee recipienu recall. depreui~n · I • # ....... WHEEEI -Bo Sartain, 13 <left>. and Sophie, his 15-year-old sister, take to a slippery Dallas sidewalk Tuesday, using cookie sheets as sleds on a sidewalk made slick from a winter storm. (Related photo, Page A4 1 Woman died saving girl from timbers SANTA CRUZ (AP) -As Northern California recovered from the worst stor m in memory, firemen said a woman "who died as a huge tree crashed down on her Aptos house used her b-Ody to shield her 15-year1oid d a ughter from jdeadly falling timbers. 'I'he teen-ager, Sheri Sheridan, was discharged from Dominican Hospital in Santa Cruz on Tuesday and, according to the hospital, immediately flew to Reddlng to be with her father and recuperate from a broken left leg. and other members, including 2·by-12-incb planks, around and on top of them. Scofield said he went throu&b a "tunnel of debris" several times as rescue workers dug to get the girl and her mother out. Several times, be said, the girl sobbed, 'My mother saved my We .' "She was aware of the fact that her mother was dead," said Scofield, wbo described the young victim as going into shock and already receiving intravenous injection to bring back her blood pressure. • • water plpet bunt and electric Hl'vlce waa dierupted u lee caked ~r lines. Commercial fli1bu were canceled and publlc lrauportaUon lround to a balt lo Milailllppl ud the Alabama l••l•Jatme canceled a Joint a ... mbly Tuellday nt.a.t. ••We were stared" to be (oo alarlbinll but apparently our worst eara were even coo1ervative,.," •aid meleoro&Ollat Max olood at tM NaUoul Weather Service olflce ln Homewood, AJa. At least 25 states have reported weather-related deaths since Saturday. There were 18 deat.U reported in llllnola; 13 in PennsylvanJa; 11'• each in North Carolina, New York, and Texas; el&bt in ~labama; seven ln Iowa; 11.x each In Micblcao, Ohio and South Carolina; five each in Indiana and Wisconsin and four ~acb ln Minnesota and Mil11.salppi ; West Vir1inla and two each in Kent u cky, Maryland, Missouri, Lou.isiana and Tennessee, and one each ln Nebraska,. Oonnecticut, Oklahoma. Fl~and Vlr,UUa. Two others were mlulq and presumed dead in Virgin.la. Snowplows in Atlanta were unable to reach some areas blanketed by 1now Tuesday night because thousands of cars were still bumper-to-bumper on the city's freeways near midnight. This morning, court officials canceled today's se88ion in the murder trial of Wayne B. Williams, charted with killing two of 28 young blacks who were slain over two years, because of conditions. Louisiana Gov. Dave Treen calle d up one unit of the National Guard and ordered all state agencies to be prepared for a disaster. The bigges t hospital in Louisiana, Charity Hospital in New Orleans, sent many patients home, pos tponed e le cti ve surgery and discouraged visitors, in part because water pressure bad dropped as homeowners left their faucets on to prevent pipes from freezing. · Most commercial flights in and out of Jackson, Miss., were canceled Tuesday due to ice-coated runways. Wea th er officials said the most bizarre aspect of the storm in the -Birmingham area was isolated thunde rstorms that were accompanied by brief, colorful lightning flashes and the snow and ice storms. Fire Capt. Philip Scofield, who led the rescue effort, said be had little doubt that Carole Seagrave, seeing t&e house start to collapse, used her body to deflect falling debris from Sheri. Savage winds and rain punished Apt.os, 10 miles south of Santa Cruz, the afternoon of Jan . 4 . Inside a $110,000 two-story wood frame house were Mrs. Seagrave and her daughter. College senate reprimands Schmitz "It was approximately 2 p.m ." said Aptos Assist.ant Fire Chief Al i:'orbes. "A large douglas fir, about six feet in diameter and 150 feet tall, fell accoss the house." Al the scene, Scofield directed the rescue effort, which included paramedics Richard Rubin and Floyd Redmon. ·'The tree had come across two houses, severed them, taking off the faces of the houses and extending about halfway through the s tructures,•· Scofield said. They were trapped with a section of the front wall on one side, and the second-floor joists Following the lead of their colleagues at Saddleback College, members or the Santa Ana College Academic Senate have ·reprimanded stale Sen. John Schmitz for recent public remarks. . The Academic Senate, which r epresents the 500 -member Santa Ana College faculty, voted to officially reprimand Schmitz, w}ao is a poli!ical science professor at tbe school, but stopped sbort of censurin& him. Last Friday the Academic Senate at Saddleback College, where Schmitz bas also taught, issued a resolution "deploring" the senator's recent scathing attack on foes or anti-abortion legislation. In ·a press release, Schmitz characterized opponents of a • • u1s1na constitutlon·at amendment banning abortions as "bull dykes" and "queer groups." At a Los Anl(etes hearing, Schmitz said he looked out on "a sea of hard, Jewish and (arguably) female faces." As a result or his comments, Schmitz, a resident of Corona del Mar, was s~ripped of his committee assignments in the State Senate. In addition, be was removed from the state Commission on the Status of Women. Senate President Pro Tem David Roberti and Sen. Alan Sieroty, both Los Angeles Democrats, said last week that a censure resolution against the Republican senator would be introduced on the Senate floor because of his remarks. Demonstration c ....... t'ood'roc"'°" ....... Saturday, January I 6 I 0:30 a.m.-3:30 ~.m. PROCESSORS List Price DLC 1• •••••••••••• 130.00 DLC • ••••••••••••• ; t85.00 DLC 71 ••••• ~ ••••• ~ •260.00 Our Price ''·'' 14t.tt '''·'' ..... ~ ..... ....... ._. ...... ·CROWN HARDWARE Everything YoU want In a hardware store . • All lt0t'9a ()pen 7 dliya • WMk. w.tctlft Of*' Thura. tll I PM Responding to a second city complaint that the company is lagging in developing_ commercial establishments in Finally, Kre mer told the ........ . -~~A career woman tells · Wl!DNESOAY, JAN. 13, 1912 . . CAVALCADE COMICS TELEVISION council members that the Irvine Com·.pany would continue to 82·3 84 86 The Irvine city general plan ls the document lbat seta the broad outline for and allows development of land in the city. The Irvine Company owns the overwhelming m~ity of developable land in lbe city. why she gave it all up to b'e a housewife and mother. Read.Bob Greene on Page 82. Charity cheese spread slow The much-heralded federal cheese giveaway got ort to a . slow start in Huntington Beach Tuesday and volunteers worried that the supply millbt mold before it would be distributed. ''We've.got to find some place to refrigerate all this cheese or it's 1oing to go bad," said Karl Cornell, chairman of a senior citizen committee djstributing the cheese al the Senior Citizens Recreation Center at 17th and Orange atreets. He was in the recreation center kitchen standing by stacks of five-pound packages of the federal surplus processed cheese. Distribution volunteers sat at a table idly talking. "We have nearly 3,000 pounds of cheese here and only 60 people have showed ~P who were qualified to receive it," be Thief 'cued,' flees lwme·· A new Irvine resident armed himself with a pool cue and chased off a burglar Tuesday, police said today. Dick Ward , who lives in Northwood, heard someone prying bis sliding glass door at 10:49 p.m. and grabbed the cue, waiting for the burglar to enter the boine, said police Lt. Bob Lennert. When the burglar enter~.d, Ward bit the man twice with lhe cue. The man struck back with a pry tool and then fled, said U . Lennert. Ward wasn't hurt in the scuffle. said at noon, three hours after distribution started. Only people on Medi-Cal or receiving federal supplementa to following the low-income rule and that some people were turned away Tuesday because they didn't qualify. "Only 60 people have showed up who were qµalified to receive it.'' their income are qualified for the cheese, Cornell said. Mike Rodgers, a board member ol lbe city'a Council oo Aging, says the city la strictly" "We're only giving the cheese to truly destitute people," Rodgers said. • • Aa word spreads. I'm sure we'll bave no trouble giving the cheese away Civic center plans get boost in Irvine Plana to bulld a new Irvine Civic Center and animal shelter and to expand a corporation yard received a boost Tuesda.y night from the Ir.vine City Council. Council members agreed to form a noo·profil corporation to i s sue bonds to finance construction of the shelter and yard, a combined project expected to cost about $7 million. The projed location is north of the intersection of Irvine Center Drive an~ Sand Canyon Avenue. The City Council also approved design plans for the projeci and told the city staff to begin asking contractors to submit constructioo bids. The non-profit corporation could also be used to fund construction or the new Civic Center, a $17 million project backed by voters on an advisory measure that passed in last November's election. The new Civic Center is to be built near the intersection of Jeffrey Road and Barranca Parkway. Another possible funding source for the facility would be formation of a joint powers authority, which would also have the power to issue hoods, according to Mike McNamara, city director of administrative services. The authority would be composed of public agencies interested in locating offices in· the center. Officials of the Irvine Ranch Water District and the Irvine Unified School District have indicated such interest. Council members told staff members lo begin asking architects to submit proposals to do the design work for the proposed Civic Center. to those who really need it." Vivian Borns, human services superintendent for the city, sald the processed cheese stays fresh for a long time. She said there wa.sn 't much publicity on lbe giveaway. But she said that today scboola in the low-ineome Oak View area will be told ol the distribution, a.s will seniors at local bingo games. "We'll have no trouble giviq the cheese away by Friday," she contends. "I think it's wonderful," said Sarah Rosen, 65. "I'll certainJy put It to good use. I'll use ll ln a variety of dishes and then I'll freeze some for later. I think there should be more of tbls with surplus food." Dist r i but ion of ch e e·a e continues this week at the seniors recreation center from 9 a .m . to 4 p.m. and at the Oak View Community Center, 172161 Oak St., from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., say city officials. UCI student's body discovered A 21 -year-old UC Irvine student was found dead this morning in a car parked oo the Irvine campus, the apparent victim of suicide by .J. carbon monoxide poisqning, U<.;I police reported. · -t The car was in parking lot No.,- 81, just south of the medical school on campus. No further information was available tbls morning about the incident or the man who died. ............... ALMOST DONE -Bill Teissedre (foreground> and Rick Teissedre put the finishing touches on the brickwork Qf t~~ new library-classroom building at Saddleback College's North Campus in Irvine. Students will begin to use the new building during the upcoming spring semeste~. Supervisors aim for ·water plan BJ May, memben of the Oran1e County Board of Supervisors expe~t to have a better idea about the adequacy of future waler supplies in the county. Supervisors ordered analysts in the county 's Urban Monitoring and Analysis Center Tuesday to prepare the first of three proposed reports on what they called a countywlde water plan. When the study is completed. officials should have enough information to coordinate conservation and, if necessary rationing plans and have a better understandlng of how to creafe a dependable water supply, according to the center's analysts. However, the supervisors' decision to order that homework baa concerned leaders of some local water districts. Dennis MacLain, general manager or the Municipal Waler D1atr1ct of Orange County, told the aupervlaors Tuesday the districts could save the county the trouble. "ln short," be said, "there is not much more that can be done locally that is not already being done ." M acLain said conservation and water reclamation programs already are being bandied by the districts, and if rationing becomes needed, it probably will be coordinated by the Metropolitan Water District. That district is the par.:nt organization that oversees water distribution throughout most or Southern California. M acLain suggested that the supervisors might be more constructive by publicizing the need to construct the Peripheral <'anal in the Sacramento River Delta to increase supplies of water available to Southern California through the slate water project. ~\ ~,~~ Huntington citizenry proves beautiful . \ TOAST OF THE COAST: News reports recently have chronicled the great pride of many Huntington Beach citizens w,ho have donated hard cash toward beautifying their city. It's worth notice along our entire coastline. What hap · pened was that in Huntington . there wa s a proposal to create a blufftop park that would overlook Bolsa Chica State Beach, ~ L'-' TIM 11111111~ and the sea beyond. This just happens to be a bluff sector that was blighted by old oil pipelines and assorted other machinery of the boomtown era in Huntington Beach when OU Was King. · The idea would be to bury old pipelines st.ill in use, clean up the blufftop and plant it with shrubs and lancscaping a la Reister Park iii Laguna Beach or the cllfftop park at Corona deJ Mar. · There was only one.real problem with ihe project. . It's called money. · POMIBLY YOU'VE BEA&D of the problem yourself ID recent times. Current economic condltiona considered, the stuff isn't really Just noatina around ln the street.. ' AAyway, tbe call went out to Huntinston Beach citlseril who would" be Willni tO donate money to create the park. In tbe end, 800 retidents and bu1lnes1es doDated more than A0,000. Amlaoll, USA, Inc., tbe city's I major oil producer. pledged. to match all donations up to $25,000 and Sher-Western, Inc., owner of the Five Points Shopping Centel', kicked ln another 115,000. By tbe time the dust settled, Huntaqton Beach's park fund stood at more than •1.000 and· all the duat hasn't reaUy settled yet. City oftleials report donatJona are still coming in. ALL OF TIUS as•INDI you tbat lt wain't·too lon1 -ao that the federal •ovemment eommlnlonect a couple of lo1aDil eabeada to wander up and dori thi IOUWne • and rate various communities according to their be~1ty . The real purpose of this exercise, it was suspected. was to find a couple of "non-beautiful" places that coui..1 be scapegoats and off er an excuse for placing off shore oil drilling platforms at that location. When the beauty survey results came in, as you might expect, spots like Carmel, Laguna Beach and Newport · Beach were given rather high marks. Huntington Beach found itself on the low end of the beauty totem pole. In the view from this corner, such subjective foolishness was an outrage and an insult to the good citizens of Huntington Beach and the enormous efforts that have been put forth in recent years to improve the entire municipality. EVEN IF YOU JUST take the coastline proper. it's fmly to attempt to assess the ''beauty" of rocky shorelines with tandf alls, such as you find in Carmel, Laguna or partil of Newport, and compare these areas to the grand, open sweeping sands that grace tbe Huntington Beach sborellne. Some people are turned on by rocks. Others pref er the wide open spaces. Each has lts own brand of beauty. The real capper thlt point.a lo the yahoo idiocy of these beauty ratings, howner, ls that which ls bappenln1 ln Huntingt.clft Beach today. Tbe civic pride of donatin1 thousands in hard-to-come-by cub &bows the pride ol community ind what the cttJaenry really feels in waoUq to make tlMIU' city a better plaff Ill which to Uve. So clouble-drata on watery-eyed survey t--.._ ,elsewhere. And as for1be aooct dtlzenry of HWitinctm ,Beach, G()d bleu them, every one . By &ICIM•D GA•EN o1 .. ...,,... ..... Irvine Company Preaideat P•ter KNllle!', 1nakin1 ..1 a ru. appearance 1\tlllday berore the lrvlDe City Couacll, 1ave five acr• ol land to U.. elty and promlaed compeny action on fl•e 111uea of recent public concern. Tbe land lift, wblcb company offlclala e1Umate la worth about SI million, was aeen aa a respoue to complaiDta by city off l chis that t be land development firm wasn't donating enou1h acreage to Irvine. Tbe land la to be used foe an animal abelter the cJty 1ntenda to build north ol \be lnteneetion of Irvine Center Drive and Sand Canyon Avenue. Kremer told council members more free land will be given to tbe city for .addlUoeal f aellltill In return for city aareement OD continued development ol land owned by the company. Responcuna to a second cl»' complaint that the company la laggln1 In developin1 com merclal establlabmenta In Irvine, Kremer aald the. company would pay for an independent $50,000 study to evaluate the city's commercial n'eeda. Addressinl a third laaue on which the company baa come under fire, Kremer said the company ia establl1bin1 a committee of executives to •'devote a hl1her level ot attention to (commercial) lease renewa.la." A number of local merchants leasing .shop space from the company has expressed fears their leuea would be canceled like the lease of lon1tlme University Park barber abop operator Jim Anderson. Turnln1 to the subject of apartment conatructlon in Irvine, Kremer promlaed that company officlaia will be workin1 with the city staff durint the ne~ month to brina forward a apeclflc proaram to build more apartment unlta. City planners have criUcbed the Irvine Company for not' buUdint enou1b apartments in Irvine. Finally, 'Kremer told the council members that the Irvine Company would continue to work with the city on tryin1 to find ways to fund city A career woman tell8,,_,..~:'i''"' why she gave it all up to b·e a housewife ancf mother. Read Bob Greene .. ~.-.;,;;:;;:~~~on~Page 82. acres lmprovementa, aucb as roadi. Kr~Qler'a comqieAta.. were well received by the City CowicU members. .Ulde from H)'inl "thank you," however, tbey bad· little comme11t on Kremers unuau-1 preaentaUon. Councilman Larry A1ran did tell Kremer he hoped that the company now lntenda to liv,. lonf term leases to aucceuful ne 1hborbood buaineaa eatabllahments. Irvine City Council crtUcllm of the lnine Company on isaues addreued Tueaclay by Kremer came to a bead at Ule Jut City Council meetlna. In Deeembet, when Councilman Bill Vardoulll IUS,elted cbaqea ln the city General Plan mlPt be In order if the Irvine Company didn't beatn to deal witb public concerns. '· Tbe Irvine city 1eneral plan ls the document that Mt1 the broad outline for and allows development ol land In tbe city. The Irvine Compuy owaa tbe overwhelming majority of developable land in t.be city. ................. DONATION -Irvine Company President Peter Kremer has given five acres of land to the city of Irvine. Balboans lodge protest Newport City Hall bans Wayne bronze A city·commlsaioned bronze relief sculpture of the late actor Jobn Wayne bu been banned Jrom the Newport Beach City Hall. But the size and price of the artwork ballooned during the two years it toot to complete it. Tbe cost now is expected to be $32,000 and the artwork now includes a sta1ecoacb, alx horses and tbe likeneaaes of Andy Devine and John Carradine in addition to Wayne Residents attack plans for music in restaurant · City council members said the acUoo la not meant to be ~ llap at Wayne , regarded as Newport's most famous citben. Residents of a Balboa condominium complex built on the ground where the famous Rendezvous Ballroom once stood did their upmost to tum off tbe music. Al issue was a plan for a restaurant featuring Ii ve entertainment. The protests Monday came largely from residents of the Rendezvous condominiums, located across the street from the planned restaurant and located OD the site of the former muaic and dance ball. "The ghost ol Stan Kenton la a till haunting Bal boa," quipped Councilman Phil Maurer before the council unanimously· approved the restaurant plans. T.e restaurant I •• yet unnamed -ia to be located at 109 Palm St. and will displace an existing beer bar and a tiny shoemaker shop. Applicant Doug Cavanaugh, who said be founded a similar restaurant oo Nantucket Island off the coast of Cape Cod, explained that be hoped to help the shoemaker relocate to Costa Mesa. One critic of the plan, Robert Duff, reported bia Rendezvous condominium is leas than 80 feet from the proposed site and that music will make it "unbearable and impossible to sleep." Rendezvous resident Ed Lynch, who carted in a television and video tape cassette sbowin1 the neighborhood, said he doean't want the area "to become aDotber Newport Pier with bllters." "I'm not a1ainst a good Newp rt, Laguna to fight drilling Laguna Beach1.~d Newport Beach officia.la WJU be planninl a strategy to convince the federal govern~ent that oil wells aren't oeeded in the coutal waters off the two cities. Laguna Beach City manager Ken Frank aaid today that following a meeting of officials of the two beach communities Tuesday, a delegation of Newport and Laguna officials will prepare a summary of the issues involved. The federal government is expected in February to decide whether to lease Southern California offshore waters, including areas as close as three miles .to. Laguna and Newport, for drtlllng and production ol oil and gaa. Earlier this month Laguna Beach. Mayor Sally Bellerue fired off a letter to the Department of Interior terming as "insufficient" an environmental impact report OD a proposed offshore oil leaae. The letter, endorsed by the City Council, sought deleUOD of possible sale next month of tracts direcUy off the coast ot Laguna Beach. In her letter, Mrs. BeUerue said the department's environmental impact report "gave insufficient conaideratiOD to the sensitive and sipificant nature of the Laguna Beach shoreline." restaurant," Lynch said, "but I'm worried about what's going to happen down the road." SeveraJ protesters su1gested that il Cavanaugh wanted a restaurant then there was UWe reason for him to keep the place open to2 a.m. "I'm not a drinking man," responded Councilman Maurer, "but I bear that bars carry a restaurant, financiaJJy speaking. And I'm glad for thoae that carry the restaurants I Wee to eat at." Mayor Jackie Heather wondered whether the restaurant would be any more disturbing than the nearby Balboa theater that ·baa re1ular mldDilll' 1bowln11 of tbe "Rocky .Horror Picture Show." That movie, which bas become a ~ult fllra, often draws loud audiences, abe explaiMd. USC delays plans/or CdM school The University of Southern California bas agreed it will not proceed with pJans to open a1 graduate school at a vacant Corona del Mar elementary school campus until a legal fight with upset homeowners is setUed. Corona del Mar residents and use officials are scheduled to meet in Orange County Superior Court Jan. 25. In the meantime, USC admin.latrators aald plana have been approved for holding several buainesa administration graduate courses at Corona deJ Mar Hilb School durine evenina boura. ...,~ ........ WAIT TO SELL -Ray Watson, former president of the Irvine Company, advised trustees of th& Newport-Mesa Unified ScbooL District to delay sale. of property. The condition wu imposed by council members tb,la week alter they airee¢to lend $13,000 to the Newport Harbor J ayceet to help pay off artist Chria Mai.on. Several council members aaid the City Hall ~ came • a result of circumstances aurrouncllna the art work. Matson, who now baa the brome work in b.il garage, wu 1fven permission in 1979 to create a bu relief of wazfor $17 ,500. Jaycees were led out as tbe service croup for ralainf money to pay for it. Wait before lease, N-M trustees urged By IODI CADENHEAD O( .. DM!y .......... Trustees of the Newport-Mesa Unified Sehool Dillrict were advised Tuesday nicht t.o wait until summer before leasing 47 acres of surplus property owned by the district. The board took no acUon OD• the property al Jamboree Boulevard and Bristol Street and President B.J . stilllnl said she hoped it could be discuaaed at the next meeting Jan. 26. Nearly all the property is located in Oranee County territory in Santa Ana Heights. Durtne a sometimes heated · meetlne, angry Heiehts homeowners told trustees that they don't want to aee biab·ri.ae development on the aile. The now -closed Bay View Elementary School occupies 11 of the 47 acres. The property was purcbued in 1965 for the conatructioo ol a blgb school by what was tben tbe Newport Barbor UnJon m1h Sebool Dlltrict. The school ls not needed because of decUnln1 enrollment. Ray Wat.son, former president· of the Irvine Company, who helped engineer the sale of 36 acres of the property to lbe district for $972,000, told trustees the property could be worth much more if they waited unW the county rezoned it. Althougb the property ia now zoned for agricultural and school use, Watson estimated It would be worth as much a.a $80 million if zoned for commercial development. ·'The best course you have will be to monitor hearines and find out what the ranee of uses will be,'' said Watson, who volunteered to advise the district. "That way you can . structure a pl"Op09al." The County Plannin1 Comm.i.saioo is expected to belln hearinp in Marcb. himself. • The Jaycees do not have enough money to pay artist Mataon. To a person, city officials acllnowledee the finiahed piece ia haodaome and Ukely worth more tban the uking price. ,,Put Coundlman Don Strauss sa1d be made the motion to keep it out of city JaaU because "I'm leas than enthu.aed with it at this point." The sculptu.re was to have been unveiled in city baJJ this month. City officla.la, who au11e.t the bronze wort eventually may be displayed in an expanded lobby at the Newport Theater Arts Center:, said they're unsure where it will be placed in the meantime. ''But we will have an un•eilina ceremony .1omewhere,'' added Ron Whitley, Newport 'a parka, · beaches and reaction director. For bis part, artist Kat.son said be was liven permission to expand b1a bronze work and toot out loans against bis bouae to cover costs. He said one of the loans is due this month. UCI student's 'body dUcovered A 21 ·year.old UC Irv'oe student was found dead this morning in a car parked on the Irvine campus. the apparent victim of suicide by carbon monoxide poisoning, UCL police reported. The car was in parking lot No. 81, just south of the medical school on campus. No fwtber information was available this morning about the incident or ·the man who died. ~ . . . b ~~£i l • n.untington citizenry proves _;;.-eautiJu TOAST OF THE COAST: News reports recently have chronicled the great pride of many Huntington Beach citizens who have donated hard cash toward beautifying their city. It's worth notice along our entire coastline. What hap · pened was that (;';) in Huntington, there was a ·~ proposal to create ~ r h b!u/ft!po ~a{~ Tll"lllPllll ~~ overlook Bolsa ..._....,._, ___ ....,._... ___ ~.,.. ......... _ Chica State Beach, · . and the sea beyond. This ju.st happens to be a bluff sector that was b!Wbted by old oil pipelines and usorted other machinery of the boomtown era . in Hunllncton Beach when OU Wu king. The idea would be to bury old pipelines sutl in use, clean up the blufftop aJ!d. plant it with shrubs and lancacaping a la Rm1ler Pari fn-Laguna Beach 0r· the' cllfftop park at Corona del Mar. Tbere·wu only one real problem with(be project. Jt's called m0ney. · · P0881.8LY YOU'VE DA&D of the problem yourself ID recent times, Current eeoaomlc conditions conaklered.t the stulf illl't really Juat floattn1 around ln the atreeta. A.nywa,, the call W.t oUt to H~ Beacbi eiU-. . who would be wWlq to donate money to ereaw: tbe put. ID the end, • n1ldeDta aDd bualnelle§ · 1doUted maF.tbu SID,000. Aminod, USA, Inc., the clt1"i· major oil producer, pledled to match all donations up to $25,000 and Sber·Western, IDG .. owner of the Ftve Points Sbopptna Center, kicked in madaer m,eoo. By the Ume the duet Httled, lllllltinaton Beach's park ._fund stood at more than "1,CMMt·IDil.:lll the dual hasn't ,-eally Httlecl yet. City oftleiala t9POlt dollaUons are stlU comtna in. and rate various commo.:!lties according to their beauty. The real purpose of tbli exerfuse. it was suspected, was to find a couple of "non-beautiful" places that could be scapegoats and offer an excuse for placing offshore oil drilling plaUorms at that location. When the beauty survey results came in, as you might expect, apots like Carmel, Laguna Beach and NeW}>ort Beach were liven rather 'high marks. Huntington Beach found itself on the low end of Ute ·beauty totem pole. In the view from this corner. such subjective foolishness was an outrage ~ an insult to the goOd citizens· ol Huntington Beach and the enormous efforts that have been put forth in recent years to improve the entire municipality 1 EVEN It' YOU JUST take the coastline proper, it's f9lly to attemP.t to aaaeas the ''beauty" of rock[ shorelines with f andfalla, such as you find ln Carme , La1una OI' parts ol Newport, and compare tbese/areu to the 1rand~ opea sweepU11 sands that 1race tbe Huntington Beacb llaot •• Some people are tUriiM an by rocks. Otben prefer the wide open 1peea. &it~ baa Its own brand Of beauty. The real= that ... to tbe taboo kUocy ol these beauty ra p, "°'"'•...:.._ii that wbicb ia bappeq In Huntlqton Beach ~1 · u1e civic pride of dolia thousandil ID bard·to-eo~ ... caab lboWI .. ._... eommunlty and wbat the c'lllilDrJ really,..., .. ~ to m• UMtr dtr a bettS plan bl:Wllieh to 11 ~~ So ...,.... __ Wlllf1.,id IUl'ft)' nvm , ......... Md••U.Pld~ot ,Beach. Ood blell ~. ~ cme. I I HAPPY 75TH -Sam Miller an.d his wife Flo bearQ as they accept the tributes or many ~Nll ..... '9•1d19N ....... friends on his 75tb birthday at Dillman 's Restaurant in Newport Beach. Balboa restaurateur feted . Sammy Miller celebrates number of milestones By STEV.E 'r&JPOLI o1 ... o.11y ......... Sammy Miller baa spent almost all of the past -46 years In what be calla "the lousiest business in yie world." But be stays because to him it's the best business. The business is restauranting, and a couple hundred friends showed u~t Dillman's on Balboa Pe sula Tuesday to help Mille celebrate some personal and proreaaional mUestooes. Invitationa to the celebration listed the milestones best. "You are invited to Sammy Miller Night," it said, "(celebrating) 22 years at Dillman's -45 years in Balboa -15 years of living." Though the main event was MUJer's 75tb birtbday, the other two milestones help explain why tpe crowd was so large. Miller, a Los Angeles native, bas been a restaurateur continuously since 1935, except for a five-year stint in the Army during World War II. He got started In the business, be said, after being in the film industry during the 1920s and a clothing manufacturer in the late 208 and early 30s. He did "a Ii ttle bit of everything" In films In the silent rum days ol the 20's, mostly fllm, editing. Then came tbe talkies. "When Al Jolson opened bis big mouth (in "Tbe Jan Singer," the first talking movie) be put me out of business," MUlersaid. After several years in the· clothing business, be carde to Balboa for the first time in Ul15 when friends Ed and Claire Allen ~~ught the bankrupt Balboa Inn Hotel. "I looted around here and it looted like nothing to me then," be said. He worked here several years, went back to Los Angeles briefly (but long enough to own ooe restaurant), then signed up for· officers' training and the Quartermaster Corps in the Army. Even though be was in his mid-~1 a desire for action ln the mwtary led blm to ask for active duty, h!! said. He got what ' I I ~ .. I'·. .. . ~ -.· ' .,. ' ~ ... · _, • .> ~ ............ . ,_ -........ -, ' ' r-. _ . ., f Jf" : \ ~ I .. ,.. •• Iii ; .••• ' .. ~ '~" ' ' ··~. t~ I IAl . ~~ ~ .. -: lo! . , "'., ~~~· , . . . . ' . • •4~ • -"'• .... , . -~--- r. •..... ~-, . • J , . .., .. ; BIO NIGHT -Sign outside Dillman 's restaurant announced the big bash inside. he wanted -a stint in the infantry that took him to France and eventually Germany. On bis arrival home in 1944 MilJer went back into the Los Angeles restaurant business, owning in quick succession the Cove, Rocket Room and Salem House restaurants. But then be . "just wanted to come back" to-> Balboa. so he packed his bags and did so in UM7. He hasn't left again. M Iller was owner of a restaurant/club called the Vaux, which was located directly across the street from where DiUman's is now. When be sold out in 1959, it was just two weeks before fledgling restaurateur Max Dillman opened an establishment across the street. The timing was right, and the two joined forces. Miller tint worked as bar manager and bartender, then became malt.re d' at the restaurant. He's a natural at the post, Dillman says, and bis connections bring In lots of customers. "He's got lots and Lots of friends," Dillman says. Miller says he retired once, after hip surgery In 1912, but be didn't have enough to do and soon went back to work. The diminutive, silver-haired iilriure of Balboa life doesn't have any plans to retire again at pre.sent. Miller sWI works four to five days a week, usually the brunch sb\ft on weekends plus Tuesday ·and Wednesday nights. "It's the lousiest busineu in the world, ~ut It's 1tlll my buinell," be aa19. ''People are alwa)'I complalniq •my lteat'a not done. th.II la not done, that'• nbt done,' but rou meet ao many different people evsy day of your We. They tell you their history." A blc part ol Sammy's history ta bis wife Flo, with wbom he's shared the same Balboa apartment for 21 years. Bil wife, brother and other family memben from the Los Angeles area joined the celebration Tuesday. As be sat next to bl.a wife the two clasped bands ll.ke young lovers. Chef Rene DeLounge exp ressed the prevailing sentiment or Sammy's admirers gathered at the party. "He's beautiful people," be said. "It's like going back in the past the way he treats everyone." Jetliner hits bridge traf fie BULLETIN WASHING TON (AP> -All alrllaer crullled la&o a brldae bearlag eommater tramc from dowatowa Waalalllgtea .... ta.. Vlrsl•la Hltuba late today, Waalliq1Ga llOllee saw. Aatborltles •aid Ute alreraft amaalled la&o Ute 1.U. S&. Brtdp near NatloDal Al .... rt, 1&nldl senral can ud plu1ed 1a&o tbe Potomac &lHr dmrl•I a bea•y mow mrm. A tele•l•I•• erew fr•• Wa11tlest-lltalloa <W&C) aald Ute pAaae wu aa Alt Flortda Boeing m JeUiMr. Barry Blabbanl, tower eMef at tbe airport, C9aflrme4 tlllat "we llad a 737 10 dow• lato tJae rl•er." Tbere wu DO Immediate word on calulties. ••• ORANGE COUNT V C A llf OH l"h\ 25 CENTS f • • .. • deaths increase to 134 81 Tiie Auoda ... Preti A winier storm that left the Deep South froaen in 1leet Md up to 1even incbea of anow puabed into the bil cities of the Northeast today 11 the nationwide death toll from a five-day cold wave cllmbed to 134. Hundreds of lbouaanda of people were left without electricity today acro11 the South u heavy lee pulled down tree llmbl and power linea. The record cold that bu set 75 low-temperature records since Saturday devastated Florlda's billion dollar citrus crop Tuesday, raisin& the pouJblllty of higher prices for oran1e Julee, and storm clouds flun1 sleet, Oil leases seen/or SD coast SAN DIEGO <AP) -Offshore drilling leases will "very likely" be approved soon for oil exploration off San Diego County's coast, says Interior Secretary Ja~es G. Watt. ·'We need to explore and inventory, as rapldJy as we can, all areas of the United States; we cannot be too a_gareaaive in inventorying and exploring those ~aa." Watt said Tuesday after addressing 1,000 persona attending the American Farm Bureau Federation'• naUonal convenUon. ExPlontion would occur at 3S nine-mile undersea tracts between three and 19 miles olf shore, he said in an interview. The two sites are west aad northwest of San Die10. off Point Loma and tbe north county cout. ••We're au11estln1 that basically all of the outer contiDental shelf land.a abould lte made available to industry," Watt said. "That's a billion acres, half of it off the coat of Alaska, I mllht add. Let the market place determine where those most attractive areas are." Earlier, Watt told the farm group : "Friends , we're vulnerable; we're Yl$ierable to a natural resource war. t:bange must come so that we can manage our resources for lbe American people." Surveys by the U.S. Geoloeical Survey indicate that the 26 tracts woulCt yield 30 million barrel.a of oil and '5 billion cubic feet of natural gas. In 1979 , then Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus exempted the San Dte10 Coun\y tracts from a series of scheduled lease sales. CaWomia baa 3,500 offshore wells, 3,000 of tbe rt11 wltbln three miles ol the cout. Tbey mate up about 10 peroent ol the domestic oil p~u~~oo. Significant ou apWs bave been rare. Watt noted. In 119, an Atlantic Richfield Compuy ril blew out in the Santa Barbara Channel, but "there waa mo lasting dam•t• to the aeathetlea, the shell fiab or the fin ftab, and no reason to believe there la lln1ering environmental degradatiOn." anow and ram rrom Arizona to Georlia. · Sebooll closed in Wubiqtoo, Baltimore and Philadelpbla today u the storm moved up the £astern Seaboard wlth up to 10 incbet ol snow forecast In the auburbl ol New York City. Alabama Power Company aaJd at least 250,000 homes ancl bu1ine11es were without electricity in that state today and ll may be several days before full service ls restored: A bout 16 ,000 homes and businesses were without JKiWer in Miaalssippl with more freezing rain in the offing. ln the predawn hours, about 30 truck ri•• were stranded on Interstate 55 between Grenada and Winona. · Central Indiana cot up to seven lnches ol new IDOW duriDI the nltbt and roada were slippery from a · freab anowfall across Mlcblgan. Up to five incbu of 1now accumulated In northern Georgia by today, and some parts ol the state bad freedn& rain. New snow, in many cue& accompanied by sleet, plied up to seven lncbe.s ln Arkansas and a root in Arizona. Miles of icy blchwaya wen closed Tuesday tbrou1bout Dixie, and other roada we~ clogged with stalled and abandooed cars. Thou.sands of people stayed home from school and work. <See FREEZE, Page AZ> Huntington man stabbed to death Police are investigating the apt>arent murder of a 56-year-old salesman who was Jound stabbed to death Tuesday in the bedroom of his south Hunt i ngton Beach condominium. The dead man was identified as Wllliam K. Norman of 8lr17 Tulare Drive. Huntington Beach police Sgt. ·Ed McErlain said a business associate became concerned Tuesday when Norman failed to keep an appointment. . The auociate, whose name wu withheld, vlaited Norman's residence, located In the adulta-only Huntington L•ndmark Community near Edison High School, and saw throulh a window that the man's refr1'•rator door was open, McErlaln said. The aaociate voiced concem t2_ a_a_!..curlty guard, who· s ummoned police, McErlain said. He said officers found Norman on the floor of his bedroom, clothed, stabbed once in the chest. McErlain said there were signs of a struggle and some ransackipg in the home, and Norman's 1980 Datsun auto wa discovered missing. He said officers are searcbine for that vehicle, described 8' an orange two-door B-210, license number 6192-ZYS. Police believe the atabbinl occurred at about 1 a .m. Tuesday. lllcErlain aald there were no signs of forced entry in the residence. Norman was said to have been employed by an out-of-atate firm as a salesman of promotional materials. Police said be lived alone. Candidate filing to begin Thursday By JEFF ADLER Of .. ...., ..... SUl'f Orange Coast politicians are busy plotting their 1982 campaip strategies as city clerks lo five area cities - Huntington Beach, Laguna Beach, San Juan Capistrano, San Clemente and Fountain Valley -gear up for a first round of candidate filings which opens Thursday. City clerks in the five cities explain that filing for office for the April 13 election opens .Thursday and runs through Feb. 4, unless ·an Incumbent candidate decides not to seek re-election. In that case, according to election officials, the tillnl deadline is extended by five days, until Feb. 9. Wblle the five cities are 1earin1 up for their local electiom, however, one Orange Coast city, Seal Beach, la readying itself for a March 30 election, accordiq to City Clerk Joanne Yeo. · Alao, the cities ol Costa Mesa and Newport Beach will elect city council members Nov. 2, while Irvine is looking toward its June 8 council election. Mrs. ·Yeo, Seal Beach city clerk, said filing for the three of five city council seats being contested opened Dec. 31 and will close Jan. 21, unless an incumbent fails to rue. Candidates mu.st be registered voters in Seal Beach, file nomination papers which include the signatures of not less than 20 and not more than ao other local registered voters, and post a $25 filing fee, she said. Already, five people have filed for the seats being elected in districts 1, 3 and 5. Besides electing four of tbe seven at-large councUmen lo Huntington Beach, voten tbere will be selecting a city attorney in the April 13 election, City Clerk Alicia Wentworth said. As in the other cities witb April elections, canclldatea seekin1 office mu1t be registered city voters and must submit nomination papen which fnclude not less than~ and not more than 30 signatures of otber loeal registered voters. <See CLE.a.K. Pace AZ> ·-=z Collnty medical issues frustrate U.S. housing funds increase for county ii1111 Cllll -UUll Mostly clear 1tie1 tbrouab Thunday. Hilhl in upper eos to low '10I. Low• of 42 to 48. Local gusty northeast winds 15 BJ F&BDDJC&, 8CBO~IU.RL .... ..., ........ Edftor'1 Not•: Tlaf1 ft tit• ooncruon o/ a four-part Doil., PUoc ..,..,, am1dJiiMIQ Oranoe COURIV• tHltf·milUott doUar cU&.nuno •I paptnt for lwollh con for alw poor proo6c:Md at UC l"1t1t• lllHkal Cnttr. ' Treatment autborhaUon requelta ... ellllbWt)' wort.en For all the tbetorlc to the contrary, the impression that ia lert ii what really la lmpor(ant to the 1o"ernmeat admlnlatraton la not 10 much who ta or iln't treated, but bow much it will cost and wbo will pay. If tb1a iln't the cue, wbJ do the Unlvenlty ol California and Oran1e Count7 10-.eramut apend about S3 mlWoa yearly ha11ll.q '1'1fll •· coatract UDdlr wblcb bNltb care 11 ~ for lDdl ..... at UM uint.. . lletlcal Center in 0ru1•' · Tbat ... 11 cat.eel• tbe count1'• contention tllat lndi1eat1 for wblcll It 11 flnaaclall1 re1pon1lble udef 1tate law Gftm 1et too ..- eare at IM mlftl'lltJ tDldlUI ·•·--=·•u•a. WM I llJ ta IO .S,e ti U.. parttcu18r ,au.nu ~ .... . , IEmllllllll what they al!an frotn medical records, sit hi Judament ol the unl•enity'1 cbH1ea. The docton red-IMincU cbar1es with wbleb the)' don't ape~. Tb• county then retusea to pay that portJon ol the bill. Oa tbe otb~r band, tbe ualvenitr 1Ni a larp at.aft ol elerltal ...... 5-:tbe Door of a JqbrlM wtllo do DOtldnl .... proceu .. tb• eountJ. 9o ........ aboal tbil~ .. ---.... tbat1lt reoeau,....,... .......... a aiw1paper.9boto1rapW•• aee-to t.M bW PfMH•bll ....... bllls bit.I been loinl OD for yean. The bUla number Io tM teal~ tbouauds. More come tD eaeb day. About SI mllllon ln paymenll have been beld up u the~ bu draued oa. • to 30 m.p.b. tbJa afternoon: below coastal canyons,. decreuing ton11ht. .. ~ ......... ROSTBITtEN -Donald Scott Priest, 11, wearing an akland A's cap given to him by players Rickey Henderson nd Mike Norris, is wheeled lnto Stanford University edical Center. The youngster, who survived a Sierra plane rash, may lose his feel to frostbite. men convicted couDty deaths ' Three men were eoovicted of first -degree murder in two ~eparate cases Tuesday by Bus driver accused of • rapmg te~n An Orange CoinQ Transit District bus driver bas been ·arrested on suspicion of rapine a 14·y·ear-old girl aboard bis bus while the vehicle was parked near the Huntington Beach City Pier. • · · · Police Lt. Tom Patton said tbe .. driver, Robert Mitchell Porter,. Jf, of Anaheim, was placed in Huntington Beach City Jail in lieu of $25,000 bail. Patton said the girl, a Buena eark reeident who bad boarded , lbe bus in that city, told officers lbe assault took place at 5:30 p.m . Tuesday when she waa the last passenger aboard as the bus stopped on Pacific Coast Highway at Lake Street. John Meade, a transit district ' spokesman, said the OCTD bas b.een informed of the rape allegation. He said drlvers suspected of criminal activity traditionally are suspended until the charges are resolved. Orange County Superior Court juries. Two of the defendants face the possibility of the death penalty. Tbe three convicted men are: -Dwayne Otis McKinney, who was found guilty of killing a 19-year-old manager of a Burger King ln Orange in December 1980. McKinney, a 21-year-old Ontario resident, also was convicted of robbery and assault with a deadly weapon. The death 19e11al{y phase of bis case~ Jan. 20. -Thomas Luparello, a 30 -year-o ld Santa Ana chiropractor, who was convicted · of hiring another man to kill the husband of a former receptionist. Luparello, also convicted of conspiracy, was cleared of special circumstance allegations that could have led to imposition of the deatb penalty. ·-Catloe 'Orduna, the hired killer in the Luparello case, ~ho was convicted of first-degree murder and ~piracy in the slaying of the 21-year-old victim. Harrah's robbed STATELJNE, Nev. (AP> Sberirrs investigators reported little progress Tuesday in their search for a gunman who robbed · Harrah's Tahoe casino of $8),000 ·in cash. • • Wbile tMre an no manct.cory fWq ,.., ceadldat11 lnte.,.... In cfi:~~alala• aa optional can '• etatement mU1t poll a d.,.ut wit.la ua. city clen. Laf\IDI Beaeb voten will be electlnl tbNe ol that city'• nve at-lar1e councUmen ln tbe elecU.. Mid Verna RoWD&er, cit)' clerk. Voten la Su Juan CaplatrMO al10 wlll b• aelectllll tbree people to 1lt on that city'• five-member aouncll, wblcb la elected at-Lar1e. llemben a1IO alt as the Or8Dle County Water Work• Diltrict Board No. 4, Qty Clerk •ary Ann Hanover explained. Besides electln1 three at-1ar1e memben to the five-member San Clemente Clty Council, voters there will be aaked "Whether to chanae the elecUon day date frQJll April to tbe statewide election day which falls on the second Tuesday in ·November of even years, city officials said. The baJlot measure, which would become effective ln 11188 lf approved , is a result of legislation recently passed by the state Legislature, permitting cities to change the date of municipal elections. Voters in Fountain Valley will select three at-large city councilmen to join that city's five-member panel, City Clerk Evelyn Mcclendon s aid. Councilmen-elect will be sworn into office at the April 20 council meeting, she added. Irvine City Clerk Nancy Rowland said filing for two of that city's five at-large city council seats will open Feb. 16 and close March 12. The municipal election is set for June 8, Ms. Rowland said. Municipal e{ections are scheduled Nov. 2 for Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, city officials in those two cities report. Newport Beach voters will elect four city councilmen, from districts 1, 3, 4 and 6, to the seven-member council. Filing ror those seats opens July 12 and closes Aug. 6, City Clerk Wanda Andersen said. Costa Mesa's city clerk, Eileen Phinney, said filing dates for that city's municipal election have not yet been officially ubeduled. , Ms. Phinney reported that two of the council's five at-large seats will be up for election. .. Cop helps nab brother DENVER CAP> -Piatrolman Edward Brooks' pleasure in a "fine piece or police work" was marred when be learned one of three suspected bank robbers he helped capture after a gunfight and chase was his older brother, authorities said. The officer did not know that William Arthur Brooks, 46, was arrested in the robbery Tuesda)' until the men were brought to police headquarters an hour after their capture, said Police Cap_l. Don Mulnix. _..,.... AME wrnt PORPO• -Neelo, a newborn olphin, swims with his mother Mich at the ark Con~ at Basch Gardens In Tampa, Fla. The name Neelo, which means "a beauty , ·in blue," was chosen from thouaands of suggestions s~bmitted in a contest. ' ORA,_ COAST• • 11111• ·. ~..,.__,..n........,.. All .................. MMU1' Cheeae recipient8 recall depreuion WASHINGTON (AP> -One woman compl'alned that lt smacked of bread llD11 ID the Depreuion, and otben 1rumb1ed about 1pend1D1 two houri ftandln1 in the 8.ld to pt a fret five-pound blotk of ~heese. But lftG9t ol tbe ntarr.: people Uni up at tbe Plnt Meut Doe Baptllt O.arela • heiU)' ..... almplr ~I for t.11e 1Ut of proeeaa•• Am.,._ 1111111, worUa rupto ........... prt .... FromPageA1 .FREEZE. • • ,.,..._.. water pipes bunt and electric Hrvtce wa1 dlarupted u let caked Power linea. Commercial fll1bta were canceled and public trauportatloo lf'OUDd to a halt Ln MlAlaaippt and the AJabama le1l1Jature canceled a Joint- UMmbly 1\aeldaJ DiOt. "We were 1carecf to be too alarmlnl, but apparenU1 our ·w o r at I ea r 1 were e v e n conaervatlv•..r'' •tld meteorolotlat Ma~ olood a the National Weather Service oftlce in Homewood, AJa. At least 25 st a tu have reported weather-related deaths ainee Saturday. There were 18 deaths reported ln Jlli.ooia; 1.3 in PeDD1ylvanla; 11 each in Nortb Carolina, New York, and Texas; el1bt in Alabama; aeven ln Iowa; six eac.h in Michi1an, Ohio and South Carolina; five each in Indiana and Wisconsin and four each in Minnesota and Miasiaaippi; West Vlratnla and two each in Kentucky , Maryland, Missouri, Loulslana and Tenneaaee, and one eacb in Nebraska , Connecticut , Oklahoma, Florida and Vlrlinia. Two otben were miaslnc and presumed dead in Virginia. Snowplows in Atlanta were unable to reach some areas blanketed by snow Tuesday night because thousands of ca.rs were sWl bumper-to-bumper on the city's freeways near midnight. ~ morning, court officials canceled today's WHEEEJ -Bo Sartain, 13 (left >, and Sophie, his 15-year-old siste~. take to a slippery Dallas sidew~lk Tuesday, using cookie sheets as sleds on a sidewalk made slick from a winter storm. < Related photo. Page A4 > Woman died saving girl from timbers · session in the murder trial of Wayne 8 . Williams, charged with killing two of 28 young blacks who were slain over two years, because of conditions. SANTA CRUZ (AP> -As Northern California recovered from the worst storm in memory, firemen said a woman 'who died as a huge tree crashed down on her Aptos bou.se used her body to s hield her 15 -year-old daughter from deadly falling limbers. The teen-ager, Sheri Sheridan, was discharged from Dominican Hospital in Santa Cruz on Tuesday and, according to the hospital, immediately flew to Redding to be with her father and recuperate from a broken left leg. Fire Capt. Philip Scofield, wbo led the rescue effort, said be had little doubt that Carol e Seagrave, seeing the house start to collapse, used her body to deflect falling debris from Sheri. Savage winds and rain punished Aptos, 10 miles south of . Santa Cruz, the afternoon or Jan . 4. Inside a $110,000 two-story '\'OOd frame house were Mrs. Seagrave and her daughter. Louisiana Gov. Dave Treen c alled up one unit of the National Guard and ordered all state agencies to be prepared for a disaster. The bigges t hospital in Louisiana, Charily Hospital in New Orleans , sent many patients home . postponed elective s urgery and discouraged visitors, in part because water pressure bad dropped as homeowners left their faucets on to prevent pipes, from freeting. Most commercial flights in and out of Jackson, Miss., were ca nceled Tuesday due to ice-coated ninways. Weather officials said the most bizarre aspect of the storm in the .Birmingham area was isolated thunderstorms that were accompanied by brief, colorful lightning flashes and the s now and ice storms. Court gives police more search power WASIUNGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court today gave police officers more power to conduct searches without warrants, and also told cities they cannot ignore possible antitrust problems while regulating cable television. College senate reprimands Schmitz In reinstating a drug -possession conviction stem ming from a 1978 incident on the Washington State University campus, the court on a 6-3 vote, created a new exception to the rule that police must first get a warrant before searching someone's house. Unless an emergency exists, police who spot evidence of a crime inside a person's -home cannot enter and search the home without a warrant. Wednesday's ruling adds a post-arrest exception to that rule. Following the lead of their colleagues at S•ddleback College, members of the Santa Ana 9<>1lege Academlc Senate have reprimanded state Sen. John Schmitz for recent public remarks. The Academic Senate, which represents the SOO-member . Santa Ana College (acuity, voted to officially reprimand Schmitz, who is a political science professor at the school, but stopped short of censuring him. Last .Friday the Academic Senate at Saddleback College, where Schmitz bas also taught, issued a resolution "deploring" the senator's recent scathing attack on foes of anti-abortion legislation. In a press release, Schmitz characterized opponents of a • • u1s1na Demonstration Saturday, January 16 I 0:30 a.m.-3:30 ~.m. ' PROCESSORS list !'fie. DLC 1• ••••••••••• ~130.00 DLC • •••••••••••••• 185.00 Dl.C '71 ••••••••••••• •260. 00 ..... Our Price ''·'' 14t.tt '''·'' co nstitutional amendment banning abortions as "bull dykes" and "queer groups." At a Los AnReles hearing, Schmitz said be looked out on "a sea of hard, Jewish and (arguably) female faces." As a result or his comments, Schl'Ditz, a resident of Corona del Mar, was stripped of his committee assignments ln the State Senate. ln addition, he was 'removed from the state Commission on the Status of Women. Senate President Pro Tem David Roberti and Sen. Alan Sieroty, both Los Angeles Democrats, said last week that a censure resolution against the Republican senator would be introduced on the Senate floor because of his remarks. 1CROWN HARDW1'RE Everything YoU want In a hardware ator• • All ...,,.. open 7 mye • WMk. W.Cttff open Thura. tll 9 PM • ''·"°'"" -· Haftoly & "-....., ""'· ci.11,.-•. Up tJ ·-----------· ::::· Gm.D QUOTATIONS · .. , 7.6 1.4 6.7 .. , '·' ,., u " l.S s.t 1